#joe bear graves
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
Barry studies
#call of duty mwii#cod mw2#john price#captain price#call of duty mw3#cod#barry sloane#bear graves#joe bear graves#call of duty#tamagoart
1K notes
¡
View notes
Text
Johnathan Price is that you đŠ
#barry sloane#six tv show#joe bear graves#joe graves#barrypaulsloane#barry paul sloane#call of duty#captain john price#captain price#john price
2K notes
¡
View notes
Text
BARRY SLOANE as Joe 'Bear' Graves in SIX (2017â2018) Episode 2.06 Indian Country
#six#six 2017#sixedit#barry sloane#barrysloaneedit#joe bear graves#joe graves#tvedit#ben.gif#gradient text
3K notes
¡
View notes
Text
Eddie, Captain, Joe, and Zach.
#call of duty#john price#captain price#captain john price#eddie wells#joe bear graves#joe graves#zach whats his name
969 notes
¡
View notes
Text
*clears throat*
*leans into mic*
⨠Barry Sloane â¨
#call of duty#barry sloane#joe bear graves#call of duty modern warfare#captain price#captain john price#john price#him#thats it#thats the post
2K notes
¡
View notes
Text
7 minutes in heaven with bear that starts with him hauling you up onto the bathroom counter, crowding against you and kissing you slow and sloppy and deep and ends with him bending you over the counter, both still fully clothed, one big paw of his securing your wrists behind your back while the other keeps a firm hold at nape of your neck, biting and mouthing at your throat and shoulder, telling you to keep quiet lest they think youâre being mauled by a bear and you want to quip that you practically are, but the weight and heat of his cock makes your brain go fuzzy, and all you can do is whine low in your throat, desperately trying to arch back against him.
#ink by bambi#bambi overuses commas and more news at 12#joe bear graves#joe bear graves imagine#joe bear graves smut#bear graves#bear graves imagine#bear graves smut#bear graves x you#bear graves x reader#six#six imagine#six smut
261 notes
¡
View notes
Text
Random gifs from SIX - 1/? | BEAR Special request by @cssndra-cain
#six#barry sloane#joe graves#joe bear graves#gifs*#dilfgifs#menedit#series#cinematv#tvedit#creatormari
2K notes
¡
View notes
Text
Can I talk about how obsessed I am with Joe Graves yet orrr
Here have some gifs of him, he's actually such a beautiful character, not just to use as price inspo but as his own person, Barry does the most insane job as him (thank you barry ily) and the writing for him is absolutely amazing
Look at his eyes man, look at the puppy eyes, he's not just a soldier he's so complex, he wants to get things right GOD I wish this show was continued
#barry sloane#six tv show#joe graves six#joe bear graves#seal team six#navy seals#i love him#john price
301 notes
¡
View notes
Text
exit, no entry wound joe bear graves x reader; part 1 (3.8k)
-
Local time at destination: 0500 hours.
And then the world rushes back to him like the culmination of a terrible dream.
Bear wakes up in another rosebush outside the front steps of the local library worse for wear. Blinking out of sleep-crusted eyes, shapes diverging in blurry unfocus before slipping back into material objects. A bench. A door. The thorny stems of roses already on their way out, already depetalling, the ground below covered in a thin layer of them. One petal even sticking to his cheek when he pulls himself off the ground, wincing at the branches that crunch around him, that tug against his skin and clothes.
His clothes smell of cheap liquor. Gin. Bourbon. It hurts to open his eyes, to sit up.Â
âMorning, sunshine,â someone says. He remembers hearing it in his dream too.Â
He looks to the source of his awakening, blanching when he notices the man staring at him.
