đ€ about me: stella, 18, korean-american, she/her, wannabe writer, theatre kid art's controversially young girlfriend, patrick's babygirl, tashi's wife, rafe's princess music: the 1975, the beatles, oasis, blur, beabadoobee, and role model
i write for art, tashi, and patrick masterlist - requests are open!
recent: good luck, babe! - tashi x reader tags: faistizer art, faistizer patrick, faistizer tashi, faistizer talks, faistizer offtopic, faistizer recs
anons: none yet
anyways 70s!patrick picking you up off the side of the road in his cadillac. it was so hot outside and you looked like you were struggling to carry this huge suitcase all by yourself. and thatâs totally the only reason he stopped in front of you. to help. not just because you had on the tiniest shorts heâs ever seen.
âhey.â he called out to you from the open passenger seat window.
âhi.â
you gave him the sweetest smile, and he almost felt bad for the dirty thoughts he was having about you.
âneed a ride?â you contemplated the offer for a moment before ultimately giving in. âhm⊠sure!â patrick parked his car a few stops ahead then got out to grab your bag.
âiâm patrick by the way.â he said. you nodded introducing yourself. âso where are we headed.â he asked you, sliding back into the car. âla.â you answered. kicking off your shoes and throwing you feet up on his dashboard, before sinking into the passenger seat. âiâm gonna be a movie star.â you giggled. patrick hummed, his eyes closing in on the smooth skin of your thighs that had a slight sheen of sweat on them. âthe new american dream.â
he let you take control of the radio switching from station to station singing to every single song.
âi just wanna say thank you for picking me up. been walking for forever.â you dropped your hand on his shoulder, playfully tugging at his ears. patrick flinched at the sudden action before chuckling. âyou uh- look a long ways away from home. howâd you get so far out here.â you sighed. âwell, i hitched from nevada with this trucker who ended up creeping me out, so at our last stop i jumped out with my bag and have been walking since. my legs are so sore.â you pouted.
patrick dropped one of his big hands on your thigh, and squeezed. moving his hand up and down massaging your leg.
you âsubtlyâ clenched your thighs together whenever his hand got a little to high, and patrick had to hold back his smirk leaving his hand to just rest at the top of your inner thigh. âyou know, i have a friend whoâs a photographer for⊠magazines. i could totally get him to take you headshots, and introduce you to people.â patrick turned to look at you, catching how your face lit up.â âreally?!â
patrick nodded and you huffed a laugh, jumping in your seat a little. âthatâs amazing, oh my god. how could i ever repay you?â
âweâll think of something.â
-
that something being you riding him outside his condo in palm springs.
âfuck, babe your body was made to be on film.â your t-shirt was lost somewhere in the car, and patrick had his rough hands groping at your exposed breast. your thighs were starting to ache again from moving up and down on his cock.
âyouâre so big, canât -fuck- canât do it.â your movement flattered down into slow grinds. âuh uh.â patrick held you up by your waist, and started moving you again. âmovie stars donât quit do they? iâm already helping you out so much just be a good girl ride me. ok.â
he wasnât exactly wrong. he was helping you out. giving you a ride, letting you stay with him, getting his friends to do your head shots.
âok.â
you planted your hands on his clothed shoulder holding on tight as you started bouncing again. your whimpery moans sounded as sweet as the smile you gave him earlier looked.
âatta girl.â patrick locked his arms around your waist, and dropped his head in the crook of your neck. he bucked his hips up in fast thrust. âpatrick!â
his hand found place on the back of your neck forcing you to keep eye contact with him. âgod, your pussy feels amazing. so glad i picked you up.â you nodded along with his words. âwouldâve been so lost without me, get picked by some creepy old man.â he says as if he isnât one them.
âthankyouthankyouthankyousomuchâ you mumbled.
âand youâre so fucking sweet.â he pushed back against the steering, the both of you jumping when the horn went off. laughs mixed in with your moans.
patrick let his hand travel down body his finger finding your clit, and he rubbed figure eights on you feeling your walls clench tighter around him. âgonna cum baby?â you nodded your head fast. your bodies moving in the same fast pace, from the outside anyone walking by would be able to tell whatâs going on.
