#my first self-drafted pattern!
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‘Don’t you leave him, Samwise Gamgee,’ and I don’t mean to, I don’t mean to!
#lotr#frodo baggins#lotr fanart#lotr frodo#lotr sam#sam gamgee#embroidery#cross stitch#my art#mine#my first self-drafted pattern!#finally bought a frame for it#lord of the rings#fibercraft#fiber art#hand embroidery
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Ohhhh yea it’s all coming together …. 🌈
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the fabric for my big winter sewing project just arrived, and I am having to restrain myself from rubbing my face against it like a happy cat
#2024 mood#my sewing#sewing#fabric#velvet#silk velvet#probably gonna end up calling this project#velvet yule dress#or just#yule dress#Jack will also be getting a festive yule thing out of this fabric too#it's a burgundy silk-rayon velvet that I got for a ridiculously good price#I have sewn 100% silk and sewn 100% rayon and sewn (poly? acrylic?) velvet#so hopefully this fabric that's all three won't be too huge of a learning curve for me#I have silk pins and fine machine needles and I am willing to baste seams as needed#I have a few projects I want to sew before I leap into this one but if I can have this dress finished about 3 months from now I'll be happy#and I'll be using a self-drafted pattern that I've made before and know all the difficulties of#and the thing for Jack will get a mock-up made first but honestly should be the easiest part of what I'm planning for this fabric#I've just gotta keep myself from petting the velvet too much lol
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The Trans Court Suit
This was my big project I made over the summer! I am beyond proud of and happy with the coat.
The first initial project I wanted for this was a pink waistcoat. I grew up liking pink and most of my stuff was, but that (along with growing up in a hot pink room) made me start to resent pink a lot especially as a teenager. (I think a lot of trans guys have similar stories.) But of course pink was very popular for men throughout a lot of European fashion history. So in many ways this was a self healing project for me, at least in that regard. Which I think was a success!




I actually found the first two portraits after I started working on the outfit, they looked perfect! The first especially is super close to my hair.
The silks for the coat as well as the linen interfacings were second hand or scraps in my stash. The cotton sateen was from Burnley and Trowbridge. This is the first project I fully drafted myself. The waistcoat and breeches were made from an 1820s manual and the coat was primarily taken from Period Patterns by Doris Edison, using also Agreeable Tyrant for interfacings and The Taylor's Complete Guide (for shape reference).
This is also the most hand sewing I’ve done for an outfit. Both of the fronts of the coat and waistcoat are completely by hand. Most of the coat is by hand with machine for structural/backstitches, mostly the seams but not the edges. In total there are 22 buttons.
I made the waistcoat straight across for two reasons A. So I can wear it with my other stuff B. I didn’t have any more trim, that was it. I’ll probably make a more 18th century style waistcoat out of white for this (at some point).
The breeches ended up being too small for my thighs so I started getting frustrated with the fit and rushed them by the end so I could move on. (I accidentally sewed the buttonholes on the wrong side).



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A Lesson In Fear Extinction | part I

