#dorks in love
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002yb · 2 days ago
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There's a group chat dedicated to how pretty Jason is. Everyone in the family contributes to it, compiling albums worth of photos.
Dick doesn't miss the fact that he's the only one without an invite. It's fine though. Before he was the reliable hero everyone knows today, he was an ornery little bastard. He'll have his comeuppance as well as some fun.
So he torments the family by somehow turning up in every picture anyone ever tries to take of Jason going forward. Either he blocks Jason out entirely or he's there in the background in a way that can't be cropped out. Always making pointed eye contact with the camera.
And at first there's a look of neutral displeasure, but the more friends and family get riled up, the more Dick starts to look smug.
Jason being none-the-wiser about any of this. All he knows is that suddenly Dick is around a lot more; he lingers. Like he wants to spend time together, or something. Because maybe...Dick likes him?
It's a realization that would come when Dick is hanging off of Jason to block a picture someone tries to take. So of course when Dick looks back from where he'd been smirking at whoever, he finds Jason standing there stiff as a board and with the most helpless, flustered expression, the softest of blushes coloring his cheeks and getting steadily redder as Jason spirals back into a crush he thought he took to the grave years ago.
Meanwhile Dick is readily manhandling Jason around and being 'affectionate' with his ‘flirtatious skinship’, but really he's just super into winning this strange game that's him against the world with all these Jason-photo-ops hahaha.
They do fall in love eventually though. There’s no way Dick can be in such close proximity with Jason all the time and not be taken by how charmingly prickly and sweetly mean he can be.
Something something Dick’s focus abruptly shifting off the photobombing game to being locked in on flirting with Jason - drawing all sorts of reactions out of him (via metaphorical pigtail pulling and being a generally ornery little bastard). All captivated and smitten because while he knew it already, Jason really is so damn cute; he’s prettiest when he’s blushing.
The group chat dies a slow death if only because it feels voyeuristic to watch these two dorks fall in love.
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blank-potato · 20 days ago
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You Exist Behind My Eyelids
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Pairing: Bob Reynolds x Reader
Summary:
“Bob,” you hiss. “He’s always looking at me.” Yelena raises an eyebrow, as if this is the most obvious thing in the world. “And?” “And smiling at me. Like I just saved a kitten from a burning building or something. He lingers. He watches me eat. He asks how I slept. He walks me to the damn kitchen.” “And is that a problem?” Yelena asks curiously, chewing on her granola bar but clearly hinting at something you can't pick up on. You stop to think. It felt like you had fallen into an alternate reality where Bob didn’t ignore your existence… where he smiled when you walked into the room, where he made you breakfast and stayed close without needing an excuse. Or After getting back your memory, you struggle to come to terms with the life you've returned to. It's one where Bob cooks for you, and smiles at you, and you have no idea why.
Tags/Warnings: 18+ Explicit Content, fluff, implied smut but no smut, sex dreams, angst, abandonment issues, self deprecation, jealousy, memories/flashbacks, acquaintances to friends, friends to lovers, Chekov's diary, the new avengers interfering (a little)
WC: 13.7k
A/N: Title from See You Again by Tyler, The Creator and Kali Uchis. I heard your cries for a part 2 to Loving You Is Easy and I hath delivered. Sorry that this took entirely too long to finish, I hope you like it!
Part 1
***
Losing your memory was a trip. Almost a month of your life where you’re drawing a complete blank. 
Not to mention, everyone is weird now, like more weird than usual.
Especially Bob. 
He’s been at it for ages. Making up all sorts of culinary creations and giving them to you like offerings. They taste good. Not just good, incredible.
The amount of effort and care he’s been putting into waffles, omelettes, pancakes, French toast… it was quite nice. And it was driving you crazy because every bite felt like more than just food. Like affection, like something familiar, like a feeling your brain was trying desperately to name.
One morning, after you’ve sufficiently stuffed yourself with the golden, cinnamon-sweet French toast Bob made for you, you set your plate down and lean over to Yelena.
“What’s going on?” you whisper urgently.
Yelena blinks at you, unfazed. “With what?”
“Bob,” you hiss. “He’s always looking at me.”
Yelena raises an eyebrow, as if this is the most obvious thing in the world. “And?”
“And smiling at me. Like I just saved a kitten from a burning building or something. He cleans my dirty dishes. He asks how I slept. He walks me to the damn kitchen.”
“And is that a problem?” Yelena asks curiously, chewing on her granola bar but clearly hinting at something you can't pick up on.
You stop to think. It felt like you had fallen into an alternate reality where Bob didn’t ignore your existence… where he smiled when you walked into the room, where he made you breakfast and stayed close without needing an excuse.
You supposed it was better than the little tango you’d dance every day, trying to stay away from each other. This was something, at least. But still… it felt strange. Off. Like you’d wandered into the middle of a story you used to know by heart, only to find the pages had been torn out and rewritten in someone else’s handwriting.
Now he was bringing you breakfast, offering to walk you to med checks, lingering a second too long when your fingers touched over a cup of tea, and you didn’t know how to feel.
“Are you sure you can’t tell me what happened during those weeks?”
“The doctors said we can’t. If they come back, they’ll come back on their own, don’t worry,” She says, giving you a reassuring pat on the back. 
It’s a tough pill to swallow, but what else could be done? You settle down with a tired sigh, trying to quiet your thoughts, when Alexei strides in, boots thudding against the floor.
“We’re out of those little frozen pierogies. I need them. For strength,” he announces to the room. 
“Well, I’m sure we could get someone to—” you start, but Yelena cuts in smoothly.
“One of us should go get it, right?” she says, way too innocent to be trusted.
There’s a pause. Like an invisible signal has passed through the room, one that everyone seems to pick up on except you and Bob.
“Maybe…” John adds, barely suppressing a smirk, “You and Bob could do it?” He looks directly at you, voice casual, but his eyes are all mischief.
“Great idea, Walker…” you mutter, audibly sighing in annoyance, arms crossed as you shoot him a look.
Bob shrinks just a little at your tone, shoulders drawing in like he’s trying to disappear.
“For once,” Ava adds with a smirk, not missing a beat.
You glance at Bob, who’s very determinedly not looking at you but is definitely turning a little red.
“Fine, we’ll go. You all seem weirdly insistent on it.”
The rest of the team had been doing stuff like this since you got your memories back, like when you’d mysteriously end up on Bob babysitting duty more often than the rest of them or how you’d always seem to be sitting next to Bob for everything. 
You arrive at the grocery store, donned in caps and sunglasses as if they were good disguises.
“Let’s just get in and out as soon as possible.”
“Right,” Bob agrees. You nod, looking at the list of things that you need to get.
He drives the trolley slowly and carefully. You look at him, he’s calm, collected, and quite focused, even if it is just a grocery run. You feel a small smile creeping onto your face when suddenly he looks at you. It’s like being struck by lightning, throwing you into complete disarray.
You stumble, tripping over your own feet, but he catches you before you fall headfirst into the display of canned tomatoes.
Bob doesn’t usually get this close. Being near you, even touching you, was rare nowadays, but he loved to feel close to you. If it was just for a few seconds, then he’d have to cherish those few seconds. 
“Are you alright? You seem distracted,” Bob comments gently, concern flickering in his voice. And he’d know, he pays more attention to you than you even realise.
“I’m perfect. Just…testing your reflexes,” You lie, he looks sceptical, but for your sake chooses not to push on it.
“Let’s get fruit, I think we’ll be murdered if we get nothing but junk food.” You say, and you go towards the fruit and veg aisle. You look around, still acutely aware of Bob’s presence — the lingering sensation of his arm around you clinging to your skin like a phantom touch. Putting it out of your mind, or at least trying, you go to grab some apples. But of course, Bob reaches for it too, and when your fingers brush against his, everything goes white. 
Suddenly, you’re no longer in the grocery store but somewhere that feels familiar, even though you’re sure you’ve never been there before. 
The smell of fresh coffee and old books fills your senses, warm and nostalgic. Soft light filters in through high windows, dust motes dancing lazily in the air. The quiet hum of a memory presses in around you, gentle and comforting.
“This one’s one of my favourites. You should give it a read,” Bob says, stepping into view and handing you a slim, worn paperback.
You take it slowly, your fingers brushing against the creased spine. The cover is faded, the title barely legible—a collection of poetry, clearly well-loved. You turn it over in your hands, tracing the edge of a dog-eared page, deep in thought.
“What?” Bob grins at your expression. “A guy can’t enjoy poetry?”
You look up at him, surprised by the easy vulnerability in his tone, the way his eyes are both playful and sincere. “You just surprise me,” you reply with a small smile. “Didn’t take you for the type.”
He shrugs, leaning back against the worn wooden bookshelf. “Guess we’ve both got sides we don’t know about each other.”
You glance back down at the book, the scent of aged paper filling your lungs. “What’s your favourite poem in here?”
Bob doesn’t answer right away. Instead, he watches you for a moment, then nods toward the book. “Page 43.”
You flip to it, eyes scanning the lines. It’s quiet. Soft. Something about ache and longing and finding peace in someone else’s silence.
“I found home not in walls or cities, but in the stillness between your breaths.”
“...And in the way your eyes forgive before your words do,” Bob finishes from just behind you, his voice soft, like he knows every line by heart.
You glance over your shoulder at him, lips curved into a small, half-smitten smile. “This is as good as the pizza,” you tease gently.
But your voice falters because your gaze gets caught.
The way the late afternoon sun filters through the window behind him, bathing him in light.  All you could focus on was the hue of his eyes and how the sun made the grey flecks in his eyes dance. This little moment, in the back of this little bookshop—hidden away behind leaning stacks and dusty, time-softened shelves—was captured in your eyes like a photograph. A photograph you wanted to live inside.
The memory fades out as you come to standing holding a bag of apples after you went to god knows where.
“Are you okay?” Bob asks.
He’s tilted his head, that ever-steady presence beside you, and looking at you with that familiar concerned expression, the one you’ve become so accustomed to.
