fulljudgement
fulljudgement
Uncharted Territory
165 posts
Do you regret taking the vow?
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fulljudgement · 14 minutes ago
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made this in protest of censorship
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fulljudgement · 4 days ago
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Hope everything turns out okay. 🫶
i'm going to be taking a short hiatus
there's a lot going on in my irl that requires my attention, and frankly the plagiarism and "inspiration" people have taken to me is putting a damper on my ability to focus.
you won't see any updates here or on ao3. patrons, i should be updating like normal on patreon.
asks will be turned off until i return.
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fulljudgement · 5 days ago
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forced creampie w/alejandro 🤠 (🌽 link)
this shit is always said about price, but alejandro also has shitty hips. a type of pain that sadly prevents him from fucking you nicley and making you as dumb on his cock as he wished he could. but that ain't preventing him from pleasuring you.
alejandro is down to let you ride him as much as you want. alowing you to use his cock as your own personal dildo. ans he fucking loves it. the way you jump up and down on his rock hard dick. your dress hastly pushed up your hips and down to let your boobs out.
the pleasure may fog his mind, hands unable to find a resting place, looming on your hips or groping your tits. but one thing does actually pop up clearly on his mind as you hump his dick: you have to get up, he's about to cum and if you don't get off, the little resolve he has left in that fucked-dumb state won't let him pick you up and get you off himself.
but when you tell him no, he regrets - let's be real, he doesn't - his decision of letting you use him and fucking without a condom. the obvious consecuence to this was him getting miked by your twitching walls, making him fill you up with his cum.
after that one, alejandro is going to fuck you raw every single time, he's obsessed creampie-ing you and a silly little condom isn't going to stop him.
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fulljudgement · 5 days ago
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simon who never had sisters growing up- not like johnny and kyle. simon who grew up with cruelty and hardness. simon who never truly had a stable female figure or influence in his life.
so when he starts dating you, he observes your every move like he's watching a documentary on an endangered species. he's in awe of everything you do. the simple routines that are ingrained into your life. things that most, if not all, women are accustomed to. he's especially mesmerised when he's watching you braid your hair. you must be some kind of sorceress, he thinks. it's some sacred art to him. begs you to teach him so that when- when, not if- you have a daughter he can take care of her hair the same way you can.
simon who just loves women and their little rituals and their softness.
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fulljudgement · 5 days ago
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“Easy, chica.”
He huffed it out under his breath, a grumble.
“Well, you wear too much gel,” you quip, scratching at a particular scale of hair—like some kind of reptile—with sudsy shampoo. You had been scraping at it for quite a few minutes, going through multiple rounds of it to break it all up, all the while he sat in the tub with crossed arms. He was way too big for the tub in your small apartment, sitting with his knees up and back stiff as you sat on the ledge behind him, wall against you. It was awkward, but you insisted.
“And I was only expecting a good fuck—” he hissed, but was cut off by your hand covering his eyes as water was poured on his head, preventing the soap from hitting his eyes.
“Im not letting you in bed covered in grime and Axe body spray, Alejandro. Work with me here and move your neck a little more.”
His chest tightened, warmth brewing in his gut. But not from arousal, anticipation—no, it was a tight coil of hot rage that was always wound. He could snap—was going to, honestly. He needed it relieved quickly. That’s what you needed to do, that’s why your name was still in his phone. A friends with benefits but no friendliness. Just hot sex and cuddling because you clung to him like a koala afterwards.
But it tampered slightly when you slotted your fingers through more gently with conditioner—he thinks it is, at least—a comb following after.
(why does it have little seeds in it?)
“Is this why you take so long in the shower?”
“Yeah, because I’m actually cleaning myself and not taking whore’s bath like you do.”
He took a glance at the bathwater, covered with bubbles that smelled like vanilla and your honey shampoo. The little rock’s of salt still lingered at the bottom, knocking together when he moved.
“We aren’t provided with lujos—Luxuries. Most of the time we don’t even have water.”
“This isn’t most of the time,” You correct, scrubbing a loofah with soap. “You barely even stay for half an hour after we’re together.” You started on his right shoulder, where a nasty bruise lay, carefully going over it and scrubbing the area around it, massaging his back as you go.
“Amigos con derechos. Im not supposed to stay and coddle you. And your hair dye always bleeds after and gets on me.” A nearly constant reminder of you on his skin.
It was quiet now, outside of the sound of scrubbing. Alejandro shifted, water swishing. It was quiet for awhile, enough so that it was obvious you were trying to avoid scrubbing his chest, going in circles on his back to avoid bothering him. Or starting something.
He did like it, the hair dye bleeding. The color always seeped onto your hairline from the sweat, and you wanted to be as close as possible. Of course it would rub off on him—usually a streak across his chest that would stay for a few days. He liked it. But he didn’t. This was supposed to be temporary and quick, like usual when he had these flings. You had lasted the longest. Why couldn’t you just give him hickey’s and bruises?
Something gnawed at him, deeply. His skin burned and itched. A need, so raw. His nerves were frayed enough he could reveal his hand to you, and he didn’t even know what it was.
