#very polite and looks up to those of authority
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Hi Legacy, thank you for your comment and for your compliment about my writing. Unfortunately, Tumblr wouldnât let me leave this response to your comment under the fic, so I am having to add it onto your reblog. Something I really, genuinely, did not want to have to do.
I hear what you are saying, and am in full agreement with you - tags play a vital role in reader protection, and thereâs nothing more frustrating (and in some cases dangerous) than people misusing them.
However, a few words now in my own defence.
I am not new here. I have been writing and posting Silco fics since Arcane first aired back in 2021. It seems more likely in this case that you are new if not to the Arcane fandom then to my blog/writing specifically - so allow me to provide a bit of context which may help, because I donât believe this case is as cut-and-dry as you believe it to be. I began posting my multi-chapter Silco x Reader fic Drink With Me in January 2022, and updated regularly until its completion in July of that same year. I was extremely lucky in that my story gained a lot of traction and interaction within the fandom throughout that time. People became extremely invested in the Reader character, and would ask me all sorts of questions about her. Thatâs how Astrid was born. She became a point of reference outside the fic for those who wanted someone to visualise, whilst the fic itself remained strictly a Reader Insert. In the few years since this story wrapped up, my followers have remained invested in the âDrink With Meâ universe (again, Iâm incredibly lucky and thankful for this), and to this day I receive tons of requests for bonus content set within this universe that I try to fulfil whenever I can. Despite these ficlets being connected to a main multi-chapter fic, most of them can easily be read as a standalone and do not require the context or any prior knowledge of the main fic to make sense. Additionally, as I did with the main fic, they are always written in 2nd person, the character is never referred to by name, and I never use any physical descriptors beyond anatomical ones during smut. If you were to take away any and all tags and look purely at the text alone, it reads as a traditional reader insert, which is why I tag it as such. I include the âAstridâ and âOCâ tags for those people who are familiar with the DWM fic and universe and who specifically follow me for this reason, so that they know in their minds that the ficlet relates to the world/timeline of Drink With Me in some way shape or form. I think the point Iâm trying to make is that those who are familiar with me and my work will see the âAstrid/OCâ tag and go âAh cool itâs this universeâ. Whereas for everyone else I add the âcan be read as gen!reader insertâ note at the top so that they can go âAh cool, let me just ignore that character tag thenâ and happily read it as a general reader insert fic perfectly fine. I hope that makes a bit more sense as to why I tag this way, why Iâve always tagged this way, and why I will continue to tag this way for my Drink With Me adjacent works. If I ever were to write something in 1st or 3rd person or that described the MC in a very specific way, then I would of course not tag that as a reader fic.
Now, so long as weâre here discussing fandom etiquette, Iâd like to politely point out that adding your grievance onto the reblog of a specific fic is not a âgentle reminderâ - itâs a full-frontal attack on the author who wrote that fic. It would have been far better for you to create your own, separate post addressing the fandom as a whole, or to send me a quiet, private comment/DM on the side.
As Iâve already said, I empathise with your point of view, and I hope you are able to empathise with mine. If the way I choose to tag my work bothers you, then please feel free to block my account so that I donât show up whilst you are searching for content. At the end of the day we are all individual humans - you cannot expect everyone to interpret/measure/categorise everything in the same way you would, and itâs imperative to take some measure of responsibility for cultivating your own online space, instead of relying on others to do it for you.
What if Astrid find a pic of young Silco by accident hehhehehehhehehehehhe
Snapshot
A Drink With Me ficlet
870 words || Established relationship || Silco x Astrid (but can be read as gen f!reader) || SFW but suggestive || MDNI
âOh my Gods.â
âWhat?â
âOh. My Gods.â
Time has stripped the photograph between your fingers of its glossy sheen and has left the edges blunt and frayed, but you would recognise those features anywhere; no less sharp nor striking through the faded sepia.
âThis is you.â
It had slipped from between two ledgers as youâd perused Silcoâs bookshelves â an activity more to entertain your idle hands than a genuine search for reading material. The image itself is simple and candid: A young man, seemingly oblivious to the fact his portrait is being taken, sat at a familiar bar, with eyes downcast toward a spread of papers.
That same man looks up at you now from a very similar spread of papers. âWhat is?â
âThis.â You drift over to his desk and perch on its edge, all the while unable to tear your gaze from the photo in your hands. The pitch dark hair swept back into a low bun. The familiar strays â the same ones that even now will always be the first to escape any styling under the combing of agitated fingers â falling forward into his face, only far longer and thicker than youâre used to. His skin, unblemished and smooth, save for the chronic furrow between his brows â etched there long before time and tragedy ravaged the rest.
Silco hums absently; an indication that he acknowledges your discovery but finds little interest in it. You can imagine the man in the photograph making the exact same noise, were someone to distract him from his paperwork for a reason he deemed benign. You flip the photo over. No date.
âHow old are you here?â
Silco exhales through his nose, places his pen down with a pointed clack, and extends his hand wordlessly toward you.
âHah! Do you think Iâm wet behind the ears?â you hold the photograph out of his reach, âYou can tell just fine from over there thank you very much.â
He cuts you a scathing glance, before leaning forward in his chair with a foreboding creak to peer more closely at the image. His scarred lips purse slightly in thought.
âMidâlate twenties. I canât say for certain.â
âYou were hot.â
âWere?â
âWere and are,â you coo, reclining backwards over the desk into his space, one elbow pitched on his paperwork to hold your weight whilst you flap the photograph in front of his face, âCan I keep this?â
âFor what reason?â
âDirty ones.â
âHardly necessary,â Silco says, the very corner of his mouth creasing upwards as he catches your wrist to halt your photo-flapping, âYou have access to the real thing.â
âTrue, true, and you can be sure Iâll continue taking advantage of that.â You grin, shoving your captured, photo-wielding arm a little closer to him in emphasis, âBut right now Iâm talking about some alone time with this guy.â
Silco scoffs under his breath and releases your wrist. You twist onto your front, weight propped on both elbows as you admire the photograph in your grip. You trace a finger down the slender throat of the man in the photo, over the generous wedge of chest exposed by his open crimson collar.
âDâyou think heâd notice me? If I came into that bar?â
âOh Iâm certain he would.â
âYeah?â You lift your gaze from the man in the photo to the one before you â as equally breathtaking. More so. You catch your lower lip between your teeth. âWhat line would he use?â
Silco hums, low and thoughtful, leaning forward in his chair, closing in on your space. He picks up his abandoned pen, briefly twirling the implement until itâs poised between his elegant fingers like a cigarette. Nib safely facing his own palm.
âAfter downing the dregs of his drink for courage... he would have approached you.â
With sensual tenderness, he brushes the barrel of his pen along your cheek, warmed metal against warmer skin. Catching at the curve of your jawline, and tracing over your pulse in a way that makes it fumble a beat.
âCast his gaze over each of your pretty, pretty features. One by one,â he murmurs, slowly drawing the end of the pen down your jugular, down the slope of your collar bone, to leisurely trail through the cut of your cleavage. The corner of your mouth hooks up. The warmth low in your belly coils a little tighter.
âHe would have leaned in close,â Silco whispers, demonstrating just so, âClose enough that youâd almost taste the whiskey on his breath.â
Blunt metal drags a purposeful line up your throat, and your lips part softly as he tilts your face toward his with the barrel of his pen flat and firm beneath your chin.
âAnd asked you â very nicely â to stop leaning on his paperwork.â
You press your tongue against the inside of your cheek while Silcoâs dual eyes sizzle with smug mirth. Itâd be unthinkable, really â to forfeit either one for the sake of a matching pair.
You straighten and push off his desk, hips swaying as you saunter over to the bedroom with the photograph in hand.
âWell,â you say, pausing in the threshold and turning to him with a smirk, âIf you need us, you know where weâll be.â
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Impertinence
Summary: Five times Pippin call Aragorn Strider in places he shouldn't, and the one time he didn't. With an epilogue and bonus snippet because I couldn't leave it where it ended. This is entirely unbeta'd. All mistakes are mine and mine alone.
A/N: Holy shit. This was kind of a beast to write. I also wrote it mostly while on shift, so I'm really hoping I caught all my mistakes, and it's mostly decent. I am not sure how happy with this I am, but I think it is as good as I am going to get it. If I keep agonizing over it, I'll never sleep today. So, up it goes. Also, I am too lazy to make this into multiple chapters right now. Maybe one day I will, but it is not this day. For now, there are headers at the start of each section
This whole thing came about because I mentioned to someone that I want Fourth Age content because I wanted to see Pippin being a little shit in court, and I was told emphatically that Pippin would clearly grow up and behave himself. I think that's insane. Pippin is a socially skilled class clown with a high level of intelligence. He also has zero regard for authority figures. So I wrote a whole fic about how much of a dork Pippin is and how Aragorn adores that dork - even if he a giant pain in his ass.
TW: MAJOR CHARACTER DEATH, angst, sadness, heartbreak, mentions of alcohol
WC: 7562 words (This was never intended to be this long, y'all.)
Making An Entrance
âStrider!â The shout cut through the den of the courtyard of the Citadel. King Elessar sighed fondly and turned to find Pippin jogging towards him in his road dirtied court attire. In the past two years Aragorn had learned one thing: every time the young hobbit came back to court, he would call the King by his old moniker in public at least once. Usually more. As with each time, everyone in the vicinity turned to search for the source of the disrespect to their monarch.
âThrain Took,â Aragorn called in greeting. At the use of his title, Pippinâs ears went pink, and Aragorn laughed at the sight of the very moment the young hobbit realized his mistake. To the utter shock of any in the area who did know of Pippin or the story of the name Strider, including the Harad emissaries who had come to discuss a new trade agreement, Aragorn knelt to welcome his friend with a warm embrace. âHow are you my dear friend? How was your journey?â
âAch, I am as well as ever! The road was long, but certainly shorter than my first journey here.â Pippin was about to launch into a long winded tale of the trip and all those he and Merry saw along the way, as well as all the doings of The Shire. Aragorn could see it in the hobbitâs eyes. Just before he could open his mouth, Aragorn interjected, âAnd I cannot wait to hear all you wish to share. I am certain we have much to discuss politically and personally, but I do not wish to keep you from getting a bite and a bath, so go freshen yourself. Then come to my quarters for dinner.â
Pippin glanced over Aragornâs shoulder and saw the assembled group of men waiting on his liege to return, and then he looked back to Aragorn. His lips pressed into a thin line. The group of Harad dignitaries looked utterly aghast at his apparent impudence. Aragorn shrugged nearly imperceptibly and rolled his eyes, at which Pippinâs face lit up anew. âAs you wish, Strider.â Aragorn barked out a startled laugh and shook his head.Â
âFool of a Took,â he murmured and rose to return to the Harad behind him. âGentlemen, where were we?â
âYou accept such disrespect from a creature so small? Was that a child?â One of the men asked while his eyes followed the retreating form of Pippin.
âThat,â Aragorn said in a voice still light with laughter while watching Pippin disappear inside the Citadel, âWas a hobbit of more renown and valor than you could imagine. His name is Peregrin Took. He is the Thrain of the Shire, and a Knight of the Citadel. He was also one of the nine of the Fellowship of the Ring. He, the others of that party, and the Thrainâs kin are the only people from whom I accept that name. So no, my lord, I suffer no disrespect, nor was that a child.â The laughter in Aragornâs voice died, and he turned back to the group before him. âI would advise you to not disrespect hobbits in this court - particularly those who were a part of the Fellowship. They are much beloved by myself, my household, and this land.â The three assembled emissaries took a collective half step back. Looking at each of the three in turn, Aragorn found his humor and patience was spent. Silent judgment and covert murmurs about his patience with Pippin he could handle, but the incredulity in this manâs voice with no knowledge of what he spoke, of who he spoke, was not something Aragorn could abide. âI believe we are done with negotiations for today.â He broke off for the briefest of moments and pushed aside the temptation to put these three men, the truly impudent ones in this situation, in their place in favor of remaining diplomatic. âLet us resume tomorrow for I desire to inquire after Thrain Tookâs companion, Meriadoc, and hear the news of a region of my land from which I receive very little.âÂ
âMy lord,â they said in unison.Â
Aragorn took his leave. As he turned, he caught their shared look of disbelief. âStrider?â he heard one ask. âHobbits?â another asked. âStrange land and a strange people,â the final man declared. Aragorn chuckled. Once again, he was going to have to have a word with Pippin. No matter how much more he loathed the Haradsâ words, Pippin had to watch around whom he spoke in such a manner. Even if Aragorn wished it was not so.
However, later that evening as Aragorn entered the sitting room of the Royal Apartments, the earnest look of joy Aragorn saw in Pippinâs eyes when he exclaimed the name - the one given to him by an innkeeper that Aragorn once loathed - stayed his tongue. With a sigh of relief, the High King of the Reunited Kingdom lifted the winged crown from his head and placed it upon the black velvet cushion on a side table that was as near to the door as possible without blocking it. Then he did away with the heavy blue velvet cloak adorned with the crest of the House of Telcontar selected by his attendants specifically for his meeting with the Harad dignitaries. âStrider indeed, my friend,â Aragorn said with a fond chuckle. âYou truly will never let that name remain in the past, will you?â
âWhy ever would I?â Pippin asked. His brows furrowed in earnest confusion. âIt is the name I first knew you by, and someone has to keep you grounded and your head from flying away with those wings you wear.âÂ
Aragorn laughed. It started as a choked back sound of surprise and devolved into a truly uproarious, booming laugh. So few dared to speak to him in such a manner that it was refreshing to hear such cheek. âVerily, and I suppose one so close to the ground would be just the person to do so?â
âPrecisely! I am glad you understand!â Pippin beamed up Aragorn with mirth and mischief dancing in his eyes that spelled nothing but trouble. The Ranger of the North could not find it within himself to fret over it.Â
Of Hobbits and Their Food
âStrider! Do not be absurd!â Pippin cried with his hands thrown up in exasperation. Aragorn resisted the urge to let his head fall to the wooden table before him. The assembled council looked in utter disbelief at the impudent hobbit in their midst. The annual meeting discussing each regionâs harvest dragged on well past lunch and was showing no signs of stopping - despite the originally listed eleven o'clock end time for the meeting. Several regionsâ summers had been unusually dry, and The Shireâs harvest outperformed all others. As a solution, one of Aragornâs advisors proposed requisitioning a small portion of its grains and preservable legumes to help offset the dearth from the other areas of Gondor. Pippin was displeased with the notion, to say the least, and turned that displeasure to Aragorn. The King sat with his fingers steepled on the table. It was logical, but many hobbits viewed âBig Folksâ with intense weariness. Declaring a portion of their harvest the property of the crown would only validate that weariness and breed resentment in a fledgling political relationship. The crown was meant to protect that vulnerable region, not pilfer from them. Yet, his other territories were in a precarious position with meager stores to last the winter.
Of all the times and days to use the old nickname, this was the least ideal. Years with poor harvests led to contentious, and frequently panicked, fall assemblies of regional Lords. This assembly included many from outlying communities who did frequently make it to court. Protesting a proposal was one thing. An outburst that - given their ignorance to the background of the familiar title - would appear to these Lords as impudence was another. Impudence they would perceive as tolerated by their King, which they would likely take to mean their King lacked control of his troops and court. Aragorn could feel every eye in the room trained on him, awaiting a response. Awaiting his rebuke to the comment.Â
âNothing has been decided Thrain Took,â Aragorn responded coldly. The emphasis he placed on Pippinâs title drew smirks from several Lords. Pippin did not flinch.Â
The ever genial hobbits looked back at his friend with narrowed eyes. An unmeasured emotional outburst may have drawn the name from Pippin, but he showed no signs of being cowed that easily. âMy apologies, Lord,â Pippin said bitterly. Aragorn suppressed a sigh of defeat and smile simultaneously. Â
âState your case for reserving your resources. It is only right we hear your rebuttal after hearing the argument for requisitioning some of your bounty.â Aragornâs tone took a more neutral tone. Arguments could remain behind closed doors - in places where the defiant nature of his friend would not raise eyebrows. Now was the time to draw an already overlong meeting to a close without further incident, so Aragorn could rein in his frustration for the time being.Â
Pippin spoke eloquently of the need to keep The Shireâs resources within and not dispersing them, his tone turning to a dispassionate recitation of facts and history. He outlined the way they often support outlying communities like Bree and the general distrust nearly all the âshire folk feltâ of any situation where resources were taken in such a manner following Sarumanâs abuse and subjugation. It was a persuasive case that Pippin would not have possessed the maturity to articulate five years ago when Aragorn met him in the Prancing Pony or four years ago when the hobbit first rode back to his home. The spirit and fierce protectiveness of his kin was the same, but the ability to debate over argue was a new development that Aragorn felt privileged to have witnessed. The inability to relinquish the old moniker of Strider in public seemed an enduring habit, however.Â
Lunch was sent for as soon as the King left the meeting hall. Pippin sat before him with defiance radiating off him in waves. The look in his eyes was so similar to that which Aragorn saw in Rivendell when Elrond attempted to send Merry and Pippin back to the shire instead of with the Fellowship that it nearly made him laugh at the old memory. Almost. âPeregrin Took,â Aragorn started, âWe have had this conversation before.â
âYes, and I have told you before that I am not likely to ever truly change. I may be older, and I may have fancy titles, but I am still no more than a hobbit from the Shire.â
âIs that so? Are you not a knight of the citadel and a member of this court? The designated ambassador from your land and representative of your people?â Aragorn asked, voice stern and lacking any of the humor with which he typically spoke to his friend. Even in their most heated political debates and spirited debate over old history, neither were prone to harsh tones.Â
âAye, I may be, but I am still simple folk. Unschooled in court and prone to gaffs.â Pippinâs protest held no water, and he knew it. Five years of serving in the court as Thrain of the Shire left him well schooled in court affairs - even if he traded on his humble, rural appearance and accent frequently in court dealings. Â
âYou know it causes a stir throughout the whole of the court each time you do that?â Aragorn asked sharply. âIt reflects on how I manage my advisors and troops. I know things change slowly in The Shire, if they change at all, but are you so incapable of change yourself? Can you do as your King and liege lord commands in this, if you wonât do it for your friend?â
Pippin visibly deflated as Aragorn spoke. His shoulders drooped and his eyes fell to the cluttered desk before him. âAye, Strider. That I can do. So long as I can still call you as I ever think of you out of earshot of those who fuss about such odd things.â Aragorn softened then. As I ever think of you. The simple statement drew a lopsided smile to his face that was reminiscent of the first night he met Pippin in Bree, the one that played across his face each time the four hobbits impressed him with their boldness in the face of fear and peril and each time they showed their heart and wisdom along their long journey. âDo you still see old Strider in me? You did once promise to ground me in that version of myself, did you not?â
âThat I did, and that I do. You may wear fancy clothes and bathe regularly now, so your old rascally look is gone, but that does not mean you are not the rascal I first met. How many times do I have to tell you this?â
âI dare say it will be many times yet in the years we spend together. I find less and less of the Ranger in myself each day I spend in these stone halls.â âDo you not sneak out anymore? Slip past your guards and flee to the woods?â Pippin asked.
âNot in many months. I have been tied to this desk long into the night, and when I am not I am with the little ones. It also seems that many people who have no right to an opinion on the matter feel rather strongly that I ought not to ever be anywhere with a guard.â
âWould it please my lord to escape this evening then?â
âDid we not just say that we need not use titles away from listening ears?â Aragorn inquired through a laugh.
âThat we did, but I am still an ass and a Fool of a Took after these many years. I shall do as I please behind closed doors and do as you please beyond them,â Pippin answered simply and grinned.
âI suppose I can abide that,â Aragorn replied and fell silent for a moment. âI do believe an escape into the woods sounds like a wonderful idea - plus none can protest that I will be unprotected with a Knight of Gondor at my side.âÂ
âExcellent! Then let's settle the matter of the Shireâs crops, so we have no work to haggle over while we are beneath the starsâŠStrider.â
Feasts are for celebrating
It was the Midsummerâs Feast, and all the remaining members of The Fellowship, their spouses, Ăomer, LothĂriel, Ăowyn, and Faramir sat at the head table. A few notable dignitaries from Aglarond and Legolasâs kin in Ithilien had also been designated seats of honor with the tightly knit group of nobility. Eight years into the Fourth Age left the lands prosperous and healing. Areas that had long since not seen inhabitants were being rebuilt. Maps were being redrawn with each passing year because they lacked new settlements. That was a struggle all were thrilled to have.Â
Eight years of retelling stories, however, meant they only still possessed roots in the truth. With each new recitation details were exaggerated anew. Drama was added. Some events were simply fabricated from nowhere. Some were far guiltier of these transgressions than others. Pippin was fairly notorious throughout the Reunited Realm for embellishments - especially when the wine and ale flowed freely as it did at feasts. As it was at this Midsummerâs Feast. âStrider! Strider!â Pippin called from halfway down the table. The guests of honor from abroad, who were seated next to him, looked gaped at the hobbit who had shared many fascinating tales that evening. âI was rather indisposed with dancing and singing, and you were the only one with Frood at the time in the Prancing Pony. Could you tell us the story of what you saw - or didnât see, for that matter - in the tavern when he disappeared? These lovely gentlemen from Aglarond have not heard that story yet, seeing as we had not yet met Gimli!âÂ
Each person well acquainted with Pippin, and his propensity to forget proper etiquette, looked around the table and then to Aragorn. Every feast it happened eventually, no matter how many times Pippin was lectured, and each time his friends reacted the same. Aragorn was beginning to wonder if Pippin acted as he did simply to get a rise out of those around him. Someone has to keep you grounded and your head from flying away with those wings you wear echoed in Aragornâs mind as he watched the familiar sight of the friends he called family react anew to Pippinâs antics. Faramir grumbled something incoherent into his glass of wine, for which Ăowyn promptly kicked his shin. Ăomer snorted out a rather undignified choked laugh. LothĂriel glared at him. Merry groaned into his hands to muffle the sound. Legolas pressed his lips into a thin line to hide a smile. Sam shook his head in dismay. Rosie giggled into her napkin. Gimli had no such compunctions and chuckled rather loudly. Diamond sighed and looked apologetically at Arwen. Arwen visibly fought back laughter. Aragorn, donning the Winged Crown and Star of Elendil, pinched the bridge of his nose, sighed, and proceeded to give a full recount of the events in the Prancing Pony the first night he met the hobbits. That retelling quickly led to several more tales shared - and debated. Tales of travels and battles, and all the embarrassing mishaps and pranks along the way. The formality of the night quickly devolved, and strict court manners gradually faded from each of the friends.Â
After a few more glasses of wine and ale, Pippin was far from the only one at the table who had their fun at the expense of the King sitting at the head of the table. Merry recounted the time Aragorn âmercilessly taunted me while I was ailing in the Houses of Healing! I had just stabbed the Witch King himself, if youâll believe it, and here was my friend telling me I had lost gear that was sitting by the bed the whole time!â Gimli and Legolas shared many tales of their time as âThe Three Huntersâ. The one that earned Gimli the most laughter was the abject horror of being awoken well before dawn only for Aragorn to lay himself flat on the ground for ânearly a whole age of menâ to declare many horses were nearbyâŠonly for Legolas to be able to see them on the horizon and correctly count them. Ăomer was all too happy to chime in that Legolas had been only three riders off on his count, before adding his own note on how he nearly killed all three of them on sight. He then apologized to Merry and Pippin, for easily the hundredth time, for almost inadvertently killing them while killing the band of orcs who had captured them.Â
By the end of the night, King Elessar doffed his ceremonial headwear and pulled out his pipe. Once he lit it, he tossed a bag of pipeweed to Pippin with a grin and a nod. The court gaped at the King who had turned into a Ranger before their eyes, though many who had seen this mood take their Lord before just chuckled. Aragorn looked around and grinned. They could gape and murmur, for this night was a celebration of all that had been hard won, and the uncouth and unendingly frustrating hobbit gesturing wildly while telling all there was to know of the Battle of Isengard and the Final March of the Ents won much of their bounty back for them. Tonight needed no lecture.Â
Joyous News
Nearly silent feet padded down the hallway outside Aragornâs office. Had Aragorn not spent several decades around hobbits, and a decade listening for that sound in his own palace, he never would have heard it. Pippin had been in Minas Tirith for only two days, and mischief was already afoot apparently. âStri-â Pippin started and skidded to a halt, and his jaw snapped shut. âMy Lord,â he began again and then addressed the Captain- General standing before Aragornâs desk. âMy sincerest apologies to you both,â he mumbled. Glee still danced in the hobbitâs eyes despite the faint hue of pink on his cheeks. âI will come back later. I did not mean to interrupt.âÂ
âPeregrin,â the officer said and gestured him into the office, âjoin us. There is clearly news to be shared. Do not let me keep you from it.â
âSire, please. I mean no offense, but this is news I need to tell Str- King Elessar alone.â Pippin caught himself midway through the old nickname. When he did, he looked up at Aragorn rather abashedly - the pink dusting to his cheeks darkening. Rarely did Pippin truly feel shame for breaking proper court etiquette, but breaking rank in front of his superior military officers was one of few things for which he felt ashamed, however. His place within the army was more ceremonial than anything else at this point, but he drilled each time he came to court and practiced with any those he could at home. It was a matter of pride that he maintained his skills. The practice of going through his drills kept the memory of Boromir alive, and Pippin meant to honor his promise to Denethor to serve Gondor until his dying breath in repayment of his debt for Boromirâs death.
Aragorn sighed and rose from his seat. He was not escaping the back and forth of deference that was brewing between these two. Pippin had already derailed the meeting and taken the focus off the report of Southrond raiding parties harrying several outlying communities. âCaptain-General, if you would please excuse us for the briefest of moments. Clearly something urgent of a personal nature has come up, but I will return shortly.â Aragornâs voice was tight, but he motioned towards the side door that led to a private side room off the office. Pippin shuffled in behind Aragorn. The embarrassment at his multiple slips of the tongue were gone from Pippinâs face when Aragorn turned to face him. All that remained was a grin that stretched from ear to ear. âWhat on all of Arda is going on? And did no page or guard inform you I was in a meeting?â Aragorn asked.
âWell, as for pages and guardsâŠno, but I did not really give them a chance to stop me either, for all my excitement.â âThen out with it, man!â Aragorn laughed, shaking his head with disbelief and amusement alike. His aggravation was quickly waning in the face of Pippinâs delight.
âIâm going to be a father! Diamond is pregnant!â Pippin exclaimed.Â
The Captain-General standing on the other side of the thin wall with his urgent report no longer held even a fraction of his importance as he had moments before. Aragorn dropped to his knees to embrace Pippin. Aragornâs lingering annoyance at the interruption and Pippinâs continued struggle to keep the name Strider behind closed doors was forgotten. âWell, that is a worthy reason to interrupt a meeting - and a reason to celebrate!â
âI would say so! Though, had I known you were otherwise engaged, I would have at least waited in the hall. Itâs not as though the bairn is going anywhere just yet.â
âNo, indeed, but I will gladly be interrupted for joyous news, my good hobbit.â Aragorn looked to the door and then back to Pippin. âI have to hear this last report, but go find Arwen and Diamond. I think we are all done working for the day. It is time to celebrate a new generation of Tooks.â As Pippin turned to leave, Aragorn added, âBut Pippin, you have to let the staff stop you next time even if I welcome interruptions for good news - and please, after eight years, stop calling me Strider while we are working.â
âAs you wish, Strider!â Pippin called halfway out the door. Aragorn groaned and shook his head, gesturing for the Captain-General to take the seat across from the desk.
âDo not ask, for I have neither the time nor the energy to explain,â Aragorn said in answer to the inquisitive look the man gave him.
Infrastructure of the Fourth Age
âIt will never work, Strider,â Pippin interrupted in the middle of Aragornâs explanation of his plan to dig new wells in the lower levels and outlying communities surrounding Minas Tirith as the cityâs population outgrew the confines of its walls - and the limits of their water supply. Most of the assembled advisors, craftsmen, and lords present were well used to the behavior of the Thrain of the Shire. Several were not, and looked wide eyed between the King and his Knight. Aragorn looked at the ceiling as though he expected to find an answer to the riddle of Pippinâs behavior there. There was none. Strictly speaking, he was not even needed or invited to this meeting, but he had a habit of poking his head into court sessions that were not pertinent to his duties or position.Â
âThrain Took. Please. I welcome your thoughts and opinions, but I cannot abide your interruptions or use of familiar names during council meetings. We have discussed this at length,â Aragorn said sternly once he looked back at the hobbit and after a long sigh.
âMy apologies, your majesty, but I do not beg your pardon. You cannot hold this old hobbit at fault. I simply forget myself in my advanced age,â Pippin said. The room stilled. Aragorn laughed despite himself. At one point, he hoped and expected Pippin to mellow as he aged, but the opposite proved to be the case. Each year the hobbit became bolder, but he was savvier about it. There were few times, however, where he sounded much like his younger self.Â
âI have heard that excuse before from an old hobbit in Rivendell who blamed senility for gaffs. I did not believe him then, just as I do not believe you now,â Aragorn said and smirked.
âYou may choose to believe me or not as you wish,â Pippin said with a shrug, âbut that does not change the fact that I think this plan is entirely foolish and ill conceived - and I agreed to march on the Black Gates with you. And that was a plan with near certainty of death and small chance of success. This, I would wager, has no chance of success.â A few of the younger people in attendance gasped. Most of the older council members laughed under their breath. Pippin matched Aragornâs smirk and did not flinch. This was the level of pointed discussion they reserved for Aragornâs study and had over a bottle of wine. However, Aragorn had not shared this plan with Pippin - as it truly was not a plan that impacted the hobbit in any fashion, nor did it seem a plan that would interest him. Apparently, he should have.
âAnd do you have another suggestion then, Thrain Took?â
âAs a matter of fact, yes,â Pippin declared in a smug tone with a grin to match. âWe just had to manage the exact same issue in Hobbiton - granted we lack the many levels and such owing to most hobbits not even handling homes with second stories well, let alone a city of multiple levels with buildings of even more levels - but good olâ Merry and some of Legolasâ elves came up with a brilliant way to reroute some of the water from the Brandywine to make new distributaries! I think we may need to do the same here.â
âAnd why would wells not work as they always have?â Aragorn challenged, but his words held no heat, nor did he ask unkindly. There was an elegance to the idea Pippin was proposing, and Aragorn was keen to hear it. Now came to the political jockeying needed to sell opposition to one of Pippinâs less tactical rebukes of a plan proposed by Aragorn. âHow in the world do you think you are going to find new well sites that nobody in the history of this city has found? Are you going to go digging up roads all over the first and second level? No. You most certainly arenât. Instead you can reroute some small distributaries off the Anduin to create a water source in the outlying communities and then work with Gimli and the other dwarves of Aglarond on a system for running that source up to the first and second levels. They have to have a system for it in their caves.â
âMaster Thrain,â Aragorn said flatly.
âYes, my lord?â Pippin asked.
âI am commissioning you back into my service for this project. You are now the lead on it. But, Peregrin, do not interrupt me like that or address me so in any of the meetings on it again.â
âI shall do as my lord bids me,â Pippin said. The smug grin on his face had never faded for a moment. The old members of the council rolled their eyes, and the young ones still gaped at him. Aragorn sighed and shook his head once again.Â
Sounds You Miss
Years dragged on and Aragorn found the gift of his long life became a curse once again. His friends were aging before his eyes while he stayed ever young. Sam sailed after Rosie passed away. Ăomer died in the autumn two years before. The men of Aragornâs guard when he first took the throne were dead or fading before his eyes. Their sons served him now. This was not the first generation of men that had passed before his eyes, but this was the first he had spent the majority of in one place, the first he tied himself to closely.Â
Aragorn sat upon his throne and attempted to focus on the dayâs open court. Truly, he put a valiant effort towards it, but his mind refused to bend to his will. The citizens of Gondor brought their woes, struggles, and strife to him once a week - more often if he could manage it- and he always listened intently. He did his best to resolve each issue that came before him, and he was known for his attentiveness and benevolence amongst his subjects. Today he simply could not manage to keep his focus trained upon the proceedings. It was instead in the building nearly directly below him where Merry and Pippin had resided for some time now. Neither were well. The ravages of age spared none of the mortal beings of Middle Earth, no matter how desperately those who would outlive wished it to be otherwise. Their aged bodies looked like shadows of the young hobbits Aragorn had once known. Merry struggled to use his right arm no matter how Aragorn strove to heal it. Pippin fared far worse. His lungs failed him frequently, and his knees plagued him with pain. Despite it all, they still insisted on coming up to the citadel for nearly every meal, and their spirits were high as ever. Age and weariness could not diminish those, nor could it quiet their laughter. Withered as he was, Pippin continued to be as unruly as in his youth. Except for the past few days. Of late, He seemed distant - like he had one foot beyond this land.Â
Heavy boots thundered down the hallway towards the throne room. Aragorn tensed. All eyes turned to face the source of the sound. Eldarion came to a skidding halt before his father. He faced King Elessar red in the face and panting. âPippin?â Aragorn asked. His voice was already thick and choked with tears. His son need not answer. Lest peril had befallen his siblings or mother, there was nothing that would have made him run so. All the same, Eldarion nodded. Aragorn rose slowly from his seat and composed himself enough that he hoped his voice would not shake. âCourt is adjourned for the day.â His voice held an air of finality which none dared defy. âPlease see the Master of Ceremony on your way out, and he will take note of that which you came to address. When I am able, I will review all issues submitted. Now I must attend to a matter that I fear cannot wait.â With instructions given, Aragorn stepped down from the throne and moved as hastily as he could without looking entirely undignified through the crowd of subjects, but as soon as he was out of sight of the main hallways and corridors, he was running.
The air in Bair Nestad felt stifling. There was a tension that could have been sliced through by a sword. Every healer stepped aside wordlessly and bowed their heads as Aragorn made his way to Pippinâs room. Typically, he was greeted with warm smiles entering this space, and not infrequently he offered aid or advice. Not this day, however. The scene that greeted Aragorn on the other side of the door brought him up short. Merry - old and stiff as he was - was seated cross legged on the too big bed. Tears ran silently down his cheeks while he dabbed at Pippinâs forehead with a wet towel. The younger hobbitâs face was pale. Far paler than he had been even the night before. A cough had plagued for weeks, but he had continued to claim all was well. Now his lips had gone blue. Even the sound of heavy footsteps did not rouse Pippin. âThe fever took him in the night. Didnât tell a soul,â Merry said without prompting, âhe canât catch his breath anymore.â
At the sound of Merryâs voice, Pippinâs eyes opened slowly. His gaze was unfocused and distant until he saw Aragorn. His face broke into a weak smile, but before he could say a word a coughing fit that wracked his entire frail body overtook him. âLet me go fetch some herbs. We can treat the fever and soothe the cough,â Aragorn began, but Pippin shook his head with what little strength he could muster.
âThere is nothing left to try,â he croaked. His voice was so faint that it could barely be heard even in the silent room. âJust come sit with me, my old friend.â Aragorn sighed. Every part of him yearned to fight the invisible foe that plagued Pippin. This was no battle that could be won with AndĂșril, nor yet by all the trainings of Elrond in the days of his youth. This battle was the same one that destroyed the NĂșmenoreans and nearly decimated Gondor itself. It was one with no victory. The battle against time and age.Â
âAs you wish,â Aragorn answered reluctantly after several seconds.
Aragorn sat beside Pippin for hours. There was idle chatter here and there. Sometimes with Merry while Pippin slept. Every once and a while, he would wake, and the three friends would recount the old days, rather Merry and Aragorn retold Pippinâs stories to him with Pippin correcting them when they forgot the fabrications he added over the years. Eldarion and all those who had come to love the Thrain over the years came by to say their goodbyes. The King never left his Knightâs side. Eventually Pippin let him send for Athelas to ease the pain that came with each coughing fit. It comforted all who sat vigil, and the tension lessened in Pippinâs face while it brewed beside him. The room smelled of the woods of The Shire, and when Pippin first smelled it, he smiled and sighed. âHomeâŠwould that I could see it once more.â
âMaybe you can, Pip! We might be able to take one last grand adventure yet!â Merry tried to make the words sound hopeful, but they came out hollow.