“Yeah, I just…” You trail off, not really knowing how to explain yourself. These little flashes had been happening more often. They were sweet, almost unbearably sweet, always unexpected and more often than not about Bob. You were told there’d be side effects when you woke up, but never in a million years did you think they’d involve Bob-related daydreams. Or memories. Or whatever they were.
You shake it off with a faint smile, eyes drifting to the apples in your cart. “I think I might make something with these apples.”
Bob lights up instantly. “Can I help?”
His enthusiasm is boyish, almost endearing, like he’s been waiting for you to let him in, even if it’s something small.  And in a rare moment of softness, maybe without overthinking it this time, you say, “Yes.”
His grin grows wide, and you swear he stands a little straighter, like your answer meant more than you even realised.
You turn the cart down the next aisle, rattling off the other things you needed to buy, and he walks beside you, a little closer than before.
***
This was hell. Since the grocery store incident, you’ve been going crazy. Bob has been on your mind, and he refused to leave. He’s seemingly dead set on helping you out, whether it was waiting by the elevator until you came back from a mission and walking you to your room without saying a word, or showing up with coffee before you even realised you needed it — Bob was there. 
And since he was always there, the accidental touches and sudden flashes became more frequent. One minute he was handing you a water bottle when you stepped off the treadmill, and the next you were in a haze, frozen in a daydream that made Bob look like the perfect boyfriend.
It was messing with your head.
It was messing with everything.
The lines were blurring, and the more he smiled at you, the more you never wanted him to stop. 
But having a crush on Bob? 
That was impossible, it’s just your mind playing tricks on you. You had to do something, and what else could you do but distract yourself? 
Later that night, you walk out of your room… You’re all dressed up and feeling a little out of place, like you're playing a role you’re not quite used to yet.
The team stops you in your tracks — they’re all looking at you like you’ve grown a new head.
“Where are you going? Hot date?” Ava asks, raising an eyebrow, trying to keep a straight face but clearly intrigued.
“Yes, actually,” you reply, and you’re not expecting their reaction.
The entire team lets out a big sigh of relief.
They're barely able to contain their excitement. These little, painful moments of watching Bob chase after you were over.
Finally, you and Bob had—
“You look incredible,” Bob says, stepping into the living room in very comfy attire — sweater, sweatpants, and socks that didn’t match.
“Where are you headed?”
His hair was a little tousled, like he had just woken up from a nap, but his eyes were locked onto you like you were the only thing in the room. He was definitely awake now.
The whole team freezes. If you weren’t going on a date with Bob, then who?
“On a date.”
“Oh.”
“Some guy asked me out when I was grabbing coffee down the street, so I said yes,” you say, voice light, but there's a nervous edge you can’t quite shake.
“Oh.”
The look on Bob’s face is downright painful; he looks like a kicked puppy, stunned and quietly devastated.
His jaw tenses, his eyes flicker down for a moment, and then he forces a smile onto his face, one that looks practised, perfect for situations like this.
“I hope you have fun.”
He’s trying to sound genuine, but you don’t miss the crack beneath his words, the emotion he’s holding back, just barely. And even though you’re standing right there, it suddenly feels like you’re a million miles away.
“Thanks…” you say softly, with a tight, uncertain smile, making your way past him.
Your perfume trails behind you like a memory he’s not ready to let go of, lingering in the air even after you disappear into the elevator.
No one says anything, but Bob can feel their eyes on him.
He doesn’t need to look to know what they’re thinking: the tension, the pity.
Bob felt deeply; he always had. He was sensitive in ways he rarely let anyone see. This… this was just another step closer to breaking. Ever since he lost you, he had been pretending it hurt to be without your love. That he didn’t miss holding you in his arms, falling asleep with you next to him. He didn’t have enough time with you, not nearly enough. He was filled with regret for not realising how he felt about you sooner, for every moment wasted. He’d give anything for just one more minute with you, just for you to look at him like you loved him, just one more time.
He missed you so much it hurt in places he couldn’t name.
But now? Now, with you going out with someone else and he was more jealous than he knew what to do with. He couldn’t bear the thought of losing you for good.
His eyes glowed an ominous gold, the power starting to pulse and flow through his body like a rising tide he couldn’t hold back. His jaw clenches as his eyes drop to the floor, lights flickering at the edges of his vision, energy straining to stay in check.
Maybe you and he would never get back to the place where things felt simple.Maybe he had just been fooling himself this whole time. 
He was tired and angry, and confused… but mostly just sad.
Empty, even.
The glasses on the table start shaking ever so slightly, getting ready to break. He can feel control slipping through his fingers like sand, like it always does when emotions win.
He keeps his eyes downcast, fists clenched tight.
By this point, he’s not even pretending to listen; he can hear muffled voices around him, but nothing’s going through.
Just static. Just you, walking away.
Maybe you were done with him.
Maybe you’d never want him again—not the way he still wanted you.
Yelena steps in, calm and grounding, taking him gently by the arm to stop him from spiralling.
“It’s okay…” she says softly, steadying him with a hand on his shoulder.
He’s surrounded by people who care, and it helps.
He’s still shaking, still unravelling inside, but he’s able to get it under control just enough.
The lights above flicker— once, then twice — before it steadies and stops.
He breathes out, slow and bitter. He had to get used to this, didn’t he?
You weren’t in love with him anymore.
“I-I’m sorry… I should just go to bed…” he mutters, voice low and tired.
“You shouldn’t be alone right now,” Yelena says, voice firmer now, no room for argument.
“Let’s just put it out of your mind, hm? Together,” she suggests, gently guiding him toward the group.
Bob nods, silent, and sits down on the couch beside her.
“Who knows, maybe the date will be a disaster,” John offers with a smirk, trying to lighten the mood.
“Thanks, Walker,” Bob replies dryly, managing a ghost of a smile.
***
The date is lacklustre, to say the least. The guy, Brandon, had taken you to some fancy restaurant, and you’re sitting across from him, trying to give things a chance, but it wasn’t looking good. He orders for you without asking, rattling off a dish you’re not sure you’ll even like. And he spends more time talking about the wine list than asking you questions. 
This is why you didn’t go on dates.
Reaching out to take your hand, he says something, but you’re not listening. You become lost in another world again, your vision fading to white.
You’re not in a restaurant but standing beside Bob at the kitchen counter, the two of you surrounded by ingredients as you make milkshakes together. The soft hum of an old record plays in the background, and the air smells like vanilla and chocolate syrup.
“Are you sure we need this much caramel?” you ask, eyeing the generous scoop he’s just dropped into the blender.
Bob nods, he’s in the zone, completely focused, like a master at work. His expression is dead serious, like crafting the perfect milkshake is a mission worthy of national security clearance.
You smirk. “What about this?” you say, dipping a spoon into the ice cream and smearing a stripe across his cheek.
His head jerks toward you, eyes wide with mock outrage. “Oh, it’s like that?”
Before you can react, he lunges, scooping you up effortlessly and lifting you off the ground as you laugh, flailing gently in his arms.
“I surrender! I surrender!” you cry between breathless giggles.
“I’ll let you go… for now,” he says, setting you back down carefully, his hands lingering around your waist just a moment longer than necessary. It sends your heart into a full pitter-patter rhythm you swear he must hear.
He grins at you, eyes sparkling. “You ready for the best milkshake of your life?”
You nod eagerly.
Then he hits the blender.
And instantly regrets it.
A violent whir erupts, followed by a flurry of milk, caramel, and ice cream erupting like a dairy volcano, splattering both of you as you recoil in shock. You both fumble to turn it off, and the whirring stops. 
“You forgot the lid?” you ask, wide-eyed and dripping.
“I forgot the lid,” Bob admits, blinking through specks of ice cream, then bursting into laughter.
He grabs a towel, cupping your face and gently wiping you down.
“I’m sorry, I messed up.” He’s smiling, but it’s faint; you can tell it’s starting to weigh on him. “Don’t be sorry. It’ll make for a good story,” You say before swiping a bit of the milkshake off his nose and licking it off your finger. “Plus, this is delicious. It’s the perfect milkshake, I meant it!”
Bob chuckles, his nose crinkling a little as he tries to hide it behind his hand, but you see it. That unguarded laugh, the way his eyes soften, the corners of his mouth lifting just a bit too wide.
It’s one of the most beautiful things you’ve ever seen.
“Hello? Are you listening?” your date asks, sounding increasingly more frustrated.
“Yeah, I uh…I’m listening…” You lie, nodding just enough to seem polite.
The next few minutes are a blur—you see his mouth moving, but not a single word registers. All you can think about is Bob.
There’s a story being told, something painfully dull about his job overseas and him bragging about how many people report to him. But it all fades to white noise the second Bob slips into your thoughts. His laugh, the way he wrinkles his nose when he smiles, the milkshake incident… everything else pales in comparison.
“I’m so sorry, but I… I can’t do this,” you say suddenly, standing up and grabbing your coat.
Your date calls after you, confused and annoyed, but you don’t look back. You don’t owe him an explanation.
You just have to get home and figure out what all these strange and not-so-strange feelings about Bob really mean, or at least push them down so far you never have to deal with them. 
***
The elevator beeps, signalling you’ve arrived at the top floor, and you’ve never been more glad to be back at the tower.
As the doors slide open, you kick off your shoes and step into the dim hallway, moving carefully through the darkness. But before you can reach for the light switch, you spot Bob on the couch.
He’s curled up, completely at peace, eyes closed as if the weight of the day finally caught up with him. Peeking into the kitchen, you see a plate of your favourite food sitting untouched, cooling on the counter.
You wonder if he’s been waiting up for you.
You walk over quietly, heart softening at the sight. But then you notice him shivering slightly in his sleep. You can’t believe he fell asleep here, nowhere near as comfortable as his own bed must be. You don’t want him to wake up with a crick in his neck.
You can’t exactly lift him to bed, so instead, you rush to your room and grab your softest, warmest blanket. Returning, you gently lay it over him.
“Much better,” you whisper, feeling a little proud, like you’re doing something right for once.
Just as you’re about to head back to check if he’s fully covered, disaster strikes.
In his sleep, Bob shifts suddenly, pulling you down with him. You find yourself trapped between him and the blanket, heart pounding as you try not to wake him.