pairing: professor!Jack Abbot x f!psych phd student reader summary: You’re a senior doctoral student in the clinical department, burned out and emotionally barricaded, just trying to finish your final few years when Jack Abbot—trauma researcher, new committee member, and unexpectedly perceptive—starts seeing through you in ways you didn’t anticipate wc: 11.9k content/warnings: academic!AU, slow burn (takes places over 3 years lbffr), frat boys being gross + depictions of unwanted male attention/verbal harassment, academic power dynamics, emotional repression, discussions of mental health, mutual pining, hurt/comfort, angst, so much yearning, canon divergence, no explicit smut (yet/tbd but still 18+ MDNI, i will fight u) a/n: this started as a slow-burn AU and spiraled into a study in mutual repression, avoidant-attachment, and me trying to resolve my personal baggage through writing ~yet again~ p.s. indubitably inspired by @hotelraleigh and their incredible mohan x abbot fic (and all of their fics that live in my head rent free, tyvm) i hope you stay tuned for part II (coming soon, pinky promise) ^-^
The first thing you learn about Dr. Jack Abbot is that he hates small talk. That, and that he has a death glare potent enough to silence even the most self-important faculty members in the psych department.
The second thing you learn is that he runs his office like a bunker—door usually half-shut, always a little too cold, shelves lined with books no one's touched in decades. You step inside for your first meeting, and it feels like entering a war room.
"You’re early," he says, without looking up from the annotated manuscript he’s scribbling on.
"It's the first day of the school year."
"Same difference."
You take a seat, balancing your laptop on your knees. Your fingers hover over the keyboard, unsure if you should even bother.
Dr. Abbot finally glances up. Hazel eyes, sharp behind silver-framed glasses. "Let’s make this easy. Tell me what you’re working on and what you want from me."
You hesitate. Not because you don’t know. You’ve been rehearsing this on the walk over. You just hadn’t planned on him cutting through the pleasantries quite so fast.
"I’m running a mixed methods study on affective forecasting errors in anxiety and depression. Lab-based mood induction, longitudinal survey follow-up, and semi-structured interviews. I'm trying to map discrepancies between predicted and experienced affect and how that mismatch contributes to maladaptive emotion regulation patterns over time."
A beat.
"So you're testing whether people with anxiety and depression are bad at predicting their own feelings."
You blink. "Yes."
"Good. Start with that next time."
You bite the tip of your tongue. Roll the flesh between your teeth to ground yourself. There is no next time, you want to say. You’re only meeting with him once, to get sign-off on your committee. He wasn’t your first choice. Wasn't even your second. But your advisor's on sabbatical, and the other quantitative faculty are already overbooked.
Dr. Abbot leans back in his chair, examining you. "You’re primary is Robby, right?"
"Technically, yes."
He hums, not bothering to hide the skepticism. "And you want me on your committee because...?"
"Because you published that meta-analysis on PTSD and chronic stress. Your work on cumulative trauma exposure and dysregulated affect dovetails with mine on stress-related trajectories for internalizing disorders and comorbidity. I thought you might actually get what I’m trying to do."
His brow lifts, just slightly. "You did your homework."
"Well, I’m asking you for feedback on a dissertation that will probably make me break down countless times before it's done. Figured I should know what I was getting into."
Dr. Abbot's mouth twitches. You wouldn’t call it a smile, exactly. But it’s something.
"Alright," he says, flipping open a calendar. "Let’s see if we can find a time next week to go over your proposal draft."
You arch a brow. "You’ll do it?"
"You came in prepared. And you didn’t waste my time—as much as the other fourth years. That gets you further than you’d think around here."
You nod, heart thudding. Not because you’re nervous.
Because you have the weirdest feeling that Jack Abbot just became your biggest academic problem—and your most unexpected ally.
You see him again the next day. Robby was enjoying his last remaining few weeks of paternity leave and graciously asked Jack to sub for his foundations of clinical psychology course. Jack preferred the word coerced but was silenced by a text message with a photo of a child attached. The baby was cute enough to warrant blackmail.
He barely got through the door intact: balancing a coffee cup between his teeth, cradling a half-closed laptop under one arm, and wrangling the straps of a clearly ancient backpack. His limp is more pronounced today. The small cohort watches him with a mix of curiosity and vague alarm.
You’re in the front row, laptop open before he even gets to the podium.
Jack drops everything onto the lectern with a heavy exhale, then glances around. His eyes catch on you and pause—not recognition yet, just flicker. Then he turns back to plug in his laptop.
You don’t expect to see him again two days later, striding into the 200-level general psych class you TA. The room’s already three-quarters of the way full when he walks in, and it takes him a moment before he does a brief double-take in your direction.
You return your attention to your notes. Jack stares.
"Small world."
"Nice to see you too, Dr. Abbot."
He sighs. "Why am I not surprised."
"Because the annual stipend increase doesn't adjust for inflation, I'm desperate, and there aren't enough grants given the current state of events?"
Jack mutters something under his breath about cosmic punishment and unfolds the syllabus from his coat pocket like it personally betrayed him.
When he finally settles at the front—coffee in one hand, laptop balancing precariously on the desk—you catch him bending and straightening his knee just under the edge of the table, jaw set tight. It’s subtle. Anyone else might miss it. But you’ve been watching.
You say nothing.
A few students linger with questions—mostly undergrads eager to impress, notebooks clutched to their chests, rattling off textbook jargon in shaky voices. Jack humors them, mostly. Nods here, clarification there. But his eyes flick to you more than once.
You take your time with the stack of late enrollment passes. He’s still watching when you sling your tote over one shoulder and head for the door.
Probably off to the lab. Or your cubicle in the main psych building. Wherever fourth years disappear to when they aren’t shadowing faculty or training underqualified and overzealous research assistants on data collection procedures.
Jack shifts his weight onto his good leg and half-listens to the sophomore with the over-highlighted textbook.
His eyes stay on you when you walk out.
You make it three steps past the stairwell before the sound of your name stops you. It’s not loud—more like a clipped murmur through the general noise of backpacks zipping and chairs scraping—but it cuts straight through.
You turn back.
Jack’s still at the front, the stragglers now filtering out behind him. He doesn’t wave. Doesn’t beckon. Just meets your gaze like he already knows you’ll wait. You do.
He makes his way toward you slowly, favoring one leg. The closer he gets, the more you notice—the way his hand tightens on the strap of his backpack, the exhausted pull at his brow. He’s not masking as well today.
"Thanks for not saying anything," he says when he stops beside you.
You shrug. "Didn’t seem like you needed an audience."
Jack huffs a laugh, dry and faintly surprised. "Most people mean well, but—"
"They hover," you finish. "Or overcompensate. Or say something weird and then try to walk it back."
"Exactly."
You both stand there for a beat too long, campus noise shifting around you like a slow tide.
"I was heading to the coffee shop," you say finally. "Did you want anything?"
Jack tilts his head. "Bribery?"
"Positive reinforcement." The words trail behind a small grin.
He shakes his head, mouth twitching. "Probably had enough caffeine for the day."
The corner of your lip curls higher. "As if there's such a thing."
That earns you a half-huff, half-scoff—just enough to let you believe you might have amused him.
"Well," you say, taking a step backward, "I’ve got three more RAs to train and one very stubborn loop to fix. See you around, Dr. Abbot."
"Good luck," he says, voice low but steady. "Don’t let the building eat you alive."
The next time he sees you, it’s after 10 p.m. on a Thursday.
You hadn’t planned on staying that late. But the dinosaur of a computer kept crashing, two of your participants no-showed, and by the time you’d salvaged the afternoon’s data to pull, it was easier to crash on the grad lounge couch than face the lone commute back to your apartment.
You must’ve fallen asleep halfway through reading feedback from your committee—curled up with your legs splayed over the edge of the couch and laptop perched on the cheap coffee table. The hall is mostly dark when Jack walks past. He’s heading toward the parking lot when he stops, mid-step.
For a moment, he just stands there, taking in the sight of you tucked awkwardly into yourself. You look comfortable in your oversized hoodie, if not for the highlighter cap still tucked between your fingers and mouth parted in a silent snore.
He doesn’t say anything. Just watches you breathe for a few seconds longer than necessary.
Then, maybe with more curiosity than concern, he raps his knuckles gently against the doorframe. Once. Twice. Three times for good measure.
No response.
Jack steps inside and calls out, voice pitched low but insistent. "This is not a sustainable sleep schedule, you know."
You stir—just barely. A vague groan escapes your lips as you shift and swat clumsily in the direction of the noise. "Just five more minutes... need to run reliability analyses..."
Jack chuckles, genuine and surprised.
He leans against the wall, watching you with no urgency to leave. "Dreaming about data cleaning. Impressive."
You make a small, unintelligible noise and swat again, this time with a little more conviction. Jack snorts.
After a moment, he sighs. Then carefully crosses the room, picks up the crumpled throw blanket from the floor, and drapes it over you without ceremony.
He flicks off the overheads and closes the door behind him with a quiet click. The hallway hums with fluorescent buzz as he limps toward the parking lot, shoulders tucked in against the chill.
A few weeks into the semester, the rhythm settles—lecture, discussion, grading, rinse and repeat. But today, something shifts.
You’re stacking quizzes at the front of the general psych lecture hall when Jack catches movement out of the corner of his eye. Two male students—frat-adjacent, all oversized hoodies and entitled swagger—approach your desk.
Jack looks up from his laptop. His expression doesn’t shift, but something in his posture does—a subtle, perceptible freeze. He watches from where he’s still packing up—hand paused on his laptop case, jaw tight, eyes narrowing just slightly as he takes in the dynamic. There’s a flicker of tension behind his glasses, a pause that says: if you needed him, he’d step in.
They swagger up with the kind of smirks you’ve seen too many times before—overconfident, under-read, and powered by too many YouTube clips of alpha male podcasts.
"Yo, TA—what’s up?" one says, leaning far too close to your desk. "Was gonna ask something about the exam, but figured I’d shoot my shot first. You free later? Coffee on me."
His friend elbows him like he’s a comedic genius. "Yeah, like maybe we could pick your brain about, like, how to get into grad school. You probably have all the insider tricks, right?"
You don’t even blink.
"Sure," you say sweetly. "I’d love to review your application materials. Bring your CV, your transcript, three letters of rec, and proof that you’ve read the Title IX policy in full. Bonus points if you can make it through a meeting without quoting Andrew Tate—or I’ll assume you’re trying to get yourself suspended."
They stare. You smile.
One laughs uncertainly. The other mutters something about how "damn, okay," and both slink away.
Jack’s jaw works once. Then relaxes.
You glance up, like you knew he’d been watching.
"Well handled," he says, voice low as he steps beside you.
You offer a nonchalant shrug. "First years are getting bolder."
"Bold is one word for it."
You hand him a stack of leftover forms. "Relax, Dr. Abbot. I’ve survived undergrads before. I’ll survive again."
Jack gives a small, amused grunt. Then, after a beat: "You can call me Jack."
You glance up, brow raised.
"Feels a little formal to keep pretending we’re strangers.
You don’t say anything right away. Just nod once, almost imperceptibly, then go back to gathering your things.
He doesn’t push it.
It’s raining hard enough to rattle the windows.
You’re having what your cohort half-jokingly calls a "good brain day"—sentences coming easy, theory clicking into place, citations at your fingertips. You barely notice the weather.
Jack glances up from your chapter draft as you launch into a point about predictive error and affective flattening. He doesn't interrupt. His eyes follow how you pace—one hand gesturing, the other holding your annotated copy, words sharp and certain.
Eventually, you pause mid-thought and glance at him.
He's already looking at you.
Your hand flies up to cover your mouth. "Shit. I'm sorry—"
Jack shakes his head, lips twitching at the corners. "Don’t apologize. That was… brilliant."
You blink at him, the compliment stalling your momentum. The automatic response bubbles up fast—some joke to deflect, to downplay. You don't say it. Not this time.
Still, your fingers tighten slightly on the edge of the desk. "I don't know about brilliant..."
Jack doesn’t look away. "I do."
The silence stretches—not awkward, exactly, but thick. His gaze doesn’t waver, and it holds something steady and burning behind it.
You glance down at your annotated draft. The silence stays between you like a taut wire.
Jack doesn’t fill it. Just waits—gaze unwavering, as if giving you time to come to your own conclusion. No pressure, no indulgent smile. Just a quiet, grounded certainty that settles between you like weight.
Eventually, you exhale. The tension loosens—not completely, but enough to keep going.
"Okay," you murmur, almost to yourself.
Jack nods once, slowly. Then gestures at your printed draft. "Let’s talk about your integration of mindfulness in the discussion section. I’ve got a few thoughts."
Ethics is the last class of the week. The room's heating is inconsistent, the lights too bright, and Jack doesn’t know how the hell he ended up covering for Frank Langdon. Probably the same way he got stuck with Foundations and General Psych: Robby. The department’s too damn small and apparently everyone with a baby gets to vanish into thin air.
He steps into the room ten minutes early, coffee already lukewarm, and makes a half-hearted attempt to adjust the podium screen. The first few students trickle in, then more. He flips through the lecture slides, barely registering them.
And then he sees you.
You’re near the back, chatting with someone Jack doesn’t recognize. Another grad student by the look of him—slouched posture, soft jaw, navy sweater. The guy’s grinning like he thinks he’s charming. He leans in a little too close to your chair. Says something Jack can’t hear.
Jack tells himself he’s only looking because the guy seems familiar. Maybe someone from Walsh’s lab. Or Garcia’s.
You laugh at something—light, genuine.
Jack tries not to react.
Navy Sweater says something else, more animated now. He gestures to your laptop. Points to something. You nudge his hand away with a grin and say something back that makes him blush.
Jack flips the page on his lecture notes without reading a word.
You’re still smiling when you finally glance up toward the podium.
Your eyes meet.
Jack doesn’t look away. But he doesn’t smile either.
The guy beside you says something else. You nod politely.
But you’re not looking at him anymore.
The next time you're in Jack’s office, the air feels different—autumn sharp outside, but warm in here.
He notices things. Not all at once, but cumulatively.
Your hair’s longer now. It’s subtle, but the ends graze your jaw in a way they hadn’t before. You’ve started wearing darker shades—amber, forest green, burgundy—instead of the lighter neutrals from early fall. Small changes. Seasonal shifts.
He doesn’t say anything about any of that.
But then he sees it.
A faint smudge of something high on your neck, near the curve of your jaw.
"Rough night?" he asks, lightly. The tone’s casual, but his eyes stay there a second too long.
You look up, blinking. Then seem to realize. "Oh. No, it’s—nothing."
He raises an eyebrow, just once. Doesn’t press.
What you don’t say: you went on a date last night. Your first real date since your second year. Navy Sweater—Isaac—had been sweet. Patient. Social psych, so he talked about group dynamics and interdependence theory instead of clinical cases. A refreshing change from your usual context. He’d been pining for you since orientation. You finally gave him a chance.
You’re not sure yet if it was a mistake.
Jack doesn’t ask again. He just shifts his attention back to your printed draft, flipping a page without comment.
But you can feel it—that subtle change in the room. Like something under the surface has started to stir.
Jack doesn’t speak again for the rest of the meeting, at least not about anything that isn’t your manuscript. But the temperature between you has shifted, unmistakable even in silence.
His feedback is sharp, incisive, and you take it all in—but your focus tugs sideways more than once.
You start to notice little things. The way his hands move when he talks—precise, economical, almost always with a pen twirling between his fingers. The way he reads with his whole posture—leaned in slightly, brows furrowed, lips moving just barely like he’s tasting the cadence of each sentence. How he always wears button-downs, sleeves pushed up to the elbows, like he’s never quite comfortable in them.
You catch the faint scruff at his jawline, the flecks of gray you hadn’t seen before in the fluorescent classroom light. The quiet groan of his office chair as he shifts to get more comfortable—though he never quite does. The occasional tap of his fingers against the desk when he’s thinking. The way his eyes track you when you pace, like he’s cataloging your rhythm.
When he leans in to gesture at a line in your text, you’re aware of his proximity in a way you hadn’t been before. The warmth that radiates off him. The way his breath hitches just slightly before he speaks.
When you ask a clarifying question, he meets your eyes and holds the gaze a fraction too long.
It shouldn’t mean anything. It probably doesn’t.
Still, when you pack up to leave, you don’t rush. Neither does he.
He walks you to the door, stops just short of it.
"Good luck with the coding," he says.
You nod. "Thanks. See you next week."
He hesitates, then nods once more. "Yeah. Next week."
And when you leave his office, the echo of that pause follows you down the hall.
At home, Jack goes through the same routine he always does. He hangs up his coat. Places his keys in the ceramic dish by the door. Fills the kettle. Rinses a clean mug from the rack without thinking—habit, even if it’s just for himself.
Then he sits down on the edge of the couch and unbuckles the prosthetic from his leg with practiced efficiency. He leans forward, slow and deliberate, and cleans the area with a soft cloth, checking the skin for signs of irritation before applying a thin layer of ointment. Only then does he begin to massage the tender spot where his leg ends, pressing the heel of his palm just enough to release tension. The ache is dull tonight, but persistent. It always is when the weather shifts.
He doesn’t turn on the TV. When he buckles it back on and gets up again, he moves around his apartment quietly, the limp less noticeable this time around.
While the water heats, he scrolls through emails on his phone—most from admin, flagged with false urgency. A few unread messages from students, one from a journal editor asking for another reviewer on a manuscript that costs too much to publish open access. He deletes half, archives another third. Wonders when it became so easy to ignore what used to feel so important.
The kettle whistles. He pours the water over the tea bag and sets it down, not bothering with the stack of essays he meant to look at hours ago.
He doesn’t touch them.
Not yet.
Tonight, his rhythm is off.
Instead, he looks over your latest draft after dinner, meaning only to skim. He finds himself rereading the same paragraph three times, mind somewhere else entirely. Your words, your phrasing, your comments in the margins—he's memorizing them. Not intentionally. It just happens.
Later, brushing his teeth, Jack thinks of how you’d looked that afternoon: eyes sharp, expression animated, tucked into a wool sweater the color of cinnamon. Hair falling forward when you tilted your head to listen, then swept back with one distracted hand. A little ink smudged on your finger. The edge of a smile you didn’t know you were wearing.
He wonders if you know how often you pace when you’re deep in thought. How your whole posture changes when something clicks—like your bones remember before your voice does. How you gesture with the same hand you write with, sometimes forgetting you’re holding a pen at all.
He tells himself it’s just professional attentiveness. That he’s tuned into all his students this way. That noticing you in detail is part of his job.
But it’s a lie. And the truth has started to settle into his bones.
He closes his laptop, shuts off the light.
He dreams in fragments—lecture notes and old conference halls, the scent of rain-soaked leaves, the sound of your voice mid-sentence. The ghost of a laugh.
He doesn’t remember the shape of the dream when he wakes.
Only the warmth that lingers in its place.
Across town, you’re on another date with Isaac.
He’s funny tonight—quick with dry quips, gentler than you'd expected. He walks you to a small café far from campus, one you’ve driven by a dozen times but never tried. He orders chai with oat milk. You get the pumpkin spice out of spite.
"Pumpkin spice, really?" he teases. "Living the stereotype."
"It’s autumn," you shoot back. "Let me have one basic pleasure."
You talk about everything but your dissertation—TV shows, childhood pets, the worst advice you’ve ever received from an advisor. Inevitably, you steer the conversation into something about work. It's a habit you seem to remember having since your earliest academic days, and one you don't see yourself breaking free from anytime soon.
"My undergrad advisor once told me I’d never get into grad school unless I stopped sounding ‘so West Coast.’ Still not sure what that means."
Isaac laughs. "Mine told me to pick a research topic ‘I wouldn’t mind reading about for the rest of my life.’ As if anyone wants to read their own lit review twice."
You laugh—genuine, belly-deep. Isaac flushes with pride and takes a long sip of his chai, eyes bright.
It's easy with him, you think. Talking, breathing, being. You lean back in your chair, cup warm between your palms, and realize you should feel more present than you do.
He’s exactly what you thought you needed. Different. Outside your orbit. Not tangled up in diagnoses or a department that feels more like a pressure cooker every day.
But still, your mind drifts. Not far. Just enough.
Back to the way Jack had looked at you earlier that day. The pause before he spoke. The silence that wasn’t quite silence.
You can’t put your finger on it. You don’t want to.
Isaac reaches across the table to brush his fingers against yours. You let him.
And yet.
You catch yourself glancing toward the door as he brushes your fingers. Just once. Barely perceptible. A flicker of something unformed tugging at the edge of your attention.
Not for any reason you can name. Not because anything happened. But because something did—quiet and slow and not easily undone.
You remember the way his brow furrowed as he read your chapter, the steadiness in his voice when he called your argument brilliant, the way he looked at you like the room had narrowed down to a single point.
Isaac is sweet. Funny. Steady. You should be here.
But your mind keeps slipping sideways.
And Jack Abbot—stubborn, sharp, unreadable Jack—is suddenly everywhere. In the cadence of a sentence you revise, where you hear his voice in your head asking, 'Why this framework? Why now?' In the questions you don’t ask Isaac because you already know how Jack would answer them—precise, cutting, but never unkind. In the sudden, irritating way you want someone to challenge you just a little more. To push back, to poke holes, to see if your argument still stands.
You find yourself wondering what he’s doing tonight. If he’s at home, pacing through a quiet, single-family home too large for his own company. If he’s reading someone else’s manuscript with the same intensity. If he ever thinks about the way you looked that afternoon, how you paced his office with fire in your voice and a red pen tucked behind your ear.
You think about the hitch in his breath when you leaned in. The way he’d watched you leave, that pause at the door.
And then Isaac says something—soft, thoughtful—and it takes you a second too long to register it. You nod, distracted, and reach for your drink again.
But your mind is already elsewhere.
Still with someone else.
You take another sip of your drink. Smile at Isaac. Let the moment pass.
But even then, even here—Jack is in the room.
You don’t see Jack again until the following Thursday. It’s raining hard again—something about mid-semester always seems to come with the weather—and the psych building smells like wet paper and overworked radiators.
You’re in the hallway, hunched over a Tupperware of leftover lentils and trying to catch up on grading, when his door creaks open across the hall. You glance up reflexively.
He’s standing there, brow furrowed, papers in hand. He spots you. Freezes.
For a moment, neither of you says anything. The hallway is quiet, just the hum of fluorescents and the distant murmur of a class in session. Then:
"Grading?" he asks, voice lower than usual—quiet, but unmistakably curious.
You lift your fork, deadpan. "Don’t sound so jealous."
Jack’s mouth twitches—almost a smile. A pause, then: "You’re in Langdon’s office hours slot, right?"
"Only if I bring snacks," you quip, referring to the way Frank Langdon always lets the TA with snacks cut the line—a running joke in the department.
Jack raises his coffee like a toast. "Then I’ll keep walking." A dry little truce. An unspoken I’ll stay out of your way—unless you want me to stay.
You watch him disappear down the hallway, his limp slightly more pronounced than usual. And you find yourself thinking—about how many times you’ve noticed that, and how many times he’s never once drawn attention to it.
Your spoon scrapes the bottom of the container. You try to return to grading.
You don’t get much done.
Later that afternoon, you’re back in the general psych lecture hall, perched on the side of the desk with your TA notes while Jack clicks through the day’s slides. It’s the second time he’s teaching this unit and he’s not even pretending to follow the script. You know him well enough now to catch the subtle shifts—when he goes off-book, lets the theory breathe.
He doesn’t look at you while he lectures, but you can tell when he’s aware of you. The slight change in cadence, the way his eyes flick toward the front row where you sometimes sit, sometimes stand.
Today’s lecture is on conditioning. Classical, operant, extinction.
At one point, Jack pauses at the podium. He’s talking about fear responses—conditioned reactions, the body’s anticipatory wiring, what it takes to unlearn a threat. You’ve heard this part a dozen times in college and a dozen more in grad school. You’ve written about it. You've published on it.
But when he says, "Fear isn’t erased. It’s overwritten," his eyes flick toward you—just for a second.
And your heart trips a little. Not in a dramatic, cinematic way—more like a misstep in rhythm, a skipped beat in a song you thought you knew by heart. Your breath catches for half a second, and you feel the heat rush to the tips of your ears.
It’s absurd, maybe. Definitely. But the tone of his voice when he said it—that measured, worn certainty—lands somewhere deep inside you. Not clinical. Not abstract. It feels like he’s speaking to something unspoken, to a part of you you've tried to keep quiet.
You shift your weight, pretending to re-stack a paper that doesn’t need re-stacking, pulse louder than it should be in your ears.
From your seat on the edge of the desk, you can see the way he gestures with his hand, slow and spare, like every movement costs something. The way he leans on his good leg. The way the muscles in his forearm flex as he flips to the next slide, still speaking, still teaching—none of this showing on his face.
Your eyes keep drifting back.
And he doesn’t look at you again. Not for the rest of the lecture.
But you feel the weight of that glance long after the class ends.
You stay after class, mostly to gather the quiz sheets and handouts. A few students linger, asking Jack questions about the exam. You hear him shift into that firm-but-generous tone he uses with undergrads, the kind that makes them think he’s colder than he is. Efficient. Clear.
When the last student finally packs up and leaves the room, Jack straightens. His eyes find you, soft but unreadable.
"Good lecture," you say.
He hums. "Not bad for a recycled deck."
You hand him the stack of forms. "You made it your own."
His thumb brushes over the edge of the papers. "So did you."
You don’t ask what he means. But the quiet between you feels different than it did at the start of the semester.
The room is mostly empty. Just the two of you. You're caught somewhere between impulse and caution. Approach and avoidance. There's a pull in your chest, low and slow, that makes you want to linger a second longer. To say something else. To ask about the lecture, or the line he looked at you during, or the kind of day he's had. But your voice sticks.
Instead, you shift again, adjust your grip on the papers in your hands, and let it all stay unsaid. But Jack’s already turned back toward the podium, gathering his things.
He doesn’t look up right away. Just slides his laptop into its case with more force than necessary, his jaw set tight. He’s annoyed with himself. The kind of annoyance that comes from knowing he missed something—not a moment, exactly, but the shadow of one. An opening. And he let it pass.
There was a question in your eyes. Or maybe not a question—maybe a dare. Maybe just the start of one. And he didn’t rise to meet it.
He tells himself that’s good. That’s safe. That’s professional.
But it doesn’t feel like a win.
His hand pauses on the zipper. He breathes out through his nose, not quite a sigh. Then glances toward the door.
You’re already gone.
You let the moment pass.
But you feel it. Like something just under the surface, waiting for another breach in the routine.
It happens late one evening, entirely by accident.
You’re in your office, door mostly closed, light still on. You meant to leave hours ago—meant to finish your email and call it—but the combination of caffeine and a dataset that refused to make sense kept you tethered to your desk.
Jack’s on his way out of the building when he hears it: a muffled sound from behind a half-open door just across the hallway from his own. He pauses, backtracks, and realizes for the first time exactly where your office is.
He hears it again—a quiet sniffle, then a low, barely-there laugh like you’re trying to brush it off.
He knocks.
You don’t answer.
"Hey," he says, voice just loud enough to carry but still gentle. "You alright?"
The sound of your chair creaking. A breath caught in your throat.
"Shit—Jack." You swipe at your face automatically, the name out before you think about it.
He steps just inside, not crossing the threshold. "Didn’t mean to scare you."
You shake your head, still blinking fast. "No, I just—burned out. Hit a wall. It’s fine. Nothing serious. Just… one of those days." You try for a joke.
Jack’s eyes sweep the room. The state of your desk. The way your sweater sleeves are pulled down over your hands. He shifts his weight.
There’s a long pause. Then he says, softer, "Can I—?"
You furrow your brows for a moment before nodding.
He steps in and leaves the door slightly cracked open behind him. He remains by the edge of your desk, a respectful distance between you. His presence is quiet but steady, and he doesn't pry with questions.
You exhale slowly, suddenly aware of the sting behind your eyes and how tight your shoulders have been all day. You look down, embarrassed, and when you reach for a tissue, your hand grazes his by accident.
You both freeze.
It’s nothing, really. A brush of skin. But it lands like something else. Not unwelcome. Not forgotten.
Jack doesn’t pull away. But he doesn’t linger, either.
Jack doesn’t move at first. He watches you for a moment longer, the quiet in the room settling unevenly.
"You sure you’re alright?" he asks, voice low, unreadable.
You nod, quick. "Yeah. I’m fine."
It comes too fast. Reflexive. But it lands the way you want it to—firm, closed.
Jack nods slowly. He doesn’t push. "Okay."
He steps back, finally. "Just—don’t stay too late, alright?"
You offer a smaller nod.
He hesitates again. Then turns and slips out without another word.
Your office feels warmer once he’s gone.
And your breath feels just a little easier.
Jack makes his way down the hallway toward the faculty lounge with the intention of grabbing a fresh coffee before his office hours. He passes a few students loitering in the corridor—chatter, laughter, the usual.
But then he hears your voice. Quiet, edged. Just outside the lecture hall.
"Isaac, I’m not having this conversation again. Not here."
Jack slows. Doesn’t stop, but slows and finds a small nook just shy of the corner.
"I just don’t get why you won’t answer a simple question," Isaac says. "Are you seeing someone else or not?"
There’s a pause. Jack glances down at the coffee in his hand and debates turning around.
But then he hears your exhale—sharp, frustrated. "No. I’m not."
Isaac huffs. "Then what is this? You’re always somewhere else—even when we’re out, even on weekends. It’s like your head’s in another fucking dimension."
Jack feels the hairs on his neck stand up. He sees you standing with your back half-turned to Isaac, arms crossed tightly over your chest. Isaac’s face is flushed, his voice a little too loud for the setting. Your posture is still—too still.
Jack doesn’t step in. Not yet. He stays just out of sight, near the hallway alcove. Close enough to hear. Close enough to watch.
You draw in a long breath. When you speak, your voice is level, cold. "I just don’t think I’m in the right place to be in a relationship right now."
Isaac’s expression shifts—confused, hurt.
Jack watches the edge of your profile. How your shoulders lock into place. How your eyes go distant, like you’re powering down every soft part of yourself.
He doesn’t breathe.
Then someone laughs down the hallway, and the moment breaks. Isaac looks over his shoulder, distracted for half a beat, then turns back to you with something sharp in his eyes.
"You’re not even trying," he says, voice low but biting. "I’m giving you everything I’ve got, and you’re... somewhere else. Always."
You stiffen. Jack stays hidden, tension rippling down his spine.
"I know..." you say, voice tight. "I'm sorry. I really am. But this isn’t working."
Isaac’s face contorts. "Seriously? That’s it?"
You shake your head. "You deserve someone who’s fully here. Who wants the same things you do. I’m not that person right now."
He opens his mouth to say something, but your eyes have already gone cold. Guarded. Clinical.
"I don't want to whip out the 'it's not you it's me bullshit'," you continue, each word deliberate. "But this isn’t about you doing something wrong. It’s me. I can’t give more than I’ve already given."
Jack watches the shift in your posture—how you shut it all down, protect the last open pieces of yourself. He recognizes it because he’s done the same.
"I'm sorry." The words are genuine. "You deserve better." Your eyes don't betray you. For a moment, though, your expression softens. You look at Isaac like a kicked dog, like you wish you could offer something kinder. But then it’s gone. Your eyes go cold again, your voice a blade dulled only by exhaustion.
Then someone laughs again down the hallway, closer this time, and the moment scatters. Jack moves past without a word. Doesn’t look at you directly.
But he sees you.
And he doesn’t forget what he saw.
As he passes, you glance up. Your eyes meet.
Only for a second.
Then he’s gone.
Isaac doesn’t notice.
Time passes. You're back in Jack's office for your regular one-on-one—but something is different.
You sit a little straighter. Speak a little quieter. The bright curiosity you usually carry in your voice has hardened, now precise ,restrained. Not icy, but guarded. Pulled taut.
You’re not trying to be unreadable, but you can feel yourself defaulting. Drawing the boundaries back up.
Jack notices.
He doesn’t say anything, but you catch the slight narrowing of his gaze as he listens.
You’d gone all in on this program, this career—your research, your ambitions, your carefully calculated goals. Isaac was the first time you'd tried letting something else in. A possibility. A softness.
And it crashed. Of course it did.
Because that’s what you do. That’s the pattern. You’re excellent at control, planning, systems, at hypothesis testing and case management. But when it comes to anything outside the academic orbit—connection, trust, letting someone see the jagged pieces under the polish—you flinch. You fail.
And you’ve learned not to let that show. Not anymore.
At one point, you trail off mid-sentence. Jack doesn’t fill the silence.
You clear your throat. Try again.
There’s something steadier in his quiet today. You finally finish your point and glance up. His expression is neutral, but his gaze is… undivided.
"Are you okay?"
It catches you off guard. You blink once, not expecting the question, not from him, not here.
You start to nod. Then pause. Your throat feels tight for a second.
"Yeah," you say. "I’m fine."
Jack doesn’t look away. He holds your gaze a moment longer. Not pressing. Not interrogating. Just there.
"You should know better than to lie to a psychologist."
It’s almost a joke. Almost. Just enough curve at the corner of your mouth to soften it. You let out a breath—half a laugh, half a sigh. "Guess I need to reassess my baseline."
Jack leans forward slightly. Then, without saying anything, reaches over and closes your laptop. Slides it just out of reach on the desk.
You open your mouth to protest.
Jack cuts in, quiet but firm. "You need to turn your brain off before it short circuits."
You blink. He continues, gentler this time. "Just for a few minutes. You don’t have to push through every wall. Sometimes it’s okay to sit still. Breathe. Be a human being."
You look down at your hands, fingers curled around a pen you hadn���t realized you were still holding. There’s a long pause before you speak.
"I don’t know how to do that," you admit, voice barely above a whisper.
Jack doesn’t say anything at first. He lets the silence settle. "Start small," he says. "We’re not built to stay in fight-or-flight forever."
The words land heavier than you expect. You stare down at your hands, your knuckles paling against the pressure of your grip. Your breath stutters on the way out.
Jack doesn’t move, but his presence feels closer somehow—like the room has contracted around the two of you, warm and steady.
You set the pen down slowly. Swallow. Your eyes burn, but nothing falls.
Your jaw shifts. Just a fraction.
You don’t say anything at first.
Jack doesn’t either. But he doesn’t look away.
After a beat, he says—careful, quiet—"You want to talk about it?"
You hesitate, eyes fixed on a crease in your jeans. "No."
He waits. "I think you do."
You laugh under your breath. It’s not funny. "This how you talk to all of your clients?"
He doesn't bite.
"You don’t let up, do you?" You're only half-serious.
"I do," he pauses. "When it matters. Just not when my mentee is sitting in front of me looking like the world’s pressing down on their ribcage."
That makes you flinch. Not visibly, not to most. But he sees it. Of course he does. He’s trained to.
You look at your hands. He's not going to let this go so you might as well bite the bullet. "I'm not great at the whole... letting people in thing."
Jack doesn’t respond. Just shifts his weight slightly in his chair—almost imperceptibly. A silent invitation.
Your voice stays quiet. Measured. "I usually just throw myself into work. It’s easier. It’s something I can control."
Still, he says nothing.
You pick at the seam of your sleeve. "Other stuff... it gets messy. Too unpredictable. People are unpredictable."
Jack’s gaze never wavers. He doesn’t push. But the absence of interruption is its own kind of presence—steady, open.
Your lips twitch in a faint, humorless smile. "I know that’s ironic coming from someone studying emotion regulation."
He finally says, softly, "Sometimes the people who study it hardest are the ones trying to figure it out for themselves."
That makes your eyes flick up. His expression is calm. Receptive. No judgment. No smile, either. Just… presence.
You look down again. Your voice even softer now. "I don’t know how to do it. Not really."
Jack doesn’t interrupt. Just shifts, barely, like bracing.
And somehow, that makes you keep going.
"Grad school’s easier. Career’s easier. I can plan. I can control. Everything else just…" You trail off. Shrug, a flicker of helplessness.
He’s still watching you. The way he does when he’s listening hard, like there’s a string between you and he’s waiting to see if you’ll keep tugging it.
"I thought maybe..." You press your lips together. "I thought I could do it. Let someone in. Be a person. A twenty-nine year old, for fuck's sake." Your hands come up to your face. "But it just reminded me why I don’t."
You draw a slow breath. Something in your chest cracks. Not a collapse—just a fault line giving way.
Jack just stares.
Then, slowly, he leans back—not away, but into the quiet. He folds his hands in his lap, thumb tracing a familiar line over his knuckle. A practitioner’s stillness. A kind of careful permission.
"You know," he says, voice low, "when I first started in trauma research, I thought if I understood it well enough, I could outsmart it. Like if I had the right frameworks, if I mapped the pathways right, it wouldn’t touch me."
You glance up.
He exhales through his nose—dry, but not bitter. "Turns out, knowing the symptoms doesn’t stop you from living them. Doesn’t stop the body from remembering."
He doesn’t specify. Doesn’t have to.
His eyes flick to yours. "But you don’t have to be fluent in trust to start learning it. You don’t have to be good at it yet. You just have to let someone sit with you in the silence."
You study him. The sharpness of his jaw, the quiet behind his glasses, the wear in his voice that doesn’t make it weaker.
Your throat tightens, but you don’t speak.
He doesn’t need you to.
He just stays there—anchored. Steady. Unmoving.
Like he's not waiting for you to come undone.
He's waiting for you to believe you don’t have to.
It's Friday night. You’re walking a participant through the start of a lab assessment—part of the longitudinal stress and memory protocol you’ve spent the last year fine-tuning. The task itself is simple enough: a series of conditioned images, paired with soft tones. But you watch the participant's pulse rise on the screen. Notice the minute shift in posture, the tension in their jaw.
You pause. Slow things down.
"Remember," you say gently, "we’re looking at how your body responds when it doesn’t need to anymore. The point isn’t to trick you—it’s to see what happens when the threat isn’t real. When it’s safe."
The participant nods, still uneasy.
You don’t blame them.
Later, the metaphor clings to you like static from laundry fresh out of the dryer. Fear extinction: the process of unlearning what once kept you alive. Or something close to it.
You think of what Jack said. What he didn’t say. The silence he offered like a landing strip.
It replays in your head more than you'd like to admit—the dim warmth of his office, the soft click of your laptop closing, the unexpected steadiness in his voice. No clinical jargon. No agenda. Just space. Permission.
You remember the way he folded his hands. The faint scuff on the corner of his desk. The way he didn’t fill the air with reassurances or advice. Just stayed quiet until the quiet felt less like drowning and more like floating.
And it had made something in your chest stutter—because you'd spent years studying fear responses, coding reactivity curves and salience windows, mapping out prediction error pathways and understanding affect labeling.
But none of your models accounted for the way someone simply sitting with you could ease the grip of it.
Maybe, you think now, as you log the participant's final response, this is what fear extinction looks like outside of a lab setting. Not just reducing reactivity to a blue square or a sharp tone.
But learning—relearning—how it feels to let another person in and survive it.
Maybe Jack wasn’t offering a solution.
Maybe he was offering proof.
Is this what it looked like in practice? Not just in a scanner or a skin conductance chart—but in the quiet, everyday choice of showing up? Staying?
Perhaps the data is secondary and this is the experiment.
And maybe, just maybe, you’re already in the middle of it.
The new semester begins in a blur of syllabi updates and shuffled office assignments. It's your final year before internship—a fact that looms and hums in the background like a lamp you can't turn off. You’re no longer the quiet, watchful second-year—you’ve published, you've taught, you've survived.
But you’re also exhausted. You’ve become adept at wearing competence like armor.
Jack is teaching an elective course this semester—Epigenetics of Trauma. You're enrolled in it—a course you didn’t technically need, but couldn’t resist for reasons you cared not to admit.
When you pass him in the hallway—coffee in one hand, a paper balanced on his clipboard—he stops.
"Did you hear the department finally updated the HVAC?" he asks, and it’s not really about the HVAC.
You nod, a wry smile tugging at your mouth. "Barely. Still feels like a sauna most days."
Jack gestures to your cardigan. "And yet you persist."
You grin. It’s a tiny thing. But it stays.
Later that week, he pokes his head into your office between student meetings.
"You’re on the panel for the trauma symposium, right?"
The one you were flying to at the end of October—thanks to Robby, who had playfully threatened to submit your name himself if you didn’t volunteer. He’d needed someone to piggyback off of, he’d said, and who better than his best grad student—who was also swamped with grant deadlines, dissertation chapters, and a growing list of internship applications. You’d rolled your eyes and said yes, of course, because that’s what you did. And maybe because a part of you liked the challenge, academic mascochism and validation and all.
You nod. "Talk and discussion."
He steps farther in. "If you’re open to it—I’d like to sit in."
You glance up. "You’ve already read the draft."
Jack smiles. "Doesn’t mean I wouldn’t like to hear it out loud."
You lean back slightly, watching him. "You going to grill me from the audience and be that one guy?"
Jack raises an eyebrow, amused. "Wouldn’t dream of it."
You hum. "Mmhm."
But you’re smiling now. Just a little.
It’s not quite vulnerability. Not yet. But it’s a beginning. A reset. The next slow iteration in a long series of exposures. New responses. New learning. Acceptance in the face of uncertainty.
The only way fear ever learns to quiet down.
Robby’s already three beers in and trying to argue that Good Will Hunting is actually a terrible representation of therapy while Mel King—your cohort-mate in the developmental area, always mindful and reserved—defends its emotional core like it’s a thesis chapter she’s still revising in her head.
Mentored by John Shen, Mel studies peer rejection and emotional socialization in early childhood, and she talks about toddlers with the same reverence some people reserve for philosophers. Her dissertation focuses on how early experiences of exclusion and inclusion shape later prosocial behavior, and she can recite every milestone in the Denver Developmental Screening Test like scripture.
She’s known for respectful debates, non-caffeinated bursts of energy, and an uncanny ability to babysit and code data at the same time. The kind of person who shows up with a snack bag labeled for every child at a study visit—and still finds time to coordinate the department's annual "bring your child to work" day. She even makes time to join you and Samira on your Sunday morning farmers market walks, reusable tote slung over one shoulder, ready to talk about plum varieties and which stand has the best sourdough.
Samira Mohan, meanwhile, sits with her signature whiskey sour and a stack of color-coded notecards she pretends not to be working on. She’s in the clinical area too—mentored by Collins—and her work focuses on how minority stress intersects with emotion regulation in underserved populations. Her analyses are razor sharp and sometimes terrifying. Samira rarely speaks unless she knows her words will land precisely—measured, deliberate, the kind of sharp that cuts clean.
Although still in her early prospectus phase, choosing to propose in her fifth year rather than fourth, her dissertation is shaping into a cross-sectional and mixed-methods exploration of how racial and gender minority stressors compound across contexts—academic, familial, and romantic—and the specific emotion regulation repertoires that emerge as survival strategies.
Samira doesn’t stir the pot for fun; she does it when she sees complacency and feels compelled to light a fire under it. That’s the Samira everyone knows and you love—the one who will quietly dismantle your entire line of argument with one clinical observation and a deadpan stare. She does exactly that now, throwing in a quote from bell hooks with the sly smile of someone who knows she’s lit a fuse just to watch it burn.
It’s a blur of overlapping conversations, familiar inside jokes, cheap spirits, and the particular cadence of a group that knows each other’s pressure points and proposal deadlines down to the day. For a moment you let yourself exist in it—in the din, in the messy affection of your academic family, in the safety you didn’t know you’d built, much less deserved. Samira’s halfway through a story about a disastrous clinical interview when she turns to you, parts her mouth to speak, and looks up behind you—
"So is this where all the cool kids hang out?"
You feel him before you see him—Jack’s presence like a low hum behind you, the soft waft of his cologne cutting through the ambient chatter. The light buzz of conversation has your senses dialed up, awareness prickling at the back of your neck. You don’t turn. You don’t have to.
Robby lets out a loud "whoohoo" as Jack joins the table, hauling him into a bro hug with the miraculously coordinated enthusiasm of someone riding high off departmental gossip. Jack rolls his eyes but doesn’t resist, letting Robby thump his back twice before extracting himself but instead of settling there, he leans down slightly, voice pitched just for you. “Is this seat taken?”
Robby at 12 o'clock, Heather to his left, then Samira, Mel, you, and John. The large circular table meant for twelve suddenly feels exponentially smaller. The tablecloth brushes your knees, heavy and starchy against your lap. You feel warmth creep up your cheeks—probably from the alcohol (definitely not from anything else)—and scoot over slightly closer to Mel, giving him room to squeeze in between you and John. You can feel the shift in the air, the proximity of his sleeve against yours, the silent knowledge that he's there now—anchored in your orbit.
He slides in beside you with a quiet murmur of thanks, the space between your arms barely more than a breath. The conversation continues, but the air feels a little different now.
He nods politely to Shen on his left, mutters something about being tricked into another committee, then glances your way—dry, amused, measured.
Always measured.
You feel Jack beside you—not just his sleeve brushing yours, but his presence, calm and dense as gravity. His knee bumps yours beneath the table once, lightly, maybe unintentional. Maybe not. The cologne still lingers faintly and you try to focus on what Samira is saying about peer-reviewed journals versus reviewer roulette, but it’s impossible to ignore the warmth radiating from his side, the way your skin registers it before your brain does. He's like a human crucible. You keep your gaze trained forward, sipping your drink a little too casually, pretending you don’t notice the way your heartbeat’s caught in your throat.
The charged air gives you a spike of bravery—fleeting, foolish, and just enough. Before you let the doubt creep into your veins, you nudge your knee toward Jack’s beneath the table, thankful for the tablecloth concealing the movement. You feel him exhale beside you—quiet, but unmistakable—and something inside you hums in response.
You feel Jack’s thigh tense against yours. The contact lingers, neither of you moving. Moments pass. Nothing happens.
So you cross your legs slowly, right over left, deliberately, letting the heel of your shoe graze his calf.
He stills.
The conversation around the table doesn’t pause, but you’re aware of every breath, every shift in weight beside you. The air between you tightens, stretched across the tension of everything unsaid.
Everyone else is occupied—Robby and Shen deep in conversation about conference logistics, Heather and Samira bickering over which of them was the worse TA, Mel nodding along and adding commentary between sips of cider. Jack sees the opening and seizes it.
He leans in, just slightly, until his shoulder brushes yours again—barely perceptible. "Subtle," he murmurs, voice pitched low, teasing.
You arch a brow, still facing forward. “I have no idea what you're talking.”
"Of course not," he says, dry. "Just sudden interest in the hem of the tablecloth, is it?"
You swirl your drink, letting the glass tilt in your fingers. "I’m a tactile learner. You know this."
He huffs a quiet breath—could almost be a laugh. "Must make data cleaning a thrilling experience."
"Only when R crashes mid-run." You angle your knee back toward his under the table, a soft bump like punctuation.
Jack tilts his head slightly, eyes flicking to yours. "Dangerous territory."
"Afraid of a little ambiguity, professor?"
His mouth twitches at the title.
You sip slowly, buying time, letting the quiet between you stretch like a drawn breath. His thigh is still pressed against yours. Still unmoving. Still deliberate.
"You always like to push your luck this much?" you murmur, keeping your eyes trained on your drink.
Jack hums low. "Only when the risk feels... calculated."
You glance at him, the corner of your mouth twitching. "Bit of a reward sensitivity bias tonight, Dr. Abbot?"
He shrugs. "You’ve been unintentionally reinforcing bad behavior."
You smirk, but say nothing, letting the conversation around you swell again. Robby starts ranting about departmental politics, Heather counters with a story about a grant mix-up that almost ended in flames. You sip your drink, Samira taps her notecards absently against her palm.
The rest of the evening hums on, warm and loose around the edges. When it finally winds down—people slowly gathering coats, hugging their goodbyes—you rise with the group, still a little buzzed, still aware of Jack’s presence beside you like heat that never quite left your side.
Under the soft yellow glow of the dim lobby chandelier, everyone says their goodnights—laughing, tipsy, hugging, good vibes all around. Jack is the last to leave the circle, and as you turn toward the elevator, you glance over your shoulder at him. "See you tomorrow," you say. "Last day of the conference—only the most boring panels left."
Jack lifts a brow. "You wound me."
You grin. "I’m just saying—if you show up in sweats and a baseball cap for your presentation, I’ll pretend not to know you."
The elevator dings. The doors slide open. You step inside, leaning against the railing. Jack stays behind.
"Goodnight," he says, eyes lingering. You nod, then turn, pressing the button for your floor. Just as the doors begin to glide shut, a hand slides into the narrow threshold—the border between hesitation and something else.
Palm flat against the seam. That sliver of metal and air.
He steps in slowly. Quiet. And presses the button for the same floor.
The doors slide shut behind him with a soft hiss.
Silence hums between you.
You don’t speak. Neither does he. But your awareness of each other sharpens—your breath shallow, his jaw tense. The elevator jolts into motion.
Jack shifts slightly, turning his body just enough to lean back against the railing—mirroring you. His arm grazes yours. Then the back of his hand brushes against your knuckles.
A spark—not metaphorical, not imagined—zips down your arm.
Neither of you pulls away.
You glance sideways.
He’s already looking at you.
Your eyes meet—held, quiet.
Not a word is exchanged. But something breaks—clean and sharp, like a snapped circuit. Long-simmering, unvoiced tension rising to the surface, clinging to the pause between heartbeats and motion-sensor lighting.
Jack leans in—not tentative, not teasing. Just close enough that his breath grazes your cheek. Your breath catches. His proximity feels like a fuse. He’s watching you—steady, unreadable. But you feel the pressure in the air shift, charged and thick.
"I don’t know what this is," you finally whisper. Your throat feels incredibly dry. A sharp juxtaposition to the state of your undergarments.
Jack’s voice dips low. "I think we’ve both been trying not to look too closely."
Your chest tightens. His hand twitches by his side. Flexing. Gripping. Restraint unraveling. His breath shallows, matching yours—fast, hungry, starved of oxygen and logic. And then, like a spark to dry kindling, you thread your fingers through his.
Heat erupts between your palms, a jolt that hits your spine. You don’t flinch. You don’t pull away. You tighten your grip.
He exhales—shaky, like it’s cost him everything not to close the distance between your mouths. The electricity is unbearable, like a dam on the edge of collapse.
And still, neither of you move. Not quite yet.
But the air is thick with the promise: the next breach will not be small.
The elevator dings.
You both flinch—just barely.
The doors slide open.
You release his hand slowly, fingers slipping apart like sand through mesh, reluctant and slow but inevitable. Jack's hands stay in a slightly open grip.
"I should..." you begin, breath catching. You clear your throat. "Goodnight, Jack."
Your voice is soft. Almost too soft.
Jack nods once. Doesn’t reach again. Doesn’t follow.
"Goodnight," he says. Low, warm. Weighted.
You step out. Don’t look back.
The doors begin to close.
You glance over your shoulder, once—just once.
Your eyes meet through the narrowing gap.
Then the doors seal shut, quiet as breath.
For now.
Contrary to Samira's reappraisal of you joining her for Friday night drinks, you begrudgingly allow her to drag you out of your cave. Just the two of you—girls’ night, no work talk allowed, and no saying "I need to work on my script" more than once. She makes you wear lip gloss and a top that could almost be considered reckless, and you down two tequila sodas before you even start to loosen your shoulders.
You’re halfway through your third drink when a pair of guys approaches—normal-looking, vaguely grad-school adjacent, maybe from public health or law school. Samira gives you a look that says seems safe enough, and you need this, and so you nod. You dance.
The one paired off with you is tall, not unpleasant. He asks before he touches you—his hand at your waist, then your hip, then lightly over your ribs. You nod, give consent. He smells like good cologne and something sugary, and he’s saying all the right things.
But something feels wrong.
You realize it halfway through the song, when his hand brushes the curve of your waist again, gentle and careful and... wrong. Too polite. Too other.
You think of the way Jack’s fingers had curled between yours. The heat of his palm against yours for a single minute in the elevator. The way he hadn’t touched you anywhere else—but it had felt like everything.
You close your eyes, trying to ground yourself. But you can’t stop comparing.
You’ve danced with this stranger for five whole minutes, and it hasn’t come close to the electricity of the sixty seconds you spent not speaking, not kissing, not touching anything else in the elevator with Jack.
It shouldn’t mean anything but it means everything.
You step back, thanking the guy politely, claiming a bathroom break. He nods, not pushy, already scanning the room.
Samira follows a song change later. "You okay?"
You nod. Then shake your head. Then say, "I think I might be fucked."
Samira just hands you a tissue, already knowing. She looks understanding. Like she sees it, too—and she's not going to mock you for it.
"Yep," she says gently while fixing a stray baby hair by your ear. "Saw it the second Jack joined us for drinks that night."
The night air feels cooler after the club, like the city is exhaling with you. You and Samira walk back toward the rideshare pickup, her arm looped loosely through yours.
You don’t say anything for a long moment. She doesn’t push.
"I don’t even know what it is," you murmur eventually. "I just know when that guy touched me, it felt like wearing someone else’s coat. Warm, sure, but not mine."
Samira hums in agreement. "Jack feels like your coat?"
"No," you sigh. Then, after a beat, quieter, "He feels like the one thing I forgot I was cold without."
She doesn’t say anything. Not right away. Just squeezes your hand. "So what’re you gonna do about it?"
"Scream. Cry. Have a pre-doctoral crisis," you say flatly.
Samira snorts. "So… Tuesday." You bite back a smile, shoving her shoulder lightly but appreciating the comedic diffusion nonetheless.
She exhales through her nose, gentler now. "If it’s any consolation, I see the way he looks at you."
Your eyes flick toward her. She continues, tone still soft, sincere. "Not just that night during drinks, but during your flash talk. I’ve never seen him that… emotive. It was like he was mesmerized. And even back during seminar last year, when he was filling in for Robby? Same thing. I remember thinking, damn, he listens to her like she’s rewriting gravity."
You should feel elated. Giddy. Instead, you bury your face in your hands and emit a sound that can only be described as a dying pterodactyl emitting its final screech. "I hate my fucking life."
"It's going to be okay!" Samira tries to hide her laughter but it comes through anyway, making you laugh through teary eyes. "You will be okay."
You shake your head back and forth, trying to make yourself dizzy in hopes that this was all a dream.
"Who was it that said 'boys are temporary, education is forever?'" Samira all-but-sang.
"Do not quote me right now, Mira," you groan, dragging the syllables like they physically pain you. "I am but a husk with a degree-in-progress."
The week that follows is both everything and nothing. You go to class. You show up to lab meetings. You present clean analyses and nod through questions from the new cohort of freshmen. You even draft two paragraphs of your discussion section. One of three discussion sections. It looks like functioning.
Since submitting the last batch of internship applications, your dissertation committee meetings have gone from once a week with each member to once every three. You'd already run all of your main studies, had all the data cleaned and collated, and even coded all of the analyses you intended on running. Now all that was left was the actual writing and compiling of it all for a neat, hundred-or-so-page manuscript that no one would read.
It’s your first meeting with Jack since flying back from the conference.
In all honesty, you hadn’t given it much thought. Compartmentalization had become a survival strategy, not a skill. It helped you meet deadlines, finish your talk, submit your final batch of internship applications—all while pretending nothing in that elevator happened. At least not in any way that mattered.
Now, seated outside his office with your laptop open and your third coffee in hand, you realize too late: you never really prepared for this part. The after.
You hear the door open behind you. A familiar cadence of steps—steady but slightly uneven. You know that gait.
"Hey," Jack says, as calm and neutral as ever. Like you didn’t almost combust into each other two weeks ago.
You glance up. Smile tight. "Hey."
"Come in?"
You nod. Stand. Follow him inside.
The office is the same as it’s always been—overcrowded with books, one stack threatening to collapse near the filing cabinet. You sit in your usual chair. He sits in his. The silence is comfortable. Professional.
It shouldn’t feel like a loss.
Jack taps a few keys on his laptop. "You sent your methods revisions?"
"Yesterday," you say. "Just a few small clarifications."
He hums. Nods. Clicks something open.
You sip your coffee. Pretend the sting behind your ribs is just caffeine.
The moment stretches.
He finally speaks. "You look… tired."
You smile, faint and crooked. “It’s November.”
Jack lets out a quiet laugh. Then scrolls through the document, silent again.
But the air between you feels thinner now. Like something’s missing. Or maybe like something’s waiting.
He reads.
You watch him.
Not just glance. Not just notice. Watch.
Your coffee cools in your hands, untouched.
He doesn't ask why you weren't at the symposium he moderated. Or if you were running on caffeine and nerves from recent deadlines. And definitely not why you booked an earlier flight home from the conference.
You search his face like it might hold an answer—though you’re not entirely sure what the question is. Something about the last two weeks. The way he hasn’t said anything. The way you haven’t either. The way both of you pretended, remarkably well, that everything was the same.
But Jack’s expression doesn’t change. Not noticeably. He just skims the screen, fingers occasionally tapping his trackpad. The glow from his monitor traces the line of his jaw.
Still, you keep looking. Like maybe if you study him hard enough, you’ll find a hint of something there.
A crack. A tell. A memory.
But he stays unreadable.
Professional.
And you hate that it hurts.
It eats at you.
Why does it hurt?
You knew better than to let this happen. To let it get this far. This was never supposed to be anything other than professional, clinical, tidy. But somewhere between all the late-night edits and long silences, the boundaries started to blur like ink in water.
You tell yourself to turn it off. That part in your brain responsible for—this—whatever it was. Romantic projection, limerence, foolishness. You’d diagnose it in a heartbeat if it weren’t your own.
You just need to get through this meeting. This last academic year. Then you'd be somewhere far away for internship, and then graduated. That’s all.
Then you could go back to pretending you’re fine. That everything was okay.
The entire time you’d been staring—not at Jack, not directly—but just past his shoulder, toward the bookshelves. Not really seeing them. Just trying to breathe.
Jack had already finished reading through your edits. He read them last night, actually—when your email came through far too late. He’d learned to stay up past his usual bedtime about two weeks into joining your committee.
But he wasn’t just reading. Not now.
He was watching. Noticing the subtle shifts in your brow, the tension at the corners of your mouth. You didn’t look at him, but he didn’t need you to.
Jack studied people for a living. He’d made a career out of it.
And right now, he was studying you.
You snap yourself out of it. A light head bobble. A few quick blinks. A swallow. "All done?" you ask, voice dry. Almost nonchalant, like you hadn’t been staring through him trying to excavate meaning.
Jack lifts an eyebrow, subtle, but nods. "Yeah. Looks solid."
You nod back. Like it’s just another meeting. Like that’s all it ever was.
Then you close your laptop a little too quickly. "I think I’m gonna head out early, I don’t feel great," you offer, keeping your tone breezy, eyes still somewhere over his shoulder.
Jack doesn’t call you on it. Not outright.
But he watches you too long. Like he’s flipping through every frame of this scene in real time, and none of it quite adds up.
"Alright," he says finally. Even. Quiet. "Feel better."
You nod again, already halfway to the door.
You don’t look back.
"Hey—" Jack’s voice catches, right as the door swings shut.
Your hand freezes on the handle.
You hesitate.
But you don’t turn around.
Just one breath.
Then you keep walking.
You make it halfway down the hall before you realize your hands are shaking.
Not much. Barely. Just enough that when you fish your phone out of your coat pocket to check the time, your thumb slips twice before you unlock the screen.
He’d called your name.
And maybe that wouldn’t mean anything—shouldn’t mean anything—except Jack Abbot isn’t the type to call out without a reason. You’ve worked with him long enough to know that. Observed him enough in clinical and classroom settings. Hell, you’ve studied men like him—hyper-controlled, slow to show their hand. You’d written an entire paper on the paradox of behavioral inhibition in high-functioning trauma survivors and then realized, two weeks into seminar, that the paragraph on defensive withdrawal could’ve been subtitled See: Jack Abbot, Case Study #1.
You’d meant to file that away and forget it.
You haven’t forgotten it.
And now you're walking fast, maybe too fast, through the undergrad psych wing like the answer might be waiting for you in your lab inbox or the fluorescence of your office.
You don’t stop until you’re behind a locked door with your laptop powered off and your hands braced on either side of your desk.
You breathe.
In through your nose. Out through your mouth.
Again.
Again.
Still—when you close your eyes, you see the look on his face.
That same unreadable stillness.
Like he wanted to say something else.
Like he knew something else. And maybe—maybe—you did too.
#the pitt#the pitt hbo#the pitt fanfiction#the pitt imagine#the pitt x reader#jack abbot#the pitt spoilers#jack abbot imagine#jack abbot x reader#shawn hatosy#dr. abbot x reader#dr abbot#dr abbot x reader#the pitt au#michael robinavitch#samira mohan#mel king#frank langdon#emery walsh#abbotjack#heather collins
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DOGTOOTH- Caleb x Reader