You didn’t move. He didn’t move.
And then you did, slowly running the loofah over his chest, and he sat with his arms on the sides of the tub, allowing more access. He couldn’t help the small twitch of his mouth when you leaned down, giving him a nice feel of yours boobs against him.
“What’d you put in my hair.”
“Hair mask. It has to sit.”
He huffed, but didn’t say anything, just letting you move him now. He tensed when your hand slid under his jaw as you moved, not wanting to knock him around. It had the same care as when you would fold his clothes on the morning and put them on the dresser.
It was obvious you didn’t really understand how this was supposed to be run. You got attached. It made him pause a little whenever you would stutter imperceptibly when he reminded you this was only pleasure, even after you made him food. You had learned how to make a few Mexican breakfasts, just to make him feel comfy. He had left early that day, walking out the door just as you picked up a plate to hand him, and you didn’t do it again.
It was a good reminder—he wasn’t here to stay.
“This isn’t anything,” he reminds you.
“I know.”
“Then why do any of this? All you need to do is give me something.”
“Because I want to.”
“Take care of me?”
“…sure.”
i didn’t know how to end this i just know there needs to be more things with Alejandro in the world.
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fulljudgement · 5 days ago
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im going to do something with this.
18+, mdni
I don't know who came up with the idea first but I fully believe Simon Riley got a vasectomy in his twenties because he was dead set on not having children and not becoming his father.
Unfortunately, the doctor doing the procedure failed to mention there was still a risk - albeit, very low - of getting someone pregnant.
Enter you; a pretty bird he'd met in a pub on a night out with the lads that he'd fucked in the bathroom. If he'd known there was even the slightest chance he had any swimmers left, he wouldn't have buried himself to the hilt as he emptied his balls inside you, still thrusting as he did so, pushing his cum deeper inside.
When your paths unexpectedly crossed again a few months later, Simon spotting you from afar, he felt that same flame of desire igniting within, his cock chubbing up, already picturing the wet warmth he'd sank into all those nights ago, the way you'd wrapped around him and made those pretty sounds just for his ears -
And then you turn and his eyes drop down to the noticeable swell of your stomach.
He'd never been very good at maths before but this time he was quick off the mark to add the numbers together in his head, realising it had been exactly five and a half months since he last saw you. Five and a half months since he'd cum inside you.
Simon didn't know shit about pregnancy but looking at your obviously round stomach, his heart sank as he began to wonder if there was a possibility that the child growing within it was his.
The last thing this world needed was another Riley.
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should i write more on this or no 😬 lmk
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fulljudgement · 8 days ago
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This is godly and i need it tattooed on my back
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fulljudgement · 9 days ago
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IM JUST A CROSS HAIR!!! ‼️
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and if you leave here, you leave me broken, shattered I lie.
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fulljudgement · 10 days ago
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so I got into grad school today with my shitty 2.8 gpa and the moral of the story is reblog those good luck posts for the love of god
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fulljudgement · 12 days ago
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🌾🌾🌾
Harvesting my wheat
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fulljudgement · 12 days ago
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Every single woman should have hairy ass armpits and they should always wear tank tops and show it off at every convenience
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fulljudgement · 12 days ago
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I am sobbing but it’s okay.
    .⠀⠀⠀ ू❀𝆬 𝐋𝐀𝐕𝐄𝐍𝐃𝐄𝐑 . ∔
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⠀ ⠀❜❀⠀˙⠀simon "ghost" riley x fem!reader⠀(❁ᴗ͈ ᴗ͈)⠀˚
░⌦⠀ synopsis.⠀ ⠀domestic life with simon. 𖧷⠀⁺⠀
⠀. ⏝ི𓏶. ゜ imagine ⠀ being⠀ simon's ⠀wife⠀ ⋮
Simon didn’t think he could be a father. Not because he didn’t want to be—he did. Quietly, painfully. But he never believed he’d live long enough for it. He didn’t think there’d be a version of life where he could sit still, trade gunpowder for cradle songs, or let something so fragile as a child curl up on his chest and fall asleep without fear in the world. But then you came. And then… she did.⠀𓆉
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He was terrified.
When you told him, his first reaction was silence. Heavy, still—the kind that made your skin crawl even though you knew he would never hurt you. He stared at the floor for a long time. Not out of anger. Not even shock. Just a weight pressing down on every piece of him, trying to make sense of a life where he could deserve something this soft.
He didn’t say anything for hours. But that night, while you lay in bed pretending to sleep, you felt his callused hand over your stomach. Gentle. Reverent. Like he thought he might break both of you.
“I’ll keep you safe,” he whispered so quietly, it could’ve been a prayer.
He wasn’t there when she was born.
Mission delays. A storm grounded his transport. He’d torn through his comms trying to reach anyone, anything—cursing the universe for making him a soldier first, father second.
But when he walked into that hospital room with dirt still on his boots and shadows under his eyes, and saw you holding her… saw her pink and alive and real in your arms…
He broke.
