Ooof that last chapter hit hard still feel like you have a twist left in store for us ahahah
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Apparently in Wolverine 8# 2011 (you can see the page in google images) his sexual fantasies looks like a BDSM room and we know our boi likes a lil pain.
ITS CANON đ
Hi! I just wanted to say that I just finished reading broken promises and I LOVED IT. Logan was so so SO well written I could cry!!! You are by far my favorite logan writer and if you ever continued broken promises TRUST i would be the first to read it every time lol!! Regardless, cant wait to see whats next from you <3
YAY! I'm so glad you liked broken promises. I was worried that my stuff for him was going to start sounding repetitive bc it's very easy to do that when you write for the same character so often, but I'm glad everyone seems to be enjoying it.
I don't see myself doing a continuation for it. Mainly because in my mind they traveled around for a while and then discovered Charles' school, but I don't think my writing all that out would be very enjoyable for me or for anyone who reads it.
If requested, I would probably do a few blurbs of them on the road together and her having a taste of the real world for once lmao
hi!! Given my obsession for Hugh jackman I am CRAVING for some Leopold X reader (from Kate & Leopold)! Maybe with some little angst but happy ending??
I love your blog!! Have a wonderful day đ˝đđ
Leopold Mountbatten x fem!reader a/n: I donât know how controversial this is going to be and I donât care. I could never finish the movie because I hated Meg Ryan in it so much. Itâs so odd, Iâve loved her in everything else sheâs been in but she made it such a hard watch. Maybe itâs because she reminds me of my grandma in the worst way lol, but I finished it for you anon sorry this was a little rushed Anyways, hope you enjoy lovelies Summary: Your neighbor went back in time and dragged someone back with him. He's irritatingly polite and far too interested in your way of life. What are you meant to do when you fall for a man who was never even supposed to meet you?
âHello, madam, please I need your help!â
Youâre used to crazies, it is New York after all. But theyâre not usually shouting at you through your window. Especially not when youâre on the sixth floor. You look away from your coffee and glance towards the fire escape.Â
Thereâs an oddly dressed man with red eyes waving at you through the dirty glass. You offer him a tentative wave back and he nods aggressively. âYes, hello, I need your assistance.â
âUm,â you shake your head, âSorry, I donât have any drugs dude.â
âNo,â he places his hands pathetically on the glass and shakes his head. âPlease, I have been kidnapped.â Finally, you take a step closer to him. You can tell now that his eyes arenât reddened from any medicinal fun, he probably got pepper sprayed.Â
Your friend did it to you once when you tried to surprise her on her birthday and youâll never forget just how awful you looked afterwards. You can see him a bit more clearly now. Whatever odd costume heâs got on, it looks good. Genuine and clean.Â
Not like most of the street performers you see in Times Square. Besides, he doesnât have that maddened look in his eye that makes you worry heâs going to come inside and kill you. Tentatively, you open the window.Â
Heâs leaping through in a second and you jump back with a yelp. He turns towards you and his eyes widen before he quickly turns away. âMy good lady, where are your pants?â
âUh,â you glance down at the oversized shirt youâre wearing and the tiny shorts underneath. Admittedly, itâs a little skimpy, but youâre not walking around naked. Youâve heard of committing to the bit, but this is a bit much. âOn,â you tell him, walking around him and trying to stand close to the phone.Â
âMaâam-â Heâs cut off as someone slams their fist on your front door. You keep a weary eye on the man while you unlock your door.Â
âHey,â Stuart smiles at you. His eyes drift slightly past your shoulder and he goes barging into your apartment. âLeopold! What did I say?â
You huff and glare at Stuartâs frantic back. âThis is yours?â Stuart nods and rushes Leopold out the door. You donât miss the pleading, while slightly scandalized, look he sends you.Â
You slam the door closed behind them, shaking your head and going back to your morning paper. You doubt youâll be seeing him around again.Â
You know, itâs just your luck that your upstairs neighbor is a scientist, one who happens to dabble in the art of time travel. And itâs just your luck that he had to fall down a damn elevator shaft.Â
Now, according to him, you have to care for someone from a different century so he can make it back to his time portal in, well, in time. This is fucking ridiculous. âIâm going to kill you, Stuart.â
âLook, theyâre going to take my phone but he really cannot-â
It goes silent on the other end. You shout his name a few times but hear nothing in response. You assume the hospital staff has finally gotten sick of his shenanigans and has taken his phone. You slam your handset down with a huff and look towards the living room. Leopold hasnât sat down since you walked in and itâs unsettling.Â
âSo,â you start and his attention snaps towards you. â1876, huh?â
He nods and you roll your eyes with a scoff. âOh, this is insane. This is insane,â you mutter to yourself, walking towards Stuartâs door. Leopold gives you a concerned look before quickly following after you. Thereâs a part of you, and you hate that part, that actually believes some of this.Â
Stuart is a brilliant, though flawed, scientist. You donât doubt that he might have actually unlocked the secret to traveling back to the past, but itâs such an insane idea to try and wrap your head around.Â
âCome on, weâre leaving.â You know that Stuart doesnât want him out of the house. Tough. Youâre not going to just stay inside and wait until he can supposedly go back to the past. You donât give Leopold any time to process your answer, already out the door and heading towards the stairs.Â
âYou know,â he starts as he catches up to you. âYou are quite rude.â Your first instinct is to snap back at him. But you take a breath and stop yourself.Â
Youâre desensitized, ridiculously used to just how awful New Yorkers can be to each other. And whether this man is truly from the past or not is up for debate. But he is polite and earnest, and you have no reason to be a bitch to him.Â
âIâm,â the words are hard to come by but you force them out anyway, âIâm sorry.â He looks genuinely surprised by the apology and it only makes you feel worse. âThis is just an insane idea to try and grasp.â
He chuckles softly, smiling as he glances down at his feet. âYes, how do you think I feel?â
Youâre sure itâs not his intention, but you only feel like more of an ass. If this is hard for you, whatever he's going through is a hundred times worse. You werenât forcefully ripped out of your own time and shoved into another you donât understand. Heâs still trying to comprehend the television.
Though, youâre sure being a scientist has helped him in marginally understanding how all of this is possible. âHow do you like the future?â It sounds awkward and stiff, but you havenât had to talk to anyone in a really long time.Â
Your interactions are pretty limited at the book shop considering no one ever comes in. They all order online nowadays and all you really have to worry about is organizing shelves. Youâre embarrassingly rusty when it comes to conversing.Â
And his propensity towards eloquence only makes you feel worse. âI must admit, some of your inventions have been quite fascinating. Iâm especially fond of your showers.â
Your face scrunches slightly at the mention of hygiene and you nod, âI bet.â Before either of you can attempt to salvage this horrible attempt at conversation your phone starts ringing. âHold on one second,â you tell him. You walk a few feet away from him but you can still feel his eyes boring into your back as you move away.Â
âHello?â
Thereâs a frantic shout of your name down the line and then the distinct jingling of keys. âI need you to cover the shop. Marcy just went into labor and Iâve got to go!â Paul doesnât give you a chance to respond before he hangs up.Â
Your jaw gapes and you stare down at your phone with shock. You know Paul and his wife had been expecting, but had it really already been nine months? Has your life become so monotonous and dull that nine months doesnât even register for you?
Itâs a depressing thought. One youâd rather not linger on. âWhat was that?â
You scream, though the people passing by donât pay you any mind, and jump away from Leopold. âJesus, where the hell did you come from?â
Leopold flinches away from you and his face is just as aghast as yours. âGood heavens, what is the matter with you? Do you respond to anything as a sensible woman might?â
âI resent that.â You tell him bitterly. Though, he does make a good point. Youâve been on edge constantly. You always seem to be more anxious than you are happy. Itâs not a good state to perpetually exist in. âI need to go into work.â
You donât want to outright say that he needs to go back to the apartment. It feels a little mean, but youâre hoping heâll catch onto your tone of voice.Â
His entire demeanor perks up and he smiles at you. âWonderful, I am dreadfully curious as to what you do.â
You open your mouth to correct him, let him know heâs not coming. But heâs staring at you with such hopeful eyes that you cannot find it in yourself to turn him down. He seems so excited, youâre sure he wonât be when he gets to your cluttered little bookshop. You let out a weary sigh, âFine. Okay.â
You walk towards the curb, hoping to hail a cab. But Leopoldâs hand gently wraps around your elbow and tugs you in the opposite direction. Your eyes widen in response to his boldness. You thought touching a woman he wasnât courting would cause someone like him to combust. Seems he didnât mind breaking the rules sometimes.Â
You make a mental note of that for later. You donât know what youâre going to do with the information, but you find it intriguing. Maybe the modern world was rubbing off on him more than heâd like to admit.Â
âWe should take this,â he stops you in front of a horse-drawn carriage and you immediately begin to shake your head.Â
âNo, Leopold, these are just tourist traps-â
He doesnât let you finish, opening the carriageâs door and gently nudging you inside. âNonsense! This is far more enjoyable than those yellow monstrosities.â
âTaxi,â you correct. You turn towards the carriage driver and give him directions to your bookshop. âInk and Tea on Fifth.â He nods and the carriage rolls forward with a lurch. You grip the cushioned seats and pray you donât get motion sickness.Â
âInk and Tea?â Leopold inquires. âAre you a journalist?â
You smile and shake your head. âNo, nothing so fancy. I just help take care of an old bookshop. They were supposed to extend the shop when it first opened. They were going to build a space for people to get pastries or drink tea, but it never happened and the owner was too lazy to change the name.â
It feels a little humiliating to be talking about your minimum-wage job to a renowned scientist. Heâs invented or is going to, elevators. He doesnât care about your stupid shop. But he doesnât look particularly judgy of you. If anything he seems to be endeared to you the more you talk.Â
Normally, youâre oblivious to these sorts of things. But itâs nearly impossible for him to hide. Heâs not shy with his attraction, never taking his eyes off of you and hanging onto your every word. Youâre not used to such outward attention.Â
You look out of the carriage, pretending to take in views youâve already seen a thousand times. âThis city is incredible,â he wonders aloud. His awe is palpable.Â
Your nose wrinkles and you shrug. âItâs dirty and the people are intolerable.â
âMust you always be so pessimistic?â You snap your mouth shut and feel embarrassment creeping around you. Youâve never had someone point out when youâre being negative, but he has a point.Â
You used to view the city through the same rose-colored glasses. Somethingâs broken inside you in recent years that has just taken the joy out of life. Everything is grey to you now, until Leopold, nothing spectacular has ever really happened to you.Â
The carriage comes to a stop outside the shop before you can respond to him. You want to deny what he says, but you canât. Your attitude is almost always unnecessary. You think sometimes you might just be trying to see if everyone feels as miserable as you do or if thereâs just something wrong with you.Â
âCome on,â you tell him, getting out and paying the driver. He wanders towards the shop, eyeing the displays in the window curiously.Â
âThese are wonderful,â he tells you, pointing to the way youâd made the books look like theyâre floating above the shelves. It was just some silly little thing youâd tried to get more people in the shop. Itâd worked for about a month.Â
âI did that,â you unlock the door to the shop and open it for him. But he doesnât walk in immediately, instead, he lingers in the doorway. He offers you a soft smile and you canât help but return it.Â
âYouâre more creative than you give yourself credit for.â
Your eyes widen as you watch him walk inside. He keeps making these oddly astute observations about you and itâs throwing you off your game. You barely know this man and youâve always been good at keeping yourself aloof and vague. Yet, he seems to read you like youâre wearing your heart on your sleeve.Â
âFeel free toâŚâ heâs already made himself comfortable somewhere in the back and you trail off. âLook around,â you finish lamely. His form is lost somewhere in stacks of books and cluttered shelves.Â
You know most of the classics and history books are kept towards the back. You wonder if heâs reminiscing or getting a headstart before he gets back to his time. You smile at the thought and walk behind the counter, sitting on the stool and preparing to finish off the rest of the day.
Leopold is still somewhere lost to you an hour later. Occasionally youâll hear a page flip or the clatter of a book being reshelved, but there are no other signs of life. Not until the bell above the door rings.Â
âClark,â you smile, sitting up straighter as your friend walks through the door. âWhatâre you doing here?â
He gives you a crooked grin and shrugs. Just over his shoulder, you can see Leopoldâs head pop over a shelf, he looks between you both, eyes narrowing with disdain. âPaul told me youâd be here, figured you might want some company.â
âActually-â you start, but another voice cuts you off.Â
âLeopold Mountbatten,â he comes around the corner, hand outstretched as he comes in between you and Clark. âAnd who might you be?â
Your brows furrow in confusion at the interaction. Leopold seems oddly hostile and Clark looks strangely caught off guard. âUm, Clark. Nice to meet you, man.â He shakes Leopoldâs hand but his grip is weak and it only lasts for one awkward half-second.Â
Itâs uncomfortable to watch them try and interact and it only gets worse when they turn towards you. Clearly, they want you to tell them who the hell the other guy is. But you feel like that might just make the situation worse.Â
Besides, you were pretty content with it just being you and Leopold, you donât need Clark coming in here and riling things up. âYou know, Clark, Iâm set here. You can just go home.â Your tone leaves no room for argument but you know he wants to.Â
âAlright, Iâll just call you later, I guess.â He throws one last skeptical look at Leopold before finally slinking back out of the shop.Â
âNeither of you should be alone without a chaperone present.â Leopold bluntly scolds you without even waiting a second before Clark is gone. It catches you off guard and you scoff.Â
You motion between the two of you, âWe donât have a chaperone.âÂ
Leopold shrugs, âYes, well, Iâm not courting you.â It shouldnât, because heâs right, but that stings. He is attractive, surprisingly so. You have this odd belief that anyone from his century had to be at least a little ugly. But heâs near perfect.Â
Hearing him tell you so bluntly that youâre not courting hurts a little. Though, you canât blame him. You must be dramatically different than the women heâs used to. From your manners to how you dress, youâre practically an alien.Â
You stand up from behind the counter and walk towards the cart of books that need to be shelved. âClark is a friend. Nothing more.â Youâve never once been romantically interested in your friend. Heâs attractive, but heâs not really your type.
Apparently, British men from the nineteenth century are. Which does not bode well for your romantic prospects once Leopold is back home. âIt is plain for anyone to see how he wants you. Donât let yourself be blinded by naivete.â
âNaivete?â you scoff and turn around to glare at him. âDonât pretend to know anything about me, alright? Iâm not some maiden in a frilly dress who needs a chaperone.â You can see that your words affect him. He looks a little taken aback by your anger and so are you.Â
Itâs misplaced. Youâre not mad at him, just mad that you even like him. âJust go read or something, Leopold.â You dismiss him more rudely than necessary and hide yourself behind a few shelves. The rest of your workday is spent in a tense silence that makes your stomach churn.Â
Youâre nearly ready for bed when something slips under your door with a slight whoosh. You turn towards it, frowning when you see a little envelope with a wax seal on the ground. You pick it up and let your finger slip under the paper, opening it to find a letter with your name on it inside.Â
The handwriting is impeccable, with a gracefulness to it that youâve never seen before. You donât have to read for very long to know who it's from. Leopold writes poetry about the color of your eyes and the way your lips curl when you smile. And then he ends it with a vague, nearly ominous, invitation to dinner.Â
You canât help but smile to yourself, changing out of your pajamas and slipping into something a little nicer. A few minutes later youâre climbing out your window and taking the stairs up the fire escape to the roof.Â
You donât believe your ears at first, thinking the music must be coming from another apartment. But when you make it up to the roof thereâs a violin player there waiting for you. He smiles happily at you as you approach.Â
You spin in a slow circle, taking in the sheer amount of flowers littered around the roof. You donât know how he managed to afford all of this. He transformed the barren and empty rooftop into your own little paradise. Candles lit and a live musician playing for you.Â
Youâve never had anyone do something like this for you, ever. Itâs a little hard to accept that someone would be willing to put this much effort in for you. âI wasnât entirely sure you would come.â
You turn around and Leopold is waiting behind you, that familiar smile playing on his lips. You arenât aware of the grin forming on your face in response. You donât have much control over that when youâre with him.Â
âWhy wouldnât I?â
He looks like he wants to respond but at the last moment thinks better of it. He instead pulls your chair out for you, helping you into your seat. âThis is nice,â that feels too underwhelming a word for such an incredible gesture.Â
You sigh and frown as you try and find the right words. You donât notice him sitting down across from you. You only look up when you feel him placing his hand on your own. âItâs alright,â he assures you.Â
Itâs still so odd how he can know you so well after such little time. âThis is incredible,â you tell him, undeterred by his attempts to soothe you. âNo oneâs ever done something like this for me.â
He looks like he takes personal offense to that and it makes you laugh. âYou deserve far more than this. Sadly, it seems Stuartâs pockets do have limits and Iâm afraid I would have put him into debt if Iâd gone any further.â
You have the perfect mental image of Stuart coming back from the hospital only to find his science project has robbed him. It makes you laugh and you squeeze his hand once before drawing it back into your lap. He lets his touch linger on you for a long moment, seemingly reluctant to pull away.Â
âNo,â you tell him, âthis is perfect.âÂ
You fall into a comfortable silence for a little while. Conversation mostly drifting toward what his life was like as a duke. You donât have much to say about your own life. Itâs been incredibly normal and youâre a little sad to find that you donât have one good thing to share with him.Â
Nothing comes to the front of your mind.Â
Inevitably, you drift into the topic youâd both been so adamantly avoiding. âHas Stuart said when youâd need to return?â
Leopoldâs grip on the fork tightens and for a moment he refuses to meet your eye. âMonday, Iâm afraid.â
âOh,â your eyes widen and you feel something burning at the back of your throat. Monday, the same Monday thatâs two days away.Â
âDance with me,â the suddenness of the demand catchers you so off guard that you forget the tears. He stands, holding out his hand to you. You almost say no, you canât remember the last time you danced and you doubt itâs going to be pretty.Â
But he whispers your name and something about his tone tells you to take the chance while you have it. You slip your hand into his, letting him pull you to your feet. He doesnât sweep you off your feet and dance the night away.Â
Instead, he holds you close and you sway together. Like moving even an inch away from each other would hurt. âYou could come with me,â he tells you. And you know immediately what heâs talking about.Â
You also know it could never happen. Going to the nineteenth century is insane. Even considering it should be enough to have you sent to a psych ward somewhere. Especially not for a man youâve known for less than a month.Â
You try and tell him that you canât, but he stops you. âI know, a preposterous idea. I just wanted to think about it.â You look up at him and find that you canât take that away from him. Thereâs nothing wrong with imagining what it could be like with him. Even when you know it can never happen.Â
You dance like that for a little while longer, swaying against each other while the violin plays in the background. He whispers your name and when you gaze up at him this time, thereâs a certain look in his eye that you know is reflected in your own.Â
He dips down, lips caressing yours gently before heâs pushing more firmly against your own. The world stops. Cliche, youâre aware. For the first time in years, though, youâre alive. You feel something other than the dull monotony of life. You feel excited and terrified all at once. Because you know you can never have this feeling again.Â
You will never meet another man like Leopold who ignites this spark of life and passion within you. Never has a man been able to make you doubt every decision youâve ever made with just a kiss, but here he is.Â
Your arms lift like you might try and draw him in closer. His hands come up, taking yours in his gentle hold and squeezing. He pulls away from you and reality comes crashing back down. Youâre not in love, you canât be. Youâve only just met him a few days ago.Â
Yet, here you are, wondering if you might actually want to leave everything behind to be with him like the great romances authors write about. He smiles at you and thereâs a bittersweetness to it, a final farewell that you know will break whatever is left of your heart.Â
He lifts your knuckles to his lips, pressing his lips against them like he never wants to part. âGoodnight,â he whispers your name and backs away from you. You watch him go, watch him leave, unable to muster up any words for him.Â
You canât think of anything that would ease this gnawing ache inside of you. Nothing to soothe the pain for either of you. You let him go because you know if you asked him to stay he would. And how selfish of you would it be to let history unravel simply because you fell in love?Â
Monday. It is Monday. Youâve been coming to terms with that all weekend. You don't want to think about the fact that Leopold will be gone tonight. Your time together was so brief but you feel like youâre never going to get over losing him.Â
Before the night was over on Sunday, a note was slipped under your door. This handwriting was messy, it made you think someone other than Leopold had written it down, but you donât know who it could have been.Â
It was a date and time, jump off the Brooklyn Bridge at this time on Monday night. Only an idiot would jump off a bridge because of an ominous note slipped under her door. But you havenât been able to take your eyes off of it, not since you first picked it up.Â
Leopold had invited you to go with him. And while you might not have said no, the insinuation was clear. Your eyes dart to your clock. If you left now, you could still make it in time. What an absolutely ridiculous thought.Â
So, why are you running out the door without locking it? Why do you not care who slips into your home now? Thereâs this sense of finality within you that lets you know youâre never going to see that place again and thatâs okay.Â
You never truly felt comfortable in your life. You always thought a part of yourself was missing. Or that you were always running late for something. You think you understand what you were feeling now.Â
The thing youâve been searching for your whole life wasnât halfway across the world, a hundred thousand miles from you. He was on the wrong side of time, or you were, at least.Â
You manage to snag a taxi to get to the bridge but thereâs a traffic jam. Youâre forced to jump out of the car and run through the different lanes of blocked traffic. People shout at you. Your cab driver screaming after you about your fare. You donât care, the only thing you can think about is the note crumpled in your hands and the clock counting down how long you have to jump.Â
Youâll either be on the news tomorrow as an unfortunate suicide. An idiot who accidentally threw herself off the wrong side of the bridge. Or, youâll see Leopold again.Â
You reach the ledge and you canât hesitate. If you do, you wonât jump in time. You close your eyes, holding your breath like youâre jumping into your neighborâs pool. Air rushes around you, whipping at your hair and skin violently.Â
Itâs not until you hear someone shouting down at you that you realize youâre not dead. Youâre lying in the middle of a dirt road, a group of people staring down at you with concern in their eyes.Â
You only have to take in the clothes theyâre wearing to know youâve made it. Before they can react youâre leaping to your feet and running off. You know youâre near the Brooklyn Bridge, or where itâs supposed to be at least. You know enough about the area to remember where Leopoldâs house is supposed to be.Â
Youâre covered in sweat and red mud. The people you pass by in the streets hide behind their hands and whisper about you. Youâre not making a good impression on your future neighbors, thatâs for sure. But, honestly, all you care about is making it back to him.Â
You see people congregating outside his uncleâs home. You know thereâs a party inside, that heâs supposed to be announcing who his wife will be. You barrel through the people outside, shoving through the crowd and running up the steps of the house.Â
You can hear Leopoldâs voice as you run, âThe woman Iâm going to take as my wife is-â
Thereâs a loud gasp as you come panting into the room. You canât catch your breath long enough to speak but it doesnât matter. The crowd is parting around you and Leopold is smiling down at you. He says your name and thereâs nothing else that matters about the world around you. Not when you finally found each other.Â
end. â I do not own the characters or the movie Kate & Leopold, but this writing is my own all rights reserved Š not-neverland06 2024. do not copy, repost, translate & recommend elsewhere.