Rip sits on the other side of the bushes on his haunches, looking deeply unimpressed. Hair slicked back for a change. âThis what you get up to when Iâm gone?â
Bear doesnât respond. He struggles to his feet instead, hangover only just creeping in. Still drunk, to an extent. His knees threaten to buckle under him, forcing him to lay a hand flat on the wall to keep himself upright. One foot in front of the other. The walk home feels endless in the hour before dawn, hardly any light to guide him.Â
âPretty pathetic shit, Bear,â the man says, trailing along behind him. Not quite mockingly, but bordering on it. âGetting piss drunk and passing out in a bush? Really? Câmon, man. You gotta be fuckinâ kidding me.â
Thereâs no sense in responding, Bear knows that now. No sense in even turning around to look. One foot in front of the other. Stumbling home alone under the cloak of night, dawn just around the corner; terrified that one day heâll have to see itâthe sun coming over the mountains, over the horizon.Â
Itâs been less than a year. He hasnât yet made his amends with God. Forgiveness sits outside of him. Not quite the right time to let it in. Maybe that time passed a long time ago, a small aperture that shuttered closed at the approach of his eyes. He missed it sometime between killing a boy and losing his mind.
A man cannot hold himself up on the scaffolding of the world alone. There has to be something beneath him. There is no sense in repeating the horrors of the world back to him; heâs already lived them. Heâs got something of a Midas touch for death.Â
The months have been long since the divorce was finalised, since Lena left for good, since Buckley died, since Ripâsince it all went down. If he thinks about it for too long, it seems like a nightmare that he woke up from still mad about; a nightmare he had no choice but to drink himself into a stupor over to escape. Thatâs the reality of the world.Â
âYou know, Bear, youâre not the one thatâs fuckinâ dead,â Rip spits as he follows behind, matching Bearâs stumbling gait stride for stride. âSo you can stop acting like it.â
Thereâs a truth in Ripâs words and it leaves him feeling nauseous. Thereâs also a kink in his neck and a headache threatening to split his forehead open. In the belly of him, he has a truth that says that the firmament of heaven is beyond his reach. When he looks up and the sky is void of coruscating light, the meagre stars like an exit with no entry wound, it doesnât surprise him. Of course there wouldnât be anything there.
On a good day, his heart feels like itâs weathered a siege.Â
âSo she left you! Itâs time to fuckinâ move on. Go to a barâI mean, you already are, so step one doneâand pick someone up. Go on Christian Mingle or something. You keep living your life like this and youâre going to wind up killing yourself. And then the fuck good thatâll do?â
It takes everything in him to not turn around and do something rash. Only the nausea keeps him from making any sudden movements. Even if he were to turn around and do something, his knees would probably buckle under him. Probably throw up the contents of his stomach. Not much in there either. It rumbles when he thinks that, clenching at the thought of food. Then it twists, the nausea returning.Â
One foot in front of the other. The walk home takes twice as long, his whole body aching.
âHeard you almost quit. Wouldnât be the worst idea you ever had. Let Buddha take overâheâs earned it. Get yourself a nice piece of land in fuckinââŚMontana or something. Couple cows, maybe some chickenâyou could get a dog, Christ. You look like a guy whoâd have a dog. Why donât you have a dog, actually? You wouldâve told me if you didnât like dogs, so itâs not that.â
His forehead is greasy when he touches it to rub his head. Body secreting poison in his sleep. Oily. The corners of his lips crack when he yawns. Itâs not like heâs never thought about a dog, about having something to care for, another living thing in his house.Â
Butâ
(âBear? âŚI donât think we should have a child.â)
What he wants often falls to the wayside, slides off him like a glancing blow.Â
Her old, familiar shape appears at the sudden loss of a dream: one where Lenaâs gaze lingers on him long enough to burn; but then it is the sun.
Bear watches dawn break. Sunday morning. In a different life, he wouldâve squinted into the light of a new day and closed his eyes against it, curling into the slighter body tucked into his chest for another hour of rest. Felt the rise and fall of her chest. Woken up to a hot mouth on his cock or fingers curling in his chest hair, petal lips seeking him out. Church after that, showering off the remnants of their morning, solemn in their pews with their chests still holding the laughter of an hour previous. Light as air, as a feather.Â
He wonât go to church today; hasnât in months. Not with the guilt of missing it the week before trailing after him, each missed week compounding month after month. The cracks in his faith webbing. Splintering out like stepping on the lake when it freezes over in the winter, crunching under his boot until he holds his place. Conscious that it could break under his feet.
