#How do i feed my arthur morgan?
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Handâ¨ď¸(Yes my Arthur Morgan is a bit malnurished.)
Can we talk about how fucking huge his hands are/lookđŚ also yes, highkey my Arthur is severely underweight but despite how many times i stop mid-game to eat and drink smth, he wont be at normal weight so idk. I think his hand looks even bigger because of how thin his lower arm is but might just be him anyway? Or its because i am not feeding him correctly? I dont know...anyways...HES STILL ONE OF T H E HOTTEST MEN EVER OUT THEREđŠâ¨ď¸đ
#red dead redemption 2#arthur morgan#arthur morgan x reader#arthur morgan x female reader#rdr2#charles smith#arthur morgan fanfiction#game screenshots#ps5 screenshots#ps5 games#ps4#ps5#rdr2 screenshots#game scenery#my screenshots#Underweight arthur morgan#How do i feed my arthur morgan?#sobbing
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hi! Sorry for any mistakes, english is not my first language. I don't know if you're accepting requests, if you not, just ignore. But I'm wondering how you would write something related to a jealous Arthur Morgan, high honor of course (with smut or without smut sincerely you know what looks best). the way you write is addictive and passionate, i believe anything you write from this would be great.
OUR DEAR, GREEN LITTLE FRIEND
Pairing | Arthur Morgan x Fem! Reader Summary | Oh, jealousy. When the thought of you straying too close to the comfort of Charles, the green monster claws its way into Arthur's head. Tags | sexual content 18+ minors dni, tiny bit of angst, description of violence and wounds, fluffy at times, smut Word Count | 10k A/N | Hi everyone! I just HAD to write this request, hope you like it! Also, thank you dearly anonâĄ
While many found the biting cold of the climate north of West Grizzlies to be bitterâsharp air seeping into your very bonesâyou saw it oddly liberating despite the current predicament. The circumstance was dire, indeed, and you pondered many times if this would finally be the end for all of you, thinking of the incredible luck you had managed to have so far. Fate, or an astonishingly fascinating knowledge on how to escape the grappling arms of the law with a suspicious amount of people trashing through the roads in utter, sheer panic.
Glancing around you as you huddled closer to the fire, hands rubbing furiously against the wool of your gloves to gain even the slightest warmth to your biting fingers, you were met with the flushed cheeks of your comrades. The skin that now glistened from the melting snowflakes was caressed by the warm, orange glow from the flames lighting up the small hut you had taken residence in.Â
The road leading to here had been long, and the time spent in the wagon that did nothing to shield you from the penetrating wind that howled into the night, your thoughts had been entirely focused on the man who now lay dead a few meters away, tucked in some fabric to shield the paling flesh of a corpse. While the thought might not make you uncomfortable, it did its thing on the others who looked weary at the covered man.Â
You had done your best to tend to him amidst the severe trembling of your fingers and numbness spreading through you the longer you rode in the worrying storm, finding his blood still staining the cotton of your glovesâa reminder that you had done what you could to help the poor fellow. Despite not knowing him well enough to shed a tear, death was still a death, and a slight melancholy set its claw in all of you as you tried to regain some warmth.Â
âStupid man.â Glancing beside you, you took notice of the dark-haired woman muttering angrily as she held a sleeping Jack close to her body.Â
âWhatâs wrong?â You inquired quietly, curious of her obvious disdain.
âJohn Marston is whatâs wrong.â Blazing heatedly into the fire, you could almost see the depths of hell through her furious eyes. âHe didnât come back with the rest.â Shifting her eyes to yours for a quick moment that, although short, showed the worry hidden beneath her anger.Â
Nodding slowly as you leaned against her slightly in comfort, you realized you hadnât taken notice of the manâs absence until now. Returning with empty hands and another mouth to feed had instead been the case, no Marston as far as the eyes could see as he probably whirred around in the blizzard somewhere.
âDo you think heâŚâ As you spoke, you trailed off, growing unsure of your words while realizing your comments might be prodded into a sensitive subject.Â
âNo.â Firmly, she sniveled harshly, shaking her head in protest. âNo, he wouldnât leave again.â Although her words were sure, you still felt a lingering doubt cloud your mind, remembering being told of his earlier departure from the gang that caused more scars in their relationships than goodânot that it wasnât faulty from the very start.
As you were about to let your prying win against your common sense, you were interrupted by the door being audibly slammed open, the noisy winds from outside growing louder as snowflakes whirled inside. Walking inside was the prominent figure of Charles, nodding respectfully to its residents as the door shut behind him, once more letting the warmth settle.
âFolks.â He mumbled quietly, treading through everyone huddling by the fire as he glanced curiously at the new woman before settling beside you. You glanced up at him, taking in his snow-covered self before lingering on his hand that rested motionless on his legs, bandages visible under his gloves.
âItâs not too bad; the cold seems to numb the pain.â A slight smile graced your lips at his observance, finding it unique to the man to be so tentative to everyone around him. Letting out a small laugh, you reach to remove your gloves before taking his hand in yours so you could lay it in your lap, unwrapping the bandages to examine the burns covering his skin.
You had given it a quick look-over before you had to tend to Davey, doing the best you could to ease his pain you were sure would be unavoidable. Although the sight was quite gruesome, it didnât look as bad as you had expected.
âYouâre stronger than me, thatâs for sure. I would be a crying mess if I burned my hand like that.â Your voice was gentle as you started to rewrap the fabric around his hand, finding it increasingly irritating you didnât have the tools you usually did that would indeed do a fine job at lessening his pain.
You had managed to gain a slight smile from the otherwise aloof man, probably finding your words humorous. âLetâs hope itâll never come to that.âÂ
Sharing a look, you heard the door open once again, the irritated voice of Uncle damning whoever was letting in the cold for the second time. Both you and Charles laughed slightly, and as you looked up, you were faced with a pair of squinting, blue eyes, the icy cold from the outside seemingly enhancing their sharpness although making a welcomed warmth spread through you as they gazed over you in a quick motionâdeparting to look at the hand that rested in your lap.
âA sad loss, folks,â Hosea stated as he stepped onto the wooden planks, speaking out loudly in the otherwise calm hut, groaning as he helped Arthur lift Daveyâs lifeless body, limp like a ragdoll.Â
Glancing subtly, you observed him as Arthurâs bulky form lifted easily, unlike Hosea, admiring how he made it seem so effortless. The others called him the camps workhorse, and you didnât fail to see why, keeping your eyes firm on the man as he carried him towards the door.Â
He shrouded you in uncertainty; he did, and you werenât sure how to behave in his bold presence. You often felt like a goody two shoes, and even though you werenât the perfect picture of a law-abiding citizen, you could honestly say you were a wimp compared to Arthur.Â
You should be embarrassed, you really should, but there was something in his eyesâ something that made your heart race. Utterly shameless, yet desperate to lock gazes again despite contradicting yourself and avoiding them every chance you could. Before you could get caught this time, you directed your eyes, focusing on tightening the bandages so they wouldnât come loose.Â
âTry to be careful, will you, Charles?â You spoke quietly while patting his hand, motioning that he was all set to go, but his hand stayed, giving you a grateful look.Â
âThank you.â His soothing voice was hushed as the loud bang of the door slammed shut not long after, ridding you of the tumult after their departure.Â
â
Oh, it burned. It burned so deep in his loins that it felt like he would erupt into flames any second. Despite the cold surrounding him, he was sure it could be possible the more he was left with his thoughts. The hushed whispers, the soft touches, and the ever-so-gentle look in your eyes made him want to empty the little food in his stomach.Â
âSneaky little rat,â Arthur grumbled to himself as he shoveled his way through the deep layers of snow. Here he was, out in the cold, tortured by the howling winds of the snowstorm, while Charles remained inside the warmth of the hut, seated next to you, all because of a slight burn.Â
He knew what he was up toâwhat any man would do if it meant getting your attentionâand he wasnât humored. Taking advantage of your good nature was downright uncalled for, bordering on immoral, which Arthur would probably realize wasnât Charlesâs character if his mind didnât seek to find faults with the man the more his blood boiled.
He scoffed to himself, stabbing the ground maliciously, imagining your warm hands around his instead, the nimble fingers of yours tending to him as you moved in closer, your sweet smell reaching his nose as you gazed up at him, face blushed from the cold with lips begging him to warm them up with his. The thought did nothing more than cover his whole body in shivers, only to be reminded that it wasnât him that received that attention from you.
âWhat are you huffing about over there, Arthur?!â Hoseaâs strained voice attempted to shout over the loud winds, standing up to rest momentarily.
âWhy donât we just bury him when the storm has settled?!â Annoyance was apparent in his voice, the green jealous monster still wreaking havoc in his mind.
âI told you, the snow will be too heavy tomorrow, so we need to finish it while we still can!â He groaned, starting to shovel once more. âAnd Iâll be damned, we are going to give Davey a proper burial. He deserves that much!â
As Hosea blabbered on about justice and other forms of respect Arthur had no intent on listening to, he zoned out, feeling sorry for himself as he imagined you might be keeping close to Charles right this moment, warming yourself to his body in a desperate search of bodily heat. Rubbing the melted snow off his face, Arthur damned the heavens above for making him the unluckiest bastard in the West.Â
Despite Arthur seeming dead set on you being lovey-dovey with a man you barely knew, Charles had left you after making some small talk, mentioning that he would try and get some well-deserved rest after the tumultuous past few days. Many others did as well, attempting to ease their minds from the constant threat against their back amidst the terrible cold.
Although, as days passed and John being back rid you of Abigailâs constant muttering, the cold only seemed to take its toll on you, unlike the others who quickly got used to the environment. Furthermore, the days only seem to get longer up in the mountains, and you wondered obsessively when you would get the chance to leaveâdamning everyone who thought seeking out Colm OâDriscoll in your compromised state a good idea instead of moving forwards.
Despite your dismay, you put yourself to use like the others, preparing to help Pearson in the grim act of cutting through the poor deer that had been brought back. While the sight gladdened you, knowing you would finally get a meal in your stomach, the brooding aura of a chestnut-haired, blue-coated man seemed to rain over you endlessly.
What could you have done to gain his stinging glare? It was almost cutting through you entirely from the burning that resided deep in his eyes, watching you ferociously, making your hair stand on edge. When he had returned with Charles, it had been nothing short of unpleasant ever since, although thankfullyâdespite his glareâhis harsh words were directed towards Pearson instead of you, which you were glad for.
âHowâs the cold treating you?â Glancing away from the two men bickering, you laughed slightly at Charlesâs innuendo, dressed worse for wear as you pulled the thick, woolen scarf tighter around your neck, hugging yourself to keep warm.
âCould be worse, I guess,â you said, clouds like smoke surrounding you as you talked.
âI suppose. Still, I donât want you freezing your fingers off.â
âMhh,â you nodded thoughtfully, speaking up after silence. âWho would look after your hand if that happened?â
He chuckled heartily at your unsuspected joke, and you glanced up at him bashfully, a light smile covering your face at his apparent amusement. While your embarrassment of being so easily swayed by the cold, it felt nice having someone take notice of your obvious discomfort, even though you would say you were pretty good at keeping it to yourself. You couldnât be surprised, though, well aware you and Charles were both tentative to your surroundings, always knowing but rarely telling.
âHere.â Taking off the large gloves covering his hand, no doubt doing an excellent job keeping him warm, he grabbed your trembling hands in his, rubbing them between his pleasant temperature hand and bandage-covered skin before gliding the fabric over yours.Â
âNo, Charl-â you protested, trying to stop him from continuing.Â
âTheyâll do you more good than me, I promise. Theyâre just in the way.â Stubbornly, he planted your hands back into your lap, petting them like you had done to him some nights ago before raising with a huff.Â
âThanks for the help, Arthur.â Charles nodded at the now grumpy man observing him as he rested against the wood of the wooden wall with arms crossed, seemingly ignoring Mr. Pearsonâs lecture about the navy he felt so strongly about, only providing a quick tilt of his hat before heated eyes were set on you.
Your gaze faltered, the blush on your face from the cold only intensifying the spread of warmth you felt from gaining his profound stareâsomething you rarely took notice of. It wasnât that he didnât look at you; he probably looked too much at times, but he was never so ardent with it, scrutinizing you under their heavy weightâmaking you feel ten times smaller under his towering height.Â
âWell, why donât you skin the deer, Arthur? Iâll help you cut them up in a while, miss.â Mr. Pearsonâs words were hasty, and you didnât miss the bottle glistening under the sunlight as he tried hiding it behind his coat, scurrying away. He would, in fact, not be back; you were sure of that much.Â
It wasnât often you found yourself alone with Arthur, and you never strayed too close, finding his presence somewhat daunting. Not that youâve had many chances to speak amidst all the chaos surrounding you, and being relatively new to the gang meant the trust lacked significantly from both sides. But, the intrigue was always present in every glance and movement.
You felt his gaze fixed on you a moment longer as you stared heedlessly at your hands, rubbing them together anxiously, having no clue what to do with yourself. While you werenât one to speak the ears of others, you never had any problem socializing with those around youâbut Arthur, he was something else entirely. Finally, though, he moved, approaching the hanging carcass.
âHow are ya?â His sudden words surprised you, hanging awkwardly in the air.
âOh, um. Good?â You cringed at yourself, finding the words stuck in your throat as his voice rumbling was loud and confident.
âCold?âÂ
âA bit,â you said softly, staring at his back as he heaved the skin away from the animal, movements rigid and harsh. âCharles gave me his gloves, so itâs a little less chilly now.â You stumbled over your words, admiring his strength unabashedly as he hauled the skinned deer over his shoulder, slamming it down the table with a loud bang. He gave you no answer, instead bringing out the knife in his belt to do the job you were assigned to.
âOh, let me!â Standing abruptly from your seat, you stepped towards him hurriedly in shame, feeling like you were just lazying around while Arthur was doing all the hard work.Â
Grabbing his thick coat to let you take his position, you found him staying right where he was, looking down at you when your hand rested on his bicep. It was unusual for him to be so close, and a blush warmed your cheeks as his towering frame became more apparent when standing a short distance from one another.
âSâalright.â He spoke lowly. âIâve got it.â
Your breath got caught in your throat as he gazed wholly at you, letting you know he had no problem with helping you. It warmed you, finding his action kindâjust like the small acts of kindness he reserved for the other girls. You would sometimes glare after them, intensely jealous that Arthur seemed to have a soft spot for them, yet acting like you didnât exist.
âAnything else I can do to help since you just did my job for me?â A shy smile found you, peering up at him as he sniveled, glancing at you while you sat on the bench again.
âWell, youâve already done your charity work for the day, so youâre fine.â
âCharity work?â You wondered, staring at him curiously as he cut through the meat. âWhat do you mean?â
He only sighed heavily, like you should be able to understand his cryptic words.Â
âHe wonât die from a small burn; it ainât enough reason to coddle the man like a child,â he grumbled.Â
It took you a while to get the gears turning, but when you did, you felt yourself grow shy from his statement. âCharles? His hand isnât looking too goodâŚâ
âYeah? Well, you shouldnât be so forward. Youâll give the poor man false hope.â He scoffed, stabbing the poor carcass harshly.
Staring at his back in disbelief at the sudden hatred, you had trouble understanding where it came from and why he suddenly grew so invested in whom you diverted your attention. You and Arthur rarely spoke, only changing quick words occasionally ever since you found yourself staying with the gang, and for that reason, you had failed to understand the reason for his hatred.
It seems all you ever did was look after everyone else, paying attention to their various troubles and tribulations regarding bodily harm. It wasnât strange to you, and by no means did you give anyone false hope, merely trying to find your place with these people, an attempt to prove your usefulness.
âFalse hope?â You questioned, baffled. âIâm trying to help; I fail to understand how that is a problem.âÂ
âIt ainât a problem!â He grumbled, voice roaring hotly in his chest as he resheathed his knife and began to make his way out, repositioning his hat without glancing at you. You followed him, stopping short by the table as you didnât want to stray too close to the fuming man.
âWell, it is since you are so angry about it?!â If this was how he carried out every conversation, you were glad the exchange of words wasnât typical between you, more so the simple fact that your company had never seemed to bring him any enjoyment. âWhatâs wrong with you?â
âWha-â He stops short, suddenly turning around and stalking towards you in significant strides. Gasping at suddenly having him so close, you backed away; his sharp eyes penetrated you as the warm blue of his orbs turned ice cold, glaring daggers into your own.
âWhatâs wrong with me?â He spoke dangerously low as his brows raised, grabbing your upper arms as he hoisted you up the table without an ounce of struggle. âIâm not the one taking every small, insignificant chance to take advantage of your good nature.â
âCharlesâs not like that. Heâs very kind.â You spoke in his defense, leaning back from his prolonged stare that seemed to cut through you deeper the more he stared. You had always pitied the people who got on Arthurâs lousy side, finding his presence at those times unnerving.Â
Now, it seemed you were at the receiving end of it, and while it chilled you to the bones, you werenât sure if your beating heart were because of fear or the thought of him being the closest to you heâd ever have.
You had never quite got to admire his eyes, always hidden under his furrowed brows and squinting eyes. Now that it wasnât because of the blazing sun down west, it was from the blaring whiteness of the snow surrounding you as you found his eyes glaring at the current climate more often than notâdispleased.
His eyes being dead set on you didnât help as you could hear his breathing grow heavier, the warmth of his breath hitting your cold cheeks as his broad frame blocked the chilly winds from reaching you.
âKind, huh?â Although momentarily distracted, you recovered as you heard him speak in a low voice, still finding his assumptions wildly out of reach while insulting you and Charles. Times were hard, and if you couldnât look after one another, it would surely lead to your doomâArthur, if anyone, should know that.
âYes, kind.â
Rubbing his eyes with one hand, he backed away from you, shrugging his shoulders while walking awayâlike your conversation hadnât happened in the first place.
âSure.â
â
It wasnât like Arthur didnât know how to restrain himself, for he applauded himself for avoiding his apparent anger when Charles had, yet again, stolen away your attentionânot that Arthur had any plans on striking up a conversation with you anyway.Â
It became clear to him that when you two were left alone, you almost turned into a living statue, barely responding to him. It was unlike you, for the time he had spent observing you, you had no problem talking to anyone elseâand although it was usually calm, it never deterred you from gaining the likes of the others and liking them in return.
Why did you cringe away from him and not Charles, he pondered, glaring at the picture that plagued his mind. The reason he knew, deep down, but his stubbornness didnât let him justify your actions. In all honesty, Charles was a more reliable man than himself, intentions often apparent with a slight sense of, well, goodness perhapsâsomething Arthur didnât possess in the slightest.
Goodness, in all honesty, wasnât something he was too familiar with, and he didnât doubt one second that you found his character to be callous, seeing as the dirty work no one wanted to do fell upon him; work everyone else found to be too cruel to do themselves. He could almost feel your disapproving gaze when he picked up his slack from Mr. Straussâs poor victims that he always tried to prolong, and while it wasnât his most favorable way of lending a hand, sometimes he did it out of spite.Â
If thatâs what you thought about him, then he couldnât do much to sway your opinion, finding it much easier to continue with his ways than realize that your sudden carefulness off him wounded him more profoundly than he let on.
And, he was indeed a harsh man in your eyes, and although his company wasnât entirely unwished for, he was still grimâignoring your presence like you werenât there most of the time. It made you wildly unsure of him, but the allure he had kept bringing you back, always wondering when you would see a glimpse of him again. You chastised yourself for it, more so now that you got a taste of his famously sullen mood that pestered everyone around him, but your eyes were still drawn to him when he was nearby.Â
Maybe it wasnât what everyone else would describe him as, but you thought of him as mysterious. Gods, you have stayed with this group for quite some time now. Not once had he spoken to you more than the standard greeting, and you didnât know much about him besides the sharp-shooting, brutal force of a man who had no problem letting his thoughts be voiced, even though the listeners might be less inclined to its harsh deliverance.
He had been cruel, sure, but you couldnât help but remember how close you had been before when he spewed words that clung so viciously from his tongue. Faintly, you remembered the deep scent of gunpowder and smoke, something you were certain probably penetrated his skin by now, but also the slightly musky scent hidden underneath. Your head raced in curiosity, wondering how his hands would grab you if it wasnât in anger. Was he even capable of that, you pondered.
Itâs ridiculous you knew those thoughts were born from misconceptions and assumptions. You had heard how he behaved amongst the camp women, forever gentle and careful, and you had sharpened your ear when youâd been told timidly about his earlier flings. He could be more heartfelt than your head let you acknowledge, and the thought made your head spin even more with your endless imagination.
Despite the inner turmoil that filled you from your earlier argument, you had avoided him for some days now, and it seemed to grow easier the colder you got, huddling close to the fire with every chance. It was the only thing keeping your thoughts occupied, wondering when you would get to leave this desolated mining town that grew more covered in snow the longer you chose to stay.
âDo you need help, Hosea?â Just after you spoke, heavy blankets were handed to you, the fabric made from a thick wool that looked heavenly. âYes, thank you. I take one step outside; I fear that it will be the end of me.â You only stared warmly at Hosea, who patted you on the back. âDonât you worry, miss. We found more blankets we thought had been lost in that dreadful storm, so we all will sleep warmer tonight.â
âOh, of course, Iâll help-â Despite the whistling winds that had picked up as the sun shone its last tendrils, you didnât oppose the idea, but you were interrupted by a mischievous look handed to you by the older man.
âMake sure Arthur grabs one, too; you know how he gets.â Before you could question his meaning, he slunk away, pulling the warm fabric tighter around his shoulders without a glance at you, chuckling merrily. You chose not to ponder too hard on his strange ways, instead making your way to the door, shivering badly as you stepped outside.
Smiles were all you were greeted with as you handed them off, and it was no surprise as it was a welcome sight to everyone to gain some extra warmth to wrap around themselves. Although feeling content by being of help, you couldnât help but wonder where Arthur could be, a single blanket now left in your hands.
Grumbling to yourself, you stepped out from the hut Dutch and Molly resided in, glancing at a smaller building some paces away, finding the orange glow of a candle lighting up the smaller barn where the horses were kept. A small smile found you, finding it very fitting for him to be where there were fewer people.Â
Although slightly fearing what could come to be an awkward encounter, you found yourself being too forgiving many times, and you damned yourself for it. What he said hurt you deeply, making you ponder if you had given Charles other signals than intended. It could be a possibility, yet you had never had too many romantic dealings with men to presume that that was the case, but his eyes held something tender the last few times you spoke as you recalled it.
âArthurâŚâ As you stepped inside after pulsing through the thick snow, you searched for the blue coat you had grown familiar with in this weather. âAre you here?â You asked quietly, wondering if he could hear you.
You cautiously stepped further into the barn, placing your feet steadily on the ground before you so you didnât slip and embarrass yourself. It was friendly out here, you could admit, the snow muting every sound and almost making every slight sound caress your ears.Â
As you stepped further inside, it turned out he was here, and he took no notice of you as you rounded the corner to gaze at his seated form, seemingly writing something in his journal. It was an unusual sight. Sometimes, you observed him as he wrote in his journal back at camp, yet you didnât make a habit of it, too shy to question him at the time.
How he didnât freeze to death in this climate was beyond you, his fingers bare as he scribbled, fingertips red from the cold and dirty from the chalk. You made a motion to speak up once again but found yourself tongue-tied as you took him in, and as you did, the thought struck you that he wasnât writing but drawing.
How unlike him, you thought, watching his brows furrowed from time to time, fingers moving expertly while the soft glow of the candle beside him almost softened his features. Your presumptions might be harsh, but you had never found him to be a man well-versed in the creative aspect of life, and while the brutal ways of his life spoke for him, you found it to make him slightly more approachable.Â
âI didnât know you draw.â You stated fondly, his eyes fitting into yours the moment the first word left your mouth, growing visibly stressed as the journal was planted into his coat pocket. A rough cough left him as he did, eyes faltering when he saw your observant gaze linger on him unabashedly.
âI donât.â A small laugh left you at his abrupt words, not teasingly but perhaps warmly, choosing not to bug him since he grew uncomfortable before your questioning eyes.Â
You were given an expectant look that reminded you of your actual business here as you stepped inside the building, closing the barn door behind you to shut out the wind that somehow managed to find its way through the cracks in the walls.Â
âHere, we found some more blankets. Hosea asked me to bring you one.â You met his eyes briefly as you stretched out your arms for him to take the blanket, eyes faltering to it at his piercing gaze.
âHosea, huh?â A scoff left him, resuming his arms to cross over his chest, shaking his head slightly. âYou keep it.â
âNo, I-âÂ
âNah, you chattering your teeth keeps us up at night. Take it.â
His words should have taken you back since his voice was stinging, but a light laugh left you, knowing he was right. Wrapping yourself in the soft, warm blanket, you surprised Arthur by sitting beside him, heavily clad shoulders touching each other as you did.Â
âI donât understand.â You stated, staring at the large shadows that flickered on the wooden wall before you. âHow can you not be cold? I feel like if I spend one more day out here, Iâll freeze to death.â
You turned your head towards him, caught off guard when you felt his gaze already set intensely on you. Your eyes faltered to his chest, growing shy as you always did when you had his attention on you. It wasnât unwanted, but you didnât know what to do with yourself in moments like that, unused to the fire that always burned so deep in his eyes.
âUsed to it, I guess.â His voice rumbled hotly in his chest, fingers flexing against his will as he took the chance to observe you. He had never had the opportunity to see your face this close. Your wet lashes clung together as you blinked, undoubtedly from the heavy snowfall outside, framing your eyes that Arthur always noticed were so very easy to read, yet at many moments also locked away.
âI donât believe you.â How could anyone possibly get used to this? It was raw, pure torture.Â
You didnât get an answer, and as you returned your gaze towards the wall, Arthurâs eyes found your features again. He had indeed been cold before you came, but it was his only chance to find a moment of peace; the thought of spending another night in that god-forsaken hut with his dear friend and his lover giggling the night away grew incredibly distasteful.
Here, he could finally hear his thoughts, the solitude of the snow muting every sound heavenly; the only noise was the familiar scribbling in his journal as he wrote about the past few days. Though his head was calmer than before, he still dreamt of your fingers encasing his like they had done Charles, the small, elegant touches rising his arms slowly, making him shiver wildly as the scene flashed before his eyes.Â
He knew he shouldnât think of you like that, and he certainly had no right to be angry at Charles since he felt so unabashedly filthy things about you, but he couldnât help it. Your every scent, every motion set his blood afire; small deeds of good you always found yourself doing so harshly contrasted his actions he couldnât help the fact that you intrigued his whole being.Â
So good, so⌠soft and warm. As he stared at you, all he wanted was to reach out and pull you closer to him so he could feel your shivering body close to him, knowing many ways to warm you up. Sighing, he removed his hat, running his fingers through his hair as the thoughts took a turn he always hated himself for.
âHey, I uhâŚâ Arthur trailed off, finding the words he wanted to speak stuck in his throat. âI shouldnât have spoken to you that way, like I did back then.â He stared before him, yet he felt your eyes heavy on his.
He did feel bad, and it had been the reason for his brooding temper since then, not coming to terms with his wrongdoings until now. He had probably scared you, he concluded, and could only assume he was right as you had done your utmost to avoid him as of late.
âDonât be,â you said with a light smile, not expecting his apology, even though he didnât say sorry directly. âItâs a lot right now, I understand. But I still donât understand why youâre so angry at Charles.â You were briefly met with a light sigh, eyes flickering to yours before diverting the flickering candle.Â
âNah, forget it. Just me being stupid is all.â
âI donât think youâre stupid. Maybe youâre mean sometimes and grumpy,â you said, giving him a teasing glance. âBut not stupid.â
A scoff left him at your words, yet you could see the corners of his mouth chirp up lightly. âYouâd be surprised.â
As your snickering died down, you rested your head on the wall behind you, not wanting to leave the quiet comfort you found yourself in nor the conversation that panned on longer than you had anticipated, much to your surprise.
