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My Sweet Girl (Matthew Tkachuk Imagine)
This is by far-- I repeat, by far-- the longest reader insert I've ever written. It's my submission for @wyattjohnston 's Winter Fic Exchange, a gift for @matthewtkachuk ! Excellent URL, by the way.
The creative process here went as follows: Shelbs shows me her On Repeat Spotify playlist -> I see The Band Camino on it and remember that I love that band -> I listen to nothing but them for two weeks -> I hear the song Know It All and am struck with inspiration -> I write this and inflict it on everyone else.
I jumped around a bit while writing, so please let me know if there's anything I screwed up! This is also the type of fic that has had 20+ tabs of Wikipedia pages, ESPN articles, and stats pages open on my computer for two months, but there was still information I couldn't find, so please be gentle with any inconsistencies.
Anyway, I truly hope that you enjoy this one! I apologize for being a day late posting, my job sucks.
Rating: M
Pairing: Matthew Tkachuk/fem!Reader
Words: 26, 028
Warnings: a lot of angst
Contains: best friend's brother, friends to ??? to strangers to lovers, situationship, idiots in love, everyone knows but them, Matthew being kind of a dick, guest appearances by the Weinberg-Hughes family and Jane Gaudreau
Summary: As Brady's best friend, it was your duty to love and support him. You're pretty sure falling in love with his brother does not count as "support", but here you are.
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You werenât expecting this to be as hard as it is.
Luckily, youâd been given a little warning beforehand, but apparently a week wasnât enough to prepare yourself. Was it kind of fucked up that the news had to come from Brady, because Matthew hadnât bothered to tell you himself? Yeah, kind of. Sure, Brady and you have been best friends for years, but itâs not like youâre not close with Matthew, too.
You hadnât realized what was going on at first, convincing yourself not to be upset when Matthewâs texts slowed and his calls stopped outright. It had been the beginning of the playoffs, you reasoned, of course he was going to be too busy to talk to you as much. Despite the fact that communication between the two of you had never waned because of the season before. It was his first year on a new team, youâd told yourself, a team with a great shot at the Cup, at that. You could deal with missing him a little more than usual if thatâs what he needed.
When youâd called him to congratulate him on passing the first round, heâd thanked you and wrapped the call up as quickly as he could. Seeing the 3:24:41 call duration on your phone afterward had felt wrong. It was one of the shortest calls the two of you had ever had.
Youâd brushed it off, chalked it up to him being tired or busy. Then theyâd won the second round, and the process repeated itself. A quick phone call, a few scant minutes. It had sounded like other people were there that time, so youâd convinced yourself that he would call you back when he was alone. He never did.
You got to watch Game 4 of the third series, got to watch them sweep Carolina to win the Eastern Conference. Your friend Terri had laughed and clapped as you cheered, jumping up and down like a child. She was a Carolina fan herself, but was good enough of a loser to hug and congratulate you despite it. Sheâd offered to leave so that you could talk to Matthew, but youâd waved it off. You knew heâd be celebrating with the boys that night, so there was no real reason to try calling. Youâd shot him a congratulations text and spent the night smiling so much your cheeks hurt.
When youâd tried to call Matthew the next day, his voice had been hushed when he answered. Youâd given him your congratulations, bubbling over about how well theyâd played. Itâs not the first time youâd had a phone call exactly like that, him letting you gush about his teamâs play and basking in the attention. This time, he interrupted you before you even got a chance to really get going. His voice was still quiet, almost a whisper as he said he had to go. The wind was immediately taken out of your sails and youâd barely had time to say goodbye before he hung up.
At that point, youâd given up convincing yourself that everything was okay. Something was very clearly wrong, and youâd spent the next nine days trying to figure out what it was. Youâd reached out to Brady, and heâd told you that he hadnât noticed anything weird from Matthew at all. Knowing that, youâd tried to downplay what was going on between the two of you, lest Brady go bother Matthew about it. You donât do well with embarrassment, so youâd preferred that whatever was going on stayed away from any third parties.
The finals started, ending rather anticlimactically ten days later in a 4-1 loss for the Panthers. Knowing Matthew, he was going to go straight back to his hotel room and beat himself up. For the last three, almost four, years, youâd called Matthew after every big win or loss, and this was his biggest loss to date. Yet your finger hesitated at his contact name, hovered over the picture of him with bedhead and a lazy smile. With how things had been going, you knew he probably wouldnât want to talk to you, even if you hadnât figured out why yet. But part of you hoped that he would, that everything to that point had been stress, and there, at his lowest, he would talk to you again, and everything would go back to normal.
That, of course, is not what happened.
He hadnât answered at all. And when youâd tried a second time an hour later, it rang once before going to voicemail. That meant that heâd declined your call, but you didnât know what that meant.
Two more days passed without you hearing anything from him, so youâd called Brady. All of this had been concerning, but that had been too much. Miraculously, youâd managed to stay calm when you spoke with Brady, sounding impressively level-headed when you relayed what happened and asked him if heâd heard from Matthew. Brady had seemed shocked at the situation, immediately calling Matthew after heâd hung up with you.
Thirty minutes later, when youâd received a text from Brady, your heart had sunk to the pit of your stomach, and itâs stayed there ever since.
Because what the text had informed you of is that Matthew hadnât lost or broken his phone, hadnât been sick or depressed or, god, lost in the fucking desert or some shit. It told you that heâd been with his girlfriend, and hadnât wanted her to see him call or text another girl. Because, apparently, Matthew has a girlfriend now. And just hadnât deigned to tell you.
When Brady had told you that she would be spending the offseason in St. Louis with Matthew, youâd tried to hide your shock. Youâd cleared your throat and told Brady how great that was, even as you wanted to throw up. Theyâd gotten into town a few days ago, and youâd done your best to keep your distance. But Brady asked you to come to dinner at his parentsâ house tonight, citing the limited time you have to see him before he goes back to Ottawa, and you couldnât refuse.
So now here you are, curled up in a chair in the Tkachuksâ den, across from said girlfriend. Her name is Tessa, sheâs 26, and she does remote work for a marketing firm. That explains how sheâs able to pick up and go to St. Louis for three months, at least. Sheâs already recounted the story of how theyâd met, a romcom story of spilling his drink on her dress at a party and getting to know each other from there. She talks about the instant connection, the way they clicked so quickly that she knew they were meant for each other. That part of the story was when youâd excused yourself to get a glass of water, just so you could stick your head in the fridge and take a few deep breaths.
Matthew and Tessa are on one of the couches, the older, comfier one. Matthew is propped up against one of the armrests, Tessa curled into his side, his arm around her shoulders. Youâve spent the night pretending not to notice the way Matthew keeps glancing at you.
Brady and Emma are posted up on the other couch, one on either side, Emmaâs feet in Bradyâs lap as she lounges. Emma is great, and does a great job at keeping the conversation going, despite how little you and the boys are participating. Tessa either doesnât notice your silence or doesnât mind, chatting happily about some film she and Emma have both recently seen. Youâre pretending not to notice the looks Bradyâs giving you, either.
You should really be trying harder. You know Brady wasnât expecting you to curl up under a blanket and mope when he invited you, and he really is right about time being limited. You should be engaging, enjoying the time you get with the boys while you have it. You would, if you could open your mouth without feeling like youâre going to scream.
Eventually, Chantal calls you all to dinner. Itâs easier once youâre all gathered around the table, somehow, and youâre able to talk a little. Chantal has always put you at ease, has always made you feel like just another of her children. If you had it your way, Taryn would be here too. She has a way of lovingly bullying you that always makes you feel better. Unfortunately, sheâs visiting some college friends out of state. But youâre doing okay, you think, at acting normal.
Then you lock eyes with Keith, and any sense of ease youâve gained flies out the window. You wouldnât be inclined to say that Keith is the most observant person in the world, so the way heâs looking at youâ like he knows something is very, very wrongâ makes it clear that youâre doing an absolutely dogshit job at hiding your feelings. You look away from him quickly, swallowing hard and forcing yourself to talk even more.Â
Maybe if you can just act normal, if you can push down the emotions and act like everything is okay, it will be. Thereâs nothing else you can really do about the situation anyway. Matthew has made it clear that heâs not interested in talking about it, so youâll have to suck it up and deal with it on your own.
Dinner goes by a little quicker once youâre actually actively involved in the conversation. Typically, you help Chantal with the dishes after meals, but when you reach for the sponge at the sink, she shoos you away. She sends the girls back to the den, insisting that itâs the boysâ turn to help.
You curl back up in your chair, mind wandering as you operate on autopilot. Youâre saying things, contributing to the conversation with Emma and Tessa, but you have no idea what youâre actually saying. Mercifully, they either donât notice or donât care.
This entire situation is fucked. Whatâs really getting to you, though, is how youâd been introduced. Youâd walked in, giving out hugs to everyone except Matthew and Tessa. Sheâd approached you, shaking your hand enthusiastically.
âMatthew said youâre Bradyâs best friend, right?â sheâd asked. It was simple, innocuous, and true. Brady and you have been best friends for years, and that would be an adequate title in any other scenario. But it felt like a punch to the gut, knowing that after everything, Matthew had told her that you were just his little brotherâs best friend. Youâd glanced at him as she said it, and the intentionally cool, unaffected expression Matthew had in place still couldnât hide the guilt in his eyes.
In that moment, you knew that he hadnât told her anything about you, about whatever the two of you have been to each other for the past few years, and that he never intends to. There was a second where heâd made a decision, a second that you werenât present for, that had cut off everything youâve been to him and relegated you back to Bradyâs Best Friend.
You want to pull Tessa aside, spill out everything. You want her to know that youâre Matthewâs friend too, that youâve been more than that. More than that, you want Matthew to do it. You want him to tell her, to acknowledge whatever the hell youâve been doing for all this time. You want him to admit that youâre something, anything to him.
Instead, you keep it all to yourself. The knowledge of everything between you and Matthew will live and die where it is now, in the minds of the two of you, and nowhere else.
June, 2018
Youâre wiping down the counters when the man enters. You force a bright smile at him, still annoyed from the previous customer but doing your best not to show it. He returns the smile, approaching the register. You move to settle across from him, greeting him politely. The shop has a lot of regulars, but you donât recognize this guy.
âIâll be honest,â he says, giving a single nervous laugh, âIâm not really a coffee guy. Do you have any recommendations?â Itâs not an uncommon question, and there arenât any other customers right now, so you donât mind.
âDo you like the taste of coffee?â you ask. He shakes his head. That eliminates about half of the menu, so itâs progress.
âHow much caffeine are you going for?â you ask next.
âAs much as possible,â he replies. The dark circles under his eyes could have hinted you to that conclusion. He has a laptop and notebook in one hand, down by his side. Itâs normal for people to bring work along with them, and heâs definitely young, so you guess itâs probably school work.
âYou could always do a triple shot latte with a flavor,â you suggest, your own go-to drink, âThe caramel is the strongest. I can put in an extra pump if you want.â Technically, you should charge extra for that, but the kid looks kind of pathetic, and you feel bad. He can have a pity pump this once.
âThat sounds good,â he agrees. You do the math in your head and punch in the price manually on the vintage register. The whole cafe is supposed to have a vintage vibe, a real hipster magnet. Math was always your weakest subject, but having to calculate totals in your head has made you a lot better with it.
Once he pays on the very not-vintage card reader, you direct him to the far side of the bar. You start on his drink, pulling shots with practiced ease. Youâve been working here since high school, so youâve gotten pretty good at making coffee. He doesnât try to talk to you while you work, which is nice. Thereâs something oddly calming about his presence, though, and itâs helping your annoyance fade.
You hand off his drink, and he retreats to a booth in the back corner after thanking you. You go back to wiping things down, bobbing your head along with the music playing quietly over the speakers. Itâs later in the evening, so you only get a few customers over the next hour. Itâs one thing you like about working the night shift. Not many customers, and most of the people getting coffee around this time are tired enough to not give you much trouble, and are usually extremely grateful for the caffeine.
Itâs quiet for long enough that you pull your stool up to the counter, pulling your textbook and notes out from under the counter. You start working on the homework for your summer semester, singing quietly to yourself as you read.
âYou have a nice voice,â the guy from earlier says, suddenly standing in front of you. You jump, hand flying to your chest as if youâre a damsel in a period piece. Youâd forgotten he was here.
âThank you,â you say, once the surprise fades. You laugh a little, shaking your head. He laughs too, apologizing for startling you.
âCould I have another?â he asks, holding up his now-empty cup.
âOf course,â you reply, âSame cup okay?â You do your best to be environmentally friendly, so you donât want to use another cup if you donât have to. He says thatâs okay, so you take the cup and start pulling another shot.
âY/N,â he says absently as he leans on the counter, âThatâs a pretty name.â You thank him again, dumping the first shot into the cup. Itâs odd, because people are usually flirting when they say something like that, but his tone isnât suggestive at all.
âWhatâs your name?â you ask, feeling like you should say something. You start pulling the second shot.
âBrady,â he says, extending a hand toward you. You look between his hand and your own, feeling rude but needing both hands to pull the shot.
âOh, um,â you stutter, âSorry, Iâmââ He seems to realize whatâs going on and retracts his hand, using it to rub at the base of his skull.
âMy bad,â he says, shaking his head at himself, âIâm tired, sorry.â You smile at him, much more genuine than the first time.
âWhatâs got you so tired anyway, Brady?â you ask, dumping the second shot and starting on the third. His face twists at what youâd thought was an innocuous question. Heâs clearly debating something in his head, so you stay silent.
âIâve got something big coming up in a couple weeks,â he explains, tapping his fingers against the counter, âIâm just trying to be prepared.â You nod, not minding how vague heâs being. You donât actually need to know every detail of a random customerâs life. Thereâs a moment of quiet as you dump in the third shot and pour some milk into a metal container.
âAnd I might be a little nervous,â he says, looking at his hands instead of you. You smile again, beginning to steam the milk.
âJust a little,â you repeat, slightly teasing in a way you usually arenât with customers.
âYeah,â he chuckles, looking up at you, âJust a little.â You smile at each other for a second, both knowing heâs seriously downplaying his feelings. You wonder what it is that has him so anxious, sure that it must be something serious. He doesnât seem to be the neurotic type.
âWhat are you working on?â he asks as you pour the milk, gesturing toward your books spread out next to the register. You shrug.
âOrganic chemistry,â you reply, pumping in the flavoring, âThe worst class ever.â He cringes at the mention of it, which you feel in your bones.
âIâve heard itâs awful,â he says.
âIt is,â you confirm. You snap the lid back onto the cup, sliding it over the counter to him. He cradles it between his hands, but doesnât move to leave. Heâs looking up at you from where heâs hunched over, and you canât help but stare back.
âDo you want to come sit with me?â he asks, âWe could be miserable together.â The smile that overtakes your face mirrors itself on his own.
August, 2018
When Brady walks in, right at his usual time, you give him a smile and lean over the counter to hug him. Youâve become fast friends, sitting together a few nights a week, probably talking more than studying. His Big Thing is long past, and he still hasnât told you what it was, but you donât really mind. You get to know about his family and his girlfriend and his upcoming move to Ottawa, of all places, but you donât need to know everything if he doesnât want to share.
You make two of the usual latte, one for each of you. You grab your books from the shelf, meeting him at the corner booth. You get through some small talk as you both set up, going back and forth with an ease that you were surprised to find has been there since the beginning.
âMatthewâs going to come hang out tonight,â he says as he logs into his computer. Heâs spoken about his brother before, so youâre somewhat intrigued.
âAny particular reason?â you ask. To your knowledge, Matthew has never been to the shop, so youâre not sure if something special is going on to spur him into coming.
âHe thinks it sounds cool,â Brady shrugs, flipping his notebook open. Maybe youâd know what heâs always working on if you could read his tiny chicken scratch. As it is, you donât mind letting him have his secrets.
You get four pages into your chapter before another customer enters, laying your pen in the divot between the pages while you go make them their drink. Luckily, they donât stick around. Itâs not awful when other people are around, but you always feel like someone is going to complain about you sitting in the dining room and studying while you should be working. But if thereâs no work to be done, you donât think thereâs anything wrong with it. Unfortunately, not everyone agrees. So you prefer if itâs just you and Brady.
Another four pages drag by, reading interspersed with breaks to talk. Honestly, the breaks are also a way to keep yourself sane as you read unnecessarily complicated science.
When the next customer enters, you spring up from your chair, shooting them a smile as you make your way behind the counter. You give your standard greeting, asking what you can get them.
âWhat do you recommend?â the man asks. You were kind of hoping heâd have something in mind so that this interaction could go quickly, because he may be the most beautiful man youâve ever seen and itâs making you flustered.
âDo you like the taste of coffee?â you ask. He nods, looking you up and down with a critical eye. It feels personal, feels like heâs searching for something, and youâre not sure if you like it.
âHow much caffeine are you looking for?â you ask next. You do your best to maintain eye contact, ignoring the way you have to look up to do so.
âHow much you got?â he asks in return. The crooked smile he gives you makes your stomach flip. You grasp for a drink to suggest, all knowledge having fled your mind in order to focus on the curl of his hair over his forehead, the glint of his bright eyes.
âA Lazy Eye would probably be the most,â you say, clearing your throat, âBut if you donât want to have a heart attack, you could do a regular Red Eye.â He tilts his head, smile turning smug, as if heâs noticed your distraction. Something about it snaps you out of your daze, slightly indignant. Youâve seen plenty of hot guys in your day, and youâre not about to look like a fool in front of him just because heâs pretty.
âRed Eye, Black Eye, Dripped Eye, Lazy Eye,â you list off with as much confidence as you can muster, âEach with one more shot than the last. Pick your poison.â Your attitude change only makes him smile wider. Your hand is poised over the buttons of the register, ready to ring up whatever he decides.
âLetâs go with a Black Eye,â he says, bearing a surprisingly sharp canine, âIâve had a few of those in my time.â That doesnât surprise you, with his smug face and oozing self-confidence. Something about it feels so disingenuous that it makes your teeth itch. Itâs clearly an act, but you canât exactly call him on it.
You give him his total, he pays, you get to work. You empty the last dregs of coffee in the pot into the sink and set the machine to brew a new batch. No matter how annoying a customer seems, youâre not about to serve them shitty coffee.
âY/N,â he says, leaning on the counter, âThatâs a pretty name.â Itâs exactly what Brady had said when youâd met him, which makes you eye the man a little suspiciously. Whereas Brady had clearly not been flirting when heâd said it, this manâs tone is ambiguous enough that youâre not entirely sure what his intentions are.
âThank you,â you say, dumping the first shot of espresso into the cup. Normally, you would ask for his name in return, but youâre not sure if you want to encourage him talking to you.
âHow long have you worked here?â he asks anyway.
âAlmost three years,â you reply. Youâre not sure you want to tell him anything about your life, but youâre trying to be polite.
âExperienced,â he says, smiling like heâs a lion closing in on its prey, âI like that.â Itâs cheesy and kind of sleazy, and you canât help but scoff in disbelief. Heâs watching you like a hawk, studying your reactions to everything he says and does. You dump the second shot, wishing the coffee would brew faster so this interaction could be over.
âI donât think I want to know what else you like,â you say, crossing your arms over your chest. You used to get embarrassed and rattled by customers making comments like this, but at some point something had changed inside you. Now you just get annoyed, no matter how hot the person may be.
âFeisty,â he says, smile changing slightly in a way you canât parse, âI like that too.â You roll your eyes, making a quiet noise of disgust. Itâs not great for business to react to customers this way, but you canât help it.
âI like it when men are silent,â you reply, able to feel how withering your gaze is. His expression changes yet again, smile getting smaller but more genuine, scrunching the bottom of his eyes up a little. That feels more natural to you, looks more right on his face. Something about the new softness in his eyes soothes something inside of you.
The coffee machine beeps to signal that itâs ready, and you waste no time in grabbing the pot and filling the cup. You hand it off to him, giving your biggest, most obviously fake smile.
âHave a fantastic night,â you say, immediately rounding the counter and heading back to the booth. When you settle back into your seat, Brady is smiling at you like youâve told the funniest joke in the world.