âI think the only adventure that awaits me, old Merry, is whatever comes next. If you do make it back to The Shire, tell Faramir I love him for me. Iâll tell Sam and Frodo âhelloâ for you, when I get wherever I am going - if they ever went there, that is.â Pippinâs words were weak.Â
With each time he woke, his gaze became more distant. Both Merry and Aragorn clung tightly to his hands as though they could keep their friend with them for even a few extra moments if they just held on tight enough.
âMerry lad,â Pippin murmured at length.Â
âYeah, Pip?â
âI donât know if I ever thanked Treebeard for making me the tallest hobbit on record. Could you do that for me, please?â Both Merry and Aragorn laughed through the tears rolling down their cheeks.
âI think I can manage that, but I think he knows you are grateful to him for it. Donât worry about that just now.â
âI wish I could see him again. Him and Quickbeam. They are such odd fellows. And Bombadill. We never would have made it home without them.â
âWe will make sure they all know they were on your mind,â Aragorn said gently and had to swallow down the lump forming in his throat.
âWe never could have made it home without you either, and to think we almost didnât trust you to go with us at all.â
âWell, donât go counting me in that tally, Pip. I wasnât there to not trust him, remember?â Pippin laughed. The sound came out more as a wheeze that caused him to start coughing once more. His lips were even more blue than when Aragorn first reached the Houses of Healing, and Pippinâs fingers were cold in his hand. âBut I wonât fight your revisions - just this one time,â Merry added as an afterthought.
âOur King and protector from the day we met you,â Pippin said. A smile graced his features, and for just one last moment Aragorn could see the young hobbit saying that asked him about second breakfast, and then Pippinâs eyes fell closed for the final time. The name Strider seemed to hang in the air, but Aragorn never heard it again.Â
Epilogue:
Pippin laid in state for a week. Tradition stated he be laid to rest in his uniform, but Merry insisted he wear his favorite coat and scarf, and so it was. At Aragornâs insistence, Pippinâs livery lay folded at his feet to carry his honor with him wherever this last journey took him. Aragorn would not dream of laying Pippin to rest in his uniform. He was a hobbit of The Shire foremost and a soldier second, but he fought valiantly. He needed that honor to stay with him. His sword, in true warriorâs fashion, was placed upon his breast. It was an odd picture: the bright colors of a hobbitâs traditional dress paired with the barrow blade. It felt fitting for the hobbit who caused trouble everywhere he went. Aragorn could think of nothing that would bring Pippin more joy than to know he caused a ruckus in court even in his death.
Mourners lined up all the way down to the fifth level to bid farewell to ErnĂźl Pheriannath. Each day the queue would begin at sunrise, and each day they came to lay flowers at the base of the bed upon which he rested and say their final goodbyes. A mere few hours before Pippinâs funeral, Aragorn stood before him. Aragorn wore no royal finery - hadnât since he returned to his chambers from Bair Nestad - instead he wore the same clothes he wore the very first night he met the hobbits in Brie. The coat had more patches and the shirt was more threadbare than that night, but it mattered not. They were more treasured to Aragorn than any ceremonial tunic and cloak. No other hand mended them, not even Arwen. Now more than ever before they felt sacred. A last anchor to the Ranger of the North Pippin vowed to which Pippin swore to serve as anchor.Â
Each time Aragorn thought he could cry no more tears, more welled in his eyes. Now he wept openly. The sobs rang off the stone walls. It was not the first time in the past week he found himself in this position. The first night Merry found him there, and they cried together. When there were no tears left in either of them, they took a bottle of elven wine to the outer wall and drank and shared stories until the sun rose.
This night nobody came, and Aragorn was glad for it. Anger held his heart as much as grief. Blessed with long life, they said. It was no blessing to watch nearly all he held dear fade before his eyes. It was a curse greater than any he could fathom. There were only so many friends one man could lay to rest and watch sail away from him. Each time Aragorn stood before a crowd and spoke of the courageous deeds of those he fought beside and journeyed with it felt like his world shrunk that much more. Pippin left the world far smaller than his small stature accounted for and quieter than Aragorn could have ever predicted. At each turn he expected to hear âStrider!â called from down the hall followed by the sound of small bare feet slapping the stone.Â
With a shaky step, Aragorn stepped up to Pippin. For just a moment, Aragorn saw the hobbit as he was during the War of the Ring: a young hobbit asleep in a bed roll needing to be roused for another day on the march. A simpler time - albeit infinitely more perilous. A time before Aragorn wore the weight of the winged crown. âStrider I shall ever remain, my dear hobbit, ere I draw my last breath. I shall not let the wings of my crown fly me away from my roots.â
Bonus:
Aragorn never experienced the Sea Longing of the elves, but he knew when it was time to lay himself down for his final rest. His body did not move as it once did, and he was weary. This world no longer held him like it once did. When the time came, he said his goodbyes and felt no regrets. Arwen asked one last time for him to say, but Middle Earth was no longer his home. Aragorn had given every piece of himself to it. To saving it. Rebuilding it. Nurturing it. Growing it. His time had come to an end. When Aragorn shut his eyes for the last time, rest took him quickly, and at last he was at peace.Â
He tried to roll over and shield himself from the light to sleep a few more minutes, but then his mind caught up to what he had just done. Aragornâs eyes snapped open, and he was forced to blink against the brightness until his eyes adjusted to light around him. It seemed to have no clear source. He was laying in an unfamiliar bed. The room was nondescript and unadorned with no windows. Aragorn sat on the edge of the bed, assessing the situation. An open door faced him with an even brighter hallway beyond it. With no other clear option, he slid on the boots beside him. The feel of the old leather brought a smile to his face. Then he grabbed the familiar green leather jacket laying on the end of the bed, and walked out into the hallway.Â
One end of the hall was a dead end and the other was the source of all the light. It was a blindingly bright glow that obscured any terminus. Aragorn faced it and concluded that was the only way he was supposed to go. With a sigh, he set out. As he neared the light, it resolved into a large, open corridor with many hallways branching off of it. Aragorn looked from one direction to the other and froze. Just as he was about to choose a direction at random, the sound of small, bare, running feet came echoing down the hall on his left. Aragorn froze. He refused to feel hopeful. Refused to look. âStrider!â a familiar voice cried from his left. Aragornâs breath caught in his throat. Fifty three years he had waited to hear Pippin say the name that had hung in the air since after he died. âStrider!â he called again, and Aragorn turned to see Pippin barreling towards him at a pace the hobbit had not been able to run for many years. He looked just as he had that first night in Bree down to his jacket and scarf.Â
âPippin,â Aragorn sobbed and fell to his knees just in time to catch Pippin in his arms. âMy dear, dear hobbit. How I have missed hearing you call that name.â
âDid you manage to stay firmly on the ground, or did those wings you wore fly you away? I hoped I reminded you who you are enough times before I left you, but I have fretted a few times that I didnât quite do enough.â
Aragorn shuffled back from Pippin enough to take a good look at him and shook his head in disbelief. âYou did plenty enough to remind me who I am, but I hope I never have to go without hearing you call my name - whichever you want at any time and in any place - ever again.â
âWell, you are in luck, Strider. As it turns out, we hobbits go the same place men do, and everyone is waiting for you.â
A/N: So I made myself cry like 17 times writing the last parts of this thing. I apologize for the pain, but I hope you enjoyed!
///////////////////////////Tagging those who liked my original post//////////////////
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#lotr#lord of the rings#aragorn#aragorn son of arathorn#pippin took#peregrin took#lotr fanfic#pippin lotr#Lord of the rings fanfic#my fanfic#unbetaâd: we die like boromir#eldarion#merry lotr#merry brandybuck#meriadoc brandybuck#gen fic#fellowship of the ring#two towers#return of the king#minas tirith#gondor#tw: death#tw major character death#tw: angst#tw: grief#major character death#death#angst#angst with a happy ending
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~ trouble ~
agathario college roommate AU stories
context: Agatha Harkness is an outgoing, people person who fits into every room steps into and every group she talks to, on the other hand her roommate Rio Vidal, could not think of anything worse than being that kind of person, she would much rather focus on her artwork as she is studying art but having Agatha as a roommate is proving to me a little more challenging than she first thought when Rio notices herself drawing a very familiar faceâŠ
pairings: agatha x rio extrovert!agatha x introvert!rio popular!agatha x artist!rio
Authors note: iâll be updating this every now and then :)
The second Agatha Harkness walked into their shared dorm room on move-in day, Rio Vidal knew she was in trouble. Trouble because Agatha exuded the kind of cool confidence that made people want to orbit her. Trouble because Rio, the self-proclaimed queen of her own quiet solitude, the tortured artist, knew she needs to pass this year to graduate and it didnât look like she was going to have a distraction free dorm room.
It didnât help that Agathaâs side of the room was already immaculateâher bed made with precise folds, her books alphabetized, and a lavender-scented diffuser softly puffing away on her desk. Meanwhile, Rio had a half-unpacked suitcase on her bed and an open box of paints that sheâd immediately forgotten about the second she found her sketchbook.
Agatha was eyeing the chaos on Rioâs side of the room with a bemused smile, âYouâre one of those peopleâ
âAnd youâre one of those,â Rio had shot back, waving a paint-streaked hand at the perfectly arranged lavender diffuser.
Agatha just laughed, brushing her sleek dark hair over her shoulder. âStick with me, Vidal. You might learn something.â
A month into the semester, Rio was beginning to suspect Agatha had some kind of secret powers. There was no other explanation for how she managed to ace every class, charm every professor, and still find time to breeze into their room at night with perfectly styled hair and some wild story about how sheâd âinfluencedâ the coffee shop barista into giving her a free latte.
âAll I did was ask politely,â Agatha said one evening, lounging on her bed and flipping through a novel that Rio was certain she wasnât actually reading.
âSure,â Rio replied, smirking as she bent over her sketchbook. âYou âpolitelyâ hypnotized them into thinking you deserved it.â
Agatha quirked an eyebrow. âYou make it sound like Iâm some kind of witch.â
âHey, if the pointy hat fitsâŠâ
Agathaâs laugh was low and throaty, the kind that sent a weird little shiver up Rioâs spine. She ignored it, focusing instead on the sketch taking shape on the page.
âAre you ever going to show me what youâre drawing?â Agatha asked after a pause, her tone light but curious.
âNope,â Rio replied without looking up.
âOh, come on,â Agatha said, leaning over the edge of her bed. âIâll bet itâs brilliant. Is it me? Youâve been staring at me an awful lot lately.â
Rioâs pencil froze mid-stroke. Her brain scrambled for a retort that wouldnât give her away. âYouâre flattering yourself, Harkness.â
Agatha slid off her bed, crossing the room with that effortless confidence she always carried. Before Rio could protest, Agatha plopped down beside her on the floor, close enough that Rio could smell the faint lavender clinging to her sweater.
âLet me see,â Agatha said, her voice soft but insistent.
âNo,â Rio replied, clutching the sketchbook to her chest like a lifeline.
Agatha tilted her head, a mischievous glint in her eye. âFine. But Iâll figure it out eventually. I always figure things out, my love.â
Later that night, long after Agatha had fallen asleep, Rio sat cross-legged on her bed, staring at the sketch. It wasnât finished, but the likeness was unmistakableâAgatha, with her sharp features and sly smile, caught mid-laugh.
Rio sighed, running a hand through her hair. âTrouble,â she muttered to herself.
PART 2
If Rio thought living with Agatha was going to get easier, she was delusional.
Further into the semester, Agathaâs relentless teasing had become as regular as Rioâs late-night sketching sessions. Every time Rio thought sheâd found a way to ignore her, Agatha would up the anteâstealing glances at her sketchbook, throwing dramatic compliments her way, or offering entirely unsolicited critiques of her work.
âYou know,â Agatha said one afternoon, sprawled on Rioâs bed like it was her own, âIâm starting to think all this brooding over your art is just an excuse to stare at me.â
Rio looked up from her canvas, her charcoal smudged fingers poised mid-stroke. âIâm sorry, what?â
Agatha propped her head on her hand, her dark hair cascading over her shoulder like sheâd walked out of some impossibly chic fashion shoot. âYouâre always hunched over that thing when Iâm in the room. Iâm beginning to think Iâm your muse.â
Rio rolled her eyes, but her heart betrayed her by racing just a little too fast. âDonât flatter yourself, Harkness.â
âWhy not? You seem to do enough of that for me,â Agatha replied, her grin sharp and smug.
Rio muttered something under her breath and turned back to her drawing. The charcoal on the page was starting to smudgeâAgathaâs sharp jawline softening at the edgesâbut she couldnât bring herself to care. The truth was, Agatha had become a fixation for her. Not that she would ever admit it. Agathaâs confidence was already insufferable enough; the last thing she needed was for her to know she was the source of half Rioâs sketchbook.
âCome on, let me see,â Agatha said, swinging her legs off the bed and landing lightly on her feet.
âNo,â Rio said automatically, shifting her body to block the canvas.
Agatha moved closer, her lavender perfume wrapping around Rio like a net. âWhy not? Afraid Iâll fall in love with your depiction of me?â
âIâm afraid your ego will implode and take out half the campus.â Rio shot back
Agatha laughed, her voice low and throaty, and leaned over Rioâs shoulder. Her proximity was maddeningâclose enough that Rio could feel the warmth radiating from her skin. âYouâre blushing, my love.â
âAm not,â Rio lied, hunching lower over her drawing.
Agatha reached out and gently tugged on the end of Rioâs ponytail. âYouâre adorable when youâre flustered. You know that?â
Rio dropped her charcoal with a frustrated sigh. âDo you ever stop talking?â
âNot when Iâm having this much fun,â Agatha replied, grinning. She perched on the edge of Rioâs chair, her knee brushing against Rioâs thigh.
Rio glared at her, though it lacked any real heat. âYouâre infuriating.â
âAnd youâre still blushing,â Agatha teased, tilting her head as if studying Rioâs expression. âWhatâs the real reason you wonât let me see your art?â
For once, Agathaâs voice wasnât mocking. The curiosity in her tone was genuine, and it caught Rio off guard.
âI justâŠâ Rio faltered, her gaze dropping to the half-finished sketch. âItâs not ready.â
Agathaâs expression softened, though the playful glint in her eyes remained. âYouâre such a perfectionist, Vidal. Iâll bet itâs stunning already.â
Rio hesitated, her fingers twitching toward the canvas. There was a part of herâa small, reckless partâthat wanted to let Agatha see. That wanted to watch her reaction, to hear what sheâd say about the way Rio had captured her in charcoal. But that same part also knew how vulnerable it would make her feel. And Agatha had a way of making vulnerability feel like a game she was destined to lose.
Agatha seemed to sense her hesitation, because she stood and stepped back, hands raised in mock surrender. âFine. Iâll wait. But donât think I wonât find a way to sneak a look eventually.â
Rio huffed a laugh despite herself. âYouâre impossible.â
âAnd you love it,â Agatha replied, her voice light but her gaze lingering just a second too long before she turned and flounced back to her bed.
That night, long after Agatha had fallen asleep, Rio sat cross-legged in the center of the room, her sketchbook balanced on her knees. She flipped through the pages, stopping at each drawing of Agatha.
There were so many. Too many. Agatha reading, laughing, gesturing with her hands as she recounted one of her outrageous stories. Each sketch was a fragment of Rioâs growing fascinationâa fascination she wasnât sure sheâd ever fully understand. Finally, she stopped on the latest one. Agathaâs face, her smile just shy of wicked, her eyes glinting with something Rio could only describe as dangerous.
Rio picked up her pencil and leaned closer to the page, her hand moving almost of its own accord. She hated to admit it, but Agatha had been right about one thing: she was her muse.
PART 3
Rio had just finished a sketch and was debating whether to call it a night when the door to their dorm swung open. Agatha stumbled in, cheeks flushed, her hair slightly messed as she leaned heavily against the doorframe, a bottle of something amber-coloured dangling precariously from one hand.
âRiooo, my love,â she slurred, her voice thick with alcohol and mischief.
âNo,â Rio said, not even looking up from her sketchbook.
Agatha blinked, taken aback by the interruption. She wobbled a little before stepping into the room and shutting the door behind her with her foot. âRude. I havenât even told you what weâre doing yet.â
âI donât need to know,â Rio replied. âThe answerâs no.â
Agatha narrowed her eyes, as if deeply offended. âYouâre no fun.â
"Well, some of us want to graduate.â Rio muttered, flipping the page of her sketchbook while refusing to look at her.
Agatha groaned dramatically and flopped onto Rioâs bed, half spilling onto her lap. Her sweater had slipped off one shoulder, revealing smooth, freckled skin, and her dark eyes gleamed with something both reckless and knowing. âCome on, Vidal. Itâs Friday. Thereâs a party downstairs. Iâve got alcohol. You need alcohol.â
âI need you to stop throwing yourself onto my bed,â Rio said, attempting to nudge her off. âAnd go to your bed.â
Agatha ignored her, propping her chin in her hand and looking up at her with a lazy grin. âWhatâs wrong? Scared you might have fun for once?â
Rio sighed, putting her charcoal down. âIâm scared youâll get us kicked out of this dorm because you decide to drunkenly yell at the RA again.â
âThat happened one time,â Agatha said, rolling her eyes. She tilted her head, letting her hair fall artfully over one shoulder. âDonât you ever get tired of sitting here with your little pencils, sketching away while the rest of the world is having a good time?â
âNope.â
âWell, I am tired of watching you do it; I can see you slowly turning into a hermit,â Agatha declared, sitting up and grabbing Rioâs hand. âUp. Youâre coming with me.â
Rio started to protest, but Agatha pulled her to her feet with surprising strength for someone so tipsy.
âAgathaââ
âNope. No excuses,â Agatha said, cutting her off. Her grin widened as she tugged Rio toward the door. âAtta girl, Youâre not hiding in this room all night, my love. I wonât allow it.â
The party was in full swing by the time they arrived, the dorm basement vibrating with music and packed with bodies. Strings of cheap fairy lights flickered over the crowd, and the smell of beer and cheap perfume hung heavy in the air.
Agatha weaved through the crowd like she owned the place, still clutching Rioâs hand. She stole two red cups from a nearby table, handing one into Rioâs hand. âDrink. Loosen up.â
Rio grimaced at the cup. âI donât even know whatâs in this.â
âExactly!â Agatha said, already halfway through her own drink.
Rio took a tentative sip and immediately winced. It was sugary and strongâthe kind of mix that promised a headache in the morning.
âGod, thatâs terrible.â she muttered.
âTerrible but effective,â Agatha said, stepping closer. Her voice dropped to a teasing murmur. âUnless youâre afraid you canât handle it.â
Rio narrowed her eyes. âI can handle it just fine.â
âProve it,â Agatha said, raising her cup in a mock toast.
Rio huffed but downed the drink, the alcohol buzzing warmly in her chest as Agatha watched with an infuriatingly smug grin.
A few drinks later, Rio found herself on the edge of the dance floor, swaying awkwardly as Agatha pulled her closer.
âRelax, Vidal,â Agatha said, her hands on Rioâs shoulders, her voice thick with amusement and drink. âItâs just dancing.â
âI donât dance,â Rio muttered.
Agatha laughed, her breath warm against Rioâs ear. âYouâre doing it right now, darling.â
Rio rolled her eyes, but her heart was racing. The alcohol made everything feel fuzzierâlighterâbut Agathaâs proximity made her feel like she was on fire.
âSee?â Agatha said, her hands sliding down to Rioâs waist as they moved to the music. âYouâre not bad at this.â
âThatâs just you,â Rio managed, her voice embarrassingly breathless.
Agatha grinned, leaning in closer. Her dark eyes sparkled under the dim lights, and the scent of her lavender perfume mixed with the alcohol on her breath. âYouâre adorable when youâre flustered.â
âIâm not flustered,â Rio said, her cheeks blazing.
âLiar,â Agatha whispered, her lips barely brushing Rioâs ear.
Rio swallowed hard, her mind spinning. Agathaâs teasing was relentlessâthe way her hands lingered on her waist, the way her voice dipped into something almost intimate.
âDo you always stare this much?â Agatha asked, her grin turning sly. âOr is it just me?â
âIâm notââ
âWell⊠You are.â Agatha interrupted, her voice soft but insistent.
Rioâs hands fidgeted at her sides. The alcohol was making her bolder, but she still felt out of her depthâher first time this close to another woman, to someone like Agatha, who radiated confidence even when drunk.
âIâŠâ Rio started, but her voice trailed off.
Agatha tilted her head, studying her with a faint smirk. âWhat, Vidal? Cat got your tongue?â
Rio couldnât take it anymore. Without thinking, she leaned in and kissed her.
It was clumsy and unsure, a burst of confidence fuelled by frustration and alcohol. Agatha froze for a fraction of a second, and Rio immediately panicked, starting to pull back.
But then Agathaâs hands tightened on her waist, pulling her closer as she kissed her back. This time it was deliberate, confident, with that same teasing edge Agatha brought to everything.
When they broke apart, Rioâs face was on fire. "IâuhâI didnât meanââ
Agatha laughed softly, her forehead resting against Rioâs. âRelax, Vidal. Itâs not the end of the world.â
Rio groaned, covering her face with her hands. âI canât believe I just did that.â
âOh, believe it,â Agatha said, smirking as she tugged Rioâs hands away from her face. Her expression softenedâjust slightlyâand her voice dropped. âFor the record, not bad.â
Rio blinked, her heart still racing. âReally?â
Agatha chuckled, stepping back and taking Rioâs hand again. âCome on, letâs get out of here before you combust.â
They left the party together, the cool night air hitting them like a splash of water. As they stumbled back to their dorm, Agatha glanced over at Rio with a smile that was almost genuine. âNot bad at all,â she murmured.
By the time they reached their dorm, the buzz was wearing off, replaced by a different kind of dizziness. Agatha let go of Rioâs hand to fumble for her key, her smirk still firmly in place.
âStop hovering,â Agatha teased, shooting Rio a sideways glance as she finally unlocked the door.
âIâm not hovering,â Rio muttered, shoving her hands into her jacket pockets and refusing to meet Agathaâs gaze.
âSure, darling,â Agatha said, stepping inside and flicking on the light. She turned, leaning against the doorframe, her eyes raking over Rio with a dangerous kind of amusement. âYouâre very convincing.â
Rio froze in the doorway, every nerve in her body on high alert. âWhy are you looking at me like that?â
âLike what?â Agatha asked innocently, tilting her head.
âLike youâreââ Rio faltered, the words catching in her throat.
âLike Iâm about to kiss you again?â Agatha finished for her, her voice low and teasing. She took a slow step forward, her eyes glinting with mischief. âOr are you planning to surprise me again?â
Rioâs cheeks burnt, and she stammered, "I wasn'tâ"
Agathaâs laugh was soft but rich, and this time it lacked some of its usual edge. âRelax, Vidal. Youâre so wound up. Itâs kind of adorable.â
Rio crossed her arms, trying desperately to regain her composure. âYou- You canât just say stuff like that and act like it doesnât mean anything.â
Agathaâs smirk falteredâjust barely, but Rio caught it. For a moment, the tension between them hung heavy in the air, charged and uncertain. Then Agatha sighed, stepping back and flopping onto her bed.
âMaybe it doesnât,â she said, her tone quieter but still playful. She glanced at Rio, her expression unreadable. âOr maybe it does. What do you think?â
Rio hesitated, her gaze dropping to the floor. The weight of the nightâthe drinks, the dancing, the kissâpressed down on her. She didnât know what to think, let alone what to say.
Agatha seemed to sense her turmoil because she rolled onto her side, propping her head on her hand. Her smirk returned, softer this time. âDonât overthink it, Vidal. Youâre cute when youâre awkward, but youâll give yourself a headache.â
Rio let out a shaky laugh, her shoulders relaxing just a fraction. âYouâre insufferable, you know that?â
âAnd yet, you kissed me,â Agatha countered, her grin widening.
Rio groaned, covering her face with her hands as she mumbled, âIâm never going to live this down, am I?â
âNot a chance,â Agatha said, her voice warm with laughter.
For a moment, silence settled over them, broken only by the hum of the desk lamp and the faint sounds of music still drifting up from the party downstairs. Rio finally dropped her hands, glancing at Agatha, who was watching her with that same maddeningly unreadable expression.
âGoodnight, Harkness,â Rio said, retreating to her bed and pulling the blanket over herself in one swift motion.
Agatha chuckled, leaning back against her pillows. âGoodnight, Vidal.â
As Rio closed her eyes, she could still feel the ghost of Agathaâs lips on hers, the scent of lavender lingering in the air. She told herself sheâd deal with it tomorrow and figure out what it all meant, or maybe pretend it hadnât happened at all, but deep down, she knew Agatha wouldnât let her forget.
#agatha all along#agatha harkness#agatha x rio#agathario#rio vidal#marvel#oneshot#wlw#lesbian#college au#lgbtq#marvel one shot#agathario one shot#agathario au
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ok I talk about Kieran a lot in the context of like, a little generic fantasy revolution plot but he is not in fact the lynchpin of this. this is his little cousin, Audrey. She's actually interested vaugely in politics + keeps up with Damian's (kieran's older brother) work, and the #state of things. Kieran is just very conductive to the vibe and does a lot of PR because he's kind of an extremist in his own right before the righteous cause, y'know. While things are kicking off for Audrey's little gang he's becoming well acquainted with violence and such because his friends are being personally tormented by A difficult to articulate embodiment of evil. (Just for fun and for easy targets, because a mildly descript embodiment of evil is about power. However you too can accumulate enough violence to fight back about it. But watch out!)
However a couple provinces over are some Good Kids (tm) at a little institution near Ottawa. Audrey considers herself not much special but wants to do magic sociology like Damian (he did not want to do magic sociology he wanted to practice magic law and somehow ended up being a combo magic social worker/cop), accompanied by her friends Charlie and Sam, interested in furthering magic research, and Gabriel, who is here to blow things up. But, TLDR, Sam furthers magic research a bit too much and gets into necromancy stuff and they've gotta put this guy down. Magic society is held together with paperclips n glitter glue and nobody's really been materially powerful enough to reanimate the dead proper, but they are not ? really cool with letting this guy continue to try ? People who properly practice magic are an open secret that's usually defended by cynicism because Who is going to believe you . CGI has gone too far etc etc. However properly fudging the line between dead and not is going to cause SO many problems that no one is ready to deal with yet.
However now a pack of plot-armoured kids are like HEY ? THERE IS A MAGIC SHADOW GOVERNMENT WHO IS SUPPRESSING INFORMATION BY ASSASSINATING KIDS? and such is the plot, in loose terms. and against his better judgement, Seth is there
#[ files ocverse ]#They bring back Sam's ghost. He's chilling.#Nevermind that Evan is already dead and kicking around but he's not supposed to be just chilling#I am not sure if political parties know about this. because its not directly related to Magic Practice.#It's just kind of coincidental.#i don't think they make very much material progress. they do however try to get the attention of the general public#they are wrong about the magic shadow government however. No actual authority is taking their calls#This is Damian's whole deal. He wants to codify it far more#He has propositions!#Magic bureaucracy does um. not have time for this buddy. can you go round up those rowdy kids trying to explode their neighbours chickens#As well as trying to get different magic communities to agree to be governed by this body in small pockets of self governing communities#its not explicitly religious to the group looked at primarily (Evan and Ri are explicitly catholic; but this is unrelated) but it Can be.#and everybody's got Opinions.#(And Damian has one. That they need to be codified!)
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Dude.. my ex boyfriend totally did get me into conspiracy theory shit, even if unintentionally (i think its intentional im sure he believed in that shit. Would not surprise me at all.) At the time i was already pretty isolated from anyone online who mightve countered any of my dumb spiritual or alien related beliefs because of some dumb shit i said online making most of the friends and followers i made online generally avoid me, depending on who it was. I was just a regular pagan and then he showed me this weird video with all this weird conspiracy theory symbolism in it. I looked it up later on and looked up the meaning of the symbolism and came across a whole bunch of stuff posing itself as Secret Information The US Govt Doesnt Want You To Know About, etc. And then i just fell deeper into the conspiracy theory pipeline, traded my paganism for new age beliefs, and goddamn dude. Like we both got suspended from school bc he had a dumb idea to dumb shit there and i spent my time in detention fucking. Trying to read "the emerald tablets" or whatever tf. Its all coming back to me rn.
#anyways im not about to let yall make me feel guilty for falling in this direction anymore bc i was fuckin 14 and didnt know SHIT about us#politics aside from lgbt ppl deserve rights and to live like everyone else and same w all the other minorities (even tho i probably still#had issues i needed to work on around those things. still generally i wouldve considered myself progressive but apolitical)#and i was already at the time rejecting my christian upbringing and trying out satanism and paganism and such and so#i had a very rebellious mindset at the time. i also hated authority so the first antiesrablishment thing i saw i clung to bc it was#*close enough* to how i felt. none of that shit ever outwardly stated (at the time at least) that anything was abt jewish ppl and i was#filling in the parts about 'child sex rings' to be about christians bc thats how i knew them to be like. it just like. seems so obviously#something a christian would try to do. like a creepy priest or something. i imprinted my own meaning onto it#im not saying it was good but i definitely didnt go into it and stick to it for reasons some ppl might wanna believe#i was way more on the spiritual leaning side and the ~secret spiritual meaning~ of the world. like the flower of life or fuckin.#shit like how theres. idk. a fucking disc or something thats supposed to go on top of the great pyramids that super enlightened#people can only navigate like a spaceship or some shit?#idk the mythology of it all really fucking enraptured me. and i still liked the reptilians even tho they were supposed to be evil and#apparently an antisemitic dogwhistle. i thought it was the annunaki or whatever i was supposed to hate. at least.#the opinions were pretty mixed back then. admittedly i didnt really look up other ppls opinions on that stuff other than articles ppl wrote#like no forums or anything really. which is probably a very good thing i avoided those lol. regardless i thought of the reptilians#as being more neutral but generally looking out for themselves kinda like. the way a reptile would ig. but now that ik its a dog whistle#it really took a the magic out of all of that stuff for me :/ im disillusioned to say the least lol.#all that new age shit was appropriation. christianity rebranded. or weird shit people made up about atlantis or whatever sjjsksks#my favorite was the oceanis one where theres a star system where whales and dolphins come from#like that one was my favorite to believe in dhdjjsksksbdhs#imagine being on a star planet diving around in the sea of light u_u anyways it still sounds fun shsjskskwne.#i hope that one is at least more tame. though im sure its still somehow connected to everything else which im p sure it is#dude all of this information is just resurfacing about all of this shit. i could totally write a whole thing about all the conspiracy#theories i learned about. i might if only to make fun of it all sjdjksksks#yall ever heard of FUCKING david willcocks????#his willing cocks???????#his fucking ass#and gaia FUCKING tv#all that dumb shit
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The Spinoff has a pretty good debunking of the supposed ârationaleâ behind the bill in this opinion piece by Carwyn Jones, the academic quoted in that Guardian article above:
Thereâs also this newsletter from this morning that explains the current situation pretty well:
I know most of tumblr is thinking about the USA right now. but fuck the nz government right now too. tomorrow, the treaty principles bill, the 'worst, most comprehensive breach of Te Tiriti in modern times' is being introduced to parliament early, because there were activations planned country wide and the cowards decided to pull it forwards. fuck this government. a friend of mine had to go home early, crying. I've been in shock all day since it came out.
check on your MÄori friends, e hoa mÄ. see what they need. see how you can help. everyday, we see and experience racism. from people around us, up to our government. community care will save us.
#a word of warning if you go clicking beyond those articles: the spinoff is a semi-satirical news outlet#but imo they do the most journalistic due diligence of any aotearoa news publication out there#for non-kiwis who are looking for more info than what is linked here this is a brief summary of nz news sources:#stuff.co.nz is a sometimes-accurate mostly garbage news site with good seo so they show up near the top#the (nz) herald is like our version of the guardian. usually fine; sometimes good; with a touch of right wing bs. they have terfs on staff.#newstalk zb is a conservative talkback radio station. think joe rogan. frequently in trouble with the broadcasting standards authority.#tvnz and one news are state owned tv news. theyâre very hit-and-miss. a few good journalists mixed in with a ton of mediocre ones.#radio new zealand (rnz) is a state owned radio news outlet. for news of ok quality and minimal bias theyâre the closest youâll get.#lastly: the platform and counterspin media and reality check radio are all alt-right disinformation brokers targeting conspiracy theorists.#i probably missed some in that list but those are the main ones#aotearoa#new zealand#nzpol#nz politics#whispers from the mycelium
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Homemaking, gardening, and self-sufficiency resources that won't radicalize you into a hate group
It seems like self-sufficiency and homemaking skills are blowing up right now. With the COVID-19 pandemic and the current economic crisis, a lot of folks, especially young people, are looking to develop skills that will help them be a little bit less dependent on our consumerist economy. And I think that's generally a good thing. I think more of us should know how to cook a meal from scratch, grow our own vegetables, and mend our own clothes. Those are good skills to have.
Unfortunately, these "self-sufficiency" skills are often used as a recruiting tactic by white supremacists, TERFs, and other hate groups. They become a way to reconnect to or relive the "good old days," a romanticized (false) past before modern society and civil rights. And for a lot of people, these skills are inseparably connected to their politics and may even be used as a tool to indoctrinate new people.
In the spirit of building safe communities, here's a complete list of the safe resources I've found for learning homemaking, gardening, and related skills. Safe for me means queer- and trans-friendly, inclusive of different races and cultures, does not contain Christian preaching, and does not contain white supremacist or TERF dog whistles.
Homemaking/Housekeeping/Caring for your home:
Making It by Kelly Coyne and Erik Knutzen [book] (The big crunchy household DIY book; includes every level of self-sufficiency from making your own toothpaste and laundry soap to setting up raised beds to butchering a chicken. Authors are explicitly left-leaning.)
Safe and Sound: A Renter-Friendly Guide to Home Repair by Mercury Stardust [book] (A guide to simple home repair tasks, written with rentals in mind; very compassionate and accessible language.)
How To Keep House While Drowning by KC Davis [book] (The book about cleaning and housework for people who get overwhelmed by cleaning and housework, based on the premise that messiness is not a moral failing; disability and neurodivergence friendly; genuinely changed how I approach cleaning tasks.)
Gardening
Rebel Gardening by Alessandro Vitale [book] (Really great introduction to urban gardening; explicitly discusses renter-friendly garden designs in small spaces; lots of DIY solutions using recycled materials; note that the author lives in England, so check if plants are invasive in your area before putting them in the ground.)
Country/Rural Living:
Woodsqueer by Gretchen Legler [book] (Memoir of a lesbian who lives and works on a rural farm in Maine with her wife; does a good job of showing what it's like to be queer in a rural space; CW for mentions of domestic violence, infidelity/cheating, and internalized homophobia)
"Debunking the Off-Grid Fantasy" by Maggie Mae Fish [video essay] (Deconstructs the off-grid lifestyle and the myth of self-reliance)
Sewing/Mending:
Annika Victoria [YouTube channel] (No longer active, but their videos are still a great resource for anyone learning to sew; check out the beginner project playlist to start. This is where I learned a lot of what I know about sewing.)
Make, Sew, and Mend by Bernadette Banner [book] (A very thorough written introduction to hand-sewing, written by a clothing historian; lots of fun garment history facts; explicitly inclusive of BIPOC, queer, and trans sewists.)
Sustainability/Land Stewardship
Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer [book] (Most of you have probably already read this one or had it recommended to you, but it really is that good; excellent example of how traditional animist beliefs -- in this case, indigenous American beliefs -- can exist in healthy symbiosis with science; more philosophy than how-to, but a great foundational resource.)
Wild Witchcraft by Rebecca Beyer [book] (This one is for my fellow witches; one of my favorite witchcraft books, and an excellent example of a place-based practice deeply rooted in the land.)
Avoiding the "Crunchy to Alt Right Pipeline"
Note: the "crunchy to alt-right pipeline" is a term used to describe how white supremacists and other far right groups use "crunchy" spaces (i.e., spaces dedicated to farming, homemaking, alternative medicine, simple living/slow living, etc.) to recruit and indoctrinate people into their movements. Knowing how this recruitment works can help you recognize it when you do encounter it and avoid being influenced by it.
"The Crunchy-to-Alt-Right Pipeline" by Kathleen Belew [magazine article] (Good, short introduction to this issue and its history.)
