#it solves everything I promise
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Ever made a password for a sight with frankly ridiculous requirements? This one had to be more than 15 characters, upper and lower case letters, numbers, symbols, no spaces, etc. after way too long I decided to cuss it out in the password and finally that one took XD
#password#password requirements are stupid#why do we put ourselves through this torture#just cuss out the thing causing you frustration#it solves everything I promise
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I wish we still had DVD special features.
Like as a kid, when I had a DVD, I would watch the crap out of the "making of's" or like interviews with the costume designers/production designers/animators - whatever.
I loved learning about the movie making process, because as a kid from a middle class family, smack bang in Australia, Hollywood felt like the furthest place on earth to me. I loved seeing all the artistry about how they built the world, how the costumes and makeup came together to make the characters feel lived in, how the actors developed their process - it was fascinating to me.
Now everything is on streaming and the production process is so obfuscated and intangible and I hate it.
I want to know how the sausage was made, and I still crave a hot dog.
#physical media#special features#movie#movies#hollywood#spilled words#spilled thoughts#writeblr#writers on tumblr#dvd#dvd collection#dvd collector#I'm currently rewatching The Residence - cause I love a clearly autistic person solving a crime#and I want to know how it was made - particularly the white house dollhouse#was it practical? was it CGI? how did they do it?#it's such a cool visual story telling technique I love it#I remember I had the monsters inc. DVD and it had a game on it#that I ran through multiple times cause I loved it#I want that back.#the residence#netflix#streaming killed everything#now I'm sad - bring it back#loved that shit#i will buy every dimension 20 season on DVD if they give me BTS content or Rick Perry Interviews like rumoured#that's a fucking promise#sam reich if you can hear me - dropout physical media will have all of my money#if you drop all of Brennans campaign notes as special features
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Having kind of a shit day for very little reason. Reblog with photos of your pets to assist with a speedy recovery.
#I wish I could just get a good cry out#stupid eyes not producing enough liquid#I was planning on going to the beach with the rest of my theatre troupe today but I couldnât get a ride because my mom is sick#and the people carpooling didnât have enough seats#so I laid in bed all day upset and wishing I could just cry#because despite being there for 3 years Iâm still on the outs of a lot of going-ons#vent posting#I promise this wonât be frequent#I just need somewhere to get this off my chest#a cat always helps right?#yeah. cat pics solve everything.#that sounded weird⌠actual cats guys#like the ones that knock stuff off of shelves and scream until you give them food
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time isnt real so i just havent kept up w actually writin down my thoughts lol
"...Huh? Milky?"
"...zzz"
"Huh, should've had no reason to assume you didn't sleep, you are a cookie at the end of the day after all... ... Eh fuck it, lets hope you're a heavy sleeper buddy cause I am not going to be the one to carry you."
...
"zzz... Wha--!!... Where... No, shitt-- ... ... ....Crepe?"
"Good mornin' sleepyhead; gotta hope those dreams were worth taking up space on my workbench."
"... ĂŹ_ĂŹ"
"What's with the look? Did you want me to wake you up? Should've told me that before you fell over if thats what you wanted."
"... ..." Teleports away
"Groan, this means I'm going to have to ask Vanilla for a bedroom for him, aren't I? Stupid babysitting job... ( âĄĚá´âĄĚ)-- at least he might pick to be roomies with him and not cause even more problems for my work."
#waffled au#crk#shadow milk cookie#cookie run kingdom#strawberry crepe cookie#it is so insanely hard to have humanizing moments for smilk that doesn't feel like it#makes everything really creepy lmao#the first time he's ever slept in the vicinity of anyone since havin followed pv and it was an accident#so now he is forced to consider what this situation means for him and how he's going to behave#to sleep around anyone is a huge amount of trust and although not intentional how will he feel about that#but no it still feels like it gives off romcom vibes-- i dont mean to do that its not my intent lmao#will a promise that i dont plan on bein weird solve anythin cause i feel like the internet does not care for such words lol
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i think one of the things is i wanna learn how to use greyscale shit in my art process but i genuinely dont know how. LMAO
#not to say it would solve all my problems with how i use colours but like it could help in some ways for sure.#i know there are tutorials for that. & by that i mean just to like. use the greyscale shit At All. i dont know how to do that.#ultimately my issues w my art boil down to like. linework angles detail & colours. & if i applied myself more im sure i could get it right#the problem really is adding detail it is excruciating my hand feels physical pain from frustration if something takes too long#so i try to do it in multiple sittings but then i lose motivation at all. yknow. im not sure how to work around that#now you could say âohh so you take issue with everythingâ but no i think the way i draw faces is really good & i rule at expressions too#like those are things i am Very Confident about. my emet faces never miss & that is a promise
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Very late but I like your Yo-kai Watch protag Lucas + unassuming small Wobblewok idea, and I gotta know more about Venoct filling Whisper's role. Does he actually know things or does he also use a book/tablet to cover his mistakes? Is he more of a right-by-your-side butler or a secret agent butler who deals with problems incognito?
OOOOOO good question
I feel like earlier on, Venoct wouldâve acted more as Lucasâs behind-the-scenes guardian, mostly looking out for him from the sidelines and only ever revealing himself when Lucas got into serious trouble, because he knew Lucas was fully capable of handling the smaller things himself.
But as time went on and Lucas gradually found himself getting into more and more danger bc of yo-kai trying to kill him, Venoct had to increasingly keep stepping in until he decided it was best to just start playing an active right-by-your-side bodyguard role in Lucasâs life, and he slowly starts entering his overprotective-butler-dad arc
As for his knowledge about yo-kai, I DO feel like heâd know more than Whisper and wouldnât need a yo-kai pad, but heâd do that thing he does in the anime where the others THINK heâs just playing up the ââcrimesââ of some wimp ass yo-kai to make them sound scary and/or intimidating, but it turns out heâs talking about an ACTUAL big huge terrifying monster
like for example it *sounds* like heâs talking about manjimutt or tattletell at first, and Lucas just goes âhaha heâs probably playing it up for dramatic effectâ but then Mass Mutterer/Tattleterror ACTUALLY appears and Lucas is like âwait what the fuckâ
But also for a bit of subversion I think itâd be funny if venoct just straight up WAS overexaggerating normal ass yo-kai sometimes. especially once he started becoming more overprotective and suspicious of others trying to kill Lucas.
Like Lucas eventually gets used to venoctâs dramatic descriptions and starts preparing for the worst, only for venoct to reveal that the âheinousâ yo-kai theyâre dealing with is actually just. like a flumpy or sum. lucas yet again goes âwhat the fuckâ and venoct just says âLUCAS you dont UNDERSTAND, as your BODYGUARD it is MY JOB to ensure your SAFETY, and I can not allow ANY potential threat to slip under my radar, NO MATTER how UNASSUMING they may outwardly appearâ
#yokai watch#yo kai watch#Lucas Schiffer#ask :)#god I have so many Thoughts about this AU#also. side note#I feel like venoct would've been EXTREMELY distrusting of Lucas's tiny wobblewok#since that thing is just a miniature version of the the being that resides in the deepest layer of hell#and several yo-kai literally died trying to keep it sealed up#in fact. remember how I said Lucas would go to the inferno to try and solve that quest himself#I feel like Venoct would've actively tried to PREVENT Lucas from going there#and would've done everything in his power to protect him from the bosses in the inferno#meanwhile Lucas doesn't even know he's there. he has NO clue venoct is tailing him. he's as oblivious as ever like#âwow I'm glad nothing's attacking me right now in the scary hell dimension haha that would be wild. anywaysâ#while Venoct is in the back getting his ASS kicked trying to save him and prevent lucas from going any further#mindy and buttons style. if anyone remembers the og animaniacs#sorry im literally obsessed I promise to stop ranting đ
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âThe only thing I do know is that we have to be kind. Please, be kind, especially when we donât know whatâs going on.â
â Waymond Wang
#tattoos#cryptid#Milkwalker#Everything Everywhere All At Once#be kind#the sentiment is there I promise#Waymond would never use a gun to solve problems#but I feel like heâd enjoy this tattoo
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i'm leaving it off just after chapter 10 because otherwise i will be reading this for the rest of the night without properly processing it but truly. truly. this series was made for me. everything abt these two already i am so curious to see where it goes...
#also the ooc ''on operation casualty'' to ''studying is the correct way to solve all psychological issues!'' is sending me. oh song <3#speak#msv lb#...clears my throat. speaking of. extremely funny once again mc eerily familiar. did you all know i'm going into med school.#i do have a good memory when it comes to my major interests (anatomy; surgical/hardware terms for example)#(which are of course relevant to my field to-be. because i'd be an awful practitioner otherwise)#although my short term memory's quite horrid by itself hm. that's mostly ascribed to the pain though from what we can tell#and it wouldn't interfere much with my line of work like it would song's here. presumably. ( ̄  ̄|||) please promise that.#oh and of course. social aspect. all the way down to 'curing infatuation' goddd help me circa 14 yrs old. never be a tutor#also you would never guess it here bc i've learned to Emote (it's much easier) but my flat affect rules my life i fear#plus the whole [gestures] autism diagnosis. i literally studied conversations. i wrote notes. i wrote notes! on how people talked!#it is still difficult. head in my hands#and the whole. thinking too fast to articulate as well... ahhh#ah well!!!#anyway all that is to say these coincidences are so amusing. i love being able to get where the mc's coming from on a personal level#not that it's necessary to enjoy a story ofc#i mean. look at w/tch's h/eart. i could not be more different from claire. that is still one of my favorite game narratives#oh i have my critiques but i have critiques with everything. that i have sm to say at all instead of writing it off is a method of loving..#there are a lot of levels of cultural biases + author vs reader type lenses you can examine with that game specifically#a character all but explicitly referred to as trans; the author did not intend to have him be so. the overarching abuse & its effects#as a personal thing for the author to write into the game; as well as the messages that go untold due to the author's own insensitivity#and inexperience to certain topics but are nonetheless present to and will be extrapolated upon by the reader/player#it's so fun...#but i digress...!!!
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Im going through it so hard but I'll survive I prommy *I'm facedown on the floor and burning*
#i'll live#just getting overwhelmed by everything#stress of symba behavioural issues#darkness cold and wetness from winter#shit load of unprocessed trauma and suppressed emotions#a lil worried about my fishtank because my shrimp population just crashed for some reason#amanos are fine but the neocardinia are disappearing :(#maybe its my assasin snails eating them when they molt..#Also hair algea are driving me insane and moss (?) is growing on plants and the leaves keep falling off#also big orange's daughter appears to have the same cancer that she had to be euthanised for so thats fun#other fish are fine#in other things that worry me#gonna get my blood drawn on Tuesday to exclude medical causes for my exhaustion#wednesday im gonna go to the vet again to see if they can finally solve symba's armpit irritation spots#on the 7th of January i need a cavity filled#i need to still call some government thing to ask for clarification about an aspect of my welfare#i feel shitty about not being able to draw or work on my ocs#or on lore#i really want to share my ocs and world with you guys..#i also really want to launch koc for my friends before the year ends..#its been in the works for way too long#i got a million art wips..#just ugh so much to do..#havent been able to visit my mom since ive obtained Symba either#because he will freak out the second he sees a dog and i cant predict wether a dog will get on the bus or be at the station#and also he still gets snippy with people sometimes when overwhelmed#and my mom is scared of him because he bit her once#god theres just so much going on in my head..#but i will stay safe i promise#lena whines
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Ayre rant lmao
Gods forever thinking about the point ayre feels she needs to prove and is yet so scared of the answer
Of projecting it all onto halryn, wanting something from him but no clue what, Of being so starved for affection that it's currently making her panic that people are being nice to her, of the fact she's glad to be around people again but so so bitter about how long it took
#i think they should fuck about it#but also#it wont solve anything#cause ultimately ayre will be doing it for all the wrong reasond#because halryn is doing too little too late#because her bitterness means she wants to drag him down#she wants what he has just to throw it away#and if she cant get to the place she was promised shell rip him from it#they are everything to me#in such a fucked up way#he keeps being nice to her and doing nice things#and she's so starved she wants to cling to it#but doesnt want to believe hes honest about it#<3#they are literally everything to me rn
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i love tbhk but the fans have the collective intelligence of a box of rocks
#'oh no this is the ending what about the character development the characters have experienced along the way' 1) babe i promise you the#actual ending chapter will be announced as the end a while in advance with a lot more fanfare and 2) of course it's not the fucking end not#everything with a sense of bittersweet resolution is an ending and we haven't even started to get into solving the series's main mysteries#like yeah it's wrapping up but we have at least until the end of the year if they rush#romeo.txt
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Event Horizon



summary: When you start university to do your masterâs in physics, you are more than surprised to meet your professor: Joel Miller, an old friend of your parents' who moved away years ago. wordâcount: 15k warnings: professor kink, power imbalance due to Joel being reader's professor, illegal relationship (overage & consenting), dbf!Joel, big fat age gap (unspecified but written with early 20s & mid 50s in mind), unprotected piv, just overall daddy issues (no use of the word daddy)
note: Okay, time to tell you I am a big nerd and studied physics in uni. Truth is, I quit to pursue a career in the arts, so my knowledge of masters level physics is...a little rusty. Please be lenient with me if I messed anything up. Also, I know most people hate physics, but I promise Joel makes it hot. Warning: explanation of the Dirac equation as foreplay. Also, I'm European and have no fucking clue how the American education system works but I don't care enough to do research. Enjoy <3333
event horizon noun ASTRONOMY a notional boundary around a black hole beyond which no light or other radiation can escape. a point of no return.
Uni felt different at eighteen, when everything was about moving out, drinking beer at frat parties, and kissing boys who didnât grow up in the same town you did. It was an exciting time, the degree itself fading into the background of all sorts of new experiences, but now that youâre doing your masters, you plan on focusing on your your grades more than on partying.
You enrolled in a new university, farther away from home, with a better physics program, and although youâve grown up considerably, you still feel that tingle of anxiety you did when you first walked to your dorm, fresh out of high school. This time you wonât have to share with another student, spending your saved money on a bit of privacy that is a single dorm room, but still, you wonder if youâll make friends here, or if youâll spend your night hauled up alone, watching trash TV and crying because youâre lonely.
