#send me a rose for a snippet
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Note
🌹🌹!!!!! :DD
at long last!!!!!!! ros, i must thank you for inspiring and motivating me to participate in this silly game. you dont know this, but at the time i was in a big writing slump and not doing well in general. reframing what ive written was really helpful (: <3
But Zhou Xu said softly, under his breath: “You are still here.” At first, Kexing didn’t know what to say. Then, he could only bring out a lame, “Yes. I am still here.” And strain to kiss his A-Xu’s nose. It landed somewhere on his nostrils, half on his mouth. Zhou Xu snorted, a warm gush of air. Kexing rubbed his face against him in fondness.
again, this is a snippet of the same wip ive shared excerpts from before. i really like this moment of quiet tbh ((:
send me a rose for a snippet
#send me a rose for a snippet#ask game#fanfiction ask game#the mutual tag#ros#muddling in words and stuff#wenzhou#wen kexing#zhou zishu#word of honor
2 notes
·
View notes
Note
🌹🌹🌹
"A feeling?" Yaxley sneers, his tone mocking.
James shrugs as much as his bindings allow, ignoring Yaxley's tone completely. "That you shouldn't have done that."
Yaxley gasps but it's not because of James' words but more because of the hand that suddenly protrudes right out of his chest, holding his heart outside his body. "So, so very true," Sirius says.
10 notes
·
View notes
Note
🌹
You even gave Simeon a little bit of a fright one time, when he was rather… underdressed.
You two had plans to go out to Cafe Lament, and you had arrived a bit early without realizing how early. You sent a couple texts to Simeon’s phone, then decided to just go see him in person– considering the fact that he could probably buy something worth a thousand grimm off of akuzon in an attempt to reply to you. He seemed to be where you thought he’d be, a blue light emitting from beyond his door.
In his room, Simeon was deciding on which shirt to wear. A nice, tan cable knit sweater? Or a sheer teal blouse? Decisions, Decisions…
“HOLY SHI–”
His eyes widened to saucers, turning and calling out your name. That was you, wasn’t it? You were early, and you sounded distressed. He called out your name again, concerned. Until…
“Oh dear.”
Simeon carefully restored himself to his human form slowly, still studying you– or, what once was you– or, what is you, but in sludge form.
from a silly fic!! poor MC.
#obey me#obey me! shall we date?#obey me fanfiction#obey me x reader#obey me mc#obey me simeon#send me a rose n ill give you a sentence or snippet of a wip :D#ty for the ask!!!#ask
39 notes
·
View notes
Text
@evernkillian
For every rose emoji in my inbox, I'll share one random sentence of one random WIP
For you, I gift you Memento Vivere:
Hector Burgess had a man’s grip and a businessman’s posture, slick politician’s words falling from his lips.
Thanks for the ask!
#ask game#send me a rose#memento vivere#snippet#writeblr#writer#writers on tumblr#writing#writer stuff#oc: hector burgess#memento vivere snippet
2 notes
·
View notes
Note
🌹
Send me a 🌹 and I'll post one random sentence from one random WIP
“I heard you were having some unexplained deaths,” he said, his voice pitched low and relatively soft.
did someone say poly cowboy au? no? well, it's here anyway
thanks for the ask!
3 notes
·
View notes
Text
GB Patch Games: Response About Sensitivity Reader
[Some of you might not have heard of this happening, but I wanted to address it across the board]
Hey everyone,
I want to make a post about the screenshots of comments from one of our sensitivity readers. The situation is that neither me or Rose want people to feel uncomfortable with Our Life: Now & Forever, but Rose hasn’t done anything terribly wrong and isn’t going to be punished.
The comment about OL MCs wasn’t meant to be genuine hatred towards all male players/MCs of OL. Rose wrote a reply about it-
"Hi everyone! This is Rose, I want to address the male MC comment since it was taken wildly out of context and without the lengthy discussion that was after it. I don't hate male MCs, in fact far from it, male MCs are integral to the story in OL:NF as female and trans MCs are. I think the relationship they could potentially have with Qiu could be a great asset in my opinion as they figure out their gender alongside the MC. The discussion itself was about how I noticed players were sticking to heteronormative norms by shipping Tamarack with a man purely out of societal norms than it was genuine thought into the characters and how I personally wished there was more sapphic relationships with Tamarack or just Tamarack with trans characters as a sapphic trans person myself. I didn't mean to offend anyone by it as no one but my friends who understood what I legitimately meant behind my message and it definitely wasn't meant to be seen seriously. I am sorry regardless to anyone I have offended and I love your male MCs regardless."
And most of the comments were about me. I’ve seen screenshots of the full conversations and they’re not as harsh as the cropped snippets made them out to be. It was longer discussions about not including Derek in any base game Moments for no good reason and not having any plus-sized love interests in OL1 because I was afraid players wouldn’t accept it. That’s not a lie, it’s what I decided for the game I created, and it is ridiculous of me. I’m the one who should be feeling embarrassed over how OL1 will forever be that way, not the people who remember that I did that. I’m not perfect and Rose actually cares more about the players than making me feel like I am flawless.
I also don’t want to tone police an employee venting about their boss in private, on their own time. Both the OL games deal with personal, important topics. This is sensitive work, and it can bring up frustrations. Sometimes people do use harsh words among friends, but they wouldn’t ever say it to a person seriously and directly.
I understand if you wouldn’t want to see anyone speak badly of a dev you like, but I promise it’s not a point of contention between me and Rose. I don’t feel mistreated in anyway. Rose genuinely cares about the Our Life series, and that’s why they get fed up with me over certain parts of the game.
Rose has never been unkind or unreasonable to me when working on the project, and their advice is detailed and well-explained. They do care about the game and want it to avoid having content that upsets people because of my own ignorance/shortcomings.
This being shared publicly from a private server is targeting Rose and seems to be a continuation of things that have happened before this. I don’t want this to continue happening. If you do still have concerns over the one comment about the community, you can let me know. But again, I don’t want people being mistrustful of Rose on my behalf for comments about me in conversations with missing context.
Do not send angry messages to Rose about any of this. We’ll do our best so that OL2 will be better than I was before. Thank you to everyone who reads this and participates in the community!
955 notes
·
View notes
Text
The boyfriend act, part 16: "The one with the unnamed surprise" Pairing: Frankie Morales x F!reader SERIES MASTERLIST
Chapter summary: Domesticity wraps itself around your days with Frankie. He asks you to cover your eyes. In front of you, an unnamed surprise. In front of him, a named one. WC: 9K
A/N: So, here’s the thing... yesterday I said I was going to post a snippet, but when I sat down to choose one, I got distracted writing, and one thing led to another and I ended up writing and editing the whole chapter so here it is part 16 YAY!!! Also, sorry for being MIA. I had a minor surgery this week (I’m okay, don’t worry) and I have two exams next monday (not yay). Thank you so much for your comments and messages—I promise I’ll reply to all of them 🤍🫶🏻 In the meantime, I hope you enjoy this chapter! If you want to be in the tag list, let me know. Don't forget to follow capuccinodollupdates for notifications! (also, If you've asked me before to tag you and your tag isn't on the list, please send me a message and let me know! Sometimes I miss comments!)
Sunday, October 27th
You stepped out of Helena’s front door and into the soft warmth of late-morning sun, your cheeks catching the light like it had been waiting for you. The front yard smelled faintly of leaves and old roses. Behind you, Frankie’s shoes thudded against the wooden steps.
“It was really lovely to see you, sweetheart,” Helena said, her hand settling gently on your shoulder. “Don’t wait so long next time, okay?”
Before you could answer, Frankie cut in automatically. “I won’t, Mom. I promise.”
Helena turned to him with a half-laugh, rolling her eyes. “I wasn’t talking to you. Although, frankly, you could stand to come around more too, don’t you think?”
You smiled, unsure where to look. Frankie exhaled a soft laugh behind you, his hand brushing your back.
Mai came out then, barefoot, a Tupperware container clutched to her chest.
“Here,” she said, holding it out. Her hair was messy, in a effortless way that made her look even younger. “Apple pie. Still warm, so don’t tilt it or whatever.”
You nodded, the pie heavier in your hands than you expected. “Thank you.”
Mai lingered for a second, then added, “I’ll text you about the party, okay?”
“I’ll be waiting.” You smiled, already imagining her message appearing on your phone screen later that evening. Then you felt it—Frankie’s hand sliding onto your waist, just resting there.
“And what about me?” he said, a crooked smile tucked into the corner of his mouth. “You’re not gonna text me?”
Mai didn’t even look at him. “You’re part of the package deal.”
You lingered after that—talking a little more with Helena about your next visit. She insisted on dinner. Mai, predictably, lobbied for a restaurant this time. There was laughter. And comfort. And something that felt like belonging.
It had changed, coming here now. It wasn’t performance anymore. You didn’t have to manufacture the way your shoulder leaned into his, or time your glances like stage directions. You didn’t have to imagine the tension. It existed, dense and unmistakable and terribly real.
And maybe that made everything more complicated. Because now, it mattered.
You wanted them to like you. Not because you were pretending to belong—but because, somehow, you already did.
A few days ago, Frankie had mentioned that his sister, Sofía, was organizing an event at her flower shop. She did it every year with her best friend Caroline, who owned a small bakery a few blocks away. People would gather at the shop to read poems, short stories, essays they’d scribbled into journals or typed up on quiet Sunday afternoons. Frankie admitted it wasn’t really his thing—he said it made him tired, that he never stayed long when he did go. But he looked at you as he said it, a crooked half-smile at the edge of his mouth, and told you he thought you'd enjoy it. So he wanted to take you.
And he was right. You spent most of the afternoon in the flower shop, the scent of eucalyptus and dried lavender hanging in the air around you. There were too many folding chairs and not enough standing room. The walls were lined with pale wooden shelves holding glass vases and hand-lettered signs. Helena had come, too, along with Grace, and the four of you drifted in and out of conversations while people took turns reading at the front. Grace stayed close to you, asking you questions with a curiosity that didn’t feel invasive. She spoke with this open, thoughtful cadence that made her seem older than she was.
At one point, she leaned toward you and whispered, “I’m glad you’re dating my uncle. You’re a good person. It’s kind of a relief.” You turned toward her with a small, surprised smile.
You thanked her softly, genuinely, but there was a slight weight tugging at the corners of your expression. That word relief had a way of sticking. You didn’t ask what she meant by it, but you thought about Rachel. You didn’t even want to think about Rachel, but your mind circled back anyway. That vague, unfinished narrative that hovered somewhere behind Frankie’s eyes whenever her name was mentioned. You didn’t have the full picture.
Later, when the readings ended and the chairs were folded and stacked near the counter, Helena invited you both to her house for lunch. You said yes without thinking. It felt easy, natural.
And now, days later, you were in the car, the sky clear and quiet above the windshield, your hand resting on the gentle curve of your stomach. Full. Content in that lazy, familiar way that comes after a big homemade meal.
“Your mom is such a good cook,” you murmured, stretching your feet out and leaning your head against the window. The glass was cool and the sunlight flickered through the leaves. “I could go over there more often.”
Frankie chuckled under his breath, eyes still on the road, one hand loosely on the wheel.
“I mean, no pressure,” you added, glancing at him. “You don’t have to be there. I can go on my own. Girls’ day, you know?”