âI grew up with a dog,â Bear finally responds, voice hoarse. First thing heâs said since last call at the bar.Â
âYeah. Figures. What kind?â
âBlack lab. We called her Daisy.â
Itâs another lifetime ago. Still living in his parentâs house, Daisy curled by his dadâs feet, her favourite spot to sleep. Television playing at a low volume, mom at the kitchen table doing her crossword, ink bleeding into the side of her hand. Itâs been a long time since Bear buried all of them. Heâs buried countless people since.Â
âWhatâcanât get another? One and done? Thatâs how everything works for you?â
Teeth raze across his skin again. Trust Rip to always cut to the quick. Finally back in his neighbourhood at least, the street empty apart from the cars parked in their driveways or along the sidewalk. Bearâs stomach rumbles something fierce now, entreating him to eat. Worse than hunger is how heâd kill for a glass of water though. Anything to settle his head.
âHavenât wanted a dog,â Bear grumbles, then clears his throat.
âYeah, you have,â Rip scoffs. Bear hears him kick a rock, sending it skidding across the asphalt.Â
âFuck off.â
Heart silicified in his chest, composed of fossilised shells and rocks and bones. It feels heavy in his chest.Â
He turns down the street leading to his house.Â
âGotta let someone else in, Bear. Girl, dogâwhatever. You canât keep this up forever or itâll kill you.â
When he turns around at the door, fishing in his pocket for his keys, the sidewalk beyond his house is empty.Â
(So a man lies down and rises not again; till the heavens are no more he will not awake or be roused out of his sleep.)
Every Friday like clockwork, Bear stops at the diner down the street for a coffee and a slice of cherry pie before heading to the bar.Â
Today is like any other. He leaves the house with only his keys and wallet and walks the long twenty minutes to the diner. Every time he fights the urge to drive, but there has to be something holding him in place. A reason not to throw it all away.Â
Itâs never completely empty when he shows up, but itâs never full either. His seat at the back of the room is open as usual, like they put up a sign before he comes ambling down the street that says Reserved for Joe Graves and then pluck it away before he opens the door. Itâd be nice if that were the case. Nice to have something just for him for a change. The thought comes with its accompanying pang of shame. Desire is a dangerous thing; anything heâs ever wanted has come at him with sharpened teeth, clamping down on his leg and ripping through the flesh. Bear trap for old Bear.Â
He slides into the booth and waits for someone to notice him. Never bothers to flag someone downâif itâs ten minutes or even half an hour before heâs served, thatâs fine by him.Â
âHiya,â a clear voice says to his right, pulling him away from staring through the blinds out the window. âCan I get you something to drink? Coffee, tea?â
The face Bear turns to meet is pleasant, smiling. Wide and untroubled. Itâs not a face he recognizes though, despite months coming to this diner and becoming familiar with the staff. If he had to guess, heâd bet she only started a few days ago, maybe a week at most. She still has the sparkle of someone who hasnât had the goodness beaten out of them yet.Â
âCoffee,â he says, his own smile strained. âAnd a slice of pie.â
âSureâwe have key lime, blueberry, appleââ
âCherry,â he interrupts, not letting her build steam. The wick in his chest burns too low for any conversation. The quick flicker of her brow makes the shame in his chest swell again. Forgive me sitting on his lips, unsaid. Iâm sorry, I donât know why I do this.Â
She nods and scurries off to the back, skirt swishing with her movements. Bear notices only because his eyes get stuck there, somewhere between the curves of her hips and the roundness of her ass. When he realizes where heâs let his mind wander, he pulls it back, flattening his lips into a hard line. Any sort of indulgence feels wrong, a taking that shouldnât be taken. He hasnât even begun to pay penance for all the damage heâs wrought.Â
Itâs only on her way back that Bear notices the small bump protruding from under her apron. His mouth goes dry. When she reaches him again, he wordlessly accepts the cup of coffee and her reassurance that the pie will be out in just a minute. For a moment, he can hardly meet her gaze, eyes locked on the gentle curve of her belly, caught off guard in a way he hasnât been in months.Â
The first thought with any clarity is, what is she doing working here? A crummy diner on a Friday night. Down the street from an even sleazier pub. His second thought is to look outside at the poorly lit stretch of road and think that this is no place for a pregnant woman to be alone. He recognizes each car in the parking lot save one, likely hers. Drove herself here with the expectation of driving herself home at the end of the night.