You struck again!! The newlywed fox was everything!! The fake neighbors reminded me of the Donât Worry Darling movie and listening to the soundtrack while reading was 10/10!! Youâre so incredibly talented!
I'm so glad everyone liked the newlyweds, I was worried that I had rushed the ending for it. Listening to the soundtrack is such a smart move, you could say a movie like that influenced the fic, but I was thinking of the Stepford Wives (with Nicole Kidman) the whole time.
That was my jam as a kid, I was obsessed with that movie.
Thank you so much for such a sweet message âĽď¸
Ugh i LOVE your work!! I hope this isnât against the rules to mention another blog but you and D1stalker are my favourite Logan writers đâ¤ď¸ like there is always more plot than smut and the ANGST AHHH I just love it !!
Oh my god, not against my rules at all. I love hearing about other bogs so I can stalk them
Anyways, thank you so much for the compliments. Iâm glad youâre enjoying it and my angst isnât ridiculously depressing. I just realized Iâve posted too much sad stuff lol, I need to answer my requests for fluff
Alter ego strikes again
âśď¸ â˘áá||á|á||||| á´Ęá´Ęá´ á´á´É´á´ x fem! reader
ă ⌠A/N ⌠ă I don't know what has creeped into my brain, but I've started rewatching the show and I literally wrote this in a day.
⏠summary ⏠Finally taking the plunge and ruining your friendship with Clark, you go on your first date but the next day he's acting like a whole new man. Not a good one. You don't know if your relationship can recover from his cruel behavior, but he's not going to give up so easily.
For the nth time, you stand before your mirror and find yourself dissatisfied. No outfit is right, each one is too little, too much, too slutty, not slutty enough. You havenât even started on shoes yet, you would be in the grave before you were ready for this date. Throwing yourself down on your desk chair, you start tugging the stockings down your legs.Â
Youâre not sure why you thought tights would work during the peak of a Kansas summer, but youâre clearly not thinking much at all today. Head propped in your hand, you slump against the edge of your desk, fingers running idly over the scattered makeup on the surface. Even that hasn't gone right, your normal safeties failing you when you need them most.Â
Maybe this was all a sign from the universe. You and Clark have been friends since you could walk, what if this stupid date was going to ruin everything between you?
Sighing, you reach for the only framed picture in your room. Itâs silly, something Martha took when you were both too busy playing to see her. You and Clark, freshly five, sit around your old purple play table, the both of you covered in glitter and rocking some of the biggest tutus youâve ever seen. Youâre yelling at him in the picture, probably telling him to put his pinky up when he drinks his tea, and heâs just grinning at you.
Itâs funny how that smile never changed. Something warm unfurls and blooms in your chest the longer you look at the picture. Itâs Clark, he doesnât care what you wear or if youâve put on makeup or not. You both loved each other long before that was ever a problem, and itâs not going to start being one now.Â
Sucking in a deep breath you put on the first outfit youâd picked out, a simple white sundress. You rarely get to wear it, anyway. Might as well test it out now. You check the mirror one last time just as someone knocks on your bedroom door.Â
Clark calls out your name on the other side, sounding hesitant. âSorry, um,â he chuckles and you can picture the way he must be nervously rubbing the back of his neck. âI got here a little early.â
You dart away from the mirror, kicking all the clothes under your bed. You slide the makeup into your desk drawer to be dealt with later. For now, you just need to make sure that he doesnât see what a hot mess your room is.Â
Sucking in a deep breath, you tug the hem of your dress down and shake off your worries. This is Clark. Your Clarkie, the boy youâve tormented since you were a toddler. Thereâs nothing to worry about.Â
âYouâre always early, Clark,â you tell him with a soft smile as you open the door.Â
His eyes widen slightly as he looks down at you. You did purposefully pick a dress that would emphasize certain aspects of yours. The pink flush on his cheeks is entirely worth it. Your eyes are drawn to the bunch of flowers in his hand and you grin. âAre those for me?â You gush, opening your door wider for him to step inside.Â
âYeah,â he holds them out to you, blue eyes stuck on yours. âI thought you might like them.â You bring them closer to your face, taking in the faint scent of the roses.Â
âI love them, thank you,â you find yourself unable to stop smiling as you drop the roses in a glass of water by your bed. After building up your hopes and anxieties for a week because of this date, you're struggling to calm yourself down.Â
Turning, you find him already looking at you with a soft smile that calms your racing heart just a bit. âIâve been looking forward to this for a while,â he tells you, taking a step closer to you. His hands find your own, pulling you into him. âNot just the date,â he amends, smile stretching wider. âAsking you out. I think our friends were getting sick of listening to me talk about you all the time.â
You laugh, âI think they were getting sick of both of us. I feel so oblivious that it took me so long to realize you felt the same way.âÂ
He huffs, though his tone remains good-natured, âHow do you think I feel?â
âWell,â you lace your fingers with his and step closer, âweâre doing it now, thatâs what matters.â He ducks down and you feel your breath stutter, but he only leaves a brief kiss on your cheek, pulling back with a sheepish expression. A gentleman through and through.Â
Youâd never thought that knowing Clark for as well and as long as you have could be a bad thing. But now, sitting in The Talon and awkwardly dipping your fries in ketchup just to have something to do, youâre starting to realize it is. Being with each other nearly every day leaves you wanting for conversation. You both are already so caught up on whatâs going on in each otherâs lives that youâre struggling not to just bring up the weather.Â
Clark groans and you startle, the noise breaking through the thick silence between you. He leans back in the booth, head resting on the edge and you find your eyes drawn to the strong muscles of his neck, the way his Adamâs apple bobs as he swallows.Â
Clearing your throat you glance away from him and push your plate away. âI didnât want it to be like this,â Clark mutters, more to himself than you, but you hear him anyway.Â
âItâs, well,â you pause, struggling for the words. Letting out a self-deprecating laugh, you shake your head. âI just donât know what to do when weâre like this,â he peeks an eye open and you gesture between the two of you.Â
His lips quirk up and he straightens once more. âI feel like I should be able to talk to you, same as always. But I don't know what to say, I donât want to risk messing this up.â He trails off, glancing away from you and swallowing roughly. The same dreaded panic youâve been feeling all week is thick in his voice.Â
âClark,â you utter his name lowly, reaching your hand out across the table. Heâs slow to meet your eyes. âI feel the same way. Weâre being stupid because I know that nothing you could say is going to change how I feel about you.â You narrow your eyes, taking on a teasing tone, âAnd you better feel the same way,â you scold.Â
He huffs out a laugh, larger hand enveloping yours entirely and squeezing gently, âYou know I do.â
You shrug, âThen weâre just being stupid, again,â you add, rolling your eyes.Â
His eyes light up with mischief, a smile spreading as he stands from his seat. You jump back slightly, surprised by the sudden movement. âIâve got an idea, come on,â he holds his hand out and you take it once more.Â
You let out a surprised laugh as he takes off, dragging you out of the Talon behind him. âWhere are we going?âÂ
He pauses for a moment, looking over his shoulder at you. It awes you, just how handsome he is. âItâs a surprise,â he winks and tugs you closer.Â
âYour surprise is⌠the school?â You frown, taking Clarkâs hand as he helps you down from the truck.Â
âNo,â he defends, shooting you a sarcastic look as he closes the door behind you. âWeâre sneaking onto the field, like we used to. Maybe a little jog down memory lane will help,â he gives you a cheesy smile and you feel like you might melt. Â
The sun hangs low on the horizon, its fading golden hues painting the sky in soft oranges and purples. The light catches in Clarkâs hair, casting a warm halo around him. Sometimes he seems so overwhelmingly perfect that you wonder if youâll ever be enough for him. Even when you were beginning to give up hope, he comes up with something so sweet, so thoughtful, that all you want to do is kiss him.Â
Swallowing down the urge, you place your hand in his and let him lead you around the side of the school. âYou know, we only used to do this to mess with the football players,â you tease. âHard to do when youâre on the team, Clarkie.â
He huffs out a laugh. âHey, we can still tear the seams on their jerseys- just not mine.â He throws you a grin, and it sends a rush of warmth through your chest.
The familiar path behind the school is darker now, but your steps fall in sync like muscle memory. The fence around the field looms ahead, a little more daunting than normal. Itâs harder to climb in your dress, but Clark gives you a boost. One so strong you nearly fly over.Â
Landing with a huff, you turn to glare at him as he pulls himself over with ease. âToo much torque in the thrust, Clark,â you grumble, brushing off your hands.Â
He chuckles, throwing an arm over your shoulders as you both step onto the field. âCome on, we should get down there before the sunâs gone.â
Dew from the grass seeps its way into the thin fabric of your shoes as you walk toward the center of the field. The bleachers stand empty, the goalposts stretch high into the deepening sky, and for the first time tonight, you feel like you can take a breath.Â
Clark shrugs off his jacket, laying it out on the grass and motioning for you to sit. You hesitate for a moment, but then you look down at the white fabric of your dress and decide youâre okay with sacrificing Clarkâs jacket.
Clark lowers himself beside you, leaning back on his palms as he gazes up at the sky. The last streaks of sunlight fade, and one by one, the stars blink to life above you. Youâve always thought the sky above Smallville was different than anywhere else. As if the stars were reaching out to you. Considering your track record with meteors, it doesnât seem that far off.Â
For a while, neither of you speak. The quiet is comfortable, not at all like the stilted silence youâd felt in the diner. Youâre content just being here with him, under the vast, endless sky.Â
Clark is the first to break the peace. He shifts beside you, drawing in a slow breath as he disrupts the silence. âIâve,â he hesitates on the word, âcared about you for a long time,â he admits, voice low and steady. âLonger than I ever told you.â
You glance over at him and find his gaze fixed on the stars. His jaw is tense, like heâs bracing himself for you to tell him this was all one big mistake and youâre better off as friends. A smile pulls at your lips at the ridiculous thought and you reach toward the small space between you both. Placing your hand over his, he finally looks at you.Â
âI know things are,â he pauses, âa little weird between us right now.â He looks at your hand and flips his palm so he can lace your fingers together. âBut I donât want to lose what we have. If youâre willing to make it work, I am too.â
Your heart stutters, and for a moment all you can do is stare at him. At the boy whoâs always been there, the boy who, despite everything, still makes your heart race. Your smile spreads, âOf course Iâm willing,â you whisper.Â
His breath hitches, and then he grins, the same grin that will never fail to make you lightheaded with infatuation.
Clark was meant to be here an hour ago. Youâd made plans to go to a screening of some old movies at the theater. Sitting on the steps of your front porch, head propped in your hand, you look out at the farmlands around you. He only lives a few minutes away from you, you canât fathom why he would be so late.Â
Youâd like to give him the benefit of the doubt, heâs not the type of guy to just leave you hanging. But thereâs something humiliating about sitting out here all on your own. The wind has already fussed and ruined the hairstyle youâd so meticulously worked on. Youâd already missed half of one of the movies. And the sun is beginning to set.Â
Part of you is begging to just go inside and give up, but you're more stubborn half won't give in. Clark isn't like this, he wouldn't do something like this without good reason.Â
A rumble sounds down the highway and your head perks up, crestfallen look replaced with something more hopeful. Getting to your feet, you grimace at the pins and needles tingling down your legs. Walking down the steps and getting a good look at the approaching motorcycle, your stomach plummets.Â
Not Clark, then, though itâs odd to see someone beside you or the Kentâs driving on this stretch of road. Your hand tightens around the hem of your tank top as the motorcycle begins to slow as it approaches your house. Heart picking up, you take a step back toward the safety of the porch.Â
Maybe they just need directions or maybeâŚ
Your brain breaks for a moment as the rider pulls into your driveway.Â
Maybe theyâre Clark.Â
Your jaw drops as he shoots you a smarmy grin, getting off his fatherâs bike and striding toward you with a swagger youâre unused to. âHiya, sweetheart." You take a step back from him, brows furrowed.Â
âClark,â you spit his name out in shock, eyes darting between him and the bike. Knowing that heâs not dying somewhere in a ditch, your anger at being left waiting surges forth. âYouâre an hour late because you were busy stealing your dadâs bike?â You demand, trying to ignore just how good he looks leaning against the post of your porch in that ridiculous leather jacket.Â
âSure,â he chuckles and rolls his eyes, brushing past you and heading back to the bike. âThatâs why,â he snaps, like youâre slow. He straddles the bike and nods you forward. âYou coming or not?â
Sucking in a sharp breath, you glance between him and the front door of your house. Again, giving him the benefit of the doubt, you choose to get on the back of the bike. Maybe this is all just one big act that heâs putting on to surprise you with something at the theater.Â
He turns the key and you frown, âHelmet?â You ask weakly. He doesnât respond, just laughs and peels out of your driveway. You squeal, grabbing on tight to his waist and burying your face in his back.Â
This isnât an act, and this definitely isnât Clark. But whoever he is, you just got on the back of his motorcycle like an idiot.Â
With every turn and rev of the bike, you prepare to feel the pavement beneath your palms. Still, as reckless and nauseating as his driving is, he manages to get you here in one piece. Though, where here is, youâre not sure.Â
Clark swings off the bike effortlessly, grinning over his shoulder at a group of girls walking into the building behind him. He doesnât seem to notice, or care, about the way your hands still tremble from the ride. Youâd been too busy clutching onto him for dear life to pay any attention to where you were going and youâre starting to regret it.Â
The building is nothing more than dirtied brick, the faded neon sign above the door advertising beer and live music. The bass thumps from inside, vibrating the gravel beneath your feet. From within, you hear jeering shouts, the telltale sounds of a crowd on the verge of chaos.
âClark,â despite his odd behavior, you still find yourself stepping toward him and holding tight to his hand. The sheltered life of Smallville hasnât exactly prepared you for backwoods, seedy bars. âWhere are we?â You peer up at him and the glint in his eyes makes your stomach clench with trepidation.Â
âOh,â he laughs, tugging you toward the entrance, âyouâre gonna like this,â he swears. Despite the way you dig your heels into the dirt, he keeps pulling, giving you no choice but to follow him into the bar.Â
The air changes as you step inside, itâs worse than you thought it would be. Thick with heat and smoke, it pulses with the heavy bass of a song you donât recognize. Multicolored lights flash across the writhing bodies on the dance floor. The scent of spilled beer, sweat, and something sticky clings to the air.Â
Your fingers tighten around Clarkâs arm as he moves forward, practically wrapping yourself around him. He weaves through the crowd like he belongs here. If you let go now, you know he wouldnât stop, heâd just keep going, leaving you all alone in a place you want no part of. Â
Clark drags you to the edge of the bar and slips a crumpled twenty across the counter. Wordlessly, and without checking for IDs, the bartender slides over two beers. Clark grabs one and to your utter shock, tilts it back, downing one long gulp.Â
âYou gonna stand there watching me,â he challenges, âor are you finally going to let loose and have some fun?â
âNo, Clark, Iâm not drinking. And neither should you! Youâre driving us back,â you snap, eyes darting around the seedy crowd.Â
Settling the half-empty bottle on the counter, he smirks, âRelax. Weâre here to have a good time,â his tone almost sounds like a threat. Have a good time or elseâŚ
His gaze flickers toward the dance floor and your heart sinks at the mischief in his expression. âAnd I know exactly how to help you loosen up.â
Again, he gives you no time to protest or even form an opinion before he grabs you and pulls you toward the center of the dance floor. You feel like a leashed dog, no choice but to obey.Â
The music shifts into something darker, slower, a sultry beat thrumming through the air. It charges the atmosphere of the dancers and the crowd sways, bodies pressed tightly together as they move with the rhythm.Â
âClark,â you glance around at the writhing bodies and swallow thickly. âI donât-â
âJust one dance,â he cuts you off smoothly, voice low and coaxing. His lips curl up in a gentle smile as his hands find your waist. His grip is tight but not uncomfortable as he helps move your hips into the rhythm of the song. âTrust me.â
You hesitate, but itâs easier than you thought to simply fall into the slow, lazy grind of the dance. Your body moves in sync with his, despite the apprehension tightening through you. Thereâs something wrong with him, thatâs clear enough. This isnât the Clark you know, this is some bold, almost predatory version of him.Â
One of his hands drifts up from your waist, dragging the hem of your thin tank top up slightly as his fingers brush against the nape of your neck. A shiver runs down your spine as his grip tightens, tilting your head back. You press your hands against his chest, eyes rounding in confusion.Â
âClark,â you whisper his name, breathless from the proximity. âWhat are you-â
He cuts you off, voice rough and breath warm against your lips, âFinally taking what I want.â His head dips down, lips capturing your own. Itâs not the soft, gentle first kiss youâd always imagine you would share with him. This is hard, demanding.Â
Heâs claiming you, marking his territory as he slips his hand lower on your waist. He pulls you flush against him, hips pressing against yours. A heat slowly spreads in you, but it's overshadowed by the overwhelming feeling that this isnât Clark.Â
You push against his chest and you know he lets you go, the situation still under his control. He backs off with an irritated look, eyes narrowed down at you.Â
Your breath comes in quick, uneven gasps as you stare up at him. âWhat the hell, Clark?â
âWhatâs your problem?â He snaps, hand flexing around your neck before dropping to his side.Â
âYou,â you hiss, eyes narrowing. âYouâre not yourself, Clark.â
His jaw tenses, fists clenching by his side as he takes a step back from you. âWhy? Because Iâm finally doing what I want?â His voice is sharp, it bites at the fraying edges of your patience. The music around you picks up pace and somebody slams into you from behind.Â
With a pained gasp, you stumble forward, rubbing the sore spot where their elbow had slammed into your ribs. Clark watches it all with a bored look. Gone is the gentle, considerate boy youâve known your whole life. This boy before you is reckless and selfish, you donât want anything to do with him.Â
His attention flickers past you and you turn to follow his gaze. A pretty blonde sways in the middle of the dance floor, hips moving gracefully as her laughter rings above the music. Without a word or a second glance, he steps around you, striding toward her with the same effortless confidence he just used on you.Â
Frozen by disbelief and anger, you watch as he slides a hand around her waist, murmuring something in her ear that makes her giggle. The crowd shifts again, blocking your view of the two. Itâs for the better as you suck in sharp breaths, trying to keep the tears at bay.Â
A lump clogs your throat and you rush toward the back of the bar, hoping there might be a bathroom to hide in. You just need a second away from the sweat and noise of the dancers. You stumble through a stained door and slam it closed behind you, wiping desperately at the tears rolling down your cheeks.Â
After splashing cold water over your face and simply standing in there for a few minutes, you finally feel stable enough to go back outside. Youâre just going to ask Clark to take you home and then you hope you never have to see him again.Â
But when you return to the dance floor, heart still pounding its way up your throat, you canât find Clark. You canât even find the blonde. Heâs acting like a jackass, but thereâs no way he would just leave you.Â
Right?
