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smoakmonster · 4 years ago
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G is for Gadgets and Gimmicks {3/3}
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A/N:‌‌ ‌Well‌ ‌folks,‌ ‌the‌ ‌conclusion‌ ‌to‌ ‌my‌ ‌little‌ ‌bookstore‌ ‌AU‌ ‌is‌ ‌finally‌ ‌here!!‌ ‌Sorry‌ ‌for‌ ‌the‌ ‌extreme‌ ‌delay‌ ‌in‌ ‌finishing‌ ‌out‌ ‌this‌ ‌series.‌ ‌I‌ ‌appreciate‌ ‌all‌ ‌of‌ ‌your‌ ‌sweet‌ ‌responses‌ ‌to‌ ‌this‌ ‌fic.‌ ‌There’s‌ ‌just‌ ‌something‌ ‌so‌ ‌precious‌ ‌about‌ ‌fluffy‌ ‌Olicity,‌ ‌isn’t‌ ‌there?‌ ‌I‌ ‌hope‌ ‌you‌ ‌enjoy‌ ‌the‌ ‌wrap-up!‌ ‌Thank‌ ‌you‌ ‌again‌ ‌for‌ ‌reading!‌ 
‌Special‌ ‌thanks‌ ‌to:‌ ‌‌pleasantfanandstudent‌ ‌for‌ ‌this‌ ‌adorable‌ ‌cover‌ ‌art!‌ ‌
(Part‌ ‌1)‌ ‌(Part‌ ‌2)‌ ‌(Read‌ ‌on‌ ‌AO3)‌
***
com∙pro∙mise (v.)
3. to cause to become vulnerable or function less effectively
***
“Hey, the QR code on the door isn’t working, so do I still get the coupon?”
Oliver glances up from meticulously arranging rows of his latest mini-soufflé experiment to find a gangly teenage boy (probably a college freshman) watching him with expectation and just a hint of entitlement. 
He frowns, stifling a sigh. “The what?”
This has been happening a lot lately. Interruptions. Deep down, Oliver knows that any form of interruption is a good interruption, that droves of customers, albeit annoying ones, do not detract from his work, but rather are the purpose of it. Strangers mean business. They mean another day where he gets to make payroll and keep his archaic practice of second-hand bookselling from dying out. 
He’s not sure when or why or how his antiquated cardboard box of a business managed to draw this sudden influx of cantankerous college kids buried in cancer-causing gadgets, but he has his suspicions. Perhaps it has something to do with this QR...something? While Oliver may not understand ninety-percent of the latest digital discourse, he does know what a coupon is. And he’s pretty sure he would remember issuing said coupon. 
As though the fringes of his very thoughts have pulled her forth by a string, the oh-so-familiar staccato of heels on old wood flooring tears Oliver’s attention.
“I’ve got this,” Felicity says brightly, with a brief hand on his arm. She inserts herself into the conversation with ease, brushing past Oliver to smooth things over with the impatient customer. 
Her touch is so quick that for a second he thinks he might have imagined it. Only the warm buzzing just below the surface of skin is proof that it was real. In truth, her touch has become a more regular occurrence. This marks at least Number 10. Not that he’s keeping track. Not that his body even remembers. Every reaction is like the first time.
Simple, innocent little touches that cause his mind to stray to dangerous places. She probably has no idea the effect she has on him. 
Felicity suddenly peeks his way and shoots him a quick wink. Or more like her attempt a wink. The squinty-eyed delayed blink is so endearingly Felicity that Oliver has never had the desire to correct her. 
So maybe she has some idea.
Oliver shakes his head with a soft smile. He’s not sure when this happened, either, but somewhere along the way Felicity and he stopped exchanging the usual social greetings and formal pleasantries. Now, she just barges into his store with as much zeal and belonging as Thea. 
The conversion taking place directly in front of him quickly devolves into Domain Lookup and Cloud Networking, and a mere five sentences in Oliver finds himself on the periphery. Feeling inept and oddly foolish, as he so often does in the presence of Felicity Smoak, and yet also a bit bereft that this kid can keep up with her whirlwind trail of thoughts and he cannot, Oliver decides to venture into the nonfiction recesses of the store. The only safe haven he has left apparently. 
Oliver finds himself gravitating towards the cramped little nook nestled alongside the brick fireplace that’s been inoperable since Plymouth Rock (Thea’s words, not his). Last year on a whim, Oliver tried cleaning out the old fireplace and ended up drowning himself and the entire back of the store in soot. He spent days washing soot out his hair. Thea got a real kick out of that, dubbing the incident Gray Day.
Even now, it is not uncommon for the occasional customer to find a book sprinkled with the stuff and mistake it for dust. 
The conversation up front grows muffled, lending a calm stillness to this part of the store. Hardly anyone ever ventures back here, partly because the aisles are more narrow and the lighting is poor, and partly because according to Rene it smells like a murder happened here. As if the kid knows what a murder smells like. 
Personally, Oliver kind of likes the pine and leather aroma. It reminds him of simpler times, when Dad and he would go camping in the woods every summer. Oliver chuckles, remembering what a poor sport he could be and how patiently Dad taught him how to start a fire and set up a tent. He’d give anything to get more days like that with his father. More days at all, really.
What would it be like to get away like that again? Even just for a weekend? To go somewhere off-grid, no cell reception, no emails, no internet or WiFi or QR Codes or...
A flash of yellow binding catches his eye, and Oliver spots a book haphazardly stuffed on the third shelf. Carefully, he yanks the book out and reads the cover. Beginning Programming for Dummies. 
A huff escapes him. It seems he can’t get away fast enough. 
Curiosity getting the better of him, Oliver flips through the book, hopelessly searching, but not really wanting anything to stick. Maybe something in here will remind him of Felicity. Maybe if he can find even one word embedded in all these hieroglyphics, he’ll be able to make more sense of her world and actually be able to communicate with her about the things that are important to her. 
But with every turn of the page, every heading and diagram just serves to confuse him all the more. With a frustrated groan, Oliver slams the book shut and attempts to shove it back into its tight crevice; at this point, he couldn’t care less if the book’s misshelved. 
“Hey, what did that book ever do to you?”
Oliver stills. Her voice both jars and soothes him. 
Feeling strangely guilty, he turns around but has trouble meeting her gaze, stuffing his hands into his pockets, as though he’s been caught cutting up in Mrs. Hannoven’s fourth grade class again. “Sorry,” he mumbles. 
Felicity tips her head, wearing that adorably confused pout of hers. “I’m not sure I’m the one who needs you to apologize.” 
“Oh. Um…” Does she seriously want him to apologize to a book?
“What I mean is…” She takes several steps closer to him and has the decency of a saint to wait until he’s looking her in the eye before she continues. “Oliver, I’m sorry.”
“What?” What on earth could she possibly have to be sorry for? 
“I shouldn’t have pushed for the QR codes. I knew it was too soon, but I just got so excited after all of my contacts agreed to help sponsor your website. And then, during a webinar last Thursday there was this study that said QR codes can help increase foot traffic by upwards of 30%. And I thought, ‘Hey, that seems like it could work for my friend Oliver’—I hope it’s not too presumptuous that I called you my friend. We are friends, right? Of course we’re friends, what else would we be? It’s not like we’re exactly colleagues or anything—”
“Felicity.” He rests his hands on her shoulders, effectively halting her ramble, a tried and true tact. And if she happens to shift a bit closer to him as a result, well, who is he to stop her?
He likes this about them. That in this one, predictable way he can give her the same sense of quiet security she gives him.  
“Yes, we are friends,” he says, giving her a slight smile, the finality of the word friends sinking into his gut. After all, it’s like she said. What else could they be? She is so many leagues out of his league. He's t-ball, and she's the Seattle Mariners. He doesn’t even own a digital watch, much less a smart watch. What could she possibly want with a guy like him?
Clearing his throat, Oliver moves on, “And I don’t know if I’ve said this to you yet, but...thank you. I really do appreciate everything you’ve done to help me out here.”
“Really?” That tentative, searching look makes him want to pull her close and wrap her up in his arms. She only wears that look when she’s seeking approval. She wears it a lot around him. Though why she’s still aching for his approval is beyond him. She’s had his approval and more since that first rainy Sunday. 
“Yeah. Although I do have to ask…”
Felicity raises her eyebrows. 
“When did I start offering coupons?”
“Oh. Um...since last week?”
“Uh-huh,” he nods, not wanting to cave just yet but secretly pleased. It’s a smart ploy, even if it was never part of his original plan. So much of their relationship and business schemes are way outside the bounds of his original plans. And he’s a better person for it. 
Looking a little too pleased with herself, Felicity reaches into her pocket, pulls out a slip of memo pad paper, and hands it to him.
“What’s this?”
“It’s a list of all the computer science books you need to stock up on before the Starling University summer quarter starts up. There’s an Advanced Algorithms course that’s only offered once a year, and I have it on good authority that the college bookstore never carries enough textbooks. And let’s be honest, your computer science section is lacking. Pretty much all of your STEM material, actually.”
Oliver huffs a laugh. “What are you, my sales rep?”
“I could be.” She gives him a knowing look, telling him he can either waste time arguing with her about this or just accept the inevitable. 
And after altering all the basic mechanics of his store, what are a few additional books really going to do? 
“In the meantime, let’s see this little guy back to his proper home.” Felicity proceeds to extricate his paperback nemesis and saunter further down the narrow aisle, looking for the right Dewey Decimal destination. 
“I also think we should advertise at the grad school,” she calls over her shoulder.
“We?” he replies, following her down the aisle.
“Yeah, bring in some study groups. Do you know there is a perfectly good History and English Literature study hall that meets at the Starbucks around the corner, when they could be meeting here?”
“No. No. I don’t do study groups.” He’s caved on a lot of things, but there has to be a line somewhere. And so help him, if this is the hill he has to die on to preserve even one ounce of dignity, then so be it. 
“Since when?”
“Since always. Felicity, they’re a bunch of toddlers who leave scone crumbs all over the floor and never actually buy any books.”
