He’s Mine
Title: He’s Mine
Fandom: The Traveling Wilburys
Pairing: Bob Dylan/George Harrison
Rating: Gen
Word Count: 2402
Summary: There was a woman standing in the hyacinth flowerbed. An in-universe AU of my WIP Dylarrison fanfic “Planting Trees”; things don’t happen/get revealed like that in the main fic. The gist is the following: Bob is between a broken engagement and a new album that needs to be written and escaped to a mansion he bought in the middle of an English forest. There he meets George, who has explanations for everything. But some things are for Bob to be found out on his own.
A/N: Part 20 of my Daily Fanfic Chocolates calendar :D For the prompt “’my current partner is a huge asshole and I need a reason to break up with them, so will you pretend to be my possessive and violent ex’ + Dylarrison” sent to me by both @savoy-brown-shoe and @siliconpine! I put a little twist on it, but I hope that’s alright! ^^ Please enjoy ❤
(links to AO3 and the DFC masterpost are in the reblogs!)
There was a woman standing in the hyacinth flowerbed.
Bob knew so, because he spotted her first on his walk with George through the garden. George had wanted to teach him more about the plants growing here and their proper care, and Bob had found it all too easy to agree.
Instead of learning about flowers now, however, they approached the woman, who just remained where she stood as they got closer.
It was the fur coat that should have told him, Bob later thought in retrospective.
It was the honey-voiced yet sharp “Bob!” that made him realize that trouble was ahead.
Before the bafflement left him, enabling him to utter the important question of what the hell she was doing here, in England, George already spoke up.
“And who’s that, standing in my hyacinths?”
George frowned and Bob had never seen him so pissed off before. Huh. Maybe he did have a chance of getting out alive of this after all.
“That’s... Macy. The woman I cheated on my ex-fiancée with like an idiot.”
George halted, then nodded knowingly when he remembered – one of the few things they both remembered of their recent drunk late-night conversation.
“Macy–” George started, then paused for a moment, not knowing her last name and regretting the loss of emphasis his address had because of it. “Firstly, I would kindly ask you to get out of my hyacinths.”
She shrugged carelessly, but stepped out of the flowerbed at last. Bob expected George to relax thereafter, but he was clearly mistaken. The tension in George’s shoulders only seemed to increase as he stepped closer towards her.
“And secondly, I would ask you to leave right now and not return, before I get really angry.”
She laughed.
She laughed in his face and showed off teeth that suddenly frightened Bob. They looked canine, and for a split moment, he could have sworn that her eyes flashed yellow and her fingernails were literally sharp as razor blades. He instinctively took as step back.
“Sure, dearie.”
She gave George a put-on lascivious grin and once-over that made Bob want to gag. She was gorgeous, yes, and it had been the last straw to doom his already doomed relationship, but now that he saw her in the daylight? Quite frankly, she was scaring him. And his list of reasons as to why currently kept growing by the minute.
“But I’m not gonna leave without dear Bobby here.”
She said it in a way that would have a bystander think that she was simply implying having a good time, but there was an undertone to her voice that told him that he was a dead man if he followed her. Potentially, literally dead.
“Well, sorry luv’, but I don’t think so.” George’s voice had dropped quiet, but it had a dangerous undertone.
“Dear ‘Bobby’ here... he isn’t going anywhere. Lest of all with you.”
A low, rumbling sound started to fill the air, and it took Bob a handful of seconds to realize that Macy was growling.
“Is that so?” she asked, and when had she moved to stand face to face to him?
Suddenly, faster than his vision could comprehend, a hand grabbed him by the collar of his shirt and he was being yanked forward.
“You’ll thank me, trust me,” she said with a honeyed voice as her grip on Bob’s shirt tightened.
She only got one step farther before George stood right in front of them, hissing. And fucking hell, had his teeth always been so damn sharp?
“He’s mine, and you are going to let go off him this instant, or you’re not going to leave this place alive.”
For some reason, Bob knew that he wasn’t making empty threats and a shiver ran down his spine.
