#close your eyes and think of tom hardy itll all be okay
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
white room - pt. 5
johnny davis x gn!reader, 18+, canon typical themes and language, 5.8k words, 5 of ? ao3 link | previous part a/n: hellow :3 we are back after an unexpected hiatus and lips finally gets to meet benny ! very exciting all round <3 i hope you like it and forgive me for falling off planet earth for a bit
Might sound kind of stupid, but recently, you been thinking that youâve finally got it all worked outâabout Benny, that is. Somewhere between the last time you saw him, and the Saturday of the picnic, Johnnyâs weird kinda way of talking around him started making a whole load of sense. And it wasnât just some little joke when he said he didnât want you knowing Benny, it was pretty much sort of the truth, you think, hidden under all the hums and grumbles of him. He actually was cut up about it a little. Nervous, though someone like Johnny never aughtâa be nervous about nothing. And you really would never say it to his face, or anyone elseâs for that matter, but youâve even been considering the possibility that Benny might be part of the reason things with him and Betty didnât work out.Â
Fuckinâ rat up the drain pipe sort of shit, right? Never saw it coming âtil it started scratching at your head one night. You were lying there staring at the ceiling and thinking, huh, Johnny talks about Benny the way youâd be talking about Johnny, should anyone ever ask you about him when you didnât really wanna say nothing. Eh, heâs just some guy, youâd say, yeah, we hang around with each other, you know, doing stuff. Stuff, and other things and what not.Â
Like, heâs got a hold on him, alright, the same one Johnnyâs got on you. A real, steel grip, hold. You started off thinking well maybe itâs a jealous type of thing, you know, old guy wanting to step into the young buckâs riding boots, but it ainât just that. Canât be. Half of Johnnyâs crew are ten years younger than him, but well, they arenât Benny, right? And thereâs something about the way he looks at himâthe few times youâve been around to catch itâsomething âbout the way Johnny watches him. And talks about him. And makes excuses for him, and the way he is. Sure, he may like him like he wants to be him, you know, foot taller, blonde, pretty as anything, but by the time Saturday rolls around and youâve really sat on it for a while, youâre starting to think: well, what if he likes him the way every girl that ever meets Benny likes him? The way even you mightâa liked him, had you never seen Johnny, of course.
Seems obvious once youâve really put some time into the idea. Nothing about Johnny says he couldnât be liking men the same way you do and, jeez, maybe youâre dumb for it, but even with all of that, you canât find a single part of yourself that seems to mind. Johnny still treats you good, still makes the nights feel longer than the daysâand he invited you to this picnic of theirs, which he says is only ever for wives and girlfriends and serious things like, so you figure youâre someone real important to him now, cause even if you arenât one of those things, youâre something, right? And he did all of that with Benny around, so what difference does it make to you? Sure, you can share as long as everyoneâs playing nice, youâre not spoiled or nothing.
Well, alright, maybe not share, you arenât an angelâwho is?âbut right now, if Johnny likes Benny like he likes you, he sure donât even know it yet. Or if he does, heâs still two hundred miles back from dealing with the meaning of it, and you know heâs not planning on running nowhere on those knees of his, so itâs whatever, right? Canât fix nothing if it ainât broke yet.
âYou like dirt bikes?â he asks, while heâs dragging you across this damn field that you spent all morning riding for, grass wet from yesterdayâs rain still. No place for any sort of picnic youâve been to, but for Vandals, sure, itâs like a natural haven to them or something.Â
âI never liked any sort of bike âtil I met you, Johnny.â
âYeah,â he winds, like he knew as much but didnât really care in the first place, âfew of us are gonna race âem. See that track there?â
You see nothing but a whole loadâa mud on top of another bunch of it. âMhmm.â
âThatâs where this whole thing started.âÂ
âAnd when you go spinning over the handlebars, thatâs where itâll end it up,â you say.