He didn't cry, not really. But his shoulders shook as he sat by your side and pressed his forehead to your temple. He stared at her like she was a ghost haunting his past—something he never thought he’d be allowed to touch.
“She’s so small,” he murmured, voice cracking.
“Yeah,” you replied.
That night, he didn’t sleep. Just watched her chest rise and fall, afraid to blink.
Simon was awkward at first.
He held her like she might detonate—arms stiff, movements cautious. Changing diapers felt like defusing bombs. And baby talk? Forget it. He read her the back of his cereal box in a low, gravelly voice, and she cooed like he was reciting poetry.
He wouldn’t say much, but he did. Morning bottles already warmed before you woke. Midnight pacing when she wouldn’t stop crying. One hand rubbing small circles on her back, the other gripping the baby monitor like a lifeline when he had to leave.
He taught her to crawl by laying on the floor with her, inching backward like it was a stealth op. When she took her first steps toward him, he froze. It felt like watching a sunrise you never thought you’d see.
She follows him everywhere.
Like a little ghost of her own.
He doesn’t let many people see her. Doesn’t post pictures. Doesn’t talk about her on base. But he keeps a small photo tucked behind his dog tags. If anyone catches a glimpse, they know not to ask.
She’s curious. Smart. A little quiet—like him. She watches everything. Studies the way he moves, tilts her head when he speaks like she’s decoding him. When she starts copying his dry, deadpan jokes, you swear Simon almost smiles.
He lets her paint his face with glitter and stars when she’s bored. He sits there stone-faced, letting her stick pink butterfly clips into his blond hair. If you ask why, he just shrugs:
“She wanted to. Didn’t wanna say no.”
He teaches her how to be strong—not cruel, not hardened, just aware. He teaches her to pay attention to exits, to trust her gut. When she has nightmares, he’s there before she can even call for him.
And when she asks him why he wears a mask sometimes, he kneels down and explains it gently. That some things are meant to protect, not hide. That it’s okay to be soft, but it’s also okay to be careful.
And then he lets her try it on. It drapes over her face like a cape. She laughs.
“Look, Daddy. I’m just like you!”
“No, sweetheart,” he says, and this time, he does smile—small, but real. “You’re stronger than I ever was.”
Simon is a man full of ghosts.
But when he’s with her, they quiet.
You’ve seen it.
The way his shoulders relax when she’s in the room. The way his voice drops softer when he reads to her. The way he presses his forehead to hers before he leaves, and whispers, “You be good for Mum, yeah? I’ll be back.”
He hates going.
Every goodbye leaves a crack in him.
But every return—when she runs to him screaming “Daddy!” and tackles his legs with her little arms—that’s what mends it.
He doesn’t know if he’s doing it right. He’s always afraid he’s too broken, too cold, too late. But you tell him he’s the safest place she knows.
And sometimes, when the house is quiet and she’s asleep in the next room, he’ll hold you close and whisper,
“Thank you.”
She’s eight now.
She tells people her dad is a superhero.
Simon doesn’t correct her.
He doesn’t know what version of him she’s seeing—what stories she’s crafted in her head to explain his scars or the way he flinches when doors slam too hard. She doesn’t know what he’s done. What he’s capable of. To her, he’s just… strong. Invincible. Safe.
He doesn’t deserve it. But he lives for it.
There are nights when the house is quiet and warm and she’s tucked beneath her galaxy-print bedsheets, one arm flung off the mattress and glitter nail polish chipped from the day.
And he’ll sit outside her room. In the hallway. Hands clenched between his knees.
He listens to her breathe.
He doesn't know why he tortures himself like that—why he waits for nightmares that never come, or for screams she’s long since outgrown. Maybe he’s still waiting for the other shoe to drop. Maybe he’s waiting to fail her. Like he failed his family. His brother. Himself.
He’ll sit there until his knees ache. Until the silence starts to feel like mercy again.
Then he goes to bed, lays next to you, and stares at the ceiling like there’s a sniper on the roof. Like peace is a trap he’s too smart to fall for.
She was never supposed to see it.
An old flash drive. Left in a drawer he thought was too high. She’d plugged it into her school laptop, probably looking for cartoons.
She didn’t say anything until hours later. She was quiet. Paler than usual.
“Daddy… you hurt bad people, right?”
He froze.
“…What’d you see, love?”
“Some men. You hurt them. But… you were saving someone, weren’t you?”
There was no panic in her voice. No fear. Just a question, small and sincere, wrapped in child-logic and trust.
Simon knelt in front of her. Took both her hands in his. Looked her in the eye like it was the most sacred thing he’d ever done.
“Yes,” he said. “I hurt bad people. I’ve done things I’m not proud of. Things I’d never want you to see. But I’ve never hurt someone innocent. Never would.”
She nodded slowly. And then—God, kids are strange—she just reached out and touched the scar on his cheek, the one beneath the corner of his eye.
“I’m not scared of you,” she said softly. “You’re my hero.”
And that was the first time in his life Simon wanted to cry in front of someone.
He held her so tight that night, you thought she might get smothered. But she clung to him too—arms around his neck like an anchor, like she’d never let go.