âWhat?â you ask, picking up your pen. Bradyâs eyes flick up above your head, slightly to the left, staying there, prompting you to turn around. The man is standing behind you, small smile still in place.
âBradyâs told me so much about you,â he says, and it dawns on you, âNice to meet you, Y/N. Iâm Matthew.â Your jaw falls open and you turn back to Brady, kicking him in the shin under the table. He yelps; Matthew laughs.
âYouâre both the worst,â you spit, trying to hold onto your irritation and failing. You laugh alongside the brothers, begrudgingly amused by the ridiculousness of the situation.
âSorry about that back there,â Matthew apologizes, seemingly genuine, âI couldnât help myself.â You shake your head at him as he bullies Brady further into the booth so he can sit. Brady shoves him back, but moves his things over anyway.
âItâs okay,â you say, pointing at him, âBut if you ever pull that shit again, Iâm banning you from the shop.â That startles a laugh out of him.
âI didnât know you had the power to do that,â he replies, using his crossed arms to lean on the table.
âI do now,â you say, tilting your chin up, âGonna put a picture up of you with a big X on it and everything.â You stare at each other for a second, and he breaks first, ducking his head as he laughs.
âFair enough,â he concedes, looking up at you through his lashes. Your heart skips a beat, but you do your best to seem unaffected. This is your friendâs brother, for Christâs sake. You canât be all aflutter over him. Youâre not sure you have a choice in the matter.
June, 2023
You might actually kill your coworker one day. Heâs such a smug rat bastard, and every meeting including both of you makes you think youâre going to grind your teeth into dust. Itâs just lucky that the job is remote, so you donât have to be around him physically. Probably best for both your sanity and his safety.
âI mean, at least you were right in the end?â Terri says, sounding uncertain through your headphones. Youâre sauteeing some onions and peppers, moving them around more than you should be just for something to do with your hands.
âYeah, I guess,â you sigh, âI just donât understand why he wants to make me look bad.â Ianâ the coworkerâ seems to always have some kind of comment on your work, some type of criticism. Constructive criticism is part of the game, but his is never constructive. It doesnât help that youâre the only two in the graphics department, so heâs always there when you present work. And really, being the only two should mean that you work together and support each other, honestly.
âBecause heâs an insecure man-child,â Terri replies easily. You shake your head down at the vegetables, startling as the oven timer goes off. You jab at the button to turn it off, opening the door to remove the chicken.
âI think Iâve had enough of insecure man-children,â you grumble. You cut open one of the chicken breasts with more force than is strictly necessary, grateful that it seems to be done.
âYou finally wanna talk about that?â Terri asks, and honestly? No, you donât. Ideally, youâll never talk about it, just push it down into the darkest recesses of your mind and bury it there. Unfortunately, you possess some level of emotional maturity, which means you know that you have to talk about it eventually.
Itâs hard, because despite Brady being your best friend, you canât exactly talk to him about this. If he knew any part of whatâs been going on, heâd probably go physically fight Matthew on your behalf. Part of you thinks that might actually make you feel a little better. But heâd also probably be mad that youâve had a not-thing with his brother, and that would make you feel worse.
âShe seems like a nice woman,â you say, trying to keep your tone neutral. Terri sighs, and you take your plate of food to the living room to eat.
âSheâs not the problem, here,â she says. Sheâs right, and you know it. You really donât have anything against Tessa, and obviously you canât blame her for any of this. Clearly, she had no idea about your not-thing with Matthew, and genuinely fell for him. Thereâs no point in being mad at her.
âYeah, well,â you push some food around your plate, âHeâs a fuckface and she can have him.â The mention of Matthew has ruined your appetite, the meal now looking completely unappealing. You push the plate to the other side of the coffee table with a huff. Youâll try eating again later, you tell yourself, knowing that you havenât been eating nearly enough lately. You canât help it, your inner turmoil chasing away your hunger most of the time.
âHe is a fuckface,â Terri agrees, adding, âBut donât pretend you donât still want him.â Ugh. Friends are the worst, actually, and you should just become a hermit in a cave somewhere. Thereâs no point even trying to deny the claim, both of you knowing that sheâs right.
âIâm not allowed to want him anymore,â you say, voice coming out weaker than you want to admit, âI never should have let myself want him in the first place.â In the beginning, despite being attracted to Matthew, it was easy to maintain distance. He was in Calgary most of the year, and reminding yourself that he was your new friendâs brother actually worked as a deterrent back then.
You canât pinpoint exactly when you started letting yourself get caught up, but youâd ended up completely entangled with him. Now heâs put that distance back between you, ripping away the strings youâd been tied up in, leaving you with all these empty spaces where he used to be. And itâs making you hate yourself, knowing that if youâd just kept things cordial, restricted your attention and connection to Brady like you should have, you wouldnât be feeling any of this right now.
âYou canât help who you love,â Terri says, so gently that it only hurts more. Youâre not fragile, okay? You donât need the softness, the careful handling. Youâre not fragile. Youâre not.
âI gotta go eat,â you say, not wanting to lie, but needing a way out of the conversation, âBye, Ter.â She says your name, but you just repeat the goodbye. She sighs, says goodbye, and you hang up. What you should do is eat something and go to sleep. Instead, you eye the easel in the corner of the living room. You sigh, heaving yourself up off of the couch to go grab a glass of water to rinse your brushes with.
April, 2019
Itâs probably going to become your new favorite day of the year: the day Brady comes home from Ottawa. His plane had landed yesterday, and his parents had even brought you to the airport with them to pick him up. As quickly as youâd bonded last summer, youâd only gotten closer through the season. It feels like you can talk to each other about anything, like you were meant to meet, like heâs the platonic version of a soulmate. You had patiently waited your turn to hug him after his parents, squeezing him as tightly as you could manage. Heâd only squeezed back harder.
With their seasons ending right around the same time this year, Matthew had landed the same night. Knowing theyâd have to go back to the airport, the Tkachuks had decided to just spend the day out instead of going home. Theyâd invited you to come with them, an invitation youâd eagerly accepted. Theyâre quickly starting to feel like family to you, and you love spending time with them. For the first time in your life, it feels like you fit somewhere.
Unfortunately, you hadnât been able to come along to pick up Matthew. Youâd had to work last night, so the Tkachuks had dropped you off at home to get changed and get going. Youâd still gotten to spend most of the day with them, which would have to be enough.
Youâre going over to their place today, and you decided to bake and bring along cookies. All of their local family and friends are going to be there to welcome the boys home, and you havenât met most of them yet, so you want to make a good first impression. Besides, itâs just polite to bring something along to someoneâs house.
Though Brady still tries to hug you when you arrive, despite your hands being full, the plates need to be deposited on the dining room table before he can get a real one. There are a few people chatting in the room, so Brady introduces you to them.
Most of the next hour goes much the same, Brady introducing you to family and friends, having small conversations with all of them. You know that Brady isnât trying to embarrass you, but he has a habit of hyping you up to people. Heâs more outgoing than you are, and he uses that social ease to brag about how smart you are, how talented. It feels a little like heâs trying to justify being your friend to them, but you know better than to think that Brady cares what anyone thinks of him and his choices.
The kitchen exits onto a large cherry wood deck, scattered with chairs, some of them already occupied. The back yard is sprawling, green grass lined with lush bushes. Thereâs a pool to the right, not opened for the summer yet, a jacuzzi positioned between it and the house. Youâre still not really used to all of this, the casual wealth of the family. Itâs so far from what youâd grown up with, something that had astonished you when youâd realized just how far above you the Tkachuks are.
There are a few yard games set up in the grass, cornhole and ladders and something you donât recognize. And there, in the center of the yard, Matthew is teaching a child how to play ladders. The kid is probably a cousin, of which they have many. Matthew is barefoot, wearing a bright red Flames hoodie and black shorts that only come to mid-thigh. Youâve narrowed your staring down to a minimum, so your eyes only linger for a second or two before you turn back to Brady.
He guides you around to meet the few people braving the chilly spring weather, much as he had done inside. Everyone is so nice, saying how pleased they are to meet you, and seeming to mean it.
Your last stop is Matthew, who interrupts his lesson to hug you. Itâs only the second time the two of you have done so, the first having been the last time you saw him before he left for the season. Despite that fact, he squeezes you almost as hard as Brady had, as if youâre his best friend too. Not that youâd presume to be Bradyâs best friend, but. Still.
âItâs good to see you, Y/N,â he says when you pull apart, and the expression on his face tells you how genuine it is. Your smile is almost involuntary, turning up the corners of your mouth and baring just a hint of teeth.
âWelcome home, Matthew,â you reply, âWe missed you.â Youâre not sure what âweâ youâre referring to, but it feels less incriminating than saying âI missed youâ. You get the feeling that he understands anyway, beaming at you.
The three of you chat for a few minutes, Matthew introducing you to his little cousin. With there being four of you, you decide to play a game of ladders, to test the little oneâs skills. Heâs pretty good, for a kid, and you and Brady make sure to throw well enough to convince him that youâre trying, but still let him win. Throughout, Matthew gives him tips and instruction, so kind and gentle that it makes your heart ache. They cheer when they win, high fiving and teasing you and Brady.
You go inside to spend some time with Keith and Chantal. Chantal gives you a big hug, as if she hadnât just seen you yesterday. Keith gives you a hearty clap on the shoulder. Taryn appears at some point, sneaking up behind you and poking your sides to make you jump. You laugh along with her, enfolding her into the conversation easily.
Time flies by, the sun setting around you, the house lights turning on one by one as darkness descends. Eventually, you end up lounging in the den with the other adult kids. From your visits last year, the chair in the corner has become yours. Youâre settled in, legs folded up under you as something that no one is watching plays on the TV. Brady and Taryn get into a heated debate about something or another, and Matthew gives you a long-suffering look as his younger siblings bicker. You just smile back at him, finding the familyâs passion entirely endearing.
âSeventeen years of this,â Matthew gripes, clearly not as annoyed as heâs trying to seem.
âAnd sixty more to go,â you reply. Matthew chuckles at that, looking to Brady and Taryn with such fondness that you almost canât stand it. Itâs the kind of relationship youâd wanted with your own brothers, but thatâs best not to think about.
âHopefully,â Matthew says, turning that fond look toward you. Your heart skips a beat, and youâve gotten good at ignoring that.
May, 2019
You shouldnât be this nervous, but you are. Terri is on speaker phone, telling you about her new job. Youâre half-listening, staring at the clothing laid out on your bed. Youâve been agonizing all morning about what youâre going to wear, how youâre going to do your makeup, if you should wear makeup at all.
âIâm glad that your boss defended you,â you say to Terri, still tuned in enough to follow her story, âShe seems cool.â
âSheâs so cool,â Terri gushes, âSheâs my favorite now.â Youâre so happy that Terri has finally found a good job, especially with how hellish her previous one had been. This one pays almost double what she was getting before, too, which definitely doesnât hurt. She expounds a little more about the things she loves about her boss, and you decide to hang back up the dresses youâve laid out. Itâs still a little too chilly to wear them, especially after sundown.
âYouâre still staring at those damn clothes, arenât you?â Terri asks, switching the topic suddenly. Your face gets warm as you make a plaintive hand gesture, despite her not being able to see you.
âClothes are stupid and I canât decide,â you complain, trying to imagine how each of the final two options will come across. If you try too hard, Matthew might think that you think this is a date, but you still want to look good. You know itâs not a date, but youâre still kind of acting like it is, and itâs embarrassing.
âDefinitely wear jeans,â Terri advises, âThatâll make it more casual.â You agree, putting away the skirt youâd paired with the one shirt, trying to picture how it would look with jeans. You move the pants between each shirt, before giving up and just putting them on. Youâll just try on both outfits and see which one you like better.
Once dressed in the first option, you take a picture to send to Terri. You look at yourself in the mirror, turning this way and that. After a minute or two of consideration, you switch tops. You take another picture and send both to Terri for her opinion.
âOh, definitely the second one,â she says, âThe first one makes you look like youâre going to a job interview.â You look at the picture again, and canât deny that sheâs right. You put that one away, settled in your decision. Youâre not sure if Matthew has ever seen you in anything but jeans and a t-shirt, so you hope the red tank top layered with a tucked-in sheer pink printed blouse isnât too much of a change.
When Matthew had invited you to take a walk around the park yesterday, just the two of you. Youâve never spent more than a few minutes alone with him, always having Brady or Taryn or Emma to provide distraction and distance. This time youâll have nothing to focus on but him.
The time comes soon enough, and you gather your things, not wanting to make Matthew wait for you when he arrives. Youâd offered to drive yourself and meet him there, but heâd waved off the idea immediately, saying that heâd pick you up.
A knock comes at your door right on time. You take a deep breath before you open it, settling your frenzied heart. Matthew smiles as soon as he sees you.
âOh wow,â he says, almost absentmindedly, âYou look great.â Your blush is immediate, and you hope he canât see it. It seems that anything that comes out of his mouth makes you blush, sometimes.
The drive to the park isnât too long. When you arrive, you gather your bag from the floor of the passenger seat, and by time you move to get a hand on the door handle, Matthew is already opening the door from the outside. Itâs a sweet surprise, and you thank him as you climb out of the car.
Itâs a nice day, not too cold or windy for once. The two of you walk, talking about this and that, moving from topic to topic as they arise. You point out a few birds as you go, and Matthew listens to the little fun facts you give about them. He seems genuinely interested, but even if heâs not, at least heâs polite enough to pretend.
âI guess we should have left a little earlier,â Matthew remarks as the sun goes down, the light fading around you. The sun sets quickly this time of year, so youâre still a few minutes out from the car by time itâs completely dark. The lights along the pathway bathe Matthew in yellow light, casting warm shadows in the dips and hollows of his face.
âAt least I have a big, strong man to protect me,â you joke, elbowing him.
âOh no, if we get jumped Iâm running,â he replies, shooting a shit-eating grin down at you. You gasp and press a hand to your heart, as if youâre truly scandalized.
âYou would really abandon me like that?â you ask. His smile softens at the edges.
âNever,â he says, looking so genuine that it makes your heart flutter, pausing before he adds, âUnless weâre getting robbed.â Your combined laughter rings out through the trees.
June, 2023
Youâve managed to avoid any questions about your odd behavior, and itâs getting easier to act normal over time. A couple weeks have passed since your first meeting with Tessa, and you still feel like ripping your skin off when you see her touching Matthew, but youâve gotten better at hiding it. Itâs not your place to be upset, anyway.
The diner is bustling at this time of day, the tail end of lunch rush. You had to wait a little bit to get seated, but now youâre sitting at the end of a booth in a chair theyâd pulled up to the edge to make up for all five of you not fitting into the booth. It makes you feel a little left out, the only one not paired off, a fifth wheel to the two couples on either side of the table. You block that out, a skill youâve had for years, but have had to strengthen rapidly over the past few weeks.
Brady has an arm around Emmaâs shoulders, and you can tell by the angle of Matthewâs arm that he has a hand on Tessaâs thigh. You remember when that was you, Matthew touching you so casually, so naturally. Sitting across from Matthew as he nudges your foot under the table, sitting next to him with your shoulders pressed together, fingers tangled together on the seat, where no one could see.
Emma is telling a story about a night out with some of her girlfriends, and youâre laughing along at the antics with everyone else. When she asks you about work, you try to clear the perpetual lump in your throat before answering, succeeding in sounding happy, though the tightness remains.
When your food arrives, you spend most of the time pushing it around your plate to make it look like youâre eating. You never have an appetite around Matthew anymore, weirdly embarrassed about being seen eating in a way you havenât been since you were a teenager. Youâll take it home and eat it later, if you can stop thinking about Matthew for two fucking seconds.
Youâre not sure how long thatâs going to be impossible, but you hope itâs not much longer.
January, 2020
Youâve been to a few games when the boys have played the Blues, but youâve never made the trip up to Canada to see them play each other before. Ottawa is nice, Brady and Emma having shown you around a little when youâd arrived. Your nerves had been shot from the anxiety of traveling abroad for the first time, even though it was just to Canada. The couple seemed to understand, only taking you around for a few hours before bringing you home.
Bradyâs apartment is nice, really nice. Heâs offered you the guest room for a few days, and you appreciate not having to pay for a hotel. Heâll be home for six days before he has to go to St. Louis for the All Star game, so youâd arranged to stay in Ottawa and fly back home with them.
Luckily, the cafe is pretty cool about rearranging your schedule, so youâll just have to work some extra days when you go back to make up for what youâre missing. Youâd asked for the days of the skills competition and game off as well, Brady having managed to get you a ticket. Your manager has always thought it was cool that you were friends with the Tkachuks, so she had agreed to give you the time off if you brought her a souvenir. Matthew and Brady had offered to sign a jersey for her without you even having to ask, and youâll owe them for a while, though they insist you donât.
Matthew gets in that first night, the three of you meeting him at his hotel. Youâre not sure how he managed it, but heâll be staying a few days instead of returning to Calgary with the team after the game. Maybe he got a special exception because this game is the last before All Star week, and he has to go to St. Louis anyway. No matter the reason, youâre glad he gets to stay.
The game the next night is exciting, and definitely worth the trip. With the Senatorsâ performance in recent years, itâs mostly the diehard fans left, so the atmosphere is electric. You get swept up in the passion and joy, especially when the game ends with a 5-2 win for Ottawa.
The boys have to debrief and get changed, which you know will take a while. Emma and you wait with the WAGs, Emma excited to introduce you to them. Some of them think youâre a new WAG at first, which is honestly kind of flattering. All of the ladies are surprisingly kind and welcoming, and you enjoy interacting with them as you all wait.
Matthew emerges first, guided down the hallway by one of the arena staff. His steps pick up pace when he sees you and Emma, and he shoots a quick thanks to the staff member before jogging over to the two of you. He immediately enfolds you in his arms, squeezing tight and holding longer than usual. You know itâs difficult for him to lose at all, let alone to his brother, so you let him hold you as long as he wants.
Once he lets you go, he meets your eyes. His smile is soft, tinged with a slight sadness that you want to wipe away.
âHey there, sweet girl,â he greets, and your breath catches at the term of endearment. Heâd started using it a few months ago, and it still makes your chest tight. You know that it doesnât mean anything, but you still imagine sometimes that it does.
He turns his attention to Emma, giving her a hug as well, just one quick squeeze before releasing. The three of you start talking, waiting patiently for Brady. It doesnât shock you that he takes so long to come out, knowing his unofficial position of leadership in the team. The guys come out one by one, hugging and kissing their wives and girlfriends, the number of ladies dwindling as they leave with their men.
When Brady finally emerges, he heads straight over to give Emma a hug and kiss. He hugs you next, before punching Matthewâs shoulder. They have a little back-and-forth as you all exit the arena, taking harmless jabs at each other all the way to the car.
The main issue with the living arrangements for the trip had been that Brady and Emma were going to have two guests and only one spare room. Matthew had offered to sleep on the couch, but heâs too tall for that, and you donât want him to end up sore or hurting his neck during the season. Youâd insisted that youâd sleep on the couch, but both Matthew and Brady had immediately vetoed that idea. Then youâd found out that the guest room has two twin beds instead of one bigger one, and the answer was simple.
Matthew sets his suitcase and backpack next to the door when you get home. Youâve already claimed the bed on the far side, so he gets set up on the one closer to the door. Emma and Brady are in the kitchen, making a post-game snack for everyone, so itâs just you and Matthew.
âYou excited to be roomies for a week?â he asks, unzipping his suitcase. Yours is already open under the window, so you grab some pajamas out of it.
âDepends how loud you snore,â you tease. He shoots you a toothy smile.
âOh, itâs gonna be loud,â he says. You chuckle a bit, knowing heâs joking. Emma calls for you, then, and you leave your clothes on the bed to go to her. The four of you converse as you eat, seated in a row at the kitchen island. Youâve got Matthew to one side and Brady to the other, and they take turns kicking your ankles. You kick back, grinning at Emma when she kicks Bradyâs other side.
Brady and Matthew had already showered at the rink, so they sit in the living room while you and Emma get ready for bed. She uses the master suite, and you use the bathroom in the hall. Itâs nice, if small, with a simple stall shower instead of a tub. You go through your routine on autopilot, only realizing when youâre done that youâd left your clothes in the bedroom. You wrap yourself in a towel, doing your best to sneak past the door to the living room.
