#shes been busy gardening:3
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#homestuck#homestuck fanart#jade harley#shes been busy gardening:3#if she makes a seed big#would it grow into a big plant?
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!! itâs very silly and unserious and the only reason itâs long is because itâs so vivid in my head. unedited as hell </3
nosy neighbours tf 141 got me giggling. and itâs not even inherently sexy nor attractive, itâs really just them being in peopleâs (or a personâs) business.
thinking about how, in retirement, they still bought a house together because itâs so odd to have separate lives. and so they bought one in the suburbs, with five bedrooms and four baths, and a really big backyard. kyle picked up gardening so the backyard was not just a plus but a damn requirement.
so they move in, not giving a damn about that one old WASP couple across the street watching them all with a sneer because apparently moving in with your mates is unusual. well, whatever. fuck them.
then they meet their new neighbour. youâre singleâdivorced, price would tell them laterâwhose life is centred around your 9 to 5 job at an office in the city which you wake up at 5am for.
you leave the house at 6:30am and then amble back home when itâs pushing 8pm. itâs a boring life; a boring routine. not even your little front lawn of cared-for wild flowers managed to hold their attention longer than a day.
so with that said, theyâd like to go on a record and say that itâs all johnnyâs fault.
friday evening, he started the game by saying, âshe bought a baguette.â he paused. âand a bottle? it's shaped like lube?â
john blinked, setting his book down. âwhat.â
mactavish shrugged, still peering from the crack in the curtains. kyle walked in then, his apron all dirtied. âhey, iâm craving a baguette.â
johnny laughed and looked at price like price was supposed to get something from that. of course he didnât, but johnnyâs always been good at carrying the momentum so, to no oneâs surprise, he repeats the observation three days after the previous one.
âbagâo coal and lemon bread. what the hell.â
âthatâs a disgusting dinner combo,â kyle chirps, switching the channels.
simon throws a pillow at him because he had been watching a documentary about moths when kyle changed the program without asking him.
âitâs just monday,â john finally replies, cementing his participation in the game. âwhyâs she buying lemâdid she not grocery shop?â
johnny looks at him, wide-eyed. âthatâs a good question, sir.â then he turns, ignoring them again to peer at their neighbour. johnâs sure youâre back in your home so he really doesnât know what johnnyâs watching at that point.
simon was successful at wrestling the remote control back to him, and the programâs returned to the moths.
.
thursday evening, two and a half weeks after mondayâs lemon bread and bag of coal, the game picks up again.
âwho the hell makes a rug purchase during the weekdays?â kyle asks, his voice teetering between fascination and concern.
âhow longâs the rug?â johnny replies, all of them watching as kyle stands in front of that slip of window they now use for âbird watching.â
kyle spreads his arms outâ2.5 ft.
âhuh,â johnny says. âfor the toilet, you reckon?â
âprobably for the cat, actually,â simon cuts in.
âwhat cat.â john doesnât even know who asked that, but reallyâwhat cat?
âa round thing,â simon answers. âgrey fur.â
âaww,â johnny croons. âthatâs cute.â
john sighs and turns back to the morning paperâs crossword puzzle for the day.
.
you donât join the neighbourhoodâs annual summer barbecue party much to their disappointment. although, in all fairness, john understands your decision because they wouldnât have gone to it anyway had they not found out that the host this year was going to be that WASP couple who still sneered at them every chance they get.
the wife, of course, couldnât turn them away in front of the other neighbours who particularly loved kyle and, shockingly, simon so there they are, eating what is begrudgingly some good ribs while listening to the neighbourhood gossip.
and while each story was riveting, nothing could honestly hold a candle to their âbirdâ and your peculiar grocery runs.
.
one evening, you come home with a man. john tells them itâs your ex-husband, admitting to them that yes, heâs now used up their once-a-month pass to accessing âspecialâ resources with regards to finding more about you.
âthink theyâre fuckinâ?â johnny asks, no longer feigning disinterest.
kyle groans because it had been more than a minute now since johnny dropped a card from his stack; they tried their best to be patient as they waited, thinking mactavish needed more time since, apparently, heâs never played cards beforeâgrowing up as a catholic boy, heâs always been told that any form of gambling was a gateway to eternal damnation.
john didnât have the heart to tell him that you didnât have to make bets to be able to play cards.
âmaybe,â simon replies, ignoring kyleâs angry grumbling. âwhy else would she bring him home? her house ainât really a wonder.â
ââŠhow do you know that?â kyle asks, his words measured and slowed.
simon blinks, then he sniffs, before looking away.
âhey!â mactavish screams, catching on. âwe agreed no tampering with anythinâ of âers!â
âyeah? well tell âat to capân tooâhe was already there when i broke in.â
johnny turns to him with a theatrical betrayed look. kyle drops his head on the table because the gameâs been fully abandoned now.
âsir,â johnny says, his voice airy like heâs speaking mid-gasp. âyou didnât.â
john licks the back of his teeth, then, âjusâ wanted to see âer cat, sâall.â
.
the ex-husband leaves three hours later with a familiar rug tucked to his side.
.
âhuh,â simon murmurs, his voice so faint that john almost missed it. âtulips and tuna today.â
johnny and kyle wouldâve loved the update but the two are away for the week.
john messages it to the group chat.
suds (19:21)
> holy shit sheâs improving.
.
oddly enough, it took them six months since they moved in for them to finally talk to you.
or, well, for you to talk to them.
âiâm havinâ a yard sale tomorrow,â you say after the introductions have passed, your lips tugged up in a shy smile.
john honestly couldnât even remember how he used to envision youâold age caught up to him and for a whole while, you were nothing but a coloured blob in his eyes since they turned out to be more damaged than expectedâbut whatever that had been was erased the moment you stood before them.
shy and awkward, your back slouched just a little like youâre trying to curl into yourself in the face of their rapt attention, but even then youâre beautiful.
âyeah?â kyle asks, smiling; the first to break out of the trance you put them into. âand would yâneed help, pretty miss?â
âoh, you,â you murmur, strained laughter peeling from your lips. âand yeah, i do. would that be alright? i tried moving my old couch downstairs and my back almost gave out. i swear, i thought i was going to see the lord today.â
johnny laughs, loud and booming. âwell weâre glad that you didnât die today, otherwise who would take care of little truffle, huh?â
john barely stopped himself from heaving out a loud sigh, an attempt made more challenging when he caught the way kyle whirled his head to glare at mactavish, the act not any less subtle since it startled you too. simon grumbles something incoherentâitâs lost amidst johnnyâs petering laugh and your swelling horror.
ââŠhow, exactly, do you know my catâs name?â
#suns#task force 141#cod x reader#task force 141 headcanons#johnny soap mactavish#kyle gaz garrick#john price#simon ghost riley
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i live for your girl dad! sukuna may we please have a little more? đđ
oh, you're in luck anon. just finished typing this one <3
--
Sukunaâs daughter had been wailing for the last half hour. Maybe even longer.
He tells Uraume to finish preparations, then walks back in the direction of your shared bedroom. He finds you there, pacing back and forth while trying to soothe your baby with light shushes and comforting humming. You look tired. Lately, you havenât been getting much sleep.Â
âSheâs still crying, even after all this time,â he says from the doorway. âIs she sick?âÂ
âOh, no,â you reply with a small, exhausted smile. âItâs just that⊠She knows youâre leaving.âÂ
That makes him pause and raise an eyebrow in question. âWhat?âÂ
You elaborate. âShe cries when you leave for business, and she doesnât sleep as easily until you return.â You look down at your daughter, who had begun reaching her little arms towards Sukuna the moment she felt his presence in the room. âProof that sheâs my daughter. It doesnât help that she can feel that I am also sad.âÂ
Though his expression remains as stoic as ever, Sukunaâs heart pings at your soft confession. Before he knows it, heâs walking towards you. âHere.â He gently takes the small, wailing girl and holds her against his chest, her cries immediately softening. Her tiny hands grip his kimono, as if she were begging him to stay for a little while longer. You sit down on the bed, and when you yawn, Sukuna tells you that heâll put the baby to sleep, then exits the room, taking the hallway that leads to the garden of his large estate.Â
By the time heâs outside, his daughterâs no longer crying. She stares up at him, her big crimson eyes still pleading to him. Sukuna sighs, slowing his steps when he reaches the gardenâs trail. âYou surprise me, brat,â he tells her. âBefore you were born, I was convinced that you, like most babies, would be frightened in my presence.âÂ
His daughter tilts her head in what he thinks is confusion, as if saying, âBut youâre my father. Why would I be afraid of you?â He scoffs, then wraps her in the baby blanket he brought with him. âYou need to sleep, little one. Itâs late. I am certain that you are tired.âÂ
Sukuna remains quiet as he continues walking through the moonlit garden, and it doesnât take long for the babyâs eyes to shut. Once her breathing steadies and he knows that sheâs asleep, he exhales once, thinking of your words earlier. âProof that sheâs my daughter. It doesnât help that she can feel that I am also sad.âÂ
He didnât know that you missed him that much whenever he was away on business.Â
When Sukuna returns to the room, he carefully places his daughter in the bassinet next to your bed. Since the baby blanket still has his cursed energy on it, sheâll find comfort in it until he returns. Then he sees you, fast asleep in the bed. He covers you with the blanket, then gently strokes your cheek. Iâll be back soon, he thinks to you. Finally, he quietly closes the door, then makes his way back to Uraume.Â
âLord Sukuna,â Uraume greets him with a dip of their head. âIs the little princess alright? Does she need anything?âÂ
âShe is fine, but we shall make this quick,â he says. âMy wife and my brat prefer when I am home, so the faster I can return to them, the better.âÂ
#sukuna fluff#sukuna imagine#girl dad sukuna#girl dad kuna ily#jujutsu kaisen#written by rey <3#jjk#jjk x reader#jujutsu kaisen x reader#sukuna x y/n#sukuna x you#sukuna x reader#sukuna ryomen#ryomen sukuna x you#jjk fluff#parent au#sukuna au
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I volunteered to help the florist with her Mother's Day deliveries today, it was fun! My favourite parts of the experience:
early this morning I delivered flowers to women who were busy with morning farm chores, usually out in the barn; some had forgotten it was Mother's Day and were pleasantly surprised to see me show up holding a bunch of flowers above my head (so it wouldn't get eaten by barn animals on the way)
speaking of: one woman let a cow smell the flowers, then said "they're probably treated with chemicalsâbetter not have a taste" with an apologetic look (at her cow)
a little boy opened the door at one point and I said, flowers for your mum! and he called her and while waiting for her to come downstairs, he said, "I learnt a Mother's Day poem at school", so I said, let's hear it! And apparently he hadn't expected that, and he lit up upon realising he would get higher returns on his poem investment than expected. He thought he'd recited it once and it was over but here was a fresh new audience!
a woman whom I found at the back of her garden hanging out with ducks deplored the fact that she didn't have a coin in her pocket for a tip, then said "Do you want to see my baby pigeons?" Yes of course I want to see your baby pigeons. That's a good tip
I delivered a bouquet to someone and a woman next door, who was in her garden, turned to the open window of her house and said, "[Neighbour's name] got flowers! For MOTHER'S DAY."
I later had to return to that street after a last-minute order was placed to this woman's address. Whomever she was talking to inside the house got the message loud and clear :)
at one point I entered a barn that seemed empty (except for cows), said "Is anyone here?" and a goat SPRUNG UP out of nowhere and poked me with her hoof and gave me a heart attack
I returned to the shop and the florist let me pick a couple of plants as thanks, and we had the usual conversationâ"Would this cheerful yellow plant thrive in my house?" "No. Your house is under 10°C. Try this one instead." Me: "This one isn't yellow :( It's more austere" Her: "So is your house" (She entered my non-heated kitchen in December once, and ever since I've been trying to convince her that it's not always like that) (just six months per year)
as I sat in the shop waiting for more bouquets to deliver, a man came in to buy roses and the florist started wrapping a ribbon around the bunch and the man asked, could you put a ribbon around each rose? I said aw they're for several mums? :) And he said yeahâthat he was going to visit his mum at the retirement home and he wanted to get something "for all her friends too, why not!" It made everyone smile
admiring the florist's skill as she quickly put together a bouquet for a new order, I said something like "at least AI won't steal your job" and she said "with quantum computing, you don't know... not sure what it is but I read an article and it sounded scary." I said, I heard it's still impractical because the quantum computer particles need to be kept in very cold environments, like close to absolute zero, and she said "Quantum plants would thrive in your house."
Florist: "I'll accompany you for this delivery because the person who filled the form gave a 'turn left after the third mossy rock'-type of address"
I was invited at her house for lunch, and I asked warily "Does your husband still have swans?" She said "No, we only kept the geese. We have just 3. They're evil too but not as bad as the swans"
one of my favourite interactions was when I delivered flowers in a hamlet that could fit in my pocket, and a young girl who came to the door asked me in what village I lived, and I said, it's not a village, just a lone house in the woods, and she sighed "I wish I could live away from civilisation." I looked around us. Asked, how many people live in this village? She said, "Sixty." I said, "That's too many?" She said, "Yeah."
Final stats for today: I was offered a coffee 4 times, Mother's Day chocolates 2 times, and 1 meeting with baby pigeons; was startled by 1 goat and terrorised by 3 geese; petted 2 windowsill cats, and was asked if Pampérigouste was currently in her pasture 4 times.
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What about Y/N and reader having a little baby girl. Sukuna was disappointed at first because he wanted another boy. But she becomes so attached to her papa since she was a baby. Like she sees cuts on his hands (she doesnât realize he can use RCT yet) and tries to treat his wounds đ„șđ«¶đœ
~đȘœ
I though tumblr ate your ask when I scrolled 5 times and could find it and I panicked so hard đ So cute đ„ș Im pretty sure weâre going with Anya, but I suck at catching her personality so Iâm just going to go with general daughter reactions for this đ„čđ€đ€
(Note: I tried, but I feel like Iâm always lacking in the daughter area. Maybe I need to borrow my niece ;-; also, its a little shortâŠ) finally back into it tho đ
Your room fell silent, the cries filling the air were almost piercing. You felt like you knew this was bound to happen. Yuji was a miracle, but your second child was born a girl. You knew Sukuna had only ever cared about having heirs, so in the silence you were on edge of what he would say or do.
It was strange watching him in that moment, she was crying in his arms, he was staring at her with that black expression that always appeared like a frown. He shouldnât have been so openly disappointed, he knew from the start when your stomach started to swell and he hadnât noticed until he touched your round belly. The child in your stomach had not an ounce of cursed energy to leave a presence, much less for him to be able to tell what it could be. Yet he held out hope for a boy, even if the lack of his presence was due to a heavenly restriction, he could work with that. But no, the little pink haired girl crying and screaming in his arms was enough to leave him perplexed. He shook his head, handing her over to you, you watched him while you began to breastfeed your daughter.
âSukuna..â your voice was a whisper followed by a cringe of feeling like your insides were coming out. You wanted to comfort your husband but you didnât feel right. âSukuna,â your lower stomach kicked in painful cramps, and everything moved in a rush. Sukuna was pushed out of the room and heard the panic of your caretakers clearly.
â- â- â- â- â-
The day had passed and he sat outside your room, they had persisted he did not pass. So he sat out there waiting until the early hours of sunrise when they brought out his daughter. He took her in his hands, you couldnât see it past her pink hair and eyes, but to Sukuna she had your face. She was small and round but to him, she looked so similar he was in disbelief you had won over that part of his genes.
He sat there all day, holding her to his chest, while his head leaned back against the wall. His eyes were closed but he couldnât sleep, he couldnât rest, he could tell you were alive, but it felt like you were just barely there. He looked down in his arms, the little bundle of clothes moving around slightly as your daughter moved, crying out. He wanted to hand it off to a servant as his hand came up to uncover her face more to look at her, that was until her hand slipped out taking a tight hold of finger. She stopped crying for a moment just sniffling, her little nails falling digging into his skin. âCome, stop your crying.â His free arm came to lightly run over his little wrinkly cheeks, âmy child.â He was looking at her with such a soft look, the servants found it endearing. It was then he decided he would take care of her as he did Yuji, his child, his pride.
â- â- â- â- â-
Years passed, and you were outside with Yuji. Watching Anyaâs big eyes growing in size as an emperor butterfly slowly fluttered around the garden. It had been a month since Sukuna had left on one of his little excursions, you were curious why his supposed two week trip became a month long trip. But you had your 13 year old Yuji who was laying in your lap passed out from his own Ventures of the day and your 3 year old girl keeping you busy, you didnât feel as lonely as when it was just yourself. âMama!â Your hand kept running though Yujiâs hair, âYes sweetheart?â Your little girl came running up to you, âPapa!â You could see the stars in her eyes as she pointed behind her, past the garden. You looked seeing the all too familiar and burly silhouette in the distance. You faked a gasp, âIt is papa! Heâs almost home. Do you wanna go get him the sweets you made?â She perked up more, âYeah!â You watched as she ran off inside the house singing a song as her steps padded on the ground. Yuji slowly sat up, eyes squinty as he looked around âDad?â You laughed while rubbing his head, âYes.â
You started to get up, Yuji rushing up and offering to help you as you struggled to get up, âmy leg is tired from being in one place too long.â You laughed and Yuji grinned, âSorryâ was tired.â
You simply rubbed his head, âItâs fine, go get your sister, sheâs been away for a while already.â
Yuji ran off to find his sister while you tried to ignore the feeling in your legs. You moved closer to the edge of the garden Sukuna was approaching in fresh blood, the closer he became the more you noticed the minor scrapes and cuts on his body. You rolled your eyes with a smile, he shrugged off the top of his robes once he had realised your eyes were trained on his body. It would be a lie to say you didnât find him attractive in this form of glory, but for the sake of your kids you wouldnât touch his chest and give him that look. It was when he stood in front of you that your dominant hand pulled your handkerchief from your obi, your free hand cradling his face before cleaning his face of the foreign contaminant.
âI see my husband is home, sturdy, well and revelling in his victories.â You hummed as you finished cleaning his face, pulling him towards you gently so you could kiss him. As you pulled away from what was going to be a soft kiss he pulled you back in to catch your lips longer, âMhm.â Was all
He hummed against your lips, aside from the hand on your head, two of his free hands came to your waist to pull you closer. Placing your hands on his chest you pushed yourself back a little to stare up at him, âYour little girl has been asking and crying for you to come back. She even made you a little treat everyday for when you arrived.â He hummed, eyeing you, your hands moving to rest on his biceps, âThey should be here. I sent her in to retrieve what she worked so hard on.â Your head turned exposing your neck to him, his last free hand coming up to run his nails over the tender flesh, âIâm sure sheâll be back soon enough, as for now Iâm craving the feeling of something else.â His hand angled your head away, teeth and lips running over the plush pulse point on your neck, until he huffed at your resistance, âhow impervious.â He pulled away, hands sliding from your waist as he looked away visibly upset. You couldnât fight the smile, âWe should go, it might be a waste waiting longer out here then if we go find them.â
â- â- â- â- â-
Thatâs how you ended up in this situation. Yuji was sitting by his dad with a big smile listening to the story of how he single-handedly levelled another city. Anya was sitting on his lap bouncing along as his body shook when heâd let out a louder laugh or was jostled around with his movements. That was until she noticed the smallest cut on his stomach and let out a loud gasp making all of you turn to look at her.
âPapa! Youâre hurt!â Sukuna looked down, seeing the small surface wound that left a red line of broken skin over his side stomach. âOh, I suppose I a-PAPA NEEDS BANDAGESâ she was rushing off feet pattering over the floor as Yuji mumbled, âBut.. canât dad use reverse cursed techniqueâŠâ he looked confused as he closed his eyes tilting his head to the side. You looked at your husband who sighed with a faint twitch at his lips and placed a hand on Yujiâs head messing up his already tousled hair. âInteresting, I remember another brat with pink hair who did the exact same thing.â Yuji smiled under the weight of his fathers hand.
Anya came running in with a bowl of water spilling everywhere and other things tucked under her little arm. You watched as Ryomen steadied her after she spilt water onto his lap trying to clean his wounds as she had watched you done when your husband would crave your attention and purposely not heal his own wounds leaving you to tend to him. He cringed as more water spilt onto his lap as she un purposely smacked his stomach with a soaking rag rubbing at the small flesh wound, Yuji tried not to laugh as you laughed quietly behind your hand watching as Sukuna tried to help only for Anya to yell at him âNo! I can do it papa! Youâre hurt!â
The screen was cute as he cringed more at the cold water, relieved when she stopped only to become stressed when she pulled out the roll of wraps. She had seen you use those wraps on Yuji many times when he would become injured or hurt. What she didnât see was how her father was much larger in size, those tiny wraps wouldn't circle his waist even once.
When they couldn't, Anya became frantic, rushing to jump off her father and run to get more bandages. This was until Ryomen caught her mid jump, âLemme go daddy! Need more wraps!â He sat her back on his lap, âNo you donât brat, I'll show you something better.â
Anya looked up at her dad with glossy eyes and a wobbly lip, âPress your hands here.â You watched as he guided her small hands to his stomach over the wrap, âPut all your force behind it.â She forced her eyes closed, pressing both her hands against his stomach with all her little muscle. Using the slightest bit of his reversed cursed technique he pulled her hands away, âSee.â Her eyes opened slowly and the red mark on his stomach was gone. Her eyes lit up as she looked up at him, âI DID IT!â Ryomen couldnât fight back the twitch of his lips that pulled into a smile, âYou did.â Her hands clasped together with starry eyes, her stare locked on Yuji, âI can fix you.â
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#sukunas wife#sukunas wife speaks#đ€mail time#daddy sukuna#sukuna ryomen#jujutsu kaisen#ryomen sukuna#sukuna thirst#sukuna x reader#jjk anime#sukuna x you#sukunation#jjk sukuna ryomen#sukuna x wife reader#soft sukuna#sukunas wifeâs ask#yuji and mom reader#dadkuna#sukuna nation#jjk ryomen sukuna#son yuji#sukuna fluff#yuji x mom reader#son yuji mom reader#dad sukuna son yuji#Sukuna and daughter#Sukunaâs daughter#sukuna with a daughter#daddy kuna#dad sukuna
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Eldritchrune - Dreemurr of Sacrifice
1 | 2 | 3
Story Setup Eldritchrune Masterpost
Back in the light world, Asgore is still dealing with the heartache of the sacrifice, even months later. Mayor Holiday is still set on moving ahead, though!
Yay, it's nice to finally get back to some light world characters here! More with the Dreemurr family will be coming along soon!