He laughs, but he goes on, âIâm serious,â through the smirk of it. âThatâs where me and Brucey got the idea for the club in the first place. Well, that and, yeah.â He nods. âHere, when we was racing.â He waves toward the tracks in the dirt, and the bikes in the dirt, and the men that are fifty-percent fuckinâ dirt, like the whole lot is some sort of sacred ground to him, like heâs just a humble guide blessing you by bringing you here, then he says, âand I never come off no more, so donât worry about it.â
And you like him enough to go along with it, cheesy Colby Jack that you are. âItâs something special,â you tell him, mostly meaning it. Well, all the way meaning it, but only in the way people look at scraps of metal in a museum cabinet, and think that itâs really something just cause the guys in tweed say that it is.Â
âBenny race with you?â you ask him.
âNo,â he shakes his head a little, ânot his kind ofâŠâ
âWhat, you gotta be short like jockeys to race or something?âÂ
âNoââ he shoots a confused look at you, then realises that youâre joking, at his expense, and forgives you for it too, all in the same sort of moment, ââwould you give it up with that?â
âHm, think I have maybe three âjust under six foot jokesâ left in me,â you promise, âbut Iâll spare you today.â
âYeah, you will.â And itâs as much a threat, as it is an invite, cause heâs smiling like a little something or other, and your lips find his in a real awkward, bumpy, kind of way, noses knocking as you walk, you know. Giggling and stuff. Real cutesy lovebird shit that you wouldnât be repeating to no-one, if you wasnât, well, you know.
âSo whereâd he come from then?â you ask, wrapping your free hand around the arm that youâre already attached to. Half-way close to crawling under his leathers, under the shirt and undershirt too, right under the curl of hair beneath that chain that he wears, if you could. âIf it wasnât the racing, I mean.âÂ
âBenny?â
âYeah, Benny.âÂ
You should probably not be asking so much, now you know what you think you knowâeven if you donât know it, and have just convinced yourself that you doâbut itâs bothering you, well not bothering, but toying with you. Heâs never wanted to say much about him and you figure you should take advantage of that sentimental look in his eye, for research purposes, of course.
âHe just. Heâs just always been around,â he says. âCame through one time needing something, yeah, and he stuck around when he found it. Like any of us would.âÂ
âYou mean Kathy?âÂ
His face screws up, sort of like a wince almost. âNoâme, the club. He needed someplace to be. Something to belong to, you know?â
âYeah.â You know.Â
âAll just gotta have somewhere to belong.â
âAnd you ainât let go of him since,â you think, not meaning to say it aloud, but saying it anyway, cause Hell, itâs the truth, whichever way you wanna look at it.Â
He donât like it of course. Tightens up right to the sides of his neck, and wrings his hand around the strap of the bag on his other shoulder. âWhatâs that supposed to mean?â
You shrug. âNothin. Itâs good heâs got you guys. And Kathy.â
Johnny nods. That, he can agree to, though he donât look happy about it. You caught him and let him right back out again, cause youâre not looking to pick fights, and that bothers him as much as if you were, apparently. Keeps him all quiet and rigid as you finish up the trek to where you oughta be.Â
The closer you get, the less barbaric it seems. Picnic benches, coolers, brave sorts on tartan blankets right on the rain-wet floor, but still, that sticky, dirt bike track in the middle, winding all over the place.
Not bad, all in all, suppose it is somewhere you donât mind spending your Saturday so much.Â
âSorry,â you tell him, âfor always poking my nose in.â
He squeezes your hand. âSânothin. Weâre mixing it up, right?â
Yeah, Vandal stuff and you stuff. Two hands at once. No more juggling. But, obviously, there are some Benny shaped parts of that, that donât seem to be mixing too well at all.
You know, you and him havenât talked once, or so much as breathed the same air at the same time, right, which isnât too crazy, but would be if it goes on much longer than it has. Cause one time, when Johnny came by, he had Cal with him. And you said hi and stuff, before he went on againâwell, it was real heavy on the stuff cause Cal talks exactly as much as you doâand another time, Wahoo and Corky were with him, yeah? And sorta, somehow, you met a few of them; not all, not properly, but a few, and never having more than a bit of small talk, you know, but it was something.Â
But you never even got introduced to Benny, so you asked him once, and Johnny said thatâs cause Benny is either with his lady, Kathy, or with the guys at the club, or on his own, doing something he shouldnât. Thatâs it, supposedly. Course, you said, wait, what? You ainât never gone nowhere alone with him, just you two? And he just shrugged and made a noise like you should quit talking about it, like you were asking something of him that he couldnât explain. Like Benny was some sort of mystical kind of guy, like he wasnât really all the way real, or something. Just a guy you only see when the lightâs hitting the right place, or the stars are in a line, or some shit.