âoh god -fuck!- cumming!â you moans filled up the space along with the slapping of skin, and some you gushing all over patrickâs cock with light scream. âshit!â patrickâs rhythm got sloppy and he completely stilled inside of you, fill you up with thick ropes of cum.
the two of sat there in each otherâs catching your breaths, your mixed orgasms dripping down onto patrickâs leather seats.
âthe industryâs gonna love you.â you smiled at his comment threading your fingers through his hair not knowing you two were thinking about very different industries.
death with no dignity; patrick zweig
â amethyst and flowers on the table
is it real or a fable ?
well, i suppose, a friend is a friend
and we all know how this will end â - sufjan stevens
cw (18+) : mentions of depressive symptoms, masturbation, and heavy yearning.
wc : 1.9 k
When Patrick was eighteen, he killed a doe.Â
It was an accident, it truly was, in every sense of the word.Â
He had been driving home from Artâs house around 11 PM and had been playing some stupid song on the radio. Heâd thrashed his head and slapped his palms against the leather steering wheel to the stupid beat, carefree and unassuming. It had been so dark, and he was distracted, and then suddenly the deer was in the center of the road. Big, black, shiny eyes and pointed ears and a deep brown coat. She was beautiful. For the split moment that he had before the impact, thatâs all he could think about.Â
He didnât have enough time to swerve and avoid her because heâd been speeding, and everything afterwards happened in slow-motion. The skidding squeal of his tires against the asphalt. His heart lurching in his ribcage, almost enough to make him feel sick. The harsh jolt of the car and the brutal sound of metal hitting muscle, followed by the animal being sent hurtling a few feet forward and onto her side, accompanied by the painful sting of the seatbelt digging into his chest. When the car finally came to a stop, Patrick froze. His hands stuck to the wheel, shaking, and his eyes were peeled open wide as he stared through the windshield at the lifeless creature heâd just hit with his car. He was practically panting. He didnât quite recall ever being so scared in his entire life, not even when heâd played his first professional match. Not even when heâd nearly drowned one summer years ago when he and Art were swimming in a lake upstate.Â
Heâd never killed anything before. Not like that.Â
The aftermath was a blur. He almost called the cops to let them know that there was a large, dead animal in the road on so-and-so street, but he didnât. To this day, he doesnât really know why. Maybe it was all of the adrenaline. Maybe it was all of the guilt. Regardless, heâd mumbled a soft, âOh, god, Iâm sorry,â and then slowly pulled off and around it. He never told his parents, or anyone for that matter, that he had cried so hard on the rest of the drive home that he felt lightheaded by the time he was in the driveway.Â
Mommy and Daddy Zweig offeredâno, beggedâto get him a new car the next evening (when they got back from Greece) because his hood and bumper were horribly dented, but Patrick had refused. Heâd laughed off the incident in front of them, and then waited until they went to bed to slink into their massive garage and pick all of the little tufts of fur out of the vehicleâs grille.
Heâd traced his fingertips along the indentations and the scratches in the paint and blinked away the wetness clouding his vision. Tried to mentally retrace his steps that night, too. What if he hadnât been listening to that stupid song? What if he hadnât left his best friendâs place so late? What if heâd been quicker? Smarter? Luckier?Â
Could things be different? Could he have spared a life?Â
Could he have spared the victim, and himself, the pain?
Patrickâs twenty-one now, and he does a lot of retracing his steps these days.
Tennis is his priority; heâs always on the court, or in a car or a bus thatâs traveling to a court of some kind. Forehands, backhands, volleying, serving, smashesâitâs all he lives and breathes. And, of course, itâs easier now to focus on tennis when he no longer has friends.Â
Art and him haven't talked in many months (has it really been years?), not since Tashiâs knee had gotten injured during that match at Stanford.Â
Fuck that fucking match. And fuck them.Â
He didnât need them, he was doing just fine on his own.Â
If his best friend of over a decade wanted to kick him to the curb like he was nothing more than a dog that had bitten him a smidge-too-hard to be loved, then whatever. If his grotesquely-talented girlfriend wanted to break up with him because he didnât want to be treated like a lesser athlete nor sit in her shadow, then fine. Heâd enjoy his tennis career and roll freely in the expendable income he was sure to continue collecting.
