#sorry for inevitably throwing off your poll results
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xkcd-for-that · 6 months ago
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Of course, factions immediately sprang up in favor of '~*~sTaR tReK iNtO dArKnEsS~*~', 'xX_StAr TrEk InTo DaRkNess_Xx', and 'Star Trek lnto Darkness' (that's a lowercase 'L').
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claudiasjeancregg · 4 years ago
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also, 48 for joshdonna? for the intimacy prompts? <3
48. offering the other your coat
Josh Lyman/Donna Moss (2.1k words) 
posted on ao3 here
engraved upon my heart (in letters deeply worn)
Donna can feel the bitter chill against her skin as she slips out of the house. She presses the phone to her ear, waiting for Josh to pick up.
She wouldn’t usually go outside to talk on the phone- it’s D.C. in February, and she’d rather not catch a cold for no reason. But Noah’s already asleep and Jo has a geometry test tomorrow, so she’s trying not to make too much noise. Not that they’re disturbed very easily- especially not Jo. Once she gets started with something, it’s almost impossible to pull her away from it. Donna and Noah call it “laser focus.” She gets it from Josh, though he claims to have perfected the whole “work life balance” thing. It doesn't surprise Donna in the least- the list of traits the two of them share is a mile long. And having such a good work ethic has always helped her, especially now that she’s in 8th grade.
Damn.
She feels old all of a sudden, wishing Josh would pick up so she has someone to complain to.
The repetitive ringing drones on in her ear for a long moment before he answers and it stops. Donna has to hide her smile at the noises coming from Josh’s end- he sounds out of breath, like he’s on a jog or something. But it’s 9 P.M., and he’s on the campaign trail, so it’s most definitely not that.
“Wait-”
Something, probably the phone, crashes to the ground. She can hear him cursing under his breath. After a moment, he picks it back up.
“Are the kids okay? Are you okay?”
“What?”  She looks around for a place to sit, settling on the front porch step. She can hear him moving around, probably on the bus or in his office. She has no idea where they are today- maybe Maryland? California? She remembers Josh talking about touching base at home states, but she doesn’t have the energy to figure out what exactly he was saying.
“It’s late. You’re usually in bed by now, all cozied up with a book and a little fluffy robe.”
“A robe?” she teases.
“Well, you know,” he amends. “My sweatshirt and a pile of briefing memos.”
She shakes her head fondly before remembering he can’t see her.
“The kids are- I’m- we’re all fine. And it’s 9, Josh. I’m never in bed by now.”
“Okay.”
“Okay.”
He pauses, and all of the movement on his end stops too.
“Hi,” he says.
She can hear his smile, and can’t help but smile back. “Hey.”
Donna huffs out a laugh at the absurdity of it all- they’re married, for God’s sakes, but he can still make her smile like an idiot for no reason. It still shakes her to her core, everytime they say “I love you” or they talk about the kids.
This is her life. Their life. They’ve built a life together, a far cry from the too-long glances and energetic banter of the White House days. They’re calmer, now- older and wiser and steady. But she loves him just as much as she ever has.
He used to be a whirlwind of motion that she couldn’t help but get sucked into, constantly talking and working and creating and never standing still. But somewhere along the line, between the hushed conversations in hospital rooms and the way his hand molded to the small of her back, he became her home. His love is the feeling in her chest when she watches him with the kids, the weight of a hand in hers whenever she has a nightmare about Gaza, the constant support when she talks about a new project she’s working on.
And he’s a jackass sometimes, obviously, but he never does anything to hurt her on purpose. And when he says something that makes her want to slap him, his eyes get wide and he frantically apologizes, begging her not to cry.
One of the things she’s learned since they first started dating is that her tears are his worst nightmare. She asked him why, once. “It feels like my heart is being ripped out of my chest,” he said. She almost stopped breathing. He turned bright red as soon as he said it, but still. They’ve settled into this thing, this domestic life that she never imagined he would want. Or that she would, honestly.
“Donna? You there?”
She snaps back to the present- “Yeah. Sorry. How’s it going? You guys are in Maryland now, right?”
He updates her on how their polls have been looking since they got to the state and she listens intently.