If it had been Lenaâwell, he never wouldâve let it be Lena, but if it had been, Bear canât imagine letting his pregnant wife drive herself home in the middle of the night. Can hardly stomach the thought.Â
Sheâs not Lena though, so he has no right.Â
Sheâs gone before he has time to say anything else, skirt swishing behind her. It catches his eye again. When he tears his gaze away for a second time, he swallows back the metallic taste of self-loathing. It curdles in his mouth. Itâs the sign telling him to stop coveting, stop looking out into the world and wondering what he can take. Itâs his hamartia, his fatal flaw; thinking himself above the reproach of God. Thinking that he can kill, fuck, curse, and stray farther and farther from the light only to find his way back in the dark.Â
The bell above the door rings when someone else comes in and Bear tenses. His shoulders only relax when two older women step in and head to a table.Â
He watches as she picks up a plate from the pass-through window and heads back towards him. When she places it in front of him, he draws a deep breath in, trying to catch more than just the aroma of fresh baked cherries.Â
âHere we goâŚone slice of cherry pie, straight out of the oven.â
âThanks, honey,â Bear rumbles, smile finally meeting his eyes.Â
âNo trouble. The guys in the back said they make it special for you. Joe, right?â
That gets him to levy her with the full weight of his attention. The thought of her asking about him. âI go by Bear.â
âOh. Alright, Bear.â She twists the word around in her mouth and seems to find it satisfying. âI think Iâve heard your name before. You wereâI mean, youâre part of Pastor Adamsâ parish, right?â
He clears his throat, cutting off the triangle point of his pie with the side of his fork. âYes, maâam.â
âMe too,â she confides, voice a low whisper. A secret between strangers. She doesnât glance around though, doesnât bother to draw out the ruse. âOr, I was, anyway. Havenât been to service in awhile. I, umâŚI remember you. From a year or so back. You and yourâumâŚyou and your wife used to always sit up at the front.â
The fork scrapes against the plate. âEx-wife.â
He catches her wince from the corner of his eye. âOh. Sorry. You justââ She doesnât have to say it. The slight dip of her eyes tells him all he has to know, and besides, itâs his own fault for still wearing the ring. Even with the paperwork signed and dated, even with Lena in another state now, starting a new life without him, the thought of taking it off makes him break out in a cold sweat.Â
âItâs notââ Bear starts before giving up. He curls his fingers into a fist on the table.Â
âSorry, I didnât mean toââ
âItâs fine. Not a big deal.â
She fidgets in the silence. Bear canât bring himself to break it or make the atmosphere less oppressive. He tenses under it, the ache in his low back worsening. These days, he always aches. Nerve damage, a disc on the verge of slipping, an old ankle injury that flares up whenever he goes running. A ghost that follows him from haunt to haunt. The ring on his finger is just another old ache.Â
âSo, uhââ he clears his throat, nodding to her belly. âYour first?âÂ
Itâs inappropriate, hardly his place to ask. Incredibly intrusive for someone heâs met for the first time, a stranger just trying to do her job and serve him coffee and pie before he goes off to drink himself half to death again at the dive bar down the road.Â
Still, he asks.Â
Only the faintest wrinkle of her nose betrays any embarrassment. âOh. Yeah. First one.â
âCongratulations.â Itâs sincere. The envy in his gut is old, but itâs a manageable pain.Â
âThanks,â she says, with a small, private smile, hand resting absently under her belly. âIâm excited. Iâm only a couple months along, but, uhâŚitâs been a journey. Just me and baby against the world, you know.â
That stops him in his tracks. Screws up the whole course of his evening because suddenly the sound of the bell over the door jingling doesnât draw his attention away. It stays fixed on the smiling girl to his right that just opened her mouth and said something unacceptable.Â
âWhereâs the dad?â he asks, far too bluntly.Â
She shrugs. âSomewhere. Didnât stick around long enough to tell me where. Itâs fine thoughâIâve got my little peanut. Thatâs all that matters.â