He turned slightly, just enough to catch your face. “Oh yeah? And what would that look like?”
You shrugged. “I don’t know. Talking about books, stuff… things you probably wouldn’t care about.”
“I like girls’ days.”
You narrowed your eyes. “Do you?”
“Sure. I can blend right in. You won’t even notice me. It'll be like I'm part of the decor.”
You laughed. “I really don’t think that’s how it works.”
He grinned, unfazed. “You could have your girls’ day. I’ll just be in the background. Silently appreciating your dynamic. Maybe even bring snacks.”
“Or,” you said, playful now, “you could have your own boys’ day. With Santiago and the rest of the guys. Talk about cars, or fishing, or whatever ancient rituals you people do to reaffirm your masculinity.”
Frankie looked thoughtful for a moment, then said, “I think I’d prefer both.”
You groaned. “God, don’t be corny.”
“A little corn never hurt anyone.”
“Yes, it did,” you said. “It hurt this conversation.”
Frankie rolled his eyes, though the gesture lacked real irritation.
“Okay,” he said slowly, dragging out the syllable like he was preparing to make a point. “But you've been to a lot of those hangouts with the guys too, don’t you think?”
“Sure, because Santi invited me. Or Benny. Or someone else who actually wanted me there.”
He glanced at you with a crooked grin. “And what, I’m not included in this girls' night elite invitation circle?”
You crossed your arms across your chest, leaning back against the car seat.
“Nope. You're not.”
He made a sound with his tongue and tilted his head toward you.
“Wow. Okay. I guess I won’t show you the really interesting and extremely cool thing I had planned.”
You laughed under your breath. “You don’t have anything to show me.”
“I do, actually.” He looked over at you again, sideways this time, as if the full force of eye contact might give too much away. “Something you would’ve loved. Not just liked—loved. Like, told-Emma-about-it kind of loved.”
“You’re being dramatic.”
He let out a long, exaggerated sigh, his fingers drumming on the steering wheel.
“Guess I’ll just take you home then. Let you sit with your own bad decisions.”
You narrowed your eyes. “Oh, don’t even try it, Francisco. You’re not going to manipulate me. That routine doesn’t work on me.”
He let out a genuine laugh this time, brief and low in his throat, shaking his head as he returned his attention to the road.
Ten minutes later, you were standing at the threshold of his house. Frankie reached into his pocket, pulled out a key, and slid it into the lock. The mechanism clicked. He paused before pushing the door open and turned toward you with something mischievous flickering behind his eyes.
“Okay,” he said, stepping in closer. “I need you to close your eyes.”
You blinked. “Are you serious?”
“I’m deadly serious.” He moved his hand up and gently placed it over your face, fingers spanning nearly the whole length from your forehead to your chin. “Eyes shut until I say. Do you understand?”
You smiled despite yourself, the warmth of his palm against your skin oddly reassuring. “I promise.”
“Good.”
You heard him exhale, the door creaking open. The sound of hinges, followed by his fingers slipping away from your eyes. A moment later, he took your hand. His grip was easy, steady. He guided you through the doorway and into the house, and you could hear the sound of the door closing softly behind you. You let him lead you, each step unfamiliar in the darkness behind your eyelids. The scent of something floral lingered faintly in the hallway—laundry detergent, maybe, or whatever candle Helena had dropped off last time she visited.
You felt the soft shift of air as you entered the living room. Frankie’s hand never left yours.
There was a strange sound from another room, and Frankie let go of your hand.
“Okay,” he said, already stepping back. “I’ll be right back. Just don’t open your eyes. Got it?”
“I won’t,” you said with unnecessary urgency. You clamped your palms over your face like a child playing hide-and-seek, and you grinned into the darkness of your own hands. You didn’t understand what was happening. None of it made sense, and yet you felt giddy—completely, irrationally light.
One, two, three… The seconds moved unevenly. You listened for Frankie’s footsteps, the shift of weight in the boards. A faint scuff. Silence. Then movement again, closer this time. You could feel him standing in front of you before he spoke.
“Okay, when I say—” he started, but his sentence was cut short by the softest interruption.
A high-pitched, unmistakable sound.
“Shit,” Frankie muttered.
Then—clearer this time—a meow. Thin and sharp and impossibly small.
Your hands flew from your face, your eyes wide, your mouth already forming words before they reached your tongue.
“No way.”
Frankie stood just inches away, his hands lifted carefully near your face. Between them, resting in the cage of his fingers, was a tiny gray kitten. The animal looked impossibly fragile, like something made of silk. It couldn’t have been more than three months old.
You stared at it, stunned.
“Frankie,” you whispered, as you extended your arms without thinking.
He gave the kitten to you and his face broke into a smile.
You cradled the small body close to your face, kissing its downy head with a tenderness that made something in your chest ache. The kitten let out another soft meow, its voice small but certain. Your heart did something strange, an internal somersault.
“I adopted him yesterday,” Frankie said, running a hand down the kitten’s back. “Doesn’t have a name yet.”
“Why didn’t you tell me?” you asked, eyes still fixed on the animal now curled into the crook of your arm.
He shrugged. “I wanted to surprise you. Thought you’d like it.”
You glanced up at him then, holding his gaze for a few seconds, long enough to see the affection that sat just beneath the mischief in his expression. Then you looked back at the tiny creature curled against your chest.
“How did he sleep?”
“He followed me around all night,” Frankie said, his voice softer now. “He's really affectionate. At first I thought he was hungry or needed water, but he didn’t. He just wanted to be close. Eventually I put him on the bed, but I was terrified I’d roll over and crush him. So I set his little bed right next to me. Figured it was safer. He still cried for a while, though.”
You smiled. You couldn’t stop smiling. The kitten was pawing at your fingers now, then gently nibbled one, its teeth more curious than sharp.
“You’re just the most beautiful little thing,” you murmured, stroking its impossibly soft fur.
Frankie watched you quietly.
Frankie nudged the bedroom door closed with the side of his foot, careful not to spill the two mugs in his hands. The scent of the tea rose with the steam.
You were already stretched out on his bed, legs tangled loosely in the sheets, wearing one of his T-shirts that hung off you like it had been made for someone else, which it had. Underneath, nothing but a soft pair of underwear. Your hair, still damp from your recent shower, clung to the sides of your neck and the cotton collar.
Sunday was drifting by in its usual, hazy rhythm. After arriving at Frankie’s place and being introduced to the skittish little kitten he had just brought home, the two of you had spent some time lying around, throwing out names—nothing had stuck. Every suggestion felt either too much or not enough. At some point between giggling over how serious he looked when he vetoed “Frankie Jr.” and the slow weight of contentment settling in your limbs, you’d dozed off.
He hadn't minded. A nap after a good meal felt like the natural conclusion to a Sunday afternoon. He normally reserved these hours for fixing things around the house or grabbing a beer with one of the guys. But with you here, in his space, smelling like his soap and stealing his shirts, the idea of doing absolutely nothing became not only acceptable, but preferable.
It was nearly four now. The TV hummed in front of the bed, soft and unobtrusive. The white curtains were drawn shut, letting in a gauzy sort of light that made everything feel suspended in time.
He placed both mugs on the nightstand, then eased into bed beside you, careful not to jostle the tiny, curled-up kitten resting on your chest. You were propped against the headboard, your fingers stroking absent-mindedly over the kitten’s fur, eyes on the screen.
Friends was on—your choice. The London wedding episodes. He remembered you saying they were your favorite, though you claimed not to like Ross all that much.
“The tea’s hot,” he said, his voice low as he leaned in a little closer. He took one mug. “Give it a minute before you try it.”
You turned your head toward him, a small smile ghosting your lips.
“Okay. Thanks,” you said softly, taking it from his hand only to place it gently on the nightstand next to you.
Frankie exhaled, a quiet breath through his nose, and turned his attention back to the television. It happened every time—you'd put something on, usually a show or movie he wouldn’t have chosen himself, something with fast-talking characters and emotional subtext, and without realizing it, he’d be completely pulled in. He told himself it wasn’t his taste, too light or too messy or too sentimental. But here he was.
“Jesus, I don't get it,” he murmured. “I never understood people who obsess over weddings.”
“Yeah, you seem like someone who’d get married in your backyard, on a random Tuesday, without warning.”
“Yeah? I wouldn’t mind that.”
You turned your head slightly, studying him now. “Without warning, though? Like, totally unplanned?”
“Wouldn’t that make it more romantic?”
You lifted a shoulder, then let it fall again. “Eh. Maybe. Depends on the context, I guess.”
“What kind of context?”
“I dunno,” you said. “Just… depends how it all feels in the moment?”
Frankie nodded like he understood, though maybe he didn’t, not completely.
“Well. If I did get married like that, it’d probably be because something forced my hand. Like—some kind of bind.”
“Forced your hand? A bind?” you repeated, laughing now. “Good thing I didn’t ask you to be my fake fiancé, then.”
You were teasing, but your voice was warm. The kitten had migrated from your chest to the space between you, burrowing under the quilt.
You shifted onto your side, pulling the pillow beneath your cheek. Your face was close now. Relaxed. Peaceful. He could see the faint dampness at your hairline, smell the familiar scent of his shampoo, his laundry detergent—all of it mixing with something that was purely you.
Then you asked, your voice quiet: “Do you think you’ll ever get married?”
The question caught him off guard. It wasn’t heavy, but it wasn’t nothing either.
He hesitated, eyes flicking to the TV and back to you.
“I used to,” he admitted. “A while ago.”
“You did?”
“Yeah. I thought about it.”
You turned your face toward him.
“With Rachel?” you asked, voice soft.
He gave a small nod, his brows lifting a fraction, like the whole thing felt absurd in retrospect. As if that version of his life had belonged to someone else entirely. Someone naive.
For a second, he considered brushing it off. Letting the moment pass. But there was something about the way you were looking at him that made it impossible.
“I was ready to commit to her,” he said. The words felt strange, but not painful. He hadn’t spoken them out loud in a long time. And for once, they didn’t come with the usual sting.
“Really?”
“Yeah,” he said simply, turning his eyes to the television, as if that might steady him. “I thought I had everything mapped out. Marriage, maybe a family. It felt like, like it made sense.”
You made a soft sound, not quite agreement, not quite disbelief. Just something that acknowledged the weight of what he’d said. Then you went quiet again, eyes shifting back to the TV.
Frankie waited, listening to the faint background noise of the sitcom. But he looked at you again, and something in your face had changed, barely—your mouth a little tighter, your eyes distant.
“I was wrong,” he said then. “So wrong. And honestly? Her leaving… that might’ve been the best thing she ever did for me. Who knows where I'd be if she'd never ended it.”
Your mouth curled into the hint of a smile. “Yeah. I mean, you definitely wouldn’t be in bed with me and a kitten right now.”
That made him laugh, softly. It was absurd, when he thought about it—how different his life might’ve looked if things had gone the way he wanted them to, back then.
If Rachel had stayed, maybe he would never have unraveled. Maybe he wouldn’t have gotten to the point where getting out of bed felt impossible, where everything tasted like dust and felt like noise. Maybe he wouldn’t have had to start from scratch.
He might still be with her. Maybe engaged. He remembered thinking about it right before she left—rings, apartments, timelines. He’d known he wasn’t in the right place for any of it, but he’d considered it anyway, hoping commitment might anchor him somehow.