“Bob, hey, you have to…” You start softly, your voice barely above a whisper as you look up at him.
You’ve never seen him this close before, only in your daydreams. His eyelashes are longer than you ever imagined, casting delicate shadows on his cheeks. His lips look soft, inviting even in sleep. Each breath he takes now feels impossibly fascinating, like you’re discovering something new about him with every rise and fall of his chest.
“Fine… I’ll sneak out later,” you mumble to yourself, barely audible.
Your body, surprisingly, begins to relax. You stop fighting the closeness and instead lean into his touch, the warmth and quiet presence settling over you like a balm.
It feels right—comforting in a way you didn’t expect—but underneath it all, there’s that familiar, quiet ache. That sense of something unresolved, poking at the edges of your mind.
But that’s a mystery for another day.
And bit by bit, you give in to the comfort and end up falling asleep while breathing in the scent of his shampoo. 
You blink awake, the feeling of kisses peppering your skin holding all of your immediate attention.
It’s soft and light, gentle enough to make you giggle.
There’s warmth, tufts of messy brown hair tickling your collarbone, and the feeling of strong arms wrapped tightly around you…
Realising those arms belong to a certain Bob Reynolds — not just any Bob, a shirtless Bob — your eyes widen as you shoot upright. “What are you…?” you start, glancing around in disbelief. You’re in a bed. His bed.
“What a hyperactive girlfriend I have,” he chuckles, easily laying you back down against the pillows with maddening tenderness.
Your brain can barely compute the fact that he said girlfriend. He smiles down at you like the sun just rose in your eyes, and you’re so easily disarmed, like you’ve been here a thousand times before.
“I don’t think you realise just how beautiful you are,” he coos, brushing his fingers softly across your bottom lip.
Those words…They feel like déjà vu.
They settle somewhere deep in your chest. Familiar. Comforting. Dangerous. It was so easy for him to say, and you didn’t know how to feel.
“Want me to help you relax?” He says, his voice suddenly like music to your ears.
You nod, your body moving on its own like you’ve been possessed, and he starts slowly slipping your clothes off, all the while looking at you like you’re a wonder of the world. His touch is light but teasing. Like he knows exactly how to leave you desperate, on the edge and needing more. 
He kisses his way around your body, treating it like a temple. Every inch of you is on fire with even the smallest of touches. 
His fingers curl in the strands of your hair, anchoring you to him as his lips press gently to your wrist, then trail upward with slow, deliberate care.
His legs are tangled with yours beneath the sheets, warm skin against skin, every brush of contact pulling you deeper into him.
Overtaken by the sensations, you find yourself pulling him in for a kiss you never wanted to end. His mouth meets yours like he’s been waiting for it, like he knows it — his tongue slipping past your lips like it’s second nature, like it’s always belonged there.
“Can I?” He asks, catching his breath, his fingers at the bottom of your shirt, so eager to just rip it off of you. “Yeah,” You reply breathlessly, needing his touch. 
He pulls back slightly, his fingers gently caressing your cheek, and before you know it, you’re naturally leaning into his touch, the warmth of his hand soothing you. There’s a sweet look in his eyes, full of tenderness, and somehow you feel like you can read his mind. An unspoken connection that almost scares you. He opens his mouth to speak, “I love—”
You wake up with a loud gasp. What in the ever living fuck was that? You were convinced that whatever it was couldn’t be real, but the alternative, that you were having sex dreams about Bob, wasn’t that much better. Morning has come, and you’re still in Bob’s arms (a fully clothed Bob thankfully) on the couch; he’s fast asleep. You scramble to get away from him before he wakes up; you don’t feel like explaining anything. But in your attempts, you unintentionally punch him in the stomach.  
“What the—?” Bob groans as he rolls on top of you. Being woken up with a punch couldn’t be pleasant. 
The two of you tumble off the couch in a mess of limbs, and he lands squarely on top of you.
The blanket twists around you both, tangling you in a heap on the floor.
Feeling his body pressed against yours sends your heart into a frenzy. His hands are on either side of you, caging you in as he hovers above, clearly trying not to crush you.
“I’m so sorry, how did we even…?” he stammers, brain still trying to wake up. 
“I–I came home last night and saw you on the couch. You trapped me and I just wanted to give you a blanket and—and…” You stutter, tripping over the words like they’ll somehow save you from the burning embarrassment.
“I’m so sorry,” Bob blurts out again, his cheeks flushed and his voice cracking slightly.
It seems the embarrassment wasn’t one-sided; he’s just as flustered, maybe more.
And yet, neither of you is making a move to get up.
Sure, you were mortified beyond belief, but being this close to Bob reminded you of your dream. His warmth came off him in waves, making you feel comfortable despite your racing heart. The soft, stormy blue of his eyes looked down at you with something that made your chest ache.
It felt too good.
You wanted to give in, to dive into this feeling even though you knew you shouldn’t, because if you did, there might be no going back.
Your eyes snap up just in time to see Ava standing a few feet away, one brow raised and a sly smile tugging at her lips.
“I didn’t want to interrupt.”
***
You were avoiding him again. It had been three days, and you hadn’t eaten a single one of his pancakes, and you only responded to him with short one-word answers where possible.
Bob knew it wasn’t because of the date. He’d overheard you complaining to Yelena about it in the training room. 
So it was him.
He doesn’t know what he did.
And nothing he tries seems to get through, it’s like the walls he’d started to gently tear down were rebuilt overnight… only now, they had defence systems he couldn’t even begin to navigate.
He’s alone in the Tower now. The silence presses in. And it’s on his mind. Your diary.
He knows that the memory-wiped version of you once told him he could read it. But it still feels iffy. Like he’s crossing a line. Still… it feels like he’s out of options.
You won’t talk to him anymore. You barely look at him. And the ache of not knowing why is driving him insane.
So he finds himself at your door.
The rest of the team is out on a mission, so it’s all quiet, just the sound of his own beating heart ringing in his ears. 
Opening the door quietly, he steps inside.
It smells like you. Feels like you.
He walks over to the drawer where you once said you kept it, hesitates for just a second… and takes it quickly. 
His chest tightened with frustration as he flipped through the pages of your diary, still unsure if he even should be reading it. But maybe it held something that could explain everything. Maybe it held what your issue was with him and why you were always avoiding him like the plague.
“Bob is avoiding me in the kitchen again. I don’t get why it’s so easy for everyone else but not me… I want to talk to him, but trying too hard is never safe. Why get attached?” he reads aloud softly, the words catching in his throat.
He swallows hard, guilt curling in his stomach. That wasn’t how it was supposed to feel for you. He thought he was giving you space. He thought maybe you needed it. That his presence might be too much.
Bob flips through more pages, the paper whispering as he searches for clarity, for a lifeline, until his eyes land on another entry.
“I can’t be around Bob… We’re too similar. If anyone could see through me, it’d be him. That’s why I avoid him specifically. If he saw me then and I mean really saw me, I don’t know what I’d do.”
He flicks to the next page, and your voice echoes softly in his mind.
“He’s gentle and complex, and sometimes he looks like he’s carrying the weight of the world alone. I just can’t seem to get through. I catch myself staring when he doesn’t notice, and wonder if I’ll ever be able to connect to him. It’s useless anyway, but I can’t help but wonder.”
And then the line that crushes him:
“Everyone leaves, so why give them the opportunity?”
The air feels heavier now.
It hits him, this wasn’t about him being cold or distant. This was you trying to protect yourself. You were trying not to hope, because hoping meant giving someone the power to hurt you. And all this time, he’d been holding back, afraid of messing it up, of overwhelming you… never realising you already cared. Deeply but quietly. 
He shuts the diary slowly, holding it to his chest for a moment like maybe it could absorb some of the emotion threatening to spill out of him.
And now he knows.
Now he understands why you flinched at closeness, why you left before anyone could ask you to stay.
He just had to show you that he’s not going anywhere.
***
Bob couldn’t push — he didn’t want to come on too strong.
He just wanted to spend time with you, to get you to let him in again, even if it was just in small, quiet moments.
Bob pauses in the doorway and sees you sitting in the lounge, your feet curled under you and your attention half-lost in a book. “I don’t mean to bother you, but can you help me with something?” he asks, voice hopeful. 
“Me?” You blink up at him, startled. “I’m sure Yelena could help you instead,” you immediately deflect, the words coming out sharper than you intended. He stiffens slightly, withdrawing into himself almost instantly.
“Oh. Yeah, yeah, that’s okay. Forget I asked,” he mumbles with a sad smile that barely reaches his eyes. He turns, slinking away like he’s used to retreating when he feels unwelcome.
But the moment he’s out of sight, guilt claws its way up your throat. You didn’t mean to make him feel small or dismissed. That wasn’t fair. You slam your book shut and jump up from the couch.
“Wait… I’ll help you,” you call out, your voice apologetic.
He stops in his tracks and turns back to you, surprised. “Really?”
You nod, walking up to him. “Yeah. Sorry… I didn’t mean to sound so cold. What do you need?”
“I know this is weird, but could you help me brush my hair?” He asks quietly, his voice barely above a whisper, before he quickly backs up, almost tripping over his own feet. “Actually, you don’t have to. It’s—”
“I’ll do it.”
Next thing you know, he’s sitting on the floor between your legs and you’re on the couch, brushing his hair gently with a hairbrush, with the TV on. 
“Your hair is really soft,” you murmur absentmindedly, almost as if forgetting who you were talking to.
“You think so?” he replies, tilting his head slightly back to look up at you.
You smile faintly, sorting through any small tangles with your fingers. “Yeah, it’s nice.”
“Oh shit, does that tingle?” you ask suddenly, catching the way he shivered when you touched a certain spot behind his ear.
“Yeah,” he says with a sheepish chuckle, “but it’s not a bad tingle.”
For once, not overthinking it too much, you just sit there, both of you watching TV, catching up on the episode of your favourite show that you’d missed.
“Remind me what’s happening again?” Bob asks, brow furrowing as he points at the screen.
“So basically, earlier on in the season, the girl found out that her real father isn’t the janitor, but actually—”
“The guy who kidnapped her dog,” he interrupts, already confused.
