“Fuckin’ gym isnae giei’ me a free month even though ah have tae drive tae practically the other side o’ the country tae get a decent pump in.”
“Mate, I can’t understand you when you get all worked up,” Gaz sighs on the other end of the phone, probably pinching the bridge of his nose. A lot of their conversations end up that way, one of them quickly losing patience with the other until the call abruptly ends.
Johnny drops his gym bag in the back and slams the car door shut, rounding to the other side to get in on the driver’s side.
“Ah said, they aren’y refunding me fer the month even though the other location is on the other side o’ town. That’s a half hour back ‘n forth,” he gripes. The call switches to bluetooth a couple seconds after starting the car, Gaz’s exasperated voice coming from the speaker instead of his cell.
“Don’t you already get a discount?”
“That’s jus’ fer bein’ a vet. This is completely different. It’s gonna be closed fer a month fer renovations. Ah cannae do this fer a whole month.”
“Hey, I know where you live. Aren’t there other gyms around that you could go to instead?”
“Are ye out o’ yer fuckin’ mind, Gaz? Ah’m no’ payin’ ten quid fer a fuckin’ day pass when ah already pay out the nose fer a membership.”
“No need to get mad at me, mate, I’m just giving you suggestions.”
“Well, keep them tae yerself if they’re all that bad.”
“Okay, this has been a great chat. I hope you blow a tire on the way there and try calling me for help so I can ignore it.”
The call ends with a loud beep and Johnny barks out a laugh as he reverses out of his spot, looping out of the lot and onto the main road.
He takes the highway because most of the slush and snow has long been cleaned off, though his wipers pump back and forth furiously to keep the snow flurries from sticking to the windshield. That already sets the tone for his evening. He nearly gets in an accident twice on the way there, everyone losing their ability to drive the second the weather is even slightly bad.
He should just be lucky his gym even has another branch. They could’ve left him high and dry for the month, forced him to go to one the other gyms in his neighborhood that don’t offer the same range of weights and veteran’s discount.
Worse, he could’ve been left with no choice but to use Gaz’s guest pass to his exorbitantly overpriced luxury gym downtown. Even the thought makes Johnny shudder. It could always be worse.
It’s so much more than just the drive that he hates about the other location. Like the first time he came here months ago when an appointment on the other side of town made him think it would be more convenient to pop in rather than heading back home for his workout, the parking lot is packed when he arrives, and he has to circle the lot twice before a spot frees up.
The gym is similarly packed when Johnny walks in, and his mood darkens as he scans the weight section for a free bench. None in sight. Just meathead after meathead lining the far wall, huffing and puffing with each rep, dumbbells scattered around.
Headphones slipped on and music loud enough to make his ears ring, he heads to the treadmills instead. Better to just start his workout like usual and hope for the best.
The air stinks of sweat and hormones, alpha pheromones wafting through the gym and leaving not a corner untouched. It’s one of the reasons he prefers the location closer to his place—convenience aside, his location is mainly frequented by betas and omegas, the odd alpha not having much of an impact on the overall vibe.
It’s not that he doesn’t have plenty of alpha friends (Gaz being just one of them), it’s just that sometimes he likes being the biggest, meanest thing in the room. Keeps him in line. Keeps him from being the stupid shit he is ninety-nine percent of the time, as Gaz would say. He likes to be the only one posturing.
So he doesn’t relish being forced to work out with a million carbon copies of himself. It’s nothing Johnny isn’t used to at least—a decade in the military and a lifetime of contact sport before that had been enough of an education in coexisting with other alphas—but it leaves him on edge, muscles bunching up until his shoulders are nearly up to his ears.
Running loosens him up. Distracts him from the urge to sink his teeth into something tender and shake until it bleeds.
A brisk walk to a light jog to a full on sprint. Tongue suctioned to the roof of his mouth, sharpened canines throbbing. The most natural state in the world—legs pumping under him faster and faster, the faint memory of bare feet on a cold forest floor turning over loose soil with every stride. The steady pound of his feet against the ground rumbling through him.
It’s a pale imitation of the real deal, but the taste of salt and rust on the back of his tongue keep him grounded. The beast in his chest rumbles its approval.
When a bench finally frees up, Johnny has to dash across the gym when he sees another alpha nearby eyeing his spot. He reaches the bench a few seconds before the other man though, slinging his sweat-drenched towel across the seat to claim it as his. The alpha hovers for a tense second, face screwed up in anger and nostrils flared like he might put up a fight for it.
Do it, Johnny almost growls, teeth itching. Try it and see what happens.
Lucky for both of them that the other alpha knows when to cut his losses. He shoulder checks another alpha as he stomps back to the leg press machine and nearly starts a whole other fight, but that’s none of Johnny’s business.
He cringes when he finally looks down at the bench only to find someone’s back outlined in sweat. Entitled shitheads at this gym can’t even be bothered to clean up after themselves.
The noxious miasma of alpha stench would make his eyes water if he weren’t so used to it. Pungent and sharp, like gargling brine.
A month can’t go by quick enough.
He leaves feeling worse than when he came in. Shoulders tight with tension and irritation crackling through him. Doesn’t even bother throwing a halfhearted see you later to the front desk workers on his way out. The height of rudeness. Not even rude so much as just not him; Johnny likes to talk, he likes to be friendly with the staff. It speaks to the anger riding high in his blood that he can’t even pretend.
To make it worse, his car is covered in snow when he makes it back, forcing him to spend an extra five minutes cleaning the shit off before he can finally leave.
It’s untenable. He can mind his ego for a paycheck, but on his own time his patience curls up into a ball in his chest and goes to sleep. It’s not a question of if he’ll lose his temper but when. Inevitable. His pugnacity has always been his downfall; his Achilles’ heel. Always cutting himself down on a sharp tooth.
The rosary beads dangling from the rearview window sway with the car when he takes a tight turn.
“Ah ken,” Johnny mumbles to himself, silver cross glinting under the stoplight. “Ah can do a month. Ah can keep it together.”
word count: 10.6k
summary: love, you know. you, simon knows.
The first time Simon ever met you, he had the aching feeling that he knew you already.
No, not the sense of deja vu you get in snippets throughout your life. He felt the strange sense that he had known you all his life and had done something to wrong you somehow. He's four. Four-year-olds should not know that feeling. Especially not the sense that somehow, he had broken your heart or betrayed you. He's never met you before — that much, he's certain. He'd know. You're his age, so it's not like this feeling can be from knowing you as an infant. He doesn't remember that far back.
You wave at him, grinning as you pull him off with his brother to hang out as your parents talk to his mom, and you show him what it means to play.
When he leaves later, you ask him if you're friends.
He gives you a blank stare.
You end up in his class later that year, his next-door neighbour and companion, walking home with him from primary school, asking him if he understood anything in class. You're not as bright as he is, Simon thinks. You struggle a little more with certain concepts, and you argue with the teachers over ways to do certain things. A contradiction of everything, he thinks. He mulls over what you are and what you are not. How do you feel simultaneously like a fifty-year-old and a five-year-old at the same time?
He tugs on you sometimes to calm you down.
"Stop it."
"But it's—"
He gives you a look and you huff.
Simon likes sticking by your place, but he also doesn't enjoy it.
When he goes home, dad beats him because he was with you again.
Can' have them findin' out abou' what I do. y' hear me?
The purple is hard to hide around you. You pry too much. You ask too many questions. You tug Tommy around too much and Tommy talks too much. You don't need to know what it's like at home for him. You ask too many questions about why he's wearing a turtleneck when it's already twenty-two degrees outside. You tug at it, offering one of your shirts, but he can't. You don't need to know. You can't know. You shouldn't know. For some reason.
He wants to hide it from you for some reason.
You seem to know anyway, blinking at Simon curiously as you push back his sleeve, staring at the purple.
"You should report him, you know?"
"Ma wouldn't like that."
"So you'd rather be beat? Is it not just a fear factor?"
You don't speak like you're from around there either. You have a mixed accent. Like you've been in an amalgamation of countries and grew up everywhere at once. You don't feel like you're from Manchester. You had moved, sure, but you're young. You seem to be a constant dichotomy between everything and nothing. What does it mean to exist to you? You stare off into nothing the same way his ma does. But time travel doesn't exist or whatever. It's impossible to be sent back in time. All of that is just science fiction.
Pondering. Is that the word?
"What are y' looking at?"
"I'm thinking." You hum, blinking back to life. "That cloud looks like a rabbit."
"No. Looks like a duck."
"Well, now that it's moved." You huff. "That one's a heart."
"That one looks like a dog."
"I don't see it."
"The four legs?"
"Hm."
"'kay, well, that one's a worm."
"See that."
"mhm."
Dad is taken away at one point. Simon returns home to police at his door, hauling his drunken dad out as another officer comforts his mom, and he leads Tommy inside.
"You Simon?"
"Yes ma'am."
"This Tommy?"
"Mhm."
"You won't need to worry about that man anymore."
"Dad." Simon says. "Dad."
"You won't need to worry about him hitting you anymore."
"He makes all the money. Where are we t' go?"
He spots your parents with his ma, and he wonders where you are.
"They said they'll take you all in." The woman tells him.
Your place isn't big enough for all of them.
Yet, when he's brought home to your family, the guest room is set up, yet he finds himself in your room when he can't sleep, staring at you quietly in the dark, watching as you rub your eyes tiredly and scooch over to make space for him.
He still fits in your bed at this point in time.
"Does that make us siblings?" You whisper, getting yourself comfortable as you tangle limbs with him.
Simon wants to say yes. He does. But there's something else he wants, he supposes. He pauses.
"Maybe."
Room for maybe not. Maybe yes.
Maybe it's a cruel joke that he failed to fall asleep with his mother yet knocked right out with you. He's not so lucky as to be able to do it, and he understands that he's a guest so he shouldn't get too comfortable with the host, but you seem to abandon all care and treat him as though you really were siblings. You share everything with him, and he doesn't get why it hurts when you do.
The maybe was a maybe yes to you, maybe.
The maybe was a no to him. It was maybe not.
There's something in his chest that twists uncomfortably when you treat him like a sibling, abandoning all care for it, and he understands that maybe it's what his mother felt when she had been with his father. He doesn't know how long he'll be able to squeeze here with you. Maybe he'll eventually grow to be too big. He knows he will. He's not supposed to be sleeping with you. He sees it in the way your parents shake the both of you awake in the morning with all the concern for you.
It's almost as if he shouldn't be friends with you at all.
Yet, you don't give him the ability to choose, telling your parents that it didn't matter because Simon was like a brother to you.
The concept of siblings should not hurt Simon as much as it does.
He nods along, and you lace your fingers with him and Tommy, telling your parents you're thrilled that you can finally have the brothers you've always wanted.
Your parents let it go and his mom apologizes for the case, but your parents assure her that it's all you and none him.
Simon keeps his fingers laced with you all the way until the two of you get to the classroom.
You don't mind the teasing from the kids, and in turn, Simon doesn't seem to either.
That's how you spend the rest of primary school, tangled limbs with Simon, tugging and dragging him around with you to different things, and he learns to grow comfortable in your presence. The strange sense that he's done something wrong eventually fizzes into nothing that he worries about. The certainty you have in your friendship keeps Simon afloat even when his family eventually moves into a flat nearby.
You hang out at his place after classes, doing homework with him, munching on snacks you bring from the local supermarket on your way back from classes, humming and chewing on the chips as you do homework.
You struggle less than Simon now.
It's like you know.
The strange feeling that you know everything yet nothing lingers despite the guilt leaving. You blink at him quietly and sleep over occasionally, humming quietly as you lay on the mattress on the ground, staring up at nothing.
You do not go through puberty the same way Simon does.
Simon hits a growth spurt in the early years of secondary school — bed suddenly too small, skin stretching out at the alarming pace he was gaining height, and you hold back laughter when he hits his head in the morning and you laugh from the air mattress. He grumbles as he heads off to wash up, and when he returns, you only smile at him like you know something and he doesn't.
He finds you stare at him with a lot more pride than you used to. It's almost like you're his mother staring at him grow up, and it makes him uncomfortable.
You still sleep in the same room as him because you don't seem to think of him as a threat of any kind.
The girls at school start noticing him as well — whispering happening around him of how he's grown so much and how he's "oh suck a looker" because of his height. You've always told him he looked real pretty. "Blond lashes are rare" you'd told him. "makes you look real pretty, Si". He had flushed red at your compliment, but only because it had been you. He had found that it would only be you. Everything you did, intentional or not, had caused more than enough flustered stumbling from him.
He supposes it is just the curse of a teen in love.
You squeeze his bicep when you pass him in between periods, waving bye to him as you're off to the classes you chose and he didn't.
It's in the periods where you're not by him that the girls like to step up to him and giggle, asking if he's free or if he's all alone.
He wonders if he should lie sometimes.
A no warranted a "well would you want to? what about me?" and a yes warranted a "oh surely you jest" so truly, Simon did not have much a choice. He'd prefer it if you just branded him at that point.
Branded.
You brand him?
He understands that whatever he had felt for you in his earlier years was a sense of yearning, and whatever he felt for you in the current years was most likely closer to love than it is a schoolboy crush. He finds it unfair to do that to you, though. You had only ever seemed to see him as a sibling or something adjacent, cheeks warm and lips curled upwards as you head over to his place with him after classes, helping his mom out with cooking if she needed it, heading home only after dark and making sure that Simon walks you there.
He's utterly and completely a fool for you, he finds.
You could tell him to steal the stars in the sky and he'd somehow find a way.
He finds that it's just a curse, maybe. He's stuck with you and he enjoys it because you had met him at four and suddenly everything you ever did became a benefit to him. You knew what he would do good in, and you knew where he could find a job. Everything from start to finish was as if you had preordained it all. Like you had known before the moment the two of you first met. It was as though you knew everything and were intervening. Some kind of angel for him.
"How was class?"
"Was fine."
He's the one who drags you into the store this time, fishing out cash as he hands you a pack of cough drops, raising a brow when you raise a brow at him.
"You're gonna start coughing soon."
"I still have leftovers from last year."
"y'know tha's not the flavor you like."
You hold a hand over your chest, pretending to be moved as he passes by with a ruffle of your hair.
"Si, you do care!"
"Think I didn't?"
"Maybe."
He follows you home to your place tonight. His ma isn't home and Tommy wanted some alone time with his girlfriend, so he settles at your place. It isn't as though he has no other friends. He's hard to approach because of the deadpan look on his face at all times, but he knows others. You worry that he doesn't so to ease the worry, he has other friends. He thinks about it a little. He only seems to care for what you say. It's been a while since his ma's words have worked on him. Though, he still avoids getting in trouble. She doesn't deserve that, and you'd probably give him a hard time if he really did trouble her in any sort of way.
"How was class?"
"Was fine." He sighs, spreading out his books on the table as you scribble away with yours.
How your hand does not fall off from the writing drives Simon up the wall. Writing has never truly been his strong suit — he's much more fit for his part-time job at the butcher's or fixing your parents' old car when they ask him if he knows what to do with it. He's much better with his hands than he is with his mind at times, but it's never stopped you from just breaking everything down into simpler concepts for him.
"Why d'you do it?" He had asked you once.
"Why wouldn't I?" You left the second part of the sentence hanging in the air.
Simon wonders if he could dare to imagine that the second half of the sentence was an "i love you" the same way that he seemed to love you with.
Though, he'd never know.
You beg your parents to let you spend the night with Simon at the turn of the century, the agreement being that he'd spend the night with you, settling on the floor or your room on an air mattress that he most definitely does not fit in, offering him your bed that's too big for you alone when you're sure your parents are knocked out. He finds himself tangling limbs with you once more, staring down at you as you blink up at him under the sheets, blanket covering the two of you as you open a flashlight. He blinks as you stare at him.
"What?"
"Yer really pretty, Si." You hum. "Can I touch you?"
"Ya nasty—"
"Your face." You mumble. "You can say no."
"'s fine." He mumbles, letting your hands map his face gently as he hums, observing as you seem to memorize something. Patterns of his skin. Your eyes gentle from the flashlight as you press your forehead to his. "You look scared."
"I'll live." You whisper, voice shaking.
You fall asleep in his arms that night, and he wakes up to you tucked under his chin snoring.
He doesn't recover from it.
You suggest him to join a military boot camp over summer after secondary since he wasn't planning on university, tilting your head and shrugging when he asks why. Would suit him. Maybe he'd like it. Maybe. Maybe. Maybe. He doesn't need to pursue it. Besides, he doesn't have anything to do either.