The room is small, blank, but functional with a bathroom you share with another student and a small kitchenette, and immediately you dream of all the ways you could decorate it. You didnât bring much, just a big suitcase and a few boxes your Dad dropped off earlier. You feel slightly guilty for leaving your parents behind, but the relief outweighs the guilt â you wonât have to come home every Sunday for dinner, visits will be scarce. You love you parents, but the distance is much needed.
You get to unpacking your clothes, reveling in the fact that you can listen to music without headphones in your very own space. You could do it in your underwear, or naked, you could sing and dance along, and nobody would be bothered by it. Itâs going to be a tough two years, the program you chose more than challenging, but a childish sort of giddiness fills you â no roommate to be considerate of, no parents to visit and take care of every week. This time in your life is about you, and only you â your career, but also your well-being. You promise yourself to do what makes you happy, instead of looking out for everyone else all of the time, and youâll start by ordering Thai food and watching the trashiest movie with the hottest actors you can find on the little flatscreen you brought with you.
***
Your first lecture is Computational Physics â the one youâre looking forward to the least. The reason you decided to study physics at all was the predictable logic behind each problem, but the more you studied, the more complex the problems got, until they were impossible to solve analytically. Now you get to solve fluid dynamic equations and simulate quantum systems on a Monday morning instead of having a peaceful cup of coffee and taking a walk around campus.
The lecture hall is big, and you pick a seat that is neither too far away to be able to read the professorâs notes, nor close enough to immediately be pinned as an over-eager teacherâs pet. In the end, you plop down next to a girl whoâs sitting alone, something about her shaved head and countless earrings making you think she wouldnât make fun of you even if you didnât understand a single thing all lecture.
"Okay if I sit here?", you ask somewhat timidly, trying hard not to sound too much like an eleven year old Ron Weasley boarding the train to Hogwarts.
"Please," the girl answers, "I donât know anybody here."
"Did you move here, too?"
"Yeah, Iâm from New York."
"You look it," you say with a smile, eyes drifting over her clothes and jewelry.
"ThanksâŚI guess?", she answers, her grin revealing a charming gap between her front teeth. "Iâm Alva."
You introduce yourself, thankful to have found someone you can stick to already. Throughout the lecture you find out that apart from being much cooler than everyone else in the room, Alva has a biting sense of humor, and a near endless knowledge of computational physics. You make a mental note to ask her to study together, her explanations much easier to understand than the professorâs.
The two of you spend your lunch break together, and you tell her a little bit about yourself, but way too soon itâs time to go already â you have Advanced Quantum Mechanics in a different lecture hall. This you find way more interesting, basic quantum mechanics was one of your favorite lectures during your bachelorâs degree. As Alva and you sit down, you find yourself hoping youâll be able to help her out this time, or youâd feel like a leech for making her help you with Computational. She doesnât seem bothered, though, and keeps babbling happily about a band she recently discovered.
"â Britpop, but they only put out two albums. I think they were like a student band or something? Theyâre wildly underrated, Iâll send you a song, their debut is called The Sun Is Often Out."
Your thoughts start to wander off a little, eyes drifting over the old-fashioned chalkboards, when the door at the front of the lecture hall opens, and a tall man walks in â a man you recognize.
"Holy shit," you whisper, interrupting Alvaâs rant about the Longpigs, and she turns her head to look at what youâre staring at.
"Damn," she says with a grin, "if I wasnât gay, Iâd want a piece of that."
"No," you snort, "I know him. Heâs my Dadâs friend."
Alva opens her mouth to say something, but at that moment, Joel Miller steps forward, checking to see if the microphone is working, and introduces himself to the hundreds of students in front of him. His voice is deep, and as warm as you remember it, but thatâs where the accuracy of your memories ends â your childish brain failed to register the tanned forearms and rolled up sleeves, the carelessly styled curls, the perfect side-profile. Heâs got grey streaks in his hair now, which should send you into a crisis about time passing and your own little life being finite, but instead it makes your stomach swirl with something dangerous. Joel Miller, the Joel Miller, who organized backyard barbecues with your father and bought your favorite vegan sausages when your Dad rolled his eyes at you, who made strawberry lemonade instead of lemon, because he knew you preferred it, who helped you with your physics homework when you were graduating high school and didnât rat you out when he caught you smoking at seventeen â heâs handsome.
Thereâs still a familiarity about him, the way he moves and talks, although itâs unsettling to see him in such a different environment. Youâre used to band-tee-Joel, beer bottle and tongs in his hands, a breezy smile on his face. He looks different here, in a white button-down, with a stern expression on his face, as heâs reading the names on his list to check attendance. When he calls Alvaâs name and she raises her hand, his eyes flicker upwards, but he doesnât look at you. Still, your stomach lurches. If you listen carefully, you can detect that southern twang in his voice youâre sure most people would miss, and it fills you with satisfaction to know youâre the one who knows him best in this room â youâre sure half the lecture hall must see how attractive he is.
When he reads out your name, thereâs a surprised lilt to his tone, and your heart threatens to skip a beat.
"Here."
Your eyes meet, and although his expression doesnât change, he holds your eyecontact for a second too long. Alva nudges your side and grins.
Your plans about outshining Alva and returning the favor of helping with a lecture are quickly buried by Joel Millerâs beautiful hands â thick fingers holding a piece of chalk almost tenderly, twirling it around when he isnât writing on the chalkboard. You vaguely register him introducing the Dirac equation, but as interesting as you would normally find it, your thoughts are stuck between memories of barbecues and the realization that you will have to call the man who taught you to drive Professor Miller.
If Alva notices your wandering mind, she doesnât comment on it, which youâre thankful for. You do notice her throwing you a couple of knowing glances, as you copy down what Joel is writing down, mixing up gamma, delta, and the Dirac spinor.
"Alright, so you all know how SchrĂśdingerâs equation works great for quantum mechanics, but it doesnât play nicely with Einsteinâs relativity, right? Thatâs a problem because electrons move fast, sometimes close to the speed of light, so we need an equation that respects both quantum mechanics and special relativity. Thatâs where Dirac steps in."
Heâs still got that warm way of explaining things your Dad never managed when you needed help in high school, like he enjoys clearing things up for people. Heâs a born teacher, patient when you panicked in the car because you confused the clutch and the break, persistent when you wanted to throw your physics book against a wall. Look, kid, think of it this way: Push harder, it moves faster. Make it heavier, itâs harder to move. If you apply a force F to an object with mass m, it will accelerate a. Thatâs why your Dadâs car takes longer to stop than your bike. Even now, he manages to make a far more complex equation than Newtonâs second law tangible.
"Dirac's equation is like the grown-up version of SchrĂśdingerâs equation. It explains how particles with spin-half, like electrons, behave when they move at relativistic speeds. The gamma mu matrices make sure the equation works in four-dimensional spacetime, meaning three space dimensions plus time. The psi is a spinor, which is just a fancy way of saying that an electron isnât just a simple wave function, it actually has spin built into its nature. Now, can anyone think of a situation where we would need to use this equation instead of the regular SchrĂśdinger equation?"
Nobody raises their hand, most people still busy with writing down Joelâs complicated notes, and as if on cue, his eyes are on yours when you look up from your notebook. He raises an eyebrow, and you see the corner of his mouth twitch almost imperceptibly. Then, he calls your last name, a formal Miss dripping off his tongue as if he hasnât called you kiddo for most of your life. Itâs almost like heâs making a joke only the two of you are able to understand, and the thought thrills you to your bone. Two can play this game â you smile back.
"Sure, Professor Miller. Youâd use it for studying high-energy particles, like electrons in particle accelerators, because it accounts for relativistic speeds. Itâs also needed for situations where particles are created or destroyed, which SchrĂśdingerâs equation doesnât cover."
Again, his eyes linger on yours, and his slightly amused smile turns into a more genuine one at your answer. You let out a relieved sigh.
"Exactly," Joel answers, his attention on the rest of the class again, "Someone payed attention during Basic Quantum Mechanics. Now, hereâs where it gets wild. When Dirac wrote this down, he realized it naturally predicts antiparticles, meaning for every electron, there should be a mirror-image particle with opposite charge, which we now call the positron. That was a huge deal because it wasnât something people were expecting, it just fell out of the math."
For the rest of the class, Joel doesnât continue that little game between the two of you, but whenever he asks a question, his gaze flickers over you, and your stomach gives an embarrassing little jump. Alva grins whenever this happens, but for most of the class sheâs busy following Joelâs explanations.
"I want you to read up on todayâs lecture," Joel says at the end of the lecture, and writes down a few page numbers on the chalkboard, "and solve the problems I mentioned earlier. Attendance isnât mandatory, weâre all adults here, but I urge you to come if youâre interested in graduating in the next three years. Trust me, itâs easier to just do the work here than in your dorms. Now, enjoy the weather, see you Monday."
You and Alva pack up your things, and before she can ask you which class you have next, you pick up your backpack.
"Iâm gonna say hi to him," you tell her, nodding in Joelâs direction, "my Dad and him go way back."
"Sure," Alva says, a cheeky smile on her face, "itâd be rude not to."
"Meet you outside?"
"Iâll be at the vending machine. Go get him," she jokes, and you snort.
Joel is packing up his course materials when you make your way down the steps and to his desk, but he looks up when he hears you coming towards him, and immediately his face splits into a smile. If you were anywhere else and ten years younger, heâd probably ruffle your hair.
"Good lecture," you say, "Dad didnât tell me youâre teaching again."
Joel puts his piece of chalk into a tin box and nods.
"I donât think he knows. You know how it is, we never get around to callinâ and I havenât been home in a while."
So this is a new development, perhaps even Joelâs first semester back at university, too.
"What about the contracting? Donât you miss theâŚpipes?"
He chuckles at your lack in basic contracting knowledge, his eyes not moving from yours.
"Ah, that was always Tommy, he just needed a little help. Companyâs doinâ well now, though, so heâll manage without me."
You think you remember Tommy â a man good-naturedly chasing you and the rest of the giggling neighborhood kids with a harden hose â but the memory is too vague to be sure itâs really him.
"Youâve grown up," Joel says, almost accusingly, and you shrug and smile. "Doinâ your masterâs already. How come youâre familiar with Dirac?"
His accent is much thicker now that itâs only the two of you, and you notice a hint of pride when he asks about your correct answer to his question during the lecture. The satisfied feeling it gives you is still the same as when he high-fived you after your drivers test, or when he patted your back after you solved a problem for school without his help.
"Summer reading," you admit, trying hard not to sound like a nerd, "Basic Quantum Mechanics was my favorite lecture as an undergrad."
Joel smiles at you, and puts his notes into his leather bag. He slings it across his shoulder, and nods towards the door.
"How would you like to grab a coffee and tell me all about whatâs been goinâ on with you and your old man?"
Your eyes flicker briefly over his hand, gripping the strap of his bag, and you raise an eyebrow.
"Whatâs the policy for staff having coffee with their students, Professor?"
Joel holds your gaze, the corners of his mouth twitching.
"Iâm actually not sure, Miss, Iâve never had to check before."
Heâs playing along, and it feels dangerously blurry â yes, heâs your Dadâs old friend, your childhood neighbor, but it feels like more than just joking around.
"Does that mean Iâm your first, then?", you ask, voice sweet and close to flirting now. The smile freezes on Joelâs face, and his gaze becomes almost calculating.
"Am I yours?" he asks you softly, and the double-meaning behind his question isnât lost on you. You feel a thrilling pang in your stomach â Joel Miller is flirting with you.
***
You do end up getting coffee after you tell Alva youâll meet her later, Joel reassuring you it wonât get him into trouble, and youâre fascinated to see he still drinks it black. What fascinates you even more is that you remember how he takes his coffee, and you wonder why your brain filed this fact away as important, not to be forgotten.
"So, when did you graduate? Sorry I missed it."
Thereâs honest regret in his voice, which surprises you. Joel was always a warm person, but you figured he cared for you as much as he would have for any kid living across the street.
"Last June," you tell him, dropping a sugar cube into your cappuccino. "I spent the summer working, and now Iâm here."
"How dâyou like it so far?"
You give a nervous chuckle, torn between the honest truth and pleasant small talk. You opt for the former â this is Joel, after all, not some stranger.
"To be honest with you, I oscillate between enjoying my freedom away from Mom and Dad, and being scared shitless by starting over somewhere new," you admit, looking at your coffee. You havenât told people about your fear, and it feels good to finally admit it â the grip your parents have had on you makes your newfound freedom almost uncomfortable.
"What dâyou mean, startinâ over?", Joel asks, his voice strikingly gentle. You sigh, and shrug.
"I know the distance is good for me, but it was comfortable, just doing what my parents expected of me. I had good grades, nice friends, and just the right amount of drunken nights for them not to worry about my social life too much," you explain, "and now itâs likeâŚthereâs so much room to be someone else, cause they wonât see it anyway."
You look up, embarrassed to have spilt your guts like this, but Joel looks thoughtful, his thumb moving along the handle of his coffee cup.
"Sorry," you mutter, "I know theyâre your friends, but they can beâŚ"
"Overbearing?"
You smile at him gratefully and he smiles back.
"Look, I know your parents pretty well. They love you to bits, but as an adult I imagine it must be stiflinâ.â
"Yeah," you sigh, grateful for his understanding, "I feel like I donât know who I am when Iâm notâŚtheir kid."
Joel nods, and sips his coffee, apparently pondering what you said.
"I promised myself I would only do what makes me happy while Iâm here," you tell him sheepishly, as if itâs a secret, and Joel laughs.
"Well, Iâm not expectinâ you to hand in any homework, then."
You grin, too, and shake your head. Itâs surreal, Joel being your professor, and you wearing your heart on your sleeve for him.
"Donât worry, Professor Miller, Iâm not dropping your class."
"Youâd better not, itâd really hurt my feelings," Joel says, eyes trained on yours. Again, that blurriness set in motion by the change of his role in your life: neighbor to professor to â what?
"What about you, though? This your first semester here?"
"Second," he tells you, "but I still donât feel at home. Once a Texan, always a Texan, I guess."
You cock your head and watch him drain the last of his coffee, the cup tiny in his hands.
"What?" he asks you, curiosity evident in his voice.
"You look so different," you say, and Joel scoffs.
"Well, thatâs real nice. Know Iâm not thirty anymore, but geezâ"
"No," you say with a grin, "itâs not that. I donât know, Iâve just never seen you teach before. Or dressed this nice â I remember you mowing the lawn in a Fleetwood Mac shirt, not checking attendance in a button down."