Felicity just chuckles at him, and if he were in a better mood he might actually be able to enjoy the sweet sound. “Oliver, stop being such a grumpy old man.” 
“No, Felicity, I think—”
She’s already moving up the ladder before he can stop her. The rickety, unstable pile of firewood that technically qualifies as a ladder he’s been harassing Rene about pitching for months. Honestly, he’d all but forgotten it was still tucked away back here. 
While she makes her way up the rungs, Oliver latches onto the base, holding the ladder firmly in place. With an excruciating amount of restraint that he barely even knew he had in him, Oliver watches her heels lift up and settle on each rung, all the while discreetly avoiding a glance at her pencil skirt. Not even a peek.
The ladder shakes as Felicity engages in a wrestling match with the top shelf. “It. Won’t. Go. In,” she says through gritted teeth. Finally, on the third push, Felicity lets out a strong exhale of relief. After wiping her hands, she makes her descent. 
Like a hawk following its prey, Oliver keeps his gaze glued to her feet. Even so, he’s still not quite prepared when one of those black t-straps slips, throwing her off balance and tumbling straight into his arms. 
“Oliver!”
He catches her easily, pulling her soft frame snuggly against him. Felicity wastes no time in wrapping her arms tightly around his neck. “Hey, I gotcha. I gotcha.” 
Her head plops against his shoulder, her warm, rapid breaths tickling his neck. He tightens his own grip around her back and under her knees, as if to reassure himself that she’s alright. 
“You okay?” he finally asks.
Her only answer is to press her cheek more deeply into his shirt, her soft hair nuzzling against his jaw. He catches a faint whiff of her strawberry shortcake shampoo.  
“My hero,” she breathes without a trace of humor. 
I’m no hero, he wants to say. It’s his gut reaction any time a single mom commends him for his “Cool Books” section that finally got her teenage son to try a book of his own accord. As though selling books can compare with saving lives every day. His greatest risk comes in the form of avoiding papercuts. And rescuing toppling patrons apparently. 
Selfishly, he’s currently enjoying the feel of Felicity in his arms a little too much to be considered a hero. Can she feel his own racing heartbeat beneath her ear? 
He clears his throat but fails to put any real distance between them without releasing her. He’s not ready for that just yet. He’ll prolong the sweet agony for as long as physically possible. 
“Well, this is a bit compromising,” he admits. 
“Compromising?” She snickers, lifting her head, a spark of mirth shining behind her eyes that wasn’t there before. “What are you, a Jane Austen character?”
“Blame Thea. She made me read them. It was in our original founders’ agreement. I have the contract to prove it.”
If you’re going to own a bookstore, Ollie, then you have to know who Mr. Darcy is. It’s a requirement. Plus, it’s catnip for women. Nothing gets girls more excited than if you acknowledge the perfection of Jane Austen protagonists.
That knowledge has never served him until this moment. Until Felicity.
He still hasn’t liberated her, and she seems in no hurry to be free of him. His ego far too eagerly takes note of that. 
“Are you making an actual joke, Mr. Queen?” Her smile is contagious. “You know, if this were a novel, this would be the part where we would um…” She flushes, her gaze suddenly faltering to his mouth. 
His heart jumps to his throat, pounding with misguided hope. While he’s not an avid reader, despite his self-appointed line of work, he can read between the lines now. And he knows Felicity well enough to know that she only ever blushes over accidental innuendos.
She can’t really mean it. Can she?
“Where what?” he asks gruffly, not trusting himself to crave more than she is ready to give him, yet aching for a way to turn fiction into a reality, to give Felicity Smoak her happy ending. And maybe find his own in the process. 
She doesn’t pull away. She doesn’t correct her misstep. She just watches him with a strange and quiet expectancy. 
Oliver gently shifts his hold, bringing her a bit closer, leaning down to meet her. The tip of his nose brushes against hers, and when she lingers there with him, it’s all the invitation he needs…
“Hey, boss, we got a spill behind the counter!”
Felicity starts in his arms, and Oliver very nearly groans. Of all the times for Rene to interrupt him. The spill is probably minor. How many times does he need to remind his employees that if you make a mess, you should just clean it up yourself?
“Ollie?” calls Thea. Her voice comes from far too nearby for his comfort. It must be a real pickle if Rene’s managed to rope his sister into the ordeal. 
Reluctantly, Oliver loosens his grip on Felicity, and she slides right out of his arms with a graceful plop, returning their difference in height to its usual status. The top of her head aligning with the level of his heart. 
“I uh…” His entire vocabulary seems to have vacated his brain at present, leaving him feeling ten times more abashed than he was ten minutes ago. 
Felicity tucks a golden strand behind her ear, still dodging his regard with robust persistence. “Yeah, you should go...take care of that…”
He nods once, not that she notices. As he slowly turns to walk away, she stops him with a simple question. 
“Same time tomorrow?”
He really should not put much stock in the hope her voice carries. But he can’t seem to stifle the grin spreading over his face when he glances back over his shoulder. “Same time tomorrow.”
***
Thea pulls out a small chalkboard from under the counter, erases the number ‘1’ with her fist, and then writes a ‘2’ in its place. The sign now reads “12 Days Since Last Attempt To Date.”
Scowling, Oliver is almost too afraid to ask. “Thea...what is that?”
His sprite of a sister proudly places a hand on her hip. “This, dear brother, is a record of the number of days since you last tried asking Felicity out on a date.”
“What?” A flicker of panic rushes through him. What does she know? She can’t know about the almost-kiss. Besides, that wasn’t twelve days ago. Again, not that he’s keeping track. He opts for being as evasive as possible. “And when was the last time I supposedly did this?”
“That day you bought Big Belly Burger for the entire staff as a thank you for staying late to reorganize the science section. You gave Felicity the burger with extra pickles that mysteriously ended up in the bag—even though, last I checked, she does not work here.”
She gives him that pointed look, the one she usually wears when she’s guarding a straight. They really need to have a discussion about the merits of a refined poker face. 
“That wasn’t a date, Speedy.”
“Hence the word attempt.”
Oliver shakes his head, returning his focus to the monotonous task of counting the till. Where was he again? Oh yeah, the fives. Five, ten, fifteen, twenty, twenty-five…
Once he’s got that row tallied, he finally tells Thea, “Felicity and I...we’re just friends.” The words burn his throat. Felicity might think of him as nothing more than a chum, but after that near-kiss nestled behind the dusty stacks, Oliver has ceased lying to himself about his feelings, resigned to this new, unrequited reality. 
“Sure.” He can feel her eye roll. “Friends who just happen to spend all of their free time together and buy each other beverages and have inside jokes—”
His head snaps up. “We don’t have any inside jokes.”
“Really? Then how do you explain this?” Thea holds up the cassette player tape dispenser Felicity got him as a gag gift. He still has no idea where she stumbled upon the trinket. Using her internet prowess no doubt. 
Oliver snatches it out of Thea’s hands while purposefully searching for anything in need of repair, as if to justify its very existence. “Our old tape dispenser broke.” 
“Uh-huh. And what about that little emoji keychain you bought her? The one with the glasses on it?”
Oliver shrugs. “It just...reminded me of her, that’s all. It didn’t mean anything.”
Thea is clearly ready to keep arguing, but Rene wanders over with a pastry order for one of the offices across the street. For once in his life, Oliver is grateful for Rene’s keen ability to interfere with his private conversations and begins boxing up the order. His heart does a strange flip when he recognizes the usual list. 
Unfortunately, Thea remains undeterred. “Hey, Felicity works there, right? I’m sure you could swing by for a quick visit.”
“Thea.”
“Don’t ‘Thea’ me. This is a good idea! Just tell her you were in the building and wanted to see if she’s available to go out to dinner this weekend. Easy.” 
“I work on the weekends. You know that.”
“And you could schedule yourself some time off once in a while. You are the boss. Plus, you’ve built this place so that even Rene can practically run it with his eyes closed.”
Both Rene and Oliver shoot her a look. 
“Alright, I said practically.”
Rene grunts his agreement, stuffing the to-go box to the brim with chocolate chip muffins. “You know, she’s got a point. You could think of this delivery as a trial run. You bring the order across the street, while Thea and I monitor the store. If all goes well, then you might feel comfortable enough to take a more extended break in the future.” 
“You’re just trying to spend more alone time with my sister, aren’t you?”
Rene smiles, guilty as charged. “There’s no reason why we can’t both be winners here.”
Oliver sighs. “Thea?”
Thea chuckles, crossing her arms. “Don’t worry, Ollie, I can handle him.”
Still he hesitates, running his thumb back and forth over the box, the box he’s supposed to bring to her workplace. He has so much more riding on this than a mismanaged store in his absence.
“I’ll be back in twenty minutes. Do not burn down the store while I’m gone.”
***
“Ms. Smoak?”
“One second, Curtis. This alphanumeric algorithm isn’t going to crack itself.” Huddled in front of the monitor and nibbling on the remnants of a Twizzler, Felicity has been doing the digital tango for the last hour. 
“Well, I hope you get cracking in the next ten minutes, because Coffee and Coding is about to start.” 
“We have Coffee and Coding on Wednesdays,” she dismisses without tearing her gaze from the screen. 
“It is Wednesday,” says Curtis.
Felicity darts a glance at her IT Director, who just lifts his eyebrows in confirmation. Flustered, she pushes up her glasses. “But who ordered the pastries?”
“I did,” Curtis admits. “Don’t worry, I didn’t forget to call your favorite little coffee shop around the corner. Or across the street in this case. Can you believe they still don’t have online ordering?”
A pang of disappointment flutters through her. While it’s not much, Felicity has come to treasure her little Wednesday morning ritual, an easy excuse in her routine to spend more time with Oliver. 
Still, it’s not like they don’t see each other an ample amount of time during the week anyway. Though after The Incident a few days ago, things between them have been different, more uncertain than usual. He hasn’t been avoiding her exactly; he just seems a bit...distant. Like he’s carrying a secret he doesn’t know how to share yet. Takes one to know one. The mystery has been driving her crazy. 