Well, today, you decided itâs gonna be different, and youâre gonna talk to him. Properly. You donât got a choice, right? Cause you figure, you donât know Johnny âtil you know Benny, and youâre getting real hungry for the full picture of him, if heâs gonna be around so much, that is.
âYou mind sitting here while IâŠ?â He points to the bikes, angling you toward the bench heâs apparently picked out for you. Front row, not even a splinter. High prize for the VIP.Â
âYeah,â you throw him a good smile, an easy one, âyou go ahead. Iâll watch.â
He looks back at you, all sweet, lips curling, then pulls a helmet from that bag of hisâcause apparently, these ones need âem, but the other kind donâtâand then heâs off, going like a kid. Half jogging, half walking, and heading right over there to the rest of them.Â
Theyâre skinny bikes, these ones, kinda looking like street dogs. All wiry and bite-y, and a whole world different from the big, hulking, spoiled dogs of his usual sort. No shiny curves and nice painted metal here, just rahh, and grrr, and all that sort of shit. You know which ones you prefer just by looking. And you really know which ones you wouldnât be caught dead riding on.Â
You put your hands in your pockets and wait, looking all sorts of all over the place, cause the racers are chatting still, and no-ones going yet, and that bench actually looks as wet as it is rotten, so you got nothing much else to do other than stand there, looking about you some.Â
This canât be all of them, you donât think, cause you see some faces you know, and a whole load that you donât, but no where near enough to be their chapter and the new one combined. But then, is it really all that surprising that Vandals, wherever theyâre from, arenât used to turning up on time? Itâll be nearly evening before itâs a full turn out, no doubt, and, God, standing in a field that long? You had no idea what was coming when you agreed to this.
You look down at your boots, splattered with mud, and try to remember the last time you wore them for longer than a few hours. Which was a long while ago, or maybe neverâthough you do remember how bad the blisters were, whenever it was, so it mustâve happened onceâand you suppose Johnnyâs worth living through that again, just about, so you decide to stick with what you were doing. Accepting your fate and that, in with a bunch of people you barely know, looking round âtil one of them knows you tooâand then you spot Benny. Â
And he mustâa saw you before you saw him, cause heâs coming right on over.Â
He doesnât say nothing, so you stay standing with your hands in your pockets, wondering if he was looking at you at all, or if he thinks youâre just some tagalong from Milwaukee, waiting for a bike to polish. But then he stops right next to you, and turns back facing the way he came, and puts his hands in his jacket like heâs copying you or something.Â
So you stand, and itâs quiet, and he looks at the guys getting onto their bikes, engines growling and barking all at once, and you think, my God, you have never survived a silence like this. You wanna wait him out, but he could be a mute for all you know. You never even thought of that. He couldâa taken a hit to the head coming off his bike and lost his nerve for speaking, or maybe heâs from Europe. Maybe he donât know a lick of English, especially not the kind youâre gonna be talking, you never even thought to ask Johnny about thatâwhat if itâs that?Â
And the longer it goes without him saying nothing, the more certain you are that whatever you end up spitting out is gonna be the most insane thing a person could say to someone they never spoke to before. Like howâs your relationship with my maybe sort of boyfriend going? Anything I should know?