Sisters in Hate by Seyward Darby (I feel like I need to give a content warning: this book contains explicit descriptions of racism, white supremacy, and Neo Nazis, and it's a very difficult read, but it really is a great, in-depth breakdown of the role women play in the alt-right; also explicitly addresses the crunchy to alt-right pipeline.)
These are just the resources I've personally found helpful, so if anyone else has any they want to add, please, please do!
#homemaking#homemaking resources#gardening#urban gardening#self sufficiency#self sufficient living#sustainability#sustainable living#homesteading#nontrad homemaker#nontrad housewife#urban homesteading#solarpunk#cottagecore#kitchen witch#kitchen witchcraft#crunchy to alt right pipeline#book rec#book recommendations#resource#long post#mine#racism tw#racism mention#transphobia tw#transphobia mention
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But what was most baffling to all that met the Pevensies after they came back was that they were kind.
Really. Not pretending, not because they were insecure. True, empathic. Far too understanding for children their age. They all have music in them.
Peterâs hands feel too small for him, but he shakes hands all the same. Gentle pressure. There is nobility behind those eyes. Eyes that always border on the supernatural sort of blue, especially in the dark.
He plays the guitar, gently coaxing otherworldly sounds out of an instrument that did not know it could be played like that. He helps his siblings with their homework, is taller much faster than his peers. Seems to take up more space, even though no one understands how a teenage boy manages that.
He doesnât like doing nothing, ever. He instructs his classmates in grammar, gives away figures he cuts from wood with a knife that seems too sharp for a boy that small. He never hurts himself, though.
As the years pass, Peter grows strong. But he is gentle. He does not seem to be brash, even when many of his friends are. Peter keeps his emotions in check. Noble. Not undangerous, but not belligerent. Peter only ends fights, and only with people that deserve it.
He offers advice, a pat on the back. Teachers wanna dislike him, some do not like the look behind those eyes. Most find they cannot. Peter is popular with both adults and children, speaks sense and laughs often.
Peter is kind. Pious, devout. His faith is unmovable like rock. Did the kids meet God on the estate of their uncle?
Edmund plays the violin. A sad Edmund is a rare sight, but when he plays sad he can keep his whole floor awake. Somehow, Peter always finds h him quickly, effortlessly attuned to his brotherâs moods. They play chess, then. Their chess master must have been a champion, Ed beats people with ease. Heâs usually not smug about it.
Ed speaks politics and war in earnest, accepts critique graciously, is elegant in a way Peter never manages. Peter speaks frankly, but Edmund can wrap words up real nice. He doesnât mince words, but his classmates grow into liking the sound of his voice. They appreciate that Edmund does not lie, even when speaking tactfully. Edmund can dial the temperature in a room, change it to suit himself.
He, too, laughs often, but Edmund is known to smirk. He likes being right and he often is. Heâll entertain anyone with a good story, always seems to have the right information to help you out. Remedies to illness, connections, job openings, how to sneak out of PE.
Heâs a spider in a web. A bit reserved for a 11 year old, and oddly well-connected. A real ghost when he wants to be, but he never scares people with it.
Aslan would not approve of that. He believes in God as well, but much more intellectually. Heâs got the intelligence to back it up and wit to match. A scholarly belief, but not lacking conviction.
Teachers like his enthousiasm, remember a moody nagging child when he left and see a secure young man come back.
Edmund will stand up for what is right. He gets into some trouble like that, but his verbal agility saves him always. Edmund has strong principles and will not bend them for anyone. No matter the trouble he gets in.
The bond with his brother is unbreakable. They even walk the same, chest out, left hand on their belt. They seem most at ease when fencing.
Susan was always warm and tenderhearted, but when she comes back there is a difference.
She seems to have gained authority. Itâs real strange watching a 13-year old use her beauty like a grown woman, but Susan has learned to wield it, to stun people so she can creep under their skin. People LISTEN to her now.
Her wit is like a knife, but she avoids cutting deep. Susan is reasonable, and strong, and principled. The little drama others get involved in does not bother her, and she seems immune to petty insults. She has killed before, with her hands.
She will do it with kindness now. She is not very approachable ( that would be Lucy ), but she is kind. She used to mother over her brothers and sisters, but now that they have raised each other in a court full of magic she has gotten more relaxed. They listen to her on important issues, trust in her judgement. Her brothers does not deem himself more important, she is both well-spoken and well-respected by her siblings. Equal. It baffles the old men that teach her. Irritates them, too.
There is an air of mystery around her. Half a look is enough to get what she wants, Susanâs friends laud her security in herself, her Mona Lisa smile. She seems to temper moods easily, makes people feel at ease.
She most of everyone exudes royalty. Itâs the grace. Susan plays the harp, her long fingers dancing across the strings like sheâs had a lifetime of practice. Sheâs elegant, never caught off guard. Jamais faux pas.
She does not get angry. She knows who she will be. She is anxious to become an adult, yes, but she only wishes to look how she feels. Not to look differently. Yet the wish to be taken seriously, to have someone see you as an adult, it makes her surprisingly similar to her peers.
Her friends have not been old yet, is all. But Susan is calm and collected. People see her as someone you can tell a secret to. She never hurts someone, is usually a neutral party, speaks sense to adult and kids alike. She is not ignorant, however, will use every trick in the book to keep the peace. She knows when to go nuclear. Vis pacem para bellum.
Lucy is a sun in human form. She has a joie de vivre that is unmatched, is gay and golden-haired and never in a bad mood.
Lucy is kind by default, does not turn it off, does not turn it down. Sheâs witty and funny and quick on her feet. She has been grown before, yes, but enjoys being young for a few years more. She dances, sings old tunes. Her voice is her favorite instrument, you can usually hear Lucy coming.
Whistling a tune in the halls is known to improve the moods of everyone who hears it immensely. Young girls need to figure out who they are, but Lucy knows, knows what sheâll be and who she likes and what kind of people she wants to be around. She is not pretending, never moody. She can get sad, of course, but her older brothers and sisters are always nearby when that happens.
Lucy is genuine and fierce and convinced, immovable at times. Admired for her drive, but respected for her empathy. She speaks to everyone, often distributes flowers. Thereâs no naivite in her at all, she simply wishes to be like this so that the world may imitate her. She likes to see people prosper, is the first with praise.
She will go far, is the consensus. Thereâs steel beneath the soft exterior, Lucy has fire below the flowers. Sheâs well-liked and well-loved. She has love in spades, it seems, animals and stragglers and misfits and outcasts. Sheâs popular, her room is a good place to get a cup of tea and someone who will listen to you for some time. After a while she no longer bothers with the door.
That a heart that size fits in a girl that small is a mystery to many. Lucy does not think it is a mystery at all. It is the heart of a lion.
Her faith is as vocal as the rest of her, she sees it confirmed in all that is beautiful, all that is kind. She never tries to convert anyone but there are several people who have told her that version of God is someone they would like to know.
The Pevensies often see each other at parties, where they like to stand together. Edmund knows about everyone, everyone knows Peter, everyone likes Susan, but it is Lucy who knows everyone.
They are kind, but not weak. Peter gets his knuckles bloody sometimes, Edmund does not abide by the rules of unjust teachers. Susan and Lucy solve their problems differently but no less effective. Kindness is their usual way of operating, but they are still kings and queens. They will not allow cruelty, will not let bullies go unpunished.
They are sure of what they are and sure of what comes after death and this makes them kind. Kind , not harmless. Kind, not spineless. Kind, not ignorant. Kind, not naive.
Kind despite. Maybe kind because. The kings and queens of Narnia are proud of what they are, honour the teachings of their lion friend. Kind.
When the crash happens and three siblings die, everyone they know mourns deeply. Without them, the world is less kind.
#peter pevensie#edmund pevensie#lucy pevensie#susan pevensie#narnia#narnia meta#the lion the witch and the wardrobe#the chronicles of narnia#narnia fic
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To Know YouâŠ
Pairing: Benedict Bridgerton x fem!reader
Summary: Benedict knows you better than anyone. But does he know himself well enough to know what he truly wants?
Warnings: none really⊠fluffy fluff. Childhood friends, class differences, marriage mart shenanigans, dancing, marriage proposals, Benedict being adorable while also a complete dumbass, unrequited to requited love, love confessions.
Word Count: 10.4k (yeah, it's a long one, folks)
Authors Note: this is a request fill for @curlsincriminology (ask HERE) about Benedict showing you all the wonderful things he sees in you, but will he figure out his own feelings before it's too late? Thanks to the complete trooper @colettebronte for beta reading this monster one-shot. Enjoy <3
I: To Know YouâŠ.
âI would rather not, Miss y/l/n,â the young man clips, walking away from you at a brusque pace.Â
You sigh and look down at your feet. Mrs Parsons will be so very disappointed, is all you can think.
â
Benedict may not have heard the words spoken, but even from his vantage point at the other end of the ballroom, he could see the disdainful way the young man uttered his parting words to you. It makes anger flare hot in his chest, his fist forming reflexively at his side.
He watches as you look down, shoulders hunching, folding in on yourself physically, as if the rejection for a dance has manifested in a body blow. He feels a pang in his gutâof sympathy, indignance on your behalf and mainly at the injustice of it all. To him, you are a wonderful, intelligent, caring person worthy of a good match. Still, the circumstances of your upbringing seem to stymie your attempts to join so-called âpoliteâ society at every turnâŠ
â
You look up with a defeated mien until your eyes land on one person who has always been able to ameliorate any of your more morose moodsâBenedict Bridgerton. Instantly, you feel lighter. You give him a polite nod across the crowded room, and, to your delight, he returns it, a hint of a sympathetic smile tugging at his lips. It is just so very characteristic of him to offer silent support, to understand, from witnessing a moment of interaction, precisely what you are feeling. A large part of you feels so wistful that there is no other man quite as nice as him. Suddenly, your overwhelming need is to leave this stuffy ballroom and catch some air.
You grew up under the tutelage of the kindly doctorâs widow, Mrs Parsons, whose house is not far from the vast Bridgerton estate in Kent. The naturally born daughter of nobody quite knows whom, you were taken in as her ward when you were abandoned upon her doorstep at a mere two years old. Her reputation for kindness towards young waifs and strays is likely why you were left there. It is an event you were too young to recall, so all you have known your whole life is her generosity and kindness, raising you as if her own.Â
And now that you are of age, she takes you to events around Kent in the hopes of securing you a respectable husband, the most prestigious being tonightâs Hearts and Flowers Ball at Aubrey Hall. The Bridgertons have always been gracious enough to invite local families, those without the means to partake in the London season, to events at their country estateâa kindness that allows for your attendance tonight. Itâs just such a pity that the one bachelor Mrs Parsons was so very keen for you to meet, one Mr Reeves, just rebuffed you so thoroughly.Â
You glance down at the remaining empty slots on the dance card tied to your wrist and sigh again. Now that you are out on the terrace in the fresh evening air, the light breeze is at least a partial balm, allowing you to recover from the sting of rejection away from the hubbub of the ballroom.
âI will never understand how the men of this county can consider themselves anything approaching mannered.âÂ
You would know that refined voice anywhere. It haunts your dreams. Just the sound of it making your ribs tighten. You turn to see Benedict sauntering towards you, two drinks in hand, that sympathetic smile still in place.
âYou are far better off without such rudeness,â he adds dryly as he pulls up beside you, arching an eyebrow for your entertainment.
âYou are far too kind, Mr Bridgerton,â you answer, taking the glass he offers with a meek smile, trying not to let your ardent admiration for him be too evident.Â
âMr Bridgerton?!?â he scoffs, âWhat happened to BenBen?â he teases gently, recalling your childhood name for him when you were a mere four and he was nine.
âWe are at a formal event; I should address you as such, should I not?â you reply playfully, a warmth spreading inside as it always does when you get the chance to have a witty, convivial exchange with him.
By gosh, if there is one man to whom you would pledge yourself without hesitation, it is him. But, of course, he is the second son of an illustrious family. To think you would have any chance to win his heart would be as likely as a future king to marry a commoner. Still, you can dreamâŠ
âAt least call me Benedict, Skylark,â he winks over his wine glass as he takes a sip, butterflies erupting in your tummy at the affectionate nickname he has used since you were small; you have to avert your eyes to avoid blushing deeply.
Just as he goes to speak again, his brother, the Viscount, materialises at his side. Looking to all intents and purposes as if he is trying to escape the ball as much as you are.
âMother is best avoided tonight, brother,â Anthony warns sagely, taking a large gulp of his champagne. âShe is under the erroneous impression I am suddenly in want of a wife.â
You can't stop the giggle that bubbles up from within at his wry observation of his predicament.
âHello, y/n,â he greets warmly, just noticing you are also there, his face morphing into a youthful, playful grin. If Benedict is the husband you have always dreamed of, Anthony is the elder brother you have always yearned for. In fact, that is always how he has treated you, akin to Eloise and Daphne, who you grew up playing with, being of similar age.
âHello, Anthony,â you chime back. âHow was the hunt earlier? Did the infamous Bridgerton brothers kill another prized stag?â you inquire, keen to engage both of them for as long as they will entertain you. Just being around them always lifts your spirits to no end.
â
Benedict observes you as you listen intently to Anthonyâs recounting of the hunt earlier that day, impressed by your resilience. He has no doubts any other woman would feign an attack of the vapours had a man rejected her so harshly. But here you are, politely listening to his brotherâs boasting, even though he can tell you are hurting inside.
Perhaps it helps that your snub went primarily unnoticed. You are unknown to the Ton; any witnesses likely dismissing it as the business of âcountry folkâ unworthy of note. Which, frankly, he could scoff at, seeing as he holds you in higher regard than all of the other attendees combined.
âHow about you?â Anthony ends his story with a question to you, interrupting Benedictâs train of thought. âHow has your experience been at our fine event this evening?â
âOh, the house is splendidly decorated and the music wonderful,â you obfuscate behind flattery. Anthony appears to buy it, but Benedict sees behind your facade, the flame behind your usually bright gaze dimming a little, making something ache in his gut to see it.Â
Damn that idiot for ruining your evening! This just wonât doâŠ
â
You can feel Benedictâs eyes upon you as you respond abstractly to Anthony.
âY/n here is too polite to say it, but she was treated harshly by that young Reeves chap from Tenterden,â Benedict edifies as you bow your head, embarrassed. âLetâs be sure to rescind his invitation to future events, brother,â he appends with a surly tone.
âDuly noted,â Anthony nods sincerely, a brush of confusion flitting over his face regarding his brother's vehemence.
âNo, there is no needâŠâ you begin to protest weakly but halt mid-sentence under the intensity of Benedictâs gaze.
âI bore witness. Believe me, He shall not darken our door again,â he states firmly.
It appears the matter is very much decided, and you donât want to put up much of a fight, seeing as it ultimately benefits you. You do, however, want to bathe in the warm glow inside whenever Benedict defends you. It's wonderful to have someone looking out for you, especially one so handsome and kind.
â
Two days later, you are taking afternoon tea with Mrs Parsons at the local tea shop when Benedict breezes in, looking so majestic dressed in Bridgerton blues that you grind to a halt. Luckily, he has not seen you as he makes a beeline for the counter.
ââTis rude to stare, my dear,â Mrs Parsons lectures sotto voce, nodding to your teacup, frozen in mid-air.
You shake your head a touch and place said item back in your saucer as she turns briefly to look at what or who caught your attention. Then she reaches out, her lace-gloved hand gently patting yours.Â
âIt would be prudent to set your sights a little more realisticâŠâ she advises with a sympathetic air. âNot that I fault your choice,â she adds, so quietly at first you're not sure you heard her correctly, but there is a tiny playful smirk tugging at the corner of her lips. Your mouth falls open fractionally, and you stare as she shrugs. âI may be old, my dear, but I am not blind.â
Well, I never, Mrs Parsons!
As you take a bite of food, Benedict twists around from speaking to the proprietor, and he sees you. Thereâs a jolt down your spine as he breaks into a huge smile that claims his whole face. And you almost choke on scone crumbs as he makes a beeline over to you rather than the exit.
âGood afternoon, Miss y/l/n, Mrs Parsons!â he greets effusively. âWould it be terribly impolite to ask to join you briefly?â
Mrs Parsons' face is a picture of surprise. âNot at all; the pleasure is ours, Mr Bridgerton,â she responds affably, gesturing to the spare chair at your small round table.
As Benedict sits, Mrs Parsons shoots you an incredulous look. It's your turn to shrug fractionally.
âMrs Parsons, I feel it necessary to tell you Mr Reeves was excessively rude to Miss y/l/n here at the ball, and I wanted to assure you that he will not be welcome at Aubrey Hall again,â he divulges sincerely.
Mrs Parsons looks taken aback and turns to you. âWhy did you not tell me, my dear?â
âI-I did not think it necessaryâŠâ you twist your mouth into a bashful pout, biting your lip.
âMr Bridgerton, thank you for bringing this to my attention, and I thank you for your generous offer, but that sort of action does not seem warranted,â she replies accommodatingly.
âThat is what I saidâŠâ âThat is what she saidâŠâ
You and Benedict speak in unison at the exact same moment, and your eyes ping to each other, both laughing then bowing your heads immediately. You know your cheeks are flushed.
â
Benedict loves the look in your eye sometimes. That spirited sparkle with glowing cheeks. In his opinion, that is the only look you should ever wear; no one, especially one as unworthy as Mr Reeves, should be allowed to rob you of it. He feels a strong compulsion to do everything in his power to keep you looking like thatâcarefree, happy, stunning. Itâs what motivates his subsequent words.
âIf it is not considered too impudent for me to do so, I have a suggestion for Miss y/l/nâs introduction into society,â Benedict offers sincerely. âI believe you should be able to find her an excellent, worthy match by casting a wider net.â
âWhat are you proposing, Mr Bridgerton?â Mrs Parsons inquiries, almost warily.
âThat Miss y/l/n come to London and partake in the remainder of the season as a guest of my family. My mother seems to think it an excellent idea, and I know my younger sister Eloise is already a good friend. I do not see why they could not attend events together,â he shrugs genially.
Mrs Parsons's face is a picture again. âYou have already spoken to the Dowager Viscountess of this matter?â she checks, unable to modulate the astonishment in her tone.
âOf course,â he confirms with a nod. âI made such a suggestion this morning when your names came up. She heartily concurs. Miss y/l/n here is too bright and good of a person to have her marital choice limited by geography or circumstance.â
His eyes fall on you, and his heart gallops at the searing look you are giving him.
â
You donât even try to temper your doe-eyed expression as you look upon Benedict, him extolling your virtues to the audience of the tea room.Â
Even distracted by all the wondrous things he has to say, you can detect the noise level on the surrounding tables has reduced; everyone in town always keen to eavesdrop on a Bridgerton conversation. Especially one that contains such noteworthy gossip as a local young lady being invited to the London season at the familyâs behest.
âMy dear, I trust that Lady Bridgerton will look after you well,â Mrs Parsons professes. âI have no objections should you desire to seize this opportunity.â Her tone pointed, very much encouraging you to do so.
âThat would be just wonderful, Mr Bridgerton,â you exhale with a grateful smile. âI cannot thank you enough for even thinking to raise such a petition.â
âThink nothing of it, Miss y/l/n,â he smiles, standing up and giving you both a brief, shallow bow. âI shall see you anon, no doubt.âÂ
And with that, he sweeps out of the tearoom, your eye line tracking his concave outline through the curved glass as he rounds the corner out of sight.
âWell, well,â Mrs Parsons puffs out her cheeks. âI am not sure what you did to inspire such actions in a gentleman. But bravo, my dear, bravo,â she holds her teacup aloft in a toast.Â
You are a jumble of emotions and could not even begin to answer Mrs Parsons about what you could possibly have done. Mostly, you are just elated by the prospect of the chance to attend the whirl of the London season, even if there is also a small pang of regret that Benedict is so keen to see you matched.
II: âŠIs To Love You
The following Tuesday, as your carriage pulls up outside the grandeur of Bridgerton House, you have nothing but butterflies. And as Lady Bridgerton - Violet as she insists you now call her - and her ladyâs maid show you to your charming guest room, you cannot temper your excitement.
âGet yourself freshened up, my dear. There is a soiree this evening at the Queenâs new residence no less, and there is no time like the present to begin your introductions,â the dowager viscountess warmly counsels.
You nod your thank yous, and after they take their leave, you twirl excitedly around the room, taking in the elegant furnishings and airy sunlight flooding in. You pull up in front of a large sash window and are delighted to see bounteous gardens beneath. The rear of the property is very much an oasis of calm in the heart of the city. But one sight in particular draws your eye: a majestic oak with two swings attached to a stately arm. It looks like a place of refuge, and you feel oddly compelled to take a seat there.
Three hours later, walking into the palatial Buckingham House, you are in a different world from the one you know in Kent. Candlelit crystal chandeliers glint like towering clusters of jewels, spraying thousands of shards of light around the room. Every railing is bedecked in hundreds of drooping flower garlands, and the walls groan with enormous portraits of royalty. The mellifluous strains of a chamber orchestra fill the air. Your grip on Eloiseâs arm is tight as you try not to look agog at all the opulence surrounding you.
âAnd I thought Aubrey Hall was grand,â you murmur quietly, and she just guffaws.
â
Benedict arrives late to the soiree from his bachelor lodgings, bustling in as stealthily as possible, knowing he will likely catch his motherâs ire for his tardiness.
But then he sees a sight that makes him temporarily stop dead in his tracks. There, hanging on to his little sister, surveying the room utterly lost in reverie at its grandeurâis you. He has not seen you dressed up as you are now, made over with the full attention of the Bridgerton staff. And he isn't afraid to admit to himself, at least, that it catches his breath. How they have applied cosmetics and styled your hair, emphasising your already evident beauty. And the dress they have chosen⊠well, he is almost ashamed of the heat pooling low in his gut; he has never seen you in such tailored, refined silks.Â
Whosoever marries you shall be quite the luckiest man indeed.
He doesn't miss the way you inhale sharply when your eyes finally land on him, his chest swelling slightly with pride as your lips part in surprise before breaking into that winning smile which always seems to brighten every room, tonight being no exception.
As he pulls up to the family, he hears his mother opining to you about the men attending the ball.
âY/n, I would like to introduce you to Lord Shelton; he is a fine young man with many interests, and he has a lovely estate near Hove,â his mother recounts as you listen intently.
âOh god, no,â Benedict immediately intervenes, âShelton has amassed significant debt at the Pudding Lane gaming hellâŠâÂ
Violet looks up surprised, then raises an eyebrow. âPray tell dear son, how do you have knowledge of such? Benedict Bridgerton, you had better not be frequenting the hells of the East End,â she threatens quietly, in that stern maternal manner that has any grown man quaking in their polished shoes.
âNo, of course not, mother,â he bristles, his eyes cutting briefly to you, not wanting you to think such things of him. âIt is an open secret at Whitesâ, and why he is currently banned from the card room there.â
â
You cannot tear your eyes off Benedict as his mother side-eyes him.
Violet hums sceptically before declaring. âWell, not to worry, there are plenty of other options available for Miss y/l/nâŠâ She steers your attention towards another crowd of young men, all talking and sipping champagne. âBaron Corning, Lord Jennings, Viscount Tewkesbury,â she recounts, nodding subtly to each one. âAny would make a fine addition to your dance card, my dear.âÂ
âWe can do much better than any of them,â Benedict chides.
You are slightly taken aback at how very much he sounds like Anthony tonight; apparently very invested in curating who you should dance with. The problem is, with each additional suggestion his mother makes to you, he roundly dismisses them out of hand.Â
Is no one in attendance up to his standard?
âBenedict, dear, a word?â Violet states pointedly after a third round of his withering opinions. âGet yourself another lemonade,â she smiles at you, patting your hand before looping her arm in her sonâs and dragging him away.
â
His motherâs arm is surprisingly strong when she needs it to be.
âDarling, may I remind you, while Miss Y/l/n is indeed a wonderful person, I do not think we can afford to be too picky for her prospects. Her background is rather⊠unestablished,â Violet points out diplomatically as soon as you are out of earshot.
âWe can do better than braggards, bores and philanderers,â Benedict shoots back, raising a pointed eyebrow.
She looks up at him and sighs. âWell, that is true.â
âAs I thought, mother,â he winks as she affectionately swats his forearm. âWhy not benefit from my knowledge? In fact, perhaps it is prudent I assist in your search for a suitor.âÂ
âOh, is it now?â Her tone suddenly filled with intrigue, her face entirely too scrutinising for his liking. âAnd does not my second son wish to join their ranks?â She adds entirely unsubtly.
âI have no time for romance; I have my art. I am most preoccupied.â He waves a dismissive hand, but even he knows his answer is tellingly brusque.
âAnd yet, you do not seem too busy to assist with the search, dearâŠâ she points out archly.Â
Benedict has no response to that.Â
â
The day after the grand ball, you are sat in the dappled shade in the gardens of Bridgerton House, attempting needlework. It's never been your strength, frankly. You would much rather be allowed to partake in more physical pursuits, like archery or fencing, a want to burn off nervous energy as you await the arrival of any suitors. You did end up dancing with a couple of gentlemen, both of whom wereâŠ. fine⊠in your estimation. Â
After messing up yet another stitch, you throw down the embroidery hoop and emit a deep sigh when a familiar chuckle rings out behind you.
âNot your favourite pastime?â Benedict correctly guesses.
âYou can say that again,â you grumble, twisting to smile at him, a little frisson in your belly at his mere presence, alone as you are.
He rounds to take a seat opposite you, across the table.
âSo let me guess,â his face charmingly skewed into a thoughtful mien. âYou would prefer to be doing something, hmmmm, more athletic?â
You giggle and cast your eyes downwards briefly, abashed he seems to know you so well. âCorrect again.â
âI remember you being a crack shot in archery,â he smiles nostalgically before continuing with genuine curiosity. âWhy did you not continue it?â
âI was informed âtis unbecoming for a lady,â you rue, the mental image of Mrs Parsons deeming such things âunladylikeâ flitting through your mind.
He scoffs. âSince when did fearsome little Skylark care one jot for societal expectations?â he teases gently, with a wink, as again he invokes the nickname he bestowed upon you a long time hence.Â
You smile briefly before you become more sanguine. âSince I have been informed I must find a husbandâŠâ you sigh.
He frowns a touch. âAny man would be lucky to have a wife who can keep him company on the archery field. I know I, for one, would greatly appreciate a spouse with whom I could share such a pastime.âÂ
A bittersweet twinge in your gut that one day he will indeed be married to some deserving, no doubt elegant, lady.
âI would venture that you are not like most gentlemen in that regardâŠâ
âPerhaps not,â he agrees, looking thoughtful, âbut then you are not like most ladies, Skylark.â
âI am not a ladyâŠâ your counterpoint softly-spoken, almost ashamed.
âYou are more lady than any other member of the Ton,â he asserts, his gaze suddenly intense, as if he is willing you to believe his point. âAnd you should be free to pursue any pastime you wish.â
You say nothing, just smile wanly, wishing you could believe it was true.
â
How you constantly doubt yourself causes a little stab behind Benedictâs ribs. A sudden burning need to prove that you should do as you please. He slaps his thighs and stands up swiftly.Â
âIn fact, I am going to go set up the archery targets right now,â he nods decisively, making a beeline for the far corner of the garden where he knows the targets are kept, hoping you will follow.
âComing?â he calls, twisting to look back at you. âI won't tell anyoneâŠâ he adds with a conspiratorial wink, seeing from the involuntary bounce of your leg how much you wish to join in.Â
He cannot help the smile that engulfs his face as you jump to your feet with a mischievous giggle. Nor can he help deliberately aiming badly, letting you roundly defeat him at target practice, basking in the victorious glint in your eye as you tease him gently for losing.Â
He also pretends not to notice his mother watching from a high window, her expression riveted and so very telling.
â
Later that day, you are reading quietly with Eloise when Violet sweeps into the drawing room with her lady's maid.Â
âY/n, Sir Denton is here to see you,â she smiles brightly.Â
âOh, IâŠâ you stutter, sitting upright, surprised.
âI can send him away, Miss?â The maid offers, intuiting your disquiet.
âNo, no, it is fine⊠I am just surprised, that is all. âTis almost 4pm. I was not expecting that anyone would be calling, given the late hour.â
Benedict suddenly materialises in the doorway. As ever, thereâs that trademark flutter in your chest.
âAny reason Denton is lingering in the hallway?â he inquires airily, grabbing a teacup and pouring himself some.
âHe is here for y/n,â Violet breezes as his eyes cut to you, a wave of irritation seeming to cloud his face.
âWell, we should dismiss him,â Benedict sniffs, pausing in his action, his face souring.
âWhy?â Violet frowns.
âI had a chance to look into his past since I acquiesced to his dance with y/n last nightâŠâ
âAcquiesced?!â Violet scoffs, but Benedict ignores her interjection, save for a curt eyebrow raise.
âI have subsequently discovered he has vastly overstated his assets,â Benedict bristles imperiously.
âWho woke up and made you Anthony?â Eloise pipes up witheringly.
Benedict shoots her a look of irritation. âAnthony has deputised me to run family matters while he is away on business this week, sister,â he reminds pointedly.
âYes, but you did not have to adopt his personality as well,â Eloise shoots back, disgust evident on her face.
âI take finding y/n here, a suitable match, seriously,â he volleys. âDo you wish to see your good friend married to someone unworthy of her?â
âWell, noâŠâ
âThen kindly permit me to handle matters,â Benedict orders with finality, uncharacteristically forthright in his opinions.
âI do not wish to see her married at allâŠâ Eloise mutters under her breath as he stalks away to dispatch Denton before anyone can argue.
You just sit there mildly dumbfounded, unsure what to make of it all.Â
â
The following evening, you are attending a music recital with the Bridgertons; Benedict is notably absent, which makes you a touch melancholic in a way you donât want to dwell on.Â
However, the evening turns for the better while you are taking refreshments at the interval. A friendly-faced young man strikes up a conversation with you after an introduction from Violet.
âAre you enjoying the music tonight, Miss y/l/n?â he asks genially.
âIt is very nice, Lord Glassborough,â you offer politely, trying to stifle your slight boredom. You enjoy music, but a two-hour concert is a little too much for you. You much prefer a short set of songs as they play at balls.
âI find it rather dull myself,â he opines quietly, leaning in. âI much prefer a lively song one may dance to.â
You know your face is a picture of surprise that his opinion is an exact mirror of your own.
âHave I offended you so?â he checks, looking mildly contrite.
âNot at all, my lord. I was actually just thinking the same myself,â you chuckle quietly.
He looks inordinately pleased and breaks into a friendly, toothy grin. He seems like a nice, agreeable sort. A pleasant, if not particularly handsome, face. Over his shoulder, you see Violet looking inordinately pleased you appear to be getting on so well.
â
âI am not sure I can do this...â you sigh as Ms West genially taps the metronome.
âYou can, dear; just remember your finger placement,â she encourages as your fingers fall to the cool ivory keys.
And so you begin again. Attempting to master this tricky piece, your eyes tracing the lines of music as you play the pianoforte. Violet is so keen for you to brush up on your skills, given Lord Glassboroughâs interest in you yesterday. You could not find an adequate excuse fast enough, and so here you are, in a slightly reluctant music lesson, trying your best to recall how Mrs Parsons taught you to play a few years ago.
âMen do so appreciate a lady who can entertain them with exquisite music,â Ms West nods approvingly as you play.
Mostly, you are relieved when you make it to the end with no mistakes, at least none glaringly obvious.
âI much prefer to singâŠâ you admit tacitly as Ms West shuffles the sheet music.
She looks at you surprised, then shoos you from the piano stool. âSing for me then, my dearâŠâ taking a seat and beginning the opening bars to a song that, fortunately, you know well.
You begin to sing along, growing more confident with every note, allowing yourself to get lost in the words, the story of a lady awaiting her true love.
âExceptional!â she peals delightedly over the sound, and you feel bolstered to continue, her playing the perfect accompaniment.
â
Benedict stops short as soon as he enters the house. The most lilting, beautiful sound echoing gently down the marble hall.
âWho is that Jenkins?â he asks of the butler who takes his coat.
âI believe it is Miss y/l/n, sir.â
He draws inexorably closer, finding himself watching you through the crack in the doorway, listening to you sing a touching tale of love that sounds so hauntingly hypnotic in your mellifluous tones. Your eyes are closed, and you sway to the melody, lost in reverie, in the narrative you weave.
The piano stops abruptly.
âCan we help you, sir?â an elder lady calls crisply.
Benedict realises the door has crept open slightly before him, enough for him to be seen by your music teacher. He watches as you swing around and look horrified that you may have an audience. It makes him take a resolute step forward into the room.
âDo you need us to desist? Is it perhaps too loud?â the lady checks deferentially, likely assuming him to be the head of the household.
âNo!â His reply is a touch too forceful. âPlease continue,â he modifies. âI was merely drawn by the splendid sound I heard. I am not sure I have ever heard such a wondrous voice,â he adds, keeping his gaze steadfastly upon the lady, not able to look you in the eye as he confesses as such.Â
â
You are mortified when you realise Benedict heard you singing; you have always managed to keep it private, until now at least. But now your heart is suddenly pounding at his extolling words.
âShe does indeed have a most excellent voice,â Ms West concurs with his sentiment, looking at you expectantly as Benedict walks further into the room, his face with the same hopeful expression.
âI am not sure I canâŠâ you stumble, nervous for an audience, most especially him; his is the opinion that would matter to you the mostâyou would be crestfallen should he not like it.
âSing more for me, please, Skylark?â His ask is gentle, beseeching as if it were just the two of you alone.
âSkylark?â Ms West sounds enchanted.
âMy childhood nickname for Miss y/l/n,â Benedict explains as he takes a seat.Â
âSkylarks have a wonderful song,â she sighs wistfully.
âIndeed,â Benedict chimes, his eyes still upon you. âI never knew how appropriate it was until this very moment.â
Something warm cracks in your chest at his sweet words, making you courageous. At least enough to nod when Ms West looks to you again from the piano. And so you restart the song for your special audience, heart in your mouth. The words coming easily to you, an extra layer of meaning he will never know as you sing words of unrequited devotion, looking to him in your braver moments. His face is enrapt, leaning forward, his eyes soft and expressive.Â
As you reach a high note at the end of the song, holding it, Benedict bursts into applause, jumping up from his seat and taking you by surprise, grabbing your gloved hands in his.
âYou should always be singing SkylarkâŠâ he pronounces. âTruly beautiful. Please promise me, no matter what happens, that you will always, always singâŠâÂ
You duck your head briefly, unsure how to deal with his effusive praise. Ms Westâs face is a picture as you stand there, your hands still trapped in his, feeling a tingle where the warmth of his skin seeps through the layers to yours.
âI-I-I promise,â you reply meekly, a touch dazed as you raise your eyes again to meet his, the intensity making your lungs restrict.
âThank you.âÂ
Two words have never sounded so sincere or loaded with significance.Â
III: ⊠And I Do.
A few days later, it is the Trowbridge Ball, a decadent affair that is usually the most talked about of the season, apparently. You share a carriage ride there with Benedict and Eloise, trying your best not to stare at himâso handsomely dressed in a white cravat and black velvet cropped jacket that clings to his tapered shape. But mostly, you fail. Your skin flushes hot the more you look at him. You could swear that his gaze strays to you, too, subtly sweeping the fine teal silk Madam Delacroix has expertly tailored for you.
âYou look beautiful this evening, ladies,â he offers politely to both you and Eloise.
âWhat do you want?â Eloise cuts across your reply, narrowing her eyes at her older brother, instantly suspicious of his flattery.
âCan I not compliment without an ulterior motive?â he frowns, their usual sibling dynamic emerging.
âNot usually,â Eloise sniffs, with another suspicious glance, before looking out the carriage window.
You take the opportunity to mumble your thanks to him. His responding smile warms your entire being, his hazy eyes lingering in a way that makes your skin prickle. And when he offers a chivalrous hand to assist you down from the carriage, you could swear his hand lingers upon yours a few seconds longer than is necessary.Â
Around an hour later, as you go to partake in a refreshment, a sneering Lady Cowper utters something cruel under her breath as you pass, her sour-looking daughter smirking beside her. You do not hear all of the words, but you do not need to. One sideways glance tells you all that you need to know. It seems so unnecessarily cruel, never having even exchanged so much as a word with you, but even as you feel a lump in your throat, their attention is already elsewhere.