But thatâs not really who Patrick is.Â
And so he canât help but lie awake at night, trying to pin-point where things went wrongâwhat he could have done to prevent this outcomeâand tracing the indentations and scratches in his relationships that surely were only indicative of his faults. Compulsively picking at the tufts nestled in the wreckage. Eyeing the bloody brutalization, punishing himself by reliving the sting.
Sometimes he drags his fingertips over some of his old, banged-up rackets that he can't bear to get rid of, and he thinks about all of it. Tennis academy days with the shy, funny blonde kid that he became close with from day one. Learning and teaching and discussing with him all of the typical adolescent lessons that gave way to life outside of the bubble. Doubles matchesâso many doubles matches. So many wins. First beers, first girlfriends, first cigarettes, first kisses. They shared everything with one another and they (almost neurotically) timed their experiences to happen around the same time so that they'd be able to talk to each other about them afterwards. As they got a bit older though, Patrick began to realize that he was feeling things for Art that he probably wasnât supposed to tell him about. And he usually told Art everything.
That was his first mistake, he thinks, like when he hadnât heeded the speed limit that night. Or, maybe, that was like playing the stupid song on the radio and going home late. It was the start of their untimely end.Â
When heâs in one of his usual depressive spirals, the kind in which he canât seem to find his appetite and he forgets to shower and he ignores his managerâs texts, he argues with himself about what exactly could be considered the âimpactâ. Was it when he had cheekily served like Art during that one casual training session, ball to the neck of the racket, confirming that he had slept with Tashi and thus beginning the festering of that awful jealousy in his friend? Or was it when he praised her in front of Art before her match in the singles tournament that fateful afternoon, igniting his friend's interest? Patrick remembers the look that glossed over Artâs eyes when he first caught sight of her; he had looked at her and suddenly Patrick felt like heâd been forgottenâlike heâd melted into those bleachers and disappeared. He canât really blame him, Tashi was talented and beautiful and ambitious and confident and matureâshe was everything that Art steadfastly admired in a person. She was twice the person that Patrick had been back then.
Usually though, he comes to the painful conclusion that the impact was certainly the day of the Stanford match. More specifically, it was when Art had yelled at him for the first time in the entirety of their friendship.Â
âPatrick, get the fuck out!âÂ
Those four words ring through his head on the worst of days.
He knew heâd fucked up by not pushing aside his pride and going to support Tashi after their fight, so he could pretty easily swallow down the discomfort that came with being yelled at by her. They yelled at each other pretty often when they got into their little spats, it was relatively normal. But god.. It was so much different when it was him. Patrick's muscles had locked up; he was shaking and breathing hard like heâd just run a marathon, able to see nothing but that pair of angry, familiar eyes. The vitriol that came spurting from the blondeâs mouth was like the worst toxin heâd ever known. It paralyzed him and began to rot his insides from that very moment on. And then all of the suffocating memories came flooding back as he turned and walked out of that campus health center.Â
Giggling under blankets with a flashlight, reading comics until the sun started to come up. Practicing for hours on the courts at the academy, sometimes until they both got sunburns and heatstroke. Sleeping in the same bed on summer nights at Patrickâs houseâtiredly watching the way Artâs chest rose and fell with each of his breaths and trying not to look at his lips. Holding each other when Artâs parents got divorced and he cried so hard that he got a nosebleed. Bandaging each otherâs blisters. Wearing each otherâs clothes. Having each other's back.
He doesnât understand what he did to truly deserve being treated like that in the end by Art.
Heâd been a good decent friend, hadnât he?Â
How could Artâs infatuation with her be enough to snuff out everything that they built together? It was supposed to be the two of them for the rest of their lives. Sure, they could each get married, pursue a career, have kids, but at the end of the day it was always meant to be them, wasn't it? Fire and Ice? Did he get that part wrong?
He habitually questions how much he really meant to him.