âWhy are you out here if you are so cold, girl?â He questioned you, catching a glimpse of your almost blue lips. âGo on inside; youâll freeze to death if you stay here.â It would be best for you to return because he wouldnât be able to live with himself if his thoughts progressed like they did before in your presence. As he placed the hat on his head again, he glanced down quickly, doing a double take as he found you staring at him.Â
Was the cold finally getting to your head, or was it simply being in the presence of the man you were so unsure of but wildly intrigued by? You couldnât tell, but the warmth spreading in your stomach as he glanced down at you spread ferociously through your stomach, almost warming you to your fingertips.Â
Suddenly, Arthur moved his arm slightly, and the motion made you jump, leaning away from him as you unconsciously drew closer to him. You couldnât tell, but it almost felt like your body sometimes contradicted your mind, defying your sense of morality.
âAre you afraid of me?â He questioned, gazing at you unexplainably. Both of your breaths were audible in the quiet night, blowing like smoke out your mouths as the world around you blurred. It wasnât like Arthur couldnât contain himself around women, but you were something else entirely. Only in his wildest dreams did you stare at him like that, like you were expectingâwaitingâ for him to do something.Â
Yet, you looked guarded, like a cornered lam, waiting for the right moment to sprint away. You pulled away, only to lean in further, the cogs in your head turning something so awful in your mind, observing his every move yet not registering your own that reached out to him.
And gods, did he want to do the same; his internal battle proved to be more difficult as your hand gripped his coat tightly, only wanting to warm your blue lips with his own and show you how he could warm you up better than Charlesâs damned gloves ever could.
âSometimes.â You let on, voice shaking from both anticipation and uncertainty.
Leaning down towards you hesitantly, he felt hot all over when he realized you didnât shy away from him like expected, mouth only parting further as he drew closer. As you did, you felt your breath hitch when a hand was placed on your upper back, Arthurâs weight only making you glide further down the wall until your head was resting in the crook of his elbow.
âArthurâŚâ He was so close now you could almost feel his heartbeat through the vast amount of clothing, breath hitting your cold, blushing cheeks as he leaned closer, the calling of his name only drawing him in. He was sure you had bewitched him, for not a single thought in his mind was about anything but the woman in front of him, entirely and utterly overtaken by what was solely you.
And through those few moments between frustration and desperation, all senses of logic disappeared as the skin of your lips conjoined, drawn together like magnets that snapped together like they never wanted to be apart again. Eyes grew shut, the only sound now the deep humming in Arthurâs chest as your hands found his cheeks, caressing the chilly skin under your palm with your thumbs.
It was ragged and scarred, a deep contrast to your own that had never tasted the metal of a gun and the blood of a foe, and the thought made a gasp rise in your throat as his weight fell heavier onto yours, pressing you into the hay-filled, snowy ground.Â
âTell me to stop.â He grunted against your now wet lips, only taking a second before joining them again. He was covering your entire body as he lay above you, resting his weight on his elbows as your head rested on his arm.Â
âNoâŚâ You mumbled, words almost not audible against his desperate mouth, feeling just as affected by the desire as he did. You felt his face scrunch up almost painfully before he took the hand that rested on your back to glide under your coat, resting it on the side of your waist as he stroked gently, feeling the curves that hid underneath the damned fabric.
It was torture. It was an unexplainable torture that you would freeze to death if he removed the clothes that covered you, and he would surely go insane if he couldnât feel the skin he imagined would be so very soft under his rough fingers. Just a taste, he thought sinfully to himself, slowly lifting the fabric of your shirt from under your skirtâs waistband, worming a freezing hand inside to feel the warmth that hid underneath.
You gasped at the sudden sensation but were quickly silenced as his tongue massaged your own, and the slight moan that left you only made a groan rumble loudly in his chest. The feeling of his cold hand rose your skin, stroking every bit it came across as if memorizing it to his brain, mapping out every single inch.Â
It was too much for you, the sheer desperation and want, not knowing what to do with yourself or how to dampen the intense feelings that nailed your firm to the ground. Every bit of you grew into static, and every touch from Arthur sent shockwaves through your body as his fingers caressed you.
âCome here.â Opening your eyes, you found his, although lidded with desire, gentle eyes gazing into yours, pulling his hand reluctantly from your waist to help you sit up. âI wonât let you lay on the ground.âÂ
You only stared at him as he seated you on his lap, chest flush against his as his hands stroked along your arms as if to warm you up, tightening the blanket around your shoulders. You felt your heartbeat pick up at his actions, your stomach fluttering fiercely as he ensured you stayed warm.
You could tell he grew wildly unsure as you remained silent, clearing his throat as if he had been in a daze before speaking.Â
âIf youâll have me, that is.â You didnât give him a chance to say more, hands finding sanction in his hair as the motion knocked off his hat, exposing the sandy locks he always kept hidden underneath it.
âStupid question.â You mumbled softly against his mouth, pressing yourself closer to him as your fingers started fiddling with the buttons on his coat. You could already feel the heat emitting, and your fingers grew hasty as you tried to move faster, the motion of your lips faltering against his eager ones.
You would have been ashamed if it werenât for Arthur being just as stressed about getting the buttons of your coat loose, hands wounding their way around your waist and pressing you closer to him the moment they became undone. Likewise, you wormed your arms under his shoulder, gasping as you felt the heat buried underneath the fabric, hugging him close as you placed your face into the crook of his neck.Â
Breathing in your scent, Arthur revealed in the way you nuzzled against him, feeling a warmth spread in his groin when the thick coat didnât keep the pressure of your middle away from him any longer. It was heaven, he concluded, trailing his hands down to your backside as he caressed the curves, pushing you flush against his.
Oh, how he reveled in it. He was selfish; there was no denying it any longer, but he craved you so profoundly it would eat him up bit by bit if he couldnât have you. It wasnât about Charles any longer; it was about the fact that you had never spared him a glance, almost bordering on fearing him, deciding that everyone else company had been much safer than his own.Â
He knew it and had seen it in your eyes countless times. Arthur wasnât unfamiliar with the look of utter horror plastered on peopleâs faces, for he faced it every day, and he wanted nothing more than to show you that you had no reason to feel that way with him, for he would never put a single finger that was unwished for on you.
And he couldnât possibly hold it against you, for he wasnât a good man, quite the opposite actually, and every lingering touch made him hate himself even more, wishing you would find it in you to push away from himâlet him know that if he ever touched you again, you would kill him.Â
But, he would find that you didnât, instead only pressing yourself even harder against him in the cold of the night, breath shaking something so terribly as he moved your lower region against his in a gentle movement. It only fueled his want for you, hands struggling their way up your skirt, caressing your stocking-clad legs as he did, reaching your undergarments with a content sigh.Â
His touch lighted a path up your legs, the cold nothing but a memory now even though the brisk air found its way underneath your skirt, following his hands that caressed your inner thighs in soft motions.
It was suspenseful, waiting for the skin to touch the skin, for his strong hands to wound around you as he had already wormed himself around your heart. And as he did, the coil in your stomach grew so incredibly tight you felt like it was too much like his touch alone wounded your every fiber, but instead of hurt, it was an undeniable pleasure that hit you tenfold.
The hand that had crawled its way inside your undergarments stroked alongside your tender parts, never touching you where you wanted him the mostâthe place that longed for his touch. He had to be teasing you; there was no other explanation as he smiled softly at your expression, gasping for air as you gripped the sides of his arms, trying to push against his fingers.Â
âAh, sweetheart.â He only cooed at you, gripping your wrists with one hand as his other finally glided over the wetness of your heat, gazing directly into your eyes with his sharp gaze, admiring your pleasure-filled face that begged him to give you more, to provide you with his all. And, as he spread your folds with his fingers, the filthiest whimper of pleasure left you, laying its noise into the quiet night with no worry about anyone hearing, only fools deciding to stray outside in this bleak, frigid night.Â
Falling into his arms yet again, you let him enter a finger into your warm cavern, gasping desperately for air as the unfamiliar stretch widened you, dragging wonderfully against your clenching walls. It was vile, the way Arthur reveled in how tight you felt against his finger, and as he pondered on how you would feel when he pushed it you. The thought made a striking, white pleasure shoot through him, making him grunt out against your neck.
âThat good?â He spoke out, adding another finger into you while placing wet, hot kisses against your blazing neck, wanting nothing more than to hear your heavenly sound of approval.Â
You attempted to nod, but the motion was interrupted by the increasingly more extensive stretch from both of his fingers; gasping like a madwoman as you moved against his hands, wishing to pull his fingers even deeper into you, dissatisfied when you realized it didnât do the job.
He could only groan when he realized your intention, slipping his coated finger from your warm heat, bringing them to his mouth quickly while his other hand found the zipper of his jeans, fumbling in a stressed fashion to get rid of the constraint.
A dissatisfied moan left you as he did, wishing for nothing more than to feel the delicious stretch yet again carry alongside your walls. But, as he fumbled with his zipper, you quickly got your senses together. You helped him undo his suspenders, then slipped underneath the fabric to trail your hand alongside the apparent bulge that stretched underneath, finding his groans to fuel your actions.Â
For a short while, your eyes met amidst the hurry your bodies experienced, and the moment slowed down to a halt as your lips found each other once more, moving against one another like starved men. You couldnât be closer to him, and he couldnât possibly be closer to you, and while you earlier had pondered that this was a good idea, you couldnât imagine anything else at this moment.
And, as your hand wrapped around him momentarily, Arthur could feel his brainâs short circuit, like he had never been able to hold a single thought in his mind his entire life. You had to have bewitched him, for he complied to your every touch, body moving against your every move like your hand was glued to his body.
âGod,â he mumbled against your lips that massaged his own, thrusting against your hand as you stroked him tenderly, gasping against him quietly. It wasnât hurried but warm and slow, basking in each otherâs presence like you had never before discovered the feeling of anotherâs touch against your own.
âThat good?â You replied teasingly, mimicking his earlier words as you smiled a toothy smile, feeling him chuckle lowly at your apparent teasing, giving you a playful slap on your behind as his breathing picked up.
Suddenly, you felt a hand encase your own. As he removed it from his throbbing member, he only grabbed you closer, wounding his arms around your back as he pulled you into a hug, the feeling of him underneath you wonderful as you glided along itâmoaning wantonly as the friction shot sharp streaks of pleasure up your body.
âCome on, sweetheart. Iâll warm you up.â As he spoke, he could feel himself shudder as your wet lips encased his tip, groaning audibly as he thought you rubbing against him. You were illegal, he concluded, for nothing could ever be allowed to feel this goodâit wasnât possible.
âPlease,â you gasped against his lips, moving your hips slightly as you felt his hands circle your waist. âPlease, Arthur.âÂ
He hushed you quietly, finally feeling you wrap your lips around him as he slowly entered your warm cavern, the walls fitting him snugly as a grunt left him unexpectedly, lost in the pleasure you brought him.Â
While it felt too good to imagine, you could only keep your mouth open at the sensation, wondering how something could ever fill you up quite as good as this. Without a single thought, you sat down entirely, feeling him stretch you wonderfully as you wrapped around all of him, wounding your hands around his neck.Â
You didnât need to move much, for he thrust up into you when you had gotten used to his size, feeling yourself being hitched up to his body as the motion made your whole body rise to then fall back down on him, once more filled to the brim. His grunting in your ears filled your senses, and while the slight consciousness entered your mind, wondering what you were doing, you pushed it far back, relishing in how your body responded to his.
Despite the cold that was surely creeping into your bones the more you stayed out here, the sound of skin against skin filling the empty spaces around you made you feel more connected to each other than you had ever felt with anyone else.Â
You started to move with him, bringing down your hips to meet his while he thrusts into you, growing more desperate by the minute. You found the hands hugging your waist, circling their arms around it, pushing you even further against him as you rested your hands on his cheeks, having no choice but to stare into his lidded eyes as he grunted roughly underneath you.Â
God, how he wanted to push you down onto the ground and drive into you, damning the snow that covered the ground. Instead, he glided down further from the wall, feeling your weight press against him more as your head found sanction in his neck, feeling his thrusts grow more in power as he pistoned into you harder from the new position.
âArthur.â You breathed out, feeling the stretch of him grow as the position made him reach even deeper inside you, one arm reaching down to grab your bottom so he could hold you firmer against him.
âI know, honey.â He murmured, head growing dizzy as you clenched around him so wonderfully, mewling sweetly into his ears as you let him take control.Â
Did it make him an evil man for reveling in what he knew Charles would never gain from you? Maybe it did, but those thoughts were placed far back in his mind as your lips found his, small moans now muted as you grew desperate for his affection, growing insatiable to once more feel the fondness that laid in his every touch.
He had been so angry that someone else had gained the courage to do what he couldnât, realizing he had been too late. Yet now, as you remain unknowing above him, it only made his lips plant themself firmer against yours, determined to make you understand that nobody could make you feel this way except him.
Grabbing the blanket off your shoulders, he threw it down towards the ground as you gasped, stroking your waist tenderly before slowing his movements.Â
Your breath heaved something so terrible, your voice shaking as you spoke. âDonât stop, Arthur. Please.â He felt his stomach coil at your words, throbbing inside you as he moved to a seated position.
âI ainât stopping, sweetheart,â he let on, leaning you backwards lightly. âLay back for me, okay?â You did as he said without a protest, the cold now gone as your legs spread from him.
He almost groaned from the sight, taking a moment to observe you as you stared at him through lidded eyes, blushed cheeks so wonderfully red against the whiteness of the snow you almost looked like an angelâyour hair spread like a halo around your head where you laid on the blanket.
Crawling over you quickly, he grunted as he felt your hand encasing itself around him, stroking slowly as you guided it to your clenching hole. For a moment, he felt a relief spread through him at the feeling of your walls surrounding him before the sheer and utter desperation set in, beginning to move into you at a faster pace than before.Â
Your breath hitched at the sudden movement, yet you gripped his arms to keep him there, not baring the thought of him stopping again. Being over you gave him more control, and his primal instincts set in as the coil in his stomach shot burning flashes throughout his body, wanting nothing more than to feel your warm walls around him forever. Maybe it was the desire talking, but he swore that the thought of you being like this with any other man than him would make him heave.
Encasing his arms around you as your hands found his hair, he felt your legs wrap around his waist, now so close he was grounding into you relentlessly. Rough yet tender, he moved into you with care, but you could feel that he was holding back as he panted above you.
âDonât stop!â You begged him once more amidst his thrusts, pulling on his strands as his lips found the softness of your neck. Why you were begging, you couldnât say, oblivious to the words leaving your mouth in utter bliss.
âHm?â He mumbled, smiling lightly from hearing your ruined voice beg him. He felt like a sick man gaining pleasure from it, but his mind was too hazy to take notice, longing to hear those words leave your sweet mouth once more. âWhat was that?â
âDonât stop,â you voiced breathlessly as his hand found your breast, rolling the nub softly between his rough fingers. Despite your begging, for his own sickly twisted pleasure his hips ceased their movements, moving torturously slow as he raised his elbows to stare at your tear-filled eyes.
They shot open as he slowed his pace, displeased he didnât listen as you already felt shameful for sounding so desperate. You couldnât help it, for it felt too good, and now that he had stopped, you wished he never had. Was he teasing you? The thought made you blush from embarrassment and annoyance, pleading with your eyes.
âNoâŚâ You mumbled, trying to move against him, yet his hands held you firm against the ground.
âSay it.â Arthurâs voice was coarse as he spoke, grabbing your hand to place tender kisses on it as your displeased sounds reached his ears. He only got a confused look, smirking slightly at the longing and apparent dissatisfaction plastered on your face. A biting shadowed lust replaced his usually sharp eyes as he watched you, carnal written deeply in his eyes.
âMy name, sweetheart. Let me hear you say it.â Suddenly, he pistoned his hips against you, driving up your wet walls as a mewl left you from the sudden force. You felt his intense eyes on you as your eyes shut momentarily, and through your blurred vision, they didnât stay open for long.
âArthur,â you moaned, eye-rolling into the back of your head as your back arched, a wave of pleasure shooting through you at his demands. He held the same controlled yet sensual pace, knowing heâd slip out of you if he went any harder. Still, his accuracy was wickedâhitting the right spot with every move.
âThatâs it,â he praised you, placing another kiss on your palm as his thrusts increased, grunting roughly as your walls squeezed him tightly. You break into sobs as you reach out to grasp his arms, tilting his head up just enough to let you know heâs watching you, his hazy gaze roving over the devastation on your face.Â
The snow around you mutes the sound of skin hitting skin as he sets a brutal pace. âI didnât tell you to stop, sweetheart.â The deep rumble in his chest as he spoke the words laced with possessiveness made your heartbeat pick up faster than it already was, the light ringing in your ears increasing as your body was hoisted up with each of his thrusts.
You call his name like a prayer amidst the pleasure, and satisfaction at hearing his name come so sinfully from your mouth made his eyes roll back, knuckles turning white from gripping the ground so harshly. Oh, you had no idea that every noise you let out from his advances made his heart soar with pride, feeling the softness of your skin under the palm of his hands.
Arthur feels the abrupt stop of movements from your hand, gripping tightly on his arms as you spasm around his cock, clenching tightly as the pads of his fingers come down to rub at your swollen nub as your orgasmed, a loud whine leaving you at the contact. Itâs too much for you, the sensation too unfamiliar yet devastatingly addictiveânot knowing if you wanted to drive your hips away from his brutal assault or enjoy him even more profoundly.Â
Even if you had decided on the prior, he didnât let you, pushing you firm against the ground as he twitched inside you at the noises you let out, groaning lowly as he came inside your warm walls, planting himself deep inside you.Â
âChrist-â He grunts out, teeth clenched as you feel his cock throb inside you, cum gathering at the base of him as his hips slow to deep thrusts, grinding into you in sheer pleasure as the knot in his stomach unleashed, feeling you placing small kissed on his neck.
The slight motion made him smile amidst his pleasure-filled mind, caressing the curves of your waist as he nestled his head into your neck, still panting heavily. As you both calmed down, it didnât take long for your hand to find his, fingers wounding themselves around the others in the blissful aftermath.
As you opened your eyes after catching your breath, you found a pair of blue ones already gazing at you. You didnât speak for a while, both of you trying to digest the situation as tiny snowflakes could be seen falling from the sky through the cracks in the walls. It reminded you of how cold you should have been, but with Arthursâs broad chest covering you, it felt like you were clinging to a furnace.
âShit, you must be freezing.â He suddenly let out, shaking his head slightly as if in a daze before rising to pull you with him. As he pulled your skirt down your legs, rubbing them between his hands to warm you up, you could only stare at him in quiet wonder.
âWhat?â He grumbled out, sniveling lightly as he glanced at you. Had you not wanted this, he wondered, doubt starting to fill his mind. You were too quiet for his liking, only staring at him as he tried to prolong touching your soft skin, fearful of the hurtful words that were sure to come.Â
âAre you jealous of Charles?âÂ
If crickets had been this far north, they would surely be the only thing audible as Arthur stopped. Bear of a man, hardy and stubborn to many, yet a faint blush could be seen rising to his cheeks as his face loweredâwishing so dearly he could find his hat that had seemingly disappeared so he could hide.
If he had been looking at you, he would have seen the toothy smile covering your face, a tender laugh leaving you as your assumptions became reality. You had to give him credit, though, for he had you completely and utterly fooled.Â
âNo.â He stated firmly, rising on his legs to pull up his pants. He found himself unable to, though, your hand grabbing his suspenders to pull him back down. The same heat that had lessened in his stomach came back as he felt your nimble touch caress him through his pants, gaining a mischievous look from you as you widened your legs.Â
âDonât worry, Arthur. Iâll give Charles his gloves back if you stay here and keep me warm.âÂ
Oh dear, that would do it. Whatever thoughts that filled his mind flew out the window, wholly consumed by you as your hands caressed his back, staring expectantly up at him.Â
âOnly me, right?â
âOnly you, stupid.â
#arthur morgan x reader#arthur morgan smut#arthur morgan imagine#arthur morgan x female reader#arthur morgan#rdr2#red dead redemption 2#red dead redemption imagine#red dead redemption smut#red dead smut
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â°âš pure, uncorrupted
pairing: arthur morgan &Â virgin!reader.
summary: you are too pure, too naive. and he hates to see other men fantasizing about tainting you. so, before someone else does - he decides to do it himself.
warnings:Â mentions of rape/sexual abuse, past physical/psychological abuse, corruption kink, arthur takes reader's virginity, arthur is protective, but lonely and hates himself. legal age gap, oral sex (fem receiving), p-in-v sex, loving sex, creampie - english is not my first language so I apologize for any mistakes!
he would never forget that day. trelawny had told them a few weeks earlier that, southwest of valentine, just a mile from the village, there was a farm: two houses and a barn. trelawny claimed there was a large amount of money hidden there, illegitimately earned by the family.  Â
that's why they went. micah, bill and arthur set out into the night, riding toward that farm. thieves robbing thieves.  Â
the family consisted of a father and two sons. they had no choice but to wipe them all out. arthur had never liked to take the lives of innocent people, but these people... they didn't feel right.  Â
the house was very untidy inside, grimy, and there was a padlocked door on the upper floor. while micah and bill ransacked the downstairs, he took a look at the bedrooms, and of course, kicked in the locked room door.  Â
you were in there. cowering on the bed, pressed against the wall, shivering and sobbing. you had heard gunshots and banging, you had tried your best not to make any noise, but they had found you. arthur was perplexed. he studied you for a few seconds, processing the situation: this family had you locked in this room. you were wearing torn and dirty rags, and your room was even more neglected. there were flies, food from days ago, and only one bed in the room.  Â
âit's okay, it's okay. i ain't gonna hurt you,â he finally said, slowly approaching you.  Â
micah arrived shortly after, and a crooked smile came across his face.  Â
âwell look at this, morgan! i say we have some fun. bill, get up here!â his cruel words irritated arthur deeply.  Â
âget out of here, you foul thing! wait downstairs!â he raised his voice, and micah only let out a challenging laugh. still, he obeyed, after arthur shot him a menacing glare.Â
you, still shaking and weeping on the bed, watched him. the thought that the man in front of you had protected you from the others, soothed you a little.  Â
arthur couldn't kill you. how could he kill you? it wasn't an option.  Â
âwhat are you doing here, girl?â he moved a little closer and noticed that one of your legs was covered in bruises.  Â
âi-i was... grounded,â you mumbled, between sobs. arthur frowned and clicked his tongue.  Â
âwere those your father and brothers?â he asked, his hand hesitantly stroking your forearm, seeking to calm you.  Â
you nodded, hot, copious tears streaming down your flushed cheeks. he sighed. Â
âthey're dead. i'm sorry,â he began, and his heart shrank at your obvious expression of relief. âyou can come with us, we won't hurt you. we'll take you to valentine,â he added. Â
you nodded, raising your arms toward him. arthur accepted the gesture, and with his strong hands on your armpits, he lifted you and carried you in his arms, heading for his horse.  Â
you refused to stay in valentine that night. you begged again and again to be taken with them. and this snarling, distrustful outlaw, softened at the image of you, a forlorn young woman alone in this world that had so embittered him over the years.  Â
âwe're taking her,â arthur said to the other men.  Â
âmorgan! we can't afford another mouth to feed!â bill protested.  Â
âwe're taking her,â he insisted, his tone firm and intimidating, and the others snorted.  Â
 it had been months since that night. you were accepted into the gang of outlaws arthur lived with, but you had a hard time adjusting. you developed an unhealthy attachment to the man who had rescued you, who you considered your hero. whenever arthur was in camp, you followed him, trying to talk to him. being close made you feel better. but he was very cold most of the time.  Â
âgirl, really, you need to leave me alone. what d'ya want now?â he said, his tone showing irritation, when you approached to talk to him for the tenth time today.  Â
 your smile vanished, your expression transforming into one of pain and embarrassment. you blushed and lowered your gaze, and before you could say anything, he snorted heavily.  Â
 âi'm sorry. i'm sorry, i just like to be alone, you know that,â he replied, exasperated.Â
 you fiddled anxiously with the edge of your blouse, pursing your lips sheepishly. Â
âi just wanted to be with you for a little while,â your voice came out shaky and low. arthur's heart almost melted.  Â
âcome,â he said, curtly, sitting down on his bed.  Â
âno, n-no need. i'm sorry to disturb you.â  Â
âcome,â he repeated, louder now, as a demand.  Â
 you shrank back but obeyed and sat down next to him. he looked at you, his blue eyes scrutinizing your sad, anxious expression, his frown easing.  Â
âi can't be with you all the time,â he explained. your lip quivered, and you nodded.  Â
âi know. i know. i'm sorry.â Â
âit's not because i donât want to. it's because this... this thing you got with me, it can't go on,â he said, his hand stroking your hair, tucking a lock behind your ear, his actions contradicting his words. âyou're gonna have to leave here someday. and if we don't stop this in time...â his words trailed off.  Â
âi don't want to leave.â  Â
âyou're absolutely gonna leave. don't be silly. you don't belong in this kind of life. when you get your strength back, i want you out of here.â
 you looked at him, wide-eyed, silent.  Â
âdon't look at me like that,â he spat, annoyed. but a second later, he sighed. âwe're not doing you any good. not me, not anyone here. you understand that, don't you?â  Â
âi don't have anyone else. i'll be alone,â you said, your heart racing with fear.  Â
 arthur stroked your cheek, thoughtfully. he had grown so fond of you these past few months, that he could hardly imagine his life without you anymore. but the rational part of him knew you had no future here, not with someone like him.  Â
 that's why he pushed you away. that's why he tried to ignore you. he couldn't stand seeing the way you looked at him, like he was a hero, a savior. because arthur was nothing like that. arthur was a criminal, a murderer, a ruthless, bitter, outlaw with no future, someone who only brought tragedy into people's lives.  Â
âi don't like it when you're this mean to me,â you muttered, pouting, still hurt by how he had greeted you when you came.  Â
âi know. forgive me,â he whispered, looking at your hand. he wanted to take it, to feel it, but didn't dare to.  Â
 weeks passed. arthur hated the way the men looked at you. micah, especially. that sick, deranged bastard. he mocked your innocence, your naivety.  Â
âwell, i've been dying to deflower that little lassie, the new one. ever since we saw her at the farm i been saying we have fun with her, but morgan won't let us,â protested micah, sipping from his bottle of whiskey, one night by the fire.  Â
âdo you think she's a virgin?â javier replied with curiosity. Â
âplease!â interjected bill, laughing. âthat girl doesn't even know what screwing is.â  Â
 âof course she doesn't. i told her to blow me the other day and she just looked at me with those dopey eyes of hers,â micah cackled.  Â
 arthur overheard the conversation and felt his insides boil. listening to those nasty old men, talking so crudely about a young, proper lady like you, made him sick.  Â
 âwhat the fuck are you talking about?â arthur snarled. he snatched the whiskey bottle from micah's hand and faced him, with an annihilating glare. âif you ever talk about her like that again, you better make sure i don't hear. or i'll cut that throat of yours so you never say a fucking word again,â he said, his voice low and intense, getting micah to turn away, letting out a nervous laugh.  Â
 he retreated to his tent, furious, and was startled to find you there. he put his hand to his chest and shook his head. âwhat are you doing here, you want to scare me to death?â he wheezed, anger still boiling inside him.  Â
 you looked at him with a smile and showed him a flower crown in your hands. âlook what i did,â you declared, proudly, your eyes on his, perhaps seeking approval in his expression. he eased back and couldn't hide a soft smile, gentle and loving. he took the floral diadem and placed it on your head.  Â
 âbeautiful,â he whispered. you blushed heavily and pressed your lips together, excited. Â
âi was reading and in the book, it explained how to make it and what flowers were ideal for it. i think it turned out really pretty,â you explained.  Â
 âyes. it looks very pretty. but you should be sleeping,â he scolded you.