pairings: caleb x fem! reader genre: smut wc: 877 summary: your golden retriever energy boyfriend wants you to sit on his face warnings/tags: MDNI, not rlly beta read, sitting/ riding on caleb's face, slight use and mentioning of his evol to keep you where he wants you a/n: hihi lovelies ! ⸜(。˃ ᵕ ˂ )⸝♡ this was sitting in my drafts ever since he got released and i figured since his myth is coming out it works out :3 i hope you enjoy reading ! (∩˃o˂∩)♡
⋆。‧˚ʚ♡ɞ˚‧。⋆
"-she could ride my face, I don't want nothing in return"
Caleb, your absolute sweetest and your only most devoted lover. A man who cherishes every step you take, ready to answer every call as if you were his master and he’s your most loyal companion. If he had a tail and ears, they’d perk up just at the sound of your voice. His tail would wag eagerly as he instinctively seeks you whenever you call his name.
He loves it. He loves hearing you say his name. He loves hearing how much you need him.
“C-Caleb..” You bit your lip.
“I don’t know..What if I-” You feel slightly self-conscious as he gazes up at you, purple eyes half-lidded with longing. The fear of squishing his face and possibly hurting him makes you feel scared, slightly embarrassed even. You try to scoot away back to his chest, but his evol grounds you to stay in position.
He licks his lips, curiosity flickering in his eyes as he wonders just how sweet your juices must be. He waits but his patience grows thinner, eager for you to settle down on him.
“Hey..” He murmurs, big puppy eyes gazing up at you, his large hands gently stroking your thigh soothingly. “You won’t hurt me, even if you tried.” It was true, he could have easily lifted you with a single hand if he wanted to, but he wanted to hold you, touch you as much as he could. And even if you did crush him, god please, do. If he dies in between your thighs this life, then so be it. It’s another way he would want to go out.
“Can I? I won’t bite..” He murmurs, pressing small kisses on the inside of your thighs, tongue darting out to lick up the wetness that’s calling his name. You could feel his hot breath against your skin, inhaling your scent as you slowly make your descent down.
Your eyes flutter close, biting your bottom lip hard as you concentrate on his mouth. One of your hands that originally rested on the headboard goes to tangle down to his chocolate brown hair the moment his lips make contact with your folds. Caleb’s first few licks were eager as if he discovered your slick was his water.
He moans, sending vibrations through your clit as he holds you on his face tightly as if you're going to slip off. The tip of his nose rubs deliciously against your clit, earning a breathy moan from you. This makes him run his nose against your clit again, his tongue traces circular patterns around it before sucking on it.
His large calloused hands traveled up to your ass, giving them a gentle squeeze before slowly traveling up to grab your breasts, rolling the sensitive buds between his index finger and thumb. You roll your hips over him, your eyes fluttering shut as your head falls back as you ride his face.
“Caleb,” You whimper out his name making his cock twitch but he doesn’t care. He doesn’t bother to even give himself a stroke, he thrives off of your pleasure alone and he’s sure he can finish just hearing you get off from him.
That’s it, say his name.
You could feel your body sinking lower but it wasn’t you, his gravitational force guided you down further into his face. He needs you to be closer, he needs you to go harder. Caleb was in pure bliss hearing you breathlessly say his name, your wetness trickling out onto his face, smearing him every time you rocked your hips.
You can’t think of anything else but only the warm wet muscle of Caleb’s tongue teasing you, thrusting in and out of your entrance, making your entire body constrict around him. He keeps a firm grip on your hips, his tongue continues to thrust in and out of you at a relentless pace. You could feel the heat building up in your body, the pleasure coursing through you.
You grind your hips harder against his face, completely forgetting your worries about crushing him. The knot in the pit of your stomach gets tighter and tighter with each movement of your hips.
He watches in between your thighs, drinking in the sight of you, the way your eyes flutter shut as his name leaves your lips in broken pants. Your legs tremble as you ride out your high while he laps up all your juices, not wasting a single drop.
His lower half of his mouth is dripping wet with your arousal, some of it from his drool. He whimpers, feeling his cock twitch, spilling out his load on his lower abdomen just by watching you get off on him.
Once you notice the mess on his abdomen and try to lean down to clean it up for him, although licking it clean off of him is a tempting view, he stops you. He gravitates you back, earning a yelp from you, so his head can rest in between your legs again. No matter how much you protest, wanting to care for him and make him feel good, he won’t let you. At least not for now.
Caleb doesn’t need you to do anything else for him in return except for your time and all your love.
#caleb x reader#caleb x you#caleb x y/n#caleb smut#caleb love and deepspace#caleb lads#love and deep space x reader#love and deepspace x reader#love and deepspace#lads x you#lads x reader
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I've been running this writing experiment lately to cut out phrases like "I felt" in my fiction writing. Like I was looking at a sentence in a draft that said, "he felt as if character's eyes were pinning him in place." And then I was like, "well, does he think that or is it true? As a result of this person watching him, he's froze. It's not like a thing, it is that thing."
Oh and "almost"! I'm always going, "He felt almost relieved that it hadn't happened." Well, did he feel better that it didn't happen or didn't he? Or "somewhat", I'm always going, "she felt somewhat perturbed."
And like none of that is wrong, to be clear. I don't know if it'd improve your writing, I don't even know if it'll improve my writing, but I use this sentence structure all the time so every viewpoint is from a voice that thinks about what it thinks, hedges its statements, and offers the same ability for wry little jokes formatted in the exact same way. And I have a lot of writing like that and I think (!) that they're good, but read as a whole, I'm like, "god, they all sound the same." Like there's one melody that I write songs to, so even with different lyrics, it's almost (!) the same song. Something I've been struggling with in regards to my writing and why I've felt so blocked is how boring I found writing my usual way. I'd read something and enjoy the individual parts of it, but then I'd step back and I didn't like the whole. And I got good at this enough at seeing that I didn't like it to do it in real time as I was writing, which as you can imagine didn't improve the process of writing because now I was bored AND dejected about being bored.
There's this sentence-level structure fact that I use unconsciously. A pattern I find easy is short sentence, short sentence, short sentence, long sentence. So I write that. "He [verbed]. He [verbed]. Then he [verbed]. As he [verbed] to his [consequence], he [verbed] that [noun] was [statement of condition]." Which could work, it often does make for a nice rhythm, but it's something I reach for often because it's easier for me.
Just last sentence, I originally typed, "I find it easier for me." But if what I mean is "using this pattern is less effort than another pattern," then it's easier for me. One voice is hedging its bets and the other asserting. Either is fine! But they're different! And, again, GOD you would not believe how many words I've cut out of this paragraph as I write it. I'm so chatty. I love using twelve words when six will do. And that gives my writing a specific tone to my ear.
So if I am bored of that tone, why not try using just the six words? Why be understated? Why be afraid of stronger opinions? So right now with my fiction, I'm experimenting with cutting out as many self-reflective words as I can. Sometime you do need to draw attention to the face that this is the character's interpretation, but like you definitely don't need to do it as much as I naturally want to do it. You don't need to always go out of your way to allow the possibility that the narrative voice is wrong. During editing, I trim the weaker ones (I originally typed, "what I consider the weaker ones" Is that more accurate?). But I think them being there in the first place shifts my language which shifts my character's which shifts my plot. It's sentence structure all the way down!!
(this barely applies to my writing on here, btw. i try to do good but yknow this is a tumblr blog. i'm not trying to get a lit mag to accept it.)
Anyway blah blah (chatty!) the point is I've been trying to write in a way opposite of my interests. Something that doesn't take itself too seriously, that emphasizes EMOTION and ACTION instead of minimizing it, and that clips through scenes at a good pace. Doing this been amazingly fun. I've been having such a good time doing it. I am writing so much because I really enjoy doing it. The process of writing is so fun again.
This post is about two things. One is my new mood stabilizer and therapy day camp. The other is about the benefit of pretending to be MXTX.
#mxtx#w.#b.#the thing about writing scum villain is that you have to write a character so is SO CONFIDENTLY wrong.#sqq needs to be as sure of that he is wrong to the degree with which he is actually wrong#i've used more exclamation points in the last month than i have perhaps in my life. i might in fact have too many exclamation points#but turns out that shit's fun as hell#it's word confetti
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meant just for you // part one
author's note: long time no see! i'm (somewhat) back! i'm really excited to share this story with everyone, but it wouldn't be possible without bestie girl @thewintersoldierdisaster who has helped me tremendously along the way. thank you so much, p! this is for you :)
summary: you have a history of dating around and hooking up. after seeing your teammates start to settle down, you and mat make a bet to see who can fall in love first.
pairing: mat barzal x pwhl!reader
warnings: mentions of sex (though no actual smut because i can't write that to save my life), cursing, toxic boyfriends
the meeting
being selected for the all star pwhl 3 on 3 showcase was an honor in and of itself, one you didn't take lightly. it was even sweeter since it was held in your hometown, ubs in elmont, new york.
you worked hard to get where you were today, not coming from money. sure your parents would be upper class anywhere else, but on long island? middle class. add on the extra expenses of skating lessons, goalie gear, and club fees on two teachers’ salaries, there wasn’t much cash left over when it was all said and done.
safe to say, your mom and dad shed actual tears when you were drafted to the sirens. whether they were tears of joy or tears of relief (from the fact that they hadn't wasted money on a career that would never be), you weren't sure. they probably would've cried regardless of what team, but knowing you were just across the river was a huge relief for them.
“proud of you squirt,” your dad said into your hair. “it’s time for you to start carrying your own goalie bag and peeling your oranges, now.”
you rolled your eyes. “i've been doing that for years, dad.”
“not the oranges,” your mom chimed in.
you grimaced. “i don't like the feeling of the peel getting under my nails. it’s gross.”
safe to say, you were ecstatic to tell your parents you were playing in the 2026 pwhl showcase. your parents had squeezed you so tightly in a group hug that you were sure some of your ribs cracked.
“you’re gonna be great!” your mom cheered.
“we can rent out our driveway to lazy tourists!” your dad said. you pulled back and gave him a strange look, but he didn't even look the least bit sorry. “i’m trying to earn back all the money i spent on your goalie gear, squirt.”
you'd rolled your eyes at the time, thinking it was just an over exaggeration, but when you saw how bad traffic was in elmont, you were grateful for the reserved parking for players.
you pulled into ubs’ reserved parking area, feeling the excitement hit you all at once.
you were at ubs for the all star red carpet event you'd grown up watching from the rug in front of the tv in your parents’ house. sometime that week, you’d be on the ice instead of watching the islanders from the stands like you had the last few years. you grew up down the street, and later that week, you would play on that ice in front of thousands of hockey fans.
you could feel the excitement singing in your veins, you were bouncing on your toes, tapping your feet in your heels as you got out of the car. you straightened your teal patterned pant suit and black corset top, before pulling your phone out of your pocket.
you: are you here yet?
you texted jessie eldridge, not sure if she arrived with everyone else. for the first time ever, you were running late. the anxiety (and probably the undiagnosed adhd) meant you spent more time fretting at your parents’ house than you anticipated, hence why you were arriving at the very end of the pwhl segment of the red carpet.
you’d have to apologize to your agent later.
now that you’d arrived, more anxiety started setting in. the cruel, self deprecating words inhabiting your brain told you to go home, that you didn't belong among “real hockey players.”
jess: not yet. pulling up now! traffic is insane!!!
you sighed and tried to touch up your lipstick in the reflection of your car window while telling yourself mentally that you could be brave, you could do hard things. you were the starting goalie on one of the six inaugural teams in the professional women’s hockey league, you were used to fear, or not feeling like enough. there was a reason you didn't check the comments on tiktok or instagram, or the replies on tweets after the games. people were cruel.
despite the shaking in your knees, despite the anxiety threatening to swallow you whole, you remembered the tears in your parents eyes when you got drafted, the hugs they gave you after each game.
you remembered the little girls you'd seen in the crowd with signs and your jersey on. that had to mean something, even if there were sexist pigs out there who didn't.
before you started walking, another car pulled into the parking lot and parked a few spaces away. you paused, recognizing the car, and waited for your teammate to get out.
jess eldridge popped out of her car, smiling wide as soon as she saw you. “long time, no see,” she joked, considering you saw her earlier that morning for practice. her eyes widened as she took in your outfit. “jesus fucking christ,” she said. “tryna get laid tonight?”
you grinned like a child and waited for her to catch up before you both started walking towards the red carpet. “we’re at a work function, jess,” you chided, knowing good and well that had never stopped you before. “how was the drive?”
jess shrugged. “traffic was not fun, you're lucky your parents live around here.”
“did everyone else ride on the bus?”
“they did if they’re from out of town.” jess pulled out her phone and checked the time. “i think we might be the last ones here. which, i’m always late, but you being late is unheard of.”
you shrugged. “i figured i could be late this one time. i’m early to every other event.”
the two of you walked towards the fan area, smiling as the noise levels increased. you started bouncing on your feet once more, grinning from ear to ear.
there were little girls who gasped when they saw you both. you pointed out a little redhead wearing jess’ jersey and the two of you quickly made your way to her.
sharpies were being pushed in your line of sight, it felt like there were so many people yelling at once. the announcer said your name, followed by jessie’s. little girls were asking for your autographs, social media interns were interviewing sarah nurse and emma maltais, there were random cheers at random intervals.
it was overwhelming.
somewhere along the autograph lines, you lost sight of all the other girls, only realizing when you looked up from yet another jersey and noticed you were standing alone.
an assistant called your name and gestured you down the line to take a few photos. you were on your way when a shoulder hit yours and nearly sent you sprawling on the ground had it not been for a firm grip around your bicep.
you glanced to your left and saw a man with a dazzling smile you knew all too well through the screen of your parents’ tv and your social media.
mat barzal.
“sorry,” he grinned. “didn't see you there.”
you weren't sure how, you two were standing eye to eye, it wasn’t like you were as short as emma, you were pretty tall, even without your heels on.
“oh,” you said. “you're mat.”
he nodded and stuck his hand out to shake before saying your name. you must've looked surprised because he laughed when he dropped his hand from yours and gestured to you. “you play for the sirens, right? goalie?”
you smiled and nodded before an attendant was ushering you down the carpet. you fully expected him to wave bye, but he kept up.
“you watch our games?” you asked.
he nodded again. “went back and watched the shut out you had against montreal. it was impressive, especially going against poulin.”
you beamed under his praise, remembering the amount of times you tapped the goalposts for blocking shots you couldn't or the twelve cherry starbursts you ate before the start of the game like you’d done since you were seven.
the game before, you only had eleven and lost by two goals. you weren't taking any chances anymore.
another attendant rushed you to stand in front of the banner to take your photo. mat caught up with you again after his picture was taken. “it’s nice to meet you,” you started when he was close enough to hear you. “my parents love you.” you blinked. “i mean, i grew up with islanders fans for parents.”
mat’s eyebrows rose, a small smirk on his lips. “really?”
you smiled. “grew up right down the street actually.”
he gave a low whistle. “bet that’s convenient.”
“my dad joked that he was gonna rent out the driveway to lazy tourists.”
mat threw his head back and laughed as the two of you continued down the carpet, stopping to sign autographs along the way.
“your teammates here yet?” he asked.
“i was definitely like the last one to arrive. jessie eldridge showed up around the same time but i don’t see her...” you noted for the first time that you'd lost her somewhere along the way. “whoops,” you said. “are any of your teammates here? is sorokin?”
“big fan?” mat snickered.
but your mind was already moving on. your eyes widened as you grabbed the sleeve of mat’s suit. “oh my god, is patrick roy gonna be here?”
he shook his head, still grinning like an idiot. “he’s taking the bye week to ignore our phone calls.”
you huffed.
the closer you got to the end of the red carpet, the more you realized you were going to have to leave mat, the handsome stranger who wasn't really much of a stranger considering how much you knew about him already.
he was starting to get tugged in different metaphorical directions by the fans reaching out for an autograph while it was obvious your popularity was nowhere near his.
“i’ll see you later,” you said.
mat’s brows pulled together. “you're leaving?”
you jabbed a thumb over your shoulder. “gotta catch up with the girls before the game tonight.”
“you feel good about it?”
your fingers twitched against your legs with more excited energy as you backed away from him, a smile on your face as you shook your head. “uh uh, nope. i don't talk about the game before the game, goes against my beliefs.”
mat cackled. “i’ll see you around, good luck!”
you spun on your heel and walked off the carpet. you walked until you saw familiar faces. emma and jess were standing at the end, looking at you and smiling as they talked among themselves.
“when i asked if you were planning on getting laid tonight, i didn't think you were going to go after barzal,” jess laughed.
you shoved her shoulder good naturedly. “we just ran into each other.”
emma snickered and shook her head. “he's hotter than all the other guys you've hooked up with, twitchy. why not give it a shot?”
it was true, you and emma went to ohio state together before being drafted to two separate teams. she was your roadie roommate and often saw the guys you'd swiped right on.
she was also the one who gave you what some might consider the offensive nickname of twitch.
“you keep spazzing out and twitching before games,” she noted.
“i’m practicing my eye and hand movements,” you said before popping a red starburst in your mouth.
you rolled your eyes but a smile was still on your face. “i don't hook up with hockey players.”
“why not? they’d be the perfect match, they'd understand your schedule, the intensity of the game. they could make a great boyfriend...” jess replied.
but you shook your head. “hookups are the only relationship i can commit to right now. i’ve got too much else going on. and hooking up with a hockey player just seems like bad news.”
emma and jess shrugged before you followed the two of them to your seats.
winter olympics - milan
the lack of travelling you did for the all star week was made up when you flew to milan for the winter olympics. it was a beautiful city to be in, no doubt about it. though, by the time you got to your room, you weren't interested in doing anything but collapsing face first into your bed. the six hour time difference and the flight immediately after all star weekend was starting to catch up with you.
safe to say, you felt like death heated up.
you shared a room with alex carpenter, your alternate captain. you loved alex like the older sister you never had, she was the picture perfect roommate.
except you were staring at her sleeping body like a weirdo because you were wide awake. how the hell had she fallen asleep so fast? it felt like your body was still in new york.
you finally accepted that you weren't going to sleep anytime soon, and instead of scrolling on tiktok and waiting for sleep to hit you in the face (and risk waking alex up), you grabbed your phone, your bag, and headed outside towards the dining hall.
it wasn't too long of a trek, though you were wishing you'd put on more than a pullover and leggings when the wind blew too hard. when you finally made it in the dining hall, your cheeks were both warm from the blood rushing to them, and cold from the wind.
you looked around the large room, for what, you weren't sure. maybe it was for people you knew, or the food options, but you had red starbursts in your bag so you weren't too concerned on the food front. still, you wandered around, looking at the food anyway, just to see if anything piqued your interest.
you'd gotten to the dessert section when a mop of dark brown hair caught your attention. at first, you weren't sure if it was him, so you approached him in a way one might back away from a lion in the safari: slowly. it wasn’t until you saw his jawline and profile that you knew for sure
mat barzal had a stack of cannolis on his plate when you moseyed up next to him.
“i feel like four cannolis at two in the morning is a bit excessive.”
to his credit, mat didn't jump when you spoke. “leave me alone, we burn like thousands of calories doing this shit.” he piled another cannoli on his plate before turning on his heel and searching for what you assumed was a table (and hopefully not more food). “what're you doing up?”
“my brain says it’s only 8pm. i didn't wanna wake alex with my doom scrolling,” you said as you followed him to a table.
mat set his plate down and pulled out his chair, gesturing to the one across from him for you to sit. “jet lag is a bitch,” he said. his head tilted when he saw the bag you placed in the chair next to you. “what’s in the bag?” he asked before taking a bite of one of his cannolis.
your eyes lit up as you smiled. “glad you asked.” you reached in and pulled out a starburst stick before ripping the top of it off with your teeth. you frowned when a pink one fell out. “dammit,” you grumbled, letting the pink starburst rest on the table. “pink is the worst.”
mat eyed you and the starburst for a moment before reaching for it. he unwrapped the paper and popped it into his mouth.
you did a little dance in your seat when the next starburst was red. it took no time for you to unwrap it and pop it into your mouth much like mat did with the pink one.
mat stared as he took a sip of his water. “is there something i’m missing? bringing a whole ass bag for just one thing of starbursts seems a little excessive.”
“you are correct,” you said, a smug smile on your face as you reached into your bag and pulled out a box. “i’m actually glad i ran into you. i was hoping i’d get to use this while i was here.”
mat blinked. “you brought battleship to the olympics?”
you nodded eagerly. “wanna play?”
mat sighed and shook his head, a smile on his face anyway. “you're so weird.”
maybe it should've hurt your feelings, but you'd been called weird all your life, this was no different. you shrugged. “maybe, but you didn't answer the question.
mat stared for a minute before pushing his plate aside. “no cheating.”
by 3am, you'd beaten mat twice and were on your way to your third win. “a7,” you said.
mat rolled his eyes and groaned. “you're definitely cheating. there’s no fucking way you're not.”
you laughed and fell back into your seat. “how would i cheat, mat?”
“i—i don't fucking know!” he sputtered and pointed an accusatory finger. “but i know you’re doing it! no one is ever this good at this stupid fucking game.”
“i played a lot as a kid,” you said like it was an explanation. “sometimes by myself.”
“how the hell did you play with yourself?”
you snickered, the joke was coming out of your mouth before you could stop it. “vibrators exist, you know.”
mat looked at you like you'd grown another head before bursting into laughter. “i fucking hate you,” he managed to squeeze out between wheezes. “you win.”
you giggled a little at his reaction, preening at the attention. “what do i get for winning?
mat slid the plate across the table to you. “pick a cannoli, any cannoli.”
you looked at the cream filled pastry, the way most of the cream had cooled to room temp and lost its volume, looking rather melted and unappealing. you twisted your face into a look of disgust. “i beat your ass three times and all i get is melted cannoli?
mat rolled his eyes, though the small smile on his lips betrayed his fake annoyance. “what do you want?”
you thought about it, thought back to the last few weeks, and what the next two weeks would look like. “you have to peel my oranges for the rest of the olympics.”
“...that's not a euphemism, is it?”
you cracked a smile. “no, i don't hook up with hockey players. my dad would peel my oranges because i hate the way the peel feels under my nails and oranges are my favorite fruit so it poses quite the problem.”
“so whenever i see you with an orange, i’ll peel it for you?”
you nodded.
he nodded and stuck his hand out. “you've got yourself a deal.”
you didn't see mat until two days later when you ran into him at the figure skating pairs event. well, “ran into” might be a bit dramatic. in reality, you were sitting in the stands with alex and emma when an unfamiliar (yet growing more familiar) body plopped down next to you.
before you could even react, a peeled orange in a ziploc bag appeared in your line of sight. “want it?” mat asked.
your eyes lit up when you saw it, your hands immediately reached out for the bag. “oh my god, i’m starving.” you did your best to not snatch the bag from his hands in your hunger, but you shoved three pieces in your mouth almost immediately after opening the bag.
mat cackled. “were you hungry?”
“starving,” you said through a mouthful of fruit.
emma laughed from her spot next to you. “oh my god. did anyone ever teach you not to talk with your mouth full?”
you shrugged. “i don't know, men are usually too busy getting the best head of their life to complain.”
alex choked while emma threw her head back laughing. mat froze next to you.
“you’re insane, twitch,” emma managed to say between laughs. “absolutely batshit.”
but you shrugged and kept eating your oranges.
“twitch?” mat said after a moment. “who’s twitch?”
you raised your hand like you were sitting at a desk at school. “that’s me,” you said after swallowing more oranges.
mat blinked. “why?”
emma piped in. “in college, she would look like she was twitching—”
“—i was practicing my hand and eye movements—”
“—in college?” alex interrupted. “she still does it.”
“and hence the name twitch was born,” emma concluded.
you rolled your eyes and looked at mat. “they're exaggerating.”
he only smiled and shrugged. “more creative than our nicknames.”
“well, the bar’s in hell then,” you said.
“barzy! we gotta go!” all four of you looked over and saw bo horvat standing at the end of the aisle, gesturing for mat to get up.
mat, to his credit, looked a little sorry to leave, even as he stood up. “i’ll see you around, twitch,” he said.
your friends, to their credit, waited until he was out of sight to start elbowing and shoving you around.
“he brought you a peeled orange? how did he even know to do that?” emma pestered.
once again, you rolled your eyes. “it was my reward when i beat him in battleship.”
“battleship? when did you have time to play that?” alex asked.
“the other night when i couldn't fall asleep.”
“are you gonna hook up with him?” emma bounced in her seat, her blonde hair falling around her face.
“i don't hook up with hockey players,” you said. “too close to home. besides, there are plenty of men to sleep with while i’m here.”
you found yourself making out with (and fucking) a french snowboarder before the night was over. he wasn't bad, he used a lot of tongue, that was certain. which begged the question: was it a french kiss in france? or was it just a kiss? you'd never know, you forgot to ask him.
alex was getting in bed by the time you got back to the room, your hair mussed and lips swollen. “eventful night?” she asked.
you shrugged and changed into your pajamas. “you could say that.”
“how was he?”
“sloppy kisser. how’s steph?” you asked.
a smile you could only describe as soft graced alex’s lips. “great, we spoke an hour ago. she told me to tell you good luck.”
“she’s so sweet.” you groaned as you fell back into your bed. “none of the guys i’ve been with have ever been that nice.”
the room was silent, yet so loud. “twitchy,” alex started. “they're hook ups, not boyfriends.”
you sat up in bed and looked at alex. “what do you mean?”
“hook ups have no emotional investment, twitch. why would they care if you did well or not?” she asked. and the truth stung a little, you weren't going to lie about that. after a beat of silence, she continued. “could it be possible the hook ups aren't enough anymore?”
you shrugged and fell against the bed. “i don’t know,” you groaned. “it’s not even like the sex is good anymore. i mean, it’s not bad, but it’s like i have to give a beginner’s lesson every time.”
“that is a benefit of a committed relationship. you're not starting over every time you have sex.”
you turned your head and saw how alex was scrolling on your phone. you weren't sure how she could do it when you were having a slight crisis. “but i don't know that i have time for a boyfriend and hockey. how the hell am i supposed to manage that?”
alex turned to look at you. “if he wants to be with you, and if you want to be with him, you both will find a way to make it work. but you have to get over this fear of commitment for it to work.”
you turned back to look at the ceiling and said nothing.
alex fell asleep shortly after your conversation ended like she didn't just wreck your worldview. and like a few nights ago, you got up and went to the dining hall, except this time without battleship or your bag of starbursts.
you should've been surprised when you saw mat again, but instead of focusing on why he was stuffing his face with cannoli, you just plopped into the chair across from him.
“do you ever wanna settle down?”
mat coughed and choked on a cannoli. “w—what? with you?”
you rolled your eyes. “no, just in general. aren't most of your teammates married? do you ever want that?”
he swallowed and nodded, taking a sip of water before speaking. “i mean yeah, eventually. why?”
you fell back into your chair and sighed. “i feel like my friends expect me to grow up at some point. i mean i’m almost thirty, shouldn't i be committed to someone by now?”
he shrugged. “i don't know, should you?”
“don't your teammates ask you about that?”
“i don't know, maybe. but i just ignore them.”
“you do?”
“...no. okay? no. it gets to me too. but it is what it is. i can’t manage hockey and—”
“—dating, right?”
he nodded.
“what if we made a deal?”
“a deal?” he leaned in. “i’m listening.”
“you and i, we both want to stop being single, right?”
“right.”
“but we’re athletes, we’re competitive. so what if we made this a competition?”
mat took a bite of cannoli. “so what’re you thinking?”
“first person to fall in love wins. we try dating around and finding our people but the first person to fall in love wins.”
mat’s eyes widened. “just like that? we’re going from an inability to commit to falling in love?”
you nodded eagerly. “it’s like exposure therapy! grabbing the bulls by the horns.” you inhaled.
“what does the winner get?”
you hummed. “a favor that can be cashed in at any time.” he nodded, looking lost in thought. “so what do you think? are you in?” you stuck your hand out, ready for him to shake it, but anticipating that he won't.
a moment passed. mat ran a hand down his face. “god i must be desperate,” he mumbled before he shook your hand. “i’m in.”
guy one: paul
you were soaked in sweat and your lungs were burning. with the water bottle attached to the back of the goal, you sprayed yourself in the face, the cold liquid doing wonders to cool you off.
you skated off the ice and towards the locker rooms. you shucked your jersey and chest protector off almost immediately.
“you in a rush, twitchy?” jess said from her locker across the room. “hot date?”
“maybe,” you replied.
truth be told, yes. you were meeting this guy named paul that you met on hinge. he seemed nice enough. granted, the bar was in hell. “nice enough” was the result of him not sending you a dick pick within the first three texts. he had yet to send an inappropriate text or photo, which gave you a little bit of hope.
so when you looked at your phone, you expected to see a message from him. but it was mat’s name on your home screen.
mat barzal: what time is your date tonight?
after that night in the dining hall, you and mat exchanged numbers. it was his idea, saying it’d be better if the two of you didn't leave meeting up to chance anymore. you'd hardly call meeting at two work events “chance” but you weren't going to protest.
you: 7, why?
you continued undressing until you were just in a pair of spandex shorts and a sirens shirt.
mat barzal: just curious.
mat barzal: you ready to hang it up?
you: hang what up?
mat barzal: your hoe stage. may she rest in peace.
a snort came out before you could even think to stop it.
you: i’ll hang mine up if you do the same.
mat barzal: i thought that was the deal.
you liked the message and locked your phone.
jess slid into the spot next to you and tried to peer over your shoulder. “what’re your plans for tonight?”
you shrugged and began untying your skates. “hinge date.”
her eyes widened as she smirked. “ooo with who? the mystery man you were texting?”
you rolled your eyes. “no, that was just barzal.”
it was almost like someone had used a clorox wipe on jess’ face, because any trace of her smugness was gone in a flash. “barzal? barzal who? barzal as in mat barzal of the new york islanders?”
you blinked. “yep.”
her jaw dropped. “when did you get his number? is he the one you're going on a date with?”
as if the word “date” was a beacon in the night, every single one of your teammates’ heads turned your way. “you have a date tonight, twitchy?” ella shelton asked. “who is it?”
“mat barzal!” jess replied quicker than you could.
it was silent for just a moment before a million questions were fired your way. since when were you dating him? how did you two meet? when was your first date? is this your first date? why didn't you tell us?
“we’re not dating,” you said over the noise.
“then why is he texting you?” ella asked.
“because we made a bet.” the girls leaned in. “whoever falls in love first, and by proxy gets someone else to fall in love with them, wins.”
alex carpenter blinked. “why?”
you blinked back. “why what?”
“why make it a competition? i thought you weren't interested in dating?”
you glanced around the room, most of your teammates were in committed long term relationships with someone and those who weren't had just gotten out of one. then there was you, and maybe one or two other stragglers left to go bar hopping with the potential of taking someone home.
sleeping around was fun, but maybe you were ready for someone to understand you, to not laugh when you say you love sleeping in socks. you were tired of falling asleep with cold feet anytime you wanted the other side of your bed warm.
but how could you say that? a post practice gossip session was not really the place you wanted to lay your heart bare.
“maybe i just wanted some consistency.” you gestured to alex. “i mean, i see steph at nearly every game. it would be nice to have someone show up for me other than my parents.”
the mass interrogation dispersed not long after that confession, with you heading off to the showers before heading home to your one bedroom jersey apartment. to pass time, you took a nap while watching gilmore girls.
you met paul at the chipotle not too far from prudential. he suggested it and though you'd had chipotle plenty of times that week, you agreed because it was easy enough.
you filled your bowl with your usual and watched as he only got chicken and white rice. part of you tried to brush it off by thinking maybe he had food allergies, but why would he suggest a place where he couldn't eat most of anything on the menu?
he picked a table in the middle of the restaurant, which was also odd, but you went along with it. he was already seated and mixing his dry ass bowl together by the time you made it to the table with your drink.
it was weird, you'd admit. it wasn't like you expected him to pull your chair out for you, but you did at least expect him to wait until you sat down to start eating. maybe his family was different than yours.
“so,” you started as you mixed your bowl with your fork. “what do you like to do for fun?”
god you were horrible at this.
he shrugged and stuffed his mouth full of rice and chicken. “i’ve been reading rich dad poor dad.”
oh god. he was even worse at this than you were.
okay, okay, maybe this date could still be saved. “so you like to read?”
paul shrugged again. “sometimes.”
you blinked and took a bite of your burrito bowl while you waited for him to ask you a question.
he kept munching on his chicken and rice.
“so,” you started. “do you have any hobbies?”
“running.”
more silence.
“what do you do for work?”
“i’m an accountant.”
you stabbed your bowl with a little fierceness, but tried to taper your frustration. “i play in the pwhl.”
you waited and watched, hoping if he didn't understand what you did, that he'd at least try to act interested. but he just kept eating.
“have you ever run a marathon?” you asked.
“no.”
the date continued on like that, your questions answered followed by painful silences that served to exacerbate how one sided the whole experience was. at the end, he stood up to throw his things away without saying a word. you followed, because you were ready to say goodbye and end the disaster you were ashamed to call a date (god you can’t believe you shaved for this).
the two of you stood on the sidewalk, letting people move around you.
“we should do this again. this was fun,” he said.
and without even thinking about it, you said, “was it?”
paul blinked. “why wouldn't it have been?”
you laughed until you saw he didn't join in. “oh,” you stopped, “you're serious.”
paul just stared like nothing had happened. before meeting him, you weren't sure what a blank stare looked like, but after seeing it on his face, you could safely say the lights were on but no one was home.
“paul, you didn't ask me a single question, the only reason we didn't sit in silence was because of me.”
he blinked like he was getting paid to do it. honestly, at that point in the night, it seemed to be the only thing he did.
“you have nothing to say?” when he didn't respond fast enough, you rolled your eyes. “bye paul.”
before you could stop yourself, you started the drive to elmont to see your parents. you could go back to your apartment tomorrow, but you really needed to touch grass after that date, even if it was the small yard behind your parents’ house.
you were at a stoplight five minutes from your parents’ home when your phone rang.
mat barzal.
you squinted at your phone but picked up anyway. “hello?”
“hey! are you currently at a stoplight?”
that was an odd coincidence. “yeah?”
“about two blocks from ubs?”
“...yeah.”
“okay cool, i see you.”
you look around alarmed until you saw a hand waving in the car next to you. you couldn't help the smile on your lips when you saw him sitting in the car to your left. his phone pressed to his ear with one hand, his other waving at you. “what the fuck are you doing out and about?”
mat jabbed his thumb over his shoulder, like he was pointing at ubs’ general direction. “just had a game. you? i didn't think you lived on the island.”
“visiting my parents. i need to touch grass, my date was rough.”
mat grimaced.
the light turned green and you half expected him to hang up, but he kept the call going. “what happened?”
“i would’ve rather watched paint dry than relive that date again. he was the most boring person i think i’ve ever met. i asked him questions and he'd give me one or two word answers and then wouldn't ask me anything. and then at the end of the night, he said we should go out again because it was ‘fun.’ and then he had the audacity to be surprised when i told him it wasn't!”
“how boring could he possibly have been?”
you groaned. “his order at chipotle was white rice and chicken.”
“and what else?” mat asked.
“that’s it. that’s the only thing he ordered.”
“oh my god.”
“and he reads fucking rich dad poor dad for fun i guess. and he likes to go running. he’s also an accountant, but don't ask me for any more information because i think he’s allergic to details.”
mat cackled through the phone. “what was his name again?”
“paul.”
“hate to break it to ya, twitch. with a name like paul, you really should've expected it.”
before you could stop it, a laugh bubbled out of your chest. “that’s super judgmental.”
“and maybe if you were as judgy as me, you wouldn't have gone on a date with the human equivalent of wet cement.”
you turned your blinker on and got into the turning lane for your parents’ neighborhood. “not all of us can be as discerning as you.”
“hey, if you wanna run your hinge matches by me next time, i’ll gladly provide my expertise, free of charge.”
“i’ll keep that in mind for next time, barzy. thanks for listening to me bitch.”
the smile on his face was audible when he spoke to you. “anytime, twitch, anytime.”
guy two: nathan
the second date only happened after an extensive vetting process, aka sending screenshots and screen recordings of hinge profiles to mat and jess (in separate threads of course. there was no way you were starting a group chat with the both of them).
jess had been more forgiving than mat had, which surprised you. she pointed out her fair share of red flags, but it was nothing compared to mat’s.
mat met you outside sweetgreen where you went inside to collect your mobile orders. to his credit, he did have a beanie (for once, it wasn’t islanders related) and sunglasses on in a sorry attempt to not be spotted. it was clear the attempt didn’t work because there were two kids asking for autographs when you came out.
you stayed back far enough where it wasn’t obvious you were with him and waited for the kids to leave with their parents.
“i swear i’m not trying to attract attention,” he mumbled to you when the coast was clear.
you handed him his order and rolled your eyes. “you're one of the most recognizable faces on long island, and you thought a beanie and sunglasses would save you?”
he shrugged before popping a pickle chip in his mouth and started walking down the sidewalk. “do you have any updated matches you wanna show me?”
without even responding, you handed mat your unlocked phone.
“oh immediately no,” mat said, looking at some guy named jonathan.
“what's wrong with him?” you asked, peering over his shoulder.
mat flashed your phone at you for a brief second. “he has a neck beard!
you grabbed your phone and looked at the photos again. huh, you hadn't noticed that before. “he can shave it!”
it was mat’s turn to roll his eyes. “he posted that picture because he thought he looked good in it, he's not shaving that fuckass beard.” he continued swiping through your matches and scoffed at most of them.
“this one has too many group photos, and i guarantee you, he's not the guy you think he is.”
two minutes later, mat scoffed and said fishing photos were a bad sign.
“it’s just fishing.”
but mat shook his head and offered no explanation. “didn't your friends tell you these things?”
“jess and ella were looking at the answers and content more than photos, i think they’re concerned about my safety.”
“and neckbeard passed the test?” mat’s eyebrows practically raised into his hairline. “twitch you are way too hot to be dating neckbeards and men whose only personality is fishing.”
“how is that fair to them? my only personality is hockey!”
you stumbled over the uneven sidewalk before mat’s hand steadied you by your elbow.
“try to stay on your feet, twitch.”
you stopped walking long enough to give him a look of disbelief. “i know you're not talking to me about staying on my feet. you fall down like four times each period.”
part of you expected mat to get defensive, but he smirked instead. “aw, you watch my games?”
you glowered and kept walking.
that was two days ago. you were currently getting ready to go on a date with nathan who had (somehow) managed to be approved by your board of trustees as mat called them. ella, jess, and mat couldn't seem to agree on anyone collectively until you matched with nathan.
he graduated from penn state law before he moved back to new york. he was the oldest of three boys and had played football since he was a kid. he doesn't play anymore now, you figured, but still got together with his friends at least once a month to play in prospect park.
it seemed like a good fit. ella pointed out how having friends was a good sign. jess said that he seemed to be passionate about his line of work and lighthearted. and judging by the dms you’d been sending each other, nathan was also way more charismatic and entertaining than paul, which was a win.
you met him at a coffee shop in manhattan, he didn't pull your chair out but he did stand when you walked over with your coffee in hand. which was fine, you weren’t old fashioned or anything, it was more than paul had done.
“hey,” he greeted with a thousand watt smile.
dear god, he was handsome.
it’s okay, you told yourself, you had marie philip-poulin shoot pucks at you a million times before, and she was way scarier than any man.
“hi,” you smiled back.
the two of you took your seats.
“hi,” he said again. “you look great!”
“you do too, handsome, i mean.”
he nodded and took a sip of his coffee. “what did you order?”
“mocha frappe,” you smiled. his face pinched in a small frown before it was covered up with yet another smile. “what about you?”
“americano,” he said. “i like it bitter.” he took a sip. “so i saw you're a fan of hockey, what’s your team?”
“oh, i’m actually a professional hockey player,” you gently corrected. “so, my go to team is the new york sirens, but if we’re talking nhl, my parents are huge islanders fans so i’ve been pulling for them as long as i can remember.”
his eyes lit up. “oh cool! i didn’t know you were a professional hockey player, i wasn’t aware they had a league for women now.”
“yeah! the inaugural season was last year, but we didn’t have official team names until this year.” you took a sip of your frappe. “what about you? do you follow the nfl closely? i know your profile said you played football.”
he smiled sheepishly. “unfortunately, i’ve been a jets fan since birth.”
you grimaced. “yikes...”
“take pity on me, i’ve been through a lot, my trust is damaged.”
you snorted before you could even think to stop yourself. your eyes widened as you made eye contact with nathan whose shocked face did nothing for your confidence. an apology was about to come out of your mouth before he changed the topic and pretended like nothing happened.
the rest of the date went so well, you exchanged numbers at the end of the afternoon. it was a little odd when you saw his phone, it looked older than you thought it should’ve, but maybe he was an old soul and didn't want the newest iphone just because he could have it.
on the second date, a week later, you met up on your side of the hudson. you were fresh from practice while nathan took his lunch break to see you.
his phone kept buzzing on the table, but he brushed them off as work emails, which made sense. he was a lawyer, he probably had hundreds of emails to answer on a regular basis. when his phone started ringing, he held it kind of awkwardly in a way where you couldn't see who was calling. he held a finger up at you and excused himself from the table.
you watched as he paced up and down the sidewalk, confused as to why he was so agitated. sure, you hadn’t known nathan long, but he didn't seem to be the type to frustrate easily.
your own phone vibrated on the table, and since nathan was on a phone call, you checked it.
mat barzal: when are you free next? i have raya matches and i need a girl’s perspective.
you: don't you have teammates?
mat barzal: they’re all practically married.
you: i’m failing to see the disqualifications
mat barzal: they’re all dudes, they don't know what they're talking about
you: and i do?
mat barzal: you’re a girl, aren't you?
you: i’m not even going to dignify that with a response
mat barzal: photo attachment
when you opened the text, it was a picture of what you assumed was child mat in hockey gear.
mat barzal: would you say no to this face?
you: i’m on a date, but when it ends, i’ll call you.
mat barzal: :)
nathan came back in, looking more flushed than usual. “everything okay?” you asked.
“huh? oh, yeah, just a work thing.”
you blinked. “seemed a bit intense for work...”
he shrugged and took a bite of his sandwich. “it’s just a lawyer thing.”
the lunch continued for another twenty minutes before he rushed off saying he had to get back to work. he pressed a sweet but brief kiss to your lips and promised to call you.
there was no reason to not believe him.
as you walked out of the restaurant, you pulled up mat’s contact and called him. he picked up on the second ring.
“hey! are you free?” he asked.
“just left my date.”
“oh...sorry, did i interrupt?”
you smiled despite yourself at the slight apologetic tone in his voice. “no barzy, you did not, he had to go back to work.”
“oh...so you’re free? right now?”
“yep, just headed back to my apartment. do you wanna come over?”
“yeah, just send me your address.”
an hour later, you were buzzing mat up to your apartment. he immediately started scrutinizing the space. it wasn't much, probably nothing like he was used to considering the giant salary gap between the two of you, but it was lived in. your grandmother’s quilt lay across the back of the couch you saved for. you'd thrifted the floor lamp and the rug (and the money you saved on it went to getting it professionally cleaned). on the coffee table was a candy jar full of only red starburst, the others were in a gallon sized ziploc bag in your pantry.
“cozy,” mat said.
“i know it’s not much—”
“do you like living here?” he asked.
you nodded.
“that’s what matters. that it feels like home.” he pulled his phone out and pulled up raya. “can you help me with this? the guys keep mentioning wife material and telling me i’m not gonna meet a wife on a dating app.”
you rolled your eyes. “your teammates have also been dating their wives since high school so i wouldn't take everything they say so seriously.” your thumbs began scrolling through his matches, taking mental notes of the girls flying across the screen. “not this girl,” you said, showing him a picture of a red head.
mat’s eyes widened. ”what? why? she volunteers at the animal shelter!”
“taking a picture at the animal shelter and volunteering at the animal shelter are two different things. besides, it’s the fact that all her group photos are with guys, not a single girl spotted.”
“so? she says she's one of the guys.”
“and in girl words, that means she’s dealing with a lot of internalized misogyny and might be a pick me. she’d probably see any woman in your life as a threat.”
“huh.”
“and this girl,” you showed him another one of your matches. “she seems nice, but if you look in the background of one of her photos, there’s a rangers jersey on the floor.”
mat physically recoiled like you'd just slapped him.