“No, no, sweet innocent Bob. That’s his evil twin,” you say, completely dead serious, grinning as you catch his wide-eyed reaction.
He smiles up at you, charmed by how engrossed you are in this ridiculous show. It was a small thing, but a glimpse into what could be, if you just let go. You were like the sun, and he was content just basking under your light for as long as he could.
“What? Is there something on my face?” you ask, suddenly self-conscious under his gaze.
“No, I, um…” He hesitates, eyes dipping away before flicking back up to you. 
“I’m talking too much, aren’t I?” you mumble, looking even more sheepish as you fidget with the corner of your sleeve.
“No, no… I could listen to you talk for hours,” Bob replies genuinely, with a soft smile. It makes your heart stutter, your breath catch. No words can form; you’re completely lost in him. He clears his throat, feeling his cheeks starting to heat up. 
“Who’s in the love triangle again?” he asks suddenly, tilting his head, saving you from gawking at him like an idiot.
You perk up immediately with a gleam in your eye, ready to unload a full essay’s worth of information. “It’s actually a love pentagon…”
And just like that, you’re talking and laughing and massaging his scalp as you comb through his hair, both of you caught in a rhythm that felt unexpectedly natural. Maybe actually talking to Bob wasn’t so bad.
***
The next day, you traipse back into your room after a gruelling mission. Getting back into the swing of things is harder than it looks, especially with the exhaustion weighing on your shoulders and flashes of Bob being unexpectedly cute popping into your head every time you try to focus on fighting. Not to mention, you actually enjoyed brushing Bob’s hair, feeling his hair beneath your fingertips, watching him react when you’d graze a sensitive spot. This was insanity, and you needed to document it. 
Looking around the dim room, your eyes settle on your dresser. You move over and reach for your diary, something you haven’t written in for far too long.
You yank open your drawer, grabbing your diary with the full intent to emotionally unload every irrational (but valid) feeling bubbling in your chest.
But you notice your diary is sitting on a stack of paper. You take them out and freeze them. 
Pictures.
Your brows knit as you start looking through them. 
They’re all of Bob.
Photo after photo, in different lighting, from different angles, in different places. Him laughing, him holding coffee, him at the bookstore you dreamt of. One of him eating a sandwich with ridiculous focus. In every single one, he looks… happy. Radiant, even. Just Bob, but lighter.
You stare at them, a hollow kind of confusion forming in your chest. You don’t remember taking these. You don’t remember any of this.
Which only means one thing… these were from the weeks you lost your memory.
You rack your brain for a possible explanation. Were you stalking him? 
But then something shifts. You look closer. The angles aren’t distant or hidden. They're up close. Comfortable. Personal.
These were moments. You flip to the next photo, Bob looking right at the camera, smiling, soft and warm like whoever was behind it was someone he cared about. Like he was on a date.
And then more photos, but they were of you.
Walking through New York, holding an ice cream, grinning ear to ear. At a crosswalk, arms thrown out like you were catching the wind. Hair wild. Laughing like you hadn’t felt a single burden in your life.
You hadn’t smiled like that in so long. You were practically glowing. Something inside you cracks wide open. What the hell happened in those missing weeks? And why does it feel like…you were happy?
Like really happy.
With him.
You spring up, heart pounding, knowing you need to get to the bottom of this. Grabbing the pictures, you dash over to his room. Your hand hovers over the door, ready to knock, but then you freeze. What would you even say? What if the answer isn’t what you want to hear? What if it changes everything?
The doubt claws at you, but the questions won’t let you turn away.
But before you could think of what to say, Bob called your name. You turn your head to the side, he’s on his way back to his room. He notices the expression on your face and knows it’s something serious. 
“I… we need to talk,” you say, your voice shaky but determined.
Bob nods silently and walks over, letting you into his room. The moment you enter, you’re hit with a wave of familiarity, like you’ve been here before, like this conversation has already started somewhere deep in your memory.
You take a deep breath and sit down next to each other on the bed.
“I know why you’ve been really friendly recently. In the weeks I lost my memory…” You begin, watching his expression closely.
Bob’s eyes soften, like you’ve finally understood something important. “We became friends, didn’t we?”
He pauses, looking a little sad at the word “friends,” but when you pull out the pictures, his face changes.
“I… I remember,” he says quietly. “But these pictures… I’ve never actually seen them before. I only remember you taking them.”
His mind drifts back, replaying memories of the two of you inseparable, back when love was the only thing on both of your minds.
“It’s been a long time since I’ve looked happy like that,” you admit, flicking through the photos. You notice a flicker of quiet sadness cross his face as he looks at them. He must miss who you were, the version of you that these pictures captured.
“If you’re willing, I’d like to try again. Get to a place where things aren’t so uncomfortable. If you were able to do it with me then, maybe you could do it with me now.”
Bob recognised this was a huge step forward. He knew it wasn’t easy, maybe it never would be, but being your friend sounded like a gift he didn’t want to take for granted.
“I’d love to try,” he said softly, hope shining in his eyes.
***
Being friends is hard. It takes effort, and you don’t quite know what you’re doing, so it’s hard, but good.
It feels good to connect, even if it still scares you to try. There’s a quiet exhilaration in the small moments, like watching a movie together or just sitting side by side without any pressure.
You even made him an omelette the other day, and you swear he almost cried.
“It can’t be that good,” You protested.
“No, no, it really is,” he said, the quiet part he kept in his head being, “Because you made it for me.”
Now, you’re sitting with him again, the comfortable silence wrapping around you. He’s quiet, and you can tell he’s thinking about telling you something. Since this whole “friend thing” began a few days ago, you’ve become something of an expert in Bob’s body language—the way he fiddles with his hands when he’s deep in thought, how his eyes light up when he’s interested in something.
“What do you want to ask?” you interrupt his mid-thought.
He looks at you with a meek smile. “I was just wondering if you wanted to go get coffee? Kinda craving one.”
You pause for a moment, then reply, “Sure, that sounds… fun,” a shy smile working its way onto your face.
You both step out of the tower and onto the street. It’s a grey, overcast day, clouds hanging low, but after everything, just walking beside him, step in step, feels like a kind of quiet relief.
You don’t talk much, but the silence isn’t uncomfortable. If anything, it’s peaceful. Bob seems more at ease now, no longer walking on eggshells around you. It’s subtle, but it means everything.
You watch his back as he walks ahead, the strands of his hair being tousled gently by the wind. Your footsteps slow, then stop entirely as the now-familiar sensation creeps in like a thread tugging at your consciousness. Just like that, you’re being pulled away again. 
You open your eyes to the soft glow of fairy lights and the sight of Bob with his back to you, working meticulously to finish what looks like a little surprise just for you. There are cushions, blankets, and pillows all arranged into a comfy blanket fort in the living room. He’s focused, tongue tucked slightly into his cheek as he ties the last bit of fabric to the back of a chair, glancing over his shoulder.
“Are your eyes still closed?” he calls out.
You quickly squeeze them shut again. “Yeah, still shut.”
You can’t help the smile tugging at your lips as you listen, hear the faint shuffle of him putting on music, the soft groan when he stubs his toe against the coffee table, and the patter of his footsteps approaching until he’s standing right in front of you. You can’t see him, but his presence is warm and unmistakable.
“Take my hand,” he says gently.
“I can’t see your hand,” you reply, trying not to laugh.
“Oh. Right.” You hear the smile in his voice as he reaches for you, carefully guiding your hand into his. His fingers wrap around yours, steady and warm, and he helps you to your feet.
“Eyes still closed?” he checks.
You hum in agreement.
“Open them.”
You blink your eyes open and are immediately greeted by the sight of the blanket fort in all its cosy glory. It’s strung with twinkle lights and layered with soft throws and fluffy pillows. Inside, there are even two mugs of something warm and a plate of pancakes waiting.
“After you,” he says with a quiet pride.
You both crawl inside, and it's everything. A little safe haven carved out of nothing. You settle down next to him, your shoulders brushing.
“This is perfect,” you whisper.
“I’m glad you like it,” he replies, sheepish but glowing with quiet pride. He takes a breath, hesitating just a beat. “I know it must be scary… not knowing who you are. I just wanted to do something to make it a little easier. Is that dumb? It’s dumb, right?”
You reach for his hand, laying yours over his, gently tracing your fingers across his knuckles. “It’s not dumb at all.”
Your eyes meet, and something clicks into place. It’s like exhaling after holding your breath all day, like sinking into a familiar rhythm, like… coming home.
Not to a place, but to a person.
You’re barely out of your daze when you hear the sudden ringing of a bike bell heading straight for you. 
Before you can react, Bob’s arm wraps around you, pulling you out of the way just in time as a bike messenger speeds past. You stumble slightly, but he steadies you, and suddenly your head is resting against his chest.
His shirt is soft beneath your cheek, and the scent of him fills your senses—it’s faint, clean… something warm like vanilla and cinnamon. 
You pull back slightly, just enough to look up at him, and for a moment, you're looking at him the way you do in your daydreams. The world slows. His hand lingers on your arm, his touch reassuring, grounding.
You feel safe. And maybe, for the first time in a long while… hopeful.
“Thank you… You saved me,” you say, the words almost teasing but laced with something softer underneath.
“I’ll always be around to protect you from bikes,” Bob replies gently, smiling like he knows something you don’t. 
You nod, and just as he’s about to start walking again, you reach out and take his hand. You don’t know why you did it. It’s like your body moves on its own. His fingers twitch slightly in surprise, and when he looks over at you, his eyes are wide.
“Just in case,” you murmur, trying to explain it away. 
“Just in case,” he echoes, quieter this time, like the words mean something more to him than he lets on. He smiles, that soft, rare kind of smile he saves for you, and keeps walking, your hands still clasped.
Walking inside, you’re immediately hit with the comforting smell of fresh pastries and ground coffee beans. It’s like a hug for your nose.
You step up to the counter and order your go-to, adding with a smile, “Oh, and can I get extra whipped cream?”
The barista nods. “Yeah, it’s just two dollars more.”
You nod again, already fishing out your card and tapping it without hesitation. Bob steps up behind you in line, casually scanning the pastry case while you wait for your receipt.