âThink the greenâs got this one.â
âWhat?â Not mute. Not mute, and not European. Talking and pointing and waiting for you to say something back, even though heâs not looking at you, up there, under the flop of his dirty blonde hair, but waiting all the same. Like heâs fly fishing and youâre ignoring the lure no matter how much he flicks it. âGreen who?â
âThe bike,â he says, âdonât know his name.â
âOh, yeah.â
Green fucking bike, what do you know? You canât even tell the colour of the one Johnnyâs on, you canât even see him no more really, not when they go up there by that corner there.Â
âSorry, wasnât paying attention,â you tell him, and you know you donât sound sorry, but him talking like he knows you has thrown you all the way off. Your big scheme to get in and get cosy now seems real dumb and real pointless. âYouâre Benny, right?â
He nods. Then he pulls his arms tighter, denim pockets bunching above his waist, like heâs freezingâwhich he might be, cause his jacket donât have sleeves like Johnnyâs does.Â
âFeels like youâre the last one of them that I ought to be meeting,â you say, and cause youâre still good mannered and things, you throw your name out for him afterwards.Â
âI know,â he says back. âJohnny talks about you.â
âHe does?âÂ
He nods again, which is real great, cause it means he talks just as little as Johnny does, but instead of humming and making noises, he just nods and looks at you. Jeez, he really does look at you. Not too long, nothing creepy, you know, but long enough like he mightâve flicked through the file-o-fax in your head and plucked out exactly what he wanted.Â
âJohnny doesnât talk about anything,â you tell him, hoping that whatever he thinks he saw, is the opposite of what you actually said. âWhatâs he say, âIâm seeing somebodyâ?â
To your surprise, Benny laughs at that, and shit, heâs as movie star pretty as youâd expect with a smile on his face. It just gets worse with this dude. âYeah,â he says, âthats, er, thatâs pretty much it.â
âFigures. I gotta get him in a headlock before he says shit about youâor anyone else that means something to him.â
Heâs looking ahead again, but you can see heâs smiling still, even if itâs small. He really is a quiet type, two minutes in and youâre realising as much already. Even when heâs talking, or doing anything, thereâs a real quiet to it, which is probably the last thing you expected to learn about him. None of these biker guys are ever like that, not even Johnny, somehow, heâs loud even when heâs saying nothing. Itâs in the face, in the way he carries himself. But Benny? You could switch his colours for a church suit and believe that he was a good kid Sunday through Friday, never speaking back to no-one.
Which makes no damn sense, and canât be the fucking case, and makes you realise all at once that heâs the sort of person you keep around just to try and solve the puzzle of him. Shy smiles and listening ears in a guy like him, riding bikes like that? Yeah, sure. The club might not be doing much as far as you know, but it sure is doing more than that, and yeah, you remember, he said it once, Johnny said Benny got all wrapped up with some cops a few times, so who the hell is this?
âYou like the picnic?â he asks, flicking his head that way.
âDepends on whether thereâs any actual picnicking, or if itâs just standing around watching stuff.â
âYeah, there will be. Kathy, she uh,â he rubs his face on his shoulder, like heâs getting an itch and the itch is small talk, âshe brought some stuff,â he says.Â
âThen I guess I like it,â you say back. âSkipped breakfast.â And real surely suffering for it, stomach aching like youâve not even sniffed food in years.Â
He puffs a short breath through his nose, like heâs laughing without trying to. âDonât think Iâve had breakfast since the fourth grade.â
You canât help it, you answer like youâd answer anyone else, Benny or no Benny. âThatâs sad. You know thatâs sad, right? No breakfasts, not even as a kid?â
He shrugs, and he donât seem offended, but he donât seem amused so much anymore either. He certainly ainât knocking back with a joke like Johnny would have.Â
âI think waffles are a fundamental necessity,â you say, just to say something again. Then you put your focus on the track, cause the wheels are back now, spinning and spitting up wet dirt, and the looped route they took mightâve gone around a couple times without you noticing, cause it seems like theyâre done. Like someoneâs kicked a stand and thrown his helmet and started shouting like heâs a winner.
âGreen,â Benny says, like you mightâve been betting against him.Â
âAnd Johnnyâ?â
âThird place.â
You find him in the group, grinning like heâd won, helmet on, goggles pushed up over the curve of it. âUsed to be faster, right?â
Benny shrugs. âI wouldnât know.â
âYou been with the club long?â you ask.
He chances the air, pulling his hands free and a pack of cigarettes along with them. âFeels like it,â he says.