When you look to make sure your stealth is working, you meet Matthewâs eyes. It stops you in your tracks. You canât discern the look on his face, and youâre not sure that you care to. He shoots you an easy smile, and you wave at him like an idiot, acting on instinct. It only makes him smile wider, and you scurry off to the room.
After youâre dressed, thereâs a knock on the door. Brady asks if youâre decent, and you confirm that you are, so he peeks his head in. Once he sees that you truly are dressed, he opens the door the rest of the way. He and Emma bid you good night, telling you to just ask if you need anything. You thank them and say good night in return, Matthew entering the room as soon as the other two retreat to their own room. Heâs barely two steps into the room before heâs pulling off his shirt.
âWoah there, cowboy,â you say, holding up a hand in front of you. He just shrugs at you.
âGotta get ready for bed,â he says, bending over and lifting his foot to remove his socks. Youâd figured that he would wear a t-shirt and shorts to bed like you, but you shouldâve guessed heâd be the type to sleep shirtless, no matter whoâs around. Heâs naked in front of thirty people every day, who cares about being shirtless?
You do your best to brush it off, turning down the covers of your bed so that you can crawl in. Normally, you would read for a bit before bed, but youâre tired enough tonight that you donât think you need to. You pull the blankets up to your chin, turning on your side. Unfortunately, you sleep on your right, so you end up facing Matthewâs bed. Is that weird? Should you try sleeping the opposite direction?
Matthew doesnât say anything, flicking the lights off and crawling into bed. He sleeps on his left, apparently, so heâs facing you too. Thatâs a little awkward, right? As your eyes adjust to the dark, youâre able to see the glint of his teeth as he smiles over at you.
âSleep well, sweet girl,â he says quietly. You return the sentiment, grateful that the darkness means he probably canât fully see the embarrassment on your face. Youâre backlit by the window, so you convince yourself that he canât.
The next morning, you wake to Matthew already out of bed, stretching. Your eyes roam his back, taking in the dips and ridges of his muscles. Only at the last second do you realize that his head is turned to the side, and heâs staring at you through the corner of his eye. You quickly avert your gaze, turning to sit bolt upright on the other side of the bed, facing the window.
The four of you spend the day exploring the city, Brady and Emma seeming to have planned what they want to show you. Itâs nice, peaceful and fun. You make them take pictures with you in front of landmarks or cool art pieces, all of you squished together to fit in the selfie.
It isnât until the fourth night that anything out of the ordinary happens. Youâre lying in bed, having turned on your back to stare at the ceiling, unable to sleep. You probably shouldnât have had that affogato after dinner, though usually they donât bother you this much. No matter how long you toss and turn, how many sleeping positions you try, you canât even make yourself tired, let alone actually fall asleep.
âWhat are you, a rotisserie chicken?â Matthew asks rhetorically, breaking the silence. His voice is hushed, but it still startles you. You turn your head to stare at him, finding him staring right back.
âIâm sorry,â you apologize, sheepish, âI canât sleep.â Matthewâs lips quirk up at one end.
âMe either,â he says, sitting up. You mimic his posture, then scoot back to lean against the headboard. He slings his legs over the edge of the bed and stands, and you think for a second that heâs going to turn on the light. Instead, he takes the two steps to your bed, motioning to the mattress. You nod, prompting him to start shoving your shoulder, bullying you into making space for him. You giggle, trying to keep quiet to respect the late hour.
âSo,â he leads, taking a long moment to just stare at you before continuing, âTell me something I donât know about you.â Youâre taken off guard by the request, not sure how to respond.
âI was an Aaron Carter girl growing up,â you pull out of thin air. Matthewâs face breaks into a wide smile, sunshine in the middle of the night.
âReally?â he asks. You nod, mumbling âyeahâ in confirmation. Thatâs all it takes to get you both talking. You trade off back and forth, telling each other small things about yourself that may not come up otherwise, launching into short discussions about some of the statements.
âMy favorite color is red,â he says at one point, when youâre starting to think you may fall asleep.
âI thought it was blue?â you reply, remembering Chantal mention that at some point. Matthew starts fiddling with his hands.
âI tell people itâs blue, but itâs really red,â he says. You tilt your head an inch or two, furrowing your brow at him.
âWhy?â you ask. He ducks his head.
âRed is an angry color,â he explains, voice quieter than before, âWith my reputation, I donât want people to associate me with an aggressive color. I donât want to play into the stereotype.â You hum, looking forward. It feels like this isnât the best time to look at him, like heâll clam up if you witness his vulnerability.
âItâs also the color of vitality, excitement, love,â you counter, leaving just a breath of a pause, âItâs a good color for you.â The entire room is still for a dragging moment, before Matthew gently knocks your shoulders together.
âWhat about you?â he asks when you look back to him. Thereâs a fraction of a change in his face, but you donât comment on it.
When you wake up in the morning, youâre still sitting up, head resting on Matthewâs shoulder, his head laying on top of yours. You suppress the instinct to startle, not wanting to disrupt him, lest he wake up and move. His skin is warm under your cheek, your arms lined up from shoulder to the knuckles of your fingers. You close your eyes again, trying to keep your breathing steady, as if youâre still sleeping. Youâve been trying so hard to keep distance between Matthew and yourself, but youâll allow yourself to enjoy this, just for a moment longer.
Thereâs a shift in Matthewâs breathing, his fingers twitching against yours. It settles after a second, into a different pattern, intentionally deep and even. Youâre sure that heâs awake, that heâs doing the same thing that you are. Youâre not sure what to do with that information.
The rest of the trip goes by smoothly, Brady and Emma showing you both the touristy things and the better local spots around the city. If the same thing happens the next night, and the night after that, you and Matthew talking in low voices until you fall asleep against each other, neither of you mention it.
April, 2020
While the initial prediction for lockdown was that it would only last a month, itâs clear that itâs going to last much, much longer.
Itâs probably lucky that youâd just started a new job, one that can be done remotely, rather than either working at the coffee shop or being laid off. Itâs not exactly what you want to do, but itâs at least in the artistic field, so you try to be grateful anyway. Itâs difficult being locked away in your apartment, but youâre grateful that youâre luckier than essential workers and people who are losing their jobs altogether.
The thing that keeps you sane in all of this is your phone. More specifically, itâs your friends. Youâve developed almost a schedule with it, calling Terri in the morning for an hour or so before work. At lunch, you facetime Brady and Emma for another hour, not envying them being stuck so far from home. It must be hard to be in an entirely different country than your family.
The highlight of each day is the evening, when you facetime Matthew. Though he spends most of the day sending you videos and memes and updates about whatever little thing heâs doing at the moment, itâs still nice to talk to him out loud. Seeing his face helps your growing loneliness a little bit.
Youâre in your living room, your phone propped up against the arm of the couch as you show off the few things youâve made since picking up crochet a couple weeks ago. Matthew compliments each of them, commending you for your improvement. Heâs the only one youâve shown, too embarrassed to let anyone else see the wonky scarves with uneven stitches.
âYou have time to work on any paintings lately?â he asks, once youâre done your little show and tell. The truth is that youâve got three new canvases drying in the kitchen. The truth is also that the man asking about them is the inspiration for their creation. Thereâs nothing incriminating about them; itâs not like theyâre portraits of him or something. But youâre still hesitant to show him, because even if he doesnât know, you do.
You show him anyway. The painting of the park is his favorite, and you wonder if he knows that itâs the one you went to for your first time alone together. Itâs mostly dark, greens and blues so deep they look black, yellow triangles of light splitting the canvas into section. If you look closely enough, the brush strokes fill in the details of the trees, the grass, the pavement. Your phone camera isnât good enough for Matthew to see that, but he compliments it anyway.
âYou should paint me something for my apartment,â he says after you show him all three. Youâre not opposed to the idea, actually enjoy the thought of something you made being showcased in his home.
âWhat do you want?â you ask, a hundred ideas already flitting through your mind. The only way youâve seen his apartment is through the background of pictures he sends you sometimes, or little glimpses you catch as he walks around while you facetime. Youâre not entirely sure of the vibe, but youâre sure you can figure something out.
âWhat makes you think of me?â he asks in return. You stop in your tracks in the doorway between the kitchen and living room. The hand holding your phone lowers a couple inches unintentionally, your gaze drifting above the screen, staring into the middle distance. What makes you think of him? Hockey, obviously. Family. Curling up under a blanket on a cold night. Laying on the couch with your feet up on the armrest, your head propped up on a pillow, a sad replacement for his lap. Spruce trees, gold, pitbulls, mushroom pizza, black eyesâ both the drink and the wound.
Everything. Everything makes you think of him.
You canât say that, obviously. You search your brain for something personal but innocuous, something sentimental but still acceptable. You think of all the time that you two have spent together over the past few years, memories springing up, some that youâd even forgotten about. Some that youâll never be able to forget about.
âCan I surprise you?â you ask. Youâre given that familiar smile in response, any iteration of which makes your heart stutter in your chest.
âYeah,â he says, propping his face up with one hand on his jaw, âI trust you.â
July, 2023
Some people may say that Terriâs apartment is cluttered, but you just find it cozy. She has decorations and knick-knacks on every surface, but the comfiest couch youâve ever sat on. Thatâs where you are now, stretched out with your back against the side, Terri mimicking your posture at the other end, your legs tangled together in the middle.
âWe should see the Barbie movie when it comes out,â she says, unprompted. You look up from the hook and yarn in your hands, tipping your head to the side for a second and shrugging.
âIt looks good,â you say, an indirect agreement. You havenât been to the movies since before lockdown, so it might be nice to go back.
âDâyou think Gabe would want to come?â she asks cautiously, âHe could bring the kids.â The mention of your brother still makes ice crawl in your chest, but itâs not as bad as it once was. Heâd reached out last year, trying to reconnect with you, and apparently your other brother too. Youâve only seen him a few times since, but itâs more than youâd seen him in the four years prior, combined.
âItâs worth a shot, right?â Terri asks, eyes flicking toward your phone sitting on the coffee table. You look toward it as well, debating for a second. It would be nice to see your nieces and nephews, but it also hurts that they barely know who you are.
âYeah,â you agree after a second, âWorth a shot.â You grab your phone, feeling as if itâs going to explode in your hands if you move too quickly. There are a few notifications when you wake the screen, which you ignore to unlock it. You open your texts, backing out of your thread with Terri from earlier. You have a picture message from Brady, just a selfie of him and Emma smiling, which you send a heart in response to. Backing out of that thread, you see another new message, underneath the contact name you havenât had the heart to change. The red and purple hearts next to his nameâ each of your favorite colorsâ having been there so long that getting rid of them feels wrong, no matter how it makes your chest hurt to see them.
Can we talk?
You tap the back button as quickly as you can. You canât respond. You should, to be polite, but you canât. If you do, youâll say something you regret. Itâll probably be agreement or the words âeat shitâ, and either option will get you into trouble. You canât respond. You want so badly to talk to him. You want so desperately to go back in time and never meet him.
Your fingers tremble as you draft a text to your brother, typing and deleting and re-typing a few times before you settle on the wording. You have more important things to worry about than Matthew.
August, 2020
The bubble was an interesting idea. It may not be the best idea in the world, despite the safety precautions, but you know Matthew is just happy to be back on the ice. Heâs already sent you a dozen pictures of the hotel, of him with his teammates and friends, masked up together in the lobby. You tell him to tell the boys that you say hello, and he texts you each of their responses.
The first round goes well, the Flames only losing one game to the Jets. You know Matthew had been worried about going through all the rules and protocols just to be eliminated immediately, so youâre glad that that isnât the case.
The series against the Stars starts out with an exciting back-and-forth, the teams trading off wins. Then the Stars win game 5, breaking the pattern. Youâre not expecting the last game to actually be the last, convinced that the Flames would at least make it to a game seven. But the Stars pull a decisive 7-3 win, the Flames falling apart in the second period and unable to get themselves back together.
Matthew has called you as soon as he got back to his hotel room after every game, so youâre expecting your phone to ring some time in the next hour or two. You putter around the apartment a little, putting away some dishes and wiping down the kitchen counters. Youâd been painting during the game, a commission from a friend of a friend of a friend. You return to that, losing yourself in the meticulous movements of your brush.
It feels like itâs been too long. You try to focus on the canvas in front of you, but thereâs a nagging sense in the back of your mind that something is wrong. It sits heavy at the base of your skull as you try to ignore it.
Eventually, it becomes too much. You check your phone to make sure that you havenât missed his call, but there are no notifications. Itâs been a little over two hours. You unlock your phone and pull up his contact in a second, pressing the video icon. Typically, heâll pick up after one or two rings, but you hear the third ring, the fourth. The call disconnects, shock shooting up your spine. It only lasts a second, your phone ringing with a voice call almost immediately.
âHey sweet girl,â Matthew greets you in his typical fashion as soon as you accept the call. Thereâs something off about his voice, and it takes you a second to realize what it is.
âHey there, darling,â you respond, voice as gentle as you can manage. Itâs not the first time youâve heard Matthew cry, but it breaks your heart every time. As much as he tries to seem tough and aloof, you know how deeply losses like this affect him. Now it makes sense that he didnât want video involved.
âHow are you?â he asks, clearly moving his face away from the receiver as he sniffles, but you can still hear it. You move to the couch, sinking into the cushions, as if youâre as crushed as he is.
âIâm okay,â you reply, âYou holding up okay?â You know heâll say that heâs fine, but you also know that heâs not. He may not be for a while. Thereâs a pause, a long stretch of silence, only interrupted by his deep, labored breaths.
âI wish you were here,â he says. He sounds absolutely miserable, his voice cracking in the middle of the sentence. The urge to hold him is overwhelming, your arms buzzing with the desire to wrap around him. You want to pull him down into your lap, let him tuck his head into the crook of your neck, let him cry on you as you scratch his scalp and kiss his head. Lockdown isnât the only reason that canât happen.
âIâm going to hug you so hard,â you insist, âAs soon as I can see you again.â
July, 2023
While youâre still a third wheel with Brady and Emma, itâs better than being a fifth wheel with the entire group. Youâd asked Taryn if she wanted to tag along, but she has training to do. Brady had already done his that morning, so heâs free for the rest of the day, and had invited you to spend some time together.
Youâre certain that he doesnât know how you feel about this place, how much it hurts to be here. As far as heâs aware, this is your favorite park, the one you visit with Matthew at least a few times a month every summer. He probably thinks itâs a great choice, something to cheer you up from the slump you know heâs noticed.
Despite the memories tugging at you from every direction, youâre mostly in a good mood. Youâd gotten excellent news the day before yesterday, an opportunity youâve dreamed of for a long time. You wanted to text Brady right after the meeting to tell him, but youâd decided it was better to share it with him and Emma in person. Youâre debating something that absolutely doesnât matter, all of you talking over each other. Youâre waiting for the right moment to change the conversation. It doesnât come until almost an hour into your walk, but you jump on it as soon as it does.
âI have some cool news,â you say, breaking the silent pause that had fallen over the group.
âWell?â Emma replies, âGo on.â The excitement is bubbling up inside of you again at the thought of it, your stomach turning, your chest too full.
âYou know that gallery downtown that I love?â you ask, continuing after they agree, âIâm going to do a show there.â They stop in their tracks, Emma immediately enfolding you in her arms. You hug her back, squeezing tight as she bounces on her toes. When she pulls back, she holds your face in her hands, voice high and thrilled as she congratulates you. The smile on your face is unavoidable, happiness from the news mingling with the happiness of your friends being proud of you.
âCool news, huh?â Brady asks, lightly smacking your shoulder as he says, âWhat an understatement.â The circle of his arms feels safe, his chest warm against your cheek as he holds you tight. The look on his face when he releases you is the best reaction youâve gotten so far, his pride meaning more than anyone elseâs.
âWhen is it?â he asks, taking Emmaâs hand in his own once again and resuming the walk. You follow along, too excited to be self-conscious of the visible skip in your step.
âAugust 20th,â you say. Thereâs an unspoken question there, a silent invitation. You donât want him to feel pressured to come, knowing that despite how supportive he is of your artistic endeavors, heâs not big on things like art shows. In the end, you donât have to ask.
âYou know weâre coming, right?â he asks, aiming a crooked smile at you, âYou canât stop us.â Though the smile hasnât left your face since you brought up the topic, it gets brighter in return.
âIâd never dream of trying to,â you reply, and you mean it.
October, 2020
Itâs odd to have the boys around at this time of year, the season usually taking them away at the end of August. Youâre grateful for it, though. It means that you get to spend time with them, lockdown finally over, freeing you from the confines of your apartment. Your job has stayed remote, so youâre able to be around even more, saving time on what used to be an hour long commute each way.
Right now, itâs you and the boys, Emma, and Terri. Youâd introduced her to them less than a month ago, but they already love her, just as you knew they would. She doesnât always come around with you, considering how you spend nearly every day at the Tkachuksâ, but she has some time today.
After twenty minutes of debating what you should watch, you all agree on a true crime documentary. Youâve given up your chair for Terri, squishing yourself onto the couch with Brady and Emma, pressing your cold feet against her leg and laughing when she yelps. She kicks you, only serving to make you laugh harder. Brady playfully threatens to fight you to defend his womanâs honor, and you put your fists up in front of you, jabbing out into the air as if youâre going to take him up on the offer. He chuckles, reaching out to fist bump you instead of punch. You drop your hands, looking past his big ass head.
Matthew is lounging in the second chair, the leg rest of the recliner up despite his legs being crossed under him. Itâs the only way the chair will lean back, heâd told you once, and he doesnât like sitting upright.
The smile on his face isnât the wide grin youâd expected. Itâs small, a gentle turn of the lips. Combined with the look heâs giving youâ something unfocused, something unbearably softâ it implies an emotion that you know canât be the correct interpretation. You swallow hard, turning your eyes back to Brady.
âPress play already, nerd,â you demand, tone playful enough to show that you donât mean it. He sticks his tongue out at you, but does as heâs told.
Five minutes in, you glance over at Matthew, finding him already looking at you. You look away, slightly embarrassed to be caught. Another five minutes later, you canât help but peek back at him again, as if your eyes are magnetized to him. Itâs almost disappointing that heâs actually looking at the screen. It only takes a second for his eyes to move to the side, peering at you in his peripheral. The corner of his lips quirks up the tiniest bit, almost unnoticeable. But you notice.
You only make it maybe half an hour into the film before Matthew leans forward and snatches the remote from its place next to Brady. The plaintive sound Brady lets out is kind of funny, but you seem to think everything is funny today. Matthew pauses the show, declaring that the group needs snacks.
âY/N, come give me a hand,â he says, beckoning you to follow him. You grumble a bit, but stand and follow him up the stairs and out of the den. He leads the way through the living room and into the kitchen. Theyâre fancy, so they have a walk-in pantry, of course. The two of you enter one after another. You start looking at the snack section, deciding what to grab. The good thing about being the one to retrieve the food is that you get to choose whatever you want and thereâs nothing the others can say about it.
Youâre rifling through the chips and pretzels when you feel a presence close behind you. Itâs obviously Matthew, but heâs so close that you can feel the heat of his body radiating into your back. His left hand comes into your field of vision, pressing to the shelves next to your head. You twist your neck to look back at him, confused as to what heâs doing.
Youâre not expecting the look heâs giving you. His eyes dark, completely focused in on your face. Your eyes flick from his eyes to his mouth without your permission. Heâs not smiling, his lips parted just a fraction of an inch.
He rests his right hand on your shoulder, using it to turn your entire body around to face him. You can feel how dumbfounded your expression is as you stare up at him, your brow furrowed, your mouth slightly agape. He returns the gesture of looking at your mouth, his tongue quickly flicking out to wet his lips. He looks like heâs about to eat you alive. You would let him.
Thereâs a long, unbearable stretch of silence as the two of you just stare at each other, faces only a scant few inches apart. If this were anyone else, you would know exactly whatâs going on, exactly what they want. But this is Matthew, your insanely wonderful, insanely hot, insanely out of your league friend. Thereâs no chance that heâs about to do what it feels like he is. No matter how many times you steal glances at each other, how closely he holds you, how many times he allows himself to be vulnerable with you, thereâs no chance heâd ever want you. And just as you tell yourself that, he speaks.