Then you see it.
The barista perks way up when it’s Bob’s turn, her voice turning a shade sweeter. “And what can I get started for you?”
He rattles off his order, and before he can finish, she cuts in, eyes shining. “And do you want that with extra whipped cream?”
Bob blinks, caught off guard. “Uh…”
“On the house,” she adds, flashing him a smile that practically sparkles.
“Sure, why not?” he says, still half-confused, then turns to you with a helpless shrug and a smile. You narrow your eyes, watching the barista giggle to herself as she starts prepping the drink. She was so obvious.
“Thanks,” He says before going over to meet you at the side where you’re loading your coffee a little aggressively, your mind still occupied by Bob and that girl.
“Almost ready to go?” Bob asks, ever casual, sipping from his coffee like nothing in the world could possibly be complicated.
But your eyes land on his cup, and immediately, something’s off. There’s too much black ink scrawled across it for it to just be his name. It’s only three letters for goodness' sake.
You lean in slightly, narrowing your eyes.
Numbers.
Your stomach twists. Your jaw tightens. And before you can think twice, the words are out of your mouth.
“She gave you her number,” you say flatly, ignoring his question entirely.
He glances at the cup, like he hadn't even noticed. “Oh… huh.”
That’s it? Huh?
The annoyance rolls off you in waves, and you hate that you can’t fully explain why. You cross your arms, shifting your weight, suddenly far too aware of how tight your chest feels.
You catch yourself and try to shake it off, but there’s a weight pressing down on your ribcage, a sharp little ache like something is stepping right on your heart.
Why did you feel so... jealous?
Bob wasn’t yours, there was no reason to be mad at a girl flirting with him, you should be happy for him, even. 
But all that was true, why did this feel like a sucker punch you weren’t prepared for?
Bob’s still looking at the cup, then back at you, head tilted. “You okay?”
You force a smile that doesn’t quite reach your eyes. “Yeah. Totally. Let’s go.”
***
Since that day, something in you had shifted. You learned you may or may not have a jealous streak, and you had finally started to settle into being friends with Bob. It was nice, and makes you regret the time you spent avoiding him. 
And you had really started to realise just how much effort Bob had been putting into just being your friend, even when you were cold, unreceptive, and distant.
It wasn’t fair.
You wanted to make it up to him.
And what better way than with a milkshake?
You thought back to that daydream you had, or maybe it was a memory.
If the whole milkshake-making thing was real, then he should love this.
If it wasn’t… well, hopefully he still did.
Bob’s up early, being knocked out of sleep by the summer heat. He gets up to get water and hears something unexpected. The sound of a blender whirring at 6 am.
He walks into the kitchen, rubbing the back of his neck, only to see you standing at the counter, fiddling with the blender.
There are a few unsuccessful batches of whatever you’re making scattered around, splashes on the counter, a sticky trail leading to the sink. You bite your lip in concentration, brow furrowed, completely absorbed in the task. He thinks you look so cute like this.
Bob says your name, and you freeze like a deer caught in headlights, like you’ve been caught red-handed.
“Bob. You’re here.” You say it like it’s a surprise, like you weren’t hoping he'd find you.
He furrows his brow slightly, a curious smile tugging at the corners of his lips. “What are you doing?”
There’s no point in hiding it now. You sigh and admit, “Making you a milkshake?”
He blinks, surprised, and then he’s smiling. Really smiling.
It’s that slow-building kind of joy that lights up his whole face, the kind that makes your heart clench.
“For me?” he asks, almost in disbelief.
You nod, a little sheepish. “I wanted to do a trial run this morning. Just in case it sucks.”
Bob chuckles, stepping closer and leaning on the kitchen island, his eyes warm and fixed on you.
“I doubt it would,” he says softly, and he means it.
“Can I have a taste?”
You answer, “Knock yourself out,” feigning an air of nonchalance when in reality you’re nervous as hell.
You didn’t want him to hate it, especially after you’d loved and eaten your weight in pancakes these past few weeks.
You just wanted to do something nice, to let him know how much you appreciate him.
He grabs a spoonful and lets it dance on his taste buds. At first, his eyebrows furrowed. That couldn’t be good, right?
Then he looks up at you, a slow smile spreading across his face. “How did you know I like salted caramel milkshakes?” he asks, genuinely surprised.
You hesitate, unsure how to explain.
“I…” you start, then take a deep breath. What were you supposed to say? 'I saw it in a daydream, which may actually be a memory, but I’m not sure?'
So instead you say, “Just a feeling.”
“It’s the perfect milkshake,” he says, eyes shining with genuine delight.
“Not quite,” you answer with a playful smile, crossing your arms.
He grins mischievously, taking a little scoop and smudging it gently on his cheek. “Now, it’s perfect.”
You laugh, reaching up to wipe it off, and for a moment, everything feels light and easy.
You spend the rest of the morning together, sharing the milkshake — one glass, two straws, since you’d only made enough for one.
Between sips and smiles, the distance between you shrinks, and for once, you don’t want to push anyone away. 
Later that night, you stand quietly by the window, staring out at the living room. Your eyes land on the now-empty space where the blanket fort from your daydreams had been, still vivid in your mind.
“You’re deep in thought,” Bucky’s voice cuts through the quiet, calm, but knowing, as he stands across from you.
“I’m deep in thought a lot these days,” you sigh, not bothering to mask the exhaustion in your voice.
You take a deep breath, eyes still fixed on the ghost of that memory. “I know you can’t tell me what happened in those weeks I lost… but ever since then, I’ve been seeing things. Glimpses. I don’t know what’s real and what’s not, but they all revolve around one thing.”
You don’t say it, but you don’t have to. The look Bucky gives you says it all—he knows you’re talking about Bob.
“How does it feel?” he asks gently.
“Hm?”
“The memories. How do they feel?”
You open your mouth, then close it again. How do you explain something like that? It’s more than just an emotion, it’s a moment. Like wrapping your hands around a mug of hot chocolate on a cold day or finding one last cookie you didn’t know you had.
“It feels… good,” you say at last. “It feels right.”
Bucky watches you for a moment, then leans forward slightly, thoughtful. “If it feels right, maybe your subconscious is trying to tell you something.”
You turn to him, your voice quieter now, more unsure. “Should I listen to it?”
Bucky offers the faintest smile, the kind of smile born from experience, from hard lessons learned. “The head lies a lot more than the heart does. If something in you feels at peace when you’re around him… maybe that’s your answer.”
You nod in as you watch him walk away, before something occurs to you, “...wait, I didn’t say anything about any him.”
“You’re not too hard to read, especially when it comes to him.”
You lay your head against the cool glass, your skin too hot, your heart twisting in ways you couldn’t explain. Embarrassment flooded through you. Whatever this was, this feeling that had been unravelling you from the inside out, it was getting harder to ignore.
But then there was the smile tugging at your lips, soft and involuntary. And that strange flutter in your chest.
You knew.
Even if you weren’t ready to say it out loud, you knew.
The floor creaked softly behind you, and you lifted your head to see Bob standing there, that same poetry book you’d seen him with before held carefully in his hands.
“Bob,” you breathe.
Just seeing him makes your heart skip. Was that normal? Or were you sick? Emotionally compromised? Both?
“That book…” You murmur. “Will you read me something from it?”
He’s a little surprised, but he nods. “Of course.”
And then, before you can second-guess yourself, you’re reaching for his hand, guiding him to the couch with you. It’s easy in a way it never used to be, natural like you’ve done it a hundred times before.
You sit next to him, close enough to feel the warmth radiating from his side. He flips through the pages, reading from one page and then another.
“I have no idea what this means,” he admits, pointing to one of the lines with a soft chuckle, “but I like the way it sounds.”
“I like the way it sounds too.”
But it wasn’t just the poem. You liked the sound of his voice. It was smooth and warm, like chocolate on your tongue or honey in tea. Every word he spoke wrapped around you like a spell, one you weren’t sure you ever wanted to break free from.
You slowly, carefully, lean your head onto his shoulder.
“Is this okay?” you ask, voice small and scared of his rejection. 
He freezes for a moment, then nods. His face doesn’t flush, but his ears are bright red. The reaction makes your chest ache most softly.
There’s a quiet, almost shy joy in his expression at how close you are. He clears his throat, trying to regain composure, and begins to read again. Each line, an ode to you. 
***
There’s a soft knock on your door. You get up, waddle out of bed, and suddenly face to face with Bob.
“I missed you,” He breathes out, you don’t even get to respond before he’s lifting you off the floor and carrying you back to your bed.
The entire time, he’s whispering sweet nothings into your ear between his kisses—soft murmurs like, “All mine…” and “Need you so bad.”
His breath warm against your skin, his voice low and urgent, making your heart race.
Then, with a playful grin, he gently tosses you back onto your bed, his eyes locked onto yours.
“Can’t spend another second away from you,” He whines, as he places himself between your thighs.
“So…” You’re forced to pause, distracted by his lips and teeth, marking your neck in desperation, “Insatiable.”
He gets down on his knees suddenly and pulls you to the edge of the bed. Immediately, he pulls off your shorts, or rather tears them off, his strength getting the better of him. But he leaves your panties on, happy to see that you’re already soaking through the fabric. 
“I liked those shorts.”
“Trust me, you’ll like what I do to you a lot more.”
He lays a kiss against your clothed pussy, making you squirm. “Don’t tease me,” You beg, and all he does is smile up at you, as if he’s innocent. He rubs your clit through your panties, working you up then moving away, over and over again. 
“If you want me to do something,” He drawls as he leans in, his breath now against your ear, “You’re gonna have to scream my name.”
“Bob!”
You jolt upright in bed, heart racing, breath uneven. You’re still half-lost in the throes of the dream. You can almost imagine Bob’s lips on your legs, travelling upwards until—No. You wouldn’t finish that thought. 
Thankfully, you're in your own bed. Not curled up against Bob. Not still on the couch where you fell asleep.
You press a hand to your chest, trying to steady the frantic rhythm of your heart. It’s hammering, wild and traitorous.
Okay. Deep breath.