âYou told him and he left?âÂ
The pie sits cooling in front of Bear as a pit in his stomach opens up. Itâs a terrible, empty hole that holds truths like the fallibility of the body and the good shouldering the burdens of the world. Â
He only regrets being so direct when her lip quivers, a little motion that betrays her until she wrests control over her face again. âItâs not his fault. I donât think he wasâwellâŚyou know, it was a surprise.â
âThatâsââ he struggles to find his words, ââthatâs not right.â
Again, she shrugs. âThatâs life.â
Bear feels his eyes go hard. A coldness settles under his skin.Â
In the deep, dark gut of him, only anger lives. He spends his days questioning why God has allowed everything else in his life to fall apart, has allowed countless other people to die, but refuses, for reasons unbeknownst to him, to kill him. Heâs given him enough opportunity and enough reason.Â
The answer he circles back to time and again is the same. An eye for an eye. Divine wrath. The litany of his sins could be sung until the end of time and thereâd still be more to sing. Itâs only right that there would be consequences for him.Â
The rage that simmers in his blood now is twofold. It begins with the sharp pang of injustice, of witnessing a punishment meted out to someone innocent. The girl standing by the booth heâs shoved himself into, almost too small for a man of his size, cannot be deserving of the same punishment that heâs brought upon himself. She has never killed. The babe in her belly has never killed. The two of them should never have to meet at the point of two paths converging with the likes of someone like Bear and proceed down the same road together.Â
Then it sinks into a familiar territory. A place at the core of him where righteousness gives way to envy, as it always does. After what he's been through, the thought of someone having everything that he's always desperately wanted handed to them on a silver platter and then sending it back leaves him feeling a bit off-kilter. Not quite right.Â
âBear?â Her voice breaks the silence. When he blinks, concerned eyes stare down at him, brows furrowed. âAre you alright?â
âYeah,â he rasps, dragging a hand down his face. Shaking it off. âSorry, Iâgot lost in my head. Sorry.âÂ
âThatâs alright,â she says, again gentle in her voice and smile. âEasy place to get lost in, isnât it?â
He makes a sound in acknowledgment. Drags the silence out. Her mouth twists shy under his scrutiny.Â
âAnyway, I have a few other tables to get to, if you donât mind. Enjoy your pie. Iâll check on you in a bit.â
He eats his slice of pie in silence as she leaves, eyes following her to her next table. Rage still sizzles under his fingertips. It makes his hands shake, old nerve damage and anger problems.Â
Itâs like a gun punch to think of her all on her own. Itâs not right. For someone like him, well, itâsâdeserved, earned. Inevitable, even. Every step taking him further away from grace, from its light. No one who knows his story would think otherwise.Â
Sheâs a pretty thing though, this new waitress. Too tired, the bags under her eyes testament to that, no matter how well she hides them with makeup. Slightly puffy anyway, maybe from a lack of sleep or too many tears. His stomach aches at the thought. It must have come as a shock, the bottom of her world dropping out from under her when the babyâs father took off. Dragged away from the church not through her own doing, but the fault of another. Not her shame to bear, and yet.Â
He forces the pie down. Bites that taste like nothing,Â
Bear hears the lilt of her voice from two tables over. âRefill on your coffee, hun?âÂ
A supplicant sits in his place as he sips his coffee. The hour slips by into the next and it starts to come together in his mind. Why he's been forced down this long road alone, why God hasn't struck him down yet despite every terrible thing he's done. His eyes follow her flit across the diner, the light seeming to bend around her like a halation.Â
When Bear looks across the room at her, he thinks, Lord, do not think I am waiting patiently for your hands. Every part of me trembles with anxiety.
(O Lord, show me I can fall apart together again; but not just yet.)