 âi'm sorry. i was excited and wanted to wait for you to come back,â you defended yourself. he smiled.  Â
 he couldn't help but bring his hands to your face. you were so precious, so candid and credulous. and those abhorrent men were talking about deflowering you just a few minutes ago... it made him feel like throwing up.  Â
the affectionate gesture surprised you. your cheeks grew warmer. âwhat's wrong?â you asked, uneasy, and he dropped his hands to either side of his body.  Â
 ânothing. nothing,â he huffed, rubbing his face with his hand, frustrated, confused.  Â
 he knew he didn't do you any good. but how could he let you go? the world was full of disgusting men like micah. men who wouldn't hesitate to hurt this girl he had come to love.  Â
 he pushed past you and sat down on his bed.  Â
 âi want you to keep away from micah no matter what, do you understand? whatever he says to you. you stay away. and if he bothers you, you come and tell me immediately,â he said, without looking at you, his tone stern.  Â
 you didn't answer, you just nodded. you would do anything this man asked of you.  Â
 âare you sad?â you asked, moving closer to him. arthur was slow to answer, still not looking you in the eye.  Â
 âyeah. i am,â he admitted, sighing. you sat down next to him, and hugged him, trying to comfort him and also, seeking solace.  Â
arthur wanted to push you away, to scold you for invading his space, to urge you to leave him alone. but he couldn't do that anymore. he didn't want you to leave, and each and every time he had asked you to stay away, he had betrayed himself. he let himself enjoy your touch, your scent, and your warmth for the first time. he closed his eyes and leaned in slightly, sliding his arms around you. Â Â
 âforgive me for being a sorry son of a bitch to you,â he whispered, very remorseful.  Â
âit's okay. forgive me for always being annoying.â Â Â
 âyou're not annoying. don't ever say that again,â he replied, his chest vibrating against yours every time his husky voice made itself heard. âi've been a real jerk.â  Â
 you fell silent. you didn't understand what this was about. and arthur was grateful for your ignorance. he wouldn't know how to comfort you, how to make you forget those nauseating words if you had heard how you were spoken of before.  Â
 âi need to lie down, sweetheart. i'm very tired,â he mumbled, pulling away a little. the affectionate nickname made your heart skip a beat. you nodded, watching him lie down, his expression one of displeasure.  Â
 âcan i stay with you?â you whispered, fearful that he would say no. but he nodded without hesitation, and you settled in next to him. his heart was about to burst out of his chest. he let you snuggle up to him, and his arm slipped loosely around your waist.  Â
 âgonna stop by saint denis tomorrow to run some errands. wanna come with me?â he asked, and you looked up at him, your eyes widening with excitement.  Â
 âreally?â arthur let out a chuckle and confirmed. âyes, please. i'd like that very much.â  Â
your excitement stirred something inside him. he felt a warmth in his chest that he had never felt before. such a sweet being like you...and your father and brothers had you locked in a filthy room, only to be discovered by men who just wanted to fuck you and leave you stranded. what would have become of you if he hadn't gone and robbed that farm with the others that night? Â Â
âokay, sweetheart.â he used the nickname again, which made you grin like a fool. âi'm gonna sleep now, okay?â he said, and stretched his arm over you, reaching over to the bedside table to put a glass over the candle to put it out.  Â
 you pouted, and rested your head on his chest. âokay,â you whispered back, closing your eyes.  Â
 arthur was trying to hide it, but he was so nervous. it had been ages since he'd been this close to a woman, let alone a woman such as yourself. his pants had started to tighten since you first curled up with him, though he tried to act normal, his heart pounding in his chest.  Â
innocently, you ran a leg over his thigh, sighing. his arm tightened around your waist. he was restless, tense, and kept shifting his posture every few minutes. Â Â
 inevitably, his eyes opened in the darkness. he couldn't sleep.  Â
âi like being like this with you,â you whispered when you noticed he was still awake. âit gives me... this nice, funny feeling in my tummy,â you added, and arthur let out a shaky sigh.  Â
âoh, yeah...?â he replied, absently, your words replaying in his mind.  Â
 âyes... it always happens to me when i'm around you,â you confessed, your candid statement making his cock grow harder in his pants.  Â
âdon't get used to it,â he growled. you looked up, saddened.  Â
 âdon't you like being like this, together?â you asked, your voice low and apologetic. arthur exhaled hoarsely.  Â
 âtoo much, darlin'. too much,â he admitted, without looking at you. he was getting carried away.  Â
 you slid slowly onto his lap, and his breath hitched.  Â
 âwhat in the world are you doing?â he whispered. he panicked, feeling your pelvis right on top of his erection, which he had been trying to hide all this time.  Â
 âi want to be real close to you,â you whispered. âdo you mind?â  Â
 he looked at you with pleading eyes and shook his head, he was speechless. he tried to push you away, but his hands wouldn't move.
 âthe book talked about this too... about men, women...â you began, your voice shy as you explained.  Â
 âno. we're not doing this, girl,â he protested. but he didn't really mean it. the least he wanted right now was for you to get off of him.  Â
 âplease...â you begged. âi just want to know how it feels.â  Â
 his face was burning, his cock throbbing desperately in his pants, needing urgent relief. so you were indeed a virgin.  Â
 this wasn't right. he wouldn't take advantage of you.  Â
 âwhy?â you wanted to know.  Â
 âyou're a virgin,â he declared, in a low gasp. you didn't respond, just shrank back a tiny bit, with shame. âmy god, you're a virgin... no, i... i can't. i can't.â he covered his face.  Â
 arthur had never been with a virgin before. let alone a virgin with a life like yours. were you even aware of the importance of what you were asking?Â
 âoh, don't do this to me, please,â he whimpered, his hands sliding over your thighs, down to your buttocks. you blushed and let out a sigh of pleasure, rolling your hips against his, trying to ease the burning between your legs. arthur let out a low moan, his eyes half closed, his cheeks red.  Â
 âbaby... we can't... not with me,â he whispered, desperate. Â
âi want it to be with you,â you murmured. and he had no more strength to resist.  Â
âdo... do you want me to put it inside you?â he asked, pressing his pelvis against yours, making you feel his whole erection, warm and big against you.  Â
 âyes, please...â you begged.  Â
 âoh, sweetheart...â he swallowed, flustered. it had been so long since he'd last had sex, and now he had a beautiful, untouched woman in his lap, begging to be fucked. it felt like a goddamn dream. and he felt disgusting about it, but he was so turned on by the idea of taking your virginity. he felt like a hypocrite.  Â
 his hand slid down your ass cheek and under your nightgown. his fingers reached for your panties, his arm around your leg to touch you.  Â
 âyou're so wet,â he murmured. he closed his eyes for a moment, the heat feeling a little overwhelming. âtake off your nightgown, baby.â  Â
 obedient, you removed the garment slowly, remaining in his lap, your body covered only by your bra and panties. arthur exhaled, salivating, his gaze gliding over every inch of your exposed skin.  Â
 âyou are exquisite,â he said to himself, almost as a reproach. he shouldn't have to be doing this. but he couldn't stop. he just couldn't. he began to unbutton his shirt. âcan i see your tits?â he asked, rhetorically, since he knew that without complaint you would take off your bra. and so you did.  Â
 his lips and tongue immediately landed on the soft skin of your breasts, after having devoured you with his gaze for a few seconds. his lips left kisses, his tongue caressing and frolicking around your nipples. you moaned and stirred on his lap, immersed in pleasure and desperate for more.  Â
 he removed his shirt, and eagerly, unbuckled his belt.Â
 âgonna get on top, it may hurt a little this way,â he whispered between kisses. you nodded, and let him grab you by the thighs, your arms around his neck as arthur changed position.  Â
 he laid you down gently, and his hands crawled up your thighs, spreading your legs. his eyes lowered to your crotch, the fabric of your underwear was visibly wet.  Â
 âdarlin'... i'm not gonna last. haven't done this in a long time,â he said, his hands shaking a little, he was so horny he could barely think coherently.  Â
 âi-it's okay,â you murmured sheepishly.  Â
 he knelt between your legs, and placed soft, warm kisses on the sensitive skin of your thighs, moving closer and closer to your center. he kissed your pussy over your underwear, and pressed his face to it, inhaling your scent. Â
âdelicious,â he purred, closing his eyes, sucking and kissing over the fabric. his hands, big and strong, squeezed your flesh, eager to feel you. his right hand traveled down to your crotch, pushing aside the annoying material of your panties. âwhat a pretty little pussy,â he growled, and glued his mouth to it, licking between your warm wet lips, sucking on your clit, devouring you like a hungry man.  Â
you moaned, your legs trembling. his hands pressed against your thighs, spreading them wider, and when his fingers left your panties, they again came between you and his touches. Â Â
 âfuck,â he hissed in frustration, and roughly, he yanked them off you, sinking his face back between your legs, parting you wide and devouring you with both intensity and desperation.Â
 âi'm going to put my fingers in, okay?â he warned, looking down at you, his beard wet with your juices, his cheeks red. you nodded, your gaze clouded with pleasure. his ring and middle finger teased your sensitive, dilated entrance. slowly he slid them inside, feeling the rough texture of your insides tightening around his thick digits. he moved them slowly inside you, curving and massaging your insides lovingly, while his tongue and lips fed on your juices and moans, sucking on your sensitive, sweet spot.  Â
 âyou're so tight,â he gasped. he pulled away briefly, to pull down his pants. his cock sprung, flushed and swollen, eager for the delicious relief only you could bring him. âlook how you got me, baby...â he whispered, wrapping his member in his left hand, squeezing it slowly. âhow you get me, always.â  Â
 your pussy clenched around nothing, feeling emptier than ever. âplease... arthur,â you whimpered. he looked at you, unsure, was he really doing this? you deserved better than this. something so much better than this.  Â
 but the urges in his body were too strong, they absolutely ruled him. he placed his cock against your center, gripping it firmly, and rubbing its tip between your lips, pressing lightly as it met your entrance, tiny but eager.  Â
 âdarlinâ... what the hell are we doing?â he said, sliding in just the tip, which was thick enough to make you whimper. âow... baby.â  Â
 you felt so full. you looked down, and you could see his thick member, disappearing inside you. your pussy throbbed and squeezed him, unable to adjust to his size. he was huge.  Â
 before he got it all in, arthur had to pull it out a little. âyou're too tight,â he let out a pitiful whimper. âi'm gonna cum.â he added with embarrassment.  Â
 he pulled out, taking a deep breath. he leaned down to kiss you. he kissed your lips lovingly. god, he'd been so rude, not kissing you all this time. he relished your lips, and you could feel the wetness of his beard against your chin and cheeks. he penetrated you again, and this time he entered you somewhat more easily.  Â
 âenjoy, sweetheart... just enjoy,â he whispered, watching your face contort in pleasure. he had to close his eyes, imagine the horses, the flowers, the bees, the smell of the barns, or he would cum right there, inside you. he pushed it all the way in, his tip pressing against your cervix. âdoes it hurt, honey?âÂ
 âno, no... i... it feels so good...â you moaned. you felt so full, his cock was so thick you felt like there wasn't an inch of you he wasn't touching right now. every little movement of his hips, pressing against yours as he nestled his face into your neck, made you shudder.  Â
 âfuck... yes, squeeze me like that,â he begged, closing his eyes tighter, starting to move his hips, his hands squeezing your thighs and pressing them against the bed, spreading you wide to penetrate you deeply. âthank you, thank you...â he gasped hoarsely.  Â
 your small hands clung to him, your nails sinking into the flesh of his back, his big, strong back, as his whole body enveloped and filled you.  Â
 one of his hands slipped between your bodies, and he began rubbing your clit, each thrust making his member bury itself deep and hard inside you, your tight body giving him no respite.  Â
 âplease tell me you're close. i can't hold on much longer,â his voice sounded strained, cracked. the bed creaked beneath you, his hips slapping against your ass every time he bottomed out inside you.Â
 âyes, yes, please don't stop,â you whimpered. his hot, sweaty skin clung to yours, the heat under the sheets thick. his smell, salty and masculine flooded your nostrils, and his cock filled you, again and again, your snug cunt squeezing, sucking him deeper and deeper inside.  Â
your orgasm was intense. you trembled beneath him, your cries and mewls getting louder, and you writhed, your pussy milking him dry. arthur frowned in concentration, letting out soft grunts and whimpers as he moved within you. he came too, couldn't help it, his legs quivering as well. his thrusts became ragged and desperate, his eyes rolled back slightly as his cum filled you, hot and thick. "oh, god," he whined quietly. his strong arms hugged you closer, pressing you tighter to him as he left you completely full of him.  Â
 âd-darling,â he gasped, shuddering on top of you, his strokes slowing, until he stopped. his hands, scratchy from work and guns, slid over your sweaty skin and squeezed your breasts and hips, before holding you tight. âdon't leave me, please.â
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Ęá´É´á´Ęá´Ę!á´Ęá´Ęá´Ę á´á´Ęɢá´É´
-> synopsis: in which arthur was able to set aside his criminal ways and leave the Van der Linde gang and live a life of relative normalcy, and perhaps meet a nice little lady to make it all worth it
         -> pairing: rancher!arthur morgan + black!fem!reader
-> from: red dead redemption 2
         -> contains: age-gap (reader is 27, arthur is 37), 2nd person ('you', 'your', 'yours'), references to canon-violence and crimes
-> a/n: my knowledge of Red Dead Redemption is limited, only really coming from watching gameplays and from beta-reading a friends fic, but arthur morgan the man that you are! I really just want him to have a good life outside the gang so i played with the whole rancher idea a little bit here, with a little bit of gen. store clerk!reader, so i hope you guys enjoy!
         -> join my taglist!
-> tags: @mbakuetshurisprincess @shuriszn @writingintheshadowsforever @cafehyunji @niyahwrites @marsfunzon22 @briology @asensitivecookie @moon-bo-young @flo-milli-shit-hoe
ARTHUR MORGAN who eventually turns in his weapons and hangs in the towel of his criminal days, feigning for something more out of life than the thrill of a hunt, Though the decision wasnât an easy one (mainly because Dutch never made things easy), the man took one last job and took the earnings from it to buy a good 10-acre stretch of land in the southern midwest territories where he knew trouble wouldnât find him if it came looking. Within the next year he settles down into the life of a rancher, and he couldnât have asked for anything better.
RANCHER!ARTHUR MORGAN who has taken forever to nail down a routine that actually sticks when it comes to waking up and rousing the animals for the day. He does the chickens first, cuz he hates those little fuckers and how they always like to peck at his feet even though he knows he tosses the corn and feed pellets far away from him. Then the hogs start squealing whenever he even nears the pen, and Arthur always mutters about how they just ate the night before, how can they be this hungry already? After throwing their slop into the feeder, he opens the barn doors to let the cows know itâs morning and that theyâll be milked soon, but he learned not the milk them just as they wake up because they in fact do not like to be fondled so early in the morning. Instead, he grabs his horse and rounds up the few sheep and goats heâs got and leads them to nearby pasture to graze. Here, Arthur gets the chance to rest a little, maybe snack on some dried meat and journal about his dreams if heâs had any, his aspirations for the day, or maybe even sketch the view.
RANCHER!ARTHUR MORGAN who learns to like making the honest living heâs got going. It may not be as thrill seeking as robbing trains or starting saloon fights or gunslinging like the old days, but heâs comfortable. Content, even. Sometimes heâll sell one of the hogs for a pretty penny and can afford to buy himself something he likes. The people in the nearest town say his milk from his cows is the best theyâve had in a long time! Heâs not a star or anything, but heâs got something good going for himself and heâll be damned if he lets it wither and die like the dreams he had in his youth.
RANCHER!ARTHUR MORGAN who wonât lie to himself and say he doesnât miss his old life. At the start, he feigned for it so bad; heâd try to rationalize it and say that it wouldnât hurt no one, but he knew better. Sometimes heâd lie awake in the modest little house that was on the property when he bought it, reminiscing about the good times in the gang before the cracks started showing. When they could make a quick scheme and walk away feeling like the richest men in the world. He missed his brothers and their asshole behavior; he missed the girls sometimes, too, even if they got on his nerves. But they were behind him, and he knew he couldnât go back. For his sake, and for theirs.
RANCHER!ARTHUR MORGAN who rides into town one day to drop off some milk at the general store to see someone new behind the counter; someone younger and prettier than the stuffy old lad who talks to proper and irritates Arthur with his poshness. Heâs so taken off guard that he almost drops the crate of milk heâs carrying in. He learns that youâre the store ownerâs daughter and that youâve taken over for him because he got into a wild riding accident, and that heâd be out for the next couple of months. You try not to make it so awkward on Arthur, as it seems like seeing you behind the counter instead of your father has already thrown him for a loop. When the cowboy promptly drops off the milk and bids a quick farewell, you fear youâve made a horrible first impression.
RANCHER!ARTHUR MORGAN who comes back a week later with a much more level head and a little less awkward now that he expects you behind the counter. This time he brings with him some seeds to sell that heâd gotten from a farmer a couple miles down the road that he didnât want. He thought heâd be able to sell or exchange them for something heâd actually use. He was quiet, yet polite, and had an air of mystery around him that intrigued her. It wasnât every day a handsome rancher came into the general store, and you wanted to know everything you could about this Arthur Morgan, who kept his cards close to his chest and was a man of few words.
RANCHER!ARTHUR MORGAN who made his visits slightly longer every time heâd come into the general store, whether to sell his goods or to buy some tools or necessities from himself. After a handful of encounters, he finally blessed you with more of his voice and words - they had a roughness to them from years of hard work, but was still warm and inviting. The way he called you âmissâ and way he tipped his cowboy hat to you as a farewell made you giddy like a little schoolgirl. You found yourself looking forward to opening the general store every day, hoping to have a conversation with Arthur Morgan if heâd come in.
RANCHER!ARTHUR MORGAN who says to you âI ainât so good with the ladiesâ when you ask him why he always seems so shy talking to you, and it actually makes you giggle a little. Arthur Morgan, the unit of a man that he is, admitting his timidity of a woman? What God in Heaven made this be so? Oh, but you have no intention of letting it be just that. No, you tell Arthur Morgan, âI can teach you, if youâd likeâ, and you swear you see the lightest dust of pink cross his cheeks. Heâs got half a mind to walk out of there like a puppy with itâs tail between itâs legs; how could you make him so embarrassed like that! Though, if itâs you than plans on teach him how to be a little less dense and awkward around women, he probably wouldnât mind it. Maybe he could even return the favor and have you writhing in bashfulnessâŚ
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#liya talks#black reader#black tumblr#red dead redemption 2#red dead redemption arthur#arthur morgan#arthur morgan x reader#arthur morgan x black!reader#arthur morgan x female reader#arthur morgan x you
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no grave can hold my body down, ill crawl home to her
summary:
arthur morgan knew he was the type of man that shouldnât risk falling in love, but jesus she just made it so hard NOT to
a/n: first fic!! inspired by work song by hozier lol. hope yâall enjoy it Xx đ
âArthur Morgan, you foolâ He thought to himself, mentally swearing for catching himself staring at their camps newest member yet again. But he just couldnât help it. He knew he shouldnât indulge in this. It was stupid really, any attempt at love in the past had failed him. All because of this life he chose to live. One that wasnât easy to leave behind. Though Arthur knew, if you asked him to heâd throw it all away. God this man would do anything for you, he practically worshiped the ground you walked on. He didnât know why he was so captivated by you, maybe it was your honey sweet voice, or the kindness you showed him right from your first day of knowing him. He couldnât stop himself from loving every little thing about you, to him you were perfect. A goddamned goddess. He thought you deserved someone better than him. A woman such as yourself deserved to live a good life, one where the law isnât out to get you. One where people could be out to hurt you because of your husbandâs line of work. You deserved to feel safe and secure in your life. Nothing like the chaos you were living through now.
Little did Arthur know, you were feeling the exact same way about him. You had deep feelings for Arthur Morgan, you were as sweet like sugar on that man. You loved everything about him, but most of all how he treated you. He made 100% sure you felt safe and were taken care of all the time. You were one of the first people heâd check up on when returning from a job. Or you mentioned something you needed and the next day he would just so happen to need to run to town and what do you know, the exact scarf, seasoning, hair ribbon, you name it would be included in his haul. And if he was around at meal times, he would not so subtly make sure you got your portion. All of this and yet, he rarely said a word to you. It confused you to no end, it felt like he cared about you deeply but he rarely paid any attention to you. You were a lost soul before you started riding with the Van Der Lindes, and because of the Blackwater situation it was hard for the gang to let in a new mouth to feed. But ever since the beginning Arthur made you feel so welcomed. You donât know what you did do deserve his kindness but it was deeply appreciated. Mary-Beth was CONVINCED Arthur was sweet on you, so weâre Tilly, Molly, Abigail, Karen, goodness even Susan Grimahaw herself made a comment about it you once. You wanted to believe it so badly, but he didnât talk to you!! He could just be a kind man of little words and youâre reading into the situation all wrong.
âOh wellâŚâ You thought with a sigh, flicking your eyes up from the needle work you had long been neglecting because of your thinking. To your surprise, you found a pair of beautiful blue eyes already looking in your directionâŚ
~~~~~~~
âShit!â Arthur swore under his breath, god dammit you were still as a staute for ages before this whyâd you have to look up now?? Arthur begrudgingly tore my eyes away from t and started walking to his horse- where he was supposed to be already. Hosea wanted to take him into town for some reason he had yet to say.
âArthur!â Hosea said warmly. He then raised an eyebrow. âI hope you didnât have any trouble getting here?â
âOh I this is NOT goinâ there.â Arthur thought.
âCourse not.â He said flatly. Hosea smiled a knowing smile, before long they mounted thier horses and were off.
The ride to Valentine was thankfully silent and quick. But Arthur knew that was going to change as soon as Hosea informed him that he was taking Arthur to the saloon to âChat over a drinkâ With such a grin on his face that Arthur knew he was nothing short of doomed.
After getting situated at the bar with a neat whiskey and a beer, Hosea start talking to Arthur, though it felt more like he was speaking AT at him. Making little remarks about love and what it does for people. Sharing little stories of âthe joys of marriage.â âŚ..very sneaky, Hosea.
âHoseaâŚ. Please get to whatever point it is yer tryinâ to make here.â Arthur said, cutting into his rambling.
âArthurâŚ.â He cooed, sounding like he was talking to some schoolyard boy. âIâve been watching you pine over (Name) for MONTHS.â
Arthur said nothing. Nothing but a silent prayer that his cheeks werenât burning a fiery shade of red.
âI know youâre sweet on her, itâs as obvious as a wolf standing in a pack of sheep!â
Arthur ran a hand over my face and let out a tired sigh. Hosea sipped his beer, waiting for him to respond.
âWhat âm I supposedât say?â Arthur grumbled, crossing his arms over my chest. âGod, what a pathetic fool I am.â Arthur thought. âNot like sheâd want an ugly bastard like me ânyway.â
âOn the contrary! Hosea chuckles. âI was walking by the womenâs tent last nigh- couldnât sleep. Wanted to walk a bit to clear my head- and my boy you shouldâve heard the things (Name) was saying about you!â
At that, Arthur sat up a little straighter. âWhat thingsâŚ?â He asked, slightly wearily. Hosea smiled.
âSon, sheâs fallen for you head first! If only youâd start speaking more then 2 words a week to her! You do so much for that girl Arthur, would it be so hard to do that too?â
He didnât say anything. Learning that, by some fucking MIRACLE- the woman of his dreams has fallen for him was making his head spin. Could this really be happening?? Could this work?? A stab of pain shot through him as he remembered Mary, and how things ended with her. But this could be different, after all you were with the gang. You didnât care about his life, you loved him despite it allâŚArthur hadnât dared let himself think that a love with you could possibly work out. The thought made him giddy. He felt dumb as rocks, feeling so strongly for you without ever saying a damn word to you. But he couldnât let himself get to know you- he couldnât bare to hear your silky voice say his name more then you already do. With such kindness, such love.He wanted to talk to you, to love you, to cherish you and worship you like you deserved to be, but-
âHosea, Iâm afraid.â Arthur said quietly. âLook at âer, I canât drag this woman down the path Iâm on. She doesnât deserve a man like me.â
Hosea pushed Arthurâs untouched whiskey towards him, Arthur took the glass and downed it all in one go. He listened to Hoseaâa next words at the fiery liquid settled in his stomach.
âAre you going to risk making that decision for her?â
~~~~~~~
You sat on the cold ground in front of the dying out campfire, grateful that everyone had fallen into their cots for the night. You loved the solitude of nighttime. It was so nice to be by yourself, enjoying the quiet peace of the stars above you.
Before long, your thoughts (as they always did) turned to Arthur Morgan. Hosea has returned to camp hours ago, telling you that Arthur should be back shortly. Itâs been hours and still no sign of him. You knew it was normal, but you couldnât help but worry while he was out of camp. Which was stupid really, you werenât his girl. Just because he was kind didnât mean you had to get your knickers all on a twist over him.
âDamn your mysterious-ness Arthur MorganâŚ.â
You only know you dozed off when the familiar sound of a horse whining woke you up. And then an even more familiar voice soothing the distressed animal.
âEasy girlâŚ. Yâknow I canât spend all my time with yaâ donât you?â
You stretched your arms out and listened to the sweet interaction. Despite him being the gangâs toughest enforcer, a wanted dead or alive outlaw, Arthur truly was a sweetheart. He treated all the women of the camp with the utmost respect and was such a help to any soul in need of. If only he knew how badly you needed him.
You from your spot on the ground, drawing the outlaws attention. He approached with a small smile.
âGlad it was jusâ you..â Arthur said, hoping he didnât sound as nervous as he felt. You on the other hand were absolutely over the MOON at the fact that Arthur had finally decided to talk to you.
âOh I hope youâre not too disappointed Mr. Morgan!â You said with a light chuckle. Arthur, not sensing your sarcasm through his nerves, panicked.
âN-no! Not at all, maâam! I apologize if I came off that way-â
âIâm just teasing yaâ Arthur. Itâs quite alright.â You said and smiled. A smile so sweet and bright Arthur couldâve melted on the spot. Your sweet smile, the way his name rolled off your lips. Arthur wasnât a religious man, but he might as well have been in heaven.
â(Name)âŚ.â Arthur said, his sweet southern drawl when he said your name making you blush. âIâd like to apologize. For how Iâve been treatinâ you.â
âOh Arthur! Youâve been nothinâ but kind to me since Iâve been here- whatever are you sorry for?â You asked him, genuinely shocked at the manâs statement. Were you talking to the same Arthur who took care of your horse for you, bought you ribbons to put in your hair, and watched over you like a protective hawk? Sure he didnât speak to you much, but you knew he was a man of few words. Even if it hurt sometimes, could live with it. You didnât need him to love you back for you to love him all the same. Youâd almost accepted it. Almost.
Arthur sighed a deep and nervous sigh, his thoughts blurring and the several whiskeys he had in him were NOT helping. Not a bit.
âYou see- well itâs, itâs just-â Arthur stammered- god he was making a complete FOOL of himself!
You stepped closer to Arthur, placing a gentle hand on his shoulder. You looked up at him nervously. The two of you had never been close as this. Arthur looked down at you, you had concern laced in your eyes. Concern for him. Your long hair was falling out of its messy braid, the loose strands framing your face beautifully. He could see the nights starts reflected in your eyes.
âHow beautiful..â Arthur thought. He was completely captivated by you. âHow could a woman like this be allowed to roam the same earth as someone like me..?â
Without even realizing what he was doing, Arthur pulled you flush against his chest, one arm wrapping around your waist and the other reaching up to cup your chin. His touch was feather light as he stroked his thumb over your face.
âI ainât never felt like this before MissâŚâ Arthur mumbled, leaning his forehead down to touch your. He didnât have time to wonder (or thank) whatever divine force gave him to courage to do this. âYou got me makinâ a fool outta myselfâŚâ
You let out a soft gasp at the a sudden touch from Arthur. You had only ever been like this in your sweetest dreams, was this really happening??
âArthurâŚ?â You whispered, questioning him. âWhaâŚWhat âre you d-â
Thatâs it. He couldnât take it anymore. To hell with the risks, the past to hell with it all! He had come to love you more than life itself. You were exactly what he needed in his painful and cruel life.