“How are Andy’s approval ratings? You’re right to keep Toby behind the scenes- I bet he’s going crazy.”
Josh relays a story from earlier that day about Toby throwing a fit because Andy refuses to let him write for her. He can barely stop laughing long enough to tell her, but she doesn’t mind.
“I should call her,” she muses.
The two of them grew closer after Gaza- once Andy got over the guilt and the absurd worry that Donna blamed her for the accident, they became fast friends. She’d always admired Andy- the woman had made driving Toby out of his mind into an art form, not to mention how damn good she was at her job. And as soon as they had been tasked with finding possible VPs, Andy was Donna’s first call.
“Yeah, I think she’s a bit tired of all the testosterone here now that you’ve gone.”
He laughs, and Donna can feel the ache in her stomach. She wishes he was here, or that she was there- it’s nice to have a break from work for a while, but she’d grown used to the pace of the campaign trail. There’s so much to do all the time, and so much to learn. Donna knows how to run a campaign, of course, but re-election was nothing like this campaign. This is new, and fun and exciting- and extremely hard. Putting a young, up-and-coming candidate in office is a whole different ball game, and she has a front row seat. She still misses the frantic pace of the White House from time to time, but what she’s doing now is so much more fulfilling. She has the power to change the country- or to give them a President who could, at least.
It’s the kind of job Donna from twenty years ago didn't know existed, and the kind of job Donna from ten years ago wouldn't dream of.
She’s no longer an also-dead- she’ll get her own damn obituary. She’s gotten past all of the struggles and the self-doubt, and now she’s putting one of her best friends in the White House.
Sam Seaborn as President.
The victory is a long time away, she knows- both Toby and Josh would make her go outside, turn around, and spit if they knew she was thinking about it, but she can’t help it. President Sam Seaborn. It’s a bright, shining light at the end of the tunnel. That’s why she’s doing this- for Sam, for her friends, for her country. For anyone and everyone who deserves a President that cares about them- she’s working her hardest to make sure they get him. That’s what makes this all worth it.
That thought reminds her why she called in the first place- she waits for Josh to finish what he’s telling her about Andy’s speech today.
“Have the results come in yet?”
“No, and you know what I was thinking?”
“Josh, I’m not going to talk to the Flenders again.”
“Donna!”
She can picture him vividly- pacing around his office, the same pouting look on his face that he always gets when he whines.
“I’m not your assistant anymore, Josh. I’m your wife- and your co-campaign manager. Get someone else to do your illegal activities.”
She expects him to complain some more, but instead his voice grows soft.
“I can’t,” he says.
She lets out a breathy laugh, trying to hide her reaction at the tone of his voice.
“Josh, I’m serious. I have enough work to do.”
Her stomach is on a roller coaster ride as his voice fills her ear. She’s taken back to Inauguration Day, years ago- sitting on his lap as they both tried to keep the inevitable from happening. He had whispered in her ear the entire cab ride from her apartment, hands resting on her waist in a manner that wasn’t remotely professional. The way his touch had felt that night- and later, when they danced together- had filled her thoughts for weeks after.
“No, I mean-” he laughs sheepishly and she can picture exactly how he looks on the other side of the phone.
“No one’s here to ask. Or, I’m not there to ask them, I guess.”
Donna’s eyebrows knit together.
“What do you-”
“Turn around.”
He interrupts her, the big smile on his face easy to hear.
She does, still confused, and drops the phone. Josh is leaning against the porch column, exactly how she had pictured him. Donna stands there for a minute, dumbstruck. Then she races over to him, enveloping him in a hug.
God, she’s missed this- the way his body instantly reacts to hers, the way he can’t seem to hold her tight enough. She can’t believe he just showed up here. She pulls out from the hug and he groans, like a five year old who just got his toy taken away. She would know- that’s exactly what Noah looked like whenever that happened to him.
“Joshua!!”
His pout turns into a wide-eyed expression immediately.
“How are you mad at me for this?” Josh asks incredulously, ducking to avoid the punch on the arm he knows is coming his way.