âCan I kiss you?â he asks, his breath brushing across your lips from the proximity. Your eyes go wide, your mouth falling open wider in shock. Youâve spent the last two years valiantly suppressing any type of attraction you have to him, trying to respect his station as your best friendâs brother. And now, in just four words, heâs let it all loose. It floods you inside, so overwhelming, so much to take all at once that it triggers a full system reset. You swear your heart stops, your mouth opening and closing as you struggle to tear the words from your lagging brain.
The words wonât come. The look on Matthewâs face is changing, something embarrassed, something guilty. He moves back an inch and you reach out, unwilling to let him go. You cup his face in your hands, pulling him in to press your lips together.
Itâs lingering, almost chaste, and entirely sensational. Your lips are tingling, sparks shooting down your spine. Your chest feels cracked open, your innards exposed for his inspection, your true self exposed for his judgment.
When you pull back and open your eyes, his are still closed. He looks like heâs in heaven, like heâs trying to imprint this moment in his mind the same way that you are. After a moment, his eyelids slide up and he looks at you again. His eyes are hazy, unfocused, his blown pupils leaving only a thin ring of blue around the edge of his iris.
âAgain,â he says, breathless, âPlease.â
Who are you to deny him?
The second kiss is as good as the first, your breath abandoning your body to pant out against his lips. You meet again, his tongue flicking out for half a second to touch your top lip. It makes you breath hitch, makes you kiss him again, makes you gently bite his full bottom lip. The sound he lets out is barely audible, but it only feeds the fire inside of you, an inferno that blazes up from your hips to your throat. You cradle his face in your hands, hold just strong enough to move his head how you want, to slot your mouths together perfectly each time.
âHurry up, asshole!â
Bradyâs shout violently snaps you out of your haze. You jerk backward, trying to step away, but already pressed against the shelves. Matthew doesnât seem as put off as you, smiling as if nothing happened. You relinquish your hold on his face, dropping your hands to your sides. His hands had wandered as you kissed, one on your waist, the other on the back of your neck. He squeezes once at the base of your skull, dipping in to give you one last quick kiss.
After frantically grabbing random snacks, you return to the den. You can feel how hot your face is, and you can only hope that itâs not too obvious how flustered you are. You and Matthew deposit the snacks on the coffee table, everyone immediately selecting one. You curl back up in your chair, legs pulled up to your chest as you lay sideways, head on the armrest.
Every time your eyes drift to Matthew for the rest of the evening, heâs looking back.
January, 2021
Just as the day the boys come home is the best day of the year, the day they leave for the season is the worst. Sometimes you wish you were Emma, that you could follow them back and forth and never be without them. But St. Louis is your home, is where you have a job and friends and more recently, family.
Youâd helped both boys pack for the past few days, but you wonât be able to go along to drop them off at the airport. When Matthew had left for the playoffs, Emma had offered you her spot in the car. Youâd told her that she didnât have to, but sheâd assured you she wanted it that way. She has to go along this time, so the car is already overpacked. Besides, you have to work that morning anyway.
You still show up at the Tkachuksâ beforehand, so early that the sun hasnât made an appearance yet. Matthew had forgotten to pack his favorite sweater, of course. You fish it out from where it had fallen under his bed, straightening up to hold it out to him. He thanks you, deciding to wear it for the flight instead of shoving it into one of his bags. It looks good on him. Cozy.
Brady and Emma are double checking their room as well, one door down from you. Keith, Chantal, and Taryn are down in the living room, waiting as patiently as theyâre capable of, which isnât very much.
Being alone with Matthew used to be exciting, used to make your heart change its rhythm, used to start up a buzz under your skin. Now, itâs just⊠comfortable. Safe. Right.
When Matthew approaches you, crowding up into your space, you know exactly what he wants. The first time youâd kissed should have been the last. Youâre too drawn to him, feel too much toward him, more than you should. More than he will ever return. The two of you havenât discussed exactly what youâre doing here, but itâs clearly meant to be casual. Matthew isnât typically the kind to shy away from voicing what he wants, and he hasnât spoken up to define anything.
Is that what you want? Youâre not sure. Making out like teenagers for months has been nice, has satisfied a part of you. But only a part.
Youâre avoiding thinking about what you want, too afraid of what youâll find. Some part of you, buried deep inside, hidden behind a recently built wall, already knows. If you allow yourself to acknowledge it, this will end badly. If you allow yourself to want, youâll destroy yourself in the process.
The kisses he lays on your lips stay sweet, gentle presses, just a tease of tongue here and there. His arms are wrapped around you, resting on your shoulders, while your hands rest on his hips. You havenât progressed past kissing, and youâre not sure if he wants anything beyond this. Youâll take what you can get.
Keith calls up the stairs for you to hurry up, lest the boys miss their flights. Matthew leaves one last peck on your lips, just as he always does before you part. You glance around his room a final time, making sure everything is packed. You help him bring his bags downstairs, help him and Emma get their things outside and into the car. Youâll have to go home as soon as they depart, and youâre actually a little grateful that you have work to distract you from the first hours of missing them.
As per usual, Emma is the first to hug you. You squeeze tight so that you can lift her off of her feet for a second, just to make her laugh. Brady grabs you next, as if both of them know that Matthew wants to be last. Brady wiggles you side to side, planting a kiss on the top of your head. You headbutt his shoulder, then kiss the same spot youâd hit. He says how much heâll miss you, something he always reiterates for a few days before he leaves. You return the sentiment honestly, earnestly. When he pulls back, you punch his chest lightly, and he returns the gesture.
Matthew steps up and opens his arms, and you step into them easily. He doesnât squeeze too hard, just holds you close, hand cupping the back of your neck, calming your anxiety and dulling the sharp edge of your pain.
âGonna miss you so much, sweet girl,â he whispers into your hair, just loud enough for you to hear. You try to swallow the lump that has suddenly formed in your throat.
âMiss you already,â you reply, a little uneven, a little raw, âCanât wait to see you again.â He places a kiss on your head as Brady had, but his lips linger, hesitant to let go. But he does let go.
They all wave as they drive off, Brady, Emma, Matthew, and Taryn all crammed into the back seat. You wave back, watching the car go, staring down the street even after the car turns and disappears.
Time to work, you suppose.
July, 2023
Art has never frustrated you so much in your life.
When you were young, the struggle and annoyance came from trying to get things just right, though they were above your skill level. As a teenager, it was due to the struggle of developing your own unique style. In college, it was not having the energy to paint most days, falling asleep at the easel others.
For the past month, the art has been flowing. Youâve been painting most every day, the ideas coming easily, creating almost a compulsion that you canât resist. Itâs only satisfied when the painting is complete. There are a couple dozen or so canvases scattered around your apartment to dry, the most youâve ever produced in a single month. But the frustrationâ the frustration comes from the fact that all of your ideas are about him. All of your paintings are moments with him, things heâd said, how youâd felt, how youâd hoped he felt.
Thereâs a feeling inside of you, as if youâre right on the edge of catharsis, as if you paint just one more thing, youâll be able to let it all go. Thatâs your motivation for everything youâve been making, just desperately searching for the release that will save you from the pain. At this point, youâre not sure it will ever come.
Youâre working on a bigger canvas, the biggest youâve used in years. Youâre glad your current job allowed you to move into a bigger apartment, because you surely wouldnât have been able to fit something like this in your old shoebox, packed so full of your things that youâd barely had space for an 11x14. You have to stand to reach the upper portion, swiping a brighter red over the dark red base. You donât want it to be about him. It is anyway.
The show at the gallery is rapidly approaching, only a month away. Youâve been working with the curator to decide which pieces to use, filing through years of work. So far, everything that sheâs found compelling has been about him. Things youâve made recently, things you made years ago when things were still good. One day, youâll get over this. But not today. Today still just hurts.
June, 2021
With neither of the boys making the playoffs, theyâd come home earlier than usual this year. Sadly, Brady is pretty used to it by now, usually coming home around this time anyway. Youâre used to getting a few weeks with Brady and Emma before Matthew comes home, but you donât have that this year.
While Brady sulks for about two days when he gets home, Matthew is far more upset. The Flames had made the playoffs for the last couple years, and he was getting used to being a contender. So not even getting a chance at it this year clearly stung. He moped around for a week or two, face tight and arms crossed over his chest most of the time. The only time he let his arms down, let his guard down, is when the two of you were alone.
Youâd comforted him through the couple weeks of upset, even staying the night a few times. It wasnât intentional, youâd just stayed so late that you fell asleep, and Matthew didnât have the heart to wake you. You have to get up early to get home for work, so youâd snuck your way out of the house before anyone else had woken. Youâre not sure how Keith and Chantal would have felt about you staying the night in Matthewâs bed, but you know what they would have thought was going on, and you didnât want to put yourself or Matthew in that position.
Once heâd relaxed, taken a deep breath and accepted defeat, he went back to being his regular happy, seemingly aloof self. Youâre grateful for it, not a fan of seeing him upset and always wanting to help him through and cheer him up.
June had come kindly, bringing along more sun and nicer weather. You and Matthew had resumed your walks in the park, and the whole group of you spend about as much time outside as you do in the den. Things with Matthew had picked up where they left off in January, him pulling you into a secluded area any time he could get you alone, kissing you senseless. Youâd missed the feeling of his lips, of his body pressed to yours.
Tonight is one of the more rare nights where Matthew comes to your apartment, instead of you going to his parentsâ house. Youâve offered to make dinner and follow it up with movies. Youâre already on the couch, your dirty dishes abandoned on the coffee table. Youâre laying on your side, Matthew spooned up against your back, your knees hanging off of the couch with the way theyâre bent to accommodate Matthewâs too-long legs. Youâre warm and comfortable, enjoying the feeling of safety that he brings, something youâve very rarely felt in your life before.
The movie is good, but youâve found that being in Matthewâs arms makes you sleepy, so youâre having a hard time focusing. You manage to mostly follow it, letting out a jaw-cracking yawn when the credits start to roll.
You feel Matthew place a kiss on the back of your neck without comment. Then heâs moving you, rearranging your bodies carefully until youâre on your back, Matthew staring down at you from his position straddling your thigh. The way heâs looking at you is intense, somehow simultaneously fond and hungry. It wakes you up almost instantly, and you reach out to rest your hands on his thighs.
âYouâre so beautiful,â he says quietly, reverently. Itâs not the first time heâs said it, but it feels different now. Maybe itâs the position youâre in, maybe the way heâs looking down at you as if he wants you, as if heâ
He takes your hands in his own, bending down as he brings them up to cradle his cheeks. You run your thumbs across his high cheekbones, tilt his head up a little by the jaw as his eyes slide shut. You press your fingers into the soft spot behind his jaw, under his ears, pull him down, down, down.
Kissing him feels as easy as breathing. Guiding his head this way and that to get a better angle, pressing your lips together over and over, longer each time, deeper. Matthew has one hand on the arm of the couch to hold himself up, the other wrapped loosely around your wrist. Heâs not trying to move you or take control, just holding on as if he needs something to ground him. You press your thumbs into the hollows of his cheeks, feeling the solid wall of his teeth under the skin. His mouth drops open and he lets out a soft sound. You press your thumbs in harder, between the new gap between his upper and lower teeth, testing how far you can push from the outside.
He squeezes your wrist once and you release the pressure. His mouth stays open, lips wet and shining. He opens his eyes halfway, as if his eyelids are too heavy to get all the way up, eyes hazy and unfocused.
Again, he squeezes your wrist. Heâs suddenly standing, using his grip to guide you up as well. He immediately crowds up against you, as if being more than an inch away will kill him. His eyes have managed to refocus, but thereâs still a dreamy look in them.
He takes a step backward, using the hand that had instinctively gone to the back of your neck to bring you with him. He kisses you, lingering. He takes another step back, gives you another kiss. He rounds the end of the couch and you realize where heâs leading you, kind of impressed that he can find his way to the bedroom without even looking.
Of course, your heart is a frantic mouse scurrying around your chest, thumping hard like youâre a prey animal facing down a predator. But as much as it freaks out in the cage of your chest, thereâs no panic in your head. Being with Matthew calms your mind, keeps your hands from trembling, feels so right that you canât find a reason for the anxiety that used to plague you around him.
He stops you halfway between the door and the bed, pulling back a couple inches to stare down at you. Youâre hesitant to put a name to the look on his face, not sure if reverent is being dramatic.
You flatten your palms against the front of his shoulders, shoving him gently, bullying him toward the bed. He allows it for a moment, but stops after a few steps. He takes your hands in his own, brings them to his mouth to kiss your knuckles. You try to swallow down the desire that grows inside of you, threatening to spill out. He holds your hands close to his face, enough that you can feel his lips move when he speaks.
âYou donât have to be in control, sweet girl,â he says, lays another kiss on the bump of your right middle finger, looks deep into your eyes with such adoration you feel ready to split at the seams.
âLet me take care of you,â he says. The part of you thatâs spent your entire life with a fist clenched desperately around any sense of control that it could find, for the first time, relinquishes its hold. And Matthew does, indeed, take care of you.
February, 2022
Itâs your first time in Vegas, and the atmosphere is electric. There are hockey fans everywhere, plenty of people wearing jerseys as they explore the strip. Everything is so big, so bright, so fancy. As exciting as it is to be here, it makes you feel a little off, a little like you donât belong. It reminds you of the first time youâd been to the Tkachuksâ house, amazed at how different everything is from the way you grew up.
Each player was supposed to be allotted two tickets, but they had allowed Brady to take additional tickets for his family, considering Matthew is his brother, in addition to how well-known and beloved Keith is. Heâd managed to get Emma included as well, luckily.
You werenât sure how he did it, but Brady had gotten another player to give one of his tickets so that you could come. Apparently the guyâs family couldnât make the trip, and he only had one friend that he really wanted to bring. He wonât tell you who it was, but the way that Timo Meier winks at you as he passes the stands gives you an idea. You werenât aware that the two talked, but thereâs always the possibility that he had just gone around and asked everyone. The idea makes something bloom in your chest, as if you could love Brady more than you already do. Youâll have to find a way to thank Timo some time.
The skills competitions are fun, though Brady doesnât win anything. Itâs nice to see the players relaxing and having fun, a well-deserved break from the stress of the season.
You all go out to an early meal before the games the next day. You donât realize until you arrive that Jack Hughes and his family were joining you, and you trip over your own feet when you see them waiting for you. Youâre a huge fan of Jackâs, but more than that, Ellen Weinberg-Hughes is an icon. You stumble with your words when you greet her, shaking her hand and screaming silently in your head. With how the boys are looking at you as you do so, they obviously anticipated your reaction and are incredibly satisfied with themselves.
For the meal, youâre sat between Matthew and Jack. Youâre grateful that Matthew is next to you, needing his calming presence as you meet some of your favorite players. The families are friendly with each other, the parents catching up on the news of each othersâ lives, the children doing the same in separate conversations.
You spend most of the dinner talking to Jack, Quinn, and Matthew. They tell you all sorts of things, including embarrassing stories about Matthew that you werenât privy to. You grin at Matthew every time they share one, absolutely intending to tease him about it later. This seems to be what the Hughes boys want, eager to give you more ammunition. Matthew buries his face in his hands at one particularly humiliating story, even as he shakes gently with quiet laughter. When he emerges and sits back up, you take a chance, placing your hand on his thigh. You squeeze once, trying to reassure him. He does his best to not react, but he also rests his hand on top of yours under the table.
âSo youâre a painter, right?â Quinn asks at one point, curiosity evident in his perpetually sleepy eyes.
âYeah,â you confirm, asking âHow did you know?â Youâd told them about your official job, but you hadnât mentioned being a traditional artist in addition to a graphic designer. Jack turns a smug smile on you.
âMatthew talks about you a lot,â he says, pleased with himself. You look to Matthew just in time to see his face flush.
âShut up,â he says to Jack, which only makes him smile wider. Jackâs attitude rubs off on you a little, and you give Matthew a delighted smile.
âHow much is a lot?â you ask Jack, feeling Matthew dig his fingertips into your knuckles.
âLike, a lot,â Jack replies, Quinn nodding from his other side. You look back to Matthew, who looks like he wants to crawl under the table and hide.
âI talk about him a lot, too,â you say. That makes Matthew look at you again, bright eyes nearly sparkling in the restaurantâs dim lighting. His expression shifts, a small, grateful smile scrunching his eyes up the slightest bit.
After dinner, you all make your way to the arena. Brady and Jack left a while before the rest of you, needing to arrive in time to get dressed and likely do some more media. Before heâd left, Jack had requested your phone, creating a contact for himself and inputting his number. As he dud, you turned your face away, toward Matthew, opening your mouth wide as if youâre screaming. He looked amused at it, but thereâs a sharp edge there. Quinn took the phone next, doing the same thing. You squeezed Matthewâs thigh again, and his expression softened. Youâve been following the Hughes brothers since they were in Juniors, and having them like you enough to want to keep in touchâ you can only describe the feeling as elation.
The lines are out the door at the arena, and a few people catch the boys to request photos before you can get to the special entrance for playersâ guests. Theyâre all very kind and courteous about it, taking a few pictures with people, finding a way to move through the crowd even as they do so. You probably should have come a different way, or maybe gotten there earlier, but as long as the boys donât mind, you donât either.
The seats are good, the second row of the first balcony. It seems to be the section that they put all of the family and friends, people milling around and chatting with each other. You spot Johnnyâs parents a couple rows away, the only people around that youâve met before. You wave to them and they return the gesture. They make their way down to your seats, greeting each of you in turn. They start chatting with Keith and Chantal, so you continue talking to Taryn and Emma.
The games are great, surprisingly fast. The Atlantic division plays a great game again Central, despite losing by 3. You still canât help being proud of Brady. Youâve been next to him since his first season, and youâve loved getting to watch him grow and improve. As long as heâs in the world, youâre going to be proud of him.
The final is awesome too, and you jump up to cheer when Jack scores in the first. When the Metropolitan wins, you high-five Taryn, glad that Jack could win when Brady couldnât. Not a bad consolation prize.
The group hangs around for a while after, and you get to meet a bunch of new people. Everyone is so nice, making you feel welcome, feel like you belong. When you finally start up the stairs to leave, Johnnyâs mom Jane stops you for a second. She pinches your jersey and gives you a sly smile.
âJust a family friend?â she asks, not a question but a suggestion. A few years back, Matthew had given you one of his jerseys to wear to a game, and youâve worn it tonight, despite him not playing. You realize now how it could be interpreted, ducking your head for a second to smile at the floor, before looking back up to Jane.
âJust a family friend,â you say, firm and definitive. She holds your gaze for a moment, looks behind her at Matthew, whoâs waiting patiently a few steps up. Heâs looking at you, that soft look he gives you sometimes. After a second, he smiles brightly at Jane. She waves and turns back to you.
âWeâll see,â she says. She pats your shoulder twice before making her own way up the stairs with Guy. Once you process the statement, you shake your head and make your way up to Matthew.
âWhat was that?â he asks as you enter the corridor. Thereâs no way you can tell him the truth, and honestly, youâre not sure what the fuck that was either. You just shrug at him, continuing your way out of the arena.
The comment sticks with you, no matter how you try to brush it off. Johnny is Matthewâs best friend, and youâve met Jane a few times before. If it had been a stranger, you wouldâve dismissed it outright. But to hear it from someone who actually knows the two of you? Thatâs harder to let go.
July, 2023
Laurel, the curator for the gallery hosting your show, is a lovely woman. Sheâs also very, very good at her job. Youâve been to countless shows at this gallery, and theyâre always perfectly compiled, excellently arranged. Youâve brought her your most recent paintings today, which makes you glad that you have a car, because hauling them through the city would be a nightmare.
The only problem you have with Laurel is that she seems to see straight through you. Youâre not used to someone looking past the professional figure you present, let alone someone seeing every part of you that you put into your art.
Sheâs staring at your offerings, examining every last detail. Sheâs already chosen about half of the pieces that will be displayed, creating a theme with your relatively impressionist style. She moves one canvas to the side, away from the others. She takes an extra few minutes to consider one of them, the largest one. It just finished drying yesterday. Having to see it every day as you passed it in the living room has been torture.
