ONE MORE FOR THE DJ HOMIE SCREW!!!
All the Imagines
@chatoicboy
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Place your headphones volume to medium or low. This is a LOUD sound.
Thereâs a collective headcanon that Hollows purr. I subscribe to that very hard and I thought it would be fun to share my own headcanons about their purring.
Ulquiorraâs purring sounds bubbly and has small chirps at the back that sound a bit separate from the actual deep sound of the purr. The pur is a little high. Needless to say, he hates it.Â
Part 12 SpecGru reader!!
No content warnings for this chapter.
You mull over your captainâs words in the hours before dinner. Sitting behind Nova in her temporary room, Doctor Whoâs opening theme warbling from your laptopâs speakers. You gently work oil into her scalp, following the precise alleys formed by her braids.
Itâs a soothing ritual, not just for her, but for you. An act of care for a woman whoâs been so kind and patient with you. Who always stood her ground on your worst days, and never allowed herself to be goaded into a useless argument. Sheâs warm beneath your fingers, soft against your chest, the scent of coconut and cinnamon sweet in your nose.
Slowly, you begin to card through memories you put great care into neglecting.
The day you left the hospital, feeling more pathetic than you ever had in your life. A packet of care instructions folded over in one hand. You remember the way Gaz hadnât quite looked you in the eye, mouth tight and regretful at the corners. Almost guilty. Even when he handed over a bag of fresh clothes, saying he was glad to see you on your feet.
Did you know then? Was there some twinge of foreshadowing in your gut? Did you hear a foreboding whisper in your mind, of how the following twenty-four hours would devolve?
Maybe you did or maybe hindsight is a liar.
What really stands out, even after all this time, is how betrayed you felt (still feel) when you reflect on that interaction with Gaz. That the best he offered was a weak warning that Ghost and Price were pissed off at you. The hurt that he didnât even ask how you felt before disappearing for the rest of that awful day. You never saw him after your initial discharge, he might as well have borrowed his lieutenantâs namesake.
And then there was Johnny.
Soap, who made himself perfectly visible, if only to express how pissed off he was. He never bothered to ask how you were doing either â didnât even seem relieved to see you conscious and in one piece. He was tight-jawed and tense; the few times he deigned to speak to you was clipped and terse.
When you finally left, you remember how your chest ached, knowing (intending) youâd never see his thousand-watt smile again. A fair few of your tears on that flight had been in self-deprecation for expecting anything but his total, unwavering loyalty to Simon. It stung that for all his crowing about being a team, looking out for each other, no one left behind â he couldnât spare you a crumb of forgiveness for a mistake in the field.
Price and Ghost had almost made sense, really. But Gaz and Soap had been a peculiar sort of pain. Your fellow sergeants, who had made you feel welcome and comfortable in the beginning â who had been the bridge and buffer between you and your intimidating superiors. And maybe it wasnât their fault that you never quite felt like you had a seat at their table, but theyâd tried.
Still⌠at least you can look at them. You canât imagine opening your mouth to face Price or Ghost and anything but acid pouring out.
âWhatâs on your mind, babes?â
You blink, palms automatically cradling Novaâs head as she tilts it back to peer at you. On autopilot, you dip down to kiss her forehead, then the gentle curve of her lips.
âHmm?â
âDonât get me wrong, the massage is nice,â she teases, âbut youâve gone over my whole head at least twice now.â
âOh,â you intone, swiping your thumb behind her ear. âJust thinkinâ is all.â
âI can tell,â she giggles, âthereâs practically smoke cominâ outta your ears.â
You grimace a bit, arms lowering down to circle her shoulders in a hug. She curls her clever, slender fingers around your forearm, tracing soft patterns with her blunt nails.
âSorry, love,â you mumble, flicking your eyes to the screen. Realize youâve only got a vague idea of whatâs going on. âIâm being a bad date.â
âYouâre not,â she insists, squeezing your wrist. âThis sâall been a lot, yeah? I just donâ want you being on your own in there.â
She taps two fingers against your temple. You used to spend all your time alone in your own head. Not because it was safe â it wasnât â but it was familiar. It took her and the rest of the team concerted effort to pry anything of value from you.
Now, you muster up an appreciative smile as you nuzzle into her hand.
âIâve just been trying to decideâŚâ
She pauses the show and wriggles to get a better look at your face, hums for you to continue.
âIf I should try talking to the 141,â you continue. âCap said I should consider it. See if we can put all that old shit to rest.â
âDo you want to put it to rest?â
âI should.â
âBut do you want to?â
The question brings you up a bit short. Being mad is easy. Youâve been mad at them for so long, one step short of loathing, that youâve settled into the feeling. Dug your heels in. Itâs an easy way to put a stopper on all the complicated hurt lying beneath.
âI want to talk to them the same way I want to go to the dentist,â you muse.
She picks up what you arenât saying.
âYou donât want to, but you know itâs healthier if you do.â
You grunt, still too proud to admit it outright.
âThe wound closed over, but it never healed properly,â she says. âMaybe youâve got to reset it, yeah?â
You sigh. âYeah. Just not sure where to start.â
She shrugs. âWherever you want to. Do it on your own terms. Only way youâll be able to stomach them.â
You chuckle. âYeah, youâre probably right.â
ââCourse I am,â she chirps. âIâm used to navigating bad weather.â
You nip at her fingers, prompting a bright peel of laughter as she tries to squirm away. As you wrestle her back into your lap, your nerves soften and settle.
Even if you excise this wound, you know you wonât be left bleeding alone. Not ever again.
You havenât come to any concrete decision after dinner. Not that anyone asks. Nova isnât one to push and your captain has already said his piece. You havenât told Nikto or Keegan about your dilemma yet, and youâre not sure if you will.
Niktoâs take on the situation isnât obvious â though if you had to guess, it would be similar to Novaâs. But Keegan? You already know what his answer would be.
Of anyone in SpecGru, he had to work the hardest to earn even an iota of warmth from you. He reminded you too much of Ghost â and how could he not? The perpetual mask, the sharp one-liners. Gruff and closed off, frighteningly capable, and a crack shot with a sniper rifle to boot.
It used to take everything in you to pull your punches during spars. The rare instances that you would agree to eat with your new team were never if Keegan was present. And more than once, you walked into the rec room, saw his looming figure, and turned right back around.
The only time you could stand to look at him was during missions, but your captain was always sure to receive a killer glare if he paired the two of you together.
Keegan was your partner on the mission that changed things.
It had been a week straight of shit sleep and bad memories, sick on loneliness and anger. When boots hit the ground, you stormed right in, eager to prove to yourself (but really, to them) that you were valuable. Didnât wait for Keegan, but that had never stopped him from keeping pace with you before.
You didnât clear your corners, got sloppy and hasty.
Took two stab wounds before Keegan shot the hostile in the temple. When he tried to call the others, you demanded that he finish the mission first. Would have rather bled out than be the reason another mission failed.
The pain and blood loss dragged you under as soon as you choked out the demand.
Then, Keeganâs face was the first thing you saw in the hospital room. Not the mask, him.
Even with dirt and black paint smudging his face, you could see the dark, worried circles beneath his eyes. Could read regret in his angular jaw, relief in the slant of his scarred mouth. For the first time, you looked in his eyes and saw more than an echo of your former lieutenant.
You saw your teammate. The partner youâd left to fend for himself because youâd been handicapped by your own pride. You saw Keegan.
âDid you finish the mission?â you rasped.
He frowned, but your captain stepped forward. âHe did â once we were there to stop the bleeding.â
You never saw Ghost in the weave of his mask again.
And soon after, Keegan was the first person you opened up to about the 141.
It was that very same week. Youâd been sick on shame and embarrassment, using your injuries to nurse your wounded ego. Skipping meals in exchange for raiding your snack drawers and moping in your cot.
Keegan hadnât made himself scarce after your discharge. None of your team had, really â but heâd made a point of checking on you. And lacking your usual sharpness, he hadnât been deterred by your comparatively mild standoffishness either.
Which was how you found yourself stubbornly tucked into the corner of your cot one night, while Keegan sewed the holes in your shirt. He kept shooting you amused looks â probably because you hadnât taken your eyes off him once. Half wondering why he was there, half waiting for the other shoe to drop.
âYou gonna say something, or you just glare all night?â he drawled eventually.
You narrowed your eyes. âDo you plan to stay all night?â
He shrugged, but his eyes flicked to yours, the corner of his mouth ticking up. (No mask. He hadnât worn one around you since the hospital. Not unless people outside your team were around.)
âIf youâll have me. Been meaning to get you caught up on the show weâve been watching.â
You huffed, frustrated. âWhy?â
He arched his brows at you, needle paused. âBecause I like you, despite your best efforts.â
You stared, a little appalled, a little touched. Keegan just chuckled and went right back to mending your shirt. You drew your knees up tighter and hid your quivering mouth with your arms.
âCap says your last team was shit to you,â he said into your sullen silence.
You scowled. He put a hand up as if in surrender.
âHe hasnât said moreân that, donât worry,â he continued, âIâm just sayinâ⌠I donât take any of it personal. Youâre a good teammate, I trust you with more than my six.â
Why, you wanted to demand, flabbergasted and all the guiltier because you knew you didnât deserve it. Why did he trust you? Why was he so patient? Why was he there at all?
You sniffled, but he just kept talking.
âI want to return the favor, ya know? Iâm not askinâ you to trust me after the mission, but you donât gotta be on your own either.â
You were crying quietly by that point, face so hot that your tears felt cold, stomach aching from more than stab wounds. He finally looked up, saw how you were falling apart. But he didnât shy away, didnât close himself off. It wasnât pity or sympathy that softened his eyes.
âThe shit you and I carry, weâre not meant to do it alone, sweets.â
And what else could you do, but spill your sorry guts?
You remember the expression on his face when you got to the part about Ghost. Remember how tightly he held you on your cot, all the distance (emotional and physical) closed between you two. Remember waking up the next morning, Netflix still open on your laptop and flopped gracelessly over Keeganâs stomach like a childhood sleepover.
You couldnât have iced him out again even if you wanted to, after that.
No, thereâs no question what Keegan would tell you, if you asked about talking to the 141. He would say thereâs no good reason to waste oxygen on a single one of them.
So, you donât ask.
You climb into his lap in your temporary room that evening, peeling his mask up and off with slow hands. His eyes are already half-lidded, the corner of his mouth curved fondly. His hands spread across your thighs, warm and rough. The scar twisting across his left palm is sweetly familiar when he draws it along your skin.
âIâm going to try talking to the 141,â you admit.
His jaw twitches, eyes flickering. âNow why the hell would you do that?â
You sigh, curl your fingers into the brassy crop of hair heâs been growing out. Heâs got a quick temper, and a habit of misplacing it when itâs been triggered by something out of his control. You donât take it personally, you never have â itâs gratifying to see how much he cares.
âThereâs no good reason to waste oxygen on a single one of âem,â he growls.
âThere might be.â
He sits back, skeptical but waiting.
You continue, âIâve got a lot of shit to say to them, and they seem eager to hear it.â
âWhy give âem the satisfaction?â he asks.
âMaybe itâll help with the nightmares.â That gives him pause. You draw your thumb soothingly across his temple â a bullet graze from saving your life. âWeâve got too much shit to carry, you and me. Unloading some of it is as good a reason as any.â
His hand drifts up your side, grazes the tattoo coiling down your arm. (The second you ever got â a big piece that took hours, Keegan never leaving your side. Nikto, Nova, and your captain periodically dropping in to provide snacks and water.)
He cups your jaw, guides your face down until your foreheads touch. You stay there, breathing him in. He smells like yours.
âWhat if they make it worse, huh?â His thumb caresses over your cheekbone the way it has a dozen times before, wiping away tears. âIâll have to kill âem.â
You huff softly, amused. âThen kill âem. But Iâm stronger than I was, Kee. Thereâs nothing they can weigh me down with that I canât carry.â
âI know,â he whispers, tilting his chin to drop a sweet, aching kiss on your lips.
âBesides, I wouldnât be carrying it alone anymore.â
His expression lightens, pride shining from his eyes. âDamn right.â
Itâs nearly midnight when you wake from a light doze. Keegan is snoring softly, an arm and leg each hanging over the side of the bed. Your mouth is dry, but you realize itâs your stomach that woke you â pangs of hunger from picking at your dinner earlier. You need to eat.
Quiet and careful, you crawl out from beneath the sheets. Keegan is a heavy sleeper compared to the nearly supernatural senses of Nikto; he hardly stirs as you pad for the door. The hall lights are dim, but you only open it a crack to slip out.
The hall is quiet, no lights on beneath any of the other doors. You hope that means the rest of your team is sleeping peacefully. If you remember right, Nikto and Nova crawled in with your captain this evening. Theyâre all in good company if nightmares creep in; you pray Keegan doesnât have any while youâre up.
Thankfully, the rec room is only two halls away. Light is spilling out as you turn the corner â thereâs a sensor that shuts them off if no movement is detected for a while. Someone is either in there now or was recently. You half hope itâs the latter, but that doesnât deter you from entering.
Your surprised to find Soap leaning against the kitchenette counter, a steaming mug in hand. His expression is flat, grim. Tired. You pause just inside the doorway.
âMight as well come in,â he says, voice low and rough. âIâll clear out in a moâ.â
Even from where youâre standing, you can see that his cup is mostly full.
You exhale and shake your head. âDonât have to.â
âHow gracious,â he rasps, brows twitching like he wants to scowl. Like he canât quite commit to being as bitter as he should be.
Youâre too tired for your usual acid, as well. Just sigh and reach for the fridge door.
âIs that how you want this conversation to go?â you ask.
âIs this a conversation?â he replies.
You pluck out a yogurt cup. âIt can be.â
Heâs glaring into his coffee now, index finger tapping at the ceramic. Thinking. Or maybe just leashing all the things he wants to say but knows will drive you right back out.
âWhy now?â he says finally.
You shrug. âBecause Iâm ready now.â
A tendon in his jaw twitches. âThatâs not fair.â
A hot flicker of anger ignites in your chest. You tamp it down with a spoonful of yogurt, measuring out your words and tone.
âHow do you reckon?â you inquire.
âYou left,â he says. Itâs been a while, but you can detect the hurt underlying the accusation. You suspect itâs something heâs wanted to say for a long time. âYou left us behind.â
You click your teeth off your spoon, take a deep breath. Itâs factually true. You are the one that left butâ
âI wasnât going to wait for you all to kick me out officially.â
He finally raises his eyes, a dark storm of emotion swirling within them.
âWe wouldnae have.â
You tilt your head, cynicism in the flat line of your mouth. âDidnât seem that way to me.â
âI ken you and Simon wereââ
âDonât.â
His mouth snaps shut, brows furrowed. You point at him with your spoon warningly but bite back the sharp remark on your tongue. Arguing isnât the point here.
Settle instead to say, âDonât speak for the others.â
Thereâs a beat of silence as he digests that, then finally nods. âAlright. Just you ân me then.â
You turn back to your yogurt, swipe up another spoonful as you reorganize your thoughts.
âI didnât leave because of Ghost,â you begin. âNot entirely. I left because I was never part of the team. And what happened after that mission just⌠made it all very clear.â
Soap frowns, opens his mouth like he wants to deny it, but you hold up a finger to stop him. He takes a long sip of coffee and waits.
âYou didnât check on me at all. You werenât there when I woke up. You never asked if I was okay,â you continue. âYou were too busy being angry on Ghostâs behalf.â
âYou almost got the both of you killed,â he argues.
âBut you cared more about Ghost almost being hurt than the fact that I was,â you say. And dammit, you feel your sinuses burning, but your eyes stay blessedly dry. The anger disappears from his face all at once as realization sinks in. âI mattered to you less than Ghost.â
His hand tightens around his mug, knuckles blanching. âNo. No, lass, thaâs noâ⌠you were always⌠you survived.â
âI felt the worst I ever had in my life, but you didnât care because I crossed the almighty Ghost,â you insist.
âI cared about you,â he denies.
âBut not more than you did about Ghost.â You drag your gaze up to his. Even his eyes look a little wet now. âAnd that⌠that wasnât enough for me.â
You suck in a shuddering breath, trying to loosen the tightness in your chest. Clear your throat once you feel the threatening prick of tears subside.
âI didnât⌠it wasnae that,â he rasps. âI ken you think Iâm full of shite, but âs true.â
You do think heâs full of shit. Maybe not on purpose, maybe he really does think he cared about you as much as Ghost, but you know better.
âI was just⌠so angry wiâ you,â he explains. âYou could have died. Nearly got Simon killed, all because you thought you knew better.â
You exhale hard. âYouâve never made a bad call?â you challenge.
âIt wasnae your call to make. You should have listened to Ghost. Instead, youââ
âI what?â
Your fingers tingle, numb. Canât even feel the spoon, or the chill of the yogurt cup anymore.
âYou disobeyed orders, it was soââ
âI didnât.â
He stops. Stares. âWhat?â
You stare right back, âI didnât disobey orders.â
First | Previous | TBC...
Masterlist
Summary: Task Force 141 operates successfully without an omega, at least thatâs what Price has been saying since its formation. Two alphas and two betas balance the pack just fine, and they have the numbers to prove it.
It works for a while, until the Omega Initiative is born and the 141 find themselves having to adjust to the sudden addition of an omega to their pack. Fresh out of an institute, youâre hardly fit for their secretive, dangerous world, or so Price thinks.Â
As each member of the team gets closer to you, things begin to come to light, not only about you but about the decision to force you into their lives.
Maybe, just maybe, Price was wrong and the 141 does need an omega after all.Â
Pairings: Poly 141 x reader, Price x Gaz, Ghost x Soap
Warnings: Alpha/Beta/Omega dynamics, NSFW content, explicit smut, fingering, oral (m and f receiving), knotting, biting, claiming, mating cycles, Alternate Universe, a/b/o typical classism and sexism, age differences, military inaccuracies, canon typical violence, blood, weapons, language, no use of Y/N, brief torture, hurt/comfort, let's be real this is so unrealistic but it's a/b/o you're not here for accuracy.
Chapters containing smut are marked with a *
Updates are posted on the weekends, either Saturday or Sunday PST
This fic can also be found on my Ao3 -> HERE
I will no longer be using a taglist for this fic, please follow THIS BLOG and turn on notifications
**This fic is currently in progress**
NAVIGATION PAGE
CRCB DIRECTORY
Part 1 - The Omega
Chapter 1 - The Introduction
Chapter 2 - Adjustments
Chapter 3 - Speak Their Language
Chapter 4 - You Can Be Useful
Chapter 5 - What I Want *
Part 2 - The Bond
Chapter 6 - One Step Closer *
Chapter 7 - Sweet Strawberry
Chapter 8 - The Thing About Ghost
Chapter 9 - Save Me
Chapter 10 - Treat Me Gently*
Part 3 - The First Heat
Chapter 11 - It's Coming
Chapter 12 - Fire In My Veins*
Chapter 13 - Piece Me Back Together*
Chapter 14 - The Aftermath*
Part 4 - The New Normal
Chapter 15: Bonnie*
Chapter 16: Big Brown Eyes *
Chapter 17: Alone
Chapter 18: Don't Let Me Go
Chapter 19: Daddy Issues
Chapter 20: The New Normal *
Chapter 21: Crime and Punishment *
Chapter 22: I Won't Be Gentle
Part 5 - A Pack of Five
Chapter 23: Regrets
Chapter 24: The Last First Time *
Chapter 25: Animals *
Chapter 26: Fuck *
Chapter 27: Drown In It *
Chapter 28: Two Is Company, Three Is A Party *
Chapter 29: There's Something Wrong With My Omega
Part 6 - The Tragedy
Chapter 30: Butterfly's Wings
Chapter 31: Forced Proximity
Chapter 32: The Tragedy
Chapter 33: Ghosts of the Past
Chapter 34: The Whole Truth
Part 7 - The Aftermath
Chapter 35: Threads
Chapter 36: To The Sea
Chapter 37: The Silence
Chapter 38: Shattered
Chapter 39: Life
Part 8 - The Next Chapter
Chapter 40 - Where Do We Go From Here
Chapter 41 - Revenge
Title card made by the beautiful @141wh0re
Hey Hextech, is it gay to cuddle your co-workers?
A continuation of lab shenanigans.
Characters: Viktor, Jayce, Reader
(Jayce/Viktor/Reader) (POLYCULEEEE!)
A thread following the chaotic trio that is, laboratory illustrator!Reader, Viktor and Jayce being unsupervised in the lab.
Note; this takes place during season 1, and the reader is gender neutral with they/them pronouns.
CONTAINS VIKTOR SPOILERS FOR SEASON 2!
There's only one couch in the lab.
There are three desks, four chairs, one whiteboard, boxes upon boxes of chalk, and only one couch.
The couch which Jayce is currently taking a cat nap on and taking up all of the room of. The lab lights are dim, and Jayce looks so comfortable, sprawled out on his back, with his boots still on his feet, whilst his legs hand off the end of the furniture because he's just that fucking tall. He has an arm slung over his eyes despite the low light, and he looks stupidly adorable.
Reader is half tempted to turn right back around and try to find somewhere else to take a power nap. They can't be bothered to lock up their desk, and walk all the way across the academy, and then all the way home to tumble into bed. And their desk is a no no, since hey always wake up with a painful crick in their neck and Viktor's knowing grin taunting them for their bad choices.
The couch looks tempting though... and can they really be bothered to go wandering around campus looking for somewhere comfortable to sleep until their meeting later? The answer is no. No they cannot.
Besides, Jayce finished with the council over three hours ago, so he's had plenty of time for undisturbed rest. And clearly, if he didn't want to share, than he would have put his sizeable salary into finding another couch for the lab already.
Decision made, and sleep tugging at their eyelids, they shrug off their jacket, yank off their boots and carefully sit on the very edge of the couch near Jayce's hip. The worn cushion barely gives under their weight it is so old and devoid of stuffing. How Jayce is deeply asleep on the thing and continues to choose to nap on it since it was brought in, they had no idea.
There's enough room for them to gingerly lay down parallel to Jayce's body on their side. They're so tired, they hardly care. Everything aches. And Viktor isn't around to tease them for essentially 'cuddling' Jayce, which they clearly were NOT! Their back was to the man after all, with the cotton of their shirt barely brushing his jacket sleeve.
If they stayed still, he might not even notice. And they could have their nap and slip away without anyone even-
A sharp inhale of breath at their back has their body stiffening like a deer in headlights. Their tired eyes bug wide, and yet they manage to keep from throwing themselves off of the couch and taking the stupid nap on the hard, cold floor instead. Maybe Jayce won't even notice. Maybe they can pretend to be asleep already.
"You're going to fall off that close to the edge." And oh fuck... Jayce's voice is deep and slurred from sleep.
Their mind screeches to a hault, when the couch shifts violently, and then an arm is winding over their side to drag them backwards. Jayce does not pull them into his chest, but he does give them enough space to be laying on their side comfortably. He's rolled onto his side too, and has shifted back towards the backrest to create more room. He retracts his arm, and his breath evens out.
Reader's mind spins. Jayce is a touchy kind of guy. Always pressing a hand to their shoulder when commenting on a sketch, or leaning up against their back in the kitchen with a quiet apology when reaching for something in an hoverhead cupboard whilst they're waiting for the kettle to boil.
He does it to Viktor too, so Reader know's it is just Jayce being Jayce.
They fall asleep like that, one hand under their cheek, their back to Jayce with a respectful pinkies worth of space between them.
Of course they wake up tangled together. Jayce's arm somehow around Reader, keeping them from rolling off the edge of the couch. Their head is tucked up under his jaw, and his breaths slowly ghost across their ear. It is the most comfortable they've ever been whilst resting on this couch.
Viktor is at his desk, when they decide enough is enough and they REALLY have to get back to work. Jayce audibly grumbles as they untangle themselves, before rolling towards the backrest and putting his back to the rest of the lab.
Viktor scarcely looks up from his work before offering a simply, "ah, you're awake. When you've finished cudfling, mind helping me out with-?"
Viktor falling asleep at his desk.
Reader and Jayce have been quietly arguing over what angle, they should draw of a new project.
Viktor snores when he sleeps. Soft, barely audible puffs of air that are only really noticable when the debate dies down whilst both sides take a moment to breath and gather their thoughts for another round.
The sound draws both sets of eyes to Viktor's desk. Where he has passed out on his notebook, cheek pressed down against the pages, arms limp at his sides, and his cane leaned up against the desk beside him within arms reach.
Wordlessly, both decide to put a metaphorical pin in the argument, whilst Jayce steps away from Reader's desk and begins unbuttoning his waist coat, which has somehow become the unoffical lab blanket. Not only because Jayce is all to happy to lend it to either of his colleagues, but because it is big and warm and everyone secretly loves waistcoat priviledges.
On quiet footsteps, Jayce crosses the room to drape it over the man's shoulders. He doesn't stir, and the other two get back to their playfully fighting just a tad quieter.
Reader not having the keys to get back into the lab, so they sit down beside the doors in the corridor to wait for Viktor or Jayce to come back. Of course, they fall asleep slumped against the wall, and Viktor and Jayce rock up together to find them. Viktor sighs, very put out.
"If anyone saw this, they'd accuse us of abuse." He mutters to himself, rummaging in his pocket for his keys.
Jayce bends down to rouse reader who was having a surprisingly good nap. They refuse to get up and just curl up tighter.
"Come back in ten minutes." They negotiate sleepily.
And Jayce is torn. They look really comfortable, but they'll certainly be feeling sitting on the floor later, so he's reluctant to just leave them there without a cushion at least. Of course, Viktor is quick to prod him along.
"Come on Jayce!" Viktor prompts. "If they're going to be a brat, treat them like a brat."
Which Jayce interprets as scooping Reader up into his arms instead of leaving them out in the hall with the lab door left unlocked.
Of course Reader wakes up immediately. Demanding to be put down, and squirming, Jayce just grins and hauls them inside whilst Viktor shakes his head at their stupid display. Jayce then unceremoniously dumping reader on the couch, and as tradition at this point, shrugs off his jacket to throw at their head.
"We should probably invest in a blanket." Reader grumbles, spreading the jacket over them as best they can before snuggling down.
Viktor deadpans. Somehow, he doesn't think the sentiment will stick for long. Not with his own secret love of waking up wrapped in Jayce's waistcoat, and not with Reader's visible relaxing form under the weight of the jacket, and not with the stupidly soft look Jayce is looking down at them with.
Reader who drags Jayce down by his shirt collar or the lapels of his waistcoat to press a kiss to his forehead.
Reader who exclusively kisses Viktor's moles. As a rule they kiss both of them in farewell after a long day. On under his eye, and the other above the corner of his lip.
Reader who then has to go back to Jayce to bestow him with his second kiss because otherwise he pouts and demands that you play fair.
They're not dating yet...
Lying in Jayce's bed after a rare evening of leaving the lab early. Sitting elbow to elbow up against the pillows, all three of them are reading books, and have changed into their night wear, with Jayce in the middle and Reader and Viktor on either side. Mainly because Jayce tends to roll a lot and will roll OFF the bed if given the chance, and Viktor needs easy access to his cane or brace at all times.
It is Reader who breaks the silence without looking up from their book. "Would you guys still love me if I were a worm?"
They feel two sets of judgemental eyes turn to zero in on them. So they play it cool and neatly turn a page. Their partners exchange confused looks.
"If it were humanly possible," Jayce started slowly, "maybe?"
"Absolutely not." Viktor firmly added.
Reader sets down their book offended. "Maybe?" They parrot back to Jayce, and then turn on Viktor who meets their gaze with a frown. "Flat out no!? Do you two even love me?"
"Of course." Viktor says calmly, "but if you happened to turn into a worm, I would not be best suited to offer you a comfortably, inhabitable environment, what with my long work hours and dangerous research. Therefore, it would be kinder to set your worm-self free, and let us both move on with our lives."
Reader stares back at him in betrayal.
"So you don't love me."
Viktor rolls his eyes at their dramatics.
Jayce tries to soothe them. "Well, look at it this way, it won't happen, so you won't have to worry about it-" "Jayce, you both work with MAGIC!" Reader points out. "You have somehow turned magic into a power supply. There is a whole rune dictionary, and thousands of untold combinations that might very well turn the right candidate into a worm."
Jayce is at a loss for words.
Viktor sits back against his pillow and returns his attention to his book, "I still stand by my earlier statement." Reader tsks and returns to their book to. "For the record, I'd build you both mud homes and take you everywhere with me. It wouldn't matter if you looked different, because you'd still be you deep down."
Jayce looks suddenly touched, and Viktor's hard expression softens a little.
"That is, surprisingly sweet, for such a weird conversation." The latter mutters, whilst Jayce leans in to land a firm kiss to Reader's forehead.
BONUS AND SPOILER FOR SEASON 2:
For some reason, Jayce dragged Reader down into the Hexgate basement before the final fight, getting them to help him pull out all the batteries from the core whilst shit goes down on the surface.
And of course, final form Viktor comes to find them in all his robed, mysterious glory.
Jayce and Viktor having a fun little back and forth.
Reader: looking at final form Viktor with wide eyes.
Reader: flushing under his intense golden gaze and ducking their head, fighting tooth and nail to keep from tucking their hair behind their ear like a school girl with a crush.
Final form Viktor: visibly amused, as he always was in the lab whenever he thought they were being stupid.
Jayce with horror in his voice as he follows Viktor's gaze to Reader: "No! Please tell me you're not thinking what I know you're thinking!"
Reader with visible guilt as they throw up both hands and motion to all of Viktor's tall, god-like glory: "WHAT DO YOU WANT FROM ME? HE'S HOT, AND HE'S VIKTOR! AND I AM MERELY A MORTAL!"
Jayce: "He is trying to kill us!"
Reader: "So? He looks hot doing it!"
Jayce: "Just focus! Please?!"
Reader: "Then tell him to conceal his itty bitty waist. I cannot focus right now, Jayce!"
Viktor: tilting his head as an unnatural angle with fondness in his voice. "It is refreshing to find that you still find my form appealing, even after such unnatural change."
Jayce just watching on in dismay: ...
Reader turning on him: "I TOLD you I'd still love you both if you turned into worms."
Viktor snorts in the background, whilst Jayce goes through the five stages of grief. He settles on dismay and points his corrupted hammer at Viktor's new form: "THAT is some sort of Eldritch being. THAT is VERY different to a fucking WORM, Y/n!"
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Fevered Mistakes
Summary: Ghost, a formidable Alpha, is captured and dosed with rut inducers. You are the omega he's tossed into a cell with. WC: 3429 Warnings: a/b/o, graphic nonconsensual sex, nonconsensual drugging, unprotected PIV sex, referenced torture/experimentation, blood, vomit, death, hurt no comfort, background ghoap, POV switches denoted by triple asterisks (***) Notes: Based off the first half of this post that I made a bit ago. Ngl, I don't really like how this one turned out, but y'all were begging for it so, so I feel bad just letting it rot in my google docs lol. There are two scrapped versions of a second chapter that would make this fic farrrrr less angsty, but idk if I'm ever gonna continue this, so I'm treating this like it's a one-shot with the warnings. If I ever do post a continuation, it will be linked on my masterlist, so you can check for it there. And hey, maybe if y'all share your thoughts about this in my inbox or whatever, it might entice the brainworms again lol. Taglist: @captainsherlockwinchester110283
There was a girl in the cell.