“but the other girls seem fine, especially this grace girl, she seems cool.”
“thanks, twitch,” mat said reaching for his phone.
you picked yours off the coffee table and plopped down on the couch. “wanna watch a movie?”
mat nodded and watched as you put on the mighty ducks. sure it was a bit on the nose and the two of you had already been submerged enough in hockey culture, but you were ready to turn your brain off and just be a kid again. besides, the two of you would probably end up scrolling on your phones most of the time anyway.
you opened instagram and saw a dm notification from an account you didn't follow. hesitantly, you clicked on the message and promptly felt you stomach drop to your ankles.
hey girl, the message started. the guy you’ve been seeing, nathan, is my fiancé, we’ve been dating since high school. i would really appreciate if you ended things with him.
“oh my god,” you mumbled.
“what? have you never seen this movie before? it always starts like this,” mat laughed. his laugh stopped short when you showed him the message. “shit.”
“yeah,” you said. “shit.”
mat’s girl one: lauren
the final buzzer sounded, signifying the end of the game, a 4-2 win over toronto at prudential. alex skated over to you first, wrapping you in a hug and patting your helmet. “good job, twitchy,” she smiled. your other teammates followed suit.
jess was last, embracing you as tightly as she could with both of your pads in the way. she skated alongside you back to the locker room. while you loved being one of the three stars of the game, you were glad you weren't chosen that night because nothing sounded better than showering and going home.
after the game debrief in the locker room, you rushed to the showers to scrub the layers of sweat off your body. only when you felt human again, did you get dressed into your sirens sweatsuit. sure, maybe you should've put your cute outfit on again, but you could already feel how exhausted your body was and couldn't imagine putting on an underwire bra and real pants after the game you just had.
on your way to your car, you checked your phone for the first time since getting to the arena. your mom and dad were the first texts you saw, both apologizing for not being able to make the game tonight and inviting you over to dinner the next night.
the most recent text was from emma maltais who told you to let her score next time just because you used to be on the same team in college. after all, weren’t you both forever buckeyes?
but it was the fourteen texts from mat that caught your eye. they all ranged in length with most of them being short exclamations and questions. the last text just read:
mat barzal: can you call me asap? i think i’m losing my mind.
as soon as you got in your car, you called him.
he picked up on the second ring.
“do i need to go to college?” he asked immediately.
what. the fuck.
“huh?” was the only intelligent response you could give him.
“do i need to go to college?”
“mat, what the fuck are you talking about?”
a loud sigh echoed through your phone as you pulled out of the parking lot. “you know how i went on a date tonight?”
“yeah, with that lauren girl, right?”
“mhm, have you read any of the texts i sent you? i feel like that would make more sense.”
“i’m driving right now, i just saw your text asking me to call you, i hadn't had time to go through the rest of them. why? what happened? was she secretly a serial killer?”
“what? no! she said hockey is barbaric and started quoting cte statistics to me.”
“what the fuck? who does she think she is?”
“she’s about to graduate from med school.”
“and she was on raya?”
“...she has a following on tiktok doing ‘days in the life of a med student.’”
if you weren't driving, you would've face palmed. “and she was telling you about how unsustainable a hockey career is?”
“she said i’d retire at thirty-five and probably have a mid life crisis that would be exacerbated by head injuries and how rough i’ve been on my body so it’s probably best that i look at going to college to find a real job.”
“oh my god—”
“so should i go to college?”
you sighed as you pulled up to a stoplight. “mat, how long have you known this girl?”
“...um, a week?”
“you're gonna let a stranger convince you to spend money on a degree you probably won't use? you get chirped a thousand times a night and yet you're not contemplating quitting the game just because someone you've played against for years says you suck.”
he paused, the only sound on the other side of the phone was his breathing. “okay okay, you're right. god i don't know why i freaked like that.”
“i don't either, you don't know this girl, you don't owe her anything.”
“what’re you doing tomorrow?” he asked, suddenly changing the subject. “do you wanna come to my game? i’ll get you a ticket.”
“i’m getting dinner with my parents tomorrow—”
“your parents can come! i’ll get the tickets for all three of you, if you think they’d be interested.”
if they’d be interested? what a joke! your mom and dad had been isles fans as long as you'd remembered. when you were growing up, your dad said you should play for the isles if they weren't going to make a women’s league.
“first woman to play on an nhl team would be quite the honor, don't you think squirt?”
“i’m sure they would love to be there, mat. thank you.”
you could hear his grin through the phone and imagined seeing his eyes squint from his big smile.
“i’ll send you the tickets.”
you woke up the next morning with a text from mat with the tickets enclosed; you shot back a quick thank you, and that you'd see him later.
when you called your parents the night before and gave them the news, they were ecstatic, asking a million questions about how you knew mat barzal, why he was giving you tickets, why you hadn't told them you knew him earlier. you'd told them you'd drive to their house after morning skate and you could walk to ubs together.
more than anything, you were excited to see sidney crosby playing up close. mat had gotten decent tickets after checking to see how close to the ice you'd want to be. he even told you to meet him at ubs before heading to your parents so you could get the family passes to come to the locker rooms after the game. you weren't sure why he was being so nice, but you weren't about to look a gift horse in the mouth.
you waited in the parking lot of ubs, leaning against the driver side door when mat sped into the lot and parked, rather chaotically, two spaces away.
he hopped out in his game day suit with mostly dry hair and three passes in hand.
“hey,” he smiled. and if nathan’s grin was a thousand watts, mat’s could power the entire island alone. “here are the passes.”
you took them from his hand with a matching grin. “thanks, mat.”
he shrugged like it was no big deal. “no problem. you got the tickets, right?”
you nodded. “they’re in my phone.
“great! i’ll see you later then?”
“try not to fall down this time, barzal.”
“no promises,” he said. “is that what you're wearing to the game?”
you glanced down at the black sweatshirt, jeans, and black and white dunks. “is this not fashion forward enough for you?”
“i don’t know, black’s not really an isles color...” he teased. “if you need any gear, i’m sure i can find a jersey—”
“i’m sure my dad has a t-shirt i can wear if it would really mean that much to you.”
mat slapped a hand over his heart. “would you do me the honor of not wearing the colors of the team i’m playing against? i would really appreciate it.”
“you’re so dramatic.”
“only for you, twitch.”
you laughed and shook your head. there was a moment where it looked like mat lit up at the sound of your laughter, but you were probably reading into things.
“i’ll see you after the game?”
he nodded. “see you then.”
you left him in the parking lot and headed down the street to your parents’ house. to no one’s surprise, they were both fully dressed and ready to go to the game that didn’t start for another four hours.
“how do you know mat barzal, sweetheart?” your mom asked as soon as you got settled on the couch. “i don't think you ever really explained it.”
“we met on the all star red carpet fan event. i was late, he was early.”
your dad cocked an eyebrow. “and he gave you tickets to a game after one interaction?”
you shook your head. “we ran into each other at the olympics, started talking more after that.”
“well, i think it’s very nice of him to invite us to his game tonight,” your mom replied, but there was a tone in her voice that had you looking at her suspiciously.
“you're not dating him are you?” your dad asked flat out.
you choked on your own spit, hacking and coughing until you felt like you could breathe again. “what?! no! we’re just friends.”
“hm.” your parents hummed in unison.
it used to unnerve you how many times your parents did things in sync. walking, talking, humming together, they did it all. but they’d been married for thirty years, maybe it would've been odder if they weren't so in tune with each other.
the three of you watched a rerun of ncis before you started walking to ubs together. the walk was only twenty minutes, but the wind was brutal that evening. by the time you made it in the arena, you couldn't feel your face.
you made your way down to your seats and watched as the kids gathered in the space in front of you. mat wasn't fooling around, they were great seats, right behind the bench, across from the penalty box.
the area had cleared out mostly by the time the game started, leaving you and your parents to freak out about being so close to one of your childhood heroes, patrick roy.
god, you'd have to see if mat would let you meet him.
the game itself was an ugly one, ending in a win for the islanders, but it didn't really feel like one. it didn't take you playing hockey your whole life to know that there were penalty kills that should've never happened, sloppiness on both teams. hell, you probably didn't even have to be anything more than a fan to realize that.
nonetheless, you and your parents made your way down to the locker rooms where you saw a crowd of blonde women and their children. you could feel their eyes on you, but it didn't feel judgmental, just curious if anything.
there was no telling how long you waited before players started coming out of the locker room and greeting their partners. you recognized them all, but had never met any of them but mat, so you kept to yourself and your parents, looking up occasionally to look for mat.
when he finally walked out, you called his name and waved, cheesing like you did for your kindergarten school photos. in real time, you watched his face light up as he walked over to you.
“great game,” your dad greeted.
mat immediately stepped up and stuck out his hand to greet your father. “thanks, sir. it’s nice to meet you, i’m mat.” he looked at your mom. “and you must be twitch’s sister.”
on cue, you could’ve sworn your mother swooned. you rolled your eyes.
what a charmer.
you watched with a smile as your dad and mat talked about the game. your dad, while quite knowledgeable, was sensitive enough to not mention the multitude of mistakes made that night.
“we definitely need to clean up a little during practice this week,” mat started. “i think roy is gonna address it...”
you couldn't hear another word after he said patrick roy’s name, like you suddenly remembered mat was being coached by your childhood hero. you tugged on mat’s arm like a child asking for another cookie.
“mat,” you started. he immediately turned to look at you, his brows pulled together in confusion. “can i meet coach roy? please?”
“oh lord,” your mother said. “you’ve started it now, mat.”
“squirt, he's probably busy, mat’s already been kind enough to invite us—”
mat glanced over his shoulder to the locker room, then looked around the hallway, like he was taking attendance. “you wanna meet him?”
you nodded emphatically, bouncing on your feet.
mat placed a hand on your back. “i’ll introduce you.”
your parents eyed mat’s hand but said nothing. you were too busy hearing the rush of blood in your head to fixate on it. “squirt, we’ll meet you at the house, you too mat! join us for dinner if you’re not too tired!” they turned on their heels and headed out of the tunnel towards the exit.
mat led you towards the locker room, but made you wait outside while he glanced around to make sure there were no naked men inside. when the coast was clear, he gestured you to come inside.
you were practically skipping into the room.
patrick roy stood by one of the lockers talking to anders lee when you entered the locker room. your jaw dropped at being so close to the man whose film you watched over and over again on youtube.
“don’t be weird,” mat mumbled. “he's just a guy.”
“you shut the fuck up,” you mumbled in reply. “he’s patrick fucking roy.”
as soon as anders finished talking to roy, he started towards the exit, nodding at you (albeit a little confused) and clapped mat on the shoulder.
the hand on your back pushed you forward until you were just a few feet away from mat’s coach.
“barzy? what’s up?” patrick roy asked before his eyes landed on you.
mat pushed you forward a little more. “coach, this is twitch, she’s the goalie for the new york sirens.”
“you're literally my hero,” you blurted out. “you made me wanna be a goalie.”
to your relief, he smiled and stuck his hand out. “it’s nice to meet you, how’s the season looking so far for the sirens?”
“not too bad, we could definitely be doing better.”
“sounds familiar.” roy’s eyes cut to mat in a sarcastic way.
“well, you met him, we gotta go, though,” mat said, already leading you away from his coach. “don't wanna keep your parents waiting.”
roy’s eyes twinkled and his lips slid into a smirk, like he knew something you didn't. “it was nice to meet you, twitch.”
“you too!”
the hallway was mostly empty when you and mat exited the locker room. you glanced up at him and smiled. “oh my god thank you! i don't think anything will live up to this moment.”
he shrugged like he didn't just do the biggest favor for you. “don't worry about it.”
“do you think i could meet sorokin next time?”
mat guffawed and lightly shoved you. “don't get ahead of yourself, that would require you to come to another game.”
“deal.”
the two of you walked towards the parking lot mat parked in. “i’ll drive you home,” he said.
“you really don't have to come for dinner, i know you’re probably tired.”
he scoffed. “and miss out on the chance to get a home cooked meal and look at your baby pictures? never.”
“you're not gonna see my baby pictures.”
“i'm sure your mom would pull them out if i asked nicely.”
you shook your head. “nope. nope. nope. invitation rescinded. you can't come over.”
“not your house, you can’t rescind an invitation you didn't give.”
you groaned. “this isn’t fair, it’s not like i can go to your childhood home and look at baby mat pictures.”
he shrugged and opened the passenger door of his car for you. “you can always visit during the summer.”
you thought about it. “summer in vancouver doesn't sound bad...”
he smiled and shut the door behind you before walking around the front of the car to get in the driver’s seat. “just let me know, i’m sure my mom would be happy to have you. she’s always happy to host my friends.” he pulled his phone out. “can you put your parents’s address in?”
you typed in their address and handed the phone back to him while you picked at the dirt under your nails. mat pulled out onto the turnpike and down a few side streets until you were pulling up to the house.
“i’m sorry your date didn't work out.”
mat turned towards you. “huh?”
“your date,” you explained. “with lauren.”
“oh,” he said. “it’s fine. tonight made up for it.”
it took your mom no time at all to sell you down the river (read: pull out the photo albums). as soon as dinner was over, mat asked, and your mom immediately went and grabbed the albums without hesitating.
mat was all too giddy to see your photos, he was nearly bouncing in his seat when your mom came down the stairs, armed with blackmail material.
“this was when she was six months old,” your mom started, pointing at different photos. when mat cackled and smirked at you, you knew he'd found the bathtub pictures.
a few pages later and mat’s eyes went wide as saucers as he looked in your direction. “why’re you dressed as an amish woman?” he cackled.
your dad smiled. “she went through an amish hyperfixation after we went to pennsylvania and saw an amish family riding in a horse and buggy.”
mat pulled out his phone and snapped a few photos, snickering to himself all the while. “this is so cute,” he said, pointing at a photo he wouldn't let you see.
your dad continued. “she even asked us to have candlelight dinner for her birthday because the amish don’t have electricity.”
mat couldn't stop laughing.
you shrugged, not even the slightest bit embarrassed. everyone had their weird fixations, yours happened to be the amish. “i tried wearing the dress with my goalie gear and cried when i couldn't,” you said.
mat continued to scrutinize the photos, flipping pages as he smiled. “you were so cute.”
for some odd reason, heat flooded your cheeks. but you brushed it off as a side effect of the glass of wine you had with dinner.
it was nearing 1am when mat finally said goodbye. you walked him out, not noticing the smug look on your parents’ faces.
“thank you for letting me crash your dinner tonight,” mat said, leaning against his car. “it was nice. your parents are great.”
you shook your head and smiled. “thanks for the tickets and the passes. the game was really fun, and i know mom and dad appreciated it.”
a cold wind blew that made a shiver run down your spine. mat took a step closer, then a step back, like he thought better of it.
“when’s your next date?” mat asked.
“not sure,” you said, scuffing the ground with your shoe. “haven't found anyone yet. you?”
he shook his head. “trying to focus on getting to the playoffs, can’t afford any distractions.”
you nodded emphatically. though his playoff run started before yours did, the urgency was still the same.
“let me know if you wanna come to another game,” he said.
before you could stop yourself, you were already shaking your head. “mat you don't have to—”
he held up a hand to quiet you. “you can make it up to me by giving me tickets to see you play.”
you smiled and couldn't stop. even as he got in his car and drove out of sight, you wore that smile inside, missing the knowing looks from your parents.
“he’s nice,” your mom said, a strange tone in her voice that you paid no mind to.
“he’s pretty great.”
mat’s girl two: grace
when mat texted you that he had gone on a date with a girl named grace and was planning another one with the same girl, a strange sinking sensation happened in your stomach. you weren't overly familiar with the feeling. you just assumed it was because you hadn't eaten much.
when he facetimed you a few minutes later, you were shoving a handful of spinach and cheese in your mouth.
“what the fuck are you doing?” he asked. his cackle echoed through your kitchen
“it’s dino time,” you said through a mouthful of spinach.
mat blinked. “‘dino time?’ as in dinosaur?”
“what else would it be for?” you scoffed. “c'mon mat, i know you grew up in canada, but you should've learned this in kindergarten.”
“okay sure, but why?”
“why what?”
“why are you eating a handful of lettuce?”
“...it’s spinach.”
mat dragged a hand down his face and sighed. “okay so it’s spinach. why are you eating a handful of spinach?”
“i saw a girl on tiktok doing it.”
“huh. and you do whatever people on tiktok do?”
you rolled your eyes. “oh get off your high horse, mat. i’m only doing it to get more veggies in. it’s not like i’m snorting cocaine because i saw the wolf of wall street.” only after you shoved more spinach in your mouth, did you ask another question. “why did you call anyway?”
“i was wondering if you'd be able to get two tickets to your game tomorrow.”
“who’s going?” you asked with your mouth still full of leafy greens. “you and bo? duclair? lee?”
mat rubbed the back of his neck. “i was actually planning on taking grace, if that’s okay.”
“oh,” you said, swallowing your spinach. there was that strange sensation in your stomach again. it was odd though, because you were eating, so the feeling should’ve been gone by now, right?
right?
“yeah,” you nodded. “yeah i can get some. i can also see if i can get passes so you can come down to the locker rooms after the game.”
he smiled brightly. “you’re the best, twitch. i’ll talk to you later?”
“mhm.”
he ended the call shortly thereafter, leaving you with your bag of spinach and a quiet room.
he planned on taking grace to your game.
suddenly the greens didn't taste as good anymore. but you had no idea why.
“you’re jealous,” jess deadpanned in the locker room a few days later.
you scoffed. “i’m not jealous. i’ve just been feeling weird.”
“and that all happened to coincide with when mat got a girlfriend?”
“one date hardly makes her his girlfriend.”
jessie eyed you, but you kept taping your stick as if you didn't see her in your periphery.
there was no way she was right. you still texted the tickets to mat. but instead of meeting him outside like he did for his game, you sent one of the attendants out to give him the passes. your reasoning was simple: you weren't feeling well for some reason, and the idea of seeing grace in his passenger seat only made your stomach twist more.
“listen, all i’m saying is you might have a little crush. it doesn’t have to be devastating.”
devastating? devastating?
devastating was losing 4 to 5 to toronto. devastating was smiling through the irritation and disappointment when emma maltais skated over after celebrating with her team.
devastating was not looking over at mat and who you assumed was grace standing at the glass, close enough that you wanted to vomit.
you were only halfway listening to your coach’s lecture after the game, knowing damn well it would lead to bag skating tomorrow. the idea of even touching the ice made you want to slam your head against the wall until you forgot about the game you just played.
when you showered, you originally just stood there, letting the water drown you briefly before you actually washed your hair and body. there was no shot you were drying your hair, you were willing to risk getting a cold if it meant leaving that godforsaken arena as soon as possible. so you slapped a sirens beanie on top of your wet hair and walked out of the locker room.
only to be met with mat and grace standing outside.
fuck.
you'd forgotten about the family passes after three periods of shitty goaltending. the last thing you wanted to do was see mat after your performance that night. the only thing that could top it was meeting grace.
of course she was lovely, smiling at you and offering her hand when mat introduced her. you weren't an asshole, so you shook her hand and did your best to smile even though you wanted nothing more than to go home and sleep off the loss.
however, you did your best to look as interested in the conversation, you pretended to be genuine when grace said you did a great job, that she had fun at the game. all her words should've lifted your spirits, but you didn't know her from a can of paint and you weren't up for conversation. maybe after the next game (that you'd hopefully win) you'd be more up for talking.
“hey,” mat nudged his foot with yours. “it’s not your fault.”
you rolled your eyes, even though they started stinging. “i should've blocked that last goal.”
“and your team should've scored or kept the puck away from you,” he said matter of factly. “the puck has to get through three forwards and two defensemen before it gets to you.”
“but if i—”
mat shook his head and placed his hands on your shoulders, his thumbs rubbing the bones there. “you're gonna keep yourself up all night overthinking this.” he leaned his head down to look you in the eyes. “it’s not your fault, you've gotta let it go.”
you scoffed. “i can’t just ‘let it go—’”
“you can, and you will if you wanna prevent yourself from making the same mistakes.”
you nodded. “thanks mat,” you mumbled, standing there in the moment until you remembered grace was right there. “it was nice to meet you, grace,” you said, doing your best to smile at her without it looking like a grimace. “maybe next time, we’ll win and i’ll be in a better mood.”
she smiled so bright that it nearly blinded you. “no worries, i look forward to your next game.”
“i’ll see you later, mat,” you said. with your goalie bag on your shoulder, your tired legs started to carry you down the hall towards the parking lot, but a hand reached out and slipped the bag off your shoulder.
“i’ll walk you to your car.”
“but grace—”
“she can come with, right, grace? we’ll drop twitch off and then i’ll drive you home?”
you and mat glanced at her, she seemed frozen in her spot, but she slipped a smile on her face with minimal faltering. “that’s fine,” she said.
mat carried your bag all the way to your car and tossed it in the trunk without breaking a sweat. when he closed the trunk door, he shoved his hands in his pockets. “text me when you get home,” he said.
“you're the one with the hour long drive, mat. you should text me when you get home.”
he laughed and tugged on the ends of your hair. “will do. let me know what your schedule looks like this week!”
you nodded as he walked away and watched as he took grace’s hand. your stomach lurched again, but you wrote it off as a side effect of losing that night.
but the sight of mat and grace reminded you of the bet you'd made at the olympics.
you still had some falling in love to do.
guy three: peter
when you were in high school, you watched a movie called serendipity and fell in love with love. the idea that the right person could be in front of you the whole time made your sixteen year old heart beat like wild.
so when you ran into your ex, peter, at a coffee shop in manhattan, you knew it was your moment.
he was the one.
he had to be.
god and to think you two broke up in college and somehow found your ways back to each other? it had to be a sign.
“it’s not a sign, it’s a coincidence,” emma said over facetime.
you rolled your eyes. “how else would you explain him being in manhattan now? i met him when we were at osu.”
“just because you exchanged numbers again doesn't mean you should date him.”
“we ran into him in the most densely populated city in america, emma. i don't think that’s by chance.” you inhaled. “besides, i think he’s changed. i know i have. maybe it was the right person at the wrong time.”
emma blinked like she didn't believe you. “what does mat think?” she asked.
that was an odd question.
“what do you mean? why would he care?”
she shrugged. “i just thought you two were talking to each other about your dates. thought he might have an opinion on the matter.”
“eh, haven’t spoken to him much.” and truthfully you hadn't. between practicing, games, and dates with peter, you two hadn’t spoken in about a week and a half. which, for anyone else, wasn't that deep, but for you and mat, it was a little strange.
“maybe you should fix that,” emma said.
almost like he knew you were talking about him, mat texted.
mat barzal: would you be up for a double date? you, me, grace, and pete?
that sounded like a comically bad idea.
you said yes anyway.
peter chose the restaurant after mat suggested meeting in manhattan, a suggestion he probably made with you in mind. it was a bit fancier than you would've liked. you were fully expecting on finding a little mom and pop hole in the wall with some indoor seating and calling it a day, but you should've known peter was more refined than that.
you were in a black dress with his jacket draped over your shoulders when you walked in the restaurant. mat had texted you earlier to let you know he and grace were already seated.
peter’s hand was on the small of your back as he led you back to the table. he plastered a polite smile on his face and whispered in your ear. “why did you agree to this?”
you shrugged. “thought it would be fun.” you glanced back with a smile on your face. “i think you'll really like mat, he's cool. and grace is nice too.” though, admittedly, you didn't know as much about her as you did mat. after all, he was the one you quieted the anxieties you were feeling about this date entirely.
“it’ll be great!” mat said as the two of you walked around a park. “you and i already get along,” he passed back your now peeled orange. you immediately shove three pieces in your mouth. “it would only make sense that our partners would also get along.”
not even peter’s cynicism could put a damper on your mood.
mat and grace stood as the two of you approached. mat hugged you first, then shook peter’s hand. you and grace waved at each other before you took your seats. mat pulled grace’s seat out before he sat down, peter was seated before you could even blink.
you shrugged it off, pulling out a chair wasn't that big of a deal. but you saw mat’s lips pull down in a frown before it was gone entirely.
“what’s good here?” mat asked. “i've never been.”
you glanced at the menu, your mouth started watering already. “the lobster ravioli looks good,” you noted. “god my stomach is growling already.”
peter made a noise in the back of his throat. “have you looked at the salads?”
you froze. in the corner of your eye, you saw mat’s head snap up from where he sat diagonally from you. “why would i look at the salads?” you asked. “i want pasta.”
peter shrugged. “just think the salad would be healthier.”
“so you can get a salad. i want pasta.”
“if i’m paying, i think you should get—”
“it's on me tonight,” mat interrupted. his eyes met yours. “get what you want, twitch.”
you closed your eyes and sighed when you felt peter tense up next to you at the mention of your college nickname. in your head, you said a little prayer that he would drop it, or at least wait until the two of you were alone to address it.
grace cleared her throat and smiled at you. “has your season gotten any better?” she asked.
grateful for the sudden change in topic, you smiled back. “it has, i feel much better now. sorry that you caught me on a bad night.”
“it wasn't that bad, twitch,” mat said. “it was an off night for everyone. you did the best you could.”
you shot him a grateful smile right as peter cleared his throat. “how’s your season going, mat? i’ve been trying to keep up but you play so many games and so does this one,” he nudges you. “it’s hard to keep track.”
mat shrugged. “we have to get better at putting pucks in the net, that’s for sure.”
“don't let his modesty fool you, peter,” you started. “mat’s on an eight game point streak right now. he’s killing it.” mat looked up and smiled at you. on reflex you smiled back at him until peter cleared his throat.
peter blinked, then gave mat a smirk. “must be cool playing for the rangers,” he said. “has to be the greatest team in new york.”
your brows furrowed right as mat’s jaw clenched. you'd told peter about mat, how he was a forward for the islanders, and was a strict rangers hater. so it was a mystery how he confused mat for a rangers player at all.
“i don't play for the rangers,” mat replied coolly.
“my mistake,” peter shrugged before taking a sip of water. “i assumed your team was the winning team.”
your eyes widened and you nudged peter in the arm. “can you chill please?” you mumbled.
grace, sensing the tension, turned the conversation back towards you. “mat told me you grew up on long island, is that true?”
you nodded and smiled widely, grateful for the topic change. “yes! right down the street from ubs. my parents and i walked to the arena to see mat play not too long ago.”
“it’s like a five minute drive,” mat chimed in.
grace nodded, then froze. “how do you know that?”
he shrugged. “we ate dinner at her parents’ after the game.”
you could cut the tension with a knife. based on grace’s thinned out lips, she wasn't necessarily enthused about the idea of mat eating with you and your parents. granted, you didn't think anything of it, but maybe it was cause for concern for her.
thankfully, the server came over and took your orders. you told the server you wanted lobster ravioli before peter could order for you and sipped your water as he rolled his eyes.
when the food came out, you were too busy eating to notice the looks mat and peter were sending each other or the way grace kept glancing back and forth from you to mat. the lobster ravioli was just too good to focus on anything else.
when the time for the check came, peter scowled when mat paid for it, but said nothing. your mood soured the longer peter was grumpy. by the end of the date, you were rushing him out the door, but not without waving goodbye at grace and hugging mat.
peter didn't say anything until you got into his car. “i didn't know mat had met your parents.”
you blinked. “i didn't think it was worth mentioning. do you want me to tell you that jess and ella met my parents on draft day?”
“that’s not the point and you know it,” he scowled. “and why is he calling you twitch?”
you shrugged. “because it’s what everyone calls me. he heard it from emma and jessie and it’s stuck since then. why is it a problem?”
he huffed. “i never said it was a problem.”
“you're acting like it is.”
“that’s because you're too old to be going by a college nickname. when you meet my coworkers, can you just give them your real name?” he asked.
there was a sinking sensation in your stomach that you hadn't felt since you were twenty. “sure,” you tried to smile. “if it’ll make you happy.”
two days later, you were drying your hair after a 2-1 loss against montreal. peter had texted you earlier that week asking for days you were available to hang out with him and his friends.
truthfully, you didn't want to, especially after losing. but peter was so sweet last night. he brought you flowers, though you weren't really a fan of daisies, a bottle of his favorite wine, and pizza from a place down the street from your apartment. he let you pick the movie out and said you were beautiful.
you were willing to endure a night with his finance bro friends because he sacrificed his free time last night to see you.
you put your walk in outfit back on and sighed when you looked in the mirror. the last thing you wanted to do was go to a bar where you only knew your boyfriend.
but love was about sacrifice, right?
you drove home and ordered an uber to the bar in manhattan. when you finally arrived, it took you a second to realize where your boyfriend was.
he was propped against the wall while one of his friends was shooting pool. peter kept talking and didn't notice you walk up until you were right next to him.
“oh hey!” he kissed your cheek, which made you grin just a little. he was so sweet and you loved the affection. “how was your game?”
your smile faltered. “you didn't watch it?”
a light bulb went off in his mind. “oh, i mean, they had the islanders game going on, so i didn't get a chance to see it. i’m sorry, babe. i would’ve if i could’ve.”
you nodded, not wanting to fight in public. because your game ended over an hour ago, and peter, according to your texts, had only been at the bar for forty-five minutes.
he seemed to take your silence as a sign that you were okay and ushered you forward towards his friends. “guys, this is my girlfriend,” he said before looking at you, expecting you to introduce yourself.
you waved and said your name. peter’s friends nodded back at you and got back to their game. peter was cheering as one of his friends, whose name you didn't know, shot a ball in the hole.
“peter,” you said over the loud music. “peter!”
he finally glanced at you, eyebrows raising like he just remembered you were there. “yeah?”
“i’m going to get a drink,” you said.
he nodded before turning back to the game.
your heart sunk as you walked to the bar, dodging bodies like your teammates did on their way to the net. in your backpocket, you could feel your phone vibrate. you reached back and pulled it out, smiling when you saw a text on your screen.
mat barzal: do you feel as shitty as i do?
you pulled up the nhl app and saw the score. a 4-5 loss against the rangers.
stupid fucking rangers.
you: i feel like absolute dog shit. like the kind i would have to pick up when i took benny on walks.
mat barzal: who’s benny?
you: my childhood dog, sweet as can be, but took massive dumps on every walk.
mat barzal: what’re you doing now?
you: at a bar with peter and his friends.
mat barzal: ...that’s fun?
you laughed at his message.
you: if only, but i’m hopeful it’ll get better.
mat barzal: where are you right now?
you dropped him a pin.
you: why?
mat barzal: i’m like five minutes away, would it be weird if i joined you?
probably yes, given how mat and peter’s last interaction went, but you glanced back at your boyfriend who was laughing with his buddies. he didn't notice you'd been gone for almost ten minutes now.
so maybe you were feeling petty, but you didn't care at that point. maybe you'd pay for it later, but the price of not feeling alone in a dive bar was worth any tension that would inevitably come.
you: it wouldn't be weird! i’d actually appreciate some company right now.
mat barzal: bet.
you were alone for another seven minutes before you saw a mop of dark brown hair walk through the doors. you watched as his eyes searched the room until they landed on you. it was like someone flipped a switch, the way his face immediately lit up at the sight of you. the very sight made your stomach twist in a way that had you buzzing in your seat.
mat shoved his way through the crowd of people before he flagged down a bartender and took the seat next to you.
“hey,” he huffed, out of breath.
you laughed. “did you run here?”
he shrugged, even as his cheeks turned pink. “maybe. that’s not the point. what’re you drinking?”
you held up your half empty cup. “moscow mule.”
“you want another?”
you let mat buy you another drink. you let him pay for it. you let him ask you about how the game was and in turn, you asked how his went. you let him tell you about bo’s kids as well as matt’s, how the bet was going, how grace was doing.
he seemed ambivalent to that last conversation topic, the spark in his eyes when he talked about his teammates died quickly.
“i don't know,” he said, tracing the bar top with his pointer finger. “things are good.”
“but?” you asked.
“but i thought falling in love would be different.”
your heart lurched in your chest, your stomach twisted like you were about to vomit. there was no reason for it though, maybe it was the alcohol?
“you're in love with her?” you managed to get out.
he shook his head, and the pressure building in your chest lessened. “no, but maybe i should be.”
mat’s eyes looked past you, when you turned around, you saw he was staring at peter and his friends. “do you love him?” he asked quietly, just loud enough for you and only to hear.
the truth was, you used to when you were in college. you thought he hung the sky, the moon, and the stars. you thought he put the earth into motion. he was your sun. but now things were different, he was different, you were different. it was like a piece of a puzzle that almost fit but not completely, like you were forcing it into a spot and saying it was close enough.
“i don't know,” was the answer you settled for. “maybe in time, i will again.”
mat let out a breath. “but you don't right now?”
“not yet.”
he nodded.
a beat later, an arm slid around your waist that had you tensing until you heard his voice. “hey sweetheart, you'd been gone for a moment, i got concerned.” you could hear the tension in peter’s voice as he spoke to you. if you were a betting woman, you'd gamble your bottom dollar on mat being the reason for it.
“pete, hey,” mat said with a wave.
“it’s peter,” your boyfriend said. “hope you’re not feeling the sting of a loss too bad, mat.”
you whipped your head around to look at peter, confusion written all over your face. “you watched the game?”
peter shrugged like he barely heard you. he wasn't looking at you anyway, his gaze was locked on mat. “we pregamed before coming here.”
“you watched the rangers play but couldn't watch my game?”
but he didn't even acknowledge what you said. “it was nice seeing you mat, but me and my girlfriend are going to go play pool. have a good night.” peter steered you away from the bar and back towards the pool tables.
it was like someone was draining the life out of you like one would tap a tree for sap.
“i think i’m gonna go home,” you said, pulling away from peter. “i’m really tired and i have practice tomorrow.”
peter’s brows pulled together, he frowned. “but you just got here. i barely got to see you.”
“that’s because you were playing pool with your friends. i’ve been here for over half an hour, peter. i lost tonight and i just wanna go home and lay on the couch and watch trashy reality tv.”
“fine,” he huffed. “i’ll see you later.”
you went on your tiptoes to press a kiss to his lips, but at the last minute he turned his head away so your lips met his cheek instead. you stepped back, a little hurt before you spun on your heels and headed for the exit.
“you're leaving?” you glanced over your shoulder and saw mat shoving past people to get to you.
“yeah,” you said. “i’m tired and wanna get in bed.”
“have you ordered an uber yet?”
you shook your head.
“let me ride home with you, i don't want you going home alone.” you were already shaking your head, telling him to catch uber back to long island, but he held a hand up. “it’s late and i don’t want to have to tell your mom that i let you catch an uber back to your apartment without making sure you got there safely.”
you held up your phone. “i can give you my location.”
“not good enough. i need to see you walk into your apartment building.”
“seriously, mat, i’d feel bad that you're adding more time to your commute.”
he shrugged like it was no big deal. “don't think of it like that, just think of it as me wanting to spend more time with you.”
the ride back to newark was short, but you felt bad knowing that mat had an hour trip back home because of you. but he shrugged your worries off and said he'd text you when you got home.
that night, after your second shower, after crawling into bed to watch the bachelor, you went to sleep smiling.
your mood over the next two days fluctuated, with you rarely hearing from peter. if you got any response, it was strictly five words max per text message. and each message took him at least thirty minutes to reply.
safe to say, when you arrived at prudential for another game, you were ready to devour the red starbursts you saved in your goalie bag.
except the bag was empty.
and really it shouldn't have been that big of a deal, but you'd been eating red starbursts before every game since you were six and your mom stopped caring about red dye 40. your shaking hands reached for your phone and hit peter’s contact.
the phone rang and rang and rang and rang only to go straight to voicemail.
so you called again.
same thing.
so you called again.
same thing.
you called one more time and it went straight to voicemail.
peter: can you chill? i’m busy.
you: i need red starbursts. do you think you could bring me some?
radio silence.
so you waited five, ten minutes. and not a single reply.
you: peter? will you?
peter: i’m busy. why don’t you get that?
tears welled up in your eyes. you were starting tonight, you couldn't afford to not have the candy. what if you lost because you didn't have them? would the whole team blame you? you know you would.
you walked into the hallway and scrolled through your contacts. you hit the contact of the person you were searching for.
two rings.
“hello?”
“mat,” you sniffled, trying to keep the crying to a minimum, thankful you'd gotten there early enough, no one else was in the locker room. and no one was in the hall.
“hey, you okay? are you crying?”
“can you do me a huge favor?” you asked.
“anything.”
“can you bring me red starbursts? i tried asking peter but he’s busy and my parents are at work still and—”
“i got you, don't worry. where do you want me to meet you?”
a sob escaped your lips as relief crashed over you. “thank you thank you thank you, mat. just call me when you get here, and i’ll meet you.”
he was there in forty-five minutes with a ziploc bag stuffed full with your favorite candy.
you about tackled him in the hallway. “how did you get down here?” you asked, bouncing on your feet as he handed the bag over.
“apparently my face is familiar,” he joked. “when i told one of the social media interns i was here for you, she led me down here.”
without even thinking about it, you wrapped your arms around his neck and pulled him in for the tightest hug possible. “i owe you one. seriously.”
when you pulled back, his cheeks were a light pink, something you could've read into had jess and ella not come bounding down the hallway.
“twitch! who is this?” they asked, wide smiles on their faces.
“no,” you mumbled. “mat, run.”
you tried pushing him away, but he turned around and smiled at your teammates. “i’m mat,” he said.
jess’ lips formed a smirk. “i’m jess, the best friend.”
“ella, the other friend.”
“are you staying for the game?” jessie asked, mirth rolling around in her irises.
“he can’t he's busy—”
“sure,” mat smiled. “i’d love to.” he turned back to you. “are your parents coming?”
you nodded, a little sheepishly. “they have my tickets—”
“you can have mine!” jess cut in. “they should be next to yours anyway.”
“you really don't have to come, mat—”
but he shrugged. “i’d love to. do you think your mom would cook again tonight?”
“i’m sure if you asked, she’d make a five course meal just for you.”
you missed the looks passed back and forth between jess and ella, only focused on the way mat’s lips curled up into a smile. “then i’ll see you out there, twitch.”
as he walked away, jess and ella smirked at you, waiting until he was fully out of sight (and earshot) to shriek at you.
“he’s eaten dinner with your parents?!”
“shut up,” you groaned, walking back into the locker room. “it’s not that deep.”
“girl, what was he even doing here?”
you held up the bag of starbursts. “i ran out.”
jess paused. “...and he brought you some?” she reached for the bag, testing its weight in the palm of her hands. “girl, this is like several packs worth of starbursts.”
you shrugged it off, like it was no big deal. “he was being nice.”
but when you skated out for warm ups and saw him sitting next to your parents, you could see the blue of the sirens jersey he was wearing, you could see your number 26 on his sleeves. he was leaning down to listen to what your mom was saying when you skated past their seats.
your parents were sporting a homemade t-shirt of you in goalie gear at the ripe age of six, if you had to guess. on any other day, you wouldn't have felt the heat flooding your cheeks, but something about mat standing next to your parents wearing those shirts felt a little too intimate. it felt like something peter wouldn't be happy about if he found out.
the same peter who brushed you off, you reminded yourself.
suddenly, you cared a little less.
you skated to the crease and started scuffing it up before prepping for the rest of the warm ups.
by the time the game ended, you were exhausted. it ended in a win, something you were grateful for. ottawa put up a good fight, but you felt every one of those twenty-three shots on goal in your bones. you were so tired, you didn't even bother checking your phone, you just shoved it in your back pocket and walked outside of the locker room.
what you saw in the hallway had to be some sort of nightmare. standing with your parents was mat, jess, and ella all of whom were pointing at the homemade shirts they wore.
you immediately started walking towards them.
“you have to make me a shirt next time,” mat quipped.
““no—” you cut in.
“of course, mat! if you come over afterwards, you can pick which picture you want on your shirt!” your mom crooned.
your eyes widened. “mom no—”
but mat was already smirking and cutting you off. “i have just the picture in mind.”
jess’ eyes brightened, like a lightbulb went off above her head. “is it the amish picture?”
he shook his head and smiled. “nah, i got a better one.” when ella and jess opened their mouths to ask, he shook his head again. “and it’s a secret. you'll all find out one day.”
you laughed while your teammates rolled their eyes. it wasn't long before they were saying their goodbyes and walking out while you, your parents, and mat just stood around.
“you know, mat,” your dad started. “the offer still stands if you want to come over for a drink.”
mat’s eyes met yours. a silent are you going? passing between the two of you.
you thought about how you should probably go home, how you'd be better just going to your apartment instead of driving an hour to your parents’ house.
but your parents made cute shirts and sat in the arena cheering you on like they had been doing for years.
“your call, barzy. but be warned, we will probably play spades. so if you're game—”
“i’m down,” he smiled.
which is how you ended up throwing cards at mat because your parents set the two of you in the card game.
“what the fuck mat!” you yelled, but it was drowned out by your parents cackling and mat groaning.
“language!” your mom chided.
mat threw his hands up at your accusation. “i've never played this before! your parents have been playing together for years!”
“not an excuse!”
“oh c'mon, squirt, don't be such a sore loser, it’s mat’s first time playing.”
you huffed and sat back in your chair, crossing your arms. “i don't remember being this bad,” you said.
“you were a concussed fifteen year old, i doubt you remembered much from that time,” your dad quipped as he shuffled the deck of cards.
mat choked on a laugh that he quickly stifled when he saw your glare. you opened your mouth to retort when your phone started vibrating in your back pocket.
peter.
you sighed and held your phone up. “i've gotta take this, i’ll be back.” you pointed at mat. “make sure they don't cheat.”
mat held his hands up. “i wouldn't even know how they could cheat at shuffling cards, but okay.”
you stepped into the living room, just far enough for a little privacy, but close enough to monitor what was being said by your parents. “hello?”
“where are you?” peter asked immediately. “i tried ringing your doorbell but you haven't buzzed me in. i’m freezing my ass off, here.”
“huh?” you asked, wondering if you heard him wrong.
“i’m outside your apartment,” he sighed.
“wait,” you said. “why?”
a moment of silence and then a deeper sigh. “to apologize. i feel like you were angry with me earlier. so i wanted to make things better.”
you blinked. “so you're at my apartment?”
“with daisies, your favorite. so, are you going to stop ignoring me and let me in? it’s way too fucking cold for this, baby.”
you grimaced at the idea of telling him the truth. “i would peter, but i’m not in jersey right now. i’m in elmont, with my parents and—”
mat’s loud ass laugh cut you off.
the silence on the phone was deafening.
“is mat there? was that him?” peter’s voice was cold in a way you hadn't heard before.
“yeah,” you said, not seeing an issue with it. “he's here. we’re playing spades.”
a long pause. “why?”
“why what?”
“why are you at your parents’ house with another guy? can you tell me how that makes sense?”
you pinched the bridge of your nose and moved upstairs to your bedroom so your parents and mat couldn't hear. “we’re just playing a card game—”
“why is he there?”
“because he came to my game,” you said.
“why was he at your game?”
“because he didn't hang up on me when i asked for red starbursts, peter.”
“oh my god,” he groaned. “i was in a meeting! you seriously can't be mad at me for not getting stupid candy for you this one time.”
“well, you asked why he was here and i told you. he brought me red starbursts, jess gave him one of her tickets, and my parents invited him over for dinner.”
“why?”
he couldn't be serious.
“because they're my parents, and they've never met a friend of mine that they didn't like. which you would know if you'd had more than three conversations with them.”
“oh don't turn this around on me, sweetheart. you’re the one with a guy at your parents’ house right now.”
“you know what?” you started. “i’m not even gonna entertain this bullshit. why did you stop by my place again?”
“to apologize!”
“for what?”
“i don't know,” he admitted. “i could tell you were mad and probably blamed me so i came to apologize for whatever i did to piss you off.” you could practically feel the sarcasm in his voice seeping through the phone.
“okay peter,” you said. “i’m going to hang up now because you're being an ass and if we continue this phone call any longer, you're going to be single. i’ll talk to you when i’m back in jersey.”
before he could say another word, you hung up and took a deep breath to steel your nerves. you took a moment to pull yourself together as you headed down the stairs and back into the dining room.
“everything okay, squirt?” your dad asked.
you nodded and did your best to smile. “just peachy.” you walked back to your seat and pointed at mat. “don't fuck this up for me, okay?” you said. “i have a lot of pride riding on this game.”
“language,” your mom scolded.
but mat smiled anyway and slapped your hand out of the air. “wouldn't dream of it.”
mat left around 2am and you were asleep in your childhood room by 2:15.
#mathew barzal imagine#mat barzal#mathew barzal#mat barzal blurb#mat barzal x reader#mat barzal imagine#nhl blurb#nhl imagines#nhl imagine
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Mutt
Matt Murdock x Male Reader
Summary: Matt finds you on the rooftop of your apartment building.
A/n: I have two requests in my drafts, and I'll get to them when I have the motivation to do so. For now I offer some short angst.