âAh! Mr Briddgerton,â her entire demeanour changing to oleaginous charm, âmy daughter looks particularly stunning tonight, does she not? I do believe you should secure a place upon her dance card before there are none left!âÂ
You watch Benedict blanch at the very words.
âI do not dance, Lady Cowper, but I bid you ladies a good evening,â he responds, polite but firm.
You try your hardest not to giggle at the disdained look on their faces as he sweeps past them, and you feel light as air as, instead, he draws up to you and winks.
âThat woman does not realise she is doing her daughterâs prospects more harm than good with her brashness,â he comments dryly as he grabs a glass of champagne from the stand next to you.
âI am not so sure the daughter would do much better without her; she seems perpetually furious about her own hairstyle,â you opine sardonically, making Benedict snort loudly into his champagne glass. A lightness fizzles in your being as he shoots you a look of unmistakable admiration for that remark.
âI daresay you are a much better dancer than her,â he contends, not breaking eye contact, placing aside his drink before leaning in and continuing in a hushed voice. âPerhaps you would do me the honour of a dance, Skylark, to confirm my suspicion?â
There is a vault in your chest as he employs your private nickname in public and, not only that, is offering you a dance when, just a moment ago, he declared publicly that he would not.Â
You can only nod, heart hammering, as he breaks out into the most handsome smile, offering you his arm and leading you to the centre of the room as you hear a ripple go through the nearby crowd. Apparently the sight of one Benedict Bridgerton taking to the dancefloor is a rare occasion indeed.
â
As he takes your gloved hand in his and curls an arm around your shoulder, he realises this was perhaps a mistake. An impromptu offer, the hollow thrill of petty revenge for the insult he observed the Cowpers sling at you. But now he realises it has rather backfired upon him.
He cares not a jot for the gossiping, people nodding and pointing to you both as you begin to dance. No, the problem is much more concerning than that.Â
It is how discombobulated he feels having you in his arms.
How your body seems to fit and move perfectly with his. How, when you dare to look up at him, his mouth goes a little dry. He has never truly noticed how striking your eyes are until seeing them this close. Indeed, the evident beauty of your face, the way you seem to glow from within, more tonight than ever. It makes his chest - and somewhere else on his body - feel entirely too tight.
â
Nothing could have prepared you for this.
The feeling of literally being swept off your feet. With Benedict's handsome face smiling down upon you as you seem to float around the dancefloor.Â
Surely, this is what dreams are made of?
You know it is a flight of fancy, but it seems as though the floor beneath your feet is a shower of diamonds rather than candlelight refracted through chandeliers. The warmth and strength of Benedictâs embrace caged around you, respectful but so close it makes your lungs feel too small to gasp the air you need to keep moving. But you never want to stop. A whirlwind of sensation as you twirl, carried away by the music, the man, the moment.
âThank you, Benedict,â you breathe, knowing you are likely looking up at him far too adoringly but unable to mask it, a burning need for him to know how grateful you are for this dance, not even noting your over-familial use of his first name at a society event.Â
His eyes flash and you could swear they dilate a fraction before you must turn your back to him, following the steps.
âI was right,â he rumbles cryptically from behind you now, his large hands wrapped around yours as you hold them aloft together, following the moves of the dance. âIt is indeed an honour to dance with you.âÂ
Your belly flares as you turn in unison and realise that you are now dancing right in front of Cressida, her expression murderous. It makes you bolder than you have ever been, tilting your head sideways a fraction so your cheek almost brushes Benedictâs, fuelled by the envy you feel seething from within her.
You could swear he sighs âSkylarkâ as his hot breath tickles your ear, your chest pounding, a flavour in the air you can taste, a powerful stirring low in your belly.
â
Benedict knows this is a dangerous path and yet is powerless to do anything but walk it. Breathing your nickname into your hair as he inhales your scent, heightened by the movement of your dancing. A light, sweet floral perfume but underneath the smell of you, familiar from many years of friendship but altered now, more decadent, an undercurrent of tart berries that thrills and stirs deep within him. Even while knowing his ever-vigilant mother is watching, an inscrutable expression upon her face.Â
He is almost grateful when the music ends before he does something foolish. But then you are staring up into his face, all doe-eyed expectant beauty and his tongue feels unexpectedly tied. He is almost grateful when an interrupting hand wraps around his shoulder. Â
â
You watch Will Mondrich whisper in Benedictâs ear, and before you know it, he is offering apologies to you with a shallow, polite bow before hurrying away. Coming back to reality with a bump, you drift awkwardly from the dance floor, feeling judgy eyes upon you, suddenly flooded with concern your behaviour was entirely too wanton.Â
Before your thoughts can spiral too far, however, someone materialises at your side.
âI do so hope your dance card is not full tonight, Miss y/l/n,â a newly-familiar, chipper voice cut in.
âLord Glassborough,â you breathe; your relief at seeing his cordial face is palpable. âI am available to dance right now,â you smile politely, taking his proffered arm and letting him lead you back out to the spot you and Benedict had just vacated.
As the music begins and you move together, the difference is⊠noticeable. Gone is the frisson over your limbs, that excitement as if your skin could vibrate off your bones. Instead you feel comforted, almost a brotherly presence as he leads you in the dance. He is technically proficient, but it feels lackingâthat tension, that heat burning in the space between you. It makes you yearn for Benedict even though he was just with you. It makes your stomach settle with a leaden weight you realise you will have to settle for less than what you truly desire.
Still distracted by your mental comparison, you absently acquiesce to his suggestion to take some air upon the terrace as the dance ends. You sense Violet, ever the vigilant chaperone, follow as he leads you into the cooler air outside.Â
âMiss y/l/nâŠ,â Lord Glassborough begins cautiously. You sense a nervousness in his being, pulling your full focus to him. âI think us most compatible, would you not agree?â
âWe make most excellent friends, indeed, Lord Glassborough,â you hedge, not wanting to appear overzealous.
âAnd friendship is the most appropriate foundation to build something more⊠tender,â he argues with a smile. âI do believe I could offer you a most agreeable life.âÂ
There is a strange twinge in your chest as suddenly, you realise what this is. The moment everyone, except perhaps yourself, has been awaiting all season.
âI would be honoured if you would consent to be my wife, Miss y/l/n,â he humbly offers a sincere kindness shining in his eyes.
And there it is. An offer of marriage from a perfectly nice, respectable gentleman done in an appropriate manner.Â
To one side, you see Violet clutch a hand over her chest, face delighted, even as you form fists within your delicate gloves, wishing this moment were not happening so soon after a truly breathtaking dance with the man of your dreams. Who is not the same man as the one before you, nervously shuffling from foot to foot, awaiting your reply.Â
âI am honoured, Lord Glassborough,â you answer cautiously, bowing your head demurely. âThis is a big decision to make. Please allow me time to give you my proper, considered answer?â
âOf course,â he bows chivalrously, his accommodating nature making this moment all the more bittersweet. He is indeed a lovely man.Â
He is just not the one you want with every fibre of your being.
â
That night, you cannot sleep. Knowing you have the most significant decision of your life to make. So, in the small hours, you find yourself drifting to the deserted kitchen of Bridgerton House to do what you do best when you need to think calmlyâbaking.Â
An activity you have grown up doing with Mrs Parsons. Many hours spent happily with flour dusting your hands, sun streaming into her grand but homely kitchen. A perhaps slightly maverick pastime for a lady of her social standing, with staff to do such things for her should she wish it, but so very enjoyable nonetheless.Â
Throwing a large, heavy baking apron over your nightdress and robe, you potter around, the flagstone of the basement floor cold underfoot, a grounding feeling that stops your mind from racing too much.
You have no idea how to respond to Glassboroughâs proposal. On one hand, he is a seemingly nice man, certainly of a good family. You are sure he would be a perfectly acceptable husband, unlikely to be mean or untoward. It is just⊠a nagging voice is telling you to turn him down despite him being an imminently sensible choice, your heart wanting, well, the impossible. A man that excites you, not just a safe, practical option.
You are onto your second batch of lemon and rosemary biscuits when a voice makes you jump out of your skin.
âWhat on earthâŠ?â
There in the doorway is Benedict, looking confounded to find you here. The very man who makes your heart skip, always. He is dressed the most casually you have ever seen himâ also barefoot, in a white frilled shirt and dark trousers, brocade braces slung around his hips. You swear you may have to grab the bench before you to stay upright.
âY/n! We have cooks you can call upon at any time should you need food!â he fusses, instantly concerned, moving to ring a bell on the wall.
âNo! Please do not!â You exclaim, rushing to stop him, grabbing his sleeve in your haste. âI-I enjoy baking. It is relaxing; it helps me to think.â
His brow knits and his eyes flick down to your hold on his sleeve, a warm vein pulsing under your fingertips. You snatch your hand away quickly, a blush staining your cheeks, mumbling an apology as you scurry back to your biscuit-making.
âAlright,â he concedes slowly, still appearing confused. âWhen I saw the sconces lit from the rear stairwell, I assumed one of the staff was still down here.â
You find it bemusing that he seems at pains to justify why he might also be in the kitchen, especially to you, a guest. This is Bridgerton House, and he is a Bridgerton. He may go wherever he pleases, surely? And yet here he is, doing so.
âI was rather hoping for some hot cocoa,â he explains with that soft, crooked smile that always makes your heart flutter.
âOh! Well, umm, I could make you some cocoa?â you look down, wiping your hands upon your apron and moving to do so.
â
That you would make such an offer, as if seeing yourself as unpaid help, spurs him into action.
âNo, you certainly will not!â He decries, moving swiftly towards the larder before you can. âI am perfectly fine with some cold milk,â he assures, re-emerges with a bottle and pouring himself a glass, leaning back against the sink to take a sip.
Despite the lateness of the hour, he finds your heretofore secret pastime strangely fascinating. A lady who bakes. By choice. So he watches as you return to making your biscuit dough, entertained as you begin to beat the mixture quite furiously with a wooden spatula.
âHave those ingredients caused you some sort of personal offenceâŠ.?â he jests lightly, nodding to the bowl.
He observes a flit of contrition across your face before you answer.
âI, umm, have a decision that I must make; baking helps me think,â you explain vaguely, then appear to rapidly change the subject. âI am, however, sure of one fact - some biscuits are a must to accompany milk. There is a completed batch over there.â
âGenius,â he opines with a wink, enthusiastically moving to grab one from the cooling rack you signalled to, delighting in the blush that darkens your cheeks. But he decides to push the topic you abruptly avoided. Concerned there could be a topic you are genuinely wrestling with. If his opinion on the matter can ameliorate your burdens, he would be most honoured to assist.
âWhat sort of decision must you make?â he inquires before temporarily losing the power of speech. There is an explosion of tart lemon and earthy herb on his tongue that melts into a buttery sweetness, utterly divine. âLord alive, these are delicious!!!â he exclaims around the mouthful.
âThank you,â you answer softly.Â
You are always so modest about your talents; it sometimes makes him want to grab your shoulders and shake you gently. To make you see what he does.Â
âTo answer your question, it is a perplexing matter that needs serious consideration,â you explain, stopping short of detail. It appears you are not yet ready to share the news with him. Something about that makes him a touch sad, but he also does not want to pry if you are reluctant to divulge.Â
â
Benedict swallows the bite he has taken, and you find yourself staring at the movement of his throat as he does. Knowing one thing to be trueâif it were his proposal, you would not even hesitate for a split second. That wistful thought makes you suddenly melancholic, and you sigh, pushing aside your mixing bowl, realising this may be an issue baking will not fix.
âI do so hate to see you doubt yourself, Skylark,â he offers quietly after a beat, mien so earnest. âTrust yourself. You will find the right answer for your dilemma; I am certain of it.â
He is so remarkably supportive that, ironically, you almost want to scream at him.
âI should leave you to your thoughts,â his tone is gentle, reluctant.
âPlease, there is no need, Benedict,â you try to assure. âTo be honest, in all of this world, yours is the company I enjoy the very mostâŠâ
That truth is out of your mouth before you can censor it.Â
You sheepishly glance over to be met by a surprised look on his face. He takes a few steps towards you, probably without realising it, and suddenly, he is very close, faint wisps of his woodsy, citrus cologne tickling your nose.
âAnd I, yours, SkylarkâŠâ he rumbles, his gaze falling to your lips.Â
Time seems to stop, and you feel pinned under glass, staring up into his handsome face as he breathes slightly ragged, your body rioting as he engulfs your senses, definitely too close to be considered gentlemanly, politeâŠ
âŠBut then, he takes a sharp inhale and steps back as if coming to his senses. He turns heel with a hastily muttered goodbye, and before you know it, he is gone. Leaving you bewildered, your thoughts scattered.
â
The following day, Benedict is idly reading the paper, partaking in a leisurely lunch of tea and cake, when his mother swans in, reeling off a set of instructions for her lady's maid.
âOh, and lastly, do not forget, we should secure an appointment with the modiste, in case Miss y/l/n should know her answer todayâŠâ Violet concludes breezily as she takes a seat.
âYet another ball we must suffer, mother?â Benedict drawls drily, folding down his paper and taking a hearty bite of zesty lemon drizzle.
She shoots her son an exasperated look before neatly smoothing a serviette into her lap as she is served her usual afternoon Earl Grey by the butler. âMiss y/l/n will be in need of a wedding dress, Benedict, dear.â
He spits an array of crumbs onto his newspaper, coughing in shock. âShe will need what?!?â he wheezes, barely recovering.
âLord Glassborough proposed to Miss y/l/n last night, my dear, at the ball. She has yet to give her answer, but I am certain she will. They are a fine match,â Violet declares, taking a sip of tea.
âWhy did she not mention it to me?â he mutters, more to himself than anyone, his forehead creasing heavily in a frown as he swallows the rest of his mouthful.
âWhy would she have?â Â
âWe talked last nightâŠâ letting slip perhaps too much in his perplexed state, lost in his own tumbling thoughts.
âWhen last night? We returned from the ball very late,â a suspicious tone in his motherâs voice, belatedly releasing he should know better than to think aloud; she is sharp as a tack.
âI-I found Miss y/l/n baking last night⊠in the kitchen when I went for cocoa⊠she told me she had a dilemma she was wrestling withâŠâ he admits, looking down at the paper, the words now a jumble before his eyes. âMother do you think it is possible she will say yes??â Benedict's head snaps up, his heart suddenly pounding in his ears.
âShe would be a fool not to,â Violet points out, raising a perfectly arched eyebrow at him. âUnless there was another, perhaps more wanted, proposal she could consider. Do you possibly know of one? Son?âÂ
Even he can read between those lines.Â
âI-I am late,â he abruptly changes tack. âI promised to meet Anthony today to discuss the soil at Aubrey,â he bustles rapidly, standing and fleeing the room before he can allow his mother to see how much of a complete lie that is.
â
Benedict spends the afternoon at Whiteâs, downing perhaps one too many whiskeys as he grills his fellow patrons upon the Glassborough family. Looking for any reason he can find to object to the betrothal while steadfastly refusing to examine why he feels so passionately about the subject. He also spends time checking the hefty tomes of Debrettâs the club holds.
He returns to Bridgerton House just as dusk settles in, the sky streaking red and pink as he enters.
âWhere have you been, dear?â Violet asks as he rounds into the parlour.
âResearching,â he gruffs economically.
âWhat? Or rather whom?â Violet inquires, revealing she already has a firm idea of what she asks.
âI can find nothing wrong with him!â
Benedict paces, an energy emanating from his being as if he is rattled by that very fact.
âThat is a good thing, is it not, son?â Violet reminds pointedly. âWe want y/n married to a good gentlemanâŠâ
Benedict shoots her an exasperated look but relents. âI supposeâŠâ
âIs not your reluctance perhaps for another reason, my dear?â Her question is gentle, if not particularly subtle.
He slumps into a wingback chair with a defeated sigh. âGo ahead. Say your piece, mother.â
âI have watched you, darling,â she begins gently, watching him tip his head back and screw his eyes shut. âI do not know exactly when, but your regard of Miss y/l/n has altered, and I am not the only one to observe it.â
Benedict's eyes fly open, and he tips his head down with a frown as his mother continues.
âEven Colin has marked a change in you. If you feel anything, my dear, then Miss y/l/n has the right to know. Before it is too late. The right to make an informed choice if you are bold enough to give her one. Son, I have only ever wanted my childrenâs happiness. And if your happiness lies somewhere that perhaps even you have not realised until nowâŠ. well then I encourage you to follow it. Follow your heart.â
Her impassioned speech suddenly makes the pieces of a jumbled jigsaw before his eyes arrange into a pattern, a way forward that is suddenly clear and sharply in focus.
It makes him leap to his feet, an urgency thronging in his being.
âWhere is Miss y/l/n?â he almost barks.Â
âI do not know,â Violet confesses, âbut I do know she has not yet seen or written to Lord Glassborough,â she adds.
âGoodâŠâ he rasps, headed determined out of the room to find you.
â
The verdant lush grass is cool between your toes as you curl them over, sighing heavily, the night now dark, a twinkle of silver among the navy sky, soon to be black. The swing under the big oak, a refuge you have sought many times since staying at Bridgerton House, feels a particularly poignant place to be tonight as an internal war rages within you, your decision swaying back and forth as much as the wooden seat you are perched upon, the rope digging into your cheekbone as you slump against it, flummoxed.
You know what your answer to Glassborough should be. Indeed, what it should have been from the moment he asked.Â
A resounding yes.
In every practical measure, this is the best possible outcome of your London season. A proposal from a thoroughly decent, acceptable gentleman, way above the station you were expecting, given your less than prestigious certainty of lineage.
And yet.
And yet.
There is a large part of you, your heart, that wants to turn down the proposal, foolhardy as that may be. Wanting to feel akin to what you felt as you danced with Benedict last night. You are not so foolish as to believe he would ever propose, but perhaps there is someone else out there for you that may evoke something similar for you? Even if only half, it would be enough. Enough for you to build a future around and feel contentment in your heart, to not just settle for what your head knows to be a sensible choice.Â
â
Having searched the house, he rounds into the garden and stops short, heart leaping into his throat as he spies you, swaying gently upon the swing, looking thoroughly lost in thought. It makes his chest ache that you are so melancholic about a decision that should indeed be joyous. The selfish part of him celebrating, hoping that perhaps you are not. His memory recalls with perfect clarity how you have looked as lost as he now feels every time you have been close. The unbearable lightness of hope seizes his legs and draws him inexorably closer.
â
You whip around as you sense company and have to take a deep breath as your eyes fall upon Benedict. His face pinched with a restless intensity.
âI was hoping I would find you,â he exhales.
âYou have,â you shrug, still confused by his crackling energy, him seeming in a rush to say something.
âSkylark, you deserve the very best of everything. Sincerely. And part of that includes that you should know the truth in the hearts of those lucky enough to know youâŠâ a slight quake in his voice as he takes a step closer.
âAlrightâŠâ you respond cautiously, your brow creasing as you sense the nerves emanating from him.
You gasp as he rapidly drops to one knee before you, a hand clutched to his chest.Â
âI have been a fool to not see it before now. My own ardent admiration for you, for your talents, for your beauty. I realise now, perhaps too late, that you are truly the most wondrous, precious being in this world. You may not always see it, but it would be my greatest honour to show you, every day, if you will permit me, what I see when I look upon you. What I have always seen if I am honest with myself. A light that shines brighter than any other, a bird that soars higher and sings more sweetly than any other. A soul that it would be a privilege to be bound to. I know it is perhaps the worst possible timing, seeing as you already have a proposal from a perfectly acceptable gentleman. Still, I could not let you get married without letting you know the contents of my heart.â
You are stunned. Speechless.Â
Your heart pounds in your ribcage as you sit there stupified for what must be an age, Benedict looking upon you expectantly, breath slightly ragged from his long speech. Somehow, convincing yourself this could only be a dream. That the man you have adored since before you can remember has just made the most beautiful poetic confession of love you have ever heard. And itâs to you.
So, you do the only logical thing that comes to mind. Pinch your own leg. Hard.
â
Benedict is momentarily confounded at your actions.
âOwwww!â you yelp. âNot dreaming thenâŠâ is your muttered follow-up, rubbing your own knee as his face morphs into the most enormous grin, a lightning bolt of joy tearing through him as he realises what you are doing, that you can scarcely believe this is happening any more than he can.
âIt is really me, Skylark,â he chuckles softly, seeing the way your eyes dilate rapidly as he can't help the lopsided grin that claims his face, a warmth behind his ribs that is just for you.
âI realise that now,â you sass back, and there is a stirring in his trousers at the tone you employ.
âI love you.âÂ
It's a reflex; he doesn't even realise he says it. But as soon as it's out of his mouth, it's like an invisible burden has been lifted from his entire being. The truth. Plain. Simple. Honest.
â
You know your face is aflame as you snap back at him, entirely without meaning to, but then he says three little words that tilt your whole world even more.Â
âI-I-I love you too.â
You are bewildered when you say it aloud.Â
 The truth. Plain. Simple. Honest.
âMarry me? Please. My darling, wonderful friend,â he implores, his bare hands grabbing yours, tingles shooting over you as your skin touches his.
âYes!! I will!!!â you answer breathlessly, not even a second of hesitation.Â
He leans in and captures your lips with his. They are warm and soft as they move gently with yours. And when he opens your mouth with his and his tongue rolls delicately over yours, it feels as if all the fireworks you have seen in the sky live now inside you, popping and exploding in a riot of colour. A whole new world of sensual pleasure is promised in that one move.
âAre you certain?â you murmur as you break apart for air, a flash of insecurity that this is happening so fast, even as there is a strong pull inside, a want to keep kissing him over and over.
He smiles, tilting his forehead to yours, a wistful look in his blue eyes.
âTo know you, truly know you, is to love you, Skylark,â he sighs, his words a blanket settling over your quaking heart. âAnd I do. I truly do.â
Benedict taglist: @makaylan @foreverlonginguniverse @notanotheruniverse @iboopedyournose @aintnuthinbutahounddog @severewobblerlightdragon @writergirl-2001 @heeyyyou @enichole445 @enchantedbytomandhenry @ambitionspassionscoffee @chaoticcalzoneranchsports @nikaprincessofkattegat @baebee35 @crowleysqueenofhell @fiction-is-life @lilacbeesworld @broooookiecrisp @queen-of-the-misfit-toys @eleanor-bradstreet @divaanya @musicismyoxygen84 @miindfucked @sorryallonsy @cayt0123 @hottytoddyhistory @fictionalmenloversblog @zinzysstuff @malpalgalz @kinokomoonshine @causeimissu @delehosies @m-rae23 @last-sheep @panhoeofmanyfandoms @kmc1989 @desert-fern @corpseoftrees-queen @magical-spit @bunnyweasley23 @how-many-stars-in-the-sky @sya-skies
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Cherry Red, Crimson Blood
Chapter 34: The Whole Truth
Summary: In life, we will be confronted with difficult choices. Sometimes you won't know you've made the wrong choice until it's too late
Pairing: Poly 141 x reader
Word Count: 12,582 words
Warnings: Dead dove: do not eat, Angst, graphic violence and torture, mentions of predatory behavior towards a minor, Phillip Graves is a major creep, lots blood and injuries, kidnapping and its aftermath, hostage situations, anxiety and panic attacks, language, very explicitly described torture, âmega gets hit a lot, choking, biting, âmega gets stabbed with an ice pick, author canât write COD missions, vomiting, lots of heavy emotions, detailed descriptions of pain, guns, background character dies on screen, descriptions of guilt and grief, lots of POV changes, some descriptive language of gore and blood at the end, rehashing of âmegaâs injuries from the last chapter, a lot of angst and very heavy content, Alpha/Beta/Omega dynamics, Alternate Universe
A/N: This chapter deals with some pretty heavy content. Please, please, please read and heed the warnings. I have included content warnings for the more graphic parts before they happen, so if you don't want to read those, you can skip ahead to the next part. I suggest taking breaks if you need to, read it in installments if necessary. And I cannot stress it enough, please heed the warnings.
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âHi darlinâ.â His grin widens like heâs happy to see you. âBeen a long time.âÂ
You squeeze your eyes shut for a moment, your brain still sluggish. You feel sick as you try to process, try to figure out why and how. You try to move your arms again, but your wrists are stuck, hands burning as you pull. You desperately want them free, desperately need them free.Â
âEasy,â Phil says, putting his hands on yours, pushing them flat against the arms of the chair. Theyâre warm and calloused, the same hand that had been on your face a few moments ago. âYouâre gonna hurt yourself. More than you already have been.â He lifts your left leg, making you groan quietly as a deep ache throbs down to your foot and up to your hip.Â
Running. A gunshot. Pain.
âHe had strict orders not to harm you.â Phil says, adjusting the bandage wrapped around your calf. âDonât worry. We got you all fixed up.â He sets your leg back down gingerly, his touch lingering for a moment before he looks back up at you.Â
âWhy?â You croak out, trying to make sense of what happened.Â
Corporal McKinney broke into the barracks and chased you into the woods. He shot you and drugged you and now youâre here, restrained in a chair staring at a man you havenât seen for years. A man who was once your dadâs best friend.Â
âA lot has happened since we saw each other last.â He says, pushing himself to stand. âI left the Marines after a few years, formed my own group of military contractors. Invited your dad to join, but you know how he is. All honor and duty and serving the country. Of course, you havenât seen him in quite a while, have you?âÂ
You stare up at him, starting to get scared. You never liked Phil. There was always something about him that put you off. He always stared too long, always sat too close to you. He always greeted you with a hug that lasted too long, squeezing you too tightly against him. He was sweet on you in a way he wasnât with anyone else. He could be intense, brash and almost downright rude sometimes. He was a firm believer in traditional packs too, even if he never spoke about his own pack, his own omega. He had to have one, if he was as dedicated as he said.Â
He was far too much like your father.Â
Phil was always kinder to you, though. Softer. Not quite as callous and bellicose as your father in public. He was polite, always happy to lend a hand, always glad to roughhouse with your brothers to get their energy out. You saw the way your mother looked at him though. Perhaps her apprehension bled into you, those dormant omega instincts picking up on something she was projecting.Â
He made you uncomfortable, and she knew it.Â
What could an omega do, though, in a world where they donât have opinions, they canât argue, they canât disagree. Your mother never said anything because in the world your family existed in, the world Phil existed in, she couldnât.Â
âHe was so angry when he called.â Phil continues, staring down at you. âRanting and raving about how his oldest daughter betrayed him by presenting as an omega. He couldnât stand having such a useless child in his perfect pack.â You flinch at his words, even though you heard your father spew those very words after your presentation firsthand.Â
âHe called you?â You ask, the pieces starting to come together as your brain finally snaps fully into awareness. You knew he called someone, but you hadnât thought it would ever be Phil.Â
âOf course.â Phil chuckles. âWe were good friends, pals, buddies. He knew I could help him.â A shiver runs down your spine. You know what heâs going to say next. âSo I did. I have some contacts in some high places, people who owe me favors. So I made some calls, pulled some strings, got you into FIOT immediately, with some strings attached of course.â He leans down so youâre almost face to face. âI wanted you. They put a note in your file. You wouldnât be placed in the registry when you were old enough, you would go to me and my pack.âÂ
Bile churns in your stomach as you process his words. It all makes sense now. The stares, the hugs, the closeness with your father, your rapid enrollment in an institute that can take weeks to process applications. It was all so you could be his. Something heâs wanted from early on.Â
âYou would have been mine,â He pushes himself up straight again, starting to pace back and forth in front of you. âIf the fucking CIA hadnât gotten involved!â You flinch as his voice raises, the frustration starting to darken his scent. âThey froze your file, made the claim null and void. All for what, their little initiative that never really existed in the first place?â He huffs out a laugh, a smirk tilting his lips. âSmall world, though. Who knew weâd be seeing each other again after so long.âÂ
He steps closer, looking down at you. You hold his gaze, suddenly feeling afraid. Even though you know him, even though you spent a good part of your childhood around him, youâre afraid of him right now. Your mind starts to revert back, the urge to lower your eyes, break eye contact like youâre supposed to flashing through your mind.Â
Donât stare alphas in the eyes. Theyâll take that as a challenge. Itâs not your job to challenge them. Your job is to be subservient.Â
You would have been subservient to him if the CIA hadnât gotten involved. You would have been under his control, bowing to him and his will. Youâd have pups by now, at least one. Heâd always talked about having a big pack with lots of pups someday, always glancing at you when he said it.Â
Youâre going to vomit all over him.Â
Itâs not just the truth that scares you, though. Youâre being held captive here. That thought has registered in your mind now, the reality settling in as you get over the shock of the last few minutes. Corporal McKinney kidnapped you from base, and now youâre restrained in a chair surrounded by unknown alphas. Phil isnât going to help you, take pity on you. Heâs not here to be nice, to have a little chat and catch up on life.
That possibly ended as soon as he was denied what he wanted.Â
His hand cups your chin, holding your face up as he looks down at you. His thumb is rough as it strokes your jaw, a tickling feeling starting in the back of your mind again. Thereâs an almost bittersweet look in his eyes as he holds your gaze. You refuse to lower it, refuse to give him that satisfaction. âYouâve grown up a lot.â He says, his hand sliding down your neck to the collar of your shirt. âYou always were cute, though. I knew early on you were going to be an omega. You were far too...calm and compliant compared to your brothers. Always so polite and eager to please. You can tell if you pay attention, you know. Those dormant instincts start to show themselves long before presentation.âÂ
His hand pulls your collar to the side, revealing your mark. His eyes harden as he stares at it, his lips turning down into a frown. A shiver runs down your spine as the darkness in his scent intensifies. Heâs not holding you hostage just to tell you about what could have been, what direction your life might have taken. Heâs here for a reason, and you know your pack is involved. Something has happened, something behind the scenes, something John was looking into.Â
âWhatâs going on?â You ask as he releases your collar, taking a step back.Â
âWell, youâre being held hostage.â He says, like it isnât already obvious. âYouâre...shall we say...leverage to ensure your pack follows orders.âÂ
You blink at him. You havenât heard from or spoken to your pack in weeks. You should be relieved that theyâre apparently still alive, but what if you had been right and they donât want you anymore? Why would they take you if your pack has abandoned you? Or did they take you to ensure they wouldnât...
âLaswell stuck her nose somewhere it shouldnât have been.â Phil says, crossing his arms. âItâs only so long before your pack finds out. Letâs just say...theyâre not going to be happy about it. So, to ensure they donât do something impulsive and reckless as they are known to do, youâre going to play hostage.âÂ
You gulp as you stare up at him, suddenly feeling very afraid. Your scent spikes in the air, clouding it with the bitter scent of anxiety. It was the plan all along. You knew it even if you hadnât been told outright. Deep down youâve always known it wasnât about strengthening packs. It wasnât about studying how an omega would increase or decrease the efficiency of military packs. With the events of the last few months, the idea had started to form in your mind. You know you werenât alone in those thoughts. John and Simon were digging into the cameras for a reason. They were put up for a reason.Â
It was always about control.
That was the point of the initiative. That was why they put cameras up, that was why General Shepherd was so invested in the state of your pack and if you had been mated. He needed to ensure you were close enough to them so if something happened that wasnât supposed to, you could be used against them.Â
Youâre nothing more than leverage.Â
Your scent spikes in the air, clouding the room as reality sinks into you. Something happened that caused this. Something called your pack away to isolate you, to leave you vulnerable. They wanted you alone as a contingency.Â
Something did happen.Â
Now youâre here, being held captive by a man you used to know, a man who could have been your alpha had things not played out the way they did. The thought has your stomach churning. How far will they go? How far will Phil take things? Could he be merciful because of your history? Or will his ruined plan make him more ruthless?Â
Youâll be punished for something you canât control.Â
Phil makes a soft sound as he looks at you, shaking with fear in the chair. âDonât be scared. As long as your pack does as theyâre told, I wonât have to hurt you.â He turns the light back to face you, nearly blinding you. âNow, smile for the camera.âÂ
Theyâre safe.Â
It had been close. A rough position to be in, but they managed it. He never doubted them and their abilities, but four against nearly fifty with no backup were not good odds. Heâs been in tighter places before, and while he had his doubts, he is grateful Johnny and Simon were sent in when they were. Even if it was a bit suspicious.
âAll accounted for.â John says as he sinks down onto one of the jump seats next to Kyle.Â
Theyâre all battered and bruised from their final fight. Heâs ready to get home, ready to get back to you. From the sound of it, things were not going well, according to Johnny and Simon. He has a lot to make up for, a lot of apologies to make.Â
âFucking Russian PMCs.â He says, speaking to Kate over the comms. âItâs not a coincidence Kate.âÂ
Kate lets out a sigh that crackles through the comm. âNo, itâs not. My team and I came across some information while we were digging into the cameras.âÂ
âWhat information?â He asks slowly and carefully. He doesnât like being kept in the dark, especially when it comes to his pack. Especially when it comes to you.Â
âNot just information on the initiative, but information on General Shepherd.âÂ
âWhat information?â He asks again, slower this time as Johnny and Simon move in closer.Â
âShepherd was the one that sold those weapons to AQ and the Russians.âÂ
John looks at the other three members of his team. He knew something was wrong, something was off about the way Shepherd had acted while informing them about this mission. âHe wanted those missiles found and destroyed so he could cover his own ass.â He says, his stomach starting to twist. He doesnât like the way this is going.Â
âBut we found out the truth before you could find all the missiles.â Kate continues. âHe sent you on a wild goose chase to give himself a chance to escape.âÂ
Johnâs hand tightens into a fist. âWhere is he now?âÂ
âHeâs gone dark. Totally off radar.âÂ
John pushes himself up to stand, the adrenaline pumping again. âIâm going to find that bastard-âÂ
âJohn.â Kate says, cutting him off. âThereâs something else.âÂ
The twisting in his stomach intensifies. Thereâs a bad feeling tickling in the back of his mind. He doesnât want to entertain the dark thoughts that are brewing. âWhat?âÂ
âThey took your omega.âÂ
His stomach clenches, his breath catching in his lungs. The other three shift on their feet, all of them stepping closer. The scent in the plane thickens, anger and confusion mixing into a toxic cocktail. He hopes he heard that wrong, that there was some kind of interference in the connection and his brain made up the words he missed. âRepeat that.âÂ
âThey took your omega.â Kate says again.
He lets out a long breath, his muscles tensing. Heâs had a bad feeling tickling in the back of his mind for the last few days. Something was wrong, something was off. He should have known it was all a ruse. Why would AQ and the Russians store a missile in any of the places they had been sent to in the last week? It hadnât made sense, and he had wanted to voice his doubts, but the consequences of a missile being launched because they decided not to look in one place was greater than his own perceived doubts.Â
They had been right though.Â
Of course it had all been a plan. Of course there had been something fishy about it. Heâs hardly ever wrong. Heâs been praised on his instincts on the field and off. He should have known. Pulling Simon and Johnny when they did should have been enough evidence, even if they had been needed in the end.Â
âYouâre positive?â He knows she is. Thereâs no mistaking something like that, thereâs no doubting it.Â
âThereâs a video.â Kate says, Johnâs stomach dropping. âIâm sending it to you now.âÂ
John pulls out his phone, his fingers white as he holds it up. Heâs angry, beyond angry. If theyâve laid a hand on you...if youâve been hurt because of his own failings, his own inability to see the truth...
He clicks on the video when it comes in, a familiar face popping up on screen. âHi boys. Been a while.âÂ
âFucking Graves.â Johnny growls, his hands closing into fists in anger.Â
âI have a little something of yours I think you might be interested in.â He turns the camera around, your face popping up on screen. Youâre restrained in a chair, wrists red from the zip ties, but thereâs a glare on your face, looking as mean and threatening as you can. Thereâs a bruise on your cheek and what looks like a healing cut on your lip. Someone hit you.Â
âSmile for the camera.â Graves says, a bit too cheerfully.Â
You donât smile, your glare sharpening as the camera gets closer to your face. Thereâs still fight left in you. Whatever has happened hasnât been too bad. Yet.Â
âLetâs make this simple.â Graves says. âYou stay away from Shepherd, and I wonât have to hurt this pretty little face. She is pretty, isnât she?âÂ
You shift in the chair, your leg lifting before you kick outward.Â
âOw, you little bitch.â The camera jostles for a moment before itâs straightened back up, a hand shooting out to wrap around your throat. Thereâs no sign of any struggle, the glare still prominent on your face. âFeisty thing. Gotta keep up with those wild boys somehow.âÂ
The hand tilts your face just slightly, showing the mark on your neck. It is you, not that John doubted that from the beginning. It may have been almost two months, but he wouldnât forget your face that easily.Â
âLike I said,â Graves continues. âFollow your orders and sheâll be released unharmed.âÂ
The screen goes dark and John resists the urge to throw his phone. He shoves it back into his pocket, turning towards the wall of the plane. He throws his fist against the metal as hard as he can. It hurts, but he can barely feel it over the rage burning hot in him.Â
âFucking Shepherd!â He shouts, rearing back to throw his hand against the wall again.