Joelâs cheeks go slightly pink, and he scoffs again.
"Well, I canât show up here in a band tee, can I? Gotta dress the part," he mutters.
"I get it. You suit it," you tell him, if only to see that blush appear on his face again. He looks up at you, holding your gaze for a couple of seconds, then he shakes his head.
"What were the odds of us meetinâ like this, huh? I gotta call your father and tell him."
Something about that bothers you, youâd prefer for your parents not to know. You like sitting here with Joel, reminiscing the old times, without anybody getting a peek in.
"Or not," he says gently, seeing the expression on your face.
"Sorry," you say, "course you can tell him."
"You apologize a lot," he tells you, and you fight the urge to say sorry once again. "Itâs okay, Iâm not tellinâ anyone, kid. âS just you n me."
That pang in your stomach again, and you nod.
"Alright," you answer, "just us."
You get a refill for the two of you, and a blueberry muffin to split, which feels strangely intimate, but Joel pats his stomach and jokes about keeping an eye on his figure, so you grin, and ask the barista to cut it in half. Joel asks you about your friends, and you tell him about Alva.
"Oh yes," he says and swallows a bite of the muffin, "that punky lookinâ kid who sits next to you?"
"Yeah, sheâs nice. Havenât really met anyone else."
"Geez, Iâm not keepinâ you from findinâ frat boys to hook up with, am I?"
You laugh, the idea of sitting here with a twenty-something year old kid named Cole or Josh instead of him so absurd, you canât help it.
"No," you tell him, "Iâm honestly enjoying the fact that I donât have to have someone else in my dorm anymore."
"Well, thatâs a relief to hear," Joel says, "theyâre all dipshits."
You remember him telling you something similar about the boys in high school, and it makes you smile. Heâs still got that protective streak, then.
"To tell you the truth, Iâm glad youâre here," you say quietly, "if Iâm not making any friends, I can come crying to you."
Joel watches you for a couple of seconds, not laughing as you intended, but taking your words seriously.
"Course youâll make friends. Give it a couple of weeks, and youâll have forgotten all about physics cause youâll be skippinâ classes left and right to hang out with people."
You donât tell him, but you think itâs very unlikely youâll skip any of his classes. Still, you appreciate his words and how confident he seems to be in your ability to open up to people.
"Well, will you give me the answers to your exams if I skip your class?"
"No way," he says with a cheeky smile, the crinkles around his eyes prominent. "I donât do preferential treatment. You wanna split another blueberry muffin?"
You grin.
"Thought you were watching your waistline."
"I am, thatâs why Iâm only eating halves."
***
Your afternoon with Joel leaves you on a high for the rest of the day, feeling much less lonely now that youâve had a conversation beyond the usual so how many siblings do you have? and where did you do your undergrad?
You start spending your lunch breaks with Alva and some friends she made in another lecture, all of whom are very nice. In the evenings you all go to see a movie or have dinner together in any of your dorm rooms, and although you walk around campus holding out one eye for Joel, you donât see him for the rest of the week. There is always a nudge of disappointment in your stomach, when you glance in the direction of his office, and the door is closed, but youâre so busy, you donât dwell on it too much. The days pass in a blur of new lectures, swapping music with Alva, and evenings spent as a group of six, and suddenly itâs Sunday again. You arenât too sad the weekend is already over, and you know exactly why youâre looking forward to Monday, but you donât allow yourself to think about Joel any more than you can help.
In the afternoon, while youâre doing Joelâs assignment for the next class, your mother calls, and you answer the phone with a mixture of feelings.
Hi, my darling, how are you doing?
"Hi, Mom. Iâm good, just doing my work for tomorrow. How are you?"
Good, good. How was your first week? Did you meet anyone nice?
Hah, if she only knew. It feels deceptive, not telling her about Joel, but you like that for now, heâs just yours.
"Yes, this girl called Alva. We and some guys hang out a lot, thereâs a cinema near by, but the lectures are pretty hard, so we only have the evenings off."
Well, Iâm glad you found some nice people! Dad says hi, heâs making dinner. Anyway, baby, we miss you terribly. Do you know when youâll be coming home?
"I just got here, Mom."
You sigh so quietly your mother canât hear it, guilt already nagging at your heart. Sunday is the day you would usually be coming home for dinner, and you know itâs no coincidence your parents called you now.
Of course, youâre right. Itâs just not easy for your Dad and me, you know? Youâve never been this far from home, and youâre our baby.
Yeah, you think, your adult baby. You sigh again.
"I donât know if Iâll come this month, Iâm still sort of settling in. But Iâll let you know if thereâs a free weekend next month, alright?"
Sure, that sounds great. Will you send us some pictures of your friends, and your room?
"Sure," you say, but it bugs you that youâre giving in. Already, youâre breaking the promise you made yourself, and letting your parents further into your life here than youâre comfortable with.
"Mom, I gotta go, Iâve still got some problems to solve and Iâm meeting Alva for dinner soon."
Okay, darling, enjoy your night! And make yourself heard. I love you!
"Love you, too! Talk soon."
Your kind, clingy mother, whose greatest pain is not knowing if youâre safe. In a way you miss her, and you feel guilty for being annoyed. Still, you know you have to gently nudge her away from you, or sheâll suffocate you one day. It makes you angry with yourself, because you know your Mom would have liked nothing more than to hear all about your week, but as soon as she asked you a question, you felt like your seventeen year old self again, getting yelled at because you stayed up past your curfew, and your parents didnât know where you were.
Tears of frustration spring to your eyes â the mix of feelings too much for you to handle. You wipe them away with the back of your hand, breathe in shakily, and try to focus on your assignment again, but now youâre riled up, and the tears wonât stop.
Itâs hard for you to deal with disappointing your parents, forcing them away when they would like nothing more than to know everything thatâs going on in your life. So, instead of preparing for Joelâs lecture, you cry on your bed, feeling lonely and angry with yourself for hurting them. You know your reaction is disproportionate, but everything you kept buried while you lived close to your parents comes bubbling out of you.
You call Alva, tell her you have cramps because of your period and just want to stay in bed. Sheâs understanding, asks you if thereâs anything she can do, even offers to bring you takeout or a hot water bottle, which makes you feel all the worse for lying to her. You decline her offer, tell her youâll meet her Monday morning. In the evening, you regret not letting her bring over a real meal, eating cold pasta in your underwear, tears still running down your face and making your head pound.
***
On Monday, you feel slightly better, your headache is gone and your face isnât as puffy as you expected it to be. Still, youâre in a solitary mood, and are glad to find Alva is able to keep up an entire conversation virtually by herself â you just grunt from time to time, or give noncommittal movements of your head in vague agreement. You hope if she notices your bad mood, she just thinks it has to do with your period.
Computational Physics is hell â you dislike it on the best of days, but guilt ridden and tired, youâre barely able to pay attention at all, and the professorâs handwriting is so bad, you end up copying down Alvaâs notes instead. Sheâs kind about it, slides over her notebook at an angle that makes it easy to read, and you make a mental note to thank her for being so kind to you while youâre offering nothing but a scowling expression all day. Maybe youâll cook for her, or make a mixtape of your favorite songs, just to show her youâre interested in being actual good friends.
Lunch passes easily, as always you sit with Alva and the guys, and thereâs enough people for you to stare at your mashed potatoes and repeatedly stab them with your fork instead of eating them. They taste like flour mixed up with water, and you dream up your fatherâs Sunday dinner instead, but it does little to help with the taste.
"So, you lookinâ forward to flirting with Miller in front of the whole lecture hall again?" Alva asks you, as youâre making your way to said room. You glare at her, but canât help the corners of your mouth twitching.
"Wasnât flirting with him," you answer, kicking a pebble, "I grew up across the street from him, Iâve known him practically my whole life."
"Whatever you say, grumpy," Alva teases, nudging your shoulder with hers. Youâre overcome with a rush of gratitude for the way she treats you, persistently kind and humorous. You chuckle, your mood lifting slightly.
"Heâs probably been waiting for you to turn legal," she continues, and you groan.
"Gross, Alva, heâs not a creep."
"Iâm just saying, if your little connection gets you the answers to his tests, you could sell them and become rich."
"I already asked him, he said no," you say darkly, thinking of the nights youâll have to spend studying to pass his exam. This makes Alva laugh her brilliant laugh, and you canât help but smile, too.
"Damn," she grins, "Iâd try if he wasnât a guy."
You snort.
"You try with Professor Carter, I need the answers to Computational," you suggest, wiggling your eyebrows suggestively.
"Youâre joking, but I bet once you get her out of her frumpy cardigans, sheâs a realâ"
"Okay, stop," you grown, the image of Professor Carter taking off her cardigans worse than her keeping them on â if possible. Alva giggles.
"Iâll help you with Computational," she says, "if you help me with Quantum Mechanics."
"Youâre good at both," you argue, and Alva shrugs.
"Not like you, though. I spent like four hours doing Millerâs assignment last night."
You want to tell her you didnât do it at all, but before you can open your mouth, she spots a friend in the crowd, grabs your arm and drags you over to him.
The three of you sit down together, closer to the front than the week before, which gives you a direct line of sight to Joelâs desk. When he walks in, your stomach jumps â heâs wearing a tie today, a dark burgundy or blue, you arenât sure from this distance, flecked with specks of white. Again, his hair is styled in that carelessly disheveled look you like so much, and the image of him putting gel in it makes you smile. He gets out his materials for the lecture, and looks up, his eyes finding yours â you smile and he gives a small nod. Again youâre struck by how different he acts in front of the class, how serious he seems. You think of his laid back manner when you had coffee, and struggle to make the images align. Joel clears his throat, and the chatter around you stops.
"Quiet, please, everyone. Thank you. So, last week, we found out that Diracâs equation predicts the existence of antiparticles. But instead of just accepting that, letâs think deeperâmathematically, what feature of the equation forces this conclusion?"
Joel jumps right into the lecture, and just like last week, nobody raises their hands â you curse the people around you for their lethargy, because sure enough, Joelâs eyes land on you. Before you can shake your head to signal to him not to ask you, he calls your name.
"If I remember correctly, you were already familiar with Diracâs equation last week. What would you say, what does the existence of negative-energy solutions tell us, and why couldnât we just ignore them?"
You wish you could answer him, know he asked you because he was sure youâd know the answer, perhaps hoped your enthusiasm for the subject would get the rest of the students to participate more, but you didnât do the assignment, and youâve already half forgotten his question. You swallow.
"UmâŚIâŚIâm not sure, Sir," you say, watching the way his brows furrow, and looking down at your notes. Alva shoots you a curious look, and when she sees your expression, she raises her hand. Youâre thankful to have Joelâs attention diverted, feeling like a fool in front of hundreds of students youâre trying to make friends with.
"Diracâs equation gives positive and negative energy solutions, and at first, the negative ones didnât make sense. Dirac suggested they represent antiparticles, like the positron, which he predicted. The idea was that electrons could, like, jump into these negative-energy states, creating a hole that looks like a positron, which was later confirmed experimentally," Alva explains instead of you.
"You're close, but electrons donât actually 'jump into' negative-energy states. Instead, Dirac proposed that these states are already filled, forming what he called the Dirac Sea. A positron isnât an electron jumping down, itâs actually a 'hole' left when a negative-energy electron gets excited to a positive-energy state. That distinction is important because it explains why positrons have the opposite charge. Good answer, though, thank you Ms. Bennet."
Joelâs eyes flicker over to you again, but you show no reaction, and he continues with his lecture without asking you another question. Alva glances at you inquiringly, and you sigh.
"I wanted to do the assignment yesterday, but my cramps were really bad," you explain quietly, and she nods sympathetically.
"Call me next time, Iâll send you my answers," she whispers, and you smile gratefully. It seems you really hit the jackpot in friendship when you sat down next to Alva.
***
After Joelâs lecture, you and Alva make your way over to the vending machine, because it has the sour patches she likes, and in her own words sheâll combust if she doesnât eat some right fucking now.
"Shit," she curses, "theyâre stuck."
"Let me," a voice comes from a behind you, and when you turn around, Joel is smiling at the two of you. "Took me a while to figure this thing out, too."
Alva steps aside, and Joel bangs his palm against the side of machine. You jump, but the sour patches make their tumbling way down to the dispenser.
"Great! Thanks, Professor Miller," Alva says, ripping the bag open and offering it to the two of you. To your surprise, Joel takes her up on it, and Alva grins at you.
"You were quiet during todayâs lecture," Joel says tentatively, when heâs swallowed his sour patch "everything alright?"
You glance at your shoes.
"Um, yeah. I wasnât feeling well yesterday, and I left your assignment for last, soâŚI didnât do it."
Joelâs expression grows worried, and Alva glances between the two of you.
"Hey, Iâm meeting Max for coffee," she tells you, "see you later?"
"Yeah," you answer, grateful sheâs granting you this time alone with Joel, "see you, Alva."
When sheâs gone, Joel is still looking at you with that worried look on his face, and you sigh.
"Sorry about the assignment," you say, "wonât happen again."
"Iâm not worried about the assignment," Joel says earnestly, but then he turns his head, and you know he doesnât want someone listening in. Sure, you can be seen chatting in the university cafe, but this conversation is rapidly blurring the lines between scholarly and â something else.
"IâŚhave some materials in my office that might make it easier for you to catch up with the lectures again," Joel tells you, and you understand the underlying meaning. Letâs talk in my office.
"Thank you," you say, relieved, and Joel nods, eyes still glued to yours, brows still furrowed. You walk to his office making smalltalk about the lecture, which to anyone listening in would seem like a normal conversation between a professor and an interested student.
Joel opens the door to his office for you, and lets you step in first. Itâs small, cramped bookshelves on the walls and a sturdy desk in the middle that is littered with notes, pencils, books, and a couple of old coffee mugs. You notice he put part of his books sideways onto the shelves, which you find weirdly endearing. This is the Joel you know â clutter and warmth.
He closes the door behind you, and you turn around to watch him drop his bag and walk over to the kettle in the corner of the room.
"Coffee?"
"Please," you sigh, "if you donât have anything stronger."
He raises an eyebrow, but doesnât answer, just turns on the already filled kettle, and gets two clean cups for the two of you.
"I only have drip coffee," he tells you, "I donât drink that crap the machines brew up."
"Thatâs fine, I enjoy the medieval feel of it."