She was small and soft in the way that almost all omegas were, though it was her scent that really gave her status away. Sweet and alluring but soured by fear, it invaded his nostrils and made him all the more dazed. The blow to his head, the one that had landed him in this situation, would have been hard enough to kill him, had he not been an Alpha.
Heâd been sloppy. Let his feelings for Johnny get in the way of procedure. But seeing his beta, laid out on the floor, bleeding from his head, still as a corpse⌠he couldnât have controlled himself if he tried. And at that point, he hadnât wanted to try.
Heâd gotten distracted, and heâd paid the price.
It had been three days since he'd been captured, by his best estimate. It was hard to measure, between the head injury and being kept in a room with no windows. All he had to go off of was how often someone came in to torture him for information. He never gave any up, of course. Even compromised, he never would. He'd been trained far better than that.
Still, he wasnât in very good shape. Beaten to hell and back, his head scrambled⌠his feet dragged uselessly as he was pressed up against the bars, one of his captors unlocking the cuffs on his wrists while the other two kept him restrained. The fourth jammed a syringe into his neck, injecting him with some unknown substance. Ghost tried to break free, to throw a punch or a kick, anything, but his reflexes were sluggish, his thoughts painfully slow. All he succeeded in doing was annoying them, and he got an elbow to the back of his neck for the trouble.
He was no omega, couldnât be immobilized by a simple scruffing, but fuck if that shit didnât still hurt like a bitch. He collapsed to the concrete floor of the cell with an animalistic howl, and the sourness in the omegaâs scent spiked, her heart rate speeding up. Ghost couldnât find it in himself to careâthe very last of rational thought was beginning to abandon him as the pain spread from the back of his neck throughout his entire body, growing unbearable as it reached his groin. He felt like there was fire raging just beneath his skin, and his senses sharpened as his dark gaze locked onto the wide-eyed omega curled up in the corner, neck cracking unsettlingly with the speed at which he turned. He had time for only one more thought before instincts took over, his heart dropping out his ass as dread turned the blood in his veins to ice before it began to boil all over again.
Rut inducers.
***
When you woke up, you were escorted to the cell in which you spend your heats. That confused you, since your next heat wasnât supposed to be for another month at least.
It also terrified you.
Though you didnât remember much of what happened during your heats, you did remember the pain. The desperate, burning need for an Alphaâs knot, and the aching, gaping emptiness when you were denied it, the only thing that could bring you any relief. This cell held nothing but bad memories, and you didnât want to be anywhere near it.
But you had no choice. For as long as you could remember, you did as you were told, the way a good omega should. In your sleep, you thought maybe you saw glimpses of a time when things were different, when there were no scientists in white coats and men and women in military uniforms controlling your life. But you knew those were just dreams. None of it was real.
You sat on the thin mattress in the cold, dank cell for hours before something finally happened that could explain why you were there. A man was brought inâmassive and with a terrifying skull mask on his faceâand you barely had to take a whiff of him as he was shoved into your cell with you to know that he was an Alpha. There was that familiar smell of damp, scorched earth after a lightning strike, and you knew from the intensity of it that he was angry. No, not just angry. Furious. The very air reeked of electricity and burning plastic, overwhelming any hint of his natural scent. This was an Alpha that was ready to rip, rend, tear, kill. And you were stuck alone in a cell with him.
âĐĐľ ŃОпŃĐžŃивНŃĐšŃĐľŃŃ,â one of the uniformed men told you, expression entirely unsympathetic. It was almost worse than the look of sadistic, scientific glee on the face of the white coat next to him. âĐ˘Ń ŃдоНаоŃŃ ŃОНŃкО Ń ŃМо.â
Donât fight back. Youâll only make it worse.
Your eyes widened, and you barely had a chance to shake your head before the unfamiliar Alpha was on you, grabbing your ankle in a brutal grip and dragging you away from the corner youâd curled up in. You screamed in pain as you felt the bone snap like a twig under his large palm, instinctively hitting your hands against his broad chest as you tried to fight him off. If you had been in heat, you wouldnât have cared, wouldnât have even felt the pain from him breaking you, would have spread your legs and begged him to knot you. But you werenât, and so your survival instincts overtook those of your omega. You knew you would be punished later for disobeying, but at the moment, you didnât care. Anything was better than being knotted by the feral Alpha on top of you. He would maul you to death while he fucked you, you just knew it.
The Alpha grabbed your wrists in one hand, pinning them above your head. The other ripped your shirt off, causing your back to arch and your tits to spill out of your bra. He buried his face in your neck, inhaling deeply and letting out a satisfied growl. You tried to headbutt him, and he snarled in your face, wrapping a hand around your throat and squeezing tight enough to make your vision go black around the edges in less than ten seconds. By the time you caught your breath and were able to think again, his hands were busy yanking down your pants and underwear in one harsh tug. You let out a hoarse shriek of fear, flipping onto your belly to try and crawl away, ignoring the searing pain in your shattered ankle. But that was your fatal mistake. His beefy palm met the back of your neck, fingers digging in as he lifted you slightly by it, his other hand coming around to roughly grope your breasts.
And you stopped.
You stopped moving, stopped screaming, you nearly stopped breathing. You were limp as a ragdoll as he scruffed you, utterly and completely paralyzed. You could do nothing but take it as he shoved your face into the dirty concrete, pried your legs apart, and forced himself inside you. You could feel the agonizing pain as his cock practically tore you in half, could feel the ice cold fear freezing every cell of your body, could feel his blunt nails digging into the ultra-sensitive skin of your nape. You could feel everything. But you couldnât do anything to stop it.
It seemed to go on forever, and yet take no time at all. One second, you were pliant and supine beneath the Alpha as he pounded into you, his weight constricting your lungs and making it difficult to breathe. The next, the restrictive grip on your neck was gone, replaced by a sharp pain at the junction of it and your shoulder as his teeth sunk into your flesh. Into your mating gland. Your own screams were echoing in the tiny cell, now, no longer confined to your head.
âMâsorry, Mâsorry, Mâsorry,â a rough, wet voice chanted in your ear. It was the Alpha, speaking to you in English. You could understand it, even if you couldn't speak it. He was still on top of you, still inside you, his knot stretching you far beyond your limits. And yet he was⌠apologizing? You stopped screaming in your confusion, the terrified screeching replaced by the sound of your heaving sobs.
âMâsorry, Mâso sorry, they dosed me, Mâsorry,â the Alpha continued, voice slurred. You struggled to focus on his words, distracted by the liquid you could feel dripping down your thighs. It was probably blood, you realized distantly. His knot wouldnât have let any of his seed escape. Thatâs what it was there for.
That, and to keep you from running.
The Alphaâs voice grew more and more gravelly as his knot began to deflate, his apologies interrupted by grunts as he began to move his hips again, thrusting in and out of you shallowly. You whined, clawing at the floor, trying to wriggle free, but he just settled nearly his entire weight on top of you.
âDonâ fight,â he growled, and you could tell from the strain in his voice that he was at least trying to resist his instincts. It didnât make you feel any better, especially not when his fingers inched closer and closer to your nape again. âDonât, or mâgonna have toâ fuck, I donâtâ fuckinâ be a good omega anâ take itâ mâsorry, fuckâ donât fuckinâ fight meââ
You were still sobbing, shrieking like a dying thing with every quick, brutal snap of his hips against yours. Too out of it from being scruffed, you missed the warning in his jumbled plea threat, continuing to struggle underneath him. You felt your ribs crack as he pressed the rest of his considerable weight onto you, and the strangled, stuttering gasp that left your throat was the kind of sound that elongated in a horror film.
The Alpha seemed to think so too, as he moaned in a horrid mixture of pleasure and abject misery before he scruffed you again. You went still, once more trapped in your own body. It was the worst sensation youâd ever felt, worse than the experiments the white coats ran on you, worse than your punishments, worse than your heats spent alone. Worse than the shattered ankle or broken ribs, worse even than the feeling of him ripping you apart from the inside. You were always helpless and vulnerable, being an omega, but this⌠when you were scruffed, you were no longer a person. You were just an object, to be used as your Alpha saw fit.
Your Alpha.
The man on top of youâwho was knotting you for the second time nowâwas your Alpha. Heâd claimed you, the pain in your shoulder was proof of that. You would wear his mark forever, now. You would belong to him for the rest of your life.
You prayed that it was short.
Your Alpha released his painful grip on your nape again, but you didnât try to get away this time. You were far too disoriented. Being scruffed once was bad enough, but twice in as many minutes? You could easily go into shock from that. You probably were in shock, but you didn't panic, feeling too distant and floaty. The ice in your veins was numbing you from the inside. That was nice⌠you leaned into it, letting your blankly staring eyes flutter shutâ
âOmega!â
Your eyes snapped back open and you whimpered, trying to curl in on yourself. That only caused pain to flare up all over your body, the burning between your legs as you tugged on his knot pulling another scream from you.
âStay still,â the same harsh voice ordered, and your instincts forced you to obey. The command was a little more collected this time, a little more coherent, even if he was still groaning and slurring.
âDon' move,â your Alpha panted, each word sounding like it was dragged out of him. He started to fuck you once more. âDonââ donâ wanna scruff you âgain.â
You didnât have it in you to be grateful. Didnât have it in you to be sympathetic to his situation either, not while he was still rutting into you like an animal.
They dosed me, heâd said. You wished theyâd dosed you. At least then you wouldn't feel the painâŚ
***
Simon had never hated being an Alpha more than in that moment.
Bollocks deep in a pretty little omega, one already stuffed full of his come and wearing his mark⌠he wished fervently that this was just another of his nightmares, the ones that stuck with him like a bad smell even after escaping Roba.
Between the disorientation from his forced rut and the nasty head injury, he almost let himself believe that it was. If it was a dream, he could give in, and he wouldnât actually be hurting anyone. He could just ride it out, come in trousers wherever he was sleeping, and hopefully, it would end faster.
But her screams were far too real.
She wailed like she was being flayed alive as she struggled underneath him, and his Alphaâafter being denied a partner for his ruts for over a decadeâwas brutal and swift in its response. Scruffing her like a scrappy mutt, growling in pleasure at the way she submitted to himâthe way she was forced to submit to him.
It was nearly impossible to think around how fucked his head wasâby instinct and injury bothâbut after he'd knotted her for the second time, he was able to act a little more like the trained soldier he was, and not like a panicked civvie.
He didnât argue with himself any longer. He accepted the reality of the situation as it was. He was in rut. He was trapped with an omega. He had brutalized and claimed her. If he kept focusing on trying to stop himself altogether, he was going to kill her. He needed to give up on that and instead just try to minimize the damage.
Starting with stopping her from going into shock, and then stopping her from fighting back. It only made his Alpha all the more eager to dominate herâby any means necessary.
It sickened Simon that that part of him existed. Deep down, he feared that it always had. That Roba hadnât created it, back in the desert. That heâd just unearthed it. All of Simonâs evilness, all his wicked desiresâŚ
It was why heâd never taken an omega before. Never even let himself date one, back when that was something he did.
Johnny was perfect, in that way. In many ways, really, but him being a betaâit soothed Simonâs fears. The fears that were being proved true.
He didnât know how long passed before the rut inducers wore off. It had to have been hours. The omegaâhis omegaâwas still facedown on the ground when he pulled out of her for the last time. She was bleeding from where heâd bitten her, and where heâd bred her, his cock drenched in her blood, her own thighs stained with a mix of it and his come.
Simon threw up at the sight. He told himself it was just from the head injury.
He was naked, except for his mask, which was pushed up past his nose. He didn't remember taking off his trousers, though he recalled that his shirt had been cut to shreds the first day of his captivity by his torturer. He didnât remember a lot of his mini-rut, as was common when it was induced. But the evidence of what heâd done was right in front of him. The omegaânot mine, not my omega, not mineâwas clad in nothing but the scraps of her clothes. Her side, hips, wrists, and the back of her neck were bruised. Her ankle was bent at a funny angle. A small patch of hair near her nape was missing, leaving her scalp red and raw. Simon looked at his hands, and found the strands woven between his fingers.
She didnât move.
Simon pulled his mask into position and Ghost took over. He moved towards the girl, feeling for a pulse. She flinched violently when he touched her neck, and he felt reliefâand guiltâreverberate through him. Ghost was good at ignoring his feelings, though.
âSâover,â he told her, voice gruff. âSâdone now. Promise.â
The omega didnât acknowledge his words, just kept her shoulders tucked up by her ears, guarding her neck. Ghost didn't protest, simply felt along her spine for any breaks. He didnât find any, so he carefully rolled her over.
Her breasts were red and raw, nipples bleeding from being scraped back and forth across the floor. There was a hand shaped bruise around her throat, and petechiae in the whites of her glassy eyes. Ghost ignored his horror at the sight, and began to palpate her ribs. She inhaled sharply when he touched the eighth and ninth ones, a pitiful, pained whine escaping her.
The ribs were probably fractured, if not broken. The bruising above them was clue enough. There was another massive bruise low on her belly, and Ghost swore. Internal bleeding. He may have actually fucked this poor omega to death. There was no way she survived the night if she wasn't treated soon.
He got his pants and trousers on, hoping it would help her believe the worst was over, and then got to work doing what he couldâwrapping her ribs with the dirty blanket in the corner, and holding the scraps of her shirt between her legs to try and stem the bleeding there. It wasn't enough. It wasnât nearly enough. He didnât even know if it was really worth the discomfort it caused herâbut he couldn't bring himself to just let her die. She was his omega.
Not mine, not mine, not mine.
He talked to her as she faded. Tried to keep her awake with the sound of his voice, though he knew it was probably the last thing she wanted to hear. He told her stories from his childhoodâthe few good ones there wereâtold her the plot of the last film he and Johnny had watched, told her about Johnny. That was the topic he lingered on the longest. It was far easier to talk about his beta than himself. And by the time her eyes slipped closed and her shallow breathing stopped, it was Simon that was holding her, not Ghost, despite the mask on his face.
It was Simon that watched her die.
It was Simon that realized he didn't even know her name.
And it was Simon that howled with grief and rage, clutching the broken body of the omegaâmy omega, my omega, mineâagainst his chest.
Footsteps rapidly approached the cell, and Simon snarled like a rabid animal as he turned towards the bars. He barely had a second to pull his omegaâdead, dead, dead, she was mine and I killed her, she was innocent and I killed herâbehind him before a familiar voice rang out. The only voice that could have possibly reached him in this state, that could stop him from giving into his instincts completely and going feral.
âSimon?â
âJohnny,â Simon growled, sounding desperate and broken. He felt broken. This little omega had managed to do what Roba and a hundred others had failed at. And she hadn't even tried.
âLet us help her, Si,â Johnny coaxed, moving closer while Price and Gaz hung back. Wise, because Simon could barely keep himself from baring his teeth at his own beta. Johnny didn't back down. âSi. Let us help her.â
Simon hesitated for a long moment, fighting his overwhelming instincts, before moving away. Johnny rushed in, immediately checking the omegaâs pulse and starting compressions when he couldnât find it. Simon tried to struggle to his feet, but he nearly fell over, Gaz and Price catching him. He snarled, weakly pulling away from them, but they held fast.
âWe got you, soldier,â Priceâs deep voice rumbled in his ear. âStand down.â
Simon slumped, unable to hold himself up anymore, all his injuries catching up to him.
âI killed her,â he whispered raggedly, eyelids falling shut. He felt Gaz shake him to try and keep him awake, but he simply didn't have the willpower, anymore. âShe was mine and I killed her.â
The mantra rang in his head even as he lost consciousness, and her screams of pain and the look of fear on her face as she lay dying followed him into his dreams.
đđ˘đĽđđđ đđđ đ
featuring. Ekko x fem!reader
wc. 15.5k
synopsis. Born from house Arvino, one of the richest and influential families of piltover. You had it all from luxurious gifts, fancy meals, a magnificent bedroom and much more. Youâre parents gave you everything you asked for. However still never satisfied you. Youâre mind always looked at the injustice and suffering zaun was going through. Thatâs when you first met ekko, the firelightsâ leader. Not very happy to have a pilty messing stuff up.
trope. âenemies to loversâ
warnings. slow burn, cursing, blood, kissing 0-0, suggestive
requested. by anon
a/n. slight spoilers for arcane s2, itâs more like enemies to friends to lovers (sorry) if thereâs mistakes you donât see it! aka not proofread (read it thrice) also thereâs no war in this :)
Above, the shimmering towers stood tall, their wealth and power casting long shadows. Below, Zaun suffocated in its neon haze, its people forgotten in the depths of the cityâs ambition. Whereas the glow of Piltoverâs lights filled the skyline. From the balcony of your family estate, the stark contrast between Piltover and Zaun was undeniable.
âYou think your actions are noble, but youâre a fool,â your fatherâs voice thundered from the dining room. His words, sharp and unyielding, echoed through the halls as you stood silently by the doorway. âConsorting with the undercity rabble is not only dangerous, itâs treacherous.â
âTheyâre not rabble. Theyâre people,â you countered, stepping forward with clenched fists. âYou act like Zaun doesnât exist, but theyâre suffering because of Piltoverâs greed.â
âYou donât understand the world you live in,â your mother added, her tone softer but no less cutting. âHouse Arvino holds power because we uphold order. Piltover thrives because of people like us. You risk everything with your reckless defiance.â
Frustration boiled within you. âPiltover thrives at the expense of Zaun. Those people deserve better.â
Your father slammed his fist onto the table. âEnough! You are an Arvino, and you will act like one. This rebellion of yours ends now.â
His command hung in the air, suffocating and absolute. You didnât argue further. Instead, you turned on your heel and left, the weight of their disapproval bearing down on you. You wouldnât stop. You couldnât.
Zaun had become a second home to you, even if it was a dangerous one. It was there, in the grimy depths of the undercity, that you had met Ekko. The boy with paint-streaked cheeks and a fire in his eyes had been as wary of you as you had been of him. Unfortunately, you had been too blinded by your own self-righteousness to notice the fire in his eyes. You thought your mission was noble, an act of goodwill to deliver medical supplies to Zaunâs struggling districts. Your family, House Arvino, had always prided itself on maintaining a veneer of philanthropy, even when their true motivations were rooted in politics. You had accompanied a group of Piltover enforcers on the trip, believing your presence would emphasize the importance of the task. You were wrong.
The moment you stepped into the heart of Zaun, the air itself seemed hostile. The tension was palpable, the sharp smell of chemical fumes mixing with the weight of countless wary stares from Zaunites who lined the streets. Your voice was soft and unsure as you addressed the gathered crowd, holding out your hands to show the crates of supplies. You thought you were doing something good, offering some small relief to people who had been forgotten.
But the enforcers who were armed and stoic, turned the scene into something far more sinister. They barked orders at the crowd, waving their weapons to ensure no one got too close. You had tried to intervene, to tell them this wasnât how it was supposed to go, but your voice was drowned out by the chaos they had already sown.
That was when the boy appeared, the one you heard slight rumors about. At first, you didnât know exactly who he was, only that he seemed fearless as he stepped forward. Placing himself between the crowd and the enforcers. His voice rang out, cutting through the noise like a blade.
âAnother topsider playing savior,â he said, his tone dripping with disdain. âYou think you can fix Zaun with scraps from your table?â
You had never been spoken to like that before. His words, sharp and accusatory, made your cheeks burn with anger and embarrassment. You turned to him, trying to keep your composure despite the growing crowd that was watching the confrontation unfold.
âIâm not here to play savior,â you shot back, your voice steady even though your heart was racing. âIâm here to help.â
âHelp?â He laughed bitterly, the sound harsh and mocking. âYour kind doesnât help. You just come down here to feel good about yourselves, then leave us to clean up your mess.â
âIâm trying to make a difference!â you snapped, your frustration boiling over.
His eyes narrowed as he stepped closer, his posture radiating defiance. âIf you really wanted to make a difference, you wouldnât bring enforcers with you like weâre criminals. Youâd be standing with us, not above us.â
The words hit harder than you expected. Somewhere deep down, you knew he was right. The enforcersâ presence had turned an act of charity into a display of control, a reminder of Piltoverâs dominance over Zaun. But admitting that felt like defeat, and you werenât ready to back down.
âThis isnât about standing above anyone,â you argued. âI came here because I care. Thatâs more than most people from Piltover would do.â
âAnd thatâs supposed to make you special?â He scoffed, shaking his head. âNewsflash, princess, Zaun doesnât need your pity. We need change.â
The enforcers stepped in before the argument could escalate further, pushing the crowd back and ordering you to return to the transport. You left with the weight of his words pressing heavily on your chest, his voice echoing in your mind long after you were gone.
Over the weeks that followed, you found yourself returning to Zaun despite the tension and despite him. Every time you came, he was there, watching you with that same guarded expression. It seemed like he could sense your discomfort, the guilt you carried for what Piltover had done to his home.
âBack again?â he would say, leaning casually against a wall with a smirk that made your blood boil. âGuess you didnât get the message last time.â
âIâm not here for your approval,â youâd hiss back, your tone dry. âIâm here for the people who actually need help.â
âYou think youâre helping?â heâd shoot back, his voice low and laced with frustration. âAll youâre doing is putting a bandage on a bullet wound.â
His words stung, not because they were cruel, but because they forced you to confront truths you didnât want to face. He wasnât wrong. Everything you did felt small, insignificant compared to the scale of Zaunâs struggles. And yet, you couldnât stop coming back.
Ekko was unlike anyone you had ever known. He was quick-witted and determined, a rebel who refused to back down in the face of injustice. But he didnât trust you, not completely. âYouâre just another Pilty trying to fix a world you donât understand,â he had told you once, his voice filled with disdain.
âAnd youâre just another rebel too angry to see the bigger picture,â you had shot back. Yet despite the constant sparring, you found yourself drawn to him, to the hope buried beneath his frustration.
That hope turned to chaos one night when enforcers raided the Firelightsâ hideout. It happened so fast. One moment, you were in the Firelightsâ hideout, quietly listening as Ekko outlined plans for their next move against Piltoverâs oppression. The next, chaos erupted.
The sound of boots echoed sharply against the metal grates of Zaunâs narrow passages. The enforcers had found the hideout. Your breath caught as the unmistakable clatter of their weapons reverberated through the space. You stood frozen, staring at Ekko as he barked orders to the Firelights around him, his voice sharp and commanding.
âYou brought them here, didnât you?â His words were like a blade, cutting through the noise. His piercing gaze locked onto you, and your stomach churned with guilt.
âI didnât mean to,â you whispered, but your voice was drowned out by the growing commotion. The enforcers didnât give anyone time to explain. They swarmed in, their heavy armor gleaming under the dim light, weapons raised. You reached for the nearest object which was a dainty metal rod. And tried stand your ground. You werenât going to let them harm anyone, not here.
Ekko was already moving, his quick reflexes guiding him as he darted through the chaos. The Firelights fought back, using their intimate knowledge of Zaunâs layout to their advantage. Smoke bombs went off, shrouding the room in thick, stinging fog. He towards you with a slight disgusted look and yelled, âYou have to leave, Now!â
âIâm not leaving,â you said, your voice defiant.
âYouâll just slow us down,â he snapped, the frustration in his tone cutting deeper than he intended. âThey need me. And you need to go back to your perfect little life, staying safe.â
His words stung, but before you could argue, he vanished into the fray, leaving you behind. You tried to follow, weaving through the chaos, but you werenât quick enough. An enforcer caught you in the shadows, his grip like iron as he slammed you against the wall. âHere you are.â
However the enforcers were relentless. One of them caught sight of you, his eyes narrowing as he grinned. You swung the rod with the little strength you had left, but it was no match for their training. Pain exploded across your abdomen as he shot you. It nearly missed your stomach, however you crumpled to the ground. Gasping for the little air you could muster.
Through the haze of smoke and pain, Ekko pull something from his belt. A device crackling with vibrant green energy. âFirelights, cover your eyes!â he shouted. The device emitted a blinding flash, followed by a wave of sound that sent the enforcers reeling. Their yells of confusion filled the air as they stumbled back, disoriented and clutching their helmets.
The Firelights seized the opportunity, retreating deeper into the hideout and disappearing into secret tunnels. Ekko crouched beside you, his hands shaking as he lifted your chin. âYou okay?â he asked, his voice rough but laced with concern.
Without replied to his question, you stumbled out of his grasp. Going into the streets of Zaun, clutching your side as every step sent searing pain through your body. The world around you blurred, a mix of dim lights and the shadows of the towering structures above.
He was shocked to say the least. âWhy did you leave so abruptly?â he questioned himself. Ekko didnât waste a second, he truly did try to hide it. But as soon as the enforcers were gone and the Firelights were safe, he was out the door. Searching for you and he didnât want to admit it. He knew didnât know you as much, but he knew you were stubborn. Matter fact for the short period of time he was with you, he knew you were too stubborn to admit how badly you were hurt.
âWhere the hell did you go?â he muttered under his breath, scanning the narrow alleys and dimly lit corners of Zaun. His mind raced with possibilities, each one worse than the last. You were nowhere to be found.
The beating left you crumpled on the ground, your vision blurred and your body trembling with pain. Somehow you managed to drag yourself back to Piltover, every step a battle against the agony that wrecked your body. By the time you stumbled into your familyâs estate, the grand halls felt like a mockery of your suffering. Your parents returned hours later to find you collapsed in the foyer, your bruises stark against your weak skin. Their shock quickly turned to anger, though it was born of fear.
âThis is what happens when you defy us,â your father said, his voice shaking with fury. âDo you see now? You canât change the world. You can only get yourself killed.â
âI trying to help,â you murmured, your voice weak but resolute.
âThey are not your people,â your mother said, her tone filled with a mix of pity and frustration. âYou are our only child. We canât lose you to some pointless crusade.â Their words lingered, but they didnât understand. They couldnât. The divide between Piltover and Zaun wasnât just physical, it was ideological. You were caught between two worlds, neither one willing to accept you fully. The summons to the Council came the next morning. As you stood in the grand chamber, the weight of their judgment bore down on you. Ambessa Medarda, seated at the center, regarded you with cold disdain.
âYou stand accused of undermining Piltoverâs authority by associating with the undercity,â she said, her voice sharp and unyielding. âDo you deny these charges?â
âI was just trying to helping people,â you replied exhaustively, your voice steady despite the pain in your ribs.
Ambessaâs lips curled into a cruel smile. âHelping? Piltover thrives because of order. And you, as an Arvino, have brought chaos to our city.âThe council murmured their agreement, their disapproval a suffocating presence in the room.
âYour actions were reckless,â Ambessa continued. âAnd your injuries are your own doing. You clutched the knife and cut yourself on its blade, all in the name of some misguided sympathy for the undercity." Her words felt like another blow, each one landing with precision and force.
You straightened your back, though the pain flared at the effort. "I acted because the people of Zaun are ignored and oppressed. Piltover turns a blind eye while it prospers off their suffering. That's not order, itâs exploitation." The murmurs grew louder, some council members shifting uncomfortably in their seats. But Ambessa didn't waver. Her gaze bore into you, her lips curling with faint amusement.
"Such passion," she mused. "But passion without purpose is just noise. You may think yourself a savior, but all you've done is tarnish your family's name and threaten the stability of our city."
Before you could respond, the chamber doors swung open with a heavy groan, and your parents entered. Dressed in their finest, House Arvino's patriarch and matriarch carried themselves with the grace and dignity that Piltover revered. Yet the tension in their features betrayed their unease.
"Ambessa," your father began, his tone measured but firm. "My child's actions, while impulsive, stem from a place of compassion. Surely the Council can recognize that their intentions were not malicious."
"Compassion?" Ambessa's tone was mocking. "Compassion does not excuse rebellion. House Arvino has always stood for loyalty to Piltover's ideals. Is that no longer the case?"
Your mother stepped forward, her voice calm but resolute. "Our loyalty has never wavered. But to degrade my child in front of this council as if they are a common criminal is unacceptable." Ambessa's expression darkened.
"Unacceptable is your heir jeopardizing the balance we've worked so hard to maintain. Zaun is a powder keg, and actions like theirs threaten to ignite it." You bit your lip to keep from speaking. The words you wanted to hurl at her-at all of them-burned on your tongue, but your mother's warning glance silenced you.
"House Arvino will address this matter internally," your father said, his voice brooking no argument. "We will ensure that such actions are not repeated."
Ambessa leaned back in her chair, studying your parents with a calculating gaze. "See that you do. Piltover cannot afford dissent from within its own ranks." The council murmured their agreement, and the session was adjourned. As you were escorted from the chamber, the weight of the council's disdain hung heavy over you.
Back in the confines of your family's estate, the anger you had suppressed boiled over. You slammed your hands against the polished surface of your desk, the pain in your ribs flaring with the movement. "They're cowards," you spat, your voice trembling with fury. "All of them. Sitting in their gilded towers while Zaun suffers."
"Alright thats enough," your father said sharply, entering the room with your mother close behind. "You don't understand the position you've put us in. House Arvino cannot afford to be seen as weak or disloyal."
"I don't care about any of that!" you shouted, turning to face them. "Zaun doesn't have the luxury of appearances. They're dying while we live in luxury!"
Your mother's expression softened, but her voice was firm. "We understand your frustration. But your actions cannot continue. They will destroy you, and us." Their words echoed Ekko's from the night before, and the parallel struck a chord. You sank into a chair, the fight leaving you as exhaustion took its place. "I can't just stop. Not when I know what's happening down there."
Your father sighed, placing a hand on your shoulder. "Then you must find another way. A way that doesn't make enemies of those who hold power." The conversation ended there, but the fire within you didn't dim. If anything, it burned brighter. You couldn't stop. Not now.
Months have passed since your bruises had faded were a careful balancing act, though you still visited Zaun, slipping away under the guise of errands or charitable outings. But you couldnât risk your parents catching on. To lessen their suspicions, you began inviting Ekko to your home. It was a calculated move, one that made your absences less frequent and gave the illusion that youâd abandoned your cause entirely.
Your room was a testament to Piltoverâs grandeur, a lavish blend of opulence and elegance. High ceilings adorned with intricate gold detailing framed the space. The sheer curtains cascaded from tall windows, filtering moonlight across the polished marble floor. A canopy bed, draped in silken fabrics, sat at the roomâs center, its pillows and blankets impossibly soft. Bookshelves lined the walls, filled with volumes ranging from engineering texts to poetry. A chandelier, all crystal and gleaming light, hung overhead, casting a warm glow over every corner.
It was in this very room that Ekko sat now, hidden behind the lush velvet curtains of one of the tall windows. Your father had come to check on you earlier, his heavy footsteps unmistakable in the hallway. When he entered, you were seated at your desk, feigning focus on a mundane ledger. He lingered by the door, his gaze sweeping over the room before settling on you. âYouâve been staying home more often,â he observed.