Without a word of warning, he found himself yanked out of Macy’s hold and pushed behind George and thereby out of her reach. Which was good, because the very next moment, George was already pinning her to a tree with both his hands as she struggled against his grasp. Her fur coat seemed to blur, and Bob squinted, not sure if he had gone insane or was simply panicking.
But in the end, there was no denying the fact that Macy, the woman, had just turned into a huge... wolf?
The wolf was still struggling against George, but his grip didn’t only look vice-like but seemingly was it, as well, and he didn’t let go of her once.
“You will leave this place. You won’t ever return here, either.” He leaned in and let his teeth flash again, staring sternly into the eyes of the wolf who Bob was only then beginning to comprehend was Macy.
The wolf – Macy – turned her head to the side, trying to evade his gaze.
“He is mine to enjoy and you won’t get a bite of him, not now, nor ever.” George turned his head and gave Bob a soft smile that made Bob get weak in the knees for a multitude of reasons. He wasn’t anyone’s anything but he wouldn’t correct George; he could see what game he was playing. “I know a good thing when I see one and you? Are late.”
George leaned in and bared his teeth again, and for the first time since Macy’s unexpevted appearance, the cogwheels in Bob’s head began to turn, and he finally, finally began to understand a good amount of things about George – including the reason why Macy had overtaken herself when she decided to challenge him.
George was not the janitor’s son. Or perhaps he was, but then his dad must have died a very, very long time ago.
Bob had a lot of questions, but all of them disappeared to the back of his mind when George simply picked up the wolf – Macy – and marched her right off the grounds. Hesitantly, unwilling to end up being torn into literal pieces, Bob followed the two of them. He should probably be running, leave before George returned, but for some reason, he wasn’t worried about him. He found that he was the opposite of scared. He felt save with George.
George’s hold on Macy didn’t loosen for a single moment, and by the time the house behind them had noticeably shrunk in size, she was starting to transform back into her human shape.
“Rrrrrgh – let go of me!” were her first words, but George just shrugged.
“You came into my house, young lady–” He grinned, but there was a dangerous glint in his eyes. “You play by my rules, and those are to be nice.”
She just snorted and he shook his head as if he were disappointed by her. “Trust me, I could have hurt you if I wanted to – and you really made me want to earlier – but... I won’t.”
She kicked against his shin then but he simply kept walking. Bob didn’t have words to describe what he was feeling right then, but it was an odd mixture of pride and awe and relief.
When George set her down, he kept hold of her with one hand, which seemed to be enough to keep her in place. That came as a relief to Bob since now she wasn’t only throwing George deadly glances, but him, as well. This time around, however, he didn’t take a step back. He remained where he stood with a safe distance to the two of them and kept watching.
“How sweet. Your food is already following you.” Macy laughed. “Does he know that if you want to, you can kill him? That he won’t be a forever-young rock star if you decide against keeping him?” She looked George in the eye and smiled. “You know that he used to be quite famous, right? Are you up to date on the music scene? Because that man was quite something... ten years ago or so.”
It’s a stab at him but Bob couldn’t have cared any less. George already knew who he was, had for a while. It didn’t matter. It wasn’t like George was going to make a go for his blood anyway. Bob was pretty sure of that, although he wouldn’t have been able to explain why.
“Or do you maybe want your own, personal... rough-voiced songbird?” Macy raised an eyebrow, looking genuinely interested now.
George remained silent for a moment, then shook his head.
“I don’t owe you an answer, and I hope you’re aware of that.”
She grinned. “But...?”
“He has other skills that are worth keeping him around for... for now.”
She laughed, and this time it sounded genuine. Meanwhile, George’s tone of voice wasn’t the only thing that had had a shiver run down Bob’s spine. No, much rather it was the implication of George’s lie that had caused Bob’s breath to hitch.
“Look, I’ve spent a lot of time and money following old Bobby here.” She looked around herself with an evaluating glance. She also seemed to see or smell something in the trees at their side, judging by her tilted head and suddenly narrowing eyes. “Allow me to go on a hunt on these grounds – I’m assuming they belong to the mansion? – and I’ll go. Sounds fair?”