He stays until the last customer has finally left, waiting for her to come back to his table with an apologetic smile. When she does, Bear hands her his empty plate, watching her take a step back when he scoots out of the booth, rising to his full height. He makes note of the way her eyes round as they follow him up. Taller than her, unsurprisingly. Surprising though, the way her bottom lip droops just the slightest bit.Â
âIs it just you closing up?â he asks, voice a tad too gruff. He clears his throat again, looking around for anyone else.Â
âWell, the chefâs cleaning up in the back, but, uhââ she looks around the diner, conspicuously empty apart from the two of them. âYeah. Just me.â
Bear gestures with his chin towards the door. âIâll wait âtill youâre done, then walk you to your car.â
âOh, Joeââ
âBear,â he corrects.
âBear,â she amends, fingers twisting together now. He relishes the sound of it on her lips. âYou donât have to. Iâm used to it, honestly. I know I just started here, but Iâve done closes before, you know.â
âIâll wait outside.â A statement now. Stubborn. Heâs always been a bit mulish, hard to shake off.Â
He can tell the second she relents, shoulders slumping. âAlright. I shouldnât be too longâŚyou can leave if you get bored though. Wonât blame you.âÂ
He fights the urge to tilt her head up by the chin to make her meet his eyes. Just barely restrains himself.Â
Leaning against a tree out front, he twirls the ring around his finger as he watches her clean up. For the first time in a long time, he slips it off.
840 notes
¡
View notes
Text
This one's for the dilf enjoyers
#barry sloane#joe bear graves#captain john price#its pride month let me be gay on main#tomorrow is nyc pride so DOUBLE reason to post this#tumnlrs gonna kill the quality but idc#gifs would be good for preserving the quality but the video. the fuuuuucking video#this man is down bad and so desperafte hes just like me fr
2K notes
¡
View notes
Text
thatâs it. thatâs the whole post.
#captain john price#barry sloane#barrypaulsloane#eddie wells#joe bear graves#joe graves#barry paul sloane#john price#call of duty#captain price#thatâs my peepaw đââď¸#peepaw price#peepaw
528 notes
¡
View notes
Text
BARRY SLOANE as Joe 'Bear' Graves in SIX (2017â2018) Episode 2.02 Ghosts
#six#six 2017#sixedit#barry sloane#barrysloaneedit#joe bear graves#joe graves#tvedit#ben.gif#gradient text#why's he always breasting boobily i can't take it anymore#also ghost mentioned âźď¸đŻđ˘đ˘đ˘
2K notes
¡
View notes
Text
me đ¤ making dark barry sloane edit
#lokisaidkneel#lokidbadguy#barry sloane x reader#barry sloane edit#barry sloane#barry sloane x you#joe graves#joe graves edit#joe bear graves#six shows#captain price x female reader#captain price x reader#captain john price#captain price#john price#john price x reader#john price x you
964 notes
¡
View notes
Text
refuses donut + snatches donut
#mind you this happens like 5 seconds in between#;; BEAR ;; self ; visage.#;; BEAR ;; isms.#;; KUROKI ;; my gifs.#joe bear graves#alex caulder#;; BEARDER ;; otp.#they don't have a ship name I think so I make the rules#it's bearder hours#pretty bear is also cute but... but I realized bearder is the right order as opposed to pretty bear
168 notes
¡
View notes
Note
Tiger I want your opinion on this please?
Tight, muscle, trim Price
or
Dad bod, little paunch, but strong muscle Price
đ¤
DAD BOD PRICE*
All day long anon, all day longâŚheâs a little bit softer round the middle than the other lads, but you know heâs 2x as strong đ
*My opinion, but all versions are good, just like all bodies are good*
#captain price#captain john price#john price#call of duty#cod mw#call of duty modern warfare#modern warfare#daddy price#dad bod#joe bear graves#call of duty price#price mw2#captain price cod#cod captain price#captian price
616 notes
¡
View notes
Text
Imagining cuddling Joe like this because Lena definitely won't
#barry sloane#joeseph bear graves#joe bear graves#joe graves six#joe graves#joe bear graves six#cod mw#cod#captain price#one of the best of barry sloane's characters#i am gnawing at the bars of my enclosure#give him a hug#cuddles#x reader#i love him#i actually hate lena's actions#he deserved better#he deserves the world
194 notes
¡
View notes