"Thirteen weeks is a long time, angel."
"Angel? Well, then, maybe you should embrace what this angel's telling you to do."
He goes per your suggestion, and you send him off with his family and yours, grinning as he frowns at you at the doors with his duffle bag, blowing him a kiss as he fights the blush that snakes up his neck. When he emerges for one final look without his hair, you laugh and play with the new cut, humming quietly as you whisper that you'll be waiting for you after his three months.
He lets himself relax into your touch as your families stand to the side, and he whispers quietly asking you for a goodbye kiss as if he were off to war. He expects you to decline, but you press your lips to his forehead, humming as you lean back and admire the print that's been left behind from your chapstick, laugh on your lips as you reach to wipe it off with your thumb, too occupied with cleaning it off to notice the starstruck look on his face as he stares at you.
"Wait f'r me, won't you?"
"How could I not? As long as you send me off when you're back."
"'f course."
"Come back safe to me, Si. I'll miss you."
His body has muscle memory of everything. The boot camp is significantly easier than he thought it'd be. His muscles remember something he does not, maybe. He treks up and does stellar, ending up personally selected by his managing captain, asked if he ever thought about actually joining the military. He'd suit the SAS. He'd be a great addition to the team, even. He'd get all the military benefits and it doesn't seem like it'd be something that would warrant too much stress for him.
He doesn't know.
Despite his body's ability to survive in such harsh conditions, he finds that he doesn't really want to stay in that state of stress.
When he finishes, his captain hands him a number to call if he ever changes his mind, and he finds you in the crowd. He abandons all the military learning he's received in the last three months just to find himself in your arms once more. He barely cares that the friends he's made are whistling at him as he practically swallows you in his frame. You don't mind. He doesn't mind. It's not a problem.
"'m back."
"Welcome home." You laugh, running your hand through his hair as he buries his face into your shoulder.
"'m missed you."
"I missed you too, Si." You hum, peeking past his shoulder as you wave at his friend. "How was camp?"
"Y'wanna tell me why my body seemed to have no struggle with adaptin?"
You look to the side, whistling as he finally lets go of you, reaching over for his mom, humming as she welcomes him back home with Tommy.
"You have explainin' to do." He points at you, and your parents leave the two of you alone to start on dinner for Simon's return, leaving you in his room as you whistle and avoid his gaze, falling back into his bed with a huff and closing your eyes.
"How was bootcamp?"
"You knew. How did you know."
"I know everything, Si." You close your eyes. "Told you I was a fairy when we were kids."
"Yer less of a fairy and more of father time."
"Who knows. Maybe I'm just cursed with knowledge."
"A curse?"
"Or somethin'." You stare up at his ceiling. "How was bootcamp. Really."
"Offered a spot on the SAS."
"You wanna go?"
Simon turns to stare at you, taking a seat by the floor of the bed as he stares at you, and you turn to face him.
"Y' want me to?"
You stare at him, letting the water in your eyes speak for you.
"Oh, angel. don' cry." He whispers, hand reaching to brush the tears as he frowns. "I wasn' planning to."
"You can go." You mumble. "It's fine. I'm just scared."
"You? Scared?" He pinches your nose, humming quietly as you open your mouth to breathe.
"Yes. Me."
"'m not gonna go. I'll just meet you at uni."
"Simon Riley going to uni?"
"Got a problem with that, angel?" He lets go of your nose when the smile cracks at your face, and you roll over to laugh. "Think I'm too stupid for ya?"
"You wish." You hum. "You think I'd let you fall behind?"
"Never have." He hums, nudging you over as you roll to make space for him on the bed.
"So next cycle? Or are you gonna try somewhere else?"
"Might follow you halfway across the world. You'll fund me, won't ya?"
"Nah. Gonna make you pay rent at least." You swat at his arm playfully as he leans over you, humming as he stares down at you. "Glad your pretty face wasn't ruined."
"Think I'm pretty?"
"Just the lashes."
"Takes too much t' please you." He rolls his eyes, eyes landing on your stomach as your shirt rides up, humming.
"So, did they fuck a lot in the camp? Is it true? Did you guys have a barrack bunny?"
Simon flicks your forehead. "No bunny. yes fucking."
You hold your hands over your mouth, gasping. "tell me more."
"I didn't do anythin'."
"No way."
"Not losing my v-card to a bunch of men in the military."
"Don't know, Si. That sounds like a porno title. Virgin man gets gangbaned by five buff military men... or whatever it is the titles are formatted like."
"'m not even gon' ask how you know that."
You laugh, eyes crinkling as Simon stares.
"'s good to see you again."
"I missed you too." You hum. "I don't mind you going. Really."
"'s my decision to not." He pinches your cheek, glancing at the door as his mother calls for you both to go eat. "I promise."
"Send me to the airport tomorrow?"
"Of course."
You let Simon drive you around before driving you to the airport. You say your goodbyes to your parents at your place, thanking Simon with a grin and a squeeze of his bicep as he lifts all of your luggage into the back of the car. You gasp quietly at the fact that his muscles are harder than before, giving them a second squeeze as he rolls his eyes at you.
"You take that back!"
"Don't know what yer talkin' about."
You don't talk to him too much in the car, too preoccupied with staring out the window. Simon doesn't pry, used to the comfort of your silence when you need it. Besides, you're being sent off to somewhere where you'll be far from him. He wonders if that'll hurt him more or you. You're great, though. You promised you'd write to him, and he's more worried that somehow he will forget to write back to you and you will forget about his existence. You're too far away for comfort.
What if someone else lays eyes on you?
He helps you load the luggage, pulling it with him as you check for your passport, letting Simon put everything down for you, giving his forearm a gentle squeeze in thanks when you arrive with him at the gate. You let him wander around with you before you're supposed to board. He'll wring the final moments you have with him dry, he supposes.
You open your arms for him, squeezing him gently when his arms find themselves around your waist, squeezing you back.
"It's your turn to give me a goodbye kiss." You tap your cheek, tilting your head as you hum, and Simon mumbles under his breath, thumb brushing your bottom lip as he stares down at you for permission.
"You gonna kiss me properly? Real bold of you, Si."
"If you'd let me."
You wrap your arms around his neck, tilting your head as he brushes your bottom lip, staring, staring, staring before letting his lips brush yours gently, softly, and pulling away just as quick. Like a ghost of a kiss — lingering feelings that he can't quite pour out onto you yet because it wouldn't be fair.
"That alright?" He continues to stare at your lips, only snapping out of it when you notice boarding has started.
"More than alright." You reach up to give him a kiss on his cheek, humming as you take two steps back with your luggage. "I'll see you!"
"See you, then."
"Yer gonna let me study abroad without a boyfriend? How cruel of you, Si. Write to me!" You laugh, tugging your carry-on with you as you wave at him from the gate.
Simon stays to stare at you until you've disappeared down the corridor to the plane.
Then, his fingers find his lips where he had kissed you, and then the cheek that you had given him a kiss to.
Ah. He misses you already.
You write to him as promised. You send letters to him and he sends them back, sending you updates on how everyone has been, writing growing more and more illegible with the letters. He wonders if you're able to read everything he sends sometimes, but he eventually sends you a letter with the number slotted into his phone, and when you write to him that you'd be visiting on a certain date, you tell him to pick you up.
The first thing that Simon notices is that you've changed.
Not that you've ever been someone that he's found predictable, but you have changed beyond what Simon can remember from you.
"It's the air." You laugh.
He stares at you, uncertain if he really knows who you are anymore. Was he the one who was being left behind?
You mentioned that you'd never leave him behind.
"Y'sure changed."
"Cultural differences." You open your arms for him, tilting your head when he shakes his head at you.
"'m all smelly from work."
You frown at him.
"Maybe we both changed."
You spend the afternoon lodged at Simon's flat because you didn't want to go home. It's just a week or two, you tell him.
He hands you booze to drink, and you ask him how work has been.
"You still gonna join me?"
"I think I'm alright here."
He fears though, that by doing so, he's going to drift away from you.
"That's good." You grin at him. "If life ever gets too boring, come find me. I'm sure my friends would flip it if some guy who's like a hundred ninety two centimeters tall dropped by and called himself my best friend."
"You talk about me?"
"How could I not?" You tilt your head at him from the passenger seat, blinking slowly. "Si, did you forget about me when I'm gone? It's a little rude of you, you know?"
"I couldn't even if I was killed." He hums. "Your luggage's lighter."
"Mhm. Most of my stuff is with a friend who lives nearby." You grin. "Didn't want you to blow out your back for me."
"Couldn't do that if y' tried."
Simon wonders if there's something in the air when you come back to visit.
"You plan on stayin' there?"
"Maybe." You hum. "I quite like it."
"Leavin' me to fend on my own, huh?"
"It'd be unfair for either of us to do something all for the sake of the other. Your comfort comes before mine." You grin. "Get me a little something to eat?"
"Got dinner at 'ome." He hums. "Your favorite."
"What if it's changed?"
"You can't be sayin' that when you told me less than a month ago."
You laugh in the front seat, grinning.
"Dated yet, Si?"
"No." He hums. "This girl stops by the shop but I don' really like her like that."
"Mm." You tap your chin. "Broken no one in yet?"
Simon coughs at your choice of words, coughing as he catches his breath, your hand patting his back as you laugh.
"Bloody hell."
You have a shit-eating grin on your face when he catches a glance.
"Why? Y'been broken in yet?"
"Nope. Waiting for a certain someone to do the honors."
You laugh at the way he's red for the whole ride back.
Yet, he makes no real move on you back at his place. He hands you a glass of water and settles himself next to you on the couch, letting you show him the variety of items you've brought back to give him, grinning at him when he stares at the strange combination of things.
"Why'd you come back during such a shite time?"
"I wanted to spend the new year with you." You hum, blinking at the snow that's come with the weather.
"You didn't come back during summer."
"No." You close your eyes, throwing your head back. "I wanted to, but I decided not."
"Why."
You kick your legs over his, huffing as you grumble. "It was hard. Flying out the country's hard."
"Cuz of the thing, huh?"
"Yeah." You rest your head on his shoulder, staring out the window. "You got work these days?"
"Nah. Old guy's home with his family. Y' gonna go home?"
"No." You close your eyes. "Didn't tell mom n dad I'd be back."
"Yeah? Just me?"
"Just wanted to see you." You whisper, taking his hand and fiddling with his fingers.
"Y've gotten real handsy since ya left."
"Maybe I just missed you." You mumble. "It's lonely without you."
"Don't love y'er other friends?"
"Love you more." You whisper, finger smooth against his ring finger as you feel him tense up under you.
"Y'love me?"
"Si, I've known you since forever. Of course I do." You rest your hand on top of his, opening your eyes as you whisper.
"Oh, like that."
You don't breach the subject of love further than that, playing with Simon's fingers as he turns on the TV for a match, letting you get comfy with him under a blanket and eventually fall asleep. He stares down at you, voice tight in his throat as he rests his hand on your forearm, heart painful in his chest. Distance has given him no time to think if all he thinks of is you. But, it would be cruel to tell you of something that's long been his problem.
It is not your burden to bear.
It is not your portion to carry.
He rests his eyes as well, the two of you staying that way until late night, Simon first to rouse as he looks out the window.
It is dark outside.
You stir as he does, leaning back onto the couch to stretch out, and kick your legs out, and Simon holds your ankle to push it to the side. The snow creates the illusion of an empty street, and the black and white hurt each other in the lack of light, but you keep staring. It reminds Simon of when you were kids. The staring has since gotten better, but every now and then he catches you staring into nothing.
"Dinner?"
"Sounds good." You kick the blanket off of you, yawning as you follow him to the kitchen. "'m tired."
"Long flight."
"Mhm." You sit at the island, watching as Simon heats the food for you, staring at him as you lean on your palm. "Si, why did you never date?"
"Why should I?"
"Donno."
Simon takes out dinner from the microwave, placing it in front of you as he stares.
"Will y' ever tell me about the staring problem?"
"Probably not." You wiggle your hands comically as you grin.
"Don't do that again."
"So you hate me." You start at dinner anyway, thanking Simon as you chew on the food, scraping the plate in the end when you finish, grinning.
"How's Tommy?"
"Great. Getting engaged soon."
"Ooh! Did you help him pick a ring?"
"No. He went ring shoppin' with his girl." Simon hums.
"Wish you could show me."
"Get dinner with him sometime. I can arrange it. He comes over Friday nights."
"Can't I just grab dinner with him friday night then?"
"Next week?"
"Sure."
"I'll tell him."
"It's Christmas week." You hum. "Did you grab me anything?"
"No." He rolls his eyes. "Dinner wasn' enough?"
You pretend to think, grinning at him when he raises a brow.
"I'm kidding."
"Sure hope you are."
You wake up to a surprise on Christmas anyway, eyes glimmering when Simon serves you breakfast with a gift, kicking your legs as you gush to him about how he didn't need to. You give him a squeeze on his bicep as you ask him if you can unwrap it, pulling at the little ribbon and paper, grinning when you spot the headphones you've written to him about, bottom lip quivering as tears threaten to spill, and Simon rushes to brush them from your cheek, calling you a crybaby while he's at it.
"I should give something back to you."
"Yer back, hm? That's m' gift."
"But I like being with you too." You mumble, hand finding his as your thumb brushes his. "D'you want anything? Anything."
"Anything?"
"Anything."
Simon stares down at your lips, humming as he raises a brow.
"Truly?"
"Use my body or whatever. I trust you." Your voice quiets the more you speak. "I'm all yours."
"Tell me to stop whenever." Simon's thumb finds your bottom lip, brushing it as he presses his lips to yours — hungry, decades of holding back overflowing and spilling into you, hands gripping the counter til his knuckles turn white, tongue shoved down your throat and a hum in his as you pant once he pulls off of you, staring as your eyes haze over and your chest rises and falls, lips parted as you blink to come back to him, bottom lip glossy from his saliva as he brushes it once more. "y'still with me, angel?"
"Mhm." You hum. "You sure you didn't go around kissing others while I was gone?"
"On my life."
"Surprising." You reach up to cup his face, thumb brushing his bottom lip as you hum. "Only ever kissed me, hm? Only wanna kiss me?"
"Bloody hell, what did going to uni teach ya?"
You laugh, humming as you squeeze his face. "How to flirt, apparently. 's it working?"
"No."
The red of his ears betray him.
You're everything except the title, Simon finds. You barely bother hiding the fact that he's allowed to do whatever with you, lounging on his couch and sticking by him at every moment, barely bothering to hide your boredom with the TV and working your knuckles into his back instead. He doesn't need to look to know you've got a shit-eating grin on your face when he groans as you work out a knot in his back.
"Yer real tight, Si."
"Yer pickin' up my accent."
"Maybe it's cuz I love you." You dig your elbow into the muscle, earning a groan from his lips.
"At this point yer just messin' with me."
"Maybe." You hum, exhaling when the knot's released itself, and you collapse on his back, grumbling.
"Get off 'me."
"Don't call me heavy, big guy." You sigh, peeling yourself off of him anyway, falling back to the other arm of the couch.
"You got knots?"
"Don't think so. Sure you're not gonna get hard all pressed up on my ass, Si?"
"Said you were free use f'r the week."
"Didn't think you'd jump to fuck me like that." You settle on your stomach anyway, letting Simon run his hands along your back, oil warm on his hands as you settle with watching whatever's on the telly (it's a football game. you're not the biggest fan, but better than thinking about the fact that you're practically moaning and squirming under Simon. You can't run from the consequences of your actions forever).
Simon fights every bone in his body to not spill over and take things too far, jaw clenched as he brushes the knot from your shoulder, pushing his thumb into it as you whimper. He hears you bite your tongue, and fight back a moan, and it almost comforts him to know that you're not too far off either. Though, he doesn't mention anything when you swat at him to stop, rolling over to lay on your back, staring up at him through your lashes, humming as he stares down at you.
"Minx."
"Freak." You laugh, chest shaking as you grin, eyes crinkling as he presses his hands on your waist, thumb pressing down to your ribs, humming quietly.
"If I were a cut of meat—"
"What fuckin' nonsense are you askin' now?"
"Entertain me, won't you?"
"I wouldn't cut you up."
"You'd eat me raw?!"
"'m no cannibal, angel."
"Just say you won't fuck me."
You're pushing buttons, Simon finds. You're testing to see how much it'll take for him to crumble and snap in your hands. Your hand rubs at his bicep in the mornings when you pass him, cheek squished with his as you point while windowshopping, fingers laced with his as though you were really on a date, and Simon finds that it's hard to fight the red that ruins the pale of his skin, crackling between the cracks of his skin from the winter cold, forced to play it off as the fact that it is cold out. He gives your hand a gentle squeeze back when you ask him to enter a store, and he tugs you back when you're wandering off course.