She’s also been racking her brain for the perfect scenario to recreate that heated moment they shared after her Humpty Dumpty debacle. But the trouble is...as soon as she hints at the depth of her feelings, she’s going to have to tell him everything. 
Hey Oliver, so you know how you assumed that I was an Executive Assistant, and I never corrected you? Well, the thing is I’m actually more like the CEO of a product-pushing conglomerate that is slowly encroaching on everything you know and love. Do you want to go out sometime?
Ugh. A stealthy flirter she is not.
So maybe today’s mishap is for the best. A chance for her to rally some gumption and figure out how to phrase her affections while still salvaging their fledgling friendship. 
The workshop will likely provide plenty of opportunity to strategize. Denise tends to drone on and on about the benefits of heapsort every time it’s her turn to talk, so the redundant lecture will afford Felicity added time to do some real romantic brainstorming. 
Sufficiently mollified, Felicity pops up out of her chair and strolls towards the conference room. 
“The food just arrived,” says Jerry as soon as she’s outside her office. 
She stumbles to a halt, blinking at her executive assistant. He says it so casually, as though her entire, perfectly orchestrated little enterprise isn’t coming crumbling down around her by one bakery blunder. 
“What? Now? Here?” She’s pretty sure she’s having a stroke. Although her ability to remain upright negates that possibility. But what good is logic at a time like this? 
Of all the truth-telling scenarios she had running through her head, this was not one of them.  
This is why she never asked for delivery! Why she personally has placed and picked up every order.
Okay, no need to panic. This is no different than any of the other work-related conflicts she has resolved in the past. Of course, those were mostly software issues, but surely the skills are transferable. She’ll just have to insist that Rene not breathe a word of this to Oliver until she has a chance to talk to him later. This afternoon, in fact. She can come up with an adequate confession by then. 
That cursory idea gets zapped the moment she turns the corner and finds the apropos man of the hour waiting in the hallway. Oh frack. 
Every blessed thought evaporates straight out of her skull. Only one person on the planet has this effect on her. 
As though it’s been days and not mere hours since she’s seen him last, hungrily her eyes feast on every part of him, from his golden-brown hair with little flecks of gray that he likes to pretend aren’t there, to those broad shoulders and sturdy arms beneath that favored blue henley. She remembers far too well what it’s like being wrapped up in those arms, all snug and safe and wonderful.
Then she starts to catalog his overall uneasy demeanor, hands stuffed into his pockets, shoulders rigid with discomfort. 
Guilt pricks her heart. He looks a little lost. 
She tries to observe her office through his eyes. Surrounded by glass walls, open and exposed. Screens scrolling with tech lingo. Not a single paper product in sight or dusty nook to duck behind. Everything is quite literally the opposite of his usual environment. And it has never been more apparent how contrary their lives are. 
All this time, she’s been invading his world and never once has he stepped into hers. Because she wouldn’t invite him. Not until she was ready. She’s driven them to this precipice. Her little lie is the grain of sand slowly corrupting the motherboard, eroding their communication from the inside out. Some friend she is. 
And yet, him braving the unknown and everything he opposes just to come and see her has to mean something, right? 
“Should we wait for you?” asks Curtis.
Felicity shakes her head, keeping her focus on Oliver. “I’m not going to make the meeting.”
“Well in that case, can I have your muffin? Because you know I’ve been working out in the mornings, and my tummy is a rumblin’—”
“Curtis!”
“Okay. Okay.”
Footsteps retreat into the conference room, until at last the door closes, encasing them in peaceful silence. 
Swallowing, Felicity hedges closer to him, the clank of her heels echoing down the long hallway. “Hi,” she says when she’s standing just a foot away from him.
“Hi.” He’s looking at her in that soft, affable way of his, making her heart short-circuit. 
She has a masters degree in cyber security, and she’s taken many a profit-hungry board member to task, so why can’t she seem to come up with a better conversation starter than ‘hi’ ?
But Oliver, her sweet friend, saves her from her own awkward web of absurdity. “So...” he begins, nodding to the wall in between the elevators. The wall covered in bold, betraying letters Smoak Technologies. 
Oh crap on a cracker. He knows. Already. Duh, Felicity, he walked into your building, you know this. The man can read. What did you expect? 
Felicity slams her eyes shut and blurts, “I can explain.”
“You don’t have to explain.”
“I know it was wrong. And I hope you know that I would never want to take advantage of your friendship, and that my lying to you has nothing to do with you and everything to do with me. I was afraid that if you knew the truth that I would lose you—”
“Felicity, hey.” Oliver’s hands, solid and steady, grip her shoulders. She has no right to draw from his comforting warmth. “You’re not going to lose me.”
She licks her lips, daring to meet his gaze again. She’s startled to find those bright blue eyes looking back at her full of sympathy, absent of judgment. “Are you sure? Because I’m pretty sure I’ve broken every cardinal rule in the friendship book.”
His face softens. “I don’t care that you lied to me. I don’t. I care...that somehow I made you feel like you had to.” He sighs, his voice deepening to a near whisper. “Why didn’t you just tell me?”
Felicity fights a wince and loses. “Because I...I kind of liked not being a CEO for a few minutes a day? It was nice. Freeing. And I didn’t know how you would react to the fact that basically my entire livelihood stands for everything you hate—”
“I never said I hated it.”
Felicity tilts her head playfully. “No, you just loathe the mere suggestion of technological advancement.”  
Oliver chuckles. “Fair enough.”
“So you’re not mad?” 
As he shakes his head, relief and elation spill through her. 
Not for the first time, Felicity is grateful that her charming literary companion is truly a good person. And not just the kind of good where he’s friendly toward impatient customers or gracious with incompetent employees—although, he is that, too. But his integrity runs so much deeper; it’s the core of who he is. Modest and generous. Forgiving to a fault. 
Oliver fundamentally embodies all that her corporate associates do not. Is it any wonder she was so drawn to him from the very beginning? 
She may have ruined her chances for anything more than friendship to develop between them, but as long as he remains in her life, she’ll be happy. She can settle for cordial camaraderie. Besides, it won’t feel like settling with him. Not really. Not completely. At least, she’ll convince herself of that sooner or later. 
Oliver withdraws his hands, leaving an alarming coolness tingling on her arms. Instantly she misses his touch. 
She watches in puzzled silence as Oliver shifts his weight, clears his throat, and suddenly evades her look. He’s nervous, she realizes. How did she not notice sooner?
Because you’ve been a little too preoccupied with yourself, Felicity, that’s how. 
“Listen, Felicity…I came by because I was in the neighborhood. But I guess I’m always in the neighborhood. You don’t need to be told that.” 
Felicity bites her bottom lip to hold back a smile. He’s awfully cute when he’s flustered.
“I know I’m just an obsolete bookstore owner, with no degree, and you…” He glances around the hallway, as though the point he’s trying to make is engraved on the walls somewhere. 
“And I what?” she prompts, a sudden burst of panic flaring in her chest, more terrified than anything that he’s never going to finish that sentence.
Oliver studies the screens for a long time, his gaze finally coming to rest back on her, and what she sees there makes her want to hold on to him and never let go. “You’re going to change the world,” he says. “You’ve already changed mine. For the better, I might add. But, I don’t know, maybe our worlds are just too different.”
“But I don’t care about the differences, and I thought you didn’t either.”
“I don’t!”
Everyone in the conference room can probably hear their conversation by now, but that is a low priority issue. All she cares about is Oliver. 
“Okay, so then what are we arguing about?”
“Felicity…you should be with someone who deserves you, someone who won’t hold you back.”
“That’s what you came up here to tell me? Oliver, what I deserve is up to me.” 
He dodges her look again, and she can feel him retreating, feel the invisible barrier he’s erected between them. 
Not one to forfeit so easily, Felicity calmly sidles up to him and lays a bold hand on his chest, right over his heart. “Please, Oliver,” she whispers. “Ask me what you really came here for. Whatever it is, I’ll say yes.”
“Promise?” 
Her inability to read his face scares her more than anything. “Promise.”
He sighs, and an anxiously long time passes before he says, “Felicity, would you like to go camping?”
She starts. “What? You want to drag me out into the woods with your sister—”
“Thea will not be there.” 
“Oh.” Nibbling on the inside of her cheek, Felicity processes this information before it dawns on her. “Oh.”
Oliver nods faintly, as though he can hear the flurry of questions her heart is suddenly screaming. 
“Are you asking me out on a date? Like an actual date? Like a date...date?”
“I mean, the implication with me standing here…” He bobs his head around, like he can’t really decide whether to confirm or deny that. She’s really put the poor guy through the ringer today. 
“Or we could go hiking,” he suggests with a shrug. 
“Hiking?”
“Yeah, there’s a great trail about an hour north of the city. My dad and I used to go there all the time. There are waterfalls and plenty of wildlife.  I should warn you, though, that it’s near impossible to send or receive phone calls in our spot.” 
He wants to take her to his special haunt? Her heart twists with bittersweet excitement. She deceives him, and he rewards her by sharing yet another coveted piece of his history. 
How can this man think he’s not worthy of her? If anything, their situation is exactly reversed. What are gadgets and gizmos compared to goodwill and grandeur? 
With more boldness than she thought herself capable of, Felicity meticulously wraps her arms around Oliver’s waist, leaning her head way back to keep eye contact with him. “Well, Mr. Queen, that sounds perfect. So...am I forgiven?” she whispers, pinching her lips together.
His own lips twitch as he follows her movements and pulls her close. “Always.” 
***
“I like you like this,” Felicity tells him, following his lead down the winding, rocky trail, her hand snuggly wrapped around his. 
“Like what?”
“I don’t know, sort of Man Versus Wild.”
He laughs, a loud, rich melody that vibrates through the core of her being. 
She’ll admit she was curious to see what side of Oliver the great outdoors would bring forth, and reality did not disappoint. Out here, away from the chaotic noise and hustle and bustle, he seems so...free. Happy. Like he’s really alive for the first time. And she feels privileged that she’s the one he chose to let so close to him.
The perks of the great outdoors have surprised her, too. Not once has she missed the ding of her cell phone. 