Graves has his omega. Graves has his omega and now youâre being used as leverage. Theyâre all being played like puppets.Â
A hand catches his fist before he can punch the wall again, easing him back. âEasy.â Kyle says, trying to soothe him as best he can. âWe have proof of life, we know that sheâs alright for now.âÂ
âFor now.â He growls, looking around at the members of his team. âBut for how long?âÂ
âThey knew weâd go after Shepherd as soon as we learned the truth.â Simon says. âThis has been in the plans for a long time.â
âTheyâre trying to get us to make a choice. Focus on getting our omega back while letting Shepherd escape, or go after Shepherd and let our omega be tortured.â Kyle says.Â
âThose fuckinâ wankstains.â Johnny says, shifting on his feet. Heâs angry, the bitter scent filling the enclosed area of the plane. Theyâre all angry, angry at those responsible, and angry at themselves for falling for it. âThey were usinâ us the whole time.âÂ
John lets out a long breath. Itâs a hard decision to make. Go after Shepherd and cut the head off the snake, or go after you and let the person orchestrating all of this escape. Graves wonât stop, even if they do manage to take out Shepherd. He has his orders, and he will follow them, with or without Shepherd pulling the strings.
There might be a second contingency. They kill Shepherd, you die too.Â
No matter what, you wonât be safe. If they go after you, Shepherd escapes and if they try to hunt him down later, heâll use you again, or worse. They donât have to kill Shepherd, though. They have proof heâs a traitor. He can be brought to justice if heâs caught. Death is too gentle of a punishment for what heâs done. He deserves to rot in prison for the rest of his life.Â
They have to make sacrifices for the good of the world.Â
âWeâre going after Shepherd.â He says, taking a deep breath. âNone of us will be safe if we donât.âÂ
âThatâs dangerous, John.â Kate says. âWe donât know how far Shepherd or Graves will take this. You know how Graves is. He may not be able to be stopped, even if Shepherd tells him to.âÂ
He takes a second to breathe. His pack is silent, all three of them staring at him, waiting for him to make this decision. He is pack alpha, he is their Captain. They do what he tells them to do, follow his orders no matter what. Kate is right, this is a risk, but sacrifices have to be made. Hands have to be dirtied to keep the world clean.Â
He just hopes youâll forgive him.Â
âWeâre going after Shepherd.â John says definitely.Â
âThis is a bad idea, John.â Kate warns him.Â
âItâs the only option we have. Theyâre trying to draw us away. Itâs a risk we have to take.â He can see the apprehension on his packmateâs faces. Theyâre all feeling it, the drive to go after their omega, but deep down he is right. Theyâll never be safe until Shepherd is taken care of. Going after Graves only removes one small piece of the puzzle. The job always comes first.Â
âGet us locations, places he might try to dig in and hide.â He says, heading towards the cockpit. âWeâll find this arsehole and kill him ourselves.Â
***
Kate lets out a sigh as the comms close off. Itâs a mistake. She knows it is. The guilt is eating her alive. She fell for this, she brought you into this, and now you might get hurt because of it. How she didnât see the reality has shame burning through her. They were all blind, all led astray, all fooled by the red herring.Â
There was never an initiative. It was never about strengthening packs. It was always about control. They wanted a way to control packs. Shepherd knew if the secret ever came out, there would be no stopping the consequences. Legal or illegal, retribution would come for him if the truth was revealed.Â
This was his way of stopping it.Â
That's why the 141 were the guinea pigs.Â
They are the most dangerous threat to Shepherd, and he handed them a way to control them under the guise of strengthening packs, experimenting on how their dynamics and efficiency would shift with an omega added in. Even worse, they all fell for it.Â
John is making a mistake. Graves wonât stop so long as Shepherd knows theyâre coming after him. The last thing she wants is for you to get hurt because of their decisions, their mistakes. Shepherd wonât order Graves to kill you. Thatâs too much of a risk. It would give the 141 nothing to lose, and that would put them at their most dangerous.Â
Will Graves listen to that order?Â
She can send out a team to get eyes on Graves, find his position at least. That way, if things do take a turn, sheâll at least have a direction to point them in.Â
They were all too trusting and ignorant. Youâre innocent in all of this.Â
Itâs her fault.Â
Theyâre going to need help.Â
Christine canât sit still anymore. She can't take it. Itâs been almost eighteen hours since your disappearance and thereâs been nothing. No word, no news. She knows youâre alive. Kate had confirmed that, but that hasnât eased the burning questions eating away at her mind. What is your current state? Who took you and why? Where is your pack and are they even aware of whatâs happening?Â
Sheâs been sitting and twirling her thumbs. She canât bring herself to do any paperwork, any research. What is there to do besides sit and worry? She doesnât have a patient to take care of because she lost the one she was supposed to watch.Â
She huffs out a breath, pulling her phone out of her pocket and dialing Kate. If Kate wonât call, sheâll call herself. Kateâs probably busy though, so Christine canât blame her too much for not calling. Sheâs probably so far from the front of Kateâs mind right now.Â
The phone rings twice before Kate answers, sounding tired and disheveled, just as much as Christine feels.Â
âLaswell.â
âKate, I need to be there.â She doesn't hold back, doesnât try to make small talk. Thereâs no time for it. She knows how Kate is doing, and itâs not great.Â
âChristine, I donât know if I can take that risk.â She says.Â
âI need to be there. I can't take sitting around here anymore, and when you find her, sheâs going to need someone she knows there, someone that knows how to take care of her.â Christine lets out a breath, the relief of getting her thoughts out taking some of the weight off her shoulders.Â
Kate sighs, but she has to know Christine is right. Sheâs not sure what state youâre in, and depending on how bad it is, and where your pack is, youâre going to need her. Even if you think she was behind this. âIâll have a plane ready to go in thirty minutes.âÂ
âThank you, Kate.â She says, letting out a sigh of relief.Â
âDonât miss the flight.âÂ
Christine hangs up, gathering a couple things from her office before closing and locking her door. She nearly runs to her barracks, packing a bag quickly. Sheâs not sure what to bring, or how long this will take. Sheâs not even sure exactly where sheâs going.Â
She hurries to the airfield, phone in hand. Sheâs not sure where the plane is or which one sheâs taking. Sheâs just relieved Kate is doing this for her.Â
Her phone buzzes as she reaches the tarmac, making her puse. She lets out an annoyed sigh before answering the call.Â
âOf course you have to call at the worst possible moment.â She says.Â
âIâve always had the worst timing.â Alexâs voice comes through the speaker, and she can almost hear the smile on his face.Â
âI canât talk long. Iâm about to board a plane.â She says.Â
âI know. Weâll pick you up on the tarmac.âÂ
She blinks in surprise. Itâs been years since sheâs seen her brother, months since sheâs spoken with him. Ever since he retired from Delta Force, his regular calls have been happening less and less, and theyâve reached near radio silence over the last couple years. Now heâs involved in this too?Â
âKate called in a favor.â He continues, and thatâs all she needs to know. âWeâll see you in a few hours.âÂ
âYeah.â She says, tears brimming in her eyes as she smiles. Despite everything, sheâs glad she gets to see her brother again. Glad she has some support in this. Your pack will be mad. Theyâll blame her. Sheâs not afraid of them, but she knows Alex will stand behind her no
**Content Warning: light torture, âmega gets punched, further injury to previous injuries, panic attack**
Your hands are starting to go numb. The constant attempts to free yourself from the zip ties isnât helping, but youâre beginning to get twitchy. Your omega is scratching at the back of your mind, begging to be free, but you know you wonât survive it. The room is full of armed mercenaries, and youâre sure if you tried to take out Phil first, youâd be pumped full of bullets before you could even do any damage.Â
Heâs leaning against the wall far too casually, staring at the phone heâd used to record the first video of you. His explanation had been simple. Your pack stops going after General Shepherd, you donât get hurt. The longer they chase Shepherd, the more Phil gets to torture you until they decide your life is worth more than Shepherdâs.Â
Will they choose you over Shepherd? What if theyâve already decided to abandon you? What if your fears were right and theyâve given up, and thatâs why they were gone so long? They wonât care what happens to you, if they have written you off as a burden, as a loss. Theyâll let Phil torture you to death and they wonât even blink an eye. Youâll just be another casualty.Â
It makes your stomach hurt, the idea of your pack letting you die. Even the idea of someone who had once been a friend of your family being so cold towards you has nausea bubbling in your belly. He doesnât care. His only worry is money, not the past. He doesnât care. Heâll do the bidding of whoever offers the highest price.Â
He lets out a sigh, pocketing his phone as he pushes himself off of the wall. âLooks like your boys donât follow orders well.â He bends down, putting his hands on his knees so heâs face to face with you. âTheyâve decided to leave you here with me. Looks like Shepherd was wrong. They donât really care about you as much as everyone thought they did. Makes me sad, them abandoning you so easily.âÂ
You try to ignore his words, try to convince yourself heâs doing it on purpose, trying to mentally break you. Yet you canât deny those words play exactly into your doubts, your fears. Have they really left you here, choosing Shepherd over you? Would they decide to do that? How easy had that decision been made? Â
Tears blur your vision as you stare up at Phil, your eyes burning as you try to put on the bravest face you can. You wonât let him have the satisfaction of knowing heâs getting to you, playing into your fears.Â
âUnfortunately, that means I have to hurt you.â He stands up straight, staring down at you for a moment before pulling his fist back, hitting you across the face.Â
You see stars for a moment, your head snapping to the side. The left side of your face is numb, the taste of metal flooding over your tongue. Youâre bleeding, blood pooling in your mouth. A hand grips your chin, pulling you back so youâre sitting up straight in the chair. You stare up at Phil, the fear fading away to anger as you glare up at him. Your face is throbbing, and you know itâs going to swell and bruise later, more than it already has thanks to Corporal McKinney.Â
Traitorous bastard.Â
They all are.Â
âI do feel bad for hurting that pretty face.â He says, stroking your jaw with his thumb.Â
The movement is impulsive, the anger becoming too much. You spit the blood in your mouth in his face, the droplets splattering across his skin. He turns his head away for a moment, bringing his other hand up to wipe at the blood.Â
âThat wasnât very nice.â He says, looking down at you.Â
âFuck you, you fucking creep!â You yell, kicking at him with your bad leg.Â
He releases your face, catching your leg easily. He pushes his thumb against the bullet wound, all the fight leaving you as pain tears through your body. You let out a scream, trying to pull your leg away but he wonât let you. He holds his thumb there as you scream, the tears streaming down your face.Â
âOkay, okay please! Please stop!â You beg, the pain radiating up into your hip and side. You canât take it anymore, your brain starting to go fuzzy as you hyperventilate.Â
He releases your leg, his hand wrapping around your throat to lift your face. The tears are streaming down your cheeks, mixing with the blood from the cut on your cheek. Thereâs no sympathy, not even regret in his eyes as he stares down at you.Â
âI donât want to hurt you, but if you canât behave, Iâll have to do just that.â He releases you as you continue to hyperventilate, your eyes starting to glaze. Youâre distressing. Will Phil help you? Will he do what he has to do to keep you alive? If you die, there wonât be anything stopping your pack. The entire plan will be over. Theyâll go after Shepherd, then theyâll hunt down Phil.Â
Cold ice water hits you in the face, shocking you back into clarity. Phil is holding the cup of water heâd been letting you drink from periodically. You blink at him as water drips into your eyes, your breaths hitching but far slower than they had been. Youâre awake and aware now.Â
You didnât even know it was possible to do that.Â
âDonât distress on me now.â He says, putting the cup down. âWe have so much ahead of us.â He moves around to the back of your chair, bending down until his breath hits your ear. âBesides, you make me help you out of distress, I might not be able to stop myself.âÂ
Your eyes pinch closed as his lips brush the shell of your ear before he stands back up, tears mixing with the icy water still sliding down your face.Â
Christine nearly runs down the ramp once the plane has stopped on the runway. Sheâs jet lagged and worn out after eight hours of worrying, but sheâs eager not only to finally get some news on you and your status, but to see her brother for the first time in a long time.Â
Itâs not hard to find him.Â
âChrissy!â He grins, hugging her tightly.Â
She has half a mind to complain about the nickname sheâd endured her entire childhood, but she canât find it in her as she hugs her brother tightly. Sheâs missed him, more than she realized. Their jobs have kept them busy, her with her medical studies and practice, and Alex with...whatever it is he does.Â
âItâs been far too long.â She says, pulling away from him. Sheâd love to stand there and hug him for an hour, but she canât. They have more important things to do. Time is of the essence, if her worst fears are true.Â
âA lot has happened, a lot has changed.â He says.Â
She looks him over, spotting the more noticeable changes in comparison to the last time they were face to face. âYou could say that.âÂ
âWe can talk about it later.â He turns to the other person with him, a woman. âChristine, this is Farah.â He introduces her. âFarah, this is my baby sister Christine.âÂ
âNice to meet you.â Farah says, shaking her hand.Â
âYou as well.â Christine looks between them for a moment. She knows that look in Alexâs eyes as he looks at Farah.Â
âWe should get moving.â Farah says, ignoring him.Â
âLaswell has moved off the grid.â Alex says, opening the driverâs side of the SUV.Â
Smart, if things are as bad as she thinks they are.Â
Christine gets into the back, letting out a long breath. Sheâs closer now to finding out whatâs happened to you. The guilt is still eating her alive. If she just hadnât left, if she hadnât believed the phone call, put it above your safety.Â
Things might have been worse if she had stayed.Â
âKate filled us in about everything.â Alex says as he drives away from the airfield. âAt least in regards to the pack and your involvement.âÂ
âThereâs some things sheâs not telling us.â Farah says. âThough if things are as bad as they sound, I donât blame her.âÂ
âI donât know much of anything.â Christine says, staring out the window as they drive out of the city. âI feel like itâs my fault. If I hadnât left her alone...âÂ
âItâs hardly your fault.â Alex says, glancing at her in the rearview mirror. âIf this was all planned, there wouldnât have been anything that would stop it from happening.âÂ
âThey might have done worse if you had stayed there.â Farah says, speaking Christineâs own fears aloud.Â
âI wish I could see her. Make sure sheâs alright.â Christine says. âIf something happens to her...âÂ
âFrom what I hear sheâs a hardy omega.â Alex says, trying to comfort her. âSheâs withstood a lot. She can survive the 141, sheâs probably giving them hell as we speak.âÂ
**Content Warnings: light torture, choking to the point of almost passing out, blood, very detailed descriptions of pain, non-fatal stabbing**
Itâs getting hard to breathe. Philâs grip around your throat is getting tighter and tighter, less and less oxygen getting to your bloodstream and your brain. Your mouth has an almost permanent metallic taste as blood drips down your chin. Blood stains Philâs arm from where you bit him, teeth marks red and angry looking from where they broke the skin.Â
âYou fucking bitch.â He growls, jaw clenched. âYour alpha should have taught you some manners.âÂ
His hand squeezes tighter, cutting the air off entirely. You begin to panic, tugging against the restrains with your raw, cut up wrists. Black dots begin to dance in your vision, your legs straining against the zip ties keeping them attached to the chair. Your hands and feet are going numb, your entire body tingling. This is it. Youâre going to be choked to death.Â
He holds his hand there for a moment, letting you struggle before he lets go and you suck in a gasp of air. You slump over in the chair, blood splattering on the floor as you cough, your throat raw and sore. Tears burn in your eyes as you heave, trying to get the oxygen flowing through your body again.Â
Phil bends down to your level as you sit there, head hanging as blood drips from your mouth. Your tongue is raw from how many times youâve bitten it. Itâs impossible to tell how much time has really passed. Thereâs no windows in the room. The only light source is the cracks around the door behind you. Even then with the bright light in your face constantly, itâs hard to tell anything anymore.Â
âFeisty still, but everyone has their limits.â His hand cups your chin as he stands, lifting your face to follow him. His hand holds the back of your head up as he wipes at the blood under your nose and on your chin almost gently.Â
Tears stream down your cheeks as you stare up at him, unable to even care anymore that his hand is so close to your neck. All he has to do is move it down just slightly and squeeze and youâll be unaware of anything around you, at the mercy of his bidding.Â
That would almost be a relief.Â
He dumps another icy cup of water over your head, keeping you from slipping too much into a panic. The cold water stings the cut on your chest and the one on your arm as it slides down your shoulders. Youâve lost the ability to feel the throbbing in your calf, numb to most of the pain in your body.Â
Why havenât they come for you? Where is your pack?Â
Have they written you off for good? Was finding Shepherd more important than you?Â
Philâs phone goes off, your stomach dropping. He stares at the screen for a second before turning back to you.Â
You shake your head, the tears cascading down your cheeks. âNo,â You start to shake. âNo, please-âÂ
âYou know I have to, darlinâ.â He moves behind you, tugging on your hair to keep your head up as one of his men stands in front of you with a phone in hand.Â
He counts down on his fingers before pressing record.Â
âSeems you boys still canât follow orders. Your omega sure wishes you would.â Phil says as he reaches around your head, holding your chin in his hand. He tilts your head back making you look up at him. âDonât you, darlinâ. Tell them. Tell them how much you wish theyâd follow orders.âÂ
Youâre still crying, unable to stop as you stare at the camera. They really have given up on you. Theyâve deemed you unworthy of saving. Theyâve let you sit here and be beat up and tortured all because they put the job first.Â
They really have given up on you.Â
Are they even watching?Â
âPlease,â You croak out, half begging your pack to care, half begging Phil to have mercy.Â
âSince you canât seem to bring yourselves to care about your own omega,â He shifts slightly, someone handing him something behind you. You catch a glint of metal, your heart rate picking up. Youâre panicking, breaths coming in shaky gasps. You know he can do worse. Heâs threatened worse, but what is he going to do? âIt seems you need a little more...motivation.âÂ
You try to wiggle out of his grasp in panic, wrists bleeding again from tugging at the zip ties. Theyâre coated in your blood, your leg throbbing but you donât care. You need to get away, get free. âNo, no-â
You let out a scream.Â
Itâs sharp and piercing, but nowhere near the sharp pain in your neck. It fires through your very nerve endings, making you aware of the very cells in your body. It shoots up into your brain, igniting every neuron in your brain. Your very blood feels like itâs boiling, your skin on fire from the pain. Every inhale feels like youâre breathing in sand, and every exhale is like glass shards dragging through your lungs and up your throat. The tears streaming down your face may as well be slicing through layers of skin, every wound pulsing and throbbing with a new kind of angry vengeance.Â
Youâre sobbing, nearly choking on air as the pain continues to pulse in your body. Itâs too much, every sensation inside and outside of your body meshing together in an agonizing harmony.Â
âShhh.â Phil tries to shush you as he bends down, his cheek resting against the side of your head. âI know, I know. Youâll be alright.â He presses a kiss to the side of your head before letting you go limp in the chair.Â
Your scream still hangs in the air even after the video ends.Â
Itâs otherwise silent in the room, all eight of them feeling the weight of their decisions on their shoulders. The scents in the air are full of pain and regret and guilt and anger.Â
âWas that fatal?â Kate asks, breaking the tense silence.Â
âNo.â Christine chokes out, her voice shaky. Her hands are trembling where theyâre tucked against her sides. Her arms are crossed over her chest, trying to bring herself some kind of comfort after what she had just watched. âHe went for the scent gland. Itâs not a fatal injury, unless you go too deep, but he knew what he was doing.â She swallows the lump in her throat. âItâs just incredibly painful.âÂ
Her words hang in the air for a moment, all of them still trying to process what they had just seen.Â
John slams his hands on the table, all of them jumping. âI fucking told you.â He says, his voice laced with the deep growl of his alpha. âI fucking told you Kate, she should have been flown out here as soon as you made the call.âÂ
âI know.â Kate says, undeterred by his anger. Sheâs seen it many times, though sheâs rarely been on the receiving end of it. âI know, I made a bad call. None of us knew they would take it this far.âÂ
âBut we knew something was going on behind the scenes.â John says, still radiating anger. âAll precautions should have been taken.âÂ
âThere was no guarantee her being here would have stopped them. She might not have been any safer here.â Kate says, trying to ease his anger, even though she knows itâs completely warranted. âThis goes far deeper than we thought it did. Even before this plan was set into motion.â She waits a moment, letting the air settle. âA year ago, a convoy was smuggling missiles and other weapons into the Middle East in an off-the-books operation. The convoy was attacked and the missiles and arms were stolen by a Russian PMC group. The operation was conducted under the command of Shepherd, and the soldiers in the convoy were all Shadow Company.âÂ
âThatâs how Graves is tied into this.â Kyle says.Â
âIt goes deeper than that.â Kate says, pulling up a file and displaying it on screen. âThe missiles and weapons being smuggled werenât being sent to aid allies in the Middle East. Shepherd sold them to AQ and the Russians. The PMC group that attacked Shadow Company was hired by Shepherd to make it look like an ambush.âÂ
âFucking weasel.â Simon growls.Â
âI donât know how much Graves knows, or how much he helped hide the entire operation, but his ties to this go even deeper.â Kate says, and they all shift closer. âGraves has history with your omega.â She says, pulling up an old photo. âWe combed through one of her brothersâ Facebook pages. Found an old photo of her dad with Graves. They served on the same base when her family lived in Texas before Graves left to join MARSOC. She would have still been a child at the time.âÂ
They stare at the photo, Graves clearly identifiable as he stands next to another man, beers in their hands. Thereâs two other boys in the photo, young and grinning at the camera. Standing in front of Graves is a little girl, a happy grin on her face. Theyâre all in various combinations of red, white, and blue.Â
4th of July, they assume.Â
âThatâs how she got into the institute so fast.â John says, staring at the photo. Heâs never seen a photo of your father before. You must take after your mother. âGraves pulled the strings.âÂ
Kate nods. âHe did, but under the condition he would be the one to claim her when she grew old enough. The CIA wiped out that claim when they froze her file.âÂ
The 141 all shift on their feet, sharing looks. John feels a sick twisting in his stomach at the implications. Your position in the photo suddenly makes sense. Anger burns in him, deep and bubbling like magma. Heâll kill the bastard.Â
âThis is revenge then.â Johnny says.Â
âIn a way, I think.â Kate says. âWe took away what he wanted. Graves wasnât going to pass up this opportunity. Heâs not afraid to get his hands dirty.âÂ
âThis all is what the initiative was created for.â Christine says, leaning against the table. âA contingency in case this all was uncovered.âÂ
âA way to control us.â Kyle says.Â
Kate nods. âYes. It was all a plan to give the 141 a weakness, a way to be controlled should the situation arise. In this case it just so happened to be the uncovering of his traitorous arms deals.âÂ
âWe were all pawns in this.â Christine says.Â
âWe let them walk right in and take control like that.â John says, turning to Christine. âYou let them walk in and take our omega.âÂ
She turns to face him, undeterred by his agitation and anger. âI did what I thought was right at the time. I got a call from one of the front desk workers in the med center saying that someone was waiting in my office for me.â She explains. âThey wouldnât say who it was, and the whole thing felt off. I knew whoever would be visiting me was not going to be friendly, so I felt it was safer to leave her in the barracks than take her with me and risk something happening in a place she doesnât know well. In the barracks at least sheâd know places to hide and barricade herself.âÂ
She takes a deep breath, still facing down John fearlessly. Heâs coiled tight like a spring, ready to jump at any moment should he deem it necessary. Itâs those protective instincts, the knowledge that his omega is somewhere else, taken unwillingly and being tortured feeding into that need to fight.Â
âMy office door was open when I got there.â She continues. âI always leave it locked. I went in prepared to fight, but I was attacked from behind. Hit over the head and drugged with something fast acting, something that would keep me incapacitated long enough for him to strike.â She stares up into his eyes, projecting her scent just a bit to try and get him to calm down. âWe all made mistakes here, things we thought were the right choice at the time.âÂ
Sheâs not wrong. They all know it. They had just seen proof of it. Â
âThe assailant?â John asks, turning back to Kate.Â
âCorporal McKinney.â Kate says. âHe was in Shepherdâs pocket from the start. Someone who could watch first-hand. Someone who could sneak into the barracks unnoticed without many questions. He was likely the one that put the cameras up.âÂ
âFucking wanker.â Simon growls. âHe approached her once in the mess. Early on. Tried to introduce himself to her. Backed off as soon as I intervened. Never tried again, at least that we know of.âÂ
âShe never mentioned him.â Christine says. âOr anyone else on base that might have tried to approach her.âÂ
âWhere is he now?â Kyle asks. Theyâre all angry, frustrated. How had they not seen this happening?Â
âLocal police tracked his car to an abandoned airfield not far outside of Hereford.â Kate says. âHe was dead inside. Police ruled it suicide.âÂ
âIâm sure it was.â John says.Â
They all know it wasnât.Â
âShadow Company likely picked her up from there with orders to stage a suicide.â Kate says.Â
âOne less loose string to worry about.â Simon says. âCovers their tracks in England.âÂ
They all go quiet. How this had all happened right under their noses? Theyâre all guilty of falling for it, for being too trusting in a world they know they canât be too careful in. Allies can turn on a dime and become enemies. Betrayals can be easily bought. Things can turn downhill within a blink of an eye. Theyâre supposed to be prepared for the worst, ready for every possibility.Â
They had written this off as a conspiracy, and now their omega is paying for it.Â
âWe need a plan.â Farah says, breaking the silence.Â
âWe canât let Shepherd get away.â John says.Â
âWe cannae just leave her.â Johnny argues against his alpha. Itâs a brave thing, considering his alphaâs current mental state. Â
âI donât know how much more she can take.â Simon backs his beta up, the desperation and pain on your face still visible in all of their minds.Â
âLet us go after Shepherd.â Alex says, offering up a solution. âHeâs obviously watching for you to come after him.âÂ
âWe can move undetected.â Farah agrees. âHeâs less likely to expect us. You need to focus on your omega. Shepherd will show himself again eventually.âÂ
âDo we have a lead on their location?â Kyle asks, turning back to Kate.Â
She nods. âWe do now. I sent a team out to try and track location through the videos and where they were being sent from.â She pulls a map up on screen. âWe have a location.âÂ
âTexas.â Alex says.Â
âHe took her home.â Christine says.Â
âWe have a plan then. We go after Graves, Farah and Alex start tracking Shepherd. Kate is eyes in the sky for us.â John says.Â
âSheâs going to need medical attention as soon as possible.â Christine says. She looks at Kate. âWhere is the nearest military base from their location?âÂ
Kate types on her computer. âNaval Air Station Joint Reserve Base in Fort Worth.âÂ
âGet me there and Iâll be waiting. Sheâs going to need someone she knows.â She says, looking at John. âSheâs not going to just let anyone close to her after this. She may not even let you close.âÂ
John stares down at her for a long moment. She stares back unflinchingly. She doesnât get intimidated easily, not after years of dealing with institutes and alphas alike.Â
He lets out a breath, staring down at her for a long moment before he nods. âI trust you.âÂ
âShort reunion this time.âÂ
âIâm just glad I got to see your face again.â Christine says, looking up at Alex.Â
âThings are...complicated.â He says. âMaybe after all of this is over we can go and get some coffee. Talk about our lives...as much as we can.âÂ
The corner of her mouth twitches up in a smile. âIâll hold you to that.âÂ
Alex pulls her into a hug, holding her tightly. âYouâre doing good work, Chrissy.âÂ
She shakes her head at the nickname, but she holds him just as tightly. âIâm trying to.âÂ
Alex pulls away, squeezing her arms. âIâd say you are. You care a lot. To the point some might call it a character defect.âÂ
She scoffs, slapping his chest playfully. âNot like youâre much better.â She glances at the car where Farah is waiting patiently. âIâm happy for you.âÂ
âOh, weâre....â Alex blushes to his ears. âWeâre not...âÂ
She gives him a look. âMhm sure.â She looks up at him one more time. âBe safe.âÂ
âAs best I can.â He says. âTake care of yourself. Donât be too hard on yourself either.âÂ
âI try not to be.â She squeezes his hand before stepping away.Â
She watches the SUV drive off, stomach churning with nerves for both of them. Shepherd is dangerous, but Alex has fearlessly faced down danger since he was a kid. Heâs always been brave and determined, loyal and unafraid to do what he thinks is right no matter what. She trusts him to take care of himself, she trusts Farah to help him, even if she only met the woman today.Â
She trusts them both to take care of each other. She trusts them both to help put an end to this.Â
**Content Warning: Blood, vomiting, 'mega forces herself into a panic attack**
Your body aches, muscles screaming. You canât take much more. Your cheek throbs painfully, swollen to the point you almost canât see out of your left eye. The pain burning from your neck makes the other pain in your body nearly irrelevant, nearly nonexistent. Itâs like electricity, burning through your very cells. Every movement seems to make it flare, makes the electric shock jolt through you. The burning pain that follows makes you whimper, a pathetic choking sound squeaking out from your bruised throat.Â
The pain makes you nauseous, vomit staining the front of your shirt and pants. Itâs mostly bile and the little food youâve gotten since your kidnapping.Â
Nutrient bars, meant to keep you fed and nourished for a short period of time.Â
You may never be able to eat them again.Â
âFuck.â Graves curses, staring at his phone. âTheyâve backed off.â He steps up to you, looking down on your pathetic form. âLooks like your boys do care about you after all.âÂ
Do they? Are they really coming for you, or have they simply given up chasing Shepherd because they lost all their leads. Will they come for you, or will they leave you here to rot? What will Graves do then? Try to take you as his own omega? Kill you out of anger?Â
Your stomach churns and you can feel the bile rising.Â
You vomit again, the warm liquid splashing into your lap. You canât lean far enough anymore, not without the risk of not being able to pull yourself back up, not with the pain burning your every movement. You canât even lift your head anymore, your body weak and battered and bruised. Thereâs blood everywhere, on you and on the floor. You can still taste it in your mouth, mixing with the sourness of bile.Â
Graves gives you a disgusted look before turning to the others in the room. âDuran, Lewis, keep watch. The rest of you come with me.âÂ
He leaves the room for the first time in what you assume is days. For once the cocktail of scents begins to disperse, all but two of the alphas finally disappearing. Where theyâre going or what theyâre going to do, you donât know. You canât bring yourself to care either way. You just want to go home. You want to see your mother again, your brothers and sisters, even your father would be a welcome sight after this. You want your alpha, you want him to hold you, to take you in his arms, keep you safe.
He abandoned you. He left you to suffer like this.Â
Your breathing picks up as you sit there, chin to chest as you stare at your bloody shirt. The smells in the room are awful, the scents no longer there to block out the sour bile and metallic stench blood. Tears are streaming down your cheeks, pink tinted splatters dripping onto your pants. What are you going to do now? What are they going to do to you now? Will they keep you alive long enough for your pack to arrive then kill you in front of them? Will they torture them too, make them watch as the life slowly leaves your eyes in revenge for chasing after Shepherd?Â
A sob rips through your sore throat up out of your lips.Â
You just want to go home.Â
You just want to be free.Â
You can be.Â
Distress. The final defense. The last ditch effort omegas have to save themselves. Distress will lead to your omega taking over, and if nothing else, a quiet death you wonât even realize is happening. Your body will give out and youâll be safely tucked into the back of your brain, comforted by your instincts. You wonât have to worry anymore. You wonât have to care.Â
If nothing else, the pain will be over.Â
Iâm sorry.Â
You begin to breathe heavier, ignoring the pain in your body as you push yourself to hyperventilate. The alphas behind you might do something, might try to stop it. They could, but would they even know how? Would it even work if you got too far? Theyâre not your alpha. They canât comfort you, bring you back from the edge without forcing you. Will they even bother?Â
You tilt your head to the side, putting pressure on your injured scent gland. You sob at the pain, the burning flowing straight into your very cells, making them scream. You push through it, your wrists twisting against the zip ties, digging them further into your already damaged wrists. The pain pushes you to a point of panic, your heart rate through the roof. You can feel it, the tightening of your muscles, your joints locking into place.Â
Youâve never done it purposefully before, but in this state, itâs not hard.Â
They left you. Theyâve abandoned you. Theyâve given up. Itâs all your fault they left. Theyâre not coming for you. Youâre not worth it.Â
The thoughts send you down the spiral, the edges of your vision starting to go dark. Youâre floating away, hands and feet going numb as your wheezing, shallow breaths block the oxygen from getting to your brain. Youâre sinking, your body floating as you begin to retreat into the back of your mind. The cage is open, your omega soothing you as you drift off, curling up in the back recesses of your mind.Â
Youâre safe now. She whispers.Â
Thereâs no going back.Â
Youâre going to get out.Â
Even if you have to do it yourself.Â
The last breath you remember taking is shaky, making you cough before your vision begins to fade to grey, then to black. Youâre getting out of here no matter what. Youâre going to go to sleep. If you fail, youâll never know it. Your death will be quick and gentle and youâll never know it happened until youâve moved on to whatever is next.Â
You wonât remember any of this. Thatâs your only consolation.Â
Your vision fades to black as all memory and awareness leaves you. The last thing you remember is the snap of the zip ties around your wrists as they break.Â
âGraves has moved with some of his men to the western building. Itâs likely the hostage is being held in the eastern building. Gaz and I will go after Graves. Ghost and Soap will try to secure the hostage.âÂ
âKeller is on her way to NAS JRB as we speak. Theyâre on standby for medevac.âÂ
âStealth is our priority. They know weâre here, we risk losing the hostage. Quick and quiet, take them by surprise. The faster we do this, the sooner it will all be over.âÂ
**Content Warning: blood and slight gore, someone gets shot offscreen, some gorey and explicit imagery towards the end**
Heâs not unfamiliar with high stakes missions. Itâs his specialty. Heâs cool and calm under stress and pressure, which is why he gets chosen for them. He can detach easily, get the job done and then go home and forget.Â
So why are his hands shaking?Â
This isnât a high stakes mission, not like one heâs used to doing. The stakes are higher, higher than heâs ever had before. Itâs not just eliminating some faceless target, itâs not just rescuing some faceless hostage.Â
Itâs rescuing you.Â
He hates that you were involved in all of this. He hates that they all fell for it, blind to the truth, blind to Shepherdâs traitorous actions. They refused to entertain those conspiratorial thoughts, and now youâre paying for it. He knows why Price made the decision he did, he understands the logic behind it.Â
He hated it, though.Â
How far would Graves have taken it if they had chosen to go after you first. Would things have gotten this bad? Or would he still have hurt you, tortured you just out of sheer anger for what happened between the two of you? He wouldnât give up just because Shepherd told him to stop. Heâs ruthless and uncaring of who he hurts and why. He gets his orders and he completes them, no matter what, so long as whoever is giving those orders can pay a high enough price.Â
How much did he get for this assignment? How much did he settle for once he learned you were involved?Â
Far too much despite that fact, most likely. Maybe he should become a merc. Less rules and more money.