"Did yer cough start this year?"
"Not yet." You hum. "Worried I'm gonna get you sick?"
"No. Worried you don't like the flavors where you are."
"You remember." You mumble, staring as he hands you the stick from the grocery bag.
"Hard to forget."
"Not when it's only mentioned in passing."
You take the stick anyway, unwrapping one and pressing it to your lips, sucking on it as you squeeze at his arm, puffer coat zipped all the way up as you head back to his place.
Simon doesn't snap the entire time that you're back for the week.
He knows you're trying to get him too, but he's probably held back more than you have over the years, so not much really moves him to do anything anymore. You can try all you want, but truly, you can't do all that much.
"Can I sleep with you tonight?"
Simon raises a brow from the island, blinking at you as you stare back at him.
"Not in the sex way. Just. Like when we were kids."
"You finally gonna tell me what all that staring you did as a kid meant?"
"Maybe." You place the dishes into the dishwasher, blinking slowly as you turn around to stare at Simon. "But I don't think you'd believe me."
"I'd argue against that. Can't tell me something insane."
"Oh, I'm sure." You mumble. "I'm sure you'd believe some made up war story from a world in the past."
"Is that what it was?"
"I don't know." You blink slowly, taking off the gloves and letting them dry as Simon stares. stares. stares.
Past your eyes and through your soul, like you're just a piece on display. Like he knows something you don't. He doesn't. Simon knows better than anyone that despite every single cell of his body crying for him to pour himself to devote to you, you would never accept it. You wouldn't. You wouldn't let him "throw his future away" all for the sake of you. Something stops you from letting him devote himself to him, and something stops you from just accepting that maybe Simon wants it and it isn't a side effect of being friends for so long.
There's a constant need to take care of him better than he takes care of you.
Simon finds it in the way you hand him a mug of water before bed, throwing the blanket over the two of you, flashlight resting between the two of you as you blink at him.
"You gon' tell me?"
"No." You hum. "But I'll tell you another secret if you tell me one. You first, though."
Simon doesn't keep secrets from you other than the fact that he loves you.
"I don' have any."
"None at all?"
"I tell you everything."
You blink at him from under the covers, tilting your head.
"Everything?"
Almost.
"Thinkin' 'bout signing up SAS." He whispers, voice cracking as he watches the grief crack past your eyes and your face drop. You don't mention anything, telling him it's fine as you collect yourself, swallowing everything back and smiling again.
"Yeah?"
"Thinkin' bout it."
"You gonna go? Really?" You whisper — scared. Simon knows you enough to be able to sense when you're scared. It's rare you even display such an honest emotion to him.
"Why don't you want me to?"
"No, it's just." You shake your head. "'m being paranoid. I'm just upset that I might not get to see you again."
"I'll see you between missions."
"I'm out of the country, Si." You mumble. "I can't visit all the time."
"I know." He mumbles. "but I've got to do sumthin 'n if not this, then I don' know what."
You rest your head against his chest, voice quiet as he runs his hand through your hair, pressing down to get you to relax for him.
"'m thinking about settling down permanently there."
Ah.
Simon seems to understand why you'd be so panicked at his enlistment. Truly, he wouldn't get to see you again, maybe. He'd be busy and if you start work, then you wouldn't get to see him at all. You can't write back to him if he's moving around, and his phone would most likely be off-limits in the service. Too little to do. Too little to hold on to. Maybe that is what you have feared.
"I'll tell you one more secret, then, Si." You mumble, hands finding his chest as you close your eyes.
"'s it, angel?"
"Tommy's gonna get married to her and then they're gonna have a boy." You close your eyes, and Simon feels you furrow your brows against his chest. "He's gonna be named Joseph. Joseph Riley. Sweet boy. Lovely, even."
"Why are you telling me this."
"Just." You whisper. "Just remember that."
You don't respond, going quiet for the rest of the trip, only giving him a hug at the airport and waving goodbye. You leave him your new address, smiling at him.
Simon doesn't know if he likes the silence he's left with when you're gone from his flat.
Yet, he's gone anyway, sending you letters that you can never quite send back, always too close or too far. He mails small things that remind him of you — tucks a photo of you into his helmet, stares up at the stars when it's night with a smoke between his fingers (that you'd scold him for) while the rest of the team joins him. He climbs up ranks — never stops writing to you. During the few times he has off, he returns to the empty flat and wonders how you're doing. You don't write back to him.
He wonders if you get his letters at all.
Yet, he can't stop to think. He can't stop. He just.
He becomes a Lieutenant.
When he's asked if he'd like someone to be at the ceremony, he briefly wonders if you'd fly over for him.
He doesn't ask you.
His feelings aren't yours to deal with.
Tommy and his mother help him pin it, but he'd wish that the hands promoting him to a higher position was you. It's to prove to you. It's to prove to you that he's fine and alive. Maybe it holds the same sentiment as when he writes to you. He's still alive, angel. He's still in one piece, even if you can't write back to him. He wonders if you still live there. Are his letters meeting a stone wall? Is it a brick wall that stands between the two of you? He'd break it down, but he doesn't want to risk the chances of you getting hurt in the crumble.
He returns home for Christmas one year, wondering if you'd be home. Tommy mentions sending you a wedding invite through Simon, and he stares. Really. Just stares at the wedding invitation. He doubts you'd answer. You feel like a ghost of his past. It's almost as if you had known that he'd never see you again when you had spent a winter with him. Like you knew. Like you wish he knew. Like when you pulled him under the blankets with a flashlight, you had known, maybe, that he'd be gone and you'd be gone.
When he sends the letter to the address you gave him, he almost worries that Tommy won't get a response back. (He slips an additional letter asking you if you'd like to be his plus one, but he doesn't have much faith that you'll respond to that one.)
Then, he's off and back to the military.
You meet him at Tommy's wedding.
You find him in the crowd, eyes lighting up as you sit next to him in the crowd, chattering excitedly about how you finally get to see him again. He listens to you talk. You've changed — as one does, and he has as well. Yet, he doesn't mind the change this time. You seem the same as before, sparkling eyes, only a little more mature. You look less like a kid and more like an adult now. You look pretty as you ever are.
"Missed you so much." You mumble. "So so much. Love reading your letters. Please never stop writing to me."
"You read em but won't send responses to my flat?"
"You didn't sell it?"
Simon shakes his head.
"Then I will. I'll write back to your flat." You mumble. "I just worry that your mailbox will overflow."
"Tommy takes care of it."
"Yeah?"
"Mhm."
"Alright." You grin. "You got a phone when you're off duty?"
He shakes his head.
"We'll stick to letters, then."
You sit with Simon at dinner. The wedding is nice. You're nice. Simon missed you, and he almost wants to ask if you've got a booking for somewhere because apparently you had tugged along with you a luggage when you first arrived and left it at the front for safekeeping. Maybe you'll ask him. It wouldn't be strange if you did. He has a day off, but you're more than welcome to stay as long as you want in his flat. He'll get you a copy of his key, even.
Maybe you'll give him a copy of yours next. He'd like to visit sometime.
"Si." You whisper, nudging him gently with the tip of your heel.
"Hm?"
"You got space in your flat?"
"I'll give y' a copy of the key. I gotta get back in the mornin'"
"You only took a day off?"
"'s just a weddin', no?"
"It's Tommy's wedding."
"Still a weddin', angel."
"Oh, should I be worried that you'll only take a day off for our wedding?" You squeeze his arm as you wave at Tommy and his bride.
Simon blinks at you.
"Y' did not just say that."
"Hm?" You tilt your head at him. "D'ya stop lovin' me over our break?"
"Who said I ever loved y'a?"
"The voices." You let go of his arm, going back to the food.
Simon takes you home after you get plastered at Tommy's wedding. He's never seen you drink so much, but to be fair, you didn't drink all that much last time you were at his flat. You seem like nothing to him as he carries you, letting you hang off of his shoulder as he brings you up the stairs, raising a brow at you when you beeline for his bathroom and throw up over the toilet.
"Regret drinkin' yet?"
"No." You rasp. "Fuck, no. Can't get alcohol this good where I'm stuck."
"Thought you loved it there."
"I only love being next to you." You start again, Simon sitting by your side as he holds your hair up. "Fuckin' hell."
"Yer slurrin' your speech, angel."
"Speakin' like you." You huff, crying. "I missed you, Si. Really did."
"Missed y' too."
You rest your palm against your forehead, eyes closed as you whimper. "'s lonely without you."
"Yeah?"
"Mhm." You mumble. "Thought I could take it again."
"Again?"
"Again." You whisper. "And again. Si, I'm not made for casual I'm made for soul crushing devotion. God, I need to move on already. Why's it so hard to move on?"
"F'rm who?"
You turn to him, eyes glossy and red as you let out a laugh— pathetic. Almost as though you were laughing at yourself.
"'m not gonna come clean about that, Si."
"Never?"
"Maybe when you get married." You bend over the toilet again, closing your eyes.
"Though' it was we?"
You laugh. "If you survive."
"You always know somethin', angel."
"Hard not to." You throw your head back, furrowing your brows as you focus on breathing. "I'd like for it to stop, though."
"And how would that happen?"
"Can't. Cursed with the knowledge. Wish you could just fuck it out of me, honest."
You wake up to the worst hangover of your life — head cracking open down the middle as you sit up and rub at your neck, groaning as you stretch your back. Getting plastered at Tommy's wedding was probably not worth it.
"Hey." Simon hands you a bowl of soup, and you whimper as you press it to your lips, drinking.
"Thought you had to go."
"You looked like shite when y' went to bed."
You huff. "So you stayed back?"
"If not me then who?"
"I could've handled it."
"Wouldn' have wanted y'to." He hums. "Wiped your face down last night."
"Thank you, Si." You mumble. "You angel."
"All you."
"No. Not this time." You close your eyes. "Did I tell you anything?"
"Said you thought y'could take being alone again."
He leaves out the part where you had cried about him fucking you.
"Oh." You mumble. "'m just lonely."
Without him.
"Would you let me visit?"
"Shall I give you a spare as well?" You tilt your head. "Or do you want to do it classic style and break into my place?"
"A spare would be nice."
"Okie dokes." You hum. "You can go back in the afternoon. I feel much better."
"Won't let me stay longer?"
"I'd assume you can only stay for so long."
"Can ask for longer. The captain'll get it."
"You don't need to, Si."
"Thought y'missed me?"
"I do."
"Then let me stay. Allow yourself tha' much."
"Yeah?"
He nods.
You let him.
He sticks behind and wanders around with you, following after you with your bags as you point and shop, squeezing Simon gently, stopping halfway to feed him, your fingers nimble on your new device as you click.
"A cell phone?"
"Mhm." You rummage through your bag, frowning when there's a lack of something. "Forgot it."
"Forgot what?"
"I'll give it to you later."
You end up leaving it on Simon's bedside — something he returns to after deployment, brow raised as he reads through the album and the songs you've burned down for him. The letter you tuck behind the tracklist doesn't go unnoticed, Simon's first letter greeting him in the house from you as he looks through the rest of his mail. You've started writing back. Blue and black envelopes stick out from the whites of formal mail, and he flips through them, your writing familiar to his eyes as he sits back with a cup of water, reading through your responses to what he writes to you.
He feels childish writing to you sometimes. The pen feels a little too light for a hand that only knows the sword and not pen. Well, sword is wrong. Gun. His hands are much more used to the weight of a weapon than a quill.
It helps ground him sometimes.
His letters are most certainly darker than yours. You report about what you've been working on in school, sending him tickets to your graduation later in the year. You tell him that it doesn't really matter if he doesn't attend, but you wanted to give it to him anyway. The extra ticket is in case he actually found someone in the military to bring as a plus one.
It wounds Simon that you'd think he wouldn't stick with you.
He writes back to you, marking down your graduation and taking the day off in advance with his captain, nodding when asked if it's the same person he took the week off for last time.
"Must really love 'er, huh?"
"Yes, sir."
"Got a ring on it?"
"No, sir."
"Better move quick, Simon. Yer at the age where dating's all the storm."
Simon wonders if you'd agree to do long distance if he can't call you all that much.
You deserve someone who'll at least be there for you when you need it.
Yet, he lingers a little too long in front of the jewelry store, battered and bruised face in the reflection of the glass, staring himself in the eye as he wonders just why you had called him pretty back then. He's hardly pretty now. Mangled upper lip and scratches on his cheek — there is no trace of the "pretty" you had once called him. Though, his lashes stay the same, so he wonders if you'll still recognize if the only thing visible are his eyes.
He stares for a second too long at the jewelry store, stepping in and looking for something you'd like.
A ring.
"A nice dramatic gem for the engagement ring" you had told him once. Yet, despite it all, the sketches you had drawn for him had been a moderate gem. A ring that would remind you of how much he loves you — it had been a simple request. Even without the title of it all. You did not need to know what you were and what you weren't. If you had the certainty that one day the two of you would end up together anyway, then why waste the effort and consider or think over other people?
Simon understands you a little more now.
"Custom. If y'do 'em."
He pulls out the sketches you made as a child. Messy and childish ones — ones where it's a moonstone or pearly, never a diamond, and ones where Simon's handwriting as a child are visible to leave ideas for his own. You did not know. He did not either. But there's something quite assuring in just knowing. Simon knows you love him. It's quite a simple thing, really. You love him in the letters you write back, painful detail down to the point and making sure not to miss a thing. You love him in the trips where you're back, refusing to book a hotel and squeezing into his flat with him, limbs tangled in an intimacy that you've both grown comfortable in.
Simon loves you too. He loves you in the simplicity of having grown up with you — in the hair held up as you throw up, and in staying back when you won't let him but you need him. He loves you quietly the same way you love him. It's quite simple, really. It doesn't matter if you won't marry him or that you deserve someone better than Simon. All that really matters is that you want him, and he wants you too. There isn't too much other thinking he should do. You've always been more simple like that.
He writes you a letter back, asking if you want any particular flowers (not that he'll get the chance to read what you want).
He'll know what to get you when the time comes.
There's a sense of stability that Simon's learned to realize now that he's older or whatever. Settling down with you and retiring from the military won't kill him. He'll just open a nice little shop by where you live if he has to. You won't let him, but you trust him enough to let him make his own decisions now. It doesn't matter what you refuse to tell him. Time will tell him, and then eventually, you'll be honest. He just has to have faith or whatnot.
He brings the ring to your graduation, sitting in the back with your family, catching up with them. He wears a mask to hide the scars on his face and whatnot, but nothing outside of it. There's a sense of age that's crept up with him, and something weighs on his shoulders, but you'll work it out of him like you always have. Seeing you in your robes and throwing your hat is more than enough to let him forget for a moment.
There's a long life of him ahead on the battlefield if he decides upon it. He'd like something to go home to or meet up with halfway.
Preferably you.
He tucks the bouquet under his arm with the box in his pocket, meeting you halfway as you spot him in the crowd of people immediately, his name yelled and your friends abandoned for him, launching yourself into his arms as he catches you with an arm, humming as you squeeze his biceps, eyes lit up as you ramble to him. He watches you, eyes gentle and warm as his mind reminds him that yes, this is what bliss is to him. Simple, easy, bliss.
"Got you flowers."
"Yeah?" You tilt your head, grinning as he presents them to you. "Can we get dinner at mine later? I'd go to the grad party but I missed you a whole lot and you probably have a hotel so—"
"You'll host me?"
"I live alone."
"Tha's unsafe, angel."
"So?"
"You wan' me to pick?"
"Nah. Takeout at my place, but I'll get to say I have dinner plans."
"And your parents?"
"They'll understand." You glance at the flowers. "You tryna tell me something with the single rose amongst all those yellows? Ooh, white carnations..."
"Maybe I am."
"You've gotten bold, Si." You laugh, squeezing his forearm as your parents spot you. "I'll send you my address. Love you lots, kay? See you in a bit."
Simon bends down to press his lips to your forehead, humming as he sends you off with a pat.
You seem to know too.
He enters with the spare key you keep buried in the depths of the crevice of a window, setting his luggage down as he reads your texts about where to stay and put his stuff. You live comfortably. He understands why you wouldn't want to move. His flat is significantly less impressive than this, yet you stayed with him every time. Considering it all, you probably could've just bought out a flat next to him if you really wanted to.
Maybe there is love in the way you simply choose to exist the way you do.