And you? You would’ve stayed exactly where you were then—Santi’s younger sister. Someone he vaguely tolerated, someone who rolled her eyes at his jokes and didn’t bother to hide it. You probably would’ve kept ignoring each other, kept your distance.
The thought landed heavily in his chest. Not dramatic or painful, just strange. Like something important could’ve slipped past him without him ever knowing what he missed.
Because now he understood what it felt like; being near you like this, existing inside the gentle bubble you created just by being close. It startled him sometimes, how long you had been in his life without him realizing the possible weight of it. Five years orbiting each other, brushing past in doorways, exchanging sharp looks or dry remarks and fights. All that time, and he’d never imagined what it could mean if he let the distance between you collapse.
You spoke then, cutting through the quiet and his thoughts. “No matter what happens, I think I’ll end up being the cat lady anyway.”
He looked at you, startled by the sudden shift in tone, the slight smile playing on your lips as you cradled the kitten in your hands. You were touching its tiny ears like they were the most delicate things in the world. Frankie had the absurd urge to be jealous of the kitten.
“Why do you say that?” he asked.
You shrugged. “I dunno.”
He watched you for a moment longer. “Don’t you want a family?”
You let out a small laugh. And Frankie realized a second too late how personal the question had been. Too direct. Too much, maybe. But you didn’t seem bothered.
“Of course I do,” you said, gently. “I mean, yeah. I’d love that. It’s just… if it doesn’t happen, I don’t think it would destroy me. I know I’d be okay. I’ve made peace with the idea that some lives don’t go the way we plan. And anyway, Santi’s definitely going to have, like, four kids at least. I can always be the fun aunt who spoils them and teaches them weird facts about everything.”
Frankie smiled. “Yeah. I get that. I feel the same way, I think. And I’m already the cool uncle, so I’ve got that covered. Lucky me.”
You laughed, then reached out to tap his arm lightly with your fist. He reached for you instinctively, wrapping his arms around you and drawing you into his chest. You came easily, your body folding into his.
“I always thought I’d have a daughter,” you said after a minute, your voice muffled against the fabric of his T-shirt. “I mean… I’d like to. If I ever become a mom.”
“Just one?”
“For now, yeah. I think I’d have to see how it goes first. Test the waters. Parenting seems like the kind of thing you can’t really prepare for, doesn’t it?”
“You’d be good at it.”
“You think so?”
“I’m sure of it,” he said, meeting your gaze. “Darcy can confirm.”
You smiled again. “I'm not sure it's comparable. But yeah. I’m already a great cat mom.”
The sound lingered between you for a moment before dissolving into the quiet of the room. On the screen, Monica was spiraling; her mother had said something sharp at the rehearsal dinner, something small but wounding in the way only a parent’s words could be. Neither of you commented on it. The glow of the TV washed your faces in warm color, but the air between you shifted.
Frankie felt it. Not something visible, exactly—just a subtle tightening in your body, a pause that wasn’t there before. He had learned to notice these things with you. How your energy moved. How your breath changed. His body, attuned to yours now, picked up on every slight retreat.
You leaned further into his chest, your head tucked under his chin, and let out a soft breath.
“I had a scare once,” you said quietly, eyes fixed on the television. “With Harry.”
He didn’t move. Just listened.
“My period was late and we’d only been dating two months. I remember this one day, how everything just kind of… froze. Like time stopped working the way it was supposed to. I couldn’t focus on anything. It was like my body had slipped into this other version of my life and I couldn’t get out of it until I knew for sure.”
You paused. The kitten shifted between you, curling into a tighter ball.
“I didn’t tell him. I went out and bought a test, did it alone. It was negative. Then, after I was sure, I told him.”
“What did he say?”
“He asked if I needed anything. That was it, really. No follow-up questions. No conversation.” You gave a small, humorless huff of breath. “I started taking the pill that same week.”
Frankie looked at you then, but you kept your eyes on the screen.
“Sounds smart.”
You clicked your tongue, not quite annoyed, but something close.
“Of course. But I still needed more than that. I needed to feel safe. And I didn’t. Not with him. That was the thing—I realized how completely terrified I was at the idea of having a baby with him. And I couldn’t even say it out loud. Couldn’t tell him how scared I was, because I didn’t trust what he’d do with that information. I was afraid of his reaction, of whether he’d be happy, make it about him or minimize it or just… shut down.” Sheepish now, your voice softened. “It made me wonder why I was with someone I couldn’t even share a fear like that with. But I was so sure of how much I loved him, I just... I didn't care.”
“Harry’s an idiot, baby.”
You let out a soft laugh, shaking your head. “Yeah. I think he is.”
“He is—”
“So you wanted a family with Rachel?”
He blinked at the TV for a moment, trying to decide how to answer.
“You’re very direct,” he said finally, a little surprised. A small laugh escaped him. “Has anyone ever told you that?”
“I’m sorry.”
“No, don’t be. I like it.” He shook his head, the smile still pulling at his mouth. Then he exhaled. “Yeah. I did. Of course I did. I thought I wanted that. Which feels kind of absurd to say out loud now, because looking back, I don’t think I was ready. Not even close.”
He paused, considering.
“I still don’t know if I’ll ever be ready, to be honest. It’s not just a wish, it’s... a whole reality. One that I’d like to live in, maybe. But I’m afraid I’m not built for it. Or that if I am, I’ll do it wrong. Like, ruin something I can’t take back.”
You were quiet for a beat, then asked gently, “Why do you think that?”
He hesitated, then let the words come.
“I mean… a child. That’s not just a responsibility. It’s a person. Someone with their own thoughts and their own pain, eventually. And I’d be part of shaping all that. That’s terrifying. I want to be good at it, I really do, but what if I mess it up? What if I do something without realizing and it sticks with them forever?”
Your fingers brushed over his arm in a slow, thoughtful rhythm. Then you looked at him, your expression soft, eyes warmer than he felt like he deserved. A faint smile curled at the edge of your mouth, and for a second Frankie thought about tracing it with his thumb. Just one second of indulgence.
But he didn’t.
“No one knows everything about parenting before they’re in it,” you said. “Even the best people make mistakes. There’s no such thing as perfect parents, or perfect kids.”
“Oh I know that.”
You rolled your eyes affectionately. “You’d be a good father, Frankie. You’re patient. Kind. You actually listen. You’ve been great with Jamie.”
Frankie sighed. “That’s different. He’s my nephew. I can always hand him back. I don’t have to make the hard choices. If I was in Henry or Luna’s place, I don’t know what I’d do.”
“Well,” you said, shrugging a little. “I don’t think anyone really knows until they get there. You can plan, sure. But life doesn’t wait for you to be ready. All you can do is love the kid, pay attention, and try not to let anything get in the way of being there for them.”
“Yeah, well...” Frankie said, reaching out to stroke the tiny kitten curled up in front of you. His hand moved gently, fingers threading through its fur like he was trying not to scare it. “Anyway, I doubt it’ll happen. In the meantime, I guess I’ll have to figure out how to take care of a cat.”
“I doubt it too,” you replied. “I swear, there’s nothing that messes with my head more than the thought of being a mother. Or not being one.”
“How come?”
You exhaled, your eyes fixed on some invisible point in the room. “I’m terrified of not becoming a mother. And also, equally terrified of becoming one. It’s like... both possibilities feel too big.” You laughed, but it was a thin sound. “Infertility scares me. Fertility scares me.”
Frankie didn’t speak right away. He was breathing in the faint scent of your hair, and it made everything feel a little more real than he wanted it to. Conversations like this were difficult for him—not because he didn’t care, but because the thought of a future that stable, that rooted, felt like trying to imagine himself on another planet. There was a version of him that could handle it. He just wasn’t sure that version existed yet.
“You’ve got time,” he said at last, his cheek pressed against the pillow.
“I’m almost thirty, Francisco,” you said, smiling as if to soften it. “And as much as I hate the phrase, the idea of a biological clock is very real.”
“Thirty’s nothing,” he said, matching your tone, rolling his eyes.
“No, I know,” you agreed. “It’s not. But still.”
He shifted beside you. “Maybe by forty you’ll have it all figured out.”
You let out a laugh. “Wow. That’s a lot of confidence in my decision-making abilities.”
“I’ve seen you order at restaurants. That took several minutes.”
“Hey. That’s important. You don’t want to mess up your one meal.”
Frankie grinned, then looked over at the kitten, now kneading the blanket with its tiny paws.
“Also,” you added, “did you know that after thirty-five it’s technically called a geriatric pregnancy?”
“That’s absurd.”
“It’s true.”
Your phone buzzed on the nightstand, the screen lighting up. You rolled away from him to check it, and the space where you’d been moments ago felt immediately cooler. Frankie didn’t say anything, just watched you. The kitten padded across the bed toward him and climbed onto his chest. He picked it up in both hands.
What a tiny creature, Frankie thought, watching the kitten as it curled into itself, like a little comma. Its paws were absurdly small, its ears too big for its head. It looked like something you’d win at a fair, a prize made of felt and buttons, only this one breathed and blinked and yawned so wide you could see the pink of its gums. It didn’t seem entirely real. He found himself hoping it would grow big, sleepy and adorable. Like Mr. Darcy.
You were scrolling through your phone beside him, your head propped on one hand.
“Mai sent me the invite,” you said without looking up. “It’s a QR code. They’ll give us wristbands when we get there.”
He nodded, eyes still on the kitten. “Sounds fancy.”
The Halloween party was an annual thing hosted by Kairos, some artsy production company Mai had been involved with for years. She designed the wristbands and the promo graphics, and always managed to secure passes for her friends. Frankie had heard about the Christmas parties too, and the over-the-top New Year’s events where people drank champagne from plastic flutes and danced in dimly lit warehouses. He didn’t go to things like that—loud rooms, too many people, the pressure to make conversation. But earlier that day, over lunch, you’d said something about loving Halloween. Mai had overheard and invited you on the spot. Which meant now he was going too. Because Mai was his sister, and you were—well, you were you.
And honestly, he didn’t mind the idea.
You tapped your phone screen off and turned to him. “Do you know what you’re dressing up as?”
He looked over, smiled faintly. “I don’t know. What about you?”
You shrugged, almost bashful. “I have a few ideas. Nothing definite.”
“Well,” he said, settling back into the cushions, “I’m really, really sure I’ll like and enjoy whatever you pick.”
You didn’t respond right away, but your expression changed—something flickered behind your eyes. He didn’t know what it was exactly, but it made him feel warm.
The kitten yawned again and then fell asleep.
Tuesday, October 29th
Frankie leaned back in the lawn chair and took a long sip from his beer. The fire in Santi’s backyard cracked and hissed, sparks rising briefly into the night. The guys were in their usual rhythm (half teasing, half storytelling) revisiting the time Will’s pants split wide open during a yoga class he’d tagged along to, trying to impress a girl.
Frankie wasn’t really listening. His phone rested in his hand, screen dimmed to almost nothing, thumb brushing across it idly. You were texting him.
Earlier that afternoon, you’d gone to try on Halloween costumes, and by some stroke of good fortune—at least in his opinion—you’d decided to keep him in the loop. One by one, the photos came in. A zombie nurse. A ghost bride. A pirate. A vampire in fishnets. Then a Victorian lady. And at some point, absurdly, a towering Marie Antoinette wig that made you look like you'd walked out of a Sofia Coppola film.