You offered a nonchalant shrug. âI realized it was pointless to keep going there. Itâs useless trying to fix what canât be fixed.â
Your fatherâs face betrayed nothing, but there was a glimmer of pride in his eyes. âA wise choice,â he said simply, and without another word, he left.
The door clicked shut, and you exhaled slowly, waiting until his footsteps faded down the hall. Then, turning your head slightly, you murmured, âYou can come out now.â
Ekko stepped from behind the curtains, his movements silent but confident. He was a great contrast to your roomâs pristine elegance. His clothes patched and worn, his presence a reminder of the worlds you tried to somehow balance. âYouâre getting good at lying,â he remarked, a teasing edge to his tone.
You rolled your eyes, motioning for him to sit on the plush chair near your desk. âI wouldnât have to if you didnât insist on brainstorming plans here.â
âItâs safer,â he replied, settling into the chair and pulling a small notebook from his pocket. âBesides, youâre the one with the luxury of access. If weâre going to unite the cities, we need someone who can work both sides.â
You hated how his words made your heart race. Not because of their weight but because it was Ekko saying them. Somewhere in the months of sneaking around and strategizing, youâd grown to like him in a way that went far beyond friendly admiration. You buried those feelings deep, telling yourself there was no time for distractions.
The hours passed as the two of you pored over maps, scribbled ideas, and argued over logistics. The moon rose higher in the sky, its silver light pouring through the windows and bathing your room in an ethereal glow. Ekko grew quieter as the night wore on, his usual sharp wit replaced by a pensive silence. You noticed his gaze flickering to you more often, lingering for moments too long before darting away. At first, you ignored it, chalking it up to exhaustion. But when you caught him staring for the fifth time, you couldnât help but smirk. âSomething on your mind?â you asked, leaning back in your chair.
He shrugged, feigning nonchalance. âJust thinking.â
âAbout?â you questioned, leaning back against your chair.
âAbout how strange it is, being here,â he admitted, his voice softer than usual. âThis room, this worldâŚit feels like it shouldnât exist. Like itâs too perfect to be real.â
âItâs not perfect,â you said quietly, your gaze dropping to the papers on your desk. âItâs a gilded cage. Nothing more.â
His eyes softened, and for a moment, neither of you spoke. The silence stretched, heavy with unspoken words. Then, slowly, he stood and crossed the room to where you sat.
âI hate to say this. But atleast iâm hereâŚâ he said hesitantly, his voice low and steady.
Something in his tone made your breath hitch. You looked up at him, and the intensity in his gaze sent a shiver down your spine. Before you could think, before you could stop yourself, you leaned in.
Ekko met you halfway, his lips crashing against yours with a hunger that left you breathless. His hand found the back of your neck, his fingers tangling in your hair as he deepened the kiss. It was nothing like you'd imagined. It was raw, desperate, and full of the emotions you'd both kept bottled up for too long.
He pulled you to your feet, guiding you back toward the bed without breaking the kiss. The world blurred around you, your senses overwhelmed by the warmth of his touch, the taste of his lips, the way he made you feel alive in a way you never had before.
You fell onto the bed, the soft blankets and pillows cushioning your back as he leaned over you, his weight a comforting pressure. His hands framed your face, his thumbs brushing your cheeks as he kissed you again and again, each one more passionate than the last.
It wasn't until his arms braced on either side of your head that he pulled back, his chest heaving as he stared down at you. The moonlight cast shadows across his face, highlighting the sharp angles of his jaw and the softness in his eyes.
"Do you want me to keep going?" he asked, his voice hoarse. You reached up, your fingers brushing against his cheek. "You might as wellâŚ" And as he leaned down to kiss you again, you knew there was no going back from this.
Golden hues of the afternoon sun spilled into your room through the tall, arched windows, painting the polished wooden floors in a mosaic of light and shadow. Outside, the tranquil sounds of Piltover carried through the crisp air. The distant hum of mechanized carriages, the faint chatter of passersby, and the melodic chirping of birds perched along the grand gardens that surrounded your home. Everything was perfect, picturesque even, but it all felt hollow.
Your bedroom was a masterpiece of luxury, a reflection of House Arvinoâs status. Elegant bookshelves lined the walls, filled with leather-bound tomes you once eagerly devoured. A velvet armchair sat by the fireplace, its cushion still as pristine as the day it arrived, and your grand four-poster bed was draped in silk, untouched except for the rumpled corner where you sat. Yet, despite the warmth and beauty of the space, it felt cold.
You hadnât touched your breakfast that morning, nor the one the day before. The silver tray your maid brought hours ago sat untouched on your writing desk, the tea long gone cold. Your appetite had vanished with him.
âMiss,â came a tentative voice from the doorway. You turned to see Anya, your maid, standing there with a concerned expression. She stepped into the room, her brow furrowed as her gaze swept over you. âYou havenât eaten again. This isnât healthy.â
You waved her off without meeting her eyes. âIâm fine.â
âYouâre not,â she pressed gently, her voice tinged with worry. âYouâve barely touched your meals for over a week. If this continues, Iâll have to tell your parents.â
Her words sent a jolt through you. The last thing you wanted was for your parents to get involved. They wouldnât understand. They never did. But you knew Anya was serious. Her loyalty to you didnât outweigh her duty to ensure your well-being.
âAlright,â you relented, forcing a weak smile. âIâll eat later.â
Anya didnât look convinced, but she nodded and left the room. The heavy door clicked shut behind her, leaving you alone with your thoughts once more. You leaned back against the plush pillows of your bed, staring up at the intricate carvings on the ceiling. Days had turned into weeks since Ekko had kissed you in this very room. Weeks since youâd seen him, since youâd spoken to him. At first, youâd waited eagerly, expecting him to climb through your window with that same confident smirk he always wore. But as the days passed, hope turned to disappointment.
However, the first week had been agony. Every creak of the floorboards, every rustle of the trees outside, had sent your heart racing, only for it to sink when you realized it wasnât him. You told yourself he was busy, that Zaun demanded too much of him to spare a moment for you. But as the second week came and went, you began to question everything.
Was the kiss a mistake? Did he regret it? The thought gnawed at you, leaving you restless and irritable. Eventually, you stopped waiting. You stopped glancing at the window, stopped listening for the familiar sound of his footsteps. If he didnât want to see you, then fine. You wouldnât waste your time waiting for someone who clearly didnât care.
But despite your best efforts to move on, the ache in your chest remained. It showed in the way you pushed away your meals, the way you avoided the social gatherings your parents encouraged you to attend. Your mother had noticed, of course, her sharp eyes taking in your pale complexion and listless demeanor. âAre you unwell, darling?â sheâd asked one evening, her tone as polished as ever.
Youâd smiled and lied, assuring her it was nothing more than fatigue. Sheâd accepted your answer, but her gaze lingered, skeptical.
Now, as you sat in your room, the weight of it all pressing down on you, you realized you couldnât keep living like this. You couldnât keep letting his absence control your life. If he didnât care, then neither should you. But no matter how much you tried to convince yourself, the truth was undeniable. You missed him.
The days stretched on, blending into a monotony of forced smiles and empty conversations. You threw yourself into the routines of Piltoverâs elite. Attending social calls, charitable luncheons, and the parties where everyone whispered behind jeweled fans about alliances and intrigue. On the surface, you seemed like yourself again. You laughed when expected, nodded politely during dull conversations, and played the part of the perfect child of House Arvino.
But beneath the carefully constructed façade, a storm brewed. No matter how hard you tried to bury it, the memory of Ekko lingered, sharper and more vivid with each passing day. His voice, his touch, the way he had kissed you. It all haunted you. It didnât make sense, you told yourself. He was just a friend, nothing more. Yet the thought of him ignoring you, of deliberately staying away, clawed at your chest.
One night, long after the rest of your house had gone to bed, you sat by your window, staring out at the glowing lights of Piltover. The thought hit you with the force of a hammer. You know deep down that you couldnât keep waiting. If he wouldnât come to you, then you would go to him.
The decision wasnât easy. It took days to build up the courage, to push aside the fear of what you might find. But when you finally made your way to Zaun, the heavy air and dim light of the undercity greeted you like an old adversary. You navigated the twisting streets, every step bringing back memories of the times youâd spent here. How he had carefully and slowly opened this world to you, how youâd fought for it together. Well atleast try to.
When you finally reached the Firelightsâ hideout, you felt your stomach tighten. It looked the same as ever, but something about it felt different. You spotted him almost immediately, standing near a table strewn with maps and tools, his back to you. âEkko,â you called out, your voice steady despite the tremor in your chest.
He turned slowly, his face unreadable. For a moment, you thought you saw something flicker in his eyes. Was it surprise, maybe even relief. Either way it didnât matter because it was gone in an instant, replaced by an icy look. âWhat are you doing here?â he asked, his tone cold.
The words hit you harder than you expected. âI⌠I came to see you. Itâs been weeks, andââ
âAnd what?â He cut you off, turning away to fiddle with something on the table. âYouâve got a life up there. What do you need me for?â
Your chest tightened, anger bubbling to the surface. âDonât do that. Donât act like I just forgot about you. Youâre the one who stopped coming around.â
He scoffed, finally turning to face you. âStopped coming around? You think Iâve got time to play house? Iâve got real things to deal with here, things that actually matter.â
The words stung, but you refused to back down. âAnd I donât? Do you think itâs easy for me to come here, to fight for a place I donât even belong to? I thought we were doing this together, Ekko.â
He stepped closer, his voice rising. âYou donât get it, do you? You donât belong here. This about you. You can go back to your fancy dinners and your perfect life anytime you want, but this is my reality.â
You clenched your fists, your own voice shaking with anger. âDonât you dare act like I havenât sacrificed anything! Do you know what itâs like to lie to everyone you care about, to pretend youâre someone youâre not, just so you can try to make a difference?â
âSacrifice?â he shot back, his voice dripping with disbelief. âYou donât know the first thing about sacrifice.â The air between you crackled with tension, the weight of everything left unsaid pressing down on you both. For a moment, neither of you spoke, the anger simmering in the silence.
Finally, you took a shaky breath, your voice softer but no less firm. âYou donât get to decide what I care about, Ekko. I came here because I thought you were my friend.â
He looked away, his jaw tight. âI didnât ask for you to come.â The words were like a slap to the face, but you refused to let him see how much they hurt. âFine,â you said, your voice cold. âIf thatâs how you feel, then I wonât bother you again.â
You turned on your heel, walking away before he could see the tears starting to swell in your eyes. But just as you reached the door, his voice stopped you. âWait.â
You hesitated, your hand on the worn wood, but you didnât turn around.
âIâŚâ His voice faltered, the anger replaced by something softer. He inched his head as he paced around, âI didnât mean it like that.â
You looked back at him, his expression finally cracking. There was pain in his eyes, the same pain youâd been carrying for weeks.
âThen what did you mean?â you asked quietly, your voice trembling.
He didnât answer right away, his gaze dropping to the floor. âI donât know,â he admitted. âI just⌠I didnât know what to say. After what happened, I thought itâd be easier if I stayed away. But it wasnât.â
Your shoulders sagged, the fight draining out of you. Looking at with with complete disbelief. âSeriously! You couldâve just told me.â
He nodded, his expression filled with regret. âYeah. I shouldâve.â
For a moment, the two of you just stood there, the weight of the argument lingering in the air. But as you looked at him, at the boy who had opened your eyes to so much, you felt the anger fade, replaced by something else. This was something you werenât ready to admit to anyone.
A few months have passed and things were relatively calm, much hasnât happened since then. The suffocating air of Piltoverâs council chamber lingered in your mind as you strode through the bustling streets of Zaun. The conversations in those hallowed halls always left a bitter taste on your tongue. They spoke of progress and prosperity, but beneath the gilded rhetoric, it was all about control. To control of resources, people, and power. It was a game you were born into but had grown to despise.
You moved swiftly, your hood pulled low to shield your face from prying eyes. The undercity was alive with its usual chaos, but youâd long learned to navigate its labyrinthine streets without drawing attention. This was your escape, your solace. The world of House Arvino, your familyâs wealth, influence, and ties to the Council. It all felt more like chains with each passing day.
The hideout was tucked deep within the shadows of Zaun, a sanctuary for the oppressed and rebellious. It had become a second home to you, a place where you could finally breathe. Ekko had been wary of you at first, rightfully so. Your name carried weight in Piltover, and trust wasnât something he gave freely. But over time, youâd proven yourself.
Today, the air in the hideout was thick with tension. Ekko was at the center of it all, his voice calm but commanding as he gave orders to his crew. He noticed you immediately, his sharp eyes narrowing slightly as you approached.
âBack again?â he asked, leaning against a makeshift table. His tone was teasing, but there was an edge to it, a quiet concern he rarely voiced outright.
âI canât seem to stay away,â you replied, offering a small smile.
His lips twitched, almost forming a grin, but he shook his head instead. âYouâre playing a dangerous game, yâknow?â
You shrugged. âI know.â
He studied you for a moment, his gaze lingering as if he was trying to decipher something. Then, with a sigh, he gestured for you to follow him to a quieter corner.
âWhatâs really going on?â he asked once you were alone. âYouâve been coming here more often, and I know itâs not just to check on the Firelights.â
You hesitated, your fingers gripping the edge of your cloak. âI⌠I donât know if I can keep doing this. Pretending like everythingâs fine topside when I know how much blood is on their hands. My familyâs hands.â
He frowned, his usual confidence giving way to something softer. âYouâre not responsible for what they do.â
âArenât I?â you countered, your voice rising. âIâm part of them, Ekko. Every time I go back to that house, every time I sit in those meetings, Iâm complicit. Iâm part of the system thatâs crushing this place.â
The intensity of your words caught him off guard, but he didnât argue. Instead, he placed a hand on your shoulder, his touch grounding. âThen why do you keep going back?â
âBecauseâŚâ You trailed off, your throat tightening. âBecause I thought I could help. That I could use my position to make a difference. But now, Iâm not so sure. The Council sees Zaun as nothing more than a problem to be solved, more importantly, destroyed.â
Ekkoâs jaw tightened, his anger barely contained. âTheyâll never stop. Not unless we make them.â
You couldnât stop thinking of the face ekko made when you told him what you were internally thinking. How the council thinks so poorly about zaun, how it can be something that wouldnât be missed if it was gone. It was horrible that most of the topsiders thought the same way, had the same mindset.
You walked briskly, the streets unfamiliar under the heavy shadows of the evening. You had chosen this route for its discretion, a calculated decision that now felt dangerous in its isolation.
Your heart pounded in your chest, though you didn't want to admit why. It wasn't fear of being recognized or stopped by one of Zaun's residents. No, this was something more insidious. A seed of doubt planted by weeks of balancing on a blade's edge between two lives. House Arvino's influence was undeniable, and it had kept you shielded from true danger for so long. But here in Zaun, your family name meant less than nothing. To most, you were just another noble, another cog in the machine grinding them into dust.
Ambessa had recently cornered you in Piltover's glittering council halls, her words honeyed but laced with venom. She had offered you promises of power, privilege, and security for your family. In order to gain immunity from suspicion, all in exchange for complete submission. You'd nodded and played your role, but the encounter left you hollow. The high society life you'd once cherished now felt like a gilded cage, and her offer only tightened the bars.
Yet, her influence was terrifying. Under Ambessa's direction, the Council had started scrutinizing House Arvino with an alarming intensity. The Firelights, they claimed, had spies in Piltover. And somehow, House Arvino's connections to Zaun became their scapegoat. You were well aware of what that scrutiny meant-your family was being squeezed, maneuvered into a position where betrayal seemed the only way to survive. A betrayal by who? you thought.
As you turned a corner into an empty alley, those doubts turned into a growing unease. The silence around you felt oppressive, unnatural. You hesitated, glancing over your shoulder. That was when the first strike landed, the butt of the gun hitting your head. You staggered, gasping in pain, only to be shoved against the damp wall. A rough hand grabbed your cloak and yanked it back, revealing your face to the enforcers.
"Well, well," one sneered, his voice dripping with disdain. "A little lost noble playing savior in Zaun yet again."
"Let go!" you hissed, trying to pull free. But there were too many of them, and their grips were forceful and rough.
"We know all about your little meetings with the boy," another enforcer said, driving his fist into your stomach. "Did you really think you could run around down here without consequences? Or did your family forget to teach you how the real world works?" The pain blurred your vision as you crumpled to the ground. You clawed at the dirt, trying to crawl away, but another blow landed, then another.
Laughter echoed around you as they kicked and struck without mercy. The worst part wasn't the physical pain. It was the guilt, the sickening realization that you'd been naive enough to believe there could be change. Especially from within the Council's walls. You'd hoped that by walking the line between your family and the Firelights, you could create something better. But this? This was your reward for dreaming too much.
Tears blurred your vision as you curled into yourself, trying to shield your head. "Stupid," you whispered through clenched teeth. "Stupid, stupid, stupid." You slammed your fist against your temple, desperate to drown out the pain, the voices, the failure.
The enforcers stepped back momentarily, likely to assess whether you were still conscious. But before they could strike again, a loud crackling sound filled the air. "Back off," came a familiar voice, sharp and commanding.
You barely managed to open your eyes, but the sight was unmistakable. Ekko and his hoverboard gleaming as he charged forward. Behind him, several Firelights emerged from the shadows, their makeshift weapons glowing in the dim light.
"What the-" one enforcer started, but Ekko was already upon him, a precise swing of his bat sending the man sprawling. The Firelights fought with a ferocity that sent the enforcers scattering, though Ekko's eyes never left you. He reached your side in moments, dropping to his knees. "Hey," he said, his voice softer now. "Donât go close your eyes, stay with me now."
You tried to speak, but all that came out was a choked sob. Blood trickled from a huge gash above your brow, staining your face. Ekko pressed a hand to your shoulder to steady you, but you flinched. Your fist weakly hitting your own head again. "Stop it," he said firmly, grabbing your wrist before you could hurt yourself further. "Hey! Don't do that."
"I'm an idiot," you mumbled, your voice barely audible. "| thought... I thought they could change. That Piltover could change. But I was wrong. They'll never stop."
His expression softened, though his jaw was still tight with anger. "You're not an idiot. You're just optimistic... too hopeful for your own good."
The Firelights surrounded you, their movements tense as they prepared for more enforcers to arrive. Ekko lifted you carefully, his arm supporting your weight. "We need to move," one of his crew said.
"Yeah i know," Ekko replied, his eyes still on you. "Let's get out of here."
As he carried you to safety, the weight of your choices pressed down on you like never before. Your family would demand answers. The Council would escalate their efforts. And Ambessa? Oh, sheâs gonna have a fieldday with this. She would stop at nothing to make you pay for what she'd see, see it as a betrayal to your own people. But as Ekko held you steady, his presence a grounding force amidst the chaos, you realized something else. You were no longer just caught between two worlds, you were tearing one down to build the other.
Ekkoâs chambers werenât lavish, but they were purposeful, an organized chaos that spoke of a leader always in motion. The space was tucked inside one of the largest branches of the Firelightâs sprawling treehouse hideout. The soft glow of lanterns filled the room, their light reflecting off walls adorned with maps, sketches, and scattered tools. From the small window, you could see the hideout below, a buzzing network of walkways, platforms, and people moving with quiet purpose.
The bed you lay on was makeshift but sturdy, piled with blankets and pillows that smelled faintly of Zaunâs metal-tinged air. Your body ached everywhere. Sharp, stinging pains in some places, a deep, relentless soreness in others. Slowly, you tried to sit up, wincing as the movement sent sharp jolts of pain through your ribs.
Across the room, Ekko stood at a workbench, tinkering with something that sparked faintly under his fingers. His braids were tied back, and his jacket was slung over the back of a chair, leaving him in a simple shirt that clung to his frame. When he glanced over and saw you struggling to rise, his eyes widened, and he immediately abandoned his project.
âHey, whoaâwhat do you think youâre doing?â he asked, crossing the room in a heartbeat.
âIâm fine,â you mumbled, your voice hoarse as you tried to wave him off.
âYouâre not fine,â he countered, his hands carefully but firmly guiding you back down onto the bed. âYouâve been out for two days, and you can barely sit up without wincing.â
âI can handle it,â you said, though your body betrayed you with another sharp wince as you tried to adjust yourself on the pillows.
âYeah, I can see that,â Ekko replied dryly, but his voice softened as he knelt beside the bed. âSeriously. You need to rest. Let me help.â
There was a quiet moment as he adjusted the pillows behind you, moving with surprising gentleness. His hands lingered briefly, his eyes scanning your face as if double checking for signs of discomfort.
âThanks,â you murmured, feeling heat rise to your cheeks.
He shook his head, leaning back on his heels. âYou donât have to thank me. I just⌠You scared the hell out of me, yâknow?â
You glanced away, guilt stirring in your chest. âI didnât mean to. I just⌠I didnât think it would get THAT bad.â
Ekko sat back on the floor, his arms resting on his knees as he studied you. âWhy did you do it?â he asked, his voice quieter now. âWhen I found you, you were hitting yourself and saying all these⌠awful things. About yourself.â
Your breath hitched at the memory, shame washing over you. âItâs just⌠something I do when Iâm frustrated,â you admitted, not meeting his gaze. âI was angry, at everyone and everything. Yâknow, I thought I could make a difference, but I was wrong. I let everyone down.â
âOh come on donât say that,â Ekko said firmly, cutting you off. âYou didnât let anyone down. Youâre one of the only people from Piltover who actually cares about Zaun. And yeah, maybe you were too optimistic, but thatâs not a bad thing. You donât deserve what they did to you.â His words hung in the air, and for a moment, neither of you spoke. Then, he added, âItâs not safe for you to go back to Piltover.â
You frowned, meeting his eyes. âWhat do you mean?â
âIâve been hearing things,â Ekko said, his expression darkening. âRumors. Ambessaâs pissed. She thinks youâve betrayed the Council, and sheâs not the kind of person to let something like that slide. Word is, she wants your head.â The weight of his words settled heavily on your chest, and you slumped back against the pillows. âSo thatâs it, then?â you said bitterly. âI canât go home. I canât go back to Piltover. What am I supposed to do now?â
Ekko leaned closer, his gaze unwavering. âYou stay here,â he said simply. âWith me. Youâve got people who will vouch for you for the most part. Iâll fight for you.â Something in his tone made your chest tighten, and for the first time in days, a small, hesitant smile tugged at your lips. âThanks, Ekko. For literally everything.â
He reached out and gently squeezed your hand. âAnytime .â
, marked with red ink, highlighted the areas where House Arvinoâs trade routes intersected with Zaunâs underbelly.
A grizzled Baron leaned forward, his metallic fingers tapping against the table. âHouse Arvinoâs little noble has gone rogue,â he rasped, a sly grin tugging at his lips. âThe Councilâs after them, sure, but that just makes this all the more interesting for us.â
Another Baron, her voice honeyed but sharp, chimed in. âIf we get our hands on them, imagine the leverage weâd have. Not just over Arvino, but the Council and even the Firelights. Theyâre a walking, breathing key to the chaos weâve been craving.â
âTheyâre already in Zaun,â another added, her tone laced with confidence. âAll we need is patience. When the time is right, weâll make our move.â The Barons exchanged nods, their plan unspoken but clear. For now, they would wait, watching, their web of spies and informants slowly tightening around you.
From across the platform, Ekko leaned casually against a railing, watching the interaction unfold. His arms were crossed, but there was a noticeable softness in his gaze, a flicker of something close to admiration.
In the days that followed, the children of the hideout began to gravitate toward you. They tugged at your hands, peppering you with questions about Piltover and laughing at your awkward attempts to keep up with their boundless energy. You found yourself helping where you could, organizing supplies, assisting with small repairs, and even attempting to teach some of the younger ones how to read.
Though the older Firelights were slower to trust, you noticed their glances were no longer as sharp, their whispers not as harsh. You were earning your place here, bit by bit, though it was a far cry from the life you had once known. Piltover, with its grand halls and polished façades, felt like a distant memory now, one you werenât entirely sure you wanted to cling to.
Ekko, ever watchful, seemed to take quiet satisfaction in your efforts. He didnât say much, but his presence was definitely there. Whether he was checking on you or working alongside the others. There was a rhythm to life in the hideout, and you were beginning to find your place within it.
Unbeknownst to you, danger loomed closer than you realized. The Chem Baronsâ spies were everywhere, watching, reporting back with meticulous detail. Every interaction you had, every movement you made, was noted. To them, you were a pawn in a much larger game, one that could tip the balance of power in Zaun.
âTheyâre softening,â one spy reported back, his voice low as he spoke into a communicator hidden beneath his cloak. âThe Firelights trust them more every day. If we move now, itâll be too obvious.â
âLet them feel safe,â came the reply, cold and calculating. âWhen the time is right, weâll take them. And when we do, House Arvino will learn what happens when they meddle in Zaunâs affairs.â
It was another ordinary morning in the hideout when you decided to venture outside Ekkoâs chambers. The soreness in your body was a dull ache now, manageable but constant. As you stepped onto the main platform, the sunlight filtering through the leaves felt warm on your skin, a stark contrast to the chill of Piltoverâs marble halls.
You hadnât noticed Ekko watching you until you caught his reflection in the metal plating of a nearby railing. He was perched on a ledge, his goggles pushed up onto his forehead, a faint smile tugging at the corners of his lips.
âYouâre staring again,â you said, your tone teasing as you turned to face him fully.
Ekko smirked, hopping down from the ledge with practiced ease. âJust making sure youâre not overdoing it,â he shot back. âYouâve got a habit of biting off more than you can chew.â
You raised an eyebrow, crossing your arms despite the ache in your shoulders. âIâm fine, Ekko. Iâve been fine. You donât have to keep hovering.â
His expression softened, but he didnât back down. âSomeone has to. If it werenât for me, youâd probably still be lying in the street.â The reminder stung, not because it wasnât true, but because it forced you to confront just how fragile your position had become. You looked away, scanning the hideout below where Firelights bustled about their tasks. The childrenâs laughter floated up, a soothing balm to the tension that threatened to settle between you and Ekko.
âIâve been trying to help,â you murmured. âI donât want to be a burden. Itâs just thatâŚâ You trailed off, unsure of how to put the conflict in your heart into words.
Ekko stepped closer, his voice low and steady. âYouâre not a burden,â he said firmly. âBut youâre not invincible either. And if you keep throwing yourself into danger like this, someoneâs going to take advantage of it.â His words hit harder than you cared to admit, but before you could respond, a group of children came running up, dragging you into their latest adventure A game that involved climbing ropes strung between the platforms. You gave Ekko a grateful smile, silently promising him youâd be careful, even if you werenât entirely sure how.
That night, as the Firelights settled into the quiet hum of evening, Ekko pulled you aside. His chambers felt more like a refuge now than a room, its warmth amplified by the soft glow of firelight reflecting off polished metal and glass.
âYouâve been doing good here,â he began, leaning against his workbench. âThe kids adore you, and even the older crew is starting to come around. But itâs not just about fitting in, you know?â
You tilted your head, unsure where he was going with this. âWhat do you mean?â
He hesitated, his fingers drumming against the table. âThe Chem Barons,â he said finally, his tone heavy. âTheyâve got their eyes on you now. Your familyâs deals with them? Those donât go unnoticed. And with the Council already hunting you, youâre stuck between two very dangerous sides.â
The weight of his words settled over you like a shroud. âSo what do I do?â you asked, your voice quieter than you intended.
Ekko stepped closer, his gaze meeting yours. âLike i said earlier, you stay here. The Firelights are your best chance now. Weâll protect you, but youâve got to let us.â
You swallowed hard, nodding despite the fear gnawing at your resolve. âAnd my family?â
âWell they already made their choice,â he said, his tone softening. âNow youâve got to make yours.â
For a moment, neither of you spoke. The firelight flickered, casting long shadows on the walls. Ekkoâs steady presence was a comfort, a reminder that you werenât as alone as you felt.
You have spent the last few weeks peacefully managing your new life in zaun. As for today, it was surely a day to remember. It had been long but rewarding. Youâd spent most of it helping around the hideout, patching up clothes, organizing supplies, and entertaining the children with small stories and makeshift games. Their laughter had been infectious, warming a part of you that you didnât even realize had grown cold. But now, as the sun set and the last streaks of orange faded from the sky, exhaustion crept over you like a heavy blanket.
Returning to Ekkoâs chambers felt like stepping into a sanctuary. The room was quiet, the gentle hum of activity outside muffled by the thick wood and steel walls. The soft glow of a makeshift lamp illuminated the space, casting warm shadows across the worn furniture. The room smelled faintly of oil and smoke, mixed with something earthy. You didnât even bother taking off your boots, flopping onto the bed with a sigh and burying your face in the worn but surprisingly soft blankets.
Minutes passed, or maybe it was hours. You werenât sure. You only stirred when you heard the sound of the door opening and closing quietly. Lifting your head, you spotted Ekko standing near the entrance, his figure backlit by the dim lights outside. His jacket was off, his sleeveless shirt revealing the lean muscle of his arms. His hair was tied back tonight, though a few strands had fallen loose, framing his face in a way that made your chest tighten.
âYou look dead,â he teased, though there was no humor in his voice. His eyes swept over you, his usual sharpness softened by concern.
âI feel dead,â you replied, your voice muffled by the pillow.
Ekko crossed the room in a few long strides, pulling a chair closer to sit by the bedside. âLong day?â
You nodded, not bothering to sit up. âRewarding, though. The kids are exhausting, but in a good way. I think Iâm finally starting to feel like Iâm⌠I donât know, contributing?â
He leaned back slightly, his arms crossing over his chest as he watched you. âYouâve done more than enough already. Theyâre warming up to you faster than I thought they would. Guess youâve got a knack for making people feel safe.â
His words brought a faint smile to your lips, but your body felt too heavy to do much more than that. âMaybe. Or maybe they just like the shiny Piltover noble playing dress-up as a Firelight.â
âYouâre more than that,â he said softly, almost too softly for you to hear. The weight of his gaze drew your attention. Turning your head, you found his eyes fixed on you, dark and intense in a way that made your stomach twist. There was something unspoken in his expression, something raw and magnetic.
âEkko,â you said, his name slipping from your lips like a warning. He didnât answer. Instead, he leaned forward, his elbows resting on his knees as he brought himself closer to your level. The air between you grew thick, charged with an unspoken tension that neither of you seemed willing to break.
Your breath hitched as his hand moved, not to touch you, but to hover near your face, as if he wasnât sure he had the right. âYou should rest,â he said finally, though his voice was strained, as though it was the last thing he wanted to say.
âIâm fine,â you murmured, though your voice betrayed you. There was a nervous tremor there, one that you couldnât quite suppress.
âYouâre not,â he replied, his tone sharper this time, though the edge was softened by the way his hand dropped to his lap, curling into a fist. âAnd you shouldnât have to keep pretending you are.â
You swallowed hard, your heart racing in your chest. He was too close, his presence overwhelming in a way that left you both yearning and terrified. For a moment, you thought he might lean in, that he might close the unbearable distance between you. And part of you wanted him to. But you couldnât.