"Watch it," he answers, a smile tugging on his lips, "donât insult my coffee filter in front of me."
You grin, and walk over to his bookshelf to have a look.
"So, whatâs going on?" he asks you while pouring the boiling hot water over the coffee grounds. Again, the Joel you remember â empathetic, but unusually direct. You sigh, turn around and shrug.
"Mom and Dad called yesterday, and I could tell they missed me, but I justâŚI cut them off after two minutes."
Joel places the cups on his desk, and leans against it. His sleeves are rolled up again, and when he crosses his arms, you feel that familiar pang in your stomach.
"And now IâŚI donât know, I feel so guilty, Joel. Theyâre not even being dicks about it, but I just know theyâd prefer for me to check in with them moreâŚand the worst thing is, I know itâs not a big deal. Theyâll get over it, theyâve got a good life without me constantly in it, so I donât know why my stupid brain canât just let this go, you know? One I miss you, darling, and Iâm reduced to this pathetic mess, instead of just, I donât know, getting my shit together."
You shake your head and clench your teeth, once again embarrassed to come crying to Joel about your parental issues, but heâs the only one you can tell. Sure, Alva would probably listen, but you donât feel like explaining your family to a near stranger. Joel just gets it. Joel knows you.
Heâs looking at you, arms still crossed, and for a second you worry he might not want to hear about your little breakdown, but then he sighs.
"You have your shit together all of the fuckinâ time, kid, I think that might be the problem," he tells you quietly. "Youâve always been so hard on yourself."
Heâs right, once again he sees what you struggle to show the world, and his words make tears spring to your eyes. You will your eyeballs to suck them back in, but of course, Joel sees.
"Hey now," he says, taking a tentative step towards you. One tear drops from the end of your lashes and down your cheek, and the dam is broken again â they come spilling in floods. Joel crosses the room in a second, and there is a slight moment of hesitation between the two of you, before you bury your face in his chest, and let your restraint fall. You cry quietly, feel him wrap his arms around you, as he rocks you back and forth.
"Youâre alright," he tells you, "Shhh, itâs okay, youâre alright."
"S-s-sorry about the assignment," you manage, and Joelâs hand starts stroking your back.
"Jesus, kid, stop worryinâ about the fucking assignment," he tells you, voice low and worried. "You donât gotta be so strict with yourself. Youâre doinâ just fine."
He smells so much like home, you think you might never stop crying.
"I donât know whatâs wrong with me," you hiccup, "One week here and Iâm a mess already."
You feel Joel rest his chin on your head, and his arms tighten around you.
"Thereâs nothinâ wrong with you, you hear me? You hold yourself to high standards. Creates pressure, kid."
As always, heâs right of course â you want to excel academically, you donât want to hurt your parents, you want to stay true to yourself and do what makes you happy, you want to make friends without compromising your grades. Itâs impossible.
You breathe in shakily, your eyes closed, face buried in Joelâs chest, and for a second he is all that exists â just Joel, all around you, pulling you to the earth. Slowly, your breathing calms, Joel still rocking you soothingly, holding you close.
"There we go," he mutters, when your chest stops shaking, "thatâs good."
When you pull away from him, he puts his hands on your shoulders to really look at you, and although youâre embarrassed by your outburst, youâre glad he doesnât shy away from you.
"I want you to start being a little more lenient with yourself, alright? You donât need to worry about an assignment on top of everything."
His hands are rubbing your shoulders, his eyes are kind and warm.
"Maybe not about yours, but I have like five other lectures â"
"Okay, so try to stop worrying about my assignments, just mine. Wonât bite your head off if you donât do them, and Iâll only ask you questions when you raise your hand, alright? In fact, for the rest of the term, I want you to hand them in late."
Despite yourself, your lips pull up in a small smile.
"Thatâs silly, Joel," you say softly, but he shakes his head.
"Itâs not silly, itâs practice to get you out of your comfort zone."
You consider his words for a moment. You do keep a pretty tight reign on yourself, and just the thought of doing every assignment late makes your skin crawl with anxiety. But when will you get another chance to step out of your comfort zone as safely as now, with Joel? Heâs offering you a way to try it without actually risking your grades. And who knows, perhaps it actually will take a little bit of pressure off of you.
"Okay," you answer, staring up at Joel with puffy cheeks and teary eyes. "Alright."
He smiles at you, but he still looks worried and you wish heâd pull you close to him again. Itâs such a relief to have this sort of human contact with someone who really knows you.
"Feel better?"
You sigh, and nod.
"Itâs just a lot, you know, uni and my parents, and every social interaction feels like such a chore, cause I donât know people yet. I feel like Iâm not even relaxed when Iâm asleep."
Joel hesitates for a moment, before he speaks, but when he does, he sounds determined.
"Come over tonight, Iâll make us somethinâ to eat, and you donât have to worry about talkinâ to anyone. Weâll watch whatever youâd like. You still enjoy those crappy horror movies?"
You smile at the shared memory â Joel letting you use his living room to watch slashers your parents didnât want you to see. One summer, when the heat was so stifling you barely went outside, you practically lived at his place, and when youâd seen all the DVDs he owned, he got you more from the video store.
"I do," you say quietly, the fact that Joel remembers more important to you than his proposal to spend the evening together. You feel significantly less alone, all of a sudden.
"Alright, then. Be over at seven,â Joel tells you, and you nod, wiping your wet face with the back of your hand.
"Thank you, Joel," you say, and hug him again, because you donât know how to tell him in words what youâre feeling, and his big, warm body against yours feels more than soothing.
"Course, kid. Just donât tell Alva, or theyâll fire me."
You smile, your arms still wrapped around his neck, as he holds you.
"But I donât wanna get you in trouble, what ifâ"
"No," Joel interrupts you, "no what ifs. No worryinâ. I forbid it."
And you accept it, leave it to Joel, because he tells you to â because you donât have any room in your head for more worries, and because you trust Joel not to do anything reckless. You trust him, period.
***
You text Alva youâre having dinner alone, that your cramps are still acting up, and you do feel slightly bad for lying, but you would never risk Joelâs job. The idea of having dinner with him at his place should make you nervous after your change in feelings about him, but youâre just looking forward to having a meal with someone who knows you, and lets you be yourself.
Joel asked you to be there at seven, so you spend the rest of the afternoon in your dorm room, wondering if you should change your outfit or if it would seem desperate â in the end, you keep the jeans but change into a blouse instead of a sweater. The part of you that stares at Joelâs forearms during class now wants to look pretty for him, so that heâll ask you over again. You know youâre being ridiculous, but it doesnât stop you from putting on your nicest perfume.
Youâre ten minutes early, so you sit in your little second hand car and try not to panic. You know Joel is merely trying to be a goodâŚfriend? Ex-neighbor, Dadâs best friend turned professor? Thereâs no real etiquette to cling to in this situation, for either of you, and although youâre positive Joel doesnât have any ulterior motives with you despite his flirting, you know he could lose his job if someone finds out you went to his house. Even if you just watch slashers together the way you did ten years ago. It makes you anxious to know heâd risk something clearly important to him for just that â he moved to a different state, quit his old job, started over completely, and is now willing to endanger that new life just because youâre stressed. At the same time it seems ridiculous anyone could forbid the two of you to spend time together after having known each other your entire life. The thought is absurd, and still, you need to be careful.
You get out of the car before you start to hyperventilate, and ring Joelâs doorbell â it feels strange for him to live in a new house. He opens the door with a smile, and absurd relief floods your veins when you realize heâs wearing an old Led Zeppelin shirt and a pair of worn jeans. This is your Joel.
"I come bearing gifts," you announce, stepping into the house.
âChrist, where did you get this?â, Joel asks, taking the six pack of beer from you, so you can take off your jacket. âI didnât know they sold Shiner Bock outside of Texas, Iâve been survivinâ on Budâ.
âBrought it with me,â you explain, âfigured itâd help if I got homesick, you know, in multiple ways.â
You grin, and Joel shakes his head good-naturedly.
âOld enough to drink, well Iâll be damned. I remember when you begged your Dad to let you have a coke and he asked me if I thought the caffeine would stunt your growth.â
âDid it?â
âIt mightâve,â Joel says with a chuckle, âbut he didnât let you have it.â
âWell, he isnât here now, so letâs put those in the fridge.â
âNo," Joel mutters, âno, he ainât.â
While Joel puts the beer away, you take a look around his living room â despite your reservations about the new house, it reminds you of his old place. Itâs got the same masculine and warm feel to it, dark wood, books all over the place, no bells and whistles. Joel is a practical man, and itâs charmingly etched into every part of his life â except for his new work-look. The room isnât as cluttered as you remember Joelâs old house back in Texas, but you assume he hasnât had time to accumulate clutter yet. No old newspapers are lying around, no birthday cards stacking up. You wonder if heâs lonely here, teaching all by himself, hundreds of miles away from the place he last grew roots in.
âDo you miss home?â you ask him, when he comes back from the kitchen with two bottles of beer in his hands. He looks at ease, much more himself than back at university. His jeans are faded, his shirt a little too big on his already broad frame, and his hair is clean and curly the way you like it â no gel twisting it into all sorts of un-Joel-like styles. Warmth floods your chest at the sight of him taking a swig of his beer. His crowfeet are a little more pronounced, and his hair has more grey strands than it did back home, but heâs still got that distinctly warm, no-nonsense feel to him.
âSometimes,â he answers, offering you the second bottle. Your hand brushes his when you take it from him. âBut Iâm pretty busy here, you know, got a whole lotta lectures to plan, papers to grade and that sort of stuff.â
You nod, and sip at your beer.
âHave youâŚyou know, met people? Made friends here?â
Joel plops down on the couch, and smiles up at you.
âYou worried about my social life?â
You shrug, and smile almost timidly.
âYou know me, kid, I like beinâ by myself.â
Thatâs true, for as long as youâve known Joel, heâs been alone. You know he has nieces and nephews who adore him, and your Dad mentioned a woman once, but it must have been at least twenty years since they were together. You wonder why Joel doesnât seem to want that sort of a domestic life, surely many women would be happy to let him put a ring on them.
You walk over to the window, and watch a blackbird tug at a writhing worm.
âHave you met someone at uni you wanna be by yourself with?â you ask with a small grin, turning back to find Joel already watching you. âI heard Professor Carterâs still single.â
âSheâs very intelligent,â Joel says earnestly. You give him credit for not laughing about his colleague, and suddenly you feel bad for calling her frumpy with Alva. âBut I think Iâll leave her to her simulations. Why am I beinâ interrogated?â
âSorry,â you mumble, and glance out of the window again, âjust making conversation.â
âYour turn, then,â Joel answers, and takes another swig of beer. âAny frat boys catch your eye? Or frat girls?â
You glance at him, a smile on your lips, and raise your eyebrows.
âHey, I donât discriminate. I thought, maybe AlvaâŚâ
âNo,â you answer, feeling fond of him for considering the possibility. âAlvaâs a friend. The guys areâŚwell, theyâre frat boys.â
 Your voice carries enough disgust for Joel to laugh.
âRight,â he says, and his eyes are warm when they meet yours again. âJust us two loners, then."
âCheers,â you say with a smile.
âCheers.â
***
Joelâs cooking is a mystery to you â he loves to eat, and when he does cook, itâs always delicious, but he only ever makes one of five dishes. Again, that practicality shining through. Why try something new if youâve perfected your routine? He made pasta for you, wasnât sure if youâre still vegetarian and makinâ your Dadâs hair fall out, and you smile into the neck of your beer bottle, when you watch him drizzle dressing onto a carefully arranged side-salad. Throughout dinner, you tell him how much you love it at least five times, because you can tell he put effort into the meal. You know itâs not technically a date, but having a dinner he made just for you, in his home â it feels like one.
You steer the conversation away from heavy topics like your parents. Although Joel offered you this evening to make you feel better, you want to spend it with him rather than in your head, so you ask him about books and music, about his lectures, about Tommy and the kids. You like watching how his face lights up whenever he talks about something he particularly loves. Joel is a quiet man, but you found out years ago it isnât shyness, but a disinterest in most mundane topics â he doesnât like gossip or superficial small talk. When he tells you Tommy made him godfather of all of his children, the pride is evident in his voice, and you donât have to fake your enthusiasm, although it amuses you, too â Tommy loving his big brother enough not to consider anyone else.
"She calls me uncle Joe," he tells you with a chuckle, "Canât pronounce her Ls yet, but Iâve considered legally changing my name."
When youâre done eating, you help him clear the table, but when you reach for the sponge to do the dishes, Joel shakes his head.
"Let me do that later, kid. You wanna watch a movie?"
So the two of you plop down on the couch with a bag of M&Ms and another round of beer, and Joel hands you the remote.
"Go wild," he says, chuckling when you excitedly turn on he TV to open Netflix.
"Wow, a streaming service? I thought youâd just hoard DVDs for the rest of your life."
Joel huffs, and instead of answering, he leans forward, and reaches for something under his couch table. When he turns his head, heâs got glasses on his face, thick-rimmed and black, and so startlingly sexy, you almost drop the remote.
"YouâŚyouâve got glasses?"
"Yeah," he answers, his eyes meeting yours, and you swallow. "When your eyesight deteriorates, thatâs when you know youâre gettinâ old."
You hum but donât answer, just hold his gaze for a second and look back to the screen. You try to ignore the familiar pang in your stomach at the sight of Joel in his new glasses, and skip through movie after movie, mumbling seen it, seen it, that one sucks, seen it, until Joel reaches over and snatches the remote from you.
"Heyâ"
"I canât read anything if you skip through them that quickly."
"Youâre not supposed to read, youâre supposed to go with the vibe of the cover."
He glances at you with furrowed brows.
"Okay, sorry, didnât know youâre a filmbro," you grumble, but itâs almost entirely fake â you couldnât be annoyed with him, not when he pushes his glasses up his nose, and carefully considers which button to press on the remote.
"I donât know what that means," he answers, and starts reading the description of a romantic comedy about Christmas.
"Iâm not watching that."
"You donât even know what itâs about."
"Itâs September, Joel."
He huffs again, but finally reaches the horror movies. Surprisingly, it doesnât take the two of you long to pick one, and the thought of two hours of brainless, scary entertainment on a couch with Joel makes you practically melt into his couch.
You can feel Joelâs eyes on you during the opening credits, so you glance over and he smiles.
"Comfy?" he asks, his voice hoarse from relaxation.