You return home a little later, makeup smudged and messy as you tell him you ended up in the backseat with some friends, but you managed to get home in one piece. You abandon the robe and hat, shaking out the bobby pins as you recite the local pizza place to Simon, pulling out a drawer with your makeup remover as you do.
It feels oddly domestic.
"Wh'd'ya want?"
"Just tell em my name. They know my order. Oh, tell 'em to make it a combo this time. You can ask them what options they have. I like the wings, but their salad isn't bad."
"This what you've been livin' off of in uni?"
"Maybe." You pause to yawn, shaking the bottle and pulling out cotton pads to get everything off. "They're good though, I promise."
"Trust you." He dials.
You're not wrong.
Simon sits with you on your couch as you tangle limbs with him, pulling the pizza out and letting the cheese stretch as you do, your TV turned on as you let him watch the game.
"Si, what do you think about me moving back?"
"Why? Y'live comfortable here."
"It's lonely without you."
"Yeah?" He reaches down to rub circles on your knee with his free hand. "Y'er so much better off here, though."
"We can just get a new place in Manchester." You lick your fingers, reaching for another slice. "I'll buy it. It can be a dowry or whatever."
"I couldn't let y' do that, angel."
"Why not?" You raise a brow. "I'm willing to."
"Then let me take care of utilities."
"If y'want."
Simon slides his hand up your leg, squeezing your thigh gently as you turn to look at him, pizza crumbs on the corner of your lips as he fishes something out from his pocket.
"If yer willin'—"
"Oh, hell, yes. Please." You grin.
"At least le' me finish."
"Sorry, Si." You hum. "Shall we reroll and rerecord?"
"'s fine." He hums, opening the box as he squeezes your thigh, humming quietly as he presents the ring to you.
"I can't promise bein' in bed with you every night, but I can promise an eternity of the time I have that is my own with you." He hums. "I'll come back to you in one form or another. I'll leave if y'want it. Anything you ask for, I will give. Marry me, angel?"
"Will I be upgraded to luvie if I do?"
"Anythin' y' want. Missus Riley, even."
"It's a yes, Si. Always a yes. Thought it was obvious when I said our wedding at Tommy's." You hum. "Let me wash my hands, though. Got crumbs and oil all over 'em."
"I'll wipe the ring down later. Gimme y'er hand."
You lick your ring finger, giving Simon your hand as he presses a kiss to the finger, delicate, gentle, soft before sliding the ring on.
"Looks real familiar." You observe the design, pausing when it hits you. "Did you keep the drawing I made back in Year 7??"
"Surprised y'noticed."
Your bottom lip quivers, tears welling in your eyes as Simon reaches to hold your head to his chest, humming as you wipe at the tears, chest shaking from laughter.
"Yer so stupid." You laugh, folding the last of your pizza and finishing it in a bite. "y'er such a bloke."
Simon pokes at your cheek, your hand flying up to swat at his as he hums.
"Yer bloke."
"Guh."
Two months later, Simon returns to help you move.
You sell the majority of your furniture and tell him you've got your eye on a nice little place a little more outskirt, but he tells you to pick where you'll be comfortable. He truly only needs to come home to you and it'll be enough. You kick at him and tell him at least to tell you whether it should be a flat or a townhouse or whatever. He settles with you as the two of you look into an agent, and eventually you find a place you both like to some extent.
You move back home to Simon, and you blink as you settle into the new place, keys in your hand as you squeeze Simon. You're back on the couch, legs kicked over his as your thumbs brush at his cheeks, staring.
“Heard Tommy’s baby is coming soon”
“Mhm.”
“Did they pick a name?”
Simon raises a brow at you when you tilt your head and blink.
“Joseph, luvie. Joseph.”
You laugh, cheeks warm as Simon hums.
"Yer still pretty as ever, Si."
"Even with the mangled lip?"
"Adds flavor." You grin. "Funny that we haven't gone on a proper date yet."
"Y'wanna go on a date? Bring your documents. We're off to get the civil ceremony."
"Wow, really can't wait f'r me to become Missus Riley, huh?"
"Waited long enough. 'm sure you've waited longer." He mumbles. "A whole life, even."
"Whole two." You hold up your fingers. "I'll tell you all about it after you finally break me in."
"Bloody hell."
You laugh, cheeks warm and eyes closed as Simon stares.
This, he understood.
You, he understands.
In this life, and whatever other he had.
You, he knows.
"Thinking?" You quirk your head to the side
"Thinkin' bout you, luvie."
"Yeah? You'll be doing that a lot more now, Si."
"Always have been."
I love how we all seem to agree that Soap is just insane for his lady (you, hello?). Constantly on his mind. On missions the boys are driven half mad by every mention of the “beautiful lass” he’s seeing right now. Oh and he’s even worse if he has a ring on your finger. “My wife” this and “the missus” that, showing the team the latest photos of you so much that any time he pulls out his phone they instinctively groan. Because nothing could possibly compare to the woman who lit up his whole life with just a smile.
Simon tries something new
Little drabble to get me out of the block.
Word count: 630
18+
CW: smut, simon spits in your mouth :)
Simon's homecoming sex is always slow.
Too much adrenaline to digest, too many memories to bury so they can never be dug out again.
It's kisses on your neck until your skin melts under his tongue. Lean fingers working you open until his palm is soaked and your breathing uneven.
Soft legs around his waist, your arms holding his head to your face, kissing the aches of his mind away.
It's rare for him to change from his usual unhurried pace, to break through that comforting tempo he's so used to—like the rhythm of a tune that calls him back home. Like a siren, coaxing his soul away from the bloodshed and back into his body—and his body back to you.
A big hand leaves its gentle grip on your waist, curling firmly at the base of your jaw to hold your head steady against the plush pillow.
He collects a glob of spit in his mouth. It falls into a string, slowly, until it sits at the slit of your lips.
It startles you, at first—brows fluttering to your forehead. But even in the haze of sex you manage to recollect yourself just in time.
A shaky exhale from your nose, and then you lick your lips deliberately, slow as anything, gauging a reaction from his eyes.
He watches how your throat bobs when you swallow it down.
He watches when you open your mouth again, pink tongue hanging out. Inviting, warm.
He cums right afterwards with a muted curse.
Doesn't care if he's sensitive as can be when he fucks you through his orgasm, then through yours, until your legs are trembling so fiercely that he thinks he's shattered you like the finest porcelain.
A stolen kiss, sloppy and wet. One where his lips taste yours fully, where your teeth clack as they're in the way.
Simon doesn't pull out. Waits a tick instead, hiding in the curve of your shoulder, long enough for his blood to return to where he needs it, still inside of you—so tight in the afterglow of your orgasm that he thinks he might cum again if he's not careful.
He fucks you a second time, ensuring your lips never part from his.
When he rolls onto his back, taking you with him, he lets you take the lead. Impaled right on his lap, hips dancing like waves on the shore, mouth parted to breathe softly and slow.
It's your turn now, he guesses, because suddenly lithe fingers are wrapped around his chin. Your thumb tugs at his lower lip as your hips slow to a more controlled pace.
"Open," you whisper.
Simon can only oblige. One look into your eyes is all it takes, his mouth already open before you even ask.
Your spit lands slowly on the flat of his tongue. He tastes it like you're dripping honey in his mouth, like that's his favorite thing to savor after weeks away from everything good.
His hand comes to cradle the back of your head only to pull you down, where he kisses you until his head spins because he doesn't care to breathe—doesn't think it matters.
"Like it when you tell me wha' to do," he says to your lips. "S' a nice change of pace."
You can hear the smile in his voice.
So, you smile too.
"Yeah?" You reply, panting softly against his mouth. "Then be a good one and fuck me like you haven't seen me in weeks, eh?"
Not the hardest order he's ever had to follow, he reckons, since it's the truth.
He breathes a chuckle, but otherwise agrees, stealing yet another kiss from you. Arms fully wrapped around your waist, feet planted on the bed, Simon fucks you like he hasn't seen you in weeks.
"Yes ma'am."
I opened a box thing again on Instagram and folks sent me stuff to doodle, and someone's request just unleashed the gay man within me
prev. | mlist ✎ᝰ.ᐟ
Fuck buddies with Ghost who tells you it means nothing, doesn’t want anything more than sex, but your apartment is the last place he visits before being sent off on an assignment.
‘Jus’ need somethin’ to tide me over, yeah dove?’
Fuck buddies with Ghost who tells you it means nothing, doesn’t want anything more than sex, but when he’s away, his rugged and calloused hands don’t feel like yours, can’t get off unless he pictures you.
Above him. Below him. On your knees. On your back. In your mouth. Buried in your cunt.
Fuck buddies with Ghost who tells you it means nothing, doesn’t want anything more than sex, but your apartment is the first place he visits when the mission is finished, doesn’t even bother going home.
And you answer, despite it being three in the morning.
“There’s my girl.” He breathes. Relieved. Dropping his bags on the floor before lunging forward to cup your face in his palms.
The claim makes you whine quietly, digging your fingertips into his wrists, arching on your tippy toes to meet his lips halfway. It’s ravenous, leaves your breath ragged, and lips thrumming with swelling blood.
He hoists you in his arms, burrowing his hands under your thighs and ass, pinching the flesh so hard it’ll bruise, but he can’t help it. He’s greedy. Selfish. Hasn’t quite coaxed himself down from the harsh realities of being ‘Ghost.’
“Ah—Simon,” You whimper, huffing hot air against his lips, “You’re hurting me.”
“Sorry, baby,” He smooths his hands, petting the backs of your thighs, “I just-”
The ‘missed you’ dies on his tongue, stops it from rolling off and filling the empty space between the two of you, but you know.
That night when he asks you to repeat him, tell him you’re all his, you don’t respond like usual. He tries his best to coax it out of your pretty lips orgasm after orgasm because he needs to hear it, but you don’t give him the pleasure.
Fuck buddies with Ghost who tells you it means nothing, doesn’t want anything more than sex, so he has no other option but to accept it because you’re not his. The lack of acknowledgment eats at his skin, brutal talons gnawing at his flesh when you slowly stop responding to his texts.
Shows up at your doorstep anyway because you don’t get to tell him when this stops. When you answer the door, you’re all dolled up, a tight little skirt hugging your figure, lip gloss smeared on your lips like you have somewhere to be other than on his cock.
“What are you doing here?” You ask, glaring at him, “I’m busy.”
“With what?”
You frown, “I have a date.”
He snorts, pushing past you, making a show of taking off his boots and placing them next to yours, has no intention of leaving.
“Simon,” You sigh, closing the door behind you, “I don’t have time for this right now. He’ll be here any minute.”
The statement alone pinches his temples with irritation, but that’s when he sees it, one small hickey adorned on your neck, just below your ear. His vision narrows, tunneling red, nudging you against the wall with one swift movement, tilting your jaw to get a better look at it.
“The fuck is this?” He snarls, runs his thumb over the bruise, and makes your breath hitch slightly.
“Nothing.” You mutter quietly.
“Your little date give you this? Huh?” He grits through clenched teeth, grip tightening on your jaw, drawing dimples in your skin.
“None of your business.” You spit back, but it’s far too gentle to have any real bite like it always does with him, pup with baby canines.
Fuck buddies with Ghost who tells you it means nothing, doesn’t want anything more than sex, but he seethes at the idea of another man inside of you, another man marking you as theirs when you’re his.
Sinks his teeth around the stupid mark, dragging sharp fangs against your delicate flesh, and sucks the skin viciously. Covers the ugly bruise with his own claim.
Fuck buddies with Ghost who tells you it means nothing, doesn’t want anything more than sex, but he presses you right up against your front door, so your date can hear him fucking you in two when he comes to pick you up.
‘Can yer little boyfriend fuck you like this? Huh, baby? Did he know jus’ how you like it?’
Fucks you messy and pretty, until your cheeks are tear-stained and your breaths are wrecked, hiccuping over your moans that’s he’s so mean, so cruel, asking you to say you’re his when he doesn’t even have the courage to say he missed you.
‘Be a good girl f’me, yeah? Tell me you’re all mine.’
And when you do finally say it, he carries you to your bed, fucks you slow and deliberate like he always does, like he really means it, and whispers the words against your skin.
@bbygirl9 @ailanbutterfly @amberbalcom14 @h0lydrag0ns
HYENA JOHNNY
sfw + nsfw. rut. knotting. premature ejaculation. service top!johnny (?)
you meet johnny at a bar.
the place is old but well-kept, a place that’s obviously seen its share of rowdy nights and heavy pours but still holds its charm. dark wood, polished by time and restless hands, stretches beneath your fingertips. liquor bottles line the shelves behind the counter.
the air hums— conversation rising and falling in waves, punctuated by the occasional burst of laughter, the sharp clink of glasses meeting in messy toasts. the dim lighting catches on old brass fixtures, scuffs on the floor telling stories of countless nights just like this one.
and behind the bar, johnny.
he moves like he owns the place, because, clearly, he does. he reaches for bottles without looking, flicks open the tap with a smooth twist of his wrist. the other bartenders glance his way for cues. it’s plain that johnny doesn’t just work here. he runs the show.
and it's that experience that has him spotting you immediately.
“what’ll it be, sweetheart?” the words roll off his tongue, practiced but not indifferent.
"a mocktail.”
johnny pauses, processing, then snorts. “that’s tragic. you say that like you mean it.”
"i do."
he clicks his tongue, shaking his head, the motion loose. “waste of a perfectly good night, that.”
"i’m the designated driver," you shoot back, somehow feeling like you have to defend yourself, jerking a thumb over your shoulder.
your friends are deep in it— half-dancing, half-stumbling, belting lyrics to a song that isn’t playing. one of them throws their arms around another’s neck, nearly taking them both down in the process
johnny follows your gaze, lets out a low whistle. “ah. the shepherd of the drunk.” his tail sways behind him, amused. “a noble role.”
"someone has to get them home alive."
he drums his fingers against the bar, eyes flicking between you and the mess unfolding on the dance floor. “you sure you don’t wanna let natural selection do its thing?”
you huff a laugh, shaking your head. "tempting. but i’d rather not explain to their mothers why they woke up in a hedge."
he grins. “fair enough. guess that means you get a drink that doesn’t kick back.” he rolls his shoulders before reaching for bottles. “what’s the call, then? fruity? sour?”
"surprise me."
johnny hums, tilting his head, eyes narrowing slightly like he’s sizing you up. “dangerous words, that.” but he’s already moving, rolling up his sleeves as he reaches for a shaker. “hope you like a bit of bite.”
"that a threat?"
“nah,” he says. “just a promise.”
you watch him work.
his hands move fast, sure, an efficiency that only comes with time and muscle memory. bottles tip, liquid pours in smooth arcs, ice clatters against the tin before he seals it with a sharp tap. he doesn’t fumble, doesn’t second-guess— he moves with a rhythm stitched into his bones.
and he’s a hyena. no mistaking it.
the broad grin, all sharp teeth. the spots dusting his forearms, darker markings trailing up his skin where his sleeves are shoved back. but more than that, it’s how he carries himself— as if he was built to be here, to take up space without hesitation.
he shakes the tin with quick jerks, wrists rolling, muscles shifting under skin.
“so,” he starts, barely looking up as he strains the drink into a glass, “you always this responsible, or is this a special occasion?”
"i like knowing i’ll wake up in my own bed."
he hums, dropping a garnish into the glass with a flick of his fingers. “can’t argue with that.” then he slides the drink toward you, tapping the rim lightly with one claw. “still. shame to waste a night like this on sobriety.”
you lift the glass, taking a slow sip. citrus, something tart, something fizzy at the edges, a hint of spice lingering at the back of your tongue.
"not bad," you admit.”
johnny leans in slightly, bracing his forearms against the bar, grin widening. “’course it’s not. you think i’d serve you shite?”
"i've known you for all five minutes. forgive me if i didn’t know what to expect."
he chuckles, head tilting, ears flicking forward. “stick around, sweetheart. i’ll raise those expectations in no time.”
"confident, aren’t you?"
“damn right.” his eyes flick over you. “why? that a problem?”