You laugh, though itâs mostly sort of a scoff, and probably sort of rude, but, come on, whatâve you gotta do to get a real answer round here? âJeez, between your riddles, and Johnnyâs half sentences, I donât know how you guys even found yourself to be friends.â
He cracks a light and takes a drag and youâve pretty much given up on getting anything more out of him, when he says, âJohnnyâs only like that when heâs talking to someone with more to say.â
âYeah, yeah,â your eyes roll, âLips, I get it. Course heâs been spreading that around already.âÂ
âLips?â He tweaks an eyebrow, looking at you through the smoke.
Great. So you really are just like that. âDumb name heâs come up with,â you say, though youâd rather not, considering he didnât know about it until you brought it up. You and your lips. âWhy donât you have one? Donât seem fair to me. I mean, you got Cockroach, walking round with a name like that, and you get to be just Benny?â
âThings like that arenât planned.â
âFeels like they are.â
He smirks like youâre real crazy. âAnd you think Iâm a special case?â
âI think youâre the favourite,â you tell him. May as well come out with it.
He snorts. The cigarette smoke goes like an ink spill around his head. âYou never figure they donât give names to people that might not stick around?â he says.
Well, that gets you, because no, you never did think of that. And now that you are thinking bout it, the truth feels like a jackhammer against you and him both. Him, who hasnât got a name and you, who has one already, willing or not. Johnny wouldnât stumble into a thing like that by accident, would he?Â
âYou move around a lot?â you ask, with all interest and no attitude. Cause if heâs right, and that is the reason, he mustâa done something to make them think as much.
âUsed to,â he says.
âMe too.â
âYou miss it?â
âFuck no,â you laugh, âno, Iâm planning to spend a real long time in one place from now on.â
He nods, but he doesnât comment any more on it, and you take his quiet to mean that he thinks the oppositeâwell, that and the way heâs looking off now, smoking like he never asked in the first place. All of that seems to you like someone whoâs planning on moving around some more, some time, whenever it is, and, if youâre real honest, for a second it reminds you of Mom, and that way sheâd be when she started itching for it again. Something new, something unattached. You near enough shiver at the thought. Last thing you want is to be drawing a line between Benny and your mom, at your first big meet-the-family picnic of all places.
âI better check on Kathy,â he says, pointing that way with the red end of his smoke.Â
âYeah,â thank God, âyeah sure, nice meeting you.â You smile, waving as he goes, and he takes all that weird, creeping feeling along with him.Â
Half successful, half fucking weird. Benny ainât the sort you thought he was, but you donât like him and you donât dislike him neither, which is probably music to Johnnyâs ears, should you ever tell him that. But as he walks away you find yourself watching the back of him, and as dead-ended as the conversation was, you feel like youâre wanting to make some more sometime. Just to work him out, you know? Just to see what Johnny sees.Â
*Â
âYou couldâa gone again, if you liked.â
âWhat? No, nah, oneâs alright by me.â
âGot it out your system?â
âYeah, yeah, couldnât spend all day away from you, could I? Leave you standing up there all alone.â
Couldnât, but wouldâve, if you hadnât caught his eye over the way there and given him a look like you were real thirsty for him. Took some fighting inside, you know, to take his helmet off and leave the racing to the rest of them, but he did, sweet as he is, and came and swept you up with all the other guys that are more keen on picnicking like you are.Â
And heâs sitting beside you nowâwell, you sat down on one of them benches there, expecting him to come right up next to you, but he went and sat on the table part, still clearly with you but above you, you see, so that his thighâs resting against your shoulder and your neckâs half breaking just to look at him. But you kind of like it. Having the head dog sitting over you like that, hand resting on the little bit of skin between your hair and the collar of your shirt. Sure, maybe itâs possessive, and maybe he really is worrying about you seeing something in one of these other guys that youâre never gonna see.Â
But the more he does that, running a couple fingers over your neck like that, the more youâre thinking heâs worked out that it gets your stomach doing all sorts of summersaults, and thatâs why he likes sitting up there like that. Hell, he can sure enough feel how hot your skinâs getting, so it wouldnât take a scientist to figure out what itâs doing to you, and at the end of the day, a manâs a man, you know?Â