âEverything except that one,â she says, gesturing to the one sheâd set aside. If she wants all of these, thatâs likely going to be everything for the show. With everything else sheâs chosen, this is all they have the wall space for, considering the way that youâve seen Laurel arrange the art in previous shows youâd attended.
âThat one is the centerpiece,â she adds, hand against her cheek as she continues staring at the large canvas. You swallow hard. Of course. Of course every painting she likes is about him. Of course the centerpiece will be him. No matter what you do, youâll never escape him.
She asks a bit about your inspiration and motivation for the piece, and you give her vague answers that sound more philosophical than the real thing. The two of you discuss some of the minutiae of the show, trying to get everything finalized ahead of time. Thereâs less than a month left, and your excitement is starting to pair itself with dread.
When you get home, you go straight to your bedroom and throw yourself face first onto your mattress. You bury your face in a pillow, finally letting out the scream thatâs been stuck in your throat since you learned of Tessaâs existence. It helps.
You make and have dinner, barely aware of what youâre eating. At least you can eat without getting nauseous now. You donât feel like watching TV, probably wouldnât be able to pay attention to a real show right now. Instead, you sit on your bed, leaning back against the headboard. You scroll social media mindlessly for a while, the ghost of Matthew next to you, his invisible arm pressed against yours.
February, 2022
Despite your better judgment, the first time you and Matthew had slept together wasnât the last, either. It had continued through last summer, then again when heâd come to play the Blues. Now youâre in Calgary, in Matthewâs apartment for the first time, in his bed again.
A lot of people idolize the first time they sleep with someone, comparing every subsequent time to the first and often coming out disappointed. You had no reason to do so, because the sex only got better over time. As you and Matthew learned each otherâs bodies, figured out what got the best reactions, the sex kept improving. Even if you wanted to fall back on your morals and resist him out of respect for Brady, you know you couldnât stay away for long. Itâs irresistible.
And itâs not just the sex. Itâs the way he holds you after, lays on his back so that you can rest your head on his chest. Itâs the way his breath ruffles your hair as you fall asleep together. Itâs the things he says to you.
Itâs the nights like this.
Youâre in Matthewâs bedroom, the dark dead of night offering only the moon to light the room. Your head is on Matthewâs chest, his arm around you to keep you close, as if you would ever willingly leave. Your breathing had returned to normal a while ago, your body cooling off and beginning to recover from the rush of feeling. Matthew kisses the top of your head every so often, and you return the sentiment by tilting your head to lay kisses against his sternum.
âI wish I could keep you here forever,â he says, so hushed that you almost miss it. Heâs always so quiet when he talks like this, as if heâs afraid to say it. He says these kinds of things anyway, but never above a whisper, not willing to share the vulnerability with anyone but you. Again, you press your lips into his skin.
âI wish I could stay here forever,â you reply. It would be nice, wouldnât it? To stay here, with him. No need to be quiet so as not to wake his family, no having to sneak out in the morning, no work to keep you away. Just laying here, together.
âIâve never wanted anyone the way I want you,â he says. Thereâs desire in his voice, of course, but also earnesty, like he really means it. Part of you would like to believe that he does, but another part knows how important it is to not get caught up in the fantasy. Itâs easier said than done.
âNot any of the other girls youâve had?â you ask. Youâd meant for it to come out teasing, but your honest curiosity wins out. Then thereâs a hand on your chin, fingers gently guiding your head up until youâre looking Matthew in the eye. Itâs not exactly comfortable to crane your neck like this, so you prop yourself up on one forearm, resting the other hand where your head had been as you stare down at him.
âNever,â he replies, insistent. He looks so serious, sounds so sincere. You donât say anything, canât think of anything. Thereâs something in the wide roundness of his eyes that speaks to you, pulls you in, encourages you to search deeper. It takes a second to figure out what it is thatâs hiding in there, but⊠itâs fear.
âI never want this with anyone else,â he says, tangling his fingers with yours over his racing heart. Thereâs a question you want to ask, something youâve been wanting to ask for a while, but the fear in him has mirrored itself within you. You should just shut up, keep it to yourself. The words come out before you can convince yourself to stay quiet.
âWhat is this?â you ask. Youâre not sure what answer youâre expecting, but you know which one youâre hoping for. He takes a deep breath, exhales slowly. His tongue darts out to wet his lips, and for the first time, you donât divert your gaze to admire the sheen of them, unable to look away from his eyes.
âI donât know,â he says, pauses, presses your entwined hands harder to his chest, âBut I never want to give it up.â
May, 2022
Again, Matthew is the second to come home. Brady returned almost a month before in April, the Senators not in the playoffs, as usual. You feel bad sometimes, because Brady is genuinely a great player, but his team has just struggled to gel together. Even through all of their trials, Brady insists on keeping hope. He loves his teammates, and thatâs what really matters to him.
Matthew, on the other hand, isnât so great at dealing with failure. The Flames make it to the second round, which is an achievement all on its own. But after winning Game 1, theyâd lost four in a row and been knocked out. It feels to Matthew almost like they got swept, he explains over the phone after the final loss.
When he gets home, he once again spends a week sulking. You mimic what youâd done last year, though staying the night is intentional this time. So long as you sneak out before anyone wakes up, youâll be fine.
On the eighth day, you tell Matthew for the hundredth time how proud of him you are. He shoots you a bittersweet smile and says that heâs proud of himself too, and you know heâs bouncing back. It doesnât help that heâs been debating for months whether to re-sign with the Flames, an agonizing choice for him. He loves his boys, but heâs not sure he belongs there anymore. Youâve assured him that youâll support him no matter what decision he makes. Johnny hits free agency next month, and if he moves, youâre not sure that Matthew will have the motivation to stay.
The next couple of weeks go by the same way that they always do, with you spending as much time with the Tkachuks as possible. At least, you think youâre doing a good job of acting like everything is the same as years past. No one knows about you and Matthew, and it seems like he wants to keep it that way. You like having this little secret life with him, getting to have him all to yourself. Youâre okay with the way it is, you convince yourself.
June came quickly, having begun only four days after heâd returned. The weather improves, you and Matthew once again resume your walks in the park. You play yard games and watch trash TV with Brady and Emma. You help Chantal cook dinners, help Keith clean up afterward. Everything is back to the summer standard.
The day had been nice, sunny and warm. The light had turned the leaves of the trees golden during your walk this afternoon. The sun is long gone now. Nighttime has become your favorite part of the day, the only time you get to indulge in whatever it is that you and Matthew have. The only time you get to touch his skin, to hear the low sounds he canât help but make, to feel his warmth against you, inside you.
Itâs been some time since youâd finished, but you canât quite fall asleep. Matthew is spooned up against your back, face buried in the nape of your neck. Youâre not sure if heâs asleep or not, too distracted to bother trying to figure it out. Youâve been thinking about it since your visit to Calgary. Any time Matthew called, or texted, or even crossed your mind, you thought of it. It made your heart leap into your throat, your breath catching as you choked on it.
He doesnât know what youâre doing together, what you are. He didnât give the response youâd been hoping for, but he didnât outright deny it either. Sometimes you think it would have been better if he had, if heâd said that it was just sex. Then you could start working on moving on. You wouldnât have to lie awake at night, wondering.
âWhatâs wrong?â he asks, his groggy voice making you startle and snapping you out of your head. You take a deep breath, debating yourself for a couple seconds before you decide.
âNothing,â you reply, patting his forearm where itâs snaked around your waist, âGo back to sleep.â He takes a quick, deep breath, the air rushing out over your skin. Youâre helpless to resist when he starts moving you. If you did put up a fight, push back against his hands, you know he would stop. But youâre tired.
âWhatâs wrong?â he asks again once youâre flipped to face him. He looks tired too, the exhaustion of the season still lingering. The moonlight paints his face in silver. It makes his skin shine, almost glowing in the darkness.
âIâm afraid,â you say. You wish he hadnât turned you around. It would be easier to speak it into the wall than it is to say to his face. You say it anyway, watching his brow furrow, admiring the way the silver light adds contrast to the wrinkles the expression creates.
âOf what?â he asks. You could make something up. Telling him that youâre afraid of monsters under the bed would be less embarrassing. Youâve never been very good at lying to him.
âThe day you move on,â you whisper, invisible pressure on your throat making the words come out tight and unsteady. The surprise on his face surprises you in return. Heâd refused to put words or labels to whatever this is, of course you would think that heâs going to leave eventually. Youâd have to be an idiot to think that he means it when he says forever.
âI wonât,â he says, resolute. You can only manage a half-smile for him.
âYouâre not the first man to say that,â you reply. He reaches up and cradles your cheek in his wide palm, warmth seeping into your skin.
âBut Iâm the first one to mean it,â he says. You close your eyes. They begin to prickle at the corners, but you refuse to cry about any of this. Heâs so adamant, so steadfast in his insistence. You try to remind yourself of what this isnât, what it will never be, but youâve never trusted someone the way you trust him, and you canât help believing him anyway.
August, 2023
You hadnât anticipated this happening, let alone how hard it would be, but finally, finally itâs a little bit easier.
Youâre not over Matthew, not by a long shot. Itâs going to take months, years. It may never happen, who knows? As long as you can cope with it, can keep your friends around, thatâs all that matters.
The first half of the day was spent with both boys and their girls. You didnât have to curl up so tightly on your chair, didnât have to force words out so they didnât think anything was wrong. Conversation was relatively easy, topics changing and flowing naturally. Youâd smiled, laughed, and a couple of times you actually meant it.
Matthew had apparently planned a date for Tessa and himself, so they excuse themselves in the late afternoon. Brady, Emma, and you stick around the den for a bit, continuing to talk. Eventually, Emma stands, stretching dramatically.
âLetâs go for a walk,â she suggests. Youâve spent too much time lately sitting at an easel or curled up in bed, and a walk sounds like a great idea.
You expect it this time when Brady takes the three of you to the same park. Itâs easier when youâre not blindsided by it, and you have the lovely memory of the last time you were here with the two to focus on, instead of Matthew. You walk for a while, music playing softly from Emmaâs phone, tucked in her back pocket. Once youâre deep into the wooded area of the park, she stops dead in her tracks. You follow suit, spinning around to shoot her an inquisitive look. She takes the two steps forward to close the space between you two, grabbing you by the shoulders and walking you backward. You stumble, trying to look behind yourself to keep from falling. She pushes until the backs of your knees hit a bench on the side of the pathway and you fall onto it. You gape up at her, befuddled by the behavior and the way her arms are crossed over her chest.
âWhatâs going on,â she demands, not a question. You furrow your brow, at a loss for words. You know what sheâs talking about, and you know that she knows that you know. But why would she wait until the day that it starts to fade, the day that you can finally think of something else, to ask you about it?
âCâmon, Y/N,â Brady says, plopping down on the bench next to you, âWe know somethingâs wrong.â You had accepted the possibility of this back in June, but you werenât expecting it to take almost three months for it to happen.
Your first instinct is that you absolutely canât tell them. Youâve been keeping this secret for years, and if Matthew has his way, youâll keep it forever. If Matthew gets his way, you repeat in your head. Thatâs it, isnât it? All this time, youâve been so focused on what Matthew wants that you ignored your own wanting. What do you want?
You want to tell someone, to finally have this horrid pain out in the open instead of keeping it caged up around your heart. You want your best friend and his wife to hug you. You want them to understand.
âMatthew,â the name tumbles out, and you donât want to stop it. Brady and Emma are still looking at you, waiting for anything you want to tell them. God, Brady is your goddamn best friend and youâd convinced yourself that you couldnât tell him something? That there was anything on this earth that he would shun you for?
It all comes spilling out in a rush. Everything from the first time youâd met him. Hell, some information that isnât strictly necessary, but they donât interrupt you or complain, so you venture on. It takes long enough to recount that Emma sits on the metal armrest of the bench. Bradyâs holding one of your hands in his lap, Emma taking the other to do the same.
Youâd promised yourself more than once that you wouldnât cry about this, but you donât really care enough to stop yourself now. The tears come two-thirds of the way through, falling silently as you recount some of the things Matthew had told you, the things heâd promised you. Youâre not outright sobbing, so you manage to power through the rest of the story. Your eyes are squeezed tightly shut by the end, like closing them will block out the memories.
It takes a couple of minutes for the tears to stop. The three of you let the silence hang as you wait for it, nothing but the leaves rustling in the trees, something scurrying in the bushes. When you can safely open your eyes to face the world again, you look over to Brady. He looks devastated.
You watch his evolving emotions morph the expression on his face, from heartbreak to anger and back again. The anger makes your heart skip a beat, suddenly afraid that maybe the whole âI slept with your brotherâ thing will be a problem after all.
âDo you want me to kick his ass?â he asks, startling a laugh out of you. You know heâs dead serious, too. Part of you thinks it might be cathartic to see Matthew get beat up by his little brother, but your soft heart doesnât want anything bad to happen to him. After everything heâs done to you, you still donât want him to have to feel even a fraction of the pain you do.
February, 2023
This year, the boys donât have to bribe anyone else to get you to the All Star Game. Each of them is allotted two tickets as per usual, but Taryn is too busy with school to come. Sheâd aimed a satisfied smirk at Matthew through the camera of her phone, saying guess youâll have to take that one along as her eyes darted slightly to the left, clearly looking at where you were on the screen.
Since your work is remote, youâve brought along your laptop. You spend the morning of the skills competition working, still averse to using your PTO if itâs not completely necessary. The boys have to do media, so thereâs no one around to bother or distract you. You kind of wish there were.
The special skills competitions are as fun this year as they were last. You especially love Sidney Crosby in the dunk tank, seemingly having the time of his life. You may not know him personally, only having met him once in passing, but after everything heâs been through, you think he deserves some carefree fun.
The sun has set by time you emerge from the arena after the regular skills competitions. The days are shorter at this time of year, even in Florida. It is warmer than St. Louis, though, which youâre grateful for.
Jack is in the competition again this year, so you meet up with the Weinberg-Hugheses again that night. Youâve gotten much closer with Jack and Quinn over the past year, building relationships on texts and calls and dinners when they play the Blues. Luke has tagged along this time, and you get on with him just as well as his brothers.
Matthew shoots Jack a look when he slings an arm around you on the way back to your hotels after dinner, but Jack just grins at him. Youâre still not sure what thatâs all about, but youâre just going to stay out of it.
The games the next day are fantastic. Youâve never gotten to watch both of your boys win at once, and you love it. When the Atlantic wins the whole thing, you cheer so loudly your voice cracks. Emma laughs at you, but you just laugh along with her.
You stick around for a bit after the game again, Keith and Chantal mingling while Emma shows you the decorations sheâs planning for the wedding on her phone. After a while, someone taps you on the shoulder from behind. You turn your head, immediately recognizing Jane. Johnny had made it again this year with his new team, so it would make sense that sheâs here too. You stand, reaching up to hug her in her elevated position.
âMatthew got you a new jersey?â she asks, referencing the All-Star jersey youâve got on. You wish you could say that you bought it for yourself, but it had indeed been a gift from Matthew. It shouldnât be embarrassing, so you act like itâs not, even though it is.
âYeah, heâs a great friend,â you reply, shrugging, âHe likes to take care of me.â The thing about Jane is that sheâs not really a jerk. Sometimes the you-and-Matthew comments bother you, but sheâs generally a very sweet woman.
âItâs good to have someone like that,â she says, smiling gently at you, âMatthew is a good boy.â Jane had been at enough Flames games for you to know her, and definitely enough for Matthew to become a pseudo-son to her. They donât interact much anymore, save for when she pops up in the back of Johnnyâs facetimes, but you know she still has a soft spot for him. You donât blame her.
âHe really is,â you agree, nodding. The two of you make some small talk, and you get some updates on Johnnyâs new life on the Blue Jackets. You give her some updates on Matthew in return. After a bit, Guy shuffles up next to Jane, telling her that itâs time to go. She acknowledges him quickly, turning back to take one of your hands in her own.
âI know he takes care of you,â she says, patting the back of your hand with her second, âBut you take care of that boy, too. Okay?â You just nod, smiling and bidding her goodbye. Her and Guy retreat up the steps and out of view. Youâre not sure why she feels the need to say these things to you, and youâre not sure why you take them to heart.
You meet Matthew and Brady outside the player entrance, the boys immediately scooping up you and Emma, respectively. Matthew sweeps you off of your feet for a moment, pressing a kiss to the top of your head. Once youâre free, you start to dip forward, realizing what youâre doing at the last second and changing track to make sure the kiss lands on his cheek.
He beams at you, and youâre absolutely certain that youâll spend the rest of your life trying to make him smile.
April, 2023
The day Brady comes home is the best day of the year, you remind yourself for the thousandth time. Youâre excited to see him, you are. The way your chest has felt rent open for days isnât his fault in any way. Youâre not going to make him pay for being the messenger.
Once you all get the couple home, you go upstairs with Brady and Emma to help them unpack. They donât really need help, obviously, but itâs an excuse to spend time together. Brady talks a little about the season, but mostly focuses on his plans for the summer. He talks about wanting to go see G, maybe even take a trip out to visit Tim.
For the most part, you just fold clothes and listen. Eventually, they switch to the topic of the wedding, Emma showing you even more pictures. Sheâd asked you to be a bridesmaid forever ago, so youâve already seen most of it, had even helped her pick half of it out, but youâre never going to squash her excitement.
Exhausted from their travel, the two make their way down to the den after everything is put away, collapsing onto the couch. You curl up in your chair, allowing the couple to choose what you watch. They pick something or another, nothing that you can pay attention to right now. Instead, you find yourself examining Brady, picking apart his features, finding all the things he shares with Matthew.
Itâs the best day of the year, you remind yourself again. The light of the TV highlights Bradyâs jawbone and your skin crawls.
August, 2023
The show is going exceptionally well, exceeding your expectations. The space is filled with strangers, friends, and even your brother and his family. There are critics and collectors, some that youâve seen at other peopleâs shows, some that you donât recognize. Everyone wants to talk to you, and you donât get a spare moment to breathe for the first few hours.
When you do get a chance to exhale, the rich couple that had been occupying you finally walking away, you catch the color out of the corner of your eye. Youâve been all around the building all night, mingling and networking in equal measure. You hadnât realized where you ended up until right this second. You turn to the piece, staring as if youâd never seen it before.
You donât need to look over to see who steps up next to you a minute later.
âYouâve been avoiding me,â Matthew says. It doesnât feel like an accusation, though it is one. All you can do is sigh.
âWhat did you expect me to do?â you ask, not expecting an answer. You glance at his hands out of the corner of your eye, noticing the wine glass in one hand, water glass in the other. Without a word, Matthew holds the water out in your direction, still fixated on the painting. You take it, feeling odd that not only does Matthew know that you forget to drink enough water, but also that heâs still trying to take care of you.
âItâs me,â he says after a pause. Youâre both facing the largest canvas, the centerpiece. Swirls of bright red spread across a crimson background, highlighted with orange, accented with a royal purple. There, in the center, are two comparatively small, even circles of icy blue.
âTheyâre all you. Or about you, at least,â you say, seeing no need to deny it any longer, âAbout us.â Itâs obvious that Matthew hadnât expected you to admit it outright, thrown off for a minute by the admission.
âCan we talk?â he asks as you take a sip of water.
âWeâre talking right now,â you reply, feeling petty. Itâs his turn to sigh. He sets his wine glass down on the nearest horizontal surface before returning to your side, facing you this time.
âSomewhere private,â he clarifies, pauses, âPlease.â You may be mad at him, enraged, incensed, but youâve never been able to deny him anything, and you still canât, even now.
You shut the storage room door behind you, flicking on the light to chase away the darkness. Matthew has his hands shoved in his pockets, looking around as if thereâs anything interesting in here. You cross your arms over your chest, waiting for him to nut up and look you in the face.
âListen,â he begins, rubbing the back of his neck but still not looking at you, âI know I should have gone about this better.â You snort. No shit. The sound finally brings Matthewâs gaze to meet your own.
âIâm sorry, okay?â Matthew says, motioning with his raised hand, âI didnât think youâd care that much.â You can feel how incredulous your expression is, and you donât even try to hide it.