“It’s the first day of the primaries! You shouldn’t be here, you should be having a panic attack in your office over the Hartsfield’s Landing results!”
He reaches his hands out for her waist.
“I wanted to have a panic attack here.”
She gives into his touch, wrapping herself in Josh’s arms like a blanket.
“Okay,” she smiles.
He does not. “Jesus, Donna, you’re freezing!”
He rubs his hands up and down her arms, like he thinks he can warm her entire body up himself. He probably does- knowing Josh, it’s not out of the realm of possibility. She places her hands on his like an anchor, calming him.
“I’m fine!”
The goosebumps on her arms betray her, though, and Josh barely hesitates before whipping off his coat and handing it to her.
“Thank you,” she whispers as he wraps it around her tightly. It still catches her by surprise, sometimes. He knows her, inside and out- like the map of her heart was given to him long ago, and he’s memorized in by now.. He can always see right through her lies or false reassurances, like no one else can. Somehow, he always knows what she needs- even when she’s too stubborn to ask.
He buries his head in the nape of her neck, his arms secure around her waist. She laughs at how affectionate he’s being- before they started dating, she would have never guessed how much he loves to touch her. Gently touching her knee on the bus, squeezing her hand as they walk, holding her in his arms every night- he always wants to know she’s there, that she’s still with him. It’s one of her favorite things about him.
Donna leans into his arms and takes a deep breath, savoring the cold air. She’s always loved this time of year. It always used to remind her of growing up, of playing in the snow with her older sister while their parents watched in the back. But now it reminds her of winter at the White House, too- of thoughtful gifts and failed vacations and Josh, and Josh, and Josh.
She had always been with him when it was coldest. Somehow, it felt right that he was standing next to her now.
Donna turns around, framing Josh’s face with her cold hands. She presses her lips to his for a moment. It’s been almost 15 years of moments like this, and she isn’t tired of it. She’s not tired of him, of kissing him and talking to him and waking up next to him every single morning. And she never would.
“Thank you,” she whispers against his lips. She walks to the front door, pulling his coat tighter around her.
“At least this time I didn't have to steal your coat,” she teases.
Josh rolls his eyes, but doesn’t move.
“You didn't steal it,” he says.
She stares at him. He rubs his head awkwardly.
“I, uh- I left it there on purpose. Your coat sucked.”
She can feel her eyes growing wet.
“Donna, please don't-”
“Joshua!!”
She dabs at her eyes, trying not to cry. It isn’t the nicest thing he has ever done for her, not even close. And it was almost twenty years ago, but still. She takes a deep breath and grabs his hand, pulling him inside.
“Come on. Hartsfield votes in a few minutes.”
As they walk towards the house, hand in hand, it starts to snow.
this took a million years and i’m so sorry. this turned into something WAY beyond what i meant it to be lol- but i’m OBSESSED with this universe. and you BET i have ideas for all the other characters. 
so basically- sam is running for president, josh and donna are co-campaign managers bc one of them works in DC and stays with the kids, and then the other one comes back from the campaign trail and they switch off. this takes place on the first night of the primaries- so it’s like “hartsfield’s landing” but 18-ish years later. 
andy wyatt is the VP candidate!! is this extremely random? yes! but i love her to pieces SO. 
what else... cj and toby both work with them on this campaign. there may or may not be some cj/toby in this- or some ot3, i need advice!!! 
oh and before josh decided to run sam’s campaign, he was retired and was living the good life as a stay at home dad. jo and noah (YES FOR JOANIE AND JOSH’S DAD, LET ME HAVE MY ANGST) are 13 and 10, respectively. donna was working somewhere very important- i think she was working as a senator’s COS, then she moved to a policy center that focuses on women’s rights and outreach in foreign countries. 
title from “fair” by the amazing devil: this song is everything good in the universe and i’m obsessed with it. PLEASE everyone- go listen to it and come back and TELL ME it doesn’t give you soft josh/donna feelings. and just... feelings in general.
ANYWAY hope you enjoyed!!! i’m kind of incapable of writing good fluff but i really really really hope this was a good choice for this prompt- it felt fitting with the reunion and all :DDD 
thank you for the prompt!!
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