You rush outside, your stomach dropping like a stone when you see the parking lot. The motorcycle is gone.Â
He left you behind.Â
âThank you,â your gaze stays trained on your hands, not ready to look at Lex. You feel his stare boring into the side of your head before he turns back to the road.Â
âYou donât have to thank me. Iâm glad you called me instead of trying to get home on your own.â He pauses, hand tightening on the steering wheel as he takes in a deep breath. âBut what were you doing in a place like that?â
You slump in the passenger seat, rubbing a tired hand over your face. All you want to do is go home and wash this night away. Youâre hesitant to tell him the truth, knowing he might give Clark hell for leaving you there. A part of you is still primed to protect him, but the other part, the one that was just left behind, canât care.Â
âClark,â you tell him and his head whips around so fast youâre surprised you don't hear it snap. âHe was acting weird tonight. Took me there and then left with another girl.â
âAre you serious?â He demands, sounding angry on your behalf. Right now, though, you donât have the energy for anger. âClark wouldnât do that.â
You suck in a deep breath and finally look at him, âThe one I know wouldnât,â you offer vaguely, ignoring his confused expression. âHonestly, I just want to get home and never talk to him again.â
Lex chuckles a little, âYou donât mean that.â
âTry me,â you snap, glaring out the window. Youâre debating calling Clarkâs dad and telling him that Clark took the bike. If not just for petty revenge. Just the thought of it makes you feel tired.Â
âIâm sure,â Lex starts, already sounding like he doesnât believe himself, âhe had a perfectly reasonable explanation for what he did.â You roll your eyes, giving him a deadpan look. His hand lifts slightly off the wheel in surrender. âThereâs no excuse,â he amends.
âNo, thereâs not.â The car rolls to a stop and you look out the window, surprised to already be at your house. The porch light is off, your parents must already be asleep. âI really canât thank you enough,â you tell Lex, offering him a weak but grateful smile.Â
He waves you off, âForget it, Iâm glad I could help. If you ever need anything elseâŚâ He trails off, leaving the offer open-ended.Â
You nod, opening the passenger door and stepping out. Youâre just about to close it when something occurs to you. Clark always gives you a ride to school, youâre not going to have a way to get there after tonight.Â
âOh,â you groan, pinching the bridge of your nose in irritation.Â
âWhatâs wrong?â Lex looks concerned and you offer him an apologetic grimace.Â
âI actually do need something,â you tell him, sheepish and pleading.Â
Clark wakes up with a fog clouding his mind, a dull pounding behind his eyes. Vague flashes of memory flicker through the haze. The sound of your upset voice, the thrum of music, and the feeling of your body pressed against his. It makes his cheeks flush with warmth, but none of it connects for him. Everythingâs one frustrating blur.Â
But he can figure that out later, his gaze drifts toward the clock on his nightstand and his eyes widen. He leaps off the bed, nearly tripping as he gets wrapped up in his sheets. He was meant to pick you up ten minutes ago.Â
Clark throws on the first clothes he finds, raking a hand through his messy hair as he bolts down the stairs. His backpack is nearly left by the door as he rushes out. If he could, heâd run you to school. It would be so much faster, so much easier. But that would require explaining why he could do that, and he doesnât think youâd appreciate him springing the truth of his abilities on you this early in the morning.Â
Youâre not exactly a morning person.Â
He speeds down the road, the truckâs tires kicking up dust as he pulls into your driveway. Throwing the truck in park he doesnât even bother cutting the engine before leaping out. Two steps at a time, he bounds up your front porch and knocks firmly on the door.Â
His foot taps against the wood of the porch as he checks the watch on his wrist. If you hurry, you might both be able to make it to first period on time. After a minute of silence he knocks again, but heâs greeted with the same silence.Â
He steps back, brows knitted together, and his gaze flickers toward the front window. He ignores the feeling of being a complete creeper as he peers through the glass. The house looks unnaturally still, none of your usual morning mess as you rush to get ready on time. The lights are off and he canât hear anything inside.Â
Your parents are usually gone before you even wake up. He canât think of anyone else who would give you a ride. Or why you would even have anyone else drive you. A strange unease coils in his stomach and another brief memory flashes through his mind. Itâs not much, just a pretty blonde smiling up at him.Â
Jaw tightening, Clark turns back to his truck, climbing inside and heading straight for school. Heâs sure everythingâs fine. You probably had Chloe or Lana pick you up. Still, even with him being ten minutes late, heâs not sure how they would have gotten to your house before him.Â
Pulling into the parking lot he frowns, greeted first thing in the morning by Lexâs ridiculously overpriced sports car. Itâs parked right in front of the entrance and he wonders what business Lex would have at the high school.Â
The passenger door opens and you step out, your bag slung over one shoulder. You turn to Lex, smiling as you give him a sweet wave. Clark watches it all with his shoulders tensed as something sharp and hot twists in Clarkâs chest.Â
He watches as Lex pulls out of the parking lot, jaw clenched in irritation. He throws the truck into park and gets out, heading toward the front doors. Inside, the hallways seem more crowded than usual but he still manages to make you out almost instantly.Â
Youâre at your locker, pulling out books as if nothingâs wrong. As if you didnât get a ride with Lex Luthor and ditch him for seemingly no reason at all.Â
Clark makes a beeline for you, tightening his grip on his backpack as he stops beside your locker. âHey,â he calls, forcing a smile. âDid I miss something? I thought I was picking you up this morning.â
You donât even bother looking at him, eyes stubbornly pointed forward. âGuess I made other plans.â
The coldness in your voice stops him in his tracks. His stomach drops, smile faltering as you continue to pretend thereâs anything more for you to grab from your locker. âOkayâŚâ He exhales slowly. âDid something happen?â
You slam your locker shut and he jumps. Whipping around to face him, your eyes are dark with anger as you glare up at him. âReally?â You snap and his eyes widen in surprise. âThis is what youâre doing, pretending you donât remember?â
Clark blinks, thrown off by the heat in your voice. âI-â
âForget it,â you cut him off. You shake your head, looking tired. âJust leave me alone, Clark. Seems to be something youâre good at, anyway.â You whip around, storming off down the hall and leaving him reeling. He wants to go after you but youâre already slipping into your English class and he knows thereâs no way heâll be able to talk to you in there.Â
He hovers in the hallway, stunned. What the hell happened last night?
His mind races, grasping at the fleeting memories. There was a bar, heâs not even sure how he found that place. He was dancing with you and then kissing you. His eyes widen at that, grimacing at the blurred memory of your rough first kiss. Heâd been hoping for something a little sweeter than some backwoods bar.Â
He remembers you being angry at him but thatâs it. There are holes and gaps that he canât remember no matter how hard he tries. Thereâs only one thing that could explain the reckless behavior, the memory gaps, and the way he felt like someone else.
Red kryptonite.Â
His heart sinks and his head falls into his hands. He hurt you and probably scared you. You donât even want to look at him now. Straightening up, he runs a hand through his hair and tries to think of a way to fix all of this.Â
Heâs not sure he can, not when he canât even remember what heâs done to you.Â
Admittedly, ambushing you outside of class probably wasnât the best way to go about this. But he needed to make sure you couldnât run from him. You walk out the door, books clutched to your chest, and head down.Â
Clark falls into step beside you and you briefly glance up, rolling your eyes when you realize itâs him. You pick up your pace, clearly trying to put space between the both of you. âWait,â he calls, stepping in front of you. âOne chance to explain, please.â
You stop in the middle of the hall, uncaring to the students parting around you. âClark-â
âI donât remember everything,â he admits, voice low and desperate as he pushes through your objection. âBut I know something happened. And I need to fix this.â
Exhaling sharply, you canât seem to meet his eye. âThereâs nothing to fix.â
That canât be true. He wonât let that be true. âPlease,â he presses. âJust⌠one chance.â
For a moment, you hesitate, teeth pressing into your lower lip as you take a step back from him. âFine,â you relent, sounding wholly reluctant. âWeâll talk after school.â
Relief floods through him and he finally manages a real smile for the first time all morning. âOkay,â he utters, trying not to sound surprised. âGreat, Iâll drive you home, and-â
âNo,â you cut him off, shaking your head. âLex is giving me a ride,â he opens his mouth to protest and you shoot him a sharp look. His jaw snaps closed and he sighs. âIâll meet you at your house later,â you tell him, leaving no room for argument.Â
His stomach twists as you turn and walk away. Lex, he scoffs and shakes his head. When did the two of you get close? One bad night and youâre already done with him?
The thought should fill him with anger, but it only makes his worry grow. Whatever he had done last night must have been truly awful. He hates that thereâs a chance he wonât be able to fix this. But what makes it worse is knowing that itâs all his fault.
Clarkâs in his room when he hears you pull up to the house. He doesnât waste any time as he heads down the stairs. âWhat happened to âI never want to see him again?ââ Clark has no shame as he listens to your conversation. He doesnât appreciate how comfortable Lex sounds teasing you.Â
âYeah, well,â your voice loses its muffled edge as you open the passenger door. âI deserve an explanation.â
âCall me if you need anything,â Lex tells you as Clark opens his front door. Rolling his eyes, Clark jogs down the steps of his porch, heading toward you both. You turn over your shoulder, smile falling as you nod your head in greeting.Â
Clarkâs waited forever to finally tell you how he really feels about you. Years of pining all led to that one moment where you told him that you feel the same way. Heâd finally gotten a chance with you, to be with you like he always wanted. Heâs not going to let last night ruin everything.Â
âThanks, Lex,â you mutter, closing the passenger door and marching toward Clark. Lex lingers for a moment and Clark sends him a stiff smile and wave. Lex returns it with a smirk before driving off.Â
âSo,â arms crossed across your chest, you glance up at him with barely veiled apprehension. âAre we going inside?â
Clark glances back at his house and shakes his head. He holds his hand out to you and you give him a wary glare. âPlease,â he asks, and after a moment you place your hand in his. He smiles and leads you to the barn.Â
Call it nostalgia, call it desperation but whatever compelled you to actually hear Clark out can go bite it. He abandoned you at a club in a town you hadnât even heard of. To go be with another girl, no less. You shouldnât have even stopped to listen to him in the hallway. Itâs a lack of self-respect, really.Â
But there was something in his eyes that compelled you to stay. Last night, heâd been a stranger wearing Clarkâs face. This morning, you saw the earnest sincerity you always do when you look into those pretty blue eyes of his. Giving in was an inevitability.Â
Walking the familiar path to the barn youâre struck with a feeling almost like grief. Whatever could have bloomed between you and Clark feels like sand falling through your fingers. Unless heâs about to open those doors and reveal an evil twin, youâre not sure you could ever forgive him.Â
Clark glances over his shoulder at you, a gentle smile pulling at the corners of his lips. He throws the doors of the barn open and you roll your eyes at the dramatics. You slip past him and head inside, stopping short once you see what heâs done.Â
Fairy lights dangle above the loft, illuminating what looks like a poorly built blanket fort. Christmas lights he clearly stole from his mom are hung haphazardly from the rafters. You can see the effort he put into making the barn feel special, even if the execution is lacking.
Itâs the nostalgia of it all that makes you smile. Summerâs spent camping out in the barn, hidden away under blanket forts, and trying to scare each other with your bad ghost stories. Itâs a time capsule of your childhood. And you know what heâs trying to do, how heâs trying to soften the hard edges of your resentment. You hate that itâs beginning to work.Â
Clark heads up to the loft first, glancing over his shoulder and motioning for you to follow. You sigh, face blank as you work to keep up the cool exterior you feel slowly melting away. He offers his hand as you reach the top, and after a beat of hesitation, you reluctantly take it.Â
Clark pulls you forward and keeps your hand in his as he leads you to sit down across from him. Sinking back into the plush pillows and blankets you prop your head in your hand, watching him with a bored expression. Sucking in a deep breath, he rubs his hands along the surface of his jeans, avoiding your eyes for a moment.Â
âI didnât want our first kiss to be in some bar.â He chuckles awkwardly, rubbing the back of his neck before finally meeting your eyes. âI didnât want our first anything to be there. I wanted it to be somewhere like this, somewhere that actually meant something to us.âÂ
His throat bobs as he swallows. Then he leans closer, reaching across the space between you, his fingers curling around yours again. The warmth of his palm is comforting, even if you donât let him see that. âI donât want to lose my best friend. I donât want to lose you, you have to believe me. What happened last night, it wasnât me.â
Your expression hardens and you yank your hand from his, putting distance between you. Clarkâs face flickers with hurt, but you ignore it. âWhy should I believe anything you say, Clark? What happened last night was an eye-opener. Clearly, weâre better off just being friends.â
He sucks in a sharp breath, looking like youâve just punched him in the gut. âYou donât mean that,â he murmurs.Â
âDonât I?â
Clark drops his head into his hands, fingers threading through his hair. His shoulders curl inward, and for a long while, he doesnât speak. The silence between you stretches, thick with unspoken words.Â
Maybe it would be better for you to just leave. Some space might do both of you good, and help you come to terms with the truth of it all.Â
This was never going to work.Â
Clark exhales slowly, then straightens, blue eyes meeting yours with an intensity that catches you off guard. âAlright,â he nods, some internal battle going on that youâre not privy to. âStand by the window.â
Your brows furrow and you shake your head. âWhat?â
âDo it,â he tells you, tone firm, and you find yourself struggling for a reason not to listen. Finally, with a reluctant huff, you get up and go stand by the window.Â
The golden fields stretch before you bathed in the warm glow of the setting sun. The wheat sways gently in the evening breeze. Utterly boring and un-fascinating.Â
You roll your eyes, âClark, I swear-âÂ
A distant whistle cuts through the air. You whip around, expecting to see Clark behind you and instead find the loft empty. Your stomach tightens and you turn back to the window. A flicker of movement catches your attention, âWhat theâŚâ
You press against the window, squinting at the field below. Thatâs when you see him. A very small Clark waves from the middle of the wheat, far too distant for how quickly he got there. Your breath catches and you find yourself waving back without thinking.Â
Thereâs no possible way he crossed all that in under thirty seconds.Â
But heâs not satisfied with just an impressive show of speed. Clark disappears and then reappears right below the barn window. Only, heâs not alone.Â
Above his head, with terrifying ease, heâs holding a goddamn tractor. Your heart slams against your ribs. âClark!â You shout, terrified this little stunt of his is going to end with him sandwiched into the dirt. He sets it down casually, as if it weighs nothing.Â
A gust of wind pushes your hair forward and you turn sharply. Clark stands behind you now, cheeks flushed, a sheepish smile tugging at his lips. âWhat the hell was that?â You demand, eyes darting between him and the tractor outside.
âItâs what I wanted to tell you. What Iâve always wanted to tell you,â he concedes, his smile faltering slightly, his voice tinged with something vulnerable.Â
Still stunned, you sink onto the couch as he begins to explain. About the crash landing. About his powers. How heâs different. Â
Your best friend- your almost-boyfriend, is an alien.Â
Of all the things racing through your mind, only one question comes to mind. âWhy have you never told me?â You donât ask him if he was from Jupiter or Mars, or if heâs got a secret eye hidden somewhere. You just want to know why he didnât think he could trust you.Â
Clark hesitates. Then, in a voice barely above a whisper, he says, âI was afraid you wouldnât want me anymore. That youâd see me as some freak.â
You snort, âYouâre an idiot is what you are.â
 His head snaps up, blinking at you in surprise. âClark, why would I ever care about what planet youâre from?â You shake your head, a smile creeping onto your lips as you shift forward, kneeling in front of him. Your hands find his, squeezing slightly. Then, hesitantly, you reach up, cupping his cheek. A smile spreads across your face as he leans into the touch. âI care about you, not about what rocket you crash-landed in.â
âMore of a pod,â he corrects and you shoot him a sharp look that makes him laugh. He sobers quickly, smile fading, âI understand if you canât forgive me for last night.â
âWell,â you muse, tilting your head. âIt wasnât really you, right? It was that krypto- karo-â
âKryptonite,â he grins a little at the way you stumble over the word. âAnd, yes, it was. I would never purposefully hurt you, but itâs not an excuse.â
âItâs actually the only acceptable excuse,â you tell him, rolling your eyes playfully. âThat or evil twin.â Clarkâs eyes widen slightly and you narrow yours. âDo you actually have an evil twin?â You shake your head, âNever mind, weâll talk about that later.â
You glance up at the twinkling lights strung above, the warm glow making the loft feel impossibly soft, impossibly safe. âClark?â You ask and he hums, already looking at you when you glance back at him. âWe can always try that first kiss again.â
His smile, soft and sweet, mirrors your own. As you lean in, his arms circle your waist, pulling you gently into him. Your fingers thread through the soft tresses of his hair as his lips brush against yours, soft, lingering, right.Â
This. This is what you knew it would feel like. This is home and safety, everything good in your life. You smile against Clarkâs lips knowing that no matter what evil twins or toxic rocks come at you, youâll face it together.
end. â I do not own the characters or the TV Show Smallville, but this writing is my own all rights reserved Š scribes-of-valar 2025. do not copy, repost, translate & recommend elsewhere.
pt two of broken promises (I know I'm so creative with names)
bodyguard!logan howlett x fem!runaway reader
a/n: SMUT 18+ MDNI they, like, never use protection (don't be silly, sheathe your willy) but Iâd like to make it 100% clear now that she has a magic uterus and there will be absolutely NO baby-making. Just rocking unprotected sex đđ If youâre tagged in this, it does not mean that I am permanently adding you to my taglist. It just means I saw you in my comments/reblogs/inbox asking for a part two and this was the easiest way to let you know I made one. If you would like to be added to the taglist, feel free to ask. Summary: Life on the road isn't exactly glamorous. Cramped spaces and too many cheap motels have you and Logan at each other's throats. You feel eyes tracking you everywhere you go but you're afraid to tell him, afraid it will be the end of the road for the both of you. One cheap bar and an explosion later and your whole life is flipped upside down.