They stop for a break on a small cliff ridge (small according to Oliver, anyway) overlooking a waterfall and a trickling stream. The views today have been glorious. All of the views, she thinks, sneaking a peek at the man beside her. 
Though he doesn’t turn, he squeezes her hand once, and there’s a slight flicker at the corner of his lips, acknowledging that he can feel her ogling him unabashedly. She gets to do that kind of thing now, though. 
“I’m thinking of closing the bookstore,” he admits, causing her to trip over a branch in shock. His grip steadies her, and then he motions towards a large rock. Once they’re sitting beside each other, he continues. “I’ll turn the business into a full-time bakery and cafe. It’s something I probably should’ve done a long time ago. You were right.” He glances her way, wearing a reluctant half-smile. 
Reeling, all Felicity can say is, “Are you sure?”
“I’m sure. You were right about the QR codes, too.” He leans in conspiratorially. “Our weekly customer traffic is up 25%, and the sales reflect that the majority of those purchases are from the coffeeshop. Just seems like the smartest decision.”
“But Oliver, don’t you love the bookshop side of things? Helping people find their next go-to read?” 
He shrugs. “Sure. But I love staying in business more.”
Felicity doesn’t understand it, but the thought of never smelling second-hand pages or stumbling over disarrayed book stacks sends a pang of longing through her. “Well, it sounds like you’ve given this a lot of thought.”
“I have,” he confirms. 
“But will it make you happy?”
He hesitates. “It’ll give me some stability to put Thea through college. That’ll make me happy.”
He’s so selfless, it breaks her heart a little every time she beholds that soft underbelly of his gentle nature. She wonders what other secret dreams he’s sacrificed over the years to provide for his sister and his employees. And maybe even for her. If she gets her wish, she plans to return the favor and help make his tucked-away dreams come true. First she has to discover what they are.
Shuffling closer, Felicity rests her head on his shoulder. “You know, I hate to break this to you, but bakeries are just as liable to collapse as bookstores. You can never fully predict the market, even in the most stable of economies.”
“I need information about what I don’t know,” he says in her ear. 
She perks up. “What about a compromise?”
“Compromise?”
“Yeah, it’s where two parties agree on a mutually desirable outcome.”
He chuckles, the hearty sound warming her down to her toes. “I know what a compromise is, Felicity. What did you have in mind?”
“Well, you’ll be happy to hear that I have converted the entire IT department over to the ways of Verdant-roasted coffee. We could make you the official sponsor of our weekly Coffee and Coding. Think of all the free advertising that will bring.”
“I don’t want any handouts, Felicity.”
“It’s not a handout if it’s good business,” she argues, pleased to see him giving it some genuine consideration. After a long time of companionable silence and sharing a water bottle, she says, “And if all else fails, there’s always the kindle route.”
She giggles at the dismissive look he shoots her before growing serious again. “Don’t give up, Oliver. Your little bookstore...it’s changed my life. You opened up my heart to ideas and worlds that I didn’t even know were possible.”
Pulse hammering in her throat, she wonders if he catches her accidental revelation, that the depth of her urgency has far less to do with treasured paperbacks than it does her utter dependency on him. 
“A compromise. It could work.” He nods to himself. “Speaking of…” He slips his hand into his back pocket. 
“What are you doing?”
Oliver pulls out a phone. A shiny, non-retrograde phone. 
Felicity gasps. “Since when do you have a smartphone?”
“Thea got it for me after she spilt a latte on my old phone. I’m choosing to believe it was an accident.”
“That is very sensible of you.”
“We could take a photo,” he suggests.
“You mean with the front-facing camera? That, my friend, is called a Selfie.”
He scowls. “I don’t think I’m ready to say that word. Baby steps.” After an arduously humorous struggle, with Felicity patiently helping him navigate all the buttons, Oliver finally manages to snap a photo or two or twelve. 
While she’s fairly certain the majority of the photos turn out blurry, they take an unnatural amount of fun in making ridiculous faces at the camera anyway. “Okay, you have to delete that one.” She points to a photo that paints her in a particularly unattractive light. 
Oliver studies the picture fondly. “Can’t. I don’t know how.”
“Here, then let me.” 
He holds the phone out of her reach. “Oh, so you can delete all of them?”
“Not all of them, just the ones that make me look bad.”
“Felicity…” he says her name as if it explains everything. And suddenly he’s not laughing anymore, though his eyes still carry a spark of secret amusement. “Let me have this keepsake.”
Keepsake. Such an old-fashioned word from this unconventional man. If Oliver were a book, he would be just like those scuffed up, intimidating volumes he’s always trying to convince novice readers to sample. Judged for his strange and rough exterior, yet guarding a mysterious sweetness and—more than he will admit—gooey epicenter. You just have to crack the spine and ruffle a few pages to get there. 
“Felicity…” Just the way he says her name makes her feel like she could do anything so long as he’s with her. 
He leans in just enough to let her know his intent, but stops halfway, leaving the final choice to her. What a gentleman he is. And like all the great heroines, Felicity doesn’t let him do all the work. She meets his kiss eagerly, pouring out in little touches what they’re both unsure to say out loud at this early stage.
But she knows it. Deep down in her bones, she knows she loves him. And she can feel his love in the way he responds. 
What a risk she’s taken, giving her heart to the most anti-technology human on planet earth. She has a feeling the dividends will be well worth it. 
***
Tag Team: @angelalafan / @austencello / @dust2dust34 / @emeraldoliverqueen​ / @hope-for-olicity​ / @mel-loves-all​ / @memcjo​ / @releaseurinhibitions​ / @scu11y22​ / @smoakqueenz​
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dust2dust34 · 5 years ago
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76, 80, 83
“Hi.”
Oliver Queen didn’t get the chance to look up before someone slammed into the seat next to him. They - she - hit it was so much force her chair slid into his as she nearly knocked the table over. Oliver slapped his hands on the essays he was grading, eyebrows hitting his hairline as he turned to her with a hard, “What the hell are you doing-”
He froze.
She was a burst of color - bright red jacket, long gold hair up in a high ponytail, glasses, deep fuchsia lipstick, and the glimpse of a grey and yellow dress underneath a purple scarf.
There was something so familiar about her.
“I need you to pretend we’re dating.”
Her voice, he thought, just as a wave of flowery perfume and coconut hit his nose. A memory surfaced in the far recesses of his mind, but when he went to grasp it, it flitted away.
And then the words hit him.
“Excuse me?”
“Please play along,” she said in a rush, scooting even closer until their hips were glued. “I know this is insane, but I have my high school reunion tonight and someone just walked in who I sort of lied to. It would’ve been fine, except my friend Curtis bailed on me, so I don’t have anyone pretending to be my real boyfriend, which makes my lie a real lie. There’s nothing wrong with being single, damn it, but when Laurel freaking Lance asks if you’re alone in that way she asks people things, you lie. But now I’m literally alone. Except for you. A random man who happened to be sitting in this coffee shop, and oh god, why did she have to come into this coffee shop, why…”
She finally looked up at him.
Her mouth dropped as his heart slammed into the floor.
“Felicity,” he breathed. 
Gone was the pitch-black hair streaked with purple, the rings in her eyebrows and nose, the dark eyeliner and black lipstick, and in their place was actual sunshine. The flowery thought made him pause, but not because it didn’t fit. It did. Perfectly. She was light incarnate. But then she always had been, ever since she’d tutored him. A sophomore guiding a senior through nearly every subject - him to graduate, her to graduate early and go off to do amazing things at MIT. 
He shook his head in amazement. “You’re here.”
“And you’re huge,” she blurted. “I mean, not huge-huge, but huge. As in muscles. You have… so many muscles, and I can’t… stop, I’m… You’re… Oliver.”
He smiled. “Hi.”
The moment stretched out until movement behind her caught his periphery. 
He knew without having to look who it was.
“You need a boyfriend, right?” he whispered.
She started, a flush coloring her skin. “I- Yeah.”
“How can you think I’m anything but hopelessly in love with you?” he asked, raising his voice. The words startled him more than her, he was pretty sure, even as her eyes popped wide. Those beautiful blue eyes with green bursts and gold specks. Oliver cupped her cheek and tried to ignore his thundering heart and shaking fingers as her breath caught. “It’s always been you.”
He leaned in. Not all the way, not like this. But the illusion was enough for the woman standing a couple feet behind them.
Felicity closed the gap and pressed her lips to his.
Oliver gasped, electricity zapping through him. The world around them faded. Hints of blackberries and coffee and something was uniquely her lingered on her lips. Heaven. He barely tempered a groan as he slid his hand under her ponytail and kissed her back.
When they pulled apart, she looked as dazed as he felt, her glasses fogged.
“Oh,” she said softly, and he stared into her, thinking the same exact thing.
It took a long time to realize Laurel had moved to the table and now stood over them, staring incredulously, eyes darting between them.
Without a word, she left the coffee shop.
“I hope the two of you aren’t still dating,” Felicity whispered.
Oliver huffed. “No. Definitely not.”
“Oh. Good. Well, that would’ve made me asking if you’re going to the reunion tonight a little awkward then. Especially because she now thinks that you and I are… that you’re my… mine. That you’re mine. My boyfriend. Even though you’re not.”
“I could be.” Off her look, he added, “If you want. The fake kind. Obviously. I’m not… suggesting-”
“I’m pretty sure I already have dibs on sentence fragments.”
He huffed. “Felicity, if you’ll have me, I would be honored to be your fake boyfriend tonight.”
“I’d love you. To. I’d love to have you. Take you. Wow. Yes. I would love that.”
“Good.” Oliver grinned. “It’s a date then.” 
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felicityollies · 5 years ago
Text
The Green Arrow vs Pink Glitter
@eloquence-of-felicities said: How about this for a prompt? Felicity talking to Oliver. “There is a first time for everything, Oliver.”
A/N: My immediate thought was sexy times, but then i was like NO BE MORE CREATIVE. So, if you were expecting sexy times I apologize.
**
“I never even let Thea do this.”
“Well, there’s a first time for everything, Oliver.” Felicity didn’t bother to cover up the fact she was giggling.