When Patrick does muster up the strength to drag himself to the shower, he generally stays in there for at least an hour. âWaste of waterâ be damned. He closes his eyes and lets the warmth run over his hair and his naked body. He presses his back to the cold shower wall and rubs his eyes until he sees white flashes dancing in the darkness. Itâs not uncommon for his mind to wander back to you-know-who. In fact, thatâs whoâs usually on his mind whenever heâs not trying harder to forget. And itâs easy for Patrick to fixate on those blurry white flashes and suddenly see yellow curls, bright blue irises, deep smile lines, flushed cheeks. Breath smelling of that peppermint gum he always chewed. The sound of his nervous laughter and joyous cheers. Patrick would know him even if all of his senses were somehow dulled or taken from him. He would know Art by the feel of his soul breathing life into his own. He would know him, surely.
And maybe itâs an act of pure filth and desperation, or one of flesh-tearing grief, but many times Patrick winds up touching himself. Slow, steady, tenderâthe way he assumes Art touches Tashi. The way he had always wanted to touch Art, though he never even gathered the courage to try to hold his hand. He thumbs his weeping slit and keens as he feels the sadness and arousal roiling in his gut. He chokes on little moans that sound like sobs that sound like screams. Heâs starved. How is it possible to miss someone when theyâre everywhere? He thinks itâs funny that heâs forgotten what Artâs speaking voice sounds like but also refuses to watch any of his latest interviews on TV. He doesnât want to see if thereâs a ring on his finger, and he certainly doesnât want to think about all of the ways Tashi gets to keep him as her own. He was mine, he unfairly thinks as he strokes himself under the scalding water, he was mine and I loved him and you lured him in and then he was gone.
The orgasm usually comes quick, spurred on by the near-lethal dose of petulant thought. He feels his thighs tremble and then his hand starts to lose its rhythm and then heâs crying out as he comes hard over his curled fingers. Sticky, clotted, putrid evidence of his lack of control. When he finally opens his eyes again, salt spills down his ruddy skin from wet lashes. He gets dizzy from the heat and the steam, he feels like heâs choking on all of it. He brings his dirtied hand under the showerhead and watches as his mess is rinsed away, down the drain in a gurgling spiral. It takes everything in him not to collapse.
âOh, god, Iâm sorry,â he whispers, before he forces himself out of the bathroom and collapses in a wet heap over his bed. His skin sticks to the sheets and makes him feel like some sort of dirty, beastly thing that crawls out of swamps and swallows up all of the good it can touch. He figures that the feeling is not far off from the truth.
When Patrick was eighteen, he killed a doe.Â
And that doe followed him for the rest of his life.
note : to anyone who's ever had a childhood crush on their best friend. to anyone struggling with the grief.
This was intentionally written to be a bit "all over the place"; I wanted to show how scattered Patrick's thoughts can be. Also I love, love, love Tashi, I just think Patrick maybe sometimes (early on, before they reconnected) blamed her for his and Art's split for unjust reasons.