George remained quiet for a moment, then nodded.
“I’d hardly call showing up on someone’s flowerbed and demanding his lover fair, but I see where you are coming from. But these are Bob’s grounds, not mine. You’ll need to get his permission.”
Their gazes met, and George nodded gently once Macy had turned her head to look at Bob.
She grinned, and her teeth were sharp, and Bob just wanted for her to be gone.
He lifted his shoulders in a slow shrug and murmured: “Sure, go ahead. But don’t kill off the entire forest population, alright?”
He already anticipated another one of her laughs, but instead, George spoke up again.
“You swear on your life to stand by your word? You get to hunt on the grounds today, but you won’t ever get closer to the mansion than this.” He pointed at the section of the road they were standing on. “And you won’t ever return here after today, nor follow Bob ever again?”
She looked back at Bob for a moment, then at George again, and smiled tightly.
“You have my word.”
George nodded and let go of her. She kept standing in front of him for a moment, considering her next move, and looked toward the forest again.
“Alright. Goodbye then.”
She turned around and left to their right, turning into her wolf form the very second she broke into a run.
George and Bob remained standing in the middle of the street for a long, silent moment.
“I... cheated on my ex-fiancée with a murderous wolf?” Bob finally managed to get out.
You told her I was your lover? was what he wanted to ask as well, but didn’t.
“Yes?” George eyed him carefully, waiting for the other shoe to drop and Bob starting to run away. He honestly wouldn’t have blamed him.
But that moment never came.
“Thank you, George. That was–” Bob met his eyes and gave him a weak smile. “Thank you.”
When neither of them said anything further, Bob pointed toward the mansion with a movement of his head. “Let’s get back, huh?”
They slowly made their way back, George constantly checking the woods to their sides for movement, but relieved that there was none, and Bob walking quietly next to him, mostly staring at the ground, lost in thought.
Back inside the mansion, however, Bob stopped walking the moment they both had crossed the threshold.
“You are not going to kill me. Even though you are a vampire or something like that and easily could.”
It wasn’t a question but a statement.
George took in Bob for a moment. He should have known Bob better, trusted him more. He wasn’t sure when he could ever have brought up the matter of “by the by, I’m undead”, though. It didn’t matter anymore anyway; Bob knew now. And he was still there and trusted him.
“I won’t. And yes I am and could, but I won’t. You don’t know how hard I tried not to, and now I found a way, and–”
“George, you’re babbling.”
Bob was smiling and George took a deep breath.
“I’m sure you have a few questions.”
“I have a great load of ‘em. But that can wait for later. For now, just– Thank you again. I didn’t know what Macy was till earlier, and you saved my life, literally.”
Also, you are really strong? And you said I was your lover in a way that convinced even me it was true for a second? was what Bob didn’t say but thought as he saw what had happened pass again in his mind’s eye. He had been a hell of a lucky bastard, having had George by his side when Macy had appeared.
He was a hell of a lucky bastard to have George by his side, full stop.
Even though it was as a friend and not, as George had implied for the sake of his subterfuge and keeping Bob safe, as a lover.
There was still the matter of George’s former fiancée.
And even that aside... Bob was unsure if George really reciprocated those – he would have had to admit to it to himself eventually anyway, so he might just do it today – feelings he was starting to develop for the other man.
George gave him a soft smile. “It’s alright.”
He looked at Bob with a concerned gaze, and only then did Bob realize that he was shaking.
George spoke up again. “I could go collect some herbs in the garden, but...” He shook his head. “I trust she’ll stay away from the mansion and, more importantly, you now, but... Better not take any risks.”
Bob raised an eyebrow in question as George’s gaze got lost in the distance and he scratched his chin.
“I think we have a tea in the kitchen that should do the job, though, as well.”
George smiled as he reached for Bob’s hand and took it in his.
“C’mon, let’s get something for the nerves.”
Bob followed him – trusting him with his life, in fact, and shaking more than before now that George’s colder hand held his own hand, gently.
15 notes
·
View notes