The sun's already crept past the blinds, washing your room in soft morning light. Somewhere down the hall, Bob is probably making breakfast. Casual. Unbothered. Probably completely unaware that you just had a dream that could get you both kicked out of the Avengers’ group chat.
You groan and flop back onto your pillows, covering your face with both hands.
You just hoped he carried you to bed before the dream started. Because if he did it afterwards and there was any talking in your sleep involved, then you might actually have to fake your own death and move to a remote cave in the mountains. 
You try to reason with yourself.
Telling yourself that it was just a dream. Probably because his voice was the last thing you heard before drifting off. That’s all. A subconscious reaction. Harmless. Totally harmless.
After a shower, you toddle out of your room, hair still damp and wearing the comfiest clothes you own. You peek out from behind a wall—and lo and behold, there he is.
Bob. In the kitchen. Making something that definitely smells like your favourite breakfast.
You pause, eyes locked on him.
His back is to you, sleeves pushed up, hands moving with an ease and purpose that feels borderline unfair. You watch the muscles in his forearms flex slightly as he flips something in the pan, and your brain betrays you. You can only imagine how those hands would look even better wrapped around your thighs—
No. No. Nope.
You slap that thought out of your head like it's a mosquito. Not going there again. Not right now. You keep watching, borderline creeping, when suddenly a voice nearly kills you on the spot.
“Spying?”
John.
You jump about a foot in the air, clutching your chest like an old Victorian lady. “For fuck’s sake, Walker!”
John leans against the wall next to you, smug and sipping coffee like he didn’t just give you a heart attack. You swear, if you weren’t so mortified, you might’ve actually punched him.
“No. Just… observing,” you breathe out, barely.
“You were definitely spying,” he says, far too amused. “If you drooled any harder, there’d be a puddle at your feet.”
You glare at him, cheeks heating. “I wasn’t– shut up. I wasn’t drooling.”
He lifts an eyebrow and sips again, like he doesn’t believe you for a second. “Sure. Just saying... if you actually talked to him, it might be more effective than… whatever this is.”
You grumble something under your breath and peek back around the corner.
Bob is still there. Still cooking. Still completely unaware of the internal crisis he’s causing.
Maybe John had a point.
Unfortunately.
You could watch him all day—had been, actually. Bob’s presence drew your attention like gravity, and the longer you kept your feelings bottled up, the crazier you felt. 
The best way to go about it was the scariest. You had to confront him directly.
You bide your time, waiting until late evening, when most of the tower was quiet and the others were off doing their own thing. Your heart was thudding like it knew what you were about to do.
You found Bob alone in the common area, and you cornered him, explaining your plight to him.
“And basically, I’ve been having these daydreams and actual dreams, which I think are actually memories or something. So I have to ask, or rather confirm, during those weeks when I lost my memory…”
You gulp.
“We had sex, right?” You mumble, looking around the room.
Bob’s eyes widen. His mouth opens and closes once before he finally manages to speak. It feels like it takes forever.
“…No,” he says, gently. “We didn’t.”
Your stomach drops. “Oh. So that was just…?”
Your voice trails off, and all you want is for the Earth to open up and swallow you whole.
Someone should pack you in a crate, slap a “fragile” sticker on you, and ship you to a remote island. You’d just admitted to having sex dreams about the man to his face.
Bob shifts, suddenly flustered himself. “Wait, no—I mean—not that I wouldn’t have… I mean, we just didn’t want to rush anything, especially while you were still trying to figure things out. We were… really close. I cared a lot. I still do.”
The twinkle in his eyes when he saw the photos, the way he pulled you out of the way when the bike almost hit you, him smiling at you when you brushed his hair… It all clicked.
“We were…” You clear your throat, willing yourself to speak clearly, “In love?”
“We were in love,” Bob admits softly. 
“That’s why the daydreams I’ve been getting… they’ve felt so real. Because they were real, once. They’re pieces of us,” you say softly, your voice trembling with the weight of the truth.
Then, gathering every bit of courage you have, you ask the question that’s been haunting your mind.
“Do you still love me?”
This felt like the edge of something, like one wrong word would break your heart forever. You told yourself you’d accept it if he didn’t. If he only loved the girl who took pictures of him eating sandwiches, and made milkshakes with him and not the girl who had shut him out and avoided him for weeks. But three words from him shut your thoughts up. 
“I never stopped.”
It all goes quiet. He said exactly what you wanted to hear, what you needed to hear. 
You collect your thoughts, standing in front of a man who loved you so deeply.
You’re scared, giving your heart away is no easy thing.
But looking at him, seeing the warmth and honesty in his eyes, you know it’ll be safe with him.
“I think…” You pause, shaking your head slowly as if the words might fall into place with movement alone. “No, I—I know that I love you now.”
His eyes soften, but you can still see the flicker of uncertainty dancing just behind them.
Then, quietly, he asks the question that matters most:
“How do you know that you love me?”
You know what he’s really asking.
You step closer so he sees it in your eyes as well as your words.
“When I tried to imagine a life without you, I felt sad. Actually, that’s not quite right. I felt… empty. Like if you left, you’d be taking a piece of me with you.”
You reach for his hand, lacing your fingers together.
“When I’m with you, it’s like a world that I never used to understand finally makes sense. Like everything’s… aligned. But when you’re not around?” You breathe in shakily, then smile softly.
“I still imagine what it’d be like if you were.”
You pause, smiling just thinking about it.
“I just… I love you with everything I have, and I don’t know if I’ll ever remember falling in love with you the first time, but I’ll never forget falling in love with you this time.”
As soon as you say that, Bob wraps his arms around your waist, pulling you close, and kisses you. A kiss full of all the weeks he’s waited for this moment. To hold you, to know that you love him as much as he loves you.
He kisses you again and again, whispering, “I love you,” with every touch of his lips, each word a promise.
***
For the next week, life is all pancakes and stolen kisses. You were buzzing with joy, glowing in a way that made it impossible to hide how happy you were. The team was happy, too, that you and Bob were finally happy. Even if you were nauseatingly cute with the forehead kisses and shared hoodies.
He read to you most nights until you fell asleep, sometimes with the book still in his hand. You’d basically made Bob’s bed your own by now—memorising the dips in his mattress, the way he mumbled in his sleep, the exact rhythm of his heartbeat.
The kitchen had become one of your favourite make-out spots. Something about the early mornings, soft lighting, and the smell of coffee just made it impossible to keep your hands off each other. One day, all he was doing was trying to get his coffee, and next thing you knew, you were grabbing him by the shirt and kissing him like it was the last time.
“Can’t keep my hands off you,” you gasped, breathless between kisses.
Bob turned slightly red, eyes twinkling. “I can tell.”
Then he was lifting you onto the kitchen island with zero hesitation, his hands running over your hips, mouth finding your neck like he’d done it a thousand times before. You were both so wrapped up in each other that you didn’t hear the door until—
“Ahem.”
You froze.
Alexei stood there, arms crossed, and a smirk tugging at the corners of his mouth. “Don’t let me stop you,” he said dryly. “It’s… cute.”
You buried your face in Bob’s chest, mortified. “I’m going to die of embarrassment.”
Bob just chuckled, one arm wrapped protectively around you. “Not before I do.”
That night, as you fall asleep next to Bob, listening to the steady rhythm of his heartbeat, your head resting on his chest and his fingers lazily drawing patterns along your back… all you could think was: How could this possibly go wrong?
It felt too good, too right, like everything in your life had finally clicked into place. The way he held you, how safe and warm it felt to just exist beside him. The world outside could fall apart, and you’d still feel like you were exactly where you were meant to be.
But somewhere deep in your chest was the smallest flicker of fear. Not loud enough to ruin the moment, but enough to make your fingers clutch his shirt just a little tighter in your sleep.
Because sometimes, when something feels this perfect… it almost doesn’t feel real.
You sit up in your bed, disoriented… but something feels off. It’s cold. Bob’s not there.
“Bob?” you call out softly, but there’s no answer. Just silence.
You scramble off the bed and start searching the Tower, calling out his name as you move through hallway after hallway. But everything feels… off. No trace of leftovers on the kitchen counter, or jackets draped over the back of the couch. No clutter, no noise. It’s been completely scrubbed clean.
Like the team was gone.
Or like they were never even here at all.
Your heart thuds in your chest as you open Bob’s door and finally come face to face with him.
“Bob, where did you—?” You stop dead. Everything in his room is packed up. Boxes. Bags. Drawers empty.
“You’re leaving?” You barely even get out the words.
“No… you’re leaving me,” You say, your voice shaking but resolute. “Please say something. What did I do wrong?”
He doesn’t speak. He looks distant, vacant, like he’s looking right through you.
“Bob, say something!” You cry out.
You step forward, trying to reach out for him… but suddenly, it’s like he’s stretching farther and farther away. Each step feels heavier, your legs like lead, like you’re being dragged through thick marsh. No matter how hard you try, you just can’t get to him. 
“Please just…” your voice cracks, eyes burning, “Please wait for me.”
But he doesn’t turn. He keeps packing, his back to you like a wall.
“Bob, please!” You plead again, desperation flooding your voice. “Please tell me what I did, tell me how I can fix this. Just don’t…”
You fall to your knees, the weight of it all crashing down on you like a tidal wave. Your voice is barely a whisper now.
“Don’t leave.”
But it’s no use. 
It’s like you don’t even exist to him anymore.
When you wake up, it’s still dark out, just the blue-grey blur of dawn slipping through the blinds. Bob is beside you, still asleep, his arm loosely draped across your waist like he’s afraid you’ll disappear if he lets go.
You know—you know he loves you. But you’re scared. That at the drop of a dime, he’s going to leave, and you won’t see it coming. It won’t be loud or dramatic. It’ll be soft. Quiet. The way people drift away when you’re not looking. Every time you look at him, it’s like you’re already preparing to lose him.
The walls went straight up, and Bob noticed immediately. From waking up alone to not seeing you all day. You weren’t gone, but you barely looked at him. Every glance was half-hearted, every smile short-lived. You were slipping. He felt it.
He finds you in your room, sitting on the floor with an old shoebox of memories cracked open. You're looking over pictures of the two of you—early days, sunlight and laughter in your eyes. Your fingers linger on the edges like they burn.