tags : @venusaurusrexx @tashism @grimsonandclover @diyasgarden @weirdfishesthoughts @gibsongirrl @newrochellechallenger2019 @jordiemeow @artstennisracket @cha11engers âĄ
thought!âŠ.art transferring his gum into your mouth with a lil kiss before going off to play
stanford!art x tutor!reader
stanford!art who wonât admit it but he actually is having a hard time adjusting to not having a roommate (aka not sharing a bed with patrick)
stanford!art who is having trouble managing his time between tennis and school and partying so the athletic department assigns you to be his tutor
stanford!art who is a lot nicer than you expect given his usual icy demeanor, once you get to know him heâs actually a sweetheart
stanford!art who gets distracted during your tutoring sessions whenever you wear a low cut top, eyes glued to your chest with his mouth hanging open a little. you laugh waving your hand in front of his face âhello? Art? you with me?â
stanford!art who takes you to your first frat party because âi canât believe youâve never been but now that i think about it your too smart and definitely too pretty to be hanging out with these people anywayâ
stanford!art who thinks you canât go shot for shot with him but he ends up tapping out first because âholy fuck y/n howâd you get ur tolerance so high?â
stanford!art who ends up stumbling back with you to your dorm room, rambling on and on about how pretty he thinks you are âyour face is so distracting jesus. canât even fucking concentrate. your eyes are so brown, so pretty like chocolate. i love chocolate, so good, sweet, creamy. do you like chocolate?â you laugh it off
stanford!art who admits he has feelings for you during your last tutoring session âdo you have facebook?â your confused because you donât what that is. âi- iâm just trying to ask for you numberâ
stanford!art who youâve been seeing for the past 3 months and youâve been to every stanford tennis match since
stanford!art who is the biggest munch youâve ever met, eats pussy like his life depends on it, moaning, whimpering into you, and humping the bed when he can to get friction. your slick mixed with his saliva running down his chin
stanford!art who is the only guy youâve ever met that cums from eating pussy
and when you think about me, all of those years ago you're standing face to face with "i told you so." - good luck, babe!, chappell roan
part 2 of black beauty
(â i recommend reading that one first)
pairing: tashi duncan x reader
in which: it's been twelve years since you kissed tashi on that beachâ what are the odds that you'd see her again at the lobby of the ritz-carlton? she's married now. you shouldn't care. but the way she looks at you says maybe she does.
warnings: a few uses of y/n. lesbian hurt, no comfort. sad ending. tashi is married to art.
note: due to popular demand, here it is :) (i don't know if i'll continue this)
twelve years.
itâs been twelve years.
you wish youâd done things differently, you wish you stayed silent, you wish you just listened to her instead of telling her itâd be okay, you wishâ you regret a lot of things. you blame yourself.
you miss your best friend.
you watched as she moved out of your shared dorm as you protested and apologized, just to get her to stay. she was petty, in a way. she was impulsive and upset. you donât blame her.
why would you?
you couldnâtâ you canât blame her for anything.
for months, you tried texting her, sending endless useless messages, messages you werenât sure sheâd ever read. until you gave up, determined to move on.
but no one could ever forget tashi duncan.
especially you.
you could never forget tashi duncan.
you graduate stanford with your journalism degree and you take a job as a sports journalistâ specializing in tennis. because of course you would.
you tell yourself, itâs normal. itâs natural. itâs obvious.
tennis is what you know. you always hung around tennis players during college. you know the rules, the players, the way the game workedâ you knew tennis.
you tell yourself it was a coincidence when your first assignment is some second-tier tournament in florida. art donaldson is there too. you give him an awkward half-wave at the press conference which he sends back reluctantly.
youâre secretly relieved. sheâs not there.
youâd hear her name occasionally at the offices, someone someoneâs hitting partner.
then you get your next assignment a few weeks laterâ not like you asked for more coverage, you were just goodâ sharp observations, clean writing. your editor kept putting your name on stories.
of course you were good at writing about tennis, you spent almost two years of your life staring at her play every dayâ
soon youâre watching art absolutely destroy some guy at the australia open from the press office. you scribble down notes furiously and make the mistake of glancing at the crowdâ
there she is.
arms crossed, her hair tied behind her back, her hand pushes her sunglasses upâ the same pair youâd steal off her face. her eyes constantly follow the ball and art.
everything rushes back, how she used to sit like that on the bench, complaining about professors and girls on her team while you tried not to stare at her lips.
when art wins, art yells in triumph and rushes over to her, you snap out of it. you scribble down another note.
the next article you write is: âart donaldson wins australian with guide from new tennis coach, tashi duncan.â
you felt sick.
maybe there was a part of you who craved to stay attached to a part of her in some way.
maybe thatâs why you didnât quit.
so you watched as art grew in success.
you watched as tashi go from art donaldsonâs coach to coach tashi donaldson.
it was inevitable that you saw them a lot.
fucking tennis journalist.
invited to opens, flown around the worldâ writing articles about how art donaldson won yet another open.
you could never get away from them. from her.
so your press conference questions were always directed to him, not her. you wanted to be petty too. you knew she was looking at you while you asked art about before game rituals with a smile. a smile you used to give her.
you donât look at her. you donât write about her.
and slowly you get used to it.