Smoke curled from your lips, the cigarette hanging loosely between your fingers as you stared blankly into the night sky. Bruises marred your face, arms, and knuckles, a testament to the latest explosion of your rage. Your body ached, a constant, stinging pain that mirrored the emotional turmoil within. Tears streamed down your cheeks, your eyes red and puffy from hours of silent weeping.
This was a familiar ritual, a grim dance played out far too often. You'd pick fights you knew you couldn't win, fueled by a desperate need to feel something other than the suffocating dread and self-loathing that constantly gnawed at you. It was a twisted attempt to distract yourself from the slow, agonizing process of imploding, of disappearing beneath the weight of your own despair.
You sighed, wrapping your lips around the cigarette and taking another drag. The harsh taste of tobacco and nicotine offered a fleeting reprieve from the bitter taste of your own self-destruction. The sound of footsteps on the fire escape jolted you from your reverie. You knew it was him, always him. Matt.
He never spoke, never intruded on your silence. He understood the importance of letting you unravel at your own pace, of letting you share your pain on your own terms. You leaned against him, the rough concrete of the rooftop a distant memory beneath his comforting warmth. He held you, his silence a gentle, unwavering embrace.
Tonight, however, was different. As you rested against him, his hands gently tracing patterns in your hair, the familiar torrent of tears failed to materialize. "Do you ever wonder," you murmured, your voice hoarse, "why we do this to ourselves?"
Matt sighed, a deep, weary sound that mirrored your own. "Of course I do. Why do you ask?"
You extinguished the cigarette against the rough cement, the dying ember a stark contrast to the vibrant city lights below. "I feel like a… a bad dog," you whispered, the words catching in your throat. "Always snapping, always biting."
The image stung, a raw, painful truth you couldn't deny. You'd been called a mutt more times than you could count, a creature of instinct and aggression. Even Matt, in a moment of frustration, had used the analogy. It was undeniable: you were broken, a stray left to fend for itself for far too long, a creature beyond repair.
"I'm a mutt," you whispered, your voice barely audible above the distant hum of the city, "deserving of the pound."
Matt's body stiffened, the gentle rhythm of his hands in your hair faltering. Oh, how he hated hearing you tear yourself down, reduce yourself to nothing. "A mutt deserves a chance," he said, his voice firm yet gentle. "Even a mutt with a bite. It doesn't define them."
You looked up at him, your eyes searching his. "You don't think so?"
He cupped your face, his thumb gently wiping away a stray tear. "No," he said, his voice unwavering. "I think you're handsome, even with all your scars. And I love you, more than words can say."
He leaned down, his lips brushing against yours in a soft, gentle kiss. It was a kiss filled with a quiet strength, a promise whispered on the wind. A promise to be there, to hold you, to help you heal.
And for the first time in a long time, you believed him.
#matt murdock#matt murdock x male reader#matt murdock marvel#marvel matt murdock#daredevil#marvel daredevil#marvel#marvel x male reader#x male reader#xmalereader#mlm#fanfic#fanfiction#queer fanfiction#gay#gay fanfiction#angst writing#angst
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on Killua, projection, and spectrophobia
This post is sort of a sequel to this answer I gave an asker, wherein I said that an overarching theme in Killua's ability to situate himself and understand the world around him is constant social categorization. It's also a very direct extension of this post about how he sees Nanika in relation to his own self-perception and the way in which he treats her as a result of projection.
Originally that second post was actually meant to be the ultimate conclusion to this one (i've been sitting on this draft for close to a year atp). So it's a little embarrassing to post this without it as a closer—this feels unfinished as a result—but I'll link it in the relevant section where it should've been read anyway, and you can take it or leave it. If you do read it and see parts I paraphrased or directly copy-pasted from very early points in this meta, that's why lol. I'm lazy and didn't want to rewrite thoughts I had already articulated in my notes app, nor did I want to leave the anon hanging for however long it would take to polish this up.
Eli, this is long as fuck. Why do you care this much?
Well, why does anyone care about anything? I like yapping. This is the yapping website. Take this as your warning that this is going to be LENGTHY, btw
But the main reason I started thinking about this and writing it down so long ago is the pervasive perception within the fandom that Killua is very logical, and that this demeanor of his is a deliberate contrast to Gon’s impulsivity, reliance on instinct, and tendency to operate based on emotion. This makes the audience trust his word even when everything surrounding him is working to tell you he’s an unreliable source of narration, including the aloof overpowered rival-deuteragonist archetype he’s subverting, which people seem to recognize in every other way but this for some reason. His family directly spells out to the audience that he’s way too emotional and volatile to be considered perfect, despite the golden child gambit—
—and while the Zoldycks are all stinky fucking liars as far as whether the audience should trust them or not, I do think they know what they’re talking about in terms of suitability to be an assassin. And Zeno is ostensibly supposed to be the "sane one," regardless of how you feel about that.
Even so, I think that it’s a really easily digestible and also not unpopular view here on tumblr to acknowledge that not only is Killua very often illogical, he’s also not less emotional than Gon just because he tends to analyze more information before making a decision. It’s not a hot take to say that Killua POV Syndrome is the source of a lot of mischaracterization for both of them and their relationship. Still, I rarely see anyone talk about the specific ways in which he’s illogical, identify an underlying pattern between each instance, and connect it to his arc and the very unsubtle metaphors that punctuate it as a whole. So that’s kind of what I’m aiming for here, just to present my ideas in one place so I don’t have to keep chunking them into different responses to asks.
So. 5 topics.
Projection (clarification)
Killua's Reflection
The Outlier: Gon
The In-group
The Mirror: Alluka and Nanika
1. Projection
Projection is a term I think people are well acquainted with, but I still feel the need to define it so we’re all on the same page. It’s been in the periphery of the therapy speak epidemic that’s been happening for a while now, and I want it to be clear what we’re actually talking about.
In it’s most simple form, projection is the process of attributing one’s own traits or emotions to another. This is the most common way I’m going to be using the word, but there are other relevant intricacies:
Originally, it was conceived as a way of ego defense and emotional suppression or denial. For example, the first formally documented case of projection was in a 1895 letter in which Sigmund Freud described a woman who was avoiding confronting feelings of shame by insisting that neighbors were gossiping unjustly behind her back. This form wherein the person projecting recognizes an emotion or action as condemnable in themself but is unwilling to reflect on it, and then attributes that same trait to someone else so it is “safe” to judge, remains the more popular conception of projection. Freud is a whole can of worms and me referencing him is supposed to be more of a history lesson than a concession of legitimacy. And in terms of talking about projection, I do think the type he describes exists and I do think it’s useful for the purposes of this post to use his name in reference to it.
Contemporarily, projection is understood more benignly as being a part of theory of mind (the ability to parse the intentions and mental states of other people separately from one’s own). This type has many different forms which manifest healthily during stages of psychological development or interaction, such as a child learning to perform empathy by recognizing and interpreting familiar experiences or expressions in others. That specific process, however, is more often referred to as mentalization, wherein “…there is little distortion of the other person’s mind because there is no automatic equation of it with the mind of the observer..." though it is still considered a form of projection because it requires using your own experiences to determine that of another.
All of these definitions are relevant because Killua does all three. He imposes his own traits onto other people even if it’s not necessarily warranted, projects the judgement of his shameful aspects onto those around him to avoid confronting them (Freudian), and uses his own experiences to mentalize with targets chosen based on his own self-perception.
2. Killua’s Reflection
I’m sure everyone interested enough in Hunter x Hunter to be reading metas on it already knows about Killua’s shit self-esteem and where it comes from. It’s something that doesn’t really need to be restated. Nonetheless, I feel an aspect of it is necessary for what I want to say.
A lot of Killua’s emotional conflicts within the story stem from a desperate need to disprove what Illumi said to him in the exchange that disqualified him from the first arc's exam.
At this point Killua has actually seen and experienced things that contradict what Illumi is saying. But in this case, even with all of these new experiences and people on his side, Killua finds he can’t disagree with his big brother. After all, it’s backed up by some pretty irrefutable proof—more than Killua has.
For example, Killua’s reaction to Gon being completely unbothered in this conversation…
Alternate translation from the 2011 anime is: "That's weird... People only like me because they can't ever tell whether I'm serious." (Viz is my worst enemy for early HxH and should be yours too)
…corroborates 2 things:
Killua has approached people (outside of the Zoldyck estate) in the past, whether to be friends or to cure boredom
Upon being told about his family, these people either reacted poorly or with disbelief. Then he was ostracized or became disinterested
Killua doesn’t seem too bothered by this all things considered, and that’s because it reinforces his family’s emotional isolation, so it’s expected and he has no reason to think it's abnormal or worry over it. Killua is told he’s incapable of friendship because of who he is and how he was raised, and then every relationship he has ends before it can begin precisely because of those reasons. From his perspective, his family are objectively correct. Every time Killua talks to anyone, he may as well be proving that gravity eventually makes things fall down. He just kept trying because he was that desperate for friends who liked HIM, not his cute kid routine.
What his family have done is effectively created a rigid in-group that defines Killua and his capacity for interaction outside of that group. This has overlap with the typical notion of “out-group bias” which, when you google it, specifically brings up the mechanisms of bigotry. I’m referring to it in the more neutral tone associated with social identity theory, which has to do with socially assigned and defined traits valued via comparison (often moral comparison), and the desire to belong to an identity group that is valued positively by the majority.
The funny thing about the Zoldycks is that they do seem to teach their kids to some extent that murder is wrong and will be perceived as wrong by the out-group. But at the same time, a caveat is created: the reason why the in-group (their family) can and should engage in it is because it is in their nature. Asking Zoldycks not to murder is like asking a cat not to meow; they can do it simultaneously because of the family’s value-specific superiority and their moral inferiority—that they're good at what they do and inherently bad at what everyone else does. “We are the only ones who could ever love or understand you, you don’t need Them.” Not only is it isolating, it’s dehumanizing, and something like this is a classic tactic used to trap people.
Doesn’t work on Killua though! He swings in a counterintuitive direction by wanting acceptance from the out-group instead of withdrawing back to his safe, rejection-free in-group. I think that has to do with the fact that he’s also othered from that in-group in some manner.
Killua is part of the family, yet he’s the golden child. As of present, the entire operation revolves around him. He’s shown blatant favoritism: Illumi and Kikyo are obsessed with him, Zeno justifies preferential treatment when called on it, Silva is very lenient with him, and the butlers we’ve seen seem to all have some preference as well. The rest of his siblings may as well be invisible while he’s around. He’s not just a Zoldyck, he’s the heir. And with the amount of control exerted over him because of it, there’s an easy connection to make that being the family’s pet prodigy had a big hand in crafting Killua’s oppositional personality.
So funnily enough, by singling him out, the Zoldycks kind of guaranteed that Killua would start to suspect that he’s not actually a part of their in-group—fueling his desire to be normal (read: actually belong somewhere) and turn his search outward. Their tradition got too big and began cannibalizing itself. Put a pin in this because we’re returning to it later.
Going back to what Illumi actually said to Killua, during the fourth phase Killua both compares himself with Gon:
…and is absolutely baffled by the fight’s turn:
…which are things Illumi addresses—that one day, Killua will start evaluating Gon as an opponent, and that Gon confuses him. Though he’s using these to gaslight him into doubting his own emotions and desires, what Illumi says is all true to Killua.
Gon does confuse him because, unlike every other social interaction he’s ever had, Gon doesn’t reinforce what his family has said to him. Gon is not considered “the out-group” by Killua; he does not behave in the way Killua has seen and was taught the out-group behaves, so he must not have their same values. Most importantly, he likes Killua for who he is as an individual, not his proficiency at the things valued by his in-group, which makes him feel like an actual person and like he could potentially belong somewhere. Gon is dismantling the mechanisms of Killua’s abuse by… basically just being a silly little guy. And though obviously Killua isn’t aware of that specifically, he does feel it’s effects.
So when Illumi pops up and basically goes “Yeah, all that is a fluke. An outlier. I know how you think, this is what you were just doing, and you’re deluding yourself,” Killua has no argument because Gon is an outlier; the one person that’s not part of the out-group or the in-group.
And then Illumi goes and puts the final nail in the coffin by forcing him to surrender, thereby allowing Gon to die and "proving" him right in that he's incapable of connection. So he does what’s expected of a murderer then goes home.
Of course, Gon storms the castle anyway, but this exchange still haunts Killua. He believes Illumi is still right. There is still the in-group, the outgroup, and Gon.
This is the kind of thinking that Killua brings into every relationship he has and, despite wanting so badly to prove Illumi wrong, he uses these preconceptions in order to side step actually confronting it. Killua doesn’t like thinking about the possibility of Illumi being correct. He doesn’t want to; he gets genuinely upset, sometimes angry, when reminded of it (think his outburst with Nobunaga in Yorknew), and it’s hard for him to engage with the idea when it comes up. But proving Illumi wrong in any substantial manner would mean thinking about it.
Similarly to Gon assigning Killua the role of “the cool-headed one who keeps me in check,” Killua takes Illumi’s evaluations of their relationship and twists them into something he can operate off of. In his head, he’s assigned Gon the role of “the outlier" which Illumi described, but views Gon’s uniqueness optimistically instead of misanthropically. As a result, Killua ends up pouring his self-worth into being useful to Gon. He doesn’t really know how else to get people to want him around, and as long as Gon is around, Illumi is wrong.
Though Killua is doing this in order to prove so, he’s not actually fully rejecting Illumi—it’s very psychologically shallow because the foundation of it still relies on Illumi’s assessments. Doing this lets Killua avoid having to do overwhelming hard work in either self-evaluation or examination of his upbringing—ironically reinforcing what Illumi wants, which is to constantly run away from problems he can’t handle.
When I say Killua is avoiding having to do hard work on reflection, I don’t mean that in a negative way. Actually deconstructing all this would take years of grueling emotional labor to do, and Killua is a child. So instead, he applies this faulty worldview in ways that make him happy, and that’s better than nothing. There’s genuinely no other option for him at this point in the story and it would obviously be silly to condemn him for it.
This is the basis of his projection; a habitual avoidance of confronting difficult emotions or ideas and an application of traits onto people regardless of fitness to reinforce it—loosely Freudian. It’s because of this that the the reoccurring motif of often literal fight or flight is so important to Killua’s character and is so deeply entrenched in his development, beyond the physical prowess to defeat strong opponents or even just growing out of being an assassin. It's a metaphor for him learning to start actually unpacking his abuse.
3. The Outlier: Gon
Because the way he perceives himself has been molded by alienation, Killua has some difficulty mentalizing with people he sees as belonging to an out-group—instead relying on analysis and pattern recognition to mimic that function and compensate. This usually works out for him because he’s a smart kid, but not always, especially when there’s no pre-established pattern (such as that time he thinks himself into a hole during the Greed Island player selection process).
There are a few examples of Killua’s difficulty to mentalize with people he’s already decided are unlike him, but a lot of them can be simultaneously attributed to apathy or practicality, so I don’t want to say anything definitive. In that same vein, Killua also seems to have a rough time getting along with peers and certain authority figures in general, which is a result of many intersecting things, some having to do with projection—for example, I’m reasonably certain his difficulties with older women come from family misogyny and his own disdain for his mother—and some not.
Despite these varying reasons, I feel confident in saying mentalizing with assigned out-groups is something Killua struggles with because Gon, the person he spends most of the series glued at the hip with, is the single biggest example and indication of it.
As mentioned, Gon confuses the hell out of Killua at first. This subsides as the series goes on—he begins to understand Gon very well behaviorally, enough to accurately predict and describe him—but it returns in the Chimera Ant Arc when Gon’s previously reliable patterns start to shift and Killua has no idea how to deal with it. This gulf of dark and light he’s invented between them causes Killua to simultaneously project heavily onto Gon and understand him as someone so alien that he often completely misses Gon’s greater motivations (and cannot actually internalize his affections, though that’s not unique to the ant arc).
His perception of Gon is so wrapped in his perception of himself that arguably one of Killua’s most dramatic and iconic little internal monologues (“you are light”) occurs right after an emotional low point where he’s obviously feeling guilty and wondering whether he’s capable of performing his assigned role in their friendship, then is urged to no longer think about it (avoidance).
To make matters more obvious, Killua’s vocabulary in the “you are light” declaration is even ripped directly out of Illumi’s mouth (眩しすぎて, translated by Viz as “radiant” from Illumi then again as “too bright” during this scene). Killua idolizes Gon as being this brilliant outlier and relies on him as a key part of his psychological avoidance—not at all even considering whether this fundamental idea, which is borrowed from and agrees with Illumi, is wrong on its own.
In the CAA, Killua is constantly having these beliefs he’s trying to dodge nailed in not only by the adults around him but also his own actions. And, when Bisky confronts him with (what he hears as) the possibility that Gon’s mere presence isn’t enough to prove Illumi wrong and Killua will end up essentially killing him regardless, he becomes resigned to the idea that he is unfixable up until he rips that needle out of his brain.
Removing Illumi’s needle results in a high point for his esteem primarily because it forced Killua to actually linger and, again, think about Illumi and his abuse. It was a huge confrontation both physically and mentally, he did it by himself without any of his psychological crutches, and coming out on top built his confidence to the point where his mood/behavior changed enough for Gon to notice. But it didn’t erase his unease about their relationship.
As Killua begins to feel less stable in his self-appointed roles, Gon also starts to break down and starts prioritizing revenge on Pitou. Alone. And this makes Killua also feel less stable in Gon’s role as the outlier. Similarly to the woman who invents gossiping neighbors to avoid addressing shame, Killua invents judgement from his best friend to internally avoid addressing his internalized alienation. He ends up worrying that Gon will ostracize him and assuming the worst, when previously he thought he'd be the only one who wouldn't do that. He becomes hyper-observant of any possible rejection.
And he’s not worried about moral rejection like he used to be! Because when Palm is introduced, it becomes evident that the rejection Killua is worried about is revealed to be his emotional value to Gon. Whether Killua is as important to Gon as Gon is important to Killua—whether his feelings, romantic or otherwise, are reciprocated.
Then with Palm, these insecurities take the form of pretty stereotypical projection in the form of jealousy and cattiness, even after the whole dating thing is finished…
…and leads to his meltdown right in front of her, during which the narrative acknowledges and makes him finally voice these insecurities.
Like, when Gon says “Let’s go,” Killua immediately spirals into worrying what Gon means by it in terms of his value. Whether they are “just teammates” or something more.
And when Gon tells Killua “This has nothing to do with you,” he can verbally acknowledge that Gon is not being deliberately nasty, but it still hits him like a truck anyway. His true understanding of the situation, regardless of what he thinks logically, is that he is being ejected from their friendship—that Killua, who defines his personhood according to the roles assigned by both himself and Gon, is no longer wanted and no longer belongs anywhere.
A sign of disordered or delayed ability to mentalize in a child—appropriately, due to abuse or atypical attachment—is not being able to separate their own reaction from the intentions of their caregiver during a reprimand or some similar interaction. This is relevant in that Killua has placed Gon into a position with an inordinate (and frankly unfair) amount of emotional authority upon which he’s reliant for comfort and affirmation. Killua’s theory of mind is impaired in relation to Gon not only as is normal due to strong emotions, but also his projecting onto what Gon thinks, which is a result of othering himself from him.
4. The In-group
I think the above is… fairly obvious, and also a super unoriginal observation. But it’s made rhetorically useful by it’s converse: the fact that Killua has a really easy time mentalizing with people that are inhuman, whether morally or literally. I’ll rapid-fire a few examples because they’re pretty self-explanatory…
Killua recognizes Hisoka’s intentions because “[he’s] like him”.
More Hisoka parallels, this time including Gon
(I’m convinced a lot of these are with Hisoka because Togashi still wanted us to hang onto the abundance of “Killua will turn heel” red herrings in the early story. Small tangent, but during the exam Togashi loved to separate Killua from Gon, Kurapika, and Leorio in various ways, often physically, in part to encourage the audience to other him so that these red herrings would be extremely prominent even during Heaven’s Arena. But I think a Watsonian analysis is also fitting)
This one is shakier because it’s primarily an ethical debate which Gon and Bisky chime in on as well, but I thought it was good to include as part of a broader pattern since he specifically brings up moral values and how they define in-groups.
Killua empathizes with Ikalgo right after being willing to murder him lmfao. It's notable the way in which he starts checking around this time if the ants/people he's fighting are douchebags or not (do they have the right social identity or not?), which seemingly justifies killing them.
(I think it’s really interesting that the upper page centers Killua’s hands during the setup for a realization about Meruem hurting himself for the sake of a “special someone." It's like Killua's equivalent to Gon's "[You'd hurt yourself] when... you can't forgive yourself.")
The reason why this occurs has to do with the defined social identities created by his family and the immediate biases/prejudices associated with them. Because of how Killua has dehumanized himself in accordance with these traits, he is pre-disposed to extending understanding—whether that be actual compassion or simple insight—toward characters who are othered as monstrous in-universe (and by the audience, where it’s used as a narrative tool by Togashi) because these experiences of being alienated from the vast majority are most familiar and sensical to him.
This becomes pretty obvious to me when you take into account that Killua’s only friends other than Gon, Leorio, and Kurapika—or at least the only other people he actually calls his friends—are chimera ants (and, in the case of Palm, she was very much ostracized even when she was a human including by Killua himself). Characters like these are relatable and make someone part of an in-group, whether he likes it or not.
On that last point, I want to bring up this observation and comment made by him…
…because while this observation from Killua comes about naturally due to Pitou’s behavior during this confrontation, the comment about protecting not being in their nature sticks out to me as somewhat uncharacteristic. It feels distinctly very emotionally charged in the midst of a scene where Killua is deliberately trying to remain calm and impartial for the sake of Gon (exercizing the role Gon gave to him).
Part of this is definitely because Pitou has been symbolized to these kids for what they did to Kite, but Pitou also has a LOT of parallels with Killua as a result of them both being intrinsically intertwined with the questions of nature Togashi brings up in Hunter x Hunter. Killua is “by nature a murderer,” Pitou is “by nature incapable [of this action]”; I believe they are very deliberate foils, so it’s interesting to hear Killua think things about Pitou that Illumi once said to him.
It’s also worthwhile to note that the role Pitou was born into and the role Killua gives himself are essentially the same, Guard, and that Meruem and Gon mean similar things to them (of course, there is the “light that illuminates all”/“you are light” comparison, but more abstractly, both Meruem and Gon represent the Ants’/Killua’s potential for expansion/evolution—in the food chain and in life/purpose respectively—and are protected as such). They also abide by this role with almost the exact same amount of devotion; we see this in the way Pitou crying over being trusted with something so important to Meruem (healing Komugi) is a parallel to how Killua was so impacted by being relied upon for an important task to Gon (holding the dodgeball).
Killua definitely doesn’t consider any similarities consciously the way he does with Hisoka, Ikalgo, or through mentalization with Meruem, but when he is thinking this of Pitou, he’s looking at a narrative foil, which I find telling. I think it’s a very classic case of Freudian projection.
5. The Mirror: Alluka and Nanika
All this brings me to what I want to talk at length about, which I suppose you can already guess because I gave it away in the section heading.
Killua’s relationship with his sisters has always been fascinating to me because they’re probably the only people in the world he would genuinely consider as sharing his precise in-group. Not just the Zoldyck family in-group, but the Killua in-group. And it really effects the way he thinks during the Election Arc.
I’ve tried my best to neatly separate Alluka and Nanika into their own sections, but it’s still going to be sorta all over the place (moreso than this analysis already is) mostly because right now Killua still hasn’t totally figured out that Alluka and Nanika are basically two whole different people. He’s certainly much closer to that than the rest of his family considering he actually makes a distinction between them, but he’s still not treating Nanika like an individual at this point in the story. And that’s super important to the way he projects onto them, so it’s going to be a little messy. Sorry in advance
Alluka
Remember that pin I told you to save for later? Now is later.
Alluka and Nanika sit at the table with Killua in being othered not only by the defined out-group (due to just being a Zoldyck), but by the people who were supposed to be The In-group™ in the first place: his family. Of course, Alluka’s situation is very different and accelerated faster than a racecar the second Nanika stopped being a secret, but evidently she was kept secret for a reason. Killua was already extremely astute even at the age when these events were happening, and probably assessed (accurately) that there would be huge drama if Nanika were ever discovered; he even went so far as to keep hiding things about how her powers worked long after the gig was up. It would be kind of stating the obvious to say someone who does all that isn’t someone who considers his sister(s) normal according to in-group standards. Otherwise there wouldn’t have been a secret at all.
The reason why Killua got along with his sister(s) so well pre-lockup and pre-needle was most likely because he was already being socially separated from his siblings as the family heir. He then took comfort from Alluka in knowing he wasn’t the only “weird” one, even if no one but him knew that yet, and projected onto her (making decisions about Nanika for her that reflect his own wishes—to keep her secret so that no one would treat her differently)
It’s partially this same projection (i say partially because it’s also, like, basic compassion) that makes Killua so mad when Alluka is outright excluded—not just symbolically, but legitimately—from the family.
He himself strives desperately to be “normal”/belong somewhere, and that ‘somewhere’ includes his own family, though at this point he obviously has more complicated emotions about it. He wants to be understood and accepted by them without being smothered—even Illumi, when he tests Killua to make a wish that would kill him, is included in this desire. In Killua’s ideal world, the Zoldycks would be on good terms with each other and act “normal”; a fantasy from a childhood whose corpse he still drags around because he doesn’t recognize that he’s been abused beyond being helicoptered and needled. Alluka herself shares this:
It’s one more thing they have in common. And, like he does when Illumi spoke in his head during Yorknew or when he said he didn’t actually want anything during the Exam, Killua gets angry when this fantasy is denied. He becomes confrontational in a way he usually wouldn’t otherwise.
I feel it’s notable that Killua does not contradict Alluka’s idea that if she were gone, everyone would get along more. Not because I think he believes it, but because I think he also doesn’t know the answer. So instead, he pivots into comforting her another way. And crucially, it’s by using something he can understand: that there is a special outlier who loves her even if she doesn’t belong anywhere, and as long as they’re together she doesn’t have to worry about it.
Cool. All that’s pretty easy to get. But it gets more complicated, because it always does.
When Killua returns for Alluka, he returns because he needs to save Gon. And with Gon comes all the baggage associated with him.
Despite the deconstruction of the dark/light dichotomy with him during the CAA, Killua remains identified with a ‘nonhuman’-aligned in-group only he belongs to, and continues judging himself accordingly. It’s a position that still puts a wall of glass between him and the majority out-group, and leaves him uncomfortably othered in the Zoldyck in-group. Gon was the all-important, miraculous outlier that made him be able to live with it, the one person that made him feel like he belonged somewhere even if it wasn’t on the basis of being in the same moral in-group. The exception to the rule of ostracization. But he knows better now. And while that’s really good progress because it begins to demystify Gon (who deserves to be understood), it leaves him in a very fragile state when confronting his family because that role was a lynchpin for upholding the psychological anti-Illumi safety net he built after the Hunter Exam.
Ultimately, this leaves Killua in a situation where his sisters can uniquely reaffirm this unhealthy superego because he can project onto them in ways he can’t with anyone else.
By saddling himself with the lone responsibility to heal Gon as a way to atone for failing to perform his role—an insecurity magnified by “this has nothing to do with you”—Killua is paralleling Gon’s guilt complex to a degree (as he does throughout the entire story, but it feels especially prominent here). Where they differ is that Gon’s apology and the validation of his emotions Killua will get from that is the relief from guilt he seeks, not the self-destruction Gon does.
In Killua’s head, they both failed their roles in their friendship—Killua didn’t end up being of any use to Gon in the end, and Gon ended up ostracizing Killua—so Killua vows to do his part again as long as Gon does so as well.
In a way, this is him acknowledging both his emotional understanding and his logical understanding of that exchange in the palace—that Gon didn’t mean what he said and did (thereby expecting him to apologize), but it still hurt him (he wants an apology anyway). This apology isn’t about blaming Gon for what he did or even really holding him responsible—which is why he can tease him lightheartedly about it later—it’s more about Killua’s own emotions. He’s standing up for himself! Which is an indication of a maturing theory of mind.
Some people read this panel with an undercurrent of Killua meaning this will be the last time he helps Gon in this way—and I understand where that comes from due to the fact that they separate afterward, and don’t really have an objective counterargument. So take this next part with a grain of salt, but I really don’t think that’s true. Killua isn’t the type to do that… I don’t even think it’s in his brain to separate from Gon right now. This is just Killua deciding that he needs to start laying down boundaries and paying attention to what he really wants in their relationship outside of being useful. It’s an out-loud admission of how deeply he cares, to the point where he can no longer wholly process or justify it as a transaction, as he does with most forms of love for self-evident reasons. It’s the beginnings of him learning about unconditionality. This is a huge step.
So…. where does it sour?
Well, Killua is faced with a similar sort of guilt brought on by role-failure (the role being “big brother”) when he comes to retrieve Alluka…
Whether you believe “Was it because Illumi was manipulating me?” is Togashi giving the audience a hint or this line being pure in-universe speculation, it doesn’t quite matter, because Killua feels the same about it at the end of the day: guilt and shame.
Though he apologizes to Alluka for this and she readily accepts it, it’s obvious these feelings continue to gnaw at him throughout the entire arc. It retroactively chips down the work he did back at the hospital, since they are the same emotion with similar catalysts.
I say this because I feel like you can infer that his guilt over these two separate but similar things bleeds together by the way Killua, when talking to himself, tends to refer to the two ‘savings’ in conjunction. You could totally say I’m onto nothing because one is a result of the other so no shit they’re related, but I think it’s significant to this discussion.
Specifically the last exchange also serves as a way for Killua to verbally reassure Alluka of her importance to him. The fact that he thinks this is necessary also shows to me that, again, he’s still feeling guilty for it, even though Alluka never indicates that she holds it against him. These panels further reaffirm this belief of mine:
…because Killua is planning to permanently put Nanika to sleep so that Alluka can “spend more time with him” (in the words she herself uses when complaining about it), which indicates that, again, it is something he feels horrible for—and that he sees Nanika in a very particular way which assigns fault to her that doesn’t quite exist, but we’ll get to it soon.
What I’m trying to say here is that because saving Alluka is inseparable from saving Gon, so too becomes the magnified things he feels over not being able to do either of these things beforehand. So successfully defending Alluka becomes way for him to relieve this now-compounded guilt and reassure himself that he’s still capable of fulfilling his self-assigned roles. If he can do that, he can still belong somewhere. He’ll still be worthy of love.
To summarize, Killua not only related to Alluka when she was young—making her very easy to project onto—but also the situation calls for Killua to see her as an extension of his best friend, which only rubs salt into the wound and serves to make him more irrational about it since Killua is still seeking redemption and reparation for the breakdown in the CAA.
Considering all the progress Killua has made, this is a relatively hard relapse. It makes sense, though; just look at what’s happening! Illumi has been the main catalyst for all this agonizing, the person whose assessments he’s developed a pathological need to simultaneously prove wrong and also avoid thinking about altogether. Now he’s got to stare that person in the face with everything on the line and tell him to fuck off.
This is the needle yank prelude on steroids for Killua—a magnification of that time when he was constantly teetering on the edge of ditching and clinging to Gon based on how useful he saw himself. Back then, when Bisky pointed out that he was putting Gon in danger, he decided that he had to leave. So, when his brother uses Nanika to put Alluka in danger, Killua decides Nanika has to leave. For a little while, Illumi becomes unconquerable again, and Killua regresses back into running away.
Nanika
This is where I leave you with this post to read as the conclusion. The readmore is actually pretty relevant, whereas it wasn't when I was answering the anon. Underwhelming, I know. Whatever man.
I really am sorry for how long it is. Tumblr yelled at me 5 times about the image limit, I had to improvise. Being super succinct without leaving out everything I want to say is a skill I do not have. Regardless, thanks for reading and hopefully this was at least a little interesting!
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hi i have a really weird request i was hoping you’d fulfill :) i read your request guidelines and it says you write for spencer reid but it looks like you write majority hotch fics, which i also enjoy:) i have hoping for a spencer reid x reader fic, i don’t have much of a plot in mind so you may need to get creative, or maybe it could just be headcanons, but anything with a weird reader. like maybe she’s an elementary art teacher type vibe (maybe she’s actually an art teacher, or maybe she works at the BAU, your choice) and she has pet bugs and wears cool clothes, that sort of thing. everyone always writes the reader to be really type a, really similar to spencer, yk? and as much as i love those fics i personally think he’d work well with a little more carefree, creative type person too. thank you so much and you absolutely do not have to write this if you don’t want too!!
Ladybird 🐞