When you see him enter, you pack them away fast, like he’s caught you doing something shameful.
“You’re avoiding me,” Bob says, standing in the doorway.
“I’m not. I’m just busy. Is it a crime to be busy?” you snap, sharper than you meant to. But it’s easier this way. Back to the same old routine of building distance, of pushing before you can be pulled. This felt easier. Safer. Who were you kidding?
Bob doesn’t flinch. Doesn’t step back. He walks in and sits down beside you, close but not crowding.
“I know why you’re pushing me away,” he says, voice low but steady. “I’m not going to leave you.”
You want to believe him. God, you do. But your chest tightens like it’s been waiting for the moment to crack.
“People always say that,” you whisper, not meeting his eyes. “Right before they do. And how do you even know that’s what I was thinking about?”
“I…read your diary—”
“You read my diary?” you in, your breath catching. That was a line—a clear invasion of privacy.
“I know I crossed a line,” he nods, guilt flickering across his face. “But you told me to. Before you lost your memories, you said it might help me understand you, and I feel like I do.”
You teeter on your heels, looking around the room like you might bolt at any second. Your heart is pounding too loudly to think clearly. Bob steps forward, into your space, grounding you.
“You’re not going to lose me,” he says, steady and soft. “I see you. And I love who I see.”
You shake your head, almost laughing, but a step away from crying at the same time.
“Bob, you don’t mean that. You can’t mean that,” you say, voice cracking under the weight of everything spilling out of you.
“I do,” he says firmly. “Every part of you. Every little quirk. I see it, and I love it.”
“You…” Your throat closes. “I’m broken, Bob. People always leave. My own mother left. You don’t understand—I'm a mess. I fall apart, I shut people out, I push them away. It’s why no one sticks around. I’m a complete wreck.”
You suck in a breath, trying to swallow your panic. “Let’s just… cut this off before you see the worst parts of me and realise I’m not worth it.”
He gently turns your face back toward his, fingers warm and sure under your chin. His eyes, those kind ones, are locked on you.
“Loving someone, truly loving someone, isn’t conditional,” he says quietly. “It’s not about perfection. It’s messy and complicated and terrifying sometimes. But when I fell in love with you the first time, I felt something I’ve never felt before. It’s like my whole world opened up,”
He pauses, swallowing hard.
“And then… I got to fall in love with you all over again. It’s been beautiful, every single moment spent with you has been a gift.”
He cups your face in his hands now, and you relax into his touch.
“I’m not going anywhere when things get tough. I won’t run when you break down, or when it gets ugly. I choose you. I love you. And nothing is going to change that.”
The dam breaks.
Tears spill down your face like a waterfall. All the things you’d held in for so long crash out of you like a wave you couldn’t hold back anymore.
“I… I love you too,” you choke out, voice trembling. The words taste like surrender and relief all at once.
He cradles you in his arms, holding you like he means it, like he’s anchoring you to something steady. Something real.
You bury your face in his chest, letting yourself be vulnerable for once, 
You’re safe.
No more pretending. No more running. For the first time in a long time, the future doesn’t feel like a ticking bomb. It feels like something you can face together.
And maybe that’s what being in love really is. Not the absence of fear, but choosing to stay in spite of it.
“Can we get ice cream or something?” You ask.
“Of course.”
***
Now that you were done dealing with your issues alone, both of you felt lighter… like breathing came easier. It’s like the weight of silence had lifted, and suddenly, you couldn’t be away from Bob—not for long. His presence had become your anchor, your gravity.
Your phone didn’t charge, but that’s irrelevant, not when you get to wake up next to Bob, his hair messy and arms around you like the night hadn’t ended.
You stubbed your toe on the edge of the nightstand, but that also doesn’t matter, because Bob loves you, and nothing can ruin your day.
You hear a commotion in the kitchen—raised voices, something clattering—but that shit doesn’t matter either. Not while you’re in love. Not while you're wrapped in this hazy, glowing calm that makes the world feel muted and far away.
You wander into the kitchen, still in a dream, still floating like you have wings... There’s an argument going on. John and Ava’s sharp voices are now muffled, like static through so you barely register it.
The argument only becomes real when you notice something flying toward your face.
A frying pan.
It soars across the room in an elegant, absurd arc—spinning once, twice—and hits you smack dab in the face.
You’re still happy though; you were thinking about Bob as you hit the ground. 
A while later, you wake up in the medbay, which you had become very accustomed to. But this time… this time it was different. It was like everything came rushing back in full colour, flooding your brain all at once.
You look at the empty chair beside your bed, and you remember exactly how Bob looked when you first woke up with amnesia. His messy hair was in front of his eyes as he slept. 
You remember trying to make him pancakes and failing miserably. You remember pretending to be a couple on the subway. You remember your first kiss. You remember everything. 
It’s like your heart snapped back into place.
You tumble out of bed, heart racing. You need to see him. Now.
“Should you be up already? And I’m so sorry about the frying pan—it was all Walker’s fault—” Ava stammers, rushing toward you.
“It’s okay, it happens,” you say, brushing it off with a dazed grin. “Where’s Bob?”
“In the kitchen?” she says, still concerned, watching you wobble toward the door like a drunk moth.
You run—well, hobble—off in search of your Bob, adrenaline and longing pulling you down the hall. Until you find him.
He’s in the kitchen, putting together snacks like a man on a mission. Quiet, focused, gentle.
“Bob!” you call, your voice cracking from emotion and recent concussion.
He looks up instantly, eyes widening in relief. “What are you doing out of bed—?”
You jump into his arms, surprising him — he catches you, confused by the sudden burst of excitement.
“Pancakes.”
“Oh. Do you want me to make some or—?”
“No, pancakes!” you exclaim, unable to contain your joy.
His eyes widen as the realisation hits him. “You remember?”
“Everything,” you say, pressing a soft kiss to his lips, stealing the breath from his lungs.
Your fingers tangle in his hair, and in that moment, you never want to let him go again.
“Really?” he asks, voice full of wonder.
“From our first pancake to our first kiss on the rooftop. I remember it all,” you whisper, your heart full. “You really didn’t give up on me.”
“And I never will,” Bob replies, pulling you back into a tight hug.
Your hearts beat in sync as you hold each other close, and in that moment, you both feel completely whole, finally, together.
“Remember when we said that we’d… y’know, when my memories came back?”
“Right now?” He blinks at you. 
“Now. Take me to your room, or we can do it right here, I don’t care.”
Bob blinked once—just once—before everything in his expression changed. His eyes darkened with intensity, lips twitching up into the beginnings of a grin. He wasn’t complaining one bit.
Bucky, however, was.
From somewhere behind you, Bucky let out a string of protests. “Guys, this is a shared space! Kitchen! Food prep happens here!”
“Fine, we’ll take it elsewhere for your sake.”
You jump and wrap your legs around his waist, arms around his neck, clinging to him like a koala. 
He catches you easily and carries you through the hallway, past the curious eyes of the rest of the team, who were all internally celebrating like their favourite slow-burn finally paid off.
He doesn’t even flinch, doesn’t stop, just keeps walking with a purpose only you can give him.
He pushes open his door, kicking it shut behind him, and lays you down gently on the bed like you’re something rare and delicate. He hovers above you, eyes searching yours with a tenderness that makes your chest ache.
“Are you sure?” he asks, his voice low and steady, though you can see the hope flickering behind his gaze.
You cup his cheek with your hand, thumb brushing lightly under his eye. “I’ve never been more sure of anything.”
He kisses you, slowly at first, like he’s afraid to break you, but then with more certainty. His hands slide to your waist, pulling you closer, grounding you even as the world starts to tilt.
Except it’s not the world that’s tilting.
It’s you.
You lift your head just enough to meet his eyes, your fingers curled lightly at the nape of his neck. “Is this going to happen every time we kiss?”
He raises an eyebrow, his smile smug but affectionate. “Is that a problem?”
You laugh, a real laugh that bubbles up from somewhere deep in your chest, and press your face into his neck, nose brushing the warm skin there. “No… but it does give me a few ideas.”
Masterlist
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foulwitchknight · 22 days ago
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O! Steve catches A! Eddie using binoculars to spy on him while he changes. He’s actually flattered and plans on using it as an excuse to tease/flirt with Eddie next time he sees him. Only for Eddie to show up at his door soon after apologizing profusely saying he was really just bird watching. Steve, secretly disappointed, but eager to spend more time with the Alpha tells Eddie he’d love to go with him next time he’s bird watching. Eddie then spends the next few days desperately trying to learn everything he can about birds in Indiana, feeling like this was karma for being a horny pervert too afraid to ask out his crush.
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rachelwattsart · 6 months ago
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Older sketch
POV you napping near an angel
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natalievoncatte · 3 months ago
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Kara let herself drift, push this way and that on the wind as it swirled about five thousand feet up. Her attention wandered, from the flights taking off over at the airport to the cars and pedestrians far below. Her vision relaxed and she looked up to see the solar winds scatter off the atmosphere in a riot of color that no one else could see. If she tried, she could see the chaotic chorus of WiFi signals and radio waves colliding with each other and scattering among the clouds.
She couldn’t sleep, so she drifted. Sometimes she wondered exactly how she was able to fly- she had no idea herself, she just did it. She wanted to fly and she flew.
A crisp cold wind snapped around her, billowing out her cape. Kara wasn’t bothered by the cold, merely aware of it. It was a December night and while it was fairly warm down below it was cool up here.
Kara rolled and lay on her back in the air, then rolled again and looked down, arms spread like a swimmer in a dead man’s float. The sounds of the city filled her ears and she sifted through them. Maybe if she picked up on a crime, she could fly down and take care of it and go home to sleep.
The city was peaceful tonight. Nuts.
As she focused her attention on this sound and that she found herself focused on a particular one: Lena. Specifically, her heartbeat. Once she found that sound it was trivial to focus on it, and hear her voice.
“It doesn’t matter, Sam. She’ll never want me like I want her.”
Kara froze, completely still, not even breathing. She should stop now, turn away, leave her friend to her privacy.