you get better. youâre a well-known name. you get invited to tournaments, opens, gamesâ you go to press conferences. you board flightsâ
you convince yourself that you donât care anymore. youâre not the same girl you were ten or something years ago. you try to forget about tashi donaldson.
you type your articles in the office and during some random conversation with your colleagues that you half listen toâ
âdonaldsonâs pulling out of the finals this tournament, whichâs an advantage to rodriguez, you might want to mention that in your predictions articleââ
âwait, why?â you find the words coming out before you can stop them.
youâre just a journalist you shouldnât careâ but tashi would never do something like that. sheâd never pull art out of a tournament- not when heâs on a winning streak-
âoh, tashi just had the babyâ lily, i think? but their publicists donât want coverage on it yet-â
lily.
your stomach churns.
and it finallyâ really does hit you.
sheâs moved on.
she has a new life.
she has a family. you have deadlines.
AUGUST 2019
your fingers fly over the keyboardâ
âArt Donaldson: Finalist at Philâs Tire Town New Rochelle Challengerâ Will a Challenger Finally Get Him Out of His Losing Streak?â
you tilt your headâ what is tashiâs goal here? a challenger? sure, artâs lost his confidence but a challenger?
you scroll through the matchups as you sip your espressoâ
no. fucking. way.
ranking 271st national playerâ patrick fucking zweig.
you want to laugh. not because itâs funny, but because of courseâ of course youâre stuck watching the past play out in a goddamn place called philâs tire town.
the last time you saw patrickâ
âyouâre, like, into girls.â
you can still smell the smoke that blew into your face as your jaw dropped on stanford campus.
you shake off the memory and continue typing your article- because you have a deadline.
6-time Open Winner and Star Player Art Donaldson seems to be winning games at the New Rochelle Challenger just a week before the US Open. Is this Tashi Donaldsonâs grand scheme to help Donaldson gain his confidence before the US Open? A known title heâs been trying to win for a while. And what happens when he loses? Is the inevitable end of the Donaldsonsâ reign on tennis finally happening?
you sigh, pausing to take a sip.
thereâs a presence behind you.
you feel it before you hear it.
a voice sharp as a blade, one thatâs stabbed you beforeâ
âheâs not going to lose.â
you freeze
and the words take a second to register- too long.
tashi donaldson.
in the flesh.
your brain stutters, your heart does something it hasnât done in years. you shake off the initial shockâ but it lingers deep inside your veins.
she looks good, of course she does. she always looked good, even when she was wearing your sweatshirt with a messy bun and ranting about doubles practice. but nowâ she looks untouchable.
a shoulder-level cut, sleek blonde highlights, layered gold necklaces- she looks every bit like âlegendary couch donaldson,â the one youâve written about for years. the one who turned art donaldson from a rank sixty-eight to a fiveâ
and you almost forget how to speak.
then you remember-
youâre a tennis journalist. a professional.
you flash a media-friendly smile, fuck it- be petty.
âah, coach donaldson, such a surprise to see you here. i had no idea we were staying at the same hotelâ i really do love artâs career and was counting on his steady recoveryâ he really deserves it.â
tashiâs lips press together, if you werenât looking hard enough, youâd miss it.
artâs career.
not herâs.
ây/n. seriouslyââ but she stops herself.
you see the moment she decides itâs not worth it.
that youâre not worth it.
she simply rolls her eyes. like itâs nothing, like youâre nothing.
and for a second you feel sorry for her.
thereâs a pauseâ
a pause long enough for her to scan your face, searching for something
as if sheâs wondering if under this âsports journalist,â thereâs a 19-year-old girl that once loved her
âi just wanted to say hello to an old college friend.â she says with a smile so tight it looks painful. her head tilts, trying to make it casual.
itâs not.
âiâve been keeping track of your career, yâknowâ i always wondered what my best friend was doing in life.â
of course she kept track. sheâs tashi duncan- or donaldson- whatever.
âthatâs truly an honor, mrs. donaldsonââ you want your words to sting, to finally pierce through her skin.
she laughs lightlyâ it almost feeling condescending. âno, donât beâ iâm sure you kept up with mine.â
she says it like itâs obvious. itâs worse because itâs true.