As if sensing your hesitation, Ekko pulled back, though his expression betrayed the conflict raging inside him. He rose from the chair abruptly, turning his back to you as he ran a hand over his face. âI need to check on something,â he said, his voice tight.
You sat up slightly, confusion and guilt warring within you. âEkko, waitââ
âThereâs food on the table,â he interrupted, not turning to face you. âYou should eat. AndâŚâ He hesitated, his hand resting on the doorknob. âI left something for you. Thought you might like it.â
Before you could respond, he was gone, the door clicking shut behind him. You stared at the space heâd just vacated, the room suddenly feeling much larger and lonelier than it had before.
Rising from the bed, you made your way to the small table in the corner. A covered plate of food sat there, still warm, alongside a neatly wrapped package. Your fingers trembled as you opened it, revealing a small, intricately carved pendant in the shape of a firefly. The sight of it brought a lump to your throat. You clutched the pendant tightly, sinking back into the chair as a wave of emotions threatened to overwhelm you. Ekko had left, but his presence lingered in every corner of the room, in the care heâd shown you, in the gift heâd left behind.
You closed your eyes, the weight of the hectic day and the unresolved tension between you pressing down like a heavy blanket. But even as exhaustion pulled you under, you couldnât shake the memory of his eyes. The way they had looked at you, filled with longing and restraint.
Hours ticked by like an endless parade of thoughts that refused to settle. You sat in Ekkoâs chair, knees drawn up slightly as your elbows resting on them. cradling your head in your hands. A sigh escaped your lips, heavy and full of frustration, as your thoughts spiraled into overthinking once again. Why hadnât he kissed you earlier?
At first, you tried to dismiss it as if it was nothing, just a fleeting moment, something that could be easily explained away by the heat of the moment. But deep down, you knew better. The way he had looked at you wasnât casual or friendly. It was something more, something intense and unspoken.
Still, you couldnât help but doubt. Maybe he had been teasing, the way friends sometimes did to lighten the mood. Maybe he didnât feel the same, and youâd simply read too much into it. But then your mind wandered back to that day in your bedroom. The memory of his closeness as the tension that sparked between you like lightning in a thunderstorm.
Friends donât act like that.
But then again, why had he ignored you for weeks after that moment? Why hadnât he said anything or even done anything, to give you some clarity? The questions swirled in your head, each one feeding into the next, until your chest felt tight and your breathing shallow.
You let out another sigh, leaning forward until your forehead almost touched your knees. âWhat are you doing to me, Ekko?â you murmured to yourself, the words barely audible in the quiet room.
You glanced at the door for the hundredth time, wondering where heâd gone. What was keeping him out so late or rather so early, given the faint light of sun beginning to creep into the room. Would he even come back tonight? Or was this going to be like before, where he disappeared for days, leaving you to piece together the fragments of what you thought you understood about him?
The thought of being ignored again made your chest ache in a way you werenât prepared to admit. You leaned back in the chair, closing your eyes against the onslaught of emotions. Sleep pulled at you, but you resisted, stubbornly staying awake as if you could somehow summon him back to you. Eventually, though, your exhaustion won. Your head lolled against the back of the chair, your breathing evening out as sleep claimed you.
Ekko slipped into the room quietly, his footsteps barely making a sound against the wooden floor. The sight of you hit him like a punch to the chest. There you were, curled up in his chair, fast asleep. Your face was soft in slumber, but there was a faint crease between your brows. Almost as if even your dreams couldnât fully erase the tension youâd been feeling. His gaze softened as he took you in, a pang of guilt threading through his chest.
He sighed, running a hand through his hair. âJeezâŚâ he muttered under his breath, shaking his head. Carefully, he crossed the room and crouched beside you. You stirred slightly at his presence, murmuring something incoherent. Without thinking, he slid one arm under your knees and the other around your back, lifting you effortlessly into his strong arms.
You mumbled something again, your head lolling against his shoulder. Which caused him to freeze for a moment, waiting to see if youâd wake up. But you didnât. He carried you to the bed and laid you down gently, pulling the blanket over you.
As he turned to step away, he felt your hand grab weakly at his shirt. âDonât go,â you murmured, your voice thick with sleep. He froze in place, his heart pounding in his chest. He looked down at you, your eyes half-open and drowsy but locked onto his.
âYou shouldnât sleep in a chair,â you continued, your words slightly slurred. âAnd you⌠shouldnât leave me like that.â
His breath caught. âI wasnât going to leave,â he said softly.
You tugged at his shirt again, pulling him closer. He sank down onto the edge of the bed, his face hovering close to yours. âWhy didnât you kiss me earlier?â you whispered, your voice barely audible.
The question hung in the air, heavy and electrified. Ekkoâs eyes widened, his cheeks flushing a deep red. âWhat?â
âWhen you had the chance,â you mumbled, your voice fading as sleep pulled at you again. âYou looked like you wanted to, but you didnât. Why?â
He swallowed hard, his throat suddenly dry. The proximity, the softness of your voice and the vulnerability in your question. It was almost too much to handle. He didnât know how to answer. Hell, he didnât even know if he could answer it.
âYou were exhausted,â he said finally, his voice hoarse. âI didnât think it was the right time.â
You hummed softly, a small smile tugging at your lips. âYouâre so stubborn,â you whispered, your eyes drifting shut.
He exhaled shakily, his heart continued its rapid pace as he watched you fall back into sleep. For a moment, he just sat there, his gaze tracing the outline of your beautiful face. He wanted to kiss you. God, he wanted to kiss you so badly it hurt. But he wouldnât. Not yet. Not like this.
Instead, he stood and grabbed the chair, dragging it closer to the bed. He sat down and rested his head in his hands, trying to steady his breathing, to calm the storm of emotions swirling inside him. He stayed there until the drowsiness claimed him too.
You woke to the warmth of sunlight streaming through the cracks in the wooden walls, a golden glow bathing the room. It was already late, half the day gone, by the looks of it. You woke up to the warmth of the sun shining through the cracks on the wooden walls. It bathed the room. You stretched lazily under the blanket, the aches in your body from the past few days reduced to a dull throb. Turning your head, you saw Ekko. Who was still slumped in the chair beside the bed, asleep.
Your brow furrowed as you watched him. His head rested awkwardly on one hand, his legs stretched out, his shoulders slightly hunched. How could he sleep like that? He mustâve spent the entire night sitting there just to keep an eye on you.
How can he sacrifice his comfort like this?
You studied him, taking in the faint lines of exhaustion etched into his features. He looked so tired, so worn down. Ekko carried so much on his shoulders. The Firelights, the fight for Zaunâs freedom, the safety of the kids who looked up to him. And not to mention you as well. It wasnât fair, you thought. He gave so much of himself and rarely took a moment for his own peace.
You slid out of bed quietly, wincing at the soreness in your muscles, and approached him. Gently, you placed a hand on his shoulder and shook him awake. âEkko,â you said softly.
He stirred slightly, his eyelids fluttering open, and then he bolted upright, instinctively swatting your hand away. His palm struck yours with more force than he intended, making you hiss at the sting.
âShit,â he muttered, sitting up fully now, his face a mixture of alarm and regret. âSorry. I didnât mean toââ
âItâs okay,â you interrupted, shaking your hand out with a small wince. âIt happens.â
He ran a hand over his face, sighing heavily. âI shouldnât haveââ
âYou shouldnât have spent the whole night sleeping in a chair,â you cut in, your tone playful but firm. âAre you crazy? Youâll wreck your back.â
He shrugged, his lips twitching into a faint, sheepish smile. âItâs not the first time.â
âThat doesnât make it better,â you said, crossing your arms.
He gave you a tired chuckle, leaning back in the chair. âIâll survive. Iâve been through worse.â
But that wasnât enough for you. Watching him now, the weariness in his eyes even as he tried to act like everything was fine. An idea sparked in your mind, one that you knew heâd hate at first. But it was for his own good.
You grinned, your excitement bubbling over as you clapped your hands together. âI have a surprise for you!â
Ekko raised an eyebrow, intrigued but skeptical. âA surprise?â
âYep!â you said, bouncing on your heels, your eyes alight with mischief. âBut Iâm not telling you what it is. Youâll just have to trust me.â
His skepticism deepened. âThat sounds like a bad idea.â
âOh, come on,â you teased, leaning down slightly to meet his gaze. âWhereâs your sense of adventure?â
He gave you a flat look. âI think I left it behind when I became the leader of the Firelights.â
You pouted dramatically, placing a hand over your heart. âThatâs tragic. Guess Iâll have to help you find it again.â
Ekko shook his head, laughing softly despite himself. âYou sure are something alrightâ
âYep!â you chirped, grabbing his hand and tugging him to his feet. âNow, come on.â
He resisted, planting his feet firmly. âWait. I have things to do. The kidsââ
âTheyâll survive without you for a few hours,â you said, cutting him off with a pointed look. âYou need this, Ekko. Trust me.â He opened his mouth to argue, but the determination in your eyes stopped him. He sighed, running a hand through his hair. âFine. But youâd better not get me killed.â
You grinned triumphantly, grabbing a scarf from the nearby table. âOh, and one more thing.â
His eyes narrowed suspiciously. âWhat?â
You stepped closer, holding up the scarf. âYouâre getting blindfolded.â
âNope,â he said immediately, crossing his arms.
âYep,â you countered, your grin widening. âItâs part of the surprise.â
âIâm not letting you blindfold me,â he said firmly.
âAw, are you scared?â you teased, leaning in closer.
His jaw tightened, and you could tell he was trying not to rise to the bait. âIâm not scared. I just donât like surprises.â
âWell, too bad,â you said, wrapping the scarf around his eyes before he could stop you. He grumbled under his breath, but you could see the faint hint of a smile tugging at his lips.
âYouâre lucky Iâm weak for you,â he muttered, his voice low and resigned. Your heart skipped a beat at his words, but you quickly brushed it off, tightening the knot of the blindfold. âYou wonât regret this. Promise.â
He sighed dramatically. âI already regret it.â
You laughed, grabbing his hand and leading him toward the door. âCome on, leader of the Firelights. Let me lead you away to freedom.â
He followed reluctantly, grumbling the whole way, but you could feel the tension in his hand slowly easing as he let himself trust you. And deep down, you knew that despite his protests, he didnât truly mind.
Ekko groaned softly as you guided him along yet another bend in the trail. The blindfold tied snugly around his head meant he couldnât see where he was stepping, which made the journey feel even longer. His feet ached from the uneven terrain, and he couldnât tell how far youâd dragged him from the hideout. âHow much longer?â he asked, a playful but weary edge in his voice. âIâm pretty sure Iâve walked enough to circle Zaun twice by now.â
You laughed softly, your tone teasing. âNot much farther. I promise itâll be worth it.â
He scoffed but didnât pull away from your guiding hand. âYou said that an hour ago.â
âWell, this time, I mean it!â you chirped, your excitement palpable. âAnd quit complaining. Youâre a leader, remember? A little hike shouldnât break you.â
Ekko grumbled under his breath but didnât argue. He trusted you, blindfold and all. Still, his curiosity was killing him. The journey had been filled with faint sounds of nature, quite the opposite to the chaos of Zaun. The air was fresher here, the scent of greenery blending with faintly damp earth. Birds chirped somewhere above, and there was an unfamiliar stillness that made him uneasy in its serenity.
Finally, the sound of running water reached his ears. It was gentle but distinct, the rhythmic splash growing louder as you led him forward.
âIs that a waterfall?â Ekko questioned as he looked around blindfolded, listening with his ears.
âNope,â you said cheekily, your grin audible in your tone.
âUh-huh. Sure.â
The moment his boots scuffed against flat, smooth rock, you stopped. You squeezed his hand and stepped in front of him, your fingers brushing against the scarf as you untied the blindfold. âOkay, are you ready?â you asked, your voice playful.
âDepends,â he shot back. âAm I about to fall into a pit of snakes or something?â
You rolled your eyes. âJust hold still.â With a dramatic flourish, you pulled the blindfold away. âTa-da!â
Ekko blinked a few times, his eyes adjusting to the light. The sight before him was breathtaking. The waterfall cascaded gently down smooth stone, its waters pooling into a crystal-clear basin surrounded by moss-covered rocks. The greenery around it was lush, vibrant, and untouched, with delicate vines draping over the edges of the falls like curtains. Shafts of sunlight streamed through gaps in the canopy, casting a golden glow over the scene. It felt like another world. Like something out of a dream. For a moment, he didnât say anything, just taking it all in.
âWell?â you asked, bouncing slightly on your heels. âDo you like it?â
âItâs⌠something,â he admitted, his voice softer than usual. His gaze lingered on the water, the way it shimmered in the sunlight. âI didnât know there were places like this between Piltover and Zaun.â
You smiled, feeling proud of yourself. âTold you itâd be worth it.â
He turned to look at you, a small smile tugging at the corner of his lips. âIâll give you that. ButâŚâ His expression shifted, concern creeping in. âShould I really be out here? The hideoutââ
You cut him off, your tone firm but not unkind. âEkko.â
He paused, his brow furrowing slightly.
âIâm serious,â you continued, your voice softening. âIf you really feel like you need to go back, you can. I wonât stop you.â You hesitated, your hands fidgeting at your sides. âI mean⌠Iâll understand.â
He studied your face, noticing the way your eyes darted away as if you were trying to hide how much the thought bothered you. You were giving him a choice, but it was clear how much you didnât want him to leave.
Ekko let out a small sigh, running a hand through his hair. âYouâre really bad at hiding what youâre feeling, you know that?â
You glanced up at him, startled. âWho, me?â
âYes you. But relax,â he said, his tone gentle. âIâll stay.â
Your eyes lit up, and before he could say anything else, you were practically jumping in place, your joy spilling over. âReally?â
âYeah,â he said with a small chuckle, watching you with amusement. âDonât make me regret it.â
You grinned, grabbing his hand and tugging him toward the water. âYou wonât. I promise.â
For the next two hours, the two of you wandered the area, exploring the hidden beauty of the place. The tension from earlier melted away, replaced by a comfortable ease as you talked and laughed together.
Ekko, ever curious, peppered you with questions about your life topside. âSo, whatâs it like being a noble?â he asked, kicking a stray pebble along the path. âIâm guessing itâs all fancy parties and expensive clothes?â
You snorted, shaking your head. âNot quite. Sure, thereâs all the glamour, but itâs not as fun as it sounds.â
âOh?â he said, raising an eyebrow. âDo tell.â
You sighed, nudging a rock with the tip of your boot. âMy parents had this⌠idea of what the perfect daughter should be. Polished, obedient, always smiling. I never really fit the mold.â
Ekko tilted his head, studying you. âDoesnât sound like you.â
âExactly,â you said with a wry smile. âI was always too stubborn, too opinionated. They wanted me to follow their rules, and I wanted to make my own.â
âSounds familiar,â he said, a hint of understanding in his voice.
You glanced at him, curiosity sparking. âWhat about you? Ever feel like people expect too much from you?â
He let out a short laugh, shoving his hands into his pockets. âAll the time. Being the leader, people look to me for answers. For direction. Itâs⌠a lot.â
You nodded, your heart aching for him. âAnd yet you never take a break.â
âSomeone has to keep things running,â he said simply.
You stopped walking, turning to face him. âAnd what happens when you burn out? What then?â
He opened his mouth to respond but closed it again, your words sinking in.
âSee thatâs what this is about,â you said gently. âYou need to take care of yourself, too, Ekko. Not just everyone else.â
He looked away, his jaw tightening, but he didnât argue. Instead, he gave a small nod, the vulnerability in his expression making your chest tighten.
Soon the peace of the waterfall was shattered by the faint sound of voices approaching. Ekko froze, his head snapping toward the direction of the noise. You followed his gaze, your heart sinking as the muffled conversation grew clearer. It wasnât just random passersby. The tone was too low and suspicious.
âGet down,â Ekko whispered urgently, grabbing your arm and pulling you toward the water.
âOw, hey-!â you hissed back, but before you could argue, he tugged you forward.
The two of you splashed quietly into the cool water, wading toward a large rock near the waterfallâs edge. Its size provided enough cover to hide you both, but your movements felt clumsy and loud in the stillness of the moment. Every splash made your heart race, and every breath felt too loud.
You crouched low, gripping the edge of the rock as you peered out cautiously. The voices were clearer now, distinctly rough and laced with malice.
â⌠shipments are in place. Should be an easy job if everyone keeps quiet,â one of the men said, his voice gruff.
âEasy? You think dealing with Piltoverâs dogs is ever easy?â another sneered.
âRelax. Itâs all set up. By the time they realize whatâs happening, weâll already be gone,â the first man replied with a dismissive chuckle.
Your ears were ringing, the adrenaline coursing through your veins making it hard to focus. Your breathing quickened, and the world around you felt distant, the voices blending into an indistinct hum. âHey,â Ekko spoke quietly beside you, nudging your arm. But you didnât respond, your mind spinning.
âHey!â he whispered again, more insistent this time. He leaned in closer, his face only inches from yours. Finally, his voice broke through the fog in your mind. You turned your head slightly, meeting his sharp gaze. Before you could say anything, his hand clamped over your mouth, silencing you.
âDonât-â he mouthed, his tone firm but his touch surprisingly gentle. His eyes were steady, reassuring, even as they flicked toward the Chem-Baronsâ direction.
You nodded, your breathing still uneven but quieter now. His hand lingered for a second longer before he slowly pulled it away, his fingers brushing against your skin. The tension between you was palpable. The closeness and adrenaline, it all made the space between you feel charged with something. You were about to whisper something when the sound of boots crunching against the rocky terrain snapped your focus back.
âKeep it moving,â one of the voices barked. âWeâre wasting time.â
The group of men moved on, their voices fading into the distance. Only when the silence stretched did Ekko exhale, his shoulders finally relaxing. He peeked cautiously around the rock, ensuring they were truly gone before turning back to you.
âWeâre clear,â he whispered, though his voice carried an edge of lingering tension.
You nodded, still crouched behind the rock, your limbs stiff from staying still for so long. Ekko moved toward the waterâs edge and helped you climb back onto the bank. You followed his lead, water dripping from your clothes and pooling at your feet as you tried to steady your racing heart.
âChem-Barons,â he muttered, more to himself than you. He looked toward the direction the men had gone, his expression hardening. âTheyâre up to something. And if theyâre this close, itâs bad news.â
You wrung out your sleeves, watching him warily. âDo you think they saw us?â
âNo,â he said firmly, but there was a flicker of doubt in his eyes. âStill⌠we need to get back.âThe urgency in his voice left no room for argument, and you agreed without hesitation.
The journey back to the hideout was tense. Ekko moved swiftly, his steps purposeful and his gaze darting toward every sound in the dense trees. You struggled to keep up, your thoughts spiraling as your footsteps lagged behind his.
What if the Chem-Barons had seen you? What if they followed you back? Your chest tightened as the weight of your continuous overthinking pressed down on you. You replayed the encounter in your mind, picking apart every detail. Had you been too loud? Too slow? What if something went wrong because of you?
âKeep up,â Ekko called over his shoulder, his voice low but urgent.
You blinked, realizing how far behind youâd fallen. Quickening your pace, you forced yourself to focus on his figure ahead of you, his steady movements grounding you in the moment.
When you finally reached the hideout, the familiar sounds of laughter and the hum of activity greeted you. The Firelightsâ sanctuary seemed untouched, the chaos of the outside world unable to penetrate its walls. Relief washed over you, but it was short-lived. Ekko headed straight for Scar, who was leaning against a rusty table, tinkering with a small device.
âEverything okay?â Ekko asked, his tone sharp.
Scar glanced up, his brow furrowing slightly. âYeah. Quiet as usual. Why?â
Ekko hesitated, his jaw tightening as he glanced over his shoulder at you.
âOh nothing, just checking.â he said finally, though the tension in his posture remained. Scar gave him a curious look but shrugged, returning to his work.
You lingered near the entrance, your damp clothes clinging to your skin as you scanned the area. Everything seemed normal, the kids laughing, people working on repairs, the occasional drone zipping by. But you couldnât shake the unease that had settled in your chest.
Later that evening, you sat by yourself in one of the quieter corners of the hideout, staring blankly at the firelight lamp in front of you. Your mind was still spinning, your earlier overthinking creeping back in.
âYou okay?â Ekkoâs voice broke through your thoughts, and you looked up to find him standing nearby, his expression softer now.
âYeah,â you said quickly, though the tightness in your voice betrayed you.
He frowned, stepping closer and crouching down so he was at eye level with you. âYouâve been quiet since we got back. Whatâs going on?â
You hesitated, unsure how to put your thoughts into words. âI just⌠I canât stop thinking about what happened earlier. What if we were seen? What if they followed us? What ifââ
âHey,â he interrupted, his voice firm but kind. âNothing happened. Everything is fine. The hideout is fine.â You nodded, but your shoulders remained tense.
Ekko sighed, running a hand through his damp hair. âWorrying until you exhaust yourself i see.â
âI just canât help it,â you admitted, your voice barely above a whisper.
He sat down beside you, close enough that his knee brushed against yours. âLook, I get it. Itâs a lot to deal with. But we canât let them get in our heads. Thatâs what they wantâto make us paranoid, to make us slip up.â
You looked at him, his calm determination grounding you once more. âI just donât want to fuck things over for the millionth time.â
âYou wonât,â he said simply, his confidence in you unwavering. For a moment, the tension between you eased, and you allowed yourself to breathe.
The night stretched on, the two of you sitting in comfortable silence. When Ekko finally stood, he stretched and yawned, his usual energy dimmed by the dayâs events.
âWell, Iâm gonna check on a few things,â he said, though his tone lacked its usual conviction.
You joking said, raised an eyebrow. âHere you go again, always busy.â
He smirked, his usual charm peeking through. âSays the person who canât stop worrying.â You rolled your eyes but smiled. As he walked away, you found yourself watching him, your chest tightening with admiration. You couldnât quite name why. The hideout was quiet now, most of its inhabitants having turned in for the night. You eventually made your way to your small corner of the space, lying down on your bed and staring up at the ceiling.
But sleep didnât come easily. Your mind kept drifting back to Ekko. The way he had looked at you by the waterfall, the way his hand had lingered on your arm when he pulled you out of the water, the way he had stayed by your side despite everything. Ekko, itâs always him. He always even if you tried to deny it, has an affect on you. You sighed, closing your eyes and willing your racing thoughts to quiet.
A wind of cool night air hit you as you slipped out of the hideout. The faint scent of distant rain mixing with the scent of metal and smoke that always lingered in the air of Zaun. Ekko had been out helping with a situation that had gotten out of hand. It had something to do with one of the Firelights getting into trouble, as usual. He hadnât been there to protest when you quietly slipped out of the hideout, and part of you was relieved. You needed to clear your head, to have a moment of peace where you didnât have to think about the danger you constantly felt closing in around you. It slowly suffocating you. Unbearable.
You had heard rumors, of course. Whispers and murmurs of people coming after you because of who you were, because of your connection to the topside. They had no idea who you were, only what they thought you were. You couldnât allow them to find out. But tonight, you werenât thinking about that. You were thinking about how to live in the moment, even if it was fleeting.
The Last Drop was not your first choice, but it was the closest. The faint buzz of people laughing, drinking, and shouting hit your ears as you stepped inside. Your heart raced slightly, but you pushed it down. Youâd taken precautions, after all. The cloak you wore concealed the colors of your family, the opulence that could mark you a target from a mile away. With your hood low, you blended in with the crowd, keeping your gaze focused on the bar, where the noise was loud enough to drown out any attention.
âDrink?â the barkeep asked, raising an eyebrow at you, the flickering light of the bar casting long shadows across his face.
âSomething strong,â you replied, trying to sound casual, though your nerves were anything but.
A quick, hard drink was what you needed. You knew the risks of coming here. This wasnât the safest place in Zaun, but it was the only place that wouldnât ask questions about who you were. The clinking of glass and the murmur of conversation surrounded you, a blend of voices that blurred into one singular buzz in your head.
You let your gaze wander as you took your first sip. The bitter warmth of the alcohol spread through your throat, giving you a momentary sense of relief, but it didnât last. Your eyes flicked to the edges of the bar, noticing the way people moved. There was a tension in the air, something off, but you couldnât quite pinpoint it. Your fingers tightened around the glass as the sensation of being watched crept down your spine.
Before you could dismiss the feeling, something sharp pricked your neck. You froze, the sensation like a needle pushing into your skin. A wave of dizziness hit you instantly, disorienting and deep. You jerked your hand to your neck, but there was nothing to see. No blood, no sign of injury. Just a strange, heavy heat creeping through your veins, seeping into your bloodstream, clouding your thoughts.
The world around you tilted. It was a slow shift at first, just a sense of things being slightly off, but soon it became overwhelming. The air felt thicker, the sounds louder, as though the entire bar was buzzing, vibrating against the space between you and them. Your chest tightened, and a cold sweat broke out across your skin. âNo. No, this couldnât be happening. Not here. Not now.
Shimmer. You realized it too late. The telltale signs were unmistakable. That feeling where your body was being pulled apart, your thoughts slowly being smothered by a fog. You clenched your teeth, trying to fight it, trying to keep yourself from losing control.
âHey, you okay?â a voice broke through the chaos in your mind. One of the patrons had noticed, a man with wild eyes and a drink in his hand. He was staring at you with concern, but you barely registered his words.
âIâm fine,â you said, though it came out more like a growl. You stood up quickly, the motion far too fast for your brain to follow. The room spun around you, the floor swaying beneath your feet like the deck of a ship caught in a storm. Your hands shot out to steady yourself against the bar, but it felt like everything was slipping away.
The bartender moved closer, his voice urgent. âYou need to sit down. Youâre not looking good.â
But you couldnât. You couldnât let them see you like this. You tried to move toward the door, but your legs wouldnât obey. Each step was like wading through thick tar, the world warping around you. Your vision blurred, and before you knew it, you were on the floor, struggling to push yourself up, your limbs stiff and heavy.
âHelp!â someone shouted, but the word sounded distant, muffled, as if coming from underwater.
You didnât know what was happening to you anymore. The pain in your head started to intensify. No. Donât lose control. But it was too late. The shimmer was already twisting your mind, and it wasnât long before the voices began. They started quiet, like whispers in the back of your head, but soon they became clear.
Someone spoke your name. Your fatherâs voice.
âYou never lived up to my expectations, did you?â The accusation burned in your ears. âAlways the disappointment.â
You wanted to scream at the voice to shut up, to make it go away, but all you could do was stand there, shaking, your hands gripping the counter as you tried to steady yourself.
âYou think you can escape me? No one escapes me,â your fatherâs voice mocked. âNo one escapes their blood.â
The voices overlapped. Shut up. You couldnât make out the words. You only felt the anger, regret, and shame. You felt like you were drowning in it. The voices kept yelling, taunting you, until you couldnât tell what was real anymore. You swung at the air, trying to bat them away, but there was nothing there.
Why donât you listen? You never do what I ask, do you?
Another voice, it was your mother now, cold and distant. âYouâre useless to me. Always have been.â
The pain was unbearable. Your head throbbed as you sank to your knees, clutching at your skull, your fingers digging into your scalp in a futile attempt to stop the onslaught of voices. Get out of my head!
You screamed, but it was a scream that only echoed inside your mind. Your body trembled, and you stumbled backward, falling into the chaos that surrounded you.
âSomeone get them out of here!â someone shouted, but it was like the words couldnât break through the fog that had settled over your mind. You could hear them, feel them moving around you, but they were all far away. Then, another voice. This one was different. It was familiar.
âHey, listen to me.â Ekko. His voice, clear and strong, cut through the chaos. You tried to focus on it, on him, but it was so hard. Your mind was a warzone. You gasped for air, your hands pressed against your chest, your body still trembling from the aftershocks of the shimmer. You looked around, and for a brief moment, you thought you saw him standing there, reaching out for you, but when you blinked, he was gone.
Your vision darkened, the last remnants of the shimmer clouding everything. You couldnât stand anymore. You collapsed against the ground, your breath ragged as the world spun out of control.
âEkkoâŚâ you whispered, but you werenât sure if you said it out loud or if it was just another hallucination. The voices faded as everything went black.
part two soon!
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A Nocturne in Melody
Vampire Viktor x Fem!Reader
Ao3 link: A Nocturne in Melody
Part 1 â The Performance
âYou were extraordinary,â Viktor said softly, his voice tinged with awe. He pulled back slightly, his eyes filled with the same wonder heâd shown back when youâd played for him in your small, shared apartment for the first time. âI donât think anyone could look away. You had the entire hall in the palm of your hand.â
Part 2
Claire raised an eyebrow, a faint smirk playing on her lips. âAre you sure about that?â she asked, her tone almost pitying. âI mean, donât get me wrong, Iâm sure he loves you. But love doesnât change the fact that heâs⌠different now. Forever, actually.â
Part 3
Jayce winced, his mouth opening, then closing as he struggled to find the right words. But nothing he could say seemed enough. Finally, he just shook his head. âNo, Viktor, itâs not like that. You know it isnât.â
Part 4
Viktor chuckled, finally breaking into a smile. He pulled back slightly, looking at you with a mixture of admiration and disbelief. âWell, someoneâs confident,â he teased, his eyes sparkling. He ran a hand through his hair, shaking his head. âMaybe I need to be less generous with my compliments if youâre going to be like this.â
Part 5
Part 6
Swan song
Professor Viktor x TA Reader
[PART 1]・ ďžâž ďžď˝Ąâ[PART 2] â・ďžâď¸ď˝Ąâ[PART 3] (coming soon)
â・ďžâď¸ď˝Ąâ[AO3 link] â・ ďžâž ďžď˝Ą
Summary: Youâre a bright phD student who wonât shy away from a challenge. Getting the most notorious professor at the University of Piltover to hire you as his assistant is one of them.
Tags: Modern AU, SFW (for nowâŚ), DILF professor Viktor, romanticizing and eroticizing borsht, lab shenanigans, reader being filled with equal parts shame and lust
Word count: 7.8k
Notice: This fic is written with a transmasculine reader in mind, but that wonât come into play at all until the final third chapter of this mini-series.
Notes: A little something something while we await season two ;] The draft for this post deleted itself twice now. If the formatting looks wonky (especially in the texting section), NO, it doesn't. Shut up.
He didnât lie.Â
Which is all the more shocking, considering you attend his 8AM lecture on the very same day, and he seems more bright and alight than youâve ever seen him.
When did he find the time?
Though there isnât a daunting amount to your thesis just yet, you still want to believe youâve written something quite substantial over the past months.Â
You toss one glance around yourself before you follow him into his office after his lecture, and you find the stack of papers youâd left on his desk last night looking positively devoured, in the most⌠academic way possible. Scribbles and notes litter the margins, the edges of the papers are already somehow lightly worn.Â
He must have read it multiple times.
âCoffee?â He offers.
âYes, please.â
As he gropes the machine in search of its switch again, he cocks his brow at you. âAnd what was that for?â
You frown. âWhat was what for?â
âThat⌠glance, before you followed me into my office.â The switch clicks, the light comes on. âLooking around like you were being followed.â
âOh,â caught in the embarrassing act, you shrug. âI donât know. Being cautious, I guess. Students have been looking at me a little funny, lately.â
âMuch too late for caution, Iâm afraid.âÂ
Uh oh.Â
As he retrieves two paper cups, youâre left wondering what exactly that should mean.