Pairing: Spencer Reid x reader
Word Count: 0.9k
Warnings: SFW, headcanons kinda, reader uses she/her pronouns, no use of (y/n), fluff
A/N: Hi anon! so glad you enjoyed my other fics! I'm so happy you requested Spencer, i've been itching to write my pookie but it's not a common request (yet?), i only have one other published fic of him. i looooooooooove writing his big brain self and ur idea of reader being an opposite personality type was so delicious to write ugh i'm quite happy with this fic. i also have some drafts of him (academic rivals, fluff fics etc.) but i don't post them bc im not at a 100% with them, they're much longer fics too lol. if you want those, i'm happy to post (slowly) so lmk. anyways, enough yapping, ENJOY THE READ!!! mwah mwah mwah <3
My requests are open! Please read my rules before req'ing. Send me stuff! :)

Spencer wasn’t accustomed to the sensation of being in the dark. If something new crossed his path, he’d devour every piece of information he could find, understanding it, processing it, then neatly filing it away in his mind for later use. The idea of being uncertain—it made him uneasy, like a puzzle with a missing piece, gnawing at him until he could fill it in. He hated the discomfort of not knowing.
But you… what were you?
You moved through life with a kind of fluidity he couldn’t quite grasp. Were you like water? No, no, you were too solid, too grounded for that. Fire, then? But you weren’t wild or destructive—your warmth didn’t burn Spencer, it invited him in. The wind, then. You were untethered and free. But even that didn’t feel quite right. The wind didn’t create, and you were full of creation. You existed in a plane ruled by feeling rather than logic, instinct over calculation.
Spencer couldn’t fathom you.
He prided himself on his ability to categorise things, to turn life into binary or categorical data. But you slipped like butter through his mental filing system, like something he could never quantify. You smelled like rain and cedar, like something both fresh and familiar, like petrichor clinging to the edges of an old wooden frame. He couldn’t place it, couldn’t place you, and maybe that was why he couldn’t stop thinking about you.
When you talked about your job— you were an elementary school art teacher— you talked about it with a kind of excitement that made Spencer envious. It was silly, really, but he wanted the one to be taught by you, to spend more time trying to figure you out. He loved his work, too, but it was so full of danger and death, and the way you loved yours made him want to be a part of the world you had.
The first time he met you, Spencer spent an embarrassing amount of time trying to decipher the colours in your outfit. He knew different textures weren’t supposed to be mixed (the Vogue magazine he had swiped at the doctor’s office had declared the mixing of dots and stripes a cardinal sin), but you had layered patterns like a painting. It shouldn’t have made sense. So why did it? He had opened his mouth to ask if there had been a method behind it, but you had flashed a smile at him that made his unfaltering mind stop dead in its tracks, and you had said, “Don’t overthink it, Spence. Just feel.”
As if it was something he knew how to do.
You weren’t chaotic, not exactly—but you were unpredictable. Spencer, with his equations and calculations, with his logic and probabilities, had always sought comfort in knowing the outcome before things even began. But you—you weren’t an equation. You were the space between the numbers, the part of the formula he couldn’t solve. You were a walking, talking example of Ramsey’s theorem— he knew where you started and where you ended, but he couldn’t untangle what was in between.
Every morning, you took a picture of your coffee. It was the same drink every day, but you persevered, swearing the foam made a new image every time. You’d tried to rope him into theorising with you, to get him to see the shape of the world in the swirls and patterns of the cream, but Spencer could never really see it like you.
“You know it’s just milk and coffee, right?” He’d say, leaning over your shoulder to examine the mug. “There’s no scientific basis for anything more.”
But you never held it against him. Sometimes, you’d nudge him with your elbow, a grin tugging at the corners of your mouth as you said, “I think you’re missing out on a whole new dimension of the universe, Reid.”
He’d hum, a little smile on his lips, and then he’d drop the subject—mostly. He wasn’t one to argue for long, especially when it came to the things that made you happy, like the ritual of your morning coffee or the way you’d rearrange your art supplies by colour, even though it made absolutely no sense.
When Spencer found out you kept bugs as pets, he’d nearly leapt out of his chair.
“You— you have a mantis,” he stammered, eyes wide as he watched you let it crawl delicately over your fingers.
“That’s not just a mantis, Spence,” you scolded him gently, a smile tugging at your lips, “Meet Matilda. She’s my friend.”
Spencer blinked, processing. “Statistically, most people keep a cat or a dog—“
“I’m not a statistic, Spence,” you’d reminded him, voice gentle as if you were talking to one of your school kids.
He tried to understand, tried to decipher why anyone would choose to keep an insect as a pet, but logic evaded him, a feeling he only experienced around you. But when he’d watch you play with Matilda like she was the best thing in the world, he let it go.
He started bringing you little things—odds and ends that made him think of you. A book of surrealist paintings he thought you’d like. A smooth, speckled rock he found outside the precinct. A jar of local honey from a case in a small town, because you once mentioned you liked the taste of dandelions.
And every time, you’d accept them like he had just handed you a moonbeam, eyes lighting up in unadulterated joy.
“See?” you had murmured one day, holding the honey jar up to the light. “You do feel things, Spencer. You just don’t realise it.”
No, it wasn’t about logic. Maybe, it was just about you.
One day, Spencer caught himself carefully placing a ladybug outside on a leaf, rather than brushing it away. As he counted its spots for you— something about them bringing luck— he realised something.
Oh.
I love her.