âWhat are you doing?â
You glance over Loganâs shoulder at the register. The man behind it isnât looking at either of you, just disinterestedly scrolling through his phone.Â
âIsnât this what you do?â You ask, motioning to the pack of beef jerky youâre stuffing down your jacket.Â
Logan scoffs and shakes his head. âNo, kid.â He takes the bag from you and rolls his eyes.Â
âWell, then how do you pay for this stuff?â
âNormally, with the money I get from my jobs. But your dad wasnât too forthcoming with my last paycheck.â
You feel that familiar burning churn of guilt roiling around in your gut. Youâve definitely added another complication to his life and it makes you feel like nothing more than a burden sometimes. âOh, Logan, Iâm sorry.â
Logan glances down at you. He gives you that familiar appeasing look, squeezing you closer, and drags you towards the register. He tosses the snacks and drinks onto the counter. The guy just barely glances up at you both.Â
âWill that be all?â He asks in a tone that says he could care less.Â
âYeah,â you answer, eyes drifting towards the magazine rack. Your face is plastered on the cover of a cheap tabloid.Â
LOCAL POLITICIANS DAUGHTER STILL MISSING
Exclusive interview with family on PG. 6
Your eyes go wide and you turn your face further into Loganâs chest. He gives you a confused look before his eyes are snagged by the same thing that caught your attention.Â
âWhy donât you go wait in the truck?â You nod and slip out of his hold, being mindful to keep your face away from the security camera near the front.Â
That keeps happening. You hadnât thought you would have made news, but your father was making this a part of his campaign. Claiming youâd been taken by a mutant bodyguard and that heâs been praying for your safe return. âExpertsâ have been claiming that with no ransom demanded youâre being turned into a message for anyone who goes against mutants.Â
Now, mutants despise you and everyone else thinks youâre a martyr. In a few years, youâre sure youâll be turned into some true crime documentary where people youâve never met before are crying over your disappearance.Â
You slide into the truck and let out a deep sigh. Youâd thought running away would be freeing. But even a hundred miles from him, you can still feel the cold grip of your fatherâs hand around your throat.Â
âTwenty on pump seven,â Logan tosses the cash on the counter, eyes drifting to you in the truck. It was instinct at this point, always keeping an eye on you. Especially since one of your fatherâs more fanatic supporters had spotted you in a shitty diner a week ago. Theyâd called the cops and tried to bar you and Logan from leaving.Â
It hadnât gone over well for him.Â
Heâd been trying to keep you a little more hidden since then, but it left a sour taste in his mouth. Heâd gotten you out of that house to show you what real life was like, to give you a taste of freedom.Â
He felt like he was no better than your father, keeping you cooped up and covered constantly.Â
When the kid in front of him doesnât say anything, Logan clears his throat. He gives him a quizzical look but the boyâs eyes are stuck on the door.Â
âI swear I know her,â he mutters. Loganâs eyes drift towards the TV behind the counter and he sees an old news story of you. Theyâre using the footage of the acid attack, claiming youâve always been the mutant movementâs target.Â
âCan I get twenty on pump seven,â Logan repeats, voice firm. The kid finally looks at him and whatever expression Logan is wearing is enough for him to finally start moving.Â
The second the receipt is in his hand heâs rushing out the door. He doesnât know how long itâs going to take that dumbass to piece two and two together but he canât risk dawdling.Â
He fills the tank up, eyes scanning the gas station the entire time. Heâs had a cloying sense of paranoia ever since the incident in the diner. He knows that at some point this little run of yours is going to come to an end.Â
He doesnât know if itâll end with cops finding the two of you. Or if youâre going to realize the real world isnât all that fun and leave him behind. He knows that a girl like you, one who's used to the finer things, is never going to be satisfied by the life he can offer.Â
But heâs hoping that you come to your senses later rather than sooner. Heâs enjoying traveling with you a lot more than he wants to admit.Â
He gets in the truck, starts it up, and glances over at you. You smile, the smile that makes him feel things he doesnât like admitting to himself or you.Â
âAll good?â You ask.Â
He nods, driving off without a word because he doesnât want to tell you the truth. Doesnât want to admit what you both know to be a fact. The time you have together has an expiration date and heâs worried itâs creeping closer.Â
Loganâs inside some shitty roadside motel. Whatever heâs talking about with the owner is clearly getting heated. You can see the way the angerâs growing on his face. His body is tensed up and he looks like heâs five seconds away from leaping over the counter and taking the greasy man leering at him down.Â
Thereâs a final word exchanged between them and then Logan is storming back towards the truck. He slams the door closed so hard youâre surprised the windows donât shatter. Normally, you sleep in the trailer. Itâs not always the warmest or coziest, but you make it work.Â
Itâs too cold out tonight to do that and Logan doesnât have a spare tank for the heating. Heâd thought heâd had enough for a cheap room for tonight, but clearly, he doesnât. Thereâs a tense silence in the truck as you mentally debate saying anything to him.Â
His fists are wrapped so tightly around the steering wheel you can hear it creaking. You shift, sitting up straighter in your seat and uncurling your legs. Thereâs a stiffness to your joints that has you groaning. Itâs involuntary, ripped out of you simply because youâve been sitting for too long.Â
It catches Loganâs attention and he glances over at you. Thereâs a resigned sort of guilt on his face and it makes you feel sick to your stomach. Heâs used to this type of lifestyle, and sometimes you think heâs embarrassed to share it with you.Â
Youâd never judge him for roadside motels or living off cheap gas station meals. You know you were privileged living up with the wealth you did. But there is something infinitely more satisfying about being poor and happy than there ever was being rich and miserable.
âLook, kid,â he lets out a heavy sigh and you mentally prepare yourself for what youâve been expecting. You were a fun time, a nice ride, but youâre becoming a burden and he canât deal with it anymore.Â
You let your nails dig into the thin skin of your palms so you can attempt to ground yourself. âI need to make some money tonight, so I just need you to bear with me for a while.â
Like there is every time he doesnât boot you to the curb, a relieved rush of air expels from your chest almost violently. âOkay,â you say tentatively, the word dragging out while you try and understand his meaning.Â
âI just,â he stops and it looks like heâs struggling to find the words to say to you. You wait patiently for him to finish, or try to at least. âThereâs a bar nearby. Iâll find some work there,â his words are ominous. They give you nothing and convey so much.Â
Clearly, heâs hiding something from you. You can tell that much from the way heâs avoiding eye contact with you. He pulls out of the motelâs parking lot and turns the radio on. Youâve learned that's his way of telling you he doesnât want to talk without being a dick about it.Â
You want to respect his space because you still feel like an imposter. But itâs hard. Heâs being oddly cagey about this.Â
The drive is short but it feels like youâve been transported to an entirely different town than the one you were in before. He takes only backroads and middle-class homes turn into shady shops with barbed fences. Caged dogs bark at the truck as it drives by and you get a sinking feeling in your gut.Â
Perhaps itâs a little classist of you to automatically assume a few low-end homes equate to a bad neighborhood. But instinctually you know something is off about this place.Â
He parks in front of a run-down bar. Even from here, you can hear loud shouts and jeering coming from inside. You donât know whatâs being said but theyâre certainly passionate. Logan turns towards you, the expression on his face so serious you feel like youâre about to be scolded.Â
âI need you to stay here. I wonât be gone long, just an hour at most. But you need to stay in the truck.â
Your jaw gapes and you scoff at him. âLogan, an hour thatâs rid-â
He cuts you off with a stern call of your name. Your mouth snaps shut and you narrow your eyes at him, teeth gritting together to keep your tongue at bay. âStay here, I mean it. Got it?â
You nod and he repeats your name, sounding aggrieved. âFine,â you huff. âI got it.â He lingers for a moment. You donât know if he doesnât trust you or is just reluctant to leave you alone. Youâre reluctant to be left alone, especially in a shady dark parking lot like this. But clearly whatever is going on inside is worse than whatever could happen to you out here.Â
âIâll be back soon,â he makes this whole thing sound so grave. It makes your brows furrow and doubt churn in your gut. What could he be doing in there thatâs so awful?
He gets out and you watch his form under the flickering street lamps until you canât see him anymore. You sit quietly in the truck for at least three minutes before you already feel the boredom set in.Â
Youâd thought youâd be able to last longer. You used to go for hours dissociating at your fatherâs galas. This is different, though. Youâre a little afraid to let your guard down here.Â
You try to listen to music but you feel bad wasting his gas so you just turn the truck off and huddle under a blanket in the trailer. You try and let yourself fall asleep but you donât last long.Â
Itâs too cold outside to really get a good rest and you can hear people moving around outside the trailer. After about an hour of rolling around and frozen limbs, you figure enough is enough.Â
As much as you donât want to provoke Logan or give him any reason to get rid of you, you canât stay in here all night. Besides, Logan said he wouldnât be long, you can always just lie and say you were worried about him.Â
Satisfied with your excuse you leave the comfort of your blanket behind and slip into Loganâs jacket. You tuck the truck keys in your pocket and walk out into the snowy night. Itâs less cold outside than it was in the trailer, you can see why he wanted a motel room for the night.Â
A few people linger by the cars, smoking and muttering to themselves. You slip past them, ignoring the feeling of their eyes burning into your skin. Youâre sure it's because you look like you donât belong here.Â
The noise in the bar gets louder the closer you get and it reminds you of the night Logan had snuck you out of the house. But youâd had him to lean on, right now, until you find him, youâre on your own. For all the noise coming from the building, the bar is surprisingly empty.Â
Only a few old men are sitting around, drinking beers in silence. The bartender cleans glasses behind the counter, sparing you an odd look before getting back to work. Thereâs not very far for you to look before you figure out that Logan isnât anywhere nearby.Â
âExcuse me?â The bartender spares you a fleeting glance before barely grunting in greeting.Â
The floor underneath you tremors and you glance down at it in surprise. You can hear something going on underneath. You figure that has to be where all the noises are coming from. âIâm looking for someone. Tall, mean as hell, heâs got this hair,â you swoop your hands up by the sides of your head, trying to mimic the odd fluff of Loganâs hair.Â
âDownstairs.â You nod and move around the bar, trying to get to the door behind him. He reaches out, grabbing your bicep and stopping you before you can get far. âIt's a forty-dollar entrance fee, sweetheart.â
Your brow furrows in confusion and you frown as you dig around in your jacket pockets. Youâve come too far to be deterred now. Ignoring the moral implications, you slip Loganâs wallet out of his jacket and give the man forty dollars.Â
He nods towards the door and you give him a weak thank you as you slip past him. Opening the door is like breaking a seal. The noises bombard you almost immediately, so much clearer than they were before.Â
You still canât understand what theyâre screaming but thereâs a violent atmosphere slipping around you as you head down the stairs. The heady smell of cigars and cigarettes threatens to suffocate you. Your eyes water at the smoke in the air.Â
Youâd think youâd have gotten used to secondhand smoking after being around Logan, but heâs less inclined to hotbox the car if youâre beside him. The second your feet hit the floor youâre being jostled to the side violently by the people around you.Â
Itâs nearly impossible to elbow your way through the crowd, but youâre determined to figure out whatâs in the middle of the cage thatâs got them all excited. You can hear the people around you screaming out bets and numbers you donât understand.Â
For one nauseating moment, you think this might be a dog fighting ring, that Logan gambles on it to earn his money. It makes you want to turn around, to shield yourself from the truth. But this is something he tried to keep hidden from you and you need to know the truth about whoever youâre traveling with.Â
You can hear the announcer, but you canât get close enough to see anything yet. âAre you gonna let this man walk away with your money?â Thereâs a resounding NO! from the crowd that makes you jump.Â
A booming voice shouts over the throng of voices, âIâll take him!âÂ
âOur savior ladies and gentlemen!â You shove through two men, ignoring the way they complain about how their beer sloshes on their sleeves.Â
âHey-â You glance over your shoulder as one of them reaches for you. You flick your wrist, sending him and his friend tumbling back into the crowd. You roll your eyes and turn back towards the cage.Â
Your eyes widen and so do Loganâs as you finally see what exactly is going on. Heâs cage fighting, this is what heâd been so secretive about. Honestly, itâs a relief compared to the brutality you were bracing yourself for.Â
You can see his lips starting to form the shape of your name but the man from before is barrelling into his side as the bell goes off. You wince, jumping away from the cage as you hear the meaty impact of his fist against Loganâs face.Â
The people near you scream, shouting for Loganâs blood. Itâs easy to figure out that heâs been beating everyone heâs gone up against based on some bloody faces in the crowd. Itâs smart, easy money. He can always heal, and can never really be beaten, not when heâs literally got fists of steel.Â
Youâre surprised that no oneâs ever caught onto this scam of his. You also wonder why he had been so adamant about you not seeing this. Sure, itâs brutal watching blood spray against the mat. But you donât care. Besides, heâs ridiculously attractive in just his jeans as he pummels into some guy.Â
Maybe thatâs not a normal line of thinking.Â
You shake your head, shelving that for later as the fight dies down. The man is limp on the mat of the cage and Logan is leaning against the wall, smoking a cigar and pointedly not looking at you.Â
You feel that familiar twisting feeling in your stomach and wonder if this was a horrible idea. You should have just stayed in the car like he asked. Youâre sure it would have only been another hour of tirelessly rolling around before he came back. But you couldnât help yourself.Â
He tells you so little about himself. If you get a chance to learn more, youâre going to pounce on the opportunity. Maybe it was a violation of his trust. You sincerely doubt that he would ever willingly have revealed this sort of lifestyle to you, though.Â
He seems to be under the same misguided intention that you need to be sheltered. It reminds you a little of your father. That might be a cruel comparison but itâs the same suffocating feeling of being kept in the dark to suit their needs.Â
The guilt youâd been holding unfurls and blossoms into anger. You find yourself retreating away from the cage and rushing back up the stairs of the bar. You donât want to watch him fight any longer. You donât want to look at him.Â
You just want him to treat you like an equal. Not like some little girl whoâs going to run at the first sign of things getting hard.Â
You burst through the door of the bar, ignoring the cold laughter of the bartender behind you. He clearly seemed to think you couldnât handle a little blood. He wasnât the only one.Â
Youâre only a couple of feet from the truck when you hear footsteps loudly stomping through the snow behind you. âWhat the hell were you doing?â You scoff, unbelieving that he would have the gall to shout at you.Â
You whirl around on him and it catches him off guard. His right foot slides against the slush as he tries to stop himself from ramming into you. âIâm not a little girl, Logan! You donât need to hide stuff like that from me.â
He crosses his arms and glares down at you. âI wasnât hiding anything,â he insists. But the tone of his voice gives him away. He doesnât like that he was caught. âI donât need to tell you jackshit about what I do for money.â
You canât believe how he sounds right now. Why is he getting so defensive about this? âI donât care what you do for money, alright. I just donât get why you felt like I couldnât know about this.â You hate the way the hurt is audible in your voice. You wear your heart on your sleeve, even when you try and cover it.Â
In the same way, heâs masking his feelings with anger, so are you. Just with less success. Something draws across his face, some emotion you canât discern. His voice goes cold and quiet as he shoves an envelope full of cash into your hands.Â
âGo back to the motel. Get a room.â
He storms past you and walks towards the trailer. You follow after him, slightly dumbfounded by how heâs behaving. He rips his motorcycle out from the back and rolls it into a parking spot. You watch him do all this with your tongue glued to the roof of your mouth.Â
Itâs only when he starts to head back towards the bar that you realize heâs not coming with you. âLogan!â You call out, trailing after him slightly. He barely turns back to face you. âAre you,â the words die on your tongue and you canât find it in yourself to finish.Â
Are you angry?
Are you leaving?
Are you going to ditch me at the next bus stop?
Instead of asking any of your ridiculously pining questions, you turn on your heel and storm towards the truck. You rip the door open with more force than necessary and drive off without looking back at him. But you know he watches, know he keeps an eye on you until he canât see you anymore.Â
Your rides with him are normally silent, but this one feels painfully so.Â
You nearly get a room with two beds. But you feel like if you do it will be a horrendous mistake. Reluctantly, you give the man behind the counter enough for a room with one bed large enough for the both of you.Â
Youâre not exactly excited about sharing a bed with him, not after how he behaved tonight. You grumble to yourself as you drag your bag inside and toss it on the ground. You picture putting up a wall of pillows between the two of you, just to be petty.Â
Itâs as youâre showering that you realize you might not even have to. He might not come to join you tonight. He wonât know what room youâre in. And heâd made it pretty clear how pissed he was at you for sneaking into the bar.Â
Maybe youâve finally pushed him too far. Youâve been toying with the boundaries of his patience for a while. Little tests to determine whether he truly wants you around simply to have a warm body ready beside him. Or if he wants you because he genuinely cares for you.Â
You suppose tonight, whether you want it or not, youâll finally have the truth.Â
The thought keeps you awake. You toss and you turn for hours, fighting with yourself. You should be happy, finally figuring out whatâs been haunting you. But youâre not. Youâre petrified. Youâd rather keep living a lie than finally accept that he truly doesnât want you.Â
You throw the covers off, the scratchy material only further adding to your irritation. You stomp into the bathroom, slamming the door closed behind you. You turn on the sink splashing some cool water over your face to try and rid yourself of the warmth lingering under your skin. You donât know if this feeling of being uncomfortable in your own body is from pent-up anger or anxiety.Â
You donât care. You just want to sleep this night away and pretend it never happened. But, of course, the universe has other plans. The motel door creaks open as youâre hovering over the sink, debating whether or not youâre nauseous enough to throw up.Â
You tilt your head slightly towards the sound. Growing up in your house, filtering through rooms like an unheard ghost, allowed you to get good at recognizing footsteps. Logan has finally decided to grace you with his presence.Â
You listen to him as he creeps silently across the room, landing on the squeaky bed. You press your ear against the door and can hear the way the sheets rustle and he cusses under his breath. Thereâs worry staining his voice and you figure you shouldnât drag this on much longer.Â
You open the bathroom door and flip the switch, turning the lamps on like a disappointed mother waiting up for her teenager. You cross your arms mutely and lean against the doorframe as he winces under the sudden light.Â
He jumps, just slightly, and glares over at you. âThought you werenât here,â he accuses. He tries sounding angry, but you have a sudden rush of clarity in that moment. Where you would normally focus only on him being upset with you, you can see the truth of his concern.
Same as you, he doesnât know where he stands in this whole situation. You doubt he had a clear plan when he rescued you from your tower like some ridiculous storybook knight. He most likely thought that you left, the same way you thought he would.Â
You remain silent, though, still a little too flustered to speak coherently. Instead, you examine him. There are cuts and blood all over his shirt. Splatters of it on his face. Though, you know if you looked there would be no physical evidence of him ever being hurt.Â
His brows furrow the longer you stare, a wall building between the two of you. âKid?â He questions, equal parts worried and defensive. Does he really think you actually give a fuck about him fighting?