Alt text for these pages under the read more:
Page 1 Panel 1: a landscape shot of the Holiday house and surrounding garden, with Rudy and Asgore outside the fence and hollybush hedge. The Delta Rune is emblazoned over the door and spiky snowflakes decorate the roof and fence. Asgore is walking by with a wheelbarrow. Rudy: âAsgore, you old goat! Been way too long!âÂ
Panel 2: A closer shot of the two men- Rudy is slim and dressed in a crisp tunic, Asgore larger and wearing slouchy overalls. Asgore: âHowdy Rudy. Youâre looking well!â Rudy, hand on his knee, bends over to hack and cough. Rudy: âOh yâknow⊠well enough, I guess! Howâs business?âÂ
Panel 3: Asgore looks down,ruefully scratching the back of his head. His wheelbarrow is full of droopy plants, ready for planting. âCould be better⊠Those soldiers hassle me almost daily. But, Iâve gotten used to it, so itâs all right.âÂ
Panel 4: Rudy puts a comforting hand on Asgoreâs shoulder. âAww hey, you can complain to me any timeâŠâ he says. Asgore doesnât avoid the touch but he doesnât seem comforted.Â
Page 2 Panel 1: close up on Rudy, who jerks his head to look as far behind him the door of the Holiday house opens to show the silhouette of a woman in a long dress.Â
Panel 2: Rudy: âBut uhh, Iâll let Carol here say her piece first. See you, Asgore!â He waves and pushes the gate open to go back to the house. Asgore looks taken aback.Â
Panel 3: A textless landscape shot of the front of the yard. Rudy, halfway back to the house, turns to look behind him as Carol comes out of the large Holiday gate to meet Asgore, who is hunched in a half-bow with his hand over his heart.Â
Panel 4: Asgore: âHowdy, Mayor Holiday.â He doesnât look up at her, and we see only the back of her head, not her face. Carol: âGood day, Asgore. I appreciate you stopping by, as I wanted to inform you personally.âÂ
Panel 5: Carol leans into Asgoreâs space, and he leans away, cowed. Neither of their eyes are visible, but we see their mouths: hers stern, his distressed. Carol: âWe will be conducting the Ritual again in three monthâs time, at the harvest moon. You and Torielâs presence is required.â
Panel 6: Bust shot of Asgore, dismayed. âAâŠAgain? Youâve⊠found another one?â His hand is still protectively over his heart.Â
Page 3: Panel 1: We see Carolâs face for the first time: she is severe looking, with medium length hair, a stiff dress, and a choker necklace and ornate belt. Her hand is also over her heart, though more like a formal salute. âI have tasked QC with obtaining the child.âÂ
Panel 2: Carolâs speech bubble continues as narration. âSheâs been quite diligent in her duties, and believes we now have one open to the concept of self sacrifice.â The scene shown is QC- a friendly, soft woman with wildly curly hair- appearing to be at a street market. She is speaking to a child with a bandana neck scarf (Clover, from UT Yellow), but thereâs no dialogue.Â
Panel 3: Another shot of Carol in profile, gaze fixed intensely ahead. âWith the Ritual rites already perfected, this time we will be successful.âÂ
Panel 4: A wide shot of Asgore, hunched over his wheelbarrow of wilty plant starts and flowers. Thereâs no dialogue. His expression is despondent.Â
Panel 5: Carol: âIs there something youâre withholding, Asgore?â Asgore: âNo. Weâll be there.â We donât see his expression. Her hands are folded sternly in front of her.Â
Panel 6: She moves once again into his space, pushing past the wheelbarrow to lean in. âI know that you two have been avoiding us in public since the last Ritual.â Asgore cringes away like a dog thatâs been scolded.Â
Page 4: Panel 1: Carol continues. âToriel has hardly spoken a word to me since then. I trust there is an explanation?âÂ
Panel 2: Asgore wrings his hands in front of him. His speech bubble covers up his eyes, but his mouth is downturned. âCarol⊠Toriel avoids you so much because she respects you. She does not want a confrontation.â
Panel 3: Carol, her expression still severe, almost angry. âA confrontation?âÂ
Panel 4: Asgore, still cringing and looking down: âI donât know.. if I can explain just how badly losing Kris hurt.âÂ
Panel 5: His narration continues from the previous panel. âSheâd be so cross if I knew I said this, butâŠâ We see the past, Toriel kneeling and clutching the blankets of an empty bed, crying hard. Asgore kneels beside her, holding her shoulders. Heâs crying too, unable to comfort her. âThe night of the sacrifice, when we got home⊠Toriel collapsed and wept so long and hard I was afraid her heart would simply stop.âÂ
Panel 6: Sill the past with present Asgoreâs narration over the top. âAnd then, once Asriel left too⊠Both of our children were gone.â Left to right, in the interior of the Dreemurâs house, Asgore stands dismayed as an unhappy Toriel rushes after Asriel, who is walking out the door with a bag on his shoulder. Heâs looking back but is clearly set on leaving.Â
Page 5 Panel 1: Back in the present, Asgore is even more hunched in on himself, hugging his fists to his chest with his expression drawn tight and sad. âI know Toriel acts as though she is fine, but thatâs simply because she is stronger than I am. The tension between us is so terrible that Iâm afraid sheâd leave me if she had somewhere to go!âÂ
Panel 2: Close on his distressed, panicky face, looking away from the confrontation. âAnd part of me canât help wondering⊠w-what if we wereâŠâ
Panel 3: Carol jabs a finger in Asgoreâs face. âWe. WILL. Be rewarded for our sacrifices. Of this I am CERTAIN.â Sheâs stern, but her fists arenât clenched- sheâs controlled. Asgore shrinks under her words, looking up at her as he stammers âI-I know, butâŠâ
Panel 4: Carolâs speech: âYou talk of heartache. Kris was not even your child by blood.â Asgore looks down, ashamed.Â
Panel 5: Carol continues, hand splayed over her chest. For the first time her expression is something other than stern, perhaps angry- still that, but pained. âDo you think your pain is greater than the one I feel, for December? Whom I gave away first?âÂ
Panel 6: Asgore plucks at his sleeve, looking away guiltily. âNo, of course not-âÂ
Page 6 Panel 1: Carolâs brief moment of any other emotion is gone. She sweeps her arm to the side. âAnd yet I have put aside my grief for years, all for the sake of you, and everyone else, in this town. I will do whatever it takes to drive this invader from our doors, and restore this town to the peace it once had.âÂ
Panel 2: Carolâs face is almost a snarl. âAll I require is that you, my oldest friends, trust me.â Asgore looks abashed.Â
Panel 3: Close on Asgoreâs downturned mouth, so none of the rest of his expression is visible. âOf course. Of course we do.âÂ
Panel 4: Carol draws away, her face returned to calm sternness. âThatâs good to hear. Our children donât need our tears.âÂ
Panel 5: Carol turns to go back into her gate, dismissing Asgore with a wave. âBut our town does need our efforts.â Asgore watches her go, putting his hands back to his wheelbarrow.Â
Page 7 Panel 1: Another wide shot of the Holiday house and gardens, with Carol walking back to the house and Asgore outside the gate. Carol: âSo Iâll see you both at the next gathering.âÂ
Panel 2: Asgore looks down at his wheelbarrow, despondently. His plants are all notably wilted. âGood day, Mayor.â The sky behind him darkens.Â
#lynx art#eldritchrune#deltarune au#asgore#rudy holiday#mayor holiday#aaaand a little bit of a UTY cameo there!#also we are trying out alt text for these I hope they work well!#PHEW what took up my time for these was definitely the BGs again#a lot of guesswork with Carol and the Holiday home since we haven't seen those in canon yet
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i got what you need | wanda maximoff đ
(College!Perv!Bestfriend Wanda Maximoff x Innocent!Fem Reader)
You're walking on eggshells with Wanda. She's unaffected and you're confused. It doesn't help that your encounter with your best friend unraveled new sensations for you, that it made your small break a huge challenge as you spend it with her.
WARNING: jealous!wanda, corruption kink, defiling childhood bed (r), dirty talk, degradation, almost fingering while in front of other people, perverted actions: using inanimate objects as plushie and hairbrush for sex, unconsented pictures, guilt-tripping, steve and tony as your parents bc why not | +18 men & minors dni. Words: 5.1k Notes: i'm back, kinda! i hope everyone enjoys this :3
[perv!wanda series] | [masterlist]
Your best friend, who lent a helping hand â pun intended â is coming home with you during your break.Â
While you were beyond appreciative, you were nervous more than anything on how to act normal while being on the receiving end of Wandaâs affection without the flashes of the sensual touches and little adventures she took you on. It played like a crazy loop in your mind. Not only that, but it definitely shed a light on your feelings for the woman. Youâre certain now that you like her more than a crush, more than as a friend.
Wanda revolved tenfold inside of your mind. Your little thoughts grew into a garden of filth, her consummate touch and moans playing like a broken loop â distinct and even agonizing.
You canât help but worry still. Sure, Wanda has been increasingly affectionate â you didnât even know that was possible. She barely let you go and her stares that lingered werenât that slick even to your own observation â yet, you werenât sure how Wanda feels about it. She never spoke about it, even after blowing the fuck out of your mindâŠ
Little did you know, Wanda had a lovestruck fool of a grin on her way to her room, after accompanying you back to your own. You were a blushing mess, both hearts pounding as you walked through the carpeted halls, your best friend truly lived up to her words â expanding your horizon of taste when it comes to bed activities.Â
It was a torture to still feel Wandaâs fingers exploring your depths, her coaxing tone clear as a day, all while she brought you to a high youâve never had before.
Shortly after, you went back to your normal routine. Your smile was wide as ever, Wanda mirroring yours with her head against the doorframe, checking you out from top to bottom. The thump on your chest didnât ebb when she met you for a study session.
There was enough space between the two of you, and itâs safe to say how it was unnerving and Wanda didnât like it one bit. Why were you holding back?
The chair creaked as she moved it closer to you.Â
âI canât do this,â Wanda whispered vulnerably, slamming her book close which startled you. One moment she was busy flipping through the pages as you, who tried so hard to contain the thoughts, and suddenly you feel Wandaâs breathing by your side.
âWhat?â Was all you could say until you saw her head tilted and unmistakably leaned closer to you â feeling her soft lips pressed against your chapped ones, her scent washing over your senses.Â
The action was so chaste that it made Wanda feel her stomach flutter. You held her waist tenderly and gave her an eskimo kiss. She smiled at the contact and the woman was wrapped up into a softness she loved about you. It slightly made Wanda feel ashamed of her dirty thoughts.Â
All it took was for her to recuperate her mind and look down to your v-neck shirt that emphasized your breasts and made Wandaâs mouth water. You met her in a liplock, hers filled with an edge of roughness and wanting that churned up your resolve. Sheâs fast and devouring your pretty lips, that it wasnât long before you caved in to Wandaâs frantic touches and she adored how you tried to keep up with her. Your best friend made sure you remember the traces she left you, reigniting the rush from the other night.
It honestly brought you to a point of being overwhelmed. The questions rattled you and Wanda can feel the gears turning in your head. Nothing else happened but her words struck you.Â
âDonât you dare leave in the morning.â She muttered while caressing your nape, her arm snaked around your mid waist as if you were to disappear in thin air. And so you didnât.Â
You woke up embarrassingly wet again. Was it the flashbacks? Had Wanda spilled her drink in the bed again? Or perhaps it was the so-called discharge youâve learnt from her? You immediately fled from the scene, timidly asking Wanda for set of new clothes you could borrow.
Each day progressed badly. You remained baffled at the events even more that it led you to slowly slip away from your closeness and routine. It aggravated the woman, you can see her neat eyebrows crease every time you made up a poor excuse. Though, you were thinking that itâs Wanda; beautiful and you didnât have an inch of worth to her standards. Whatever that relapse was, it bothered you.Â
Meanwhile, Wanda was motivated to get you both out of this funk.
Though, you rushed out of your dorm that made Wandaâs beautiful emeralds become puzzled as soon as you saw her in front of your doorstep, holding a paper bag full of love â her words, not yours. You canât help but internally coo at her effort, which made you act before you even think of it. All you did was leave a kiss on her soft cheek and left her with nothing but a cryptic reply of meeting a friend.
It was a whiplash to the two of you. You werenât this impulsive and intimate; while a part of Wanda is appreciative, reddened with your initiative, she was unaware what was the pushing force. Especially when you have been practising unspoken boundaries for the past few days â now she has to overthink who was this friend you speak of.
Were you hanging out with someone new? The girl from the library whom you shared a table with and constantly smiled at you, maybe the one who was too touchy and friendly with you at your student org? Her mind ran for miles. Was that what you craved? A new thing that could offer much more? Wanda huffed in disagreement. She doubts that someone else can be better than her.
There Wanda was, struck, a little humiliated and crestfallen. It felt like you were teasing her. The frustration builds up her chest as the woman couldnât do her usual moves to you as workload took both of your time.Â
As much as Wanda possessed and adored her collection of erotic polaroids that contained you, nothing could beat the real thing now. Not when she successfully coaxed you to open Pandora's box â the memory of you riding her pillow to the brink of wetness and first orgasm, how she luckily had another time with you, still anew to her perverted mind.
Sheâll make sure to make you pay back for this.
Around noon, you met up with your best friend. You guys were still following through your original plans for the break â your filthy rendezvous be damned. Zipped up in her black sweater, her denim jeans and chunky shoes. To your surprise, the emerald eyes were already looking at you. Your lips were caught in a twist, looking away in embarrassment.
âYouâre barely covered up.â She nods over you, her tone amused.
It caught your attention. âWhy? Doesnât it look good?â Youâre clueless, doing a small twirl for your best friend and self-consciousness has begun to eat you.Â
âGreat. Wonderful, actually.â Wandaâs rasp stoked something in you, making your eyes quickly flit in her direction only to be met with dilated pupils that raked over your figure â one you were acquainted with. âBut look at the skies, it could rain.âÂ
You looked up at the gray clouds and shrugged. âWe have your car. Weâll be fine, Wands.âÂ
She concedes and it falls silent. Being in her car was the closest you two have been besides the previous incident. Though it was awkward for you, Wanda looked just fine. You stole glances of her side profile every now and then as she inspected her stuff in the visor and glove compartment. A small smile escapes your lips as you see the little trinkets you gifted her proudly displayed on her dashboard and still thoughtful as ever, Wanda adjusts the carâs AC towards you. She smelled wonderful, the awareness of your Wanda-deprivation kicking in.
âWhere were you?â Wanda finally asks. Your eyes narrowed in confusion. âWhen you, uh, kissed me on the cheek. You seemed to be in a rush.â She clarifies with an adorable blush on her face. That was new.
Your eyes fluttered rapidly, not meeting the womanâs inquisitive green eyes â a telltale sign of you hiding something.
âUm, just ran some errands.â You sheepishly reply.
Wanda merely hummed in disbelief. She leaned to your side, fastening the seatbelt for you.Â
âUh-huh. And Iâm not buying that, you know?â Her honeyed voice washed over your neck so lightly, making you suck your breath in. It doesnât help that you feel Wandaâs hand clasped and brushing over your front. âYou suck at lying. Whatâs bothering you?â
âLetâs⊠letâs not talk about it right now, Wands.â How odd, Wanda thought. Still, her mission of riling you up was on the move and this motivated her even better.
Wanda bit the inside of her cheek in disappointment. Youâre lucky that she loves challenges and sheâs nothing but persuasive.Â
She sighed, letting go of the topic for now. âOkay.â Wanda will crack it out of you.
The pitter patter of your heart only grew with Wanda's feather-like touch, the woman softly hummed along the songs in your playlist. You're graced with her perfect side profile that your eyes cannot help but flicker back and forth, from her eyelashes up to her plump red lips and the slight movement of her wetting them with her tongue. It didn't take long for your mind to get sucked in flashbacks; how they felt against yours and the expanse of your skin...
âAre you alright? You look a little flushed, dorogaya.â Wanda murmured.Â
Your breath hitched and both your hands were gripping onto the seatbelt across your chest, the need to lessen your lightheadedness constantly increasing.Â
âWeâre visiting your home to relax, (y/n/n). Maybe I can help you to de-stress again.â The woman feigned innocence in her words. You didnât pick it up but she knew your mind was running a mile, recalling how good her definition of âde-stressingâ was.
How your best friend took you carnally on her bed⊠twice. At least the ones you remembered.
âLike a massage?â Your voice cracked, looking unsure over Wanda.
A devious smile is painted on her face.Â
âSure, something like that.âÂ
After a few hours, the two of you pull up into your hometownâs driveway. Thereâs a newfound feeling that stirred between you two after that life changing event â albeit Wanda coming over wasnât exactly foreign, it felt as though your relationship progressed further.
Like she wasnât here as your best friend, but something more. That had you nervous like a hopeless teenager again, barely normal around the woman youâre crushing into.
She was greeted with shoes being left on the doorstep and saw the picture frame that she cannot help but coo at each time she sees it. You look away which only tugged at Wanda's heartstrings. She pulled you close for a side hug. You were so fucking adorable. Both of you arrived at your hometown near dinner time and the more Wanda sees the parts of your house, her excitement grows more to finally see the room you grew up in.
Amongst other thingsâŠ
Your best friend naturally takes the seat beside you. It was getting harder for her to restrain herself as she saw your outfit that went along with the breeze of the night. You changed into comfortable shorts and an oversized shirt, a contrast with your mostly covered self at the dorms.
Wandaâs eyes kept fleeting over the bits of your exposed skin and the whiff of your scent and lotion that got into her senses.
She absolutely cannot control herself.
âHow's university life treating you, honey?â Steve asked, turning the rotating table on your way. It brought Wanda back to reality as seeing you shift uncomfortably in your seat, for a split second you halted on taking a spoonful of the meal. You were not willing to unpack the stress that you momentarily left miles away.
Wanda senses it and bites onto the opportunity of lending a supportive touch on your arm â a comfort to you and for herself. She orbits around you at this point and one thing Wanda knows well is the feeling of handling it on your own.Â
âSheâs wonderful. This one is always trying her best at all times, sometimes I find her sleeping at her study table. I have to find ways for her to relax on multiple occasions.â Wanda smoothly took over with a charming smile.
Suggestiveness may not have been your strongest suit, but you learned enough from your best friend by this time enough to be nervous to the next words she was about to drop. You remember the ungodly activities that only your dorm can ever know. How uninhibited you were under Wandaâs voice and touch⊠the floating and inexplicable sense of relief that it gave you.
You feel your palms sweat. âNo need to tell them all that, Wands,â You quickly chewed on your food, feeling slightly bothered.
âAll Iâm saying is I make sure (y/n) over here is in good hands. She keeps me grounded and I intend to return that gesture as well.â The grin on Wandaâs face was seeping through her tone. âSheâs⊠quite a hard worker. Always deep once sheâs locked in the learning zone.âÂ
While you knew what she meant â youâre thankful that your fathers only took her words with a sweet smile as they listened intently with hands clasped at the table, taking Wanda's words as a reassuring reminder that you werenât alone.
Conversations occurred again and it somehow led to a fit of chuckling and sounds of agreement at the dining table with more stories of your other dad, Tony's raging party days â refined into an appropriate storytelling, of course with your Pa Steve around â telling you the doâs and don'ts, and Wandaâs caresses had progressed into tiptoeing across your arm, then placing her hand atop of yours. She takes it as a win when she sees your slumped shoulders become less tense.
Among all things, you havenât noticed Wanda's eyes that raked over your legs right now. She tunes out a little. As much as she loved being in this opportunity with you, your bestfriend still craved you and you were there, unknowing. Hers for the taking. She couldnât help but ogle at your thighs through your short jeans, exposed before her own eyes, and clearly recalling how addictive they were to caress and mark.
Hands slithered on your left thigh, a ghosting touch that was beginning to rile you up. Wanda was on a mission to grip you softly by your thigh. It made you visibly hitch your breath, making Wanda chuckle. It made you flustered, hands tense around the utensil and so was the muscle of your thighs. Your best friend notches it up, feeling her fingertips stroke on your plush inner thigh. She feels so warm over your cold skin. Dangerously near your core. Youâre familiar with it now â sensing the overflowing need and desire in Wandaâs grasp over you.
You gave her a pointed look. What was the point of this? You didnât want your parents to catch you. It was beyond exhilarating. âWanda, whatâre you up to?â You utter close, only audible for her to catch.
âNothing.â She shrugged as though her actions weren't anything scandalous.
By gods, Wanda cannot wait to have her hands and lips all over you again.
After the weird encounter you had at the dining table with Wanda, you both changed into indoor clothes. Nothing is ever that too normal with Wanda, you suppose. God, the teasing! It was torture. You were close to combusting into a mortifying pool of distress and lust â perhaps it was Wandaâs plotting all along because of the unwipeable grin etched on her gorgeous face.
She playfully (or so you hoped) suggested taking a shower together but you became a mess at the thought alone, you were stammering and barely making eye contact in front of your best friend. Wanda seemed to take mercy and left you to gather yourself, but not without a kiss on your cheek and a light slap on your ass.
Almost like she was mocking you for the same thing you did a few days ago.
She was cuddled up to your side, mindlessly tracing your arm and the soft skin of your slightly exposed stomach. The bed was better than the one from your dorms, offering a decent space for the two of you. Even enough for some of your plushies to lay in. It was driving her to the wall, looking at your fitted shirt that emphasized the swell of your breasts nicely, and the sweatpants combo that you wore for tonight. To Wandaâs mind, it was like you paraded yourself like fresh meat for her, ready to be taken once again. Your free hand stroked her brunette hair as the movie played on the television in front of you, occasionally pulling back when your phone rang.Â
You hear Wanda huff ever so lightly beside you at the divided attention she was getting.Â
âJust some project stuff,â You lean your phone to Wandaâs eyesight for affirmation. The group chat came into her view.
Her eyebrows creased once again. âAt this hour?âÂ
âYep. Probably overthinking. More than me, which is surprising.â You humorously said to ease her protective nature and thankfully, Wanda snorted at.Â
âHmm. Donât respond now,â Wanda whispered as she burrowed her face on the crook of your neck. âYou smell so good.â
You smiled nervously. Her breath tickled against your skin. âYou smell just the same. Well, you used the same products as I didâŠâ
You were talking nonsense out of nervousness, she could tell. Thankfully, Wanda didnât call you out. You typed away, itching to wrap the conversation and enjoy your time with your best friend. Wanda can see it from the way you responded, she was so proud that it filled her with delight. Sheâs happy to know that a time with her was a bigger priority.
Underneath the light interaction, there was the desire that continues to brew in the pit of Wandaâs gut. She couldnât do anything for now. As much as she wanted to stay up, the driving tired her out. So Wanda rested her eyes for a couple of minutes, hugging your bunny plushie.
Until there was a sigh of content that stirred Wanda to wake into consciousness.
Her brain didnât register it for a few seconds. It continued, so pitiful and mewl-like. That canât be right. She paled in realization. When Wanda woke up, she caught your hand in the cookie jar â the arched neck and eyes screwed shut, biting your bottom lip to suppress the moans. God, Wanda raked over your exposed legs and halfway pulled down underwear, as though you were so desperate â in a rush to touch yourself.
âAnd you were going to invite me, when?â You turn your head too quickly at the sound, you pull your fingers back like you were burned, eyes flutter just as rapidly.
âI didnât thinkââ
âClearly you werenât. Touching yourself like a whore that wasnât treated properly,â She snarked back. âYou couldâve asked me this â days ago â and I would gladly give it to you, dorogaya. Now tell me, what were you thinking about?â
She scooted closer to you, on her knees and Wandaâs brunette hair still messy yet beautifully cascading. Her green eyes were filled with nothing but mirth.Â
âI didnât know what to think about⊠it was better when you, um, led me a few weeks ago. I mindlessly just went for it,â Your center was wet, Wanda notices, but not as it was when she was deep in you a few nights ago when you were fast asleep.
âSee how much you need me? Thatâs why you shouldâve told me. Instead of roping me into a limbo with you.â Wanda settled between your legs. You audibly groaned when she took off your underwear, your legs feeling less restricted. âMaybe you need to be taught another lesson.â
She sees you visibly gulp. Your throat felt dry all of the sudden. âW-whatever you think is best for me, Wands.â
âBest for you, huh.â
She called you a whore but it didnât phase you that much. You suppose it was the truth, no decent woman would touch themselves with their best friend innocently laying beside them. Wanda loved seeing your doe eyes. So compliant, the fear of being punished and talked down while simmering in careless yet a raunchy act reeled her in the most filthy thoughts once again.Â
âDid you get your fingers nice and wet?âÂ
âY-yes,â
âYou sucked them good enough for me?â The thirst was unmistakable in Wandaâs saccharine tone that made you drip every second in your underwear.
She saw your inner thigh muscles become tense, as though you were grounding your mind, preparing for what was about to come. You hesitantly nod â embarrassed that even in suppression of your feelings, Wanda remained as the star of your lust and pent up desires. Maybe honesty will serve you well.
She pinned your wrists above your head. It embarrassingly made your back arch at the slight recoil due to the firmness of her grip and action. You were cruel for igniting a spark of hope, the icing of it all she got was a random kiss on the cheek. Wanda had enough of playing nice.Â
âWeâll start with the game of truths before you get rewarded. Is that fair enough for a whore like you?â The term rattled you â oddly in a good way. It sent you on a submissive headspace, being degraded by a different version of Wanda was satisfying. It made your stomach do flips and your cunt pounding. âTell me who was the friend you met up with.â
It caught you off-guard. You feel bad at the realization that Wanda was racking her mind over it.
The friend in question was no other than her own brother. You wanted clarity on Wandaâs headspace, how to woo her, how the woman was like when it comes to⊠relationships. Naturally, her twin Pietro came to your mind. You spoke of your conundrum but nothing more than that â you can never share whatever happened in the dorms, of course.
âIt was Pietro,â Your voice cracked at the confession. âI had some questions to ask about you.â
Wanda's fingertips skimmed over your ribs, trailing lower. Your breasts were practically begging to be groped â the way it flopped perfectly as you laid down. Did you say it was about her? She muses what it could've been about. She doesn't like being excluded from it.
"You're already with the better Maximoff twin. You should have asked me instead, whatever it was. I thought I was your favorite," Your bestfriend said, hurt. She caressed your knee and the action sent tingles right up your southern part. You shivered in pleasure. âMy brother always gets everything. He canât have your attention as well.â
You didnât Wanda to misconstrue things from here on. "I know and you are, Wands! But it was about relationships, I wanted to know if uh, you were in one from the past and what you think of them,â
It seemed to do the trick, her aura calming down at your words.