She gets more clever every year.
She steals his hoodies. Starts hiding his mask in ridiculous places—like the freezer, or under her bed—just to see how long it takes him to find it. She claims it’s to “keep him home longer.”
He pretends to be annoyed.
“You’re a little brat,” he mutters, tossing her over his shoulder.
“I'm baby!” she giggles back, kicking her legs.
They have their own games. Their own signals. A whole silent language between them. When she’s nervous at school, she touches her wrist twice—it means “I wish you were here.” When he’s home late from a mission, she leaves a plastic dinosaur on the kitchen table—it means “I waited.”
She tells him she wants to be like him.
A protector. A fighter.
He tells her she already is.
But inside, the thought terrifies him.
You’re the one who packs his bag now. She won’t help anymore. Not since last time.
She’d cried so hard she threw up. Told him he promised he’d stay longer. That “longer” shouldn’t mean “only six days.” She was angry in that way only children can be—grief-stricken and pure.
“I hate the army,” she said, clutching the edge of his vest.
He knelt again. Always kneeling, always trying to shrink himself to meet her where she is.
“You don’t have to understand, love. But I hope one day… you’ll forgive me for missing things.”
She didn’t answer. Just turned and ran to her room.
He left anyway. And it broke him.
He kept her crayon drawing in his vest pocket the whole mission. Folded and faded. A stick figure version of him holding hands with her beneath a smiling sun.
It’s still there.
And when he comes back, It’s always late.
You’ll hear the gate creak. The boots on the gravel. She’ll fly out of bed before you can stop her—barefoot and wild-haired, running down the stairs.
He drops everything to catch her.
She wraps herself around him like a vine. He doesn’t even get the mask off before her little arms are around his neck and she’s whispering “I missed you I missed you I missed you” like a spell.
“I missed you too, sweetheart.”
He holds her like she’s the only thing tying him to earth. And maybe she is.
Teenage girls are loud in their silence.
Simon learned that the hard way.
She doesn’t slam doors or scream. She doesn’t yell “You don’t understand!” or throw things across the room. She just gets quiet. Withdraws. Answers in clipped syllables, disappears into her hoodie, headphones in, eyes distant.
She used to run to him the second he came home. Now she doesn’t even look up from her phone.
She’s fifteen.
And sometimes, Simon thinks she’s slipping through his fingers, and he’s got nothing left but shadows and memory.
It started small.
She stopped asking him to braid her hair before bed. Said she could do it herself. She stopped leaving dinosaurs on the kitchen table. Stopped leaving notes in his rucksack.
He knew it wasn’t personal.
It was growing up.
But that didn’t make it easier.
“Give her space,” you told him gently. “She’s figuring herself out.”
He tried. He really did.
But he couldn’t help hovering near her doorway some nights, watching her back hunched over a laptop, music playing softly. Wondering if she still remembered how he used to sing to her in a voice barely above a whisper when she couldn’t sleep. Wondering if she remembered why he was gone so often.
Wondering if she still thought he was her hero.
It came up one night, out of nowhere.
She was setting the table. He’d been home for five days. The air was calm, the routine safe. And then:
“Do you wear the skull mask because you want to scare people?”
He looked up from the sink, heart stalling for a second.
He turned off the water. Dried his hands slowly. Looked her in the eye.
“No,” he said after a long pause. “I wear it because I used to think I was already dead.”
She blinked.
Didn’t say anything.
He almost regretted being honest.
“But then…” His voice caught. “Then I had you.”
The silence that followed was thick. Fragile.
And then she whispered:
“You’re not dead.”
He cleared his throat, chest aching. “No. Not anymore.”
She set down a fork.
Walked over.
And, for the first time in months, hugged him without needing a reason.
He didn’t let go for a long time.
The hardest part of fatherhood for Simon isn’t leaving. It’s letting her live.
She’s starting to go out more now. With friends. Late bus rides. Music festivals. Sleepovers at houses he doesn’t know.
He doesn’t sleep well on those nights.
You can see it—the way his leg bounces, the way he checks the time every fifteen minutes, the way he keeps his phone unlocked, her tracker app open on the screen.
“She’s not a target,” you remind him. “She’s a kid.”
But in his world, innocence doesn’t mean safety.
And light doesn’t mean there’s no danger.
When she comes home, he does the same ritual every time:
One look over her face.
A glance at her hands.
Eyes flicking to her shoes, her wrists, her neck.
A checklist of survival. It takes seconds. She doesn’t even notice.
But he does.
Only when he’s sure she’s safe does he let himself exhale.
The first time she really breaks—it’s quiet.
She comes home from school, bags under her eyes, and says: “I don’t think anyone really likes me.”
Simon is at the table cleaning a rifle.
But he puts it down immediately.
And for a long time, they just sit on the couch. Side by side. She doesn’t cry. He doesn’t pry. Eventually, she says, “I feel like I’m too much for people. Too weird.”
He looks at her then. Really looks.
And in the softest voice he can manage, he says:
“You’re not too much. The world’s just too loud.”
She leans into him.
He lets her.