You shake your head and walk back into the bathroom. You rustle around in the cabinet underneath the sink until you find a washcloth. Wetting it, you bring it back out to him. You station yourself between his spread legs, holding the cloth between you like a peace offering.Â
He looks doubtful as he glances between you and it. Finally, he lets out a rough sigh and simply nods his head. But when he reaches for it you snatch it back, much to his chagrin. You offer him a small smile and tilt his chin up towards you, gently wiping some of the dried blood off his cheeks.Â
He doesnât flinch or hiss away from the less-than-gentle fabric. He stares at you unblinkingly, like if he closes his eyes for a moment heâll wake up and this will all have been a dream. âYou donât have to do this, kid.â
You roll your eyes and crane your neck to get a better look at him. âWould you shut up?â You whisper teasingly.Â
His lips quirk slightly and you can see his shoulder slump in relief at the sound of your voice. âSo, she can talk.â You canât help the little laugh that comes out of you. He grins fully at that and his hands come up to rest on your hips.Â
His thumbs rub soothing circles along the sides of your waist as his hands dip a little lower. âWhat are you doing?â Your hand drifts down to his neck to wipe some blood off there as well.Â
He shakes his head and shrugs, âI donât know what youâre talking about.â
You lift your gaze to his and your lips fall flat, âLogan-â
He cuts you off before you can finish. In one smooth motion, his hands drop to wrap around your thighs. He lifts you slightly and drops you onto his lap. He grins at the slight huff of surprise that rushes out of you.Â
His arms go back to your waist, pulling you closer to him and grinding you a little against him. You bite your lip to stop any noises from escaping. As much as you wouldnât mind what heâs thinking, you need to talk.Â
âLogan,â you scold.Â
He smirks and tilts his head patronizingly, âSomething wrong, sweetheart?â
âItâs not happening,â you tell him firmly, hand still working on cleaning him.Â
He sighs and one of his arms drops away from you. He cups your hand in his, stilling your movements and forcing you to meet his gaze. Gently, he takes the cloth from you and tosses it somewhere you canât see. âIâm fine,â he whispers, eyes searching yours.Â
Itâs hard meeting his gaze. The worry and anxiety from the night still weigh heavily on your shoulders. He repeats himself, fingers tilting your chin up to face him. âAlright?â
âI donât care,â the words come rushing out of you before you can stop them. His brows raise in shock and he gives a slight chuckle of amusement. A lump grows in your throat and your eyes grow wide. âWait, I donât mean-â
You cut yourself off and rub your hands over your face, trying to get your head on right. Loganâs patient, rubbing your back and clearly trying not to laugh at you. You finally take in a deep breath and face him again.Â
âI donât care about the fighting,â you can see his shoulders tense slightly like he doesnât believe you. âI donât care, Logan. You do what you have to survive and Iâm not gonna judge you for that.â
âWhat if I enjoy it?â He cuts you off, tone harsh as he glares down at you. There's experience in how quickly he doubts you, how quickly he tries to get you to change your mind about him.
You wonder how many times heâs been rejected just for being a mutant. Youâve only ever been rejected by one person because only he ever knew. Your father. And that hurt enough for one lifetime.Â
You canât imagine going for as long as he has and constantly being called a monster for something he canât control. Your brows furrow and you lean into him until your lips are brushing. He remains stiff beneath you but you donât let it deter you.Â
âI donât care,â you tell him, pressing your lips to his before slowly pulling back. You wait for him to respond, physically or verbally, but heâs still looking at you with that cold unfamiliar gaze.Â
You wonder if maybe it was a mistake, to bring it up at all. But just as the thought comes heâs surging forward. His lips catch yours, his hands digging so desperately into your shirt you know it rips.Â
Your arms go to his neck, holding onto him so you donât slip off his lap. You haven't been this close for a few days. You think it might have made you both feel on edge. Thereâs a relief that comes from not just having sex with him, but also just being intimate and close to one another.Â
Itâs a reminder that youâre not alone, that thereâs someone here beside you to be a partner and a pillar of stability. Youâve never had that before. Someone that you can rely on and trust fully. You donât think he has either.Â
He craves you the same way you do him. Each kiss, every shared breath, is treated like it will be your last. You donât know when your father will finally catch up to the two of you. You donât know when the police might finally recognize Logan.Â
Thereâs no definitive future for either of you. Itâs a real possibility that this could be your last night together. And neither of you wants to be upset with each other. Because you were never truly mad. You were always just worried.Â
Your hands drop to his shirt, dipping to find the holes in it from his fight and ripping at the flimsy fabric until you can just yank it off. He smiles against your lips at the eager way you move atop him. But he canât tease you, heâs already annoyed with the buttons on your shirt.Â
He pulls back, glaring down at the fabric like it's insulting him. Without another word, he slices through it, leaving it in tatters on your shoulder. You grin, shrugging the rest of it off. âThat was yours.â
He grips your hips tightly and leaves marks where his fingers are as a reminder that he was here. He flips you over, leaves you breathless as he hovers over you. âI really donât give a fuck, sweetheart.â
Youâre addicted to his voice. How breathy and desperate it is when heâs with you. Itâs a level of vulnerability you rarely get to see from him. He canât hide himself when heâs with you like this. He wants you just as badly as you do him.Â
It gives you a confidence rush like no other, makes your ego grow ten times its size. If you can make a man like this fall to his knees from nothing more than a kiss, then youâre capable of a lot more than you give yourself credit for.Â
But you donât want that tonight. You reach for him before he can go much further, grabbing him by his hair and tugging until you know it stings. He nearly fucking moans at your rough touch, eyes fluttering open to meet yours. The green of them has been wholly consumed by his desire for you and it makes you ache for him.Â
âNot tonight,â you tell him. Thereâs no room for argument in your tone. As much as he might want to taste you, devour you, all you want is to be as close to him as possible. You want to be covered and filled by him in every way you can be.Â
His head falls against your thigh, a rough groan tumbling from his throat at your words. You drag him towards you, pulling him up your body until youâre face to face. You smile softly up at him, lifting your head so you can meet his lips again.Â
Youâll never get enough of kissing him, of tasting him. Sometimes you have to stop yourself from reaching across the seats and kissing him while he drives. Youâve nearly made him wreck a few times and forced him to pull over so you could both have some fun in the back.Â
Addiction isnât the right word for what you feel for him. It brings along its own negative connotations. The taint of dependency and toxicity. With addiction, itâs a parasitic relationship, hurts you but makes you feel good.Â
This is just goodness. This is a kind touch for the first time in your life and finally feeling safe in someone elses arms. This is opening yourself up to him fully and not once feeling like you need to mold yourself into something else to make him happy. Itâs accepting him as he is, a broken dog who likes to fight to punish himself. You donât want to change him or make him âbetter.â You just want him to be happy.Â
You use your powers to help yourself, flipping him over and straddling his hips. You drag his jeans down his legs and flick your wrist, sending them flying somewhere across the room. He watches you with eyes filled with awe, hands drifting over your curves like something to be worshipped.Â
You know heâs waiting for it, for you to sink yourself down on him and finally be filled. But you wait, hover over him even as the muscles of your thighs tremor. âYou donât hide things from me anymore,â you warn him. Youâre not asking, for once, youâre demanding what you want.Â
He doesnât look angry like youâd been expecting. Instead, it only seems to turn him on more. âYa know,â his hands drift to your hips, dragging you down and over his cock until itâs wet with your want. Your nails dig into his chest until thereâs blood beading under them and youâre trying not to let your noises slip out.Â
âI kinda like it when youâre all bossy like this.âÂ
âLogan,â you grit his name out. It takes everything in you not to look as affected by him as you feel. âNo more hiding shit.â
He leans up on his elbows. His hand drifts to the nape of your neck and drags you down until your lips are nearly touching his. âYeah, I got it, sweetheart.â
Like a taut rope being cut, you sink into him, your hips finally drop and he guides you down every inch of him until you feel like youâre so full you canât breathe. He lets you linger for a moment, and get used to this feeling while he steals the very air from your lungs.Â
Heâs greedy with the way he touches you. His hands always moving like heâll never fully be satisfied with how much of you he can feel. Heâs always reaching for you like he needs to make sure youâre actually real and not just something heâs dreamt up.Â
Even with how impatient he is, youâre always the one that moves first. You roll your hips over him, moaning at how he feels inside you. Itâs like heâs perfectly molded you around him. He always manages to brush against the spots that make your eyes roll into the back of your head.Â
The second your hips begin to roll, heâs wrapping his heavy arms around you, grinding you down into him. He keeps you trapped in place, using you like a toy as he bounces you on his lap. Your mind is fuzzy, every bad thought and feeling shoved out while he makes you go dumb on his dick.
You love how boneless you go. You donât have to think now, donât have to worry. You wrap your arms around his shoulders, shifting yourself further on top of him until you're practically burying yourself under his skin.Â
Not thinking always comes with its own consequences, though. Your powers slip a little out of your grasp. The walls trembling and the drawers and cabinets opening and closing. The both of you have gotten used to the noise, know how to drown it out, and just focus on each other.Â
One of these days, youâll need to figure out a way to have sex with him without bringing the room down around you. Thatâs a problem for later though. His whispered praises and grunts of your name filter through your mind until thereâs nothing left inside you but him.Â
âFuck,â he hisses in your ear, âyouâre so fucking tight around me. You close?â He grunts, hand drifting down to rub tight circles on your clit. You dig your nails into his shoulders, nodding your head frantically against his neck. âWords, sweetheart.â
âShit,â you can barely think of your own damn name. Let alone what you want from him. âFuck off,â you hiss. He chuckles at the attitude and you almost expect him to stop, just to be a dick because you were a brat.Â
But heâs just as close as you are and heâs too selfish to tease. Wave after wave of pleasure crashes down on you as your body shakes against his. He follows quickly after you, warmth shooting up inside you and almost leaking down your thighs. You feel stuffed, like your bodyâs been pushed to the limit and further.Â
You both sit together in silence for a while. You ignore the way your skin sticks to his uncomfortably, instead reveling in the warmth he provides you. Anyone else, and youâd be rushing to get away from them.Â
Youâre always extra sensitive after sex, every little thing setting you off. But thereâs a comfort to the way his hairy ass chest brushes against your breasts and his arms squeeze around you. Itâs a nice grounding feeling.Â
The tips of your fingers drift over his arms, following the path of his veins and brushing against his fingers lazily. He flips his palm over, encasing your hand in his own wordlessly. Little things like that ease your worries. Makes you feel like something more than just a quick fuck.Â
He breaks the silence first, which is rare for him. âIâm sorry about tonight.â
You frown and peer up at him. âI told you, I donât care about the fighting.â
He sighs and shakes his head, âNot that. I shouldnât have gotten so fucking mad at you. You didnât do anything wrong.â You want to interrupt him, assure him that you both acted pretty childishly.Â
But you understand itâs difficult for him to express himself verbally. He usually prefers silent acts of apologies and expression, you donât want to mess him up before he can get out what he wants to say.Â
âI donât want to be like your father.â Your face screws up a little and you shift uncomfortably on his lap. He loosens his grip, giving you room to leave if you want to, but you stay put. âIâm trying not to coddle you, sweetheart, or hide you away from the world. But I donât like you seeing that shit.â
âYouâre not my dad, Logan. He wouldnât give me a choice,â you try and joke but it just seems to make him more irritated. Sighing you straighten up, bracing yourself on his chest and staring down at him.Â
Your head tilts to the side in contemplation and he almost looks uncomfortable under the attention. âIâm not so fragile or sheltered that Iâm going to shatter at the first taste of the real world, Logan. I mean, for godâs sake, Iâve had acid thrown at me and bodyguards since I could walk. I know how dangerous it is. Whatever you want to hide from me, Iâve seen worse.â
You let your words sink in for a moment and he looks at you like heâs seeing you for the first time. You know that itâs odd for him, to comprehend a girl who was afraid to go into a bar swallowing down an illegal fighting ring like itâs nothing. But youâre not lying. Everyday little things are what youâre unused to. But youâve lived alongside violence your whole life.Â
âLook, fighting, sleeping in shitty motels, and your truck, that doesn't bother me. But I donât like when you hide things and I donât,â you take in a deep breath, mentally preparing yourself for the worst. This is what youâve been trying to tell him for weeks.Â
A few little words have your tongue tied and make you desperate to cover yourself up again. He can see the shift in your expression, and feel how tense you get. He sits up a little more, thumb rubbing soothing circles over the back of your hand.Â
âI donât want to just be someone to fuck you, Logan. I didnât come with you so youâd have easy access pussy,â he looks thoroughly amused at your crude words, but thereâs something else lingering in his expression. Something like hurt.Â
âIs that what you think?â He asks, tone distant. You canât find the words so you simply nod. He sighs and shakes his head. He eases you off his lap and you worry youâve truly fucked this up somehow.Â
He goes into the bathroom, returns with a wet washcloth. He still doesnât speak and youâre on edge the entire time he cleans the both of you up. You can see heâs thinking, biting his tongue, and trying to figure out what it is that he wants to say to you.Â
Youâre impatient, five seconds away from just demanding a response from him. He tosses the cloth and drops into bed beside you. You draw the sheets up to your chest, glaring down at him while he rubs his hands over his face with a tired sigh.Â
When he opens his eyes again he laughs at how close you are. âJesus,â he wraps an arm around your waist, dragging you down into his chest even though you fight him. It must be easier for him to speak when youâre not staring at him.Â
âI didnât go back for you so I could fuck you, kid. I⌠care about you,â thereâs a long pause before he says the word care. You think itâs funny, that he canât bring himself to admit what he actually feels. But youâll take it, youâll give him the time he needs to come to terms with the truth.Â
For now, you let yourself fall asleep, feeling just a little bit better about the road ahead.Â
Things get easier between the two of you. And somehow harder at the same time. You donât walk on eggshells around each other, no longer afraid of scaring the other off now. Which also means that you find it easier to bicker with him about little things. Like, not just tossing his trash everywhere in the truck. Youâre practically living out of the trailer, the least he could do is help you keep it tidy.Â
You know itâs weird for him. Suddenly having someone nag at him not to be a slob or to take breaks in between driving so he doesnât wear himself out. Itâs an adjustment you see him struggle with sometimes.Â
You try not to be too pushy, but thereâs only so many times you can flick crumbs from his burgers off your seat before you lose it. âLogan!â You snap, glaring at him as you stand up only to find chip crumbs squished into the fabric of your leggings.Â
He glances over at you and shrugs, âWhat?âÂ
You glance between the crumbs and him with a glare but he doesnât seem to be connecting the dots. âFucks sake,â you grumble, passive-aggressively wiping the truck seat off before you slam the door and storm towards the diner.Â
Youâre sick of being cramped in the truck. Youâre sick of the greasy food. Youâve begun to crave salads lately. Which is beyond weird. But the novelty of shitty food and milkshakes wore off a hundred miles ago.Â
Logan catches up to you, huffing with irritation as he swings the door open for you. You take a seat in the booth near the corner, snatching up the menu and pointedly staring at it and not him. âReally?â He demands. When you donât answer he tips the menu down, forcing you to meet his gaze. âWhat is your problem?â He hisses, trying not to draw attention to you both.Â
You lean in, voice a harsh whisper. âHow hard is it to just not make a mess? We live out of that damn truck, the least you could do is keep your crumbs on your side.â
He rolls his eyes and leans back in the booth. Youâre both sick of having the same fight. But thereâs really nothing else to do anymore. When youâre stuck together for so long, itâs the small things that get to you.Â
Youâre going to say more but the waitress pops in front of you out of nowhere. âHi!â She beams and gives you her name, the bows in her hair trembling at how hyper she is. âWhat can I get you both today?â
You and Logan place your orders, and he shoots you an odd look when you only order the salad. âWeâve got a couple more hours ahead of us, youâre gonna get hungry.â
You cross your arms and shrug, âNo, I wonât.â
He licks his lips, sucking on his teeth and leaning against the table. âYes, you will,â he argues with a stern voice.Â
You narrow your eyes at him and give him a bitter smile. âKiss. My. Ass.â
Your stomach grumbles for the third time and you know that Logan can hear it. Youâre pointedly not making eye contact with him. It feels like it's louder than the music at this point and you really donât want to prove him right.Â
Without a word, he begins to dig around in the center console. You glance towards him, confused, âWhatâre you doing?â
He doesnât say anything, just tosses whatever heâs grabbed onto your lap. You glance down at it and frown. Itâs somehow cold as you unwrap it. You pull the parchment paper away and let out a relieved sigh.Â
He ordered you a wrap from the diner without you realizing. You take a bite, your hunger steadily easing away. âIâm sorry,â you mutter, pointedly looking out the window.Â
He glances over at you and scoffs. âWhat was that? Couldnât hear ya, kid.âÂ
You roll your eyes and turn to glare at him. Heâs already looking at you, a teasing tilt to his lips. âI said Iâm sorry,â you snap. âI shouldnât have been a bitch.â
He shakes his head and waves you off. âI havenât exactly been pleasant myself. Iâll,â he huffs lowly and forces the words out, âclean up more.â Â
âI think weâve just been stuck on the road too long. Weâre gonna end up driving each other insane.â
His eyes glance along the signs on the highway. Thereâs a notice for food and shopping at the next exit and he nods towards it. âWeâll stop at a motel for a few nights. Take a break.â You want to ask him if heâs sure thatâs smart.Â
It seems risky, to slow down for so long. But you need to walk around, breathe fresh air, and stretch your legs. Youâre too selfish to tell him not to stop and keep going. Instead, you nod and smile at him. âThat sounds really nice.â
He gives you a slight smile thatâs gone as quickly as it came, reaching over and resting his hand on your thigh. You move closer to him and he turns the radio up. You wonder why he doesnât want to talk anymore but you donât push it. Youâre too excited to finally get out of the truck again.Â
The town is nice enough. Itâs small, with only a few shops where you buy some new shirts to replace oneâs that Logan has torn up. The motel youâre staying at doesnât have a washing machine so you have to use the laundromat to wash your clothes.Â
Logan says heâs going to see if he can find a quick job nearby. You wonder if that means a real job or a more bloody one. You decide not to ask questions, instead taking the little change you have and figuring youâll try to get the smell of grease out of all your clothes.Â
As you load the machine up and put your quarters in you canât escape the feeling of someone watching you. Youâve been on high alert ever since Logan stole you away from the house. But this is different.Â
Youâve gotten used to your own paranoia, you know when itâs real or not. You walk away from the machine, glancing out at the glass walls near the front and trying to see if thereâs someone out there. This, oddly enough, doesnât feel like a police stakeout where theyâre going to track you back to the motel and bust Logan.Â
This is something different. There is a deep-seated primal fear in you that makes the hair on the back of your neck stand up. Your heart races as your eyes search the dark street outside. What little glow comes from the streetlights isnât enough for you to clearly make anything out.Â
But you feel them, tracking your every move. Theyâre somewhere nearby, you canât see them but they see you. You feel sick to your stomach. You glance at the door before racing towards it. You turn the lock, slowly backing away and keeping your eyes trained on the street.Â
You look into the shadows and find shapes and movements where there are none. Your eyes spin as your brain crafts a horrible image of some monster waiting outside for you. When the timer for the washer goes off you let out a sharp scream, spinning around and clutching your chest as you glare at it.Â
âFuckâs sake,â you mutter, angrily running your hand over your face and trying to catch your breath. You put the clothes in the dryer and by the time you're done, the feeling is gone. You donât know if they were never there to begin with, or if they got bored and left.Â
Youâd told Logan that you didnât need a ride, youâd just walk the short distance back to the motel. Now, you use the phone on the front counter and call him, telling him youâve changed your mind after all.Â
By the time he picks you up, he looks incredibly concerned. You know you sounded panicked when you called him. You still feel upset about the whole thing. But when he asks whatâs wrong you just tell him you got a little scared walking back in the dark.Â
You donât tell him someone was watching you because you know heâll make you pack up and leave again. You want some stability. Even if it's just for a week. So, as stupid as it is, you lie to him and say everythingâs fine.Â
When you try to go to sleep that night you feel like youâre being watched again. Even with the curtains closed their eyes burn into you. You toss and turn under the heavy weight of the sheets, struggling to get comfortable.Â
Thereâs a low grumble behind you before Logan throws his arm over your waist and tugs you back into his chest. âStop movinâ around,â he demands, his voice barely audible. You smile a little at how tired he sounds before forcing yourself to settle down.Â
He doesnât give you much choice, using his body as a weight to keep you pinned. You still feel their gaze, even more now, but his proximity brings you enough comfort to get a little bit of restless sleep.Â
Loganâs up before you, he always is. He comes in with cheap coffee and free breakfast from the lounge. You push the sheets off your legs, your shirt sticking to your back from the cold sweat of your nervous sleeping. You feel a little more at ease this morning.Â
You wonder if youâre developing some late-in-life fear of the dark. You donât know why you were so upset last night, you feel perfectly fine now. Itâs almost like it was all one bad dream. Logan walks over, handing you the coffee wordlessly and rustling around in your bag for something.Â
He pulls out the envelope of cash you keep stashed away and frowns at the contents. âFound a job,â he mutters, stuffing the envelope away and turning back towards you. He leans against the desk, face pensive.Â
You rub your eyes, trying to wake yourself up a bit more so you sound coherent. âWhat is it?â You take a sip of the coffee and your face screws up at the aftertaste.Â
âFighting,â his tone is clipped and you wonder whatâs got him up in arms. He walks past you, heading into the bathroom, and closing the door behind him. You tilt your head, gaze following him curiously. He doesnât normally close the door, he usually likes to invite you to join him.Â
Something happened and you wonder if heâs hiding the same thing you are. You close your eyes, taking in a deep breath and closing your mind off to the fear from last night.Â
By the time Logan is done in the bathroom, youâre feeling more awake. You canât just dismiss what happened last night. Youâve never gotten scared like that before. You refuse to ignore your instincts, but youâre also not going to let whoever that was terrify you into going back on the road.Â
You donât want things between you and Logan to grow more tense than they already are. The time away from each other yesterday helped a lot. You no longer want to strangle him when you hear him breathe. Youâll just stick closer to him today and see if you feel the eyes on you again tonight.Â
âSo,â you start, testing the waters to see if heâs still in a bad mood. He glances over at you, eyebrows quirked in curiosity but youâre tongue-tied as you stare at him. However many weeks youâve been with him and youâre never gonna get used to seeing him straight out of the shower.Â
The towel is draped low on his hips, giving you a taunting look at what lies underneath the white cloth. Droplets drip down his abs and youâve never wanted to be water more than you do right now. Itâs unfair, just how attractive he is.Â
You always forget what youâre going to say. You canât think when he has a shirt off, itâs infuriating. Scoffing, you turn away from him and shake your head. You hear him chuckle, you know he knows what youâre thinking about.Â
âWhatâs wrong?â He creeps up behind you, arms wrapping around your waist and tugging you back into his chest.Â
âLogan, dammit,â water soaks into the back of your shirt uncomfortably and you tilt your head to glare at him.Â
He smirks down at you, âCat got your tongue, kid?â
You roll your eyes and push away from him. âI canât even remember what I was going to say.â You snatch a shirt from the dresser and shove it into his hands. âPut this on.â
He scoffs and gives you a disbelieving look. âAre you serious?â You wait for him, gaze expectant. Youâre not gonna be able to think when he looks like this. Sighing, he acquieses and tugs the shirt on. His lips fall into a sarcastic line, âHappy?â
Like a switch being flipped you finally remember what you were going to ask him. âThe job you told me about. Where is it?â
You can see on his face how little he wants to divulge that information to you. But you know heâs going to tell you. You two made a deal not to hide things, although, you might be breaking your side of that right now.Â
âSome shitty bar a few miles from here. Listen-â
Youâre not gonna like it.Â
I donât want you tagging along.Â
You should just stay here and read or some shit.