âLet me get this straight, you wanted to know if I fucked someone before and if Iâm a girlfriend material, so to say?â It was shameful when she said it out loud. Like you were frenzied to know Wanda outside of her comfort, making you avoid eye contact. "Oh dorogaya. If you wanted me, you already had me from the beginning. I'm definitely your girlfriend now."Â
Wanda has a devious smirk. It warmed her heart you consulted her twin and she basically had your mind hostaged. The smell of your arousal though was affecting her slowly.
She continued, âYou left me high and dry. Do you think thatâs fair for me, dorogaya?â Wanda raised an eyebrow, her tone condescending.
âIâm sorry, I didnât mean toâŠâ
âItâs always like that. You know I would never do you wrong, yet stillâŠâ
âI-Iâm sorry,â You repeat hopelessly. âHow can I make it better, Wands?â
She gave your mound a slap. Hard enough to startle you, yet your hips chased and bucked for more of Wandaâs touch.
âWe can start with a few things. I wanna know if you used something else other than your fingers when you first explored masturbation.â Wanda wanted you to sit uncomfortably in your hole of shame it seems.Â
Her dexterous fingers bristled with intent, sensual and motivated to turn your gears. Wandaâs finger pads skimmed on your folds, just above the surface. Albeit each stroke did not come with force, it didn't stop you from slowly spreading your legs apart further and further.
"You just can't help it, hm?" Wandaâs eyes darkened when a sheer wetness covered her fingers. âMaybe it was mister bunny over here. Have you thought about grinding your pretty cunt against this soft plushie?â You breathed rapidly at the implication, heat spreading at the tips of your ears.
Wanda held the toy by its neck, the face of the innocent bunny being rubbed at your bare skin. It descended from your mound to your cunt. When you attempted to shut your legs at the teasing, she clicked her tongue on the roof of her mouth, unamused as your erotic mewls of desperation bounced off the four walls.Â
You felt the fur of the material, getting tainted by the sinful act. Wanda stretched your folds as she dug the toy deep as it could get, rubbing it back and forth. You closed your eyes as you reel at the foreign sensation, it tickled you â almost near as grinding over Wandaâs pillow â remembering her words; gyrating your hips, letting your weight fall completely. To simply feel. So near your clit. But it was futile with its barely cuddle size.
âNo, Iâve never,â You breathlessly reply, on edge.Â
A smirk fell onto her lips. âBut you enjoyed that, didnât you? I donât think you used it either. Itâs too small for someone as needy as you. Youâre a big girl who wants a big reward,â
The striking difference of Wanda was moving you in ways you never thought it could. She was unnerving and demeaning, yet it was palpable with pleasure. You look over your side â the nightstand. Wanda follows your line of sight and it clicks to her what the object was.
âYou used this?â Wanda humorously says, her green eyes dilating further. She held your hair brush, right at its bulbous tip and it made you feel so ashamed. âSo adorable. I can definitely see you fucking yourself with this. Some good old penetration. Now, open your legs wide for me.â
You hesitantly spread them. Wanda clamped her teeth over her bottom lip, looking at the hot mess that you were. She went in slow with your pretty, wet hole intruding with the bulbous tip that you havenât felt for a while. You felt the impatience in Wandaâs motions, pushing and pulling until all of its length was inside of you. Granted, it wasnât much, but it stimulated you nonetheless.
Oh, it drove Wanda crazy.
âMaybe next time Iâll fuck you with a better toy,â She pushed the tip and you feel her tongue flattened, licking across your neck. A better toy? You wondered for a brief second. âA double-ended strap. A slut like you would enjoy a pleasurable length and girth, I can tell. Now say it how bad you want it,â
âIâmâI need you so bad, Wands!â You whined with bucked hips. "O-oh! Please, please. Wands..." You grasped on her nape and peered over the unrecognizable emerald eyes.Â
Her pupils blown, cheeks visibly flushed, and holding you tighter by your love handles. You bucked your pelvis by instinct and it made Wanda sport a knowing smirk before latching her lips onto yours; a kiss fueled with rough need. Her thrusts with the hair brushâs tip didnât falter. She thrived on this sight of yours.
Wanda shushed you. She roughly pulls you by the cheek, only to give you the softest kiss to the expanse of your tense jaw â slowly easing to her ministrations. Yet again, you have fallen under her spell. Was it the dark or lightness you see; that, you canât quite figure it out. But you know that you craved Wanda just as much.
She pulled the bulbous tip away, rubbing the length across your slit. It progressed harder right on your throbbing clit.
"Please, please.â She mocks you. You squirm and feel the soft sheets rustle against you. âBe patient, dorogaya. This isn't meant to be fun for you. Can you imagine how torturous it has been for me for a month? I'm simply walking you through it, baby."
Your spine arched until your front chest met Wanda's clothed own and it naturally gravitated in return, making your bodies pressed in heat. She feels the tip of your nipples, all pebbled that she canât resist but suck on them, giving them ample attention.
Even when Wanda slowed down her ministrations, it didnât help with the pressure she applied over your clit. You feel her in circles and all determined, your legs spasming and arms slung around her, wanting to hold something to gravitate you through this fucking.
Wandaâs grip over you was strongly reminiscent of a leash; youâre whining like a hopeless puppy. Cheeks heating up as you squirm.
What else is there to detest? Wanda is here touching you in all the right ways. You beam at her all eager, like the woman has shown you colors you never thought ever existed. You felt the familiar release that sent your body and mind into cloud nine with Wanda slumped over your body. She kissed your forehead and during the moment of you temporarily passing out, you saw a flash of something flicker for a second.
She took pictures of your fucked out face.
You felt something that was poking your lips apart. You opened them mindlessly, soon it registered that Wanda had inserted the hair brushâs tip â she wanted you to clean it off. And so you did, putting up a best attempt to suck them off dry. You tasted sweet and salty. It felt raunchy and dirty⊠how her mind worked when it came to lust, you were certain that Wanda was a succubus sent to devour you and your well of innocence.
Wanda ravished you thoroughly. She took off her own clothing, deciding that sheâll have her time of pleasure later on. Who knows, maybe sheâll introduce you to tribbing. Imagining your determination of wanting to please her, grinding harder against her cunt â Oh how it excited Wanda now that you were hers.
âNext time you want something, just tell me.â
do not repost/translate on other sites. © wandagcre
#gg.writes#perv!wanda#wanda maximoff smut#wanda maximoff x fem reader#wanda maximoff x reader#wanda maximoff x female reader#wanda maximoff imagines#wlw#lesbian
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the lusty cabin-dweller
pairing: ghost / Simon riley x fem reader summary: your life gets wider when you find an injured man outside of your cabin. tags/warnings: Skyrim!ghost, secrets, graphic injuries, some angst, facial injuries, nursing Simon back to health one stew at a time <3, listen to this for the vibes, vaginal + anal sex, oral (f), animal attacks, blood, processing an animal for meat and fur, violence, death (non-major), mention of Skyrim racism, softdom!Simon, some backstory, please hmu if i forgot anything, one bed trope, simon backstory adapted to skyrim lol (so past abuse, murder, theft, domstic violence) but nothing graphic w.c: 5k
Honey-nut is squealing again. Some days you think she might not be worth the milk and cheese she gives you for all the trouble she causes. A high, strange bleating cuts through the chilled night air like a knife, sharp and terrifying only for a moment.
She's been at this since Frostfall. Maybe it was the weather causing Honey-nut distress - she was getting old, after all. For a goat.
In the time it takes you to trudge out of bed, pull on a wool shift and a fur, two things happen: one, Honey-nut stops bleating, and the woods surrounding your cottage becomes deathly silent.
Two, a crunch.
Just one, but it's enough. Someone is outside.
For a brief, hysterical moment, you worry for Honey-nuts safety. Have they hurt her to be quiet? No, you'd have heard that at least. Your breath comes fast, chest squeezing. Bandits? Probably not. It's a decent hike up to your wooden cottage. But it is nearing winter, and soon it will be Sun's Dusk. It's not unheard of that they'd be looking for a place to take over for the colder months.
Your hand goes to your heart, fingertips touching your throat. Be calm, you tell yourself. You aren't helpless, look. The axe, leaning by your front door. You can see in the dark well enough, and you're more familiar with your homestead than they are.
The axe feels right in your hands. Too-familiar, weighty, deadly. You touch your ear to the door, trying to reign in your fear. Nothing. Then, a wheeze, strangled and restrained like whoever it is can't afford to be heard. But you have heard it, and you push the door open.
"Show yourself!" You shout, voice surer than you feel. Your knees quake a little, but your grip on the axe is strong.
The animal pen is a mere few steps away from your front door. Past the front garden, it's wide open aside from the little shelter you built the past Mid Year. A foot sticks out, clad in armor.
"I'm armed," you add. "You're not getting anything from me!" The world is dark, the woods quiet. Adrenaline burns in you, bright enough to guide your steps.
"You gonna kill me with that, girl?"
Gruff voice, like scraping rocks. Coming into view, you see that this man poses no threat. He's half dead, slumped and pale, clutching his side.
"Who are you? What's your business here?" The axe is a deterrent, now. Just for show. You hold it above him, but nearly drop it when you see his face. It's sliced right through the middle, from his forehead to his jaw. "Oh, gods-"
"Mind yourself with that," his eyes flit to the axe. "Or put me out of my misery now."
Your shoulders dip down, lowering your weapon. Guilt crawls into your belly and settles there when you notice that yes- his feet are armored, but the rest of him is dressed in miners attire. White, coal-dusted shirt. Workman's pants, tucked into woolen calf wraps. God, he must be freezing. Maybe that's saved his life, staunched the bloodflow. It's tacky on him, not shining wet like you expected.
"What's happened to you?" You cringe at the sound of your voice. It's gone from fierce defensiveness to cloying concern, staring only at the blood staining his skin.
He breathes hard, staring at you a moment. It's hard to tell what he's thinking, what he's feeling. Outside of obvious pain. Leaves around you shiver in the breeze, a light snow beginning to fall when he finally speaks.
"Bandits," he grunts. "An ambush." Every word is a fight, a wheeze. Empathy drives away caution and you drop your weapon in favour of kneeling beside him.
"Come on, then. Let me help you," lifting him is a monumental task, even with him helping. He's as big as horse, thick as one too. Legs like tree trucks that hold him up just barely, feet sliding weakly on the uneven ground.
Looking back, Honey-nut watches you bring him through the doorway with a judgmental twinkle in her eye. Maybe it's time for goatherd pie.
///
Your bed is too small. His feet hang off comically, and the wood creaks under his weight. It'll have to do. Your mother would have beaten you black and blue for this - for inviting a stranger in, for settling him in your bed without so much as a whatâs your name? But you know how to stitch and turning away someone in as bad a shape as he is would weigh on your conscience.
You light the sconces along the wall, and then a lantern to keep by his bedside. Warm, orange light fills the cottage, flickering every so often, inspiring calm.
"I'm no healer," you warn him. "Nor an alchemist." Itâs not necessarily a lie. You had done a brief stint as a volunteer for the temple of Kynareth, lending your hands and your time to help nurse wounded soldiers. There had been supervision then, though. Guidance.
"Iâm shit out of luck for choices, sweetheart,â his facial wound leaks a little when he speaks, blood running down the side of his face in thin rivulets. The wound at his side, however, is what worries you the most.
âLet me,â you murmur. Your fingers find the edge of his shirt, pulling them out of his pants, and up, up, gently. Looking him in the eye, watching his pain win over his weariness.
Another gash, swaddled in cloth wrapped sloppily around his middle. Without moving him you have to cut them off, slicing off his shirt at the same time. This one bleeds sluggishly, skin shredded, like heâd been dragged over coarse rock.
He words slur, energy leaving him. Mumbles under his breath things you canât make out, and donât try to. Youâre busy rinsing, cleaning, and patting his ribs dry. Tensing every so often, he breathes hard through his nose to offset the pain. Mumbles some more, hands making fists.
Itâs bad, but heâll live. Exhaustion might trump over all, anyhow, what with how his eyelids have begun closing. Through the slit of them his eyes are pale, like sunlight through deep blue ice. Blonde lashes, stark against the dirt and coal smearing his skin.
You work in silence, letting him sleep through this one so heâll hopefully be unconscious for the work you have yet to do on his face.
âWho did this?â You whisper to no one. Youâre a breeze in the night, alone, hunched over this man and wiping his face with a cloth.
Clear of blood and grime, you gather a sewing needle and dip it into the lantern flame. Stitching is easy, but on his face? You falter a moment, worried, until you think of how proud men often are of their scars. Boasting battles won and creatures slain.
Itâs that thought that pushes you through to the end, weaving the needle through until he's sewn and clean of blood.
///
Sweat and iron. The smell of it, sharp and salty, sea foam and earth, is the first thing you're aware of.
Then, the light of morning. Pale, almost white, invading through the windows in rays. A chill. Your eyes open with a not insignificant amount of effort, back twinging in different places as you become aware of the world again.
"Awake?" You startle, jerking up. It's the man from the night before, laying as he was, a little curled against the pain and big as an ox. "W's startin' t'think you'd sleep all day."
"It's morning, is it not?" You're not used to talking this early - or at all. "How's the- how are you feeling?"
He grunts, shuffling. His wrapped side has some blood peeking through, little spots of leakage, not enough to lose your head over. His face has swelled some overnight though, and you're awake enough now to hear the muffled quality to his voice. Part of the cut pulls his upper lip tightly. You wince.
"Just wait. I have something for the," you pause, crossing your space on stiff legs to find the bookshelf. Clay pots, glass bottles, books. Ah, here it is. "For the pain." It's some elixir. Purchased the last time you'd made the trek to Markarth from Muiri, the alchemists apprentice. It brings forth a distant memory of pain, of twisting your ankle running after Honey-nut.
Your ankle hadn't quite healed right, but this was good for when winter came and stiffness made the pain worse again.
He eyes you wearily as you approach. Suspiciously. As if you haven't been helping him out of the kindness of your heartâŠ
"This will help," a promise.
"Don't need'it." He slurs, then cringes as it pulls his lip again.
"You'll recover faster if you're in less pain."
In the end he acquiesces, if not just to take the edge of the purpling that's beginning to show on the edges of his bandage. Broken ribs, maybe?
///
Chores need to be done whether or not there's an obstinate patient in your bed. Honey-nut needs to be milked, and she fights you every step of the way. You discover her pen open from last night and sigh with relief that she's still there.
The chickens have laid eggs for you, and you collect them diligently in your apron. Then, the garden. And finally a sweep of your traps in the woods.
Just one rabbit, but it's enough. You hope the man likes stew, and that his swelling goes down enough for him to tell you his name.
///
He tells you his name is Ghost. Strange, but you've heard stranger. Maybe he's a follower of Namira, you wonder not without an inkling of apprehension. Ghost is quiet, even as he heals. After you'd made yourself a straw bed on the other side of the cabin, you'd wake to him sitting up and stretching. Testing himself. Always silent.
The exhaustion was the worst of it. One nearly empty bottle of elixir later, the swelling on his face has gone down significantly. His ribs sore but on the mend. It was sleep that he needed, and lots of it.
Days passed like this. Switching bandages, wiping and cleaning, cooking enough stew for two. Nearly a week until he was up and about insisting to help around the cottage.
"No need," you tried to gently push him back into the warmth of the open door. He was too big, and having none of it. "You'll be better in no time."
He was just so tall. Were he to stand still at your doorway, half his face would be covered by the top of it. Despite his condition, you could tell that your initial comparison to a horse was completely on the nose. Stocky as a boar, arms thick as mammoth tusks. Hairy like blonde wheat shining in the sun. You'd noticed as much, watching him rest, watching his eyelashes flutter on his cheeks as he dreamt.
///
Ghost works like you're paying him in gold. He sweats, arms swinging down over and over again above the chopping block. There's enough wood to last three winters now - maybe four. Every job he takes is finished to excess. Your roof has never looked better, re-thatched in rotting places and swept clear of mildew. The old wood fence in your garden? Replaced.
Honey-nut finds her new favourite person when he dismantles what he calls shoddy work, and rebuilds her a shelter twice as big. The chickens are still weary, but enjoy receiving the kitchen scraps he tosses.
"There's really no need for all this," you insist again, because he's come back this afternoon with an elk on his back.
"Didn't need to fix me up, either, did'ya?"
You break it down together. Ghost does the harder part, while you take cuts of meat to dry for jerky. The rest will go into a venison casserole, with juniper berries.
"Hey- Ghost?" You call. He's skinning the rest of it for furs. "I'm off to gather some berries for dinner."
A nod, and you're off.
Your basket is old, woven, carried once by your mother and now you. Silly, but special all the same. It's stained with many years of berry collecting, many years of winter nights spent tucking into fruity crostatas or summers full of juniper mead.
The hills are rife with the low, rough trees. They grow like weeds here in the Reach, mountain pocked with patches of light green and little blue berries. Once, as a child, you'd made the mistake of eating one straight off the branch. Bitter as burnt coffee, it was lesson you'd learned through tears of laughter with your mother. A happy memory.
Does Ghost have a family? You wonder again about him, about why a man like that is wasting his time mining. He could've climbed the ranks as an imperial and been a General or - divines forbid - a stormcloak. You prayed he wasn't so craven as to follow Ulfric and his band of Nord supremacists.
It's this distraction that leads you right into the waiting jaws of a sabre cat. Quick and silent, it reminds you of your patient for an absurd moment before you're tripping backwards, basket full of berries scattered and forgotten. Your hip makes contact with the ground hard, pain lancing through your joint like a spear.
Fuck, how could you be so stupid? This was a mountain, leagues away from the nearest town. Sabres, bears, wolves. You'd always, always used awareness as a first precaution. Sight, sounds, keeping your ears tuned to the slightest crack in a twig. If not, there was the bow and arrow stowed away under your bed.
Now, you were caught unawares. Muscles under it's fur rippled, a low growl in it's barrel chest, creeping toward you. Adrenaline burned through you like a fever, hot and electric all at once, freezing you in place by the weight of your heart in your stomach.
Stendarr's mercy, dying from an animal attack after living years on the craggy peaks of the mountains, avoiding ambushes and robberies. Living on goats cheese and chicken eggs, nothing yet achieved. What a waste. Miserable, hopeless tears prick at your eyes. Your breath leaves you in quick, desperate puffs. Running wasn't an option - it would only encourage the sabre. Sovngarde, here you come-
"Aaarghgh aaaaa!" A roar. Loud, ringing in your ears, as fierce as a cave bear. It's Ghost, jumping through the brush towards you with his arms above his head. "Bugger off!" He's screaming loud, voice cracking a little, the stitches at his lip tearing just enough for droplets of blood to fall.
"I'll put you down!" It's nonsense, but it's loud, and he's massive. Taller than the sabre even if it stood on two legs. When he reaches you, he steps in front of you. Shields you.
The face-off is likely less than a few minutes, but it feels like time moves as slow as honey. Ghost faces of the sabre, screaming like a madman, beating his chest and waving his arms. It creeps backward, hissing and fighting, but is cowed by his stance and size.
When it's disappeared through the maze of juniper trees, he turns to you. Extends a palm rough like bark.
"How long have you lived here, again?" His voice grates as usual, made worse by his shouting.
Your face heats in embarrassment. "A few years. I'm not usually so distracted," you dust your dress, patting yourself. Twigs and dirt fall from the wool. "I swear. I got lost picking berries."
He snorts, like you're stupid. You feel stupid.
The basket is half empty when you call it quits, tired from fear. Ghost is hunched beside you, holding his ribs again, rubbing his lip almost compulsively.
"Stop that, you'll get a thicker scar," you reach for his elbow.
"Don't care much about that, love," he shrugs your hand away.
Dinner is made in silence. It's a miracle you have the energy, but while you're physically drained your mind is running in circles. You watch with concern as he sits gingerly back on the bed. The pain in your hip pulses with sympathy, pulsing heat travelling down your leg and up your back.
"Need me to take a look at anything?" Besides his obvious discomfort, you'll have to fix his face back up. You'd prefer for him to be in a welcoming mood.
"I can handle it," Mr Stoic over here. "Did'ya take a fall?"
You drop dried frost mirriam into chopped, boiled potatoes. Then a pad of butter.
"Yes, but I'm alright," the cream sauce comes together, ladled over the venison. You're out of eidar cheese, but Honey-nuts goat cheese crumbled over everything is perfectly fine. Ghost eats like a furnace taking coal, anyhow.
"Let me see," he's up close. Again, you've been taken unawares. A sharp inhale like a gasp, heart beat picking up, breathing in the smell of him. It's gone from bloody to pine, to earth, to fresh wood. His hands find your hip and you hiss, trying to jerk away. In doing so you press your side into his chest, curled close, warm not just from the fire. "It's alright, sweet girl." He murmurs into the top of your head.
This tenderness is new. His fingers are as gentle as you've seen them in the last few weeks, pulling up the thick skirts of your dress and assessing the tender skin. It's a little hot to the touch, painful. The rough pad of his thumb brushes against you softly, making you whine.
His lips brush your hair, not quite kissing you, but affectionate nonetheless. You're close enough to see his throat bob when he swallows.
"Just a bump, huh, sweet girl?" He takes over, mashing the potatoes, setting out plates at your little wooden table, guiding you by your lower back.
You eat in relative silence, thighs brushing, a tension bubbling to the surface like stew on the fire. He spares you a few glances between bites, still wincing whenever he has to bend down.
"I'll take a look at that again before bed," you speak through a mouthful of creamy venison.
Sure enough, he's reopened some of his stitches. Not worst case scenario, but you spend a few minutes hunched over and bandaging him up again. He stares at you intently, eyes so clear and focused you wish he wouldn't. It makes your hand shake.
Moving to get up and back to your straw bed, his arm shoots out as quick as an arrow and takes your wrist in his hand. His stare is the same, squinting at you like he's waiting for you to confess something. Like he's waiting for you to give in.
"You're not sleeping on the floor," he says, sure, chest puffed. "Not with your hip. Come on now, come lay down." Gently, he tugs you down. Protests make it to the tip of your tongue and nowhere else, not with the promise of a mattress on your sore muscles and screaming hip.
It's too small though, much too small. Already he was hanging off, shoulders taking up the entire width. You curl forward, on your good side, facing away from him and into the dark. The cabin is still warm from cooking dinner.
His breath puffs on the back of your neck, hand finding your arm and stroking up and down. Soothing you. He curls around you, following the natural bend of your body.
"Simon," he whispers.
Your brow almost touches your hairline. "That's not my name."
"No," his reply is half spoken, half physical. He wraps an arm around your shoulders, bicep under you, cradling you, his big bear paw hugging your shoulder. A stray pinky ventures dangerously close to your nipple, fingers spread. "It's mine."
The world widens. "Yours?" You breathe in, out. It's trust, is what it is. He's giving you a piece of himself, this stranger, for you to hold. "Simon," you taste it in your mouth. "Simon."
He laughs against your hair. "Was watching you," he confesses. "After we got- after the ambush. Walked for days, till I found you."
"How long did you watch?" You're curious, if not a little suspicious. "You weren't casing it, were you?"
"No, nothing like that. Couldn't keep walking," he sighs loud like a dog. "Hadn't eaten, hadn't drank. Needed to know if you were somewhere I could stay."
"That's why Honey-nut was losing her mind," the realization is half funny, half scary. By the eight, you really hadn't noticed someone living so close-by for so long?
"Honey-nut?"
"You've met her, Simon. She's the goat."
"Ah," he snorts. "I've been calling her Molag-Bal, for how she's got us in the palm of her hand."
"Simon!" You shriek with laughter, shaking until he squeezes you from behind. So close his heartbeat taps against your back.
///
A week goes by, and each night is the same. You wake together, sleep together, eat together. Simon regains his strength and his wounds turn into scars. His face is deeply marked, but you've never known him another way. Truthfully, it adds to his handsomeness. There's a ruggedness there that one can only develop living in the rough.
The air gets colder, frigid in the mornings and nights. Light snows have begun falling, and Honey-nut begins her bleating until you put up the winter wall of her shelter, boxing her in. The chickens slowly cease laying eggs, bundling together, clucking at Simon when he checks for the seasons last bounty.