You were such a loving soul, treating everyone and everything around you so kindly it was heartwarming. You give and give and GIVE to everyone around you. You never judged anyone around you for their actions- past or present. You picked up chores from the other women when they needed a break. You sung little Jack to sleep when Abigail was too exhausted to lift her head from her cot. You put braided flowers into your beautiful long hair whenever you had a moment to yourself. You smiled at him every morning when you left your tent to begin your day. You always kept the pink silk scarf he picked up for you and left in your tent with a note in the pocket of your skirt. You picked at nails and hummed when you were nervous. You loved staying up late, gazing at the stars and admiring the universe. He had pages upon pages of you doing exactly that sketched in his journal.
You were heaven sent. You were perfect. The world didnât fucking deserve you.
Arthur slammed his lips down onto yours without wasting another moment. And he shuddered at the feelings of your lips finally being against his own. You kissed him back just has hard, standing on your tip toes to wrap your arms around his broad shoulders. You felt his tongue slide against his bottom lip, and wasted not a moment opening your mouth to let him in.
Months of longing, tension, were fought out as your tongues pushed against each other. Of course Arthur won, you could barely contain the moan that was building in the back of your throat when you felt his tongue exploring your mouth like a starving man. If he hadnât been holding you so tightly, you wouldâve fallen over. The sheer want and desperation of the kiss made your knees go completely weak.
Unfortunately, you both needed air and had to pull away. Arthur rested his forehead against your own. The both of you stood there, panting with closed eyes. Neither wanting the moment to end.
When you eventually opened your eyes, you looked up at Arthur. And couldnât help the giddy smile that spread across your face. Arthur wrapped both of his strong arms around your waist, and he smiled sweetly back at you. You both stood there for a moment, swaying gently back and forth as you embraced each other. The silence that fell between you both was comfortable and welcome as you gazed into each others eyes, both sharing the same look of love and adoration.
Arthur was the one who finally broke the silence between the two of you, and you will never forget his next words.
âPlease darlinââ He whispered. âIâm begginâ you⌠I want you to be my girl. Iâm sorry I was a fool for such a long time-â
You leaned up on your tip toes and silenced him with a gentle kiss.
âI wouldnât have you any other way, Mr. Morgan.â
#arthur morgan fic#arthur morgan#arthur morgan fanfiction#i love you arthur morgan#arthur morgan x female reader#arthur morgan x reader#work song#inspired by a hozier song#arthur morgan fluff#tension#love confessions#rdr2#rdr2 arthur#red dead redemption 2#red dead#rdr#arthur is foolishly in love#x reader
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Heyy! Omg I love your Arthur Morgan series so much Iâve reread it so many times alr haha
Hereâs an idea/request if your interested đŤśđ˝ so this takes place right after part three and reader is getting sick of j doing chores all day and wants to study again to achieve her dreams so tries studying in secret and gets caught? Feel free to alter/add whatever u like đŤśđ˝
đTYSM Ritaa! *HUGGIES*, loved to hear that! Hope you enjoy reading this one too!
Warnings/ MDNI: not incest, strictly platonic, abuse, restrictions// I don't condone such behaviour
Wiping the sweat from your brow after chopping vegetables for Pearson, you decided to slip away for a momentâs rest and a quick drink of water. As you sat down, your mind raced through the endless list of chores left to tackle: sorting supplies, feeding the horses-
â(Y/n)! Get your ass here for a minute!â
A sigh escaped before you could stop it. What does he want now?
âYes⌠Arthur?â
Without looking up from his journal, he handed you a shirt. âButtonâs broken.â
Great. Again?.
âRight.â You mumbled, taking and inspecting it. Unluckily, your disinterest was too evident for him to miss.
Arthurâs gaze lifted from his journal, confusion mixing with mild irritation. âRight what? Fix it.â
âDo you... have to wear it today?â
âIt doesnât matter. Fix it. And wash it too.â He didnât wait for your answer as you nodded, already bracing for yet another chore.
At this rate, my hands are going to look ancient by the time Iâm 30 from all this washing.
You turned to leave, only for his voice to follow you. âAlso, bring some coffee.â
âArthur, donât drink so much coffee all the time. Itâs bad.â
From his cot, he glared, unamused. âWhat, you a doctor now? Itâs only my second cup today.â Before you could respond, Dutch called him over, and he stood, striding off with a parting command, âIt should be on the table when I get back.â
Grumbling, you turned to make the damn coffee.
Heâll get it, alright.
These were the times when you found yourself fervently wishing for your brother to get married just so you could be free from the burden of being his maid. But then again, would he even find a woman willing to endure a life like this? God, no, please, give him a wife. ASAP. But then again, you couldnât help but pray for that unfortunate woman, too, because living here was no piece of cake. Do people even marry outlaws?
"...."
You shook your head and decided it was best to start on the coffee instead of rambling in your head.
âââ
Finally done with the day's work and free from Susan's watchful eye, you made your way to your tent and collapsed, face-first, into the pillow with a satisfied groan. You lay there, savoring the brief solitude, until a gentle throat-clearing sounded just outside your tent. The voice that followed caught you off guard. It was unmistakably Hoseaâs soft, friendly tone.
You quickly composed yourself and stepped out to greet him.
"I wanna show you something. Come," he said with a smile, gesturing for you to follow. As he led you around the camp, you couldn't help but notice Arthur's horse was gone.
Thank God.
When you reached a quiet spot, he motioned for you to sit on an overturned crate beside him. "So, I gathered a few books here,â he said, a small stack beside him. âAnnabelle mentioned you like reading, hm?"
"I--well..." Your voice faltered. How could you explain that after everything, your heart had shut itself off, wrapped tightly in a cocoon of cynicism? Arthurâs words echoed in your mind,
'Walking with empty dreams is useless. Lazy.'
The books felt like a window to something lost. They reminded you or maybe haunted you, of a past drenched in hope, of that rainy night when it all started to unravel.
"Well? Look, I'm gonna be honest with you," Hosea continued, his voice a comforting blend of seriousness and warmth. "You're a sharp girl, with a damn keen mind and a thirst for knowledge. So why waste your free time when you could read? Iâve got plenty of books you can borrow anytime you like."
You shifted, fiddling with your fingers. "No--I mean...thank you, really, but...itâs just..." The words caught in your throat, but you pushed on reluctantly. "Y'know...Arthur just...doesnât⌠I donât know how heâll--"
"React?" Hosea let out a knowing chuckle. "Who says he has to know? Read when he's not around, itâs simple. And whatâs his deal with you reading, anyway?"
"Itâs not like heâs ever said anything specific, but..." You sighed. "I think he worries...that somehow the books will make me cling to the past. And honestly, whatâs even the point of reading, really, when this is all I have to look forward to? Living here⌠forever."
"Now, donât talk like that." Hoseaâs tone softened, his eyes filled with an almost fatherly concern. "We all have different lives and paths, our thoughts and dreams thatâll shape our futures. And Iâd like to see you have a life outside of all this, one with more than just survival, you hear me? You think I donât want that for you? Sometimes I even think about it myself when Dutch is... well, being Dutch." He grinned, and you couldnât help but giggle at the shared understanding.
"Also, donât go thinking that being a girl can stop you," he added with a wink. "So⌠whaddaya say?" He waved the book enticingly in front of you, and any resistance you had left melted away.
"Sure. Thanks a lot, Hosea."
"No problem. And donât you worry about Arthur, okay?" You nodded, cradling the book close as you slipped back to your tent. The weight of its worn pages in your hands felt like a secret gift. Maybe today wasnât such a bad day after all.
âââ
It was just another day when you finished your chores and when you were sure Arthur had gone hunting, you settled into a secluded spot on the edge of the camp, your book propped on your lap, and lost yourself in the words, the outside world fading away.
That is, until someone snatched the book from your hands.
"Hey!" you shouted, startled.
"Whatâs this, oh, these damn boring books!" John, who was a year younger than you and had a knack for finding you when you least wanted to be found, held the book out of reach with a mischievous grin.
"Canât you just play with me instead sometimes? I swear Iâm so bored these days!" His voice was grating, and you could feel your irritation rising.
You lunged forward to snatch the book back, but he leapt backwards, a teasing spark in his eyes.
âJohn! This isnât funny! Iâm not free like you all day, alright? I do actual work around here, not out there trying to shoot a rabbit and missing every time, and now Iâm relaxing, so stop being a jerk! Hosea would be mad if he found out you messed with his book!â
âOf course, the oldie is your tutor,â he laughed, clearly unfazed. âHow about we do something that makes both of us happy? I get to play, and you get your book back.â
Gritting your teeth, you feigned a serious demeanor. With a quick breath, you lunged at him again, your frustration bubbling over. Johnâs playful stance told you he was ready for a chase, and before you knew it, you were darting after him, laughter bubbling up despite your annoyance.
As much as you wanted to giggle and enjoy the thrill of the moment, there was a lingering fear at the back of your mind, what if Arthur returned early? The last thing you wanted was to be caught in a childish game when he expected you to be responsible.
"JOHN! COME BACK! DONâT GO TOO FAR!" you shouted, but he ignored you, running toward the small lake that fringed the camp. You had no choice but to follow him, anxiety bubbling up inside you, not just from the chase, but from the thought of losing that book. It wasnât just some random novel, it belonged to Hosea, and you couldnât let him down.
âHere, take it!â John taunted, a mischievous grin spreading across his face as he threw the book into the lake.
âJOHN, WHAT THE HELL IS WRONG WITH YOU?!â, your frustration boiling over as you watched the book sink beneath the surface.
âGO GET IT! HURRY!â You shouted, while John stood reveling in his victory.
âI donât know how to swim!â He shot back.
âFUCK YOU!â But you knew you couldnât let Hosea down. You couldnât let that book be lost.
With a determined breath, you dove into the lake, plunging into the cold water. Your heart raced as you fought against the initial shock, remembering the few basics your dad had taught you when you were ten. You focused on the glimmering book sinking just out of reach and swam deeper, stretching your fingers to grab it. That's when John realized that maybe he went too far and kept calling your name.
Finally, you managed to wrap your hand around the damp cover. Kicking off the bottom, you propelled yourself upward, gasping for air as you broke the surface, the book clutched tightly to your chest.
"(Y/N)...I am sorry..." He stammered when he saw the look of absolute rage on your face. He knew he was going to be dead if he got in your hands.
The moment John took off toward camp, you bolted after him, fury blazing in your chest. Heâs going to pay for this, you clutched the soaked book tightly in one hand and narrowed the gap between you. You could hear his frantic apologies as he dodged between trees and crates, but you werenât letting him off so easily. This time, he had gone too far.
As the camp came into view, you spotted Arthurâs towering figure near the fire. He was leaning against a post, arms crossed, a dark look already on his face as his eyes landed on John racing toward him with you close behind.
âOh, shitâŚâ you murmured under your breath, your heart pounding even faster. You slowed your pace, watching as Arthurâs expression shifted from mild irritation to intense, unfiltered anger. John stopped short, nearly tripping over himself as he came to a halt in front of Arthur, his face pale.
âArthur--uh-- I was just--we....â Arthur cut him off, his voice low and deadly calm. "What? Messinâ around, huh?â
Arthurâs eyes narrowed, shifting to you, drenched and clutching the wet book. His voice dropped into a growl. He directed a sharp glare at John. âLooks like moreân that to me.
Johnâs face drained of colour. âUm-we were just--playin'â he started backing away under Arthurâs icy stare, but Arthur grabbed him by his ear and pulled him closer, making John let out a burning wince.
âListen here, you little idiot,â Arthur snapped, taking a step closer until John practically shrank under his gaze. âYou ever pull somethinâ like this again, youâre gonna find yourself missinâ a few teeth, you understand me? Stay away from her.â
John nodded frantically, too scared to speak, and when Arthur jerked his head in a silent order to leave, John took off like his life depended on it.
Arthurâs eyes turned to you, his face darkening. His gaze swept over your soaked clothes, the way you clutched the dripping book like it was something precious, and his jaw clenched.
âCare to explain why youâre drenched head to toe?â he asked, his voice low but laced with irritation.
You swallowed, choosing your words carefully. âIâŚjust wanted to get the book back.â
Arthur raised a brow, unimpressed. âAnd what the hell were you doinâ with it in the first place?â
You stammered, caught off guard, and Arthurâs eyes narrowed. He reached out, grabbing your arm firmly, pulling you closer. âDonât tell me youâve been sneakinâ around to read like a fuckin princess,â he muttered, his tone a mix of anger and disbelief. âThat why youâre makinâ trouble?â
You opened your mouth to protest, but he was already fuming. Before you could get a word out, his grip tightened, and he gave you a hard, reprimanding shake. âYou think jumpinâ in the damn lakeâs a smart idea? Riskinâ yourself over some dumb book!? Are you fucking serious?â
âArthur, itâs not-â you tried to explain, but he cut you off with a sharp slap across the cheek, the force of it blurring your mind for a few seconds, sending a shock through your whole body. You touch your cheek, trying to keep the hurt off your face and shield yourself from another one.
âYouâre makinâ my life harder with this reckless nonsense, thought' I made it clear that there ainât no use for fillinâ your head with fantasies out here. You need to learn whatâs important here. Donât forget your place. Also told you to not wander off! There are all sorts of dangers out there!â
Your voice was broken but you still managed to retort, "It's...not just fantasies...why can't you get it-" He threw the book from your hands, irked.
âWatch it,â he snarled, gripping your chin with bruising force, his face close, dark eyes simmering with anger. âYou think I got time for this nonsense? Next time you got free time, you spend it doin' somethinâ useful, not messinâ around in places you donât belong.â
But before he could go any further, Hoseaâs voice sliced through the tension like a whip. âArthur! Enough!â Hoseaâs tone was sharp, urgent, as he stepped forward, grabbing Arthurâs arm and prying him back. âHave you lost your damn mind? Let her be!â
Arthur jerked back, breathing heavily as he let go, his jaw tight with frustration. He shot you a look that still held that smouldering fury but kept silent under Hoseaâs watchful gaze. The older man placed a protective hand on your shoulder, guiding you behind him, his face set in a firm, disappointed scowl as he looked at Arthur.
âThis isnât how we treat our own,â Hosea said quietly, the warning clear in his voice.
"I will treat her however I want, so shut it, old man! She jumped in the fucking lake for a damn book!" He turned back to you. "If I ever catch you slackinâ off with one of these again, or doin' such stupid stunts, thereâll be hell to pay. You hear me?" You nod quickly, too scared to even meet his gaze, swallowing back any retort.
He muttered under his breath and turned sharply, stalking off into the woods, leaving you standing there, shaken but grateful for Hoseaâs intervention.
âYou alright?â Hoseaâs voice softened, his eyes filled with concern as he watched Arthur disappear.
Though your throat felt tight, you nodded as your hands still clung to his coat. âHm.â
âDonât let him get to you, you do a lot more around here anyway, more than anyone I would say,â he murmured. âHe...he's just afraid. But you...don't have to be."
You tried to smile through your tears, though the sting of Arthurâs slap still lingered, and you knew it would for days to come.
Hosea gave you a gentle pat on the shoulder, noticing the way your gaze lingered on the soaked book. âI see the bookâs wet, but itâs alright. There are plenty. Iâll buy this one again for you.â His tone was warm, reassuring. âNow, go change before you get sick.â
You managed a small nod, before hurrying to the privacy of your tent. As soon as you stepped inside, the weight of the day finally crashed down on you. You sank onto the cot, clutching the damp fabric of your clothes, and let the tears fall, the frustration and anger pouring out in muffled sobs.
Everything, Arthurâs fury, Johnâs reckless prank, the guilt over Hoseaâs book, hit you all at once. The tent felt like the only safe space at that moment, the only place where you didnât have to hold back. Perhaps, it's better if you don't read, maybe Arthur is right...but Hosea's hopeful words rang in your mind. You buried your face in the pillow, letting out everything, all the confusion, anger and pain that was clawing you from inside, draining yourself.
#platonic yandere#platonic headcanons#platonic#rdr2 arthur#yandere arthur morgan#arthur morgan#yandere brother#x sister reader#yandere x reader#yandere x you#xreader#x reader#x you#yandere x y/n#x y/n#dark#yandere male#yancore#yanblr#low honor arthur morgan#x fem!reader#asks open#free gaza#answered asks#asks
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How can I make it OK?
Arthur Morgan x reader
PART 1 đ PART 2
Summary : you're homesick.
gender neutral reader, no use of y/n, not explicitly romantic unless you wanna read it that way, 3K words
Warnings : swearing, mentions of suicide, panic attack described in semi detail, not the jolliest thing i've ever written
A/N : first post that's actually writing in 2025 ! wrote most of this on the train while listening to house in nebraska by ethel cain and more than this by wolf alice so yeah. also this isn't arthur heavy in the sense that it's reader rambling about being homesick mostly. to be read in a southern accent as god intended
Of all the places I have travelled with the Van Der Linde gang, I think this is my least favourite.Â
Living- or rather, camping- in the ruins of some plantation, bodies of the former owners stagnating in the pond. Sometimes I hear âem- the ghosts, in the walls, screaminâ. I know itâs my mind, playing tricks on me; but itâs harder to have that rational thought when youâre lying alone in the middle of the night, wind whistling through broken windows. Itâs not that I donât like having a roof over my head. Shit, everyone in this godforsaken gang is happy to have a real shelter from the weather, even one as flimsy as this house. So I shut my mouth, hunt as Iâm expected-which is what I am doing now, borrowed bow over my shoulder, quiver resting comfortingly between my shoulder blades.Â
Hunting is familiar. Back in the Grizzlies, where my daddy raised me, weâd go out any time of day, in any weather, hunt for the coming storms. Iâd do everything the way he taught me to- lay out traps, wait behind a boulder, bow in hand. It builds patience, he told me when I asked why the hell we didnât just track the damn animal, instead of waitinâ in the cold for it to find us.Â
Now, itâs not cold, and dear old daddy ainât here to help.Â
I left my horse hitched by a lake, with enough grass for him to be fed and well until I bring back something worthy of Pearson. Itâs near sunrise; already, the heat is uncomfortable; my skin is sticky, my clothes uncomfortable. Itâs moments like these that I long for the snow.Â
I wipe my forehead with the back of my head. Iâve been walking for a little while now, waiting for a pack of deer to pass by. Thereâs something that bothers me about killing them- maybe itâs their eyes, so big and brown, caught frozen as they stare at you. Or maybe itâs their resemblance to this little girl I knew, at a local village at the base of the mountain where I grew up.Â
I shake the thought of her big brown eyes and twitchy nose as I spot a herd of âem, grazing near a small stream. Thereâs enough light for me to count them- seven, big enough to feed us.Â
I get on one knee, like my daddy taught me. Notch an arrow in the bow, pull it back. One of the poor animals raises its head, looks in my direction.Â
Before I can hesitate, I let go, and the arrow flies; a fraction of a second later, it has notched itself in the animalâs throat. It falls; its friends, the rest of its herd (its gang, I think, almost laughing) scamper off, into the woods. I donât go after them. Pearson will have to do with this, and whatever herbs or mushrooms Iâm able to pick up.Â
The doe is dead by the time I reach her. I kneel. Pull the arrow from her neck; thick, sticky blood gets on my hands. I almost reach for snow, to clean it off; curse myself when my fingertips meet grass and mud. The doeâs dead eye stares up at me, brown and empty as the sky. I resist the urge to close them.Â
âSorry, sweet.â I whisper it as I hoist her up, put her over my shoulder. Sheâs heavy. I must be getting blood on my shirt- itâs a shame, because itâs my favourite colour, and Iâve just bought it.Â
I swallow any regrets I feel as I walk back to my horse, the weight of the doe uncomfortable against my bow and quiver.Â
Youâre the reason she wonât come home, a little voice whispers in my head. I stop, then, because my chest is tightening and I canât really breathe. I say something incoherent. The fields around me are empty- itâs just me and this doe.Â
I drop her into the mud and loosen my shirt, gasping for air. I want cold, I want crisp mountain air; not this thick, humid, barely-air that clogs my throat and makes my lungs heavy.Â
I dig my fingers into the mud and grass, as I would have done in the snow, back home. Home. What a weird thought. I catch the dead doeâs eye again, and thatâs when the tears come, thick and hot and nasty, blurring my vision. So stupid, I think, as I force myself to stare at her. She- no, it- is just an animal. She doesnât have a home, not the way I did. Do.Â
I think of crying out for help, but thatâs pathetic, and Iâm a lot of things, but pathetic ainât one of them.Â
I think I stay there, on my knees, fingers deep in the mud, for a long time- when my vision clears again and Iâve stopped gasping for air, the sky is clear, clear blue, no traces of sunrise left. If I focus hard enough on it, I can almost pretend Iâm back in the mountains.Â
I get up, teeth digging into my tongue to prevent any new feelings from resurfacing. Iâm not in the goddamn mountains. All thatâs left for me there is two frozen bodies deep beneath the snow, and a hut thatâs probably been raided or taken over by some other gang.Â
I pick the doe up, this time careful to avoid looking at her face. Its face. Itâs an animal, not my goddamn sister.Â
I make it back to my horse without another incident; strap the doe across his back and climb onto his saddle. His name is Coal, âcause of the colour oâ him- black and charcoal grey, a streak of white down his face.Â
âHey, boy,â I murmur to him as I flick the reigns. My voice is shaky, hoarse; itâs obvious that Iâve been crying.Â
Coal begins to trot back to camp. I think of changing direction, of going to Rhodes, clear my thoughts. But I gotta bring this back to Pearson, or heâll skin me.Â
The camp is still there when I return, which is a relief. I donât think Iâll forget the moment when I came back after a hunt and found everyone gone, everything burned to the ground.Â
I shiver at the memory and get off Coal. âIâll come ând fix your saddle later,â I say to him, scratching his neck. He grunts, in a tone I hope is affectionate. I remove the doe, put her back over my shoulder. Make it to Pearsonâs stand, where heâs angrily chopping vegetables.Â
âHey,â I say, dropping the doe in front of him. I angle her head- her eyes- away from me. âGot some meat.âÂ
âI can see that,â is Pearsonâs kind answer.Â
I ignore him and walk away again, into the derelict house weâve been callinâ home for the last few weeks. My room is on the top floor; I wish I shared it with someone, but I got lucky (Dutchâs words) and got my own, private room.Â
I tug off my bloodstained shirt and drop it on the floor. Thereâs nothinâ to be done about my trousers- theyâre the only pair Iâve got (the others have just been washed, and hang soaking wet outside) and I donât plan on walking around bare-legged.Â
I change quickly. Sit down on the bed, stare at the wall.Â
I donât know how long I stay like that; starinâ at the peeling wallpaper, trying to pretend itâs the same white as the snow I used to see out my window. Obviously, the pretendinâ donât work, because itâs not the snow, itâs a crumbling fuckinâ wall in a crumbling fuckinâ house. I stand, take a deep breath in (of hot, hot, humid, thick air), push it out. It ainât cleansing- I donât feel better once Iâve tasted the surrounding bogs- but itâs enough to calm my heartbeat, and make me feel somewhat human again.Â
For the rest of the day, I help around camp, doing stupid, mind-numbing tasks. I try not to think of the mountains, and how much better than this godforsaken swamp they were. People talk to me, and I answer, polite and all. I eat Pearsonâs stew, listen to another grandiose speech about Dutchâs plan (or, as far as Iâm concerned, concepts of a plan). I finally find a moment of quiet sitting on a log, staring out at the swamp. Not the prettiest sight; all brown and green, with hints of yellow dust.Â
Iâm alone for only a few minutes before I hear footsteps. I turn, and find Arthur approaching, taking his cigarette packet from his satchel. I shift on the log Iâm sitting on, making the split second decision that his company is something I want right now.Â
He sits next to me, silently. Offers me a cigarette (I decline with a shake of my head and a wave of my hand) then lights his own with a match. He stays quiet for a little while, blowing smoke from his mouth, tinting the world blue and grey.Â
Itâs strange, sitting next to him. He donât mind being quiet; seems to like my company well enough, âcause he keeps coming back here to smoke.Â
Heâs the one who found me, all that time ago, on a solo hunt in the Grizzlies. It was at the edge of the mountains, where it starts to get warmer; where the sun melts away most of the snow. Was from Blackwater, he said- I asked if I could go back with him. Promised Iâd leave âem all alone when I got there, I just needed a job, as far from my daddyâs corpse as I could get. Heâd said yes, maybe reluctantly.Â
Turns out, Iâd found somethin' better than a job. Not quite a family, but a gang, people to rely on, people to distract me from the emptiness created by my fatherâs death. I suppose itâs these people keeping me here, in this swampy nowhere, sweating my socks off. Here, Iâve got people- back in the mountains, Iâve got two dead bodies and an empty house.Â
My chest tightens again, and wordlessly, I take the cigarette from Arthurâs hand, take a long drag. I hand it back, still silent, and dig my fingernails into my knuckles.Â
âYou miss home?â Arthur asks me, his words marked by the smoke curling from his mouth. I take the cigarette from his fingers again, press it between my teeth, inhale âtill I can blame the burning in my eyes on the smoking rather than whatever has grabbed hold of me; whatever old, buried feeling Iâd thought long gone had chosen to make an appearance. Guess it must be more obvious than I thought, that Iâm feelinâ odd, âcause he clearly smelled it on me.Â
âI donât know, I guess,â I say, softly, fiddling with the dirty fabric of my trousers as I hand the cigarette back; as if I donât know the answer, as if I havenât spent half my goddamn life thinking about this. I exhale, blowing out smoke from my nose. âNever really thought about it.â The lie burns in my throat, so thick I can hardly breathe.Â
Itâs not the stability that I miss. The weather in the Grizzlies was nothinâ permanent, not in any sense- one minute itâs a blizzard, the next youâre standing staring at the bright blue sky, knee deep in snow. I guess itâs the wolves howling, itâs the comfort of a fire as wind rattles against the window panes; itâs even the way the stars look after three days holed up inside. Thereâs no one thing I miss or donât miss- I just know I miss it, so much that my chest tightens at the thought.Â
When my daddy got shot, three- no, four- years ago, I thought the one answer was to leave that place behind; pack up my clothes and go out into the Wild Wild West, make my own future away from the smell of his freshly dug grave, right next to my mamaâs frozen bones. And when I came across Arthur, and later his gang of gung-ho outlaws, who seemed ready to take on the world, I thought that was it- my life was set.Â
But I donât like the constant moving like I used to. It donât feel like adventure anymore; it feels like escaping, like weâre always running from something.Â
âI donâtâŚâ I hesitate, reach up to dig my nails into the dip of my collarbone, try to dig the feeling out, hold it up to the light to examine it. âI guess itâs different.â A veiled confession. Away from the Grizzlies (away from home) itâs hot, stiflingly so; I canât climb onto my horse without breaking a sweat. Itâs already too warm by the time the sun rises- clothes sticking to your skin uncomfortably, flies buzzing above, drowning in the smell of swampy nothingness as soon as your eyes open. I donât hate it- it has become familiar, but familiar in the way the weight of a revolver at my hip has become familiar; the way the constant paranoia that clogs my throat has become familiar.Â
âDifferent how?âÂ
Another pause, as I scuff the yellow dust ground with the toe of my boot. Different in a whole lotta ways, I want to tell him; even the colour of the sky isnât quite the same back home.Â
Home. I think of the snow as I stare at the yellowed leather of my shoes. Where thereâs snow and wolves and no people to shoot at you unless you really look for it.Â
âI donât know,â I say, even though my whole body knows; it courses through me, the knowledge that a few days ride away is the mountains, and the snow. âIt just is.â
The answer dissatisfies him, I think. âCâmon,â he says in that gruff voice of his. âYou gotta be able to find one difference between here and the goddamn Grizzlies.âÂ
ââS warmer,â I say, the words followed by a short, slightly forced laugh. âDonât snow as much.âÂ
He snorts, shaking his head. âAlright,â he responds, maybe a little condescendingly. âThink oâ anything else?âÂ
âYou got less wolves down here,â I add, after a few moments. I donât say that I miss the sound of them howling; that when I close my eyes, I try to picture it, try to pretend Iâm back there instead of here.Â
âAlright.â He says it kinder this time, like weâre getting somewhere.Â
âThe sky looks different.â I dig my fingers in deeper. He offers me the cigarette; I take it, repurpose the burning in my throat. The smoke flickers around me as I exhale. âItâs- clearer, up there. More blue.â Here, the sky is tinted almost yellow. It ainât ugly, but it ainât home.Â
He doesnât answer, now, staring out at the swamps. I donât know how he feels about this place- about Rhodes, and the foreignness of Saint Denis, with its factories and smoke and cobbled roads. I wonder if he misses home- if he ever had one to begin with. âI guess I do miss it,â I say, to fill the silence more than anything. âBut⌠I donât know, I donât think I wanna go back.â Alone is the word I donât add. I think- maybe- if I had the gang, my new family, Iâd go back to the Grizzlies. After we escaped Blackwater, and hid out in that abandoned town up in the mountains; that was the happiest Iâd been for a long time.Â
But alone isnât something I want to be. Not the way I was alone, the few weeks after my father passed- just me and the freshly dug grave, me and the wolves, me and the gun that killed him, sittinâ on the table, an unwanted temptation.Â
âI donât wanna be alone again.â It comes out soft, hoarse, pathetic, the words grating in my throat, like sandpaper on my tongue.Â
Itâs true. Yes, home is in the mountains; I know that now, when my chest clenches at the simple thought of the snow. But home is also with these people- with Arthur, and Mary-Beth, and Pearson, and the rest of them. Hell, even Kieran, the OâDriscoll boy, has become home, in a way. Home is not just the place where I grew up (the place where my daddy now lies); home is also the people that have become my family; who have embraced me so kindly and warmly. I know deep in my stomach that if I were to leave now, take a horse back to the hut, Iâd end up like my daddy, a bullet in my head and a gun in my hand.Â
He did it âcause he was lonely. So lonely that even I wasnât enough to stop him from pulling the trigger. Lived in the mountains his whole life, but he had my mama then, and his parents. I guess fifty years of snow and not much else can drive you insane.Â
My hand goes to my temple; I dig my fingers into the skin, right where I found the bullet in his head.Â
âYâwonât be,â he responds gruffly. Heâs finished his cigarette, and yet heâs not made any attempt to get up, leave me with my thoughts. I snort, wipe my mouth with the back of my hand.Â
âDonât know that,â I say. âWith the Pinkertons on our asses, ând all.â Itâs meant to be lighthearted, but it comes out quiet, rough.Â
âYeah, but theyâve always been on our asses.â He puts a hand on my leg; it engulfs my entire knee. âTell you what.â He hesitates, clearinâ his throat a little. Squeezes my knee. âIâll take you huntinâ, once a week- or twice, or less, if you want.âÂ
âI go huntinâ anyway,â I answer. âNot in the mountains, yâdonât.â My chest both tightens and loosens at the same time. I swallow; my heart is thumping in my chest. I put my hand to my collarbone again, digging my nails in. âCâmon, itâll do you good. Cold air and all that.âÂ
I know thereâs a deeper meaning to that. Cold air- heâs giving me the chance to go home, and not by myself. Even if itâs not for long, itâs enough- to feel the snow again, to hear the wolves. Maybe once Iâll camp overnight, ride back to camp in the morning. The idea fills me with hope- a feeling weâre all starved of, these days.Â
âReally?â Is all I manage to croak out.Â
âWhat, you donât wanna?â
I laugh, and itâs genuine this time. âNo, I- I wanna.â
âAlright then.â He gives my knee a last squeeze, then stands. I stand with him, smooth my shirt with the flat of my hand. âTomorrow then?â Tomorrow. Tomorrow, tomorrow, tomorrow. Iâd sing, if my throat werenât so damn tight. My eyes sting, and I wipe at my nose with my hand.Â
âThank you,â I say, quietly. He donât respond, but he nods, and I think maybe he smiles a little.Â
Tomorrow. Tomorrow Iâll get to take a piece of my new home to the place I grew up- someone I love, to the place that holds my heart.Â
I watch him walk away; and suddenly, the humidity donât feel so bad anymore.Â
#arthur morgan#red dead redemption 2#rdr2#arthur morgan x reader#red dead redemption x reader#bloodhoundsandplagues writes#very little mention of arthur actually#im sorry#this is just me projecting my vaguely homesick feelings#when home is a place but also a person who's not in that place#yk#argh#i miss my mum#happy new year tumblr#arthur morgan x you#arthur morgan x yn#arthur morgan rdr2#please indulge me#would you be surprised if i said this wasnt proofread
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⎠tags ; fem reader, historical fiction (time period typical commentary about gender), bantering / romantic tension, smoking cigarettes, indirect kiss, enemies to lovers if you squint, a vague age gap hejkfdjks
⎠a/n ; i cant believe myself but i needed to get it out of my fucking brain.