âWhyâs that?â
âI thought you were well aware of the fact that rumors would start, um⌠circulating the moment I made it public that I had hired an assistant.â Coffee trickles into the cups, a soothing little melody. Viktor leans against the wall beside the machine as he watches the cups fill. âIâve always been adamant about not needing one. It is natural for people to have questions â and to come up with, eh, answers â when I suddenly do.â
The notion of the answers students might have come up with swirls around in your brain.Â
You wish they were right.
Youâre glad theyâre not.
You look at Viktor.
âDo you mind it?â
The coffee stops pouring. Viktor does that thing again, spreading long fingers apart to grasp both cups. And heâs quiet â for a beat longer than he should be.
âNo. There are more important things to worry about than⌠gossip.â He sets the cups on the table, then takes his seat. He hesitates for a brief second, craning his neck before he fixates on you, motionless. Waiting. âDo you?â
âTrying not to.â
The answer makes him⌠deflate, somehow. Itâs barely visible, for just a fraction of a second his chest sinks, before his tone is back to his composed cadence.
âYou will get used to it,â he assures. âNow, onto more interesting matters â your work.â
Thank god. You donât know how much more of the awkward tiptoeing you could have handled.
âYes.â Your heart leaps into your throat. Acting normal has never been so difficult. âWhat did you think?â
âVery impressive.â He slides the stack of papers towards you. âI have made some⌠suggestions here and there, should you wish to take them into consideration. But, I think you struck gold with your hypothesis. Should you need a conversation partner, guidance, anything at all â I would gladly be at your service.â
âThank you, Viktor. I really appreciate this.â
At the sound of his own name coming from you, something in him shifts. Shifts with an unfamiliar near bashfulness, he stifles a little smile into the rim of his paper cup, the corners of his eyes crinkle, he settles into his seat a little further.
âBut you never held up your end of the bargain,â you point out. That snaps him out of it.
âAh, yes. I did not.â He continues to hide behind his cup, before he finally seems to decide to take a metaphorical leap, as he sets it down and stares down at it. âI fear the unfortunate truth may be that when it comes to research, I either work better with a partner, or that⌠Cecil is right and I need to slow down. Though Iâd guess the former is more likely.â
âYou used to work with, uhâŚâ youâre not sure how to approach the topic, âTalis, didnât you?â
âThe five basic principles of applied arcanism are commonly referred to as Talisâ princies, you do not have to feign uncertainty to appease me.â
So you drop the attempt to tiptoe around the subject, and ask, plainly:
âWhy wasnât your name added on?â
Viktor scoffs. âTalis-Sidorov-Sviboda has a terrible ring to it. Or so heâd said. And admittedly⌠I was more of a conduit than the co-author of his idea. He said we would name the next big thing we would discover after me, but⌠well, you know how it is. I dedicated myself to teaching, he retired to lead a quiet life in his gaudy mansion with his sports cars and his purebred German shepherds after he married some businesswoman.â
Though his story does line up, those arenât necessarily the rumors youâd heard. Thereâd been talk of more than just a mild dispute of names, and⌠well, there had been⌠something between Talis and Viktor. But thatâs about all you know.
Under your gaze, Viktor grows suddenly uncomfortable â both with the subject and the fact that he might be able to tell you know more. Heâs quick to redirect the conversation.
âAs for my research: I have been studying the laminal hexoin cascade in stabilized hexgems in various matrices. And though bold, I have been attempting to figure out the ideal matrix â something that will allow for close to a hundred percent energy renewal and render all other sources of energy obsolete.â
âThat is bold,â you say. Your other thought, you keep to yourself: it also sounds impossible. You suppose stabilizing hexgems 20 years ago was also something thought impossible â and yet, Viktor hadnât shied away. If anyone is apt for the job, it is him. âAny luck so far?â
âPartially. They have been yielding favorable results, but not enough to be viable energetic alternatives as of now.â He takes his cup again, bringing it to his lips in a rushed movement, drinking a mouthful, rather than a sip. Once Viktor sets it down, his hand remains on the table, fingers tapping on the shiny surface once, twiceâ âI could use a theorist to assist me with a few things.â
The implication dizzies you. Is he�
But then he slides another one of his drawers open, and retrieves a stack of papers. Slanted handwriting, barely legible â youâre by now intimately familiar with it: his cursive. It litters the pages, in different inks and in pencil, diagrams, sketches⌠just looking at it makes you hungry to read it.
He smiles as if heâs read your mind, again.
âI was thinking it could be you.â
â
Youâre invited to his office for lunch break the very next day too. And though he assures you there is no pressure in having to read through his notes by then, you disregard it.
It takes you a reread to be able to make sense of all his scribbles, but⌠itâs brilliant. Heâs brilliant.Â
It should stop surprising you by now â his ideas, his drive, his curiosity, his mind â but with every single time Vikror impresses you anew, he becomes something more distant.
As youâre marveling at his intricate weaving of concepts, it strikes you, unpleasantly, that this is the same man youâd wanted to devour just days ago. The man whoâs made you coffee, the man whose sharp eyes fold at the corners when he smiles.Â
Youâd have deified him, had he been your teacher. You still do, especially now, after youâve seen more of what his mind is made of. The mere notion of him becomes terribly out of reach, and youâre plagued with guilt for that night. Guilt for having tainted such a man with your thoughts.Â
And yet, you still canât help but think of his neck, the soft pink of his chapped lips, the hollow of his cheeks. You wonder what his mouth tastes like, and you want to slap yourself on the wrist for it. You should have, because minutes later, you wonder about worse things too. The scent of his skin, the coarseness of his body hair, how far up under his navel it might reach.
And when you finish reading his notes a second time and bring the paper to your nose to sniff it â hoping for a trace of him â you realize you have a problem. A serious one.
It torments you for the rest of the night, through the hours you spend writing up some suggestions and ideas, all the way to when you switch off the light, and hug whatever pillowâs within reach close.
When you get the urge to tilt your hips against it, you decide to get up and splash your face with water.
And you wish you could do the same thing the very next day on your lunch break, when youâre standing in the doorway of his office and heâs eating borscht. The sweet-tangy smell of vegetables, beef and beets makes your stomach growl, but your physical hunger is long lost on your otherwise preoccupied brain.
The beet red of the soup has pigmented his lips. They look kissed raw, puffy, ripe. A lavish speck of colour on his otherwise pale face, it draws your gaze and does not let it stay somewhere more respectful.
You want to taste them.
He does it for you, raspberry pink tip of his tongue darting over the plush of his lips before he swallows and finally greets you.
âSorry,â you say, and it comes out tense, near horrified. Youâve caught him eating soup, for chrissakes, not being bent over his table. Oh, god. Why did you have to think about that? âIâll come back later.â
âNo,â Viktor gestures to the empty seat across from him. He screws his thermos shut, and puts it away. âPlease, Iâve been waiting for you. Sit.â
And you do, like the dog you feel like you are right now.
âDid you manage to find the time to read my notes?â
Oh, did you.
âI⌠followed your example and made some suggestions of my own. But on separate pages. Here.â
His reaction is more than what youâd hoped for. Itâs more than the impressed raise of thick brows that had kept you fueled last night, itâs more than the smile youâd been hoping for.Â
âYou are unbelievable,â he grins, and takes what you offer, pushing his glasses up his nose before he starts reading. You selfishly use the distraction to stare at his lips again. He mutters to himself as he reads, pink mouth molding around whispered jargon, nodding. âYes, this⌠this is exactly what Iâd hoped for, when Iâd asked for your assistance. Your fresh set of eyes is invaluable. I hadnât thought of approaching the modification from that angle.â
âIâm glad you think so.â
He doesnât take his eyes off the page for even just a moment, flipping it surprisingly fast, and taking it with him as he leans back in his seat.Â
And decides to torture you.
Viktor traces the pad of his own thumb over the curve of his bottom lip as he takes in your handwriting. The give of the flesh under his fingertip hypnotizes, the slight drag of rough skin on soft pink one, your mind is long gone.
You think of rough fingertips on his lips, on his chest, rough fingertips on the pasty white of his gaunt lower stomach, rough fingertips in coarse hair. Rough fingertips dipping between his milky thighs, rough fingertips on where he runs just as pink as he does on his lips, rough fingertips dipping, slipping on slick skinâ
You need to stop.
And you most certainly need help.
âIs something the matter?â
It feels like youâve swallowed your own brain whole when he speaks, because your skull rings hollow when you try to come up with a reply that isnât incoherent babble.
âWhâ me? No. Why?â
And because embarrassment loves to stick around once it has made its presence known, the stars align for the next social disaster: your stomach growls. Loudly.
âDid you not have lunch?â Viktor asks.
âI⌠didnât get around to it,â you admit.
âI wonât take up too much of your time, then,â he assures. If he knew just how much of your time heâs started taking up â and the fact that you wish you could give him what is left of it to him, too. âI would like you to work alongside me on my research. But if you donât feel like you can squeeze another project into your presumably busy schedule, I understand. I would be glad to have you merely as⌠a colleague to consult with, as well.â
Is that even a question? Heâs offering you the opportunity of a lifetime. You would be an idiot not take it.Â
And an even bigger idiot to turn down more time spent with him.
âYou donât even have to ask,â you joke. âYes. I would be thrilled, Viktor.â
This is his first smile you witness when his pretty boyishness doesnât shine through. Itâs a gentle quirk of his lips, no teeth to be seen, just tenderness. It makes your heart leap to be the cause of it.
âThank you,â he says.
âThank you.â
Silence.
Just as youâre about to breach it â he does it first.
âWould you be free for lunch tomorrow as well?â
He watches you from below long, dark lashes as you give a breathless yes.
â
âI brought you something.â
Itâs the last thing you expect as you step into his office at noon, upon exchanging hellos.
Youâre alight. With curiosity, above all else. And with worry â why would he bring you something? What will you do to reciprocate?Â
âThank you,â you say, though you have no idea what for just yet. âWhat is it?â
âI saw you eyeing my borscht yesterday.â Thereâs a glint in his eye that suggests more, so much so you canât decide between flirting or digging a hole for yourself in the hardwood floor of his office.Â
The middle ground is standing in his office awkwardly as he unzips his backpack.
He retrieves two thermos bottles: the one youâre already familiar with, and another that looks older, more worn, and sorely lacks the sticker youâve so come to love and fixate on and dream about. âI, eh, I made you some. In case you wouldnât get the chance to eat before you came here.â
Your chest swells so much it hurts.Â
He made you soup?
âYou⌠Viktor, this is⌠thank you. You shouldnât have.â
âI wanted to. Have a seat.â
You practically jump into the seat across the table from his â a seat youâve come to associate as yours, in spite of being well aware of the oppisite.
As he screws the bottle open and pours some steaming soup out into a paper bowl â god, heâd brought paper bowls â his eyes flick to you.
âBut if you donât care for borscht, you donât have toââ
âI do care.â
And that rings true not just for the borscht.
It rings true for the soup he brings you the next day too, it rings true for every word that passes his lips. And it rings true for the time you start to spend in the insane coffee shop queue to surprise him with his preferred order and a slice of cake (a different one each day, until you figure out his favorite: cinnamon coffee), it rings true for the dark blue roughed up thermos he lets you take home the day you donât finish the soup he brings you because youâre just so busy talking.
Itâs November before you know it.
As the days grow colder, itâs not rare to be finding warmth by lavishing in Viktorâs attention as you ramble on about ideas â either for his research, or your thesis. All while he intently follows your thoughts with a smile, stopping just to shave another mouth-half-fullâs worth off his cake of the day with his plastic spoon.
And once he savors the last bite, Viktor almost always flips it hollow side down, sliding it down the swell of his tongue within his mouth, removing it from between puckered lips. His cheeks hollow, he holds eye contact all the same, and itâs a mental image that haunts you. A mental image you project in your mind, nestled between the apex of your thighs. The thick of his tongue. The cushiony seal of his lips, the suction of his cheeks.Â
It never becomes any less distracting than the first time it happens.Â
You startle when Viktor speaks as he sets down the plastic spoon into the now empty packaging.Â
âI would like you to accompany me to the lab sometime soon. When would you be free?â
Youâve been before â but just a handful of times. Mainly for him to demonstrate or disprove certain guesses, or test conclusions youâd reached together.Â
âIâm free right now,â you suggest.
Viktor shakes his head. âI have a lecture in an hour.â
Right.Â
âI mean⌠I think we could make it in an hour.â
âI prefer to take my time.â Viktor leans back in his seat, stares thoughtfully at the clock on his wall for a moment. âWould seven PM work for you?â
âUhâŚâ you mentally go through your schedule for the day, âyes. It should. I might be a little late, though. How about⌠seven fifteen-ish?â
âGood.â The flow of the word is syrupy, yet his next sentence comes out surprisingly peppy with excitement: âSee you then.â
â
Though youâre well into the final week of November, it never stops bothering you just how quickly the sun sets. By the time you get to the lab, the airâs gone cold, dry, and the darkness is heavy and thick.
Viktor waits for you just outside the university lab, under the halo of the street light â perhaps just a hint overdressed for the cold, in your opinion. Itâs certainly trench coat season, though his is surprisingly long, reaching somewhere along the middle of his shins. The hand he hasnât tucked in his pocket holds his cane and is clad in a leather glove. Around his lengthy neck, a red knitted scarf lays in chunky, impenetrable layers, reaching almost all the way to the swell of his top lip and his ears. You can hardly see his smile from underneath when he spots you â but his eyes give him away.Â
âRight on time,â Viktorâs tone has just as much pep to it as a few hours ago, perhaps even moreso. He rolls his shoulders, before he subtly nuzzles further down into his scarf, shying away from the biting cold. âLetâs get inside.â
He leads the way into the building, its warmth embracing you the moment you step in. The tip of your nose and your fingertips feel like theyâre beginning to thaw, tingling just a hint. As you go to take off your coat, you notice Viktor isnât in a rush. He rests his cane against the wall before he unwraps the thick, wide scarf from around his neck, folding it. He sets it on a nearby table, shucking off his trench coat, slender shoulders under a wool sweater. You watch closely as he then takes his scarf and stuffs it into the sleeve of his coat before he hangs it up.Â
Thereâs something stiff, painful, about how he moves. You wonder if itâs the cold.
âWhat?â He watches you with appeased amusement.
Caught red-handed, you jump, still halfway clad in your coat.
âNothing,â you reply, scraping for a way to deflect from your obvious staring. âNot a big fan of the cold?â
âNever.â He says it like itâs a very serious matter. âI still donât know how I made it through my first eighteen winters in St. Petersburg.â
âYou grew up in Russia?â
He laughs through his nose like youâve told him a half good joke. âWhat gave it away? The accent? The surname?â
âNo, I just thought⌠Svoboda is a Czech surname.â
With how his smile turns knowing, self-satisfied, youâre suddenly back in his office again, uncertain and nervous and asking for a job as his assistant. He could taunt you with the knowledge that youâve looked up his last name, embarrass you a little, play with you.
But he isnât that man anymore â not to you. This time, he feeds your curiosity, albeit just with crumbs.
âMy motherâs,â he clarifies. âSidorov is Russian â my fatherâs.â
Oh.
âItâs nice that they used both their names. Iâm assuming that wasnât⌠common, back then, and back there.â
âIt wasnât, and they did not.â Viktor waits for you to hang up your coat, watchful gaze making your every movement feel loaded with static thatâs about to snap. âI added hers when I changed my name.â
Changed his name?
The image of the sticker on his thermos turns up fresh in your mind, and you canât help but wonderâŚ
âWell? I was hoping we could discuss more in the lab, but if you prefer the coat hangerâŚâ
Goddamn it. Focus. You need to focus.
âSorry.â
You catch up, then slowly follow Viktor down the hallway, into the small lab he has been assigned. Itâs one of the less grand ones, but it has all it needs â from a pretty new hexion accelerator to a humble whiteboard. It smells sanitized, sterile, ozonic.
You assume your usual seat by the whiteboard while he sets up. It still doesnât feel⌠right to let him do all of that by himself, but he insists upon it, so, you stay out of his way. Viktor tidies up the space just a little, finding his goggles among the mess. He slips them onto his head, elastic pulling back his soft hair into a fluffy grey and brown mess. His cane thumps against the linoleum with every hurried step â though he doesnât seem to be hurrying on account of you being there as much as excitement to show you.
Once heâs done, he sits in front of the accelerator, slipping his goggles on, and nods for you to come. Which you do â youâd be at his beck and call beyond just the academic context. For a moment, you pluck the inviting tilt of his head and the quirk of his lips out of their context, and you plant it atop your own bed, him in just a loose shirt, underwear, lax with freshly received pleasure. More comfortable than heâs ever been, all because of you. Beckoning for you. Come here. Smiling at you when your knee dips into the mattress, tucking his index under your chin as you crawl to him, reeling you in for a kiss.
âCome closer.â
God help you.
You comply with a wildly beating heart, stepping forward until youâre close behind his sitting form, watching the accelerator over his shoulder.Â
He smells nice. Like an indistinct, aromatic cologne, covering up the natural, gentle musk of his skin. You have to resist the urge to dip your head down and trace the tip of your nose along his spine, from where the bones of his neck show to where the scruff at the back of his head goes thicker, fuller. You wonder if heâd shiver as you let the scent of him imbue you⌠you wonder if heâd lean into it, if heâd tilt his head for you, let you dip your face into the slope of his shoulder, where his scentâs more potent.
The mere thought of him, vivid in your nostrils and clinging to your palate and the floor of your brain, rattles you with a shiver.
âI thought Iâd rather show you than tell you,â he explains, wrapping both pale, bony hands around the handles of the accelerator. Steam hisses from the exhaust, flooding the room with more ozone, and gently, but certainly, the gem starts to spin behind the glass panel, beginning to levitate out of its socket, illuminating the room.Â
God, you should have put on goggles too, itâs making your eyes hurt. Itâs a welcome reminder as to why you chose to spend most your days staring down a blackboard rather than the thing itself. The screen right above it is more of a familiar sight to you: numbers, reading the rotations per minute, as well as energetic output, steadily increasing.Â
It whirrs, magic static whirling up around the blue orb, electricity crackles.Â
You can see the appeal of this over a blackboard. But youâd still take the chalk. Especially considering the deafening noise.Â
Nevermind the damn goggles. You need to remember to bring some ear plugs.
âWatch the panel.â Viktor raises his voice over the hum of the machine, and turns to you, watching you from behind foggy lenses with a smile. You wish you could see the way his crowâs feet deepen. It rumbles harder, so much so Viktor almost has to shout the next thing he says, which is a shame, because his usually playful lilt is lost in the noise of it. âNot to⌠spoil the outcome of this experiment for you, but I implemented the conclusions we came to last week, and, it is safe to sayâŚâ
With a well-timed click and tug on a lever, the machine disengages, and the gem drops back into its socket under the influence of gravity. Its violating light returns to a faint, blue glow, like an artificially lit aquarium; fluctuating and undulating gently in its intensity. The potential energy indicatorâs numbers climb back up, steadily, but faster than what youâve seen before.Â
Much faster.
You canât help but grin with excitement. âItâs regenerating fast.â
Viktor smirks at you over his shoulder like youâre sharing a sacred, intimate inside joke.Â
âIt is.â
You await the verdict with a bated breath.
âHow much?â
Viktorâs smile only grows, like heâs about to give you a present. And, all things considered, this is going to be one, in monthsâ or maybe even yearsâ time.
âA thirty-seven percent recovery after usage within an hour.â Viktor spins in the lab stool to face you with the theatrical self-satisfaction of a magician who just sawed his assistant in half and is waiting for the applause. You nearly forget to step back to give him the space for it, so much so your knees knock together. But there is no chance for you to apologize, Viktor is unbothered, sliding the goggles up his forehead enthusiastically, his show of complacency ditched in favor of pure excitement. âThat is more than Iâve ever achieved thus far. Thanks to yââÂ
His voice sticks in his throat, turning into a pained hiss.
His hairâs tangled in his goggles.
âOh, wonderful,â he grits out sarcastically.Â
A frustrated half-sigh half-groan rumbles in his chest as he pulls again and only makes things worse.
âCould you get me a pair of scissors? I should have some in the third drawer over there.â
âWait. At least let me try first,â you insist. Reluctantly, you step closer, and after a momentâs hesitation, Viktor lowers his head for better access like a feral animal letting itself be pet for the first time. He sits still, the sound of both your breaths suddenly loud in the tall, quiet room as youâre forced to step even closer. âCould youâŚâ
You nudge his ankles apart with the tip of your shoe.
He listens.
After a stuttering, fragile exhale, Viktor spreads his thighs.Â
You take the space offered. And you try not to think about kneeling, about making a home for yourself between his thighs.
âDo you think you can do it?â
You wish heâd asked you that about any number of things, except for the goggles tangled in his feathery, soft hair.
But yes. You think you do.
It would have been a terrible shame to cut it â though some shorter, bluntly cut hairs that sit a little further back near the top of his head tell you his suggestion was not the product of a new idea. Carefully, you pull whatever hairs are looser from between the lens and the bridge of the goggles, though a strand remains stubborn.Â
You try to ignore the warmth of his breath on your shirt, the intoxicating, soapy, yet distinctively human smell of his scalp, and the mesmerizing ratio of grey to dark brown, the subtle heat on the sides of your palms and wrists, resting on his head for stability.
As you separate another few hairs from the stuck strand and accidentally tug at them, Viktor has no reaction. Beyond swallowing thickly, and sitting through it dutifully.Â
You wonder if heâd act just the same, had you bunched his hair into the spaces between your fingers and tugged â simply biting his tongue and chewing through the pain â or if heâs leaned into the force, moaning with it, and god, youâve hurt him, and you havenât even apologized.
âSorry.â You sound twice as genuine â mainly because you apologize for much worse than the inflicted pain. âAlmost done.â
âThe scissors would have been faster,â he half-jokes.
His voice sounds different. A hint more⌠strained. He shifts in the seat, wipes his hands on his slacks.
âWould have been a shame, though. You have pretty hair.â The last part of the sentence positively escapes you, and once you hear it, you freeze. Your brain scrambles itself trying to add something that will fix the inherent following awkwardness, the horrifying realization you just called your boss pretty, the fact that itâs true, the fact thatâ
Viktor flinches with another accidental tug of his hair, and so do his thighs â jumping with the surprise, clenching together until they squeeze around yours. But theyâre gone just as fast, flinching away with horrified urgency. Before you get to savor the supple flesh pressing into your own in another new perverted way, before you get to imagine his ankles locking behind you, tilting and rubbing your hips into the hug of his thighs.
You need. To get. A grip.
âSorry.â
You continue on in silence, and thank everything above he at the very least canât see the way your hands shake, because heâs staring at the floor like he could drill a hole into it with just his eyes.Â
You should have gotten the damn scissors. As if through divine intervention, the rest of his hair comes loose not soon after.
âOkay. All done.â You smooth the slightly crinkled, but now free strand back down into the rest of his soft hair.Â
Viktorâs dainty features come into view from below his face framing pieces as he tilts his chin up. His lips quirk into a gentle smile, his eyes sparkle in the faint blue glow, soft shadows under the hollow of his cheeks and the swell of his lip and the tip of his nose and the bone of his brow. You wish you could immortalize him in whatever way heâd let you â a sculpture, a painting, a poem. He looks ripe for kissing, eyes half-lidded and twice as dreamy as he peers at you.
Youâre going to see him like this in your mindâs eye later tonight.
Nestled between your thighs, or kissing down your stomach, molten gold under long, dark lashes, sitting atop carved marbled bone.
âThank you.â He says it quietly â like it would break the sudden holiness of the moment to say it any other way.
Heâs so warm.Â
You could kiss him. See what the ozone of the room tastes like in the slick of his mouth. You wonder if heâd let you, if heâd suckle your tongue into his mouth in a show of submission, or if heâd bite your lip, licking your teeth, pressing, pushing, make you earn the privilege to taste him.Â
You wonder if heâd hold you, or if his curious hands would roam, tracing the front of your stomach, or your spine, or press to the middle of your breastbone like he wants to see where youâd split open for him down the middle like a ripe peach. You wonder if heâd let you dip a hand down the front of his slacks, you wonder if heâd tilt his hips into it like heâd been aching for it, aching for you. Scorching your hand with want, materialized in slick or straining hardness. You wonder which itâd be.
From where youâre standing, the distance between the apex of his chin and the space where his slacks stretch between his thighs is small â and your gaze takes the leap, searching. But the material dips and curves in such a way that youâre left none the wiser, and with nothing but a disgusting realization.
Youâre staring at your bossâ crotch.
You step back from the heat between his thighs, painfully awake, aware. It squeezes and wriggles in your chest like you have a parasite lodged in the chambers of your heart.Â
Youâre disgusting.
You need to put an end to this.
âYouâre welcome, professor.â
With that, youâre practically bolting from between his thighs, to stash the scissors away again.
Youâre neglecting your job, youâre putting it in jeopardy. Putting yourself in jeopardy, risking all the rumors circulating becoming a shameful truth, youâre risking the first man who ever kept up with you, followed you where you wanted to go and took you further â youâre risking it all because he makes you unbelievably fucking horny.Â
And itâs absurd. Embarrassing. You need to get a hold of yourself.Â
âI was⌠thinking, actually,â you begin, and want to punch yourself over how Viktor perks back up from where youâd left him. âAbout some things regarding my thesis that Iâd like your thoughts on.â
âOh. Of course.â You have got to be imagining the subtle disappointment in his tone. The second you let yourself believe itâs more than just a figment of your make-believe, is the second you will be doomed.Â
Viktor, with all his years and experience, would and does know better than to fall for his assistant. You know he does.
âWhatâs on your mind?â He prompts after your prolonged silence.
If he knew the half of it.
â
Youâre late.
And itâs a direct, shameful consequence of last nightâs lusting, the time youâd spent frustratedly tossing and turning and thinking of his mouth and his eyes and his scent, before youâd given in past midnight, and humped your hand into completion.
Thinking about him under you, about pressing your face into his neck, about pressing him into the mattress and rutting into him until he gushes and his tired body sings for you and his voice cracks. Until he breaks for you, until pleasure itself oils and unscrews all the biological cogs of his body and he comes out unstrung, reborn.
Viktorâs in a wheelchair.Â
And he looks worse for wear than youâve ever encountered him before, slumping in the chair and massaging his eyelids with his thumb and index, seemingly gathering his thoughts. Heâs dressed even warmer than usual, in a loose but thick, dark red sweater. Thereâs a colorful knitted blanket folded and set over the tops of his thighs.Â
Viktor doesnât acknowledge you when you come in and sit near the whiteboard, simply resumes his lecture as he regains his mental footing. And he goes on for a while, not sparing you a single glance, as he goes through powerpoint slides today, instead of his usual writing and hand drawn diagrams.Â
Heâs at it for a while, not as fast as his usual pace, but undeniably concise, certain. UntilâŚ
âThe energy output increases proportionately to the spin, and, with powerful enough matrices, some hexgems can create force fields of their own. This is a particularly common phenomenon in unstabilized gems as well, though with the activation of their force field, those tend to also create⌠ehâŚâ
Viktor stops, sighing, pinching the bridge of his nose. He frowns, mumbling something in another language, which, judging by the heavy consonants and squeezed vowel, youâd assume itâs Russian. The word must be slipping his mind, so you decide to help out.
âA shock wave.â
Viktorâs gaze cuts. Heâs looked at you with disinterest before, sure, but thisâŚÂ
He doesnât even turn his head to look at you, just eyes you from the corner of his vision like something unworthy of acknowledgment. You wish you could swallow your words back up.
âYes,â he says. âThank you. A shock wave.â
You donât say anything again for the rest of the lecture.Â
Once the door falls shut behind the last few students who have left the room, Viktor turns to you. You wish you could shrink; and it feels like you do, when he finally speaks.
âI appreciate your intention to help â but do not interrupt me again. I know what Iâm trying to say.â He sounds utterly unlike himself, both spent and angry. âI donât need help. Especially not in the middle of a lecture.â
âSorry.â
That alone softens him up a hint. He looks away, rubbing his thumbs against the wheels of his chair, before he speaks again. Calmer.Â
âJust⌠do not let it happen again.â
As he slumps in his seat, massaging at his temples, you understand that his anger⌠might not have been as directed at you as youâd initially thought. Heâd been snippy when his back hurt â having switched to a wheelchair must mean heâs in a lot more pain now.
And you understand his frustration. Heâd just gotten himself an assistant a few months back, and started a new project â looking like he requires help in front of his students is certainly not doing his reputation right now any favors.Â
âBut if thereâs other things I can do to make your day a little easier, Iâd like to do them.â
âNo, thank you.â He shakes his head, before he grabs both wheels and advances to where heâd left his bag. As he starts packing his things, he stops again, quietly groaning somewhere in the back of his throat. âWhere did I put my penâŚâ
Viktor eventually finds it right behind his water bottle on the table, tossing the both of them into his bag, shutting it tightly. You expect him to wheel himself over to the ramp that leads to the exit, but he just hangs his head, massaging at his temples again, before he looks at you.
âActually, Iâd like it if you went to my office and got me a silver tin box in the⌠fourth drawer on the left side of my desk. Do you have the key with you, or should I give you mine?â
âI have it. Iâll be quick.â
âThank you.â
And you deliver on your promise. You donât run, but you power walk there, and youâre back with (hopefully the right) tin box in the same lecture hall before his break ends.
Viktor takes it from you gladly, popping it open. It contains two foils of painkillers, one already half empty, a small ziploc bag of⌠gummies, and at the very bottom, some dark chocolate.Â
You must have pulled a bit of a face at the contents â particularly the gummies â because Viktor cocks a brow at you, before he faintly chuckles under his breath and pops three painkillers in one go.
After depositing the foil back in the box, he fishes out the dark chocolate bar. It looks to be the expensive kind, something Belgian â Viktor breaks off a piece, putting it in his mouth, before he holds it out to you.
âPeace offering,â he clarifies when you hesitate.Â
Youâd be a fool to turn him down. You take some â itâs rich, buttery, and melts on your tongue. It coats your mouth with its taste, dark and aromatic and unfortunately not as sweet as you thought Viktor preferred. Heâd always favored the almost disgustingly sugary cakes.
âDidnât think youâd like something so bitter,â you say.
âI do not. It sometimes helps with my migraines,â he tells you. âSugar makes them worse. A very⌠devastating discovery to make, as Iâm sure you can imagine.â
You wonder if right now is the right time to be curious â and you decide it might be.
âDo the migraines also affect your leg? Or the other way around?âÂ
âNo.â Viktor shakes his head, popping off another piece of dark chocolate. âThis,â he gestures at himself, the wheelchair, âwas just a very unfortunate⌠overlapping.â
âOh.â You grimace in sympathy. âFun.â
âA punishment for it, more like.âÂ
Whatâs that supposed to mean?