The time to make a trek to Markarth is creeping. You need dried goods, grain, seeds for spring, dried meats, elixirs - everything. It'll be your last trip before you're stuck in the freezing mountains with nobody but Honey-nut to talk to.
Books are your salvation during the cold months.
"I have to get supplies soon," you break the news to Simon early in the morning, when the light just barely creeps over the craggy peaks of the mountains. "In Markarth."
There. It's over with - telling him. You know you're being a coward by not asking directly, but you need to know. What is he going to do now that he's healed? Spend a few more months with you? You're still mostly strangers, practicing domesticity together, but strangers nonetheless.
"Can't go to Markarth," he says.
"Why's that?"
Simon looks at you then, eyes hard and tender at the same time. He grimaces a little, scar twisting wit his expression.
"Used to work there," A pause. "Used to⊠mine there."
"What?" Cidhna mine is for prisoners. You take a small step back, shaking your head. "What?" You repeat. Cidhna mine? Is that how- oh. His injuries, his waiting to see who you were before approaching. By the gods, you've been tricked!
"You tricked me-" you start, upset. Was he a killer, a robber? Images dredged from the recesses of your mind float to the surface. Men, fire, your mother cut down before you.
"No, no," he interrupts. He's shaking his head, not quite stepping forward but leaning toward you. Eyebrows drawn up, palms facing you in supplication. "Sweet girl, I," he looks around then, as if the words will appear written in smoke from the hearthfire. "Listen to me please," he pleads.
"Tell me what you did!" It's a near-shout, but you're upset. He's been cozying up to you while running from the law. Not that you're a total stickler for rules, but the men at Cidhna mine aren't there without reason.
The most secure prison in Skyrim.
"I will, I'll tell you. Just sit down please, sit with me." He pats a chair, sitting in the one beside it. Beseeching you. "Cm'ere, sweet girl. M'sorry."
///
You sit quietly while he tells you, choking a little on the rising tide of emotions. The biggest question is should you believe him? This story of his past, his father, a childhood spent learning to steal and bully to survive. Elixirs for a brother hooked on skooma, food for a mother grown sickly from her husbands abuse. Eventually getting rid of his father altogether, and wining up in Cidhna.
"If what you say is true," your voice wavers, throat tight with emotion. "Why not tell me?"
He shrugs his shoulders, looking up for a moment as if asking the divines for guidance.
"You never asked."
For a moment, you want to be indignant. You laid with him, cooked for him, wiped blood and sweat off his brow.
But he's right. You never asked, never thought to - just wondered, minded your business, content to help someone in need of it. The feeling of betrayal loosens in your chest, releasing it's vice grip on your heart, a calmer acceptance taking place.
The position it leaves you in is awkward, even if you're content to believe him. You've been too yielding since you met him. Accepted him into your home, accepted his story. Ambushed by bandits? A silly lie, now that you think of it. Vague, believable. Easier than explaining that guards had slashed him as he escaped imprisonment. That he couldn't go back because he was so recognizable.
You don't speak as you get ready. It's not an angry silence, but one brought by embarrassment. How stupid he must think you are, cozying up up to him like that.
The question of where he'll go burns still in your mind, in your gut. You're nervous, fingers shaking a little as you wrap long strips of warm wool on your calves, forearms, and between your fingers. Your dress is double-layered, boots sturdy.
It's a trip and half, lugging everything. You're on foot until you reach the nearest inn, and from there you rent a horse and cargo carriage. Easier from there, with Jazbay the white mare to pull you along.
"I know someone in Cidhna," Simon interrupts your thoughts. He's always tall, imposing, a little intimidating. Now he looks as sheepish as a man like him can look. "Could youâŠ" He extends his hand, a letter clasped in it.
You grimace, but nod curtly.
"Thank you, honey," he breathes a sigh of relief. Honey. That ones new. It fills you with warmth.
"You're welcome to stay with me," you blurt. Impulsive, stupid. Brought on by the familiarity of his affection. "For the winter, I mean."
He's across the cabin in two steps. He presses his front to yours, hands cupping your cheeks, thumbs gently rubbing your cheekbones.
He kisses you, then, and everything slides into place. Your stomach tightens, hands coming up to grasp his shoulders, gasping into his mouth. It's wet, lips smacking noisily, the only sound in the near-frozen forest. Acceptance, sweet and buttery. This is a man whose never had a home.
"I can't stall any longer-" you try. He interrupts you with his mouth again, long kisses like it's reviving him, revitalizing him. "I gotta-"
"Shh, sweetheart," he hums lowly. Gods, you've never been this wet. It soaks into your cotton underwear, clit pulsing in time with your heart. "Let me take care of you, yeah?"
///
He's so solid, firm muscle and hard cock. It leaks between his legs, bobbing with his abdomen where he's kneeled on the floor, face in your cunt.
"Simon!" You're shouting, unabashed. Years have passed since anyone's touched you last, and you're sensitive as a maid, gripping his too-long hair almost meanly. Simon licks you like a starving man, slurping, letting you drip and then sucking it off your skin. His fingers find the entrance of your pussy, fitting himself in two at a time.
Once you've begun, you can't stop. He fucks you on the bed, letting it creak dangerously. Bends you over the table, cock dragging in and out of you deliciously. You shake and shiver in his arms, wrung out and insatiable all at once.
"Can I have you here, sweet girl?" He thumbs at your other hole, dipping in, kissing your inner thighs.
"Yes, gods yes, Simon," you drag his name out. Si-i-mon. It sounds good that way, breathy, not spoken but moaned and screamed. It's late evening, dark, colder now that you haven't lit the fire.
No need, when his cock is as hot as coals and slides between your arsecheeks like a divining rod. Your pussy is aching and hot, too-sensitive. You're belly down on the bed again, hands gripped in the sheets.
When you deliberately relax your muscles, he fits his fingers in your ass using come as lubricant. Spits down onto you, watches you start to rub yourself into the bedding desperately.
"None of that," he pants, pulling you up by your hips. A whine builds in your throat, which he shushes by pushing his other two fingers in your cunt. You yelp, moving toward him and away from him. He keeps you still, firmly holding your hips.
You come, tears beginning to leak into your sheets, when he presses his cock against the notch of your hole and pushes in.
A long, deep groan from the pit of his stomach starts and doesn't stop until he's sheathed. You're frozen, stuck in a gasp that doesn't end, filled to the brim.
Simon begins to rock, shallowly, stealing your breath and breathing it back into you with every thrust. It's then that you begin to make sound, crying out and fisting the sheets, rocking your hips with him. He reaches around, leaning down to kiss your shoulders and play with your clit at the same time.
"Not gonna last," he says into your skin. "Gonna come inside you again."
You're easy - so sensitive that if he breathed on you long enough you're sure you'd peak. His fingers twisting and pinching your clit is pure madness, and you tighten like a vice around him as you yowl your last orgasm of the night.
His hips snap into yours roughly, abandoning your clit for the flesh of your hips, pounding, dragging, grunting into you as he finds his own release.
Half-asleep, you fell him roll over onto his side and turn your head to face him. He's smiling lazily, stroking your skin, still sweating from exertion.
"I'll come with you tomorrow," he whispers.
"I thought you couldn't come to Markarth?" Confusion prickles at you, brows coming together. He finds the furrow with his thumb and smooths it away.
"I can't, honey. But I can come down and wait for you."
"You will?" Hope rises in you, in tandem with affection.
"Always," his voice is a soft murmur.
"Tomorrow, then."
"Tomorrow. Goodnight, sweet girl."
<3
#cod x reader#cod mw2#task force 141#141 x reader#drgnfly writes#simon riley x reader#ghost x reader#simon ghost riley#simon riley#skyrim au#i truly don't know but i had fun writing it#hehe#cw dubcon#tw dubcon#cw murder#idk what else to tag#i love skyrim#i dont know shit about goats#genuinely this is jokes but i've been playing a ton of skyrim so here you go
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Hey Mae, congrats on 7k!!!! <3 Could I get Remus with apple pie, 25) a cold cement floor against skin?
Thanks for your request!
Remus Lupin x fem!reader ⥠551 words
Youâre spread-eagled on the cement floor of James and Lilyâs garage. Youâre worried you have sweat stains under your armpits, but not worried enough to hide them close to your body. No, you need all the contact with the cool ground you can get.Â
âUm.â You strain your neck to look in front of you, but itâs only Remus. âYou okay?âÂ
You let your head drop back to the floor. âYeah,â you sigh. âSânice in here.âÂ
âIt is ungodly warm out.â He grunts quietly as he sits beside you. âIf Sirius had shown up before the afternoon, we couldâve been done and inside by now.âÂ
James had asked you all over to help plant their new garden as a surprise for Lily when she comes home from her parentsâ. Poor Lily has been wanting to do it ever since theyâd bought a house with a backyard, but she was first too busy and now too pregnant to be kneeling on the ground under the sun for hours. Youâre not even pregnant and you worry itâs killing you, so really youâre glad the worst of the labor is being done for her.Â
âI sat down to drink my water,â you gesture with your chin to the half-emptied cup at your side, âbut the floor felt so cool I decided to lie for a bit. It gets a good breeze in here, feel?âÂ
âI feel it,â Remus agrees. His own hair is stuck to his forehead with sweat, but he lifts a hand to move yours, brushing damp strands away from your face. You close your eyes and hope your sigh conveys the appropriate gratitude.Â
âIâll get up and help in a second,â you promise.Â
âThatâs alright. Take your time.â His voice is an amused hum. âI didnât come to fetch you, only to check on you.âÂ
âHave I been gone long?âÂ
âYou donât know?âÂ
âMightâve fallen asleep.â Youâre beginning to sound slurred even now, the cool floor against your skin lulling you into a trancelike relaxation. âI didnât realize quite how hot I was until I came in here. You know?âÂ
Remusâ hum is tinged with worry. âYeah, I think so. Sit up and have some water for me, lovely?âÂ
You push yourself up with a heavy sigh, picking up your cup. You worry youâve left slippery sweat spots on the floor. âIâm okay,â you reassure him.Â
âThatâs good.â He lifts the hair off your neck, holding it in one hand so the air cools your nape. âMaybe you can have another water, just to be safe. Weâll bring them for everyone on our way back out.âÂ
âThatâs a good idea.âÂ
âHello?â Sirius comes around from the back, peering at the two of you. âYouâre just slacking off without me, are you? I didnât know we were having a break.âÂ
âYou had your break in the morning when we were here and you werenât,â Remus reminds him.Â
âOh, James is all by himself out there now.â You force yourself up, your thighs sticking to the floor. âIâll go help him.âÂ
âJust bring him back for some water,â Remus says after you. âWe could all use a breather.âÂ
âI swear,â Sirius grouses, âif he hasnât stocked his freezer full of ice pops to compensate us for all this, Iâm not going back out.â
#mae's 7k#remus lupin#remus lupin x reader#remus lupin x fem!reader#remus lupin x you#remus lupin x y/n#remus lupin x self insert#remus lupin fanfiction#remus lupin fanfic#remus lupin fic#remus lupin fluff#remus lupin imagine#remus lupin scenario#remus lupin drabble#remus lupin blurb#remus lupin one shot#remus lupin oneshot#marauders#marauders fanfiction#marauders fandom#the marauders#hp marauders#marauders era#marauders x reader
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PART 1 - PART 2 - PART 3 (NSFW) - PART 4 - PART 5 (NSFW)
Your family did fine. You were more comfortable than some, but not so comfortable that you could sit idle. The crops had started to bud, and the shop was filled with all manner of pickled vegetables, fresh eggs, and flowers. You counted the coppers and silvers in the little lock box under the counter. Business was the same as usual, but your brow still furrowed.
Mother was getting tired. The decades of tilling, sowing, reaping, and harvesting had started to toll on her. Especially after your father left. The bastard. Your mother labored at home with an aching back and bad knees. Before long the crops would flourish and need tending. It was more than enough work for two, unfathomable for just you alone.
Jeering came from outside the shop. A band of orc hunters with their catches. They were a threatening bunch. Hard and strong. One orc could have the strength of two men. In the great cities they faced more discrimination, but out here someone either hunted for their meat, or payed other people to do the hunting for them. And the orcs⊠they were masterful at what they did. And so they were welcomed.
The rusted hinges of your shop door creaked. âDid you miss me?â
Any desire to feign positivity drained from your person. You didnât even try to hide the sour look on your face. Milo was a repugnant leech that had been stalking your family for years. He had tried courting each one of your elder sisters, losing them each time to men better than him. And now you were the last sister on the list. Unmarried. And running out of time. The latter fact he was quite aware of.
âHow is Celina?â You never liked how he called your mother by her first name. It was too familiar. You donât bother to look up from your coin counting. âMy Motherâs wellbeing is none of your concern.â Milo sauntered up to the counter, ây/n-â
You slammed your fist, sending a few coins into the air. âWhen will you get the idea that my family wants nothing to do with you?â You still couldnât look him in the eye. He sighed, picking up one of the coppers from the floor, âYou would rather your mother toil in the field? You would rather surrender yourself to the life of a shopkeep? Itâs a waste.â
You had no answer for him. Because he was right to question your choices. Yes you truly enjoyed running the family shop, but you couldnât possibly keep this up for long without your mother. She deserved peace and rest. But he was just⊠a nuisance at best. Frightening at worst. His family owned half the town, and how easy it would be for them to blacklist you and your mother from ever doing business in their marketplace again.
âAnywaysâŠâ He dropped the coin down onto your counter with a clank, âWinter will come. And will you be prepared? If your mother cannot help you work the fieldsâŠâ
âAre you trying to give me an ultimatum?â You had pushed the idea of next winter out of your head the second the ice started to melt. But he was right, what would you do? He didnât entertain your question with a response. No⊠it wasnât an ultimatum. It was a threat. A threat that when winter came you would get what was coming to you. He made his way out the door, the rusty hinges screeching. âYou should really fix that.â He gave a nasty grin and let the door slam behind him.
You pushed all the thoughts of worry from your head. It was something you had grown skilled at doing. Gods be damned if you let him spoil such a lovely morning. You threw the windows of the shop open, arranging bouquets from your flower garden for the street to see.
At night when you and your mother pray over dinner, you beg anyone listening for an eternal spring.
~
Two weeks pass uneventfully. You sell many bouquets of flowers to well-to-do ladies, and your motherâs special pickled red onions fly off the shelves as usual. In the early morning you sit counting your coins, listening to the soft bustling of the market just beginning to wake up.
âYou know you can pickle these eggs right?â
You keep your eyes trained on the coins, trying not to lose count. There is a long pause, but you can tell the man hasnât walked away, âWe donât sell any here.â
âYou should.â You raise your head to cock an eyebrow at him. You try to stifle a gasp from your chest. An orc man with olive green skin is leaned slightly through the window of your shop. You had never had an orc approach your little shop. They always had bigger and better things to sell and buy.
âWe donât sell those here.â A more rational person would have thought twice before talking back to an orc hunter. But you were tired of men questioning you. A young lady entered the shop, eyeing the orc man still leaning on your window sill. The door squealed unpleasantly, cutting through the tension like a knife. âFine,â The orc smirked and shrugged, exiting your window.
~
The next day, there was a basket waiting for you on your shopâs doorstep. You groan. This wouldnât be the first time Milo left gifts for you to find. You take a peek into the bracket and⊠what was this? Spices? Salt? Garlic cloves? Underneath the goods were two silver coins.
You yelped at the sound of fingers rapping against the window pane. You reeled around expecting Milo. But⊠it was the orc man. The orc man from the day before. He pointed at the little latch holding the window closed. You were sure he could punch his way right through the window if he really wanted in. âI donât want any trouble!â You yelled at him through the window.
Another smirk crept onto his face, âI bring no trouble with me, Miss. I just thought you might like a chance to make some more coin.â
What this lecherous orc seriously propositioning you for pay? Before he could say another thing, you hurled an egg at him. You hoped it would have just broken against the window to frighten him off. But to your horror it crashed through the glass, making a direct impact with his face. âFuck!â You heard him fall on his ass in the street.
You rushed to the window. The orc was splayed out on the cobblestones, his forehead bleeding from the broken glass. He lay motionless, and you started to panic. Oh Gods. Oh Gods no. You just assaulted an orc. A big strong orc man who kills things for his living. Not even Milo or his familyâs status could protect you from the wrath of an angry orc. You threw open the screeching rusted front door. Oh gods he was huge. He knew where you worked. He could follow you home. What if he brought his fellow huntsmen with him? What if they hurt your mother as well?
You couldnât stop any of the thoughts racing through your head. You were worried about making it through winter⊠now you might not even make it through the summer. You bit down on your fist, trying to keep composure.
âGot a hell of an armâŠâ The orc grunted, pulling you out of your trance. He sat himself up, bringing his fingers to the drops of blood running down his temple. âHa!â He guffawed and made his way to stand up.
âPlease⊠please.â You werenât sure if you were praying to a high power or pleading to him. His eyes met yours but there was no rage, or fury. There was a look of annoyance, maybe a bit of mild amusement. Rubbing his hand over the back of his neck he said, âMiss. I only meant⊠you should make pickled eggs. There are a lot of orc boys out here far from the motherland. They would pay a premium for a taste of home.â
You were nearly speechless, âI- I donât know how orcs prefer their pickled eggs-
âThat basket has everything you need.â
âOh⊠okay. Very well. Sir.â Your voice wavered and he could see how clearly frightened you were.
The orc groaned, wiping more blood off his face. âSorry about this. See you around.â You hoped that wasnât a threat, but with that he jogged his way down the street.
Blasted pickled eggs.
#orc#orc lover#orc husband#terato#monster fuqqer#monster lover#monster#orc x reader#orc x you#orc x female reader#orc x fem!reader#orc bf#orc fuqqer#monster x reader#monster x female reader#monster x human#orc x human#orc oc#monster x fem!reader#orc romance#monster romance
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Pac: how people perceive you<3
Note: 1. take what resonates.
2. Take a deep breath. Ask your spirit guides to help you choose the pile and choose the one that calls out to you.
3. Pictures used are from Pinterest. All rights go to the original owner.
Pile 1:
She'll put you in a trance at first glance
Don't wanna fall in love, but I'll take a chance
straight up I got vision of this one picture that I saw on Pinterest a while back. It was a rabbit in an armour with some sort of spikey weapon and it said âsoft but not available for mistreatmentâ. Very do not harm but take no shit vibes. I see major cancer placements. You can tame anyone. I keep getting beauty and the beast vibes. Like, you know how to tame people. People listen to you but I donât see and boss employee kind of relationship but more like a goddess and her followers kind of relationship. I see you being hurt in the past. Was growing up difficult baby? Did someone hurt you? I wanna hug you right now. You are an inspiration. You are a warrior and you are so so strong and wise. I feel like we are getting away from the actual question of the reading but I feel like someone wanted me to tell you this hahah. So onto the question that how people perceive you, I think they can tell that you have been through something that changed you. Made you stronger and wiser. People definitely see you as someone who will nail the trope of âtaming the bad boyâ haha. But ofcourse remember that itâs not your job to fix anyone and I feel like you already know this. People see you as someone who dances in the rain, confident (lots of cards show me the theme of confidence actually), hopeful. They also see you as this boss lady (gender neutral). They see you as someone who is busy building empires.
Additional: student, business, garden, summer dresses, flowers.
Song: Dangerous woman by Wieland
Pile 2: You wear that cast so cool
And I'm in awe
A face like you've never seen before
Around
people see you as someone who is constantly moving(it could be traveling or you know, making moves generally) you are not a still entity. You are always doing something. People see you as someone who is very private and mysterious. Itâs hard to know anything about you. Moon seems to be really significant for some reason. People also see you as someone who cuts people of very quickly. No bullshit kinda person. You can deal with absence but wonât take disrespect. You are an achiever. People see you as someone who is constantly trying to learn something. You are open to experiences. You walk away from a situation that doesnât serve you and thatâs what many people admire about you. Young hear and old soul is what I keep hearing. People feel like they can come to you for help and also see you as someone who is very sensible.
Additional: wood, earth signs, moon, 3, heart on your sleeves, white flowers, driving far away.
Songs for you: Ever (foreign sleep) by team sleep.
Pile 3: Baby, this is what you came for
Lightning strikes every time she moves
And everybody's watchin' her
But she's lookin' at you,
people see you as someone who works really hard. They see you as someone who is very responsible and completes tasks like a pro. They see you as a leader. Is acts of services you love language? People feel like they can always count on you. You are always there to help people. You honestly are a great leader you know? Some people seem to see you as a rival. A competition. You make people competitive pile 3. People see you as someone who is very faithful. You are almost untouchable to people. You seem to be on an entire different level that they cannot reach. People see you as someone who is smart and has a way with words. You seem like someone who would do great in negotiations and business exchange lol.
Additional: ships, sea, commerce, green,
Song for you: this is what you came for by Calvin Harris and Rihanna. (Very Rihanna energy lol)
#tarot#tarotblr#pick a card#pick a pile#free readings#tarot requests#tarot reading#tarot cards#intuitive readings
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The Hero and Hope 4/5
Okaaaay, so there's 5 parts instead of 4! I realized that the last part was over 6k words, so we're splitting it into two! The last part will still be posted next Friday, so this will keep us on track!
Summary: The picnic has an uninvited guest that you're uniquely suited to greet.
-------
(part 1)Â (part 2) (part 3)
âDidnât think Iâd see anyone able to catch Marie,â the Lord says, brows raised. His golden eyes track Isla across the garden and he whistles when she jumps to tag his former knight. âThat was not within the capabilities of a Villager.â
Ivan scans the crowd around them. Most of the townsfolk are too far away to eavesdrop and the ones close enough to potentially hear are engaged in their own conversations. âCareful, Brennan. If the Director hears you speculateâŠâ
âYes, the Director,â Lord Brennan sighs. He brings his teacup to his lips, but doesnât drink. He contemplates Director Sarah where she crouches with a glass of water near Annie. âYou know this is the first time weâve met?â
Itâd been a fight to get Sarah to agree to today at all. Ivan chooses his words carefully. âYour predecessor did not have the sort ofâŠkind interest you do.â
The former Lordâs interest Sarah shared with them was a lot more horrifying. Thereâs a reason that Isla at only fifteen years old is the eldest at the orphanage.
âThatâs one way to put it,â Lord Brennan agrees. He settles back into his seat and sighs in satisfaction. He watches the children gradually grow tired of their game and drift towards the dessert table. He grins when the townsfolk naturally make room for them, a few of them even fetching treats from the center of the table for the littler ones. âSee my people together? It was very good of me to lure you and Marie to my territory.â
âYou gave us a castle,â Ivan says. They werenât so much lured as bludgeoned with generosity. Some days it feels like they blinked and ended up standing amongst fine silk and filigree.
âItâs a manor as far as paperwork goes,â Lord Brennan says.
âIt has buttresses.â
âA very fortified manor.â Lord Brennan finally sips his tea and sighs again. âThis tea is from our fields, isnât it?â
âYes, my lord.â
âItâs delicious.â The full canopies of the trees enveloping the estate rustle in the wind. The sun shines warmly overhead. Lord Brennan takes another drink. Delicious. âThe landâs come a long way since we ousted my father, hasnât it? Plentiful harvests, an established trade route, a new school. If it werenât for the demons, my work would be done.â
âI would prefer you had no work then,â Ivan says dryly.
âMe too.â Lord Brennan sets his tea aside and rubs his eyes. âAny updates?â
âNone,â Ivan admits, frustration leaking through his words. His face is still amiable and the disconnect between his tone and his visage is jarring. âWe investigated the wolf tracks in the woods and only found carnage. No signs of the demons themselves.â
âSo they are demons?â
âRegular wolves wouldnât be able to evade a squadron of your knights, my lord.â
âNeither would demon wolves,â Lord Brennan says. He rubs his chin, brow furrowing. âI donât like what that implies. Any sign of larger foes?â
Ivan doesnât want to discuss this here. Marieâs eyes are on him, sensing his rising distress. He smiles and waves to her. âBesides the horned rabbit migration?â
âIs it a migration?â
âIsla saw five within the first four weeks of summer,â Ivan says.
The Lordâs attention falls on the teenager. Sheâs patiently letting one of the other children â Hera? The one whoâd curtsied to him like a little noble â weave flowers into her braid. He tries to imagine her fighting a horned rabbit and his lips thin. âIâll call for reinforcements from the capital.â
âMarie and I canââ
Lord Brennan waves Ivan off. âNo, no, Iâve asked too much of you already. Arenât the two of you too busy in your retirement already? I thought youâd be settled with a child by now.â
âItâs not good to rush these things,â Ivan says as he has the last three times Lord Brennan has asked. This time itâs Ivan who sighs. âIt took Marie and I a good few months to win Director Sarah over after our misstep.â
âAsking about Destinies, was it?â
âImplying weâd value any child less for not being a knight like us,â Ivan corrects.