Frankie had been more than happy to offer feedback. Encouraged, even. He’d wanted to go with you, truthfully, but work ran late, and he already had plans with the guys. This, this stream of selfies and little captions, felt like the next best thing.
Then finally:
[🍓]: Christine Daaé
And a second later, a photo of a white corset. Silk. Lace trim. The implication was clear.
Frankie had grinned at the screen, then exhaled through his nose like he couldn’t help himself. Of course, that meant he was going as the Phantom. Erik. You’d declared it so.
A bottle cap hit his thigh.
He blinked, looked up from his phone.
Santi was smirking at him from across the fire pit.
“So, can you?” he asked, lifting his chin.
Frankie furrowed his brows. “What?”
“Victor’s boat.”
Frankie shifted in the chair, stretching out his legs. “Ah, right. This Friday?”
“Yeah,” Benny said, yawning as he leaned back, arms behind his head. “You free or what?”
Frankie scratched the edge of his beard. “Actually... I... I’ve got something.”
Santi grinned, like he already knew. “Right. The Halloween party.”
Frankie nodded once, keeping it casual.
“What party?” Will asked, suddenly interested.
“Kairos,” Santi said, turning toward him. “My sister told me. Mai works for them, remember? Costumes, DJs, probably too many people. And look at this guy—ditching me for my little sister.”
Frankie narrowed his eyes, shook his head, and let out a short laugh. He raised the bottle to his lips again, the glass cool against his mouth.
“I’m not ditching you,” he said, though he didn’t offer anything more than that.
And across the firelight, Santi just kept smiling.
“Well, by the way,” Benny said, adjusting forward on the edge of his seat, arms braced on his knees, “why couldn’t you come by last weekend?”
Frankie didn’t flinch. “I was with Mai and my mom,” he said, voice even. And it was true. Mostly.
Sunday had been at his mother’s house. You were there, too. Of course.
Benny wasn’t done. “And Saturday?”
Saturday had been yours. The morning, the afternoon, the parts of the night that bled into morning again.
“Same,” Frankie said, not missing a beat. He didn’t look away.
Across the fire pit, Santi shifted. He leaned into his right arm, elbow pressed into the chair, and tilted his head like he was squinting at a puzzle that had just gotten more interesting. There was something annoyingly pleased in his expression.
“Yeah, I don’t buy it, Fish,” he said, eyes wide, eyebrows lifted. A grin pulling at the corners of his mouth.
Frankie laughed—short, breathy, too defensive. “Yeah. Right. You guys are unbearable. If you’ve got something to say, just say it.”
And the second the words left his mouth, he regretted them.
Santi’s face changed, like a switch being flipped. The amusement faded. He leaned forward slightly, not dramatically, but enough to close the distance. His eyes reflected the movement of the flames, sharp and unreadable. His jaw didn’t move, but his voice came out even, almost quiet.
“Okay. When the hell were you planning on telling me you’re sleeping with my sister?”
The crackle of the fire filled the silence that followed. Frankie’s heart dropped so fast it left something hollow behind. His body went rigid. He didn’t blink. He felt the blood drain from his face, felt it pool somewhere in his shoes. The entire backyard blurred at the edges, just orange firelight and too many, many eyes.
He didn’t say a word.
Benny shifted uncomfortably. Will looked down at his beer.
Santi didn’t move. He kept his gaze locked on Frankie, his expression perfectly unreadable.
And then, just as Frankie opened his mouth—he had no idea what he was going to say—Santi broke. A sharp laugh burst from his chest, and he leaned back in the chair, shaking his head.
“I’m messing with you, man.”
Frankie exhaled. It didn’t feel like relief. His skin was too hot, but his fingertips were cold. He ran a hand through his hair, tried to laugh along with them, but it sounded weak, like an echo of something genuine.
His pulse was still racing. His body wasn’t convinced the danger had passed.
And the worst part was: he hadn’t actually denied it.
A breath left Frankie’s chest, short and shaky. “Jesus, man.”
Will and Benny exchanged a glance, laughing in that unsure, uneven way people do when they’re not totally sure it is a joke.
Santi grinned, still riding the high of his own performance.
“You should’ve seen your face,” he said, pointing lazily in Frankie’s direction. “Fucking priceless. Relax, will you? I’m messing with you.”
“Right,” Frankie muttered. “I know. I know that.” But his voice betrayed him. “You just—you look so damn convincing when you do that.”
Santi shrugged, all casual confidence. “It’s my talent.”
Frankie shook his head and stood, brushing nonexistent crumbs from his jeans.
“I gotta take a piss.”
“Did you shit yourself, Fish?” Benny called after him, laughing.
Their voices followed him as he crossed the patio and stepped inside, shutting the door behind him. The silence inside the house felt abrupt. It made the rush of blood in his ears feel deafening. His heart was still hammering against his ribs—each beat too fast, too hard. Like his body hadn’t caught up with the fact that it was just a joke.
Just a joke.
In the bathroom, he leaned over the sink after washing his hands, gripping the porcelain with wet fingers. His reflection looked too pale under the overhead light, his mouth tense like he’d been grinding his teeth. He pressed his palms to his face, exhaled into the space between them. Tried to shake it off.
The truth was: he felt like he’d been caught. Like it was written on him somewhere—I’m sleeping with Santi’s sister. Bold print. Centered.
He stayed there for a minute longer, trying to even out his breathing. Trying to look normal. He wasn’t sure it was working.
When he finally stepped out, the hallway felt colder somehow. As he passed the kitchen door, a voice called out.
“Frankie.”
He stopped. Turned his head.
Will was standing by the open fridge, hand already wrapped around the neck of a beer bottle. He looked casual. Not suspicious. Not accusing.
“You want one?” Will asked, nodding toward the bottles.
“Yeah. Sure.”
Frankie stepped into the kitchen fully, nodding once as he accepted the bottle from Will. The glass felt cool in his palm. He leaned back against the counter, the edge of it pressing into his spine just enough to remind him he was still in his body.
Will moved with efficiency, pulling three more bottles from the fridge, setting two on the counter with a dull clink, and uncapping the third for himself. He sat across from Frankie, perched casually on one of the stools, the bottle already pressed to his lips.
They stayed like that for a few seconds. Frankie watched the floor. Will watched Frankie.
Then, finally, Will spoke.
“So,” he said, drawing the word out. “How long has this been going on?”
Frankie lifted his head. “What’s been going on?”
Will tilted his head, eyebrows raised in mock innocence. “You know Santi’s basically your brother-in-law now, right?”
Frankie smiled—tight, crooked, tired. He didn’t answer right away. Instead, a quiet laugh escaped him, as if the idea were absurd. But it didn’t feel absurd.
“No... I mean—”
“I saw you at the bar,” Will cut in, one eyebrow arched. “On Benny’s birthday. You two were talking. I was heading over to order another round, and I saw you leave. Together.”
Frankie clicked his tongue, a quiet, defensive sound. “That’s not—”
“And,” Will said, leaning in slightly now, clearly enjoying this, “the next day, Santi told us you said you'd spent the night with someone. Said you wouldn’t say who. And then, that day at the river, you said you were seeing that woman. What a coincidence, huh, Fish?”
This time, Frankie didn’t try to argue. He looked at Will, really looked at him, and saw the certainty there. Not speculation. Not a guess. Certainty.
There was no point in denying anything anymore.
Frankie sighed and shifted his weight.
“You can’t say anything. You hear me?”
Will threw his head back, a triumphant laugh spilling from his chest like he’d just solved a mystery no one else had noticed.
“I fucking knew it.”
“Shh,” Frankie hissed, glancing toward the hallway. “Man, shut the hell up.”
Will shook his head, grinning like he’d just heard the punchline of a joke that had taken too long to land.
“You two really aren’t being discreet, you know that?”
Frankie narrowed his eyes, exasperated. “You can’t say anything.”
“I won’t,” Will said, holding up a hand in mock solemnity. “Promise. No need, anyway. The others will probably figure it out without my help. You’re not exactly subtle.” He gave a small shrug, then leaned back in his seat. “To be honest, I still wasn’t totally sure. I had my suspicions, yeah. But the look on your face out there?” He let out a low whistle. “Jesus, man. I thought you were about to pass out.”
Frankie let out a breath and rubbed the back of his neck. “Yeah, well. I kind of thought that too.”
There was a pause. Will’s expression shifted, softened. He took another sip of beer and then sighed, setting the bottle down with a quiet clink against the counter.
“So?” he asked, his tone more curious than nosy now. “What’s going on? How did that even happen? I mean, how did things change between you two?”
Frankie didn’t answer immediately. His eyes drifted. First to the far wall, then to the patch of floor just beside Will’s foot. He searched his memory, trying to locate the exact pivot, the precise beat where everything had begun to shift. But it was like trying to pinpoint the first moment he started falling asleep. You just wake up in the middle of it, already half-under.
How had things changed?
When?
He could think of a dozen interactions that might’ve mattered. But the one that surfaced—the one that rooted itself in his mind now—was less cinematic than he wanted it to be. It wasn’t dramatic. It wasn’t even particularly romantic. But it had cracked something open in him. And after that, he started noticing you differently. Or maybe not differently... just more.
It embarrassed him, how fast it had happened for him.
"Your mother, your sisters, your aunts and uncles, your mom’s friends—they’re all going to be watching." You had said that night, the day before his mom's birthday.
Frankie exhaled, the sound half-sigh, half-growl, and pressed his hip against the edge of the kitchen island.
"It’s different." He muttered, voice weighed down by something that felt like exhaustion
"Different how?"
"Because Santi’s my best friend. And you’re his sister. It was weird."
"And this is all fake, Francisco," you gestured vaguely in the air between you, where the tension had been gathering like dust. "How old are you again? Forty?"
"Thirty-five," he corrected automatically.
"Right. Almost forty. And you can’t do something as simple as kiss a woman. Yes, I’m your best friend’s sister. Yes, you clearly dislike me. And yes, I clearly dislike you too. But it’s just a kiss," you were speaking with that infuriating kind of calm that always had annoyed him. "A fucking—"
Frankie’s hands were on your face before he processed the shift. Fingers at your jaw, thumbs resting just beneath your cheekbones. His grip wasn’t rough, just firm. And then his mouth was on yours. It wasn’t timid. It wasn’t theatrical either.
He kept kissing you longer than he should have. He knew it, could feel the line being crossed even as he leaned into it, even as his heart stammered in his chest.
And then—just as suddenly—he stepped back.
His hands dropped, and his expression shifted into something smug and irritatingly collected. He clicked his tongue, the sound almost playful.
You weren’t moving. Your posture was stiff, your breath uneven. He noticed the subtle rise and fall of your collarbone, the slight part of your lips, the fact that your eyes were still on his mouth.
He turned from you and folded his arms across his chest, like that might hide something.
“I can do that, no problem,” he said, trying to sound flippant. “Stop being so fucking insufferable all the time, and maybe this whole thing would be easier.”
Your mouth opened—probably ready to snap back, but the words caught somewhere between fury and shock.
He didn’t say anything else. Just leaned against the island, pretending to study the floor, as if that helped him ignore the sound of your breathing.