She’s taller now, but somehow still fits under his arm.
“I don’t know how to be normal.”
He smiles, brushing her hair back behind her ear.
“Good. Normal’s overrated.”
She laughs, watery and real.
It’s the sound of his heart stitching back together.
Simon isn’t great with words. Not the soft ones, anyway.
But he shows her love in the way he always waits up.
In the way he replaces the lightbulb in her lamp before it burns out.
In the way he gives her his old hoodie when she’s sick and lets her keep it.
In the way he memorizes the names of her friends. Learns their schedules. Watches over them from a distance like a silent guardian.
She doesn’t say “I love you” as often as she used to.
But when she falls asleep in the car and mumbles “Dad” like it’s home…
He knows.
He knows.
She’s not a child anymore.
But she’ll always be his little girl.
And he’ll always be the ghost at her back—quiet, watchful, loyal.
Not haunting her.
Protecting her.
Always.
He never taught her how to drive.
You did.
She insisted.
He didn’t mind. Truthfully, the thought of her behind the wheel made his pulse spike. Not because he didn’t trust her, but because he knew the world. Knew how quickly things turned. He could pull a man out of a wrecked Humvee, but the idea of her skidding into a light pole because of wet asphalt made his vision go white.
So he let you take her.
Watched from the window.
She waved at him once from the driver’s seat, grinning like she owned the road.
And he waved back. Small, barely-there.
But it was enough.
It was always enough.
The house is quieter now.
She’s twenty-three.
Lives two cities over. Has a dog. A job. A life.
She comes home when she can, which isn’t often. You say that’s normal. That’s what kids do. But he still checks the front window around five every evening. Still listens for the sound of a key turning in the lock that doesn’t come.
He still sets her place at the table when you aren’t looking.
You find the folded napkins sometimes. The extra fork. He never explains. You don’t ask.
She doesn’t call him "daddy" anymore.
That’s what time does.
It sands things down.
She calls him Dad now. Or Old Man if she’s feeling playful.
He likes it. But it stings in a quiet way. Like finding an old picture and realizing you don’t remember the moment it captured.
There are still hugs. Still warmth. But she doesn’t cling to him anymore. Doesn’t bury her face in his neck. Doesn’t fall asleep on his chest while he reads boring manuals aloud to lull her.
Instead, she brings over wine. Talks about work. Politics. The rent.
She’s brilliant. Composed. Fierce in a way that reminds him of a younger you.
And sometimes, when she laughs, he sees the little girl she used to be—cheeks round, eyes bright, hands sticky from jam.
Then the moment fades.
And she’s grown again.
He doesn’t go on missions anymore.
Retired now. Officially.
He didn’t tell her right away. Wasn’t sure how. He expected a celebration, or at least a toast.
But when he finally said it over dinner—softly, plainly: “I’m done. Hung it up.”—she looked at him for a long moment. Then nodded.
“Good,” she said. “You were always more than that.”
He looked at her then—really looked—and realized she hadn’t seen him as a soldier in years.
She’d seen the man.
The father.
The one who tucked her in and stitched her broken toys and waited outside ballet recitals with bloodied knuckles he never explained.
He had been trying so hard to protect her from the world.
But she’d been watching him—all this time.
Learning how to survive by the way he loved her.
One night he got sick.
It wasn’t life-threatening. Just a flu.
But he hadn’t been sick in years, and it hit him harder than expected.
She came home that weekend without asking.
Let herself in. Took one look at him bundled in blankets on the couch and said, “You look like shit.”
He coughed. “Nice to see you too.”
But her hands were gentle. She made him tea. Sat on the armrest of the couch, fingers brushing over his forehead like she was checking for fever the way he used to when she was small.
She stayed the night. Slept on the floor beside him like a sentry.
He woke at 3 a.m. and saw her curled up in an old hoodie of his, her phone clutched in one hand, screen still lit with some half-written message.
And for a second—just a flicker—he wished she were small again.
Not because he didn’t love who she’d become.
But because that time was so brief.
So unbearably sweet.
And it was gone.
It was raining.
She stood beside him under a grey sky, both in black, her hand tucked into the crook of his elbow.
It was his brother’s grave. The one he used to visit alone.
“I wish I’d met him,” she said quietly.
“He would’ve loved you,” Simon replied. “You’ve got his mouth. Same sarcasm.”
She smiled through the tears. Leaned her head against his shoulder.
“Do you ever miss being young?”
He didn’t answer right away. Rain hit the stone like fingers drumming.
“I miss you being young,” he finally said.
And she didn’t speak again. Just held his arm tighter.
One day, it happens.
She calls him—voice shaking, words rushed. Something about a near-accident. Someone ran a red light. Her hands were shaking. She didn’t know who else to call.
And Simon?
He was already in the car before she finished the sentence.
He found her on a curb, hands trembling around a coffee cup someone had handed her. He didn’t ask questions. Just crouched in front of her and pulled her into his arms.
She broke. Sobbed into his coat like she was twelve again.
Like she was small and scared and needed her dad.
And he just held her.
Kept one hand on the back of her head.