âLetâs hope my migraine eases up on me throughout this lecture.â He smiles at you â and for the first time youâve known him, he looks old doing it. Exhausted. The face of a man whoâs seen enough hardship for a lifetime, but has yet to cave under it.Â
You wish you could hold him. You wish you could melt it away, kiss it better, love it better. Whatever heâd let you.
You surprise both him and yourself when you lay a gentle hand on his shoulder and let your thumb rub a small circle over the wool.Â
Though he flinches at the first contact, once something in his brilliant mind unfurls and settles, so does he. Through the cracks, tenderness shines under the fatigue. Viktor can be soft â in spite of everything im his body and his past that protests against it. âThank you.â
You take your hand away sooner than youâd like â but at the ideal time to keep it from being anything more than a friendly touch.
âIâm glad I could help,â you say.
â
Viktor isnât there at all next week.Â
You come in on Monday to find his office empty during lunch break, and when you attend his lecture, itâs another professor from his department teaching it. The students donât seem all too excited about the change either â and you leave before it even starts.
Heimerdinger is none the wiser about Viktorâs situation when you talk to him â in spite of their shared history. He simply tells you heâd taken the week off and had arranged for substitutes.
You consider messaging him⌠and ultimately end up doing so, after some internal debate. You simply text him to get well soon and that you hope heâs getting some well-deserved rest. He replies with just a plain thank you.
Tuesday is quiet. You receive a stack of midterms you need to get through from the substitute, and you do, by Thursday morning. Which is when Heimerdinger messages you.
Dr. Prof. Cecil B Heimerdinger
Good morning! Iâm well aware this is on very short notice â but the substitute professor has unfortunately suffered a minor car accident. Not to worry; they only sustained small njury. However, I am finding myself forced to task you with Viktorâs lectures today. Do you think you could take care of that? Thank you.
-Cecil B. Heimerdinger
9:32
Just the thing you needed â teaching two full lectures, entirely unprepared.
Alright. Youâve got this. Youâve got this. You just need to find out whatâs even on the agenda for today. You could text Viktor, right? If he answers on time, that is⌠heâs sick, he might as well be asleep right now. You could call, but⌠he said only to do that in the case of an emergency when he gave you his phone number.Â
Would this count as an emergency?
Your phone beeps.
Dr. Prof. Viktor Sidorov-Svoboda
There should be a black flash drive in the third drawer on the left in my desk. It has all my lectures.
9:34
Todayâs topic is LHC segments naturally occurring in unstabilized gems. Feel free to use my work laptop to familiarize yourself with the presentation before the lecture.
9:35
Me
Thank you so much!Â
9:35
His answer comes a few minutes later, just as you fish the flash drive out of his drawer, and plug it into his laptop.
Dr. Prof. Viktor Sidorov-Svoboda
Good luck đÂ
9:42
It would be a lot easier to get caught up in the desire to snoop around on his laptop if you didnât have less than 20 minutes left until the lecture. His background is disappointingly the default image, but some of his folders look undeniably tempting â not just the scientific ones, which take up most of the space. Thereâs some photo albums titled with the year and location: Germany 2011, Czech Republic 2009, among many others. Thereâs also a photo album titled Persichka.Â
Who is that?Â
You almost click it. But then you check your watch again and realize you only have 15 more minutes until the lecture, and decide against it.
â
For how utterly unprepared you are, it goes surprisingly well. You stumble, once or twice, but youâre glad to see that even by the end of the lecture, you still have most studentsâ attention.
After you dismiss the class, you donât expect questions. But a good handful of them, a little under ten, approach your desk, whispering among themselves, before a hastily appointed representative emerges.Â
âWe were just wondering,â she awkwardly begins, âif professor Sidorov-Svoboda is alright. And when heâs coming back.â
âOh.â You hope theyâre asking because they understandably prefer him, and not because you did a particularly shabby job. âHe texted me just today â heâs doing alright. But I canât give you an exact estimate for when heâs coming back just yet.â
âOkay. Thank you.â
With that, all of them turn to go. After the last student has left the room, you reach for your phone, and pray you donât see any other day-altering messages today.Â
Dr. Prof. Viktor Sidorov-Svoboda
I did not mean for you to have to do this.Â
10:11
You unlock your phone and jump straight into the chat.
Me
Donât worry, itâs alright. I handled it :)
12:02
Dr. Prof. Viktor Sidorov-Svoboda
I knew you could.
12:02
Thank you.
12:02
Me
Focus on resting up and getting well soon!Â
12:03
Dr. Prof. Viktor Sidorov-Svoboda
I have been. I actually feel well enough for company now. Coincidentally, Iâve gotten some ideas for your thesis and I would like it if we discussed them sometime. Would you be free this weekend?
12:05Â
He wants to meet? Outside of the university? Undoubtedly for academic purposes still, but your heart squeezes and bounces and pops with the implications.Â
No. You shouldnât let yourself hope for more than just a few formal, at best friendly hours spent together.
Viktor doesnât want you. He would never want you â he knows better. You know better.
Me
Iâd like that! Saturday works for me. Where would you like to meet?
12:05
Dr. Prof. Viktor Sidorov-Svoboda
If youâd prefer somewhere on academy grounds like my office or the coffee shop, either would be fine.
12:06
My apartment is also an option.
12:06
The choice is obvious.
Yo can you do a part 3 of Cover Up where y/n is introduced to the rest of the members of the hotel.
A/N Yes?? I love me some fluff like that. I also had another request for a part three to this series but yours came in first so I am going to make that one a part four and because you didn't super specify anything you wanted besides intros, I am gonna spin this to line up with that request. I hope that is okay.
Cover Up pt. 3 (Alastor x Reader)
Pairing: Alastor x Reader
Previous Parts:
Cover Up (Human!Alastor x Human!Reader)
Cover Up pt. 2
Warnings: mentions of murder, Angel briefly flirts with you, jealous/minorly possessive Alastor. I think that is it, please correct me if I am wrong.
Word Count: 1,885
Master Lists:
Master ListsÂ
Hazbin Hotel Master ListÂ
Alastor Master List
Click here and leave a comment if you want to be added to any taglists or send me an ask about it.
Once Alastor had given Y/n the full tour, she had absolutely insisted that she be allowed to meet the rest of the guests. Alastor could never say no to her and so, he had taken her by the arm and walked her back into the lobby. It did not come as a surprise to him that in the short time they had been away from the hotel's central area, Charlie had managed to set up a welcome party for his darling wife. Y/n on the other hand, gasped in shock when everyone jumped out from behind the various couches.
"I literally... okay, I have no clue who any of you are but thank you? This is so sweet? I..."
Before Alastor could do a thing about it, Y/n was whisked away from his gentle grasp by Charlie. The demon Princess brought Y/n to the center of the room, Alastor watching from the sidelines with crossed arms. She seemed to happy, so absolutely filled to the brim with joy. As much as he wanted to take her away from the crowd, to be alone with her, he allowed the party to occur. Her joy had always been his priority, first and foremost. There would be time.
"Everyone!" Charlie excitedly announced, "This is Y/n! She is going to be our newest guest. Our cook? Our newest maybe guest who is going to work as a cook."
Y/n laughed lightly at Charlie's confused words. She took a slight step forward.
"Hi everyone." she waved with a soft smile.
"Oh she's good." Angel Dust muttered and Husk elbowed him in the stomach, catching the glare Alastor had shot the spider demon's way.
"Ow!" Angel exclaimed, rubbing the spot the cat demon had hit as he turned to him, "What was that for?"
Y/n chuckled a bit uneasily, looking over at Alastor and his wide smile. Vaggie quickly stepped in, breaking the tension she felt slowly building in the group.
"I'm Vaggie." she announced in an unfounded and unexpected display of friendship, "Charlie is my girlfriend, we run the hotel together."
Y/n lit up at her words, shaking the hand Vaggie held out to her enthusiastically.
"I didn't realize she had a partner in all this! And in afterlife too, I guess. That's so sweet!"
Vaggie smiled, letting out a light laugh as Charlie stepped up behind her, placing her hands lovingly on her girlfriend's shoulders.
"She is just the best." Charlie warmly noted as Y/n and Vaggie released their clasped hands, "I wouldn't have been able to come this far without her or any of the other sinners we have working with us."
"I thought everyone else here were just guests." Y/n mused aloud and Charlie shook her head.
"No, no! We tried doing it on our own in the beginning... but then Alastor showed up. He brought along some friends and, well, he's really been such a help. We are so grateful to have him and them on our team."
Y/n shot her husband a sidelong glance, smirking mishceviously.
"You really know how to work magic, princess." she hummed, "Getting Al to be a team player? I'm impressed."
"Oh, no!" Charlie frantically waved her hands, desperate that Y/n not get any wrong impressions, "We didn't pressure him or anything, he showed up of his own accord, actually."
"Really." Y/n laughed lightly as she fixed her gaze back on Charlie, "Well, I'd love to meet these alleged 'friends' of his he brought along."
"Of course!" Charlie exclaimed, smiling brightly once again as she stepped to the side with Vaggie, "Husk is our bartender and Nifty is our maid. She was our cook too but, I suppose you'll be taking care of that now."
Husk nodded his head in polite recognition of the introduction Charlie had given him. Nifty on the other hand, was incapable of such restraint and, her curiosity getting the better of her, rushed up to Y/n. In a split second, she had climbed the demoness' body like a ladder and was perched on her shoulder, messing with her hair.
"You smell nice." she hummed, smiling and Y/n's cheeks flushed slightly pink.
"Why, thank you. That is very sweet of you to say."
"Will you help me in the war against the bugs too?"
"Come on, Nift." Angel sighed before Y/n could respond as he walked over to the pair and grabbed the smaller demon, "Don't freak her out."
Nifty made grabby arms towards Y/n as Angel lifted her into the air and Y/n's smile only widened at the sight.
"No, please don't worry. You didn't freak me out, Nifty. I am actually looking forward to working with you, I like your enthusiasm." Y/n sent Nifty a wink and the little demon's smile grew as her feet found solid ground again.
She shot a look up at Angel, nodding her approval as Y/n fixed her gaze on the spider demon as well.
"And you are...?" she prompted and Angel immediately fell into character.
Stepping forward, he leaned down towards her, running a hand through his hair while resting one of his elbows on her shoulder.
"Angel Dust is the name, but you can call me whatever you want."
He expected her to be flustered, to at least blush a bit. He waited for her to take a step back or even to be teased or jabbed the way Husk did when he was like this, but nothing of the sort came. Instead, Y/n's eyes glinted in the light, narrowing with intended mischief.
"Oh yeah?" she asked, taking a step closer to him and batting her eyes oh so prettily.
"I... uh..." Angel stuttered, completely taken aback.
Y/n dissolved into a fit of laughter, hands clutching at her stomach as she doubled over.
"I'm sorry!" she wheezed, "I couldn't help myself. I'm actually taken."
"You are?" Angel asked, growing more confused as she straightened back up, wiping a stray tear from her eye.
In a split second, Alastor was behind Y/n, his claws wrapping around her shoulders.
"She is." he replied and though his voice was calm and even, it sent shivers down Angel's spine.
Angel took a step back, scratching the back of his head as he looked away in discomfort.
"Oh, uh, sorry. Didn't realize you and the strawberry pimp here were an item."
"Strawberry..." Y/n laughed again, craning her neck to look up at Alastor behind her back, "I am not letting you live that one down."
Angel smiled, regaining his composure and placing his hands on his hips.
"Oh yeah? You shoulda heard what that girl who was in here a few days ago called him. 'Tall dark and creepy' was it?"
"And what girl might that be?" Y/n asked after a moment, crossing her arms over her chest as she sidled her way out of Alastor's grip, turning to face him.
"Mimzy." Husk answered before Alastor could reply, "She's just some lowlife who always hangs around when she needs Alastor to take care of some trouble she's caused."
Y/n let out a gasp.
"Mimz is here?" she asked excitedly, bouncing on her toes.
"She's here, darling." Alastor replied, "But she is no longer welcome in the hotel. Caused quite a bit of trouble for us when she visited after all, can't have her ruining my newest project."
"Well, can we go visit her? I miss her so much!"
"You know her?" Charlie asked, her voice laced with confusion.
Y/n turned to face Charlie, nodding intently.
"Yeah, she introduced us actually."
"Introduced certainly is a word for it." Alastor admitted and Y/n chuckled.
"Back when we were alive, she used to throw these 'singles parties.' As it turned out, Al and I both were using them as a hunting ground so to speak. When we met, he offered to walk me home and then pulled a knife on me. Of course, I already had my gun trained on him so we found ourselves in a bit of a sticky situation. It was so romantic." Y/n wistfully replied.
"Uh, yeah." Angel laughed, "Romantic. That's the word."
"So you guys knew each other when you were alive?" Vaggie asked.
"Yeah, we did." Y/n nodded, "You guys can ask whatever but first, I think there is one more person I have yet to meet?"
She turned expectantly towards Sir Pentious who up until this point had been standing quietly near the back of the group. At the redirection of the rooms attention, he felt his cheeks grow warm.
"This, Y/n, is our other guest." Charlie announced, gesturing towards the snake demon with an outstretched hand.
"Sir Pentious." he bowed lightly, "It is an honor to meet a demon as... as stunning as yourself."
There was a heartbeat, a single tense moment of silence. Then Y/n laughed, waving him off cheerily.
"Oh you, what a charmer."
"So you guys knew each other when you were alive? And you're... you're together?" Angel cut in, drawing Y/n's attention back to him as he lead her by her arm over to the bar.
They sat down beside one another, Husk slipping behind the counter and pouring them each a drink.
"Yep." Y/n replied, downing her drink and meeting Angel's eyes.
"How?" he prompted after a moment and Y/n laughed.
By now the rest of the gang had brought themselves over to where the pair sat and were listening intently. Alastor stood near the edge of the group, all the seats near his beloved having been snatched up before he had the chance. He crossed his arms over his chest, his patience beginning to wear thin.
Nearly one hundred years. It had been a lifetime since they had seen one another and the brief tour of the hotel he had given Y/n earlier was not enough to satiate the rabid hunger in his chest. Still, for her, he tried.
"Well, it was a ruse at first. Just a partnership. I watched for cops and he provided me with the brute strength I lacked. We were actually in the middle of chasing down one of his victims when he finally asked me out."
"You were a killer?" Pentious asked, enthralled.
"I was." Y/n nodded, "Until Al died and I was under too much suspicion to do so anymore."
"So you..." Charlie trailed off, counting on her fingers in deep concentration.
"Have been married for a hundred years give or take? Yep."
"Wait, hold on!" Angel exclaimed, "Married?"
"Did Charlie not tell you anything? More importantly, did Al never talk about me?"
Y/n raised her eyebrows, meeting her husband's gaze across the crowd. Alastro looked away, nearly bashful under her persistent gaze. It was Husk's turn to step in now, taking a sip of his own drink as he leaned across the bar.
"Alastor has enjoyed keeping his secrets." he candidly stated, "But there were one or two times he drank a little too much and let your name slip."
Alastor glared at Husk and Y/n grinned at her husbands reaction to the revelation.
"Always the troublemaker, that one but, god, do I love him."
-----
Next Part -> coming soon
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đđđŽđ đĄđ đ¨đ§ đđ˘đŤ - Part 2
Part 1, Part 2, Part 3
Pairings: Alastor x female reader, Angel Dust x female reader (platonic) Summary: You tried to distract yourself on the dancefloor after Alastor caught you with Selena, but the memory still clings to your mind. Feeling both embarrassed and guilty, you find yourself at the bar again, reflecting on your complicated relationship with the Radio Demon while seeking advice from Angel. Warnings/Tags: female reader, mutual pining, alcohol consumption, drunk reader, reader is bisexual, jealous Alastor, comfort, deep talk with Angel Dust, frustrated reader, doctor Angel gives you advice Wordcount: 3.8k A/N: As promised, here is Part 2! I have to admit, though, that I made a slight change to the plan. While I initially said the story would be split into two parts, it has now expanded to three. I did this for the sake of the plot and to make you all squirm. Everyone whoâs been tagged in this part will automatically be tagged in the next. If you arenât part of the tag list for this story but want to be added, let me know in the comments! Part three will be online in September. Comments, likes and reblogs are always appreciated!
Masterlist
   You sat at the bar with another drink in your hands. It was your second since you left Alastor alone in the hallway and returned to the party. You had tried to enjoy the rest of the evening, danced and threw yourself into the music in a way that belied your inner turmoil but despite all the effort you couldnât shake off the unease thatâs been following you around ever since. The moment Alastor caught you and Selena making out replayed over and over again in your head, and you couldnât even tell what was worse: that he was the one who caught you, or his extremely weird behavior towards you. It was obvious he was tense. He died in the 1930âs, so he probably found it extremely uncomfortable to be witness to such an intimate moment. But besides his discomfort he radiated something else you couldnât quite decipher. Heâs always been someone who liked to tease others and pushed their boundaries for his own amusement. Yet, this time, it felt different. Personal. Maybe it was just your twisted and lovestruck mind that made you see things that werenât actually there but you could swear that he appeared bitter. Almost⌠jealousâŚ?
   No. Alastor? Jealous? Never, you thought and let out a dismissive huff before taking another sip from your drink, this time a much larger one than before. Alastor kept everyone at a respectable distance, ensuring he never got too close to others, especially on a personal level. Alastor couldnât be jealous. What a laughable idea. Yet, there was still that perplexing push and pull between you two â those fleeting moments of tenderness when he seemed to open up, his gaze lingering on you longer than usual, his touch almost soft and delicate. His words, laced with teasing, could be taken as either jokes or flirtations, only for him to push you away again an hour or a day later. It was depressing, nerve-wrecking and most of all, infuriating. Why did he always have to be such an enigma? Could it be that he didnât understand his own feelings? Why was he so complicated, so emotionally incompetent, so⌠sadisticâŚ?!
   You wouldâve screamed if you werenât surrounded by a huge crowd of dancing and laughing people. That goddamn Radio Demon left you a complete mess, and you couldnât even tell if he did that on purpose or if he was just oblivious. He was unpredictable and that made it even harder for you to comprehend the situation and his odd reaction to finding you in a strangerâs embrace.
   A tap on your shoulder snapped you out of your thoughts, and you turned to see Angel, his face etched with concern as he looked at you.
   âHey, toots, youâve been away for quite some time and ya look anythinâ but happy. Is everythinâ alright?â he asked, his eyebrows knitting together. His usual teasing tone was replaced by one that was soft and genuinely concerned.
   You forced a smile that didnât quite reach your eyes. âYes, Iâm fine⌠Just needed a drink,â you explained with a quick glance at the cocktail in your hands before you looked back at Angel who raised an eyebrow, not buying a single one of the words you just uttered. He shook his head and clicked his tongue repeatedly against the roof of his mouth, emitting a sound you barely registered.
   âYouâve always been a bad liar, toots,â he responded and wrapped one of his arms around your shoulders. âCome on, tell doctor Angel whatâs wrong.â
   You snickered at his antics and shook your head in amusement, your hair brushing lightly against your skin. Your eyes scanned the room, searching for a familiar redhead with antlers and possibly the fluffiest ears in the entire Pride Ring, just to ensure he wasnât within earshot. When you didnât spot him, you let out a deep sigh, your smile fading to match the heaviness you felt inside. âWell, itâs just thatââ
   âWait, let me get a drink first!â Angel interrupted you and turned towards the barkeeper.
   You chuckled and shook your head again, rolling your eyes in the process. Barely a minute later, Angel Dust spun back around, now holding a maxi cocktail in one of his four hands, a wide grin spreading across his face, showing off the golden tooth in his upper front row.
   âWhat?â, he exhaled, noticing the way you stared at his drink. âI must be prepared for whatever ya âbout to tell me!â
   âYouâre unbelievableâŚâ you snickered with a wide grin, your heart feeling much lighter than just seconds before. It was a mystery how Angel managed to lift your spirits within seconds just by being himself, but you certainly couldnât complain.
   âWell, come on. Spill!â Angel exclaimed with a flourish of his arms, almost knocking out another guest with his drink.
   Taking a deep breath, you steeled yourself for a brief moment before finally beginning to share your troubles with him, âYou know, I met this girl today. Selena is her name.â
   âAh, that dark-haired knockout, huh? I saw ya two getting pretty cozy on the dance floor,â Angel quipped with a mischievous grin, taking a playful sip from his cocktail. "Ya two were practically makin' out with your eyes! Canât blame ya, though,â he added before you could continue your story. âIf I was into chicks, I'd be all over that action myself. But you, darlinâ Y/N, sure know how to pick 'em!â
   âAngel!â you exclaimed with an aghast expression and jabbed him in the ribs with your elbow, feeling your cheeks flush with heat almost immediately.
   âHey, donât play coy with me. I know you way too well to fall for any of your lame excuses!â
   A sigh slipped from your lips as you took a few sips, your expression shifting to one of resignation. âYouâre right,â you mumbled, twirling the straw with your finger while your gaze fixed on an invisible point in the distance. Finally, you admitted with a weak voice, âHonestly, thatâs exactly where this story is headedâŚâ
   âNow youâve got me intrigued!â Angel chimed in with a mischievous grin. Despite sneaking a glance at him from the corner of your eye, you chose to ignore his playful curiosity.
   âWell, letâs just say we had a good timeâŚâ You continued nervously twirling the straw in your drink. âAnd before you ask, yes, we made out,â you added, glancing back at Angel and noticing his sly grin widening almost devilishly. âRight over there in the hallway!â You pointed toward the door leading to the dimly lit corridor separating the main floor from the bathrooms and outdoor area.
   Angel laughed suggestively. âI knew you had it in ya,â he teased you, nudging your side with his lower elbow two times. âDid you just kiss or did you alsoâŚâ
   You immediately raised your hands and interrupted Angel with a harsh âNoâ before he could finish his sentence.
   The spider demon let out a disappointed huff and raised his glass to his lips again.
   âAlastor caught us before anything could turn serious,â you deadpanned, your voice tinged with bitterness. While a deep shadow crossed your expression, and your cheeks flushed a bright red as the memory replayed, Angel choked on his drink. His eyes widened in surprise as he began to cough violently. He leaned forward, desperately pounding his chest fluff with his fists in a frantic attempt to dislodge the liquid from the wrong pipe. The commotion drew curious glances from those nearby, and you turned to face him, a mix of amusement and concern etched across your face. The scene was both entertaining and troubling, as you watched him struggle, trying not to burst into laughter while simultaneously wincing at the memory that had caused this reaction. The recollection hung over you like a heavy fog, each detail feeling as vivid and mortifying as the moment it occurred.
   Angel took a moment to steady himself, his breathing finally returning to normal. Once he felt composed, he raised his glass and took a long, deliberate sip from his cocktail, as though he hadnât just nearly choked on it in a hilariously awkward fashion. With a wry smile, he remarked, âDamn, I can see why thatâs a real mood killer.â
   âA mood killer?!â you retorted with disbelief, squeezing your eyebrows together. âThat was absolutely embarrassing! The absolute most mortifying experience Iâve had in the last ten years! And now I canât stop thinking about itâŚâ The blush on your cheeks got even redder, almost rivalring the dancefloorâs RGB lights.
   Angel Dust placed a comforting hand on your arm. âHey, donât beat yourself up over it. Alastorâs a big boy. He can handle it. Besides, he's probably more upset about ya makinâ out with someone else than the actual scene.â
   You looked up at him, tilting your head before your eyes widened as his words sank in. Did Angel just confirm the very same assumption you dismissed only mere minutes ago? Unsure whether you understood him correctly, you asked, âWhat do you mean?â
   Angel rolled his eyes. âOh, câmon now, toots. Itâs obvious ya have a crush on him and from what Iâve seen, heâs definitely got a thing for ya too. Heâs just too much of a stick in the mud to admit it.â
   You held your breath, your heart skipping a beat, but instead of showing hope, you furrowed your brows. âAnd what makes you think that?â
   âItâs the way he looks at ya,â Angel said, raising an eyebrow. âHeâs been starinâ at ya all night â and not just tonight, but for a while now. Ya seriously tellinâ me ya never noticed? His gaze is like daggers. Ya canât miss it. Also, ya never noticed the way he handles ya? Caressinâ ya cheek like silk, toots. That guyâs all over you. And you never noticed?!â
   âNo! I meanâ yes! Urgh, I donât knowâ,â you stumbled over your words, overwhelmed by Angelâs blunt confirmation, your inner turmoil, and that humiliating encounter in the hallway. âHeâs sending mixed signals, Angel, and itâs driving me crazy!â you finally blurted out, hiding your flushed face behind your free hand. Slightly hunched forward like an embarrassed shrimp, you grabbed the straw of your drink with your lips and took a long sip, draining the glass almost completely except for a few ice cubes and the slices of lemon floating at the bottom.
   âHeâs a jerk, Y/N. Probs in denial âcause of his oâ so scary reputation,â Angel said with an exaggerated roll of his eyes and pulled you into his chest. The proximity of your friend immediately eased your nerves, and after a moment, you lowered your hand, glaring up at the spider demon. Angel might come off as a bit of a clown, but heâs always been a good friend to you. He offered invaluable advice whenever you needed it and comforted you in a way no one else could.
   âAnd what do you suggest I should do?â you asked, a surge of sadness suddenly welling up inside of you.
   Angel noticed the change in your demeanor and hummed, the sound vibrating in his chest and soothing you like a purring cat. âI think itâs time for the both of ya to stop dancinâ around each other and get into some action.â
   âFunnyâŚâ you growled, disappointment lacing your voice, but Angel didnât seem affected by your frustration. He simply sipped his drink nonchalantly.
   âHey, I wasnât jokinâ, kitten,â he shot back, his eyes scanning the club as if searching for something. Spotting the lounge area, he grinned and added, âIâve been watchinâ ya and Mister All-Creepy flirtinâ for what feels like forever. Itâs gettin' unbearable. Not that I donât enjoy the show, but seriously, why donât ya just get a room already?â
   You followed Angel's gaze and immediately regretted it. There was Alastor, seated cross-legged on the same couch heâd occupied earlier, his smile tight and strained. He mustâve returned to his seat during your conversation with Angel.
   You bit your lip so hard it nearly drew blood, trying to calm the frantic pounding of your heart at the sight of him. Despite your discomfort, you kept your gaze fixed on him and exhaled a long, deep breath. âBecause heâs fucking complicated,â you muttered, fidgeting with the straw of your empty drink, pushing the ice cubes and lemon slices back and forth.
   âWeâre in hell,â Angel clarified, âEverythingâs complicated.â
   âYeah, but Alastorâs a whole other level of complicated,â you said, letting the words hang in the air. You lifted your glass, swallowed some ice cubes, and pulled out the lemon slices to munch on. After a moment of contemplation, you continued, âHe seemed tense when he caught us. Acted really off â cracked jokes just to make me uncomfortable once Selena fled the scene.â
   âSounds like somethinâ Smiles would do,â Angel shrugged.
   You huffed, frustration clear in your voice. âI know, but⌠either heâs been playing games with me, or maybe youâre onto something and he is jealous.â
   âWhatâs wrong with both?â Angel raised an eyebrow.
   You tilted your head, averting your gaze from Alastor and glancing at Angel. The spider demon, however, kept his eyes locked on the deer demon as he continued, âWhat I mean is, Iâm pretty sure heâs been testinâ ya limits. Rilinâ ya up to distract himself from the betrayal he mustâve felt when he saw you and Selena together.â
   You just hummed, your mind occupied with a whirlwind of thoughts, your emotions running into complicated territory. After a moment of silence you asked, your voice filled with desperation, âPlease just tell me what Iâm supposed to do. I canât just march up to him and lay it all out there like âHey, Al, you know, Iâm in love with you. Would be cool if you reciprocated my feelings.ââ You roll your eyes, your voice tinged with sarcasm. âThat sounds like a one-way ticket to heartbreak.â
   âI know this ainât easy, toots. But sometimes ya gotta take a leap. If youâre tired of the games and the mixed signals, itâs time to confront it head-on. It might not fix everything, but at least youâll get some answers.â
   âIâm pretty sure he'll reject me even if he might reciprocate my feelings. I mean, you know how he is.â
   âThen itâs his loss. He doesnât deserve you if he canât see your value.â
   You took a deep breath and closed your eyes, still unsure about this advice though deep down you knew that Angel was right and that there was no other way for you to get clarity than confronting Alastor head on. That smiling bastard definitely wouldnât come at you first. He was way too⌠well, Alastor, for this.
   With a groan you buried your face in your hand, massaging your temples with your thumb and index. âWhy me.. why himâŚ? Why out of all of Hellâs denizens him, AngelâŚâ you whined quietly, cursing yourself for falling for a sociopathic serial killer. This couldnât end well. This wouldnât end well. Yet, there was nothing else you could do. It was either jumping right into the cold water or getting burned alive by that damn uncertain feeling in your chest. âYou know, I wanted him to come with us in hopes I could resolve things between us. Get closer and spend some time with him. But instead I didnât give him any attention and made everything worse. What if heâs angry at me for dragging him here? What ifâ whaââ
   âNow youâre overthinkinâ, toots,â Angel interrupted you and placed one of his hands on your head, slowly caressing your hair in a soothing manner. âThe alcohol is makinâ ya emotional. Maybe ya should wait a few more days before ya talk to him,â he suggested with a soft voice, the motion of his hand in your hair calming you down a little, your breathing slowly got less ragged and more composed. âLet me make one thing clear,â Angel continued, stopping his petting of your head and instead lifting your chin with two of his furry fingers to make you look at him.
   You held your breath as you looked up at him, eyes gleaming with unshed tears, and waited for him to continue with a forced smile on your lips.
   âAl wouldâve never agreed to join if he doesnât care about you.â
   You stayed silent, only the bass of the loud music pulsing in your ears. He was right. Alastor was very stubborn and selfish. So the fact alone that you managed to convince him â which was surprisingly easy â had to mean something. Biting your lip you let your gaze return to the red demon in the back of the club, your eyes lingering on him for a moment in which you contemplated your next move. A deep breath, then you looked back at Angel. âI think I need to get some fresh air,â you said, your voice suddenly tinged with exhaustion.
   âWould ya like my company?â Angel asked but you shook your head.
   âNo. I need a few minutes just for myself.â
   With that, you left Angel at the bar and made your way across the grand room, heading toward the very same door that led to the cursed hallway. As you weaved through the crowd, careful not to bump into anyone, the hairs on the back of your neck stood on end. The unsettling sensation of being watched sent a shiver down your spine and you didnât need to look up to know exactly whose gaze was following you. Ignoring his stare, you left the room and stepped into the outdoor area. The fresh breeze of Hellâs night air enveloped you with a soothing embrace. You took a deep breath, leaning against the wall and closing your eyes, allowing the calm of the night to settle over you. The music from the party was barely audible; only the deep bass vibrated through the closed door, a distant reminder of the revelry still going on inside, though the songs themselves were almost indecipherable.
   You didnât know how long you'd been standing there, focusing on your breath and ignoring the few people around you, but a presence stepped into your field of vision and you looked up, your gaze meeting Selena who met you with a kind smile.