"just wondering if it ever gets you in trouble."
his grin turns wolfish— if a hyena could pull off wolfish. “constantly.”
you don’t take him home that night. not because you don’t want to— because you do, god, you do— but because you’ve got a job to do.
instead, you spend the next hour wrangling your friends, guiding them into overpriced rideshares, confiscating a stolen pint glass, and prying one of them away from a very ill-advised conversation with a married senior executive.
by the time you finally collapse into bed, your jacket still smells like whiskey and citrus, your ears still ringing with laughter.
you tell yourself you won’t think about the bartender with the easy grin and the voice that curled around your name like it belonged to him.
you tell yourself a lot of things.
the work gala arrives like an obligation dressed as an opportunity. the invitation promised networking, an open bar, and a celebration of months of labor.
but you don’t want to go.
you doubt anyone does, but it’s not really a choice. the project your team has spent months sweating over is finally seeing the light of day, and the higher-ups need their captive audience. they need applause, nods of approval, praise whispered over crystal flutes of overpriced champagne.
so you go.
you let yourself be swept inside, past sleek decor and halfhearted compliments, past handshakes that mean nothing and conversations that mean even less. the champagne is crisp, the hors d'oeuvres bite-sized and forgettable, and the smiles around you all feel the same.
the work gala is everything you expected.
the kind of event that looks dazzling in photos but feels hollow in person. the chandeliers glisten, the glasses are always full, and the music hums soft and unintrusive, a backdrop for corporate egos to stretch their legs. it’s all smiles that don’t reach the eyes, laughter that’s a beat too polished, and conversations that carry the distinct flavor of ambition disguised as small talk.
the dress helps, if anything. a deep color, clean lines, the kind that turns a glance into a second look. a little armor against the monotony of handshakes and careful smiles.
you last about ten minutes before you seek out the bar.
and that’s when you see him.
johnny.
standing behind the counter like he owns the place, despite the fact that he very much does not.
his sleeves are pushed up, forearms bared, and his tie is hanging loose like it barely survived a halfhearted attempt at professionalism. he looks like someone who should be on the other side of the bar, drink in hand, making people laugh too loud. but he’s here, somehow, and he’s already watching you.
he leans into the counter, the soft golden glow of the pendant lights casting sharp shadows across his grin— and it looks suspiciously like he’s been waiting for you to notice him.
and of course, you do. how could you not?
johnny isn’t just attractive.
that would be too simple. attraction is easy, common. but johnny is something else. something loud and impossible to ignore, the kind of presence that bends a room around him, that demands attention without asking for it.
you stop short, fingers tightening around the stem of your glass. “johnny?”
he grins. “last i checked.”
your eyes flick down to the neatly pressed vest, the gleaming bar, the expensive bottles lined up in perfect order.
then back to him.
“what the hell are you doing here?”
johnny reaches for a glass, inspecting it against the light before setting it down with a soft clink. “servin’ drinks, apparently.”
your brow lifts. “you own a pub.”
“that i do.”
“so why are you working here?”
“money’s good.” he shrugs, as if that’s a reason.
you give him a look. “you could’ve sent someone else.”
his smirk twitches into a grin. “could’ve.”
you narrow your eyes. “but?”
johnny leans in slightly, resting his forearms on the bar. “but then i wouldn’t have run into you, would i?”
heat pricks the back of your neck. “you expect me to believe you took this job on the off chance i’d be here?”
“nah,” he says easily, reaching for a bottle, twisting off the cap with practiced ease. “but it’s a hell of a nice surprise.”
you exhale, shaking your head. “unbelievable.”
“what’s unbelievable is that you’re still holdin’ that same drink,” he says, nodding toward the half-full glass in your hand. “startin’ to think you don’t trust me.”
“i barely trust this event,” you say dryly. “let alone the bar staff.”
johnny places a hand over his heart, mock-wounded. “cut me deep, sweetheart.”
you roll your eyes, setting your drink down. “fine. impress me.”
his grin turns sharp, all teeth. “dangerous thing to ask.”
he moves with a kind of effortless confidence, each motion smooth, deliberate, like he doesn’t need to think about it. bottles spin in his hands, liquid pours clean, precise. the scent of citrus and something smoky rises as he mixes, the clink of ice against glass filling the space between you.
when he slides the drink across the bar, he taps the rim lightly with one finger. a challenge.
you take a sip.
pause.
lick the taste from your lips.
his smirk lingers, watching. waiting.
“…damn it.” you exhale. “that’s actually good.”
johnny laughs, pleased. “you plannin’ on apologizing for that remark earlier?”
your pulse jumps.
“and how exactly would i do that?”
he tilts his head, considering. “stick around. drink somethin’ strong. keep lookin’ at me like that.”
and just like that, you’re in trouble.
you don’t mean to get drunk. you came here to be seen, to endure, to let your boss soak up the credit for your work while you nod along. but then johnny makes you a drink, and when you finish it too fast, he makes you another.
responsibility starts as a whisper.
drink slower. be professional. don’t plant yourself at the bar all night.
then he tilts his head just so, watching you like you’re a puzzle he intends to solve and the whisper fades.
you order another.
somewhere around your third drink, your laughter turns ease. johnny’s grin mirrors it, fingers working effortlessly over glass and steel as he keeps the drinks flowing.
fourth drink, you tell him he has unfairly nice hands. he nearly spills a cocktail laughing.
five drinks in, you go for a napkin, miss entirely, and send a row of garnishes tumbling. staring down at the mess, you seriously debate the logistics of picking them up without falling under the bar.
johnny exhales, tossing a rag over his shoulder. "i think that means you’re cut off, sweetheart."
"you think a lot of things," you mutter, blinking up at him, heavy-lidded and unbothered.
his laughter softens, turns fond. "and i’m usually right."
you pout at him until you sway a little too much, and the world tilts just slightly before a hand reaches over the bar to steady you.
he exhales through his nose, shaking his head, muttering half-amused, half-exasperated, "jesus."
for a moment, johnny considers just throwing you over his shoulder and dealing with the consequences later. he’s a hyena, after all, and hyenas take care of their own. you’re his, in some loose, nebulous way, and it wouldn’t be difficult to make sure you got home safe.
but even in your current state, he figures you wouldn’t be thrilled about waking up in a stranger’s bed with no memory of how you got there.
so, he does the next best thing.
he steals your phone.
you don’t even notice, too busy playing with the condensation on your glass, and he sighs as he tilts the screen toward your face.
the lock screen slides open instantly.
"oh, sweetheart," he murmurs, shaking his head. "you’re makin’ this too easy."
he scrolls through your messages, thumb tapping with sharp efficiency, scanning over names he doesn’t recognize until he finds a group chat that looks promising. lots of emojis. lots of inside jokes. someone had typed in all caps at some point about a brunch reservation, so yeah— this’ll do.
he thumbs out a message: “your friend is very drunk. come get them before she pukes over my bar.” and attaches the location.
and then, because he can, because he wants to, because some part of him already knows he’ll be seeing you again, he puts his number in your contacts, too.
you wake up to a headache and a mistake.
the headache, at least, makes sense. it splits through your skull the second you shift, a dull, relentless throb pulsing behind your eyes, pressing into the backs of your sockets like a vice tightening around your brain. your mouth is dry, tongue thick with the stale aftertaste of liquor, and your body feels like dead weight, limbs tangled in sheets that are too warm, too heavy. everything is stiff— your neck, your shoulders, your stomach twisting in protest as the memories of last night flicker back in fragments. a bar. dark wood. golden light. laughter that lingered low in your chest, warm and sweet, and—
him.
your stomach flips before your brain can even process why.
you groan, rolling onto your side, pushing your face into the pillow to block out the morning. you want to sleep, to bury yourself beneath the covers and pretend none of it happened— whatever it is. but your body betrays you, instincts dragging your arm across the mattress, fumbling blindly for your phone where it must’ve slipped from your hand sometime in the night.
your fingers brush cool metal. you blink blearily at the screen.
the glow cuts through the dimness of your room, soft and insistent, illuminating the single notification waiting for you.
a new contact.
johnny ;)
your stomach twists harder.
you blink at it.
once.
twice.
the emoji taunts you, cocky even in pixels, a playful little wink that makes something hot curl at the base of your spine. the name itself is bad enough— too much of a reminder of how his mouth quirked up when he poured your drink, and the warmth of his fingers when brushed against yours as he slid it across the bar.
your pulse ticks up. you hesitate, thumb hovering over the screen, torn between the impulse to check and the ridiculous urge to just not know.
but you already know you’re going to look.
you swipe, and the screen shifts.
one unread message.
johnny: still alive, sweetheart?
your first instinct is to throw the phone across the room. your second is to type something back. something quick, something effortless, something that won’t make it obvious that your pulse just stuttered in your throat.
you fail spectacularly.
you: barely. might never recover.
his response is immediate, and it makes you wonder if he was already waiting.
johnny: tragic. if i’d known, i would’ve given you a proper sendoff
heat prickles at the back of your neck. you stare at the message for a second too long, then lock your phone and press it flat against your chest as if that might do something about the way your heart is suddenly working overtime.
and just like that, it starts. small things, at first. quick, snappy messages.
johnny: remind me to never let you near tequila again. i don’t think you’d survive round two.
you: bold of you to assume i wouldn’t win.
johnny: bold of YOU to assume you won anything last night. you begged me for water.
you: lies. slander. i demand proof.
johnny: aye, sweetheart, i’d send the security footage, but i think the sight of you poutin’ at me over a glass of water might be too much for your fragile ego.
you don’t have a response for that. you lock your phone, toss it onto your bed, and roll onto your stomach, groaning into your pillow.
but the messages keep coming.
johnny: how’s the hangover? or should i start gettin’ that funeral procession in order?
you: surprisingly not dead.
johnny: pity. i would’ve made a great eulogy.
it’s easy, too easy.
he starts asking about your day. you start telling him.
johnny: how’d the deadline go? survived it?
you: took three cups of coffee and some questionable life choices, but it’s done
johnny: questionable life choices, huh? do i even want to ask?
you: if you must know, i impulse bought a croissant the size of my head. no regrets
johnny: i admire the dedication. although i’d be more impressed if you could finish it.
you: challenge accepted
he keeps talking to you. keeps pulling you in, coaxing conversation out of you and somehow it all feels natural, effortless.
he makes fun of the salad you regret ordering for lunch.
you: i don’t know what i expected. it’s lettuce.
johnny: truly a tragic meal. if you die from boredom, i promise i’ll give a heartfelt speech at the funeral.
you: that’s the second time you’ve threatened to monologue at my funeral. should i be worried?
johnny: just bein’ prepared, sweetheart. never know when tragedy might strike.
he complains about a difficult customer but immediately follows up with “not that i'm whinin'. boss can’t be seen whinin’."
the more he texts, the worse it gets.
you catch yourself checking your phone too often, waiting for his name to light up your screen. you start carrying your charger everywhere, the battery never allowed to dip low, just in case. when he texts, you answer too fast. when he doesn’t, you fight the stupid urge to stare at your phone, to wonder if he’s busy, to think about what his hands might be doing instead.
somewhere along the way, the teasing shifts into something else. something a little slower.
johnny: long day?
you: feels like it
johnny: go easy on yourself, sweetheart. tomorrow’s just gonna show up and make a mess of things all over again.
your fingers hover over the keyboard. something about it makes you pause, makes your stomach do that stupid little thing where it twists up in knots.
you: that’s bleak
johnny: nah. just means there’s always another chance to make somethin’ good out of it.
you don’t have a response for that either.
turns out you don't need one because then he follows it up with a—
johnny: what are you doin’ friday?
your stomach flips.
you: depends. why?
this time, the response doesn’t come immediately.
you watch the typing bubble appear. disappear. reappear.
johnny: takin’ you out. that’s why.
your breath catches. your hands hesitate over the keyboard, mind racing, running in circles. you type something and delete it. type again. delete. finally, you settle on—
you: at your pub?
his reply is fast.
johnny: christ, no. my staff would never let me leave alive.
you: fair point. so where, then?
johnny: you’ll see ;)
you are, without a doubt, in trouble.
johnny is ready. more than ready. too ready, if you ask his staff.
he’s been buzzing since you said yes, practically vibrating through the walls of his pub, too restless to stand still. his staff have been suffering through it for days— watching him plan the date down to the minute, pick out the restaurant, polish his shoes, practice his stories in the backroom mirror with an alarming level of dedication.
“you’re a grown man,” gaz mutters at one point, rubbing his temples as johnny rehearses a joke for the fifth time. “not a schoolboy with his first crush.”
he’s taken people out before, sure, but this— this is different. his fingers twitch when he thinks about it. his pulse kicks like it’s trying to outrun him. he shoves it all down, tells himself to act normal, be normal, but his body betrays him at every turn.
and then, just as he reaches your door, just as he lifts his fist to knock—
his rut slams into him like a sledgehammer.
hyena ruts are brutal.
unlike wolves or big cats, they don’t creep in slow, don’t build over days like a fire waiting for kindling. no, hyenas go from zero to hundred in the space of a breath— one second fine, the next wrecked by an all-consuming need, by instincts that don’t care for reason or timing.
johnny staggers, barely catching himself before he hits the wall, his shoulder slamming into brick with a dull, shuddering thud. his claws scrape at his own arms, blunt nails dragging hard enough to leave welts beneath his fur, but it doesn’t help, nothing fucking helps. his body isn’t listening. his breath stutters, fast and uneven, catching in his throat like he’s choking on something thick and hot. sweat beads at his temples, slicks the back of his neck, soaks into his shirt despite the night air.
his stomach knots, muscles pulling tight, something twisting low in his gut like a wire wound too far. his mouth hangs open, his tongue thick, saliva pooling behind his teeth like his body is preparing for a bite, for a kill. his canines throb, the dull ache settling deep in his jaw, instincts curling sharp beneath his ribs, thick and hungry and dangerous.
and fuck. fuck, he’s so hard he can’t breathe.
his cock strains against his trousers, the fabric pulled taut over the thick, aching line of it, every throb so deep it rattles in his bones. he shifts, trying to ease it, trying to will it down, but the movement just grinds the swollen head against the seam of his fly, drags coarse fabric over his leaking tip, makes him hiss between clenched teeth. his balls are tight, drawn up so high it’s like they’re trying to retreat into his body, his whole system locked down, caught in something primal and unforgiving.
he clenches his fists, claws digging into his palms, every muscle in his body coiled and trembling with the effort of staying still, of not grinding down against something, of not reaching between his legs and squeezing his own cock in his fist just to take the edge off.
and then he fucking whimpers.
the sound wrenches out of him, cracking at the end. his breath stutters, catches in his throat, his body too hot, too tight.
johnny's head tips back, knocking against the brick, his hips twitching forward in a broken little jerk, chasing nothing, his cock pulsing angrily, trapped and swollen, sensitivity that borders on pain. he squeezes his eyes shut, teeth grinding, sweat rolling down his spine, but it doesn’t help. nothing helps.
and then— the door creaks open.
he flinches, his whole body jolting, his breath shoving out of him in a ragged, shaking gasp.
you’re there.
crouched beside him, close enough that he can catch your scent, something grounding and unbearable all at once. your hand hovers near his arm like you’re about to touch him.
no.
“no-” it breaks from his lips before he can stop it. “no- back inside-”
his fingers barely catch your sleeve before slipping off, his limbs weak, useless. “call-” he tries again, panting through clenched teeth. “call for help- call for- fuck-”
but you don’t move. you don’t go back inside. you don’t slam the door shut. you don’t listen.
you reach for him. and he folds.
the second your fingers brush his skin, johnny's whole body caves, shaking apart under the weight of whatever the fuck is happening to him. his forehead knocks against your shoulder, a shuddering noise ripping from his throat as he clings to you, his fingers fisting into your shirt like you’re the only solid thing left in the world.
“oh, fuck-” his cock aches. throbs. pulses against the stiff, unforgiving line of his zipper.
he grinds against nothing, every twitch of his hips sending another spike of sensation shooting up his spine. his balls are heavy, swollen, so full it’s like they might burst, like they might spill just from the way his trousers dig into them, the way his body is wound too tight, too fucking close to something he can’t control.
he needs. he needs.
fuck, but he shouldn’t.
“i-” he tries to pull back, tries to put space between you, but his fingers won’t listen. instead, they curl tighter, dragging you in, his body betraying him in real time, his cock pressing flush to your thigh, the heat of it scalding even through layers of fabric.
a noise breaks from him, sounding dangerously close to a sob.
he can’t. he can’t.
“fuck-” he buries his face against your neck. “m’sorry- m’sorry, just-just a second-”
he’s trembling, breath stuttering, little whimpers breaking past his lips no matter how hard he tries to choke them down.
you say something and he barely registers it through the thick haze clouding his head but your warmth weight, and the press of your body against his—
it helps. just a little.
and you— well, you know exactly what’s happening.
you don’t waste time pretending this is something johnny can just ride out alone. you grip his arms, drag him inside, shove the door shut with your heel and twist the locks tight. then the deadbolt. then the security chain.
your fingers are practiced, muscle memory guiding you through the steps of securing the space.
just in case. just in case someone else nearby is in rut or heat, just in case some poor bastard catches wind of johnny’s scent and decides to come sniffing around.