"Yeah," you answer, and smile when hands you a blanket. Heâs not exactly close to you, but it still feels a little intimate when you spread the blanket out and offer him the other end. He moves over a little, so that the blanket covers his legs, and when you concentrate you can feel his body heat next to you, so you try hard not to â and instead get lost in the movie.
Itâs not particularly good, but the story does get under your skin a little, and when thereâs an unexpected shriek, you violently jump and instinctively move closer to Joel. He chuckles, but doesnât give any reaction to your arm suddenly pressing against his. He doesnât move away, either, so you donât, fear suddenly not being the only thing bubbling up in your stomach.
"Jesus," you mumble, the creeping music making you anticipate another jumpscare. Youâre right, it does come, but prepared though you are, you still wince, and turn away from the screen slightly. Out of sight, out of mind. Joel turns around, too, and when he sees your widened eyes, he grins.
"Howâs that Christmas movie lookinâ now?"
"Iâm not scared," you say, and there is some truth to it, "Iâm just not good with jumpscares."
When the next one comes, you canât help it, you clutch his arm next to you, your nails digging into his firm muscle, and Joel glances at you again.
"Sorry," you say quickly, letting go of his forearm now marked with five tiny crescent shapes. "Jesus, Joel, sorry."
"Itâs fine," he says, and the amusement is evident in his voice, "you sure youâre into this? There might be some cartoonsâ"
He stops talking when you glare at him, but his mouth is twitching under his beard. Youâre determined to watch the entire movie, and you try not to let any reaction show, wanting to prove Joel wrong.
There is one particularly scary scene â itâs not necessarily violent, but the music and shaky camera movements make your pulse race, and you turn your head slightly, so as to look at something else. Joel glances at you again, but he doesnât laugh this time, just puts a heavy hand on your shoulder. Itâs grounding, the warmth of it, how his thumb digs into your muscle and his fingers spread out over your back and neck.
"You donât gotta force yourself to watch this, kid," Joel says gently, all teasing humor gone.
"No," you say stubbornly, but move even closer to him. His touch is a welcome distraction from the movie, and although you know itâs stupid and reckless, you lean into him, and Joel puts his arm around you. Itâs closer than youâve been to him except for hugging, and your heartbeat starts to quicken for all the wrong, non-horror reasons. When you flinch, Joel tugs you against his side, and it feels natural to hide your face in his shoulder.
He was never touchy with you, or anyone for that matter, so something must have changed. You wonder if heâs trying to comfort you, or if you might not be the only one who can feel that strange pull between the two of you.
When the movie ends, Joel regrettably removes his arm from around your shoulders to switch off the TV, and although youâre slightly disappointed, you scold yourself for expecting something else.
"Not bad," Joel says with a small smile, and pushes his glasses up his nose. "Very brave."
You scoff, but feel the corners of your mouth twitching, too.
"I used to be less of a wimp, but I guess you soften with age."
"Youâre twenty-three," Joel argues, "thatâs young."
Yeah, too young. Too young to lean over and kiss him, or climb into his lap, or expect anything other than paternal care when heâs got his arm around you. You look at your lap, all of a sudden feeling stupid and silly for having dreamed up an absurd fantasy about the man in front of you.
"Hey," Joel says gently, "whatâs wrong?"
"Nothing," you say quickly, "nothing, I had a really great evening. Thanks, Joel."
You can tell youâve confused him, but he nods, doesnât question your sudden change of mood, and stands when you get up from the couch.
"Anytime, kid. You call me if youâre havinâ a bad time, alright? My doorâs always open."
Heâs so kind, so recklessly, stupidly, lovingly kind, and all of it is directed at you. You curse yourself for it, but again you feel that familiar burn in your eyes. Joel reaches out and easily pulls you towards his big body, hugging you the way he did in his office just this afternoon. He doesnât ask you what brought on your tears, just lets you cry into his Led Zeppelin shirt that smells so much like home, like a childhood you wonât get back to. You remember whiffs of that smell when you were watching movies on his couch while he was at work, too pissed off at your parents to spend the summer at home. This scent was there when you attended a neighborhood barbecue after fighting with your father and Joel grilled some vegan sausages for you without comment or question. Heâs always looked out for you like this, quietly, without demanding an explanation, just a solid, comforting presence in your life.
Your tears stop after a couple of minutes, and you take a step away from Joel, wiping your face. He looks so worried again, brows all furrowed and arms hanging limply at his side. Didnât he flirt with you, though? Didnât he prepare dinner for you the way a date would, ask you about your dating life, ask you to coffee? You donât think you would be able to handle another evening like this one not knowing what Joel really thinks, so in a moment of hazy recklessness, you lean up.
His eyes meet yours, all warm and strangely unguarded, but before your lips brush his, a hand on your shoulder stops you. Without saying something, you move away from him, and nod to yourself, his reaction all the information you needed.
"Sorry," you say very quietly, not managing much else now that youâve humiliated yourself in front of the only person you really know in a six hundred mile radius. Joel runs a hand through his soft hair, and inhales deeply.
"No," he says, his voice a little strained, "no, donât be. I justâŚJesus, kid."
He rubs his palm over his beard in such a familiar way, your chest aches a little. Itâs ridiculous how much you want to touch his face, to feel him again, skin on skin. So you donât turn and run the way your embarrassed heart is telling you to, just watch him collect his thoughts, standing in front of him like a wet and beaten dog.
"Look," he begins, "I wonât say Iâm not flattered, but thatâsâŚitâs a bad fuckinâ idea. ItâsâŚitâs chaos, and on top of that most people would argue itâs wrong."
You swallow. You know all of this, have turned it over in your head ever since you stared at Joelâs rolled up sleeves for two hours on that first Monday, but hearing him say it makes your stomach churn.
"Yeah," you mutter, and trace Joelâs shadow with the very tip of your foot, "yeah, of course. Sorry I put you in that position, wasnât right."
Your face still feels puffy, and you know youâre probably all red and pathetic looking, begging Joel for scraps of his attention, but all of a sudden, he lifts his hand up to your face, and cups it in his broad palm. His thumb strokes your cheek, and when you meet his eye, the expression on his face is tender.
"Itâs alright," he tells you softly, "I can see you worryinâ at the speed of light in that pretty head of yours."
Something in your chest flutters at his words, at the rough and warm cadence of his voice. He reads you so easily, one turn of your head and he knows youâre lost to your thoughts.
"I shouldnât have let myself toy with this idea," he continues, and your stomach flips. "I shouldâve realized youâd pick up on it. Itâs on me, alright? Itâs on me not to start anythinâ."
You can hear the implication â Iâm the adult here. Itâs not what you want to hear, but just the mention of Joel toying with this idea, as he put it, is enough to lift your spirits. So you werenât crazy.
"Iâm an adult," you say weakly, never having felt more like a child. Joel nods.
"You are, but Iâm still in a position of power here. Be wrong, to abuse that."
His thumb is still moving over your cheek slowly, making it hard to think straight.
"So dinner and a movie doesnât abuse it?"
You donât want to argue, you donât know why you keep disagreeing with him, and the way his face falls, you wish you hadnât said it.
"No, itâŚit does, youâre right. Jesus, of course it does. I donât blame ya for beinâ ang-"
"Iâm not angry," you say softly, and tentatively turn your head in Joelâs hand. You press a kiss to his palm, his warm skin pressed right against your mouth. "Iâm not your student, Joel. I mean, of course I am, but I know you. Itâs different."
Joelâs eyes are glued to your face, and he looks so conflicted you wish heâd just throw you out of his house, if only to solve his dilemma.
"Itâs still wrong," Joel mutters, his eyes glued to your lips since they brushed his skin "even if you take away the fact that Iâm your fuckinâ professor. Your DadâŚ"
"My Dad is half a continent away and finds a way to be unhappy with whatever choices I make, so I might as well make the ones I want to."
The very first day, before you even met Joel, you decided to do what makes you happy while in university, and although this certainly wasnât what you had in mind, you know itâs what you want. The only thing you want, in fact.
Joel sighs, and tucks a strand of hair behind your ear.
"Joel, Iâm not trying toâŚlook, if Iâm wrong about this, just tell me, but I feelâŚI just wanna be close to you all of the fucking time," you say quietly, "and itâs okay if you donât, really. I justâŚI want you to know itâs not nothing to me."
Saying I donât just want to hook up with you would feel too straight forward or crass, but you think Joel gets the gist of what youâre trying to say, and he closes his eyes briefly. You study his face behind his glasses, the wrinkles and freckles from years in the sun. You do feel anxious about his answer, but whatever it is, youâre glad you told him. Itâs out in the world now, the way you feel when he holds you, and he can do with it what he pleases â youâve handed him the reigns.
"IâŚI know what you mean. Me too," he says very quietly after a beat, his eyes open and looking directly into yours again.
A triumphant pang of affection pulses through you, and you put your hand over Joelâs, which is still resting on your cheek. He looks conflicted, but his other hand holds your waist now, and tugs your smaller body closer to his again. Heâs solid as a brick wall in front of you, and you figure youâre allowed to touch, so you rest your hand on his shoulder.
"What am I gonna do with you?" Joel mutters, and strokes your lower lip with his thumb. If you had more guts, youâd let it slip into your mouth, but youâre still afraid heâll pull back if you make a wrong move, so you just let him caress your mouth tenderly.
"Whatever youâd like," you answer just as quietly, and you know it sounds sexual, but you mean it in every way â if Joel wants to be nothing but your professor, youâd take it, and if he wants to keep you here in his house indefinitely, youâd let him. Joel keeps looking at you, taking you in as if heâs considering whether the risks outweigh whatever magnetic or gravitational pull the two of you have between you.
"Stay," he say after a while, and although his face looks slightly regretful, his voice is determined, "justâŚsleep here tonight. I like havinâ you here."
You want him to kiss you, to pull you onto his lap on the couch, to take you upstairs right now, but Joel seems to be restraining himself, so you just nod.
"Me too," you whisper, echoing his words back to him, and for just a second, his thumb digs into your lip a little harder, but then he pulls away.
"Testinâ my goddamn restraint," he mutters, and takes a step away from you. "Iâll get you something to sleep in."
***
Joel gets you one of his band tees you love so dearly, and just the idea of being enveloped by something that smells like him all night makes it a little easier when Joel tells you heâll take the couch instead of inviting you to sleep with him in his bed.
"No," you say softly, "itâs fine, you just sleep in your bed, Joel. Iâll take the couch."
He looks critical, so you offer him a soft smile.
"I donât know if your back could take it," you tease, and he seems torn up between laughing and frowning. In the end, he just shakes his head, mutters something that sounds a lot like bad fuckinâ idea, and gets you a blanket and pillow.
He brings you a clean toothbrush and towel, letâs you use his bathroom (you look at the shower the entire time youâre brushing your teeth, trying hard not to think about what Joel looks like using it in the mornings), and when youâre done changing, you unlock the door again.
Heâs there, sitting on the edge of his bed, his eyes trailing over your form in his much too big shirt. Itâs long as a dress on you, coming down to your naked thighs. Joel visibly swallows and gets up from the bed.
"You got everythinâ you need?"
"Yes. Thank you, Joel."
Thereâs a beat of silence and you almost think Joelâs about to cross the room, but he just runs his palm over his beard the way he always does, and nods.
"Alright. Just shout if thereâsâŚwell, you know. Iâll be here."
"I will."
"Alright. OkayâŚgoodnight, kid."
"Night," you almost whisper, voice soft, and right before you reach the door, Joel clears his throat.
"IâŚyou were right about dinner and the movie. I wasnât just tryinâ to be friendly," he says quietly, and your stomach swirls. Before you can walk over to Joel and do something about it, he sighs.
"Sleep tight, sweetheart."
Sweetheart.
***
You wake to the sound of something dripping, and when your eyes flutter open, you can see Joelâs back from the kitchen. Heâs wearing his work outfit again, a white button down and dark pants, sleeves rolled up. It smells like coffee, and with a smile you realize he must be brewing his beloved coffee â no machine, just a filter. He looks broad, even from your spot on the couch, and you enjoy peeking in on him. You study his movements, the way he reaches for a cup, how his fingers absentmindedly drum on the kitchen counter while he waits.
When he turns around, his eyes find yours, and he smiles.
"Morninâ. Did I wake ya?"
"âS fine," you yawn, pulling the blanket up to your chin, not yet ready to get up. "I have classes at ten anyway."
"âS eight," Joel tells you, "Coffee?"
"Yes please," you answer, and stretch your limbs under the blanket.
Joel brings you a cup, complete with a little bit of milk and sugar, and you move your feet so he can sit down on the couch.
"Sleep well?"
You sip your coffee, let it burn your tongue and close your eyes at the taste. When you open them, Joelâs gaze lingers on your face.
"Yeah," you answer, "thank you forâŚyou know."
He nods, takes a sip of his coffee, and looks at his lap. He looks like he wants to say something, but heâs very quiet, and you feel anxiety bubbling up in your stomach.
"Joel, do you want me to leave? Itâs fine if you do," you ask him softly, not wanting to make things awkward for him. It would be rational of him to ask you to leave, the smart and ethical thing to do.
"No," he answers quietly, still not looking at you, "I want you to stay."
Stay? On a Tuesday morning, after you almost kissed him and he told you he couldnât do that, after you spent the night on his couch? When you have classes in two hours, havenât showered yet, are half naked and wearing his clothes, on his couch under his blanket? When youâve got friends wondering where you are and probably ten unanswered messages from Alva?
"Alright," you say, agreeing as easy as breathing.
Finally, he looks up, and his expression is so conflicted you reach out for him. Your hand finds his and you squeeze it. He keeps looking at you, his hand limp in your grasp, as if any movement of his muscles would incriminate him.
"You shouldnât," he tells you earnestly. "Stay, I mean. You shouldnât stay."
"I know."
You donât let go of his hand. He doesnât move his away.
"Itâs a really, really bad idea," he adds, and youâre not sure who he is trying to talk out of whatever this is. "Itâs risky. Could blow up both our lives."
"Yeah," you say, and watch him sip his coffee, "okay."
Then, a tentative flex of his fingers against yours, and finally, heâs squeezing your hand just as tightly, and before you can process what that means, Joel is leaning over you, dangerously close. Your breathing quickens, you register how soft his hair looks, how strong his hand is. He leans in further and you sit up a little, still cocooned in his blanket. His face is close to yours, his eyes fiery with something you canât pinpoint, and you sigh, when he closes the gap between you.