He shook his head. Oliver wasn’t annoyed or upset. Actually, he was highly amused. His rough and tumble little girl had decided had decided the knights of the round table needed to go to the salon before they could have their meeting. That included his eighteen-year-old son, William.
“My boyfriend is never going to let me live this down,” William muttered as the curly-haired blond four year old polished his nails with blue glitter.
She slathered it all over his nails, getting it on his skin, but William didn’t complain. “Sir William is almost ready,” she said matter-of-factly.
Lady Mommy, Sir Todd, Lady Helen, Sir Buzz Lightyear, and Sir Woody were already sitting at the coffee table waiting for them. Oliver knew that today’s meeting included events from the last dragon slaying and a discussion on who stole the last cookie from the cookie jar; all eyes were on Sir Todd. That rascally teddy bear.
When Mia was through with William and had him blowing on his nails, she moved toward Oliver. “Daddy,” she said, looking up at him with her mother’s bright blue eyes.
“Yes, Lady Mia.”
“Fingers, please.”
He held out his hands for her. She watched her eye his nails and rub her chin as if she were deep in thought.
“Pink,” she said.
“Pink is a good color.” He nodded.
She reached for her tiny bottle of pink glitter and shook it. Mia began to apply the glitter in the same slathering motion she had done to William. He watched her and glanced to his son, taking a picture for his boyfriend. His gaze flicked to his wife. He smiled and she leaned down to kiss his cheek. It was these moments with his family that made him grateful he was alive. He loved them more than anything in the world and he wouldn’t trade this life for anything. Pink glitter and all.
**
Tags: @memcjo @deathandindignitybedamned @almondblossomme @alexiablackbriar13 @blackcanarydinah @mickeysjones
I’m doing this from my iPad so I’m only tagging a few people, sorry!
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bisexualfelicity · 5 years ago
Text
No Other Version of Me - Chapter Two
Amalia Queen was once said to be so important that the universe made sure she happened. Yes, it was her mom who said that but it still counts. Now, she's an adult and struggles to be worthy of such sentence. She doesn't want to be a vigilante and make so many sacrifices like the rest of her family, but it doesn't mean she doesn't want to save the world.
Sequel to "Five Lives"
Next Gen, not canon compliant.
Previous chapters on AO3
“I think you got the wrong place, the bunker is on the other side of town,” Amalia hates how bitter she sounds, but can’t help it.
Naila doesn’t seem affected by it though. Amalia expects her to look hurt over it, maybe try to say there was no need for that, but the other girl seems completely indifferent to Amalia’s tone, inspecting her room and settling on top of her bed.
“I need your help,” she repeats, as if Amalia hadn’t heard the first time. “Samyia is in danger.”
“What have I got to do with that?”
“I need help rescuing her,” she says.
“I’m not a part of the team. Have never been. Did you forget that?” Amalia asks, hurt giving place to confusion. “Besides, we already know that. Team Arrow has been talking to Sara, everything is already handled.”
Continue reading under the cut or on AO3
“I didn’t come to ask for the team’s help. I’ve come to ask for yours. I know our parents are working together and they have a plan. This is not about that.”
“What is it about then?”
“They are not accepting my help. They think it’s too dangerous, considering…” she doesn’t end her sentence and Amalia does not ask what she means, she’s more curious about how she fits in all of this. “But I know going there is the best chance to get Samyia out safely.”
“That sounds like a discussion you should be having with the rest of the team, Naila. If you don’t mind, it’s late, I’ve had a long day and would like to rest now.”
“Mali, please,” the nickname only makes Amalia less inclined to listen to her, but Naila doesn’t notice or doesn’t care, “Just listen to me. I’m not asking you to do anything crazy, I just need someone to watch my back while I go save Samyia. The others won’t risk it, but I know you’ll do what is right.”
Amalia stays quiet, trying to understand what was happening. She very much wants Naila to leave her room, so she can just think about all of that. Half of what she was saying doesn’t even make sense. And besides why come to her? Amalia is not a vigilante. She’s trained, of course, she needs to know how to defend herself and it had been needed over the years, but she’s not used to being in combat and would rather be safe at home.
“I’m sure if you explain your side they are going to understand.”
“Why don’t you ever listen to what I’m saying? They won’t. Don’t you think I tried? Do you think coming here was my first option?”
While Amalia herself thought it was not logical to ask for her help, it still hurts when Naila put it like that.
“Why don’t they want you going?” Amalia asks, trying to decide if it’s even worth losing her time like that.
“It’s a long story. Maybe… Maybe I can tell you later. Will you help me if I tell you?”
“Of course not. I’m pretty sure the best way I can help you is by getting out of the way,” Amalia says, crossing her arms and raising her eyebrows.
“Fine. I see you’re still mad at me. I thought you were a lot of things, Amalia, but I never thought you’d be that selfish to deny help to someone you once called your friend.”
“I called you a lot of things, but, guess what, when you end a conversation by disappearing for five years you lose any right to complain!”
“I didn’t come here to complain. And I definitely didn’t come here to have a repeat of that fight, okay? I’m here because I’m desperate! I’m here because my sister is gone and she’s going to do something very stupid and if I don’t go people are going to get hurt. I know you care, Amalia, you can’t have changed that much.”
Amalia stays quiet at that. Tears are burning in her eyes but she refuses to let them fall, she is not a teen anymore, she’s over this. It is true that she cares, she cares about Naila, she cares about whatever is happening with Samyia, she cares about anyone possibly getting hurt and she cares about whether she is being selfish or not.
She likes helping people. She built her entire life so she could help as many people as she could. Being called selfish and sounding like she didn’t really care about the outcome of all of that? That damages her core. That’s not who she wants to be. And Naila knows it very well, Amalia is not naïve enough to think Naila didn’t use these words on purpose, the girl is trying to manipulate her and knows how to do it well.
“Here’s what I can do,” she finally says and almost shivers as she sees the hope in Naila’s eyes. “I will go to you with the bunker, I’ll help you convince them to hear you…”
“No! That’s not what I said,” Naila interrupts her, the hope giving way to anger and impatience. “Sara is going to arrive at any minute. She can’t know I’m here.”
“Your mom can’t know you’re here? What the fuck did you get into?”
“Look, are you going to help me or not? I don’t have enough time for this.”
“Then go. I didn’t ask for any of that. You didn’t say anything good enough to convince me I should go with you. I don’t even know what I’m dealing with and if you’re hiding that from Sara, I’m not sure you’re even on the right side.”
“Fine. You don’t trust me anymore, I guess I deserve it. Just… Don’t tell anyone about this, okay?”
Before Amalia can even think about answering her, Naila gets up from the bed and heads to the window. Naila looks back at her and Amalia thinks of saying she could just leave through the door, but it sounds like the wrong thing to say – and she doesn’t really want to explain to her friends in the living room what is going on – so she says nothing. Naila doesn’t say anything else either, just stares at Amalia and goes through the window, disappearing into the night. There is no anger in her face, but there is something there and it takes Amalia too long to realize what it is.
Disappointment. 
Amalia tries to forget this meeting ever happened. She puts her pajamas on, goes to the living room, joining her friends in watching TV and laughing for the rest of the night and, when it’s day again, she throws herself in work and pushes thoughts of Naila as far as she can. There might be a part of her that is a little over the edge for the next day, but if her coworkers ask what’s got her in a mood, she’ll definitely just smile and says she has no idea what they mean. 
Maybe she activates notifications on many news websites and keeps checking to see if anything comes up, but if that’s the case it’s certainly because she’s a concerned citizen and why shouldn’t she care about what happens in the world? She likes being updated. There’s nothing wrong with that. 
But all the lies can’t hide forever from her mind. Her fast heartbeat is a constant reminder that she’s anxious and she has reasons to be. Did Naila talk to the team? To her mom at least? Did she go alone? Have they saved Samyia? Is everyone okay? She can only assume nothing terrible has happened or else she would have heard about it by now… Right? 
By Friday, her phone aches next to her. Emma is on a date and Ilana always goes to her parents’ for shabbat dinner, so she finds herself alone in her apartment after work with nothing to do but wonder. Sure, she has other friends, she has stuff she meant to do, there’s always more work waiting for her, but it’s been 48 hours and she hasn’t heard anything and she can’t stand waiting like this all weekend. 
Amalia is debating which family member she should call when she gets a message from Mom asking about having lunch together the next day. She confirms it, telling herself it doesn’t mean anything. Nobody is in the hospital. Mom would have just said that otherwise. 
She considers herself a practical person most of the time, but can barely recognize herself now. The practical thing would be to just call literally anyone in the family and be done with this, ask everything they know and satisfy her curiosity. Even following her instincts again and showing up on the bunker would be more practical than laying in bed for hours, thinking of the worst scenarios and then arguing in her mind about how unlikely it is that it would happen. But it’s too much; she can’t move. 
The night goes on like this. Amalia has spent sleepless nights before, many during college, a few having fun, but never because she was too worried to relax. Just close your eyes and think of nothing, it isn’t that hard. Except her brain won’t shut up, no matter how she says that it’s too late now and everyone else is asleep, nothing is going to happen until the morning. But what is going to happen in the morning? 
When did she become that person?
Amalia is about to have a full identity crisis by the time the sun comes up. She tries to sleep one last time, fails to do it, meditates with an app she just downloaded and eats breakfast. It’s the longest she manages to stall before heading to her parents’ house, ready to just face the truth, whatever it is. 
She lets herself in without ringing the bell and finds that she can already breathe better just by being in her family’s home. The house is completely silent and Amalia assumes everyone is still asleep. Not thinking much about it, she goes to her old room, lays in her bed and closes her eyes. For a moment, she thinks she might actually sleep this time and wouldn’t that be ironic? But her insomnia doesn’t have much of a sense of humor and doesn’t give up just because she’s home. 
Meredith, the cat, soon joins her in the bed, meowing at Amalia’s face, either asking for cuddles or complaining it’s been too long since she visited last week. Amalia really misses the cat and wishes she could steal Meredith and go home. Life would be much better if she had her cat with her. But Mom would be really angry if she did it and Libbi would definitely steal her back. Meredith didn’t need that kind of stress. 