âYou not finishing yourâŠwhat was it again?â
Heâs pointing over your shoulder now, at the napkin-rolled parcel of good fucking food waiting there on your lap. You had only put it down for a second to get yourself situated. Wouldâve eaten it in two bites if you didnât have Johnny to think about. âSome kind of sandwich,â you answer. âThough itâs more like a burger in a home that donât fit itâand yeah, Iâm finishing it. Itâs good. Itâs alright.âÂ
You can hear him smiling, feel it without even looking back at him to check. âJust alright?â he asks. Then his headâs down by your head, ear by your ear, eyes across the way to where Kathy and Benny are snuggling on the opposite bench. âNow donât let Kathy hear you saying that.â
Which he says altogether too loud, exactly as he planned to do.Â
âHey, no!â And you hate to admit it, but youâre talking louder like she mightâve heard, just to cover your back that donât really need covering in the first place. âI mean itâs good. Itâs real good! They ran out of regular buns is all.â
Kathy smiles, you think, and Johnny laughs at you relaxing at itâand you wouldâa liked a kiss or something as an apology for getting you to fret like that, but he just leans back again and runs a thumb down your cheek at the same time, like thatâs near enough the same thing. Real charmer. So comfortable already, you know, so sick that he thinks thatâs enough, and so perfect and fine and sweet, that it has you smiling while you un-peel the damn napkin. You seem to be taking turns these days, over who has who wrapped round their little pinky, and today itâs your go around that bent little finger of his. Broke it coming off his bike, he says, but you know a fighting injury when you see one, and heâs certainly no type of guy to be avoiding a bust up when itâs put in front of him.
âJohn, whoâs that skinny, mousey looking dude over by Wahoo?â you ask, before taking a mean bite of your sandwich-burger. Then you chew and chew and and God, if Kathy werenât married, youâd be asking her yourself, before licking your lips and clarifying who you mean, âThe one with the camera and the tape recorder?â
âOh.â He clears his throat, fidgeting enough to make his leathers creak. âThatâs Danny. Heâs a⊠I dunno, a sort of journalist, I guess. Yeah. Scouting out stories and things. Been riding with us for a while.â
âYeah?â Your brows go up, âcause thatâs the last sort of answer you thought youâd be getting. âHeâs out here interviewing you guys?â
âPutting together a book, he says.â
âHmm.â Sâall you can manage to say to that, Hmm.Â
On that second or first date of yours, Johnny was real antsy about the idea of you going home and typing out his secrets, and you had to be seeing each other for weeks and weeks before he wanted you to really meet everybody here, but now youâre learning that this whole time theyâve had a walking talking wire tap rolling with them? Asking Qâs and getting Aâs? Yeah, feels like something that makes no sense to you, coming from the big boss himself.Â
âHeâs from New York,â Johnny adds, like he donât like your silence. Like he thinks youâre weighing this Danny guy up, or something. âSâa good kid.â
âYou speak to him much?â
âNah. Spends a lot of time over at Kathyâs place.âÂ
Figures. He probably wants to work Benny out the way you and everyone else doesâand what better way to work him out, than to get talking with his lady like that?
âMaybe heâll want to talk to me,â you say.
âWhyâd he wanna do that?â
And you donât like the joke in his voice, so you turn right round to face him, elbows sitting on his thighs. âWhy wouldnât he? I got stories to tell.â
Heâs not looking at you, but looking over your head at Danny and Wahoo still. âYouâre new to the Vandals,â he says, âyou donât know nothing about it. Whatâve you got to say to him about all this?â
You agree as much as you donât. And youâre itching at the principle of it anyway, so you were planning to keep on going, agreeing or not.Â
âI know you, donât I?â you tell him. âPlus new people got as much to bring to the picture as old people, you know, and when youâre writing something up you gotta have the whole entire picture from as many people as you can get, rightâand I know, I like to write too, remember?â
âYeah, I remember.â
âSo why wouldnât he wanna talk to me? I could tell him a whole load about all sorts of thingsâhow someone like me got all wound up with someone like you, for startersââ
âAlright.â
âAnd how it feels to be fitting in with a bunch of people that are as much like you as they arenât like you, you know?â
Heâs looking at you now, and in the break you take to get some air and another point lined up, he asks, âYou done?â Like youâd been talking forever or something.