"Aren't very good at being stealthy, are you Mr. Marston?"
His eyes linger on your frame longer than he'd like them too. You're still in your night clothes, and dawn has yet to break. Up earlier than he's used to seeing you. Up brushing his horse, of all things. Old Boy's nothing but tender under your care.
The faint mist of morning touches his skin, turns him cold. You oughta be even colder like that, but it doesn't show on your face.
He scoffs a little, hands tucked into his pockets. "Wasn't trying to be. Nobody's up this early so I though we had some unwanted company."
"I guess I still count for that, huh?"
âOh, shut up would you?â
You giggle back to him in reply. Itâs rare to hear. Normally when you're laughing, it's a lot coarser. Always so rowdy. He doesn't mind how you sound now. He sits on a log nearby, watching you as you pat the horse gently. Brushing it's mane and whispering words quiet enough that he can't hear over them over the crackle of the freshly lit campfire.
He can't see your face in the dark either, not well. But you're smiling.
"He likes you more than he likes me," He mumbles.
"A woman's touch or somethin' like that," You reply back. John laughs sardonically.
"A woman? Hardly. Got plenty of other options if that's what he needs."
You shoot him an unimpressed look, brows furrowed. Most women would be pissed at him for saying so. John wouldn't say it to anyone but you, he figures. You hardly look mad though, if a little displeased.
You rifle through the horses saddle (with all of John's things, not even bothering to ask him permission) until you find some sugar cubes. The horse makes a pleasant noise as you coo at him, opening your hand up to feed him.
"But he's eating out of my hand all docile anyway," You give John a furtive glance, smile pulling at the corners of your lips "Reminds of somebody,"
Yeah. Right. He bets it does.
For how much you and John argue and for how much you get on each others nerves, he can admit to himself that he spends more time looking at you then looking away. He can't understand it himself. Makes him feel guilty. He ain't much of a good man. He ain't much of anything. A decent marksman, a fine swindler. Not much else.
The flame paints your face orange-yellow in the light. Not enough for you. Not in anyway. But he can't keep his eyes from memorizing you . Always noticing the way you look back at him. All tender. You can be a lot of things when you want to be, but he doesn't often catch it.
It's hard to ignore when he does. "Don't you have things to do, Mr. Marston? Your turn to stand watch today, isn't it?"
He wants a little longer with you. He frowns at you. "Mr. Marston? You call everyone their name but me."
"Does it bother you?"
Course it does. That's what he wants to say. He looks around for his satchel and pulls a cigarette out from it along with a lighter. The flame sparks, looking away from you. "Just wondering why that is."
"Well, lets see," You stop tending to Old Boy after a few more lonesome pats, instead walking towards him close to the fire. You pour yourself a cup of coffee as you sit on the log adjacent. "Arthur's troubled when I say Mr. Morgan, says it makes him feel old. Mr. Smith is too formal for Charles, and Summers is... Summers. Same with Dutch, and Hosea and Bill. Mm, I guess that leaves Javier - but he's hardly a mister."
"And I am?"
You grin into your cup of coffee, not looking at him. "Course you are, Mr. Marston. What else would you have me call you?"
"My name would do you just fine."
"I like Mr. Marston. It's nice and formal, and well," You do peer up at him at him this time. "Young ladies are supposed to be prim and proper and formal, aren't they? At least from what I know. Shouldn't go around calling a man with a son by just his name now should I?"
Damn it. You're clever. "It's no wonder men lose their betting money to you."
"What are you saying now? Just trying to be mindful. Would you prefer I call you your name, Mr. Marston?"
You're doing it on purpose now. He sighs.
"Call me whatever you want," He says, giving up on it after a while as he takes another drag of his cigarette. You finish your coffee, bemused before empty out the grounds.
After, he watches as you saunter over to him. You bend forward, too close - bare skin inches away from prying eyes.
He's thankful everyone's asleep and not around to witness this.
You bend to him eye level, plucking the cigarette half-smoked from between his fingers and placing it between your lips. Your lips are smooth, shiny and plump and soft.
You hold it between your pointer and middle and take a deep inhale of smoke. The scent of tobacco floods his lungs again as you blow the remaining smoke out into his face, making him cough.
He stares at you wide-eyed and awe struck as your grin widens. A flush creeps up his face as he realizes where your mouths been, watching the end of butt of the cig get dark and stick between your lips.
"Thanks for the cigarette, John," You say, waving him off as you turn back towards your tent. "I'll see you at supper,"
John watches you smoke as you get yourself ready for the day, at the far end of the camp - adjusting something in his jeans. Damn you do something to him.
#rdr2 x reader#john marston x reader#red dead redemption x reader#how on gods green earth do i tag for a man named john#writing tag#i want that guy quite terribly
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The Bounty Hunter and The Raider
đ In which a chance encounter with a figure from your past, brings new feelings out of you.
đ Raider!Joel x Reader x Darkish!Arthur Morgan (tw: allusions to reader being abused, allusions to abuse from past, 'problematic' age gap; joel is 52 reader is 22, tiny allusion to reader being forced against her will to stay with joel)
When Joel had begged you to go on a small hunting trip, you truly didn't want to leave the cabin. But after bottles of nail polish, the promise of your favorite meat, and Joel going down on you for at least an hour...you caved. You had watched him hunt deer, and a few bunnies before pouting about wanting to go home.
When you arrived back at the cabins lining the outside of Jackson, you couldn't believe your eyes.
You look hesitant, almost worried. âArthur? Is that you?â
Arthur's facial expression grows weary upon hearing your voice. âDarling? That you?â
It had been at least three years since you had seen ArthurâŚsince you had left in the middle of the night and Joel had found you half dead, begging for your life. âI can't believe it's you.â
Arthur looks you up and down, surprised to see how much weaker you are now than what you used to be. Your hair is duller, eyes tired, and bruises decorating your visible skin.
âI think I could say the same to you, darlin'. You look like you got hit by a train.â Arthur clears his throat.
Joel had barely now noticed the broad man speaking to you, anger flashing his face.
âAnd you are?â he demands, taking your side. Joel feels a protectiveness, something he hasn't felt since you first came around Jackson. Now everyone knows you're Joelâs girl.
Arthur immediately looks Joel up and down, almost sizing him up. He raises an eyebrow before going back to talking to you, âWho's the fella behind you?â
âOh. This is my boyfriend.â you say in a friendly tone. âJoel this is Arthur, Arthur this is Joel.â
Joel nods at Arthur, making sure to step closer to you. He refuses to take his eyes off Arthur. âNice to meet you.â
Arthur laughs a little at Joelâs possessive performance. âLikewiseâŚyou two seem close.â
Joel huffs, picking up on Arthurâs almost mocking tone. âYeah. Been together forâŚboutâ three years now right baby?â
âYes.â you nod. âJoel saved my life actually.â
Joel wraps an arm around your waist, pulling you closer to him. âDamn right I did.â
Arthurâs amused at Joelâs behavior. Amused at how clingy he is with you. It reminded him of himself, only when you were younger and in his care.
He smirks, âSeems like yall are attached to eachâother.â
âI haven't seen you in so longâŚâ you remember how you left him. Nearly 2 a.m, making sure he was asleep before gathering your things silently and booking it. âWhat even brings you to Jackson?â
Arthur shrugs nonchalantly, âSome bountys on some raiders. Passed Jackson, it seemed like a quiet place to rest.â
âYou going to be long then?â Joel asks with a direct stare to the other man.
Arthur notices Joelâs grip on you tightening, your face forming a little frown at it. He holds back another smirk, and shrugs again, âMight be. Why, got s problem with it old man?â
Joelâs face turns into a scowl, eyebrows furrowing at the comment. âNah. Jusâ was wonderinâ when youâre leavinâ. Jacksons a quiet place for a reason.â
You giggle, âTommy and Maria wonât mind an extra mouth to feed.â
Joel rolls his eyes. âI know he won't, and that ain't what Iâm worried boutâ.â
Arthurâs smile grows as he visibly notes Joelâs growing agitation towards him. âThen what are you worried about?â
Possessiveness becomes present in Joelâs tone, âNothingâŚnevermind. It don't matter anyhow.â
Arthur raises an eyebrow at the older man. âYou seem a little on edge there.â
âWe just got back from hunting!â you speak up, wanting to diffuse the situation. âWe're both hungry and exhausteid. That's all.â
âOh really?â
Joelâs eye twitches slightly, but keeps his comments to himself.
âJoel?â you turn to him. âDo you wanna go tell Tommy we have an extra guest tonight?â
Joel sighs, he takes a moment before nodding at you. âYeahâŚyeah Iâm goinâ.â
Joel gives Arthur another glare, before he walks off with the animals to go find his brother.
Arthur watches as Joel leaves, a smirk still decorated on his face. He turns back to you, his demeanor turning softer. âSeems like your new fella has a bit of a temper problem princess.â
âHe's just not friendly towards new people. Especially when it comes to me.â you reply.
âThat so?â
âHe'sâŚlost a lot. Besides his brother, and a distant daughter who won't speak to himâŚIâm all he has.â you admit, your gaze falling to the ground.
Arthur cocks an eyebrow. Curiosity pours into him. âHe lost a lot? What sorta loss are we talkin?â
âHis daughterâŚfrom the old world. And before me he lost his lover.â you sigh at the mention of Tess, still not sure where your feelings stand.
Arthurâs smirk faded fast. âDamn. Can't imagine losinâ my family like that. And his lover too?â
You tense up at the mention of Tess again, something Arthur noticed almost immediately.
âHe seemsâŚpretty attached to you.â he points out.
âYeah he is. When I left you that night, it wasn't long until some raiders came along and nearly took me as a sex slave. Beat me nearly to death to break me in. I barely escaped, and when I didâŚI mustâve gone days without food or water before Joel found me hunting with Tommy.â you explain in a meek voice.
Arthurâs eyes widen as he listens to you. He begins to tense up himself, a hint of anger in his eyes. âHe found ya, out there all alone? Weak as a newborn baby?â
You nod. âHead basically bashed in, barley could see my face from all of the blood. My arm never really recovered properlyâŚso-â you mock his tone from earlier âIâm looking a little rough.â
Arthur chuckles a little, âRough looking is an understatement princessâ
âYou don't have to be rude.â youâre not sure why youâre taking his teasing so personal.
He scoffs, âAin't being rude. Just saying what's obvious.â
There's a silence between you two, you both simply just glancing at once another.
Arthur clears his throat, âSoâŚwhy did you leave that night? Never figured that out.â
âWhy do you care?â
âJust wonderin. You had your own room, I took care of youâŚâ Arthur shakes his head.
âI just had to leaveâŚokay?â you sigh. âI don't wanna talk about it.â
âDarling-â
So you're staying for dinner?â you reassure.
Arthur nods just as Joelâs footsteps could be heard, âAlright my love, made Tommy aware of the extra company.â
âIâll stay for dinner, since arrangements have been made.â Arthur replies.
âWhen do you think you'll take off?â Joel asks, no longer caring about being kind.
âNot sure. Why? Planninâ on runninâ me out of town?â Arthur cocks his head.
âLike I said, Jacksons a quiet town. Don't need no bounty hunter causinâ issue.â Joel has an annoyed smile on his face.
âJoel.â you warn.
Joel looks over at you, his eyes softening when they meet yours. âWhat?â
âPlease be civil. You know how Tommy can get.â you remind him.
âI am being civil.â Joel assures.
âŽâË
The table is set the way Tommy specifically likes. An extra plate set out for Arthur, who now looks around Joelâs sprawling cabin from where he's seated. Whoever owned it prior to the world going to shit, definitely had money. Something Joel may not not have, but he carried the only currency that mattered in the new world: power and strength.
âSoâŚyou planninââ on stayinâ in Jackson for a while?â Tommy asks, taking a bite of the venison.
Arthur looks back to that man, who is much easier on the eyes than his rougher older brother. âOhâŚI honestly donât know. I never stay in one place too long. But, Jackson seems like a cute peaceful community, a real set up yall have built here. I might stick around for a bit.â
âWhatâs a bit mean?â Joel asks, chewing his food with a glare directed again, at Arthur.
Tommy sighs, realizing the look on Joelâs face means absolutely no good, he attempts to chime in, âI-â
âYou should take Arthur hunting.â you say with an innocent smile.
Joelâs face scrunches at your suggestion, even more of an annoyed look painting his face. âAnd why in the hell would that be a good idea?â
Arthur speaks up before youâre able to respond, âSounds like a great idea.â
Tommy only giggles.
âBecause now you are both the biggest and toughest in Jackson, both could bring home serious foodâŚmaybe more venison.â you smile at him. Venison was by far youâre favorite, growing tired of the duck and chicken you had to endure.
âNo way in hell darling, you think that man can hunt like me?â Joel feels a pang of jealousy towards your suggestion.
âJoel.â your smile falls. âJust take him hunting with you.â
âDammit, all right, fine. Iâll go hunting with emâ just stop poutinâ at me like that.â Joel shakes his head.
âGood, I want more venison.â you smile to yourself again, eating what's left on your plate.
Joel gives you an eye roll, though he cannot help but crack a smile at your excited attitude towards more of your favorite meat. âYou really love it don't you?â
âWell, I mean it is pretty tasty. SoâŚIâd say the excitement is warranted.â Arthur is quick to defend you, not knowing Joel is only joking as venison is a way to spoil you from the duck and chicken you usually consume.
Joel immediately scowls at Arthurâs comment, and glances at him. âIt's not âpretty tastyâ. I hunt the best damn venison yaâ ever tasted.â
Tommy only snorts at his brotherâs words, grinning at how easy it is to simply rile the older one. âSure bud, real good venison.â
âTommy you loved it at Christmas, Maria asked for the recipe.â you shook your head playfully at him.
âOkay okayâŚyou got me youâre right.â Tommy chuckles. âI guess he did do a good time that time, didn't he?â
Arthur feels almost out of place at this dinner. You, Tommy and Joel are all connected. Love is between the three of you. Romantic, platonic along with familial.
âDecent job?â Joel sounds offended, âDecent job my ass, that was the best damn venison you ever have tasted. You said it yourself.â
Tommy throws his hands up in mock defense, still finding it hilarious to mess with Joel. âAlrightâŚit was delicious venison. Happy now, cowboy?â
Arthur smiles, âCowboy huh? Ain't he a little too old to be a cowboy?â
âPlease stop bullying Joel, you guys are hurting my feelings.â you fake pout.
Tommy and Arthur both chuckle, knowing why youâre siding with Joel.
âOh come on, weâre just givinâ Joel a hard time. He's the one who can't accept that heâs old and rusting now.â Tommy smiles at you.
âYeah. Maybe he oughta go to bed early tonight so he gets all his rest in.â Arthur adds.
Joel only looks between the two men, annoyance painted on his face.
âOh yeah Joel, wanna get your old bones bed early tonight?â Tommy snarks playfully.
Arthur laughs at Tommy playing along with him. âYeah, can't be havinâ ya olâ back giving out on ya now.â
âDon't worry, my love.â you assure Joel. âIâll sleep early with you.â
Joel grins, âYou gonna sleep with me, huh?â
âDon't get jealous there, Joel. No need to growl like a dog.â Tommy tells his brother.
âYeah, she ain't going nowhere old man.â Arthur jokes.
You frown, âBe nice to him.â
Tommy puts his hand up, surrendering to you. âAlright fine Iâll stop.â
Arthur, on the other hand, does not want to stop. Itâs almost like a small power trip he's having over Joel.
âYeah, guess we should leave the big olâ cowboy alone for the night. He gets cranky close to his bedtime I see.â
You immediately stand up, âI invited you to dinner because I missed you. You're still the cruel jerk I ditched in the middle of the night. Now you can't stop being mean to the man I love. I'm going to sleep, goodnight to all of you.â You leave them at the table and beeline upstairs to you and Joelâs shared bedroom.
Joel sighs, also standing up. âYou happy now bastard?â Not waiting for his reply, he immediately heads up after you.
Tommy, feeling the tension clears his throat. âI bet my wife is missing me, Iâm gonna get on headed out. Was great meetinâ you.â
Tommy grabs his coat and heads for the door, leaving Arthur alone at the kitchen table, somewhat confused.
âŽâË
Joel walks through the hallway, heading straight to the master bedroom you both shared. His mind is suddenly filled with worry as he freezes before fully touching the doorknob. He knew you were sensitive, much too sensitive.
He takes a deep breath, and proceeds to knock on the door.
âGo away.â
âIt's me baby.â Joel says.
He hears your soft footsteps, then the door opens. You had changed into your nighty, eyes red from crying.
âYou okay baby?â he asks.
âYou don't get it. He'sâŚalways has been like that.â you shake your head.
âLike what?â
âHeâŚhe would be so mean to me, picking out stuff he didn't like. Telling me I was weak for how I thought. That I wouldn't survive this world.â you were visibly upset, something that hurt Joel.
Joel nods, taking in your words. The hard part was that Arthur was correct. If you didn't have someone protecting you, you'd be dead.
âYou chased after me.â you bring him back.
âI did baby. You were upset. Had to make sure you were okay.â he reassures you. âBut if you wanna be aloneâŚâ
You immediately move to pull him into the room, kissing him and reaching for his belt buckle. âWanna be alone with you.â
Joel lets you guide him onto the bed, âYeah sweetheart? You want me all to yourself?â
You straddle him, âYeah daddy. Needed you since Arthur showed up.â
Joel sighs at the mention of the bounty hunter. Jealousy blooming. âIâm gonna take care of youâŚsweetheart you're mine.â
âPlease do.â you beg as he switches you over, now hovering you.
The neediness in your voice turns him on much more. âDon't worry baby girl, Iâm going to make sure to take real good care of you. Make sure you never think of Arthur again.â
He grips your thighs tightly, as his hard on aligns with your soaked through panties. You mewl at the contact.
âFeels good Joel.â
âYou? You like how your feelinâ? You feelinâ better?â The sight of you squirming is enough to drive him wild. But the fact that Arthur is possibly downstairs listening to you, drives him even more insane.
Joel tugs at the edge of your nightgown, and begins to pull it over your head. You now lay bare for him, Joel taking in your completely naked form. He hasn't been harder in his life than he is now, he's sure.
Arthur knows better. He definitely does. He's able to sneak upstairs, following the sounds of your moaning. He couldn't believe his ears. He slowly tiptoes to the door, but completely halts when your voice speaks up.
âYou said you'd do anything for me right?â
Joelâs voice answers after, âYeah, baby girl. You know Iâd do anything for you, darlinâ. Anything you asked of me.â
The silence is sharp. Before you speak again. âI want you to kiss Arthur.â
#joel miller x reader#the last of us#the last of us smut#arthur morgan#arthur morgan x reader#red dead redemption#dark!joel miller#dark!joel miller x reader#kinda dark!arthur idkkk
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"I'm Yours" ||
Arthur Morgan x GN!Reader
Rating: None
Length: 1.3k words
Asked by @yyiikes IN LOVE WITH THIS SO MUCH ?? we need another part when he finally says it back
Part 2 of "Here With Me"
Oh, I can absolutely do that for you! I adore this man so much and he's been occupying my mind a lot, so I'm glad to have you guys enjoy my writing! I'd love to do more!
*
âIt's been a few weeks. A few weeks of my silence and their patience. I don't know what else I could possibly say to them that I already haven't written or thought here, it's⌠it's obvious, ain't it?â
*
Arthur stared up from his leather journal as he leaned further back against the tree in camp, the cover of the shade made it easy to stare at you across the camp as you did your usual chores, completely unaware of the set of eyes on you. The brim of his hat offered that extra layer of protection from being caught, but even if he were caught, would he even deny it? No, he wouldn't, and he just chuckled at himself at how obvious it had been to probably everyone, excluding himself until recently.
Yes, he truly did have feelings for you, whether he cared to address them or not. He would have just chalked it up to loyalty to those in the gang, but you were a different case altogether. When he was faced with you being injured, it struck a nerve with him, and the urge to protect you outweighed anything that required any sense of logic, his instincts just took over, and that wasnât just caring for a fellow gang member, there was something more in the depths of his gut. Arthurâs eyes flickered back down to the page and there you were, sketched carefully across the page like you were a carved statue. He hadnât realized just how much heâd focused on such little details of you face, how he paid that much attention to those small things that made your face soâŚyou.
Heâd been thinking of you so often now, his mind full with so many ways to get you alone to have a talk, but no matter what he did, there was always someone wanting his attention, a dayâs work was never finished. Today, it was a day of peace, or at least heâd hoped it would be, it was early and there were people who were barely awake. Arthur had let out a sigh and slipped the journal back into his satchel, then pushed himself from the ground and got to his feet. Instead of making his way straight to you, he went to pour himself a cup of coffee to calm his nerves, the warmth of it in his hand made him focus when he couldnât.Â
Youâd been petting the horses after feeding them, and his eyes barely wavered from you for more than a moment, the intensity would have worried onlookers if it werenât the people heâd known for years, but they knew how Arthur was. âHe keeps his walls upâ, âheâs not much of a talkerâ, all those things that were said about him werenât necessarily a lie, but there was more to it than that. He did feel, he felt more than he let on because things of that nature were much more complicated. The one person in camp that he felt he could really talk to,besides yourself, was Charles, and even he had given him the best advice he could.Â
âTalk to them,â he said bluntly. âDonât be ashamed to tell them, they obviously put enough trust in you to confess. So, even if you donât feel the same, itâs best to tell them exactly what you feel.â
Charles was always smart, incredibly intuitive, and Arthur was always the second guesser, but overall, his friend was right. He had been so wrapped up in thinking that he didnât notice you going for your own cup of coffee right beside him. Arthur stood beside the fire and stared out at the water, the trees along the horizon brought him comfort in serene moments like this, but as if his body was reacting, he turned to see you staring up at him.
âYou okay there?â You asked, a small smile on your lips as you brought the cup up, taking a small sip.Â
Arthur cleared his throat and nodded as he brought his own cup to his lips, his eyes darted from you to the water again. âBeen thinkinâ is all,â he said gruffly.Â
You nodded in reply and hummed. âYeah, I felt bad bothering you, but I wanted to be sure.â You had wanted to reach out to him to offer your support, or any comfort he might take solace in, but you decided against it.Â
What you were greeted with though was Arthur beckoning you toward the large rock that sat by the shoreline. You would follow him, of course, and looked around curiously as he motioned for you to sit on the rock. As much as you wanted to question him, you kept your mouth shut and waited, patience was a virtue with this man. He then removed the journal from his bag and flipped more than halfway through until he stopped on a page, and then handed it to you with little to no hesitation while you balanced your coffee in one hand with the journal in the other.Â
As you were about to ask, your eyes caught the drawing on the left, it was you, and it was sketched so beautifully that you were at a loss for words as you stared at it for a while. Arthur cleared his throat after a moment and chuckled as he tapped the other side of the journal, which was filled with words written in neat writing. Youâd never seen his journal before, so all of this was a lot to process, the fact he trusted you with it in the first place showed how important youâd been.