âIn what world would I not be upset?â you respond, âAfter everything?â You can hear yourself, know you sound like a bitter, jealous old ex, but you canât bring yourself to care. You see his Adamâs apple bob as he swallows and looks away again. When he looks back, thereâs an almost pleading look in his eyes.
âIâm sorry I didnât tell you,â he says, more sincerely than the first time, âYou shouldnât have had to find out from Brady.â You avert your gaze, working your jaw for a second before you raise your chin and square your shoulders.
âNo,â you agree, âI shouldnât have.â
âIâm sorry I stopped talking to you,â he says, motioning helplessly with his hands, âYou have to know how hard that was.â You shake your head, almost disgusted.
âImagine how hard it was for me,â you reply. Your fingertips are digging into your own arm, fingernails biting into the skin. The fact that he would stand here and imply that this was a struggle for himâ as if he expects you to offer sympathyâ makes your stomach churn. The guilt in his expression makes you sickly satisfied.
âListen,â he leads with that word again, as if he has any right to ask it of you, âI didnât want to upset her. You know how some girls are.â You do know. And itâs still not an excuse.
âYou didnât tell her about me,â you say, anger and hurt straining your voice, âYou said that I was just Bradyâs best friend. You didnât even tell her what we had.â You want to scream it at him, just want to scream in general. Maybe if you did, if you released your tight grip on control in a different way than you had with him, maybe it would make him understand.
âWhat did we have?â he asks. His voice is quiet, just as yours had been when youâd brought up the topic all those months ago.
âI donât know,â you say, turning his own words back on him. Itâs true, anyway. Youâve never known what any of this was. Youâd only known what you wanted it to be, what you stupidly, fruitlessly hoped for.
âWe never dated,â he replies, voice still low but seemingly not bothered by the uncertainty, âWe never called it a relationship. You were never my girlfriend.â Itâs a simple fact. It tears your heart out of your chest.
âJust because we didnât name it doesnât mean it was nothing,â you insist, squeezing your eyes shut for a second to push down the urge to cry before admitting, âI stopped dating.â He looks even guiltier at that, but it doesnât soothe anything in you.
âI didnât look at another man,â you continue, embarrassed and ashamed but unable to let him continue through life without knowing, âI didnât even want to look at anyone else.â The shame makes the fiery anger burn brighter.
âI gave you three years of my fucking life,â you say, voice raising just enough to make Matthew flinch. You keep it reigned in enough that no one outside will hear, not interested in sharing this conversation with anyone else, especially not potential business contacts. The flames engulf your chest, lick up at your throat, threaten to consume you.
âI never asked you to do that,â Matthew replies, solemn. Your jaw drops, just half an inch, enough to part your lips as your breath hitches. He never asked. He never fuckingâ
âYouââ you begin, breath catching in your throat as your eyes burn with tears you refuse to let escape, âEverything you said, everything you did, and you expected what? For me to just move on?â Your nails are digging so deeply into your biceps that youâre surprised they havenât drawn blood. Matthew doesnât respond right away, and you canât tamp down the impulse to be petty.
âBut I guess thatâs what you did, huh?â you jab. Matthew shuts his eyes tightly, fists clenching like he wants to fight. It should be threatening, but youâve always known that he would never dream of laying a finger on you in violence. But then again, youâd thought you knew a lot of things about him.
âWhy do you care?â he asks, shoulders tense as he opens his eyes to stare you down, âYou donât even want me.â That shocks a laugh out of you, so completely ridiculous that you canât help it.
âThatâs the most fucked up partâ I do want you,â you respond, simultaneously an answer and an admission. His brow furrows as he continues looking at you, as if he canât believe what heâs hearing.
âDid you seriously think I didnât?â you ask, more of a demand, slightly offended because, âDo you think I said all those things for fun? For shits and giggles?â You canât read his expression, donât even bother trying. He can feel whatever he wants. Thatâs not your concern anymore. All you care about is the cold spreading through you, crawling up from the tips of your fingers, freezing your arms, creeping into your chest and beginning to extinguish your rage.
âI loved you, dickhead,â you continue, the words spilling out of you starting to sound pathetic, no matter how hard youâre trying to hold on to the anger, putting the last grasp of it into the words, âStupid fucking idiot asshole, I loved you.â Matthew gapes at you, hands going lax at his sides. His jaw moves as if to say something, but nothing comes out.
âI loved you and you threw me away like garbage, and didnât even have the balls to tell me yourself,â you force the sentence out, feeling like youâre choking on every syllable. Matthewâs breathing stutters. Youâre expecting annoyance, irritation, maybe even shame or guilt. Youâre not expecting his wide eyes, his eyebrows turned up in the middle, his slack jaw.
âYou loved me?â he finally asks after a few agonizingly long seconds of silence. Thereâs something in his voice that you tell yourself you donât care to analyze.
âOf course I did. How could I not?â you say, huffing as you look upwards, needing a momentary break from this staring contest, âThe pathetic part, the part that makes me hate myself, is that I still do.â Itâs physically painful to say, no matter that the hurt is psychosomatic. Youâve spent the last few minutes breaking open your ribcage, one bone at a time, revealing to him the space youâd made for him inside of yourself.
âYou love me?â he asks, so dumbfounded that heâs repeating himself.
âYes, Matthew,â you say, facing up to the dread inside of you, the one fact youâve been struggling with the most since youâd found out the news.
âAnd Iâm terrified. Because Iâve always loved you,â you pour out, barely able to hold yourself together as you meet his eyes, âAnd Iâm afraid that I always will.â Thereâs not even space for half of a breath before Matthew speaks.
âPlease do,â he says. His hands are open, palms facing your direction, as if pleading.
âWhat?â you ask.
âI didnât know,â he says, and apparently heâs decided itâs his turn to reveal himself, âI was surprised that you wanted anything to do with me at all. But then you kissed me, and I spent the next three years waiting for you to leave.â The confusion comes over you so quickly that it almost masks the hurt.
âWhy would I leave?â you ask. Thereâs been nothing subtle about your feelings. Youâve told him that heâs the only one you want, that you want to spend the rest of your life by his side, that heâll always be the only one. How could he hear all of that and think that you would ever leave?
âBecause youâre smart and kind and funny and hardworkingââ he starts listing off.
âTessa is all of those things too,â you cut him off. It doesnât come out as resentful as you wouldâve expected a sentence like that to. As youâve told Terri, you really have nothing against Tessa. Besides, she really is everything heâs saying.
âBut sheâs not you,â his response comes immediately, emphatically, âI donât want just anyone like that; I want you, and you happen to be that way.â Youâre stunned into silence.
âItâs not the traits, itâs you,â he says, insistent, like heâs trying to convince you of your own worth, âAnd I kept waiting for you to find someone else, someone who wasnât hotheaded and self-centered andââ He stops himself, swallowing so hard you can see his throat stutter under the thin skin of his neck.
âSomeone better,â he finishes. The thing is that Matthew doesnât have low self-esteem. He knows heâs a catch, and yet⊠And yet, heâs standing here, admitting that heâd still thought of you as being so far above him that you could never want him. And itâs not that there isnât probably someone out there better than himâ
âI never wanted someone better,â you tell him, voice almost a whisper. Growing up, youâd created this picture of the perfect man, told yourself that youâd find him one day, would never settle for less. Then youâd met Matthew, and he was nothing like that imaginary ideal. He was flawed; he was real. And you couldnât help but love him for it.
âAnd I never wanted anyone else,â he replies, his own voice hushed to match yours, but no less certain, âI still donât.â Three months ago, you wouldâve given anything to hear that. But things are different now.
âI thought that if I went and found someone like you, someone close enough, that I could fall for them too,â he confesses, shame making his face tense, âI thought that if I stopped talking to you, if I kept my distance, that I could get over you.â A fraction of the anger buds in your chest at the idea.
âSo youâre using Tessa,â you accuse, instantly offended on her behalf.
âNo!â Matthew denies emphatically, pauses, shakes his head, âYes. Maybe. I donât know.â If he is using her, at least he seems ashamed about it. Something in his posture makes you think he isnât, that he really thought he could love her.
âLook, sheâs great. Sheâs amazing. Sheâs too good for me, too,â his shoulders have been hunched up to his ears, but they fall now, defeated, âShe talks about that spark she felt when we met, the way she feels about me now, and I want, I really want to feel that way too. It would be easier if I could.â Believing this entire time that he truly loves her has been hell for you, but itâs still somehow worse to know that he doesnât. That he did all of this, hurt you so deeply, for someone he doesnât even love.
âAs much as Iâve tried, I donât. And I canât,â he says, turning his gaze to the floor, âAnd if Iâd ever thought that I had the slightest chance with you, I never would have dated her to begin with.â All these years, all those words, all the touches youâve shared, and heâd still never taken you seriously. Itâs not your fault, you know. But you realize now that for every time youâd indirectly confessed your feelings to him, heâd said the same things back. Heâd returned every sentiment readily, easily. And as much as heâd apparently had the same idea as you, that the other could never love you back, you hadnât seen it either. Youâve been just as ignorant of his feelings as he was of yours, just as deep in denial. And now thereâs this rift between you, a deep chasm that keeps you apart, all for no reason.
âSo, what now?â you ask. Thereâs nothing else to ask.
âWhat?â he seems genuinely confused.
âWhat now?â you repeat, too tired to be upset anymore, âYou break her heart? Or do you keep pretending? Fake your way into a wife and kids and a house in the suburbs?â His confusion persists, tongue darting out to wet his lip the way it always does when heâs anxious.
âI thoughtââ he shakes his head the tiniest bit, as if he canât believe whatâs happening, âI mean, I love you. I want to be with you.â Thereâs a sadness sitting heavy in your chest, only getting deeper at his words.
âI love you too,â you say, tipping your head an inch to the right, perfectly aware of how melancholy your smile must be, âBut you hurt me, and now you have to hurt her too. I thought you were better than this.â Youâd thought the world of him. You donât hate him now, could never force yourself to. But you are disappointed in how everything has played out.
âI thought you didnât want better?â he says, not really a question. Your lips turn up another centimeter at that.
âListen,â you say, turning the word back on him. You inhale deeply, exhale slowly. He stays quiet.
âThe opportunity of a lifetime is on the other side of that door,â you gesture vaguely over your shoulder, then let your arms relax, your hands fall to your sides, âI donât know what to do with any ofââ you give another vague gesture, â--This.â The devastation is writ clear on his face, telegraphed by his posture, bared in the forefront of his miserably beautiful eyes.
âOut there?â you say, smile still in place, âI know exactly what I want. So Iâm going to go get it.â you pause, take another deep breath, âAnd maybe youâll be there tomorrow, and maybe you wonât.â
âI will,â he jumps in. You huff an almost-laugh.
âWe can figure this all out later,â you say, sure a definite, âFor now, I have to focus on the things that Iâm sure of.â He nods, looks at the floor, raises his head and looks back at you.
âDid you used to be sure of me?â he asks, an uneven, shaky whisper.
âYeah,â you say, your entire being feeling so heavy that you can barely hold yourself upright, âI used to be.â
September, 2023
While Brady had departed yesterday, Matthew doesnât leave until tomorrow. It took some internal debate, but youâve decided not to go along to drop him off at the airport. His family will think itâs weird if he doesnât hug you, and youâre not sure if you can handle him touching you yet.
Youâre curled up on the couch with a book, letting yourself get lost in the story. A knock comes on the door and you startle. You mark your page and stand, rounding the couch to open the door. When you do, Matthew is standing there.
âHey,â he greets, giving you the same bittersweet smile youâve become accustomed to over the past few weeks. Youâd given him a key to your apartment right after youâd moved, but you appreciate him not using it right now. You welcome him in with a gesture of your hand, turning to lead the way. You get four steps away before he speaks.
âI broke up with Tessa,â he blurts out. He doesnât seem happy about it, but he doesnât seem particularly sad either.
âWhy?â you ask, crossing your arms over your chest, âYouâre that sure that Iâll take you back?â The anger comes and goes as it pleases, and itâs starting to sneak through the space between your ribs.
âNo,â Matthew says, looking so unbearably fond of you, âI think youâll tell me to get fucked.â Some days you want to.
âThen why did you break up with her?â you ask. Part of you has been wondering if, despite everything heâd said, he would stay with her. Youâre not sure you would have been able to keep the conversation to yourself if he had, but you would have at least tried.
âBecause none of this is fair to her,â he answers, shrugging, âShe deserves someone who feels the same way about her that she does them. Someone whoâs obsessed with her. She doesnât deserve to be settled for.â You examine his expression, his stance, and realize that heâs truly being honest. He genuinely wants the best for her.
âHowâd she take it?â you canât help but ask. It makes him grin down at the floor for a moment.
âHonestly?â he asks when he raises his head, âNot great. Could have been worse, though.â As much as you love Matthew, you would have been proud of Tessa if she had slapped him.
âProbably shouldâve been worse,â you reply. He grins again, tilting his head as he admires your face.
âProbably,â he agrees. For long moments, you both stand still, eyes locked.
âWhat now?â you ask, the same question as a couple weeks ago. He shrugs again, but he doesnât seem as miserable or desperate as he had at the gallery.
âI donât know,â he replies, that same phrase that youâre still trying to make peace with, âI know what I want. Same thing Iâve wanted this entire time. So I guess itâs up to you.â After three years of him encouraging you to give up control, to let go and follow his lead, heâs handing you the reigns now. However this ends or continues is completely your decision.
âYou leave tomorrow,â you say, though youâre both viscerally aware of the fact.
âYeah,â he gives you the crooked smile that had captured you the first time youâd met, âDonât suppose you want to come with me? The winter weatherâs nicer in Florida.â You let out a breathy chuckle, shaking your head at him.
âIf youâd asked me that last summer, I probably wouldâve said yes,â you admit. You kind of expect him to react with sadness, but you prefer the hope that blooms on his face.
âMaybe Iâll ask you again next summer?â he suggests, offering you the option. At this point, you have no idea where your relationship will be at this time next year. You donât know if youâll even have a relationship, of any kind. But if heâs willing to try, so are you.
âYeah,â you nod, smiling wider than you have in a long while, âNext summer.â
June, 2024
The Hughes brothers are a funny trio. Seeing Jackâs upbeat, outgoing energy bookended on each side by two reserved, perpetually exhausted brothers is always kind of funny. Youâd run down the pavement from the Tkachukâs door to the driveway when youâd seen Quinn climb out of the carâs driver seat, immediately sweeping him up in a hug. The boys had decided to road trip around this summer, so of course youâd strongly suggested that they visit you.
You help them haul their bags out of the trunk, taking Lukeâs backpack in hand and insisting on carrying it in for him. The three of them had started teasing you the instant they saw that Matthew hadnât come out with you.
âCome on, I heard him at the All Star game,â Jack pesters, voice taking a mocking edge as he croons, âSweet girl.â You laugh brightly, stopping the careful steps youâre taking backwards up the pathway to the house.
âWe werenât dating, I swear,â you insist. Plenty of people over the years have accused you of dating Matthew, but at least heâs funny about it. He stops in front of you, lifting his chin and giving a shit-eating smile.
âWait, werenât?â he asks, âAs in, past tense?â You feel heat begin to crawl up your face. Youâd intended to tell them, of course, but not the second they got here.
âYeah,â Matthew calls from behind you, and you twist around to watch him close the space between you, âPast tense.â Jackâs glee is overt, but you can see the little signs of happiness on the other two boysâ faces too. Matthew lines himself up against your back, wrapping his arms around you, the gaudy Cup ring on his finger glinting in the light.
âHey, sweet girl,â he murmurs, pressing a kiss into your hair. You canât see him, but Jackâs smug face makes you sure that Matthew is staring straight at him. âMy sweet girl,â Matthew says. It might be the best thing youâve ever heard.
#matthew tkachuk imagine#matthew tkachuk fic#nhl imagines#nhl fanfic#the winter fic exchange 2k24#RI#andi's coping mechanism
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The men in question!!
#reidlover101#relatable memes#pinterest#relatable#funny memes#memes#best memes#youtube#spencer reid#sam and colby#ryan reynolds#deadpool and wolverine#logan wolverine#wolverine#rory culkin#spencer ried#jim halpert#john krasinski#andy samberg#jake peralta#joe goldberg#penn badgley#iron man#tony stark#rdj#robert downey jr#my mans
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you donât need a collage degree to be a Fall out boy groupie
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no offense 2 all the boys but the real highlight of poetfilm dot tumblr dot com are some of the greatest girl oc duos of all time
#ooc.#there's the original. the personal favourite. ellie/olympia (even if ellie isnt totally a 'girl'. it still counts. its the blueprint)#long time weirdgirls who have a very particular relationship w reading wuthering heights. alice/divina#grumpy/sunshine duos. always a favourite for everyone. alice/andie#codependent girl duo that borders of t*xic y*ri at times. alice/luanne#actually lets throw the deer girls in here too. alice/mina#there's a lot of these duos actually. mostly w alice because she's the favourite#ive definitely missed some but i love them all. we already know this i wanted to say it again
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The Way Home 2.06 - How to Save a Life
Quality : HD Screencaptures Amount : 1.138 files Resolution : 1.920 x 960 px
- Please like/reblog if using!
#grandecaps#the way home#the way home hallmark#kat landry#chyler leigh#evan williams#elliot augustine#del landry#andie macdowell#sadie laflamme snow#alice dhawan#kris holden ried#colton landry#jefferson brown#capped by macfraser82
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I missed amongus server drama? đ„Č
Qwerty no amount of update accounts could describe what happened
#donât stop the party#his ass did not get hired NDA loving wife potato farm swag priest Iâll use him later the interview cyrus copper house Cyrus farm underside#the village armor spells out chef well he underwater mines tools named after master chef winners red light district what amendment is the ri#ght ti remain silent THEYRE fuckinng at the red light district all the time clings reciting poetry maybe if I finish his gift heâll like me#when is the divorce is clings socks son because heâs mixed who is the father church so trinkets the pope then is it priest or pastor Iâm not#calling him father cyrus how are you doing Cyrus Iâm feeling swaggy bedrock minecraft isnât on mac Nintendo online is $20 a year you did#lore and youâre not even on our server can I get the family tree when will my husband return from the war cyrus has the nda why are you at#the red light district trinket crying laughing#Iâm gonna listen to YCGMA is your husband faithful oh well he works csn cyrus deafen the king solomon baby story recited from a techno quote#in a Cyrus fic please areus donât tell you know clings I just want my family to be okay you donât know what this would do to him please#he doesnât even have a priest outfit you are not allowed to build in swag nation afyer some debate the council has considered you for the#job of pastor so how are Andy and clings related#cyrus gets tagged 5 times consecutively on a burger post. clings is in the backrooms. itâs jover.#amogus server#asks#qwerty
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âŠâŠâŠâŠâŠ HELLOOOOO
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Sinergi Pemerintah jadi Kunci Keberlanjutan Program Teman Bus
JAKARTA â Wakil Ketua Komisi V DPR RI, Andi Iwan Darmawan Aras (AIA), mengajak Pemprov Sulsel, Pemkot Makassar, dan Pemkab Takalar untuk bersinergi menghidupkan kembali koridor Bus Mamminasata atau Teman Bus. Dengan subsidi pemerintah pusat yang hanya berlaku hingga 2024, AIA menekankan pentingnya kolaborasi untuk memastikan keberlanjutan program transportasi massal ini. Sebelumnya, bus iniâŠ
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Polres Pamekasan Raih Penghargaan Pelayanan Publik dari Ombudsman RI
PAMEKASAN, MaduraPost â Polres Pamekasan kembali mencatat prestasi gemilang dengan menerima piagam penghargaan dari Ombudsman Republik Indonesia dalam ajang Penganugerahan Predikat Kepatuhan Penyelenggaraan Pelayanan Publik 2024. Acara berlangsung di Hotel JW Marriott Surabaya, Jumat (13/12). Penghargaan bergengsi ini diberikan atas komitmen Polres Pamekasan dalam memberikan pelayanan publik yangâŠ
#Hotel JW Marriott Surabaya#Inovasi Pelayanan Publik#Kapolres Pamekasan AKBP Jazuli Dani Iriawan#Komitmen Pelayanan#Pelayanan Kepolisian Berintegritas#pelayanan publik#Penganugerahan Predikat Kepatuhan#Penghargaan Ombudsman RI#Polda Jawa Timur#Polres Pamekasan.#Prestasi Polri#Rekomendasi Ombudsman RI#Sinergi dengan Masyarakat#Transparansi dan Profesionalisme#Wakapolres Kompol Andy Purnomo
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PuzzCulture 2024 Holiday Puzzly Gift Guide: By Price
Welcome to the PuzzCulture 2024 Holiday Puzzly Gift Guide! Weâre so excited to be bringing you our biggest ever gift guide! There are so many tremendously fun and puzzly products to share with you this year. We just might be your one-stop shop for all things puzzly! In this edition of the Holiday Puzzly Gift Guide, we have endeavored to strike a balance between the most affordable price weâŠ
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#12 Days#99 tv crosswords#a-puzzle-a-day calendar#a-to-gen-z crosswords#a24#Acrostic#ada nicolle#advent#advent calendar#alice is missing#allplay#American Values Crossword#Andrew Ries#andrews mcmeel publishing#Andy Kravis#APE Games#archer expansion#archimedes#archimedes&039; gear#aries puzzles#Asmodee#astronomy fluxx#athena#atlas games#avxwords#Big Potato Games#billiards#black crossword#Black Oak Games#Board game
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Kompak, Mentan Bersama Menhan dan Penasehat Khusus Presiden Saat di Akmil Magelang
JATENG | INTIJATIM.ID â Menteri Pertanian (Mentan) Andi Amran Sulaiman, Menteri Pertahanan (Menhan) Safrie Sjamsoeddin, dan Penasihat Khusus Presiden RI Bidang Pertahanan, Dudung Abdurachman, terlihat sangat kompak. Keakraban mereka menjadi perhatian publik saat para petinggi negara ini menghadiri acara Pembekalan Khusus di Akademi Militer (Akmil) Magelang, Jawa Tengah. JumatâŠ
#Andi Amran Sulaiman#dan Penasihat Khusus Presiden RI Bidang Pertahanan#Dudung Abdurachman#Menteri Pertahanan#Menteri Pertanian#Safrie Sjamsoeddin
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Do That (Mikko Rantanen)
Sorry Iâm late! I got in a car accident, so I had to deal with that. Anyway, this is my fic for @kurlyteuvo for @wyattjohnston âs summer fic exchange! I feel like I could have written another 10k words of this, but alas, I didnât have the time. Hope you enjoy!