Lena… liked girls? She. She said she. As in another woman. Who did she mean? Kara didn’t know of any women she was close to, but then, Lena was a private person despite their growing closeness, she-
“She has to be straight,” Lena was saying. “I tried everything. I filled her office with flowers, I bought the damn company for her. What do I need, my own personal Bat Signal?”
Kara dropped fifty feet without even realizing.
She was talking about… no… that wasn’t…
What?
“I can’t just ask her out! What if she gets all weird and I lose my best friend? Not to mention the power imbalance, I’m technically her boss… what? No I did not make myself her boss to justify not asking her out! Sam!”
Lena huffed and Kara could hear her pacing her penthouse.
Lena liked her. She like-liked her. She was talking to her friend about asking her out. She was… in lesbians with her? No, that’s not how you say that.
“Fuck,” Kara muttered. What was she going to do now? She couldn’t just fly down there and say something.
She’d been spying. Eavesdropping. She had to stop this, fly home, maybe call Alex. Sleep on it and figure out what to do.
As her heart pounded in her chest and her pulse throbbed in her ears, Kara began to realize something.
She had felt things around Lena. Weird little things like a fluttering in her belly and a sudden nervous energy and this intense need to be around her, to just look at her. Her emerald ocean eyes and sharp jawline and the way she would tilt her head just so and look at Kara like that and it would make heat pool low in her hips. She could listen to Lena talk about anything for hours and just drift on the currents of her voice, so soft and smooth.
Then there was also, well… Lena had to have caught her looking.
Kara’s heed snapped up and her eyes went wide.
Holy shit, she was in lesbians with Lena too.
(That’s not how you say it)
Kara yanked her phone out and called Alex.
“Kara? What the hell is that noise? Are you in a wind tunnel?”
“I’m flying. I couldn’t sleep.”
“It’s four in the fucking morning and I’m on day watch. What do you want?”
“I’m in lesbians with Lena.”
There was a long, vaguely exasperated pause.
“What the fuck are you talking about?”
“I,” Kara began, “I was kind of listening in and I heard some stuff.”
She told Alex what that stuff was, then listened as Alex turned her mouth from the phone and talked to someone. She heard Maggie’s voice as she cackled violently.
“I fucking told you!” Maggie was laughing.
“Kara,” said Alex. “Please be normal about this. Go home. Make a bushel of frozen potstickers. Sleep it off, decide what to do in the morning.”
“Okay,” Kara sighed.
She resolved that she would only do a quick flyby, just to make sure Lena was okay. She wouldn’t even get that close.
When she passed by, Lena had hung up her call and was sitting on her sofa with a glass of liquor in her hands, the most forlorn look in her eyes as she stared at it.
Kara, she decided, should go home.
She landed on Lena’s balcony and rapped gently on the glass. Lena yelped and surged lightly to her feet, almost dropping the glass, and stared.
For a moment Kara could only stare. Lena had her hair down and it made her seem soft and vulnerable as she warded off the chill with a hoodie and sweats. She was the most cuddly thing Kara had ever seen.
“It’s not locked,” she said in her soft, husky voice.
“You should lock your doors,” Kara said as she stepped inside, closing the door.
“We’re on the twenty-eighth floor.”
“Good point,” said Kara.
“Is there something you need help with, Supergirl?”
Kara looked at her for too long a beat. She could still turn back and come back the next day or meet Lena for lunch like they planned or… or…
It didn’t matter. This problem would be there no matter what she did and the longer she waited the worse it would be.
“I have to tell you something,” Kara said softly.
“What is it? Did something happen? Do you need me?”
Yes, she wanted to say. I’m… I don’t know how to say this and I’m worried I’ll mess it up.”
Lena looked intrigued and more than a little nervous. Her throat bobbed and Kara felt an instinctive tug towards her, a need to shelter Lena within her arms.
“My real name,” she began, “is Kara Zor-El. I carry the name of my father, Zor-El. When I arrived on Earth my cousin fostered me with the Danvers family, so I took their name. So my full name is Kara Zor-El Danvers.”
Lena looked at her for a long moment.
“I know.”
Kara flinched. “What? How?”
“You aren’t subtle. I’ve been keeping you from getting fired for every time you run off from work with nothing to show for it. The first time you came to my office, you were with Superman. The next time you came you said you flew there on a bus.”
“Wait, you know… you know Clark is…”
“My brother was his best friend before he tried to kill him.”
“Why didn’t you call me out? Say anything?”
Lena’s tongue flashed across her lips and Kara watched intently as her heart raced and a storm of emotions flooded her face.
“I think was hoping you would tell me yourself. That you’d trust me.”
“I should have said it sooner. After you saved my life.”
“Why now? Why tonight?”
Kara froze.
“I.. heard you. Talking to your friend. I didn’t mean to, it was an accident. I was just riding the wind because I couldn’t sleep. Sometimes… sometimes I just need to know that you’re okay.”
Lena was staring at her.
“Oh my God,” Lena choked out. “Oh my God, Kara. You weren’t supposed to hear that. This is so fucking embarrassing. I can’t believe, listen, it doesn’t mean, it’s not like… I hope we can still be… fuck!”
“Ilikeyoutoo,” Kara blurted.
Lena’s eyes went comically wide.
“You… you what? You do? What do you mean you like me?”
Kara felt her own mouth go dry.
“I… think about things, and at first I thought I was jealous of you because you’re so pretty but then I started thinking about, um, kissing you and stuff even though Kryptonians don’t really do that, and it was confusing but… I think I feel like you feel.”
Kara realized she hadn’t moved. She squared up and crossed the rooms, the weight of the cape on her back giving her a little push of confidence. Lena watched her approach with keen interest.
“What do we do now?”
“I… I don’t know. I’ve asked people out and been asked out plenty of times but I have no idea how this works. This is a lot, Kara. You’re supergirl… and you like me.”
Lena set the glass aside. She was barefoot and Kara was in her stacked heels, so Lena was looking up at her. Kara felt seven feet tall. This tension suddenly lay between them, and Kara wasn’t sure what she needed to do except that she needed to handle this delicately.
So, she brought her hand up and tenderly pushed it beneath her curls to lightly cup her cheek, a flood of heat passing through her body at the softness of Lena’s skin. She was soft and velvety and warm and Kara thought her heart might burst through her ribs for its jackhammering.
Lena leaned lightly into the touch. Feeling bold, Kara put her other hand on the small of Lena’s back and stepped in close, tipping down like a fairytale prince about to kiss the fair maiden.
Kara paused to whisper “is this okay?” and Lena replied with a gentle brushing of lips that made Kara’s knees feel weak.
“Mmm. Very okay.”
Lena slipped her arms around Kara’s waist and pressed close and Kara was instantly aware that she was wearing nothing beneath her pajamas.
“Should we go out on a date?”
Lena smirked. “I think we’re past the awkward icebreaker questions, darling. I think that if you want… third date activities are on the table.”
“Thir… oh. Oh.,” Kara said. “Oh, okay.”
By morning, Alex had texted five times, ending with WHERE ARE YOU?
“Getting breakfast with Lena,” she texted back.
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corgibuttdraws · 5 months ago
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I remembered that sonadow video by w/ this audio from lucia88956289 and thought it'd be a cute animation tfygh
☆(obviously credit to them for the audio and their own vid for reference ;u;)
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simona-artista-artblog · 4 months ago
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💝💘 Happy Valentine’s Day 💘💝
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melle-otterwise · 3 months ago
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Destiel version of this meme 😁
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thatmexisaurusrex · 4 months ago
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(x)
Okay, kind of in a moodboard mood, so here's two for the @sambuckylibrary's SamBucky Valentine's Day Week 2025 prompt "Gifts". Enjoy! 🥰
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002yb · 8 months ago
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When people hear that Nightwing has a sweet tooth, they assume he's something sweet, too. It's almost believable when they see him peeling tangerines with a wingding—offering slices to Red Hood before eating some himself. Then that same wingding ends up impaled through someone's hand later. A none-too-sweet warning because they dared to touch Nightwing's little wing partner.
They think it's a Robin thing: liking sweets. They watch with twisted interest the way Red Hood unwraps a butterscotch. The way he takes it between his teeth before pulling it past his lips to suck on. Deterred only by the sharp crack of Nightwing biting through a butterscotch of his own, teeth glinting sharp in the dim moonlight and eyes bright with a promise of bittersweet violence.
Dick does actually have a sweet tooth. Jason just so happens to be the sweetest person he knows and he'll be damned if anyone tries to take his little wing away from him.
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livelovecaliforniadreams · 1 year ago
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tadc-and-md-sideblog · 5 months ago
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this is them, right
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foulwitchknight · 4 months ago
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Every week Eddie will come by the Video store to rent a horror or fantasy movie and Steve’s hoping to use that information to ask him out. There’s a new movie called the Labyrinth coming out Friday and he wants to ask Eddie to the Premier but he’s really nervous. It seems like every time he’s about to, something gets in the way mostly himself. The day he finally builds up enough courage, Eddie comes running into the video store all excited because someone else had already asked him. Steve tries his best to seem happy but as soon as Eddie leaves he goes in the back to sulk which he does for the rest of the week. It doesn’t help that Eddie keeps bringing his date by the Video store and Steve has to see how perfect they seem together. It’s gotten to the point where Steve hides in the back when he comes by and worst yet Eddie doesnt seem to notice. At least that’s what Steve thought until that Friday Eddie is at his door determined to get to the bottom of why he’s been avoiding him.
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vodkartoons · 1 year ago
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huh?!!!
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the fragrant flower blooms with dignity coded
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gundamthey17 · 6 months ago
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i know Charles labels them "the brains" and "the brawn", but they are both equally nerdy in their own way, and you cannot convince me otherwise
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darkcrowprincess · 23 days ago
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People don't realize it, but Anakin and Padme are both dorky nerds. They hide it well because they're both badasses. But they're both nerds.
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Padme genuinely loves poltics, fashion and cultures, Anakin engineering, racing, and battle strategies. Attack of the clones is so important, because they finally get to relax and be themselves together. They spend half their picnic time talking about poltics and genuinely enjoy it. They enjoy hearing each other's point of views.
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