You wonder which one heâll pick today. âYou wouldnât like it, itâs just a shitty little place where I can make some quick cash.â Look at that, itâs rarely ever your first pick excuse. You must be getting better at reading him.Â
âIâll come with you,â you tell him because youâre not asking. Youâre not staying by yourself tonight and you both need the money. You grin at him even as his face falls in disappointment. âMaybe Iâll fight.â
He doesnât even say anything and you immediately regret what you said. The look heâs giving you would put you six feet under if it could. âIt was just a joke,â you mutter.
âWasnât funny, kid,â he tells you, tone clipped as he moves around you to grab his jeans. âI donât even want you in those places, let alone fuckinâ fighting.â
You purse your lips and take a seat on the bed, handing him his jacket when he begins looking for it. âI have abilities too, you know. Maybe I could win a fight.â
âDonât,â he snaps. âI win because I can take the hits people deal me. You canât,â you donât bother arguing with him that you heal too. You understand what he means. You might be able to recover physically, but thereâs a mental aspect to being knocked on the ground. Thereâs humiliation and fear in cage fights, you probably wouldnât be able to handle that side of it.Â
He waits for you to say anything else but when he realizes youâve dropped the subject he lets out a relieved sigh. âYouâll stay in the truck,â he tries.Â
You give him a deadpan look, slipping the keys out of your purse and handing them to him. âNo way in hell, but Iâll stay by the bar if it makes you feel better.â He stays silent and nods but you know heâll try and convince you otherwise when you actually get to the place. Tough luck, though, you donât think itâs safe for either of you to be apart tonight. Even if itâs just staying in the truck.Â
The setup of these places is always the same. Though, this bar seems to be particularly disgusting in comparison to other ones youâve been to. You position yourself near the corner, your back to the wall so youâre less likely to be noticed in the crowd.Â
The fights never last more than a few minutes. And thatâs if Logan is feeling generous. Most of the time you only need to be here an hour before people get pissed off and go home. Someone bumps into you and you hear a small, âIâm sorry,â before they rush to claim a stool.Â
The crowdâs already begun to die out. Most leave while they still have a little money left in their pockets. You duck your head down, catching the eye of the girl whoâd bumped into you. She looks young and incredibly skittish. Her eyes keep darting to the tip jar near the bartender.Â
She quietly asks for water but the bartender just shakes his head, tugging the jar closer to him. You donât know why youâre drawn to her, maybe itâs because she looks like one of those sad pound puppies, but you take a seat beside her.Â
âWater,â you order, slipping him some change. When he gives it to you, you pass it off to her, spotting the greedy way she eyes it. You know a runaway when you see one, she clearly needs a little help. But Loganâs got enough on his shoulders, youâre not gonna bug him with adding another person to the mix.Â
âThank you,â she gulps it down like she hasnât drunk anything in days. You feel your stomach twist with empathy. What little cash you have in your wallet, you slip into her bag as you pass by her. Logan will have made enough for it to be spared and it's the least you can do.Â
Not everyone is as lucky as you to have someone help them navigate a new life.Â
Logan grabs his jacket, wiping blood off from under his nose and heading towards you. You know heâll want a drink before you go, he always does. Before he can say anything someoneâs shouting the name he uses in the cage. âHey, Wolverine! I want my fucking money back.â
The big man heâd knocked down earlier takes a step towards him. His friend tries to hold him back, but thereâs no stopping him. Heâs already had his ass kicked once, what makes him think this is going to be any different?
âNot your money anymore, bub.â Logan scoffs and turns back towards you. You just want to leave now. You donât want to stay for a drink or go get something to eat. You feel the eyes on you again, but when you turn to find them thereâs no one there but the girl.Â
And sheâs not looking at you. Her eyes are wide and staring at something else. âBehind you!â She screeches, and both you and Logan whirl around to find the man barreling towards him with a knife outstretched.Â
Logan moves so quickly that you stumble back slightly. He grabs the guy's arm, twisting his wrist until the knife drops to the ground. He shoves him back against the wall, claws out and pinning him there.
âShit,â you whisper, glancing around as the few patrons of the bar stare in horror at Logan. The people counting his money stop and tuck it back into the cash box. You clench your eyes shut in irritation, heâs not gonna be getting paid tonight, thatâs for sure.Â
Thereâs a strange noise behind you, like someone cocking a gun. You turn around slowly, gasping when you see the bartender pointing the barrel of his shotgun at your chest. Heâs not aiming it at Logan, heâs aiming it at you. Like he somehow knows thatâs the only way to get him to back off.Â
Itâs not like he was going to kill the guy, besides, he came at him with a knife first. Whatâs the difference if Loganâs a mutant? Heâs defending himself. Why does no one understand that?
âGet out of my bar,â the old man warns lowly, taking a step closer to you. Logan turns around and finally spots whatâs going on.Â
âPay me and Iâll be on my way.â You know youâd be able to heal from the shotgun blast, but you donât exactly want to go through it.Â
The old man laughs and shakes his head. âYouâre not getting paid, buddy. Get the fuck out of my bar before I put a hole in your little girlfriend.â
Your eyes narrow in disbelief. You debate with yourself for a moment, if this is smart or not. But the guyâs being a prick and youâre sick of people treating mutants like theyâre less than nothing. You flick your wrist and the shotgun goes flying out of his hand.Â
You glance over at the cashbox and it comes floating towards you, landing easily in your outstretched palm. âBe thankful Iâm not blowing a hole in you,â you warn, glaring at the cowering man. You walk forward and he stumbles back and you try not to focus on the sick feeling of satisfaction it brings you. You grab the tip jar and shove it towards the girl at the end of the bar. âGood luck, kid.â
Logan releases the man from the before, taking a step towards you. You feel the hairs on the back of your neck stand up and rush towards the exit of the bar. You need to just get the fuck out of this town as quickly as possible, youâre not safe here anymore.Â
Logan seems to agree with you. He gets into the truck and doesnât turn back to the motel. Instead, he turns onto the highway while you keep your eyes peeled on the trees outside your window. Thereâs someone out there, still following you.Â
âSomethingâs wrong with the suspension,â you glance up from where youâd been working on breaking open the cashbox and frown. Loganâs glaring down at the steering wheel, it seems like heâs struggling to get it to turn properly.Â
âWhat?â
He scoffs and glares at you, âHow should I know?â He pulls over to the side of the road, opens his door, and lets in a rush of cool air and snow. You toss the cashbox to the back of the trailer and follow after him.Â
He goes to where heâs pulling his motorcycle and you feel like you notice an extra bump under the tarp. âWhatâs that?â You take a step towards it just as Logan pulls it back. You have to bite back a laugh when you see the girl from last night curled up next to his motorcycle.Â
She gives you both guilty looks and slowly sits up. âIâm sorry,â Logan offers her a hand and she gets out of the trailer. He grabs her bag and drops it at her feet. âI didnât have anywhere else to go.â
âFind a different ride,â he growls, already heading back to the truck. You open your mouth, prepared to argue, but you canât force her on him. As much as you might want to help her. Sheâs better off away from the two of you.
âYouâre just gonna leave me here?â She snaps at him, a little attitude finally showing through.Â
âYep!â He gets in the truck and you know he wants to drive off immediately but he has to wait for you. You shoot her an apologetic look as you follow after him, slipping into the seat beside him. He starts the engine, driving off slowly, eyes drifting towards the rearview mirror.Â
You bite your tongue, trying not to point out how cruel he is leaving her on a snowy highway in the middle of nowhere. He glances over at you, âWhat?â He snaps.Â
You shake your head and shrug. âNothing.â Youâve barely finished speaking before heâs slamming on his brakes.Â
âGod dammit,â he mutters, running a hand over the stubble on his jaw. You canât help the grin on your face, reaching over to open your door. It doesnât take long for the girl to catch on, scooping up her bag and chasing after you.Â
âYouâre such a softie,â you tease him.Â
âShut the hell up.â
Rogue is nice, if not a little odd. She claims to be a mutant too but doesnât want to give specifics on her abilities. You donât want to push her but you are curious about the gloves she wears. âWhat kind of name is Wolverine?â She asks, spotting Loganâs tags.Â
He glances over at her and smiles slightly, âWhat kind of a name is Rogue?â
She goes to say something but you throw your arm out, holding her back as you shout, âLogan, watch out!â He tries to hit his brakes in time but the treeâs already coming down. The truck slams into it and itâs like time slows down, only for a moment.Â
You can feel the impact of your body against the windshield, the glass dragging along your scalp and skin. Itâs like a million razors each slicing into you. And then, youâre flying through the air, head snapping so hard against the ground you canât see anything.Â
You hear something happening around you, a roar that doesnât sound human echoing through the air. Thereâs the sound of metal crunching and someone is screaming in the distance but you canât see. Itâs not like a total void of darkness, thereâs just nothing.Â
You feel the blood slowly leaking down the back of your skull and something lands harshly against your head. You donât think much time has passed. When your eyes finally open, however, youâre not lying on the pavement.Â
The world around you is foreign. It smells like a hospital but itâs not like any youâve ever seen. X-rays are hanging on the wall and paperwork is scattered on a desk near the bed youâre lying on.Â
Your mind is blank for a moment. Slowly turning back on while you process the sudden change of scenery. You donât even remember closing your eyes, you donât know when your vision came back to you or how long youâve been here.Â
The terror sets in quickly. You throw the blankets off your legs, staring down at the pajamas you wear in disgust. Someone had changed you. Theyâd run tests and done X-rays on you and you donât remember a second of it.Â
You rip the needle out of your arm, tossing it to the floor and running towards the door. Your feet slip on the metal floors as you run but youâre afraid to stop. Everything around you looks more and more like a lab.Â
Did someone from the bar call some government agency? Youâve heard horror stories from your father about the tests the military has run on mutants. Youâre starting to worry thatâs what's happening to you.Â
But you doubt the military would make it so easy for you to escape. This has to be something else. Youâd heard other voices when youâd been lying on the ground. People who had been trying to help. Could that be who took you?
âYou caught on quicker than your friend.â You nearly fall flat on your face, flipping around to see who spoke. But no oneâs there. Youâre completely alone. âIâm just grateful you didnât choke out one of my associates.â itâs coming from beside you now.Â
Itâs all around you, the voice floating through the walls until you think he might be in your mind. âMuch faster than your friend,â he sounds gleeful and it makes you even more anxious. âIâm a telepath, darling, nothing to fear. If youâd just take that elevator and come up to meet me.â
Youâd have to be an idiot to actually listen to the voices in your head. But you donât see another way out of here. So, reluctantly, you follow the floating voiceâs instructions and slip inside the elevator.Â
When the door opens up again you donât have a chance to step inside before someoneâs pushing you back. Logan stands in front of you, hands clamped tightly around your shoulders while he looks you over.Â
You sink into his arms, hugging him tightly to you. Youâd been terrified you were all alone here. Itâs more than a relief to see him again. âYouâre okay?â He asks, pulling back to look at you one last time.Â
You nod, throat too dry to try and form a coherent sentence. You glance over his shoulders brows furrowed at the people awkwardly watching you reunite. Thereâs a man in a wheelchair smiling at you, âAh, glad you could make it.â The floating voice, of course. âLogan here was quite worried about you.â
Logan turns to glare at the man and you offer a slight smile. There is something comforting about him. Youâre not exactly threatened by an old guy in a wheelchair. The redhead behind him, however, is bugging you. Something about the way sheâs looking at Logan doesnât sit right with you.Â
âWelcome to my school for the exceptionally gifted,â something about the way he says that makes you tilt your head in confusion. You donât know what he means until thereâs a puff of smoke behind him and some kid is walking by with their hair on fire like itâs nothing.Â
Mutants. Itâs an entire school for mutants. You think you could pass out again.Â
âItâs the best place we could have ended up, Logan. This is amazing.â Youâve been going back and forth for an hour. He wonât see reason. He keeps saying you need to leave. That you donât know these people and it could all be one big trap.Â
You donât understand him, why heâs so desperate to get away from people like the both of you. Youâre rejected in every other corner of society. You could have something real here.Â
It hits you at once. Thatâs the problem. Heâs not ready for something real. Heâs not used to it because heâs never had it before. At least you could pretend at a sense of normalcy living at home. Itâs an entirely new concept to him, sticking to one place for so long.Â
âWe donât know these people,â he hisses, leaning over the bed to argue with you. You narrow your eyes but your conversation is cut off by a knock on the door. You sigh, walking away from him and swinging the door open.Â
Jean is on the other side, a surprised look on her face when she sees you. âOh, Iâm sorry. I was trying to drop these off to Logan.â You glance down at the towels in your hand and give her a strained smile. Thatâs a flimsy excuse if youâve ever seen one. âI must have the wrong room.â
You step to the side, opening the door wider so she can see him. He doesnât even look at her, too busy angrily unmaking the bed. âNo, you have the right one.â You hold your hands out expectantly, âI can just take those for you.â
The look on her face is priceless and finally causes a real smile to grow on your lips. She wordlessly hands you the towels, looking disappointed. You donât know if it's because of what she was trying to do, or because she couldnât do it.Â
Before she leaves you call out a quick, âTell Scott I said thank you again. Wouldnât be here without him, after all.â Her shoulders tense and she rushes back down the hall. Whatever little crush or interest she has with Logan is going to need to be dealt with on her own.Â
Youâve got enough shit going on without having to worry about her too. You shake your head and slam the door shut, tossing the towels on the desk. Logan sits on the bed, watching you with an odd look.Â
âWhat was that about?â
âSheâs into you,â you tell him bluntly, waiting for his reaction. He doesnât even blink, just glances between the towels and you before shrugging.Â
âNot interested.â You donât want to admit that you feel any relief. There was never any real doubt. But itâs still nice to be reassured.Â
You slip into bed beside him, taking his hand and forcing him to meet your gaze. âI know that this isnât what either of us was expecting, but this is good, Logan. We donât have to worry about pretending weâre something weâre not. We donât have to worry about my dad or anyone finding us.â
He doesnât look entirely convinced. But he lets out a heavy sigh and drags you closer to him. He tucks your head under his chin, placing a brief kiss against your forehead. âIf you want to stay, weâll stay. But Iâm not putting on that fucking costume.â
You laugh a little, peering up at him with a grin, âDeal.âÂ
Thereâs a place for you here, even if there isnât in the rest of the world. You can be safe here, you donât have to worry anymore. You donât have to fear the eyes on the back of your head because they canât get you here.Â
end. â I do not own the characters or the comics/movies Wolverine/X-Men, but this writing is my own all rights reserved Š not-neverland06 2024. do not copy, repost, translate & recommend elsewhere.
General Taglist: @evasmlp âĄÂ
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@mrs-ephemeral @wolviesgirl @allilium @insomniachox âĄÂ
Asked for part two: @enchantedbutterflies @strawberrylore @ittoscumdump @enananawoah @wotcherboo
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@likeficsinthewnd âĄÂ
How About a Nuke?
Part I / Part II / Part III / Part IV / Part V / Part VI
Cooper Howard x fem!reader, the ghoul x fem!reader A/N: I always appreciate your thoughts and comments on these chapters. I donât reply to every comment, mainly because Iâm cackling like an evil witch over your suffering Summary: Time split in two. Both sides of the same coin and neither of you can get your shit together.