The other over her heart.
“You’re safe,” he murmured. “I’ve got you.”
Later that night, she curled up on his old couch, wrapped in his blanket, and whispered,
“I didn’t want to call you. Thought I was too old.”
He shook his head.
“You’ll never be too old to be my girl.”
And one day…
One day, it’s just the two of them on the porch.
You’re inside baking. The sun’s going down. Her eyes are softer now.
She says, “Do you ever think you could’ve had a normal life?”
He doesn’t answer at first.
Just watches the wind move through the trees.
Then:
“This is normal. For me.”
She leans her head on his shoulder.
He doesn’t flinch anymore when touched. Not by her.
“You were always enough, you know,” she says.
He swallows. Tries to look away. Fails.
And then she adds, quieter, “You saved me. Even when I didn’t know I needed saving.”
He closes his eyes.
Because in that moment, it doesn’t matter what he’s done.
Who he’s killed.
What haunts him.
Because this is what remains.
This girl. This woman. This life they made.
And that… is enough.
He never thought he’d grow old.
Never imagined it.
He used to think men like him didn’t make it past 40 — not without a bullet or a blaze or a quiet disappearance somewhere no one would bother looking. There was always something inside him waiting for it — like his bones expected to be abandoned.
But now?
Now his body aches in new ways.
His knees click when he gets up too fast.
The hair at his temples has gone silver, and his hands have lost their steady, deadly stillness.
But you’re still here.
Still brushing your teeth beside him. Still humming while folding sheets. Still asking if he wants tea or if his shoulder hurts when it rains.
And it guts him. Every single time.
That you stayed.
That you chose to grow old next to a man who never expected to live long enough to deserve it.
Your love has changed.
It’s not fireworks now. Not firelight and breathless kissing in hotel rooms after too-long deployments.
It’s quieter. But deeper. Warmer.
It’s how you always leave the light on for him, even when he forgets to ask.
It’s how he sets out your slippers without thinking, so your feet don’t touch the cold floor in the morning.
It’s how you never ask where he’s going when he disappears into the garage, and how he never questions the way you cry at old home videos, even though you’ve seen them a hundred times.
There’s a kind of intimacy now that goes deeper than touch.
A knowing.
A weightless ease, like your hearts have learned how to lean on each other without needing to speak.
You’ll brush past him in the kitchen, and he’ll place a hand on the small of your back — not to move you, not to guide you, but just to feel you. To remind himself you’re real. Here.
Still his.
Sometimes he just watches you.
He won’t say it out loud. He’s too old for poetry, and too hardened for flowery things. But sometimes, when you’re reading by the window, your glasses slipping down your nose and the light touching your cheek just right—
He stares at you like you’re something holy.
Like you're the last beautiful thing left in a world he once thought he’d never understand.
He’ll pretend to be half-asleep on the couch, or too focused on whatever’s in his hands — but he’s watching you. Memorizing you again and again, like a man trying to hold onto something too big to keep.
Because he knows.
He knows time takes things.
He’s lost too many people to pretend otherwise.
So he watches. And he commits you to memory. Every wrinkle near your eyes. Every gray strand of hair. Every sigh. Every smile.
You catch him sometimes. And he always looks away like a boy caught daydreaming.
“You’re staring,” you tease.
He shrugs. “I always do.”
He still has the mask.
It’s in a box now. Top of the closet. Buried under old jumpers and Christmas decorations.
You told him he didn’t need it anymore, and he agreed.
But he kept it. Quietly. Respectfully.
You found him once, years ago, just sitting with it in his lap. The house was silent. The air still.
You didn’t say anything. Just sat beside him.
He looked at you, eyes far away, voice quieter than you’d ever heard.
“I wore this to keep the world out,” he said. “But somehow, you still found your way in.”
And you leaned against him.
And he let you.
And neither of you moved for a long time.
He loves you differently now.
Not less. Not softer.
But heavier.
There’s a weight to it now. A depth.
He knows what it means to have someone for a lifetime. He knows what it costs to stay — what it takes to love a man who wakes from nightmares, who still pauses at loud noises, who forgets he’s safe even now.
And he sees what it cost you, too.
He saw it in your eyes when the baby was crying and he wasn’t home.
Saw it when you had to explain to your daughter why “daddy” missed her school recital.
Saw it in the way you smiled through the loneliness, always so patient, always so good.
He never said thank you. Not enough.
So now he shows it.
In every slow dance in the kitchen.
In every cup of tea made before you ask.
In every time he reaches for your hand during a movie, just to feel your fingers between his.
He asks you one night.
“Do you regret it?”
It’s late. The moonlight’s dripping through the window, and the sheets are tangled between your legs. You’re half-asleep, but his voice pulls you back.
You turn toward him. Find him already watching you.
“All of it,” he says, quietly.
And you reach for him, tuck your fingers beneath his chin like you did when you were younger. His beard is whiter now. His eyes softer.
“I’d do it all over again,” you say.
And he believes you. With every beat of his scarred, stubborn heart.
You fall asleep like that — your fingers in his, your breath slow against his skin.