Wordlessly, he stood there as you read the page.Â
âIt's been a few weeks. A few weeks of my silence and their patience. I don't know what else I could possibly say to them that I already haven't written or thought here, it's⌠it's obvious, ain't it? Of course I love them, I have for a while now and it scared me. Iâve loved in my lifetime and yet, whenever I had, something bad always followed, like a curse upon my heart. But if thereâs one thing Iâd been told that really stuck with me, it was to take a gamble on love. Itâs ridiculous to be afraid of something so natural and yet itâs been the hardest thing to admit. But I admit it, I love them. And I ainât gonna regret it, not this time.â
When you finished, you stared up at the gunslinger with large eyes, you were struck with disbelief, dazed at the fact that this man was so articulate with how he felt and how he saw you⌠Your eyes went back to the pages and you stared for a long while, unable to truly say how you felt.Â
Arthur shifted and took a large drink of coffee, then looked back at you. He then chuckled to himself and sighed. âIs this how you felt when you told me all that stuff and I said nothinâ?â He asked you. âBecause now I get it, thatâs⌠agonizinâ to wait.â He offered a wide smile and continued to sip his coffee.Â
âArthur⌠IâŚâ You couldnât do it, you couldnât say it, this man had your tongue. Quickly, you stood up with his closed journal, then threw your arms around his bulky frame, which almost caused him to drop his coffee, and most definitely spilled a majority of yours.
He laughed and looked down at you, your arms around him as you hid your face in his jacket. Arthur patted your shoulder gently at first, then he pulled you in with one arm and hugged you in return. This ainât so bad, could get used to this.Â
The sun was finally beginning to rise in the sky, the colors like a watercolor painting as the pinks and purples slowly faded with the hues of gold, and staring out at the sky while you were wrapped around Arthur was more of a dream than you could have ever imagined. His hand placed gently on your shoulder, allowing you to just remain with him, taking in the comfort of his scent.Â
You could get used to days like this.
#tinalbion writings#arthur morgan x reader#rdr2 fanfic#arthur morgan drabble#arthur morgan imagine#writing drabble#rdr2#red dead redemption 2#red dead redemption 2 arthur morgan#arthur morgan fluff#arthur morgan x gender neutral reader#gender neutral reader#writing ask
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WITCHING HOUR, CH 2/3 â [18+]
(18+) - MARKED FOR EVENTUAL SMUT, MINORS DNI!
fem!reader x arthur morgan
summary: the prodigal son returns tags: marked 18+ for smut in later chapters, reader has a backstory kinda (but now a little more than kinda), original side character(s), does arthur count as a tag, he needs his own warning, its more exposition please don't leave
word count: 4.9k
a/n: HERE! DAMN! (i'm so sorry this took so long)
<< previous chapter | read on ao3 here | masterlist
you can find a link to the playlist here! tag list (look how crazy. i have a LIST.): @photo1030
The subsequent mornings are painted with varying shades of gloom. It was smeared over the sky in thick coats, and if it was just a little thicker, it might be able to keep out the spears of light.Â
Sometimes, they tickle. Sometimes, they recoil from the rigid mounds of snow and blind you and anything else unfortunate enough to get caught in the line of fire. Pain in the ass, really. A particularly nasty pain in the ass flickers in the cloudy metal of your spoon one morning while youâre shoveling grits into your mouth.
âYou planning on eating the table too, kid?â
Your eyebrows shoot up, as does your spine once you lower your spoon back into the chipped bowl.Â
âMy apologies,â you gulp. âYouâll uh, have to forgive me, Mrs. Campbell. Seems the winter airâs gotten to my head.â Â
Mrs. Campbell was a wiry, dark-haired woman of 63, and had spent more time rearing cattle than children. She was rough, tough, and at present, leveling you with a stare so doubtful that you wonder if the look you often catch on the livestock is embarrassment.Â
After holding your gaze for a few moments more, she resumes the rocking of her chair from the corner and returns to her darning. A large red sock, the same one sheâd whacked Mr. Campbell over the head with after sheâd found it on the floor of the living room only thirty minutes ago.
âNo, no, youâre alright.â Mrs. Campbell pauses, though her hands continue to work. Under, over. In, out. Not a single finger pricked. âThink thatâs the most Iâve seen you take down in one sitting, is all. You bite like a bird.â She makes a funny chewing motion with her mouthâor, at least you think itâs supposed to be funny. It seems to amuse her well enough; most strange things did.Â
She then asks how much horse feed is left, and you tell her enough to last for the next two weeks. You ask how her daughterâs baby boy is doing, she tells you heâs been picking his nose, and the two of you return to your respective distractions: the pulling of thread and a spoon fishing around a now empty dish while you consult silently with the peeling floral wallpaper.Â
Arthur Morganâs appearance had set you on edge, loathe as you were to admit it. The fact that thereâd been no sign of him since youâd first spoken only hastened the growing dread, more so than the lack of response after your fatherâs men had been so kindly disposed of.Â
Contingencies had been thoroughly accounted for, leaving you mildly inconvenienced at best and dead at worst. There were other conclusions youâd drawn up, of course, but dealing in extremes had its benefits.
You press your thumb absentmindedly into the corner of the dining room table. Could the Campbells have heard your exchange? No, they couldnât have, too old. And that was excluding the fact that the main house was rather far from the cabin. Given the time frame, it would have been well beyond what was reasonable for yourâŚsituation to have been brought up.Â
Besides, this was important. Better to sort this out now than whenâifâhe showed up at your doorstep again.
âI have a question.â
Mrs. Campbell snorts. âI presume youâre lookinâ for an answer.â
You set your spoon down, and stand to clear the table. âDo the two of you getâŚstray cats often?â
This time her hands waver. âDuring the warmer months, sure. But in this weather? I mean, if it had the guts to get through all that âwinter air,â I donât see why not.â Her eyes flick up. âWould have to be real hungry, though. Or stupid, which I doubt, âcause cats ainât stupidâsonuvabitch!âÂ
You jerk as her needle clatters to the floor. She lets a curse slip as she hunches over to retrieve it; another follows as she tugs the string loose, just a little, and her fingers trip over themselves before falling back into a steady rhythm.Â
Her brows pinch in concentration. âNever met a stupid cat,â she repeats.
âIâŚI see.â Moving around to the other side of the table to collect what's left, you frown when you catch your warped reflection in a bent spoon. You pick it up, and your fingers brush over the bump unconsciously. âI saw one,â you say slowly. Mind fumbling over any disastrous outcomes. âA cat, I mean. Heâs been hanging around my cabin for a while now. I was only asking âcause heâs been spooking the chickens.â
When Mrs. Campbell doesnât answer, your mouth gets the better of you. âOnly, he turned up again a couple nights ago. Acting real docile, you see.â Not docile. The farthest thing from it. âNearly shot him then and there, butâoh, he just looked so pitiful! Heâs real mean looking, all scratched up and such, but I was tired, so when shooing him off didnât work I let him in. Didnât hiss, didnât bite, nothing. But, I think I may have scared him. Skittered right out the door, quick as lightning. Heâs been pissinâ me offâpardon my languageâbut, I just donât see why heâd go through all that trouble to show up if he was just looking to leave the moment I raised so much as a finger.â
You only cease your rambling once you realize that youâve bent the spoon too far in the wrong direction. âIâŚshould turn him away, shouldnât I? If he shows up again?â
Mrs. Campbell lets out an exasperated exhale, smooths out her apron, and sets her mangled sock down in her lap. âHe kill any chickens?â
âNo, butââ
âYou feed him?â
âNo?â
âWell, I think you should. Itâd be real funny.â
Funny. Funny, sheâd said.Â
You look to the silverware for consolation, but they can only produce a weak gleam.
âQuit making faces at my utensils, I hate when you do that. If you got something to say, say it now so I can finish this damned sock.â
Instead of making faces at the spoons, you reserve them for the tablecloth. âI justâdonât think itâd be wise.â A wanted man, with a lofty bounty at that, and you were comparing him to a mangy feline. Attempting to see him as anything other than what he so obviously was would be disingenuous.Â
And maybe Mrs. Campbell wasnât the right person to be speaking to about this, because her nose crinkles with such distaste that you have to remind yourself that youâd remembered to bathe. âYouâre grown,â she says, âand you work here. Iâm inclined to believe that you have enough know-how to keep yourself from doing anything too dumb. If not, oh well.â
ââŚRight.â
Sometimes you wonder if her daughter had moved out not for marriage, but to escape Mrs. Campbellâs dreadfully indifferent way of speaking. Still, you take her words with relative care and pray that the âfeedingâ portion of her advice can be altered into something much more metaphorical.
When you attempt to bring the dishes to the water bucket, Mrs. Campbellâs head snaps to you and she clicks her teeth. âDrop it.â
âI was justââ
The sock finds its way into a basket of other half-finished projects at her feet, and she pushes herself up to stand just as tall (if not taller) than any tree before snatching the dishes from your hands. âI donât pay you to do my dishes, girl.â
You smile. âI donât believe you pay me at all, Mrs. Campbell.â
âPrecisely. Your Pa pays me. And enough with that âMrs. Campbellâ mess; makes me sound like an old crone. Told you to call me Fran, didnât I?â
Shrugging past the bitterness in her tone at the mention of your father, you turn to the doorway and pull your coat off of the hook youâd tossed it on the night before. Itâs only slightly warm from where the sun has touched it.Â
The beams have softened their assault on the curtains; itâs still fairly cloudy, but thereâs no sign of incoming snow. Chores would be alright, if only for today.Â
âIâll work on it, Mrs. Campbell. But, I do have one more question, if you donât mind.â You wait for a nod while you pull on your boots with a wince. âHow come you donât take on any other help?â
Like most of her responses, Mrs. Campbell doesnât give much away. Nothing remarkable that you can discern, at least. She merely winks and carries on with her washing. But just as you set a foot out the front door, she calls out to you.Â
âHey, kid?â
You turn.
âIf the worst you can call him is a spooked cat, he canât be all that bad, can he?âÂ
You freeze. âPardon?â
She looks up at the ceiling, as though her next words will appear if she gets her eyes to narrow enough. Glasses had been the first of many neglected suggestions youâd offered upon your arrival. Youâd even offered to buy them yourself, with what little youâd been able to bring with you. But Mrs. Campbell, being Mrs. Campbell, had simply laughed.
Squinting, she returns her focus to the bucket and reaches for a cake of lye soap. âAh, and tell that idiot if he slams my doors, Iâll send my foot so far up his ass that them science folks wonât have any animals left to call him.â
__
Illusory warmth finds you a few weeks later.
It isnât quite spring yet; winter is a stubborn mule, and though the snow has receded into the dirt it still stamps its hooves into the wind. In the water, tooâfreezing rain taps its fingers onto the windows. Soft and melodic, it nearly puts you to sleep from your place on the floor before you remember the annoyances itâs dragged along with it.Â
Thereâd been no sign of trouble tonight, and the chicken wire had been reinforced a few hours prior. Thatâd mostly been the work of Mr. Campbell, though. Heâd chirped about some promise heâd made to his âlovely wife,â and went on his merry way after leaving you with some choice words from the wife in question about the importance of rest.Â
The rain had started not long after. Which was great, for someone out there. But, bad for you. Pretty bad. Ugly, messy badâbecause it was cold, dark, and the dirt hadnât the moral backbone to keep itself together for any longer than two blinks before your boots were practically swimming in it.Â
The trudge back to the cabin was only slightly humiliating, considering the fact that the sole witnesses were the owls you knew were hiding out in the safety of the trees.Â
Scampering from the uneven path to the front porch, however, was another story. Although the pliant (no good, backstabbing) earth was quick and eager to drag you to its depths, you were aggravated enough to be slightly quicker, and your palms shot out to catch you just before your chin could meet the full wrath of the wood.
But the word âjustâ was a pebble cast into a pond, and the first ripple was the metallic tang that flooded your mouth. Diatribes were spat onto the ground alongside the blood, tongue throbbing with a vengeance before you drove the heels of your palms down to push yourself up. The second ripple was a little less red, but just as irritating. The rain had pulled the wet fabric of your work shirt and trousers tight over your limbs, and it had begun to border on painful when water droplets struck like one might strike the skin of a drum.Â
âIâm grateful, Iâm grateful, Iâm oh so fucking gratefulâŚâ It was a mantra you often found yourself repeating whenever natureâs pranks sought to drive you mad. Rain was good. Rain was fine, actually, so youâd ignored the creaking of your knees and hobbled your way inside.
And here you sit: back propped up against the wall, shivering like a fool with your knees tucked into your chest. The mud crusting between your fingers barely registers while you work on releasing yourself from your wet clothing.
Which, of course, is when the light tapping on the window takes its cue to crescendo. Itâs a rather flimsy cloak for the uneven thunks outside that make no attempt to conceal themselves. But your bones know better.Â
Awful timing, that man.Â
You feel the weight of his fist against the door before he makes contact.Â
(One.)
You shoot up.
(Two.)
You lunge for the table.
You decide against greeting him with the rifle, which is a significant improvement. Itâs a revolver. But you did have the good sense not to kick the door again; the rusty hinges were fragile enough without your meddling. Instead, you let it creak open with one hand on the doorknob.
Youâre met with a bruise, planted right atop a cheekbone. A swollen bottom lip, blood threatening to split it wide. Heâs got a button missing from his rumpled jacket, and the caving of the porch underneath his feet clues you in on the fact that heâs favoring his right leg. Heâs been fighting. Fighting, and he looks about ready to keel over and die. Or pick another fight. Probably both.
Part of you unwinds at the sight of him, battered as he was. Present as he was. But the more logical part of you senses that heâs here for something, and the even more logical part of you remembers exactly what it was that stood at your doorstep.
Itâs then that the stench of alcohol hits you, and the familiar smell of mud sweeps in not long after. Arthur is completely covered in it, save for his face. Andâ
There. There it is again.
That look.Â
Your pulse trips in your throat, and you pray that heâs inebriated enough to ignore it. âYouâre on my porch. Why?â
Bright blue comes back into focus, and his hands fall to his hips. âI can go where I damn well please.â
âThatâs all well and good, but why are you on my porch?â
He sniffs. Peers just over your shoulder. â...House call.â
You step to block him. âNow thatâs two chances. I have it on good authority that one is just fine these days, but Iâm feeling generous.â And confused. Extremely confused.
His face contorts into a heatless grimace, and the doorknob squeals. Youâre suddenly reminded of the odd tales of shapeshifters youâd stumbled upon as a child: one moment a man, the next a bloodthirsty predator. Not a particularly helpful developmentâespecially since your talk with Mrs. Campbellâbut it was a development nonetheless.
Arthur rattles off the courtesies typically extended toward esteemed guests while you look him over again, and your eyes lock onto his hair. Another familiar connectionâdoe brown strands, streaked with mud and nearly plastered to his head from the light downpour. Much less ferocious than the rest of him. But, tonight, if you have to pick, heâs a wet dog. A wet, potentially drunk dog, who was missing his hat.Â
And suddenly, the natural chatter of the trees comes to a halt.Â
âWhatâd you just call me?â
âŚYou idiot.
âI didnât call you jack shit,â you lie. Arthur gives a loose smirk, and your next protests become nothing but bluster. âWhat, the little girl that hit you knock your ears shut?â
âFigured Iâd let her get a hit in, out of the kindness of my big olâ heart.â Arthur sways on his feet a bit, peering down at you through the water that he hasnât bothered to wipe from his lashes. Gravity finds eventual triumph, and he leans into the post before eying the revolver still in your hands. âDonât suppose youâre planninâ on pullinâ that trigger any time soon.â
âWhatâs it to you?â
Arthurâs face begins to harden, and he crosses his arms tight over his chest. âYou know, last time I was here I said you were lucky. Well, Iâd like to make an addendum: lucky and stupid, lady.âÂ
You cast a disbelieving look at the leg heâs been keeping his weight off of. âAnd youâre drunk. The fact that you got here without your horse cracking your head open is a miracle.â
His brows draw low, and he rubs the heel of his boot against the muddy spot where youâd fallen earlier. Blinks at the ground. Then, with the vigor of a child caught sleeping in church, wipes angrily at a speck of mud on his thigh. âMânot drunk,â he finally mutters, flicking the offending dirt out into the yard and crossing his arms again. âAnd Iâve got enough trust in my horse to fill at least half of that barn yâall got.â
âJust half? Not the whole thing?â
âWhole thing would be two horses.â
You almost laugh. Almost. When you donât reply, his eyes drop back down to the gun, gaze contemplative. âYou got any idea how easily I couldâve knocked that flimsy thing outta your hands?â
âWhy of course I do, Mr. Morgan.â The dampness youâd been struck with pulls at you, bones heavy and patience now worn thin. You give the revolver an exaggerated twirl, the metal snatching what can be seen of the moon through the rain and reflecting it at him. âIâm real lucky youâre here to tell me so, ainât I? Matter of fact, why donât you go and fetch me my chair before I topple right on over? âÂ
âThat ainât what I meant, and you know it.â You think he sounds somewhat regretful. But somewhat isnât enough.Â
âDo I now,â you say dryly. âYou seem to ânot meanâ an awful lot.âÂ
Arthur pushes himself off of the post with his shoulder and shoves his muddy hands into his muddy pockets. âI just donât see why you people are so eager to act like you got your life for dog-cheap.â
âYou people?â
âYeah, you heard me. You people.â Heâs looking at everything but you now, eyes wild but body frighteningly still. âYouâll look trouble right in the eye, and lie right through your damn teeth till it gets you laid out cold in a ditch somewhere.â Arthur gestures to the embarrassing height your shooting arm has dropped to in the time that heâs spoken. âI can tell each time you open that door that you wonât shoot. Canât, Iâd argue, âcause if you didnât have my big head within one inch of that barrel, youâd be some deep shit.â His words are a forlorn echo amidst the rain, now nothing more than a light haze.Â
You could shut the door and go back inside, you think. Tell him heâs wrong, because he most certainly was. Peel out of your damp clothes, because standing outside in the chill spelled nothing but trouble. Arthur wouldnât push. He was just as prone to bluffing as you were.Â
And yet.
And yet.
âI could say the same about you. Donât think your kin would take too kindly to the fact that youâre hanginâ around someone that knows your face. Who you are.â You steady your aim. âThatâs a loose end, Arthur. You donât seem like the type of man to keep many of those around.â Itâs the first time youâve said his name all night; youâre only sure because the moment it leaves you, his entire body tenses before he sags back against the wooden post.Â
The way he looks at you then might be considered cruel and unusual punishment. You think of butterflies, embroidered into blankets from childhood. Tacked to the wall of your fatherâs study. The only difference between them and you is that youâre free to leave.
If only you possessed something to sweeten the dealâwhatever deal you could come up with in the next five seconds. To mask the returning waver of your voice, now laden with inconceivable realities. âAm I a loose end, Arthur Morgan?âÂ
He opens his mouth to speak. Closes it. Untucks a hand from the arms heâs wrapped around himself to scrub at his beard and finally wipe at the water youâve been eyeballing from his lids. He opens his mouth again, now on the precipice of what might be an explanation.
âSâdangerous,â is all he says.
You see red.
The arm holding the revolver is dropped so you can poke a finger into his chest. âYouâre not making any sense!â Each word is enunciated with a jab, and you cringe at the feeling of rain rewetting the mud underneath your fingernails. âYou cut and run, turn up drunk and beaten half to death, practically beg me to let you inside, and then you get upset when I say I wonât pop a bullet into your head?â
Arthur pinches the bridge of his nose, voice beginning to escalate. âNow if you would just listen for more than two secondsââ
You cut him down with a harsh whisper. âListen? Listen?â Your eyes momentarily check for any sign of a light being turned on in the main house. Nothing. Your finger falls away then, and a violent chill wracks your body from head to toe. âNo, you listen. I donât know you. You donât know me. You said your piece the last time we spoke, and you left, so why are you on my porch!â
âI donât know!â
Something cracks, and your vision blurs when you whip your head to recheck the lights. Still nothing. The crack fizzles out into nothingness, and you return to find Arthur close. Awfully close. And your hand is warm andâoh.
It seems his pluck is rather contagious. The noise youâd heard wasnât thunder, but the sound of your treacherous hand clapping right over Arthurâs mouth. Â
Time stills. Or speeds up, more like. The only thing you can be certain of is that ring of greenish gold around his pupils. The brush of his lips against your palm. Humid air being released in slow, steady clouds. You briefly wonder what else this warmth has dominion over, save for your cupped hand. Who else.Â
The speed of the exhales increases, and envy wriggles in the dirt of your heart like unearthed worms. Did his mind wander, as yours often did? Surely not as emphatically. It no doubt ambled from one thought to the next, attention snagged only when he had the energy to do so. Had you been interesting enough to snag his?
The spell is broken by a lamp flickering on in the distance.Â
âShit!â
Sheer panic sinks its claws into you before rationality can, and youâre curling a hand around Arthurâs wrist and yanking him inside before he can protest.
Youâre both panting ragged breaths once the door shuts behind you, in spite of the mere two steps itâd taken to cross the entryway. Tangible confusion permeates the air, and Arthur looks at you expectantly. Itâs only fair that the (secondary) perpetrator speak first. Â
But words are tricky, tricky things. And as much as you partook in your fair share of falsehoods, finding the right ones when you didnât feel that your life was on the line was an unfamiliar practice.Â
Voice quiet, you blink at the muddy footprints on the floor. âYou left my door open.â
âI remember,â he replies. Simple.
The silence returns, eerily reminiscent of your first encounter. You consider telling him about the warning Mrs. Campbell had wanted you to relay to him. But then you think about all of the other things heâs missed since heâs disappeared, and your mind becomes saturated with just about everything, and somehow nothing at all. But Arthurâs voice, once again, cracks the fragile quiet.Â
âGod damn it!â He begins to pace, rubbing at the shadows under his eyes. Youâre thankful that heâs finally lowered his voice to a whisper, though the close quarters donât seem to help with the intensity. âI ainât supposed to be here. Not like this.â
âNot like what? Arthur what do youââÂ
âThis isnât how this was supposed to go,â he says, voice edging on the side of desperation.
âHow what was supposed to go?â You look at his hands, fumbling with his belt loops. He sucks in a brittle gulp of air when he catches you looking, like heâs surprised youâre looking at him at all.Â
And then, miraculously, the pieces of the puzzle fall into place.Â
âIâm to kill you. Ideally this evening.âÂ
Until it all promptly falls apart.
You turn away. Begin to work open the half done buttons of your shirt. Arthur turns to face the door. You decide to humor him. âWho.âÂ
âSome man, your Pa, I presume,â he says. For the first time in what feels like eternity, his voice is devoid of any feeling. It sounds small. Not defeated, not yet, but oh so small. âWilling to pay big bucks to get rid of a âfinancial thornâ in his side. Knew âbout my business in Blackwater, which I assume youâre also aware of. Said heâd had some bonds on that boat.â Blunt fingernails scratch lightly at the curtains. âHe said I could sniff things out, see if I wanted to to his dirty work.â
Shirt falling to the floor, you allow yourself some time to stew numbly in your naivety while you get the fire going; you could be disappointed all you wanted once you were warm. You can hear Arthur scrubbing at his beard again when you begin to drag a chair in front of the fireplace. You sit, or collapse rather, and shuck off your boots with little care for where they land. Where the mud splatters.
âHowâs Marlene?â You ask.
Rustling. Heâs turned around. More frantic rustling. Heâs turned back to the wall. âIâm sorry?â
âMarlene. Chicken. â
âAh. Sheâs uh, good. Eating good. Still pecks like hell, though.â
And, once again, more silence.
You bark out a dry laugh. It hurtsâhurts like hell, but it tumbles out of you with a sharp snap. It snowballs into pure, unadulterated laughter. Bouncing off the walls, the drinking glasses, the mud, right into the fire and back out again. It continues until youâre left with nothing but a pathetic wheeze rattling your lungs.
Settling into the back of the chair, your head lolls back till you can see an upside down version of the bewildered Arthur youâd turned away from. The angle is awkward, and the blood rushing to your head makes him look all warm and fuzzy, but itâs precisely why youâve chosen it.
âDidnât think finding all this out would be so funny.â He speaks as if poking a tiger.
Another half-hearted chuckle slips out of you. âGood god, I thought you were trying to proposition me.â
âProposition you?â He scowls. âWhat on earth would IââÂ
Arthur stops. Blinks one of his blinks. Gives his eyes another rub. Blinks again. Heâs been doing that a lot, lately. This âblinkingâ thing.
âOh.â He frowns.
Frowning right back, you push yourself to stand and toss some old papers from your table into the fire. âNo need to seem so put off by it, gosh. Shouldâve told me you were out for my head from the start. Wouldâve made this a hell of a lot less embarrassing.â Disappointment had beat out the warmth.
You wait for an apology, or a joke. Or something. Anything. But youâre met with nothing. The paper eventually crumbles into nothing, too, smoke tickling your nostrils alongside the smell of rain.
His voice sounds from the back of the room.
âI didnât say that.â
You whip around.
âSay what.â
He speaks as if it were the most obvious thing in the world. âI didnât say I wasnât. Interested, I mean.â When you point to yourself, he rolls his eyes. âNo, the couch.â
There was no couch.
The two of you watch each other for a bit. Then Arthur finds another annoying spot on his thigh to rub at, and youâre watching him.
âYouâre drunk,â you conclude, voice flat. You pull on a blanket, suddenly conscious of the bareness of your shoulders. âYouâre drunk, or tired, or both. You werenât here. I didnât see you, you didnât see me. Am I clear?â
You stand on wobbly feet and motion for him to leave.
âYou donât think Iâm joking, do you? I meant what I said.â He brushes past your outstretched hand to clunk into the chair, mirroring that same awkward position youâd found yourself in earlier. Strong neck arched, fire light catching the water thatâs begun to bead on his cheeks. âI donât do charity. Donât think I have the money for it, actually.â
âHow kind of you.â
âI mean it. Truly.â
âThen come back tomorrow,â you blurt.
Fuck.
What the hell were you doing? âYou come back tomorrow night, sober, and weâll see.â No, we would not.
But itâs too lateâArthur is rebounding off of the chair, straightening out his jacket (heâs noticed the missing button, finally), and striding to the door before you can retract your mistake. Even so, you follow after him like a besotted moron, only stopping when he turns to face you once the door is back open.
âTomorrow, then,â he says. Eyes dark. Searching.
And then heâs stooping down. Reaching for your hand. Pulling it to his dry lips, and pressing a chaste kiss right to the top of it. He chuckles when you shiver, still clutching the blanket tight around your shoulders.
Youâre released soon after. And Arthur gives you one long look, tells you to lock your door, and leaves.
â
next chapter >>
#arthur morgan x reader#arthur morgan x female reader#arthur morgan x you#arthur morgan#red dead redemption 2#rdr2#rdr2 fanfic#ao3#archive of our own#fanfiction#witching hour
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I feel like a lot of the people who write or talk about low to high honor Arthur donât really understand his character.
Like, heâs not just a rampant murderer. He was raised to âsave those who need saving, feed those that need feeding, and shoot those that need shooting.â It feels like so many people forget the first two parts of that!! Even if Dutch lost the plot near the end, Arthur pushed back, reminding him of their motto and even talking to others about it, quoting it frequently through the game. And if you do play him low honor, he talks to the girls about how awful he feels, about how he feels like heâs just killing for no reason and it scares him.
So many people write low to high honor Arthur as this evil piece of shit in the beginning and then either his mortality or whoever theyâre shipping him with âsaves him.â Like yeah, obviously low honor is a choice you can make for the character, but I feel like in character, Arthur Morgan does not kill for no reason, he kills when he thinks he has to. He intimidates and robs people, for sure. But he wouldnât be unnecessarily cruel. It is interesting though when they explore that low honor guilt he feels and brings up in his journals or in conversations as part of this anger he feels, and itâs really cool to see that explored, even in the game. For example when he beats up the guy in the bar fight in valentine, he goes too far, and when he kills Downes. But in both of those situations he initially had a reason to do it, even if it was immoral or strayed too far from the point. But heâs not indiscriminately cruel.