“Thank God you’re not my real boyfriend,” you snapped. “I’d rather kiss a toad.”
Frankie’s mouth curved slightly, not quite a smile. "You’ve got a lot of experience with those, don’t you?"
He pushed away from the counter then, dragging a hand over his stomach before reaching into his pocket to check for his keys. An instinctive gesture, like trying to remind himself he still had an exit.
He walked over to the couch and gave Mr. Darcy a half-hearted pat, then turned back toward you. You hadn’t moved. You looked pissed.
He didn’t blame you. Not entirely, anyway.
“I’ll pick you up at six tomorrow. Don’t keep me waiting.”
“Or what? You're going to leave without me?”
Frankie paused, hand already on the door. He looked at you. Then he stepped aside and held the door open.
"I’ll come up and get you," he said, like a warning.
He didn’t wait for a reply. Just walked out, jaw tight, the echo of his shoes fading with every step. The door clicked shut behind him, a final-sounding noise that filled the quiet he hadn’t noticed until then.
Frankie took the stairs two at a time. Something urgent buzzed beneath his skin—irritation, maybe. Or something that required irritation as a cover. When he hit the street, he didn’t hesitate. Got into his car, turned the key, pulled out of the space like it owed him something.
But a few blocks later, a red light caught him. The first real pause.
And in that stillness, something shifted.
His fingers lifted, almost without thought, brushing against his lips. They felt warm, too warm—like they’d been branded. His mouth still remembered yours. Not just the pressure or the shape, but the feeling. The pull. The part of it he hadn’t expected.
He sat there, one hand on the wheel, the other grazing his mouth, eyes unfocused and fixed on nothing.
That was the moment. The first one that counted.
That was when it started for him.
“I don’t know how it happened,” Frankie said quietly, his thumb pressing against the condensation on his beer bottle. “It just did. One day I hated her, and the next day I didn’t. And that confused me as much as it probably confused her.”
Will raised his eyebrows, leaning back slightly.
“Well, doesn’t confuse me. I knew it from the start—remember? Everything makes sense now. I was right, wasn’t I?”
Frankie let out a sigh and nodded faintly. “I couldn’t tell her, though.”
Will blinked. “You mean all those years you two were at each other’s throats was because you couldn’t be honest with her?”
“No,” Frankie said, laughing in spite of himself. “No. I genuinely didn’t like her after that. I wasn’t pretending.”
Will looked at him, unconvinced. “Okay, sure. But what about now? Did you tell her how it?”
Frankie shook his head. He didn’t explain why. He didn’t know how to.
Will nodded again, slower this time. “And is this—whatever it is—serious?”
At first, Frankie laughed. A short, instinctive sound. Because the question felt too big, too final. But then the laugh faded. His smile disappeared, and his gaze dropped to the floor.
And just like that, the answer was there.
You placed your toothbrush back in the cup and flicked off the bathroom light with the back of your hand. The apartment dimmed into quiet shadows as you padded barefoot toward your bedroom. Mr. Darcy followed you, tail held high, as if he too were ready to call it a night.
But before you got into bed, you paused beside the vanity and looked once more at the costume hanging on the door. Just one last look.
You hadn’t found it in one of those over-lit costume shops filled with synthetic capes and plastic tiaras. You’d gone to a small gothic boutique tucked between a tattoo parlor and a record store. The corset had been waiting there for you—white, embroidered, delicate.
The idea had arrived in your head fully formed: Christine Daaé.
Once you had the corset, everything else followed easily. You found the dress online and paid for priority shipping without hesitation. It was arriving tomorrow morning, and you had already cleared a hanger for it. The pictures online had shown a soft, off-white fabric with dramatic bell sleeves and a neckline that dipped just low enough to make you blush. It ended just below the knees, but a single slit ran up the side of the left leg, high enough to make it interesting.
You had paired it with white thigh-high stockings that fastened with lace, the kind that sat snug against your skin. The whole outfit was beautiful. Romantic, theatrical, sensual. You couldn’t wait to wear it.
Frankie hadn’t protested when you told him your idea. In fact, he had agreed almost too easily. You bought him a white half-mask online and found a soft, 19th-century-style shirt with ruffles at the collar. The woman at the shop, who had probably seen a hundred Phantom couples come through in October, still smiled when you told her what you were planning. She even helped you pick out a black vest with subtle embroidery. Frankie said he’d handle the rest.
You had always loved Halloween in the way certain people love early autumn or thunderstorms—something about the atmosphere, the anticipation, the slight eeriness that made everything feel more heightened, more alive. It was one of your favorite days of the year. Or at least, it used to be.
Lately, the holiday had come and gone like most other days. Last year you’d planned a solo horror movie night. Candles lit, snacks laid out, a carefully curated film queued on the screen. But you’d fallen asleep before the opening credits had even finished rolling. You woke up sometime around midnight, your head slumped against the couch cushion, the room dim and quiet and too still. You didn’t try again after that.
This year, though, there was the party.
It was happening Friday night—even though Halloween fell on a Thursday—because that was how adults did things now. Convenience before tradition. It didn’t bother you. The point was that someone had invited you, and more than that, you wanted to go.
You hadn’t been to a Kairos party in years. The last time, you’d gone with Emma, and the two of you had danced for hours, stealing sips from each other’s drinks and rating costumes like it was a red carpet. But Emma hadn’t been able to make it the past few years and your other friends always had other plans. So, you stayed home.
But not this year.
You folded the corset carefully and placed it back inside its tissue-lined box. The shoes were already tucked away on the top shelf of your closet. You smoothed your hand over the duvet before pulling it back, ready to settle in for the night. Mr. Darcy was already curled up at the foot of the bed.
And then the doorbell rang.
You paused. Checked the time on your phone: 10:03 p.m.
A crease formed between your brows as you walked toward the kitchen, the soft shuffle of your slippers brushing against the floor. You turned the corner and peered out through the narrow window that faced the street. And then you smiled. Frankie.
You didn’t bother asking what he was doing there before heading downstairs. The air outside was crisp when you opened the door to the street, the pavement still holding the warmth from the day.
He was standing there with his hands in his denim jacket pockets, looking at you like he hadn’t really meant to show up but had ended up there anyway.
“Hey,” you said, stepping toward him, slipping your hands up to his shoulders and leaning in to kiss him—just a quiet press of lips, familiar now, but still electrifying. “What are you doing here? Weren’t you at Santi’s?”
He nodded, the corners of his mouth tilting upward in a tired kind of smile, the kind that suggested he’d had a long day but was happy to be standing there with you. His hands found your waist almost without thinking and he stepped past the threshold as you moved aside for him. Before you could say anything else, he leaned in and kissed you again.
“Yeah,” he said quietly, “but I needed to see you.”
You tilted your head slightly. “Did something happen?”
Frankie let out a low laugh. “Well, first of all, Will knows about us. Did you know that?”
You blinked. “What? Wait—what do you mean he knows?”
He lifted his shoulders in a helpless little shrug. “I’ll explain everything upstairs, okay?”
There was something in his tone that told you it wasn’t urgent, but it still made your stomach flutter.
You nodded anyway. “Yeah, okay.”
You let go of him to close the door behind you, then turned to find him already looking at you with something unreadable in his expression.
“And,” he added, almost as an afterthought, “I need to talk to you about something.”
“What? Don’t say it like that. You’re scaring me.”
Frankie shook his head immediately, pressing his lips together like he regretted phrasing it that way.
“It’s nothing bad. I promise. It’s just… something about when we first met.”
dividers by @/saradika-graphics
Taglis: @paleidiot @gothcsz @everyth1ngfan @katw474 @mellymbee @pedritosgirl2000 @tsunamistorm123 @jokesonthem @sunnytuliptime @greenwitchfromthewoods @ashleyfilm @darkheartgatita @thedilfdiaries @nandan11 @whirlwindrider29 @onlythehobi @diabaroxa @yellowbrickyeti @deatt @yslgreen @daybleedsintonightfa11 @mys2425 @pigeonmama @speaktothehandpeasants @pez3639 @stylesispunk @imaginecrushes @isla-finke-blog @smiithys @brittmb115 @sukivenue @awkwardmebaby @la-vie-est-une-fleur29 @suzysface @picketniffler @gaypoetsblog @merz-8 @doblasftcisco @ultra-nina-bella @satanxklaus @readingiskeepingmegoing @copperhalfcent @ashhlsstuff @sunfairyy @icanbringyouinhot @hi--have-a-nice-day @sesdeuxyeux @peachiestevie @biccaline @crayolacraycray @wencontre @peepawispunk @berryispunk @billionairecowgirl @blub-senpai @madpanda75 @joelmillerpascal @thatdbeagoodsticker @dtftheavengers @jessthebaker @yourallaround-simp @vingtetunmars @deatt @pedges-world @vickie5446
#the boyfriend act#capuccinodoll#frankie morales#triple frontier fanfiction#francisco catfish morales#frankie fic#francisco morales#friends to lovers#frankie morales fanfiction#frankie morales smut#frankie catfish morales#frankie morales x reader#frankie morales x you#frankie morales fanfic#francisco morales smut#francisco morales fanfiction#francisco morales x reader#pedro pascal fic#pedro pascal smut#pedro pascal fanfiction#pedro pascal#pedrohub#triple frontier
350 notes
·
View notes
Text
Soldat

Pairing: Winter Soldier! x Doctor!Reader
Word Count: 1.0k
Summary: The reader knew her soft hearted connection to her unwilling patient would become a tool her captors used against her. So, after escaping captivity only to find the soldier waiting in her motel room to retrieve her, she shouldn't have been shocked.
Authors Note: Hi guys! This is the first of my works that I've ever posted on here, so please be kind :). This is a snippet from an incredibly long and complicated novel length fic I've written about a doctor being taken captive by Hydra Pre CATWS, to care for the Winter Soldiers declining health. Hope you guys like it!
Song Choice: Haunted by Beyonce
His silhouette cast a heavy shadow across her body. “Soldat…” She whispered, her gaze nervously flickering up to meet his.
He looked pained as he stared down at her. His tormented blue eyes were shadowed by his tightly knit brow. The black mask locking his jaw shut muffled any words he could have said. Though she doubted that he’d say anything if he could.
“Please don’t do this…” She whispered, too afraid to slide her foot backwards to put space between them.
His breath came in heavy pants against his muzzle. His metal hand slowly rose and slid around her wrist. She gasped at the cold feeling. “I can’t go back there-” She wavered, trying to tug her arm back. He just blinked at her, his hold on her like steel. “Soldat please- please tell me you can hear me-”
But he couldn’t. Because the man she was speaking to wasn’t just the Soldat. He was the Winter Soldier. And there was nothing she could do to stop him.
Not when she was his mission.
He took a slow step forward into her space, crowding her into the wall. Her breath hitched, stomach twisting fearfully. His cold flesh hand brushed against her waist before his fingers dug into her hip.
“Please…”
Her feet left the ground as he yanked her close and hauled her over his shoulder. She yelped, struggling against him, but his metal arm hissed as it circled her waist and locked in place. The man moved like smoke, slipping easily in and out of her hotel room without a sound. She sobbed as she writhed on top of him.
Panic surged in her veins, deep and piercing. She couldn’t escape his grip. And she couldn’t call for help. The Soldier would kill anyone who interfered with his mission, whether he wanted to or not. And she couldn’t bear the thought of doing that to someone.