(he smells good. too good. sharp and heady, the scent of him curling in the air, thickening with every ragged breath he lets out. you, even you, feel your own instincts stirring, muscles tensing in awareness, your body recognizing his rut and urging you to stay close. to soothe. to let him take what he needs.)
johnny is shaking against you, his whole frame shuddering with the effort of keeping himself together. his breath is hot against your skin, slipping out between the low, broken whimpers he can’t seem to bite back
“fuck-fuck, m’sorry,” he stammers, voice catching. “didn’t- didn’t mean-”
his claws twitch against your arms, not quite gripping, afraid to hold on too tight.
his tail flicks behind him, anxious, ears pressed flat against his skull. his pupils are blown wide, swallowing up the blue of his eyes, his whole expression caught between shame and need.
“wanted this-” his voice cracks, something dangerously close to a whine. “wanted this to go well. wanted- wanted t’please you.”
johnny shudders, forehead knocking against your shoulder as another tremor rolls through him. “wanted you to- to see me. see me as a good mate. confident.”
he breathes in, sharp, and his whole body locks up for a moment, every muscle going taut— then a full-body shiver wracks through him, cock pulsing hard enough that you feel it, even through his trousers, even through your own clothes.
your throat goes dry.
you reach up, smoothing your fingers through his fur, brushing a hand along his back, trying to offer something— some kind of grounding touch, reassurance.
“johnny,” you murmur, voice steady, firm. “it’s not your fault.”
his breath hitches.
“i really don’t mind,” you say again, softer now, pressing the words into the shell of his ear.
a noise catches in his throat, something small, choked and helpless, and he drags his face away from your shoulder, tilting up to look at you properly.
his pupils are still wide, expression still hazy, but he searches your face with almost terrifying seriousness.
his tail flicks again when he seems to find nothing or what he was looking for.
“…can i make it up to you?”
your brows lift.
his ears twitch, jaw flexing, uncertainty plain with how his teeth catch on his lower lip, his eyes flicking down to your mouth and then lower, dragging slow over the curve of your body.
you shift, tilting your head. “how?”
johnny's tail twitches again then stills. he swallows hard, nostrils flaring, then lifts his gaze back to yours, something new burning in the depths of his expression.
“…can i lick your pussy?” he’s puppy-eyed and pleading, expression screaming with ‘please let me- please let me take care of you- please, i need this.’
his breath ghosts warm over your lips, fingers flexing where they’re still curled weakly around your arms.
he’s trembling, cock leaking. and you—
you nod.
his ears twitch, breath shuddering out in a sharp little gasp, grip on your thighs tightening. fingers hook into your waistband not a moment later, and he yanks, dragging your pants down, underwear with them, his movements are frantic, almost clumsy in his eagerness. he groans, wrecked and relieved, the second you're bare in front of him, pupils blown, tail wagging, whole body thrumming with ‘please, please, please.’
and then—
oh.
his tongue is warm.
hot and wet and wide, the rough texture of it dragging over your slit in a slow, open-mouthed lick, firm and eager like he's trying to taste every inch of you.
your breath stutters, hands flying to his head, fingers curling into his thick fur as he groans against you, the sound vibrating up through his tongue, sending sparks of pleasure shooting through your spine.
and he doesn't stop.
doesn't hesitate. doesn't tease.
no, johnny dives in, pressing his face right up against your cunt, burying his nose in the soft flesh of your inner thigh, mouth sealing over you like he's starving.
his tongue flicks, curls, scoops into you, lapping up your slick with these obscene little slurping sounds, breath coming fast and desperate through his nose.
"fuck," you gasp, hips jerking, but he just growls, arms wrapping around your thighs, locking you in place.
his tongue drags up, then circles your clit, flicking once, twice before sucking it into his mouth, lips sealing around it with wet, sloppy pressure.
a sharp, helpless sound breaks from your throat, fingers spasming in his fur, tugging hard, but he just whines, pushing closer, pressing his face deeper between your legs, like he wants to drown in you.
his tail thumps against the floor, hips shifting, rutting, desperate little movements like he needs the friction, like eating you out is wrecking him just as much as it’s wrecking you.
johnny’s tongue works you open, the rough drag of it lighting up every nerve in your body. he’s sloppy with it, messy and eager as a puppy, sucking and lapping and groaning like he can’t get enough— like he won’t get enough, not until you’re shaking, not until you’re breaking apart in his hands.
his nose presses in, nuzzling against your clit as he angles his tongue deeper, the slick heat of his mouth sealing around you, sucking, devouring every drop of slick that spills from your pussy. his grip tightens, claws pricking your skin, grounding you against his face as he buries himself in your cunt, breath ragged.
his ears twitch at every moan, every gasp, tail wagging, thudding against the floor in frantic, jerky movements. his hips roll, little ruts against nothing, cock straining in his pants.
and fuck, the way you’re squeezing around his tongue, the way you’re whining, the way your fingers are tugging at his fur, yanking him closer, using him for your pleasure—
it’s perfect.
his tongue flicks against your clit, so fast he feels like his jaw is gonna cramp and your whole body locks up, muscles tensing, thighs clamping around his head as your pleasure slams through you.
"johnny-!"
you break, back arching, fingers spasming in his hair as your orgasm rips through you, cunt clenching.
and johnny loses it.
his hips snap forward, grinding down against the floor, cock pulsing in his pants, the thick length throbbing in time with your orgasm, so turned on with how you’re gushing into his mouth.
"fuck-” johnny’s body shaking, arms tightening around your thighs as his own climax crashes into him, his whole frame jerking with it.
his tail spasms, ears flicking wildly, and he ruts with mindless abandon, his tongue still lapping at you as he comes, soaking his trousers, thick spurts spilling out in his underwear, making a mess of himself, of the floor beneath him.
johnny’s breath stutters, his tongue slower now, softer. he whimpers against you, his hips giving these tiny, involuntary twitches, pleasure still rattling through his system, buzzing under his skin.
he’s a mess. ruined. wrecked.
but he’s still got his mouth on you. he’s still hard.
even after all that, after coming in his pants like a desperate thing, he’s still thick and straining against the damp fabric, the outline of his cock pressing against his zipper, a dark stain spreading where his release had soaked through.
but he’s smiling up at you, lazy, hazy-eyed satisfaction, ears flicking, tail giving a slow, contented thump against the floor. he looks pleased with himself, looks like he just had the best meal of his life, tongue flicking out to lick the last traces of you from his lips.
you swallow, your gaze flicking down, heat curling in your stomach.
"johnny-" your voice comes out soft. "do you- do you wanna fuck me?"
his ears perk up. his breath hitches.
"fuck," he gasps, pupils blown, hips giving a helpless little jerk, grinding into nothing. "fuck, yes- yes, please-”
your voice comes out soft, barely above a whisper, but he hears it like a gunshot.
"fuck me..."
johnny whines. he’s so happy, so relieved, so thrilled that his hands are already moving before his brain catches up— grabbing at your clothes, tearing them off your body, dragging fabric down your arms, over your hips, tossing them aside like they offend him.
you barely have a second to breathe before he’s fumbling with his own clothes, his pants sticking to his skin, soaked through with his release, and he growls under his breath, impatient, frantic, tearing at the fabric.
you hear the sharp rip before you see him, and by then, it’s too late.
his hands are on your hips again, tugging you back against him, the heat of him pressing up behind you. bare now, nothing between you, and—
oh.
oh.
there is a lot of him.
you don't see it, but you feel it, the weight of him pressing against you, the head of his cock nudging at your entrance, leaking precum against your folds. your brain catches up in a single, dawning moment of realization.
"u-um- johnny, wait-"
he doesn’t wait. he pushes in.
your mouth drops open around a soundless scream, arms giving out beneath you, sending you down onto your hands as your body stretches around him.
"hnnngh- fuck-”
johnny groans, hands locking around your hips, fingers digging in, holding you still as he sinks in deeper, his fat length forcing you open, your walls struggling to accommodate the sheer size of him.
his cock is thick, veined, hot as a brand against your insides, his knot still deflated but already pressing against your entrance, teasing the stretch that’s still to come.
"s’good- fuck- so warm-" he babbles, hips twitching. rolling. driving him deeper. deeper. deeper.
you can feel every ridge, every pulse, the wet sounds of your slick mixing with his precum, making everything so messy, so hot, so unbearably good.
your fingers curl against the floor, nails scraping for purchase, breath coming in ragged gasps. you can barely speak, but you manage a single, broken sound—
"johnny-"
he whimpers, hips jerking forward, sinking the last of himself inside.
he’s so deep you swear you can feel him in your stomach.
he snaps his hips forward, slamming into you with a force that knocks the breath from your lungs.
again.
again.
again.
it’s feral. frantic. mindless. his claws dig into your hips, keeping you locked in place as he fucks into you with the wild, unrelenting pace of an animal.
"fuck- fuck- fuck-"
he’s babbling now, every noise ripped straight from his chest. he’s gone, lost to instinct, breath ragged, panting against your back.
and you— you’re drooling.
your mouth falls open, a string of spit slipping past your lips, eyes hazy, unfocused, body pliant beneath him. it’s like you’re the one in heat, like his need has infected you, sinking into your skin, making you just as desperate, just as mindless.
his knot isn’t even swollen yet, and still— still— it feels like too much, like your body is barely keeping up, like you’re caught in the eye of a storm and all you can do is take it.
and he’s loving it.
“s-so good-" he whimpers, his voice shaking, thick with pleasure, his ears twitching. "s’takin’ me so well- fuck- made f’me, yeah? made t’be bred-"
his teeth graze the back of your neck, not quite biting, but close, breath hot against your skin.
"tell me- tell me y’need it-"
his hips snap forward, hard, cock grinding against the deepest part of you.
"tell me, bonnie-“
you somehow managed a choked moan of his name which seems to please him enough. “j-johnny!”
"hah- hah- hah-" his panting is ragged, tongue lolling out between sharp teeth, drool slipping past his lips, dripping onto your back. his claws dig into your hips, dragging you back onto his cock with every thrust.
you're reduced to a mess of slick and sweat and open-mouthed moans. your vision swims, breath stuttering, drool slipping past your own lips. your cunt grips him tight, sucking him in, slick coating his cock, dripping down his balls, wetting the base of his knot as it starts to swell.
"pretty..." johnny fucking giggles. it’s breathy, boyish, downright giddy as he snakes a hand down between your legs, fingertips dragging through the sticky mess between your thighs, rubbing over your swollen, aching clit.
"pretty clit… so soft... s’cute like this, all swollen f’me..."
he snickers to himself, his other hand coming up to your lower belly, pressing down, feeling the bulge his cock makes inside you. his hips snap forward hard, pressing down at the same time, making you feel every inch of him.
"fuck-" he whimpers, laughter breaking into a moan, tail flicking wildly behind him. "y'feel that? s’me, bonnie- deep inside- fuck, s’good-”
your orgasm crashes over you like a tidal wave, your body locking up, cunt milking him as you shake. your mind goes hazy, all-consuming pleasure buzzing through your nerves, and you barely register the way his rhythm falters—
until he gasps, breath catching, his whole body trembling, hips stuttering against you.
but he doesn’t push his knot in.
his cock throbs, leaking, twitching inside you, but his knot— still swollen, thick and pulsing at your entrance— doesn’t breach. he was too caught up, too lost in you, and now.
well, now it’s too late.
"fuck- fuck, bonnie, ‘m sorry-" his voice is frantic, hands shaking where they grip your hips. "i was s’posed t’ knot you, i- fuck, i know it hurts-”
and it does.
the ache of being left open, empty where you should be full, the throb of your walls still pulsing around nothing.
johnny knows.
he knows it hurts to push his knot in if you’re not distracted by your orgasm. he also knows the second the high fades it’s going to leave you aching, needy, sensitive in a way that burns.
"i got you, bonnie-" he murmurs, voice soft, affectionate even as he drives into you again, already chasing another orgasm from you. "gonna make it up t’you, promise-"
he grabs your hips, yanking you back onto his cock, fucking you harder, faster, desperate to fix it, desperate to make sure you don’t feel the pain.
his fingers find your clit again, rubbing quick, his touch clumsy, eager. “fuck- ‘m sorry, s’gonna feel so good, swear it-"
and he’s right.
your body can’t fight him, can’t deny him, the overstimulation pushing you right back up that peak, another orgasm slamming into you not even a minute later.
your walls clamp down around him, milking him, and he chokes on a moan, his whole body tensing. "fuck, fuck, that’s it- thass it, bonnie-"
his knot swells, stretching you wide, pushing in finally, locking him deep inside you—
and then he comes.
he fills you, cock pulsing, spurts of cum pouring into you, stuffing you full. his hips twitches, grinding against you, voice breaking on your name.
johnny's arms wrap around you, hugging you tight, chest pressed to your back. "s-sorry," he breathes, still panting, nuzzling against your shoulder. "s’never gonna happen again, promise-”
oh but it does. it happens multiple times, in fact.
you don’t know how long it’s been. you lost count after his fifth load. time has lost all meaning, swallowed up by the relentless rhythm of johnny’s rut.
he’s insatiable. a desperate, panting mess, rutting into you over and over, knotting you again and again, rolling his hips even when he’s still locked inside you, grinding his over-sensitive cock against your walls like he can’t stop.
his hands won’t let go of you, always grabbing, always holding— your hips, your waist, your thighs, your wrists. pulling you back onto him, keeping you flush against his sweat-slicked body.
johnny's all heat, burning up against you, whining your name in between frantic, slurred murmurs of "so good, so good, my bonnie, mine-"
but eventually— finally— the first wave of his rut starts to fade.
he slows. his thrusts lose their urgency, grip loosening, breath evening out, the feverish need in his eyes softening into something dazed, exhausted.
you take your chance.
"johnny-" you murmur, shifting slightly beneath him. "you need to drink some water, love."
he doesn't seem to really hear you, nuzzling into your neck. "mmm… later…"
"no, now," you insist, stroking a hand through his sweat-damp hair. "you’ve- we've been going for hours- we need to hydrate, okay?"
he grumbles, but when you finally manage to untangle yourself from his grasp and sit up, he whines, reaching for you again, ears flattening against his head.
"no- bonnie- come back-"
"drink first," you say, grabbing the water bottle from your nightstand and holding it out to him after you've had your own fill. "then I’ll cuddle you."
he pouts but takes the bottle, chugging down greedy gulps, tail flicking sluggishly behind him.
you press a granola bar into his hand next, watching as he blinks at it, then at you, before finally taking a bite.
he chews slowly, brows furrowing like he’s thinking about something, the fog in his brain is clearing just enough for rational thought.
and that’s when you pick up his phone from the mess of clothes, phoning his emergency number.
a guy nicknamed 👻.
you hesitate, fingers hovering over the call button.
johnny tilts his head at you, ears twitching. "whatcha doin’, bonnie?"
"calling your emergency contact," you say, glancing at him. "someone needs to know you’re in rut."
johnny groans, flopping back against the pillows, rubbing a hand down his face. "oh, fuck me-"
"i did," you deadpan. "for hours."
he snorts, but his face is already going pink. "fuckin’ hell… he’s never gonna let me live this down…"
you press the call button. the phone barely rings twice before a gruff, sleep-roughened voice answers. "this better be important, mactavish.”
"uh- hi," you say, gripping the phone tighter. "this isn’t johnny, but i feel like i needed to call his emergency contact so..”
there’s a pause. a sharp inhale. then— "…what happened."
you glance over at johnny, who’s sprawled out on the bed, still naked, still flushed, body twitching with the last remnants of his latest orgasm. his tail flicks, ears pinned back, eyes half-lidded and dazed.
"he’s in rut," you explain. "we- uh- handled it. but he’s still got waves coming, and i don’t think i can keep up with him forever."
"fuck," the guy mutters. there’s some shuffling on his end, the sound of movement, a door creaking open. "how long’s he been at it?"
you hesitate, looking at the clock. "uh… at least five to six hours?"
"jesus fucking christ." more rustling. "i’ll drop some suppressants off. you got any blockers up?"
"yeah, doors are locked, everything’s secure," you say. "no one else has caught onto his scent. hopefully."
"good. last thing we need is someone else getting ideas."
you nod, happy you're both on the same page.