Thank you for reading! I appreciate any likes/comments/reblogs/follows. Constructive criticism is welcome. Do not plagiarise my content and/or post it anywhere without crediting me.
Dividers by @/cafekitsune

#hotchnerwritescm#criminal minds#criminal minds x reader#criminal minds x you#spencer reid#spencer reid x you#spencer reid x f!reader#dr spencer reid#spencer reid criminal minds#spencer reid fanfic#doctor spencer reid#reid x you#reid x f!reader#spencer reid fluff
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Shameless Self-Promotion Saturday Sunday/Sunday Accountability Post
Thanks so much for the tags, @the-sparrohawk and @basedonconjecture!
This was…not my most productive week, admittedly. I’m still coming off the jubilation/crash of having finished:
Getting Into Trouble
My darlings, my babies, my collection of Neve/Rook one-shots that hauled me out of fandom retirement. Love these dorks.

But I’m not done with them yet! I did some light editing this week, mostly on The Ventus Job, but I also wrote a bit more of it. I use Sunday as a self-imposed deadline to post something I wrote in the prior week, tricking my ADHD into letting me a little productive. So I’m being efficient and using this post for that accountability check too!
So, the rough draft (unedited and unbeta’d) opening to the chapter of TVJ I’m currently working on below the cut.
And very gentle tags, if you haven’t already done it, tooooooo: @hyperions-light, @ofcrowsanddragons, @bygonesigh, @mageofquandrix, @dymme, @thedissonantverses, @jouskaroo, @mythals-whore, @davrinsleftpectoral, @skullypettibone, @uchidachi, @galluslonging, @littlemissgeek8, @thatgaymerguyb, @corvus-frugilegus, and @lurkiestvoid, and whoever reads this and wants to!
The Imperator’s manor loomed large in its place atop a hill in Hightown, the rounded spires and forms a testament not only to the building’s place of importance but Ventus’ history as a capital in its own right. The manor itself was surrounded by a large wall, one that unlike others she’d seen in town, Neve noticed no damage to. Either the Antaam had not made it this far into the city’s gates when they’d taken Ventus, or the good Imperator had prioritized using the city’s building materials for aesthetic rehabilitation of the estate over, perhaps, more necessary purposes.
Neve didn’t think it was all that hard to discern which option was likely the correct one.
“Oooh, the light shows!” Sabine said, sounding pleased for possibly the first time since Neve had met her. Back at the inn, the closest any of them had managed was her neutral acceptance of their attire and comportment.
The lights danced across the darkening sky in intricate patterns, timed to the music being played in the courtyard. A favored form of entertainment in the Imperium, and one that allowed the Imperator to ostentatiously present his wealth.
Because, obviously, the well-lit and massive manor on the hill, not to mention his title, would be insufficient otherwise.
“Panem et circenses,” Rook murmured under his breath in Old Tevene. She glanced at him curiously, and he shrugged. “My dad said that every time we went to one of these things. He wasn’t wrong.”
He opened his mouth to continue, but hesitated as they passed the armed mercenaries flanking the estate’s gates. “But a story for another time, I guess,” he said wryly.
The courtyard as they entered was filled with people milling about, enjoying the lights and music while drinking wine and — if she and Rook were lucky, which wasn’t a given — hopefully gossiping as the alcohol loosened their tongues. Most of the attendees wore fashionable robes in latest styles in favor with the Altus class — expensive brocade with glimmering gold dominated the Altus’ custom robes — even the handful of wealthy Laetans and Soporati, who tried to emulate the more expensive attire with similar cuts and fabrics that could possibly fool the uninitiated. But, of course, every Altus was not fooled in the least. Neve knew her Altus classmates at the Circle had been able to pick out fabric quality at twenty paces; they’d surely honed their expertise in the exercise since. And, true to form, distinct groups of attendees were forming along the fabric class divide. The only exceptions to the effort to woo friends and intimidate enemies through dress were the few military officers in formal uniforms, who at least pretended to neither notice nor care.
“Y’know, I don’t get to feel like a show dog or charity case often these days, but this really does take me back,” Rook sighed with feigned wistfulness. Neve snickered, while Sabine elbowed him and glared.
“Remember what I said about you embarrassing me,” she hissed.
He gave her a smile that was the picture of innocence. “To only do it if it upsets your father or brother?”
“No! Not to— well, actually, if the opportunity arises…”
On Neve’s other side, Livinia snorted.
#shameless self promotion saturday#getting into trouble series#the Ventus job#neverook fanfiction#Neverook#my fanfic#disaster rook universe#sunday accountability post
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Sewing Zero Waste Culottes from The Craft of Clothes
Zero Waste Culottes From The Craft of Clothes
Behold! Fancy pants!

The pattern for these pants was one of my Christmas gifts. It comes from Liz at The Craft of Clothes, a zero-waste designer. I've really gravitated towards self-drafting and zero-waste sewing in the last couple of years, and this pattern has been on my list for a good six months, so I was excited to get into it.
Drafting
The first step (after reading the pattern through twice) is drafting the pattern pieces.