Amalia is telling all of this to the cat, hugging the cat against her will, when she hears a knock on the door. 
“Mali? What are you doing here so early?” Dad asks as he comes into the room and sits next to her in the bed. Finding the bed too crowded, Meredith decides to leave.
“Lunch,” she says not answering it at all.
It shouldn’t surprise her that her dad is up and dressed like he had just came back from running. Dad had never been one to sleep a lot and is getting worse every year, of course she wouldn’t be able to arrive before he woke up. Dad just stares at her, waiting for her to complete.
“Couldn’t sleep, sorry,” she’s stalling to ask and kinda wished Mom was here, because she’d just try to guess what is happening instead of looking at her and respecting her time. “I need to know what happened.”
Dad seems surprised by it, like he had no idea she even suspected anything. He sighs and stays silent for a bit, but Amalia doesn’t pressure him, she knows he’s trying to find the right words and she’s not sure she wants to hear them. Her thoughts start spiraling and she only focus again once Dad touches her shoulder, steadying her. 
“The League asked for our help on a mission,” he starts, Amalia just nods even though part of her wants to say she already knows that and he can just fast forward to what happened. “They had been dealing with a threat and Samyia was captured in action. Their enemies are based just outside Star City and we could help retrieve her so they could go back safely to Nanda Parbat…” Dad pauses and she knows the worst is to come. “We had everything ready to go, but then Sara found out Naila went alone without back up when she was supposed to stay behind. I’m sorry, Mali, but Naila was captured as well.”
“What does that mean?” 
“It means she’s missing. We’re still going to try to get them back, but you have to know… Naila was what they were after. Samyia was being used as blackmail. There’s no way of knowing what they intend on doing to Naila now that they have her.”
She tries to breathe in and out and not freak out, she tells herself she was expecting it. Yes, Naila was taken. Of course she was taken. Because she had no back up and she had literally told Amalia that she needed someone to watch her back. They wanted Naila, this is why Sara or the Team wouldn’t let her help. They were scared this would happen.
She should have gone with her. Or, better yet, she should have told her family or Sara what Naila was doing.
“It’s going to be okay, honey, breathe with me,” Dad is saying besides her, his hands comforting in her back, breathing slowly and waiting until she did she same. “I know you care about her, Mali, but we’re going to bring her back safely. You don’t need to worry about that.”
“Don’t worry?! How am I going to do it when it’s all my fault?”
August 2036
When Amalia finds Naila standing in her living room, her first thought is that someone died and she’s here for another funeral. She can hear her parents’ voices echoing through the house, laughing with Sara, so she assures herself that nothing bad happened again. Naila looks uncomfortable, sitting alone on the sofa in an extremely poised way, but Amalia makes no movement to join her. 
Last time they’ve talked to each other it was Quentin Lance’s funeral and it was not a good day. Amalia had heard about Naila since, Becky commented about her cousins and Naila had been in Star City a few times since, but never in her house. Amalia doesn’t know what her presence means and doesn’t like it. 
She knows why Sara is here: because everything sucks right now. There have always been bad guys creeping around, always some danger, but it got worse. She doesn’t know who’s behind, she thinks there are superpowers involved but she’s not sure and she honestly doesn’t want to know. All she wants is to forget that this is her life. 
But she can’t. Because Uncle Roy died and she had to look at her little cousin Elliot and know that it could have been her without a dad. And then Laurel got hurt last month and still hasn’t recovered. She knew it was only time before something happened to her parents and then it did. Her dad was thrown from a bridge and could barely leave the bed now. 
She knows she’s lucky. Dad’s at home, when he could very well had ended up in the hospital or in a coffin. If it served for anything, they should all have just learned that vigilantism is not worth it. 
But instead Sara showed up. Not just to see her sister and make sure this side of the family was okay, but to fill in for Dad in Team Arrow.
And she’s bringing her daughter? That is just weird. 
Amalia is still standing in the door when Naila looks directly at her, not saying anything. Amalia tries to smile but Naila doesn’t bother to copy her, staring with curious eyes. Not knowing what to do, Amalia decides to join Naila at the sofa, sitting next to the girl, still silent.
“So.. You’re visiting Laurel?” Amalia asks, trying to start a conversation.
“We’ve visited her yesterday, we’re visiting your parents now,” Naila says, frowning and Amalia can’t help but laugh at that answer. “Sara wanted me to meet you. I’m Naila,” she extends her hand and Amalia finds herself shaking it even though it feels weird to shake hands with someone her age. 
“I know that. I’m Amalia. We’ve met already.”
“I remember, but we weren’t formally introduced then. I’d like to get acquainted with you since I will be attending school where you go comes September.”
“Are you… staying in Starling?”
“Yes, Nyssa and Samyia are going to continue in Nanda Parbat for most of the time, but it was decided that I should accompany Sara while she’s here. Sara thought I would enjoy experimenting formal education, so I am here.”
“Did you not go to school there?”
“I had lessons with my moms and other members, but there isn’t anyone else my age in the League, so no school.”
Amalia frowns at that. No wonder the girl sounds so weird if she doesn’t interact with anyone their age. Amalia could only imagine how shocking would be to suddenly start high school with hundreds of teenagers, well, being teenagers. Amalia had some difficulty belonging there and she had studied with those people her entire life.
“I can help you around in school,” Amalia offers, “I can introduce you to my friends and we can hang out, if you want that is.”
“That would be lovely,” Naila smiles for the first time and her whole face transforms, she seems so happy at that moment that Amalia for a moment thinks she has offered more than just helping in school. 
Naila is looking at her expectantly, waiting for Amalia to continue the conversation. Later, Amalia will be able to pinpoint this as the exact moment she decided to befriend Naila. They’d have to be friendly with each other anyway, Naila didn’t know anyone else in the school and it’d be the right thing to do; but it’d be easier if it was something genuine and not a friendship out of parental obligation. It’s the bright in her brown eyes and the way she blushes after smiling that sticks for Amalia, the red hardly apparent in her sand skin.  Naila looks shy in a way that Amalia has never pegged Sara and Nyssa’s daughter for.
“Tell me about Nanda Parbat, what do you usually do there?”
While Naila talk about her life, Amalia can’t help but find it all fascinating and soon they are able to maintain a conversation without much awkwardness. Naila takes a while to be comfortable, but by the time their parents arrive in the room, it’s clear that Felicity won’t have to ask Amalia to hang out with Naila, they have already made their own plans. 
Amalia thinks of her two best friends, trying to think of how to introduce Naila and wondering if they have a good backstory planned. Amalia is not ready to explain to her friends what the League of Assassins is and how she’s associated with then. Luckily for them, Amalia is a great liar and has been doing that since she was young enough to talk. 
Somehow, even though she sounded like she was from a different world, Naila would fit right in her life.
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spartandiggle · 6 years ago
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give me a minute to hold my girl
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smoakd · 6 years ago
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Felicity, I’m a better human being, just because I’ve loved you
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mystarsandmyocean · 10 years ago
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sunday six: hunger games au
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An excerpt from Chapter Two of The Firebird, by allstartstofade and mystarsandmyocean (myself): 
“Take it,” Thea demands, her palm curling around her gift.  It isn’t quite a brooch, Felicity amends - that description too stuffy - but a golden circle, from which a bird emerges, both symbols backed by a pin.  Thea’s hand shoves her offering closer, her smile folding into wide eyes and a trembling lip, reminders that for all her bravado, Thea is still barely past childhood.  
Tracing the circle with her middle finger, Felicity notices tiny, golden flames falling from the bird’s wings and tail - not a bird then at all, but a phoenix, like in the stories that had preceded the Dark Days.  Felicity’s never seen something so beautiful - or so old.  Not much remains from the times before the Games; most relics locked away in Capitol museums.  “Thea,” she murmurs reverently, “I can’t accept this.”
“Mom gave it to me this morning,” Thea scoffs, pressing her palm into Felicity’s.  “She said it would protect me from being reaped.”  She pulls away, leaving the pin in Felicity’s hand.  “Stupid, I know.  But….then again, they didn’t choose me.”
They chose you hangs unspoken between them.  Another puzzle pieces clicks into place for Felicity.
“What happened today wasn’t your fault,” Felicity says, placing her free hand on Thea’s knee.  She waits until Thea meets her gaze before continuing.  “They didn’t choose you - that’s a good thing.  But that doesn’t mean that you chose me instead.”
Felicity would never ask anyone to make that sort of choice for her.    
Thea nods, a tentative smile not quite there.  “I still want you to keep it,” Thea insists, a Queen in every way but victory, “I wore it, and I didn’t get reaped.  Maybe if you wear it, it’ll help you win the Games.  Or, I don’t know, brighten up your outfits.  Those interview clothes have to be flashy, right?  Ollie always looks like such a peacock up there.”
This time, Felicity’s laugh is the one just shy of tentative, her struggle with the pin’s old clasp hiding the tears in her eyes.  She’s never worn anything but hand-me-downs and stitched-together remnants; she can’t even imagine wearing the glamour of the Capitol.  She’s suddenly glad she took a bath that morning, though she’s sure it won’t be enough to make her fit for Capitol couture.  The door to the room swings open before she can answer, Rob interrupting with a firm, “Miss Queen?”
“Thank you,”  Thea whispers, pulling Felicity in for one final hug, “I believe in you!”
Want to read more? The Firebird: Prologue | Chapter 1 
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shineyma · 6 years ago
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Chapters: 13/? Fandom: Arrow (TV 2012) Rating: Teen And Up Audiences Relationships: Oliver Queen/Felicity Smoak Characters: Felicity Smoak, Oliver Queen, Tommy Merlyn Additional Tags: Bratva AU, bratva!Oliver, Arranged Marriage, Power Dynamics
“A coup,” Tommy echoes, voice flat with disbelief. “You married Oliver so you could launch a coup against your father.”
“Well, technically I married Oliver so that I could eventually trick my father into starting a war against the Bratva that would end with both of them dead and me regretfully returning to Las Vegas to dissolve the organization that cost me my husband and father,” Felicity amends. “But some plans have had to change.”