âItâs been a pleasure working with you,â you held your hand out and shook Tomâs, though your experience with him was anything but wonderful. If you didnât need the exposure youâd never do another movie for him again. Cooper came up behind you and wrapped an arm around your waist.Â
âIâm sorry, Iâm just going to steal her for a minute.â
Tom waved his hand and went to track down another drink. You sank into Cooperâs arms, deflating with relief. âThank you,â you whispered.Â
He chuckled and the sound had shivers going down your spine. âNo problem at all, sweetheart.â He swept you out of the room and into one of the hallways of whoeverâs house you were at. Youâd stopped paying attention after about the fifth party youâd been dragged to. Working with Cooper had been a dream come true, but you hadnât realized just how much socializing youâd have to do.Â
He let go of you and you immediately missed the feeling of his arm around you. He provided you with a sense of protection youâd been severely lacking since you started acting. He was a shield against the greed of Hollywood.Â
You let yourself lean against the wall and he watched you with a keen eye, smiling slightly at how tired you looked. âDoing alright?â
You nodded before looking up and giving him a small smile. âJust need a little break, thatâs all.â
He rested against the wall opposite to you, tugging out a cigarette and offering you one. You shook your head and tried rolling out your shoulders to get rid of some of the lingering tension. He had a knowing look on his face when he spoke.Â
âIt was like that for me too when I first started out. No one really prepares you for how much ass you have to kiss in this industry.â
You let out a short laugh and rolled your eyes, âMy lips are chapped at this point. Iâve never had to stroke so many menâs egos in one night.âÂ
âI hope you donât feel like you have to do the same with me.â
You glanced up at Cooper and shook your head, âNo, youâre not like that.â
Fuck him, you thought. You didnât have to do what he said. You got up, prepared to duck your way through the fighting again, when you heard the unmistakable high pitched ringing of a bullet flying by and then you were launching forward.Â
âFuck!â Your hand flew to your arm, trying to stop the blood from oozing out of the graze on your arm. He hadnât left a hole but a good chunk of your bicep was splattered on the ground. Â
âNow, what did I tell you sweetheart?â You turned around to stare shocked at Cooper. He pointed to the ground with his gun. âGo ahead and sit your ass back down.â The warmth of the blood seeped out from between your fingers and your other hand clenched in rage.Â
âWhy donât you just go fuck yourself, Cooper?â He might not have had eyebrows anymore but you could still make out the way his muscles shifted in anger. Despite it all, you could still read him like a book.Â
You werenât going to let him think he could just continue to treat you however the hell he wanted. âWhat did you just say to me?â His voice was low, a dangerous tone that days before you might not have messed with. But you didnât care. Heâd shot you twice at this point, you couldnât bring yourself to give a shit about catering to his feelings right now.Â
Your hand reached towards the gun tucked in your pants. His eyes tracked the movement but he made no move to stop you. Slowly, you wrapped your fingers around the handle and you pointed the barrel right at him. He chuckled but there was no humor in the sound. âYouâre playing a dangerous game, sweetheart.â
âIf youâre gonna shoot me, go ahead and do it. But our partnership ends here.â You hoped he couldnât see the way your hand trembled or how the gun shook. You werenât sure, when the moment came, if you could actually kill him. Despite it all, you still saw the man you used to love in that face.Â
And despite what heâd told you about that man, you couldnât let yourself believe him. You couldnât afford to lose the last good memory you had. Youâre caught off guard when he clicks the hammer again and tucks the gun back in his holster.Â
Your eyes are wide with surprise but he just raises his hands in surrender. âGo ahead and leave, Iâm never one to linger where Iâm unwanted.â Well, thatâs a fucking lie. Still, you decide to take him at his word and slowly you tuck the gun away again.Â
âGoodbye, Cooper.â
He smirks, âGoodbye, darling.â
You should have known better. Youâve barely turned around before a rope is looped around your waist and dragging you to the ground and back towards him.Â
âThanks for having me over, Barb. Are you sure thereâs nothing I can do to help?â She shook her head and placed your cup of coffee on the table.Â
âWhat kind of hostess would I be if I asked that of you?â She gave you a kind smile and left to dart back into the kitchen. You fiddled with the table mat in front of you, feeling incredibly uncomfortable. Cooper came back in from the yard and waved you forward.Â
âCome on, sheâll be a while longer, itâs nicer out here.â You left your cup on the table and followed him outside. He led you to the pool, motioning for you to take a seat on one of the chairs. You appreciated how hospitable he and his wife were but you were feeling incredibly out of place in his home.Â
Cooper laughed and gave you a funny look. âYou donât look very comfortable over there.â
You shrugged and gave him a sheepish smile. âAm I that obvious?â
He shook his head, âNot to anyone else, maybe.â
âBut you know me a bit better than anyone else,â you finished the thought for him. He was right. He knew you better than anyone in Hollywood did. And you enjoyed it and loved how close you had gotten over the course of filming the movie. But you also hated it a little bit.
Cooper Howard had always been an on-screen crush for you and now face-to-face with him, the infatuation has gotten even worse. It made you feel awful every time Barb invited you over to their house. You were a guest in her home and halfway to being in love with her husband.
But who could blame you? He was kind and sophisticated, and he wasnât one of those Hollywood assholes who looked down on anybody who was deemed as below him.Â
And maybe you were mistaking his generosity for something else, but you swear he had a certain look in his eyes every time he stared at you.Â
You almost hoped that he didnât. You wanted this to be different from the other men you worked with. They always claimed they were in love with you. It didnât take long for them to realize that it was only lust and not love.Â
You wanted him to be different.Â
Maybe youâre a fool for thinking that there was still Prince Charmingâs around. But you would hold onto that hope for as long as you could.
âI fucking hate you. You know that?â
âWhy donât you shut your mouth, huh, sweetheart?â You hissed in pain as Cooper squeezed the rag around your arm even tighter. He grinned at the noise and tied the makeshift bandage off.Â
âYou should have just left me there.â He stood up and yanked your hands towards him. He used some of the rope to tie you up, leading you around on a leash like you were a damn dog.Â
âCouldnât do that.â
âYeah, why the hell not?â He finally looked at you, an angry set to his eyes. But he didnât respond, he just yanked on the rope and dragged you forward. You complied, only because of the way your shoulder pulsed with pain.
You wished he had left you in Filly instead of dragging you along behind him. He had already dealt with Ma June and gotten whatever the hell it is that he puffs on. You had no idea why he even needed you anymore.Â
You werenât of any use to him and itâs not like thereâs some big bounty on your head. Why keep you around? Why not give you both what you want and just let you go?
Maybe it was cruelty. Maybe the only thing he got out of it, was knowing that he was torturing you. That seemed like enough for a man like him.Â
You stared at the back of his head and felt hate burning in your gut. He was right. Cooper was gone, you couldnât even see him anymore. You didnât want to see him anymore.Â
âWeâll get along just fine if you keep that attitude of yours in check.â If you could still pull out your gun, youâd take your chance. Youâd shoot him dead if you could. Instead all you could do was longingly stare at it from where it was tucked in your bag.Â
He returned from where heâd been keeping watch, confident no one was going to bother them tonight. She sat with her back to him, the rope tied around the post of the old warehouse they were camped out in. Sheâd refused to talk to him since theyâd made camp for the night and it was slowly driving him insane.Â
Heâd made a decision when he went back for her. She belonged to him now, she wasnât leaving anytime soon. He didnât understand why she had to make all of this so hard.
He knelt down in front of her and she averted her eyes to a corner of the room behind him. He reached for the bandage on her arm and she jerked back, she looked at him at least, even if it was to glare. Heâd take progress where he could get it.Â
âYou want to let it fester and rot then be my guest.â She stared at him a moment longer before sighing and offering him her arm. He unwrapped the bandage and threw it to the ground. It was sopping wet with her blood and she winced at the noise it made when it landed, some blood sprayed off and hit her face. Heâd meant to just graze her, done a bit more damage than expected.Â
There was a large divot where muscle should be, he could nearly see bone poking through on the deepest bit. It was a wonder she hadnât been complaining the whole time they were walking. Heâs not sure how sheâs bearing the pain so well.Â
He needs to cauterize it before she loses more blood. He takes a glance at her face, the way her jaw is set, the cold look in her eyes everytime he so much as breathes. Thereâs no way this will go over very well, but thereâs no point in investing any time in her if she just dies of rot tomorrow.Â
He starts a fire in the area with the least visibility, heâs trying not to tempt any stragglers near them. Itâs not like he can rely on her to watch over him in the night, heâs sure if he handed her a knife sheâd slit his throat right now.Â
He pulls his machete out and lets the dull edge heat up before bringing it back over to her. Her eyes widen but she still doesnât say anything. And when he presses the edge into her wound and her skin sizzles and roasts she still doesnât utter a word.Â
But she bites down on something in her mouth so hard blood leaks out of the corner of her lips. Sheâs being real tempting right now, all bloodied and cooked, smelling like a nice meal. Maybe he should chop her up into little pieces, sheâll keep him fed for a while, thatâs for sure.Â
She starts panting, breathing heavy through her nose and he knows heâs kept this on here longer than necessary. Still, he canât help himself. He presses the blade a little deeper, lets it hit some uninjured skin just to see if she says anything. She only clenches her eyes shut and turns away from him.Â
Disappointed by the lack of response he backs off. âYouâre welcome,â he grouses.Â
âFuck. Off.â She spits the words out at him, droplets of blood flying off her lips as she does.Â
The way her eyes flare with anger shouldnât be as attractive as it is. But she has always been particularly pretty when sheâs pissed off at him. He licks the blood off his lips and grins. âSo she can talk.â
Her eyes well up with tears and he sits back, enjoying the sight of her breaking down. Sheâs caused enough trouble for him the past few days, sheâs just getting a taste of her own medicine.Â
Cooper swoops in, taking her hand and leading her around the dance floor. She grins up at him, eyes shining under the lights of the ballroom, once again heâs struck by just how gorgeous she is. âI should warn you,â she leans in like sheâs sharing a horrible secret and whispers, âIâm a terrible dancer.â
He takes her in, the pretty dress sheâs wearing and how well it suits her and shakes his head. âJust let me lead.â
Her laugh makes his heart race and all he wants to do is run away with her. Get her out of here and just have her all for his own, if only for a few hours. âDonât say I didnât warn you, mister.â The music picks up and he takes her through the steps he had to practice a dozen different times for a multitude of occasions, one including his wedding.Â
âDo you know how pretty you look tonight?â
She gives him a coy smile and shrugs. âIâve been told by a few men, but I think Iâd actually believe it if you said it.â
He leans down and kisses her. He shouldnât, he really shouldnât, but he canât help himself. Sheâs as soft as heâd imagined, shy and confused, but she doesnât stop him. He feels her lean in and he slowly parts from her. âYou look beautiful.â She pulls away from him, eyes wide and lips parted from shock. He sees the shine on her lips, the slight way theyâve swelled up and he wants to lean in again but heâs interrupted.Â
âCut!â Sam walks over to them, a big grin on his face and claps Cooper on the shoulder. âI love the improv, Coop, weâre gonna do this again. Keep the kiss.â Cooper nods and waits for him to walk off before he turns back to her.Â
He offers her an apologetic smile. âI hope that didnât bother you, darling. It felt right for the scene.â Not a complete lie, it did work better than whatever the writers had chosen for the next few minutes of dialogue. But truly, he was just fulfilling his own selfish desires.Â
She seems to blink herself out of some sort of daze. She shakes her head and steps away from him, he lets his hands fall down to his sides, already missing the feeling of her. âNo, not at all. Good call, Coop.â His name on her lips sounds like music to his ears, especially that breathy way she says it when sheâs nervous.Â
He sighs and rubs a hand down his face. What the fuck is he doing? He shouldnât have kissed her. He definitely shouldnât have pushed to get her this role, either, knowing she was going to be his love interest. He knows sheâs been trying to step back from these types of things. But he also knows that sheâd take any role he offered her.Â
He shouldnât be taking advantage of that, but he canât help himself. He finds that he wants to be near her, always. He wants to listen to her ramble and have her there to read scripts with, he just wants her around him constantly. It used to be purely platonic. The respectful relationship between a mentor and mentee. But sheâd figured out how to navigate this world on her own.Â
Soon, he worried she wouldnât need him anymore. Or want him around. He takes every opportunity he can to have her on set and itâs only recently that heâs noticed the physical attraction. He takes his hand off his face and glances to the side.Â
Barb is there, but she hadnât been watching. Sheâs busy talking to one of the PAâs. He takes in a deep breath and gets back on his mark. If he messes up a few times, just so he can kiss her again, who could blame him?
âCat got your tongue?â
You have a dozen different remarks, but youâre too drained to go through this routine again. You can tell heâs getting angrier the longer you ignore him. Good! Heâs shot you twice, you didnât exactly owe him the satisfaction of your conversation.Â
Your arm is throbbing, a dull pain that you can feel deep in your bones. You keep shifting, trying to ease some of the pressure off of it, but with the bindings around your wrist itâs nearly impossible. You want to cry, scream, fight. You want to do anything, but heâs bound you and you feel like a beaten down dog.Â
Your tailsâ been cropped and youâre just going through endless rounds of fighting until youâre useless enough to be put down. You donât see a way out of this. And even if there was, even if you did escape, youâd still have the rest of the Wastelands to get through.Â
He stands up and moves next to you. He throws himself down with a thud and digs around in your bag. âNo rations left, huh?â You close your eyes and let your head thunk back against the pole youâve been leashed to. He grabs his own bag and pulls out his foul smelling jerky.Â
He dangles it under your nose, slapping your cheeks with it a few times until you open up your eyes. He grins, yellowed teeth making you nauseous, âThere are those pretty eyes. Come on, open up sweetheart, ass jerky ainât gonna eat itself.â
Your nose scrunches up in disgust and you turn your head away. âHey!â He snaps and you jump. âIâm being generous here, now, open your damn mouth.â
âWhyâd you shoot me?â You spit it out, rushed and near incoherent. Itâs a desperate attempt to distract him so you donât have to eat what is confirmed human meat. That could have been you today, had you not woken up before that creepy old couple got to you.Â
He takes a moment, contemplating his answer. âThought you were the raider.â
âWhy?â
He rolled his eyes and the jerky, thankfully, dropped back into his lap. âI heard someone in pain. You donât have a great track record, sweetheart, I figured someone had gotten you again.â
Indignant anger bubbled up in your gut and you moved as far away from him as you possibly could. Though, it was only a few inches. âYou didnât think I could defend myself. It wasnât even a consideration?âÂ
You knew how to shoot a gun, and you knew how to fight back. But shouldnât there be a bit of grace considering a few days ago the entire world wasnât fucking insane? You think youâve handled yourself exceptionally well considering everything thatâs been thrown at you.Â
Thereâs no hesitation in his answer, âNo.â
âWell,â you spit the words out like you want to wound him with them, âyou were wrong.â
To your surprise he smiles. It seems genuine enough, appreciative even, but you canât trust him anymore. You never should have trusted him to begin with apparently. âThat I was.â You wished you could smack the smug look off his face. He was acting like he had anything to do with your fighting or surviving that fight. Despite what happened with the raiders, you were capable of protecting yourself.
That woman was already bleeding out and on the ground before he had interrupted. âWhat the fuck do you want from me, Cooper?â His hand twitched towards his gun and he glared at you. You rolled your eyes and sighed, âOh grow the fuck up, I said your name, shoot me or get over it. Iâm not gonna play this game with you anymore. Iâm not gonna let you walk all over me and Iâm not going to continue to cater to your temper.â
He wasnât angry, though, he was grinning. Making a noise that bordered on a laugh. âSomeone found their fight again, it seems.â
Your jaw clenched and you kicked at him. He grunted at the impact and you felt a little bit of satisfaction flare up, âAnswer the question.â
He shook his head and shrugged. âI donât know. I donât particularly like you, but I canât seem to let you go either.â
âWell,â you scoffed, âyou sure know how to make a girl swoon, donât you.â Your wrists itched within the confines of their bindings and you pictured strangling him with the very rope he had you tied up with.Â
âYou wanted the truth.â
âDid you enjoy yourself?âÂ
Cooper wrapped his arms around Barbâs waist, he leaned in to kiss her but she dodged away from him. He let out a heavy sigh, already dreading this conversation, and backed up. âWhat are you talking about?â
She whirled around on him and glared, âDo not pretend you donât know what Iâm talking about.â He shook his head and walked over to the bar cart, pouring himself a glass of something that would hopefully calm him enough for another fight. Theyâd been fighting a lot lately.Â
He knew what this one was going to be about. Her, but theyâd been having issues long before this attraction started up. She just wanted something to use against him, to make him the bad guy. She just couldnât ever handle hearing the truth about herself.Â
But he wasnât going to make it easy for her. He was sick of rolling over and just letting her have what she wanted for the sake of peace. âGive me something to work with here, Barb.â
She scoffed and shook her head muttering, âUnbelievable,â under her breath. âShoving your tongue down her throat, thatâs what Iâm talking about!â
Cooper winced, âLower your voice, Janey is-â
âDo not,â she held up a hand to silence him. âDo not bring our daughter into this. Answer the damn question.â
He let out a humorless laugh and held up his hands. âI don't know what you want. Youâve never had a problem with this before. Itâs a part of my fucking job, Barb, what the hell do you want?â
She shook her head and pinched the bridge of her nose. âJust admit it, Coop, sheâs different. We both know it, this isnât some scripted kiss. You wanted it!â Of course he did. At least she actually liked him, appreciated him, made him feel something other than shame and frustration. She didnât manipulate him at every opportunity like Barb did.Â
âLower your goddamn voice!â He snapped, heat rushing to his cheeks in anger. âI am married to you, you are my wife, not her. I love you, okay, Barb. I donât know where this is coming from, or why youâre choosing now to bring this up. But Iâve had a long day and I donât want us to go to bed angry.â
She shook her head again and paced the length of the living room. âCooper, I canât-â
The phone ringing interrupted her. She looked at it like she knew who was calling and waved her hand to dismiss him. âWe will continue this,â he walked towards the phone and took it off the hook. âWhat?â
He regretted how short he sounded when he heard her on the other line. She sounded a little confused and like she was sorry for bugging him. âCoop? Sorry, is this a bad time?â He glanced over his shoulder at Barb but she wasnât looking at him anymore.Â
He let out a deep sigh and tried to reign in his temper, âNo, sweetheart, whatâs up?âÂ
âOh, well a few of us figured weâd go out and get some drinks. I wanted to see if you wanted to join us, or if you could give me a ride?â
He let the phone droop to his cheek and glanced at Barb again. She was already making her way towards the bedroom. âMake your choice, Cooper,â she called over her shoulder.Â
She piped up on the other end, âCoop?â
He glanced down at the phone again before he shook his head and brought it back up to his ear. âYeah, Iâll be right over, honey. Let me just grab my jacket.â
âYou remember that first movie we did together?â He leaned back against the wall, arm propped up on his knee and gazing out at the Wasteland. âPassed a poster for it in this old movie theater a week ago.â He glanced over at her and nudged her shoulder. âMust have been a sign, huh?â
Her voice was a hoarse croak that he nearly didnât understand. âDid you ever love me?â The question came out of nowhere, catching him slightly off guard.
Anger flared through him. He turned to glare at her but she wouldnât look at him. She had the audacity to ask something that fucking stupid and then she couldnât even look at him?
âHey,â she sighed and turned to face him. ââCourse I did. Why the hell would you say that?â
She snorted and shook her head. âSeriously?â He nodded and she sighed. âYou told me you didnât. All I was, was a hole to fill.â
He ran a hand down his face and shrugged. âI donât know what you want me to tell you sweetheart.â
âHow about the truth,â she gave him a sharp look and he laughed. She was real cute when she was trying to be threatening.Â
âAlright. You want some advice? Everyone in the Wastelands lies. Canât trust a thing anyone says.â
She nodded but he should know better than to think she would give up so easy. âSo, I canât believe you now then?â She must have thought she was real clever. He was getting a little sick of this back and forth. She needed to learn to just listen to him, sheâd get a lot farther a lot faster that way.Â
âConsider this the one exception.âÂ
âAnd here I thought you didnât like to drink, sweetheart.â She let out a drunken giggle and slumped further against Cooper. He glanced at her and laughed. Her eyes were barely open and she kept pointing at something but refused to tell him what it was she was talking about. âKeys?â
She lifted her purse but it dropped to the ground before he could grab it from her. Cooper sighed and propped her against her door, he leaned down to grab the bag and dug around until he found the keys. He noticed the little key chain he got her dangling from them and smiled.Â
A mini revolver, to commemorate their first movie together. It was cute that she had kept it, he hadnât really expected her too. Then again, heâs kept every ridiculous gag gift sheâs gotten him. âAlright, letâs get you to bed.â She threw an uncoordinated arm over his shoulder and let her feet drag while he tried to corral her into her apartment.Â
âWork with me, honey, come on.â She finally lifted her feet enough to stumble into her bedroom. He closed the door and heard a loud thud. âShit,â he ran into her room but sheâd only tossed her shoes across the room.Â
âI donât drink,â she slurred, eyes red and cheeks puffy.Â
He chuckled and nodded his head. He hoped to get her lucid enough just long enough to get her tucked into bed. He was tired and going to get drinks had been a mistake. He wasnât in the mood to try and entertain a group of people with tales of his glamorous Hollywood experience. Honestly, heâd gone just to talk to her, but sheâd been in more of a mood to party than he had expected.Â
âDonât trust anyone.â He grabbed the sleeves of her jacket, helping her out of it and trying not to laugh at how much she struggled with them. âJust you,â she hummed, giving him a smile even though her eyes were closed and she was a second away from passing out.