And somewhere in the dark, in a house full of years and silence and everything you've both endured...
Simon smiles.
Because in the end, despite everything he’s done, everything he’s lost—
You stayed.
And that made all the difference.
It starts with small things.
Keys. Names.
What day it is.
Where he left his book.
At first, you joke about it. Call it “old man brain,” and he chuckles, rubbing the back of his neck, muttering something about brain damage and too many concussions.
But then he starts calling the dog by the wrong name.
Asks where your daughter is — even though she just called.
He forgets the kettle is on.
Leaves the tap running.
Stares at the cupboard, confused, trying to remember why he opened it.
And one day, you find him standing in the hallway, still as stone, holding one of her baby toys in his hand.
“She used to chew on this,” he says, quiet, “didn’t she?”
You nod.
“She’s twenty-seven now, Simon.”
He blinks at the toy.
“Oh.”
You learn his patterns.
He doesn’t like loud noises anymore.
Doesn’t like too many people in the house.
Gets tired easily. Confused quickly. Frustrated at himself more than anything.
But he’s still him.
He still drinks his tea the same way. Still looks for your hand under the blanket when you watch old movies. Still walks beside you in the garden, pointing at flowers like he remembers what they’re called — even if he doesn’t.
“Is that one the… the purple one?” he asks.
You smile. “Lavender.”
“Right. Right, I knew that.”
He didn’t.
But he likes when you pretend he did.
Sometimes he has bad days.
Days where he wakes up and doesn’t know where he is.
Days when he looks at you and his face folds — not in anger, but in heartbreak.
“I’m supposed to know you,” he says once, voice shaking. “Aren’t I?”
You take his hands. Place them on your cheeks. Let him feel the shape of your face.
“You do. You always have.”
He breathes in, trembling.
“I’m scared, love.”
“I know,” you whisper. “It’s okay. I’m not going anywhere.”
And you don’t.
You never do.
But there are still good days.
Days when he laughs at your terrible jokes.
When he remembers how to make your tea before you do.
When he tells you a story from the army — one he swore he’d forgotten.
And there are still evenings where he pulls you in, slow and careful, kisses the corner of your mouth and says,
“Still the prettiest thing I’ve ever seen.”
“Even with the wrinkles?” you tease.
“Especially with them,” he grins.
You cry in the kitchen after that one.
Quietly.
Not because you’re sad.
But because you still get to have this.
And then one morning, he doesn’t know your name.
He wakes with a start. Looks at you.
And doesn’t say anything.
Not confusion. Not fear. Just… blankness.
You speak gently. Smile.
Tell him your name like it’s the first time.
Tell him you’re safe. That he is too.
And he nods.
“Alright. If you say so.”
But later — later that same day — when you bring him tea, he takes your hand and murmurs:
“Thank you, sweetheart.”
You freeze.
“Do you know who I am?”
He blinks. Thinks.
“No. But I know I love you.”
The days stretch longer now.
He’s quieter, softer — not from peace, but from the slow unraveling of time. There are whole mornings where he doesn’t speak at all. Just watches the trees, the clouds, your hands in the garden. Like his soul has moved somewhere deep inside, and he’s just floating now.
He forgets more often than he remembers.
But he still holds your hand.
Even when he doesn’t know who you are, he finds your fingers. Rubs his thumb over your knuckle. Leans into your shoulder like a man who’s known only one comfort in his entire life.
And he has.
You.
He sleeps more now.
Sometimes all day.
You sit with him. Read aloud. Tell stories he once told you. Some of them are true, some of them aren’t — he wouldn’t correct you now even if he knew.
But he smiles sometimes. At the sound of your voice.
Like part of him — the part too deep to lose — still knows you.
And when he wakes, slow and blinking, he always asks:
“You’re still here?”
And you always answer, soft and warm:
“I’ve always been here.”
It happens on a rainy morning.
There’s nothing dramatic about it.
No gasp. No panic. No final words.
Just a stillness.
You wake first. His hand is still wrapped around yours. His chest still, his face soft, relaxed — like he simply drifted somewhere quieter. Somewhere gentler.
He doesn’t look afraid.
He looks young.
Somehow.
Like the weight finally left him.
And for a long, long time, you don’t move.
You just rest your head on his chest, where his heartbeat used to be, and whisper the only thing that ever mattered:
“You made it, Simon. You’re safe now.”
You bury him beside the lavender.
The spot he always loved — where the bees hummed and the light hit just right in spring.
Your daughter helps. The grandkids each place a flower on the earth. You keep your hand on the stone long after everyone else has gone.
There’s no mask on it. No rank. No war stories.
Just:
Simon Riley
Beloved Husband. Father. Safe, at last.
And you keep living.
Not out of duty.
Not out of guilt.
But because he would want you to.
You still drink your tea the way he made it.
Still hum old songs while folding the laundry.
Still leave the porch light on, out of habit.
Some nights, you sit alone with the rain on the window and close your eyes — and you swear you feel it:
His hand on your shoulder.
The breath of him.
The warmth.
You speak into the dark like he���s still beside you.