Oliver laughs a little under his breath, still totally unshaken by the news that she was plotting his death when she married him. (When she first told him, he actually laughed out loud. Strange man, her husband.) Tommy looks much less amused.
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habibialkaysani · 7 years ago
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TOP TEN SUPERFLARROW OTPS (as voted by my followers) - 
#10. oliver queen x felicity smoak
I don’t regret a single moment. and you shouldn’t either. you have done so much. you have saved so many people’s lives, and you have changed so many for the better - including mine. knowing you has changed my life. you’ve opened up my heart in a way I didn’t even know was possible. I love you.
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minaswritingsquad · 7 years ago
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for the fantastic bev/@felicityollies
by @artemisodinson
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chaossmagic · 7 years ago
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Fic: Deck the Halls
Based off this prompt:
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Read on AO3
Felicity had a plan for her first Christmas - her first celebration of the holidays - as a married woman. 
Now, of course, being Jewish, she usually wouldn’t put much thought into Christmas itself, settling for pulling out the tacky Hanukkah sweater she wore every year, dutifully lighting the bright silver menorah her grandmother had given her for her Bat Mitzvah, and eating way too many latkes to be allowed. And yes, she planned on doing all those things too. 
But this year was different. This year, she had finally married the love of her life, and it would be the first year she would be celebrating the holidays with her new family. 
Her and Oliver were married.
Oh, wow.
It was incredible. She’d only been a wife for a few weeks, but it was already the best thing she had ever done. Every time the ring on her left hand caught her eye, it made her stomach flutter and her heart seize up with so much love she thought she might actually burst with it. 
Six years ago, she’d thought her crush on Oliver was a non-issue, something fun to entertain once in a while but nothing that would ever turn into something real, because it couldn’t. 
And now....well, now she had him by her side forever. For better or for worse.
She’d thought of her plan very carefully, because she wanted this day to be an extra-special one. 
They’d agreed that they’d get up first, allowing William to sleep in a little, before Oliver made breakfast and they roused him for food to the sounds of a tinny homemade CD that had been filled with the most ridiculous Christmas and Hanukkah songs Felicity could find. It was something she and her mom had done in her childhood, dance around their too-small kitchen in socks and fraying dreidel-print sweaters to an old mixtape of silly festive songs, her mom warbling along in her broken Hebrew while Felicity jumped and twirled to Rockin’ Around the Christmas Tree.
Those memories were some of her best from holidays past, and it was something she hoped she could indulge in once again with Oliver and William, making new memories to complement the old.
Her first point of call, however, was to make sure she got the first kiss of Christmas day from her loving husband, and she was determined to make that happen.
***
Oliver was still asleep when Felicity slipped out of bed on Christmas morning, trying to be as quiet as possible so as not to wake him too early and spoil her plan. The hardwood floor was chilly on her bare feet, and she reached for her robe - a Hanukkah present from William, bright white and so incredibly soft, and it even had ears on the hood - and a pair of Oliver’s thick woollen socks that he always denied he ever used, yet ended up draped over the back of the dresser chair far too often. Her Oliver was eccentric that way, not that she would ever dream of changing him.
Her reflections brought a small smile to her face, and she took a moment to relish in the glow of it. She was married. To a man she loved so much and so wholly she had thought, more often than not, that it would break her apart. 
She padded across the hall, past William’s room, where silence told her that he too wasn’t up yet. Of course he wasn’t; he was almost a teenager, and teenage boys didn’t get up voluntarily before noon on any day that wasn’t a school day. Even then it took some convincing. Felicity thought of the brand-new microscope sitting in its wrapped box under the tree in the living area and couldn’t help but curl her toes and give herself a moment to squeal with excitement, completely elated, possibly for the first time in a long time.
Reaching the kitchen, the call of the coffee maker was sounding out to her, but she forced herself to show restraint; besides, Oliver’s spiced cocoa was way better, and she’d rather wait and have a steaming mug piled high with whipped cream and dozens of marshmallows instead. 
She’d once claimed it was better than sex, and he’d immediately rushed her off to the bedroom, lips attached to hers, to prove that hypothesis.
Now, she simply grabbed one of the magazines she’d left on the kitchen counter the night before, and settled for resting nonchalantly in the kitchen doorway, perusing the pages and waiting.
Because, unbeknown to Oliver or William, she’d tied a bundle of fresh mistletoe to the top of the door after they’d both gone to bed, and it was this she was hoping to catch her husband under for their first Christmas morning kiss.
 It was genius, really, and that meant something because she herself, Mrs Felicity Meghan Smoak-Queen (provisionally: they hadn’t actually officially decided on the whole surname question yet), was a genius.
Glancing at the clock on the wall on the other side of the room, she saw it was 7am. Oliver would be up soon; he always was an early riser, even on their whirlwind summer of love two years ago when they’d essentially been on vacation. 
She’d flipped through the entire magazine and was about to turn back to the front cover when she heard the telltale sound of water running and the creak of floorboards. Yes! she thought. Time to shine!
Felicity tried to look as casual as possible where she stood, even humming to herself as she waited, and soon Oliver emerged in the hall, damp from a shower and still in pyjamas. He was barefoot, possibly because Felicity had stolen his socks.
“Good morning!” she said brightly as he approached, bouncing slightly on her toes. “Merry Christmas, Oliver.”
She was too absorbed in the anticipation of the moment he spotted what was hanging over the door to notice the confused furrow that appeared between his eyebrows, nor the odd expression on his face as he passed her, pausing to take her hand and squeeze it gently in his. 
“Oliver?” she asked. “Aren’t you going to say merry Christmas back?”
“I thought you didn’t like it when people said ‘Merry Christmas’,” he replied, rummaging in the cupboard above the sink for the cinnamon and nutmeg and cocoa powder, puling out three mugs and lining them up on the counter. “Which is why I don’t say it.”
“Yes, well....this is our first holidays as husband and wife, and I know how much you love Christmas, so...I want you to say it. Please. For me?”
Oliver, now spooning cocoa powder into mugs and fetching the milk from the fridge, turned to her with a beaming smile. 
Oh God, that smile. The star of Bethlehem itself could not compare to that smile.
He sighed, capitulating to her, as he always did.“Felicity, merry Christmas.” 
“Thank you,” she smiled back, now practically vibrating with antsy feelings. How much longer till he noticed?
But instead he bent down to look in the cupboard once more for a pan to boil the milk on the stove, and while Felicity got a very delectable view of her new husband’s ass, it also wasn’t quite what she was hankering for.
“Also, hon,” Oliver added, his voice muffled by the clanking and clattering of pans, “your magazine is upside down.”
“What?” Felicity shrieked, unable to believe her own ears. She quickly flipped it over, looked at it. And it was upside down. 
It had been upside down this entire time.
“Oh, frack. Frack frack frack frack frack!” she exclaimed, thumping the magazine down onto the counter again. “Frack and dammit!”
“What’s wrong? It’s just a magazine.”
To her horror, tears pricked at her eyes, and she burst out, “I had a plan to have the perfect first Christmas morning kiss as husband and wife and I ruined it! Because I held the stupid magazine upside down!” 
At that, Oliver stretched up, pan in hand. “Hon, you know you don’t have to expect anything from me, right?”
“I know,” Felicity sniffed, swiping at her eyes with the sleeve of her robe. “But - it’s such an important milestone for us and - I wanted it to be perfect. Look, I bought mistletoe and everything!” 
She pointed forcefully up above her head, to where the bunch of mistletoe was. Oliver followed her gaze, and then he chuckled. 
“Felicity, you’re my wife,” Oliver said. “You don’t need to ask permission to kiss me on Christmas morning, okay?” 
Felicity held out her hands, and Oliver took them. Their matching wedding bands shone ever so slightly in the breaking dawn light coming through the windows. “I don’t care about any elaborate plans, or strategically placed mistletoe. I just want to spend the holidays with you and William.”
“Even if I held the magazine upside down?” she asked, looking up at him timidly through her eyelashes. 
He smiled,bending to press a tender kiss to her forehead, one hand coming up to cup her cheek. 
“Even if you hold the magazine upside down.”
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smoakmonster · 6 years ago
Conversation
other fictional couples: aww honey you remembered
Oliver & Felicity: honey i know your DNA sequence anywhere. i can recall the exact words we've ever said to each other & what you were wearing & the angle of the sun hitting your face the day i met you; i remember one of the first things you ever said to me, so i use that random word as my password 5 years later.
other fictional couples: i love you so much
Oliver & Felicity: i love you more than should be allowed by law; i would go to prison again if it were illegal to love you; i love you no matter who you are or what you become; i love you beyond a quantifiable numerical value, which basically means i love you infinity times infinity. you are my always--no YOU are MY always--
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dust2dust34 · 5 years ago
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#firstphotochallenge, Olicity AU
Written for the Fic for Food Drive - a prompt from @latinasmoak and @jesileighs based on Italia and Robbie’s tweets here. Enjoy!
(read on AO3)
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“... the world is a giant fire bag of garbage… oh, puppy… oh my god, she’s getting so big…”
She meant to say all that, but it came out more like, “Teyydafdlsakdjfdkfjdodladjfdhigg,” around her toothbrush.
It was too early. She hadn’t had coffee. She’d barely zombied her way through feeding her child before handing him over to his father to have five seconds to herself. All she could really think about was how good the toothpaste tasted as she earned her zombie title by mindlessly scrolling through Twitter.
“Coffee’ll be wetter,” she mumbled - ‘cfkdllpttrer’ - and she scrunched her nose up at herself. “Not wetter. Better. Brain not working-”
A new notification popped up.
Felicity paused when she saw the photo she’d been tagged in.
For a split second, she wondered if her Twitter had screwed up again, because she was only supposed to get notifications from mutuals. A very necessary filter, considering some of the things people tagged her in. But here it was, this picture she knew as well as the back of her hand, but the relevance didn’t register…
Not until she saw who’d posted the photo, and what he had written.
Specifically the #firstphotochallenge.