   âHey,â she greeted you, breaking the comforting silence. âIâm really sorry for leaving you like that. Itâs just⌠I was really embarrassed when he caught us and knowing heâs the Radio Demon made me very nervous and my flight instincts kicked inâŚâ she explained herself with a soft voice, regret visible on her face as she met you with a weak but apologetic smile. âIt was egoistic. I shouldnât have left you alone with him.â
   You just shrugged your shoulders. âItâs okay,â you retorted genuinely, âI understand you. Alastor can be very intimidating. Especially if you donât know him.âÂ
   Selena hummed and fell silent for a brief moment, before she continued, âI didnât know youâre acquainted with him.â Her words sounded more like a question than a statement, and a slight hue of red spread across your cheeks. âI was confused that you know each other. I mean, heâs a much-feared overlordâŚâ
   "Yeah, his reputation precedes him," you retorted, glancing at the door thoughtfully, as if he stood right behind it.
   Selena nodded, though her expression still held a hint of confusion.
   You continued, "We work together at the hotel. Honestly, he's not that bad once you get to know him personally."
   Selena raised her eyebrows in surprise. "Really?"
   You nodded, a small smile forming. "He's actually quite the charming gentleman and can be really funny at times. If you donât mind his⌠well, complicated personality."
   Another moment of silence lingered between you in which Selena visibly processed your words. Then she asked, with a curious tone, âAre you close?â
You turned your gaze back to her, caught off guard by her sudden questions. A heavy feeling tugged at your heart and twisted your insides, but you pushed the discomfort aside. For a few seconds, you pondered whether to reveal the complications you were having with Alastor, carefully weighing what information to share and what to keep to yourself. Though something told you that Selena might be trustworthy, you had only known her for a few hours. Maybe one day you'd open up more, but for tonight, it was better to keep things brief.
   âLetâs just say we are quite close, but itâs⌠complicated. He⌠well, heâs complicated. Itâs something between a loose friendship and professional coworkership,â you explained, keeping the romantic details out of it. Even if you told Selena, you were not in the mood for additional advice. Angel Dustâs words had been helpful, but you still felt unsure and, to be honest, terrified about what to do next.
   You swallowed hard, your shoulders tensing as you recalled Angel Dustâs advice to talk to Alastor but avoid doing it today. He had said that the alcohol made you too emotional â which was true; everything felt more intense and overwhelming than it probably was. Yet, you worried you might not find the courage to confront him another day. You were already intoxicated, had embarrassed yourself in front of him, and were struggling with inner turmoil that left you frustrated and somewhat angry. Given all this, you sarcastically questioned what a little more heartbreak could possibly add.
   âYou really care about him, huh?â Selena suddenly broke your train of thoughts and pulled you back into reality.
   Shit, you thought. Was it that obvious? Maybe you shouldâve just kept your mouth shut.
   âGuess I do,â you responded with a deep sigh, giving in, and Selenaâs eyes softened with understanding, as she offered you a heartwarming smile.
   âWell, he can consider himself lucky to have someone like you in his afterlife,â she retorted, her voice laced with genuine admiration. There was something reassuring in her words, a reflection of kindness that you hadnât expected.
   âThank you, SelenaâŚâ you said, your voice carrying a tone of heartfelt gratitude. âThis really means a lot to me.â
   âWell, I think Iâm heading home for tonight,â Selena changed the topic, her expression shifting to one of thoughtful weariness. âIâm pretty wasted and need a good amount of sleep to keep my hangover from being too brutal. You have my number, right?â
   You nodded, and Selenaâs smile turned into a satisfied grin, as if she was pleased with the connection you had made.
   âPerfect. Just send me a text when youâre home,â she instructed, her tone friendly and casual. âWe should definitely meet up again sometime. Thereâs a lovely little cafĂŠ not far from here that I think youâd enjoy. And if you ever need someone to talk to, donât hesitate to reach out.â She gave you a reassuring wink before finishing her drink.
   You returned her smile and nodded. âSounds great.â
   As Selena made her way out, you felt a small but comforting spark of hope. Maybe, despite the chaos of the night, you had found a new friend. And with that newfound strength, you decided it was time to step out of your shadow and confront Alastor. Better to do it tonight than to keep waiting. After all, you asked yourself again, what could a little more heartbreak possibly add to the drama?
Part three will (hopefully) be out in September October!
Everyone whoâs been tagged in this part will automatically be tagged in the next. If you arenât part of the tag list of this story but want to be added, let me know in the comments!
*~*~*~*~*
Taglist:
@diffidentphantom, @notsoaverageguy-1997, @the-autistic-moth, @n0tmentallystable, @sirens-and-moonflowers, @alastorsgirl48, @ratsematary, @night-lol, @divineknightmare, @musiclover059, @bitter-rabittt, @milkissesx, @florist-of-the-valley, @fantasyhopperhea
NO NUT NOVEMBER â24 | đđŽđˇđ˝ đ¤đš!
sebastian michaelis, neuvillette, lucifer, sylus x f!reader (all separate)
DETAILS: This series follows four men, four scenarios centered around No Nut November, and four ways to let carnal desire take overâpick your poison. Welcome to the world of Pent Up! where weâre all about chasing pleasure.
GENRE: Explicit Smut, Mature Themes
DURATION: 4 episodes
CONTENT ADVISORY: nsfw, mdni, unprotected sex, porn without plot, edging (sebastian michaelis), aphrodisiacs (neuvillette), demon fucking (lucifer), bondage (sylus). each chapter will be tagged specifically.
EPISODES:
Episode 1 â One Hell Of A Plan
No Nut November only has one ruleâto abstain oneself from an orgasm or ânuttingâ during the whole month of Novemberâthat means no rule is broken if Sebastian fucks you without cumming, right?
Featuring Sebastian Michaelis. Release date: November 4th 2024.
Episode 2 â Chocolate Gone Wrong
Neuvillette finds himself itching to break the sacred rule of No Nut November after naĂŻvely indulging in aphrodisiac-laced chocolates gifted by Sigewinneâa popular craze among young Fontanian adults.
Featuring Neuvillette. Release date: November 11th 2024.
Episode 3 â The Clock Strikes Midnight
A month of sexual abstinence, nothing Lucifer cannot do but once the grandfather clock sings on midnightâbidding goodbye to the eleventh monthâhe starts his carnal hunt.
Featuring Lucifer. Release date: November 18th 2024.
Episode 4 â Temptress
Sylus prides himself in his unwavering resolve but he soon starts doubting that fact after your brazen attempts of getting him to lose No Nut Novemberâby practically offering yourself on a silver platter before the Onychinus leader. Who is he to deny himself of a feast? You want to be devoured? Heâll give that to you.
Featuring Sylus. Release date: November 25th 2024.
SUBSCRIBE to be notified ! (taglist)
DIRECTORâS NOTE: divider: cafekitsune. eeep my very first NNN event hehe enjoy. thoughts and feedbacks are much appreciated!
â
Š chrollogy 2024 | donât plagiarise, repost or steal my video
Writing Collections ~
Bear!Price
>pt 2 >pt 3 (nsfw) >pt 4 >pt 5 >pt 6 >pt 7 >pt8 >pt 9 >pt 10 >pt 11
Ghost A/B/O
>pt 2 >pt 3 >pt 4 >pt 5 >pt 6 >pt 7 >pt 8 >pt9
Mafia!141
>pt 2 >pt 3 >pt 4 >pt5 >pt6 (nsfw)
Officer Price (Mini series) pt 1 pt 2 pt 3
Team141 Accidental Edibles (Probably mini series)
Ghost in trouble...
Price "Sharing"
More Price Sharing You
Ghost/You Dinner
Ghost/You Games
Gaz/Soap Weed ramblings
Scrubs (2002) Media Analysis Web (through the reblogs)
any other ramblings can be found under #vnardshoard !
Part 12 SpecGru reader!!
No content warnings for this chapter.
You mull over your captainâs words in the hours before dinner. Sitting behind Nova in her temporary room, Doctor Whoâs opening theme warbling from your laptopâs speakers. You gently work oil into her scalp, following the precise alleys formed by her braids.
Itâs a soothing ritual, not just for her, but for you. An act of care for a woman whoâs been so kind and patient with you. Who always stood her ground on your worst days, and never allowed herself to be goaded into a useless argument. Sheâs warm beneath your fingers, soft against your chest, the scent of coconut and cinnamon sweet in your nose.
Slowly, you begin to card through memories you put great care into neglecting.
The day you left the hospital, feeling more pathetic than you ever had in your life. A packet of care instructions folded over in one hand. You remember the way Gaz hadnât quite looked you in the eye, mouth tight and regretful at the corners. Almost guilty. Even when he handed over a bag of fresh clothes, saying he was glad to see you on your feet.
Did you know then? Was there some twinge of foreshadowing in your gut? Did you hear a foreboding whisper in your mind, of how the following twenty-four hours would devolve?
Maybe you did or maybe hindsight is a liar.
What really stands out, even after all this time, is how betrayed you felt (still feel) when you reflect on that interaction with Gaz. That the best he offered was a weak warning that Ghost and Price were pissed off at you. The hurt that he didnât even ask how you felt before disappearing for the rest of that awful day. You never saw him after your initial discharge, he might as well have borrowed his lieutenantâs namesake.
And then there was Johnny.
Soap, who made himself perfectly visible, if only to express how pissed off he was. He never bothered to ask how you were doing either â didnât even seem relieved to see you conscious and in one piece. He was tight-jawed and tense; the few times he deigned to speak to you was clipped and terse.
When you finally left, you remember how your chest ached, knowing (intending) youâd never see his thousand-watt smile again. A fair few of your tears on that flight had been in self-deprecation for expecting anything but his total, unwavering loyalty to Simon. It stung that for all his crowing about being a team, looking out for each other, no one left behind â he couldnât spare you a crumb of forgiveness for a mistake in the field.
Price and Ghost had almost made sense, really. But Gaz and Soap had been a peculiar sort of pain. Your fellow sergeants, who had made you feel welcome and comfortable in the beginning â who had been the bridge and buffer between you and your intimidating superiors. And maybe it wasnât their fault that you never quite felt like you had a seat at their table, but theyâd tried.
Still⌠at least you can look at them. You canât imagine opening your mouth to face Price or Ghost and anything but acid pouring out.
âWhatâs on your mind, babes?â
You blink, palms automatically cradling Novaâs head as she tilts it back to peer at you. On autopilot, you dip down to kiss her forehead, then the gentle curve of her lips.
âHmm?â
âDonât get me wrong, the massage is nice,â she teases, âbut youâve gone over my whole head at least twice now.â
âOh,â you intone, swiping your thumb behind her ear. âJust thinkinâ is all.â
âI can tell,â she giggles, âthereâs practically smoke cominâ outta your ears.â
You grimace a bit, arms lowering down to circle her shoulders in a hug. She curls her clever, slender fingers around your forearm, tracing soft patterns with her blunt nails.
âSorry, love,â you mumble, flicking your eyes to the screen. Realize youâve only got a vague idea of whatâs going on. âIâm being a bad date.â
âYouâre not,â she insists, squeezing your wrist. âThis sâall been a lot, yeah? I just donâ want you being on your own in there.â
She taps two fingers against your temple. You used to spend all your time alone in your own head. Not because it was safe â it wasnât â but it was familiar. It took her and the rest of the team concerted effort to pry anything of value from you.
Now, you muster up an appreciative smile as you nuzzle into her hand.
âIâve just been trying to decideâŚâ
She pauses the show and wriggles to get a better look at your face, hums for you to continue.
âIf I should try talking to the 141,â you continue. âCap said I should consider it. See if we can put all that old shit to rest.â
âDo you want to put it to rest?â
âI should.â
âBut do you want to?â
The question brings you up a bit short. Being mad is easy. Youâve been mad at them for so long, one step short of loathing, that youâve settled into the feeling. Dug your heels in. Itâs an easy way to put a stopper on all the complicated hurt lying beneath.
âI want to talk to them the same way I want to go to the dentist,â you muse.
She picks up what you arenât saying.
âYou donât want to, but you know itâs healthier if you do.â
You grunt, still too proud to admit it outright.
âThe wound closed over, but it never healed properly,â she says. âMaybe youâve got to reset it, yeah?â
You sigh. âYeah. Just not sure where to start.â
She shrugs. âWherever you want to. Do it on your own terms. Only way youâll be able to stomach them.â
You chuckle. âYeah, youâre probably right.â
ââCourse I am,â she chirps. âIâm used to navigating bad weather.â
You nip at her fingers, prompting a bright peel of laughter as she tries to squirm away. As you wrestle her back into your lap, your nerves soften and settle.
Even if you excise this wound, you know you wonât be left bleeding alone. Not ever again.
You havenât come to any concrete decision after dinner. Not that anyone asks. Nova isnât one to push and your captain has already said his piece. You havenât told Nikto or Keegan about your dilemma yet, and youâre not sure if you will.
Niktoâs take on the situation isnât obvious â though if you had to guess, it would be similar to Novaâs. But Keegan? You already know what his answer would be.
Of anyone in SpecGru, he had to work the hardest to earn even an iota of warmth from you. He reminded you too much of Ghost â and how could he not? The perpetual mask, the sharp one-liners. Gruff and closed off, frighteningly capable, and a crack shot with a sniper rifle to boot.
It used to take everything in you to pull your punches during spars. The rare instances that you would agree to eat with your new team were never if Keegan was present. And more than once, you walked into the rec room, saw his looming figure, and turned right back around.
The only time you could stand to look at him was during missions, but your captain was always sure to receive a killer glare if he paired the two of you together.
Keegan was your partner on the mission that changed things.
It had been a week straight of shit sleep and bad memories, sick on loneliness and anger. When boots hit the ground, you stormed right in, eager to prove to yourself (but really, to them) that you were valuable. Didnât wait for Keegan, but that had never stopped him from keeping pace with you before.
You didnât clear your corners, got sloppy and hasty.
Took two stab wounds before Keegan shot the hostile in the temple. When he tried to call the others, you demanded that he finish the mission first. Would have rather bled out than be the reason another mission failed.
The pain and blood loss dragged you under as soon as you choked out the demand.
Then, Keeganâs face was the first thing you saw in the hospital room. Not the mask, him.
Even with dirt and black paint smudging his face, you could see the dark, worried circles beneath his eyes. Could read regret in his angular jaw, relief in the slant of his scarred mouth. For the first time, you looked in his eyes and saw more than an echo of your former lieutenant.
You saw your teammate. The partner youâd left to fend for himself because youâd been handicapped by your own pride. You saw Keegan.
âDid you finish the mission?â you rasped.
He frowned, but your captain stepped forward. âHe did â once we were there to stop the bleeding.â
You never saw Ghost in the weave of his mask again.
And soon after, Keegan was the first person you opened up to about the 141.
It was that very same week. Youâd been sick on shame and embarrassment, using your injuries to nurse your wounded ego. Skipping meals in exchange for raiding your snack drawers and moping in your cot.
Keegan hadnât made himself scarce after your discharge. None of your team had, really â but heâd made a point of checking on you. And lacking your usual sharpness, he hadnât been deterred by your comparatively mild standoffishness either.
Which was how you found yourself stubbornly tucked into the corner of your cot one night, while Keegan sewed the holes in your shirt. He kept shooting you amused looks â probably because you hadnât taken your eyes off him once. Half wondering why he was there, half waiting for the other shoe to drop.
âYou gonna say something, or you just glare all night?â he drawled eventually.
You narrowed your eyes. âDo you plan to stay all night?â
He shrugged, but his eyes flicked to yours, the corner of his mouth ticking up. (No mask. He hadnât worn one around you since the hospital. Not unless people outside your team were around.)
âIf youâll have me. Been meaning to get you caught up on the show weâve been watching.â
You huffed, frustrated. âWhy?â
He arched his brows at you, needle paused. âBecause I like you, despite your best efforts.â
You stared, a little appalled, a little touched. Keegan just chuckled and went right back to mending your shirt. You drew your knees up tighter and hid your quivering mouth with your arms.
âCap says your last team was shit to you,â he said into your sullen silence.
You scowled. He put a hand up as if in surrender.
âHe hasnât said moreân that, donât worry,â he continued, âIâm just sayinâ⌠I donât take any of it personal. Youâre a good teammate, I trust you with more than my six.â
Why, you wanted to demand, flabbergasted and all the guiltier because you knew you didnât deserve it. Why did he trust you? Why was he so patient? Why was he there at all?
You sniffled, but he just kept talking.
âI want to return the favor, ya know? Iâm not askinâ you to trust me after the mission, but you donât gotta be on your own either.â
You were crying quietly by that point, face so hot that your tears felt cold, stomach aching from more than stab wounds. He finally looked up, saw how you were falling apart. But he didnât shy away, didnât close himself off. It wasnât pity or sympathy that softened his eyes.
âThe shit you and I carry, weâre not meant to do it alone, sweets.â
And what else could you do, but spill your sorry guts?
You remember the expression on his face when you got to the part about Ghost. Remember how tightly he held you on your cot, all the distance (emotional and physical) closed between you two. Remember waking up the next morning, Netflix still open on your laptop and flopped gracelessly over Keeganâs stomach like a childhood sleepover.
You couldnât have iced him out again even if you wanted to, after that.
No, thereâs no question what Keegan would tell you, if you asked about talking to the 141. He would say thereâs no good reason to waste oxygen on a single one of them.
So, you donât ask.
You climb into his lap in your temporary room that evening, peeling his mask up and off with slow hands. His eyes are already half-lidded, the corner of his mouth curved fondly. His hands spread across your thighs, warm and rough. The scar twisting across his left palm is sweetly familiar when he draws it along your skin.
âIâm going to try talking to the 141,â you admit.
His jaw twitches, eyes flickering. âNow why the hell would you do that?â
You sigh, curl your fingers into the brassy crop of hair heâs been growing out. Heâs got a quick temper, and a habit of misplacing it when itâs been triggered by something out of his control. You donât take it personally, you never have â itâs gratifying to see how much he cares.
âThereâs no good reason to waste oxygen on a single one of âem,â he growls.
âThere might be.â
He sits back, skeptical but waiting.
You continue, âIâve got a lot of shit to say to them, and they seem eager to hear it.â
âWhy give âem the satisfaction?â he asks.
âMaybe itâll help with the nightmares.â That gives him pause. You draw your thumb soothingly across his temple â a bullet graze from saving your life. âWeâve got too much shit to carry, you and me. Unloading some of it is as good a reason as any.â
His hand drifts up your side, grazes the tattoo coiling down your arm. (The second you ever got â a big piece that took hours, Keegan never leaving your side. Nikto, Nova, and your captain periodically dropping in to provide snacks and water.)
He cups your jaw, guides your face down until your foreheads touch. You stay there, breathing him in. He smells like yours.
âWhat if they make it worse, huh?â His thumb caresses over your cheekbone the way it has a dozen times before, wiping away tears. âIâll have to kill âem.â
You huff softly, amused. âThen kill âem. But Iâm stronger than I was, Kee. Thereâs nothing they can weigh me down with that I canât carry.â
âI know,â he whispers, tilting his chin to drop a sweet, aching kiss on your lips.
âBesides, I wouldnât be carrying it alone anymore.â
His expression lightens, pride shining from his eyes. âDamn right.â
Itâs nearly midnight when you wake from a light doze. Keegan is snoring softly, an arm and leg each hanging over the side of the bed. Your mouth is dry, but you realize itâs your stomach that woke you â pangs of hunger from picking at your dinner earlier. You need to eat.
Quiet and careful, you crawl out from beneath the sheets. Keegan is a heavy sleeper compared to the nearly supernatural senses of Nikto; he hardly stirs as you pad for the door. The hall lights are dim, but you only open it a crack to slip out.
The hall is quiet, no lights on beneath any of the other doors. You hope that means the rest of your team is sleeping peacefully. If you remember right, Nikto and Nova crawled in with your captain this evening. Theyâre all in good company if nightmares creep in; you pray Keegan doesnât have any while youâre up.
Thankfully, the rec room is only two halls away. Light is spilling out as you turn the corner â thereâs a sensor that shuts them off if no movement is detected for a while. Someone is either in there now or was recently. You half hope itâs the latter, but that doesnât deter you from entering.
Your surprised to find Soap leaning against the kitchenette counter, a steaming mug in hand. His expression is flat, grim. Tired. You pause just inside the doorway.
âMight as well come in,â he says, voice low and rough. âIâll clear out in a moâ.â
Even from where youâre standing, you can see that his cup is mostly full.
You exhale and shake your head. âDonât have to.â
âHow gracious,â he rasps, brows twitching like he wants to scowl. Like he canât quite commit to being as bitter as he should be.
Youâre too tired for your usual acid, as well. Just sigh and reach for the fridge door.
âIs that how you want this conversation to go?â you ask.
âIs this a conversation?â he replies.
You pluck out a yogurt cup. âIt can be.â
Heâs glaring into his coffee now, index finger tapping at the ceramic. Thinking. Or maybe just leashing all the things he wants to say but knows will drive you right back out.
âWhy now?â he says finally.
You shrug. âBecause Iâm ready now.â
A tendon in his jaw twitches. âThatâs not fair.â
A hot flicker of anger ignites in your chest. You tamp it down with a spoonful of yogurt, measuring out your words and tone.
âHow do you reckon?â you inquire.
âYou left,â he says. Itâs been a while, but you can detect the hurt underlying the accusation. You suspect itâs something heâs wanted to say for a long time. âYou left us behind.â
You click your teeth off your spoon, take a deep breath. Itâs factually true. You are the one that left butâ
âI wasnât going to wait for you all to kick me out officially.â
He finally raises his eyes, a dark storm of emotion swirling within them.
âWe wouldnae have.â
You tilt your head, cynicism in the flat line of your mouth. âDidnât seem that way to me.â
âI ken you and Simon wereââ
âDonât.â
His mouth snaps shut, brows furrowed. You point at him with your spoon warningly but bite back the sharp remark on your tongue. Arguing isnât the point here.
Settle instead to say, âDonât speak for the others.â
Thereâs a beat of silence as he digests that, then finally nods. âAlright. Just you ân me then.â
You turn back to your yogurt, swipe up another spoonful as you reorganize your thoughts.
âI didnât leave because of Ghost,â you begin. âNot entirely. I left because I was never part of the team. And what happened after that mission just⌠made it all very clear.â
Soap frowns, opens his mouth like he wants to deny it, but you hold up a finger to stop him. He takes a long sip of coffee and waits.
âYou didnât check on me at all. You werenât there when I woke up. You never asked if I was okay,â you continue. âYou were too busy being angry on Ghostâs behalf.â
âYou almost got the both of you killed,â he argues.
âBut you cared more about Ghost almost being hurt than the fact that I was,â you say. And dammit, you feel your sinuses burning, but your eyes stay blessedly dry. The anger disappears from his face all at once as realization sinks in. âI mattered to you less than Ghost.â
His hand tightens around his mug, knuckles blanching. âNo. No, lass, thaâs noâ⌠you were always⌠you survived.â
âI felt the worst I ever had in my life, but you didnât care because I crossed the almighty Ghost,â you insist.
âI cared about you,â he denies.
âBut not more than you did about Ghost.â You drag your gaze up to his. Even his eyes look a little wet now. âAnd that⌠that wasnât enough for me.â
You suck in a shuddering breath, trying to loosen the tightness in your chest. Clear your throat once you feel the threatening prick of tears subside.
âI didnât⌠it wasnae that,â he rasps. âI ken you think Iâm full of shite, but âs true.â
You do think heâs full of shit. Maybe not on purpose, maybe he really does think he cared about you as much as Ghost, but you know better.
âI was just⌠so angry wiâ you,â he explains. âYou could have died. Nearly got Simon killed, all because you thought you knew better.â
You exhale hard. âYouâve never made a bad call?â you challenge.
âIt wasnae your call to make. You should have listened to Ghost. Instead, youââ
âI what?â
Your fingers tingle, numb. Canât even feel the spoon, or the chill of the yogurt cup anymore.
âYou disobeyed orders, it was soââ
âI didnât.â
He stops. Stares. âWhat?â
You stare right back, âI didnât disobey orders.â
First | Previous | TBC...
Masterlist
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(A/n) âł Going over this, I just now realize how similar it is to the first episode of House of the Dragon and I apologize for that! Feedback is greatly appreciated!! Take care of yourselves and take a break, eat a snack, drink some water!!
Word Count âł 2.7k
Content Warnings âł 3rd, P.O.V, violence, blood, injury, mentions the Doom of Valyria, mentions of deathâŚ
AWOIAF Masterlist
The sun set hours ago⌠Lake-town was cold enough during the day and when the sun came down, it felt like a winter storm.
Bard was preparing to set off to collect fish again. He hated leaving for so long and coming home for a day or two, it broke his heart whenever he had to tell his children he was leaving again.
Bard climbed the wooden planks and up to the rooftop where his young son, Bain, sat. He leaned back, his head up towards the sky with widened eyes.
âCome Bain, itâs cold.â Bard said, his arms resting on the rooftop. âItâs time for bed.â
Bain turned to his father. âDa, is the dragon gonna come for us? Like the one in the stories you told us?â
Bard hopped onto the rooftop, kneeling to his son. âNo, son. The dragon sleeps within Erebor. It has for a hundred years.â
But Bain pointed to the sky. âBut thereâs one.â
Bard followed his finger and squinted. He felt his heart drop when he saw the shadowy figure soaring through the sky. He could barely make out the size or his wingspan.
A gasp left his lips as he grabbed his sonâs shoulders. âGo, go inside.â He demanded, pushing him. But his eyes remained on the dragon. âQuickly now.â
Watching him take a couple of laps around the Lonely Mountains. His heart raced, was the dragon trying to tempt Smaug? He followed his son inside, trying to remain calm for his children.
He didnât see the dragon descend towards Mirkwood.
The dragon flapped his wings as he touched the ground, sending out a cloud of dust, twigs, and leaves out of his way.
The dragon grumbled as the guards surrounded him. âRČłbÄs.â His rider told him, taking off the leather belts that held her to the saddle. âLykirÄŤ.â
The dragon bent his neck, allowing the rider to dismount. She smiled rather widely, running her hands along his scaly neck and to his head.
She placed her hand under his eye, seeing her reflection in his eye. She laughed as her dragon rumbled under her touch, she placed her forehead onto his skin, closing her eyes, humming a soft tune.
Tauriel approached her with a stern expression. Usually, she would happily greet her but considering that nobody was supposed to be leaving Mirkwood, let alone at midnight, she was frustrated.
âThe King does not like repeating himself.â Tauriel warned her, coming close even if the dragon seemed to be displeased. âNo one is allowed to leave unless granted.â
She pulled back from her dragon and turned to face her, the smile still on her face. âAegar is more than big enough to saddle two. I know how much you love the sky.â
Taruiel shook her head in disappointment. âCome, the King wishes to speak to you.â She walked with some of the guards, two waiting for her.
She sighed and followed her, leaving Aegar to lay and rest.
She may have been here her entire life, but the Kingdom of Mirkwood never ceased to amaze her. They have been friends for her entire life as Tauriel was the one who taught her how to use a bow from a young age.
They walked arm in arm through the halls of Mirkwood. Tauriel found herself unable to contain her laughter and smile.
âIt is difficult to understand you.â Tauriel giggled. âDo you take pleasure in seeing all of us scramble to locate you?â
(Y/n) grinned sheepishly. âAdmit it. You wish to ride a dragon.â
âI believe Iâm content with seeing you fly.â
âYour loss.â She pushed her lightly. âSo tell me, how angry is he?â
(Y/n) then pulled her arm back as they approached the throne room, Thranduil sat there, observing a jewel in his hands.
Tauriel took her leave but not before looking back at her, her smile had faded but she remained calm. Tauriel left before Thranduil could say anything else to her.
â(Y/n).â Thranduilâs voice was calm yet assertive. But there was an edge of frustration. âYou know how I feel about these reckless flights of yours. And to venture out without my permission, disappointing.â
(Y/n) bowed her head, her gaze focused on the floor. âForgive me, My Lord.â She replied. âYet you donât allow me to go flying with your permission.â
Thranduil sighed heavily, pinching the bridge of his nose. âYou must remember there are dangers out there, worse than what Aegar poses. You dare fly close to Erebor? Are you asking to battle with Smaug? A dragon three or more times larger than Aegar. He may be a dragon but you are not.â
(Y/n) straightened, lifting her head to meet his eyes. âAegar is strong, he is loyal. I wouldnât dare use him as a weapon.â
âThe time is coming, (Y/n). You are a formidable soldier, you two make quite a team.â Thranduil admitted. But with a wave of his hand, he dismissed her. âTake a bath, you stink of dragon.â
It has been several days since Thranduil warned (Y/n). His words lingered in her head.
She shouldnât have to feel frustrated with him, afterall, he was the one to find the items left behind by your family.
There were many things gifted to her when she was old enough to read. Books of her great- great- something grandfatherâs handwriting, it was worn, some words difficult to read.
Before she even learned of High Valyrian, she thought the words were a remembrance of her home or maybe her family. But no.
It was far from it. A warning.
ZaldrÄŤzes buzdari iksos daor.
A dragon is not a slave.
She managed to grasp her forebearâs language with some help but she wouldnât say she mastered the tongue of High Valyrian. Rather, she knew the basics.
It was noon, the sun casting a warm glow over the wooden yard. (Y/n) focused on fastening the leather straps to the saddle, she had a feeling that it was becoming loose.
Aegar laid comfortably on the ground, snoring.
Legolas leaned against a nearby tree, watching her and noticing the furrowed brow that she had for nearly an hour.
âSomething is on your mind.â Legolas commented. âSpeak, looking bothered does not suit you.â
(Y/n) paused, her fingers picking at the old and peeling leather. âIt is nothing.â Offering a smile.
But Legolas saw through her smile, he could see it in her eyes. âYou forget I know you, I knew you from the start⌠Youâre worried that once Aegar is old enough, youâll be forgotten.â
She sighed, tying the leather back into the saddle. âI only worry for Tauriel. The King does not respect her enough.â
âYou worry too much, you need to place some of it on yourself and Aegar.â Legolas stepped forward. âYou have earned your place here.â
âI have no place here. My home is gone and Iâm an outsider, Iâm no elf. If I had not appeared with my dragon, Thranduil wouldâve sent me away.â She explained, standing to her feet as she observed the saddle.
Legolas was ready to push that idea out of her head. He had no idea she thought of herself so lowly. He grabbed her arm.
Tauriel suddenly appeared. âThereâs trouble.â She announced tension in her voice. âThe King has ordered another nest to get rid of.â
(Y/n) pulled her arm back. âAegar!â She shouted, waking him up from his slumber. âIĹrÄs.â
Aegar stood on his feet, stretching his wings. She grabbed the ropes to mount him.