Itâs not a bad idea.Â
He lasers his focus on the building as they creep through the trees, moving silently. Two against however many are inside. It was impossible to tell with how many were moving between the two buildings constantly.Â
He brought the whole squad. He planned on putting up a fight regardless.Â
At least they have the element of surprise on their hands.Â
âWe move silently through the building.â He says as they approach the door. Thereâs two guards standing outside. âThey know weâre inside, things could go downhill quickly.âÂ
âOn you, LT.â Johnny says, taking point beside him.Â
âDrop one, Iâll take the other.â He says, aiming at one of the two Shadows guarding the door.Â
Itâs quick and quiet, their bodies slumping onto the damp dirt. Simon scans the area before moving forward to the door. Itâs unlocked, Johnny pushing it open slowly to check for a trip wire.Â
None.Â
Sloppy, or perhaps on purpose. They canât be too careful. Shepherd will have let Graves know theyâre not on his trail anymore. Heâll be expecting them.Â
They split up, combing the bottom floor of the building. He takes out two more Shadows, checking every room for a sign of their target, but they find none.Â
âSecond floor.â He says, waiting at the base of the stairwell for Johnny to join him.Â
âYou think sheâs in here?â Johnny asks as they creep up the stairs, careful not to make too much noise.Â
âWell, weâll find out.âÂ
Itâs far too unguarded to where theyâre holding you. Graves will have assumed theyâd split up. He must have moved most of his men to the western building to put up as much of a barricade as possible. He can picture Graves standing there, the smirk on his face as he holds a gun to your head. Will he take that risk, shoot you in front of them and give them nothing to live for? Or will he use a knife, letting you die a slow, painful death in front of them?Â
Or, maybe he moved them to the western building to make them think thatâs where you are. Focus their attacks there so they leave you behind. He gets cornered, he send the word to kill you before any of them can get to you.Â
More red herrings.Â
He pauses before he reaches the top of the steps, taking out the shadow standing down the hallway. They split up again, looking through rooms at the top of the stairs, making their way down the hallway.Â
One of the doors is open, and he silently motions for Johnny. He counts down silently in his head before rounding the corner, rifle up as he scans the room. His stomach churns as he looks inside, taking a couple cautious steps forward. Heâs seen a lot of things in his time, done a lot of things, but this is different.Â
âScreaming Jesus.â Johnny says, lowering his rifle as he steps in behind Simon.Â
Thereâs blood everywhere.Â
Itâs coating the floors, leaving a sticky residue as it dries. Itâs the room you were in. He recognizes it from the video, and the bright light in the corner is a dead giveaway. The chair in the middle of the room has been broken, the wood of the arms snapped off and splintered. Thereâs four bloody zip ties on the floor, along with several instruments on the floor including the ice pick.Â
He wants to shove that into Gravesâ eye for what he did to you.Â
Thereâs two bodies on the floor, one of them dead in a pool of his own blood, the other choking as blood seeps onto the floor under him. He steps up to the shadow, putting his boot on his chest and pushing. The Shadow lets out a groan, coughing up blood.Â
âWhere the fuck is she?â He growls, staring down at the quickly paling face.Â
âFucking bitch went crazy.â He chokes out. âWent running.âÂ
Simon steps back, pulling out his handgun and firing two bullets into the Shadowâs head.Â
âPrice, we found the room.â He says into his comm. âThe hostage isnât here. A half-dead Shadow said she bolted.âÂ
âLT.â Johnny says, motioning to the door, the only other exit from the room. Thereâs a bloody handprint on the door, one too small to be one of the Shadowsâ.Â
âI think she managed to get out.â He says, staring at the handprint. His stomach drops, his hand tightening around his rifle. He glances down at the bodies, throats cut and faces bloody. âI think her omega took over.âÂ
âYou and Soap go after her. Sheâll do the one thing she knows to do, the one instinctual thing she can do if she has nothing to fight.â Price says. âWeâve got Graves cornered.âÂ
Simon pushes the door open, cool air flowing into the stuffy room. Thereâs bloody shoe prints heading down the stairs. He can see the rapid turn on the concrete below before they head off towards the trees.Â
âIâve got a trail.â He says.Â
âGo.â Price says. âSimon...you know what you have to do.âÂ
He does.
He motions for Johnny to follow before hurrying down the stairs. The longer they delay, the further youâll get. He doesnât doubt some Shadows followed you if you made that much of a ruckus. The more time they waste, the more dangerous things get, and not just because they might lose you or the shadows might catch up.Â
He races towards the treeline, rifle in hand, but thereâs no one else standing guard. Price and Gaz will have taken care of those in the other building, and those that were outside probably went after you.Â
He slows once they break the treeline, trying to catch any hint of your scent that might be left. His only hope is that youâve left a trail. Heâs a tracker, he knows what heâs doing. His senses are stronger, more in tune. He can find you. He can track you down. He has to.Â
The guilt is eating him alive. If something happens to you, heâll never forgive himself. Heâs right here, so close and yet so far. Youâre running on borrowed time and thereâs only so much of it left. Eventually you have to slow, eventually your body will start giving up. Will it be too late then? If a Shadow finds you when you canât fight back...
âDead Shadow ahead.â Johnny says, motioning to the slumped over body ahead of them. âWeâre on the trail.âÂ
âLetâs hope she left more markers on the way.â He says, kicking the Shadow, but the stab wound in his neck is all Simon needs to know. âKeep going straight.â He says, continuing on the path theyâve been following. He needs just a whiff, a hint of your scent. Something.Â
They come across another dead Shadow, this one off to the side of the path they had been following. He turns, making an adjustment before moving forward. Johnny keeps close, both of them watching for more Shadows, or for any glimpse of you. All they can hope is theyâre on the right path.Â
He nearly sets off in a run as he hears a sound ahead. Itâs a yowl, almost like a mountain lion. It sends a tingle down his back, his alpha blaring warning alarms. A threatened omega is a dangerous thing. Fierce and protective of themselves, capable of great feats and lethal if you get too close.Â
Itâs you, no doubt.Â
Price had been right.Â
He has no choice.Â
He pushes forward, his steps quick as he makes his way through the bushes. He spots you near a boulder, trying to fight off a Shadow. Heâs got the upper hand, using his size against you. Youâre getting tired, your movements slowing. Simon aims with his rifle, a shot to the head dropping the Shadow. You drop into a crouch, surveying the trees. Youâre covered in blood, a knife in your hand as your wild eyes search for them.Â
âDistract her.â He says to Johnny. âMake yourself as unthreatening as possible. Iâll go around and get her from behind.âÂ
He doesnât even wait for an acknowledgement before heâs moving, slipping around to the side of the boulder. Johnny steps into the clearing slowly, holding his hands up, talking to you quietly.
âEasy, kitten. Ye know who I am.â Johnny is careful not to get too close, his steps slow as he moves to the side, getting you to turn. âWeâre just here to help ye. Get ye home and safe.âÂ
Youâre holding the knife up, brandishing it at Johnny. Simon isnât sure if youâve ever thrown a knife before, but he doesnât put it past you to try in this state.Â
He hopes Johnnyâs reflexes are fast enough.Â
He slips out from behind the boulder as you pause, wasting no time as he races up behind you and grabbing you before you can bolt or go for Johnnyâs neck. You let out another yowl, struggling against him as he wraps an arm around your chest. Your teeth sink into his arm and he lets out a curse, but he doesnât let go. He lets go, they wonât get another chance. Itâll be too late.Â
He doesn't want to do it. His mind flashes back to his father and mother, one of the few times his mother fought back. It hadnât lasted long before her body went limp, practically a ragdoll in his fatherâs hold. Simon had grabbed Tommy and ran, barricading them in his room. They didnât want to see what was going to happen next.Â
He doesnât want that kind of control over you, he doesnât want to put you through that trauma. The disorientation, the fear, the confusion. That must have been what it felt like after being sedated during your heat. You had been sick for days, crying in Johnnyâs room. He had heard every sob, every attempt to soothe you.Â
He put you through that. He made you face that down despite the fear on your face as Johnny escorted you to the med center.Â
And now he has to do it again.Â
He has to this time. He has no choice. His only other option is to let you die. Price will never forgive him. Johnny wonât even look at him again. Heâd betray them worse than you did, worse than Shepherd, worse than Graves.Â
You never really betrayed them in the first place, though.Â
You were afraid, untrusting of them, unsure because of your past. He had been foolish to blame you, foolish to think it was somehow your fault. You acted out of fear, out of terror. How you must have felt in those moments when that beta showed up, when you faced down Shepherd alone, when you returned to find your space invaded and those cameras all over your room. They werenât there to protect you, they werenât there to support you. They left you alone and you hid it from them because you didnât know any better, because you were so afraid.Â
Heâs a goddamn fucking prick heâs been.Â
Tears blur his vision as he tucks his free arm behind you, shifting your position just enough so he can get his hand around the back of your neck. You kick out with your legs, releasing his arm, your head tilting back in a last ditch, instinctual effort to protect yourself.Â
His eyes squeeze closed as you let out a yelp, his fingers digging into the back of your neck. Itâs hard enough it will leave a bruise, but he has to be sure. Itâs the only thing that might save you. Itâs his only option, his only chance to keep you alive.Â
âThere you go.â He says quietly into your ear. âNeed you to relax for me.âÂ
Your body goes limp in his hold, head resting back against his hand as he holds you there. Your muscles twitch as the tension leaves you, eyelids fluttering before they close. His arm stings where your teeth had sunk into his skin, hard enough to draw blood, but he doesnât care.Â
âKeep resting.â He says, easing his hand from the back of your neck as he shifts you in his arms. âGonna get you somewhere safe.âÂ
Youâre like a ragdoll in his arms as he lifts you up, cradling you against his chest. Youâre warm, hair sticking to your forehead.Â
âCall it in.â He tells Johnny, his eyes still glued to your face. âWe need that medevac now.âÂ
âPrice, we got her.â Johnny says into his comm. âWe need medevac stat.âÂ
You look so peaceful despite the blood soaking your body. Partially yours, partially the Shadows you killed in your escape. You look like a gruesome painting, a gorey depiction of an omega pushed too far. Something theyâd put on display in a museum, a photo that would win prizes in celebration of such a natural state caught on camera. It would be circulated for decades, something talked about centuries from now.Â
A raw view of humanityâs inner beasts.Â
He canât stand it, seeing you like this. They did this to you. They are the reason youâre like this. They made the bad call in the end, they put you through this. You wonât forgive them, not after everything. You went weeks without them, without a word and then this happened. Innocence tainted in the blood of the guilty. The bloodstained omega held in the arms of the blood-tainted alpha. He should be the one covered in their blood. He should be the one carrying the weight of torture and desperation on his shoulders.Â
The guardian dog covered in blood in the name of protecting his innocent sheep.Â
How heâs failed you. How they all failed you.Â
He pushes past the pain, past the grief, past the guilt and the horror of what they did to you, what they put you through.Â
Theyâve got you back. Youâre safe.Â
Itâs over.Â
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#call of duty#call of duty fic#poly 141#poly 141 x reader#tf 141 x reader#John price x reader#captain price x reader#Simon Riley x reader#Ghost x reader#Kyle Garrick x reader#gaz x reader#soap x reader#John mactavish x reader#a/b/o#alpha/beta/omega dynamics#omegaverse
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chapter 5: the fall a bridgerton!au
pairing âžș duke!satoru gojo x fem!reader
summary âžș dearest gentle reader, a new season is upon us as the ton gets ready for a season filled with drama, heartbreak, and passion. after being crowned diamond of the season, duke gojoâžșonly looking to marry just to secure his inheritanceâžșhas his sights set on you, the easiest (and most obvious) option. later, when you catch his saying unsavory things about you on a terrace when he least suspected it, you swear to never marry gojo. as london's fashionable set goes through yet another wedding season, will there be hope for scandalous gossip, hate, and thinly veiled insults, or will we witness blooming love and passion?
warnings âžș nsfw, enemies to lovers, bridgerton au, angst, fluff, SUGGESTIVE, eventual smut, jealousy, misogyny, description of injury, concussion, blood, regency era au, gojo being infuriating, reader also being infuriating, both of them are clueless honestly
chapter summary âžș gojo comes up with a strange yet tempting arrangement, but the accident that follows it may cause epiphanies for the both of you. (11.8k)
a/n thank you to pookies @/sinn-clair and @/yasu-1234 (they are awesome and here are her works) for beta reading my work :3 ahaha pls forgive me for yapping so much in this chapter. iâll meet you after the chapter is over for EVEN more yap
prev. the game | next. the house party
general masterlist | series masterlist
Dearest Gentle Readers,Â
It is well known across town that a certain gentleman, long absent from Londonâs bustling thoroughfares, has not graced its streets for a year. One cannot help but ponder how Mister Sukuna Itadoriâs travels have fared, as he embarked on what we all know to be that of most enlightening of venturesâa Grand Tour of Europe. Those familiar with such journeys will know that for most young men of the ton, a tour of Europe offers more than just art and cultureâit is a playground of indulgence and mischief. Will Mr. Itadori reappear as the brash and impetuous young man we once knew, or has Europeâs charms softened and tempered his spirit into one more befitting of a mature gentleman? This Author has her doubts, but one can never say for sure until a man reenters Society.
Yet, Gentle Reader, while Mr. Itadoriâs return may provide fodder for speculation, there is another gentleman who has quietly yet decisively captured the attentions of the ton this season: His Grace, the Duke Nanami. Not only does His Grace possess a title and considerable inheritanceâboth of which set many hearts aflutterâbut he is also known to be a most genteel and dignified young man, whose decorum and good sense have only enhanced his reputation. Many an eager mama and her hopeful daughter now look to him as the ideal suitor. His Grace, however, has been nothing if not a model of decorumâdistant, polite, and entirely too elusive.
But therein, dear reader, lies the dilemma. The Dukeâs refusal to engage in more than the most cursory conversation with any lady has led many to wonder: has he already chosen his future Duchess in secret, or is he simply too discerning for any of the eager young women who have presented themselves thus far? One thing is certain, though: the house party in the countryside promises to be most entertaining, especially if the Duke chooses that moment to make his intentions clear. One can only hope the object of his affections is prepared to be swept off her feetâor at the very least, that her mama is! Only time will tell, but one thing this Author assuresâhis next move shall be watched with the greatest anticipation.
âž» LADY WHISTLEDOWNâS SOCIETY PAPERS
Dawn breaks out, bathing the land in a rich, golden hue. It seemed as if the very air of the Gojo estate had significantly altered your sense of slumber; before, it would take you fairly long to wake, preferring to stay well rested until Nobara barged in your room, bellowing at you to get ready.Â
The rhythmic clatter of hooves on the cobblestone path echoed as you guided your mare along the estateâs carefully tended gardens, resplendent in their display of colorful blooms. The thought flashes across your mindâwhichever lady of the ton unfortunate enough to inherit the Gojo surname would certainly find herself living an enviable, lavish lifestyle. If nothing else, the manor, with its outstanding grandeur, would offer sufficient distraction from the trials of an insufferable marriage.
Horse-riding had always been of your taste, providing solace when you needed time to ponder upon your thoughts. The fresh morning air was so different from the stifling confines of your roomâs walls, soothing your spirit in a way a fitful sleep could not. Inhaling deeply, the cool morning breeze carried with it the scent of flowers and morning dew, offering a reprieve and reminding you of freedom found in quiet moments.
Mornings always feel like new beginnings to you. The sounds of the chirp and the peace of the feeling that you are currently the only person in the world, suspended in time, soothes you. You walk the path laid out in front of you, getting closer and closer to the woods that were next to the Gojo gardens.Â
The same ones you had the encounter with Gojo in the river.
You tensed slightly, the memory of your embarrassing fall washing over you like a cold splash of water. Gojo had yet to jest at your expense over it was nothing short of miraculous. No doubt, the teasing would come in time, as inevitable as night following day.
The distant sounds of hooves break you out of your thoughts, as you still, turning your head around to see where the sounds originated. When you finally manage to curve your head (almost) fully to the back, in the soft light of the morning, you see a flash of silver hair.
And groan internally.
"I would not have thought the great Lord Gojo so lacking in charm as to resort to covert stalking," you quip, turning in your saddle to face him.
"Stalking?" His familiar, lazy drawl carried across the air as he approached. "Surely you underestimate me, my lady. A mere smile is all it takes to win hearts."
Reluctantly, you wheeled your horse around to face him properly. "Ah, yes. How could I forget? Your captivating smile alone is surely enough to send every lady into a faint, and not at all the rather handsome fortune attached to your name." You eyed him criticallyâhis attire was casual, much like that day in the library: a white shirt carelessly unbuttoned at the collar, black trousers tailored perfectly. There was a hint of weariness in his eyes, though his insufferable smirk remained firmly in place. His hair was fairly polishedâin comparison to his clothesâas if he had gotten ready to go somewhere that didnât require extravagant garments to be worn.
He tilted his head, his gaze moving past you as he urged his horse toward the woods ahead. "Ah, so you find my smile captivating?"
You bristle, realizing his play of making you follow him to continue the conversation and get the last word. âI find your opinion of yourself entirely too high. I never mentioned that I thought you captivating but that of the handsome sum tied to your name.â
âAll I heard was handsome.â
You take a deep breath and hold it, your eyes narrowing at the man trotting carefree in front of you. âAre the ladies really so naive that they would fall for just a captivating smile rather than acknowledge your lack of wit?â
Gojo glanced back at you with a raised brow, his grin only widening as he slowed his pace slightly. "Naive, perhaps. Or maybe theyâre wise enough to appreciate the finer things in life. Not everyone is so immune to charm.â
You rolled your eyes, clicking your tongue in mild irritation as you spurred your horse forward, coming level with him. âCharm without substance only lasts so long, my lord. I daresay one day youâll meet someone immune to your tricks.â
He chuckled softly, the sound lazy and unbothered, as though youâd merely entertained him with a light jest. "And yet here you are, still engaging with my so-called âlack of substance.â Could it be, perhaps, that you find me more interesting than you care to admit?â
"I find you no more interesting than a mildly amusing bookâone that I can close whenever I please," you shot back, though your eyes flicked over his disheveled appearance. âBut you, Lord Gojo, do seem rather underdressed for a morning ride. I hope youâre not planning on inflicting yourself on some unsuspecting lady like this.â
His eyes gleamed with that familiar glint of amusement. "Underdressed? Why, I thought you might prefer me this wayâunpretentious and free of the heavy trappings of society." He gave a careless wave toward his shirt. "Besides, Iâve work to do today. Iâm making rounds over the dukedom."
You raised an eyebrow. âWork? You?â you echoed, voice laden with playful disbelief.
âHard to believe, I know. Iâm more than just a pretty face, as youâve so kindly pointed out,â he teased, eyes flicking to you briefly before turning back to the path ahead. âWould you care to join me on my rounds? You might learn something about the âsubstanceâ you claim I lack.â
You hesitated, but only briefly. The truth was, the Gojo manor had begun to feel more like a cage with each passing day. The endless routine of polite conversations, tea under the watchful eyes of your mama and Duchess Gojo, and waiting for the upcoming house party with the maids and doormen watching for your every move was beginning to wear on you. The walls of the estate, grand as they were, could only offer so much distraction before they imposed on you. The gardensâbeautiful and sprawlingâhad already been walked, the library somewhat explored. You had gone through the motions of being the perfect guest, yet none of it stirred the thrill of adventure that your heart craved.
Your mind drifted back to London, to a time before all the expectation and decorum had weighed so heavily on your shoulders. A year ago, Sukuna had been your partner in rebellion, the one who shared your disdain for societyâs rigid rules. The two of you had stolen mornings together, sneaking out on horseback, galloping through the streets and parks as if the tonâs eyes couldnât reach you. Sukuna, with his wild streak and brash charm, had always encouraged you to live for the moment, to taste freedom in a way that felt dangerously exhilarating. At night, you and him would enjoy stolen moments on a swing.Â
There had been no chaperones then, no one to watch your every move or to remind you of what was âproper.â You had been free, in a way you never thought possibleâa freedom that felt distant now, almost like a dream.
You studied him for a moment, curiosity beginning to outweigh the slight irritation you felt toward his smug demeanor. What exactly did a duke like Gojo do when he wasnât parading through society, charming every lady within reach? Despite yourself, you were intrigued by the possibility of seeing him in a different light, away from the polished halls and pretenses.
Here, far from the cityâs strict social rules, you felt a flicker of that same wildness returning. There were no watchful eyes in the countryside, no endless stream of whispers and gossip to navigate. The Gojo estate, for all its grandeur, was isolated. Out here, you could indulge in a fleeting taste of freedom once moreâespecially if it meant escaping the suffocating sense of propriety that came with every room of the mansion.
With Gojo, the stakes were different. He wasnât Sukuna, who lived on the fringes of the ton with his devil-may-care attitude. No, Gojo occupied the very heart of societyâs structureâa duke, a man of immense power and wealth, a figure who could easily sweep up any lady of the ton with a glance. Yet here he was, offering you a glimpse of his world beyond the ballroom, beyond the pretense of polite society.
The thought of accompanying him into the villageâunaccompanied, and without the constant pressure of reputationâwas thrilling in a way you hadnât expected. It was as if you were being offered another chance to experience the freedom you once shared with Sukuna. Out here, away from the prying eyes of the ton, you could simply⊠be. There would be no eyes to judge, no chaperones to pull you away. For a few hours, you could escape the suffocating decorum that bound you so tightly, and just breathe.
And perhaps, just perhaps, there was a part of you curious to see what lay beneath Gojoâs surface. Despite all his teasing and arrogance, there had to be more to the man than his carefully cultivated charm. What did the world of a duke truly entail? What responsibilities lay hidden beneath that confident smirk?
âWell?â Gojoâs voice broke through your thoughts, a hint of amusement dancing on the edge of his words. âYou could always go back to the estate. But if you join me, you might learn something. Something real.â
You met his gaze, curiosity stirring. How much freedom could you taste before the world pulled you back into its orbit?
âAnd what, pray tell, does this so-called âworkâ of yours truly entail, my lord? Are you certain it isnât merely an excuse for you to idly saunter about?â you asked, feigning disinterest even as your heart began to quicken at the thought of leaving the mansionâs confines.
Gojo shrugged. âManaging a dukedom is more than just attending parties, my lady. There are land disputes, tenant needs, crops to inspect. All terribly boring, I assure you,â he drawled, though his teasing tone did little to hide his satisfaction.
âAnd yet, here you are, inviting me to partake in such âdreadfulâ tasks.â You arched an eyebrow, testing the waters of this strange proposal.
He cast you a sidelong glance, that insufferable smirk playing on his lips again. âYou seemed in need of something less tedious than idle conversation. Besides, I canât let you think Iâm all charm and no substance.â
You scoffed lightly, but the temptation was undeniable. A morning spent away from the watchful eyes of society, away from the restrictions that had grown more suffocating with each passing day, sounded like exactly what you needed.
And so, you nudged your horse forward. "Very well, my lord. Lead the way."
As Gojo turned his horse toward the village, you followed, anticipation swirling within you. For just a little while, you would forget the rigid expectations that clung to your every move. And who knew? You might learn something about the man who was far more than just a smileâor at least, you hoped so.
As you and Gojo rode along the countryside road, the gentle thrum of horse hooves against the dirt path filled the early morning air. The village lay just beyond the hill, but the tranquil quiet of the ride had settled between you for now. You looked at the open landscape, enjoying the rare opportunity to simply exist outside the bounds of society's expectations. While Gojo glanced at you, his gaze briefly lingering before he forced his eyes forward again.
To Gojo, you are an enigma.Â
There was something about you that drew him inâsomething beyond the usual appeal of a pretty face and a sharp tongue. He had been thinking and rethinking your diary entries ever since he had discovered them, going over every word in his mind like an irritating riddle. Of course, he knew better than to admit that he had read them, let alone how much those words had unsettled him.
Your thoughts, penned in those private moments, had been both surprising and dangerously radical. They spoke of dissatisfaction with the very society that had molded both of you. Critiques of the ton, its shallow expectations, and even its treatment of womenâthoughts that, if discovered by the wrong person, could ruin you. Lady Whistledown wouldnât need much to twist those words into a scandal, to paint you as a rebel, a woman too difficult for any suitor to consider. You would be exiled from the marriage market in an instant, no longer the diamond the people adored.
Realistically, he could do it, in fact. That is, ruin your image for the rest of high society. Gojo knew he had power over you. He could destroy you if he wanted to, could slip a few words into the right ears and watch as your pristine image crumbled like delicate glass. A small, vindictive part of himâperhaps the part that still bristled at your quick wit and frequent jabsâalmost considered it. With the way you have been snarkily snapping back, making a fool out of him, and in general being not a very agreeable person, he, in fact, should have incentive to do so, as a payback.Â
Of course, Gojo could always be the bigger person. He should let you go, keep his distance, and find a more agreeable matchâsomeone easier, someone less troublesome. It would be the rational thing to do. He was Lord Gojo, heir to the Duke of Gojo, after all. He didnât need to deal with a woman who questioned him at every turn, who might even challenge his reputation just by association.
He knew he should stop courting you, stop this dance before it spiraled into something neither of you could control. And he didnât know what exactly to choose.
He cleared his throat, finally breaking the silence. âYou seem deep in thought, my lady. I do hope Iâm not boring you already.â His tone was light, though there was an undercurrent of curiosity.
You quirked an eyebrow, as if debating whether to entertain his question. âNo more than usual, my lord.â
He grinned at your response, but then his expression softened, just slightly. âAnd here I thought you might have enjoyed escaping the estate for a bit. Surely the quiet countryside must be a relief after the pressures of town.â
You gave a small nod, but your guardedness remained. âIt is a relief, but one must still be careful, even out here. There are no watchful eyes, but gossip has a way of traveling regardless.â
Gojo smirked, leaning slightly in his saddle. âI doubt anyone could catch up to us before we make it back for breakfast.â
He watched you from the corner of his eye, gauging your reaction. The morning wasnât extremely windy, but his eyes took in your hair, how the wind shifted it so that your napeâand the slopes of your back and bodyâwas uncovered. Your torso rocked as both your horses moved on, and you were fidgeting with the reins of your horse with gloved hands. You were a puzzle he couldnât yet solve, but for some reason, that only made him more determined to try.
With a measured tone, he added, âTell me, do you ever tire of it all? The expectations, the constant scrutiny. It must be exhausting.â
He watched you closely, curious how you might respond, wondering if you would offer something more than your usual sharp wit. Even if you didnât, Gojo was prepared to nudge you, just enough to see what truly lay beneath the surface.
You turned your head slightly, brushing a loose strand of hair from your neck as you gave him a searching look. Unconsciously, your horses had drifted closer together, and as you moved your hair, revealing your simple, unadorned hairstyle from the morning ride, Gojo caught the intoxicating scent of your shampoo.
Sandalwood.
The notes lingered in the cool morning air, drawing him in. He found himself momentarily captivated, closing his eyes to take in the fragrance. It wasnât until he regained his composure that he realized you were watching him expectantly, waiting for him to respond.
âMy apologies,â Gojo cleared his throat, flashing you a semi-apologetic smile. âYou were saying?â
You arched a brow at his absent-mindedness but chose not to press the matter. âAs I was saying,â you continued with a subtle edge of humor, âit is a ladyâs duty to endure the endless gossip and scrutiny of society. After all, we are part of it, are we not? I am a part of that societyâdiamond or not.â Then, you snarkily remarked, âThough I imagine you know as much about gossip as I do, my lord.â
There it is. Gojo felt the familiar flare of irritation rise within him as you brought up, yet again, that night on the terrace. How many times would you throw that back in his face? Instead of showing how it bothered him, he slipped into a mocking stance, clutching his chest in an exaggerated display of faux hurt. "You wound me, my lady. Can a gentleman truly not express his true sentiments in private company?"
His smirk faltered slightly, but he pressed on, unwilling to let you have the upper hand. "However, I do know more than you think. I hear things all the time. Not everyone is as... mysterious as they pretend to be."
There was an edge in his voice that hadnât been there before, and he knew you noticed. He didnât like where this conversation was heading, but he couldnât stop himself. Not now.
You narrowed your eyes, your tone sharp. "Is that so? Or are you simply adept at making people feel small, my lord?"
Gojo shrugged, keeping his expression casual, though his jaw tightened. Why did you always know exactly how to get under his skin? "I do not belittle, my lady, but observe. And if you're concerned with my words, rest assured I never speak ill of a lady unless she has thoroughly earned it. After all, gossip, for all its flaws, often carries a kernel of truth."
"I see," you replied, voice clipped. "So you place your trust in whatever the ton whispers, so long as it serves your purposes?"
Gojo met your gaze, his voice lowering with intent. "It is not a matter of convenience, my lady, but discernment. Knowing who is genuine and who is merely playing a part."
He saw the way his words hit you, the way your expression flickered. Good. Let it sink in. Youâd been sniping at him for days now, and it was about time you felt a little of the sting you so effortlessly delivered.
"And you, Lord Gojo, are the arbiter of what's 'real'?" Your voice rose, sharp as a blade. "Tell me, thenâwhatâs real about you, besides your title and your incessant need to make others feel beneath you?"
The smirk that usually danced on his lips vanished. He felt something sharp coil in his chestâdefensiveness, maybe, or frustration. He wasnât sure anymore. His tone turned cold, dangerous. "Tread carefully, my lady. You are not as untouchable as you might believe. Perhaps others coddle you, treat you with delicacy because they think you fragile, but I am not of their number."
He saw the way his words cut, deeper than heâd intended, and a part of him regretted it. But another partâthe part that was tired of always being one step behind in this game you playedâfelt a grim satisfaction.Â
You opened your mouth to respond, but he wasnât finished. He leaned in slightly, his voice dropping to an almost dangerous softness. âYou think you are the only one who carries burdens? I have duties tooâmy name, my estate, my people. You may despise me for all you like, but at least I do not pretend that none of it matters."
The silence that followed was thick, heavy with the weight of the truths neither of you had spoken before. For a moment, you were speechless, and Gojo couldnât quite read the expression on your face.
There was a vulnerability in your eyes, something real beneath all the snark and bitterness. It was unsettling. He hadnât expected to feel any sympathy for you, but seeing that flicker of something raw, something that mirrored the exhaustion he himself felt, made his chest tighten in a way he didnât like.
You finally broke the silence, your voice quieter now. "I never asked for any of this."
Gojo let out a long breath, some of the tension in his body loosening. His voice softened, the sharp edge gone. "Nor did I."
The moment of mutual understanding was fleeting, fragile, and Gojo wasnât sure if he wanted to dwell on it or forget it entirely. The silence that followed wasnât quite hostile anymore, but it wasnât comfortable either.Â
Straightening in his saddle, Gojo cleared his throat and gestured ahead. "The village lies just ahead. We should proceed before the shops open, unless, of course, you would rather remain here, basking in your righteous discontent."
He smirked, but it felt more like a mask than anything genuine. He needed the banter, the distance it created between you. It was safer than whatever had just passed between youâa moment of weakness he couldnât afford to dwell on.
You rolled your eyes but gave a small nod, your expression still guarded. "Lead the way, my lord."
Gojo nudged his horse forward, the tension easing just enough for the both of you to fall back into their usual roles. But the memory of that brief, unguarded moment between you lingered in the back of his mind, nagging at him as they rode towards the marketplace.
Soon enough, the dirt road gradually transformed into cobblestones beneath the horses' hooves, the soft clatter of stone replacing the muffled sound of earth. Up ahead, the village began to unfurl itself, a bustling marketplace coming into view, vibrant with the daily hum of activity. Stalls lined the streets, laden with goodsâfresh produce, meats, textiles, and trinkets. The air was thick with the mingling scents of fresh bread, roasting chestnuts, and the subtle hint of herbs from the nearby apothecary. Your stomach twisted sharply at the realization that you had yet to break your fast, and the sweet aroma of bread, freshly baked and still warm from the ovens, stirred your hunger even more.
It was a small comfort that you had chosen to appear on Gojoâs rounds in a simple dress. While far from a maidâs garb, it was enough to blend in with the modest attire of the villagers, allowing you to remain somewhat inconspicuous. You imagined what a spectacle it might have been if you had arrived adorned in the usual finery expected of a lady of your statusâa diamond strolling through the marketplace like some exotic bird, plumed and out of place. Even if that interpretation wouldnât be completely wrong.Â
You stole a glance at Gojo. His attire, though far more refined than that of the villagers, was practical enough for the countrysideâa waistcoat and riding cloak that spoke of wealth but not ostentation. He moved with ease through the marketplace, his presence commanding attention without demanding it. Residents and shopkeepers greeted him warmly, others calling out his name with familiarity. It was clear that he was well-known and, more surprisingly, well-liked among the people here.
You, on the other hand, felt like an outsiderâacutely aware of every gaze that lingered a moment too long in your direction. Although the villagers were preoccupied with their own business, there was no mistaking the subtle glances thrown your way as you rode alongside Gojo. Perhaps it was the curiosity of seeing a noblewoman in such a humble place, or perhaps it was simply the oddity of your pairing with him.
âAh, Satoru!â A baker called out from a window in his store, a wide grin on his flour-dusted face. âCome for your usual loaf, I presume?â
Gojo chuckled softly, bringing his horse to a gentle halt. With practiced ease, he dismounted, his movements graceful and assured as he swung his leg over and landed lightly on his heels. The smoothness of the motion caught you off guardâit was almost unsettling how effortlessly he moved, as if every action was calculated yet unforced. You couldnât help but feel a pang of irritation, knowing full well that you would never manage such a feat with half as much elegance, even with assistance.
He strode toward the baker with the kind of natural ease that spoke of familiarity and comfort, offering the man a warm, familiar smile as they exchanged pleasantries. There was a certain charm in his manner, a fluidity in the way he blended himself into the simple rhythm of village life, so unlike the polished and sometimes disingenuous world of high society. You found yourself watching their conversation, noting how easily he made himself a part of this worldâsomething that unsettled you more than you cared to admit.
You brought your horse to a stop beside his, watching as Gojo clasped the bakerâs hand in greeting. âNot today, Iâm afraid,â Gojo remarked with a light laugh, his tone amiable, yet restrained, âthough the aroma is tempting enough to make one reconsider their resolve.â
You couldnât help but roll your eyes, though the tempting aroma of freshly baked bread was almost enough to make you forget your irritation. You remained silent, feeling somewhat out of place amid Gojoâs easy banter with the villagers. There was something about the way he interacted with themâso at ease, so familiarâthat unsettled you. The way the baker addressed him by his given name, Satoru, only added to your bewilderment, and you couldnât help but wonder how much of this was genuine and how much was part of the façade he wielded so effortlessly in society.
âAnd who might this lovely young lady be?â The bakerâs voice drew you from your thoughts. Both men were now looking at you, you the center of attention as the baker looked between you and Gojo expectantly.
Gojo had his arm resting casually on the bakerâs shoulder, his usual smirk slipping for a brief moment as he scratched at the back of his headâa gesture that seemed oddly boyish for someone of his station. It was so unlike him that you blinked in surprise. âAh, this isââ
âSatoru!â Before he could finish, a sharp voice rang out. The next moment, Gojo winced as an older woman smacked him on the back of the head, leaving him clutching it in exaggerated pain. âYouâve found yourself a wife and didnât think to inform me?â
Gojo turned with a dramatic groan. âNo, Mrs. Tanaka, she is not my wife. Must you always strike me so?â
The womanâshort in stature but brimming with fiery energyâhad her arms crossed, looking up at him with a mixture of affection and reprimand. âAnd what reason would I have not to, given how you leave everyone guessing?â
Her gaze then shifted to you, her stern expression softening instantly as she hurried over. Taking your hands in hers, she smiled brightly. âAh, so this is the young lady whoâs finally tamed our Satoru.â
You looked between Mrs. Tanaka and Gojo, bewildered, searching for any explanation or protest that might spare you from the implication. But Gojo merely shrugged, an amusedâthough slightly embarrassedâexpression on his face.
Before you could respond, Mrs. Tanaka waved off any attempt at explanation, placing a finger to her lips as though she already knew the truth. âSay no more, my dear. A fine match, indeed.â She then turned to her husband, giving him a pointed look. âDear, didnât you say you had some business with Lord Satoru today? Why not invite them into the bakery?â
At the mention of business, Gojoâs expression shifted, and it was almost unnerving how quickly his lighthearted, carefree demeanor gave way to a more serious and focused air. He turned to the baker, his brow slightly furrowed. âMr. Tanaka, is there another issue with the ledgers? I had thought that those troubles had long since ceased.â
The baker scratched his head sheepishly. âWell, my lord, there have been further claimsâfalse ones, no doubtâregarding the ledgers, particularly in reference to the debt I incurred when I purchased the bakery. I did not wish to trouble you, especially as,â he cast a quick glance at you and nudged Gojo with a knowing grin, âyou have a fine lady with you today. But your assistance in resolving the matter would be most appreciated, my lord.â
Gojoâs expression darkened slightly, his jaw tightening as the gravity of the situation became apparent. âOf course, Mr. Tanaka. We shall address it at once. Let us discuss the matter inside.â
Mrs. Tanaka, turning to you with a motherly smile, cooed, âWhy donât you come inside as well, my dear? You look positively famished! Let me prepare something for you.â
As the men disappeared into the back of the bakery to attend to their business, Gojo offering you a brief glance as he followed (as well as an exchange with the baker to have your horses carried to a stable in the village), you were left to follow Mrs. Tanakaâs lead. She guided you to a chair with a gentle, yet insistent, manner, ushering you to sit as though you were a guest of the highest importance. Though her attentiveness was kind, you couldnât help but feel slightly out of place.