My biggest starting hurdle was deciphering "the culottes are designed to sit on your waist" when choosing the correct pattern size. Most designers consider "the waist" to be the teapot - that is, the true waist. (It's easiest to find if you bend to the side and stick your hand in the crease - like you're singing "I'm a little teapot".) But some consider belly button height to be "the waist". I generally wear my pants at the latter height, and there's a good 2" circumference difference between those two for me.
I eventually decided to call my belly button my waist, on the grounds that that's where I prefer to wear my pants. It's also easier to take seams in than out, if I guessed wrong.
Decisions over, it was smooth sailing from there. Pattern drafting is not a technically difficult process, as long as you have good instructions, and Liz's patterns definitely fit that bill. But there's a lot of attention to detail required to make sure the end result is good. That sort of thing always makes me nervous. Fortunately there was only two pattern pieces to draft, and they're 98% straight lines and based off rectangles.
Interestingly, this is the first zero-waste pattern I've tried that has you draft pattern pieces to use. The others I've seen (most by the creator of this pattern - our library had a copy of her book, Zero Waste Sewing) have had you draw directly on your piece of fabric to create the layout. (In fairness, I didn't have to draft my own pieces. The pattern came with the option of self-drafting, printing on A4, or printing on A0.)
I much prefer the direct-draw method to faffing about with pattern pieces. But given that this pattern is designed to have the pieces tesselate, having a set of physical pattern pieces does make more sense. It's also got me wondering if I could successfully make a pair out of old jeans legs, using one leg per pattern piece. But then, I'm always looking for ways to use up my denim pile...
Sewing
I prefer structure rather than flow in my butt coverings, so I was somewhat limited in my fabric choices for this first pair. (I know the fabric I really want to use, but I am being a sensible apprentice and trying things out on a nice-but-less-hideously-expensive fabric first.) Most of my stash acquisition has focused on stuff for shirts, since I wear those out faster than pants. I eventually settled on this nice brick red, 100% cotton, table cloth.

The picture is suffering from sun exposure. It's nowhere near this bright in person.
I laid out the pieces and huzzah! The fabric was just big enough! ... But only if I unpicked the hems (they're monsters, a full 3 cm/1.2" each side) and ironed them flat first. Thus, it was time for a marathon unpicking and ironing session.
After that was done, I checked the pattern fit again. Huzzah! I had enough space for all the pattern pieces, and not very much scrap left over once I'd cut them all out. (Of course, it was late and I wasn't paying as much attention as I should have been, so I didn't add an extra inch when I was forced to cut the waistband in two pieces. There was enough extra fabric that this was only an annoyance and not a complete disaster.)

The fabric at the top is scrap. All but a few inches of the stuff on the right became waist bands and plackets.
Sewing was a fairly straightforward exercise, though it required enough brainpower that I completely forgot to take any progress shots as I went. Almost every step of the pattern comes with a diagram to show you what to do, which helped me immensely. So did having the seam allowances specified at each point, as there's three different ones used in different places.
That's not to say I didn't screw up, of course. While sewing the crotch seam, I somehow managed to close up the front of the pants entirely and leave a gap for the placket open at the back. (That will teach me not to double check the direction the pockets are facing before I pin and sew that seam. Maybe.)
I also made a highly decorative and completely awful to sew with choice for topstitching thread, which I quickly became too stubborn to stop using. So the topstitching is, uh, not great. But it is purple and sparkly, and if I'd had any sense at all I would have left it til last (or even done some sort of hand embroidery with it).

I was tricked by the first line of stitching being so easy. LIES. It was all lies.
Why should I have left it til last? Because it turns out that the culottes are, in fact, designed to sit on one's true waist. Which meant I had a two inch difference between what I needed to fit me, and what the waist measurement was. If I hadn't top stitched the panels, I could have simply ran another line of stitching down the seams that didn't have pockets in the way, and taken the waist in without much fuss or bother. Unfortunately, I didn't do that, so I was left with two choices.
Take out the topstitching and take in all the panels, bitching and moaning about the effort I went to and the number of times the topstitch thread broke while I was sewing the stupid sparkly goodness onto things.
Work out how to take the waist in by the necessary two inches, using only the crotch seam and maybe some darts or pleats or something.
Choice #1 would have been the logical, rational decision, so of course I went with option #2.
An hour and change of basting, pinning and unpinning the waistband, and completely forgetting how seam allowances work later, I managed to get a fit I was happy enough with. I ended up grading in a dart-like object at the centre back. (If I decide later that I'm not happy with the fit after all, I'll try out the modification for adding elastic to the back waistband that the pattern also includes. Probably while questioning my life choices and lamenting the amount of time I spend with a seam ripper in hand.)

The original stitching line is in blue, the new one is in black.
After all that fitting woe, I wasn't in the mood to try buttonholes (my good machine, the one with the automatic buttonholer, is currently out of action). Instead I dove into my snap stash to close the placket.

I love using bright, vivid colours for inner details. It's the sewing equivalent of wearing leopard print underwear.
A nice bonus of using the snaps is that I could put them through just the placket, leaving the fly front clean. This did make the placket pull slightly when I'm wearing the pants, exposing a trace of bright red. I fixed that by invisibly whip-stitching through the placket and outer fabric to hold everything in place. Next time I'll also double check the understitching, and topstitch the edge if needed, before installing the snaps.
Field Test and Adjustments
Trying stuff on as you go is all well and good, but nothing tells you what you really need to fix like being out in the field. I quickly discovered several things:
The waistband needs serious help to stay where it's supposed to be. Which, y'know, I did make a size larger than I should have. This was not surprising.
The crotch needs to either drop a wee bit or (preferably) rise a couple of inches. The latter will likely spoil the skirt-effect somewhat, but it will be far more comfortable for my legs.
I need a loop on the waistband to hold my keys.
For the waist woes, I had a few choices - 1) belt loops, 2) suspenders, or 3) add elastic to the back waistband. Belt loops are fiddly to make and sew on, but would solve the key-hanging issue. Suspenders technically wouldn't need any sewing changes, but the clip-on style are notorious for pulling off when you're doing things. And while the pattern includes instructions for adding elastic to the waistband, I wasn't confident it would do the job I wanted (I stick a fair amount of junk in my pockets and elastic can't always cope with the weight).
After some dithering, I went with the suspender option for this pair. I like the look of them, and the "floating" effect they give when they pull the waistband a bit above where gravity wants it to sit is extremely comfortable. But I didn't want to deal with clips always popping off. So I indulged in a quick side-quest of improving my suspenders, then sewed buttons into the waistband of the culottes.

This used to hold the clips, but the wire was easy to bend flat with needle-nose pliers.

Gee, I wonder which buttonhole I did first?
Fashion Show
Overall, I'm quite happy with how it all came together. I'll definitely be making at least two more pairs - the "men's" version (less flare in the hems), likely out of recycled denim, and a pair in heavyweight stash linen.

The back panel adjustment is basically unnoticeable.

They have great range of movement - maybe I need to make a workout pair?

And I even have somewhere to hang my keys.
This post was originally published on my blog, Garak's Apprentice . I currently syndicate my content at Micro.blog, Tumblr, and Ko-Fi.
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Long Post (From the Drafts)
I love patterns and recurring themes. When I was reading Crescent City, at first glance, there were a lot of parallels between Danika and Rhysand. They both lie to their loved ones, exploit them, manipulate them, take away their bodily autonomy. Danika is basically Rhysand 2.0, only she is a woman and everyone genuinely seems to love her. I didn’t finish the third book and so I’m not very sure about Bryce’s growth in the end except that she becomes the Fae Queen and she demolishes monarchy among the fae. Now that got my attention.
To preface, this isn’t a character critique on Bryce although it seems like it. It’s just SJM is too predictable in her writing and keeps recycling the same thing.
Half-bloods. Some Voldemort shit this is.
Rhysand is part High Fae and part Illyrian. Bryce is part fae, part human. This half-breed nature, however, gives them an advantage over the others belonging to the same race/species. In Bryce’s case, added to some physical perks, her morality is also rooted in her humaneness which makes her supposedly better than the fae.
Both of them hate one or both sides of their ancestry. Rhysand even refuses to rule 2/3 of his court because of this hatred. Bryce is self-righteous and this extends to some of the Vanir too.
Can’t be anything less than ‘The Most Powerful’
Rhysand self-proclaims as the most powerful High Lord to exist and considered the most reliable to unite Prythian by his friends when he can’t even rule his entire court on his own.
Bryce marginally surpasses her father in magical powers making her eligible to rule her people. She is rallied as the one to unite the fae factions in Midgard as evidenced by Cormac’s words. The prince who was raised to rule his people admitting a woman who is prejudiced against his race and took no interest in learning the ins and outs of FiRo saying she’s fit to be a queen. Sounds familiar? (Bryce may have a good heart but that’s not enough to lead. Politics is treated like a child’s play in these series that I want to murder someone.)
Ruler who won’t rule
Keir runs Hewn City. Generals like Devlon run Illyria. Morrigan runs Velaris. Rhysand creates a court that dreams for centuries.
Now, Bryce. She implements the first ever fae democracy in Midgard. It sounds very much like she handed her responsibilities over to a council while she keeps her title. (Like I said, dnf the book, so correct me if she gave up that power too.) It seems a good choice since she doesn’t have any experience in governing people but we’ll circle back to it.
Lying is the new smarts.
There is difference between being a cunning mastermind who wields their words and being an outright liar. Rhysand, Feyre, Bryce are smart because all they ever do is lie.
When Rhysand is scheming, no one is spared. Everyone is a pawn in his games. This trait is overlooked in Bryce because of her empathetic tendencies and how she throws herself into dangers for her loved ones. But she is guilty too. When everyone is looking for the human boy, Bryce makes her friends chase ghosts in order to cover her tracks. Even Fury, a reputed assassin, wants to be left out of Bryce’s plans. June never wants to be part of it either and only offers to help for the sake of the boy. Bryce manipulates them and drags them to the Meat Market all so she can meet the Viper Queen without raising suspicion. And Hunt is like a dumb puppy who just follows her around when she screws up. He could have very well been lobotomised after book 1.
And the same happens when Bryce takes her parents to Velaris. What happened to the human boy she put everyone at risk to save? I only read the bonus chapter, so let me know what this boy who’s more vulnerable than Ember and Randall and just clawed his way out of a concentration camp was doing in Midgard.
And, neither Rhysand nor Bryce take being lied to or denied lightly.
The burdens of their mighty power.
Rhysand respects no one and loves lording his powers over others. Nothing new here, so let’s talk about Bryce. Midgard is a very biased world where humans and any creature with little power is treated as less than, no different from Prythian on that front. Bryce hates authority as she’s subjected to this treatment as well. But she also enjoys certain perks all through her life. She is rescued from the interrogation right after Danika’s death, secures a decent life being Danika’s friend and through her allies. She has the advantage to act out because of her connections to these powerful players in the Midgard but she has a ‘might as well enjoy while it lasts’ attitude hating anyone who also does the same. Eventually many are swayed by her personality (which wasn’t personally compelling to me but whatever) although she had a strong footing in that world because of the very privileges she despises.
Book 1 Bryce was way better and a bit grounded to her reality but she changes so much after inheriting the powers from the Drop. Everyone constantly has to get a stamp of approval from her time and time again. No one is given the benefit of the doubt until they prove themselves meanwhile she lies and tricks. She has no respect for anyone’s rules. Yes, her world is fucked up and she is the rebel who breaks every notion there is that oppress innocent people but she takes it too far sometimes. She hates hierarchy. But she uses her name to ‘help’ June and later is unyielding when asked to take the responsibility that comes with it. She insults Cormac in front of everyone but gets away with it. And my favourite, when Nesta and Azriel warn her about the dangers, Bryce—knowing nothing about that world—goes on and on about her birthright and upheavals the Prison because she heard a calling. The last one was out of desperation but she can be pretty stupid and entitled. Most of the times, she is just lucky that things don’t backfire badly.
Combining all this, one thing is clear. The ones who are the least eligible to run a democracy always get to stay at the top, and not to mention they come with immense power which is one of the many reasons they are chosen in the first place. What they truly portray is an unopposed authority with unlimited resources whenever they desire.
Rhysand, Feyre, Bryce—none of them play by anyone’s rules. They have a holier-than-thou attitude and only a select few are offered their trust, that too after they have proven themselves useful in some way. They abhor anyone in power, anyone who wants power, but never hesitate to flaunt their own or pull ranks. For someone who fights for the commoners, they tend to endanger civilians at whim. Rhysand and Feyre look down on other High Lords and question their strength when they don’t play along. Bryce does the same to anyone who doesn’t want to help her and thereby don’t adhere to her moral standards.
Right now, Bryce imitates Rhysand’s rule in Night Court. She has distanced herself from the ruling by creating a council to care for FiRo. And considering the above, how will Bryce exactly handle when her council doesn’t agree with her? She is deeply prejudiced against fae and she views them as shallow and unreliable across worlds, given she has a good reason at the start to believe so. Someone who’s always broken rules to get her way, what will she do with the power she holds? Will she wait around for people to decide, or use her title, or scheme behind their backs and turn the council into a metaphorical government? Especially if it involves the humans somehow.
Basically the Court of Dreams and the Council in FiRo is just a motif to suggest that these characters are epitome of goodness and fit to be a ruler when none of them prove to be worthy. Democracy is not a principle that’s truly valued in these series but a backdrop as it is acceptable in the society.
PS Since these are self-inserts, do I dare say the ‘better than everyone hybrids’ are SJM projecting her complex about her own heritage? If any of you confirm that Aelin or one of her popular friends fit this criteria, I’m calling it because three is a pattern.
#half baked rambles#this made sense when i wrote it alright#anti rhysand#anti feyre#anti feysand#anti morrigan#anti inner circle#anti bryce#anti acotar#anti cc#anti sjm
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Let It Hurt
Pairing: Avery and Jameson Summary: A rewrite of Ch. 54 in the first book. Alternate take post first kiss at the Wayback Cottage where Avery is more angsty and doesn't let Jameson go that easy. Length: Moderate Story Type: Rewrite
ANNOUCEMENT: I'm starting a tag list. If you want to be included, comment down below! Also, to access my TIG master list of fics, here's the link to the expanded view of my blog: riddles-n-games.tumblr.com. Click the icon Hawthorne Vault, that's where you'll find hidden treasure.
A/N: Hi guys! I'm sooo excited to be posting this one. It's been a long time in drafts and I was lost with how to continue it but I just know I really wanted Avery to be hurt but accidentally didn't try hard enough to make Jameson stop kissing her again. This gets deeper in their feelings and so it kinda makes Jameson sound like he's his THL self but still in line with his TIG self as well. Enjoy!
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Kissing him felt like fire. He wasn't soft or sweet, the way he had been while washing away the blood and dirt. I didn't need soft or sweet. This was exactly what I needed.
Maybe I could be what he needed, too. Maybe this didn’t have to be a bad idea. Maybe the complications were worth it.
He pulled back from the kiss, his lips only an inch away from mine. “I always knew you were special.”
I felt his breath on my face. I felt every last one of those words. I’d never thought of myself as special. I’d been invisible for so long. Wallpaper. Even after I’d become the biggest story in the world, it had never really felt like anyone was paying attention to me. The real me.
“We’re so close now,” Jameson murmured. “I can feel it.” There was an energy in his voice, like the buzzing of a neon light. “Someone obviously didn’t want us looking at that tree.”
What?
He went to kiss me again, cupping my cheek in his hand and with my heart sinking, I sadly wasn’t fast enough to turn my head away as his mouth connected with mine. I couldn't stop the lone tear that slid down my face. The shock of his words only started to hit me then and I wished it didn’t hurt so much but it did, even as I subconsciously reciprocated the kiss.
For a moment, I tried to will the hurt away, to pretend that this was what it was like to get kissed by a boy that liked me. I hated that his body felt snug against me and how it felt right. We didn’t actually like each other in that way, he just needed me to solve his grandfather’s last mystery and then I’d be discarded. I was no Emily but then, I never would want to be her anyway.
She was a life lesson of what not to be; a spoiled little girl who was more trouble than she was worth, got everything she wanted and got away with anything. Even if something was most definitely her fault, somehow everyone else was responsible. Well, the princess fell from the tower at some point. But even though I was tired of being associated with a dead girl that was six feet below the ground in a grave, I was continuously being dealt that card to no avail.
The biggest irony of all was that I was in the house where her presence was most felt, like the ghost of her was overhead, hovering behind me, following my every move.
When he pulled away, I pushed at his chest and turned on my heel, trying to put as much distance between us. Hearing him grunt in surprise was only the tiniest bit satisfying as I made my way back to the room. There was some muffled mumbling that sounded an awful lot like “deserved that” but even so I didn’t care.
I stopped at the beds and looked from one to the other. Which was hers? As I took in every fine detail of the quilt, my hand subconsciously went to my chest, ghosting over the pattern of the wound. I was in a dead girl’s room. I was almost killed tonight. There had been wood in my chest, there could have been a bullet buried there instead. Jameson could have been hurt or killed; if the bullet had ricocheted, it easily could have hit him.
Both of us could have come out of this very differently if it weren’t for those “hadn’t beens”. But Jameson didn’t seem to see it that way. No, because he was busy thinking about a tree. Anger flared inside me at the reminder. I understood he had laser focus but I thought he had room for a little bit of empathy and logic.
My mind shot to alertness when I heard nearby shuffling until I realized it was coming from the bathroom and heard him step into the bedroom. I crossed my arms and kept my eyes trained on the bedpost in front of me, not letting myself look up when I knew he was right behind me. He sighed softly.
“Heiress?” I didn’t reply. Another sigh. “Look, I know I came off as in-
“I could’ve been shot.”
“Pardon? I didn’t-”
“I said I could’ve been shot.” I spun around, catching him blink in surprise. “Shot, Jameson. Do you know what that means?” I stared at him sharply for a long moment before he looked aside, something like guilt or shame evident on his face. “I just inherited your family’s stupidly big fortune which made me a target of basically everyone related to you and anyone else in the world that made me their problem. I could have been killed. You could have been. Don’t you get that?”
He looked up again and tilted his head, giving me a small wry smile. “Don’t worry about me, Heiress. A bullet still wouldn’t stop me.” My jaw dropped; he was still attempting humor.
“A-Are you being serious right now? Do you hear yourself?” He stayed silent. “Oren just pulled a chunk of wood out of my chest and if things had worked out a little differently, he could have been pulling out a bullet. Same goes for you. And meanwhile you’re over here thinking about a damn tree? This mystery, us running around acting like we’re Mystery Inc, you figuring out why your grandfather chose me, it’s all meaningless to you if I die. And if you got shot, your family would be out for me, we both know that much. And then what? Not everything is a game, Hawthorne.”
“Perhaps you’re right but that’s just it, MG. If Emily taught me anything, it’s that everything is a game. Even this.” I was about ready to throttle him. But I withheld and rolled my eyes, laughing anxiously instead. “Jameson, get real. Emily’s dead, I almost died, your grandfather is dead, you’re not one of the heirs, your family hates me, the inheritance is not in the rightful hands, and now someone is after me. This is reality for me and you right now. This isn’t in your head. Life comes with risk, I know, but this isn’t a game.”
That elicited a reaction. His jaw got tight and his eyes narrowed. “You don’t think I know that Heiress? Unfortunately, my grandfather raised us treating everything like a damn game from the moment we could talk and think. Don’t pretend you even know the beginning of my life story, we’d be here all day.”
“And I’m not. But you are acting like what just happened is something to push aside. Newsflash, it can’t be. I can get you pretending that covering me with yourself in the woods, cleaning my wound, our kiss doesn’t matter but not my life or yours being on the line for some stupid mystery. That’s all I ask.” That’s when it hit me. “Why do you act like that? Like you don’t matter?”
I caught the panic in his eyes when they widened for a brief second as he turned away from me and ran a hand through his hair, sighing deeply. He’d been doing that a lot. After a long pause he spoke. “Because I’ve done worse. There’s a lot of things from my past that I’m not proud of. Things with Gray, things with Emily, things with Xan and Nash, the old man…” I put a hand on his shoulder. He side-eyed me and smirked knowingly. “If you’re expecting for this to turn into a confession, you’re going to be sorely disappointed.”
This time I sighed and shook my head. “No, I don’t. I don’t expect you to say anything you’re not comfortable sharing. But Jameson? We’ve all done things we’re not proud of, don’t be so hard on yourself for that.”
He turned his head toward me fully and the smirk turned into his signature crooked grin. “Don’t pity me, Heiress. Self loathing is a very good look for me.” But I saw the sadness in his eyes and something about it gave me a hollow feeling, like he’d been holding it in for so long. Yet that didn’t last either. “I know what you’re thinking and contrary to what you believe, I deserve it. Call it my role in the family.”
My hand slid from his shoulder and swiped at the mussy hairs stuck to my forehead. Then, I sidestepped him to pace around the room. I wasn’t sure how much more beating around the bush I could take.
“I thought that was my thing,” he said. I glared at him in passing. “What? Did I say something wrong?”
“Can you just let me think in silence for a second? I mean, would it kill you to stop making everything a joke?”
“Hey, this wasn’t ever going to be a pity party, Heiress. Not my style. I’ve been honest about that mu-”
“Stop it! Just… stop.” I walked over to him and took his hands in mine. “Look at me, Jameson.” He did, surprisingly. I lowered my voice and spoke gently. “I know you’re not okay. I know you’re sad. You have been for a long time. It’s caused you deep pain, I’ve felt that way, too.” I felt him go very still and for a long minute, he was quiet.
He exhaled shakily and his eyes were averted. There was the rawness again. “I’m not very good at this, Avery. I’m terrible at hurting.”
Avery. He said my name; that’s when I knew he meant it. I let go of his hands and cupped his face in mine which made him meet my gaze. I felt like crying just seeing his misery. “I know you are. You can take all the time you need. But you can’t fix the issue by avoiding it.”
Jameson inhaled sharply and rose to his full height, shaking his head again and went to stand against the wall. “I can’t. I’m sorry but I can’t.” His voice had gone so quiet, I could barely hear him. I followed after him and while I stopped just far enough that he had some space, I still reached an arm out and placed my hand on his back. He flinched slightly but didn’t tell me to move it and I didn’t retract either.
“Look, I’m sorry that this might be pushing you too far.” He didn’t say anything. “You can be mad at me like I am at you for tonight but in truth, I think you’re just mad at yourself.” His head tilted to my side and I saw his mouth open but I plowed on. “You don’t have to tell me anything about your past. You don’t have to clarify. We can pretend everything else is a game. But not this. You matter Jameson and hate me for telling you that but that’s something you’ll have to eventually admit to yourself. It doesn’t have to be out loud with anyone around. It just has to be you admitting to yourself that you matter because you do.”
“I-”
“And I know this sounds worse but there are people who care about you: your brothers, your Nan, your aunt, I think, and you know, I’d even say me. You matter to me, Jameson. I may not know too much about you but I know a bleeding heart when I see one, especially one who hates themselves. I’ve been there myself, Libby too.” That’s when I heard the broken laugh.
“You really don’t know when to quit, do you?”
I shook my head. “Nope, why do you think I’m still here?” He turned around and leaned on the wall, eyes red and hair covering his right eye but he was smiling that crooked smile. It was raw and edgy but it looked good on him.
My stomach did a little flip flop. Stop it, now’s not the time. I stepped closer to him, swiping at the forelock but when I pulled my arm back, he gently wrapped his fingers around my wrist and tugged me to him. I shuffled forward a little more till I was practically leaning on him and his other hand went to my hip. The hand that was entwined with his was resting on his chest and it seemed like he was mindlessly rubbing circles into the back of my hand, as if distracting himself. We stayed in silence for a few minutes which seemed to stretch into an hour. Finally, Jameson spoke up.
“Listen, Heiress, I owe you an-”
“I forgive you.”
He shook his head. “Nuh-uh-uh. Not so fast. You got to give your little speech without interruptions. Now that I am in the mood to talk, you want to interrupt? Tsk-tsk.” I arched an eyebrow at him and he simply winked. His voice lowered, “I’m warning you though, this might be a shitty apology.” Oh, I’m prepared for that. But I didn’t say that out loud, just nodded and waited for him to continue.
“Hmmm-ahh. Hah, I’m already failing this. I’m sorry for what happened back there and here. I know it was serious and could’ve been bad news for both of us.” He looked to my wound and brought a thumb over it, air tracing it but hovered so close to my skin that I could practically feel his touch. “I was worried about you, still am.” Then through his teeth I heard him mutter something more softly. It sounded something along the lines of “Maybe-something-always.” but I couldn’t be sure.
“That wound could have been fatal and I am angry we didn’t spare that but it doesn’t change the fact you’re still here kicking. Avery, if there’s anything I can give you full credit for, it’s your tenacity. I admire that a lot.” I felt a smile tugging at my lips. “About the tree thing, um, that’s how I learned to push away all the bad stuff, by focusing on the next clue. Those Saturday games helped me learn to focus on one thing even when there was something in the back of my mind. And to your final point; you are right. If I got shot or died, Nash would find a way to bring me back just so he could whoop my ass.”
I smirked at the last bit. “I’m sure he would. I could try to protect you, though.”
“Heh, you can try. But I wasn’t wrong when I said this was a game.”
“Jameson…”
“Hear me out. This is a game, a dangerous one and because of the risks and stakes, this,” he pointed to my wound, “is exactly what can happen. People will be out for you, more now than ever. But, if you still want to find out why my grandfather chose you, then the reward is considered higher than the risk. However, that’s up to you. And I can go back myself because I know these grounds.” He stared at me intently and I knew what he implied with the unspoken words. He wants me safe. The feeling warmed me but turned to ice shards because I knew he still wanted to risk himself.
I shook my head. “Jameson, you were with me. I don’t know if that person was potentially after you too. I don’t want you to risk yourself.” What if the bullet strikes its mark this time? I leaned my head against his chest but he didn’t let me be that way for long. He cupped the back of my head and made me look up at him.
“Do you trust me?”
“No.” He smiled.
“Good. But do you trust that we’re a good team?” I bit my lip but nodded in the end. “I can take worse risks, Heiress, and I found ways out of shadier spots. I’ll look through the security logs to find a safe path to the tree, I can promise you that much. Also, tell Oren to block that fireplace entrance in your room.” I nodded frantically. Then, he whispered the quietest I ever heard him. “I know you don’t have reason to trust any of us but me and my brothers don’t have anything against you even though Gray was acting like you’re a conwom-,” I snorted while he briefly smirked but quickly turned serious again, “If there’s anything good the old man taught us it was loyalty to each other no matter the circumstance.”
I nodded again for what felt like the hundredth time. Then, I carefully wrapped my arms around his upper torso and hugged him, burying my head into his shoulder. His went to the small of my back and I felt him rubbing circles into my shirt like earlier. “Thank you, that means a lot. I still think you’re an idiot for wanting to do this but I won’t stop you. I’ll even distract Oren.”
“Great, does that mean I can kiss you again?” I pulled away from him immediately and raised an eyebrow in question. He was smiling cheekily and winked. But his eyes held that same intensity when he was focused and were tempting me. Well? Will you? Before I could think twice, I pulled him down by his hoodie strings and pressed my lips to his hard. Jameson had no trouble catching on and he lifted me up by the thighs, letting me wrap my legs around his waist before readjusting his arms to my back. I also curled my arm around his shoulder and clutched the fabric of his hoodie at his shoulder blade. It was a deep kiss but it was sweet. Ok, so a bit sweet isn’t bad.
When we parted, I was panting but he wasn’t. What a shocker. Instead, he was observing my face and I could imagine what he saw; the cuts, raw and red, scratches from the bark. Before I could ask anything, he leaned close and pressed soft kisses to each one. I closed my eyes. When he kissed my forehead last and he pulled back, I opened them again to find him smiling softly at me. It made me smile too and I didn’t hesitate to lean forward again to give him a light kiss in thanks.
Unfortunately, at that same moment a hushed gasp came from the hall.
A/N: Hope you guys enjoyed that. See you next time. Also, I'm updating my master list of fics so the last few including this one will be there for you.
#avery kylie grambs#avery grambs#jameson winchester hawthorne#jameson hawthorne#averyjameson#averyjameson fics#the inheritance games fanfics#tig fanfiction#the inheritance games#tig#Youtube
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Gauging interest
If I put my self-drafted Baltic pickup patterns up on Ko-fi as a "pay what you want" kind of thing would people be interested? I'd want to pattern test everything myself first, so it'd definitely take awhile, but is that something people would want?
For reference, it'd be patterns for work like this:


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