She was trapped.
When she escaped, her only hope was staying hidden. But now it was too late.
The Soldier walked in steady silence, his heavy duty boots barely crunching against the pavement. “Soldat-” She grunted, her nails digging into the leather suit on his back.
She could reach for his belt. She could grab his gun. But he knew she wouldn’t. They all did. Because that was the whole point of sending the Soldier after her. They knew she would never hurt him.
She couldn’t even imagine it.
“Please listen to me-” She gasped, his shoulder digging into her stomach and stealing her breath. “None of this is real- you can come with me-”
But it was useless. The man inside couldn’t hear her. Not really.
He was trapped in the prison that was his body.
She could see it in his eyes, the fight, the cloudy daze. She could see the way his fingers twitched and his breath rose and fell quickly. Deep down he knew what he was doing, and god did he want to stop, but he just couldn’t.
A black suv parked in the alleyway behind her motel beeped to life. He laid her out in the back seat and grabbed her wrists. She heard the sound of duct tape tearing before she saw it.
She tried to scramble back but he caught her ankle and yanked her back to the edge of the seat. “Don’t do this- I’m begging you-” She wept, the sticky tape pressing into her skin as he taped her wrists together.
She reached out, her trembling fingers brushing his mask, long dark strands of hair tickling her knuckles. His gaze shifted to hers, dull and clouded. His brows knit together as she begged, the words falling flat before him. Recognition was just beyond his reach.
A gloved hand gripped her jaw firmly, but without excessive force. He held her there for a moment, steadying her as she verged on hyperventilation. “Soldat…” She whispered, willing him to hear the humanity in her voice.
His thumb swept over her lips, pressing them together. She swallowed around the lump forming in her throat. The soldier watched her as he pressed the last piece of tape over her mouth, his palm smoothing it down over her lips.
Tears slipped down her cheeks, staining her flushed skin. He watched one travel and drip onto his glove before he pulled away.
He pushed her back and the door slammed shut, and she knew it was over. It was all over.
Authors Note: I hope you like it! Just a little something from my hundreds of thousands words length fics I've been writing about my man Bucky. Please please let me know if you're interested in more! I have a lot, haha! Comment and let me know what you thought! (Please be kind)
#writing#writeblr#bucky#bucky barnes fanfiction#bucky fanfic#james buchanan barnes#james bucky buchanan barnes#bucky barnes#mcu bucky barnes#bucky x reader#bucky x you#winter soldier#the winter soldier#falcon and the winter soldier#the winter solider x reader#the winter solider fanfiction#james bucky barnes#captain america civil war#captain america#captain america and the winter soldier#winter soldier x reader#winter soldier x you#winter soldier x y/n#winter soldier fanfiction#sebastian stan#thunderbolts#tfatws
324 notes
·
View notes
Text
Retired John Price with a Younger Wife 4
CW: MDNI, sex occurs
John Price x Reader x Rest of TF141
I couldn’t for the life of me find a way to write in the smut for Gaz and Ghost so I’m trying to make it up here with little snippets! But I think I have an idea of how I want it to go, but I just need to work on writing it out
Part One Part Two Part Three
Stray dogs always come back running once they catch the scent of something they want
Soap always answers the call for when his services are needed. All Price has to do is send him a time and a date and he’ll always receive a thumbs up in response. It’s almost comical how after every hookup, Soap is eagerly looking at the calendar to see the next available date he can come.
You love him because of his mouth. The way he eagerly eats you out as if it’s his last meal, and not to mention that he always wants to make sure he’s gotten a taste of your sweet cunt somewhere during your time together. The way he calls you “Bonnie,” every time you do something he likes (which is practically everything). How he always makes you laugh with his sense of humor as he talks about anything and everything. There’s been nights where you two have been talking about your lives and when you look at the clock you realize that it’s almost 5 a.m. With him, laughter never ends.
Stray dogs always return back to the hand that feeds them
Gaz always finds a reason to end up at your house. From wanting to watch the game with John to wanting to check in on you, and somehow that always ends up with you two in you and John’s bedroom (could you even call it that anymore?) going at it like rabbits in heat.
You love him because of his gentleness. How he always checks in on you before he moves, and how he praises you for being “his pretty girl”. How he always offers to finish you off with his mouth or hands if he felt that you didn’t receive the satisfaction that he felt that you deserved. And when you guys are done, he’s always quick to fetch you some water and usher you to the bathroom. There’s been nights where John heads to bed early, and you and Gaz are telling each other about your deepest secrets and wishes. You can’t even help it, with the way he’s offers you comfort and never judges. With him, you feel like you’ll never have to hide behind a mask.
Now that he’s gotten a taste of her, he’s starting to make their home his.
While Soap and Gaz always returned to their own homes with their tails tucked in between their legs, Ghost always found a way to stay the night. From wanting to give you a massage, a bath, and order some takeout Ghost managed to make the guest bedroom his own. It becomes the norm for you and Price, where you two always set aside a plate for him and you start buying more than you normally do to supplement the extra body. You’re not sure if it’s the food you buy that makes him the animal he is in bed. Where he has you put into a mating press and loves telling you about how tight your cunt is. Where he always seems to want to have you crying from overstimulation before he finally calls it a night.
But you love him because he’s always there, like a shadow. He’ll always accompany you everywhere you go, no matter how boring it may be. Even if you’re not in a mood to be talkative, Ghost doesn’t mind, he’ll smell the roses with you and admire how simple life is when he’s not out there in the battlefield. You don’t need to worry about anything because you know that he’ll always take care of it. With him, you know that he’ll always be there for you even in silence.
But you would always choose your husband first. John is the man you swore to spend the rest of your life with. And he was the best of all three worlds. John could make you laugh till you turned red with his jokes. Those secrets you told Gaz? John knew them by your sixth month anniversary and was always already to just listen to whatever you needed to say. And your shadow? John had that job first, he was always one step behind you ready to assist when needed. All he needed to do was just look at your eyes and he knew when you needed him.
On the special occasions where he bought viagra, he always made you were feeling good. He would move softly in you, cherishing the sounds of your moans as you clutched onto the pillows. Price would always give your cunt some love with his mouth or fingers. He always made sure to praise you after every orgasm. He would be rough when he could tell all you wanted was just to be fucked stupid. But even you guys knew that these three men were worth adding to your life.
So on the 5th month anniversary since starting this new hookup sessions, John invites the men back to his house on the premise of a barbecue. It is near the end, where John finally tells the men that you and him are thinking of selling the small dainty house. Before they can say anything, you give them a smile, the same smile that all of those men fell in love with, and speak.
“This house would be quite cramped for all five of us, don’t you guys think?”
#!oldmanprice#call of duty#john price x reader#tf 141 x reader#gaz x reader#soap x reader#ghost x reader#simon riley x reader#john soap mctavish x reader#kyle gaz garrick x reader#cod smut#call of duty fanfic#cod x you#cod x reader#tf 141 x you#tf141 x reader#tf141 x you#cod x fem!reader#cod fanfic#simon ghost riley#johnny soap mactavish#kyle gaz garrick#john price#call of duty x female reader#call of duty x you#call of duty x reader#!diamondwrites#divider by saradika graphics#poly tf141#poly 141
179 notes
·
View notes
Note
🌹
A little more DC for you since you liked the other one so much xx -- send a rose 🌹 and I'll post a snippet from a wip
Billy stepped forward, face set. "I need to talk to Batman."
Robin smiled kindly. "Let me see if I can help you first. Is it about your parents or guardians? Do you live in this building?"
Billy shook his head. "I'm from Fawcett City. I have a message for Batman from Captain Marvel."
Robin stared at him. "How did you get to Gotham?"
"Train."
"By yourself?"
Billy glared. "Are you gonna help me or not? I came all this way!" He gestured. He really didn’t want to grab a bus to Metropolis. It was late. He would probably have to sleep somewhere in the city first.
"What's the message?"
"It's for Batman."
“No Bats here,” a deep, mechanical voice stated.
Robin grabbed Billy’s arm and pulled him behind. Billy turned and stared up at the tall figure as he stepped off from the ledge of the building and closer to the boys. He was wearing a full face metal helmet in a gleaming red color. Billy spotted the gun in his hand and stepped further behind Robin.
“Picking out your replacement, Replacement? How proactive.”
Robin was tense, arms spread defensively in front of Billy. “What do you want, Hood?”
“You’re in my territory, birdie.”
“We’re in Gotham Heights. Park Row is two blocks east,” Robin returned, voice tense.
“Close enough,” the man growled.
Robin tilted his head. “Fine. We’ll go.”
“Kid stays.”
“He’s not from Gotham,” Robin quickly returned.
“I have a message for Batman!” Billy piped in.
“Oh, really?” the stranger drawled.
“And he’s probably on his way. So you should go if you’re a bad guy.” He turned to Robin. “Is he a bad guy?” Billy whispered loudly.
The man huffed through the mechanical mask. “You’re really not from around here. I’m the Red Hood.”
“I’m Billy Batson.”
Robin looked over his shoulder at Billy. Both heroes stared at him for a long moment.
“Seriously?” Robin asked.
Billy nodded.
#dc#gotham#red hood#jason todd#robin#tim drake#billy batson#captain marvel#shazam#batman#send a rose
184 notes
·
View notes
Note
also 🌹
hiiiiiii (waves at uu with hands and feet) . i know the ask game requests just ONE sentence of a RANDOM wip but i do what i want
Zhou Xu braced his knees and stood up. The movement itself signified a thick fatigue lining his bones, but the play of his brows was easy. He crossed over to Kexing, picking up the plate with dates Kexing was holding. He tickled him under the jaw. “The great Wen Kexing…” Zhou smiled and let it trail off there, because even the most confident men had their limits. Kexing understood without Zhou Xu finishing the sentence.
this is from the same wip as the last excerpt (: <3 <3 <3 its also what i originally considered for the no-context condition of that game but it didnt seem to be mysterious enough. though i dont know if the other snippet i settled on in the end is much mysterious either huehe. at least there is the birth of a calf
send me a rose for a snippet
#i had to go through hoops to find that stupid post in my reblogs!!!!! TVVVVVVVT pls appreciate my efforts#and this is why we always tag our posts! (:(:(:#(buries head in my arms and cries)#(okay it wasnt that bad. but oh wow i was active in july!!! O:)#cryptid#ask game#send me a rose for a snippet#fanfiction ask game#muddling in words and stuff#inbox#the mutual tag#i cant remember . did i put my last wip snippet in the fandom tags????#i did!!!!! wowh im gutsy#word of honor#wenzhou#wen kexing#zhou zishu
3 notes
·
View notes
Note
🌹
just a sentence is too boring so im giving a snippet <3 have some mean mammon ->
“Oi! It’s me! Th’ hell ya locked the door for?! Open up!” Mammon, your supposed guide to all things Devildom, shouts at the top of his lungs. You wince.
Oh.
You scramble to your feet, interrupting the beginnings of a new assault on your door handle by opening it a smidge. Only half of your face shows, and you squint at the onslaught of light.
Mammon’s attention seems to perk, his head pushing forward, slouch straightening, and he gestures his hand at you. “Are ya tellin’ me ya ain’t even dressed yet?! Lords, Lucifer’s gonna kill me! Ya humans are so incompetent, I swear!”