“Really?” she yelled around her toothbrush. Felicity was too far away from the living room where she knew her husband was, so she spat out the toothpaste and stuck her head out the door and yelled louder. “Really, Oliver?”
“What?” came his distant reply.
“That picture?”
“What?”
“That! Picture!”
“What’s wrong with it?”
“That’s not our first photo!”
Felicity waited for him to reply, and when he didn’t, she repeated, “That’s not-”
Her phone rang and the screen lit up with her son’s drooling face smooshed against Oliver’s laughing one. It never failed to make her smile, and it did this time, despite her hackles being up. Oliver tended towards the stoic look for photos, which worked for his career, but it had the added bonus of making the candid moments so much better. When he was uninhibited and free and so cute it felt like her heart was going to burst right out of her chest? That’s when he was at his best.
And it only reminded her of the picture he’d chosen for this supposed ‘first photo challenge.’
She swiped to answer as she walked back into the bathroom. “That picture-”
“Why are you yelling across the house?” he asked, his voice still distant, telling her she was on speakerphone. A gurgle followed and then Oliver was speaking in a low coo, “Oh, there’s my big guy. There he is.”
It had her heart melting and she glanced in the mirror in time to see her falling into her Heart Eyes Face, as Oliver dubbed it.
She furrowed her brow and pointed her toothbrush at her reflection.
‘No, this is serious.’
It worked.
“Because,” Felicity said in her loud voice, “that isn’t our first photo as a couple. We have a much better first couple photo.”
“It’s not a first-couple-photo-challenge, it’s a first-photo-challenge,” Oliver told her patiently. A noise told her he was kissing their kid, probably on the top of his head, as he was wont to do when Oliver situated his chubby little body on his wide chest, the perfect resting place for him. She melted again. But only slightly this time. See? She had control. “That photo is literally our first photo together,” Oliver added.
“I mean, if you want to get technical, it’s not even really a picture, it’s a screen capture, and a crappy one at that,” Felicity replied, switching screens back to his tweet. The likes and reblogs were already blowing up. She ignored that, instead shaking her head at the picture itself. “Ridiculous.”
“I think it’s a good picture of us.”
“I’m not saying it’s a bad picture-”
“Then what?”
She would always remember that day. He was supposed to be a single-day guest star on her show, an ex that showed up at the wrong-place-wrong-time, there to act as a catalyst for the romance storyline that had been plotted to take place in the second season. The kiss hadn’t been scripted, but the director wanted to play out some scenarios, and one of them was a surprise kiss between exes. They’d nailed it in one shot, because none of them thought it would get chosen. And then of course that cut was picked for the episode, and suddenly the EPs were asking Oliver to come back, and long story short, he became a regular on the show. It helped that everyone who watched loved their chemistry as much as the producers did. And as much as she and Oliver did, apparently, since they started dating nearly right after that episode was shot.
That day had been a cataclysmic change in both her personal and professional life.
And yet.
Felicity shoved her toothbrush back into her mouth and mangled out, “Hang on,” as she retweeted the photo and started typing a caption with it.
“What are you doing?”
“Wait.”
“Felicity.”
“There. Done. Tweeted.”
He sighed and the rustles told her he was scrolling back to his Twitter app. She set her phone on the counter, a triumphant smile on her face as she finished brushing her teeth, waiting for him to see it, to read it…
Oliver snorted. “Nice.”
“It’s true.”
“I was excited,” he countered. “I just played it cool.”
“Ha,” she said, spitting out the last of her toothpaste and rinsing her brush. “So cool that I literally bit your head off when you tried to talk to me after you wrapped for the day.”
He chuckled. “I thought you didn’t like me-”
“But I did! And you were all... professional when I was all flustered, all cool, calm, and collected-”
“Not on the inside-”
“You were way too good at hiding it-”
“Well, I am an actor-”
“Oh shut up-”
“It still worked out pretty well-”
“Yeah, because you’re lucky,” Felicity informed him. “And insanely gorgeous.”
“So that’s why you keep me around, huh?”
“What can I say?” she asked with a cheeky grin, grabbing her phone and leaving the bathroom. “I’m a sucker for a pretty face.”
“I’m glad I married such a romantic,” Oliver huffed as she walked into the living room.
The most perfect sight waited for her, and she had to stop to take a picture.
It wasn’t the first photo she’d snapped of her boys - it was one of about a billion, actually - and it definitely wouldn’t be the last. It reminded her that it was kind of amazing that there was evidence of their first kiss at all. Even if the buildup to it still rankled her.
“You know,” Felicity said, alerting him to her presence. Oliver looked up from where he was reclined against the couch cushions, just flat enough for their dozing baby boy to be sprawled across his bare chest. “If me yelling at you after you asked me out, and then jumping you when you tried to walk away didn’t tell you everything you were getting into, I don’t know what would.”
“True,” Oliver replied with a chuckle. He tossed his phone away and opened his arm for her. When she plopped down next to him, he dropped his hand to squeeze her butt. “I can tell you I was definitely excited then.”
She rolled her eyes and he laughed.
“I guess our first ‘couple’ photo is already out there anyway,” Felicity mused as she smoothed her hand down their son’s back, straightening his onesie, “since you posted it on Instagram. Pink filter and all.”
“You chose that.”
“I did not.”
“Yes, you did. And then before telling me it was a joke, I posted it.”
“Right, you posted it. So you chose.”
“Oh my god.”
“Just say I’m right.”
“I will not. But I will say I don’t regret a single second of it. How’s that for exciting?”
Felicity snorted, trying to fight her Heart Eyes Face. She failed judging by his knowing smirk.
“It’s pretty good,” she allowed. “I guess.”
“I’ll take it,” he said with a grin before tugging her closer for a kiss.
*
Thank you for reading! Reviews literally feed the soul and muse!
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felicityollies · 5 years ago
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send me a cosmic sign
olicity || gen || fluff || 1792 || more fics
summary: Did you know after returning to earth, astronauts often drop common objects fully believing they will float? Felicity seems to be having this problem. Oliver, a barista she meets, happens to think it's kind of cute.
a/n: based on the prompt @thefrizz13 posted on twitter! also part of the quarantine and chill fic drive prompt: coffee shop au. all the prompts // more quarantine and chill fics
read on ao3 ||  buy me a coffee? || ask a question
★ @alexiablackbriar13  ★  @almondblossomme  ★   @bazingagubicorn  ★ @blackcanarydinah  ★  @bisexualfelicity  ★  @coal000  ★ @deathandindignitybedamned  ★   @flowerandsunshine ★ @garrickjay ★  @green-arrows-of-karamel  ★  @hope-for-olicity  ★ @imusuallyobsessed  ★ @it-is-jay-amaya  ★ @jaspertown  ★ @mammashof  ★ @memcjo  ★ @miriam1779  ★ @missafairy  ★ @missyriver ★ @mickeysjones  ★  @mochababychristy  ★ @myhauntedblacksoul  ★ @nerdyandturdy  ★  @olicitylovemaking ★ @oliverfel4  ★ @omglovechrissie  ★ @pleasantfanandstudent  ★ @pjcmfalcon  ★ @releaseurinhibitions  ★  @smoakqueenz ★  @sweetdawn129  ★ @tdgal1  ★ @therewas-a-girl ★  @vicky-vale  ★
if anyone wants to be tagged/untagged lemme know
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spartandiggle · 6 years ago
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A Catalog of Non-Definitive Acts | [2/2]
After a chance meeting on the roof during a Queen Consolidated Christmas party, Oliver commits himself to helping Felicity complete her bucket list. Felicity, who has decided to uproot her life for a fresh start after the New Year, isn’t sure she appreciates the help, but finds herself getting it anyway.
[read it on ao3]
Stargazing in December isn’t the greatest idea, but it’s on the list so Oliver insists. They’re bundled up to almost an overt degree and there’s so much cloud coverage that any stars are few and far between. Oliver had picked her up and they’d driven outside of the city, far enough to escape the light pollution brought on by the busy streets and tall buildings.
He’d packed a blanket and a thermos of hot chocolate. They’d tried spreading it out on the grass, but the ground proved to be too frozen for comfort or warmth. Instead, they’d ended up on the hood of Oliver’s car, the blanket spread over it to protect the paint job, and they’re huddled close together as they share the thermos.
He kisses her and she’s not sure which one of them deepens it until he’s half on top of her, hands moving uselessly over her thick coat. She revels in his warmth, the weight of him, the sheer euphoria of his attentions.
“We need to set some ground rules,” she says, once he’s freed her mouth and turned his attention to her throat.
[read the rest on ao3] | [buy me a coffee?] | [redbubble]
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bisexualfelicity · 7 years ago
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Five Lives - Chapter Ten (10/10)
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Summary:  Oliver Queen and Felicity Smoak live their own lives without ever meeting each other. The universe tries to fix this with a bit of time traveling. Based on the book Replay by Ken Grimwood. Written for the @olicityficbang.
Words:  56542
Complete!
Read all the chapters on AO3!
Excerpt:
January 1st, 2021.
Oliver wakes up in a jolt, his heart skipping fast, disoriented for a second. Felicity is still sleeping by his side, not moving at all. He looks at his watch and notices it’s already eight a.m. Does this mean they continue there? He turns around, getting his phone, just making sure it’s the same date and the same universe. Nothing seems to have changed. Oliver closes his eyes again, not sure if this is some kind of dream.
Someone pokes him some while after, and he realizes he’s fallen asleep again. When he opens his eyes, Felicity is staring at him, looking confused.
“We’re still here,” she whispers to him, like she herself can’t believe it.
He looks at the clock again, it’s nine a.m.
They don’t smile, just look at each other, waiting for reality to drop. Felicity moves first, getting her phone, she looks at it for a while, her eyes moving fast, and then she just drops it on her lap.
“I don’t understand,” she says once again and Oliver shrugs, he’s not about to complain about having more time.
He gets up and goes to the bathroom, takes a shower, when he comes back, Felicity is at the react same place, biting her nails. She has this frown that indicates she’s thinking about something, Oliver is sure she’s trying to come up with an explanation.
Continue reading on AO3!
@bazingagubicorn
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