âtashi!â
mrs. duncan calls out from the elevators in the distance, sheâs holding the hand of her granddaughter, lily, you assume.
âwell, nice chat. i have to go,â tashi smiles thinly. âiâll see you around.â
and just like that sheâs gone.
you take another sip of your coffee
you are fucked.
this prediction article is due in four hours.
and the words started blurring after your last sentence, which you wrote three hours ago. right before you saw her.
fuck it.
itâs not going to work, you need to clear your headâ you needâ
you need a drink.
and maybe itâs the special ânew rochelle challenger related guestsâ fucking discount but one drink turn to two. then to another. and anotherâ
and you see her.
tashi.
wrapped in some cardigan, asking the receptionist for something thatâs a part of her husbandâs routine tomorrow before the gameâ
and your brain no longer controls you legs and youâre in her face.
âheyyyy, tash,â you laugh like she just said the funniest thing in the entire worldâ
ây/n.â her eyebrowâs raised. you probably reek of alcohol.
âmrs. donaldson- we can escort this⊠hm.. person away-â the receptionist starts.
âno, itâsâ itâs fine.â tashi sighs. âif you donât have what iâm looking for, itâs fineâ um- weâll just use a substitute. thank you.â she turns to look at you again.
she scans you, half-exasperated, half-something else. you wobble on your feet with a grin.
âjesus, y/n, how much did you drink?â
âjust enough to stop thinking about you.â
her eyebrows furrow and she looks like she might just walk away. but she doesnât. she just takes one good look at you andâ
she grabs your arm. âcâmon,â she mutters. âwhatâs your room number?â
âwhy? you wanna hook up with me?â you laugh again.
the receptionist looks between you and her with a concerned expressionâ
âitâs fine. leave it.â tashi shakes her head as she hoists your arm around her shoulder.
and before you can process, sheâs practically carrying you across the lobby. like she knows exactly how to take care of you, whether you like it or not.
she sighs and adjusts her grips when youâre finally in the elevator. âgive me your room key.â she squintsâ âwhere the fuck is 2755?â
itâs late, sheâs tired, you donât blame herâ but your drunk mouth canât help but giggle, âyouâre really bad at this.â
tashi just sighs again, the elevator door slides open. the hallway stretches ahead, but she doesn't leave you down it and pushes you towards the glass door.
"forget it. i need air," she mutters.
you both step onto the hotel terrace, the doors open and the chill winds of the outside air hit your skinâ
tashi leans against the balcony and takes a deep breath.
you stare at the soft city glow, the flapping of the tarp hitting against the tennis court in the distance. the alcohol in your system softens into something else.
you open your mouth and let out what's been rotting deep inside you for the last twelve yearsâ
"do you ever think of me?"
the answer comes after a pause.
"no."
liar. tashi donaldson's a fuckin' liar.
you laugh.
clear, bright, bitter.
"pussy. you can't even admit it." you smile widely because it hurts. it really does. you can feel your nails scrape into your palms.
tashi rolls her eyes. ây/nââ she starts.
then she stops.
"i should go. i need to tuck lily in and..." her eyes shift, "art needs me to give him a review before his match."
you shake your head laughing again. "nevermind. you're never going to admit it."
"what is there to admit?"
"you loved me."
she exhales sharply, "that was literally ten-"
"twelve"
"-twelve years ago." she give you a hard, stony look. "get some sleep, y/n. you probably have a deadline."
and just like that, she's gone. again.
you stare at the glass door that she'll turn back.
but she doesn't.
and night is quiet.
-
tags: @hyuneskkami for the dividers
Hey donât take that commenter under your Athena post too seriously. They get under everyoneâs posts acting purposefully obtuse. We got what you meant!
thank you!! i was worried i came off too strong! đ€
if you dont continue the black beauty thing i fear im going to explode
i honestly hated black beauty đ
but if yâall REALLY want it, i have some ideas for pt. 2âŠ
HAPPY 1ST BIRTHDAY TO OUR BABIESSSSSS
THANK YOU VOGUE