And youâre surprised enough that you canât say whether you are or not.Â
âI donât want you talking to him,â he says, âabout us. Can I ask that? Am I allowed to ask that of you?â
âSure you are, Johnny.â That was beside the point. You was just giving an example, you know, of why Danny might wanna point that microphone of his in your direction.Â
Johnnyâs looking down at you in one of those sorta ways that reminds you heâs a father stillâand a father of two girls at that. The kind of look a guy might give a lion after kindly asking him to put his teeth away. âFeels like maybe you got a problem with it,â he says.
âYou donât want me talking to him about you? Fine.â You shrug. âI donât mind.â
âYeah?â
âYeah, I mean, come on, I just donât like the implication that I got nothing interesting to say to someone like that.â Which is the truth, and you arenât anyway shy of admitting it to him.Â
He hums in response, and you donât know if itâs a âyouâre so funnyâ kind of hum, or a âyouâre getting on my nerves but weâre in public and I canât say nothinâ kind of hum. And you donât get to work it out neither, cause Cal shouts from the next table over like youâd been listening to his conversation, and not your own, this whole time.
âYou coming, Lips?â he says.
âTo what?â
âCar show, couple weeks from now.â
Right, cause that clears it up. âWhyâd I do a thing like that?â
He looks down a little, like you caught him feeling nervous about the thing. Like it was prom and you were waiting for him to ask you, or something, lone earring swinging while he doubts himself. âWell, usually,â he says, âwhen a guyâs going steady with someoneânot to assume or presume, Johnny, every journey is a beautiful oneâbut, well, usually they bring âem along to these things.â
Youâre laughing. Well, trying real hard not to, cause heâs trying so hard to be⊠whatever that was, and you donât mean to come off as rude so early on, yâknow? âNo, I mean, you bike guys go to car shows? Whereâs the sense in that?âÂ
âSâmore of a wheel show,â Cal says.
âSâmore of a something to get drunk and start fightinâ each other for no reason,â Kathy adds from across the way, conversation travelling like a bunch of fish going upstream, âyou donât wanna be there, trust me. They just like lookinâ tough to all those nice boys in the 4-wheelers there.â
And you believe her, having said no more that a few words to her in your life, cause if anyone knows about these things, you kinda figure Kathy does.Â
âYou wanna go?â Johnny asks, before you can say anything about the drinking and fighting part.Â
You look up, and heâs frowning like he mightâve asked you something real troubling, or like heâs trying to suss you out, even though heâs already done that and more, you reckon, sussed you out down to the parts even you donât like thinking about.Â
âDâyou want me to go?â you ask.
âWell, yeah,â he says, easy but hesitant, âI do, yeah.â
âThen sure.â You turn back to Cal, whoâs smoked up like a teenager in the brief moment you looked away from him. âSâpose Iâll be there, then.â
âSâpose weâll be glad to have you,â he says back, and itâs probably only the weed, but heâs smiling like he means it. Like youâve spent a whole lifetime with these guys, and not just one muddy afternoon in a fucking field in the middle of nowhere.Â
Funny how it works sometimes, ainât it? Johnny spent so long trying to balance things between you and the Vandals, when all he really had to do was stop worrying so much, and let everything fall together. One big pile of imperfection is a Hell of a lot easier to deal with, and you donât mind being a part of that. Dirty boots and Benny included.Â
>>>>>>next part
~~~~~~~~
taglist: @drabbles-mc @hausofmamadas @garbinge @raven-black102 @lyralu91 @hoodeddreams13 @businesscalamity (pls let me know if i forgot you or you no longer want to be tagged!)
#johnny davis x reader#the bikeriders x reader#johnny davis#the bikeriders fanfiction#johnny davis fanfiction#was so keen to post i didnt have time to find a gif and make it pretty#close your eyes and think of tom hardy itll all be okay#LOVE U!!!
19 notes
·
View notes