Idk maybe itâs because Iâve never been able to finish a low honor run lol, Iâm just talking outta my ass
#red dead redemption 2#arthur morgan#red dead redemption#Iâm a nerd about him sorry guys#I could talk for hours#low to high honor Arthur Morgan#characterization
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like kerosene (on a flame of doubt)
fandom: read dead redemption 2 warnings: canon typical violence, blood and gore characters: alma mcarthy (oc), john marston, dutch van der linde, arthur morgan, assorted original side characters word count: 7,826 overview: alma mcarthy joins the van der linde gang, circa 1891 BEFORE READING: please open in a new tab as it's very long and tumblr formatting is terrible on dash đ
1891, Wyoming
âI want those stalls all mucked out before lights out, you hear?â
Alma rolled her eyes so hard she thought they might disappear into her skull. âI ainât your servant, Jeremiah. Do it yourself.â
âListen, girl.â The slapping of his boots through mud bounced between the walls of the livery as he stormed towards her. âWhile you are under this roof, taking my gold and tending my horses, you will do what I goddamn fucking say.â
Evening was drawing near. Distantly, if she strained her ears over the sound of her associateâs - sorry, bossâ - incessant droning, Alma could hear a pair of coyotes calling to each other in the nearby hills. One of the horses in the stall closest to her stamped itâs foot with a huff, whether at the threat of wildlife or Jeremiah, Alma wasnât sure. She absently reached to hush it as the manâs squelching boots finally brought him to stand before her.Â
His cheeks were crimson, a vein popping on his forehead and disappearing all the way up into his receding hairline. The horse, a beautiful roan mare, was now at the front of her stall and huffed sharply enough that Jeremiahâs neckerchief fluttered. âWasnât I fucking clear, girl? Pick up the goddamn rake and get to work.â
Jeremiah Owens wasnât a particularly kind man, in the grand scheme of the things. He only knew how to yell or curse, smelt not-so-faintly of manure, and Alma was fairly sure he had never bothered to remember her first name. Girl this, girl that. Still, she fought the urge to stamp her foot like a petulant foal. He had never laid a hand on her, for starters, and shouting aside, he had given her free use of the small loft space above his office. Right now, he was the only thing separating her from the warmth of this livery and the rain-soaked emptiness on the horizon outside.Â
âIâve gotta do up the papers for those mustangs,â she snapped, biting down the fire in her gut. âMr Darlington was due to send one of his boys tomorrow morninâ for them, or did you forget?â
That was the other reason she liked Jeremiah. When sheâd turned up on his doorstep just under nine months ago, looking like a starving rat no less, he hadnât just offered her a job - heâd brought her in on the less-than-reputable side of his operation. More than that, heâd let her help with it. Storing and feeding horses was one thing, but a horse fence was an entirely different beast. A lucrative one, too. She knew he had a few hundred gold stored somewhere in the basement of his house, she was sure of it.Â
âI ainât smooth-brained, girl.â Again, she rolled her eyes. Again, he glared. âThe papers are already organised. Just muck the stalls out.â At that, he stormed back the way heâd come, no doubt to the comfort of his small house up the way.Â
âO-kay boss,â she sing-songed, mostly to piss him off.Â
To his credit, he didnât bother turning back around.Â
In truth, Alma didnât mind the cleaning. It was mindless, sure, and it left her muscles aching every night in her sorry excuse for a bed, but at least it kept her busy. Didnât give her too much time to think. If she had time to think, she started remembering, and that led nowhere good.Â
She worked her way through the stalls as the daylight finally slipped away below the horizon. The roan mare was a legit purchase on Jeremiahâs part, currently the only one in the livery. A group of men had brought in a trio of mustangs a few days ago, beautiful beasts captured from somewhere over the mountain, and then there was the stallion.Â
He was a huge Thoroughbred, proud, a striking blood bay colouring. Alma was sure heâd been nicked from one of the local ranches, but it wasnât her or Jeremiahâs jobs to ask those kinds of questions. Either way, sheâd be sad to see him go, even if he would fetch them a fortune. He was magnificent.Â
Alma had reached his stall, and was about to sneak him a sugar cube, when something clattered to the ground at the opposite end of the stable.
The stallion jerked away from her hand, startled, as Alma too spun on the spot.Â
Her hand went to her hip on instinct. Her revolver, as always, was holstered. Jeremiah had fought her on it for about a week before a wannabe gunslinger had held them both up over ten dollars. Sheâd been armed while working ever since.
The livery was deathly silent.Â
Most of the lights were off by this time of night, only one illuminating her end of the stable and one in Jeremiahâs office. The office where the sound had, undoubtedly, come from. Alma crept in that direction, keeping her shoulder tight against the stall doors and the shadows they cast. There was only one place Jeremiah ever was at this hour, and it for sure wasnât working. Lazy bastard.
A shape darted past the office window.Â
Fury, at being robbed, at being stolen from, gripped Alma, and before she could think of any common sense she was sprinting for the door.Â
The hinges were always loose and creaking, and even her slight frame sent the door slamming open as she barrelled into it. The shape turned out to be a person as the door also slammed into them, sending them careening into the far wall with a shout. Alma twisted, revolver drawn.
It was a man, scrambling to his feet while one hand gripped his nose. There was blood covering his chin and throat. She couldnât see much of his face through his curtain of dark, greasy hair, but she could hear him cursing under his breath.
âWhat the fuck do you think youâre doing?â Alma snarled, gun aimed between his eyes where he was leaning back against the far wall.Â
âYou broke my fucking nose!â
She took a step towards him, gun still up. âYou were trying to steal from us!â
He shifted, spat a glob of blood in her direction. He spoke like a street rat, kind of looked like one too, but his clothes were just a little too nice to be one of the petty thieves Alma was used to seeing around town. The leather of his boots, though now muddied, was clearly well looked after, and the holster for his own revolver looked well made. Maybe he was from a gang? Jeremiah had grumbled that there were a few that rode through every so often, but usually they brought good business to the livery.
âWhat do you want?â she snapped. Back in the stables, she could hear the mustangs cracking a fuss at all the commotion.Â
He scoffed. âYour money. What, are you simple?â
âFuck you!â Alma glanced quickly at his gun - still holstered. âGive me back anything youâve taken. Now!â
Despite the gun pointed at his forehead, he had the audacity to laugh. âOr what? You probably donât even know how to use that thing.â
Oh, this greasy fucker.Â
The Alma from five years ago wouldâve baulked at even holding a gun. Her Pa had taught her how, of course, but sheâd been a proper little girl back then, with parents who loved her, and a warm home to run back to if things got too hard.Â
Five years was a long time.
The manâs left arm, the one not gripping his broken nose where it was still streaming blood down his face, twitched closer to his holster.
No you donât.
Alma shot him.
âFuck!â he screamed as the shot rang out through the office and livery and the land surrounding it. The horses cried out, an owl scattering from the rafters and into the trees beyond at the sudden noise. His body slammed back against the wall, broken nose long forgotten as he clutched helplessly at his shoulder and the rough line the bullet had drawn through his skin. He was lucky sheâd only grazed him and not put it between his eyes.
Alma stormed up to him, lunging, and before he could react she had his revolver in her free hand. âI said, give me back anything youâve taken!â
She could hear Jeremiah shouting for her up at his house.
The man dropped to the ground, one shaking hand held palm-out as the other tried to stem the bleeding. Alma was close enough that she could see the sweat on his brow and the wide-eyed look on his face, like a startled filly. It was barely a flesh wound. He really hadnât thought sheâd shoot him.
Belatedly, she realised he was barely older than she was, maybe even the same age. More a boy than anything. Just like she was barely anything other than a girl.
â - all of it!â he stammered. She hadnât realised heâd been talking. âGet away from me, you psycho!â
Heâd emptied the small satchel at his hip, sending an assortment of trash and stolen goods scattering to the floor. A few wads of cash, a stack of fraudulent papers that Alma had hand-written herself, a pack of cigarettes, a few twigs and rocks, a tin of gun oil that looked like it was nothing but dregs, and a little pocket knife. She took the cash and papers, thought for a moment, then pinched the cigarettes too even though she didnât smoke.
She glared at him, raising both guns again. âIâm the psycho?â
âYou shot me!â
âYou deserved it,â she said, backing up to slam everything back onto the desk. Out of the corner of her eye, she could see the drawers all sitting wide open. Subtle. âNow get -â she started, breath caught at the adrenaline coursing through her veins, ânow get the hell out of here before I really shoot you!â
The man - the boy - just stared at her. His nose, thankfully, had stopped gushing blood all down his front, although now his arm was stained russet too. His shirt was well and truly ruined.
Alma marched over to the window heâd apparently crawled through and slammed her hand against the frame. âAre you deaf?! I said go!â
That seemed to shake him out of whatever daze heâd fallen into. She tracked his every movement across the office, guns still razed, and simply glared as he awkwardly tried to clamber back out the window with only one good arm. She slammed the butt of his own gun against his back as he went, sending him tumbling into the mud outside.
He cursed, stumbled and slipped, before righting himself and sprinting for the edge of the property. If she squinted, she could make out the shape of a horse hidden just beyond the treeline.Â
âAnd donât come back, you bastard!â she screamed after him.Â
Jeremiah chose that moment to burst into the office, door slamming open the exact same way it had moments before. âAlma!â
She leant back against the wall beside the window, a gun still gripped in each hand, and raised an eyebrow at her boss. âSo you do know my name.â
âWhat happened? Did I hear a gunshot?â He eyed the leather-wrapped revolver in her right hand. Alma almost laughed when she realised he was only in sleep pants. Maybe the old geezer did care after all. âWhere did that come from?â
âA gift from a thief. Donât worry, I chased him off cause, unlike you, I care about this business.âÂ
Jeremiah just gawked at her. âYou shot him?â
âWould you rather I let him take all your cash and papers and everything not nailed down?â
âWell, no, but âŚâ he only then spied the blood smeared on the wall and floor. âHells, girl. How many times did you shoot him?â
Alma scoffed at him as she inspected her new revolver. âJust once, barely. Iâm not a monster.â
...
One of Jeremiahâs cousins, Gregory, came by the next day to help shore things up in the wake of the attempted robbery. The man was Jeremiahâs opposite - tall, rotund, intimidating - which Alma supposed was a good thing. Itâd hopefully scare any other would-be thieves off, at any rate.Â
Not that they had to worry. The next few days were entirely uneventful. Mr Darlington sent a few boys down to pick up two of the mustangs, and paid triple what they were realistically worth without batting an eyelid. Jeremiah had made her hide the Thoroughbred out back before their arrival, just in case their suspicions rang true.
Alma had also convinced Jeremiah to let her man the fence after her little display the other night. Thatâs where she was that morning, perched on a stool behind the cut-out in the wall with her head propped up on one hand, when a man on a beautiful white stallion came trotting down the path. Even from a distance, she could tell she wouldnât like him. The moustache alone put her off.
âWhy, good morning to you miss!â he cawed. In the morning sunlight, the red of his waistcoat shone like rubies. âFine day, isnât it?â
Alma just stared at him. âI suppose.â
âQuite an establishment youâve got here.â He hitched his horse by the post at the livery entrance, then waltzed over to where she was perched around the side. For a new customer, he sure knew his way around.Â
âIt ainât mine, sir,â she said, fighting to smooth her brow against a brewing frown. âCan I help you?â
He was right before her now, smiling with too many teeth and his silly slicked-back hair. âForgive my manners. Dutch van der Linde.â The hand he held out was tanned, roughened, yet adorned with rings of all metals that glinted as he moved. An unusual combination. When she simply looked from his hand to his face and back again, the man - Dutch, apparently - simply smiled and shifted to clutch at his gun belt with a hip cocked. âI was hoping to discuss a proposition with you, if youâd be amenable?â
Oh boy. âUnless itâs to sell that pretty horse of yours, sir, the answerâs no.â
âNow, now miss, donât be so rash.â Alma felt herself tense, toes curling in her boots where they were hidden behind the counter. She could image Jeremiah in her ear, insisting that she be amenable to all customers lest she drive away business. She forced herself to breathe as Dutch kept yapping. âIâm here to propose an offer to you, specifically. You see, one of my boys said he ran into you a few days back, said you had a bit of a ⌠disagreement?â
Any pretence of her being a good salesperson flew out the door at that. So the greasy fucker was back to haunt her then. She pulled her revolver from the holster at her hip before she could stop herself, jumping off her stool in the same moment. Trust her luck that the moment Gregory was nowhere to be seen was the moment she needed him.Â
Dutch, to his credit, didnât even flinch. Instead, he held up both hands in surrender. Still smiling. Still too many teeth. âEasy miss, Iâm not here for what you think. Like I said, I have a proposition.â
Alma scoffed. Kept her revolver raised. âMy mumma didnât raise no fool.â
âI can see that. But I truly mean you no harm.â Dutch breathed out a laugh, or maybe it was a grimace? Alma could quite read the way his face twisted. âFrom the looks of Johnâs nose and shoulder, she apparently also raised quite a fighter.â
Was this the boyâs - Johnâs - father, then? Uncle? Alma supposed there was a bit of a resemblance with the dark hair, but it had been nighttime. Maybe she was misremembering. âYeah well maybe you need to teach your boy some proper manners. Didnât you hear itâs rude to accost a lady in the night?â
Dutch laughed properly then, glancing to his feet for a moment as if to collect himself before lifting his gaze back to Alma. His brown eyes assessed her. âNow, there is fire in you, miss. I knew Iâd like you. â
âThe feelingâs not mutual.â
Another laugh shot from him, short like gunfire. âHah! Now, where was I? Oh yes, I came to thank you for not killing John on sight, the boy was foolish to steal from such a ⌠reputable establishment such as this one.â He waved his hands at the livery in question with an eyebrow raised. âIâd also like to offer you a job, of sorts.â
âSorry to disappoint, but Iâm already gainfully employed, if you couldnât tell.â Alma glanced behind her, hoping fruitlessly that one of her associates would actually be found in their place of work when she needed them. Alas, all that greeted her was the beautiful Thoroughbred with his ears perked in her direction. She kept her revolver gripped.
Dutch, apparently oblivious to her distraction, or perhaps not caring, soldiered on. âBut does this place truly bring you satisfaction? Purpose? Youâre clearly an intelligent young lady and have a mind for business and horses, and I just happen to find myself in need of someone with such talents.â He reached into a pocket of his coat, slowing as he saw her grip on her revolver tense, before producing a few pieces of paper. He gently placed them on the counter between them. Alma couldnât help but gape a little when she recognised her own handiwork. âIâve seen how you operate. Smart idea, faking the papers to get a higher price. I bet youâre making a killing out of the rich fools around here.â He paused again, for dramatic effect or to assess her reaction, Alma wasnât sure. âWouldnât you rather put your skills to better use? Me and mine can offer you that and more.â
Alma fought the urge to ask where heâd got the papers from. âLet me guess? By âbetter useâ, you mean scamming people for you, rather than this business? You must think me a proper idiot, just like that John of yours.â
It was an insult, and sheâd meant it as one, but Dutch only kept smiling. Something in his eyes had sparked. âThink bigger! The government would see us civilised, chained up, would see our freedoms taken away. The rich folk around here no doubt deserve to lose some cash to you, sure, but a woman with your talents could be doing more than taking coin from a few oblivious ranchers. You and me and the others in my community? We can make a real difference.â
Surely he was a fool. The government? His community? Alma had seen how the law and the government treated people who didnât fit in, people who lived outside the confines of society, and it werenât pretty. As much as she hated the system sometimes, she had no desire to slide back into the fear sheâd only just managed to crawl out of.Â
Then again, what had her parents gained by being dutiful citizens? Theyâd been happy, for a time she supposed, but what were they now other than six feet under with no gravemarkers for Alma to visit? Theyâd done what they were told, had tried to live the great American dream, and it had torn them up and spat them back out like they were nothing.Â
Worse than nothing.Â
Still. Going in guns blazing surely wasnât the solution either. No matter how many big, pretty words people like Dutch used to decorate it.
Gregory had apparently decided to finally do the job his cousin had asked him to, and Alma could hear him trudging through the stable in her general direction. She forcibly shook herself from her thoughts and perched back on her stool. âIf itâs all the same to you, Iâm mighty fine sticking to scamming the rich folk around here. Thanks, but no thanks.â She rested her revolver on the counter between them. âNow, if you donât have a horse to trade, I think itâs time you left, sir.â
If Dutch was disappointed, he didnât let it show. He simply smiled and held his hands in mock surrender, rings glinting again. âWell, if you change your mind, my associates and I will be in town for the next few days. Weâll be in the saloon, or nearby at the very least. You have a good day, Miss âŚ?â
Alma bit the inside of her gum. Threw caution to the wind. âAlma McArthy.â
âIt was a pleasure to meet you, Miss McArthy.â Dutch started walking backwards to his pretty horse with his pretty waistcoat and perfectly styled hair, and smiled. âThink about my offer?â
âDonât count on it,â she called after him.
Gregory was beside her now, leaning over her shoulder to glare at Dutchâs receding form. His horse was small, fast no doubt, but he took his time trotting back up the path and over the rise. Alma kept her gun out until he was fully out of view.
âHe give you any trouble?â Gregory grumbled, arms crossed. They were as thick as small trees.
Alma sighed, rubbing at her forehead. âNah. Just ⌠wanted to sell me something. I told him to sod off.â
âHmm. Good.â
...
Alma was tossing and turning up in her loft above Jeremiahâs office, as she had been for the past few hours, when the gunfire started.
She tumbled from her cot, landing with a thud while her eyes adjusted to the near-pitch darkness.Â
Another gunshot. Glass shattering.Â
She fumbled across the small space for her gun belt, her revolver and the boyâs still tucked in their holsters. Lunged, then, for her coat where it hung on a hook haphazardly nailed into the far wall. The off-white of her sleep shirt near-glowed in the dark; even with her coat tugged on, her knees were still exposed.Â
Another gunshot, another, another. Screaming. The horses were whinnying.Â
A bullet shot through the wall of her loft, sending a spray of splinters towards her. Alma threw herself backwards on instinct, heart a drumbeat in her ear, and almost tripped over her boots where sheâd left them scattered at the end of her shift. The whole livery was writhing as if in pain, had come alive with screams and gunfire.Â
âServes ya right!â someone - not Jeremiah or Gregory - was shouting over the cacophony. âThieving scum!âÂ
It had been a relatively quiet few days, besides that boy trying to rob the place. Surely Dutch hadnât returned? He had been a pompous ass with a stick a mile up his ass, but he hadnât seemed to have any ill-feelings towards her or the stable.Â
Alma went to make for the door, thought better of it, and tugged open the window instead. It was still at least a few hours before sunrise, the sky more stars than anything, and her eyes were still stuck with sleep. She couldnât spy movement in the nearby treeline, but from this angle she could see figures darting about towards the front of the livery.Â
âCome out here, you fucking coward!â
âBurn the place to the ground!â
âFlank them!â
It wasnât too high of a drop, maybe a few metres.Â
Another spray of bullets cut through the loft floor.
Alma jumped.
The grass and mud cushioned her fall enough that she didnât snap both ankles on impact, and she never thought sheâd be praising mud in her entire life. She made to run, slipped, fell flat on her front, and her sleepshirt was well and truly soiled now. Her mind unhelpfully supplied an image of the boy as heâd fled, bloodied and muddied as heâd been, as she now half was, and she cursed at herself. She could taste manure.
âGet the fuck outta my property!â That was Jeremiah. Alma raced to peer through a ground floor window, the glass shattered by bullets, and spied him crouched behind a stall with his rifle gripped in shaking hands. He was in the same state of undress as she was. âYou good for nothing inbreds!âÂ
The remaining mustang was rushing its stall, as if in hopes of breaking free, and Alma could hear the roan mare crying out at the top of her lungs. Movement caught her eye towards the entrance, and she caught sight of the Thoroughbredâs tail disappearing out the stable doors with someone atop him.Â
Her heart dropped into her stomach.
Alma left her window behind and crept further along the outside wall, until she could just make out one of the men that had been decorating the livery in bullet holes. He was tall, criss-crossed with scars and looked as if he too had slipped in the mud at some point. Even through the grime and the black dots of her panic-riddled vision, she would recognise the family crest stitched into his coat collar anywhere.
The Darlingtonâs.
Well, shit.
The quickly-receding outline of the Thoroughbred disappeared over the rise. Alma wanted to punch something, shoot something, wanted to set the whole damned lot of them on fire. It was their own faults for being so complacent in guarding their property. Now, not only had a couple of hundred dollars worth of gold just run out of the livery, but it had left a trail of bullet holes in its wake.Â
â - pay for this!â The Darlingtonâs, those who werenât in the process of also stealing the remaining horses, were still exchanging gunfire with Jeremiah. The mustang was giving them more trouble than it was worth, but a duo of fools were trying helplessly to muster it into submission while also avoiding getting a bullet between the eyes.Â
âDarlingtonâs just lucky his whole goddamned stable isnât here!â Jeremiah shouted. âAinât my fault he canât keep his own things nailed down.â
âSpeak for yourself, asshole!â
The roan mare was halfway out the door now, a rider grasping for her mane as they hoisted themself atop her. The swarm of gunmen was actually less than Alma had initially thought. She pulled her revolvers, crouched, aimed for the nearest idiotâs forehead.
Gregory was tackling the man into the muck before she could fire.
The two men went flying. Gregory was twice the manâs size, if not more, and easily had his opponent straddled with a fist flying towards their face before Alma could even blink. Once, twice, he slammed his fists down, spit and blood flying with every impact. Once, twice, she heard something crunch.Â
Alma shifted her focus to one of the men trying to tame the mustang. Breathed. Fired. Unlike with the boy, she aimed properly this time, and the man crumpled satisfyingly as her bullet tore through his chest. The mustang reared back at the sudden freedom, sending the other man scattering away to avoid a hoof to the temple.Â
Jeremiah seemed to be gaining ground too, his rifle picking off another Darlington. Alma should try to flank, get behind -Â
Screaming.
Distantly, she recalled a gunshot.Â
When she twisted, Gregory was looking right at her. He was still straddling the now-twitching corpse beneath him, his fists mangled messes, and his entire front was drenched in crimson. Not from his victim, though, she realised. Alma jerked forward on instinct, her body no longer her own, as she watched half his internal organs pour out of the newly-carved hole in his gut. She wasnât sure if she was screaming. It didnât matter. The thud of his body toppling to the mud forced her to her knees.
âYou fucking bastards!â
Laughing. âPaybackâs a bitch, Owens!â
âYou fucking bastards!â
Hooves thundered past. The mustang, maybe. Alma forced herself to move, to throw herself behind the cover of a stall, as the gunfire kicked up again. Jeremiah was still cursing, still shouting, still firing.
She shouldnât care so much. Sheâd known the man for barely a day. Her fury built, threatening to swallow her whole. Heâd barely said two words to her. She wanted to kill something.
All at once, the sound came rushing back to Alma. The livery felt as though it was falling down around them. She spat out the taste of bile that had thundered up her throat, adjusted her grip on her revolvers, before standing and picking her next target. Most of the Darlingtonâs had fallen back to the stable entry, what with all the horses now having been properly stolen. There were still enough of them to be a threat though. Alma managed to clip one manâs shoulder, almost got another in the chest before he dived for cover, sent one falling back with a hole between the eyes.
Jeremiah cried out, deeper in the stable. Alma spun; despite the carnage, she could just make out his balding head through a hole that had been blasted through the stalls. A shadow was looming beside him. Seconds later, she could fully make out the man that had crept through the back door.Â
The gunfire stopped as Jeremiah clearly struggled against his attacker. Alma, any hope of stealth long abandoned, sprinted for the pair. Gregoryâs corpse. The rancherâs corpse. Her parents' corpses. Gregoryâs corpse. The rancherâs -
Sheâd almost made it to them, had her revolvers raised, when someone slammed into her.Â
Manure came rushing up to her, and for the second time that night she was rolling in it, hay and shit caught in her hair and coat. The bare skin of her legs tore against the debris of the livery floor. Her attacker, a wiry man with copper hair, immediately flipped her. She opened her mouth to scream, but the sound died before it could erupt from her throat as he slapped her hard enough that the stars were suddenly inside the stable.
âNow, now, whoâs this, Owens?â the wiry bastard asked, smiling as he grappled with her flailing arms. Not again, not again. âSheâs a little young for a whore, ainât she?â
Jeremiah had slumped back against the stable wall, but the fury in his eyes could have burnt them all to the ground. âGet off her, you sick inbred!âÂ
Her wrists were now pinned above her head. Alma could feel the cool evening air on her legs as her sleep shirt rode up. Someone else had moved to grab her feet where she had been kicking them. Not again, not again.
The man that had attacked Jeremiah now leaned over her boss. He had a bloodied knife in one hand. âI was gonna put this little lady out of her misery, but I think Iâve changed my mind. After all, whoâs gonna keep this place running, once all that blood catches up to you, huh old man?â
Alma screamed, writhing, and earned herself another slap.Â
The man with the knife wandered over to Alma then. Dark hair swung in his face as he crouched beside her and held the butt of his knife to her temple. His breath smelt of tobacco when he said, âWeâll be seeing you mighty soon, little lady. In the meantime, lights out.â
Darkness.
...
By the time she woke the next morning, her head was pounding so hard she could barely see straight, the livery was burnt to its foundations, the horses were all long gone, and Jeremiah was a cooling corpse laid out beside her.
...
Everyone stared at Alma as she burst into the saloon.
The place was quiet, which she supposed was to be expected given it was barely midmorning. Too early for the nearby ranch hands, too late for the drunkards. A small gaggle of men were half-heartedly playing poker in the corner; the sight of her dripping blood and stinking of manure in the entry grinded their conversation to a halt.Â
She wasnât sure if she recognised anyone. She didnât care. This town, and these wretched people, would soon be lost on the horizon behind her.
âJesus,â the barkeep shouted at her across the room, âget lost, girl, before I throw you out myself.â
Alma ignored him.
She hadnât bothered to change out of her soiled sleep shirt. Couldnât, not with the livery burnt to the ground along with any of her belongings. Theyâd left Jeremiahâs house standing, for some reason, but the place was better left to be the mortuary it now was. The rifle slung over her shoulder was the only remnant of the place sheâd had the heart to grab before making the long walk into town. Her hair was a matted mess down her back, and her knees were still lazily oozing blood where theyâd been scraped raw on the stable floor. A drowned, beaten rat likely looked better.
Her heart was still pounding in her chest. Alma was sure her jaw might snap in two at any moment with how hard she had been clenching it since waking up a few hours ago.
It wasnât the first time sheâd been forced to flee after a massacre. Any respectable, well-mannered girl of society would scarcely be seen in public alone, or at least without a good reason, lest it bring scandal. For Alma, she felt almost called to it, like a compulsion she just couldnât shake. Always catastrophe. Always running. Always one. One day she was sure sheâd run out of horizon to swallow her up. Either that, or her own fury would do it for her.
âDid ya hear me, girl? I said get lost!â
She had the rifle pointed at his forehead before he could blink. âShut up,â she snapped, even as the sound of guns suddenly being drawn ricocheted through the saloon, âbefore you make me lose my goddamn fucking temper.â
âPut the gun down!â one of the patrons yelled.
The barkeep raised his hands, leaving his dishcloth to fall forgotten to the floor. âWoah, easy there missy.â
Alma chewed on her gum to still her raging thoughts. âThereâs a man in town, said heâd be nearby for the next few days. Dark hair, moustache, fancy clothes. Goes by Dutch. You know him?â
The other patrons were still shouting at her. The barkeepâs eyes kept dancing between her, the rifle, and undoubtedly the guns pointed at her own head. âI ainât answering no questions with a gun between my -â
âDo you know him?â A piece of her spit landed on his cheek.