âThere seem to be a lot of unusual Destinies in the orphanage,â Lord Brennan says. Heâs not an Identifier but heâs got a good eye. Though no one can know for sure until a child either develops their mark or comes into their power at fifteen, heâs seen more than a few signs of a Scholar, a Guardian, and a Teacher. Once again he finds his gaze being drawn back to Isla. Sheâs got a child under each arm and is running from Marie again, the game having resumed after their snack break. âThat one is a Guard, at least. Nobody else would have physical abilities like that.â
Ivan ignores the Lordâs comment. âItâs been worthwhile getting to know them all.â His smile turns a little more genuine. âTheyâre all good kids.â
âSurely you and Marie have an inkling of whoâll be a good fit?â When Ivan doesnât reply, the Lord clicks his tongue. âYou canât choose all of them.â
Ivanâs voice is a study in nonchalance. âCanât we?â
Lord Brennan opens his mouth only for no words to come out. At length, he has to laugh. His knights do like to keep busy. âYouâd need a castle.â
âYou did give us one, my lord.â
âI suppose I did.â
The two men lapse into a pleasant silence. It is good to see the townsfolk this cheerful. This town is the furthest from Lord Brennanâs own castle and he rarely has a chance to visit. The first time he had had been very different. The people still bore the wounds of winter in gouged cheeks and brittle smiles. Now he sees the glow of health everywhere he looks.
He contemplates the Director once again. Sheâd been the only one back then to not seem pleased to see him ride in on his white horse. Even now he can feel the chill of her scrutiny as she stood defensively between him and the orphanage. None of that chill is present today. Her smile is as sweet as his tea while she tends to a scrape the little Scholar sustained in this round of tag. âMs. Sarah is very pretty, isnât she?â
âI know we canât adopt them all,â Ivan blurts out. He doesnât seem to have heard Lord Brennan. His gaze is turned towards his own inner conflict which is why he also doesnât notice the blush dusting the Lordâs cheeks. âIt wouldnât be fair to them. Marie and I decided to adopt a child who would benefit from what little we can offer. Military arts and luck.â
âI donât think youâre being fair,â Lord Brennan says with raised brows. âYou and Marie offer a lot more than a Knightâs experience. Havenât you shown that already in your actions?â Heâs not aware of everything his former knights have done, but heâs heard plenty from the children today. He didnât think Marie had the patience to teach anyone how to read.
Ivanâs hands fist. âItâs not enough, itâs notâthe little boy. Josiah. Heâs so smart. I donât even know where to start with him and even Marie says that heâll soon outpace herââ
âWell,â Lord Brennan says, âNeither of you are Teachers, true, but there is a school for that--â
âAnd Annie wants to know why bread rises and why the sun sets and how many seconds are in a dayââ
âAll kids are curiousââ
âHera staged a whole theater production for my birthday and all we could do was clapââ
Is he missing something? âIsnât that what youâre supposed to do?â
âWe donât know any actors or directors to introduce her to!â Ivan cries out. He quickly lowers his voice, but canât hide the stress around his eyes. âWhat could we give to a child like her? Like any of them? Â Marie and I are out of our depth. It would be so much simpler if one was a Knight!â
The Lord tentatively offers, âIf Islaâs a Guard--?â
Ivan gives a cry of distress that he barely capture in the palm of his hand. âIsla! That girl feels like my daughter already, butâŠsheâs been through so much. She doesnât need a father who teaches her how to fight or a mother who teaches her how to withstand a siege! She deserves to never have to fight again. What could we offer her? What could we possibly give to her she hasnât already learned on her own?â
A light goes on in the Lordâs head. He takes in the festivities with new eyes. The townâs Baker, Blacksmith, Teacher⊠His friends have invited every possible parent they could in hopes of providing for the children in ways they felt incapable of doing themselves. As noble as that wasâŠâIvan, being a parent goes beyond the skills you can give a child. Itâs more than fostering talent or an offering an apprenticeship. Itâsââ
A horseâs scream drowns out the Lordâs next words.
Ivan is in front of Lord Brennan with his sword drawn before the horses and their blood-splattered riders even round the side of the castle.
-----.
 You throw Annie and Josiah behind you the moment you hear the sound of hooves galloping towards the manor.
âIsla, whatââ Josiah starts to ask and then cuts himself off as the innkeepers and their entourage burst into the party.
You smell blood before your eyes register the terrible red staining their fine clothing.
âORCS!â Mr. Innkeeper screams over the frightened snorts of his horse. He stumbles down from his mount and staggers towards the Lord. âThey overtook our carriageâplease, my wife, sheâs hurtââ
Mrs. Inkeeper is holding her side and seemingly barely holding onto the saddle horn. âOur guards wonât be enough to hold them offââ
âInside,â Sarah hisses into your ear. She points after Hera whoâs already shepherding the younger kids into the building. âNow.â
ââan armyââ
ââfastââ
ââwaiting for usââ
You move faster than youâve allowed yourself since you arrived. This is no time to take care in hiding your abilities; there are roars coming from the forest unlike anything youâve ever heard before. Your senses seem to dial up with your heartrate and you can hear the clash of steel against rock and flesh. You scoop Annie into your arms and leap after Josiah and Sarah.
Mr. Dallenâs face is pale as he ushers you all into the manor. He holds the door open for the townsfolk. The hall fills with the sounds of panic and sobs as fear washes through you like a tidal wave. There have never been orcs south of the mountains, there have never been demons bigger than a horned rabbit in the last twenty years, even when the Winter froze the riverâ
Mr. Dallen waves down Marie as she sprints to the large doorway. You think that heâs going to pull her inside to safety, but instead he thrusts her bow into her outstretched hands.
âDo not open these doors,â she commands. Behind her the knights are assembling into a formation, their Lord at the center. Ivan stands before them all, barking orders to ready their spears as the trees in front of them begin to sway. Marie pulls a dagger from under her skirts and slices the bottom half of her dress clean off. She kicks it away from her feet as she talks. âTake everyone to the basementââ
âMaâam, the escape tunnel still isnât cleared of debrisââ
Marie swears so violently that half the townsfolk gasp. She grabs Mr. Dallen by the shoulder, her eyes flicking back and forth between him and her husband. âThen we will draw them away. The moment you think you can, run to the wagon. Get the children toââ She bites her lip. You can see the devastating truth flash through her mind. There isnât anywhere to go. âDamnit. Bar the door and arm everyone you can.â
Mr. Dallenâs lips are bloodless as he nods. âMy lady.â
Marie turns to everyone. Her voice is unlike anything youâve heard come from her lips; itâs harsh and barking. A commander giving orders much like Ivan is doing outside. âListen, everyone. We are in danger. Our best estimate is that 25 orcs are marching on the manor. There is no guarantee of survival. The moment this door is breached, it will mean the knights have failed. You must be prepared to fight. Do you understand?â
Twenty-five? Your hands ball into fists and your breath catches in your throat. Youâve heard of entire villages being wiped out by three.
âThen weâll fight with the knights,â the Baker says. He pushes away from the center of the group and marches to the wall. He pulls down the crossed axes, keeps one, tosses the other to the Blacksmith. She catches it easily. âYouâll need everyone who can hold a weapon.â
Marie never voices her protest. You can see the strain of holding it back in her tense shoulders and her poignant silence. At long last, she nods. âYouâre right. Stay behind the knights. They know how to handle the frontline better than you.â
Thereâs a flurry after that. The townsfolk divide in half. Those unable to fight slide back as those who can start scavenging for weapons. Mr. Dallen grimly pulls two long daggers from under his coat while pointing your neighbors to decorative swords, to ornamental spears, to the heavy coatrack just inside the parlor.
Grimly, you stride past Sarah, ignoring her hiss and darting hands. You can leave the weapons to the villagers, thereâs a large knife on the dessert table you can useâ
Marie slams a hand against your chest. You stagger back at the weight of the blow, breath knocked from your lungs. Youâre more stunned than hurt as you gape at her.
âChildren stay here,â Marie says. Her eyes narrow. âNo exceptions.â
âBut Iâmââ
âWe donât have time to argue!â She pushes you further back, clearing the doorway for the armed villagers to run outside towards the knights. âYouâre strong Isla, but this isnât your fight. Stay here. Guard the door.â
The winter wind howls in your mind. You splutter. âBut Iââ
Marie spins away from you. âDirector Sarah.â
Sarahâs arms slide around your shoulders. âYes, lady.â
 The closing of the door feels like a blow in itself. You stare sightlessly at the unyielding wood as your emotions rage. How could she? Youâre strong, you can do more, you can help, youâre the one who kept everyone from starvingâ
âWe need to barricade the windows,â Director Sarah is saying to the townsfolk. Half of them gaze at her uncomprehendingly. Her hands slide from your shoulders slowly, as if testing that you arenât going to leap outside. When you donât move, she lets go entirely. âIsla, move the furniture. Hera and Josiah, find something to tie it down with.â
You move on autopilot. There are other hands alongside yours as you push the sofa and armchairs in front of the windows, the townsfolk coming together to defend the manor. Hera darts between you all and pulls the curtains closed, reclaiming the curtain ties to use as rope. Sheâs got a grim determination in her eyes that looks uncomfortably familiar.
Your attention is on the noise outside. The orcs are slow, but loud. The roars change to squeals and bellows of challenge. Branches break and thereâs a terrifying, splintering crash as a tree falls. Metal rings as the knights raise their shields. You can see it all in your mindâs eye, the knights in a defensive line across the length of the garden, the Lord securely in their center. Ivan is shouting about this being what theyâve trained for, that there are more of them than there are orcs, that this city wonât fallâ
And the Lord is speaking too, quickly and quietly to Marie. The escape tunnel? Damnit, I should have sent more menâ
It will be fine, Marie says. Her bow sings as she holds it ready and you know the way her muscles flex and her eyes narrow from experience. We wonât let a single one of those monsters past us. We wonât--
The knights bellow alongside the orcs. Your heart leaps and your focus is jarred. Youâre standing in front of the door again, your hands balled at your sides. Everyone can hear the battle now and the townsfolk scream when the orcsâ battle cries shake the manor.
âQuiet!â Is that your voice? It is. Your eyes slide to the frightened faces behind you. âYouâll distract the knights.â
Sarah steps up alongside you. âAnd let the orcs know exactly where we are.â
The villagers quiet into aborted whimpers and muffled sobs.
The battle rages, louder and louder. Are orcs big? They sound big. When you close your eyes you can hear the way their feet pummel the earth. Do they have weapons? Metal clashes. A knight screams that their hides are too thick. The Lord shouts back to aim for their eyes. A table splinters, a bow sings, thereâs a liquid gaspâ
BOOM!
You slam your hands against the door, muscles straining as another blow lands against it. The wood convulses under your hands and the lock creaks. The villagers scream.
âNo,â someone whispers. âNo, they found us.â
Youâre eight and the snow spirits are howling for blood. Your shoulders ache with the effort to hold the door against the wind. The cold is biting at your fingertips and there is an old hope dying in your chest--
Small hands slam against the door next to yours. Hera is snarling and swearing, Josiah is crying. Sarah is telling the kids not to worry, Isla and Hera and Josiah wonât let them in â
Theyâre here. Youâre not alone.
âGET AWAY FROM THERE!â
The orcâs bellow isnât nearly as loud as Ivanâs roar.
The blow youâre bracing for never comes. Ivan goads the orc to follow him, to leave the manor alone, to eat the man readily available to himâ
It does not sound like the knights are winning now.
âMy Lord!â Marieâs voice is strained.
âDo not fall back, theyâll corner usââ
âWho is that? Who isââ
The crack under the door lights with a sickly purple. The smell of ozone seeps into the manor. For a moment there is a silence so complete you think youâve been struck. What was that? Magic? Youâve never seen magic before--
Screams rocket across the field. The Blacksmithâs screams. The Bakerâs screams. Marieâs rage-filled howls.
âDEMON KING!â
Your Destiny burns.
---.
(part 1)Â (part 2) (part 3)
----------------
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ONE DANCE, PLEASE?
pairing: trevor lefkowitz x ghost bride!reader
summary: since your death, weddings at Woodstone have been a source of bitterness for you but that doesnât stop trevor from attempting to cheer you up with a dance
word count. 1.6k || masterlist
warnings: fem!reader, mentions of death, dead!reader
a/n: this is my first ghosts fic so please be gentle! I love the idea of a ghost bride and debated on making it into an OC or reader story. I think I like having it be in little one-shots! itâs a crime more hasnât been written for trevor (or any of the showâs characters). feel free to request for trevor or any other ghosts characters <3
âAre you going to mope around for eternity?â Sasappis asked you, standing arms crossed in front of a beautiful garden decorated to the nines. The backdrop to your sulking was stunning flowers tied in bunches and pastel dresses moving around the patio-turned-dance floor.Â
âIs that not the point of being a ghost?â you replied, jutting out your feet forever stuck in kitten heels and skin-colored pantyhose. Sass lightly kicked your foot with his and nodded his head to the corner just off the dance floor where the rest of the ghosts danced and laughed. A part of you was jealous of how easily they enjoyed themselves at weddings and how they were not plagued with an eternal hatred for them and what they represented.Â
It always felt like a cruel joke, even though it never had anything to do with you, when Sam and Jay hosted a wedding at their B&B. As much as you loved the couple, you couldnât stand what most considered a joyous event. The union of two people in love, not tainted by tragedy, grew your restatement each time. Weddings were a part of the business and helped Sam and Jay bring in the money they desperately needed to fix up the mansion, but that didnât mean you had to enjoy yourself. Instead, you spent each event sulking on the sidelines, ignoring the pang in your chest, and avoiding your ghostly counterparts' advances to cheer you up. The only thing that wouldâve cheered you up was a do-over of your big day that was ruined by a strike of unluckiness, resulting in your untimely death. Â
Sass narrowed his gaze at you but decided against saying whatever he wanted to. Instead, he turned on his heel and headed back to the ghosts. You adverted your gaze back down to the beads sewn into your dress, picking at them with the wish you could pull the garment apart with your hands, but since it was what you died in, it would forever stick to you.Â
A slow song played through the DJâs speakers as the sun slowly began to set over the yard. Strung lights glittered warmly, bathing the attendees in a golden glow. The bride had looked radiant since she arrived at the mansion days ago, and all day you had to watch her and her husbandâs love run circles around you. Your malice wasnât aimed directly at the happy couple, but rather at what they represented and the reminder of what you almost had.Â
Someone appeared beside you, their presence clouding your solitude-sulking. âWhat a bunch of losers,â the person said, causing you to turn your head and meet Trevor. âI mean, seriously, this song was lame when I went to weddings and people are still dancing to it? I get the appeal of throwbacks but letâs pick this snooze-fest up a little, am I right?âÂ
You rolled your eyes. âWhat do you know about weddings?âÂ
âI happen to have been invited to a lot of them, thank you very much. Well, the receptions and bachelor parties, usually. Those weddings had a lot more alcohol and single bridesmaids.â You said nothing in response, hoping your dimly lit mood would shoo Trevor away. You were mistaken, though. If anything, your silence only encouraged him further. He moved in closer to your side, standing with his hands on his hips as he gazed out across the crowd. âI think they may need some help livening things up a bit. Care to join me?âÂ
He often tried to do that, brighten your mood by offering to dance with you. And every time you turn him down, not because you didn't want to, but because youâre worried that the second you start to enjoy yourself at a wedding, tragedy will follow a second time around. You liked Trevor and couldnât stand the thought of enjoying yourself only to hurt yourself, again, or him. In your head, as long as you moped around, everything would stay the same as they were, which you loved more than youâd admit aloud. You liked your ghost-mates and you liked Sam and Jay. If you somehow brought some unfortunate curse upon any of them because you enjoyed yourself just as you had on your own wedding day, you werenât sure you could cope with that a second time around, not when you hardly coped with it from the first time.Â
âTrevorâŠâ you sighed, defeated and slumped-shouldered.Â
Normally, he dropped it after that. He usually sat quietly at your side until his excitement and urge to join the party overwhelmed him and he resumed dancing with Flower or attempting to play pranks on the livings with Thorfinn. That time, however, he took you by surprise. He moved directly in front of you, face set with a certain tone of seriousness that was odd.Â
âNope,â he said, simply. âYou are not moping for eternity. I wonât let you.âÂ
âThatâs not your choice.âÂ
He smirked, cheekily and annoying but stupidly charming. Those three words suited him too well. Trevor extended his hand out, making a grabbing motion with his hand. âOne dance, thatâs all Iâm askinâ. Thatâs all I need to change your mind.â You tightened your grip on the skirt of your dress, unbudging at his request. âOne dance. Please?â His voice was a little lower, pleading almost.Â
One dance. You never got to dance at your wedding. Something bad could happen, it probably would.Â
Trevorâs fingers grazed your knuckles, tapping them lightly and looking at you in a way, underneath the golden light, that made you consider it. He noticed your hesitation and dropped his hand back down at his side.Â
âOkay,â he said after a beat before he turned away with a little frown on his lips that made you feel even worse.Â
There was something wrong with you, maybe it was some kind of ghostly side effect of dying on your wedding day; perhaps you were doomed to live in the murky waters of what-if and why.Â
The bride and groom were in the middle of the patio dance floor, spinning each other around in quiet fits of laughter and bodies pressed as close as they could get with the brideâs fluffy dress. They were married, dancing as two halves of a whole with nothing bad lingering over their heads. There was no impending doom, aside from you sitting on the outskirts. The doom was you and your mind, rippled with jealousy, sadness, and a million questions of what exactly you could have done differently that day. But the truth was, there was nothing you could have done. Fate was fate, as Flower had once said in one of her more insightful conversations. Fate was messy and included bear attacks, arrows in necks, and accidents. Fate found you there, at the Woodstone mansion forever a fiancee but now entangled with the fates of your ghost friends who also found themselves there forever.Â
Forever was such a long, made even longer with eternity hanging on your shoulders. How many more weddings would you sit there, watching and sulking in your own unhappiness that others wanted to fix for you?Â
Something between a groan and a sigh left your lips as you stood up, letting your wedding dress fall back down to the ground in the pristine condition you had died in it in. âTrevor,â you said again, louder as you called after him. He stopped, slowly turning around with a confused quirk of his brow. You nervously picked at the beads again, but that time wasnât to pick them off but rather settle them back in place in a similar way to how you had picked at them awaiting your turn to walk down the aisle. A dance was not nearly as monumental as that, but it carried a weight that pressed down on your chest.Â
âOne dance,â you said. He stared at you for a moment like he wasnât sure he had heard you right. It wasnât until Thor punched him in the arm with a hardy laugh and Hetty pushed him forward towards you.Â
Trevor approached you, smoothing out his tie. âReally?â he asked.Â
You nodded. âIf anything bad happens, Iâm blaming it on you," you said only half joking.
He smiled, wide and toothy and the way that made you subconsciously want to copy it. âThe worst thing thatâll happen is me stepping on your feet. I havenât slow danced since prom.â Despite that, he dramatically bowed and extended his hand. âMay I have this dance,â he said in a terrible accent. You couldnât help but laugh lightly, some of that weight lifting from where it hurt your chest.Â
Once you accepted his hand, he all but dragged you to a quiet corner of the dance floor, away from where any livings would walk through you two, and away from the other ghosts and their suggestive smirks and comments pointed at the two of you.Â
When you danced, with his feet clumsily trying to avoid stepping on yours and hands rested on your waist, nothing bad happened. You did not die a second time around, nor did tragedy strike in the way you feared. The only thing that occurred was dancing, peppered with occasional laughter and a quick apology when Trevor stepped on your skirt and halted your movements. You recovered with a shake of your head and a slight lead in the dance, which he didnât voice but silently appreciated.
#cbs ghosts#trevor lefkowitz#trevor lefkowitz x reader#trevor lefkowitz x you#sasappis#thorfinn#isaac higgintoot#hetty woodstone#alberta haynes#flower montero#pete martino#ghosts fanfiction#cbs ghosts fanfiction
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Blood Red | Azriel x Cassianâsister!Reader
Summary: After both you and Azriel are left, abandoned and replaced by those close to you, you find company with him in a night of drunken lust, only for old secrets to be unburied in the morning along with a mating bond.
Word Count: ~3k
Warnings: Smut, oral f!receiving, p in v, mentions of infertility, abuse, arguing, but it all ends up okay
Minors, do not interact!
A/N: Whoever requested this (you know who you are) this was sooo fun to write and I hope it was what you wanted, hope you enjoy it<3
Requests are open!
You and Cassian have always been thick as thieves, brother and sister, close and closer, dumb and dumber. You had gotten into countless shenanigans and ridiculous situations with your older brother, and heâd dragged you out of most of them, thankfully.
You were more than thankful to the Mother for providing you with someone like him; family of your own, closer than even your adoptive family that was Rhys and Azriel.
Things had been different lately, though.
âHey, Cass? Are we still heading to that movie tonight?â
You asked, poking your head into his room. He was sharpening his blade, a habit of his. He glanced up at you, golden eyes gleaming with apology as he shook his head.
âCanât. Have to train the Valkyrieâs tonight. Itâs their friendship-anniversary thing or whatever.â
He said with a little shrug, you raised a brow, but then left his room. Did you feel a tug in your gut about the fact that he was prioritizing Nesta and her friends over you? Maybe. Maybe a little more than just a maybe.
It only got worse as the days went on.
The night she and Cassian had planned to spend at Ritaâs together? He was busy with Nesta that night.
In the afternoon they were supposed to go on a hike together, one they go on every single year? Postponed. The reason why? He was âbusyâ, and that business was with Nesta based on the hickeyâs on her neck the morning after.
You were slowly and surely being replaced, and there wasnât a thing you could do about it. Every little activity youâd enjoyed with him, he was now enjoying with Nesta, and occasionally Gwyn and Emerie would join them.
Little did you know, you werenât the only person who felt that way.
*********************************************************
Azriel didnât know what he was doing wrong, or if what was happening was out of his control completely.
âIf you need to fuck someone, go to a pleasure hall, but leave her alone.â
Rhys had said. They couldnât risk making Lucien all pissy and causing a fight between the two for Elain. That would only complicate things between Court alliances, not to mention Elain was still delicate from her experiences with the Cauldron.
He had slowly but surely seen Elain drifting away from him, piece by piece.
The first occurrence had been when she tolerated Lucien at the Winter Solstice, and worse, had hugged him after his gift. What was that gift, you may ask? A set of small porcelain houses meant for storing spices, all of which she used for cooking her various recipes.
The gift had been genius, playing just into what sheâd liked. And Azriel hated that.
Next, it had been when she was there to support him when he learned of his true heritage. Sheâd wiped his tears away and encouraged him to tell Helion. And just like that, the fiery fox bastard was the Heir of Day Court.
Azriel had certainly noticed the extra time the two had been spending together, the little walks through her garden they shared, how his hands would warm with magic and keep her toasty on cold winter nights.
It had only been a matter of time before the two of them had accepted the bond, and when they had announced it, Azriel felt as if his heart cracked in two. What only made it worse was the second announcement; Elain would be going to live in Day Court with Lucien.
He knew he should feel happy for them, he knew he should, but he couldnât find it in himself to feel anything other than anger and regret heâd let himself get so attached with no promise of a future with her.
Sheâd moved before heâd even had a chance to say goodbye, and maybe that was for the best. He didnât know what words might betray him and spill out when he didnât want them to.
He found himself sticking to himself more often than not, and he noticed something else; you.
You seemed just as lonely and isolated as him. The night he really noticed it was when the entire Inner Circle was out at Ritaâs for the night.
Cassian and Nesta were dancing and drinking happily, Rhys and Feyre sipping at their drinks while talking, Mor flirting with the waitress sheâd been eying for the past century, and Amren had probably snuck off to a bar bathroom with her lover.
It only left you and Azriel, sitting tensely at a table together, a booth to be exact. You sipped at your drink, not seeming to want it too much. He watched quietly, offering the silent comfort he always did.
You seemedâŠdistracted, worried almost. Heâd seen that look enough before to know what it was, you were distressed, and most likely hiding something.
âWhat?â
You then asked, looking up at him questioningly. For the centuries heâd known you, his mind never felt as blank as before. Heâd been staring.