You glare at him, then promptly shut the door in his face.
Basked in the darkness of your room again, you head towards your bed – and jump when the door slams open behind you.
“What the fu–” you begin, but Mammon interrupts you.
“Ohh-hohoho, ya gotta lotta nerve, human! Who d’ya think you are?” He snaps, and you turn to face him – but he’s already plopped his dandy ass at the end of your bed.
“Who the hell do you think you are?” you mimic. Immediately, you regret your words, remembering he’s a demon, he could kill you in two seconds flat, but he just lets out a snort.
The room is still relatively dark, and when you squint to focus on him, his eyes seem to have a hazy golden glow. Eerie.
Cool, but eerie.
“Ya blind or somethin’? Dumb too? Ya need me ‘ta help ya waddle ‘round on yer two feet?” His grin isn’t kind. It’s nearing sadistic, bullyish.
“Jesus fucking Christ, dude,” you mutter in disbelief.
// not sure if i'll ever finish this wip, even though i have a lot of it done!! WIP is from a piece where MC/you decide not to go up the attic stairs! It's horror<3
#tysm for the ask hehe<3#obey me#obey me fanfiction#mammonxreader#obey me mc#obey me mammon#ask#ask game#send me a rose emoji n i'll give you a sentence or snippet of a wip <3
21 notes
·
View notes
Note
cruel intentions anon here 🥹 can u share something with us? like a small snippet or a scene you've scraped or idk just some ideas? I've read the fic twice but I fear I'm fr addicted to them 😭
Well I'll admit I don't have too much since I've started focusing on only one project at a time, but I have a bit of a oneshot that goes with this pic

Set a few weeks after the, ahem, conclusion of The Bet. Nothing smutty posted here unfortunately, but it will be. Oh it will be smutty. Clarke does not leave Lexa looking like that for no reason 😌
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
You're whistling.
Honest to God, actually whistling.
A jaunty little tune devoid of melody and structure. Nothing more than a slow sling of notes that doesn't really have any direction in particular, because the point isn't the song itself.
It's the mood.
And that mood is… happy.
So, so fucking happy.
Terrifyingly, unmitigatedly, euphorically fucking happy.
It's weird and you hate it, and it's embarrassing to even think about, but you wouldn't trade this feeling for anything.
And really, who could blame you. Not when life has never been this good. All rose colored glasses and kiss-filled memories that dance like bubbly champagne around the empty space in your head.
You genuinely don't think anyone has ever been as blissful in the existence of the world as you are right now when the doors of the elevator slide open, and you swagger your exceptional ass into your penthouse's bottom floor.
You drop your purse on the bench and toss your keys on the countertop, praying it leaves a scratch for your stepmother to have a stroke over. Just for the hell of it. You undo the clip and feel your hair untwist in tousled ringlets draped sensually across your shoulders.
You whistle a few more notes, and contemplate grabbing something to eat, before deciding there's nothing else in the world that you need.
Because you're in love.
And it's that love that keeps you smiling as you walk down the hall, adding an extra click in your steps just to hear the crispness reverberate off the walls you don't pay for. It's that same love that makes your heart race as you slam the antique handles down and throw open the parlor doors with a flourish, lightheaded and so goddamn euphoric you would fucking hate the chipperness for them if it were anyone else.
It's that love that makes you so stupid that you don't even bother to look around before your eyes land on her. Beautiful and formidable as she stands behind the bar. Her lips purse at the shotgun bang of the doors, but she doesn't even jump, and her control next to your chaos makes you love her even more.
“Miss me?” you burst in with a deep chested purr.
Because you're in love and you love her and you absolutely want her to know it.
You just… don't know how to fucking say it.
Not yet.
Grey-green eyes widen like a warning shot, darting from you to the corner of the room and right back again, so quickly you would've missed it if you hadn't been staring quite so hard.
“Not particularly, no,” she snips in that contemptuous drawl of hers without missing a beat, and pops the cork back on a bottle of gin that costs more than your semester's tuition.
You, belatedly, follow her eyes to the corner of the room and see your housemaid diligently running a duster across the frame of your great-grandfather's portrait.
Fuck.
Your heart drops right down to your asshole, but you send up a silent prayer of thanks because at least you hadn't tacked on the pet name ‘lover’ like you'd been using so much as of late.
That's been the closest you could get.
But Sherri doesn't seem to have heard you. Or at least she doesn't pay you any mind, not having paused from her work for even a fraction of a second at your grand entrance and social faux pas.
You stand frozen, staring at Lexa still working her magic behind the bar, adding a splash of something red to a drink before taking a sip and grimacing at its taste.
She smacks her lips and shakes her head and sets the drink back down like it's personally offended her.
You frown at the whole display because you know she's not even a gin girl.
“Sherri,” she calls in that sweet little voice she reserves for the people she actually cares if they like her.
“Yes, Miss Lexa,” your faithful maid answers, immediately stopping to look over.
Huh.
Apparently her hearing is just fine.
Delicate fingers discreetly land on your stomach as she passes, trailing down to your hips and snagging the bottom hem of your sweater, yanking just so to send you stumbling several feet away from the door and out of the way.
“You should take the evening off,” Lexa says once she's left you off-balance in her wake. “Go enjoy life for a change.”
“Oh, I don't think—” Sherry starts but cuts off at the soft tisk from Lexa's lips.
“No. No. Now, there is simply nothing to think about, because that was not a suggestion, my chérie.”
You smile at the lilt of her teasing. Always in awe, because for the life of you, you'll never understand how she manages to be such a condescending bitch while still sounding so innocent. So warm and pleasant.
And to be fair, it really hadn't been a suggestion.
You stand forgotten in the late afternoon shadows and watch as she closes in on your maid like a huntress. All sculpted calves and four inch heels. Hands tucked daintily behind her back.
“But your mother—”
“Will never know,” Lexa whispers, bringing one long, sexy finger up to press against the pout of her smile. “I can keep a secret if you can…”
Sherri sighs in her defeat and shakes her head with the fondness of an exasperated mother, and you wonder if there's anyone this girl can't charm off their feet.
Lexa preens.
“Good. Now, a little birdy told me it was your birthday this weekend.” She pauses just long enough for your maid to nod in surprise. “And, well… I guess I just couldn't help myself.”
You cross your arms and make yourself comfy by settling a shoulder against the wall. More than thrilled to just sit back and take in the show as this fucking magician pulls out a bracelet from goddamn nowhere.
She hushes the woman's flustered coughs, ignores hands slipping through greying red hair and automatic dismissals of, “no, Miss Lexa, this is—I couldn't possibly.” She soothes it all with honeyed words of reliability and sacrifice and devotion to our comfort, all while clasping the understated but opulent chain to an overworked wrist, connected to a woman who doesn't seem to quite know what to do with herself. Nimble fingers twist and turn the apparently well-thought-out gift so it lays perfectly in place, admiring her own exquisite taste in jewelry more than anything, you already know.
You wonder when the hell she got so thoughtful.
She ushers the woman out with a firm, guiding hand to her back, mouth tipped in a demure smile as she assures her, this is exactly what she wants.
The parlor doors close much more gently than when you'd entered through them, and she spins gracefully on her heel, looking so fucking pleased with herself.
You hold her eyes.
Uncross your arms.
And slowly, loudly, begin to clap.
“Well aren't you made of sugar and spice and everything nice, Miss Lexa.”
She pinches the sides of her skirt and fans them out, dipping into a mere suggestion of a curtsey.
You move as though to reach for her because it's been six hours too long since you've had your hands on that body, but her pleasantries drop away as she sends you a scowl and slips just out of reach.
“Next time, have a touch more decorum when entering a room,” she sighs over the authoritative clack-clack of her heels. “I had just gotten that bracelet. Didn't even have a chance to wear it out yet.”
Ah.
Now that makes more sense.
Fuck, you love how good she is at thinking on her feet.
“No one told you to kiss her ass with jewelry, for fucks sake,” you mutter despite the efficacy of her brilliance because really, she always had to be so damn extra about everything.
“It was all I had, and thanks to someone,” she says with a pointed edge, “I didn't exactly have time to figure out another distraction. And since I'm fairly certain she at least already knows we're sleeping together, I'd much rather stay in her good graces. I can handle losing a bracelet in exchange for…”
She trails off and vaguely gestures to the air between you.
The thought alone of someone else knowing makes you want to vomit.
You cross your arms tighter.
“Why do you think that she knows?”
That evil fucking brow of her flits up when she looks at you like you're an idiot.
“Because you're not quiet, and she's not stupid, and half of Greenwich knows what you sound like when you come.”
You grit your teeth and wonder if it's worth reminding her who came on your fingers while loudly calling your name last night, but when she struts her perfectly bubble shaped ass back over to the bar, you ultimately decide that, no, it is in fact not worth it.
Apparently done with the minor complication of your eagerness and the conversion as a whole, she picks up the drink you'd all but forgotten and holds it out at arm's length, letting it dangle from the mere tips of her elegant fingers.
“For you, my darling.”
You still haven't figured out exactly what she's playing at when she calls you that, because you know she is never sweet for nothing. You know there has to be a barb in there somewhere. Some sort of slight on your character or something. She shouldn't just call you ‘darling’ for no reason… But for the life of you, when she looks at you like this - like you're the only thing that matters in her broad and expansive world - you can't figure what it could possibly be.
“Gin and… cherries?” you ask when you take the glass and give a tiny sniff of the drink.
She smiles indulgently and twists away to retake her place behind the bar, and suddenly her grimace from her sip before makes sense.
She hates sweet drinks.
Well.
Unless she's kissing the taste of them from your lips.
“So is this what we're doing now?” You examine your drink closer. It doesn't look poisoned anyway. “It's this what we've become?”
She hums in question as she picks up a second shaker and stirs the contents. You watch her grab a martini glass and begin to pour her own crystal clear drink and, yes, that's much more her style.
You truly are fucking a master mixologist. Which you suppose is bound to happen considering she's been making drinks for one person or another since the tender age of thirteen…
“My kingdom for some context, darling,” she murmurs when you're too enamored to answer, popping an olive into her glass and taking a healthy sized pull, moaning at the taste.
You down half your bramble in one go and traipse yourself around the back of the bar.
Setting the drink down at her side, you put your empty hands to much better use. Drift your fingers across the soft dip of her back and trace her hips, holding her steady as you press in and drape yourself along the length of her.
“Acting like a vintage married couple,” you clarify in a whisper. You reach up and pull her hair aside to expose the delicious expanse of her neck, and you wonder in what lifetime you actually managed to do something good enough to deserve the way she tips her head to the side to give you more access.
You mouth slow, wet kisses along the sensitive spot just behind her ear as she sighs, “Is that what this is?”
“You tell me, pretty girl.” You smile against her skin when she shudders at the name. “Waiting for me to come home to you. Having a drink ready. Did you make me a special little dinner to eat as well?”
And you're still getting used to this.
This thing with her you've been playing at for the last couple of weeks. This truce or whatever it is that leaves you so off balance you never know which end is up.
Because you've never had something like this.
Because where you expect a scoff and a rebuff of your entire charade, she only presses harder into you with a sensual groan. Where you expect her to fling your hands away and shove you off of her entirely as she would have before, she merely sets down her glass, and kisses your lips, and covers your hands with her own.