âThatâs real sweet, why donât you get in bed?â She nodded and threw herself down against the pillows. Cooper sighed and got up to get her trash can out of the bathroom, dropping it by the side of her bed in case she needed it.Â
He glanced down at her, taking in the serene expression she held when she slept. It was so different to the usual way she kept herself guarded, she seemed so vulnerable in moments like these. He brushed the hair off her face and turned the light off. It made him feel good to know that she felt safe with him.Â
He could never be with her the way that he wanted to, but at the very least he could protect her from the people who would just take what he wanted.Â
âI donât think I can do this on my own,â she whispered. She shifted again, tugging at the bindings once more. Annoyed at her constant fidgeting he reached over and loosened them slightly. His fingers lingered on the reddened marks on her wrist, he pressed lightly on them and she shivered.Â
He let her go and sat back against the post. âI know.â
âI stupidly thought I would find something in Filly. I think I was trying to prove something to myself, but I canât do this. I need help, but Iâm not gonna let you treat me like some pet you didnât want.âÂ
He sighed and she turned to look at him. When he really took her in, actually paid attention to her, he could see how tired she was. That sort of bone deep tired that you only get after a lot of bad days. Heâs sure thatâs what this was, itâs how it was for him when he first started out on his own.Â
He didnât have anyone to help him or guide him, he figured it out on his own. It made him smarter, stronger, turned him into somebody that no one was going to fuck with. She was a lot different than him, though.Â
âAlright.â
âYouâre going to help me,â she held out her hands and he understood the gesture for what it was. A test, to see if he was true to his word, if you could actually believe him.Â
He grinned and yanked her closer, reveling in the way she winced at the ropes burning the open wounds. âIâve had a taste of you now, sweetheart, I wonât be letting you go anytime soon.â She doesnât flinch when he pulls out his knife, not even when he presses it against the tender skin of her wrist.
Thereâs trust in her eyes, a hesitant trust, but it was there. He slices through the knot of rope and wraps the rest of it up to put back in his bag. She lets out a sigh of relief and rubs at the irritated patches of skin. âI really did love you, you know?â
Heâs sick of this. Heâs sick of how sad she sounds, how tired. Itâs barely been a week and sheâs already starting to give up. He's already made the decision to keep her around, heâs not one to go back on his word. But sheâs making it real hard to not just knock her out and shut her up. âYeah, yeah,â he muttered, âso did I.â
She scoffed, âNo. You didnât, not like I did.â
His hand clenches at his side in frustration. Whatâs it gonna take to drill this into her head? He grabs her by the chin and yanks her forward, the leather of his glove smushing her lips together. âI loved you. You donât get to doubt that and you donât get to doubt me.â
Heâs darting forward before she can shove him back. Her hands hang limply between them and she gasps in surprise when he presses their lips together. Itâs not altogether pleasant, her lips cracked and bloodied and his have long since turned to leather.Â
But that familiar passion he once held for her sparks up and he shoves forward. She whimpers and lets herself fall back, hands grabbing at his jacket and tugging him closer. He used to treat her gently, savor their time together like theyâd never have another chance. It always felt like that, they were one moment away from losing each other. He supposes heâd been right, their time was short.Â
Who they were now were two different people to who theyâd been. He bites down on her lip hard enough to draw blood and pulls back. Sheâs staring up at him, shocked and flustered. He canât tell if she wants to kiss him again or slap him. He doesnât give her a chance to choose, he licks her blood off his lips and drops her to the ground.
She groans as her head slams against the floor, sand and dust billowing out from under her. âYou should get some rest. Weâve got a long walk tomorrow.â He leaves her there in the dirt, lets her linger in the feeling of his rejection. He rubs at his lips and savors the taste of her blood on his tongue.Â
end. â I do not own the characters or the game/show Fallout, but this writing is my own all rights reserved Š not-neverland06 2024. do not copy, repost, translate & recommend elsewhere.
Youâre gonna make me blush âĽď¸
One More Spring
One-shot
Tagging: @dumblittlebunbun bc youâd commented on a previous slasher post
Bo Sinclair x fem!reader A/N: This was a strange little Drabble I came up with when I was experimenting with a different writing style. Summary: You only have one wish, to make it to one more spring in Ambrose. You know that the women donât last long, used and tossed aside, you donât have big hopes. Just one last prayer.
You could always tell what kind of day it would be by how the door closed. Maybe it was because youâd grown up with strict parents, but you could read a mood based off their footsteps.Â
For now, you felt comfortable and remained lounged on your crappy lawn chair, trying to get some sun back on your legs after winter. The screen door closed lightly behind Bo as his heavy boots made their way to you.Â
You didnât bother lifting your sunglasses as you felt him hovering over you. âWhatâre you doing?â His voice was gruff and he sounded like he was panting.Â
âTrying to get some color back.â
You could hear him scoff and glanced to the side to see him stealing a swig from your beer. âDonât have better things to be doing?â
âLike what?â You snarked, rolling over and huffing when his eyes immediately went to your ass. Probably a good thing you chose a skimpy pair of bottoms, he was always more agreeable when he was horny. âPlaying housewife?â
He chuckled under his breath, kneeling down beside you and flicking your sunglasses up. âYeah, maybe.â
You rolled your eyes and swatted his hands away. You propped your head up on your arms and glared at him. âIâll put on an apron for you later, for now, buzz off.â
He shook his head and stood up. âDonât know where all this attitude came from.â You yelped as his hand came down on your ass. He laughed loudly, walking away much too smug for your liking. âBetter not be a damn thing under that apron later!â He shouted as he went back into the house.Â
You looked up to tell him off and finally caught a glimpse of his coveralls. Blood coated the bottom of his pants and you shrank back into your chair. You put your head back down on your arms, closing your eyes and ignoring the way your stomach twinged in anxiety.Â
As requested, youâd made dinner in an apron and nothing else. Bo had subsequently banished Vincent from the kitchen. Youâd felt bad when youâd woken up in the morning, you hadnât gotten a chance to slip him any food. Youâd passed out pretty much the second Bo was done with you.Â
Your eyes darted to the bloody coveralls on your bathroom floor. You sighed, legs aching as you got off the bed. You collected his dirtied uniform and the laundry basket and made your way downstairs.Â
You got started on the laundry, kicking the old washing machine a few times to get it going. It had been on its last leg for a decade, it was a matter of months before it finally conked out. You threw the clothes in, fingers snagging on a lacy number at the bottom.Â
You frowned, tugging it out and holding it up to the light. Youâd never seen this before. It certainly hadnât come from your bag. âYou like it?â
You jumped, whirling around with the shirt clutched to your chest. âJesus, Bo, you scared me.â
He chuckled, face still slightly mussed from sleep. He was only in a white t-shirt and pajama pants, rare to see him in anything other than working clothes. âSnagged that off a tourist yesterday, thought youâd look good in it.â
I thought you would like it.Â
I know youâve got a few shirts like that in your closet.
You always look pretty in this color, baby.
Youâd heard it all a thousand different ways. The same sentence over and over and over again. You were haunted by the women of Ambrose. The ones who came before you, whoâd tried and failed to play house with him. The ones who were yet to come.Â
And the woman who would inevitably replace you when you messed up for the final time.Â
Your nails dug into the lace, feeling it give beneath them as you smiled at Bo. âI love it, thank you.â
He hugged you, lips lingering against your forehead before he wandered off to start some coffee. You turned around, eyes going back to the shirt. Youâd burn it if you could. Rip it apart and scream, instead you tossed it in the wash with the rest of your clothes. You let the lid slam shut, the noise jarring you out of your stupor.Â
You forced on a happy face and walked into the kitchen. Vincent was lingering near the entrance and you offered him a gentle smile. âSorry about dinner,â you whispered as you passed him. He shook his head and took a seat at the table.Â
You grabbed the ingredients you needed, rustling through Boâs ancient cookbook for the French toast recipe youâd found the other day. One day, youâd run out, you wouldnât have any more delicacies to surprise them both with.Â
Bo would tire of the same repetitive food. The same face every morning. The same sounds and movements in the bedroom. Youâd become used up, lose the new shine everyone loved on their toys.Â
You clenched the spatula in your hand, gritting your teeth as you cooked some eggs for the both of them. You brought it over to the table, scooping it onto their plates, Bo got the bigger serving. Bo always got what he wanted.
Your mind flashed to the garage, the straps there waiting for you. âHey!â
You jumped, pan nearly dropping out of your hands as you stared at the dropped eggs on his lap. âSorry, Iâm sorry.â You rushed to the counter, grabbing a towel and kneeling down, frantically trying to get them off his pants.Â
A calloused hand landed on your head, you jumped and looked up at Bo. Your heart raced, expecting malice or a sneer that meant the last nail had fallen and your time was up. Instead he was smiling gently down at you, hand smoothing the hair from your face. âJust a spill, darlinâ, get the bacon âfore it burns.â
You backed away instantly, taking the egg filled rag with you as you went back to the stove. You flipped the bacon, turning off the burner and risking a glance over your shoulder at Bo.Â
He was sipping his coffee peacefully, not a worry in the world. But you could see how tightly Vincent had his fork gripped, the way it shook slightly as he placed it back on his plate. Seems you werenât the only one whoâd thought your time was up.Â
When would it happen?
When spring returned and the birds started chirping their early morning song again?
You wouldnât mind if that was when it ended. If you got to make it to another birthday, that would be even better. Youâd like to experience another holiday, or Halloween. Perhaps that was too much to ask for.Â
Youâd settle for just seeing the buds return to the trees in Ambrose once more. Pink blooming in the absence of death. That would be lovely.Â
Alright, youâll take that.Â
Make it through one more spring and you can happily let go.Â
You could hear the women screaming as you walked down the stairs of the house. See glimpses of who they used to be. Hair clips you knew werenât yours, underwear buried in the back of drawers that youâd never touched. Necklaces and jewelry that didnât match yours.Â
You could hear their voices, disorienting and panicked as you hung the laundry on the line. Felt like the birds echoed their mourning cries in their melody.Â
You saw the red lines around your wrist as you pulled off the dry sheets. You tried not to look at them too much. Bo liked to touch them, rub his fingers along your wrist and admire them. He thought it brought you closer, linked you together somehow.Â
You hated looking at them. Hated the sight of the worn skin. All it reminded you of was the time below. Your pictures that were tacked above the others.Â
You heard a scream further away from the house, bloodcurdling and echoing through the air of Ambrose. It would never make it out. Never travel past the forest bordering the ghost town. You wondered if it was a product of your own fractured psyche or another masterpiece in the works.Â
Your question was answered when you sat on your knees in the bathroom that night, trying to scrub the crimson out of Boâs coveralls.Â
You liked your time with Vincent. You like the candles he kept scattered around his studio, nails dug into them to help him keep time. Heâd sit you down on the couch and would position you like a doll. Youâd let him, mind going numb as you lost time for as long as he wanted to draw you.Â
You knew he liked you the most out of the other girls. You learned sign language for him, communicating with him when Bo got sick of both of you. He enjoyed your face the most. It wasnât model perfect or the type of beauty people wrote songs about.Â
He liked the normalcy of it, the slightly blandness. Heâd told you once, on a nice night, that it was your eyes that gave you life. Not the color of them, but the light behind them.Â
You wondered if he would draw you again when Bo snubbed them out.Â
You folded Boâs clothes, tucking them neatly into his drawers and tossing the basket back into the hall. You moved towards the bed, straightening the sheets and tucking them in tight. You liked it tight, he hated it.Â
Your one act of rebellion.Â
It honestly wasnât hard to fall into this role with Bo. Youâd known if youâd wanted to survive the only chance you had was to make him happy. In a way it was peaceful here. It was quiet and you never had to worry about anything.
You cleaned the house, cooked the food, were the perfect housewife and heâd be content and so would you. He let you have your own time, surprising you with journals to write in. Or heâd dig through tourists bags and bring you back books heâd thought youâd like.Â
You didnât get to go into the city with him, doubted you ever would, but you were okay with this.Â
You picked up his watch, opening up his night tableâs drawer to tuck it away. Your eyes landed on a bright splash of red and your fingers froze from where they hovered above the handle. You glanced over your shoulder, heart thrumming.Â
You turned back towards the drawer and carefully slid the Polaroid out.Â
A picture, a woman with gorgeous red hair splayed along her pillow. She looked beautiful.Â
Or she would.Â
If it wasnât for the gash across the neck, so deep it showed you the inside of her throat. Crimson dripped from the wound, pooling around her and onto the bed below her.Â
Your eyes darted to the bed to your left, hands wrinkling the pristinely kept picture. Without thinking your hand dove further into the drawer, probing, digging, searching for something.Â
You didnât know what until you hissed, hand jerking back as blood blistered out of the gash on your finger. You placed the picture back, popping your finger into your mouth and licking up the metallic taste of your blood.Â
You used your other hand to wrap around the handle of the blade, tugging out the large kitchen knife and staring down at it blankly.Â
One more spring.
You put the knife back, straightening out his drawer and leaving the haunted bedroom to clean your wound.Â
You woke to the sound of birds chirping. To your left was the window, pink buds blooming across the branch of the tree across from the house. Above you was Bo, straddling your waist, a knife held tightly in his hand.Â
âWell,â you wrapped a hand around his, calmly pulling the knife down to your throat. Youâd thought youâd be more upset. Fight, beg, plead for one last winter, or just another day. One last good day. But you were tired, youâd been slipping since summer. Bits and pieces of yourself floating along the wind, joining the cacophony of lost women. âArenât you going to do it?â
Bo stared down at you, his brows furrowed. The whites of his eyes were red and you knew heâs been struggling with this for a while. You werenât sure how long heâd been sitting above you, but you knew it had been before youâd woken.Â
You were thankful, at least, that he had let you see the spring morning before he did this.Â
He yanked his hand out of yours, âCrazy bitch,â he muttered. He scoffed and shook his head, jumping off of you. Your head lolled to the left, you opened up the window, inhaling the fresh smell of new life.Â
You made it another winter and another spring. Your face was plastered along Vincentâs wall. Statues of you adorned Ambrose but you didnât occupy a single one of them.Â
On the outside MISSING flyers with your face faded and fell from lamp posts. Your name was forgotten from the minds of those whoâd been alive to mourn you. You became another statistic, another lost soul. An old news story that would be used in classrooms.Â
What happened to her?
Is she still alive?
Was she the first?
Will we ever know?
No. They wouldnât. You were the girl on the paper trampled beneath frantic feet as they rushed to work. Tossed aside in the garbage when they were done with the morning paper. To the rest of them, you were forgotten.Â
To Ambrose, you were their muse. Inspiration behind their every move.Â
Every morning youâd wake up to a blade pressed against your throat. And every morning Bo would leap away from you and shake his head. Heâd never do it, you knew that now, and it provided you with a careless freedom that freed you from the shackles youâd placed upon yourself.Â
You didnât spread your legs and let him take what he wanted anymore. You didnât submit under his temper, you fought back, raised your voice and threw glass bottles right back at him. You didnât let him bend Vincent under his thumb or scream at him just because he could.Â
You pushed, every day, that invisible line that separated you from the other ghosts in town. Yet, somehow, you never breached it, only managed to extend it.Â
âI want to go with you.â
Bo froze, after a moment he fixed his cap and grabbed his keys from the tray. He didnât look at you as he spoke, âWell, come on then.â
You followed him through the front door, hopping in the truck when he opened it up to you. The engine rumbled, vibrating the seat below you and his hand slid from the keys to your thigh. He squeezed, as if reminding himself you were there, he was really doing this.Â
You could hardly believe it yourself.Â
Bo rounded the bend from the gas station and you felt your heart racing. A hummingbird flitting through your chest, frantically trying to break from the cage of your ribs. He pulled through the old campground, the one youâd been on before your car had mysteriously broken down.Â
You couldnât remember who it was you were with. What their names were.
Youâre halfway certain one of them had been a lover. His name lost to the past.Â
Bo pulls onto the highway and you brace yourself. Youâre not sure for what. Perhaps for him to change his mind, a blade buried in your gut. To start pouring blood down the front of your shirt. Or maybe the car will wreck, divine intervention deciding that neither of you get another day.Â
Nothing happens. Bo slams his hand against the truckâs stereo and rock crackles through the speakers. His hand returns to your thigh and he hums along to the music. After a moment you relax, rolling the window down and letting the breeze cool you down.Â
He makes it to the city, smaller than where you used to live, but a mammoth compared to Ambrose. You buy groceries, marveling over products youâd forgotten even existed. You finally manage to buy the tampons you like instead of getting lucky that another woman has them in her bag.Â
You harass him into letting you go to a secondhand store, buying a shirt for you. Yours and yours alone. Itâs simple, long sleeved and white, nothing special, but it means everything to you. When you make it back to Ambrose, the familiar stifling air and aged walls, you bury the shirt in your dresser.Â
Youâll never wear it and never part with it. This shirt will never be anyone elseâs but yours. Youâll never allow another woman to get her hands on it. Even when youâre gone youâll protect it.Â
âWhat do you think?â
Bo shrugged, taking another swig of his beer as his eyes roved over the journal in his hand. You sat on the edge of your seat, eagerly watching him read. Perhaps a bit too eagerly, he sensed it, pouncing on the chance to make you vulnerable.Â
âYou know I donât read much, baby.â
You rolled your eyes and moved to sit next to him. âIâm aware, itâs real sad, Bo. Now,â you nudged his shoulder with your own. âWhat do you think?â
He chuckled, marking the page and tossing it on the coffee table. His legs spread and you took the invitation, slotting yourself in his lap and wrapping your arms around his shoulders. He grinned up at you, âIt was good. Real fuckinâ good.â
You smiled, cheeks puffing out with the force of it. âReally?â
He nodded his head, âMhm.â He leaned forward, taking you with him, and placed his beer on the table. You reached behind yourself, blindly readjusting it onto a coaster. He rolled his eyes, but you saw the fondness in them.Â
His hands moved down your back, squeezing your ass before they landed on your thighs. Rough calluses spread along smooth skin and goosebumps prickled under his touch. You donât know why you let him read the strange disjointed novel youâd been writing.Â
Maybe because you knew no one would ever see it. Maybe you wanted some part of yourself permanently embedded into his brain. Either way, you enjoyed the way his face changed as he took it in. The expressions shifting with each new sentence.Â
âYou got a fucked up little mind, you know that?â
You hummed, nodding your head and leaning forward to slot your lips against his own. It was his own fault you were like this. Heâd bent you, broke you down, used you until you were a shadow of the woman who used to exist within your body.Â
Maybe he had won.Â
There was a part of you, a spirit, floating somewhere beneath his garage, that had once belonged to you.Â
You ground your hips down against his, biting down on his lip until copper flooded your mouth. He didnât get angry, just gripped your hair and moved you both to the cushions. He groaned into your open mouth, pinning your body below his and manipulating you how he wanted.Â
Then again, maybe youâd ruined him too.Â
You shouldnât be alive. You shouldnât still have a throat to drag air down, but here you were. Shoving against him and forcing him to submit to your whims. You werenât the only one whoâd changed, and you both knew it.Â
end. â I do not own the characters or the movie House of Wax (2005), but this writing is my own all rights reserved Š not-neverland06 2024. do not copy, repost, translate & recommend elsewhere.
I feel like I have to get over this mindset of I need likes. Aside from my Fallout stuff, the majority of what I write is for smaller fandoms. I feel like I'm getting in my own head and ruining my love for writing by basing my writings worth off of how many likes and how much attention I'm getting.
Belle ll 21 II she/her ll Current Obsession: Charles-RDR2 ll Requests CLOSED Masterlist ll Nameless blogs = blocked ll Ao3 ll
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