âNothing, but youâŠâ
He hesitated, before sighing and finishing his sentence.
âYou lookâŠupset.â
He finished. You gave him a dry look.
âYeah, well, so do you. Guess everyone else gets their happily ever after with a mate except us, huh?â
He nearly winced at that. You had hit the nail on the head with that statement. Everyone was happy and mated with their lover and in couples, living out their own happily ever after, while the two of you were here, mateless, loveless, and lonely. Replaced.
âIâm sorry about what happened with Elain, though. It sucks.â
He stiffened at the mention of her. Heâd just been hoping to drink himself to death and get a cheap hookup tonight. He was already halfway to drinking himself to death point, already three or four cups in. Heâd counted four from you.
âNevermind her,â
He said, shaking his head. The alcohol flowed through his veins like liquid courage as he then caught your gaze, eyes lingering a second longer than they shouldâve before he offered his hand, standing up.
âCare for a dance?â
*********************************************************
You were just how youâd wanted to be tonight, too drunk to care about anything, though you supposed it backfired when you ended up in a slow, oddly romantic waltz with the shadowsinger.
It felt wrong to look at him that way, but it also felt so, so right.
His hands found your waist as you slowly danced, your chest pressing up against his until he could feel your pert nipples through your thin shirt â that was when he realized you werenât wearing a bra. And based on the heady scent of arousal coming from you, he assumed no undergarments in general.
Youâd come for the same thing as him. A release.
And who was any other male to give it to you, other than himself?
*********************************************************
The night was filled with wild mistakes, heated touches, and whispers of affection that would soon probably be forgotten.
Heâd whisked you away under the cover of shadows, into his dark room, cool whispered touches of shadows slipping your clothes off and dropping them to the floor as Azrielâs mouth found your own, his tongue slipping between your lips as heâd pinned you against the mattress.
And just like that, his head had slid down between your legs, tongue slipping between your folds to lap at them.
âIâve wanted to taste this pussy for centuries,â
He growled, fingers going to slip in and pump inside of you, curling against that sweet spot while he lapped and sucked at your clit.
âAz,â
You moaned, hand tangling itself in his thick head of midnight curls, tugging him ever closer. He was eating you out like a starved man deprived of any food or water for decades.
Your back arched into him, and before your climax could wash over you, his mouth had dragged up and was against yours again, before moving to lick and suck on one of your nipples. His finger slipped out and silenced your whines by being slid into your mouth, with you obediently sucking on them and whimpering at the taste of your slick.
You felt his hard cock rub against your legs as his knees nudged your thighs apart, making you spread before he was filling you in moments, every glorious inch going deeper and deeper, tears pricked your eyes as you moaned around his fingers, before he finally removed them.
He was panting by then.
âSo fucking tight, this cuntâs squeezing me so good.â
He groaned, already rutting into you like an animal in heat at that point. Your previously cut-short climax had your walls fluttering around him as it came back with a vengeance, completely overtaking you as you sobbed around his cock, body trembling and writhing beneath him.
He was utterly entranced.
He watched his half-lidded eyes as you had your orgasm, looking so beautifully wild and untamed, and it didnât take long before he was spurting thick ropes of cum into you, painting your insides.
He collapsed onto you, panting and feeling boneless. The only thing he had the energy to do was wrap his arms around you and hold you close, wing draping over the both of you.
You shuddered, curling up against his chest, managing to pull the blankets over both of your bare bodies, too fucked out and intoxicated to notice that the glamour you had on your wings was gone.
*********************************************************
âGet up, Az, itâs time for traini-â
The both of you scrambled up, your head pounding with a headache, no doubt the alcohol for last nightâs fault. Cassian stared at you wide-eyed. You assumed it was the fact that youâd just been caught naked in Azrielâs room, smothered with his scent and the scent of sex, but Azriel quickly tugged some clothes to cover his lower half on, stopping and staring at you.
Cassianâs face contorted in something of shock, betrayal, and overwhelming anger. Illyrian wing colors were usually always genetic, Cassian himself had the same dark wings as everyone else, but they were red when the light shone on the membranes, Azâs were a twilight color, and Rhysâ an amethyst color.
Your wings, however, had a shade of red through the veins, much more obvious than in any other wings. Now that the glamour wasnât on them, they even had a tint of red to the usually black bat wings.
He recognized those wings, as did Azriel.
âYouâre Devlonâs?â
Cassianâs now pissed voice boomed, and you pulled a robe on, useless tears now welling in your eyes. This was what you deserved for hiding it for so many years. Youâd never been Cassianâs sister, not by blood like he believed. Your father had simply deemed you infertile and thrown you out to the streets, where his mother had claimed you as her own. Youâd both been so young that neither of you remembered.
âI wanted to tell you-â
âWhen?â
His now booming voice demanded, eyes full of anger and pain, taking a step towards you at which Azriel snarled and intercepted him.
âDonât.â
Azriel said, his voice low and deadly calm. It was then that you felt it, that tug towards him, the snapping. It mustâve formed for him last night, you realized. That was why he hadnât sent you off to your room.
âShe lied to me, to us for years, Az. She has his wings. Sheâs not even my sister.â
Cassianâs voice replied, the males both glaring at each other. His words stung more than anything, âSheâs not even my sister.â Almost no one in their Inner Court was biologically related, but that felt more personal.
âNot another word.â
Azriel snapped white-hot anger in an intensity heâd never felt before welling up as he saw your eyes fill with tears.
âWhy? Whatâs it to you? What else has she lied to us about?â
âIf you say another goddamn word about my mate I will rip your throat out.â
Cassianâs eyes widened, staring in shock, before narrowing. His gaze caught with yours, watching you cry. His instinct to protect warred with knowing that youâd deceived him for years.
âAnswer my question. When were you going to tell me?â
A sudden anger built up in you, your grief turning to anger.
âI was going to tell you that night at our hike, but you were too busy fucking Nesta to make time for me, like everything else.â
You snarled, and he growled at the mention of his mate. A realization sounded in his chest. He sighed.
âFine. Fine. If you want to play like that. But donât expect me to trust you again.â
He said, before storming out of the room judging by the sounds of commotion in the other room, you could assume that heâd gone to tell everyone else the secret youâd harbored for centuries.
Azriel looked at you, walking over to you, one hand wrapping around your waist and going to your back, pulling you into his chest. His gaze went from your red wings to your eyes, a somber look in his hazel eyes, mixed with the previous anger.
âI think itâs a wonderful color.â
He murmured, trying to be reassuring.
âYou arenât mad?â
You asked, silent tears rolling down your cheeks as you nuzzled into his bare chest.
âIt was your secret to share. Iâm only upset we didnât make ourselves trustworthy enough for you to feel comfortable sharing it.â
He spoke, words gentle and lacking the harsh edge Cassianâs had.
âWhat about the bond?â
You asked. He hesitated but spoke.
âI think itâs the best thing thatâs happened to me since meeting you.â
That got a small smile and a huff of laughter out of you, which he was more than thankful for.
âIf that werenât so cute, I might call it corny.â
He chuckled lightly, the sound deep and rich, soothing to your soul.
âLetâs just get through dinner tonight. We can do that, together. Iâll slaughter Cassian if he goes too far.â
*********************************************************
He might just have to slaughter Cassian five minutes into the dinner.
It had been tense from the beginning since youâd come, red-tinted wings not glamoured or covered by any sort of magic. The conversation was dry and scarce, and Cassian was stabbing the meat on his plate with concerning force.
Eventually, Amren rolled her eyes and sighed into her glass of wine, eyes landing on you.
âAddress the elephant in the room or I will, and you wonât like the latter, girl.â
Her clipped tone spoke out. You swallowed, throat suddenly feeling dry. Your hand squeezed Azrielâs under the table. Everyone was now watching you closely, even Cassian, who seemed to be feeling a mixture of anger and guilt.
âIâmâŠsure youâve figured out by now that Iâm..his daughter.â
Your voice was shaky and unsteady, and already had every protective instinct in Azrielâs body flaring up angrily.
âIâm sorry I never told any of you, itâs a long story-â
âWe have all night.â
Cassianâs voice spoke out, sharp as a knife. Rhys and Azriel both shot him a death glare. You swallowed, staring down at your plate, trying hard not to break down.
âI was labeled infertile, and he threw me out â Cassianâs mom took me in and..I never brought it up, because I thought youâd think differently of me.â
You spoke, though it slowly turned to quiet mumbles the longer you spoke. Cassianâs sharp gaze softened.
âI - we wouldnât have thought that.â
He spoke, voice still upset, but not as harsh anymore. Azrielâs gaze moved over to him, still swimming with anger.
âReally? Because the first thing you did upon discovering it was tell her that you werenât her sister and that you wouldnât trust her again.â
Azrielâs voice snapped before he could stop it. Rhys and Feyre looked on between the two, clearly surprised by Azrielâs comment. He was always the patient one, never getting angry or worked up. Amren only raised a brow.
Cassian opened his mouth to reply, but another sharp glare from Rhys shut him up. Rhys, ever the peacemaker for tonight, then spoke.
âI think there has been quite a lot ofâŠmisunderstandings between you two. She was not obligated to tell you that, Cassian and it wasnât anything personal. She was scared, that was all, and your reaction to the news is not helping.â
His unamused voice spoke, clearly in High Lord mode and trying to piece everyone back together and stop the conflict. He had enough on his plate with Nyx and his duties now, he didnât need this.
Cassian sighed, meeting your eyes.
âIâm sorry, forâŠsaying what I said. I didnât mean it. I was just mad, youâll always be my sister, related to that piece of shit or not. Also for letting you down to spend some time with Nesta.â
You seemed more than relieved at that, giving him a little smile. If Nesta weren't currently leading her training with the Valkyrie, she might've been offended by that.
âAnd Iâm sorry for keeping it from you, all of you.â
You replied, but before anyone could get anything out in response to it, Mor walked in fashionably late and sat down next to Amren, pouring herself some wine.
âCan we talk about the chemistry between you and Azriel, though?â
She asked with a smirk, at which you nearly turned pink, and Azriel gave her a withering look. Rhys smirked and Cassian snickered, all the while Feyre watched the two of you with a knowing look.
âYou could always borrow my cabin in Illyria, for when you both accept the bond, and based on last night, Iâm assuming itâll be soon.â
Rhysâ amused tone then rang out, at which you turned bright red, and even Azriel had a hint of a blush on his tanned cheeks, avoiding Rhysâ gaze.
âSure. Thanks.â
He managed to choke out, everyone bursting into laughter at that. You squeezed Azrielâs hand beneath the table, and he squeezed it back. He met your gaze, a silent âI love youâ in his eyes, and a whispered âI love you, tooâ from your own.
You might need that cabin earlier than youâd expected.
#acotar fandom#acotar fanfiction#writers on tumblr#acotar x reader#azriel#azriel acotar#azriel x reader#acotar fluff#azriel fluff#azriel comfort#azriel x cassianâssister!reader#azriel smut#acotar smut#light angst#angst with a happy ending#cassian acotar
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God is Fair|The Lore
Devotional Love with Suguru x Reader|Two-Shot
Part 1|Part 2|Part 3
the deets: ever since you were young, you knew you were meant for each other. he came into your life like a storm and grew closer no matter how distant you seemed. he swelled and captured your heart every time he was near. so why did you keep fighting him? w.c: 12.7k (holy f*ck) out of idk yet for part-two the rest (god bless) tags: fem!reader, mostly angstyâŠ.pretty much 90% angst for part 1, repressed feelings, jealousy, lingering lips and fingers, a little bit of self-depreciation at the end but pick that crown up love, reader gets a little violent at the end đł|if i missed anything, pls comment or DM âșïž angelâs note: this story started as one thing and ended up as anotherâso goes the way of life. PSA: most of the good, filthy, mack-nasty shyt is in part 2/3, but youâve gotta wade through the fire first to get it. Itâs always worth it|thanks for reading đ€ earworm đ: Chihiro|Billie Eilish
Over time, you became perfectly molded to him.
As did his lips to your tender bud that sank under his sinful tongue.
Slender fingers grip and drown under his raven locks, barely saving you from the shallow breaths you must take to stay alive.
Youâre just above water, and he steals your air, spelling poetry with his tongue over your folding petals.
Broken coos spill from your puffy lipsâhis favorite melody to ever grace his ears.
Whether it was today, tomorrow, yesterday, or foreverâyou fallâin and in and even deeper into his grasp. Under the waves and trapped in his oceanâhe gently pulls you underâyour lungs yearning for air, but you never want out.
And the way he dives in, drowning to taste every drop, every sweet, delectable sip of your nectar like he could live the rest of his life without oxygenâtells you that he doesnât either.Â
You learned to love each otherâs oceans and came to mix seas. Both treaded rough waters but learned to float with calm bodies.
Now you lie hand in hand, limbs weaved like vines through each otherâs arms, as you cuddle. Completely spent from another night in each otherâs depths. Grateful. Grateful for his loveâhis patience.
And wondering how on Earth you thought itâd be possible to exist without someone you swore you despised.
Suguru has always been the bestâthe best at being good, the best at being kind, the best at being quietâthe best at being better than you.Â
When you were eight years old, he made his quiet introduction into your quaint little neighborhood, arriving in a flashy Mercedes-Benz followed by two moving trucks that pulled right into the driveway directly across the street from your humble home. Heels painted with red bottoms adorning stocking-covered legs were the first things you saw as you watched from your bedroom window.Â
The sound of movers drew your attention. No one ever came to your city, let alone your cul-de-sac. You felt a shift. A change was coming.
A tall woman, her long, sleek ponytail blowing in the wind, stepped out of the driverâs seat wearing large couture shades that took up most of her face. The overhanging forecast made everything bleak and gray, but the sunglasses stayed. A man exited the passenger seat and came to the womanâs side. He gingerly took her hand and looked around with a small smile, gently rubbing her arm. She slightly grimaced and handed him what looked like one of those small, overpriced designer bags.
They looked soâŠout of place.
They had to smell like money.
What the heck were they doing here?Â
In a city like yours, one of those places where everyone knows everyone and everybody's business, you instantly knew that this couple would be the talk of the town. At least with the adults. Â
You blew air into your bangs. You werenât expecting new neighbors, but they could have at least come with a kidâsomeone who might actually want you around.Â
âHey, Bug,â your dad called from the garden.
He always left the back door open so he could hear you in case you needed him. He must have heard the rumbling of their heavy trucks now being unloaded with elegant furniture. Would all of that even fit in there? Their house was bigger than yours but not by much. âSounds like weâve got new neighbors. Might go by later and say hi if you want to come.â
âNo thanks.â
You turned back to the window, resting your head on your arms. Meeting Mr. and Mrs. Richy Rich didn't sound very appealing to you and might only make you feel worse on this already gloomy Spring day.
For once, you wanted to be pleasantly surprised and not just surprised with something you wouldnât expect, like hitting the jackpot or whatever.
And then you saw him.
Inky black hair drawn into a short ponytail, emerging from the back seat of the fancy car and clutching a book thicker than his torso. His starched white-collar shirt and beige shorts reminded you of school. He kept his chin tucked and looked like the wind just might knock him over if the book wasnât keeping him upright.Â
He and the woman were near twins. Definitely mother and son. She smoothed her hands down her skirt and put on a genuine smile for him. The man draped his arm around the boyâs shoulders as he took in the neighborhood. Slow and sheepish. You thought his eyes caught yours when he looked behind him and you ducked under the window sill.Â
Shâ
âYou canât stay cooped up in here all the time, Bug,â your dad called again. It sounded like he might be wrapping up. âYou donât know what youâre missing out on.â
You inched back up to the window and peered over the edge. The boy looked like he was just as lost as to why he was there.
Anxious. Reserved. Kind of boring.Â
Not your speed.
You blew a raspberry and turned away. So much for that. You wouldnât be missing much.
In your neighborhood, all the kids walked freely to each otherâs houses to see if anyone was home. This was before everyone had cell phones to save time and figure it out for them.Â
You watched it happen with the other kids all the time. Theyâd visit each other and either stay inside (super rare) or gather the rest of the neighborhood to play in the cul-de-sac or park.Â
But you were never quite given a direct invitation.
The few friends you were close with moved away about a year ago, and the thought of making new ones who would eventually do the same kept you emotionally at arm's length. To make it worse, you swore the group you were left with undoubtedly hated you.
Why?
Because you had a history of sucking.Â
Everyone else in the neighborhood was naturally good at something. Anything. Everything.
But you?
You had to try.
Mess up. And try again. At almost anything you could name.
Basketball? Trash.Â
Tag? You were slow.
Football? Pssssh. As ifâlike youâd let yourself get hurt? You sat out every time.
So, the kids stopped inviting you or always picked you last. Both were grimy slaps in the face. Because you always knew you could be better. Delulu was the solulu if theyâd only give you a chance. Or two. Or a few. But damn, you were trying.Â
At least you werenât the only one being left out.Â
Itâd been weeks since you saw the new kid on the blockânot like you thought about him much after you dismissed him. But slowly, as the sounds of Spring beckoned him outside, he reminded you that the new ârichâ neighbors did indeed have a kid.
It started with the curtains in his living room window gently ruffling before heâd peek out, scanning the scene for signs of life. Then eventually upgraded to gracing the neighborhood with his presence to sit outside. For hours, he watched from his front porch as the neighborhood kids dashed past your houses to play in the cul-de-sac.Â
It kind of made you jealousâthe amount of space and freedom on their porch that his parents clearly werenât taking advantage of. Only two plastic chairs and a small table occupied the space, and they werenât nearly as lovely as the things you saw go into the home on move-in day. If it were up to you, youâd string up one of those hammocks big enough for two like youâd seen on TV and just float in the breeze under the overhang. It had been a frequent daydream of yours long before they moved in.Â
Instead, a gawking boy with too much time on his hands made it his home. Watching. Fiddling with his fingers and leaning on the rail. Watching. Always seeming too afraid to approach.
He had what you thought was the best house in the neighborhood (and probably the most money), and still, he looked so lonely.Â
With the background he seemed to come from, you thought heâd be more ballsy.Â
One day, you were, and you walked right up there, took the hand of the wide-eyed kid, and led him to the rest of the kids down at the park. His dad watched the whole thing go down from the kitchen window as he did the dishes, silently laughing as the boy stumbled behind you without saying a word.Â
This was your chance. You were so tired of the other kids being better than you. With him being the new kid, you thought heâd at least be somewhat on your level or maybe even a bit worse. Anything was better than being the odd one out.Â
You and the boy just a few inches shorter than you crashed the party right before the next game started. You beamed at the group like you had caught a prized fish.Â
âGuys, this is umâŠumâŠâ Then you realize you hadnât asked his name. And he was still holding your hand.Â
You dropped it and nudged him. âSuguru,â he said softly, seeming to avoid eye contact.
Suguru hadnât seen that many kids in a group like this outside of school. He didnât mean to look so anxious, but he wasnât used to being in a neighborhood full of kids his age. He instantly felt like an outsider seeing how comfortable everyone was with each other, apart from you by his side. While soft smiles offered him a glimmer of acceptance, the stares made him self-conscious. He wondered if he could ever fit in.
You repeated his name in case no one heard him. Suguru. It naturally rolled off your tongue. Soft and sweet. Like the boy. He fidgeted with his fingers, but hearing his name felt reassuring. You looked at him and grinned. It was time to see what heâs got.
Tee-ball was the game. One you hated the most. Running was not your sport, and you certainly didnât have an arm, so it never hurt your feelings too much when you werenât picked for teams. But you made sure Suguru was. You wanted to see him in action.Â
Last summer, you guys found an old traffic cone to use as the tee and placed sticks around the field for bases.Â
You didnât expect much from Suguru when it was time to bat becauseâŠlook at him. He was so small and timid. The bat borrowed from someoneâs dad was almost the same size as him, and you swore you saw his feet lift a few times during his practice swings. Too much of that and heâd be airborne. You prepared to give him a âjob well doneâ pat on the back once he hit the ball a few feet.
Suguru squared up at the teeâon his way to join you at the bottom of the barrel.
And wouldnât you know it?Â
He knocked the ball clear out of the park and didnât even skim the cone.Â
Your mouth fell open before you remembered you were the designated retriever since you werenât playing the game. You grumbled the whole walk and search for it.Â
And then he did it again. And again. And again.Â
And surprise, surprise, he excelled at every game he played after. Everyone wanted Suguru on their team.Â
You gaped at the featâso much power, strength, and coordination in such an unassuming body.
And instantly hated him.
Not because he was the best or braggy about it.Â
It was the complete opposite.Â
He barely seemed to acknowledge itânot in an arrogant, dismissive way, but more like he was just happy to be involved and doing something. He was sheepish with compliments and even seemed nervous to receive them. Heâd rub his head and give a little close-eyed smile before returning to the game.
And peer over to you on the sidelines for approval.Â
Every swing, every hit, and every game after, his purple eyes would find yours whenever he thought heâd done something worthwhile.
You tried to hide the jealous scowl, returning his shy smile with a nod and told him to keep his head in the game.Â
But he noticed.
He saw it. He knew you were unhappy, and he wanted nothing more than to help.Â
So after that, you kind of mirrored each other.Â
The kids always saw you as a try-hardâconstantly on repeat, trying to make yourself valid and stand out. Youâd grab failure by the throat and wring its neck, determined to make it forget your name. Not because you were attention-seeking; you only wanted to be counted in.
And so the student became the teacher. Suguru began to slip you little nods as if saying he saw youâjust like you saw him all those times on his front porch. Itâd annoy you at first, what you thought couldâve been pity, but it felt nice to finally be acknowledged by someone.Â
And so gradually, you looked to him as a spectator, earning silent yeses and nos until you finally worked up the courage to do what you were afraid of most. Ask him to be a friend.Â
To help you perfect your skills, of course.Â
But the friendship blossomed like the Spring, and you and Suguru actually grew really closeâinstantly drawn to each other. Pop-ups to his house were the norm as you had the most advantage out of everyone in the neighborhood by living right across from him. And you both were always brought up by one anotherâs parents.
Turns out Suguruâs dad was a lot like yours and they got on really well. Theyâre both funny, kind. But your dadâs a little bit different. Heâs got rebellion in his bones, as he often talked about when he told you stories about his youth and take-no-shit hippie days.Â
âIâm serious, Bug. So, there we were, strapped to the tree. Shackled, really.âÂ
He mimicked the story with his arms in between laughs.Â
âSo, so weâre all chained up, right? And this bulldozer is coming right at our heads, ya? I look over to Stanley,â your even crazier God-father who showered you with gifts every time he visited, âI say, âStanley, toughen up. You look like youâre about to piss yourself.â And he goes, âIâm not scared. I forgot to go before we locked ourselves in.ââÂ
Your dad roared with laughter, wiping the tears from his eyes like he hadnât told that story a million times. Like he was going around trying to collect little activists. But Suguru almost fell over, leaning into his every word. He was such a shy laugher, always creasing his eyes and dimpling his cheeks when he did. It made your dad feel like the funniest guy alive when Suguru entertained his jokes.
âYou were so brave,â and Suguru called your dad by his nickname just like your dad told him to. âI want to be that brave when Iâm older.â
Your dad winked at youâyou stuck out your tongue. Suguru was a good kid, he thought and reminded him a bit of himself.
Those days, your dad was mostly the same. He didnât need much and chose to live a quaint and peaceful life. Heâd talk your ear off about activism, travel, and stories about your mom who passed when you were born. You never got to âmeetâ her, but you always felt like you knew exactly who she was. And she was totally different from Suguruâs mom, who you learned was a hard-working corporate baddie. Red bottom heels. Makes sense.
By the end of that first summer, your families were practically joined at the hip. You and Suguru even more so. Outside of house calls and playing games with the rest of the neighborhood, the two of you also made frequent trips to the makeshift pier. Almost everything in your neighborhood and the surrounding area was walkable, including a small, wobbly, probably dangerous dock that sat over the small lake in town. Youâd play a little alphabet game you made up on the walk down and constantly challenge him. Only for him to literally beat you at your own game nine times out of ten.Â
âAngels shop atââ You skipped down the dirt path.
âBlessed boutiques,â Suguru finished, âBeautiful coatsââ
âCan clothe their wings. Dashing dollsââ
âEat every sweet. Forks will findââ
âGiantâŠgiant,â you thought and thought and thought, âGiantââ
âGeese!ââ Suguru tagged you and ran down the dock, deeming you the loser of that round. You strolled down to meet him near the water reflecting the sunset. A pout took up your face. He patted the deck, motioning for you to sit. âYouâre gonna miss the fireflies.â
Watching them pop up one by one and glow on the water as the sun went down became a ritual. And one of your favorite memories of summer.