He tastes of coffee and toothpaste, and you wish youâd gotten the chance to shower, but the thought disappears almost immediately when you hear Joel groan. His kisses you languidly, deeply, and your fingers come up to his beautiful arm, barely wrapping around half of his biceps. He cradles the side of your face, pulls you closer, makes your stomach clench with need. It feels inevitable, the way he touches you, like you only exist in a physical form to be touched by him.
His free hand peels the blanket off your body, lets it slide to the floor without ever stopping his the kiss, and you moan softly, when his hand touches your waist. The sound makes him break away, stare down at you, pupils blown wide.
"Fuck, you look good in my clothes," he mutters, nudging your jaw with his nose, and pressing a kiss there. "You should really, really go home."
Your head falls back slightly to give him better access to your neck, and he brushes his lips over your pulse point. Your heart skips a beat.
"I â I know," you breathe, fingers digging into his arm. His beard scratches your skin deliciously, and it takes everything in you not to whimper or beg. Joelâs hand slips under your shirt â his shirt â and instead of finding your waist again, he digs his thumb into your hip, stroking the fabric of your cotton panties. The fire in your stomach burns brighter, and you almost buck up into him. Joel Miller, the Joel Miller who until recently had a key to your childhood home, who lent it to you whenever you forgot yours inside â heâs sucking bruises into your skin, and toying with your panties. Itâs dizzying, his familiar voice when he hums in satisfaction, even rougher than usually.
His fingers trace the waistband of your panties towards the front, until they find a small, silky bow, and Joel groans. He doesnât take your underwear off, doesnât even touch you where you need him the most, just keeps playing with the little bow, until your hips twitch without your permission. A little lower, and he would be able to feel how wet you are, how wet you have been all night. You didnât do anything about it, not while you were a guest in his house. It would have felt wrong. You canât imagine anything feeling more right than Joelâs mouth and hands on you, though.
"Jesus," Joel curses, "I should stop befâ"
"No," you whine, all dignity turned to hot air by Joelâs fingers, "please, Joel, please donât stop."
He curses again, and moves his big body so that heâs not just hovering above you, but actually on top of you, your thighs falling open for him easily. At the movement, his shirt hikes up your thighs, and you know youâre basically on display for him, your soaked underwear leaving little to the imagination. Heâs still fully clothed, his perfect button down all wrinkled now.
"Look at you," Joel breathes, lightheaded with desire, "this all for me?"
So he saw, when you moved to accommodate his broad form, saw how soaked you are, knows you ruined your panties just because he kissed you.
"Yes," you breathe, "yes, pleaseâ"
Before you can beg further, his finger presses down on your clit, and he watches your face contort in pleasure, as it shoots up your spine. You whimper, staring into his eyes, and he stares right back, as you start to grind your hips against his palm.
Your head feels blissfully empty, all worries about this relationship, uni, your parents, gone from you with a simple, practiced movement of his hand. The whimpers keep falling from your lips, and Joel curses.
"So beautiful," he mutters, "tell me what you need, angel."
Itâs not a question, itâs an order.
"I â fuck, I need you iâinside," you groan, and Joelâs lips find yours again.
"Yeah? Need me to fuck you good, even though theyâll throw us both out?"
It shouldnât turn you on. Youâre jeopardizing both your own and Joelâs career, and heâs turning it into dirty talk. Still, your pussy doesnât lie, and the way it throbs for him, aching to get him inside, makes all doubts disappear from your mind.
"Yes," you answer, unable to say much more as Joel keeps drawing tight circles into your clit.
Your hands drift from his arms towards his front, and Joel curses, when you paw at his belt buckle. It takes you a second, but then itâs open, the sound of the metal exciting you â it sounds like a promise.
Joel finally tugs your panties down, and for a second youâre selfâconscious about not being clean shaven, but the second he sees you bare and glistening for him, his fingers dip into your folds, gathering your wetness with no hesitation.
"Fuck me," he groans, bringing his hand up to his face and tasting you, holding eyeâcontact the entire time, "prettiest pussy Iâve seen in my life."
You twitch under him, dragging your gaze away from his eyes and to his fingers. A moan escapes you, your hands have gone slack on his waistband, and Joel smiles down at you. Then, he does the same motion again, drags the tips of his thick fingers through your sticky arousal, but instead of sucking them clean himself, he holds them up to your mouth. His eyes burn, when you wrap your lips around them without a moments hesitation, and he feeds you your own slick.
"Taste so sweet, huh?"
You donât answer, just swirl your tongue around his fingers, and suck on them. Joel watches your mouth intently, lets you take your time.
"Good girl," he praises you, and you clench around nothing, "so fuckinâ needy for me."
He drags his fingers from your mouth, and finally pushes into you, the stretch much tighter than with two of your own. Your head falls backwards, and Joel curls his fingers.
"No, baby, look down here," he orders, and immediately you lift your head again, and watch him pump two thick digits in and out of you. Itâs dizzying to think itâs the same hand that waved to you from over his fence for years and years. You feel a coil building in your stomach, and you moan.
"Fuck, Joel," you moan, his name leaving a delicious aftertaste in your mouth. His beautiful forearm flexes with every movement, your slick is dripping down his fingers, and those damn sleeves are still perfectly rolled up.
With a few more curls of his fingers, you gush around him, barely having time to warn him, and he praises you, calls you his good girl, drags his fingers against that spongey spot inside of you until you see stars.
When he slips his fingers out of you and holds them up to your face again, you clean them up with your mouth as Joel watches with bright eyes. To think that heâs the same man who taught you Dirac not twenty-four hours ago â already, you want him inside again. When youâre done, he fumbles with his own clothes, and you watch him this time instead of helping.
"You look so good like this," you mumble, eyes raking over his broad form, "Professor."
His eyes snap up to yours, and you grin.
"Fuckinâ Christ, kid," he mutters, popping open the buttons on his shirt, "you canât say shit like that."
"You donât like it? You know, I watched you during your lectures and dreamed aboutâŚwell, about this."
His expression is unreadable, but if youâre not mistaken, his hands move even faster now, and then he shrugs out of his shirt. You almost moan at the sight of his naked torso, so broad and solid.
"You need to pay attention in class," Joel answers, as he opens his pants. Your breathing grows a little shallow when he reveals his boxers underneath, his bulge huge.
"Canât," you mumble, "not with you looking like this."
He chuckles at that, at the honesty and need in your answer.
"Donât worry," he says softly, "Iâll fuck it outta you. Wonât be needingâ me in class, not if Iâm still leakinâ out of you."
Your lips part, your pussy clenches â a smile tugs on the corners of Joelâs mouth at your reaction. He drags down his boxer shorts, and your eyes snap towards his cock, so thick and dripping in precum. You whimper, you canât help it, and Joelâs smile widens.
"Weâll make it fit, baby," he says, reading your mind, and then bends down and kisses you again. You try to tug your shirt upwards, but Joelâs hands find your wrists and he holds them tight.
"No, want to fuck you in it," he breathes against your lips, and you press your hips upwards until he groans. He pumps his fist over his cock a couple of times, and aligns it with your entrance.
"Deep breath, baby," he mutters, and you obey, staring up at him as he starts pressing into you. Itâs tight, much tighter than his two fingers, and your eyes glass over with pain, but Joel goes slow. His hand strokes your tummy, helps you relax, while he pushes on consistently. You feel like heâs punching the air from your lungs, eyes wide with the stretch of him, as he nips at your jaw and neck to distract you.
"Know itâs a lot, but you can take it, angel."
"Y-yes," you moan, and screw your eyes shut, "please donât stop, Joel."
 Joelâs breathing is ragged with restraint, and suddenly his hips snap forwards â and heâs fully buried inside of your tight body, nestled right against your cervix.
"Back to Joel, are we?" he teases, and gives you a couple of seconds to get used to him. You whimper and claw at his arm.
"I â ah â Iâll call you Professor Miller âf you want," you slur, as he starts dragging his cock out of you again. You tremble under him, the feeling almost more intense than when he pushed inside of you.
"Yeah? That get you off? Or â fuckâ is it the fact that Iâm friends with your parents?"
It really, really should be a turn off, to be talking about your parents right now, but the way Joel says it, the way he points out just how debauched it is what youâre doing â you canât help but moan. You blush, too, can feel the heat in your face, but youâre tired of being ashamed of wanting him the way you do.
"Both," you answer, and this time Joel groans, his hips snapping into you at a rougher pace. The head of his cock hits your spot every time, and you let out little sounds of pleasure with every drag of his cock, unable to form a coherent sentence. Joelâs hand finds your clit again, rubbing circles as his other one pressing down on your stomach.
"Feel that?" he asks you, and you do, you feel him all up in your guts, "you take it so well baby, take all âf me."
"Yes," you answer, eyes glassy with pleasure, "want all of you, Joel."
He bites your shoulder, keeps rutting into you, and soon you feel another orgasm building.
"Close â ah â so close," you whimper, and Joel speeds up his thrusts just slightly. You clench around him, right on the edge.
"Come for me, angel, give it to me."
You do, your hips bucking, back arching.
"Ah â fuck, Joel, Profâ"
"Say it," Joel orders, fucking you through the waves of pleasure.
"Professor."
He comes, too, twitching deep inside of you and spilling rope after rope of come. It feels right, like youâre his. His groan is rough, his thrusts sloppy, and you feel your pussy spasm around him in a third, weaker orgasm, or maybe itâs just aftershocks from your second. Youâre limp underneath him, letting him use your body how he needs to.
"Fuck," he curses, "did so good for me."
He slips out of you, and you can feel his spend drip out of you. Youâre weak, soft like jelly, sweaty and entirely satisfied.
"Jesus," you breathe, when he falls down next to you, his couch mercifully being big enough.
"Yeah," he answers, "Jesus."
***
Turns out, Joel Miller is a dirty talking bastard during sex, and a big softie afterwards. He makes you tea, strokes your hair while you sip it, then carries you up to his shower and gently washes your body his his sponge. Throughout, heâs quiet, and you wonder if it was too much, the mention of him being your professor, of your parents, but youâre too afraid to ask. He brushes your forehead with his lips when he dries you off, and pulls another of his shirts over you head. Your panties are entirely ruined, itâs all youâre wearing.
When youâre clean again, and relaxed, Joel pulls you onto his bed, wrapping you up in his arms.
"Did youâŚwas that too much?" he asks you softly fingertips tracing over your thigh lazily.
"It was just right," you answer quietly, and he hums.
"You didnât feel like youâŚI mean when you called me Professor, you wanted to do that, right?"
You look up at him, and press a soft kiss against his jaw.
"Of course, Joel. Wanted everything we did, I promise."
He nods, but you can tell thereâs still something bothering him.
"You know thatâs not what you are to me, though, right?" Your voice is soft. "Youâre just Joel."
He brushes the top of your head with his lips.
"I mean it," you press on when he doesnât answer, "itâs like a costume, Joel. I know itâs your job, but itâsâŚI donât think of you as like, an authority figure or something. I just thought you looked hot in that slutty shirt."
"Sluttyâ?" he sputters and you laugh.
"Sure, you know, with your sleeves rolled up, and that first button popped open."
"âS not slutty."
"You showed your forearms. Half the lecture hall felt like a victorian man seeing ankles for the first time."
Joel makes an exasperated sound, half amused and half offended.
"I mean it," you say again after beat, humor gone from your tone, "and itâs not just sex to me. You know that."
"Yeah," Joel answers slowly. "âS more to me, too."
Itâs a hell of an admission.
"What are we gonna do?", you ask quietly, and Joel sighs.
"Youâre gonna go to class," he says, voice dark, "and Iâll try very, very hard not to call your father and tell him Iâm fallinâ for his daughter."
You bury your face in his chest. With anyone else, it would be too much, too fast, too intense. But this is Joel. Itâs not fast if youâve known him your whole life, is it? You kiss his chest, and he seems to understand.
"Weâll figure it out," Joel says quietly, pressing a kiss to your hair.
For a second you do want your parents to know, want them to see that someone does treat you like an adult, want to look them in the eye and say Iâm with Joel now and thereâs nothing you can do about it. I have my own life now and it includes this kind man. Itâs childish, you know it is. You lean up, catch Joelâs mouth in a kiss.
"Yeah," you answer, âWeâll figure it out, Professor.â
#event horizon#dbf!joel x reader#dbf!joel#dbf!joel miller#professor!Joel miller#professor!joel#joel miller x reader#joel x reader#joel miller smut#joel miller fanfiction#joel x you#Joel Miller x you#joel miller#pedro pascal characters
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We NEED more soft!Rafe after the new season. He moved out and got a whole house to himself maybe he could ask his girl to move in? Becasue he wants her there and to be part of his life...his new life where he's a better person
Request: SOFT RAFE PLSSS
I don't know when I found time to write this, but enjoy soft!Rafe asking his girlfriend to move in with him! Feel free to send more requests, I'll write when I find time
Warnings: soft!Rafe, relationship moving quickly, mention of Ward's death
â
ââRafe, I truly canât see. Iâm not cheating,'â you promised as you walked with Rafeâs hands over your eyes. Â
He had picked you up in late afternoon and refused to tell you where you were going. Just that he wanted to show you something...and that you had to close your eyes during the whole drive.Â
Rafe laughed a bit, trusting you. ''Okay, okay.''Â
You walked a few more steps, then he stopped and removed his hands from your eyes, revealing a large two story house.Â
A frown formed between your eyebrows. ââWho's house is this?''
He wrapped his arms around you from behind, resting his chin on your shoulder. ââMine,'' he whispered in your ear, giving you a gentle kiss on your jawline. ââAs of this morning.''Â
Surprise filled your face. ââYou bought a house?ââÂ
Every time Rafe showed up to your place after a fight with his family â most often his father â, needing a bed to crash in for a few days, you tried talking to him about getting his own place. It would solve a lot of conflicts. But Rafe always said he wasnât ready to leave the family nest.Â
Behind you, Rafe hummed. ââI bought it with a part of my dadâs inheritance money. Sharing a house with Rose is not possible anymore. Too much has happened...ââÂ
You covered his hands with yours in silent support. Youâd heard the ugly stories about Rose and Rafe. He hadnât always made the best decisions in the past, but Rose constantly blamed him for everything bad that happened to the family. Rafe may have deep personal issues, but it was wrong of her to villainize him.