Sitting down, you couldnât shake the thoughtâwhy were you being treated with such familiarity? Yes, Mrs. Tanaka assumed you to be Gojoâs wife, but was the lord you knew, so self-assured and pretentious within society, truly capable of leaving such an impression on these villagers? The notion seemed almost laughable.
You concluded that Gojo must have performed some extraordinary deedâsomething grand yet deceptively simple, like saving their child from rolling down a hill. A gesture that, while not heroic by any noble standard, had been enough to secure the coupleâs undying gratitude. Of course, you mused with a bitter edge, only Gojo could manipulate such a mundane act into a permanent place in their hearts. The thought soured your mood further. It was just like him to charm even the most unsuspecting, innocent villagers into adoring him, using that devilish smile and unearned charisma to weave them into hisâ--
You were jolted out of your spiraling thoughts, your internal conspiracy theories evaporating at the first whiff of fresh bread. The warm, buttery aroma wafted throughout the room as Mrs. Tanaka made her way towards you, carrying a tray of fresh loaves that looked as good as they smelledâmoist and buttery. The sight of the golden-brown crusts made your stomach clench painfully in hunger, reminding you that you had yet to break your fast because of your rendezvous with Gojo.Â
Mrs. Tanaka set the basket down before you, settling herself across the table, leaning back in her chair with a look of comfortable familiarity as her eyes studied you with quiet observation. Sensing your hesitation, she waved a hand, smiling warmly. âGo on, my dear, help yourself. Youâve yet to break your fast, and itâs no good going hungry.â
With a silent nod of gratitude, you took the invitation, though some part of you briefly wondered what your mother would say if she were to catch you eating so eagerly. But knowing she was nowhere near to scold you for indulgence, you wasted no time. The moment the warm, fresh bread touched your lips, you had to suppress the urge to devour it outright. Though you tried to remain composed, you could not help the small, contented sigh that escaped as the heavenly taste spread across your tongue.
Mrs. Tanaka watched you with delight, the sparkle in her eye showing how your evident enjoyment amused her. You chewed as gracefully as possible, closing your eyes in brief bliss, a smile tugging at the corners of your lips. Once you had swallowed and could speak without impropriety, you offered her a sincere, âI am deeply grateful to you for your kindness. This bread is truly unlike any I have tasted before.â
The woman waved off your praise with a hearty laugh. âOh, my dear, you flatter me too much. Have some more! Your words are as sweet as your disposition.â
A flush crept up your neck at her compliment, and for a moment, you were flustered. Despite being praised endlessly by members of the ton for your beauty and title, there was something undeniably genuine in Mrs. Tanakaâs wordsâan absence of ulterior motives or expectations. She did not seek anything from you: no favor, no power, no advantageous marriage proposal. Her compliment felt simple, warm, and real.
Mrs. Tanaka continued to smile warmly, her gaze soft as she leaned in a little closer, clearly intrigued by the presence of a lady beside Lord Gojo. She took a sip of tea, her fingers tapping lightly against the table as she asked, âSo, my dear, where did you meet our Satoru? Heâs never brought a lady to our village before.â
The question caught you off guard. You paused for a moment, careful not to reveal too much or seem overly invested in his affairs. âWe met in... social circles,â you answered simply, averting your gaze slightly, trying to keep your tone neutral. There was no need to elaborate or dwell on how precisely your paths had crossedâcertainly not to Mrs. Tanaka, no matter how kind she seemed.
But Mrs. Tanaka was undeterred by your hesitance, her eyes lighting up with fondness as she spoke again. âAh, yes, I suppose that would be the case. Though Iâve known him far longer than most in those circles.â She chuckled, a motherly gleam in her eye. âIâve been with him since birth, you know. I was his nurseâwatched him grow from a babe to the man you see now. Heaven knows it wasnât easy.â
You glanced up, startled at the intimacy of her revelation. The thought of this woman, now sitting across from you, having been a part of his life since his earliest days struck you in a way you hadnât expected. Gojo had always seemed like an enigmaâa man of privilege and power, impossible to know beyond his title and public persona. But here, in the humble setting of this village, Mrs. Tanaka spoke of him as if he were not some distant lord, but a boy she had raised, a person with a story you had never even considered.
âHe was the most energetic child,â Mrs. Tanaka continued, her voice fond and nostalgic. âAlways getting into mischief, running circles around everyone. He had so much spirit, but oh, the responsibilities placed on those little shoulders were heavy from the start. Even when he was just a boy, his father had him learning the estate's business, sorting through documents before he could properly read some of them. I remember onceâhe couldnât have been more than ten years oldâhis father handed him a stack of contracts to review. The poor lad spent hours poring over them, brow furrowed like a little man.â
You listened intently, the bread in your hand momentarily forgotten. It was strange, hearing Gojo being spoken of this wayâno longer just a lord or rival, but a child burdened by duty far too early.Â
The woman continued, âI remember thinking how much that experience mustâve aged him. He always carried that burden with such grace, but you could see itâit weighed on him.â
A strange turmoil began to stir in your chest. You had only ever known Gojo as the man he presented to societyâarrogant, infuriatingly self-assured, with a grin that could cut like a knife. But now, you were being offered a glimpse of someone else entirely: a boy who had been shaped by forces beyond his control.Â
Mrs. Tanakaâs voice softened, her gaze faraway as she reminisced. âIt was not easy for him, growing up with so much expected of him. He would act out sometimes, just to remind everyone that he was still a boyâstill someone who needed room to breathe. But even so, he never shied away from what was asked of him. He understood his duty, perhaps too well.â
âI see.â You swallowed, a strange sensation creeping up your spine.Â
âHeâs a good man, Satoru,â Mrs. Tanaka said softly. âHeâs had to grow up faster than most, and heâs been shaped by that weight. But I hope you can see that thereâs more to him than whatâs on the surface.â
You offered her a polite smile, but inside, your thoughts were a storm of conflicting emotions. Gojo, a man burdened by duty? The notion seemed almost laughable... and yet, there was a part of you that couldnât dismiss it so easily.
Your gaze then wandered to the man of the topic itself. The baker and him were poring and scanning endlessly over sheets of paper, an uptick in his jaw visible as his eyes remained concentrated, oblivious to your observation from across the bakery. His hand raked over his hair, the muscles in his forearm clenching and unclenching due to the action, as he discussed something with the baker. Whatever matter they were discussing, it was clear it a serious matter, for you could hear the gears whirring through his mind through the calculative look on his face.
The scene felt oddly intimateâwatching him in such a serious, unguarded moment. His usual carefree demeanor was replaced by something sharp, calculating, as if the gears of his mind were turning at full speed. He pointed at something on the paper, his brow furrowing, and exchanged a few terse words with the baker. From the look on their faces, the issue seemed grave, but Gojo handled it with a calm decisiveness that surprised you.
Finally, after several moments of quiet but intense discussion, there was a visible shift. The baker nodded, sighing in relief, and Gojoâs posture relaxed, the tension in his frame unwinding. He stood a little taller, rolling his shoulders as though shedding the weight of responsibility that had pressed down on him so heavily just moments before. He glanced at the baker with a reassuring smile, offering a firm pat on the manâs back. It seemed the matter had been resolved.
As Gojo turned his head, his eyes caught yours from across the bakery. Your heart leapt unexpectedly, and you quickly averted your gaze, heat creeping up your neck as you pretended to be fascinated by the contents of the breadbasket in front of you. Despite yourself, a faint flustered feeling bloomed in your chest, and you couldnât shake the sense of being caught staring.
Out of the corner of your eye, you noticed Gojo making his way toward you, his steps slow but deliberate. You could feel the gentle thud of his boots against the wooden floor, the sound growing louder with each stride. Your back straightened instinctively, your gaze fixed firmly on Mrs. Tanaka, trying to distract yourself from the awareness that Gojo was now directly behind you.
Then, a hand placed on the back of your chair as Gojo effectively leaned over you, peering down to look down at you and Mrs. Tanaka. âAh, I see youâve been well entertained,â he drawled, a teasing lilt to it, though quieter and more casual than before.
You manage a polite smile to Mrs. Tanaka despite the teasing intent behind Satoruâs words. "Mrs. Tanaka has been a most gracious host," you replied, avoiding meeting his eyes directly, though you could feel his presence and the heat of his hand behind you, on the back of your chair.
âWell, the business is settled for now,â Gojo turned slightly so that he was addressing Mrs. Tanaka as well. "Iâm glad we could clear it up."
Mrs. Tanaka nodded, her expression pleased. "Thatâs good to hear. I donât know what weâd do without you, Satoru. You always manage to set things right."
Gojo shrugged modestly, though the smirk playing on his lips told you he was aware of his importance in the village. "I do what I can," he said with an exaggerated sigh, though the humor in his tone softened the boast.
You suppressed the urge to roll your eyes at his self-satisfaction, but Mrs. Tanaka was having none of it, laughing and swatting at his arm. "Enough of that, lad. Youâll give yourself a swollen head.â
Gojo laughed heartily at that, the sound easy and infectious. For a moment, it was almost disarming how comfortable he seemed in this setting, a far cry from the lord who prowled through the ton with that arrogant air of superiority. The contrast gnawed at you, but you pushed the thought aside, focusing instead on Mrs. Tanaka, who now wore an expression of mild concern.
Curiosity piqued, you glanced over to Gojo, only to find a matching look of confusion on his face, his eyebrows slightly raised as he too turned to the woman.
Mrs. Tanakaâs frown deepened as she folded her arms, the lines of worry clear upon her face. âSatoru,â she began, her tone earnest, âis your wife pregnant yet?â
The question landed between you like a stone dropped in still water.
Gojo sputtered, his usual composure vanishing in an instant, and youâtaken abackâchoked on nothing but air, coughing violently as the shock of the statement hit you squarely.
"P-Pardon?" Gojo stammered, eyes wide, and for once, his usual glib charm utterly failed him.
You managed to recover just enough to speak, though your voice came out hoarse and incredulous. âIâI beg your pardon, maâam?â
The tension in the room skyrocketed as Mrs. Tanaka blinked innocently between the two of you, utterly oblivious to the awkwardness spreading like wildfire. "Well, itâs justâheâs always been so strong and healthy. I thought, surely by nowâŠ"
You quickly attempted to intervene, âNo, I assure youââ
But before you could get a full sentence out, Mrs. Tanaka turned to Satoru, her gaze suddenly serious as she leveled him with an intent stare. âYouâre doing your task correctly, I presume? You have to apply a bit of force, or you're not performing the act quite right.â
She then turned her concerned frown toward you. âIs he not doing his job properly? You do feel pleasure, donât you, my dear?â
You blinked, utterly baffled, and turned to Gojo, seeking some kind of explanation. But to no availâhe was conspicuously avoiding your gaze, a rare flush creeping up his neck. The sight of him, normally so self-assured, now visibly flustered, did nothing to quell your rising confusion. âPleasure?â you echoed, unsure of what she was referring to.
âSatoru!â Mrs. Tanaka scolded, her tone growing more exasperated. âYou must conduct the marital act properly!â
Gojo finally intervened, cutting Mrs. Tanaka off with a polite but decisive, "Thank you, Mrs. Tanaka. We shall consider your counsel. I have many errands to get to, so we must take our leave now." His voice was calm, though firm, signaling that the conversation had reached its conclusion. Offering her a swift bow, he gestured for you to follow, and you did so with a quiet, grateful nod.
Once outside, the air between you both felt lighter, though a strange silence still lingered. Both of you took to the streets againâGojo didnât seem to make motions towards the bakeryâs stable to grab your horses, so you assumed the medium of travel was to be foot for the rest of his errands.
However, after a few steps, curiosity gnawed at you, and you could no longer hold back your question.
"What, exactly, is the marital act?"
Gojo stopped abruptly, turning to face you with a look of utter bewilderment amidst the bustle of the market traveling around you both. "You cannot be serious."
You met his gaze earnestly. "I am entirely serious. My mama hasn'tâŠenlightened me, simply skirting around the topic. I was wondering if you could, given that it has arisen in our conversation."
He blinked, seemingly at a loss for words, before letting out a startled laugh. "It is... how children are conceived."
"Oh," you responded, thinking on it for a moment. "So... one must marry, then?"
Gojo stared at you, incredulity plain on his face. "What?"
"You sign the contract," you explained, as though clarifying something obvious, "and then you lay in bed and embrace, do you not?"
Gojoâs mouth fell open for a moment before he threw his head back with a short, disbelieving laugh. "Just embrace?"
You nodded, though your cheeks had begun to burn under his astonished gaze and you averted your gaze to look at the shiny, red apples a vendor was presenting. "Yes, merely embrace."
Shaking his head, Gojo let out another incredulous chuckle. "And you believe children are delivered by storks as well, I suppose?"
You crossed your arms, feeling your face grow hotter. "I most certainly do not. I was present when my mother gave birth to Yuji, and I heard every scream, thank you very much."
Gojo ran a hand over his face, stifling his amusement as he tried to gather his thoughts. "Clearly there is more to it than simply embracing. It is... a rather more intimate affair."
"More intimate? You mean like wrestling?"
At this, Gojo choked on his laughter, shaking his head in disbelief. "No, not wrestling. Itâs... well, I hardly know how to explain it delicately. But it is how one begets children."
You frowned, now growing frustrated with his vagueness. "You speak in riddles. If I am mistaken, then kindly explain what the act entails!"
Gojo sighed deeply, clearly struggling between frustration and amusement. "The marital act is not simply laying beside one anotherâit involves a... a physical connection, far beyond mere affection. It is, indeed, how children come to be."
You blinked, still not fully understanding, though you refused to let it show. "You could simply say so, instead of dancing around the matter."
Gojoâs lips twitched into a grin. "Ah, but where would be the fun in that?"
"Fun?" you repeated, exasperated. "This is a matter of knowledge!"
"Indeed, a matter of knowledge I did not expect to be imparting today," Gojo said with a wry shake of his head. "Suffice it to say, it is more than an embrace, and when the time comes, you shall learn well enough."
You glared at him, cheeks still warm with embarrassment. "I shall inquire elsewhere, then."
âI would advise you not to,â Gojo remarked wryly, tilting his head to indicate that both of you move, which you surmise is a wise move given that a heavy and big cart was moving towards the general direction of the both of you, and your feet followed him through the market. Roving his eyes over the general treats and food available, you seeâfrom beside himâthat his eyes fixate on some sweet smelling pastries on a cart. Not taking his eyes off of them, he adds, âItâs quite a sensitive topic among the ton. I suspect your mama would faint if she heard you were out and about inquiring the true nature of the marital act.â
âI canâŠconsult texts,â you say, offhandedly, but you are equally as enraptured towards the sweets stall you both are walking towards.
âMmh,â Gojo hums, âYou could, Iâm sure. However, you might encounter moreâŠscientific things, rather than the personal.â
You shrugged, eyes locked in on the pasty bursting with apples. âMakes no distinction to me.â
In yourâŠfocus on the pastry, you failed to hear the upcoming hooves against the street, steadily getting louder and louder towards you. Just as you were reaching the pastry stall, the thunderous clatter of hooves on cobblestones cut through the air, snapping you from your reverie. A carriage barreled down the narrow lane, far too close for comfort and ready to crush you.
Before you could react, Gojoâs hand shot out, firm and unyielding, pulling you back toward him with a swift motion. He held you against his side, shielding you from the oncoming threat, his grip steady and protective. The world seemed to spin for a moment, your senses heightened by the closeness, the warmth of his touch, and the rapid beat of your own heart.
"Must I be responsible for keeping you from walking into trouble?" he murmured, his voice tinged with both relief and a hint of exasperation. You could feel his grip on your arm and waist as he breathed heavily, the sheer strength he possessed making you shocked, even dizzy. The carriage rumbled past, stirring up a cloud of dust, and you were left standing so near to him that you could feel the steady rise and fall of his breath.
You opened your mouth to stammer some excuse, your cheeks hot with embarrassment, but his expression had already softened into that infuriatingly familiar smirk, and he let go of the contact he had on you. "I shall have to keep a closer watch over you, lest pastries and carriages both be your undoing," he teased lightly.
You huffed, stepping back from his person with as much dignity as you could muster. "I was merely... distracted by the sweets, as were you," you replied, sounding petulant even to your own ears.
"Ah, yes, distracted to the point of self-endangerment. Truly, the pastries of this market wield extraordinary power over you."
"I am hardly so careless. It was a mere lapse of focus." Your lips twitched, fighting the smile threatening to surface despite your annoyance.
"If you say so," he drawled, his tone full of mock skepticism. Then, with a more serious note, he added, "Perhaps it would be wise to focus on the task at hand, rather than leaving your life in the hands of apple tarts."
You flushed slightly, more from his sheer perceptiveness than the scolding itself, and cast your eyes away, suddenly unsure of what to say. It was so much simpler when he was mocking you, but this unexpected gentleness was a new kind of challenge altogether.
"Come then," he said, his voice returning to its light, teasing timbre. "Let us continue our quest for knowledgeâor, at the very least, for pastries that won't lead to your untimely end."
Moving towards the stall, the smell of various fruits baked into sweets with delicious sauces sprinkled on top. The treats were clearly crafted with care, the kind of sincerity and dedication that no gilded manor kitchen could quite capture. The young couple behind the stall radiated a warmth and pride that spoke of a passion for their craft, one that valued love of the work over the cost of the ingredients.
Gojo, ever at ease among the townsfolk, exchanged pleasantries with the couple, his attention split between their conversation and the tempting selection of tarts. He spoke with the man about some local issue, but you found your focus entirely absorbed by the golden-crusted apple pie that seemed to call to you.
âWould you like to try these?â You looked up to see the presumed wife of the man, smiling at you and eyes twinkling with genuine hospitality.
Returning her smile with a polite nod, you said, "There is no need, truly. How much do you ask for one of these?" You thanked God for remembering to carry your small coin purseâa habit drilled into you by Sukunaâs lessons on self-sufficiency, even if Judgement day came in, you always carried money on your person so long as you were not within your familyâs vicinity.Â
The lady named her price, and you promptly began to search for the correct coins in your purse. Just as your fingers brushed against the cool metal, a gloved hand caught your wrist, halting your movement.
"You must be the only lady in all of Christendom who insists on paying for her own tarts whilst her husband stands idly by," came Gojoâs teasing voice. You didnât need to look up to know that his familiar smirk was firmly in place, brimming with that infuriating mirth that seemed to accompany his every word.
Without relinquishing his gentle hold on your wrist, he smoothly handed over the coins to the stall owner, then deftly picked up a golden apple tart. His eyes gleamed with something unreadable as he offered the pastry to you, the corners of his mouth twitching as if daring you to protest.
But you didnât give him what he wanted; rather, you took it without protestânot without rolling your eyesâand looked it over appreciatively.
Gojo bent over to lean his face close into yours, ever so playing the part of a husband wanting to spoil his wife. âHappy?â
You gave him a hum, sticking your tongue out and then taking a bite of the pastry in front of you.Â
Gojo's smirk widened, clearly amused by your reaction, his blue eyes sparkling with a mix of mischief and satisfaction. He watched you intently, as though gauging your every move, delighting in this little game of his. You knew he expected some sharp retort or flustered reaction, but you were determined not to give him the satisfaction.
Instead, you took a slow, deliberate bite of the tart, savoring its warmth and sweetness. The flaky crust gave way to the soft, spiced apple filling that practically melted on your tongue. You closed your eyes for a brief moment, relishing the taste, and let out a contented sigh. "It is quite satisfactory," you said, allowing a small smile to play on your lips as you met his gaze.
"Well, I should hope so," Gojo said with a chuckle, still playing the role of the devoted husband. "One does go to great lengths to ensure one's wife is suitably indulged."
You rolled your eyes at his theatrics, but there was no denying the way the scene had amused you, despite your best efforts to remain unflappable. âYou enjoy this, donât you?â you remarked dryly.
"More than you can imagine," he replied, his tone light and teasing. "Seeing you this flustered and yet so determined not to show it? Absolutely delightful."
You narrowed your eyes at him, though you couldn't quite suppress the smile tugging at the corner of your mouth. "You are insufferable."
"And yet," he said, leaning in ever so slightly, a touch of softness behind the humor in his voice, "you tolerate me still."Â
You huffed. "Only because you happen to be useful at times, particularly for giving me the opportunity to escape the confines of your godforsaken manor."
He laughed, a genuine sound that echoed above the bustle of the market. "Oh, I'll take that as the highest compliment, coming from you."
"Enjoy it while you can, Gojo. It may be the last time I am so generous."
"Noted," he said with a grin, giving you a playful wink. "I'll savor it as much as you did that tart."
"You know," you began, musing, "our mamas have truly squandered their efforts. We would never have made a compatible match."
Both of you rode side by side on horseback, the forest trail stretching out before you as you made your way back to the manor. The journey was not far nowâthe stone turrets of the Gojo estate were already visible in the distance. The both of you hadnât had much time to do much other than two encounters you had, deciding to make your return before your rendezvous got behindhand. You turned your head slightly to study Gojo's reaction, expecting to find that familiar, self-assured smirk he always wore. But instead, his expression was... different. A touch more solemn, perhaps even conflicted.
At last, he spoke, his voice softer than usual. "And what, pray tell, do you consider a suitable match?"
You let his question hang in the air for a moment, taking in the rustling leaves and the steady rhythm of your horses' hooves against the well-trodden path. It was just the two of you here in the quiet of the forest, far from the prying eyes of society. There was a certain unspoken understanding between youâa truce of sortsâyet also a acknowledgement that either of you could easily betray this moment's candor.
So, ultimately, you chose honesty. Partial honesty.
With a quiet sigh, you chose your words carefully. "I think," you hesitated, your gaze caught by Gojo's steady, penetrating eyes, "I should prefer a life of tranquility once I am wed. Someone gentle, who would respect my desire to occupy myself as I please, who would allow me a measure of privacy." You quickly added, as to not seem too radical, "I mean to say, someone who would not object if I wished to practice my piano in solitude or to pursue a quiet hobby. Surely you understand, my lord, the burden of constantly being in the public eye."
Instead of seeming understanding, Gojoâs gaze on you wasâŠpensive. Your heart sped up as the solace you needed from Gojo after being a bit vulnerable didnât appear, leaving your mind running as to what he was thinking.The sunlight filtered through the trees, catching in his white hair, giving him an almost ethereal appearance as the two of you rode on in silence.
Then, the clouds covered the sun up, giving his figure a glum, ruminative cast.
After a long pause, he finally spoke, and his voice seemed to carry a note of something deeper, something unspoken. As if he was aware of something you werenât. âWhat I do understand that is that you are being deceitful. Both your future husband and to yourself.â
His words hung in the air between you, more like a question than a statement, challenging in a way that left you unprepared. The forest around you seemed to hold its breath, the rustling leaves and birdsong fading into the background as his gaze locked onto yours, probing, almost too perceptive. It was the windiness indicative of rainfall, with the thunder of clouds above you to provide testament to the change in weather.
You straightened in your saddle, feeling the weight of his scrutiny. "I fail to see what you mean," you replied, a touch defensive, though you kept your tone level. "What else should one seek from a marriage if not harmony and respect?"
 "You speak of privacy and quiet, of being left to your own devices. But tell me," he said, his voice barely above a murmur, "would that truly satisfy you? To be married to a man who treats you as if you were a paintingâbeautiful, yes, but best admired from a distance, untouched and unengaged?"
You opened your mouth to respond but found no words. There was a part of you, a stubborn part, that wanted to argueâto tell him he was wrong, that a peaceful life was exactly what you desired.
"I... simply wish to avoid the chaos that comes with too much entanglement," you said finally, more quietly. "Iâve seen what happens when people become too wrapped up in one another. It's a vulnerability I do not wish to expose myself to."
"Ah, I see," he said, nodding slowly yet mockingly as if he was piecing together a puzzle, making you bristle involuntarily. "So, youâd rather not risk the mess of it allâthe unpredictability, the chance of losing control. You want safety."
You narrowed your eyes at him, both irritated and unnerved by his perceptiveness. "Is that so wrong?" you challenged. "To desire a life where I can control my own happiness, rather than leave it in the hands of another?"
He matched your tone and fervor. âIs that truly what you believe a marriage is for?â
You sneered. âAnd donât you want an accountant for a wife, my lord? It is quite laughable for you to be advising me on the beauty of marriage.â
Enraptured in the heat of the moment, you hadnât realized that you were nearly at the stables where you had to station your horses until Satoru grabbed his reinsâ-hands idle before, directing his horse in no particular directionâto now steer his into the stall next to the ones you directed yours.Â
âMy stance on marriage and my character bear no relevance to this matter,â he replied, a rueful smile tugging at his lips as he tethered his horse. His tone was controlled, though a trace of irritation bled through. âWhatever my faults, they do not make your notions any more rational.â
âBut you forget that it illuminates who you are,â you hissed, walking towards the exit of the barn, tired of the smell of manure and Gojo, unsure which was more repugnant. âA hypocrite. A whited sepulchre, if you will.â
Gojo barks out a laugh from behind you, following closely behind on your heels. âAny supposed sanctimonious nature of mine does not alter the fact that you are steering yourself into a life of misery. Not just you, but any poor fool incapable of seeing through your polished smiles to your true intentions.â
On a given day, had you not been so incensed or had your opponent been anyone other than Lord Gojo, you might have heeded the thunderous roar of the rain on the stableâs roof or the slick ground outside that awaited you. And on a given day, you wouldnât have stepped so fast, as if daring the friction of the ground and force of gravity to make you fall flat on your face.
But, alas, it was not that said given day and your ankle made a sickening crunch! against the ground as you fell, your head and body hitting the wet grass. You felt the world tilt unnaturally as you hit the ground, the impact jarring through your body, sending a shockwave of pain radiating from your ankle to the back of your skull. A dull throb began to pulse at your temples, and the rain poured down, blurring your vision into a haze of grays and greens.
Through the blend of sensations, you heard a sharp intake of breath, and then there were hurried footsteps approaching. Somewhere above the din of the storm, a voice called your name, its usual calm fraying at the edges with alarm.
âMiss Itadori!â WIth that you jumped, eyes finally registering a Gojo clenching your wrists tight. âCan you understand what I am saying?â
Your gaze drifted over his face, focusing on the small detailsâhis rain-slicked hair, the concern that flickered behind his eyes, the humorless smile that strained at his lips. Slowly, you managed a nod, though even that small movement made your head swim. âYes,â you whispered.
Then, you became acutely aware of a warm, crimson fluid pooling around you, contrasting sharply with the rain-soaked earth. You began to feel faint, though not from the severity of the injury itself, but rather from the unfamiliar sight of so much blood. It was unnerving, especially for someone who had never experienced a wound of this nature. The lightheadedness must have been responsible for your sudden admission, âI am frightened.â
Lord Gojoâs eyes, which had moments ago glinted with amusement at your pitiful state, softened ever so slightly. His smirk remained in place, yet you noticed the way his fingers twitched restlessly at his side, betraying the composure he desperately clung to. âMy lady, itâs merely a gash. You are not in danger of perishing,â he said, his tone light, almost too light, like a mask hiding something unspoken. âHowever, it seems Iâll have to carry you to a physician, lest you collapse entirely.â
He stood up from where he had been inspecting your ankle, bending slightly before you with his arms extended. But there was a slight hesitation in his movement, a momentary pause before his hands reached for you, as if he were weighing the consequences, considering the impropriety of the action.
Your eyes widened in alarm at the very idea of being carried by him. âCarry me? What--AHHH!â A sharp scream left your lips as Lord Gojo, without warning, scooped you into his arms. In the blink of an eye, you found yourself in a bridal carry, your gown catching the rain as he strode out of the greenhouse. He moved with a purposeful stride, though his grip on you was perhaps a fraction tighter than necessary, his jaw clenched just a bit too firmly.
You pounded your fists ineffectively against his chest, cheeks burning with indignation. âGojo, let me down!â
He, of course, ignored your demands entirely, his voice annoyingly gentle as he cooed, âNow, now, itâs for your own good. Youâre in no condition to walk, and I can hardly risk your injury worsening.â But despite his calm words, his eyes flickered nervously to your face and then away, almost as though he was afraid of what he might see in your expression if he looked too long.
âWhat if someone sees us?â you hissed, your mind racing at the impropriety of the situation. The two of you, unchaperoned, in such an undignified positionâit would provide gossip for Whistledown and the ton for weeks.
Gojoâs smirk returned, though there was a tightness around his eyes that hadnât been there before. âI am wearing gloves, my lady. Fear not, I am not making contact with your bare skin.â His attempt at humor felt forced, his voice lacking its usual ease, and when he added, âThough I daresay, it would not be such an unpleasant thought,â the playfulness seemed almost like a deflection.
You narrowed your eyes, trying to distract yourself from the warmth of his arms. âWhy do you always wear those?â
âWriting ledgers and doing a lot of work with pens make my fingers blister. Itâs quite unsightly, so I prefer to wear them,â he said, his voice steady, though the hand supporting your back trembled almost imperceptibly.
You hummed, settling a little more comfortably in his hold. "You know, youâre quite strong to be able to carry me like this. What manual labor are your parents making you do to get the title of duke?â
âWell,â Gojo began, but his voice sounded tighter now, the rumble of it vibrating through his chest where your head was so near. The proximity seemed to unsettle him in a way his words could not hide; he cleared his throat as if to steady himself, but his breathing was just a touch uneven. My vindication for such close contact will be the blood loss, you thought, as you nestled your head closer to his chest, until your nose was almost grazing his neck. The scent of tobacco and vanilla filled your senses, lulling you closer to the pulse that beat a bit too fast beneath his skin. âI enjoy doing archery. Iâve been doing it ever since I was a child, which happens to strengthen your shoulders.â
You thought back to the night you were strolling in the garden the day of your debut, musing on the size of his shoulders, and mumbled, âMmmm, I was right.â
Gojo stiffened almost imperceptibly, his gaze flickering down to you in a way that was almost too quick, too searching. His lips parted slightly as if he wanted to say something, but he hesitated. "Right about what?" he asked finally, his tone a bit too casual, as though trying to mask the turmoil behind his nonchalance.
âNothing,â you murmured, closing your eyes and leaning your head against his shoulder. You felt his gaze linger on you, as though he were trying to decipher a puzzle that was just beyond his reach, before he let out a breath he seemed to have been holding. And as he carried you onward, the rhythm of his heartbeat felt almost in sync with the rain, though you both pretended not to notice how fast it was racing.
As you leaned against him, the warmth of his presence enveloped you, a soothing balm against the chaos swirling in your mind. But the world began to tilt, colors blurring at the edges, and the sounds of the forest faded into a distant hum.
âGojoâŠâ you whispered, your voice barely a breath, a final plea for clarity before darkness crept in.
The last thing you registered was his grip tightening around you, a hint of alarm breaking through his facade. âStay with me,â you heard, though his voice felt miles away, echoing in the void as consciousness slipped through your fingers like grains of sand.
Then, the world faded entirely, leaving only the warmth of his arms and the distant sound of his voice.
prev. the game | next. the house party
general masterlist | series masterlist
a/n AHHH HI BRIDGERTON!GOJO READERS I MISSED U!!! im very sorry for the delay that happened with this chapter but for me it's so hard to write...development and angst and fluff becasue when you write it's so hard to know when any of your writing hits :(
but re-reading ur comments reblogs and asks inspire me a lot to continue so we all good :3 i think what happened was that i kind of went thru a crisis where i thought my writing wasn't good at all because of certain things i saw in other authors', i.e. writing longfics that have 10k+ words that led me to believe i wasn't writing enough, that my plotline was progressing too fast, etc. i might have long chapters going on, i might not because i realize how stupid that belief was lol. anyways moving forward i dont think we will see that type of delay because i have the best readers hehe <3 love you all and im kind of giggling in anticipation to all your funny comments because they make my day
ANYWAYS like always reblogs and comments are appreciated <333
meme time
gojo getting to business w the baker (credits to @/sinn-clair LOL)
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The Sexed Regime, or: You Probably Have the Wrong Critiques of "TME/TMA" Terminology
Let's begin by looking at an interesting dichotomy.
There's an oddly pervasive idea in queer spaces that a truly progressive trans or post-gender politic underscores the irrelevance of sex. In contrast to patriarchal society's utter fixation on "natal sex", queer existence must be transcendent, a space in which one's bodily configuration is understood to be entirely under one's purview, where presentation is simply something we inhabit and implies nothing about our sexualities or embodiments. It is an idea of emancipation rooted in agnosticism, an anti-patriarchal revolution spurred by the lack of belief in our cissexist society's deranged emphasis on knowing what's in our pants at all times.
It's a very appealing idea, I'll admit.
Here's the thing, though.
The naturalization of sex is the foundation of patriarchy, as well as the basis of the heterosexual regime it instantiates. Humanity is cleft in twain, with one sex marked for reproductive-sexual exploitation by the other. Like most other regimes, this one is also powered by belief--belief in the superiority of the 'male sex', the unfitness of the 'female sex', and most of all: absolute belief that sex is immutable, exhaustively binary, and non-overlapping.
What this also means, ultimately, is that those of us who dare to desert the sex we were conscripted into face different pressures and violence. It is obvious that many trans people are also subject to reproductive injustice, as cis women are, and consequently the transphobia they face is very acutely a regendering impulse, a patriarchal desire to drag them back to the confines of womanhood to fulfill their patriarchal purpose. There is, understandably, a certain amount of solidarity between cis women and trans people who have suffered these aspects of the heterosexual regime.
This is in fact the understanding that gives rise to even liberal-progressive uses of 'male socialization' directed at transfems. Trans women are understood to have been spared certain excesses of misogynistic violence and therefore expected to see and approach the world differently. It is simply a neutral observation, of course, no judgment behind it ... well, until it comes time to deny trans women epistemic authority over experiences of misogyny or womanhood, even their own. After all, can transfems really be said to have a full understanding of patriarchy? They weren't 'raised AFAB'!
Oftentimes, this becomes a double bind of proving that transfems did experience trauma, feminization, and abuse even pretransition, often as children, which is then usually dismissed as "trauma dumping" or "equating womanhood to being abused"--despite the minimization of our experiences being predicated on our "lesser" understanding of the trauma of being "misogyny-affected". So let's not retread that.
Instead, I'll point out that people assume a symmetry, a complementarian equivalence, almost, between the experiences of trans people. What I would like to stress is that there is no such thing as a coherent "AMAB" class or a shared "AMAB solidarity" based on shared experiences of oppression, because I have some shocking news that readers may wish to sit down for:
Trans women are oppressed by cis men.
Cis men are overwhelmingly the ones who rape us, beat us, kill us, and seek to abuse us. When we were children, we were bullied and violated for our perceived effeminacy, largely by the cis boys we were most proximate to. Most of us have been around cis men when they've voiced their most dehumanizing, misogynistic thoughts about women, and have been punished for not participating in these rituals of misogynistic rhetoric, too. The trauma of our upbringing involves being locked into spaces with those who sniffed out our differences, our non-conformance, and routinely punished us for being deviant. When we grow up, they are the ones who largely continue to prey on us.
The chief characteristic of transmisogyny is the presumed artificiality of trans womanhood, the idea that we are mimetics, and our womanhood is a farce, a costume whose only purpose is sexual. This dovetails with our disposability--our inability to be women who can bear children, further patrilineality, and secure what minuscule respectability is afforded to the domestically-confined women who continue the male line. As such, our hyperfetishization marks us for extreme violence, as sexual objects that can be freely used and discarded, guilt-free, because after all ... We asked for it.
Why would we "choose" womanhood if we did not want this?