âWhoâs asking?â
Alma risked glancing to her right, towards the back of the saloon, and there in all his pretend finery was Dutch Van der Linde. The pomade in his hair was still stiff as bricks, and his outfit remained largely unchanged from when sheâd seen him a few days ago. His boots were muddied at the edges, but at a quick glance he didnât seem any worse for wear. Definitely not like heâd been involved in a major shoot-out or arson attack.Â
Dutchâs gaze was cold where it landed on her. One of his hands was gripping his gun belt casually, although she didnât doubt he was quick on the draw. It took him a moment, his eyes bouncing around her face, before they sparked in recognition. âMiss McArthy, is that you? By God you look miserable.â
âItâs been a long day.â Alma glared back at the barkeep, her nose scrunched, before begrudgingly lowering the rifle. âIâd say thanks for the assist, but I figure you probably deserved the bullet.â
The barkeep, for his part, seemed less phased without a gun in his face. âI werenât lying, girl. Get the fuck out of my establishment. You ainât welcome here no more.â
âOr what?â she spat, Dutch forgotten for the moment. âYouâll call the sheriff down on me? That good-for-nothing asshole couldnât even jerk himself off if he tried .â
Someone coughed out a laugh by the stairs.
âNow, now, what Miss McArthy means to say,â Dutch said from where heâd suddenly walked up beside her, âis thank you for your incredible hospitality. We were just going, werenât we my dear?â
âDonât put -â
Dutch gripped her forearm. âWerenât we?â
There were too many guns surrounding her, and she wasnât a total fool. Sheâd have to find someone else to beat her anger onto. Maybe Dutch and his perfect little waistcoat would do. The look he was sending her made her insides boil enough as it was, but she eventually relented and let him drag her towards the back door.
They passed the stairs and another soft laugh escaped one of the two figures leaning there. Dutch wasnât even looking at her as he led them outside, but called over his shoulder, âCome along, boys.â
âReal charmer youâve got there, Dutch. Iâm surprised you two didnât get along better, Marston.â
âOh fuck you.â
Alma waited until they were outside proper before wrenching her arm free. She still had the rifle gripped in one hand, and spun with it loosely gripped to glare at the trio. Dutch had stopped to assess her with his arms crossed, hip cocked as usual, and despite the commotion inside there was the ghost of a smile on his face. The young man beside him was as tall and broad as an oak tree, with hair like dirtied sand and a healthy spray of stubble across his jaw. He was in the process of jabbing a younger man beside him, who was all wiry limbs, dark hair and -Â
âYou?!â Alma shouted, stomping a step forward.Â
The boy - John, if she remembered Dutch correctly - flinched back on instinct, which just seemed to make the tall man laugh.Â
âStay the hell away from me!â John shouted in the same moment that the tall man laughed, âWatch out, Marston, or sheâll skin ya alive.â
âThere will be no skinning,â Dutch said with a sigh as he stepped between them all, and Alma wondered again if he was the boysâ father. âMiss McArthy, this is Arthur Morgan.â He indicated the tall man, who was still laughing under his breath. âAnd we all know youâre well acquainted with young John Marston.â
She just glared at them. John glared right back. Alma didnât miss the way he rubbed absently at his shoulder.
Dutch apparently took that as an invitation to continue. âIntroductions aside, I must ask, Miss McArthy, what brought you to be in such a state of disarray? Iâm understandably thrilled that youâve come to discuss what I offered but, Iâll admit I wasnât convinced Iâd ever see you again.â
There wasnât any pretty way to describe a slaughter, she knew that from experience. Judging from the copious weapons strapped to the three men before her, she figured they werenât squeamish. Still, sheâd rather not think about it. âPeople change. Itâs human nature, in case you weren't aware.â
He laughed. âThat fireâll sooner get you into trouble you canât fight your way out of, miss.â He took a step towards her, hands in his pockets. âThe truth?â
She glanced at John and Arthur, but they were both leaning against the back of the saloon, spectating. Fabulous.Â
âYou said you and your âcommunityâ were out to make a difference. That you help people, take from the rich, that kinda thing.â She swallowed the bile and fire in her throat. âTurns out those oblivious ranchers you were talkinâ about werenât so oblivious after all.â
Dutch, for his part, did look genuinely struck as the truth settled in his mind. âThe stables?â
She shrugged, indicating her ruined form. âWhatâs left of it is standing right here.â
âI am sorry, miss. Truly.â
Alma scoffed. Began to pace, rifle still white-knuckled in front of her. âI ainât here for your sympathy. I came for your help.â
âDutch is many things, Miss McArthy, but he ainât a god.â Arthur leaned forward as he spoke, his face half obscured by his hat. âCanât turn back time, Iâm afraid.â
She fought the urge to walk up and hit him. âYou think Iâm simple? Iâm no fool.â He held up his hands in mock surrender as John snickered beside him. She turned her gaze back to Dutch, who hadnât entirely dismissed her. âI know who did it. I know where they live. You help me settle this debt, I can make it worth your while.âÂ
âAs sorry as I am to see you in such a state, Miss McArthy, my people and I donât operate on revenge.â
âBullshit you donât!â she snapped, stepping so close she could smell Dutchâs cologne. âYouâre outlaws, arenât you? A gang? Donât think I donât know exactly what you lot are. âCommunityâ my ass.â
Arthur took a tentative step away from the wall, the line of his shoulder suddenly sharp. Dutch simply held her gaze, and when he spoke his voice dripped of barely-contained venom. âYouâre walking on mighty thin ice, miss. Best you donât stomp too hard.â
âI ainât judging you. We all do what we need to get by. Hell, Iâm not saint.â Alma indicated her blood-stained clothes. âI know what you are though, what you do.â She jabbed a finger into his chest despite the way he towered over her. âYou said you like sticking it to rich folk. Help me do that and I can guarantee you coin for your trouble.â
The little patch of grass behind the saloon was quiet for a long moment. John had started pacing a little, still scratching at his shoulder. Arthur was watching Almaâs hands where she was gripping the rifle.
She knew she had Dutch hook line and sinker when he tilted his head, all predator. âHow much coin are we talking, exactly? And from who?â
âAt least a few thousand, probably more.â Arthur whistled at that. âThe Darlingtonâs own a big ranch west of town. Follows the river, has the big fuck off homestead planted in the middle. Youâve probably seen it. They took all our horses before sparking their matches, and Iâm sure thereâs a few more on the property worth pinching. Their Thoroughbred stallion alone would fetch you seven hundred.â
Dutch raised an eyebrow at her with a hand on his hip. âSo you expect us to not only break into a heavily guarded ranch, but also walk out of there with multiple horses that weâd then need to resell? And the establishment where weâd do such a thing just got burnt to the ground.â
John was looking at her like sheâd hit her head.
âYouâre outlaws, arenât you? Surely you do this sort of thing all the time?â
âNot exactly,â Arthur said, but he was scratching his chin in thought. âI know the place, Dutch. Hosea got talking to one of the ranch hands yesterday at the store. Could be worth our time.â
âOf course itâs worth your damned time!â
 âIâll be the one who decides that, thank you miss.â Dutch planted a hand on her shoulder. âAfter we do this, and it pans out, what do you say about my offer? A young lady like you would be wasted on the streets in a backwater dump like this, and Iâd hate to see you suffer.â
The man was as slimy as a snake and half as pretty, but Alma wouldnât pretend that the offer wasnât ⌠tempting, especially given her current circumstances. Her mumma had always warned her away from trusting powerful men, especially those with only illusions of it, but what choice did she have? Sheâd been burned before, and sheâd likely be burned again. If they didnât do it, sheâd surely just do it to herself.
His questionable company and fashion taste aside, Dutch didnât seem entirely insane. Arrogant, prideful - sure. At least in that regard he was honest about his intentions. Jeremiah had been a weak man, at his core, and Dutch seemed as far from weak as you could physically get. Arthur, too. John ⌠well he didnât count.
Alma looked at Dutch and sighed. âSo youâll go to the ranch?â
âLetâs just say youâve sold me on the idea,â he said with a smile, squeezing her shoulder where it was still gripped in his hand. âBesides, you were right. I do like knocking rich folk down a peg or three, especially when we profit from it. Itâs good for my soul and pockets.â
A chill wind rushed between the buildings. Alma remembered her state of undress, and ached for warmth and a home that no longer existed. When she met Dutchâs eyes, she saw burning.Â
âIf it pans out. We could all be riddled with bullets in a few days.â
âThatâs the spirit, Miss McArthy!â Dutch laughed, clapping her on the back. âArthur, see about getting the young lady cleaned up and fed, wonât you? Weâll head back to camp and start talking out this plan.â
âYouâve got to be kidding me!â John shouted, eyes wide as saucers. âYouâre letting this psycho stay, just like that?â
Alma spat back, all venom, âSays the greasy rat who smells like he crawled out of a gutter. What are you good for anyway, besides annoying everyone?â
Dutch just rolled his eyes and walked off, calling after John over his shoulder. Arthur met Almaâs eye with a smirk, before turning to ruffle Johnâs dark hair where he still stood, gawking.Â
âOh, little Johnny Marston here is good for lotsa things. Failures of plans, entertainment, target practice -â
âI hate you both,â John grumbled as he stormed off after Dutch, who had already disappeared around the corner.Â
Alma couldnât really find it in herself to laugh, not crusted with blood and manure as she was, but in another life she would have. As it stood, she just slung the rifle back over her shoulder and winced as the movement caught on her bruised side. The pain made her remember Jeremiah and Gregory, slaughtered and left to rot in the sun, and she had to swallow bile for the third time that morning.
If Arthur noticed, he thankfully didnât say anything. âI think you and me are gonna get along just fine, Miss McArthy.â
In the almost-midday sun, the blue of his eyes glinted. âI wouldnât be so sure, not with the company you keep.â He laughed under his breath. âAnd ⌠just Alma is fine, if itâs all the same to you.â
He waved a hand in the general direction of the main street, and Alma down a nearby alley beside him. His shadow engulfed her. ââCourse. Letâs get you cleaned up and pretty before we all get shot by your ranchers tomorrow.â
âDonât blame me for being realistic. And they ainât my ranchers. Iâd sooner see âem gutted like pigs for what they did.â
Arthur looked at her with a raised eyebrow, shaking his head, but kept pace with her as they headed towards the local hotel. âMiss Grimshaw is gonna love you.â
...
Two days later, Alma was fleeing the Darlington ranch with a few hundred dollars in her pockets and a freshly stolen mustang mare underneath her. A week later, she was halfway across the state with a gang of outlaws known as the Van der Linde gang.Â
And that, as they say, is that.
...
TAGLIST:
@nokstella, @celticwoman, @florbelles, @zahra-hydris, @arborstone
@kibellah, @carrionsflower, @fenharel, @daerans, @fashionablyfyrdraaca
@loriane-elmuerto, @imogenkol, @knakrack, @roguecritter
#writing tag#ch: alma mcarthy#PLEASE open this in a new tab .... it's so long and i don't really wanna post it on ao3 cause there's no ship content#also this is fairly unedited so i'm not responsible for any typos lol#anyway i'm very proud of this 𼺠my longest fanfic ever đĽş
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Hi!! Your writing is always so wonderful and i was wondering if youâd be up to write something if you still take requests!
I have this whole long and detailed storyline in my head with an oc. Iâll write a short summary about her and if youâd like I would be head over heels if you come up with some sort of scenario!
Basically sheâs very masculine presenting, often mistaken for a young man/boy because of it. Hot headed and pretty reckless at times. Sheâs around Abigailâs age but joined the gang a year or so before. Sheâs not the brightest in general but every now and then has some surprisingly smart things to say. In general personality wise a mix of Mushy and Rowdy from Rawhide, if youâve watched the show. I think sheâd get along with Sean the most because of her personality. But sheâs secretly got the hots for Arthur, sheâs pretty decent at hiding it however. Loyal like a dog to him specially, however the feelings she harbours for him will forever be onesided.
IDK IF THIS IS TOO LONG TO READ OR TO DUMB TO COME UP WITH A SCENARIO. BUT LIKE??? Do whatever you want with all this, if itâs even interesting at all. THANKS EITHER WAYđ¤đ˝đ
My Love Is Not Mine, All Mine
(Arthur Morgan x Fem!Reader Angst)
Reader is masc presenting in this, you read the req. Also angst. No comfort lol. Creative freedom is a blessing.
What do you do with a loving feeling if a loving feeling makes you feel all alone. Your heart squeezes. Your stomach tries to cave in on itself. Your body becomes shamefully frail; muscles taut and sore, a perpetual ache plaguing your body. Youâd take on the brunt of the day, and feel it collapse on you at night. Your weary knees would carry you through it all, and you could squash a week into a day. You become addicted to the loneliness and desperation, because you do not know what else to do with yourself. It is the most familiar feeling you know, and you have convinced yourself it is your destiny.
But when you wake up Arthur in the morning, and when you wait for him at night, and when you wait for his beck and call so often that you do not have your own freedom, it is comparable to having a dog. You would do anything for him, and he for you, but the passion is interrupted. You were his literal and metaphorical partner in crime, and when one of you would ride, so came along the other to accompany them.
Spending so much time with Arthur reminded you of what it was like to be fulfilled. You were hungry for love, and you longed for Arthur to feed you so full until you could not take it anymore. You wanted to know what it was like. He would fill your bowl, but not lift the spoon to your lips.
You awoke from your dream softly, turning over and away from the light casting down on your face. You wished you could keep dreaming, but when you saw Arthurâs figure standing a few feet away where the stew cooked, you were given a million reasons to stay awake. You hoisted your aching body up onto your elbows, your joints groaning and creaking as a reminder that the previous night had not been kind to you. Youâd change out of your chemise into dusty jeans and a cotton button up, shoving your feet into a pair of pointed black boots. They had been your continual choice of foot wear for the past few years. A good pair of boots could be your companion forever. Oh, how you longed for a companion. Soon, the soles would crack and the leather would crease in a thousand more places, but youâd keep wearing them out anyways. You were loyal.
You paced over towards the fire, leaning down to pour yourself a cup of coffee. Youâd utter a tired âMorningâ to Arthur, flickering your eyes towards him before staring back down at the liquid in your mug. Heâd return the gesture as he served himself a stew; it reminded you of how hungry you were. But you could not bring yourself to eat, the butterflies in your stomach would not allow you.
Before long, youâd find yourself naturally gravitating towards Sean (though you were ready to abandon him the moment Arthur called for you).
âHowâs my favorite ladâI mean lass doing this fine morning?â Seanâs energy would leave others jaded, but you would come at him with the same level of enthusiasm. He always had a way with his words that kept your spirits high.
âIâm doing just fine! Thank you.â You groaned as you sat, stretching your back and hearing a satisfying crack.
âSheesh, someone didnât have a good nightâs rest did they?â He would comment mockingly, chuckling to himself when you flipped him off.
âYeah actually, had another one of those weird, recurring dreams.â You waved your hand dismissively, opting to not want to talk about the topic. But Sean was persistent, and heâd take any bit of entertainment he could get, even from you.
âWell, thereâs definitely a cure to your predicament.â He looked at you slyly, bringing his coffee to his lips. You rolled your eyes. You hated the thought of it. Some part inside of you cringed at the thought. Of tearing yourself open in all your glory and allowing Arthur to look inside you, allowing him a chance to try and understand your most tender and sentimental facets. Lord knew he would not allow you the chance, his walls were so thick you were convinced not even he could tear them down.
You looked at your boots in defeat.
âNot happening.â You sighed in frustration.
âCome on! Whatâs the point of living if ya donât take risks every now and then?â
Sean did not understand that you did not fear risk, rather, you feared loss of companionship. And you clung to it more dearly than your own life.
âItâs too early to be talking about this!â You spat, an unpredictable aggressiveness in your tone.
âYâknow, for one of the most reckless and straightforward people I know, you sure are shy when it comes to this crush business.â Sean teased you in return, egging on your aggressiveness.
You shushed Sean, condemning him for being so loud. You didnât want anyone else around camp to know about your feelings for Arthur. Not that you had ever willingly told Sean about them; he more or less figured it out on his own and teased you about it. You allowed Sean to, because you got some sort of satisfaction out of someone acknowledging your feelings. Sean allowed you to blush and giggle about your crush with the likeness of a schoolgirl, and he did not shut you down once. You did not want to hear about how high Arthurâs walls were, or how unavailable he was, or how he preferred ladies as opposed to you. He did not give you any of that, rather, he provided you with encouragement, told you to go for what you wanted. Most importantly, he didnât turn your business into gossip.
You appreciated the gestures, but you could not find it in you to go for it. You were a great gunslinger, you did amazing in heists, you had an affinity for sniffing out leads, you ran into things headfirst; action first and think later you told yourself. But when it came to this, you second guessed everything you did. You never made your feelings obvious, you hid them well. But in terms of your loyalty to Arthur, that said everything for you.
Eventually, Arthur approached you, asked you to ride with him. Naturally, you followed suit, bidding Sean goodbye as he playfully raised his brows at you.
âWhere we headed?â
âInto town, I got a letter from someone asking for help.â His explanation was brief, but you knew perhaps what this meant. Your stomach tied up into knots and squeezed, and you suddenly felt your body become heavy with each of your movements.
âI see, but why do you want me to go alongâŚ?â There was a tinge of hope in your voice; what you were hoping, you did not know.
âJust in case something happens and I might need you.â
You nodded.
âAnd, we always ride together anyways.â He added.
You did not expect that, but you felt your chest swell with pride, and you turned your head to hide the inescapable smile. You nodded in acknowledgement, the words echoing in your head.
Your ride towards Saint Denis was quiet. Which was unusual. You would usually talk up a storm, and Arthur would happily entertain it. But this ride was different. The only sounds accompanying your ride was the drumming of hooves on red earth, as well as the metallic gallop of a far off train. You noticed Arthur was rigid, stiff, yet fidgety. You almost felt bad for being in a good mood from his words, but the heaviness between you spread when you remembered where you were heading.
Eventually drumming turned into clopping, as dirt roads turned into stone paved streets. The unwelcoming miasma of Saint Denis had you wheezing, fanning the air ahead of you. It felt as though even in open air, you could not suck in a deep breath. As the two of you approached your destination, Arthur seemed restless. You noticed the way he would tighten and then untighten his fists, and as the two of you dismounted your horses, he kept fiddling with his collar and hair.
âNeed help there?â You offered, giggling at his particularness.
âYes, I would appreciate that very much.â He laughed dryly, his attempts at calming his nerves with humor were in vain. You stepped forward and adjusted his collar, and even if brief, you felt his heart hammering at his chest. You bit the inside of your cheek to sustain another smile (you wondered if you had to do something with it?). You took his hat off his head, fixing his hair for him. A few passer bys looked on at the vaguely intimate scene with prying eyes, perhaps they found it strange how a âmanâ was so close to and helping another man. Yet perhaps, you were more man than woman. You dressed like a man, carried yourself like one, did things that only men could do, you drank like one, talked like oneâ.
âHow do I look?â He asked, before curling his lips in a nearby window, checking his reflection. You giggled.
âLovely.â You commented. You scratched at the skin on your arm, letting your nails dig in a little deeper.
âThank you.â He looked back at you, a wavering confidence in him. Wordlessly, he motioned for you to follow him, and you did, walking by his side. Arthur studied the buildings, trying to find the location to which he was summoned to.
âArthur! Up here!â A voice called out.
The two of you looked up, and upon seeing Mary Linton, your suspicions were confirmed. You had to will away the pressure that built up in your face, your throat becoming unbearably dry.
Arthur smiled and nodded at her.
âYou came! And you brought yourâŚâ Mary looked at you, studying your face as if she would find an answer there. âFriend!â She finished.
You nodded at Mary, hands behind your back.
âPleasure to meet you Miss, Iâm (Name.)â The pitch in your voice gave her the answer she sought.
The prospect of Arthur having never told Mary about you stung. Perhaps something youâd bring up later.
âHold on a minute, Iâll be down!â She called out, before disappearing into the hotel. Moments later, she appeared before the both of you. She and Arthur seemed to devolve into hushed conversation, to which you had no choice but to awkwardly stand there. Arthur had shared more intimate details of his life with you before, but to be witnessing one had you rigid. You did not know whether to breathe a sigh of relief or to sob out in fear when Arthur politely asked you for a moment of privacy with Mary.
Perhaps you shouldâve said no to coming along as soon as Arthur told you what this was about. You pondered this as you walked down the wet stone sidewalk, looking up at the sky rather than at the floor. You stopped eventually, and stared.
You thought back to the time you had gotten into a bar fight with a man in Rhodes, and Arthur practically had to peel you off the poor bastard as you beat his face blue. You remembered the lecture he gave you for acting so reckless and impulsively. You told him the man deserved it for shoulder checking you, which only made Arthur chastise you more.
The truth was, heâd made a sly remark about Arthur.
You were pulled out of your train of thought when you heard hasty footsteps behind you. Normally you wouldâve prepared for the worst, but you knew those footsteps well. They were Arthurâs, of course.
You turned around in excitement, ready to greet him, ask him how things went. But your face dropped, your eyes nearly popping out your skull when you saw his forlorn expression. Was heâ blinking away tears?
âUhm⌠You okay?â You asked hesitantly. You reached out a shaky hand to his shoulder, stuttering in your movements out of uncertainty, before you set it down fully. He allowed the touch. Arthur cleared his throat, bringing his fingers together to pinch his bridge, but not before wiping the seams of his eyes with his finger and thumb.
âYes, sweetheart, Iâm fine.â
The way he called you sweetheart was bittersweet; it stung so good. You could almost taste it; you licked your lips.
âWhat happened?â You asked, moving forward to try and look him in the eyes. You placed both your hands on his shoulders now. You swore you saw more tears well up in his eyes when you asked, which he blinked away.
âMary asked me for help, again.â
âOh.â That was all you could say.
âI turned her down.â
âOh.â
âItâs fine though, itâs justâŚI didn't think I should, after all thatâs happened.â
You nodded in understanding. He looked deeply hurt by his decision, and it was one you were not sure you could help comfort him over without hurting yourself. The two of you stood there silently for a moment.
"I'm a bad man, aren't I, (Name)." His voice wavered. He looked up at you with sadness in his eyes, and it felt like barbed wires were being tightened over your throat and heart when he said that. It stung to see Arthur speak so lowly of himself.
"No Arthur, of course not⌠you're one of the best men I knowâŚ"
He chuckled sadly. "Thank you, but I'm a no good fool, who doesn't know what he wants."
You took notice of the people who walked around your heartfelt moment, like a river parting for a rock. You knew of Arthur's issues with self esteem, and you knew that no matter what you said, he would not take it to heart.
Another moment of silenceâ until Arthur walked past you towards where your horses were waiting. In a moment of impulsivity, you gripped his forearm, stopping him in his tracks.
He looked at you in surprise, first at where you grabbed him, then at you.
"I⌠I..."
You began, but the words did not seem to come out. Your grip on his arm was tight, tightening slightly when you became keenly aware of the rising tension. But he did not look at you with impatience, never. Rather, concern. As the seconds passed, you tried to find the right words to say, but it did not happen.
"I'm sorryâŚ" You felt the familiar feeling of your throat tightening up and running dry. He managed a half hearted smile before patting your hand. You felt his palm smooth over your knuckles, before you both let go.
"It's okay, let's go get a drink somewhere. I think we both need it."
'I think we both need it' You would ponder his choice of words. You felt your body become heavy, and any movement felt like you were dragging your limbs across the stone floor. Wearily and wordlessly, you followed.
You did not know what to do with all the love you had for him. You did not know where to put it.
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My Love Mine All Mine - Mitski
#red dead redemption 2#red dead fandom#red dead redemption 2 x reader#red dead redemption community#van der linde gang x reader#writing#red dead fanfiction#arthur morgan#arthur morgan x reader#arthur morgan x reader angst#angst#red dead redemption angst#read dead redemption fanfiction#red dead redemption 2 fanfiction#mary gillis linton
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How i think some Cod/Tlou character's Y/ns would like đ
My native lenguage isn't English, so i'm sorry if i make a mistake at writing this, and i'm sorry if this has Spelling mistakes or if the pronunciation is wrong
And again, another post that nobody has asked me to do, but i'm just as delusional as you are and i like to imagine my Y/n with certain appearance, so... Yes, this is how i'll feed my squizofrenia and yours too, Let's start with this already â
Also, Credits to the respective creators of these face models
Konig's Y/n:
Ghost's or Valeria's Y/n:
Abby's or Rudy's Y/n:
Joel's or Tommy's Y/n:
Alejandro's Y/n:
Makarov's Y/n:
Grave's Y/n:
Now that I notice, you can also use the face models for Grave's and Makarov's Y/ns as a Y/n for Arthur Morgan đŚ
Nikolai's, Horangi's or Ellie's Y/n:
Laswell's y/n:
Price's or Soap's Y/n:
Gaz's Y/n:
You can actually use these face models as y/ns for any Cod Character.... đ
So... That's pretty much all.... I don't really know what else to add because this post really explains itself, so... Yeah, Bye!
#cod mw2#cod x reader#cod x y/n#cod x you#cod x oc#cod mwii#cod mw3#cod modern warfare#cod characters#tlou x reader#tlou x you#tlou x y/n#tlou fanfiction#tlou2#tlou1#tlou#the last of us x reader#the last of us x you#the last of us x y/n#the last of us 2#The last of us characters#the last of us#x y/n#y/n#face model
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So I have a new idea for a hypothetical ask. All the parental figures/old folks meeting up. Hosea, Bessie, Darraugh, Hamish, Lennyâs dad Thatâs mentioned in his letter possibly, Grimshaw, Dutch and the less parental Strauss, and Uncle
I would love them to just get to hang out together and in some cases away from the rest of the gangâs shenanigans (câmon let Hamish and Hosea and Darraugh have there own shenanigans!!!) Plus I am a sucker for any hypothetical Hamish content and Hosea and Grimshaw are two of my favorite gang members :>
this made me laugh hypothetical au where the known parents of the gang turn up for no reason and get into antics
it feels like an intervention with darragh, mr summers, the duffys and later grimshaw and bessie all chiming up to yell at dutch and hosea What the everloving FUCK did you do to our boys. look at them. they have anxiety.
dutch tries to defend himself and hosea has to give him the shut up look because his talk of ideals immediately backfires when mr summers points out they left lenny to die alone.
the parents magically know what happened in rdr2. darragh and mr summers are instant best friends and are taking turns holding each other back from punching dutch in the face. mammy duffy does land a punch before her husband catches her
dutch and beatrice morgan get along a little too well and hosea is suddenly very thankful they never met because they both have that extra bit of neurological spice in the same direction. maybe it's schizophrenia, maybe it's unspecified delusions of grandeur but they both speak in pretty language that isn't entirely grounded in reality and very much feed that energy in each other.
lyle morgan pipes up about not being surprised arthur turned out to be a killer because there was always something wrong with that kid and hosea beats him with a chair. hamish stops hosea only to take the chair himself and join in. fuck lyle morgan
uncle only turned up to eat popcorn and watch williamson sr and marston sr both drink themselves stupid and then was so mildly infuriated by the display he decided fuck you they're my kids now. tell me uncle isn't the closest thing bill has to a positive male figure in his life in rdr2.
micah bell the second is annoyed at how much micah has slightly improved for the better in modern era. his 'wife' who is instead very proud of her son for finally being the slightly good person she always believed he was capable of being slaps him. dutch joins in punching gross old man who raised son to be as mentally warped as micah is - and that's coming from the master gaslighter himself
in more fun stuff: hamish, hosea and pappy duffy would be fishing pals, sit in silence drinking beer sort. uncle tags along but they aren't convinced he even owns a fishing rod. hamish and hosea have brief conversations about what a good kid arthur is while on the inside they are punching the ground screaming because he has done so well for himself and they're so proud he finally got the chance to just be happy
as much as they loathe dutch for encouraging their boys to be outlaws instead of using his resources to help them rebuild their lives and actually doing good, darragh and mr summers can't stop themselves from getting into pseudo-intellectual debates with dutch and annabelle. they all have really similar ideals about common good but disagree about how it is achieved and it's very amusing to see them get animated about it
grimshaw, bessie, mrs bell, mammy duffy and hosea are also gossips and love nothing more than sitting around drinking coffee and talking about their gaggle of children. also mrs bell is so beautiful and charming everyone is trying to decode how micah was produced. they are all just sharing childhood stories like micah picking weeds to be a bouquet for his mama who he adored and arthur's fishing story and the mission of giving john a bath and you can just tell they all love their kids.
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