ââDo you want a tour?ââ he asked, his voice brimming with excitement, and the eagerness in his eyes made it impossible for you to refuse.
You followed Rafe up the steps to the porch of his new home. He fumbled briefly with the key before pushing the door open, but just as you were about to enter, he pulled you to a sudden stop.
âWait,â he ordered, his strong arms wrapping around you as he effortlessly lifted you up.
You squeaked, startled by the sudden move. ââRafe, we're not married, you know,ââ you said with a soft laugh, looping an arm behind his neck. ââYou don't have to carry me over the threshold."
He set you down gently on the wooden floor of the entrance hall and shut the door behind him.Â
Inside, the house felt big and empty, its openness accentuated by the sunlight streaming through the uncovered windows.
ââI donât know why, but I expected it to be fully furnished,ââ you admitted, glancing towards what you assumed was the living room.Â
Rafe chuckled, his fingers lacing with yours as he guided you further in. ââSome people do buy them furnished, but this one wasnât. Youâll have to help me pick out furniture because I suck at decorating.ââÂ
The kitchen was massive and even had two ovens â a rich people thing. It was unfortunate Rafe didnât cook. The backyard had a large patio where Rafe mentioned wanting to set a barbecue and a firepit, and maybe one of those large daybeds. He wanted his house to be cozy and feel like a home, not look straight out of a fucking magazine.
As he led you into the last room upstairs, the master bedroom, Rafe's voice grew soft. The words were burning on his tongue, but he didnât know how to say them.Â
ââAnd here's our bedroom. I mean, the bedroom.ââ He made a mistake on purpose, just to see your reaction.Â
You tried to hide the smile that spread across your lips, your heart beating fast in your chest. The slip of his tongue hadn't gone by unnoticed. Did he truly mean for you to live here with him? Was this why he took you to the house and insisted on making it a surprise?Â
ââThereâs a big bathtub in the master bedroom, andâââ Rafe continued, moving toward the bathroom to show you the bathtub, but you were not listening.Â
Moving in with someone is a huge step in a relationship, not something you can decide on a whim. You and Rafe had only been together for a few months, so it felt a bit early to take that step. But then again, everything in your relationship had moved quickly from the start. He met your parents two weeks after your first kiss, and said âI love youâ after twenty-six days of dating â yes, you had counted them.Â
When Rafe glanced back at you, he noticed you seemed deep in thought. ââIs everything okay?ââ he asked, an eyebrow raised in concern.Â
You snapped out of your thoughts, shaking your head. ââYeah, everythingâs good,ââ you replied, smiling at him. ââI was just thinking of all the time itâll take us to christen our house.ââ A mischievous grin curled on your lips as you walked toward him. ââMaybe we should start now. Itâs a big house.ââÂ
Rafeâs eyes flickered with surprise as he heard what you were implying. He expected you to refuse, to say it was too soon.Â
ââYouâll move in with me?ââ he asked, a hint of disbelief in his voice.Â
You nodded, and a smile curled on Rafe's face. He's never been happier.
â
OBX taglist: @moralina@eudximoniakr @toylewestinnyc @rottenstyx@sweeterheartxamerica @jordierama @viridwityy @izzy-laufeyson @kenzi-woycehoski @lilaconner @Katsukis1Wife  @hawkegfs @mommyruuetrue  @acornacreacure @snownjune @nmedina8611 @slvtherinseeker  @slvtherinseeker @poppet05 @1stevelacyfan @illf4iry @withbeautyandrage  @maybankslover @sunflowerziva @laylasbunbunny @Honey-marvel15 @leoluvsur-pappy @slytherhoes @kcskye123 @outerbanksacc  @pedrosprincess  @mikaelsonsstuff @skyesthebomb  @a1mzcruml3y @iluurmom  @popeheywardssecretgf @madelynie @loverofdrewstarkey  @radiant-whore @outsider-at-hogwarts @luci1fer @bbycowboi @rafecameronsbadussy @urbfsbitchlol @nomorespahgetti @bloodyhw @Veescorneroftheworld  @papayaboyluvr @slytherinambitious @darylscvmdumpster @tommysaxes @johannelis2302nely @lynbubble  @straberryshortcake143 @beth-gallagher22 @doestalker @rubyliquor @theflcwer @angelxxrose @sierraluvzz @cruzgrecia @evelestrange @sunnysunny133696 @under-seasoned-pasta @hoeforsirius  @buckyswhxre @emerald-09  @simonessolarsystem @rehead1180 @stvrkey  @ynmunson @riddle18 @love4ldr @withfireandbl00d @wonderland2425 @blublock404 @eddieslut69
#rafe cameron#rafe cameron x reader#rafe cameron x you#outer banks#obx#rafe outer banks#outerbanks rafe#rafe x reader
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âDOCTOR I CANâT TELL IF IâM NOT ME.â

ŕ¨âŻ âBATFAM X NEGLECTED!HEALER!READER ęą
â° ŕ§ââââââSYPNOPSIS: all you ever wanted was a purpose. something that would give meaning to your existence, your power. healing others was the only thing that ever made you feel alive, needed⌠until you ended up in that awful place.
â° ŕ§ââââââ masterlist. | next.

There is only one thing you ever truly wished for in this life: a purpose.
Something that would justify your existence, that would give meaning to every breath, every wound, every sleepless night.
And you found it. Not in an empty promise or in the affection of others. You found it in your own power.
A selfish desire, yes, but undeniably yours. A purpose born not out of love, but out of need.
From that strange power growing inside you, the one that forced you to look at othersâ suffering with cold, almost cynical eyes. As if every wound were a problem only you could solve. As if every scream of pain were a prayer meant solely for you.
You clung to that.
To the idea that your worth existed only in your abilities.
The ability to stop someone from dying in front of you. To rip death from their body with your own hands. To stitch broken flesh with threads that hurt, yes, but worked. That was the only thing that ever made you feel alive. The only thing that ever made you feel alive, needed.
For a while, it was enough.
For a long while, you were selfish.
It didnât matter if they used you. It didnât matter if it hurt. If every healing left another scar on you. If every salvation cost you a little more of the little you had left.
As long as you could keep doing itâhealing, fixing, protectingâ the price didnât matter.
Because at the end of the day, you could lie down on that mattress of emptiness and tell yourself: âToday, I made it worth it.â
Your existence and your power meant something.
Of course, you didnât have a mother to share secrets with, nor guardians who offered you love. Only faces that came and went, and the bitter understanding that you were just another burden in a broken system.
Until, by some twisted stroke of fate, you had the âpleasureâ of meeting your biological father.
Bruce Wayne.
Billionaire. Philanthropist. Playboy.
Batman.
Even so, none of that really mattered to you. What truly hit you was learning that you had to leave everything behind and go to Gotham.
That cursed city, that concrete jungle drowned in darkness and crime. Where dreams go to die and bodies, if theyâre lucky, go to sleep.
Gotham wasnât a home. It was a prison for someone like you.
A place where meta-humans like you were enemies, threats, problems to be contained.
Your power, your only purpose, was stripped away with nothing more than a change of zip code.
And that was the cruelest part of all.
Not being able to use it.
Not being able to save.
Not being able to be useful.
Your existence, reduced to ashes, like the bodies of those you didnât reach in time.
It must be poetic, right? The healer who cannot heal. The savior without faith.
They hate you. You've felt it. That visceral resentment from those who survived because of you, but still blame you for what you couldnât stop. Screams, stares, choked pleasâ all of them pierced your soul deeper than any weapon ever could.
For someone who once swore to save lives, itâs only natural that those you vowed and wanted to save now express their utter disgust and despair toward the false, horrific salvation you once offered them.
And now? Now you live among strangers.
An immense mansion full of absences. With brothers who seemingly donât recognize you, and a father who doesnât see you.
Your arrival in Gotham wasnât exactly ideal, at least, thatâs how you think you remember it.
Itâs hard for you to remember that moment. You donât hold on to unnecessary memories⌠none of it will make you feel alive again.
Apparently, your new father figure has several children. Some of them are already adults. With lives of their own far from the mansion, you donât know much about them, they were almost always too busy to say anything to you.
You canât understand them, canât they come up with better excuses? You donât want these peopleâs attention.
These people canât help you with your abilities. They canât make you believe youâre still allowed to use them freely.
No, these people are just strangers who stumbled into your life overnight and want nothing to do with the problem. Not even your new father had the decency or responsibility to try forming a bond with you.
Bruce Wayne was an absent father. Not in the way someone leaves and disappears completely, but in the kind of absence that feels stronger the closer the person is. A hollow physical presence, like a ghost made of flesh and bone. One who could look you in the eyes and still not see you.
He struggled to communicate, to make time for you, to even remember that there was now one more occupied room in that massive mansion of his.
He doesnât know how to deal with you, and you donât know how to deal with him either. At first, you wondered if the problem was you. If you had done something wrong. If the way you talked, walkedâeven breathed, was so bothersome that heâd rather bury himself in work than give you an hour of his time.
But soon, you realized something even crueler: You donât need a father. Youâre not looking for one. Youâre not waiting for one.
What you need is a patient. Someone you can heal. Someone who needs you.
Because thatâs what youâve always done. Heal. And Bruce⌠Bruce simply refuses to be healed.
But he doesnât understand.
When you approach him, when you seek him out, when you try to speak to him, all he does is throw up a wall made of cold words, as practical and impersonal as that damn business suit of his.
âIâm busy.â
âNot now.â
âWeâll talk later.â
âItâs for work.â
Always the same. Always excuses with the bitter taste of indifference.
Is this what having a father is supposed to feel like? Because if it is, then it doesnât feel any different from your days in foster care.
At least there, you knew you were alone. Here, they make you believe youâre not⌠but you are, more than ever.
Youâve learned to observe the details, as always. Itâs one of the few things youâre good at, aside from using your power.
You notice the tired look in his eyes, the dark circles underneath, the way his fingers tense around his pen like heâs trying to crush it. The stack of papers on his desk never gets smaller, itâs like it multiplies just to keep you at a distance.
And the subtle changes⌠that lower tone in his voice when he sees you, like he canât even be bothered to raise it for you. The way his eyebrows furrow, not out of anger, just⌠annoyance. Irritation.
Thatâs what hurt the most.
So you stopped trying. Because if you kept going, you were only going to be reprimanded by the one you were supposed to please. You convinced yourself that you donât need his approval. That you donât need his love. That youâre better off without him.
But then, why is it that every time you walk past his office, you pause for a second, hoping that door opens, just once, without you knocking first?
Why do you still need him to see you?
Richard Grayson is the eldest. The first adopted son of Bruce Wayne. Everyone sees him as a beacon of hope, the moral compass of this family made of shadows and scars. And it makes sense. He has that bright smile, that genuine warmth the others can barely fake. He gives out hugs without being asked, listens patiently, laughs easily, and has that absurd gift of making anyone feel seen, at least, if youâre one of his.
Because with you, it was always different.
From the beginning, Richard seemed kind. Seemed. But between that warmth and you, there was always a distance, like someone had drawn a curtain between the two of you. You heard his apologies more than you heard his actual voice.
âSorry, I have to head out right now.â
âSorry, I was already on my way to BlĂźdhaven.â
âNext time, I promise.â
He was always rushing. Always busy. Always somewhere else. And you⌠youâre not someone who believes in empty promises.
At first, you thought it was just bad luck. That maybe if you insisted a little, if you found an excuse, if you caught him in the kitchen, he might stay for five minutes. Just five. But those minutes never came. And you started to notice a pattern. How his demeanor shifted the moment you walked into the room. How his smile became more diplomatic. More rehearsed. How his footsteps sped up when he thought you werenât watching.
You didnât want to admit it at first, but something inside you began to whisper an uncomfortable truth; He was avoiding you.
And then you understood. If Richard Grayson, the kindest, the most human, the most "big brother" of them all, couldnât be around you, then what was the point of trying with the others? What could you possibly expect from Jason, who barely speaks to you? From Tim, who seems more invested in his computer than in actual people? From Damian, who can barely tolerate his own shadow?
So you did the same.
You avoided them. One by one.
You decided it wasnât worth it. That if you werenât going to be a real part of this family, you werenât going to pretend.
Itâs easier that way. It doesnât hurt as much if youâre the one walking away first.
But sometimes, when you see them laughing together from the staircase, or hear Richard speaking so fondly of the others, a part of you wonders if it was ever really your choice to walk away, or if theyâd been leaving you behind from the very beginning.
Your suspicions didnât take long to confirm. All it took was talking to a few of your supposed brothers to realize the pattern repeated itself.
Jason, Tim, DamianâŚ
Each one was a story unto themselves. Each one was a maze of traumas, masks, and poorly calibrated emotional responses. But if you had to describe them in one word, it would be: inaccessible.
The second of your brothers was Jason, and from what little you could gather, because no one seemed eager to talk about it much, Jason had died. And then he came back. It wasnât a metaphor. It wasnât an exaggeration. He had been buried, and now he was not. That simple statement was enough to provoke a morbid curiosity, almost scientific. What had changed in his body? Did he suffer from partial necrosis? Brain damage? Did his muscles regenerate? What residual effects did resurrection have on human physiology? Everything in you screamed to investigate. To dissect. To understand.
It was a dangerous thought. You knew that. You repeated it to yourself like a mantra: too tempting for your own good.
But what confused you the most wasnât his condition, it was his behavior toward you. Jason had this aura of latent violence, like dynamite that could explode with the wrong spark. But that wasnât what kept you away. Not entirely. It was his inexplicable rejection.
You didnât understand it. You didnât provoke him. You didnât talk to him, you didnât interfere, you didnât cross the line. And yet, his gaze was always sharp. As if your mere presence triggered something in him. Irritation. Annoyance. Maybe even disdain.
You wondered if it was your fault. If the way you were, the way you spoke, the way you were, simply bothered him. But you couldnât find an answer. And though you wanted to, you knew that getting closer would be too risky.
Because youâve seen the broken walls. The misaligned doors. The tables split in two like they were made of paper. Youâve felt the tension in the air when Jason enters a room and isnât in the mood. And you know, without needing confirmation, that his punches arenât soft. That his rage doesnât distinguish between the guilty and the witnesses.
So, you avoid him.
Not out of fear exactly, but out of caution. Self-preservation. You donât want to be the next crack in the walls of this house.