"i’ll be there in twenty," he continues. "keep him calm, get some fluids in him, and don’t let him knot you again unless you wanna be stuck for another hour."
you open your mouth to answer, but before you can, johnny groans, rolling onto his side, tail swishing, his voice petulant.
"is that ghost?"
"is that his name? i mean, i guess so-"
"tell him he’s a fuckin’ cockblock," johnny whines, pouting up at you. "cannae believe this- rut suppressants? really? yer ruining all my fun, mate."
"oh, fuck off," ghost deadpans. "you’ll thank me when you’re not dead from dehydration and a broken dick."
johnny grumbles, burying his face into your thigh, huffing dramatically. "don’t wanna suppressants. wanna keep fuckin’ my bonnie-”
ghost sighs, long and heavy. "jesus christ. twenty minutes."
the line goes dead.
simon "ghost" riley x fem!reader | mafia!au | masterlist
Chapter Twenty-Seven: to you, Aelin
tw: minor violence and gore, miscarriage, abortion mention, infidelity
“You see that girl right there? You stay away from her. She’s nothing but trouble.”
It’s the first thing John’s father says about Aelin Gilroy. Using one long, crooked finger, he points her out in the thick crowd of parents and students attending their Year 8 science fair. Projects and standing boards obscure her as they tower overhead on rickety folding tables, but that blinding smile and incandescent teal eyes shine through the crowd like a lighthouse leading a ship safe to shore.
Trouble. He often disagrees with his father, and this instance is no different. He does not think Aelin Gilroy is trouble. She’s never disruptive in class, and he once saw her give another student her cardigan two years ago when she couldn’t stop shivering in class. It isn’t until her father steps into view that he realizes the meaning of this warning—crisp police uniform, hat held in front of his stomach, giving a firm handshake to the science teacher. An officer. An inspector. An adversary to his father in the most wretched of ways.
Police officers always make the family business difficult.
For many years, John heeds his father’s warning—if not for his own sake, then at least for hers—until Year 11. By some terrible twist of fate, his maths teacher sat Aelin Gilroy next to him in that small, two seater desk. She smells like roses freshly woken by morning dew after a spring shower. He learns she likes to doodle in the corner of her notebook during lectures, and she can’t stop tapping her foot against the floor while taking an exam. John finds that he likes the way her pale brows knit together in concentration, scrunching her forehead, and how soft her voice is when whispering answers to the table on her left.
But he doesn’t have time to think about her. Not that he should. John Price is unfortunate enough to come from a long line of brutal patriarchs who often condition equally as cruel heirs. Once he turns sixteen, his father’s petulance only grows as he forces him to join him on escapades in the night after lectures have concluded. Bodies crumble. His fists split on begging faces pleading for the mercy that has long been snuffed out of his father’s chest. Each night his cheek grows tender with the force of his father’s hand, and his eyes droop with the weight of the secret life of a killer—of a true son born into the family business.
“Red color corrector will hide the bruise on your eye.”
It takes John several moments to realise Aelin Gilroy is talking to him, but even then he doesn’t fully believe it until he turns to see her already staring at him. She’s lazily leaning forward on the desk, hand propping her head up beneath her chin as her tongue darts out to wet her rosy lips. John’s pencil ceases its dance across his worksheet.
“Color corrector?” he repeats.
“Yeah, you know. Makeup. Green hides red marks from acne, orange hides dark circles, red for… very dark circles.” Her brows raise as she silently motions to his eye, bringing his own hand to touch the tender spot on his face. “I’ve got some in my bag, if you’d like. Though, you’ll have to find your own shade of foundation. I think you’re a bit too warm toned compared to me.”
Her bluntness and unabashed reference to the shiner on his eye leaves him chuckling, transforming her coy smile into a small smirk. “You sound like an expert.”
“I am,” she quips before grinning. After a quick glance around the room, Aelin carefully pulls the collar of her shirt to the side, exposing the side of her neck. At first, John finds nothing of any importance until she points out a line of covered hickies just above her collar bone, fingers tracing it as if lovingly. They grey beneath the concealer and foundation, blurring them to the point they’ve almost vanished. “A girl’s gotta have her fun.”
John likes her humor. Appreciates it, anyway. Maybe there’s something comforting about knowing a girl like her gets in trouble; albeit, much less violent trouble than himself. A small flicker of hope ignites in his chest at the idea that perhaps there’s something in common between him and Aelin—that he has the possibility of even resembling something that’s normal. Something not drenched in blood.
It’s a short lived fantasy. When the end of term comes around, and they no longer share classes together, they drift. Aelin keeps her smiles polished while John continues to do the only thing his father ever bothered to teach him. By the end, Aelin’s A-Levels are enough to earn her a trip to anywhere in the country. Opportunities are thrown at her feet and offered up on dainty silver platters that glisten bright enough to reflect the future ahead of her. As for him, his father dies when he’s twenty. Murdered, and in a way that’s eerily similar to the way his mother had been. Cold, calculated, ruthless—his father’s existence is snuffed out by a single bullet, leaving behind nothing but a bloodstain coating the pillow that covers his face.
The torch is passed down—the handle is still bloody.
Over the years, he grows rigid and battle-hardened thanks to the business of violence that was bequeathed to him by his late father. He builds upon a decrepit empire until it’s thriving with sharp teeth and hired guns. It’s the only thing his father taught him; how to be dangerous. How to collect teeth and grind them to dust beneath the sole of his shoes. The Price family rises to power. The name forces people to tremble. John Price has nothing to lose but his own life, and even that pathetic amount he can scarcely get himself to care about.
The only thing he holds close to him is the ghosts of his past. They always lurk in uncomfortable places, whispering into the shell of his ear, biting at the nape of his neck. It finds him at all hours of the day—it torments him. Slithers beneath his skin. Even now as he stands in line at the florist’s shop his skin itches, eyes flickering to the exit, fingers twitching for the knife stowed in his pocket.
The only emollient he can find in this place is the voice of the woman in line before him. Demulcent and fleeting, he notes the way his heart slows. How the pathetic muscle quivers in his chest as she sweetly thanks the shopkeeper. When the redolence of roses reaches him, he tells himself he’s hallucinating, but when she turns to leave—small bouquet of flowers in her hand—he realizes who it is.
Aelin Gilroy.
Even after all these years he can still recognize her. The soft slope of her nose, the faint, bouncing curls in her flaxen hair, and her grace. How her chin is held high. How confidence exudes from every pore in her body as she floats toward the exit. Somehow, she’s even more perfect now than she was when they were children. He steps out of line, forcing the shopkeeper to stare at him with narrowed brows as he follows after her on uncertain feet.
“Aelin?”
All the air leaves his lungs when she turns to face him. She’s grown into her features now. Rosy cheeks and full lips, but her eyes are still the same. Crystalline like a low tide, filtering golden sunlight into fractals. Those eyes stare at him blankly, hands uncomfortably adjusting the bouquet as she traces him without a shred of familiarity.
“Yes?” she asks tensely.
Chuckling, he slaps his hand on the nape of his neck, rubbing out the tension there. “It’s John. John Price.”
There’s something about the light igniting in her eyes that has him feeling warmer than he has in a long while. A precious grin breaks out on her lips as she steps closer, now comfortable with his presence. “Oh my god, I didn’t recognize you! It’s been years… staying out of trouble, I hope?”
“Getting in just enough to keep things interesting,” John counters.
It’s as if no time has passed at all. She’s still that star pupil. Still that girl that had every boy tripping over their own two feet. Even now he can still hear her feet tapping against the floor as her pencil fills in test answers.
“What’s the occasion?” he then asks, gesturing to her bouquet.
“Oh,” she says. Her voice trips. Fractures. “Well, it’s—erm—the anniversary of my dad’s passing.”
John blinks. He can vaguely recall the news. Rolling clips of the police station and the accident that stole his life away. Somehow he never put two and two together.
“I’m sorry to hear that, I hadn’t heard,” he quickly apologizes.
Despite the terrible awkwardness of the conversation, she still smiles. Always graceful. Always poised. “It’s alright. I’m… making my peace with it.” She pauses, throat clearing with a tense cough. “What about you?”
“Oh, just some flowers for mum.”
His response makes Aelin smile something small and bittersweet. “How lovely. I bet she’ll love them.”
“They’ll make for good decoration.”
Something settles between the two of them—something that had never been there before. Not while they were children, growing up with one another in different corners of the world. It’s unfamiliar. Suffocating. It leaves John floundering, but the warmth it brings is intoxicating.
“Well, I ought to get going,” Aelin excuses politely. “Got a few more errands to run. But really, it was good seeing you again, John.”
This is the part where he should say goodbye. Wish her farewell just for her to vanish into a life of fortune where he’d never see her again. If he was a smart man, John would have done just that, but instead he finds his hand diving into his pocket where he retrieves a pen before quickly stealing one of the shop’s business cards to scribble down his number in the negative space.
“Here,” he says, holding it out for Aelin to take. “I’m certain you get this a lot, but if you need anything, anything at all, I’ll be there.”
To his surprise, she takes the card without hesitation, aqua eyes scanning his rushed handwriting while quietly thanking him. As she holds the card in front of her, something catches John’s attention. There’s a glint on her finger, one that reflects the light so brightly it nearly blinds him. Upon closer inspection, he realizes it’s a large, gaudy ring. Something given in poor taste. Something that attempts to steal the spotlight of Aelin’s beauty rather than compliment it.
“Did you get married?” John asks in what he tells himself is mere curiosity.
“Oh. No, not yet. Just engaged,” she says with an odd tone. Aelin glances at the ring—at the small band and large diamond that looks heavy enough to weigh her down. As if she can’t stand to look at it any longer, she shoves the card into her pocket before smiling at him. “Thank you again, John.”
As Aelin exits the store, she tries not to think about how this interaction with a long lost classmate of hers has her feeling lighter than she has in years. That’s all she feels these days. Heavy. Weighed down by a stony gaze that used to look at her with adoration as the looming nature of her own failure hangs over her head as if each step she takes brings her closer to the gallows.
There is little reprieve to be found in the cemetery where her father lays. Knees digging into the fresh grass, trembling fingers propping the flowers against his headstone, she does not pay attention to the tears streaming down her face. She’s learned to ignore them, if not welcome them. The wind picks up, cooling her feverish face as she traces the engraving of her father’s name letter by letter with her index finger.
“I miss you so much,” she whispers. “Everything’s gone to shit since you left. I dunno what to do without you.”
Her days have been foggy. Each waking moment leaves her stumbling through the dark all while she pretends she’s still the radiant girl she’s always been. It’s difficult to keep up the facade when her bed is cold in the mornings, and her fingers itch for the card John Price gave her. Ghosts follow behind her in the bedroom, her rearview mirror—the toilet.
So then, it should not come as a surprise when she returns home from her mother’s to see the lamp on in the living room. The television drones but no one is listening. A hand on a thigh. Unfamiliar lips pressed against ones she should have memorized but hasn’t felt the touch of in months. The woman looks nothing like Aelin. Inky locks cut into a short bob that her fiance weaves his fingers through as his nose kisses her cheek.
“Adam?”
Aelin’s stomach drops when they jump, heavy eyes now on her as she stands in the entryway. When Adam’s chest heaves with a sigh, she’s suddenly in the bathroom again. Hands clutching her stomach as she waddles out. Eyes full with tears as she sees him sitting on the couch, focused on the football match. It’s the same thing all over again.
She doesn’t wait around long enough to hear his excuses. The front door slams shut behind her but the sound is muffled on her ears as she slips into her car and speeds away.
Night has long since fallen by the time she reaches the park. When she was a child, her parents used to own a home in this neighborhood and she often came here with her dad. The swingset is painted blue now instead of red, but she makes no effort to approach it as she seats herself on an algid, metal bench.
During times like these, Aelin would often go to her dad for comfort. His office smelled like leather and Earl Grey, and he always kept a recliner in the corner of the room for her to curl up in to do homework, or cry about boys at school. He always knew what to say. What to do. Guiding her with a soft hand and sweet heart—she always wished she was more like him.
Now—without the luxury of paternal comfort—she does something stupid.
Fingers haphazardly digging through her bag, clutching the florist’s card, shakily punching in the numbers into her phone; Aelin knows she’s insane. Insane for thinking John Price is the person to call for something like this. Insane for thinking he’d even do anything at this time of night. Still, he answers. His voice bleeds through the speaker next to her ear like lukewarm wine. Intoxicating. Comforting.
The only greeting she can choke out is a sob.
By the time John finds Aelin, all of her tears have run dry, having been replaced with a brutal fury instead. A thick numbra clouds the park as the halogen lights hardly hold a torch bright enough to fight off the darkness. Still, he approaches her, noting how her knees bounce just like they used to all those years ago during exam season. Her bottom lip is bright red—irritated and cracked, abused by her teeth.
For as much effort as he puts into looking calm on the outside, there is nothing in the world that can settle the nerves fraying within him. Hearing her cry, hearing her beg for him to come and get her scared him more than he cares to admit. The tear stains on her cheeks make his fists curl. If only she knew the dangerous power she holds. The power to say bite and for John Price to respond where.
It doesn’t take long for him to coax out the truth. The rage swirling within Aelin nearly erupts as she spews every brutal detail. How Adam had been acting strange the last few months, how he used to show her off but has been keeping her locked away like a dirty secret, or something he’s ashamed of.
“Two fucking years, John,” Aelin seethes, teeth gritting so hard that they nearly crack. “Two years of being with him just for him to do… to do that? He moved me into his home, wanted me to quit my job because he said he wanted to take care of me, to take care of… of…”
Terrified that you’ll disintegrate before him, John reaches a careful hand out and brushes it against her shoulder. The tension melts beneath his touch, and if he wasn’t so concerned, pride would swell in his chest. “Easy, love.”
“I could’ve been great,” she continues, voice cracking as she leans into him. “I was able to go to any school in this country. I got my degree. I could’ve kept at work and been… something. And I didn’t need to. Not really. There was never anything I was trying to prove to anyone. I could’ve had a few kids with that white picket fence and stayed home to care for them, and I would’ve been completely happy living that trophy wife life if it meant I was loved. But I’m not, and it fucking hurts because I know I’m worth so much more than this.”
She crumbles like dust. The kind that’s so thin and fine you can only see it in the air when sunlight hits it. John’s arms wrap around her, pulling her close, palm cradling her head as she shakes in his grasp.
“Fuck, I’m so stupid,” she babbles.
“You’re not stupid,” he attempts to persuade.
“Adam only proposed when we found out I was pregnant,” she says. Her voice shatters. Fractures. Each syllable catches in her throat, slices the tender flesh. “T-Then my dad died and… It was stupid to think he’d want to stay after I lost it.”
John’s blood runs cold. His vision clouds with ichor—vermillion and thick. It’s so close he can nearly taste it. A violent man to a violent end, he craves it now more than ever. Instead, he holds her closer and gathers enough bravery to kiss the top of her head.
“None of that was your fault, love,” he assures. “You’re brilliant. Downright brilliant, and he’s a sorry sod for not seeing it.”
It takes a little convincing to get her to agree to stay at his place for the night. Really, there’s something comforting about being somewhere else. Away from her mother and that house that’s still haunted with her father’s ghost. John gives her an old t-shirt and a pair of joggers he’s been meaning to throw out for some time before ensuring she’s comfortable enough in his guest bedroom.
When he’s certain Aelin’s asleep, John sits in his office, hand over his mouth, teeth grinding as he stares at his phone. It takes only five minutes of deliberation before he’s dialing up the only man he knows he can trust.
“Yeah?” Simon Riley. His blunt greeting cuts over the line over the sound of thrumming club music and a cacophony of chatter.
“Riley, I need a favor. I’m sending you an address and I need you there as soon as possible,” John says, voice rumbling low and dark as he taps his desk with the tips of his fingers.
“What for?”
“A friend,” John excuses. “I need any items that seem like they belong to a girl. Clothes, toiletries, things of that sort.”
There’s a pause, and John can already see the expression on Riley’s face. A raised brow, tight lips, and a small huff. “Somethin’ ya can’t get yourself?”
“If I go myself, I’m breaking the jaw of the bastard who lives there,” he growls.
Inhale. Exhale. “This have somthin’ to do with the girl earlier? The one cryin’ on the phone?”
“Yeah.”
A hum. “I’ll be there in an hour.”
Much to John’s surprise, Aelin doesn’t ask too many questions when morning comes. She doesn’t push when he gives a vague answer about how he got her items, and she doesn’t question where her engagement ring vanished to, or why Adam hasn’t bothered to call or text her since she stormed out of the house. He tells her to stay as long as she likes—as long as she needs.