“I’ll be there soon. Not yet. But soon.”
Because real love never ends.
And the life you built together — the quiet, the pain, the laughter, the child, the years — it doesn’t vanish when he goes.
It lives in you.
In your daughter.
In every soft, ordinary, beautiful thing he once thought he could never have.
Simon made it home.
And home was always you.
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You can help me by reblogging my works with the tags and please do not repost, modify, translate or plagiarize in any way on any platforms.
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fulljudgement · 17 days ago
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I love mer stuff 😛
still thinking about marine biologist!reader. come home the kids miss you 🥹
Orca Mer!ghost and marine biologist!reader who runs a mer sanctuary???? Yeah.
Ghost was a new rescue, youve been told. He was found off the coast of a popular tourist spot, and had suffered a broken arm from a boat getting too close. As one of the few on-call staff members with medical experience, you get called in to fix him.
Its...bad. when you first see the mer, thats all you can think. Bad. His arm is limp and cradled to his chest, you only catch glimpses through the tight anxious circles he swims. On his eighth turn you spot two notches and a tag on his dorsal fin. He was one of robas, that bastard.
Protocol states that he should be sedated for the procedure. It also states that you should never even stand close to a tank with an agitated mer. Soap, one of your three permanent patients, had once told you that seeing figures looming over the surface of the water was much more threatening than someone dipping their legs in. when your feet are in water, soap always had the best speech, growing up alongside humans we can see you are human stepping into our territory. We could easily drown you. It is like...submission? I dont know the English word for it.
So, you don a wetsuit and place all the needed supplies by the edge of the pool. The second your feet breach the water surface, ghosts hand is wrapping around your ankle and yanking you into the water. He had crossed the tank in seconds, and you were about ready to accept this would be how you die.
Except, you never feel your back hit concrete, or water filling your lungs. No, ghost just drags you into the centre of the pool then...leaves you there. You tread water as he circles you slowly, silently grateful for all those days spent in prices tank. Just as you begin to think ghost is waiting for exhaustion to overtake you, he pauses his circling and stops directly in front of you. "You..." his voice is scratchy and wavering, clearly unused to english "you...water...why?"
You had been trained on how to speak with mers that had limited speech. They weren't stupid, but you couldn't ramble at them like you could soap. Slowly, you gesture to your forearm, then point at ghost "broken. I'll fix it."
Ghost makes a displeased rumble that you know means danger. "No."
You nod, no need to anger him. "I promise, ill fix it. Can I show you what I want to use? Just so you can see?"
When ghost doesnt say anything, you slowly drift towards the edge of the pool again. He watches silently, and you think youll make progress, only for him to growl when you reach over the sill. "Hey, hey." You put your hands up so he can see them "its just stuff to fix you, okay? Do...do you want to come look? You can touch and ill tell you what it does."
Water sloshes against the sill as ghosts large form swims close. The bandage looks comically small in hid hands. "Those," you explain, careful not to grab at them, "are waterproof bandages. Its to help hold your arm in place when I fix you."
Ghost nods, picks and pulls at the stretchy fabric for a bit before moving on to the next item. You spend the next hour like that, going over each item and what it does again and again. You would spend the whole day here if thats what it took for ghost to feel safe.
You seriously think this will be all the progress for today, content with it even if youd prefer ghost be fixed sooner than later. Youre so caught up in whether his arm could handle another day that you dont register the presence drifting closer to you until a large hand circles your waist.
With a yelp, you're dragged backwards to lie on ghosts chest as he floats belly-up. He just rumbles at you when you squirm, hand nearly as big as your abdomen resting over your stomach. He holds his broken arm in fron of you, "fix it."
...well, you would never say no to helping a mer. So you work with what ghost gives you. Laid back as items are passed to you. He doesnt react when you pull at the bones until they set properly. The hand on your stomach may have been playful were this gaz, but you know its nothing more than a warning. Ghost could gut you if you upset him.
Its slow work, but as the sky is beginning to shift into warm hues, ghosts arm is bandaged and properly set. He startles you against by picking you up with one hand and sitting you on the sill. The second he lets go, ghost is darting to the farthest, deepest end of the pool.
Mildly, you note that he isnt swimming tight circles anymore.
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fulljudgement · 21 days ago
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im joining the war on gross disgusting pornographic content on the side of gross disgusting pornographic content
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fulljudgement · 23 days ago
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nothing pisses me off more than when people say this.
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fulljudgement · 23 days ago
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in order to not succumb to sex negative conservatism you have to accept that people will get off to things that are upsetting to you. and you cannot assume anything about what they have or have not experienced, what they do or do not believe, and how they act based solely on what gets them off. even if it's extremely confusing and disturbing to you. there are people who have only ever had heterosexual vanilla sex in missionary with the lights off, who actively contribute to more real world harm than your average fetish artist. kink is not a reliable source of information on someone's moral standing. it just feels good to think that way.
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fulljudgement · 27 days ago
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i love re-consuming media i used to love when i was younger. like wow! child me still is in me i am holding her hand and keeping her safe and doing her favorite things with her!!!!
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