Tim was a different kind of strange. More than Jason, though in a completely different way. His oddity didnât stem from aggression or visible trauma. It was more subtle. More internal.
Almost clinical.
You observed him, like you observe everything. With that gaze of yours that searches for patterns, inconsistencies, vulnerabilities. And in him, you found many.
Surprisingly, Tim was brilliant. Not just "smart for his age," but one of those cases where the brain moves faster than the body. Too fast. So much so, that sometimes it seemed like his body gave up halfway through.
The dark circles under his eyes were a constant. His responses were slow, as if they had to pass through a filter of a thousand thoughts before being verbalized. He walked like his mind was too heavy for his spine to carry. A shadow carrying ideas. You were surprised he hadnât fainted yet from the combination of insomnia, chronic stress, and mild malnutrition.
No one asked you.
No one thanked you.
But still, you started leaving him food. Food that could sustain him without causing a stomach collapse. Nothing too obvious, of course. A yogurt here. Cut fruits there.
Something easy to eat between keystrokes. You allied yourself with Alfred in that small act of silent intervention. The old butler seemed to notice, but he never mentioned it. And you never confirmed it.
Tim would probably assume it was all Alfredâs doing. In fact, you counted on it.
Not because you wanted to keep it a secret. But because you knew that if he suspected you were behind something so... "thoughtful," it would only make him uncomfortable. He doesnât know how to respond to care, to the intention behind such detail. Tim doesnât know how to handle it if that sincere gesture comes from you.
Just like you would if any of them ever tried it with you.
Alfred... Alfred is a different matter.
Of all the people in the house, heâs the only one who acts like your existence isnât a miscalculation. But he doesnât fool himself. He doesnât offer you love, or tenderness. He offers you structure. Routine. Measured phrases and cups of tea.
Itâs not affection between you.
Itâs a sort of tacit alliance.
Two functional people in the middle of a broken ecosystem.
You know he tries. But you also know itâs not enough for you.
Youâve seen children like you. In hospitals. In refugee camps. In temporary homes. Children who cling to an adult figure as if their life depended on it, and are then destroyed when that figure leaves. Or worse, when they stay but stop looking.
You donât want that for yourself.
You convince yourself this is better. A working relationship. A dynamic where each one fulfills their role and no one crosses the line into the personal. Because if you get attached, if you let yourself believe this could mean something...
You know how that ends. They canât give you what youâre looking for.
They canât give you purpose.
They canât return what was taken from you when you understood that your value only exists if you can heal, if you can serve, if you can be useful.
You still donât know who you are when youâre none of that.
Back to the subject of your "family," the last on the list of who your siblings were, was Damian.
The youngest of the group. The second biological son of Bruce Wayne.
You said it out loud once, casually: "Ah, so he is the real one."
No one found it funny.
Unlike the others, Damian didnât need time to show you that you werenât welcome. He didnât bother to fake courtesy or neutrality. From the beginning, he made it clear that your existence was expendable.
Maybe it was your silence. Maybe it was your lack of reaction to his provocations. Maybe he just didnât like you. But he pointed his katana at you the first month you arrived.
The blade against your neck wasnât a metaphor. It was real, cold, intimidating contact. You felt a thread of power activate instinctively in your body, a reflex of defense, of desperation. If you had let it go, well, you wouldnât be here, mentally recalling this account.
You didnât. Not for him. For you.
Because it wasnât worth it. Because using your power on someone in your âfamilyâ would mean admitting they were important enough to hurt you.
They werenât. Not yet.
You canât risk being discovered. No one can know that you actually have this power. None of them can know.
Bruce appeared just in time to prevent the confrontation from escalating. Did he protect you? Not exactly. He simply said something like, âDamian has a complicated history,â as if that justified a death threat in the family kitchen.
Is it common in Gotham to justify a childâs homicidal impulses if they've had a difficult childhood?
That was your question. You didnât ask it out loud. No one would have liked the answer.
It was also that day you found out that Damian was Bruceâs biological son. And you couldnât help but think about the irony of it all.
The same Bruce Wayne who, in the public eye, was a scandalous figure, a charming, charismatic playboy billionaire with endless parties, had exactly one biological child. One. Not five. Not a legion of illegitimate children scattered across the world. Just one.
That kid turned out to be a ticking time bomb with a traditional sword.
Everything fit so perfectly wrong that it almost seemed planned.
With the girls, it's complicated. Maybe even more so because, deep down, a part of you thought they could be different.
Stephanie. She was like a female version of Richard, a constant smile, a vibrant energy that everyone seemed to adore, except you.
She greeted you with empty enthusiasm, one that never went beyond the surface. It was easy to see that behind her good mood, there was a locked door she wasnât going to open for you.
And you understood. Because you'd seen it before.
People who act as if everyone is welcome, except you.
Stephanie was just another confirmation that no matter how hard you tried to fit in, this home was already full. You werenât in the original plan. You never were.
Barbara, on the other hand, was simpler. She was hardly ever at the mansion. Youâd see her sporadically, a red ghost in the shadows of fleeting visits. And still, in that limited time, she always found a way to smile at others, share a joke, a quick conversation, a knowing glance⌠Never with you.
Not once.
It was as if your presence went by unnoticed, not even worth including out of courtesy.
Cassandra was the most honest, in a way. She didnât pretend. She didnât smile. She didnât speak.
She ignored your attempts to help with almost admirable efficiency. You could attribute it to her trauma, her history, her way of seeing the world⌠but that excuse starts to wear thin when itâs the only one left to justify everything.
Maybe youâre just not interesting. Maybe you donât even stand out enough to be actively rejected.
Or is it because you donât even deserve her attention?
It was easier to believe that they all had a reason not to see you.
Easier than admitting that maybe, you werenât that hard to ignore.
What was dangerous about this family wasnât the weapons, nor the katanas, nor the fists that had broken ribs more than once.
It was the mask.
It took you time to understand it. First, it was a hunch. Then a suspicion. Finally, a certainty: they were all vigilantes. Heroes of Gotham. The same ones who make your hands tremble when you try to use your power. The ones who make your gift feel useless. As if it were a mistake rather than a blessing.
The irony is so perfect it could almost make you laugh.
You canât feel useful, canât do the one thing you know how to do perfectly, because youâre surrounded by those who fight so that people and beings like you are neither necessary nor welcome.
And yet, you prefer them this way.
Cold. Distant. Detached. Unknown. Because connections are dangerous. Because memories weigh. Because at some point, someone taught you that affection is the hook that precedes the pain.
Because you know it better than anyone. When you get attached to someone, itâs not just pain that you feel when you lose them. Itâs as if a part of you dies too. Not because you lose them, but because without your power, without that âusefulness,â you feel like you never deserved to have them in the first place.
In Gotham, you canât do anything.
You can't heal.
You can't save.
You can't be useful.
You can't be loved. Or at least, thatâs what they taught you to believe.
Here, you have no parts left that you can afford to lose. Not while you're trapped in this city that doesnât need what you can give. A family that doesn't know what to do with you. You donât know what to do with yourself either.
They canât give you a purpose.
They never could.
They didnât even try.
You expected so little, that not even that surprised you.
Until you found him.
The only living person who not only recognized your power, but accepted it for what you wanted it to be:
A miracle.
He called himself Doctor Masashi. A kind voice, a serene figure. But behind that calmness was surgical precision. He knew exactly how to shape you. How to rebuild you, only to destroy you again with elegance.
He was the only one who never lied to you about what you were:
A weapon.
A tool.
A precious jewel that only shines when it bleeds for others.
A perfect puppet.
And you, grateful for the strings.
He gave you direction when all you had was guilt.
He gave you structure when all you had was emptiness.
He gave you⌠meaning. A cruel meaning. A conditioned meaning. But still, you took it.
It can't be that bad, right?
Clinging to that.
Clinging to him.
Clinging to something that tells you that you can still be "something."
Because if someone, even just one person, can look at you and say that you are good for something, then you're not broken.
Then you're not alone. Then everything that hurt was worth it.
Even if guilt drowns you every night.
Even if the nightmares never rest.
Even if the hands you tried to save still drag you from their graves, begging for a second death.
It doesn't matter. As long as someone believes that keeping you alive makes sense... then thatâs enough.
Right?
Maybe you're a weapon.
Maybe you're selfish.
Maybe you did it all just out of fear of disappearing, for that unbearable need to feel alive.
The need to feel that you matter. To have a place to fit in.
But at least you're something. In this shattered world, that's already more than many have.
But how much more can you take before you truly break? How much longer before you completely crumble, like so many times you did on the inside? How much will the price of his greed cost⌠and your desperate desire to remain useful?
Because in the end, it wasn't Bruce.
Nor your brothers.
Nor your sisters.
None of them ever knew who you were.
None of them understood.
Only him. Only Masashi.
Thatâs what scares you the most. Because if even he can make you believe thatâs all youâre worth. If even he manages to make you cling to that idea, then maybe, you were never more than that.
Maybe you were never more than your power, and in Gotham, where you can no longer use it...
Not even that belongs to you.
#female reader#tw neglect#neglected reader#healer#mental health#emotional abuse#child neglect#dc comics#batfam x batsis#batsis!reader#batfam x reader#batfamily x reader#batfamily x neglected reader#yosano akiko#bruce wayne x daughter reader#platonic batfam#tw abuse#child abuse#dc x reader#angst#healer!reader#batfamily x batsis!reader#medic!reader#yandere platonic#yandere batfam#yandere batfamily#yandere batboys#â˘â𪝠hold on to reason (or fall for the illusion)#٠࣪â enigma
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I'm happy to announce that Dru is no longer alone! Spring is here, baby chicks have hatched, and so I was able to get two new hens.
The first one (who, as per tradition, will receive a name on the day she lays her first egg) is your average red hen, already old enough to defend herself against hazing; and she seems very congenial to boot. It took some time for Dru to warm up to her former coopmate when I first brought her home, whereas she seemed to like this one immediately. She inspected her from every angle and deemed her very satisfactory.




From day one they were glued to each other all day long! It's sweet how the new, young hen seems to observe everything Drusilla does, which plants she decides to eat, etc, then earnestly imitates her. I bet Dru enjoys having such a studious disciple.


Dru and Louise used to sleep in the laying boxes rather than on the perches; each of them had laid claim to a different box so that they spent the night in separate cubicles with a wall between them; in contrast, when I went to check on them the first night, I found Dru and the new hen huddled up together on the same perch.

Moreover, when it came to seeking shelter from the elements, Dru and Louise used to sit on opposite sides of the outdoor tableâwhereas, when it snowed a little on Day 1 after the new hen arrived, I found her and Dru hiding under the table on the same side, quietly and companionably clucking to each other.

At which point one of my friends bravely said out loud what everyone was thinking:
And, I mean, the new hen just came out of her egg this year so the age gap with 5yo Dru is probably problematic in chicken years, but also this reminded me of the most wholesome image that lives in my computer (which balances it out):
But I did mention that I got two new hens. I wanted both of them to be 10-12 weeks-old, but unfortunately the neighbour I bought them from only had one hen left in this age range. He said I could take a younger chick, and I was reluctant at first because I didn't want her to be attacked by the older hensâI could keep them separated until she grew up a bit but wouldn't she get lonely?
(This is a complete digression, but while making small talk with this neighbour I mentioned that I've had a lot going on since the beginning of the year and I was a bit exhausted, and he said "Oh, you need some birch water" and took me to the nearest birch and offered me a drink from the tree. I loved thisâevery time I mention any kind of ailment to a neighbour, they all have their Elixir of Choice that will solve all my problems, be it special honey as a cough remedy or whatever homemade concoction they personally swear by.
So I went home with two bottles of birch water, and promised I would have a glass every morning.)

But let's go back to chickens. Like I said I didn't want to have a smaller chick along with two older ones, because chickens can be quite mean to more vulnerable members of their coop, but then I went to look at his young chicks and quickly developed a soul connection with one of them. She seemed solitary and had a glint of existential anguish in her eyes that I identified with. So I took her home.

I also liked the fact that her feet are currently longer than her body.

As expected, the older hens are pretty rough with her, so the chick currently spends the nights in the greenhouse where it's warm, and in the morning I transfer her to the coop.
Every morning I have to slalom between a dog and a cat during the Transfer of the Chick.
She gets a supervised visit with the other hens so they get to know each other, then I let the older hens out and the baby spends the day in the coop, where she can walk around and forage safely by herself.
I initially let her have access to the indoor part of the coop, but then realised that her tormented temperament resulted in her hiding from the world in the dark all day long, so I now close the little trap so she'll spend the day downstairs.

It was obvious that she longed to look at the world but was too anxious to do so on her own, so I gently placed her on the roof of her coop so she could have a better view of the pasture, with the llamas and donkeys grazing in the distance, and it blew her little mind.

I also worried she might fail to learn important chicken social codes if she didn't spend enough time with other chickens as a child (and she didn't seem very good at socialising with her age peers to begin with) so after letting her adapt to her new home for a bit I decided to take her out of the coop, on a leash (so she wouldn't run away into the woods), for some more supervised socialising.
The other hens were fairly nice to her, they seemed less interested in hazing her when everyone was outside of the coop, but her anxiety got the better of her and she just curled up into a tiny ball and tried to disappear.
If I were a hen in a coop, even an adult one, I would be intimidated by the other hens, especially the ones who are very close friends like Dru and the new girl seem to be, so I sympathised, and deposited the little chick on the outdoor table where I was about to have my afternoon tea. I gave her some grains to eat in my saucer and, like any self-respecting chicken would, she immediately stepped in it and made a mess.

She looked a lot more confident and adventurous on top of the table! I figured, since the other hens were foraging around the table while clucking to each other, this still counted as socialising, from a safe distance, for the little one. She was a bit wary of Pandolf at first, who was going round and round the table like a fluffy shark, hoping to get a glimpse of this new animal, but once she realised he just wanted to rest his long nose on the table and look at her adoringly, she stopped paying attention to him.
And after thoroughly exploring the table, trying to taste my mandarin and then my tea, having a look at the book I was reading and then at the other hens below herâand chirping her opinions continuously the whole timeâshe slowly ventured onto my lap and fell asleep :')

#crawling along#i hope she grows up fast so the others can adopt her as a coopmate#but I don't regret having accepted my neighbour's offer of a smaller hen; she's so sweet
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the way this site acts ud think trans women making posts were the biggest obstacle to social justice
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