But she doesn’t leave.
Aelin Gilroy lingers in his home—not as a ghost, but as a dream. Something drifting between his fingers, just out of reach, that he wants so desperately to hold. He finds residuals of her in the shower with her golden hair stuck to the wall and the silage of rose toying with his nose. She’s there in the kitchen when he comes home, cooking up a late dinner, asking him to join her for a movie.
There is no effort on her end in leaving, just as there is no effort from him in getting her to leave. He would keep her forever if he could. Hold her in his arms like he did that night in the park, cradling her head against his chest. All she would have to do is ask him.
But as the weeks meander on, John finds himself sitting next to her on the couch. There’s too much wine in their bodies, ichor red and brimming full in his stomach, diffusing the light of the television as it illuminates her skin, her smile, everything. He decides that he likes this. Her. Enjoys the warmth of another human in this too-large house, always a void greeting him when he gets home, a black hole waiting to crush him. He doesn’t know how his father could have ever treated his mother so cold when the touch of a woman seems to make this home flourish.
She feels his gaze. Heavy lidded and murky with alcohol. She stares back, aqua hue bleeding into something darker, like the depths of the ocean instead of the mere tide lapping at the shore—unknowingly profound. He has yet to scratch the surface of Aelin Gilroy.
Yet he gets close to it when she places her glass on the coffee table and swings her leg over his lap. Bum resting on his knees, her hands steady her swaying body as she grips his shoulders, curls cascading down her back like a waterfall of sunlight. John stares up at her with awe blurring his vision. She smiles like she knows the mess she’s making of him.
“Kiss me.” She does not ask. She demands it. Requires it.
He leans back until his skull hits the cushion, then shakes his head. “You don’t want me to do that.”
Her eyebrow quirks. “Why not?”
“I’m not a good man.”
“I know.”
Those words are a baton to his diaphragm, forcefully expelling a chuckle from his throat before he can stop it. She tilts her head and he nearly grabs the nape of her neck to devour her whole. “How do you know?”
“I’ve always known,” Aelin insists. “I’ve always been a daddy’s girl. Besides, if you were a good man, you’d be dead by now. The good ones are always quick to go in your line of work, aren’t they?”
John wants to pretend that he’s surprised she knows, but of course she knows. Aelin Gilroy, daughter of Sean Gilroy, Chief Inspector, top of her class, the looks to kill and a brain to go with it. It does not take a genius to sniff out the blood that stains his hands. Dirty hands. Soiled hands. Ones he can’t help but place on her waist.
“If you know that much, then you know that you don’t want me to kiss you,” he insists.
“Why?” Her turn with the questions.
“Becuase I’m not dragging you into a life like this. I’m not letting you get hurt because of me.” His admission comes with plaguing visions that are so noisome they sting his eyes. Rose pink brains soaking into a mattress. Fingers plucked free of the palms they used to call home. His mother, dead and left to rot like a warning. “You don’t want this.”
“No. I just want you,” she hums. Aelin’s hands begin to wander, fingertips brushing against his hairline as she tilts her head, curiously inspecting him, spinning eyes hardly able to focus on one part of him before moving to the next. “You’re not your father, John. You share his name but not his mistakes. You are not a bad man.” Palm to cheek, warmth swelling together against his feverish skin—she presses her thumb to his lips. Drags down over them until they’re parted. “You might not be a good man, but you’re too kind to be a bad man.”
It isn’t until her lips meet his that John Price realizes that he’s been caught in Aelin’s trap for quite some time—she’s just now decided to rein him in. It’s the closest to heaven he’s ever been. Even as her teeth sink into his flesh, even as her nails rake across his back, even as she drowns him—nothing but a corse floating among stilly water—he knows he cannot starve himself of this one desire.
After so many years, he finally has something to live for besides the circle of life and death. Besides being a slave to his family name simply because paternal law decrees it. Now, he has something to build. Someone to love. A future that holds more than decrepit bones. A ring covers the old scar on Aelin’s finger. His bed is always warm in the night when he returns home and in the morning when he can’t bring himself to wake with the rest of the world.
The room she slept in during her first night with him now holds a crib.
It’s made of wood and engraved with pumpkins and rabbits, a project Aelin took upon herself and has been whittling away at with a small carving tool. Hunched over, stomach swelling quietly but still enough to be noticeable in her sundress. The image has been burned into his mind all night while he’s been away at work, hunched over his desk, listening to pathetic excuse after excuse.
He leaves early tonight, hands buzzing too much to quiet, fingers screaming for his wife. To hold her face and smooth over her stomach. She’s gotten more emotional these days; crying at any kind gesture, or any time she looks at the crib for too long. John hates to see the tears that stream down her cheeks but doesn’t mind the excuse to hold her close, to chuckle into her ear, to toy with the ends of her hair.
When John steps inside, there’s nothing but blood to greet him.
Watery. Bright red. It stains the couch in the very spot Aelin curls up in at the end of the day with a warm cup of tea and something quiet to put on the television. John stares at it. It spreads, ichor floating through the veins of the couch similar to the way it spreads on a mattress, soaking deep—too deep to get out. Deep enough to scar.
He panics. Her name rings through the house as he trips down the hallway, following the sparse trickle of blood like breadcrumbs. There is no answer, but he hears her quiet, muffled sobs. Hand clasped over her mouth, eyes squeezed shut as if that could ever stop the tears; she’s on the toilet. He doesn’t even knock before entering, but she doesn’t have the energy to chastise him for it as she sits curled over herself, sundress bunched around her waist, arms cradling herself as if she can hold the remaining bits of her child within her shattering womb.
“Love,” John breathes. Within an instant he’s on his knees before her, but she won’t look at him. He reaches forward, cups her face in his palms, wipes his thumb at the never-ending flood of tears. She’s feverish to the touch.
“I-I’m sorry,” Aelin sobs. Her arms press further into her stomach as she leans forward, head attempting to bow, but John keeps her head above water—keeps her from drowning. “I really thought it would be different this time, I just… ah… John, it hurts so bad.”
Her sobs come unheeded now, and each rattling reverberation that cuts through her shatters his newly mended heart. John holds her with trembling hands. His own eyes squeeze shut, faint tears wetting his eyelashes as he rests his chin on her head. Even against his neck he can feel how warm her forehead is—how it nearly blisters his skin.
After fifteen minutes of his world ending, he takes her to the hospital. Ultrasound visits turn sour now that there is no baby to look at. The bleeding stops. Their child is gone. When they arrive home, all they do is lay in bed with nothing but the sound of their hearts shattering to break the silence.
It is the first time, but it is not the last.
It happens again.
And again.
Eventually, after the years, they give up. Their hope flickers and wanes, but the desire still lurks in their eyes every time they pass a stroller during date night or they look at that empty nursery-converted-to-guest-room. John puts that love into the men who work for him instead, and Aelin gives it to her adopted sister. But at the end of the night, no matter how long they were out laughing or chuckling, they come home to a warm bed, desperately searching for the grubby hands of what could have been.
But it comes back. It barrels like a bullet into their lives, embedding into deep tissue, nestling too far to rip it out without doing more damage. It arrives as a phone call. A sob. A begging to be free of this torture. John finds it in the bathroom with Aelin, curled forward, ripped boxes strewn across the floor, along with three positive pregnancy tests.
She looks up at him as he enters the bathroom, eyes red and irritated, her usually neat hair now frizzy. “John, I can’t do this again,” she chokes.
Wordlessly, he joins her on the floor with an arm snaking around her back. Aelin collapses into his chest, legs slung over his lap, head resting against his collarbone as he cradles her. For a long time, he is silent. Neither of them speak as the weight of the situation begins to crush them under impending pressure. It squishes the blood clean from their bodies, suffocating their brains of all helpful thought.
The world is ending all over again.
“I’ll support whatever you want to do, love,” John murmurs against the crown of her head.
Brows furrowing, she stiffens. “What do you mean?”
His words get caught in his throat for a long, aching moment before he’s able to choke them out. “If you… want to terminate, then we can do that. Or if you want to keep it then we’ll do that, too.”
Aelin is quiet for a long time. There is nothing but soft sniffles and the occasional pule that slips from her lips, but John doesn’t rush her. Instead, he holds her until her muscles relax, and she’s nothing but a limp mess against him.
“One more time,” she decides, malice slipping into her tone as she wipes her nose on the back of her hand. “One more time, and if it doesn’t work, I’m getting a hysterectomy. I can’t keep doing this b-but… I just… want to pretend to hope for a little while.”
Nodding, John places one more kiss on her head. “Okay, love.”
For the first few weeks, Aelin is near unconsolable. Nesting on the couch, blankets obscuring her body, hugging a pillow to her chest as her glassy eyes watch flashing images on the television. She attempts to distract herself with the company of her adopted sister, but the connection feels severed. Smiling and pretending to be happy when she’s harboring a secret that will surely demand blood before she has the chance to sing its praise.
But that secret keeps growing. And growing.
Each passing day that Aelin wakes and there’s no blood to follow her throughout the day, a glimmer of hope roots in her chest. It burrows and whispers. It promises love and fulfillment. It promises something she’s never been fortunate enough to achieve previously. It’s enough to make her skin glow, rosy and golden like the sun kissing the horizon before bed. It’s enough to make her cheeks swell as shiny, opalesque teeth peek between glistening lips. It’s enough for now, and then—
“Oh my god.” Hands on her stomach, smiling through the tears, bottom lip trembling. “John, it’s twenty-four weeks. It’s viability week.”
—and then it’s everything.
Time rolls backwards as the guest room is once more turned into a nursery. Bunnies and pumpkins, soft oranges and fluffy whites, and a perfect hint of peach. A changing table with ribbons along the side. A rocking chair for the long nights when none of them will get rest, and it will be worth it to have a sleepless night due to love rather than turmoil.
But joy is a meal that tastes better when it’s shared.
So, Aelin stands in the kitchen. Film refracts the light above her through the sonogram in her hand, thumb holding the picture so firmly as if she’s afraid it will slip through her fingers. Heavy feet rattle the floor behind her before she feels warm palms smooth over her stomach and a chin on top of her head.
“She’s beautiful,” he murmurs.
Smiling in agreement, Aelin scans every little feature. The curve of the baby’s nose, how her lips part as if already babbling, hands squished up to her face like she’s trying to chew on her fingers. “Just over halfway there.”
Just as she lowers the sonogram, the baby kicks against John’s palms. His chuckle hits her, warm and dripping with adoration. He squeezes back, pulling Aelin against him.
“Are you sure you don’t want me to come with you?” he questions.
“Yeah, I think it would be better this way,” Aelin nods. “I feel… a little bad. Having been sort of ignoring her these last few weeks. I know Simon is taking good care of her but… well, it’ll be nice to have dinner with just the two of us.”
She turns her attention to the card before her. The outside is plain. A simple white background with frilly lettering asking Guess what? On the inside, there’s that same lettering with the triumphant announcement of It’s a girl! followed by enough space to put a sonogram. Then, there’s a mini calendar of August, with a circled due date. She shoves everything inside of a light peach envelope before sealing it shut with the tip of her tongue, but as she stares at it, she feels it doesn’t quite look right.
Inspiration strikes her, and she quickly retrieves a pen from the junk drawer before scrawling Auntie Chip on the envelope. Smiling, she sticks it in her purse.
And with that, she is ready for dinner.
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“Yer gettin’ married next week.”
You scoff at your brother staring at his Scotch whisky like it holds the answers to the universe.
“And you’re the king of Egypt. Funny, Simon.” He doesn’t laugh. Instead, he glances at Johnny, his husband and right-hand man. The two have a silent conversation, a head twitch followed by a pursing of lips. Johnny’s lips are cracked and split, something you can’t imagine your brother is attracted to. Superb mental health does not run in your family.
Johnny rises out of his chair, a wooden thing that creaks with effort, and takes his leave. He ruffles your hair on the way out while you try, for the thirtieth time, to shove his side. You are, yet again, unsuccessful. He’s built like a tank.
“M serious, love. ‘Ve been in negotiations the past month. It’s happenin’ next Saturday, St Etheldreda's Church.” You run through a list of churches in your head. St. Ethledreda’s is not in Manchester. In fact, you’re pretty sure it’s not in your territory. Which means…
“Why’re you naming a church in London?” Simon’s quiet as his eyes bore holes into yours. This is one of his favorite tactics to use on his men - staying silent until they find the answer themselves. You hate when he uses it on you like you’re under his command and not his younger sister.
“You can’t be serious.”
“We need an alliance an’ they offered.”
“Then write a fuckin’ treaty! Not a marriage certificate.”
“You know it doesn’t work like that.”
“It’s the 21st century.”
“Not in this family.”
That’s something you can’t argue against. Most people outside of your immediate circle don’t even know Simon’s married to Johnny, let alone into men. When he first came to power, you created a sob story for him - early marriage to his (female) childhood sweetheart, then fast-spreading cancer, ending with a man struck by grief. It allowed him a known reason for turning down arranged marriages while making him seem more human than your shared father. No one paid enough attention to you two as children to know the story wasn’t real, and fake certificates of marriage and death are a dime a dozen. Everyone knows he’s close with Johnny, his right-hand man, and that’s that.
“What about my bookstore?” It’s your pride and joy, plus it’s 95% legal. Mostly.
“There’s bookstores in London.” London. Only 200 miles away, but it’s like another world. Another world where you can’t walk down the street where every single storefront owner knows who you are. Where the cops are on your family’s payroll and don’t blink an eye at the gun strapped to your hip. It doesn’t matter if you were raised away in your formative years, losing your accent and most concepts of slang that baffle you. It doesn’t matter if you only share a father with Simon, that your mother was a Riley employee and not Mrs. Riley. Manchester is your home.
It doesn’t occur to you that you have a choice, mainly because you know you don’t. The firm, or mafia, gang, or whatever you want to call it, still operates as if women are objects to be traded and bought. Marriages are merely political agreements. Getting to run a bookstore, or cash-cleaning business, as a woman is almost unheard of where you’re from. Others might call you lucky, but it’s more like being a bird in a gilded cage. A glimpse of what a true, normal life might look like. Living in a flat above your store, hosting local book clubs, setting out free cookie samples - all to be ruined when Johnny stumbles through with a gunshot or the newest recruits are sent to grab more bullets from the basement. Every other week, you snap back from your daydream and remember that you’re a mafia princess at the end of the day, though duchess seems more adequate since the Rileys don’t have that big of a territory.
“And who is my husband-to-be in London?”
“John Price.”
“I’d rather marry Nikolai. In fact, I might just go elope.” Simon glares and you glare back. “I’m not marrying John Price.” You clarify, for emphasis. Simon leans forward in his office chair, looming over his desk like a puppet master. You’re in the chair across from him, crossing your legs casually like you’re not discussing your arranged marriage and potential future. “Contract’s done, love. Jus’ waitin’ on yer signature.” Your signature, the one change from the barbaric practices of old England. You could say no, but then Simon would have no choice but to cut you off. It would be a sign of weakness to the other families if he let a delinquent bastard half-sister run his decisions.
“I want to negotiate the contract.” It’s the closest your brother has ever been to rolling his eyes. They twitch with restraint, blonde lashes flickering. “This isn’t a TV show, kid. Yer not negotiatin’ yer bloody contract.” You uncross your legs, hands on your armrest like you’re about to leave. “Fine. Let me go call up the NCA, tell them all about my brother and his scary gang.” He sighs deeply, then pulls out his phone. “Bloody hell. Can’t wait t’ marry you off, fuckin’ arsehole.” You grab the bright pink stress ball on his desk, a stocking stuffer you gave him as a joke, and throw it at him. He doesn’t even bother to look up from his phone, huffing as the ball hits the side of his head.
“Here.” He tosses you the phone that’s already ringing. There’s no contact name, just initials. JP. “Riley. Got a problem?” A smooth baritone emits from the phone’s tinny speakers. “Hope you’re not busy this weekend, future hubby. I can’t wait to see you.” Simon sighs at the consequences of his own actions. John’s silent on the other end, processing your words. Bit thick, that one.
“An’ why’s that, sweetheart?” It’s a term of endearment but he laces it with vitriol. “We’re having tea on Saturday at my store. Bring your contract and favorite lawyers. See you then!” You hang up before he can answer, tossing the phone back to Simon. He shakes his head at you.
“Smile, Simon. It’ll be nice to bond with your brother-in-law.”
This is going to be a very long marriage.
If you even get down the aisle.
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Why does reader hate John? Why is she also a little shit? All will be revealed :)
no exactly