The following school year, you were even more inseparable. And when the end of fifth grade rolled around the year after, you knew it was fate when you found out youâd be attending the same middle school.Â
You were overjoyed. So was Suguru, but for different reasons. To you, now it was on.Â
Academics was an area where you had a fair shot at flourishing. You were studious, attentive, and almost the perfect student. And while you didnât have bad grades, you always felt like you could be better. And you know why. Because everything came naturally to Suguru, of course.Â
Thank goodness for extracurriculars, though. The two of you didnât need to do everything together, and you both benefited from the time and separation to do your own thing and discover your own interests. The Newspaper club caught your eye and was more interesting than you thought it would beâthe first hobby to make you fall in love with words.Â
Suguru took an interest in robotics and, surprisingly, Yearbook. He was pretty crafty with a camera and made sure to snap the best photos of you during your events.Â
But the two of you rarely spoke of school or after-school activities. You never wanted him to know if you were struggling or needed help with anything and tried not to rely on him so much those days, so everything with you was always good.
It had to be.
He was still the competition, after all.
And you had to appear just as flawless.Â
Instead, you enjoyed late-night phone calls that went way past both of your bedtimes as you grew into middle schoolers. Pretending to be asleep and slipping the phone under your pillow without moving a muscle when your parents checked in was a sport, but it couldnât be helped. The books you were reading, shows you were watching, and thoughts on what high school would be like were too good not to talk about into the late-night hoursâeven when your eyelids got too tired to stay open. Falling asleep with your cellphones in hand or occupying a space on your pillows was the norm.Â
âWhatâd ya think about the movie?âÂ
âI mean, the book is always better, right? But like,â you sighed happily into the phone, âthey made their lives look soâŠamazing.â
The two of you watched The Great Gatsby 1979 version on DVD at Suguruâs house right after school that day before you had to scurry off to help your dad in the garden. Suguru finished the book a few days ago, and after catching him with it during lunch and poking him enough to get him to spill some of the details, you were sold.
A glamorous romance about a life of luxury and passion?
Say less.
And because you couldnât resist, you told him youâd finish it in less time than he did.
Suguru thought the movie was pretty true to the book, but man, what a sad story. You, however, were in love with the lifestyle.
âWhat about Daisy?â he asked.
You pondered Daisyâs decision for half a second before deciding she was a one-off. All her life she had been spoiled, something you were a total stranger to but didnât make a point to sayâonly dismissed her frivolous ways and called her a coward. âJust the money and parties would be enough for me,â you said in a daydream. âItâd be too happy to be that shallow.âÂ
Suguru laughed and said that wasnât the point of the book. âMoney can't always buy happiness. She couldâve had love. It was right there.â He sounded so sophisticated when he said it, much too wise and sappy for a 13-year-old.Â
You sucked your teeth. âThatâs easy for you to say.â And you reminded him that he has a nicer house, clothes, car. âAnd when are yâall getting the Benz back?â
Lately, you and Suguru had been getting picked up by his dad in a major downgrade of a car. Itâd been at least two months, and you were missing the feel of luxury against your skin.
The phone went quiet for a second, and Suguru scratched his head. âUh, we actually donât have it anymore.â
Your eyes widened as if he'd just told you someone died. Borderline devastation set in like it was your family losing one of its greatest displays of wealth. But Suguru didnât sound the least bit sad when he told you that his dad referred to the ânew carâ as a âcash carâ because they needed something quick.
And then it clicked, and you realized why youâd been noticing that furniture and things had also been disappearing in his house when you came over. And why he had to switch to the free lunch program you were also on at school. And why his dad mentioned looking for a second job the other day.
Suguruâs family had been hit by the recession.
And thatâs how he became your neighbor.
Most of everything Suguru grew up with in his previous family home was placed in storage when they first moved into your neighborhood. His mom thought their stay would be temporary; she had been demoted at work but didnât think it was a big deal, and things would quickly be back to normalâmaybe even come with a promotion if she worked hard enough.
But it wasnât her skills that was the problem. The economy was in shambles, and her company was running out of money. After two years of hoping for a miracle, she and over 40% of her company were laid off.
They kept all of this from Suguru until only a few weeks ago. He was much too young to understand what it all meant when it first happenedâhe was just a kid. But now, he was older, smarter, way less naĂŻve. They couldnât keep lying to him about why the car was away at the shop or why the family heirloom dining table went missing, among other things.Â
When they told him that heâd have to slow down on his growing book collection and only get one gift for his birthday that year, thatâs when he started asking questionsânot that either of those things meant much to him. He was more than happy to frequent the school library, and you noticed that heâd been spending a lot more time there than usual during breaks.
What bothered Suguru the most was the looks his parents gave him when they told him everything. Like they were delivering the worst news in the world. Like they were so worried that theyâd be disappointing him. Like they should be ashamed.Â
It hurt him more to know that they felt like they had failed him.Â
âMy dad just looks so tired all of the time now.â
Mr. Geto, who had been a stay-at-home work-from-home employee since before Suguru was born, had to get a part-time job working overnight to help bridge the widening gap between their old and new lifestyle.
Now, Suguru doesnât get to see him as much except to make breakfast and kiss Suguru goodbye with a sluggish smile on his face before school.
He really missed his dad. And it made you feel like shit for momentarily being a Daisy.
For the rest of the night, you just listened to Suguru tell stories about back homeâwhat his parents were like, the things they used to do, the trips they would take, and the time they spent together. Little memories from a place youâve never been but could clearly see as he talked through the night.
Never once did Suguru mention missing the things he used to have or wanted now. The people in his life were what he cared about most.Â
âMy dad got a new antenna for the TV to surprise my mom with so she can still watch her favorite channels from back home,â he laughed. âItâs so big. I hadnât seen one before, so it was kinda funny to look at, but Iâm glad itâll make her happy.â
You solemnly smiled and propped up on your arm. âDo you ever miss home? Like being back there?â
He mentioned that he thought about it sometimes: the plush green grass in his front and backyard that heâd lay in for hours, the much sunnier skies compared to the frequently gray and cloudy ones, and humid air here in your rainy city, the few friends and family members he had to leave behind.
But he liked it here better and surprised the hell out of you by saying so.Â
Anywhere was better than being here.Â
Even though his family was going through a hard time, they still managed to get the nicest house in the neighborhood. You could only imagine what his childhood home looked like compared to the one bedroom and living room your dad made into his own space.
You asked why. What could possibly make this place any better than where he came from?
You could hear him shrug through the phone as he lay on his back and stared at the ceiling decorated with glow-in-the-dark stars.
âI donât know,â he said. âItâs just something about this place.â
You still think about that conversation sometimes.
The end of middle school came in a blaze, and so did puberty.Â
Suddenly, you became aware that it was time to start caring about what you looked like.
Some nights, you would call it early with Suguru in favor of spending hours on YouTube watching videos and learning how to wear makeup. You put more thought into how you dressed and tried your best to style the little clothes you had into mostly decent outfits.
Every morning, youâd beam when you entered the kitchen to grab breakfast and say goodbye to your dad. Heâd try his best not to cry, watching his little Bug grow up before his eyes.Â
Suguru did some growing, too.
The summer of 7th grade, he got a little taller, and when your final year started, you guys were finally neck and neck. He was beginning to be able to see the top of your head when he lifted his chin, and he would make little jokes about it in his prepubescent boy voice that was starting to crack. Youâd push the too-big glasses that he got at the start of middle school up the bridge of his nose and tell him not to get too cocky. This was the tallest he would get, youâd tease. He may have been good at everything, but heâd always be a pip-squeak.Â
When you werenât going back and forth with Suguru, you were hanging out with the new gal pals you made at school. Your little trio started spending more time together, window shopping at the mall, attending football games after school, and talking each otherâs ears off about anything in between throughout your last year. You couldnât tell Suguru everything, of courseâthere are some things that guys will simply never be able to relate to or understand.Â
And one day, while the three of you sat at lunch together while Suguru was off with his robotics team, one of your gals leaned over the cafeteria table to poke you with a devious smile and ask the age-old question: who do you like in school?
Your brain had the audacity to picture Suguru first.Â
Your friends squealed watching your face blush beet red, but you turned away and never answered the questionâonly said that you were more focused on school and extracurriculars to help you in college more than anything else.Â
But where the hell did that come from?Â
Suguru was, debatably, your best friend, but that was it.
Not that you needed to convince anyone else of that. JustâŠyourself?
Before that day, you never really thought of Suguru in that light. He was this quiet, nerdy, prodigy of a boy who was great at everything and gave you another reason to want to be just as good. You secretly looked up to him, if you wanted to call it that, but you certainly didnât like him.Â
He was just the boy next door.Â
The boy next door who was challenging you once again: to push the little hints of affection that had been blossoming aside and dismiss them.
Bury them down, keep your eyes on the prize, and finally be rewarded for your efforts.
To keep up with him, not fall in love with him.Â
On a rare sunny Saturday, a month and a half before school let out for the summer, the two of you sat on his beloved front porch with the future on your minds. Â
Suguru picked at the grass growing between the wooden boards. âThinking about trying something new next year?â
You popped another sugary blackberry from your backyard into your mouth while stretched out on Suguruâs favorite quilt. He couldnât help but notice how relaxed you looked, drinking up the warm sunbeams on your skin.
âI donât know,â your arms folded behind your head as you stared at the ceiling, âI love Newspaper, butâŠI donât know. I think I wanna branch out.â
You just werenât sure how yet. You had done some research on the high school youâd both be attending next year and ran down the list looking for something to jump out at you. Something you could really put yourself into. You still loved writing and expressing yourself, but there was nothing else besides repeating Newspaper or trying Yearbook (Suguâs territory). The rest of your options werenât ideal, but beggars couldnât be choosers.Â
âHow about volleyball?â
âNah.â
âArt club?â
âMmm-mm.â
He leaned against the wooden railing. âHmmm, choir?â
You laughed and didnât even bother to respond to what was clearly a joke.Â
He sighed and pensively licked the sugar from his fingers before asking if maybe youâd want to do something together.Â
You looked at him and squinted. âWhat?â he shrugged.
âYou know what.â And he shook his head all innocent-like.
Always innocent that Suguru. Effortlessly wrapping everyone around his finger. Your dad, his teachers. Even your trio mentioned him from time to time about how helpful he was. With all the times he went out of his way to make sure you were okay, even you were starting to let your guard down. Watching him now as his ponytail blew softly in the wind, looking so naĂŻve as to what you meant but still wanting to understand, made you blush sick.
Not having much of a reason to actually be so guarded, you made one up. âYou tryna go toe to toe with me, Geto?.â
Your brow cocked, and you used his last name because you knew itâd get to him. He was fully aware that you only say it when youâre serious, and itâs mostly blurted when you guys go at it on Mario Kart.Â
âJust because I said we should do something together?âÂ
âYeah, so you can one-up me.â
If there was a hobby or favorite pastime that you really enjoyed and might actually be better than good at, you knew it was best to keep it out of Suguruâs reach. Academic and recreational competitions needed to remain separate if you wanted to keep your sanity.
Suguru took a breath. If there was one thing he didnât bother competing with you at, it was arguing. He knew you wouldn't back down if he just sat here and tried to convince you; youâd poke a hole in every counter until he simply gave up.
So, instead, he pandered to your inflated ego, chewing his lip before telling the truth. âCâmon, Twin. I promise I wonât. Do it for me.â
His soft purple gaze landed on you, and you got a funny feeling in your stomach that you hadnât felt before.Â
He was serious.Â
He really wanted to be at your side trying something newâexploring togetherâhelping each other find yourselves.
The shy teen who was as quiet as a mouse and yet a beast of a kid wanted to be right there with you. And he wasnât afraid to say it.
You cleared your throat and averted his gaze. âFine,â you agreed, but on one condition, âIt stays a hobby, no competing.â And it sounded like you were talking to yourself more than him. âBut valedictorian? Thatâs mine.â And you tossed another blackberry into the air and caught it perfectly in your mouth, making Suguru raise his eyebrows.
âThatâs a bet,â he said, reaching over to wipe a bit of sugar from the corner of your lips. You swat away his hand and punch his shoulder, but damn him if the gesture didnât make you feel all weird inside. He faked an âOwâ and rubbed his arm before joining you on the quilt to soak in the sun. You closed your eyes and pretended to float in the breeze whistling through the railing. Even without the hammock, it kind of felt like you were.Â
âSooo, what do you wanna do this summer?â And the possibilities felt endless.
Who knew this core memory of each otherâs youth, the moment you finally let his fingers inch across the blanket and softly brush yours without pulling back, would be one of your last?Â
Two weeks before break started, after all of your plans for the summer and the following school year had been planned out, it happened.Â
To this day, you question the timing of your worst nightmareâjust when you thought you were living the dreamâcoming true.
The Getoâs were moving on up.Â
For years, Suguru watched his mom grind in corporate America. It wasnât new to him; she had one of the hardest work ethics heâd ever seen, but it was on a different level after his family moved to your city.
Something in her had changedâthe thought of instability.
She knew Suguru was used to not seeing her due to long hours at work, but when it started to affect her husband, when it began to shift the familyâs dynamic, she knew she had to figure something out, and fast.
She could sacrifice her time for the family. She couldnât sacrifice Suguruâs time with his dad.Â
All these years, Suguruâs family pulled themselves up by their bootstraps while Suguru was lost in the bliss of friendship. Mrs. Getoâs hard work paid off, and she got a promotionâon the opposite end of the country.Â
The day was bright and sunny when he left, the exact opposite of how you felt watching the beat-up car that had grown on you drive out of the neighborhood.
You looked on from your window because you didnât want him to see you crying, watching, or caring.Â
You had been right from the first time you saw him.Â
And were back to square one.
Alone.
You guys tried to stay in touch, you really did, but being in totally different time zones made keeping up with each other a little harder. New apps for your phones, like Snapchat and Instagram, helped a little, but they didn't compare to the late-night phone calls you missed so much.Â
At first, Suguru would Snap you about how he was getting on in his new city, neighborhood, and places his family would explore over the summer.
The thought of him being someoneâs new boy-next-door made your stomach twist.
When school rolled around, heâd send Snaps and joke about his preppy new uniform that came with a vibrant red tie and over-starched navy pants. His mom got him into a fancy private school because, of course she would, but they were really strict with phones, so you weren't able to talk to him until he got home. By the time he did, the sun had already gone down for you, and youâd be too tired from your own after-school activities to keep your eyes open.
You missed Suguruâeven your dad missed him and his family terribly.Â
You missed him so much that you began to resent himâhis new life, fancy school, and new âfriendsâ. Jealousy reared its ugly head, forcing you to put your walls up again.Â
Another friend, gone, moved on to bigger and better things. Leaving you behind once again.
You had finally found a friend, a real friend, who never made you feel badâsomeone you could tell almost all of your secrets to.
Who got whisked away.
Who youâd give anything to see again and go back to the way things were.Â
Though itâd only been five years, you felt like youâd known him your entire life.
But what you thought was fate, turned out to be folly.
It wasnât fair.
Sometimes I fall But still, I rise To the skies high above In the clouds my ego Will go where no one knows
Why I am here
And why I try
To defy what I believe What it means to succeed To be won
To be one
To be âthe oneâ
A smoking gun.
âThank you.â
The cafe filled with snapping fingers as you walked off the stage, heart pounding and a smile plastered on your ducking head.Â
Look at you now. Performing in cafes, libraries, open-mics, wherever you could be that called for an audience. Still a little shy, but letting it motivate you and pour out on the floor to be soaked up by the listeners. It was an adrenaline rush, finally finding something you knew belonged to you and being damned good at it.Â
No one was better than you at telling the world how you felt while simultaneously mesmerizing an audience with your soliloquy and speech. Words still had a hold on you; you just figured it was better to say them out loud than keep them written down.
âGood job, Bug.â Your dad handed you a hot cup of tea fresh from the counter with your nickname scribbled in big cursive letters across the cup.Â
âDad, please stop calling me that.â
He frowned. âBut youâre my little bug.â He threw an arm around you, almost making you spill the hot liquid.Â
You groaned and protested. âIâm not a kid anymore.â And took a sip too soon, burning the tip of your tongue. You held it in and swallowed, looking around to see if anyone else saw the scorned look on your face.Â
You thought of 15 as one of your prime years and kept yourself busy to prove it. Just a sophomore in high school, Baby had a new hobby: dominating slam poetry. You had taken over the scene in your city with expansion heavy on your mind.
Though it was hard for your dad to hear, you were right; you werenât a kid anymore. But you knew he was just proud of you. More than you could ever know. It made him happy to see you had something no one could take from you.Â
With a tsk, you leaned into his hug. You should be thanking him more. When the idea of doing slam poetry first crossed your mind, you were a hot mess (surprise, surprise) at being confident (BIG surprise)âyour stage presence was lacking, to be specific.Â
On the page, your poems were like water in a desert, but opening your mouth and performing it with your whole chest wasâŠdifferent.Â
Fixating on your lines and rhythm made you want to pull your hair out. It was hard making sure your words sounded like you and would be understood. You needed to be understood.Â
Youâd practice your performances in front of your dad until you were blue in the face. A show was put on for anyone who would listen. And secretly, you missed Suguruâs presence because heâd be perfect for it.
But you didnât need him. You were on your way to competing in your first official local competition. All your practice around the city and long hours at home agonizing over your talent for slam poetry built up to that momentâthe time to show the world what you had to offer.Â
Nothing felt better than holding the gold 1st place medallion between your fingers afterward. Regionals came next, and nothing could have validated your talent more than the medals you took home on top of the prize money your dad stashed away for college.Â
It was time to travel, and Nationals was your next target.
You couldnât describe the feeling of finally being outside your city. The thought of being beyond the walls of home once felt like a hopeless dream. New cities, new friends, new organizations, and new styles of poetry were within your reach. The exhilarating travel that worried your dad put a thrill in your heart. You wanted to see everythingâbe heard everywhere. Life was full of opportunity and everything it had to offer.Â
âSo youâre gonna do the group piece and then an individual one, maybe?âÂ
You leaned against the cool bus window as you and your teammates winded down the road to your next hotel. Over the summer, you traveled with your stateâs top slam poetry organization to compete in regional cities around the coast. All of this was practice for the Nationals coming up that August before school started. The day was coming faster than you could imagine.Â
âI donât know about a solo,â you wondered.
You looked out the window and chewed your bottom lip. Your team lead had been pushing you to do a stand-alone piece for the Nationals for weeks, but you felt far from ready. You were strong in a group, but on your own, looking out into a crowd of people while demanding their attention on an empty stage, the thought made you queasy.
This wasnât your local library or a small regional contest. Nationals is where you tell the country who you are and why you matter.Â
âHey,â a hand rested on your shoulder, calling you back. âYouâve got this. You deserve this.âÂ
And you did deserve it. Youâd worked too hard and advanced so far in such a short amount of time. You didnât think youâd get here so fast, but here you were, on a double-decker bus full of others who were just as talented as you, in a place where you belonged. In a place where you didnât have to try so hard or look for that slight nod of approval to let you know you were seen.Â
August was in a hurry to put you on the stage because, before you knew it, it was time to head to California for the Nationals. What better place to begin to live your dreams than in the place where they all come true? Sunny skies, sandy beaches, and the aura of art and performance lingered in the air. It was the complete opposite of where you came from. It felt like home. You could see how Suguru could get easily lost in all.Â
You always wanted to visit the West Coast and see how he was living.
Itâd be so funny to randomly Snap him after all this time and tell him you were so close, but you decided against it.
Cali was HUGE; thereâs no way the competition would just happen to be in his city for you to casually bump into him.
Plus, imagine that awkward reunion after a few years of radio silence.
You two could be completely different people now.
He probably wouldnât even want to see you.
Maybe you didnât want to see him.
So many great things happened since his family packed up and left. In fact, without Suguru around, you found yourself excelling more naturally at anything and everything than ever before. Comparisons were a thing of the past, and you knew you had something no one else could take away from you.
Except maybe the competitor going on before you at the Nationals.Â
The audience was loud and clearly approving of his killer performance as they ate him up with whistles and snapping fingers.
Who needed a mic when you had a voice like that?
Easily projecting across the entire venue with every rhythmic pop, beat, and enunciation of his words.
You might have met your match or worse.
For the first time in your poetic career, you thought you just might lose your winning streak.Â
Anxiety convinced you to head back to the holding area. You just needed to run through the lines of your solo only a few more times.
Youâve got this.
He was nothing.
This was nothing.
You were taking home first placeâabsolutely positive that success was literally on the tip of your tongue. Until you saw him.Â
The boy with the raven hair.Â
Unmistakable and stopping you dead in your tracks as you saw him in the flesh for the first time in 2 years, standing long and tall in the venue.
Not in the audience.
Not as a stagehand.
But in another teamâs holding room.
As a competitor.Â
Your heart plummeted into your ass.
What in the fuck was he doing here???
You swiftly ducked behind the wall leading to your teamâs holding area, hand flying to your chest to still the thunderous beating.Â
Deep breaths, deep breaths. DEEP B R E A T H S.Â
Suddenly, your mouth was desert dry.
The entire summer, you prepared yourself to keep from slipping upâhow you would suppress the urge to call him, think about him, or wonder where he would be when you were here.
You covered all of the bases.
But here he was in a place you least expected.
In a place you now knew youâd dread seeing him the most.
The boy you had become a ghost to was haunting you, but somehow, you knew this would happen.
You only got a quick glance at him before you vanished, but it was enough of a glimpse to notice the chances.
And God, were there changes.
As teenagers do, you both had grown out of your prepubescent bodies and into your young adult ones. And while you thought you looked relatively the same with a few upgrades here and there, Suguru had gone through a full-blown glow-up that set yours on fire.Â
âAlmost ready?âÂ
You nearly jumped out of your skin. Your teammate followed your line of sight and smirked. âKnow him?â
You shrugged a bit too nonchalantly and said you thought he looked familiar but didnât. âShame,â she rested her shoulder on the wall with a dreamy gaze. âHe looks like a dream.âÂ
You turned away before you threw up and realized that you were about to be called up next. The frazzled look on your team leadâs face let you know sheâd been looking for you, and you took a synced deep breath when she spotted you. Her hands fell on your shoulders before you went up the stairs to the stage. âYouâve got this.â
Iâve got this. . . . You donât got this.Â
Your legs felt like Jell-O walking up the short set of stairs to the black platform in the middle of the stage. You hadnât been on one this big, in a venue so large, with an audience so vast and eyes in the hundreds. The row of judges sat below you, yet looked so intimidating. Heat engulfed you from the lights aboveâa literal deer playing the lion in the headlights.
Sight zeroed in on the judges, you avoided the audience. Hoping that he wasn't still there because you knew seeing him WOULD freak you out.Â
In the silence Between the shattered and oppressed dreams I found, I tore The roar Of my own voice Reclaiming the night
Your lines flowed out of you more naturally than water, eyes closed, unfocused, or hazy as you transformed your surroundings into the scene of your storyâthe journey from struggle to empowermentâthe story of why you deserved to be here. In that moment, there was no one elseânot even the judgesâjust you, the stage, and the song that belonged to you, even if it mattered to no one else.
But it mattered to him.
And you didnât see him until near the end of your set.
The familiarity of your voice called him to confirm it for himself. To make sure it was you. He couldnât believe it. You looked soâŠpowerful. Fully fledged in your adulthood, kicking ass and taking names. Fierce and poetic. The same attitude as the girl he grew up with but in its full realization.Â
Your voice cracked a little when you spotted him, completely awe-struck by you, but you played it off like it was part of your set. Damn the boy who had the same gawking eyes that used to watch the neighborhood kidsâquiet and longing. You hoped it wasnât obvious, but Suguru noticed. He knew. He still had some kind of effect on you. He could tell by how quickly you looked away. You still felt a way about him. He wasnât just a nobody to you. But given the circumstances, he didnât know whether to love or hate it by the time he took the stage.Â
The mic fit snuggly between his fingers. It was rare that someone fully approached it without starting their piece first. You wondered where he was going with this, why he looked a bit tense, why he kept his gaze lowâif it could be because of you.
You held your breath and crossed your fingers. Once again, it was time to see him in action under the sweltering stage lights. And in seconds, you saw your gold medal fleeting.