Which, ultimately, brings me to my point: Sex is a social regime of difference imposed on us, but it is, unfortunately, a regime still in existence. My sex is the basis upon which my womanhood is denied and my disposability justified, because the transfeminized are degendered--we are not, as a rule, provided a path "back" to manhood. Our "effeminacy" ensures that we are 'failed' men, because gender is ultimately hierarchal. Losing status, being unmanned, is frankly trivial, and is what underlies the oppression of queer men--trans men included. Most of us are ultimately subject to some kind of degendering, largely due to how a patriarchal society regards those who defy the reproductive mandate, but transmisogyny is a specific manifestation of degendering that trans women experience.
"TME/TMA" may well be an imperfect categorization--all undertakings in boundary formation are imprecise, though not always violent, given that we need descriptive terms to communicate--but the real issue with it is that it's an overly-ponderous and ultimately clunky terminology for the frank reality that the binary sex imposed on us shapes the contours of the violence we experience. I have never experienced the specific kind of misogyny that sees me as nothing but a broodmare, because I'm a filthy troon, that dehumanized abject thing whose only purpose is absorbing (sexual) violence. Yet the acknowledgment that transfems experience forms of violence that others do not--or sometimes, even the acknowledgment that transfems face violent misogyny at all--is much less forthcoming.
Our struggles are indelibly connected, of course, stemming from the same source and promulgated by the same regime that seeks to define us as nothing more than male property. The shape of each is distinct, however, and because people frequently misunderstand the shape of mine, the idea that my struggles are even connected to theirs, that I experience misogynistic violence homoousian with that which they experience, is frequently dismissed, or considered outright offensive.
This is why I talk and write about transmisogyny, and why more people need to become more familiar with how the naturalization of sex and the regime of heterosexuality under patriarchy necessitates our common struggle.
And unfortunately, in order to properly express these ideas, we do need to talk about the regime of sex.
#transfeminism#gender is a regime#materialist feminism#lesbian feminism#sex is a social construct#social constructionism#feminism#transmisogyny#transphobia#degendering#regendering#anti transmasculinity
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Apparently there was some lil drama in Good Omens fandom again about people being deeply nervous and scared of the end of Season 3, and I wrote this in the replies of one of the asks that Neil Gaiman answered, but I feel like it is deserving of being crossposted into its own post (in a slightly expanded form) so folks actually see it.
cmere, good omens fandom, we're having an intervention. a Come To Jesus talk, if you will.
First of all, I'm literally begging the fandom to:
learn what personal boundaries are, especially around parasocial relationships with strangers. (Suggestion: When sending asks to authors you like, use "polite work email" etiquette, not "joking with a friend" etiquette. The latter comes off REAL weird sometimes, and sometimes outright mean/rude/bullying).
take a couple deep fucking breaths
embrace the philosophy of The Author's Intent Only HAS To Matter To The Author, It Does Not Have To Matter To YOU. If you do not like the author's intent, you can say "hmmmm no thanks" and write some fanfic. That's what it's for.
Friends, Romans, countrymen..... Stop trying to make Neil Gaiman responsible for your happiness. For one thing, that is an absolutely unfair and cruel burden to put on a stranger who doesn't know you. Neil is only responsible for Neil's happiness. You're responsible for your own happiness. In fact, do not rely on ANY external source to guarantee your happiness, not even very nice people like Neil, not even your significant other, not even your family members. Yes, those people might be able to help you with your happiness, but they cannot guarantee it. Expecting a third party to guarantee your happiness is how corporations exploit you, and it is the source of all media trauma. Take agency over your own joy! Don't give away your power! Plan to DIY your personal ideal ending!
Neil is not telepathic, Neil cannot know all your hopes and dreams and wishes, nor SHOULD he be expected to know them, nor does he have space to know them. He is busy with things like his own and Terry's hopes and dreams and wishes. Their hopes/dreams/wishes are just as valid and important as yours, aren't they? Yes, they are. So calm down. caaaaaaaallllllm dowwwwwn.
Yes, I love the show very much too, but at the end of the day it is just a story. And the great thing about stories is that you are empowered to retell them in a different way. It is not real, so if you end up unsatisfied by S3, then blithely impose your own reality and build your own joy. It's not like it's the End Of The World or anything (lil fandom joke there for you)
And look, if you read this and you're feeling Mad and Upset or Frustrated about it, that is a symptom that you are maybe feeling a little stung in your Media Trauma parts. I am sorry that other stories have let you down in the past, and I really sympathize that you are feeling scared about the fate of this story that really matters to you. You've invested a lot of love into it! I really understand the fear! You don't want to be hurt again, and that's super understandable and normal.
But bestie, literally the only way for you to find a story that's exactly perfect for you and that won't hurt you at all is for you to write it yourself. I know that sucks to hear, but it is the truth. If you keep pinning a hope of perfection on other people's stories, you will keep getting traumatized by the media you consume. Love other people's stories for what they ARE, not for the stories that you WANTED them to be -- the same way that we love people, you know? You have to let a person be their own person; you can't force them to be someone else. That's fucked up, so if you notice that you keep trying to do that, maybe go to therapy so you can be that Someone-Else person for yourself (or, if you can't afford therapy, read some self-help books from the library or find some good channels on Youtube who make content that might help with that (I really like JulienHimself)).
If you need a story to be something big and important for you, if you are seeking catharsis and healing from a story that matters to you and you're really scared that you won't get it, then open a Word document and start typing. You can do it. You're a human being, and you evolved to tell stories. Literally it's a species specialization. You got this. It's gonna be okay, because you're going to seize the means of production and MAKE it okay. Yes? Yes.
Good Omens S3 will be what it will be. It will be what Neil wants it to be and what Terry would have wanted it to be. Period. That IS actually the highest achievement and the most noble and admirable accomplishment that we can hope for. And hey, maybe what they want overlaps with what you want, and that will be wonderful! But that will be merely a happy coincidence. The only person who can TRULY center your wants is YOU. So stop trying to trap Neil into doing it, please, because he's busy and it's not his job, AND because your wants do matter and you deserve to have someone who can give your wants their 100% full attention (aka you. that's you. only you can do that. Not even your best friends in the world can do it. Not even your mom can do it, at least not if you're old enough to know how to read.)
It's gonna be okay. Really. Really, it is. No, stop typing the snarky melodramatic reply. This is not the time for jokes; I'm being serious. It's going to be okay. Neil Gaiman can only break your heart exactly as much as you allow him to do so. That's how art works. You have to consent in order to be affected by it, and you can withdraw your consent at any time. You're going to be okay. I promise. As long as you choose to claim your own agency and your own empowerment as an individual, then all will be well and all manner of things will be well.
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One thing that I absolutely love about TFOne's writing is that it manages to avoid a lot of the heavier criticism I've seen regarding MegOp's hero/villain dynamic over the years (trust me, the mid-2010s TF discourse was crazy)
*Spoilers Below*
First of all, the narrative benefits so much from the main 4 cast members all being a part of the same exploited mining class. So many takes on MegOp have Orion being of a higher status (an archivist, a cop, etc) while Megatron is much lower down on the social latter (a miner, a gladiator, often in the context of being a slave).
I've seen many people be put off by this, because it feels as if Megs is being villianized for being rightfully angry at the system that deeply harmed and exploited him, while Orion/Optimus is praised for taking a more pacifistic stance despite him not suffering as much from or in some ways even benefiting from the system he claims to oppose. I don't find their dynamic to be as simple as that, and I do find these takes to be a bit reductive, but I do very much see where they are coming from.
I am definitely one of those people who's very frustrated with the way pacifism is hailed as the one true path of morality, and the inherent implication that taking any sort of revenge on the people who abused/exploited you makes you just as bad as them. Also, Marvel's particular brand of demonizing any form of radical political action, despite the system clearly being broken and corrupt, but being completely unwilling to offer any other alternatives to meaningfully change things for the better.
When looking at what I described above its pretty easy to see how a lot of versions of MegOp's hero/villain dynamic unfortunately fits into that trope. Bringing it back to TFOne, you can see how Op and Meg coming from the same political/social status subverts this. The existence of Elita and Bee only further illustrates that out of the 4 people of the mining class who were all deceived, exploited, and literally mutilated in the same way it is only D-16 that completely loses himself to his rage, even to the point where he loses compassion for his own companions and disregarding the safety of the other miners (when he decides to "tears everything down" and Elita exclaims he's going to "kill everyone").
What I think I love most about the characterization in TFOne is that Orion is the radical one. Not only that, but he is praised by Elita and by extension the narrative for it. He is constantly challenging authority, and is the first to have the suspicion that their society is structured in an unjust way.
Meanwhile D-16, to be frank, is kind of a bootlicker. He fully believed in the system and that Sentinal Prime, as someone with power, had the right to decided "what was best" for those who are weaker/lesser (I wish I had the specific quote from D-16 to support this, but the movie's still in theaters). It illustrate that D-16 already held certain fascistic ideals, and that he and Orion already have fundamentally opposing moral/political values, it simply hasn't been of any consequence yet. It shows that their eventual falling out was inevitable, even if they had decided to rebuild Cybertron together.
It should also be noted that D-16's feelings of anger and betrayal do not necessarily have anything to do with the unjust system itself, but that said unjust system was predicated on a lie. Hence his fixation on deception in the post-credits scene and him naming his faction the Decepticons. Meanwhile, when Orion learns the truth he's just sort of like "yeah, I always kinda knew something was up" because again, he understood on some level that their system was predicated on injustice.
Even D-16's obsession with Megatronus Prime, while initially an endearing aspect of his character, is also an indicator of the questionably large amount of value he puts on one's strength. It foreshadows the "might makes right" ideology that the decepticons follow, and is a key part of their ideological characterization across continuities.
Instead of the narrative we often see in Transformers media were Optimus is idolized by the narrative for being more moderate and Megatron is villiainized for being radical (or so people often claim), it is instead Optimus who is rewarded and praised by the narrative for being radical, and Megatron who is villainized and punished by the narrative for holding potentially fascistic values.
I do agree with some criticism I've seen that the whole thing with killing Sentinel and D-16's final turn into villainy felt a bit rushed and more than a little cliche, but I also understand it both had a limited runtime and that it is ultimately a family film meant to be accessible to children. More importantly though, I think the movie set the groundwork early on that, no matter how this final act played out, D-16 was always going to turn to darkness, and Orion would not have been able to stop him.
Its perfectly tragic, the way all MegOp should be, while also feeling really well thought out from a thematic standpoint. I love it.
#transformers#tf#tfone#transformers one#orion pax#megatron#d-16#optimus prime#maccadam#megop#megatron x optimus prime#kaysposts
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Here Comes The Sun
Azriel x You
Word Count : 3.8k
Summary : When the Spymaster of the Night Court discovers your little crush, you end up crossing a lot of firsts off your list.
Warnings : lots of sexual tension, use of nicknames (Sunshine - Reader/You), mention/insinuation of loss of virginity, mention of masturbation, oral and fingering (f recieving).
Author's Note : written for this anon ask, very lightly edited so please forgive mistakes/mispellings.
The crowd at Ritaâs tonight was especially large, you think to yourself as you huddle closer to your friends. You had made the trip from Day Court especially for one of your dear friends birthdays. After hours of dancing, you were now gathered next to the table that Mor had taken over for your friends and hers. Rhys was snuggled in the booth obviously preoccupied with his mate and Cassian was moping, bouncing one knee and eyeing the exit, biding his time until he could go home to Nesta. The rest of your group, including the birthday girl, were standing in a tight knot trading laughs and waving their hands in animated conversation.
Except you. You had pushed yourself to the outside of the group, overheated from all the dancing. You allow your eyes to roam around the large room, the music picking up into another lively song. Your gaze slides along the bar before it lands on the dark figure youâve been avoiding all night. Azriel, the Shadowsinger, Spymaster to the Night Court.Â
As you dip your chin with a secretive smile, you turn back to your group.
âI see your little crush hasnât faded since the last time you were here.â Mor practically shouts over the music.
âWho? Me? What are you talking about Mor?â You feel a hot flush of color creeping over your neck.
Mor just tilts her head in response with a smirk, right in the direction of the bar you were just staring at.
âAzriel? The Spymaster?â you feign a shocked face with a laugh. âHe is way out of my league.â
Mor leans closer to your ear so she isnât shouting. âBut you arenât denying it.â
The flush of heat reaches your cheeks now. âThereâs no harm in looking, you know,â you answer with another laugh.
âYouâre right,â Mor smiles wickedly. âNo harm done.â
As she turns back to the conversation with the birthday girl, you turn towards the table top. Grabbing your water from the table, going for a piece of ice you can cool your fingers with and press to your overheated face. Shaking the cup you realize it's empty and risk another glance towards the bar.Â
An elegant female catches your eye, dress glittering and legs as long as night. She is sidled up just next to Azrielâs stool in the corner obviously trying to get his attention. It is then that you notice he is paying her no mind, not even to politely decline. Because his eyes are on you.
Another flame of heat licks at your cheeks as your eyes lock with those light hazel ones. Dipping your head quickly to turn back to your friends, you feel a slow cool breeze sliding over the back of your neck. Before you can even question the source, a hand grabs your arm.
âYou want me to grab you another drink?,â one of your other friends asks.
âNo, thanks. Thatâs ok. I should probably head out anyway. Early start tomorrow and all.â Tomorrow you were headed back to the Day Court. Scholar duties wait for no one, not even a good friendâs birthday.
Slipping through the crowd past the churning dance floor, you spot Mor and the birthday girl pushing through the hordes of people in an attempt to reach the bar. Catching their eye, you wave a little wave and head towards the coat check.
Throwing your coat over your arm as you step out onto the street, you are blissfully thankful for the cold winter air that hits you. It was much too hot inside and your face is still heated at a low simmer. The fleeting reminder of those eyes on you from across the room bring that heat straight back up to a boil.
Those light hazel eyes, those swirling dark wisps of shadow, that single dark lock of hair that doesnât seem to stay in place and falls across his forehead.
Enough. You admonish yourself in thought.
You decide the night air will do you some good and begin the short walk just a few blocks to your inn instead of winnowing back. You donât even make it half a block before a whipping mass of shadow blocks your path and you slam into the very solid body within it.Â
Stumbling backwards a step, you stammer out an apology. âOh, Iâm sorââ
Those eyes.
âLeaving so soon, Sunshine?â Those eyes are focused solely on you as Azrielâs deep voice sounds.
âOh, um. Yeah, I was just heading back to the inn. Iâm heading home early in the morning.â
âBut the night is young. Youâll miss all the fun, Sunshine.âÂ
âI get it,â you force out a giggle even though your heart is pounding. âSunshine - Iâm from Day Court. Very cute.â
Azriel chuckles, the vibration sweeping over your skin. Your face isnât the only thing that feels hot now.Â
âNot what I was going for, but a cute coincidence.â He emphasizes the word cute in your tone.Â
âThen why did you call me Sunshine?âÂ
Why are you out here alone on the street talking with this male?Â
It wasnât that you felt unsafe. How could you with the Spymaster at your side? It was just that being alone with males wasnât something you did. Ever. The scholar dorms were separated and all of your roommates were female. The occasion had never arisen before.Â
âLook at you,â he purrs. âYou are practically glowing. That is why I called you Sunshine.âÂ
Your face flames even hotter now if that were even possible. Another slow cooling breeze passes over you, this time down the side of one cheek. The source is clear this time. Tendrils of smoky shadow pass through your peripheral vision as the coast over your shoulder. Before a thought could fully form in your mind, he slips to your side.
âMay I escort you?â Your attention falls to the shadows that twine around the elbow he offers you.
âTo the inn? Where Iâm staying?â
âDid you have another place in mind?â His mouth quirks up on one side with a dangerous glint in his eye.
You shake your head a bit as your brain kicks back into gear. âIf the night is so young, how come you are out here offering to walk me home?â
Azriel laughs. His chin tilted up, you canât help but to notice that smooth expanse of tattooed neck.Â
âYou caught me Sunshine,â he says, bringing his gaze back to you. âIt just so happens that a little birdie told me ââ He leans down, lips dangerously close to your ear.
â- that you might have a little crush on me.â
If your skin could get any hotter you would burst into flame, right here in the middle of the sidewalk.
âMor really should keep her mouth shut,â you spit out in a sudden burst of anger.Â
âIt wasnât Mor who told me,â he says as he straightens.
âThen who?â You tilt your head to look at him, confused. Outside of Mor, your other friends had no reason to randomly approach someone from the Inner Circle.
âLike I said Sunshine, a little birdie told me.â With a flick of his wrist he holds out his hand, index finger extended in a point. A vortex of shadow swirls above it, forming into a tiny bird. Wings flapping as it lands on his finger like a perch.Â
You crack out a sharp laugh. âSpymaster. Right. I should have known. Well, like I told Mor ââ you peer at him with a mischievous grin. âThere is no harm in looking.â
In an instant, Azriel spins to face you fully. One arm smoothly planted to brace against the brick wall behind you. âSo you arenât denying it then? You do have a crush on me?â
Your head is spinning, your heart pounding, no witty comebacks spring into your mind. The only thing forming is a low heat in your belly.
âNo, Iâm not denying it.â you say breathlessly.
âWell,â he starts, staring right into your eyes. âIt just so happens Sunshine, the feeling is mutual. And while there may be no harm in looking.â He leans closer, his finger glides down the side of your face before hooking under your chin. âItâs so much more fun to touch.âÂ
Before you can utter a single word, his lips are brushing over yours. The first tender kiss lands softly against the pillow of your lips, barely any pressure behind it. The second has you reciprocating with a gentle push of your own. The third is what causes all thoughts to flee and a sigh escapes your throat.
You feel his lips pull into a smile against your own. âDonât you agree?â
You stand there frozen. Dazed, head empty. âIâm sorry,â you breathe. âI forgot the question.â
Azriel releases another low chuckle and again the vibration coasts over your skin. This time suspiciously close to your ear.
âI said,â he rumbles as you feel his nose brushing against your hair. âItâs so much more fun to touch isnât it?â
The tip of his nose begins dragging lower, like a cold piece of ice sliding down your heated neck.
âAzriel, wait ââ you say sharply.
He pulls back and stares into your face again. âWhatâs wrong, Sunshine? Did I do something wrong?â A sly grin across his classically beautiful face. âYouâre standing here like youâve never been kissed before or something.âÂ
The only answer is your bewildered stare, another bloom of color rising to your cheeks.
He jerks back slightly in shock. The look quickly covered with that impenetrably impassive mask so familiar to the Spymaster of the Night Court.
âThereâs â I mean, the right â itâs just never come up before,â you stammer with a shake of your head.Â
You watch as a heat reaches his face. The flame igniting not across his cheeks, but in his eyes.
âSunshine,â he whispers softly, his finger still hooked under your chin. âWas that your first kiss?â
Once again, your words fail you.
Pushing off from the arm bracing the wall, Azriel brings both hands to the center of his chest. âI am honored to be your first,â he says nodding into a slight bow. âAnd maybe â if you so desire ââ the sensual tone of his voice deepens. âI could be part of many more firsts for you.â
That flame of need is still bright within his eyes.The inferno no longer blazes up your neck and face as it doubles low in your belly, slipping down and settling squarely between your thighs.Â
Isnât this what you wanted? What you had fantasized about for weeks after that first initial sighting of him? Isnât his voice after he first introduced himself to you the one you replayed over and over in your head? That deep timbre inside your brain as you ached for some privacy in the overcrowded dormitory to touch yourself? Itâs not like you were saving yourself for any particular reason, it had just never happened.
âYes,â you breathe in a shudder. âI do so desire.â
The flame in his eyes flares higher as he turns to stand at your side, a feline smile pulling at his lips. Azriel offers you his elbow once more. With your eyes still on his face, drinking in the crinkle near his eye and the tilt of his mouth, you slip your hand smoothly into the crook of his arm.Â
Before you can even lift your leg to step, blackness surrounds you. What were once wispy strands of shadow now surround you like a sheet, obscuring the street around you from view. You draw in a gasp. This was not the winnowing you were accustomed to. It felt entirely different although not necessarily in a bad way. Yet before your gasp could be released fully, the blackness receded and you stared about you in wonder.
The cobblestones beneath your feet were replaced with gleaming hardwood, the chill of the winter night gone. A fire was already burning in the fireplace as you scanned the room before you.
âThis isnât the inn,â you state as you finally release your breath.Â
âNo. It isnât,â Azriel rumbles out another laugh as he releases your arm. âI thought youâd prefer a little more privacy. Plus the beds at the inn arenât exactly made for wings.â He shuffles his wings with a sly smile as he turns to you.
âYou know from experience?,â you smirk.
âDoes that bother you?,â he asks seriously as he steps closer. The usual buffer between bodies cut in half, you can feel the heat of him radiating.
âDoes me being â inexperienced bother you?â Another rush of color floods your face and you press your still chilled knuckles to your cheek in frustration.
âNo,â his tone is still serious as he gently removes your hand from your face. âIt doesnât bother me.â The fingers held so tenderly in his are brought to his lips, the same sweet pressure from his kiss earlier laid on the back of your hand. âItâs â intoxicating.â
You feel your breaths shorten as he steps even closer, his front pressing against yours. Azriel drops your hand and brings his up to your chin once more, this time tilting your head to the side. His other arm snakes around your waist.Â
âKnowing youâre allowing me to bring you pleasure,â his warm lips brush against the side of your neck. âPleasure you have never known before,â his kisses shift lower. âThat itâs my name you will cry out as I give it to you,â his teeth graze your collarbone and his wings tremble with his words.Â
âAzriel,â you sigh, leaning your head back even further.Â
Sliding his hand from your face to the nape of your neck, his face comes up to meet yours. âWe are just getting started, Sunshine.â
His lips crash into yours just as you bring your arms up to his shoulders. Gone are the trailing soft kisses. This is just need. Bruising, nipping, need. Your tongue meets his as it enters your mouth, searching. You push back as he deepens the kiss further, needing to be closer. Wanting more. Your hands slip into his hair, threading between your fingers as you try to get closer.Â
He breaks the kiss just for a moment to reach down and grasp your thighs, hauling you up to wrap your legs around him before he eagerly returns. Your grip around his neck tightens as you hold on, your heaving chest pressed up against his. You feel him moving and in a moment youâre being lowered to the bed, mattress meeting your back.Â
As he pulls himself away, standing upright before you, you notice the damp stain left on the front of his dark shirt. Right where your thighs had been spread around his waist. As he unbuttons his shirt his gaze drops down to where you are looking and he runs his thumb over the wetness there.Â
His shirt now tossed aside, he steps near you again. Hands sliding up the outside of your thighs to your hips, the fabric of your dress bunching as he pushes it up.
âNo need to be embarrassed.â He says as he sits you up so that he can gather your dress over your head. âYou're about to be dripping on much more than my shirt.âÂ
As he tosses your dress over on the floor with his shirt, he peers down at you, just looking, hands held still at his sides.
âSo fucking beautiful.â His hand reaches out and caresses your breast, filling his palm with its weight before drawing his thumb across your tight nipple. The sensation causes you to gasp and you feel it in your core. He seems to be lost in thought for just a moment before he leans over quickly, snatching the pillows from the head of the bed and tucking them directly behind you.Â
âLay back,â his voice barely above a whisper. You follow his instruction, your body angled so that you are sitting up partially on the edge of the bed. âI want you to watch as I make you come undone, Sunshine. I want you to remember who put that look of bliss on your face.â
As he speaks, that swirling sheet of shadow moves behind him along the wall. As they fade back into their usual state and return to his shoulders, you see that a large full length mirror is left in their wake. Azriel drops to his knees beside the bed as you take in the sight before you. His broad muscular shoulders kneeling before you, wings tucked in tight. His hands snaking along your hips and your face flushed with arousal.Â
One scarred hand nudges at your knees and you spread open, watching reflection as you do. That same hand now moves to your soaked panties, one index finger sliding through the gusset and his knuckle brushing softly against the outside of your folds.
âAll this for me, Sunshine?â It comes out like a growl. With a pull, that finger begins lowering your panties down your thighs. You bring your knees together just long enough to slip them off completely before you spread wide once more.Â
In one swift motion, Azrielâs hands are under your knees and you are being pulled to the very edge of the bed. He hooks one leg over his shoulder and the other he pushes firmly wider. You donât even have a chance to react before his face is at your core, his tongue lapping at your arousal.
You squeak out a sound of surprise and you feel a muffled laugh against you. The vibration of which turns your sound into a moan. His tongue has parted your folds now, making a slow circuit around your engorged clit.Â
âIs this what you thought about as you touched yourself?â He doesnât even lift his head as he speaks. Your moans continue as your head falls back and your eyes close. He breaks the circuit of his tongue to dip down toward your entrance.Â
âHow quickly did you come with your fingers while you imagined my face between your legs, Sunshine?â Returning to that sensitive bud once more, his tongue picks up a fevered pace. The cry that leaves your throat is positively sinful and your leg begins shaking against the palm that holds it open.Â
You feel his tongue curling, cradling your clit just before he pulls it into his mouth and sucks. The leg you have over his shoulder tenses, pulling his body closer to your core. With a pop he releases and brings his eyes up to your face.Â
âWatch,â he says with authority. Just the tone of his voice has you practically vibrating.Â
You follow his command as he lowers his head. You stare at the image before you. His hand pressing into the flesh of your trembling thigh. His tongue picks up that pace once more and you see yourself shudder as you moan. Releasing the grip you have on the sheets, you bring your hands up to his head, staring at the sight of your skin against the black hair as you thread your fingers through.
The picture is â intoxicating. Just like he said. On the edge of the first orgasm you havenât given yourself, you fixate on the bob of his head between your thighs, your breasts heaving with your labored breath, the sweat beginning to glisten against your skin.Â
Itâs too much. Quicker than youâve ever been able to finish before, you feel that tightening in your belly rushing you towards the finish line. Azrielâs tongue dips again into your entrance before resuming his pull at your clit with a groan.Â
âAzriel,â you pant out. âOh, Azâ Iââ
âThatâs it, Sunshine, keep watching,â he says quickly before returning to his task. Just as you feel that familiar flutter starting, you feel a finger at your entrance pushing in.Â
You choke on a gasp as his finger fills the void and begins curling inside you. Clenching your fingers you pull at his hair, eliciting a deep moan from his chest. One more curl of his finger and you are falling over the edge. You watch in the mirror as your face twists into pleasure, your muscles contract and you pull your leg tight against his back. Your other leg now trembling freely as his hand moves up to your hip. The ripples of pleasure draw out as you watch, longer and longer until you are pulling yourself upright by the grip on his hair.Â
âAzriel!â you cry out in a sob. The orgasm gives one final wave before you fall back onto the pillows, releasing your hold on him. He lifts his face from your core, but the finger inside you remains. Gently, slowly he continues pushing it in and out of you, the sound of your release squishing around it. You shudder with aftershocks at his continued movements.
âHow did you like seeing me between your thighs? Was it everything you imagined?â You can hear the smile in his voice as you gather your breath.Â
âIt was ââ you sigh out at a loss for more words.Â
He halts his movements, pulling his hand from your body. Then Azriel is standing before you, grabbing your hips and shifting you to the head of the bed. Bringing his knees up to the mattress and crawling over you he asks, âHow many firsts was that, Sunshine?â
He settles his weight over you, the hard length of him evident against your core. Wrapping your arms around his neck and pulling him closer, you laugh. âI lost count.â
Azâs face breaks out into a bright smile as he brings his mouth to yours. Tongues searching, heads tilting before he pulls away nearly a full minute later. âThe night is still young, Sunshine, whatâs next on your list?â
He gives a testing thrust against and you laugh once more as you wrap your legs around him in answer.Â
****
Hours later, you wake in the pitch black of the dead of night, a muscular arm wrapped around you and a wing slung over your body. Pushing gently against the hard chest in front of your face, you start to push up to sitting. The arm around you tightens, pulling you back to the mattress.Â
âWhat time is it?â you ask.
âNot time for you to rise yet, Sunshine. Go back to sleep,â Azrielâs half asleep voice is even sexier than the one he whispered in your ear with earlier.Â
âI should go.â
âYou donât really want to walk the streets back to the inn at this hour do you?â He smiles sleepily as he cracks an eye open. He would winnow you if you wished, but he couldnât resist teasing.Â
âNo, I mean â Iâm heading back home to Day Court today,â you snuggle back into that hard chest again. âBut I donât want to.â
That sleepy smile graces his face once more as he presses a soft kiss to your forehead. âSo donât.â
#azriel x reader#azriel x you#azriel imagine#azriel acotar#acotar smut#acotar#acomaf#acowar#acosf#acofas#azriel shadowsinger#azriel shadowdaddy#acotar fanfiction
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To My Unmasked Friend in the Fifth Year of COVID - By: Anna Holmes - Published Aug 17, 2024
Iâm going to be honest with you, because I love you, and you deserve nothing but honesty. Iâm going to try really hard not to be angry while I do it, but itâs probably going to slip out every now and again. But I need you to hear me out, all right?
By now, weâve talked about my reality. My personal struggle with long COVID, the isolation I live in, why I am so angry all the time.
But letâs talk about you. You just went to a big convention overseas. You got on a plane, got a little gussied up, talked shop with some insiders, geeked out over awards and merch, ate, drank, were merry, left with your social cup and your heart full.
Youâre a good person. We wouldnât be friends otherwise! Youâd never dream of tripping a person with a red and white cane, using the r-word, excluding a disabled person from an event because of something they canât help.
You might even acknowledge that the COVID response from governments and organizations has been ableist and inadequate.
But you didnât wear a mask.
For whatever reason â you wanted to show off your makeup, it makes you itchy, you believed the messaging that COVID is endemic (what does that actually mean?), you just donât think about it anymore â you made a choice that actively excludes people like me from participating not only in an event like a convention, but society at large. And yes, it is a choice. Every time you step out into the world without a mask on your face, you have made a decision that your very good reason, whatever it is, supersedes the right of disabled and at-risk people to exist safely in your orbit.
Well, hold on, you say. Itâs not any one individualâs fault, itâs the inadequate public health messaging. Isnât that what youâve been saying?
And I have. In the past, I have talked about how it is unconscionable that health authorities have thrown their hands up and rescinded guidance that would have saved hundreds of thousands of lives and prolonged a pandemic that, to hear them tell it, has been bested. It hasnât. Worst of all, the financial motivation that we all know is driving this premature victory lap isnât even being fulfilled. Long COVID and other post-COVID complications are costing the global economy one trillion a year. Meanwhile, article after article handwrings about nobody wanting to work anymore, about the sagging college application scene, about declines in military enlistment, and the strain on our healthcare systems.
All of this is very much the fault of our leaders, who have decided the political ramifications of ânormalcyâ are more important than the health and lives of the 400 million people living with long COVID across the globe, the immunocompromised folks who are increasingly being shut out of every conceivable public space, and the disabled community which has been screaming into the wind about our marginalization since before the virus even hit US soil.
But I want to be very clear. You are helping them do this.
The reality is that we have been living in this deeply flawed landscape of âpersonal choiceâ, and youâve made yours. Youâve opted not to look into how densely clustered cases are. Youâve stopped listening to your friends who have informed themselves. Youâve given yourself permission to put COVID on the back burner. Youâve earned it, right? Four and a half years of trauma?
COVID doesnât care if youâre tired of being scared or careful or considerate. COVID is not something you can personally overcome by being smart or virtuous or brave. It is a virus which only seeks to infect and replicate, and it is getting very good at those things. While youâve looked away, my community has been scrambling to avoid variants that skirt immunity and donât show up on rapid tests until day five-seven. The constant battle has changed since you were last in it. Itâs not sufficient anymore to get your shots and test before a big event. You could well be asymptomatic and infectious, or have symptoms and convinced yourself it canât be COVID because that second line hasnât popped up.
You have come to the conclusion sometime between 2022 and now that you just have to decide what level of risk youâre comfortable with and live with it. The problem with that is scale. Itâs you and everybody else doing that, and a lot of people have decided they are comfortable with a high level of risk. Despite what youâve been told, youâre not just making that decision for yourself. You are making it for every person you come in contact with.
Think back to the early tense days of 2020. We were told to select a âbubble.â Those people would be our social lifelines, and through those, we could control our exposure.
My bubble is quite small. It includes my husband, my sister, and two friends I see relatively frequently.
My husband goes to work via the bus, and to the grocery store. Every person he comes in contact with there has the potential to infect him, and then he has the potential to pass it along to me. He mitigates this by wearing a well-fitted respirator at all times.
My sister goes to work at a busy public place. She masks when public facing and takes it off in the back office. She goes to restaurants, bars, concerts, hangs out with friends and her own partner unmasked. About 75% of her interactions have the heightened potential to infect her, which she might then bring into my house when she visits me.
My friends do not mask anywhere except my house when asked. They attend concerts, shows, cons, bars.
Obviously, I am in control of whether I wear a mask around these people. And as we approach one million new cases a day, I will be around everyone but my husband. But science is clear: reciprocal masking is more effective at infection control than a single person masking â especially when that single person is trying to protect themselves, not others.
This is settled science. Weâve known this since 2020. It says clearly that the choice you make is not personal- it has implications for everyone you come in contact with.
And being clear â if I could, Iâd make everyone wear a mask for their own health. I donât want people suffering with what I have. But youâve been told this lie that you can take your risks for yourself, so you feel comfortable going out without a mask. Youâve been told this lie that itâs possible to completely recover from a COVID infection, so you assume that even if you do catch it, thatâs whatâll happen to you, despite evidence showing that every body is indelibly changed by an infection, and that risk only grows with each subsequent infection.
And the greatest lie of all â that only the sick or elderly have anything to fear from COVID â has given you unfounded confidence in your own âgoodâ genes or immune system or fitness. You can get long COVID even if youâre in peak form â in fact, may even be more likely to be hit hard.
So you have decided, individually and collectively, that only the sick or elderly should have to take precautions, and you freewheel through life, only to get surprised and dismayed when you bump into COVID in the wild. Itâs back, people declare every summer or winter, as though it ever left.
But I want you to really think about the implications of your choice. Besides yourself. Because letâs be honest here, thatâs who youâve been thinking about, right? Your risk. Your comfort. Never mind your bubble, never mind the bubble of everyone you come into contact with, never mind the people like me who are literally hiding from people like you.
Youâre not masking at the doctorâs office. Youâre not masking at the airport. Youâre not masking at the giant superspreader you just attended, and youâre not masking in the bars and restaurants where we know the virus flourishes. And then youâre bringing that exposure back to your family and friends. Back to the grocery store, where you run across people like my husband, shopping for someone who is unsafe to leave the house, or your elderly neighbors, or an immunocompromised employee.
Youâre a good person, or you like to think of yourself that way. Thatâs why when youâre asked to mask, you dismiss it out of hand â because that changed behavior implies that youâve been doing something wrong.
And my friend, Iâm telling this because I love you: you have been. You might have been doing that on faulty information, but be honest with yourself and with me â youâve heard me begging people to take this seriously. Youâve seen the information Iâve been sharing. You have had the opportunity to seek out the correct information all along, and you have chosen not to.
It isnât too late to change your view of the risk youâre imposing on the people around you. Itâs not too late to push public health to become more effective. Itâs not too late to act in solidarity and be the inclusive person you think you are. Itâs not too late to take care of yourself.
Ultimately, thatâs what I have been screaming myself hoarse about. I donât want you to end up with what I have. I donât want you to inadvertently impose that on someone else. And yes, Iâve been angry, because youâve been advertising your absolute lack of concern with group shots of your naked faces on social media. It doesnât seem to bother you that I am stuck at home like itâs 2020, except for doctorsâ appointments that I literally have to risk my life to go to. Youâve told yourself that itâs not your problem, because only the sick and elderly have to take precautions.
You know better. You can do better. For your community, yourself, and me, do better.
Please. I love you.
Anna
PS. If youâre feeling upset and embarrassed right now, the best thing you can do is take action. Get yourself good masks (the surgicals and cloth ones donât cut it anymore), donate to mask blocs so others can access good masks, write to your representatives and the President, comment on upcoming CDC guidance, schedule yourself a booster, and talk to your loved ones about doing better, too. The only way we get out of this is with community care. So care.
#covid#mask up#pandemic#covid 19#wear a mask#coronavirus#sars cov 2#still coviding#public health#wear a respirator
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