Rating: T
Pairing: Mikko Rantanen/fem!reader
Words: 7789
Warnings: children involved (not the readerâs)
Summary: Reader meets Mikko at the park and things go from there
It was a one-in-a-million coincidence to meet him, but youâve never been so grateful for a chance encounter.
Hereâs how it happened:
You have a tradition of spending your days off at Skyline Park, reading or knitting or just enjoying the sunshine. It was a pleasant September afternoon, the fall chill having yet to set in. The sun was bright, the breeze not too strong. You were sitting on a bench, reading a new book your friend had recommended, a few dozen pages in.
Suddenly, someone was an inch away from you, making your head fly up in surprise. The person skipped and twisted, avoiding falling into you at the last second. He paused for only a second, throwing out a quick âsorryâ before he continued his jog. There was no time to respond, having barely processed what was happening before he was gone.
Youâre not sure if that really counts as your first meeting, since only one word was exchanged, but it had been the first time youâd interacted at all. Youâd been more vigilant that day, waiting for someone to misjudge their footing and crash into you. Nothing of the sort had happened, but in looking up at every passing runner, youâd seen him three more times as he lapped the park. Those passes gave you time to look at him more closely, and the shock had hit.
The man who had almost fallen on you was tall and muscular, with curly blond hair and bright blue eyes. Youâd seen his face on TV a hundred times, in replays and promos. Because the man was Mikko Rantanen.
Luckily, the awe had faded by the end of the day. There was an odd embarrassment in its place, despite having done nothing wrong. Whatever, youâd decided. Itâs not like you were ever going to see him again.
Except you did.
Most times you went to the park, it was just a flow of regular people, nameless faces passing by. This time, you had been drawing. The scenery was beautiful, the architecture perfect for sketching. You were focusing on the concrete sculpture across the pathway, trying to get the lines perfect, trying to capture the look of joy on a little boyâs face as he climbed all over the boxes.
Just as you looked up from your sketchbook, he had passed by. Your eyes had met, and it sent a jolt through you that you couldnât explain. Maybe it was simply because he was beautiful, the yellow-white sunlight making his hair glow like a wild halo. Maybe it was because he had been looking at you already, as if he recognized you despite the two weeks that had passed.
Again, youâd looked up at every passing runner that day, catching sight of him four more times. Your gazes met every time. You couldnât explain the feeling, the way it seemed like he was looking for you, like he was searching for something in your eyes.
The third time, you were almost expecting it. Hoping for it, definitely. You had checked the Avsâs schedule that morning, seeing that they were off at home. With that knowledge, you brought along your sketchbook. You always saw him at around the same time, so you started on a new book to kill time until then.
When he makes his first pass, you switch to your sketchbook. Itâs a little cloudy today, the fall having taken hold, weakening the sun and making the wind crisper. He goes by and you start sketching. Itâs hard to get the features just right when youâve only seen him in passing, so you give in and look up some references on your phone. He crosses in front of you again, and you do your best to take in the way the cloudâs shadows deepen on his face, carve out his features in stark relief.
He hadnât looked at you on the second lap, and he doesnât look on the third either. Youâre a little put out, because this is the day that you want him to look the most. Nevertheless, you keep working on your art, filling the page with carefully shaded pencil sketches of his face at different angles. Youâve always been better at drawing nature and inanimate objects, but you think you get his likeness down pretty well. He doesnât look on the fourth lap.
You had gotten distracted by working on the line of his jaw, tweaking it until it sloped just right, when a shadow fell over you. You looked up, thinking that the weather had turned quickly, as itâs wont to do. You didnât want to get rained on, especially when working with paper.
Instead, it had been Mikko, standing a foot or two away. His gaze wasnât piercing, really, but it felt like it dug into your core anyway. He stared; you stared back.
âOh, um,â you said finally, sitting up a little straighter, âHi.â A small smile had turned the corner of his lips at that.
âHi,â he replied, going quiet again, as if he was waiting for something. You werenât sure what you were supposed to do in this situation, not used to interacting with strangers. Let alone very famous, very handsome strangers.
âHowâs your run going?â you ask, grasping for anything to say. His smile grows with the words.
âItâs good,â he says, eyes flicking down to your lap before coming back to rest on your own, âHowâs your drawing?â Itâs then that you realize the sketchbook is sitting face-up on your lap, your work fully visible to him. A furious blush heats your cheeks immediately, his smile blossoming fully.
âUh,â you say, eloquently.
âIâm sorry if thatâs weird,â you apologize quickly, worried that he may think youâre some kind of stalker, âI donât mean to make you uncomfortable.â He chuckles, shaking his head a little. The corners of his eyes crinkled with happiness.
âItâs not weird,â he replied easily, motioning to the book, âTheyâre really good.â You swallow hard, still nervous. At least he doesnât think youâre some kind of weirdo, probably.
âThank you,â you say. Words evade you after that, and thereâs a short pause. He extends his hand toward you, huge palm open.
âIâm Mikko,â he said, still smirking. You took his hand, letting it nearly envelop your own as you shook it.
âIâm Y/N,â you officially introduce yourself. His shiny white teeth peek out from between his lips.
âItâs nice to meet you,â he said. And thatâs how it started.
After that, he had taken to sitting with you for a while after his run, listening to your stories and updates and sharing his own. Your schedules didnât always align, but you got to see him at least every few weeks. Quickly, that wasnât enough. You were fascinated by him, by the way you felt so comfortable with him so quickly, with the way it was so easy to open up to him in a way you rarely did with others. You wanted to be around him all the time. It scared you.
You feared you were becoming infatuated with him, that your brain was latching onto a pretty stranger to distract from something. You were terrified that you would put him on a pedestal, would convince yourself you were falling for him, only to break your own heart.
Over time, it became clear that that wasnât what was happening. Yes, you wanted to spend all your time with him. But you didnât neglect responsibilities or other friends to do so. You stuck to your encounters in the park, not pushing for anything more. You felt safe around him, but not because you deluded yourself into it. You felt safe because you had been vulnerable with him, and he had shown over and over again that it was okay to do so. It was easy to open up with him, but you didnât feel the need to spill your entire life and all of your secrets to him. You were a little obsessed with him, but it was a soft, happy, fond kind of obsession. It didnât interfere with your life, only added to it.
The pattern continued for months, the two of you even meeting up in the dead of winter, clearing snow off of the bench to huddle together against the cold. The spring is welcome when it finally comes, though it brought buckets of rain along. You would take walks together, Mikko holding a big red umbrella just above your heads.
Usually, you welcome the warmth and light of early summer. When it started to arrive that year, you dreaded it. You knew Mikko would be going back to Finland for the summer, and you didnât look forward to being alone again. He told you ahead of time when heâd be leaving, and you couldnât help but count down the days you had left.
The last day youâd get to see him, there was a solemn air surrounding your interactions. You presented him with a going-away gift, a light grey cable-knit hat. Heâd have no use for it during the summer, but it would help during the hockey season. And maybe youâd been afraid that youâd never see him again, that he would go away for months and forget all about you, and you wanted to give him a memento. And even if the memory of who gave it to him faded, youâd still be able to keep him warm in the vicious winters.
Heâd thanked you profusely, hugging you tight. You tucked your face into his neck, trying to imprint the smell and feel of his skin into your brain. He pulled it on immediately, heedless of the hot sun beating down on him.
When it came time to part ways, he slipped you a neatly folded piece of paper. Please use it, he had said, pressing a quick kiss to your hairline before departing. You had watched him go, your forehead tingling from his touch. When you unfolded the paper, you were met with twelve numbers. The format isnât familiar, but the plus sign at the beginning and the note underneath reading text me make it clear that itâs a phone number. Under the note, thereâs a username as well, with Whatsapp scribbled next to it. Youâd tucked the note into your sketchbook, slipping it into your backpack. Your heart had sung and beat off-rhythm the entire way home.
With a line of communication open, the floodgates opened. You were able to message any time you wanted, working around the nine hour time difference. Even when one of you was asleep, youâd leave messages for the other to read when they woke. It still wasnât ideal, but when he sent you pictures of him and his dog, he didnât feel so far away.
His return to Denver was highly anticipated. Youâd agreed to meet at the park two days after he landed. The first thing he did when he saw you was wrap you up in a tight hug, twisting you side to side like his happiness made it impossible to stand still. You had squeezed back, as hard as you could.
A month into the season, he had invited you out with some of his teammates to celebrate a win, and that had been the beginning of the current era. It was the first time you had seen him outside of the park, the first time heâd introduced you to some of the other people in his life. It had broken the seal, and the next invitation had solidified the knowledge that he wanted you to be a part of his life, too.
Another year passed, the two of you growing almost unbearably close. He came to your apartment after tough losses, holding you close under the covers of your bed for comfort, nearing the line between platonic and something else. You never crossed it, though, even when you laid between his legs on the couch, when he FaceTimed you every night on the road, when you fell asleep with your face smushed into the crook of his neck so much that you were imprinted with his scent upon waking.
Then, your sister-in-law has a baby.
Itâs her and your brotherâs third child, a beautiful little girl named Rose. You go to the hospital the second theyâll allow you, begging out of work early. You congratulate your brother and sister, talking for a little while you wait for the nurses to bring Rose back from wherever theyâve taken her. If you tear up a little the first time you hold her, well, no one else needs to know.
The next day, your brother invites you over that weekend to see all of the kids, and you excitedly accept. Itâs been a little while since youâve seen the other little ones, and the promise of getting to play with them carries you through the rest of the week. Even when your boss gets on your ass to finish a report a week before itâs due, youâre soothed by the thought.
On Friday, you get a text from Mikko. Well, you get texts from him every day, but this is the important one. He only has practice on Saturday, so he asks if you want to hang out afterward. You always do, hell, you want to spend all of your time with him. Unfortunately, he wants to get a late lunch together, and thatâs when youâre supposed to be at your brotherâs. Something holds you back from saying no immediately, the gears in your head turning.
Half an hour and a text from your brother later, you finally respond to Mikko. The proposition is this: you can spend time together, but he has to come to your brotherâs with you. Itâs a long shot, since heâs only met your siblings once, but you want to have your cake and eat it too.
Youâre surprised when he responds less than thirty seconds later, just the word âyesâ in all caps, with three exclamation points for emphasis. Beyond the surprise, thereâs something about his eager certainty that warms your heart.
The decision to invite him had been mostly impulsive, but as soon as you see his face at your apartment door, you know it was the right one. His smile is wide and bright, buried in your hair as he hugs you in greeting. You grab your bag from the hook on the inside of the door and head out. The drive isnât exactly short, but traffic isnât too terrible at this time of day, so itâs not as bad as it could be.
It also helps that Mikko spends the drive alternating between talking and singing, turning the music up when a song he likes comes on, then turning it back down so he can continue regaling you with stories. Heâs not a great vocalist, but his enthusiasm and joy more than make up for it. You keep glancing over at him, loving the way the sun turns his hair golden, messed up into a shining halo around his head.
Derek meets you at the door when you arrive, wrapping you up in a hug. He gives Mikko a quick once-over before shaking his hand. Mikko thanks him for allowing him to tag along, always polite. Luckily, neither Derek nor Heather watch hockey, so you donât have to worry about any fannish behavior.
He leads you around the corner into the family room, eyes softening as soon as he sees Heather on the couch with Rose in her arms. Itâs sickeningly sweet. Briar and Florian run to you immediately, shouting your name and latching onto your legs.
You bend over a little to run a hand through their hair, urging them to step back so you can plant kisses on their foreheads. Their smiles are brighter than the sun, and they both start telling you about their days, talking over each other. You laugh, hauling them up, one in each arm. They keep talking as you make your way to the couch, sitting next to Heather and kissing her cheek.
After a minute of the kidsâ chatter, you remember that Mikko is here, still standing awkwardly at the edge between the kitchen and family room. You beckon him over, patting the spot next to you. He sits, and Briar crawls into your lap, never having been a fan of strangers. He curls up, turned away from Mikko with his face hidden in your chest. Florianâs speech about preschool has stopped, and heâs staring at Mikko like heâs trying to figure out what to do. After a few seconds, he climbs over your lap, balancing with one knee on your leg and the other on the couch, reaching around Briar to shove a hand toward Mikko.
âOh,â Mikko says, taking Florianâs hand and shaking it twice, âItâs nice to meet you. Iâm Mikko.â Florian nods, brow furrowed like heâs investigating the odd man his aunt brought.
âIâm Florian,â he introduces, âThatâs a weird name.â Mikko lets out a startled laugh at that, but doesnât seem offended.
âIâm from a different country,â Mikko explains, âSo we have different names.â Florian thinks for a second, then nods again, resolute.
âAre you Aunt Y/Nâs boyfriend?â he asks. You say his name, ready to chastise him for asking inappropriate questions. Mikko speaks first.
âNo,â he says, shrugging, âBut we are really good friends.â This seems to be a sufficient answer for Florian. He crawls out of your lap and over Mikkoâs, sitting cross-legged on the couch facing him.
âWhatâs your favorite dinosaur?â he asks, bringing a smile to both Mikko and your faces. Mikko angles himself slightly toward Florian, engaging fully with the conversation. Youâre relieved that Florian seems to like Mikko, especially because that means Briar will have an easier time warming up to him. Briar trusts Florianâs intuition, so heâll give someone a chance if Flo likes them, but will never get anywhere near someone he doesnât approve of.
You turn back to Heather and she hands Rose over without you even having to ask, physically moving Briar into her own lap so you have space. Briar doesnât mind, just cuddling into his momâs arms.
As you and Heather talk, Flo dismounts the couch and Mikko stands, following him around the room as Flo tells him about all his toys. After the tour, they sit on the floor together, Flo showing Mikko how one works. For his part, Mikko does a fantastic job of seeming interested, nodding and humming and asking questions to encourage him to continue. Itâs incredibly cute.
Eventually, Flo moves on to a different toy. This one is Briarâs absolute favorite, you know, but youâre still surprised when he plops down to the floor to go join the other boys. He still doesnât say much, but he does give little comments in his quiet, lispy voice.
âHeâs good with kids,â Heather says when she catches you watching them for too long, giving you a sly look. You can feel a little heat rush to your face, biting your lip.
âYeah,â you agree, looking back down at Roseâs sleeping face, âDidnât know that.â Heather chuckles, but returns the conversation back to its previous topic. Youâre grateful, not wanting to think too much about the feelings that have started pressing at the edges of your consciousness the past few months.
After some more gabbing, Briar comes over to tug at your pant leg. You turn your gaze to him, filled with love at the sight of his chubby face. He points toward the stairs, then starts walking over to them. You pass Rose back over to Heather, your knees creaking when you stand. Briar has stopped halfway to the stairs, staring back at Mikko and Flo. After a moment of deliberation, he goes back over, face determined as he tugs on Mikkoâs sleeve. Once he has his attention, Briar points to the stairs again. Mikko seems surprised but stands anyway, letting the little boy lead him upstairs.
It takes a second to shake your shock, but you follow along. There are very few people Briar feels comfortable taking up to his room, and you hadnât expected him to decide Mikko should be added to that list. Especially so quickly.
Since youâre a few steps behind them, Briar has already climbed up onto his bed by time you get to the doorway. You watch as he grabs one of his stuffed animals and gives it to Mikko, telling him the stuffieâs name and the backstory heâs created for them. Mikko offers it back once Briar has finished speaking, and it gets exchanged for the next. Seeing Mikko kneeling next to the bed, knees surely aching, paying rapt attention to every word Briar says⊠something grows in your chest thatâs far too soft to not be a threat to your sanity.
Briar beckons you over when he gets to the last stuffed animal, the only one you donât recognize. You join Mikko on the floor, leaning into his side while you listen to the story Briar has come up with for the newest addition to his collection.
Once heâs finished, the three of you go back downstairs. Heather is standing now, rocking Rose back and forth in her arms. Mikko steps up to her, but keeps a respectful distance as he admires the baby, complimenting both her and Heather. Flo pulls at Mikkoâs pant leg, dragging him away and through the glass door into the back yard. The rest of you follow, Derek reappearing from his office to join.
Flo and Mikko are running around in an instant, playing a two-person game of tag. It doesnât take long for Briar to join, and Heather gives Rose to Derek so she can follow. You want to play too, but Derek sidles up to you. You donât get much time to talk to him, so you pass up on tag to sit in the lounge chairs with him.
Heâs been working on a few tough cases lately, but obviously canât tell you much about them. Attorney-client privilege and all that. He talks vaguely about work, before switching to the family news. He mentions your little brother getting a new job, a good one, and laughs when he realizes Matt had forgotten to tell you.
âWhat does Mikko do?â he asks. You probably shouldâve expected the question, but you didnât.
âHe, uh,â you hesitate, âHe plays for the Avalanche.â Derekâs eyes widen at that, surprised and impressed.
âThatâs pretty cool,â he says, looking to Mikko, âHow did you two meet?â He looks back to you expectantly, and it hits you all at once that the way youâd met was kind of insane. A complete stranger came up to you, and you had not only started talking to him, but had accepted his number and used it. Stranger danger is real, and youâd overlooked the concept because⊠why?
âWe met at the park,â you explain, not interested in going into details, âHe almost ran into me when he was running, and. Well.â Itâs written plain on Derekâs face that he wants to ask a thousand more questions, but he holds himself back. Thatâs one thing youâve always loved about him: he knows when not to ask.
âAre you dating?â he asks, eyes focusing in so he doesnât miss any part of your reaction.
âNo, weâre just friends,â you reply, waving a hand dismissively. Derek looks skeptical, readjusting in his chair. You want to look away from his piercing gaze, but he has this magnetism that prevents it. Itâs always been kind of freaky, the way he reads people.