You expected nothing less.Â
His voice was lined with melodyâa sweet, ethereal flow and a melodious string of vocabulary that wrapped you in an envelope and swaddled you like a baby. He sounded so mature. He sounded so much betterâŠthan you.Â
The nerdy boy with too-big glasses and cracking voice had been replaced by a young man who towarded over the audience with a long side-bang and gauges in his ears. The red tie around his neck did look absolutely ridiculous like he said, but the rest of his navy blue uniform was tailored to perfection and fit like a glove.
He looked and sounded like where he came from. Money. But he was more than that. You found yourself hanging onto his every word as you watched from out of sight. He couldnât see that he made your heart thump, but it was begging to fall out of your chest by the second.
This wasnât about slam poetry anymore.
Suguru had entered your arena.
Shy, reserved, and knocking the ball out of the park.Â
Out of over 200 solo acts, you came in 6th. Suguru came in 5th.Â
And you couldnât even feel good about it. Because you knew what this meant.
Regionals took over the remainder of your sophomore academic year, but when summer rolled back around, it was time to look Suguru in the face again at almost every out-of-state competition. The West Coast was once a dreamânow you dreaded touring the area because you knew he would be there.
Performing.
Waiting to chew you up and spit you out.Â
Over the final two years of high school, you both spent most of your free time hopping around the nation and directly squaring off with each other.
Growing more apart as you did.
Silent hatred brewed and led the way every time you saw himâunmistakably written on your face.Â
He chalked it up to the fact that the two of you had changed over the years, and maybe youâd simply outgrown him. But he never thought someone he used to call his best friend could give him a look so cold. With no other choice but to follow your lead, he kept his distance and pretended you werenât there.
But the way he racked up medal after medal, winning over judges and audiences alike, was loud and clear.
With him, you could only hope for second best. Though out-of-state competitions were just practice, losing to him in any capacity was a constant reminder that what was yours, wasnât anymore.
If it ever was.
This time, anxiety burned through you instead of helping you.Â
During junior year, one of the most pivotal moments of your poetic careers, you met face-to-face again at the Nationals. Both of your organizations fought their way to the semifinals, but as you held your breath waiting for the judges to call his teamâs name, silence swept both of you when you realized that neither of you made it to the finals.
Again.
By that summer, you were tired, good and tired of inching closer and closer to third place, then second, but never first in out-of-state competitions where Suguru was in the mix.
He was sucking the life out of you, but you couldnât show it, especially when on stage where you knew heâd have his eyes glued to you.
Then, in August of your senior year, it finally happened; you returned to the Nationals, your final opportunity to win and go international. This time, it was close to your territory, in Georgia.
All bets were off.
The winner was a toss-up.
And what a slap in the face to finally winâŠ.and tie with Suguru.Â
You sulked on the inside the whole ride home while your teammates cheered and celebrated around you. To them, youâd just made history with your organization being the first in your state to go to the continental competition and have a shot at the World Poetry Slam Championship.Â
To you, your freedom of expression kept escaping you.
You felt yourself starting to mold into something outside of yourself.
Some nights, you lied in bed, unable to sleep hearing Suguruâs rhythmic beats rack through your brain.
Analyzing them.
Judging them.
Mimicking them.
Wanting to be like the best.
Your foundation was shaking.
At least you didnât have to worry about the continental competition. Winning wasnât the point; only earning one of the top 10 high scores to be automatically qualified for the WPSC.Â
It was a dream come true.
But how come it tasted so sour when you stood on that stage, your teammates going absolutely insane in the crowd at the news of you advancing to the international championship, but once again with a score just shy of Suguruâs?Â
The two of you were declared the best in your countryâŠand you were sulking.Â
It shouldnât matter!
You're one of the top 40 poets in the WORLD, babe!
And, for Godsake, a free plane ticket and trip to leave the country was waiting for you with your name on it! Belgian waffles and fountains of chocolate are more than enough reasons to get over yourself and this one-sided beef.Â
But your dad still got an earful about it.
Weekly chats with him almost always centered around poetry and Suguru ever since you first saw him sophomore year.
The closer the world championship came, the sadder you sounded.
âWhat if I-â
Your dad stopped you. âDonât even finish that sentence. What have I always said?â
You hugged the phone to your ear, rolling your suitcase back and forth between your legs in the airport terminal. âBug,â your dad said after a momentâs silence.
You groaned. âWe donât say âwhat-ifsâ. We say âwhat isâ.â
âAnd whatâs going to happen.â
You looked over to your team lead, soundly napping in the corner. It was the butt crack of dawn, and both of you had gotten to the airport way too early for your liking to make sure you didnât miss your flight. Your first international flight. You actually had a passport, like???Â
So much had gone into getting you here.
Energy. Time. Effort. Trust. Encouragement.
People were rooting for you. They wanted to see you win. You wanted to see you win.Â
âIâm gonna do my best.â
âThen youâre already a winner, Bug.â
God, your dad was gushy. And God, you loved him for it.
You didnât feel so bad by the time you watched the sunrise in full bloom through your airplane window.
Pink, orange, and yellow washed over your face, making you feel so small. It wasnât your first time in the sky, but definitely the most nervous youâd been.
Local papers, blogs, and newsletters featured your nameâpeople knew you now; they had expectations.
A reputation had been made, and now you were in the fight of your life to keep it.
You sighed into your palm with your dadâs words in mind.
David was determined to take Goliath down.
Belgium.was.cold.
Like you hadnât packed nearly thick enough coats type of cold.
You felt like an idiot.Â
You were a lyrical genius but couldnât even put âBelgium in Decemberâ and âit might be freezingâ together. But the lobby of your quaint little hotel with hot chocolate on tap was warm and inviting.
Your team lead handed you a cup, and you found yourself missing your teammates. They would have loved this and cheering you on at the top of their lungs.
The feeling was lonelyânerve-wracking.
You were in the beautiful country of Germany for a competition, not leisure, so you couldnât even relish in the fact that you were overseas.
At least the food was good. Nervous eating made you binge until you felt sick the night before the competition, but a quick stroll in the brisk morning air made you feel better.
The bus ride to the venue felt like you were about to hop into a boxing ring. And the gloves were off.
Crossing the threshold into a space full of chosen people was like marveling at the diamonds of top-society. And you were one of them. Your team lead walked by and closed your gaping mouth with a smile. âChin up, dear.â And disappeared into the crowd.
You'd never met a foreigner before and were thrust into a venue full of different skin tones, accents, languages, and ages. It wouldâve been even more overwhelming had it not been for the smell of coffee wafting through the air, reminding you of your last safe space for poetry before you went pro. With half an hour left until the competition, you thought exploring a little wouldnât be a bad idea. Â
The venue was dark and moody, perfect for setting the atmosphere and circulating the rising tension in your body. The main stage basked against the background of darkness under a single warm light that cast a circular glow.
Your final destination.
His burial sight.Â
Suguru was nowhere to be found, but by the looks of the thick crowd shuffling in to fill their seats, it was easy to get lost. You met back with your team lead to run your rhythms a few more times.Â
âPlease donât say it.â And she laughs, giving you a small nod and shoulder squeeze.
You still hear it in your head. Youâve got this.
But man, were these poets giving you a run for your money.
It was exhilarating and terrifyingâa glaring reminder of why you were here among the best.
Translations were available on the screens behind the performers as you ping-ponged between their words and their expressions. Both demanded your attention and the crowdâs.
But so did you and Suguru when you both breezed through the semifinals.
For a second, you thought he hadnât made it to the venue at all when you looked for him during your performance. But he let you and everyone else know he was in the building when he graced that stage. A hush fell over the space, and even you felt your face go soft while watching him.
He more than deserved that advance, but you werenât done just yet.
After a brief intermissionâthe DJ wasnât playing any gamesâyou turned the corner to line up for the final round when you collided at 100mph with Suguru.Â
âFuâ oh.â You held your arm as you looked at himâreally taking him in.
When he was on stage, you noticed he wasnât in his usual uniform, but up close, the alternative was definitely a choice. The loose black tee ruffled as he smoothed his bang.Â
âSorry.âÂ
He rubbed his shoulder and kept his eyes low. His hands stuffed into his black cargos as he looked away, not wanting to upset you. Or see the look of resentment on your face.
You could tell he knew he made you uncomfortable, but you didnât know how different he wished things could have been.
Hurt was written all over the face of your childhood best friend, and you never knew Suguru to be upset about anything.Â
You cleared your throat. âGood luck.â
His head drew back like heâd seen a ghost.
His lips parted.
Then he kind of smiled, leaning against the wallâlooking at you for a moment.
You were so grown up and had accomplished so much.
Suguru was fully aware that you hated his guts and was so proud of youâeven if you didnât need him anymore.Â
He reached out to shake your hand. âGood luck, Twin.âÂ
Your heart thumpedâno one had called you that in 4 yearsâsweet and low from honeyed lips.
Suguruâs hand lingered in your air for a second before you gingerly took it.
Soft and warm.
Just like you remembered but strongerâfirmer.
The gloves were off for him, too.
Things were done a bit differently for the final rounds. Instead of holding deliberations for the end of the rounds after everyone had gone, everyone got their votes front and center from five random audience members.
Paddles would fly in the air, displaying the scores to be tallied up and held until the end.
Thank God you could do quick math. Numbers were racking upâbone-chilling talent was on full display.
You were amazed, laughing, shocked. Every set was different from the last.
The crowd fell into a hush when one guy came on stage and laid straight down. Bareback to ground. Then fired off rhythmic jokes that made you laugh at some and ponder the seriousness of others.
Dark humor often has truth in it.Â
Most sets were in a completely different language yet spoken so beautifully that you dug your nails into your palms to keep from crying. Emotion was universal. And you were feeling a lot of them.
Suguru walking onto the stage snapped you out of it as you watched from the other side of it.Â
Though youâd just seen him a few minutes ago, this was a completely different light. Something had shifted.
Nice to meet you My name is Suguru Oh really? So is mine! Itâs nice to meet you too.
Tell me what youâre like, what do you like to do? Lately, Iâm not sure Was hoping for a breakthrough
In a world where masks are sticky and glue Iâm lost in a maze with no clear view Doubt will cling like morning dew Caught in the storm of shifting hues
If you didnât know better, you wouldâve thought Suguru was having a mental breakdown.
Your jaw tightened, clothes fidgeting between your fingers.
It was the most unexpected thing you couldâve imagined. And this was just the beginning of the journey through his paradoxical mind.
His ship was sinking. And he was taking you all down with him.
âŠI wear many faces each one feels new, But none will fit like I want it to Left with a voice that's small and untrue Burying deep I don't know what to do
In this mirror, Iâm searching for clues, But this reflection is oddly askew. You scream through the glass, âStay real and stay true!â But if youâre me, thenâŠwho are you?
You could hear a pin drop.
Suguru stopped breathing.
He couldnât believe that he actually did it. He had never been so vulnerable.
If you thought you knew him and what he was going through before, you were left stunned and corrected.
A few of his scores floated into the air, and though you couldnât see them all, the few you did were perfect 10s.
It wouldâve been hell to go directly after thatâthankfully, you had a few more people before you.Â
Time crept closer and closer to your setânervous sweats and fidgeting fingers kept you company.
So much for keeping a hobby a hobby, you thought, pacing backstage.
This wasnât fun for you anymore; it was always supposed to be fun, easy, natural.
But this was no longer just about you.
It never was.
It was about proving anyone who ever doubted wrong. Â
When the host called your name, you made those 3 minutes on stage feel like your last.
Rain, rain donât go away, Youâre the only one who stays, Cross my heart and hope to die I promise that I will not cry
Build and build and There it goes! All for naught and just for show Hypnotize your guards to grave Leave the trust to fade away
This was your final plea to be heard by the world if you had ever made one.
A letter to those who ever dismissed, ignored, or left you.
Fire and brimstone poured from the pit of your soulâserved up on a plate with the audience in mind but Suguru as the guest of honor.Â
You thought heâd be away in the dressing room or at least within earshot, but no. He stood tall and bright, leaning against the door frame that led out to the hall, backlit by the warm lights that framed his figure, watching.
Listening.
Knowing the poem was partially about him.
You hoped it hurt him as much to hear it as it did for you to write it.
Deep breaths kept your voice steadyâhe wouldnât hear it crack this time as you powered through your trembles. Bold and brash. Unleashing your truth.
He saw it in your eyes and unconsciously did the only thing he knew to support you, the beginning of your connectionâtrust that blossomed into turmoil. The small nod of approval.Â
Years had passed.
Envy had pushed you to avoid him.
He accepted that you no longer saw him as a friend.
Yet he still wanted to show his support.Â
And it pissed you off.
âŠLo and behold the savior's light Here to take another flight Take me by my desperate hand Lead me how you only can Fragile like a gentle rose I will follow where you go.
Shadows whisper of the known What I am. I am alone...
You walked off stage before you could see your final scores.
Whatever would be was now out of your handsâthe relief felt agonizingly sweet.
Your team lead wrapped you in her arms as you silently cried. You didnât know how long the tears had been building up, but the release was like a dam burst.
Crying on your first international trip to Belgium.
Nice.Â
A final intermission was left, and the scores were tallied. You guzzled down some water and took a few breaths before meeting the rest of the contestants. Finally, finally, you and Suguru stood side by side again on stage. Your entire history had built up to this momentâready to declare a winner. Ready to determine whether you finally caught up.
His pinky brushed yours, sending sparks to your belly like that day on his porch.
Head down, you waited for a name to be called.
Any name, every name, would be better thanâ
âSuguru Geto.â
Naturally rolling off their tongue.
Suguru stiffened beside you like he couldnât believe it himself as they motioned for him to come forward. In your mind, everything went quiet. You couldnât feel anything but emptiness in the pit of your stomach. Not even anger.
Before he moved a muscle to claim the spotlight, he turned to you, daring to offer his hand again. But it felt less like a âJob well done!â and more like a pitiful âIâm sorry.â And you had had enough of condolences.Â
You turned away and left the stage in the midst of the raging applause for Suguru. No one else may have caught the cold shoulder, but to Suguru, it felt like he was trapped in ice. He could leave your life forever now for all you cared.
This was your one, final chance to make things even between you two.
But reality was a bitch.
You couldnât get away from him quick enough.
Yes, youâve gotten to travel the country. Yes, you got the opportunity of a lifetime to go overseas just off your hard work alone, but all of that meant nothing if you were only second best.Â
It was redundant.Â
What was even the point in trying? You would never be good enough to stand on your own. Always under his shadow, drowning in his wake.
It wasnât.fucking.fair.
You brushed past your team lead, contestantsâanyone trying to tell you how amazing you did. You couldnât stand being bathed in lies and beelined out the back of the venue.Â
âFuck this.â You choked back tears, breath escaping you as you pushed the door open.
The contrast of sharp, cold air whipped your face, making you realize you didnât grab your jacket, but it was just what you needed to set the gravity of your situation in.Â
You were nothing.Â
You bawled your fists.
And foolish for trying.Â
Hyperventilating.
Look at what you came from. Look at what you get for trying to change that.
Hot, fat tears spilled down your face as you huddled in a corner of the building. You wrapped your arms around your knees, trying to shield the icy winds, but you already felt dead inside. Pathetic and worthless. It was out of your hands to change that.
A voice called after you, belonging to the last person you wanted to see right now. That soft, angelic voice that swooned the world and made your insides boil. Why couldnât he just get it?? Why couldnât he stay the fuck away??
You thought you had hidden yourself well by putting a bit of distance between the exit and the corner you tucked into, but he found you in seconds, tears dried on your face, crouching into your knees.
He stood there gaping, completely overwhelmed by the state of you.
For once, he was out of words.
âWell??â It was hoarse and cracking.Â
âI-Iâmââ
âOh my God, pLEASE fucking save it!â You shook, burying your head into your arms.
It was enough that he got to bask in your pathetic breakdown with front-row seats. He didnât need to pretend he didnât enjoy it.
But Suguru was fed up with your bullshit and came looking to tell you about it. The final straw was leaving his extension of sympathy high and dry as you walked off stage. Giving him the ultimate âfuck youâ in his moment of congratulations.Â
He never understood why you hated himâthe resentment, what happened, what heâd done. But he was about to make you explain yourself.Â
âGet up.â Gentleness left his voice.
He came closer and towered over your petite frame, cornering you so you couldnât run away. âYou think I donât know how much this meant to you?â
When you didnât answer, he crouched down to your level.Â
âHey.âÂ
You buried yourself deeper.Â
âHey.â
âDonât touch me.â You brushed him away, pressing your back into the wall as you stood up, shivering in the wind.
But it felt like you had punched him in the gut.
He had never seen you so bothered before, and the revelation that you were pointing the finger and naming him the culprit made his chest feel tight. It felt worse attempting to bury your heart on your sleeve. But the extent of your scorn was on full display.
After a moment of looking your bitterness in the face, it finally clicked for Suguru.
Why you hated him. Couldn't stand to look at him. Avoided him.
Why you started all of this competitive bullshit in the first place.
The root of it was more painfully obvious to see than the daggers in your eyes. What else could it be?
âYouâre jealous.â
And that set you off.
âHA!â It almost hurt to laugh. âJealous?!â
People could probably hear you inside the venue. But Suguru knew just what to say to get you to talk.Â
âThis whole time, I thought you were upset because I left, butâŠyouâre just jealous.â
You snorted. âYouâve never worked hard a day in your life.â
âWhat? You donât think I earned this?â
âWho knows? Mommy buys you everything.â
âWoah,â he held up a hand and laughed, âIs that what this is about?âÂ
Your cheeks burned hot, but you had egg on your face and had just spilled the beans. But fire still raged in your chest.
âYou could have had anything else. Anything! Anything in the world, but you just had to take this from me!â
âHow was I supposed to know??â he cut you off, âYou stopped talking to me.âÂ
You felt a pang and fell silentâflurries of unread texts, unopened Snaps, and missed calls played in both of your minds.Â
âHow was I supposed to know anything? How was I supposed to have anything without making you feel bad?âÂ
âMe?â You scoffed. âWithout me, youâd probably still be sitting on that dusty ass porch (you loved that porch), watching everyone go and fucking live life.â
âI was like 7.â
â9.â You rubbed the blooming goosebumps on your arms.
âWhatever, you think I owe you or something? You want a âthank youâ?â
His tone made you shift, but you puffed up your chest.
âNo, I donât need a thank you." Your eyes narrowed. âIâm just not that impressed.â
Oh?
He scoffed, backing away with a smirk, arms swinging as he looked away then back at you. âYouâre full of it.â
âYouâre not that talented.â
He cocked his head, raising a brow. You were questioning his talentâclearly emotional and spewing liesâbut it was a shot at his reputation nonetheless.Â
His smirk faltered as he clasped his hands. âYou wanna go?â And then he got closer. Your breath caught as he studied your face, his left arm shooting out to frame you, pinning you into the corner.
The heat radiating off his body should have been a comfort in the frosty air, but fuck, you also felt other things that raced your heart and made you hate yourself.Â
He leaned over you. âHow would you like to eat your words? Fried? Or sautĂ©ed?â
His eyes bore into yours, daring you to buck up or back down. But just because he finally had the balls to challenge you and take up space didn't mean you were intimidated.
He was the same little boy he'd always been.
And you were quick to remind him.
âBite me, Getââ
Instead, he kissed, capturing your lips in a way that shot electricity down your spine and stole the breath and shriek right out of your body.
In an instant, you swore your pupils morphed into hearts. For so long, he's wanted to do thatâkiss your sweet, supple lips that ramble nonsense and shut you upâbridge the gap between your broken friendship to ask for more, to make all your fire, resistance, and anger melt away...so you could come back to him.
Knees weak, you nearly staggered, scrambling for the walls to keep you up, but was saved by his hand cradling your hip to hold you. Keep you. Protect you. Your heart burst.
You pulled away, eyes heavy. Leaving a sliver of space between your lips to see your heated breaths mingling in the chilly air as he rested his forehead against yours. Softly, you cradled his face in your hand, feeling waves of longing swell through your bodyâhis had already burst. Then you slapped him.
âHowâs that for poetry?â And left.Â
extended angel's note: this story took a TOTALLY different turn from what i originally planned (thanks Mac Miller) but omg it's sO much better and kinda fits into all of the sugu angst i have planned (oh how i love to hurt myself so). this story in particular was supposed to be like all smut and no exposition but umâŠthings happen đ
sO, all of the low-angst, âenemiesâ to lovers lives in part 1, with a focus on the resolution in part 2: lovers who give in and chose each other arc while remaining focused on my original goal of making a smut that spotlights and actualizes realistic sex. learning each other, listening, patiently growing, and choosing.
#bluuharem#God is Fair#geto x reader#jujutsu kaisen x reader#jjk x reader#jjk fanfic#jjk poc reader#jjk x y/n#jjk imagines#suguru x you#suguru x y/n#suguru smut#jjk smut#suguru geto x reader#getou suguru x reader#geto x y/n#geto x you#anime fanfic
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I have an ideaaa
how about a Paige x fem!reader wedding/proposal fic or headcanon??
the idea of her draft fit as a wedding outfit omfg đ€
my peace đïž
omg i love this idea!! i did wedding headcanons if thatâs okay!<3
content: fem reader & no physical description of reader or their wedding outfit
ౚৠthe night before, you and paige spend it by cuddling into each other while sitting on the balcony that overlooks the city.
âmy wife, my wife, mine,â she whispers against your neck after every kiss. ânot for another day, babe,â youâve been reminding her since she proposed.
ౚৠit takes her 20 minutes to leave your townhouse that night. lots of goodbye kisses have already happened that it took kk & ice to drag her ass out.
âbye my beautiful gorgeous wife!â paige yells out the window as ice drives away. she doesnât get into the car until you are out of her sight.
ౚৠinstead of reading your vows in front of your wedding guests, the both of you decided to do it before the ceremony. as you walked towards paige, you could see her wavy blonde hair with her front pieces in braids (as always). she was wearing an all white suit. you could tell she was nervous and excited by how much she was fidgeting.
âpaige?â when she turned around her blue eyes already had tears in them. she looked at you in awe and almost fell to her knees. âwe canât cry we both have make up on,â you fan both of your both eyes trying to hold it all in.
she laid her head on yours and looked into your eyes. for a moment it felt like it was only the two of you in that garden. âweâre finally doing it. my wife,â you see a tear fall from her eye as she leans in to kiss you.
ౚৠnow the vows!!!!!! đ„č
paige reached into her pocket and took out a folded piece of paper. you could see her shaking, so you squeezed her hand to remind her itâs just you.
she smiled at you and took a deep breath, âever since i could remember, i was always told, âyouâll know when theyâre the one,â and i never understood that. i never felt complete until i saw you. when our eyes met, i knew after 3 seconds that you were the one. iâm blessed with the pleasure to know someone like you.â she looked up at you and saw you tearing up. âbro if you cry, iâll cry,â she said laughing. âokay okay! no more crying.â
she took another shaky breath, âto be able to love and be loved by you. you are my sunrise and sunset filled with the most beautiful colors. youâre my peace with the world is too loud. your love is my turning page. you are the strongest person i know and i admire to be my best self everyday. i never doubted our love and will always consider myself lucky to love and learn from you. these past four years have been my favorite movie. i promise to love every single detail of you for the rest of my life.â
after you said your vows, paige was walking up to kiss you until you stopped her. ânot until we say i do!â she looked at you with shock but kissed your knuckles on both hands. she leaned her forehead on yours once more. âsee you at the alter,â then watched as you walked back to the venueâs house.
she didnât want to take her eyes off of you. just wanted to stand there and admire you.
ౚৠduring the dance, you reserved chick-fil-a as a surprise for paige. she ran to you and grabbed your face to kiss you all over. her and kk were fighting over who was going to be the first to be served. spoiler alert: you got served first since they were too busy bickering. when you were eating your nuggets, paige noticed you had ranch on the corner of your mouth and kissed it off of you.
ౚৠonce your reception was over and almost all of your wedding guests have left, you and paige danced one last dance. your heels were long gone and paige was very tipsy. she held you so close to her chest that you could hear her heartbeat. you felt the breeze against your skin and closed
your eyes. paige was slowly guiding you in a circle while humming the song.
she kisses your head and said, âmy wife.â
tagging: @urantisocialgay because i know youâve been asking for this (:
#paige bueckers#paige bueckers x reader#paige bueckers headcannons#paige bueckers imagine#paige bueckers x fem!reader#paige bueckers fic#paige bueckers fanfiction#uconn huskies#uconn wbb
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