"Not in your wildest dreams, my love," she whispers with an adoring grin, and kisses you deeper again.
#anon#cruel intentions au#CI snippet#also thank you for reading I'm so glad you like it#CI is my lil weirdo baby fic and I love them they're so awful#thank you 💕#nice things
54 notes
·
View notes
Note
🌹
Send me a 🌹 and I'll post one random sentence from one random WIP
“I can walk,” he’d snapped to the bulkier one, but it had been Astoria that turned back to answer him.
some when we're alone chapter five for everyone wondering where it went!
thanks for the ask <3
1 note
·
View note
Note
Hi! As Valentine's day is coming... If you feel comfortable with it, would you write an Aaron x girlfriend reader spending Valentine's... actually night together after a hard day at work? P.S.: I really like your stories!
A Valentine's Surprise
pairing: Aaron Taylor Johnson x female!reader
word count: 1595 | requests are open (send requests, I will gladly answer them all)
Aaron Taylor Johnson Masterlist
After a grueling day at work, you drag your feet up the stairs to your apartment, mind cluttered with endless meetings and a never-ending to-do list. As you fumble with your keys, a soft glow emanates from within, accompanied by the gentle strains of your favorite love song. The door swings open before you can even insert the key, and there he is—Aaron, his eyes warm and inviting, a tender smile curving his lips.
“Hey, love,” he greets softly, stepping aside to let you in. “I know today wasn’t easy. Come in and let me take care of you tonight.”
You set your bag down, still tired, but something in his gaze sparks a little hope—a promise of comfort and tenderness after the storm of the day. “Aaron… you really shouldn’t have,” you murmur, leaning into his embrace.
“Nonsense,” he replies, gently brushing a stray hair from your face. “Tonight, it’s all about you. I’ve planned a little something special.”
Curiosity piqued, you follow him into the softly lit dining area. The room is transformed: flickering candles are arranged carefully on the table, and a trail of rose petals leads from the door to a small table set for two. A vase of fresh red roses stands proudly at the center, its fragrance mingling with the delicate aroma of the meal he’s prepared.
“Wow,” you whisper, a smile tugging at your lips despite the exhaustion. “This is… beautiful.”
Aaron’s eyes twinkle with mischief and affection. “I wanted to remind you how loved you are. I know you’ve been pushing yourself too hard lately, and you deserve a night just for you.”
He pulls out your chair for you with a flourish, and you settle in, your eyes never leaving his. As you both take your seats, he pours you a glass of wine. The clink of crystal and the soft murmur of the background music create an intimate bubble around you.
“So, tell me about your day,” he says, leaning forward with genuine concern. “I want to hear every detail—if you feel like sharing.”
You laugh softly, the sound mingling with the gentle music. “Every detail? It was just a mess of deadlines, meetings, and then… this.” You gesture around the room, your eyes softening as they meet his. “It means a lot that you did all this for me.”
Aaron smiles. “It’s nothing, really. I just want you to feel cherished.” He pauses, then continues, “After dinner, I have another surprise planned… but let’s enjoy this moment first.”
The conversation flows as naturally as the wine. You recount snippets of your chaotic day, and he listens intently, offering little jokes and words of encouragement. “You’re incredible,” he insists, his voice low and sincere. “I know it’s hard sometimes, but you handle everything with such grace. I admire you so much.”
At one point, he reaches across the table, taking your hand in his. “I want you to know that tonight is about more than just relaxing—it’s about celebrating us, our connection, and the love we share. I’ve been thinking a lot about how I can show you just how important you are to me.”
You squeeze his hand gently, feeling the warmth of his touch. “Aaron, you make me feel so safe, so loved. Even on my worst days, you’re here to remind me that there’s beauty in the chaos.”
As the meal comes to an end, the candles have burned low, casting a soft glow that hints at the transition to the next part of the evening. Aaron stands and offers his hand. “Come with me,” he murmurs. “I have something else planned.”
Curiosity and anticipation flutter inside you as you follow him down the hallway to the bedroom. The door opens onto a room transformed by Aaron’s careful planning—a sanctuary bathed in soft, ambient light. The bed, draped in silky sheets, is adorned with even more rose petals that mirror those in the dining room. A subtle scent of vanilla and lavender fills the air, creating a sense of calm and intimacy.
Aaron walks to the center of the room, his eyes never leaving yours. “I wanted to create a space where you can truly relax,” he explains. “I’ve set everything up so that tonight, you can forget about the world and just be here, with me.”
He steps closer, his hand cupping your cheek as he searches your eyes for permission. “I want to make you feel cherished—every inch of you. Tonight, I want to show you how deeply I love you.”
Before you can respond, he leans in, capturing your lips in a kiss that’s soft at first, then deepening with an intensity that seems to echo all the unspoken words of care and desire. The kiss is both a promise and an invitation, drawing you into the moment completely.
“Aaron…” you whisper against his lips, the sound trembling with a mix of anticipation and emotion.
“Shh,” he murmurs, his tone tender. “Just let go. Tonight is our night.”
Gently, he leads you to the edge of the bed, laying you down on the plush sheets as if you were the most precious treasure in his world. He takes a moment to admire you—your beauty accentuated by the soft light, your eyes shining with a mix of wonder and desire. “You look so beautiful tonight,” he says, his voice husky with emotion.
You smile, feeling a blush of warmth spread across your cheeks. “I feel beautiful when I’m with you,” you reply, your voice barely above a whisper.
Aaron reaches for a small table on the bedside, unveiling a neatly wrapped box. “I wanted to surprise you,” he explains. “I’ve been saving this for the right moment.” With care, he unties the ribbon, revealing a delicate piece of jewelry—a pendant that catches the light in a way that makes it almost magical. “This is for you. Every time you wear it, I want you to remember tonight, and know that my heart is always with you.”
Touched by his thoughtfulness, you trace the design of the pendant with your fingers. “It’s perfect,” you murmur, your eyes glistening. “Thank you, Aaron. I love it... and I love you.”
He smiles, leaning down to capture your lips in another kiss, this one filled with the promise of more. “I love you too, more than words can ever say.”
The rest of the evening unfolds in a slow, deliberate exploration of intimacy. Aaron’s hands and lips trace soft, loving paths along your skin, each touch igniting sparks of desire that melt away the remnants of the day’s stress. “I’ve missed this—us,” he whispers as he caresses your shoulder, his touch both reassuring and electrifying.
You respond with soft laughter and whispered words of affection, “I’ve missed you too, Aaron. You make me feel… alive.”
Between kisses and tender caresses, your conversation continues, as intimate and soulful as the physical closeness you share. “Tell me,” he murmurs, “what do you need from me tonight? How can I make you feel even more loved?”
You take a moment, your gaze drifting to the shadows dancing on the walls. “Just hold me,” you reply softly. “Just… make me feel like everything’s going to be alright.”
And so, he holds you. The night becomes a tapestry of whispered confessions, gentle laughter, and the quiet murmur of two hearts finding solace in each other’s embrace. The world outside—the chaos of deadlines, meetings, and exhaustion—fades away until there is nothing but the soft glow of the candlelight, the rhythmic beating of your hearts, and the shared promise of a love that heals and nurtures.
Time seems to stretch, each moment a blend of passion and tenderness, until the peak of your shared intimacy arrives like a gentle crescendo. In the dim light, every kiss and touch is a conversation of its own—a dialogue of desire, comfort, and unyielding affection.
Aaron’s whispers fill the space between you. “I want you to know, every time I look at you, I’m reminded of how lucky I am. You’re everything I’ve ever wanted.”
Your reply is a soft sigh, punctuated by the closeness of his embrace. “I never knew I could feel so safe, so cherished. Tonight… you’ve given me a love that feels endless.”
In that sacred space, the layers of stress and fatigue peel away, leaving only the raw, undeniable connection between you. Every touch is a reassurance, every whispered word a promise that this night—this moment—is a testament to the love you share. The surprise that Aaron prepared wasn’t just the carefully arranged setting or the beautiful gift; it was the depth of his care, the sincerity of his intentions, and the willingness to bare his soul for you to see.
As the night deepens, and the soft glow of dawn edges the horizon, you lie in the quiet afterglow, entwined in each other’s arms. The remnants of the evening—a scattered petal here, a half-whispered phrase there—serve as gentle reminders of the night’s magic.
Aaron brushes a kiss across your hair, murmuring, “Every day with you is a gift, but tonight… tonight has been my favorite.”
You close your eyes, a contented smile on your lips, and whisper, “Thank you, Aaron. For the dinner, the surprise, for making me feel so loved. I couldn’t ask for anything more.”
In the gentle embrace of the early morning, with the promise of a new day on the horizon, you both drift into a peaceful slumber—hearts full, souls intertwined, and the memory of a Valentine’s night that will linger in your hearts forever.
#aaron taylor johnson x reader#aarontaylorjohnson#aaron taylor johnson#atj x reader#atj fic#Aaron taylorjohson x femreader#sergei kravinoff x reader#sergei kravinoff fanfiction#kraven x reader#sergei kravinoff#pietro maximoff#pietro marvel#pietro maximoff reader#tangerine#bullet train tangerine#tangerine bullet train#tangerine x reader#tangerine x fem!reader#tangerine x you#bullet train tangerine x reader#tangerine bullet train x reader#bullet train#bullet train 2022#bullet train movie#bullet train x reader#atj#atj x fem!reader#aaron taylor johnson x fem!reader#tangerine smut#tangerine atj
92 notes
·
View notes
Note
I adore your Cats Among Wolves series, I’m so excited for when the WIPs are posted! I know you get lots of requests for them, but if you come across any more of those snippets that you’d enjoy posting, I’d love more to tide me over until the next one gets officially posted! I keep hoping that checking your AO3 daily will somehow make it come out faster, but somehow, I don’t think that strategy is working 🤔… Oh well, I love reading the new chapters to your other works too!
Sending lots of encouragement with my invisible pom poms!
Rose has just finished a beta pass through Cedric & Axel's fic! Which means I now need to write another 3K minimum, because she found all my plot holes. Everybody say thank you to Rose for improving my writing immeasurably.
In the meantime, have a snippet!
The stairways and corridors are distinctly chilly after the warmth of the hot springs cavern, but the bedroom Gaetan leads them to is cozy, with thick curtains on the bed and a bearskin rug on the floor. One of the walls radiates a surprising amount of heat. “‘S the oven chimney,” Gaetan explains, jerking a thumb at it. “Get some sleep, yeah? I’ll bring up some more potions for when the last dose wears off.” He steps closer as Letho puts Cedric down on the bed - closer, in fact, than Cedric can recall the little omega getting to him pretty much ever before. Cedric’s always given Gaetan his space, and Gaetan has seemed to appreciate that. But now he pats Cedric on the arm, frowning down at him. “Don’t die, you bastard,” he says gruffly. “Not when you’re the only decent alpha our School’s got.” He and Letho leave while Cedric is still trying to find a response to that. Axel clambers into the bed and pulls the curtains closed, curling around Cedric carefully. “Don’t die,” he whispers. “Don’t leave me.” Cedric manages to shift until his fingers are tangled with Axel’s, and squeezes hard. He’ll do his best.
127 notes
·
View notes