âDo you want to be dating?â he asks. You know he sees the way your throat moves as you swallow hard, the way your eyes dart to Mikko for the barest second. You should say no, but something stops you. Youâd never really thought about it, more than grateful to just be Mikkoâs friend. Your friends had joked about it, of course, but thereâs something different about Derek asking. The way he asks so seriously forces you to consider it, to review everything you know about Mikko, trying to find an answer you had anticipated would be obvious.
âOkay,â Derek nods, bouncing Rose the tiniest bit when she starts to babble. He changes the subject, telling you some story about your uncle that you donât really care about. Unfortunately, your mind is stuck on it now, trying to imagine what dating Mikko would be like, trying to decide if thatâs something youâd want.
Not that it would matter if you did, because Mikko will never see you that way. You know the kind of woman hockey players go for, and youâre not it. You donât have a business or some fancy degree, you arenât charismatic and congenial. Youâre not a trophy. Maybe a fourth place ribbon, if that. Mikko is going to find some beautiful, talented, lovely woman to love, and thereâs no point in musing over dating him.
Except he comes over, and Derek effortlessly hands him Rose without even having to ask, and you realize. Seeing him hold her so carefully, the look of adoration he has for a baby he has no connection to, makes something click into place. Which is probably the worst thing that couldâve happened.
As much as you try to focus and be present for the remainder of the visit, you find yourself drifting. Itâs not really the baby thing. Hell, youâre not even sure if you want kids. Itâs the fact that itâs your niece, your nephews, all comfortable around him, immediately welcoming him in. Itâs the fact that Heather is overly protective of her little ones, and yet had no protests about Mikko holding Rose, letting him keep her as long as he wanted. Itâs Briar plopping down in front of the chair Mikko sits in, leaning back against his leg in a way youâve never seen him do.
When it comes time to go, you hug each of the boys tightly, before kissing Roseâs head. You give a matching kiss to Heatherâs cheek, and Derek squeezes you tight afterward. Then you watch Flo and Briar hug Mikko of their own volition. You watch Heather lean forward to kiss his cheek as you had hers. You watch Mikko duck down to place a kiss on Roseâs forehead, so carefully, so gently. You watch him shake Derekâs hand, some type of look passing between them.
The drive home is much the same as the drive there, though you know youâre smiling and laughing less at Mikkoâs stories than usual, too lost in your thoughts to be a good audience. When you glance at him out of the corner of your eye, heâs already looking back, concern turning the corners of his lips down.
The plan had been to have dinner together after the trip, but you canât find it in yourself to be in public. Instead, you retreat to your apartment, begging out of the meal with the excuse of a headache. Itâs not completely an excuse, because you do have a headache, but itâs more whatâs causing the headache thatâs making you want to curl up under the covers in your dark room. Luckily, Mikko doesnât argue much, seemingly knowing something is wrong and not wanting to intrude.
You lie in bed for a while, the blankets pulled up over your head. Sometimes your brain gets stuck on something, turns it over and over in your mind, wonât let you escape the cycle. It had started with Heâs great with the boys, My family loves him, Oh my god do I love him? At some point it had switched, I want him around always, Heâll never love someone like me, Oh my god Iâm in love with him.
Youâre in love with him.
And thatâs the sticking point. Thatâs where all the problems begin and end. Youâd taken a chance on a stranger, it had worked out, and now youâre going to ruin it all with your stupid feelings. You know what you have to do, but youâre not sure you can manage it. Obviously, you canât tell him. It would make things weird, and youâd lose him, either slowly or all at once. So you have to pretend. You wonder if you can, and if so, how long you can keep it up. Can you pretend forever?
By the grace of whatever deity may or not be above, you donât have work the next day. Sundays are when you have a standing date with your best friend. Despite wanting to keep hiding in bed, you get up and ready, sighing before you step out the door.
Jackie looks lovely, as always, wearing a sundress and leggings to enjoy one of the first warm days of the season. Being around her always makes you feel underdressed, but you know sheâd never judge you for your jeans and button-up. You hold her for a couple extra seconds when you hug hello, breathing in the smell of her perfume to calm yourself.
You mean to bring up the Mikko situation, you really do. Thereâs just no appropriate time to segue into it. Instead, you talk about work and family and Jackieâs new apartment. Itâs pleasant, and you donât want to ruin that. You try to convince yourself that this is what you need, some time with someone you love, away from your thoughts. You know better.
The two of you take a walk after lunch, Jackieâs kitten heels clicking on the pavement. The trail is short, winding through the trees surrounding the restaurant. Despite your inability to find a way to bring it up, Jackie takes advantage of a lull in the conversation to ask about Mikko. She gives you a sly look when she does, and it makes your stomach turn. Of all the people who joke about you and Mikko being in love, Jackie is the most frequent offender. Youâre already mentally preparing for the teasing, squaring your shoulders and biting the inside of your cheek.
âHeâs good,â you reply, already queasy. It must come across in your words or body language that something is off, because Jackie stops dead in her tracks. You stop a couple steps ahead of her, turning to look at her. She examines you, her big brown eyes surely seeing right through you.
âOh honey,â she says, eyes going soft. Her mouth pulls in a tight, pitying line, one side of her lips tipped upward just enough to show a level of affection. Her brow is furrowed, her head slightly tilted.
âYou realized, didnât you?â she asks, taking a step toward you. You feel your cheeks heat, and your eye twitches the way it always does when you want to cry. Most of what sheâs said about you and Mikko has been jokes, but it would seem that she knew about your feelings before you did.
âIâm in love with him,â you whisper. Saying it out loud is simultaneously relieving and overwhelming. Itâs out there in the world now. Itâs real.
âHoney,â Jackie says again, taking the second step necessary to pull you close. You cling to her, willing your wet eyes not to spill. She keeps one arm around your torso, the other coming up so she can put her hand on the back of your head, encouraging the way youâre burying your face in her neck. She presses a firm kiss to your hair, making your breath hitch. You focus on breathing, four seconds in, seven seconds out. Youâre okay, you tell yourself, youâre okay.
âYouâre never going to tell him, are you?â she asks, the still-fresh hurt rising up to fill your chest, to crowd out your lungs. Itâs not really a question, and you know she already knows the answer. Youâve been friends since your teenage years; she knows you too well. You keep breathing, ignoring the way the air stutters in and out.
âI canât ruin it,â you reply. The cosmic stroke of luck that brought Mikko into your life is too unlikely and wonderful to give up. You canât bear the thought of losing him, this wonderful person who makes you feel seen and heard and understood.
âOkay,â Jackie says into your hair. You loosen your hold on her and she lets you go, still looking almost as heartbroken as you feel. Sheâs always been too empathetic when it comes to you, feeling your emotions so strongly that they become her own. It mixes with her protective nature, wanting to find solutions for all your problems, wanting to stop any hurt the second it starts. You love that about her, but still feel guilty that youâre hurting her, even unintentionally.
âI get it, and Iâm not going to pressure you,â she says, giving you a heavy look, âBut I think you should tell him. You donât have to, but I think itâll go better than youâre expecting.â Itâs not unexpected. While most people joke about you and Mikko dating because they think the way you interact is funny, Jackie does it because she really believes you should be together. Itâs been a subtle encouragement, hidden with smirks and laughs. Of course she would think you should tell him.
âIâll think about it,â you reply, though itâs mostly to appease her. Youâve already thought of telling him, anyway, and the reactions you imagine are the reason youâre not going to do it. After a pause, Jackie gently shoves your shoulder with her fingers.
âYou have a crush,â she sing-songs, smiling. The childishness of the action makes you smile in return, the air around you losing some of its weight.
âOh, so you want to talk about Cale?â you ask rhetorically, pushing her in return. She groans dramatically at the mention of her own crush. It makes you laugh, remembering the way sheâd gone shy and speechless when sheâd met him. The rest of the afternoon is much less serious, and for the thousandth time, youâre grateful for her.
Somehow, the conversation makes it easier to be around Mikko. At least you have someone who knows whatâs going on and supports you, rather than being alone in your feelings. Heâd gone on a roadie after your visit to your brotherâs, so you canât be physically close to him for another week, but your nightly video chats are less awkward than that first day. The more you talk to him, the more youâre able to return to the friendly spirit youâve cultivated over time.
When he comes home, you spend a night cuddled up on the couch watching a new show. His touch had almost burned when he pulled you close, but it subsides and youâre able to settle into him. When itâs late enough that youâre both trading yawns, he urges you up from the couch, leaving the snack bowls to be taken care of in the morning. He ushers you into the bedroom, assuming that youâll stay the night without having to ask.
Youâve done it a hundred times, but itâs different this time. He shucks off his shirt easy as anything, stripping down to his boxers with a complete lack of embarrassment. Logically, you know itâs probably because he gets fully naked in a room full of other people on an almost daily basis, but youâre not one of the guys, and he doesnât seem to mind anyway. Part of you thinks itâs a display of trust and comfort. Another part of you thinks itâs a sign that he doesnât view you as any different from his teammates, that he sees you so platonically that the implications of being nearly naked in front of you could never mean anything.
Lying in bed together isnât too different than usual, luckily. Yeah, youâre thinking of how much you want to fall asleep with his arms around you every night, but itâs not overwhelming. The room is dark and quiet when he presses a kiss to the back of your neck, sending sparks down your spine.
âIs everything okay with Derek?â he asks, his voice just loud enough to be heard over the whir of the fan. The mention of your brother reminds you of that day and you tense, knowing he can feel it. His tone is too grave for the question to just be checking in, so he knows something is wrong.
âYeah, of course,â you reply. The fact that he asked specifically about Derek means that heâd noticed the change in your demeanor after the conversation on the back patio. Asking about it a week later means he hasnât stopped thinking about it. Youâd hoped that he would forget, or that acting normally tonight would keep him from asking. But Mikko never seems to forget anything when it comes to you.
âDid I do something wrong?â he asks after a pause. Thatâs the last thing you want him thinking, so you thread your fingers with his and squeeze.
âNo,â you say simply, firmly. Youâre not going to let your own issues make him feel guilty or insecure. Thereâs another short pause before Mikko speaks again.
âAre you sure?â he asks, adding, âYou can tell me.â Youâve told him before when heâd messed up, so you already know you could. But thatâs not whatâs happened, and youâre not sure why heâs convinced it is. You release his hand, wiggling a bit as you roll over to face him. The moonlight filtering in around the edge of the curtains is just enough to make out the outline of his features, his light eyes silvery with it.
âMikko,â you say his name for emphasis, âYou havenât done anything wrong, I promise.â He doesnât say anything, just looking at you. It kills you that he doesnât believe you. You curve one hand around his cheek, tilting his head down so you can kiss his forehead. You nudge his face back up to force him to look at you, repeating the sentence in Finnish. You still donât speak much, but you at least know how to say this. Finns donât say things they donât mean, so you hope he takes it as the reassurance itâs meant to be.
âWhen did you learn Finnish?â he asks, startled off topic. You give a little laugh. Maybe this will distract him from his clearly morbid thoughts.
âI started studying when I met you,â you answer. You donât mention that youâve already completed all the lessons Duolingo offers, and may have spent actual money on a real lesson program.
âOh,â he says, pauses, asks, âSo nothing is wrong?â He sounds less grim than before, so youâll count this as a success.
âNothingâs wrong,â you confirm. The conversation ends when he replies okay, and you feel like you should turn back over, but something in his expression stops you. Thereâs some other question there, one heâs debating on asking. Turning away might keep him from doing so, so you stay in place. The silence hangs between you, but itâs not uncomfortable.
âWhy are you learning Finnish?â he asks. You shrug as best you can while lying down.
âSo you have someone to talk to when you miss home,â you reply. Being so far away takes its toll on Mikko, and there are no other Finns on the team, so you want him to be able to have at least a little comfort sometimes. Youâd intended to keep it a secret until you were conversational, but this seems like a good reason to out yourself.
Again, thereâs something in his face telling you that thereâs more he wants to say, something stuck right behind his front teeth begging to be let out. You wait patiently, but he just takes a deep breath and says thank you. Thatâs where the conversation really ends, and you fall asleep with your head tucked under his chin.
After that, itâs your turn to think something is wrong. Mikko isnât known for being a quiet or pensive person, but this thing keeps happening with increasing frequency. The two of you will be doing something innocuous when heâll freeze, gaze fixed on you in some inscrutable emotion, sometimes something akin to fear. The idea of him being afraid when heâs around you doesnât sit right, and you do your best to figure out what about you is suddenly scaring him.
You try to take note of what youâre doing when it happens, thinking that maybe there will be a common thread you can pluck out. Once, it happens when he comes home from a game and you present him with his favorite dish, a recipe youâd used your limited Finnish skills to get from his mother. Another time, youâre meeting him in the hall after a game, wearing the jersey heâd given you with his name plastered across the back. Other times included looking up to him from your sketchbook when you were at the park together, him coming home from a roadie to find that youâd gotten groceries for him, even just sitting on the couch together watching a movie.
Thereâs no specific action tied to the reaction that you can find. Itâs always preceded by the same look, though. Youâll meet his eyes, his face will go slack, the corners of his mouth turning up just the slightest bit, his eyes bright and hazy. His mouth will part slightly, and then the surprise and fear will overtake him.
For the most part, youâve tried to ignore it, but you know youâll end up asking him eventually if it continues. Youâre pretty sure itâs going to happen again tonight, because youâre in the middle of spooning some sauce over chicken breasts for him to eat when he gets home, one of his favorite comfort shows queued up on the TV to soothe him after tonightâs loss. It happens a lot after losses, so itâs reasonable to expect at this point.
He calls your name as he comes through the front door and you announce your presence in the kitchen. He sidles up behind you as you plate the food, wrapping his arms around your waist and kissing the top of your head. He compliments the smell of the food and you pat his forearm twice in greeting, thanking him and finishing your task surrounded by his warmth.
You carry both plates into the living room, giggling at the way Mikko shuffles along with you, refusing to relinquish his hold. After you place your handful down on the coffee table, you gently headbutt him to tell him to let go. He doesnât, so you wiggle a little, making him laugh. He still wonât let go, so you start prying at his fingers, but heâs too strong, and then youâre both laughing. You whine his name through it, and he finally relents. You turn around to look at him for the first time since heâd come in and the look is there: that soft, fond look youâre tempted to call besotted.
You enjoy this part while you can, the clear blue of his eyes halfway overtaken by his pupils, the gentlest of smiles on his lips, the ever-so-slight tilt of his head. You only get it for a couple of seconds before his mouth begins to part, ushering in the dreaded terror.
âWhy do you do that?â you ask before youâve consciously decided to. Youâd intended to wait to ask, to see if it persisted first, but it bothers you more than you care to admit. You never want to make Mikko feel anything negative. Maybe if you know what youâre doing to trigger the reaction, you can stop it.
âDo what?â he asks in return. He looks genuinely confused, his strong brow furrowed. At least he doesnât look afraid anymore.
âSometimes you seem so scared when you look at me,â you explain, reaching a hand up to cup his jaw, running your thumb along his cheek, âWhat am I doing wrong?â Itâs probably not the best time to bring it up, right after a home loss, but youâve already started. May as well get your answer.
âNothing,â he replies, insistent, âYouâre not doing anything wrong.â He takes a half-step forward, resting one hand on your hip and the other on the side of your neck. His touch is gentle, but it helps ground you.
âThen why?â you implore, suddenly desperate to know. There has to be something you can do, something you can change to stop this.
âI justââ he begins, inhales sharply, âDonât worry about it, darling.â Typically, you love it when he calls you pet names, but it feels compensatory here, like heâs trying to make up for not giving you an answer. But you need an answer, need to know whatâs gone wrong.
âMikko,â you say his name quietly, as softly as you can manage, âPlease tell me.â He hesitates, conflict writ across his face.
âPlease,â you repeat, searching his eyes for something, anything. The two contrasting expressions youâve been agonizing over return, mixing on his face. His mouth quirked in a tiny smile, his brow furrowed, his eyes dilated, somewhere between affection and apprehension. He takes a deep breath. You wait.
âYou make it so hard not to tell you that I love you,â he finally says.
Okay. Thatâsâ okay.
Thatâs definitely a love confession, right? Thereâs no way anyone could think otherwise, but your brain is trying to find another angle. The dissonance is strong, the statement going against everything youâve convinced yourself of for months. Guys like Mikko donât go for girls like you, except apparently they do, because heâs saying he loves you. You can feel how stupid you look, face slack with shock as you just stare at him. Mikko loves you.
It must take you too long to respond, because he starts to step away, his hands falling from your body. Your free hand flies up to grab his shoulder, holding him in place. He could pull out of the grip easily, but he doesnât, standing stock-still and waiting.
âYou should do that,â you say. Your mind is starting to shift, to push past all the bullshit youâve been telling yourself, to take in what heâs saying and maybe, just maybe, starting to believe.
âDo what?â he asks. Your chest is tight, a smile beginning to pull at your lips.
âTell me that you love me,â you reply. The short, disbelieving laugh Mikko lets out is the second best thing youâve ever heard. Because the best thing youâve ever heard is when he takes your face in his hands, looks deep in your eyes, and says:
âI love you.â
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Resmi Diklat Paskibraka Bengkulu Tengah 2024 di Tutup
Resmi Diklat Paskibraka Bengkulu Tengah 2024 di Tutup KANTOR-BERITA.COM, BENGKULU TENGAH|| Pemerintah Kabupaten Bengkulu Tengah melalui Badan Kesatuan Bangsa dan Politik (Kesbangpol), mengadakan acara penutupan Diklat Pasukan Pengibar Bendera Pusaka (Paskibraka) Kabupaten Bengkulu Tengah Tahun 2024. Acara tersebut berlangsung di Hotel Grand Bougenville pada Minggu, (18/8/24), Acara ini menandaiâŠ
#Andi Erzantara#Badan Kesbangpol#Diklat Paskibraka#pelatih Paskibraka TNI/Polri#Pelatihan Paskibraka#Penutupan#Purna Paskibraka#Upacara HUT RI ke-79#Bengkulu Tengah#Kepala Kesbangpol
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Cdrama: Dr. Spring (2024)
Gifs of Intro of cdrama "Dr. Spring"
ENG SUB ăæ„æ„éèĄ Dr. Springă EP01 | Starring: Xu Ziyin, Wu Jifeng
Watch this video on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vGokvFIfxf0
#Dr. Spring#æ„æ„éèĄ#Chun Ri Ye Xing#Jian Wang 3 Chun Ji#Jian Wang 3 Wai Zhuan#ćçœ3æ„ç„#ćçœ3ć€äŒ #ćç¶Č3æ„ç„#ćç¶Č3ć€ćł#2024#Tencent Video#WeTV#youtube#cdrama#chinese drama#episode 1#1st episode#Roada Xu#Wu Ji Feng#Tiffany Gao#Wang Kuang#Zhou Yu Hang#Yu Qing Hui#Jin Yang#Shen Xin#Andy#Kong Bi Yu#Zhao Mei Yan
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The Way Home 2.07 - Somewhere We Only Knew
Quality : HD Screencaptures Amount : 1.152 files Resolution : 1.920 x 960 px
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#grandecaps#the way home#the way home hallmark#thewayhomeedit#chyler leigh#kat landry#elliot augustine#evan williams#kris holden ried#del landry#andie macdowell#sadie laflamme snow#alice dhawan#colton landry#jefferson brown#samora smallwood#capped by macfraser82
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Korupsi Dana PIP SD di Kota Serang Seret Nama DPR RI dari PKB
SERANG â Persidangan kasus korupsi dana Program Indonesia Pintar (PIP) yang menjerat terdakwa mantan Kepala Sekolah SDN Kesaud, Tb Samsudin terus bergulir di Pengadilan Negeri Serang. Dalam persidangan itu terkuak bahwa terdakwa Tb Samsudin bersama mantan guru bernama Tb Iskandar bertemu dengan staf ahli DPR RI. Dalam sidang perdana yang dipimpin oleh hakim Arief Adikusumo itu, JPU KejatiâŠ
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#Andi Supyandi#fraksi pkb#Kepala Sekolah SDN Kesaud#Komisi X DPR RI#Korupsi PIP#Program Indonesia Pintar
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