â(Y/n), wait,â Tauriel grabbed her hand. âThe King has requested you stay behind.â
(Y/n) frowned and scoffed. âIt would be easier if Aegar-â
But she could see it in Taurielâs eyes, Thranduil was going to keep her and her dragon here. âA dense forest with a large dragon?â Tauriel laid it out for her. âHe fears the damage it could cause. Aegar could not maneuver properly in those woods.â
âAlright.â She muttered, stepping away from Aegar. âAlright.â
âIâm sorry.â
(Y/n) watched them go, annoyed and saddened. She longed to be by their side, joining them in a fight.
Thranduil was going to make her wait and watch. He was going to make her feel like a burden. His way was punishment.
(Y/n) watched from the corner, watching as each dwarf was pushed into a cell. Their complaints were falling on deathâs ears.
She stepped out from the shadows and towards Legolasâs direction, wanting to know where the dwarves came from.
âWhat do you know of dragons, girl?â The dwarfâs voice was gruff, laced with bitterness as he eyed the dragon sigils embroidered into her clothing. âYou wear it like a badge of honor.â
(Y/n) eyed him as well, realizing who the dwarf in the cell was. âYouâre Thorin Oakenshield? Heir to the throne of Erebor.â
Thorinâs fists clenched around the iron bars. âYou have yet to answer my question.â
(Y/n)âs eyes widened in amazement. âI cannot believe it. Iâve-â
â(Y/n)! Dina!â Legolas commanded her to come. âGet away from the dwarf.â
With that, she walked away, leaving no room for Thorin or (Y/n) to say anything.
âMust you speak to them?â Legolas sneered, following you down the steps. âWhat reason do you have?â
âIâve always wanted to see the infamous Thorin Oakenshield. It was not disappointing.â
â...Is it?â
(Y/n) nodded, a smile on her lips. âYes. If what they say is true⌠If they reclaim the mountain, I would love to see the glory of Erebor.â
Legolas froze in his steps. âI am beginning to wonder where your allegiance lies.â
âWhat makes you wonder that?â
â...Go, I need to report to the King.â
She rolled her eyes, asking herself if her curiosity made Legolas or anyone else question her loyalty.
Of course, her loyalty lies with Thranduil, he saved her and took a human and a dragon in. A human not from this world.
The sun had begun to set when (Y/n) stood at Thorinâs cell. âMight I ask you something?â She began, breaking the silence.
He looked up at her, eyes wary. âWhat is it? Dragon rider?â
âIf you had no memories of the kingdom or its riches, would you still fight to reclaim it?â
âYes.â He answered without hesitation. âFor it is not the gold or treasures that drive me, but the honor and memory of my kin who were lost. To reclaim Erebor is to honor their memory, to give those who wish for their home.â
He stepped closer to the bars as he spoke his words, loudly enough for the rest of the Company to hear. He spoke with bravery and pride, not a single ounce of shame in them.
(Y/n) listened to his words closely. It made her think of her own home, the writing of the book could not describe the doom correctly.
Only a dream, unsure if it came trueâŚ
(Y/n) became lost in her thoughts, she began to speak aloud. âI wonderâŚâ She uttered. âWhat it would be to see Valyria, to walk the streets, see the dragons fly into the sky with my people on its back. I wonder if any Targaryens remain.â
She sighed, sitting down on the steps. âI wonder if the dream was true and the doom of my home was correct.â
Thorin, still irate from the encounter from earlier but genuinely curious about her side of dragons, sat as well. âWas it taken?â
âIt was destroyed. A Targaryen had a dream, D⌠Daenys had a dream. She had foresaw the destruction. But I have no way to know if it was true, I do not know if Valyria still stands or if any Targaryens remain to rule the skies.â
(Y/n) looked up to the ceiling, closing her eyes to remember how Valyria was described. âTo be home. I would give my life just to see it.â
ââŚMay you find your way home, dragon rider⌠And safely.â
It was a chaotic scene. The dwarves and Bilbo found themselves stuck in wine barrels but their path down the rough rivers were blocked by the portcullis.
Kiliâs cry was loudly heard as he fell back, clutching his leg that the Morgul arrow stuck out of.
âKili.â
Thorin felt his heart sink, hearing his nephewâs cries as he was unable to do anything.
Legolas, Tauriel, and the other Elves fought against Blog and his party.
The Orcs were relentless, fighting to the point until their bodies gave out and welcomed death.
Arrows flew into their bodies, daggers stabbed into their hearts or heads.
Kiliâs eyes shut tightly, hissing loudly as he attempted to get back up.
His eyes opened and widened, his eyelids fluttering as the pain was flowing throughout his body⌠He could see a dragon flying⌠A dragon?
He could make out the dragonâs silhouette against the sunlight, circling the river before he saw him make a dive. He could hear him roar, loudly.
Taurielâs eyes immediately shot to the sky, Aegarâs body casting a shadow over the river.
Aegar descended from the sky and landed into the river, his landing sending waves that splashed anyone close.
Thorin couldnât see Aegar but the sound of his roar was enough to send chills down his back. He looked back and saw the rest of his Company staring up at the dragon.
(Y/n) swiftly unchained herself from the saddle, her feet hitting the ground. She drew her sword, cutting down the Orc coming towards Kili.
She took a quick glance around and estimated the amount of Orcs, she could hear another group coming.
Aegar let out another roar, lunging forward and his massive jaws snapped shut on the nearest orc, easily crushing him into two pieces.
He exhaled a quick stream of flame at the incoming group, the Orcs screaming as they threw themselves into the river.
The Orc swung his ax at her, she ducked and cut his leg, making him kneel with a shriek. She pierced his head with force, making sure he was dead.
She continued to cut through the Orcs with Aegar protecting her, coming down on an Orc that nearly came down on her.
âTauriel!â She shouted as she tossed one of her daggers past Taurielâs head.
She grabbed the dagger lodged into the Orcâs chest to stab it once more before using it on another, she tossed it back and (Y/n) caught it.
She heard Kili loudly groan once again, Thorinâs Company were sitting ducks in those barrels and they could only do so much with little to no weapons.
Thatâs when she noticed why the Company was just floating. The portcullis was shut. It mustâve been why Kili wasnât in his barrel and why he was on the ground, holding his knee.
(Y/n) dodged another Orcâs attack, managing to move behind him. She grabbed his head and slid her blade across his neck, she then let him fall to the ground.
She came to Kiliâs side. âNowâs your chance!â She stated, crossing blades with another. âGo! Before they outnumber us all!â
Kili managed to conjure whatever strength he had left and grabbed the lever, opening the portcullis, and allowing the Company to escape.
âKili!â His brother cried out, watching Kili slump to the ground once again but push himself into the barrel.
Kili felt and heard the arrow snap, sending another wave of agony throughout his weakening body.
(Y/n) watched as one-by-one, the Company fell into the water and their barrels carried them through the rough stream.
She turned back the Orcs, immediately impaling one Orc coming down on an Elf, and used her dagger to finish the job.
She looked up at Legolas drawing another arrow. âSecure Mirkwood.â He ordered. âWorry about damages later.â
Legolas ran off, following the Orcs that were focused on the Company, Tauriel was behind him.
She rushed to Aegar, she climbed onto Aegar who lowered his neck, allowing her to quickly settle herself.
âSĹvÄs!â Aegar began to run, flapping his wings a couple of times before taking off.
(Y/n) directed him towards the gates, wanting to spread the word first. Thorin looks back into the sky, watching Aegar and noticing (Y/n) upon his back.
Š Intoxicated-Chan 2024, I do not allow my work to be copied, translated, modified, adapted, or put on any other platform without my permission.
Taglist âł @mrsdurin , @marsmallow433 , @oneiratxxia10 ,
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đđĄđ đđ¨đĽđ đ¨đ đđĄđ đđ¨đŤđđĄ
đđđ˘đŤđ˘đ§đ : đđŤđđ đđ§ đđđđŤđ¤ đą đ đđŚ!đđđĽđđŤđ˛đ¨đ§!đđđđđđŤ
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đđ˛đ§đ¨đŠđŹđ˘đŹ: Upon your arrival, Cregan sees to it that you are comfortable in Winterfell and a deal is struck.
đđ¨đ§đđđ§đđŹ: A sassy Jace and a Reader in denial of her feelings. Tiny bit of angst at the end
đ°đ: 5.5k
đ/đ: I told yall I would drop again soonnn (had 4.3k words and decided to write 1.2k more đ)
â ⢠â ⢠â ⢠â
đđđđđŠ: The entire family watches as you and Silverwing take flight, the dragon's wings beating strongly as you soar into the black sky.
A sense of melancholy hangs in the air, the weight of your absence already palpable among those left behind. Rhaenyra's expression is solemn as she watches you disappear into the distance, a silent prayer on her lips for your safe return.
â ⢠â ⢠â ⢠â
As Silverwing flies through the night sky, you catch a glimpse of another dragon in the distance. You instantly recognize the familiar shape and color as none other than Vermax. He appears to be flying in the same direction as you and is rapidly catching up.
You signal Silverwing to land
Silverwing, sensing your command, begins to reduce her speed and descend towards the ground. She lands gracefully on the soft earth, her wings beating powerfully to ease the impact of touchdown. The moment you dismount, you see Jace jumping off Vermax and hurrying towards you.
âJace what the fuck are you doing??â
Jace approaches you quickly, his expression serious as he stops in front of you. He takes a moment to catch his breath, running a hand through his messy hair
"What do you think I'm doing? You didn't seriously think I would let you go to Winterfell alone, did you?"
âMother said-â
Jace cuts you off, his frustration clear in his voice "I know what mother said. But I'm not letting you go on this trip alone, especially not with...him there. I'm coming with you, whether you like it or not."
You roll your eyes at his stubbornness and he rolls his own right back.
"Don't give me that look. You know I'm right. You need me there, whether you want to admit it or not."
âWhy do you have to be so difficult. Ugh.â
Jace gives you a cocky grin, his usual playful demeanor resurfacing.
"Because someone needs to be the voice of reason and it clearly won't be you given your emotional state at the moment."
You scoff and get back onto Silverwingsâ saddle.
He lets out a huff of laughter, shaking his head becausehe knows he's annoyed you. He hops back onto Vermax, the dragon flapping his wings impatiently, eager to take flight again.
"Ready to keep going, hotheaded?" he yells and you reply with a warning
âMother will skin you when we get back; I hope you know that!â
He laughs, unbothered by your threat
"I'm sure I'll survive. Besides, it'll be worth it when I get to say I told you so."
Silverwing begins to beat her wings, preparing to take off once again. Jace clearly enjoys the opportunity to rile you up, as brothers always do.
â ⢠â ⢠â ⢠â
5 and a half days later
âDRAGONS!!â The guards bellow out a startled shout, prompting several other guards and castle folk to rush out into the courtyard to see what the commotion is.
As Silverwing and Vermax touch down on the cold, snowy landing outside Winterfell, you and Jace dismount, your breaths visible in the crisp, cold air. The castle looms above you, its massive walls and towers covered in a thick layer of snow. The sound of voices and activity can be heard from inside the castle, signaling the busy life of the northern capital.
The cold wind beats against you both, itâs chill uncomfortable and unfamiliar.
Approaching the wall, the townsfolk and guards murmur among themselves as you and Jace come into view, their eyes wide with a mixture of fear and awe. You can hear them whispering as they catch glimpses of the mighty dragons resting in the clearing behind you. The guards at the main gate watch you as you approach, their hands gripping their hilts of their swords tightly.
âThis is the eldest Princess and Prince of the realm, children of Queen Rhaenyra. We are to meet with Lord Starkâ you call out.
The guards exchange glances with one another, clearly uncertain how to respond. One of them steps forward, his gaze flicking nervously between you and the dragons behind you.
"You're here to meet with Lord Stark, you say?"
âIndeed. He had been made aware of our coming.â
The guard nods slowly, still appearing rather nervous in the presence of the dragons. He clears his throat and calls out to another guard standing further back
"Open the gates! The Princess and Prince are here!â
As the gates creek open, down comes Cregan Stark, marching towards you through the crowd of townspeople flanked on either side by a few of his trusted retainers. A cloak of wolf fur is draped over his shoulders, and his expression is stoic as ever. He stops about a few feet away from you, his grey eyes taking in the sight of the dragons behind you in the far clearing.
Your breath catches in your throat and your heart races. You thought you were ready to see him again but clearly, that was not the case.
Cregan's expression remains stoic as he gazes at you, his eyes searching your face intently. He takes in the sight of you standing there, a mixture of emotions flickering briefly in his steel grey eyes. For a moment, the two of you stand there, silently staring at one another, neither of you breaking the tense silence that has fallen over the courtyard.
You observe each other with looks of familiarity. You still remember quite clearly how he looked at 5 and 10 and it definitely wasnât anything like now.
Before, he was the same height as you, short red-brown hair and soft features. He had the sweetest smile youâd ever seen. It was almost like you could feel the warmth of his happiness.
Now, there is no warmth. His expressions show very little emotion and heâs at least a foot taller than you. His hair has grown out to his shoulders and it still has that pretty red-brown color to it.
He continues to scrutinize you, his eyes roaming over your figure. He does not speak, but his gaze betrays his thoughts.
It's clear that he too is caught off guard by the encounter, memories of your childhood together flooding his mind.
You incline your head in recognition and respect.
âLord stark.â
"Princess,"
He nods in return, his expression guarded but polite.
He briefly glances at Jace, then back at you, clearly noting the presence of your companion.
You tap Jaces hand to get him to be respectful.
Jace, who has been watching the exchange with annoyance, follows your unspoken order. He steps forward and gives a brief, stiff bow to Lord Stark.
"Lord Stark," he greets in a cool tone, his expression betraying his reluctance to show proper respect.
What a great start to an alliance. Good one Jace.
Cregan raises an eyebrow at Jace's impolite behavior, but he remains impassive as he regards him. He turns his attention back to you, his gaze flicking over your figure once more before he speaks.
"I trust you had a safe journey?"
âAye. We did.â
He takes a step back, gesturing towards the entrance to Winterfell.
"You must be weary from the journey. I will have my men take you to your chambers for you to rest. We can converse when you have freshened up and settled in."
âThank you.â
Cregan nods once more, then turns and gives a brief command to a few of the retainers standing nearby. The retainers step forward and begin to usher you and Jace towards the castle. Cregan falls in behind them, still observing you intently, his expression inscrutable as ever.
You speak to Jace in high Valyrian
Jace glances at you as you address him, his brow furrowing slightly. He responds in the same language, his voice low so only you can hear. "He's still as cold and stoic as ever. This should be fun."
âIt was rude of you to do what you did, ignoring him like that.â
Jace rolls his eyes, a hint of irritation in his voice
"It wasn't rude. It was the truth. He acts like a block of ice, even towards royalty."
âJacaerys.â You demand sternly
Jace holds his hands up defensively, his expression contrite. "Alright, alright, I'll stop. But you can't deny that you were practically fawning over Lord Stark."
âI was not. It was rude of you not to greet him like that after sneaking all this way with me. It would be a shame to send you home when youâve only just arrived, wouldnât it.â You threaten.
"Fine, I get it I get it I'll be polite. But only for you. Not for him."
âThatâs not how this works-â
Jace cuts you off with a dismissive wave of his hand "Yeah, yeah, I know. I'll behave myself. I promise. Can you just stop nagging me for ten minutes now, please?"
âShall I send raven to mother right now?â
"No, no, no. That won't be necessary. I said I'd behave. I'll be the perfect image of etiquette, I swear it."
âGood then.â
Jace sighs, his shoulders slumping in defeat. He gives you a weary look, accepting that he has no choice but to play nice.
"I'll be on my best behavior. No more rude quips or comments. I'll treat Lord Stark like he's the most charming, most handsome man in all of Westeros. Happy now?"
You just scoff in response.
Jace rolls his eyes, clearly not pleased by your response "Gods, you're impossible to please. I make the grand gesture to accompany you all this way and you're still annoyed with me. I can't win, can I?"
Cregan, who has been quietly listening to the exchange between you and Jace, raises an eyebrow at your bickering. A hint of curiosity flickers in his eyes as he hears the rapid exchange of words in High Valyrian. It's clear that he's wondering what you're discussing that has you so riled up.
Jace has nothing more to say, pouting as youâre lead to where youâll both stay.
At last, you reach the Great Keep and up a spiral staircase to the guest wing. They escort you to two adjacent rooms, each furnished with comfortable beds, warm furs, and a fireplace to keep away the winter chill. Servants are already inside the rooms, laying out towels and filling a tub of hot water for you to bathe.
âThis is much appreciated, especially after our long journey.â You thank Cregan but Jace just goes straight to his room, shutting the door behind him.
He waits a moment, as if considering what to say, before finally speaking in his deep, gruff voice.
"Is your brother always so...irritable?"
âIâm sure you remember.â
A slight smile tugs at the corners of Cregan's lips as he hears your comment. He nods slowly, his eyes still locked onto yours.
Thereâs that warm smile of his
"Aye, I do remember. Though he seems to be even more ornery than I recall."
âHeâs quite the trouble. The older he gets, the more impolite and out of line.â
His eyes widen as he nods in agreement, his expression taking on a slightly amused cast.
"It seems so. But he is certainly loyal, I'll give him that much."
âWell it's clear he never liked you, that's for sure.â
Cregan raises an eyebrow at your statement, his gaze flickering with curiosity. He crosses his arms and leans against the wall, his voice taking on a more serious tone.
"Oh? And why is that, pray tell?"
âBecause you stole me away from him. I stopped playing with him everytime you visited Kingâs Landing.â
"Ah, so he's jealous, is he? I wondered if that was the cause of his animosity towards me."
âSpeaking of JaceâŚI mean to talk with you quicklyâŚâ
Youâd wanted to ask him if he could keep your brother in Winterfell but with the way Jace is behaving, he might just ruin it for himself.
The corners of Cregan's lips twitch into a smile at your words, his gaze still fixed on you. He nods, gesturing towards your chambers.
"Very well. Let us talk somewhere more private then, shall we?"
âNo need.â
He raises an eyebrow at your response, his expression turning curious as he studies your face. He tilts his head slightly
"Oh? You wish to talk here? In the corridor? Are you not concerned about your brother and his listening in?"
âWellâŚI suppose youâre right.â
Cregan nods in agreement, a hint of a smirk on his face. He pushes himself off the wall and takes a step towards your chambers.
"Aye, I thought so. Come, then."
He gestures for you to lead the way into your room.
You push open the doors of your chambers. The room smells of your favorite flowers.
He remembered.
You smile silently but briefly to yourself at the flowers on the bedside as for him to not notice.
Cregan notices your brief smile anyways, but he does not comment on it. He walks over to the window, peering out into the snowy landscape outside. The moonlight in the darkening sky casts a silvery sheen upon the snow-covered ground, making everything look almost ethereal. He lets out a soft hum, his gaze still fixed on the outside before he speaks.
"It's a clear night tonight.â
You shiver, still cold although already inside. It was somehow colder in your chambers than the halls. Maybe it was because of the windows. Youâd greatly underestimated the cold of Winterfell and now, you were suffering for it. âA-ayeâŚâ
Cregan notices the shiver that runs through you, his gaze lingering for a moment. He frowns slightly, concern evident in his eyes, even through his usual stoic demeanor.
"Are you cold? Here, come closer to the fire."
He pushes himself away from the wall, gesturing for you to come nearer to the fireplace and you step closer.
He feeds the drying fire more wood in order to warm the room faster.
He moves to stand beside you, his figure casting a long shadow over yours as the firelight dances upon your features.
"Better?" he asks, voice soft and low.
You nod in response and he hums softly, eyes still fixed on you. He studies you for a moment, taking in your chattering teeth and trembling form.
"You're still shivering. Here, let me..."
Without warning, he reaches out and gently grabs hold of your hand, his fingers wrapping around yours.
âIt would be a bother-â
He cuts you off with a shake of his head, hand tightening around yours. His voice is firm but gentle as he speaks.
"It's no bother at all. I won't have you freezing to death while you're under my roof."
He gently pulls you closer to him, guiding you to stand right in front of the fireplace. He keeps his hand wrapped around yours, his grip firm yet careful.
"Now, hold on.â
He takes a few moments to remove his cloak, which he drapes around your shoulders. The cloak is made of thick wool and lined with softer furs, making it warm and comfortable to wear. The garment is much too large for you, but it immediately envelops you, trapping the warmth of the fire between the layers of fabric. He stands silently next you, his hand still wrapped around yours, as if to ensure your body heat stays trapped within the cloak.
âI like thisâŚThis is nice.â The coat of course. Not his company. In any way. At all.
Cregan smiles slightly in response to your words, his grip on your hand tightening imperceptibly. He gazes down at you, studying your face as you huddle within the warmth of his cloak, a flicker of something warm passing through his grey eyes.
"Good. I'm glad.â
He rubs small circles on the back of your hand with his thumb, his touch gentle and soothing as he keeps you close to the fire.
You canât help but feel a flutter in your heart at the kind gestures and he canât help but get butterflies, seeing you in his large furs.
Cregan continues to watch you silently, his gaze lingering on your slightly flushed cheeks and the way his cloak envelopes your body. With each passing moment, a sense of protectiveness and possessiveness begins to rise within him, though he keeps it well-hidden behind his stoic expression. His thumb continues to rub gentle circles on your hand, the gesture becoming almost subconscious at this point.
You pull your hand away and clear your throat. This is inappropriate. You shouldnât be allowing him to get so close like this. Yet here you are.
He frowns slightly as you pull your hand away, feeling the loss of your warmth as you withdraw. He glances down at you with a hint of confusion in his eyes, wondering if he may have overstepped some invisible boundary. His gaze flickers down to his cloak, wrapped tightly around your shoulders, an unconscious reminder of his desire to keep you close and warm.
âAre you feeling warmer now?â
âYesâŚThank youâ
A hint of relief crosses over Cregan's face at your answer, and he nods silently. Despite the return of the usual distance between you, there's a noticeable hint of reluctance in his gaze, as if he wishes to pull you closer again. He takes a step back, shoving his hands into his pockets, his voice is quiet as he speaks.
"You're always welcome."
The silence between you hangs heavy in the air, charged with unspoken words and lingering tension. Cregan stands facing you, his gaze fixed on your face. The dance of the fire casts shadows across his features, emphasizing the hard set of his jaw and the intensity in his eyes. He opens his mouth to speak, but hesitates, seeming to think better of whatever he was about to say. The silence hangs between you for a beat longer before he finally does.
"You said you wished to talk, didn't you?"
âI need a favor. Well not so much a favor butâŚâ
Cregan raises an eyebrow at your words, curiosity etched on his face.
"Go on,â he prompts
âMy mother will soon be sending a raven.â
"A...raven? What for�"
âShe will want you to send Jace back to dragonstoneâ
Cregan lets out a scoff, his gaze flicking around the room before settling on you again.
"She wants me to send him back to Dragonstone? What for?â
âHe wasnât supposed to be here. Mother forbade him from coming with me so he decided to be a half wit and sneak out to âprotectâ meâ You roll your eyes just thinking back to his rebellious flee.
He shakes his head at Jaceâs stubbornness and crosses his arms.
"He really never does like to listen to anyone, does he?"
âSheâll surely skin himâ
She really might.
"Aye, I can imagine she would be quite displeased to find out he defied her orders. He's really dug himself a deep hole this time."
âWell thatâs why I need you to ignore the messageâŚâ
"Ignore the message? Are you serious? You want me to ignore your mother's command to send your brother home?"
âJust⌠donât worry about it. And if you get in trouble. Iâll vouch for youâ
Cregan looks deeply conflicted, his brow creasing as he processes your request. He crosses his arms, his eyes studying your face intently.
"The Queen herself? And you think your word can protect me if it gets out that I disobeyed her?"
âI am her eldest. Besides, Itâs nothing you havenât done already.â You cross your arms, hinting about when you were children.
He rolls his eyes at your remark, clearly understanding the reference.
"Aye, fair point. I suppose I have disobeyed a few royal orders back then. But this is different. We aren't children anymore."
You didnât want to have to resort to this but youâre almost begging.
"I know this but can't you just do it for my sake? As much as I hate to admit it, I need my brother here" You take his hand once again.
Cregan flinches slightly at the sudden contact of your hand in his, his gaze immediately looking down to where your fingers are intertwined together.
There's a momentary flicker of vulnerability in his eyes, his stoic expression faltering for a brief moment. Your words, spoken with such earnestness and conviction, tug at his heartstrings, and he can't deny the plea in your eyes.
He sighs deeply, a mixture of reluctance and resignation crossing his features. However, as his gaze falls upon your desperate expression, his will crumbles, and he nods.
"FineâŚIâll do it for you."
âThank you..good. I'll swipe the message before it even reaches your solar. And if she asks you, you won't be lying because youâd not have received it and youâd not have even laid your eyes upon itâ.
"Aye, but I have one condition."
Oh gods. It can never be straightforward with him can it?
âAnd what'll that be?âŚâ
"Your brother will have to be respectful and obey my commands. No more of his sharp tongue or disobedience. Iâll not have him questioning my authority in my own castle. I donât want any more unnecessary headaches because of that boy."
Cregan takes a step closer to you, his figure towering slightly over you, his gaze fixed solely on your face. His voice is low and quiet, a hint of warning.
Despite your doubts for Jaceâs good behavior, you agree
âEasy. Done.â
You mean easier said than done?
Herein lies the problem. How is Jace to do that? Heâll never give up his snarky remarks. Sure maybe temporarily, but not forever. He canât go long without saying wondering out of pocket.
Cregan nods in approval, a flicker of satisfaction in his grey eyes.
"and.."
Of course there's more.
"...you give me something in returnâ He finishes, his voice firm but gentle at the same time. His gaze bores into yours, searching for a hint of protest in your eyes but not letting go of your hand just yet. He continues to study you with intense eyes.
âWhich isâŚ?â
"Your company. Everyday."
Fuck.
âWhat?â
This is the last thing youâd expect and the last thing you wanted to happen. Getting over him does not include spending MORE time with him.
Cregan's gaze is steady on you, his voice still holding a slight gruffness.
"I want your company. I want you by my side. I want you to accompany me to my meetings, to dine with me, to walk with me, to simplyâŚbe with me.â
You chuckle nervously and in disbelief âEveryday? It is a jest, surely? You cannot expect to-â
Cregan cuts you off, his voice a quiet but firm interruption. His gaze remains steady and intent, his expression serious as he responds.
âNot a jest. I expect you to keep me company. Not all your time, Iâm not unreasonable, but a fair share of it. That is my price. Take it or leave it.â
ââŚAnd if I refuse?â
An unreadable expression crosses over Creganâs face at your question. His grip on your hand tightens almost instinctively, like heâs afraid you might pull away. A hint of vulnerability flashes in his eyes, hidden behind a stoic mask, as he responds.
âYou wonât refuseâŚbut if you doâŚthen the deal is off and your brother has to leave.â
Using blackmail to spend more time with you is low, even for him.
You ponder for a minute, weighing the decisions and he watches closely as he waits patiently for your response.
âSo⌠blackmail is how you get what you wantâ
He sighs, letting go of your hand as he takes a step back, creating some distance between you.
"Not blackmail. Incentive." he grumbles in irritation. He crosses his arms, his gaze hardening as he responds.
"Iâm not a liar or an oath breaker. You want me to do you a favor? Then Iâll do it. But Iâm allowed to have something in return, arenât I?"
âFine.â
âPerfect. Then itâs settled. Tomorrow, you will spend the day with me.â
âNowâ you sigh and turn your back âIâd like to take a back now so id it please youâŚâ you give a shooing motion.
Cregan nods, a slight hint of amusement in his eyes as he gazes at your back. He watches for a moment longer before relenting.
âVery well, you may bathe. I have matters to attend to anyway.â
He really doesnât. He just wanted your company.
He turns towards the door, his hand on the handle as he glances back at you over his shoulder.
âI assume I will see you at supper tonight?â
âNo you will not.â
He pauses at your statement, his hand dropping from the door handle. He turns back towards you, his expression slightly surprised by your adamant response.
âNo? And may I ask why not?â
âI wish to retire after my bath so you may send for my supper. I will not come down. Itâs been long since I slept well.â
He considers your words for a moment, his eyes studying your face intently, his tone slightly reluctant.
"Very well, I suppose you need to rest. But I expect to see you at breakfast on the morrow. We have a few matters to discuss.â
âAye.â
Cregan gives you a small nod of agreement, his gaze lingering on you for a moment before he finally turns to exit your your chambers, muttering something under his breath.
âBloody stubborn girl.â
The door closes softly behind him.
âI heard that!!â
"Intended it to be heard!" he calls back from the hall, his voice tinged with playful sarcasm.
The room is quiet for a few moments after, the only sound coming from the crackling fire in the fireplace. The stillness is interrupted only by a soft knock on the door, followed by the voices of the servants as they bring in soaps, oils, and towels for the bath.
Every interaction with Cregan just melts at your resolve. You canât avoid him. Heâs made sure of that.
Despite your best efforts, you find yourself struggling to maintain that familiar disdain for him. Somewhere along the line, your feelings towards him have grown more complicated and nuanced.
You continue about your routine, undressing and slowly sinking into the warm water of the bath. As you relax into the tub, you let your mind wander once again, and the memories of your past with Cregan flood your mind. The old feelings of friendship and affection for him bubble to the surface, but you quickly push them down as you remind yourself of what he did.
The maids carefully and meticulously wash your hair, gently massaging the soap into the strands and rinsing it clean. Their touch is soothing as they work, their hands gliding through your locks with practiced ease. The warm water of the bath gently laps against your skin, providing a relaxing contrast to the maids' gentle touch.
You let yourself sink deeper into the tub, the warm water enveloping your body and easing the tension in your muscles. The heat of the water soothes your tired limbs, and the comforting scent of the bath oils swirl around you as they float on the surface. The maids gently massage a soft cloth over your skin, helping you clean and relax even further.
They tend to your arms, legs, and rest of your body, scrubbing all of the dirt and grime away.
After you are thoroughly rinsed, they help you stand and step out of the tub, warm water dripping down your body. One of the maids wraps a drying cloth around your hair, while the other sets out a soft and lightweight silken robe for you to slip into.
âThank you for your assistance girls.â
The maids nod graciously at your appreciation, their work complete.
"You're welcome, Princess. Is there anything else you need before we take our leave?"
âWhat be your names?â
"I'm Martha." One says, the tall, brunette maid.
"And I'm Sara." The second maid replies, a soft-spoken blonde with an equally soft face.
âGoodnight, Martha and Saraâ
The maids curtsy together as they reply.
"Good night, Princess."
With that, they gather their materials and exit your chambers, leaving you alone in the quiet room once again.
Once youâre done drying yourself off, you put on your silken robe, exiting the bathing room.
As if on cue, there is a knock at the door, followed by Creganâs voice on the other side.
"Are you decent?"
âJust a moment.â
You cross the room to the bed, your steps quiet on the soft carpet. As you go through the wardrobe, you select a soft and lightweight night shift made of fine silk. You slip it over your head, the fabric feeling cool against your skin and falls just above your knees.
âYou may enter.â
Cregan pushes open the door and enters, his eyes scanning the room, almost instinctively searching for your presence. A hint of surprise flickers across his face as he spots you, dressed in a simple nightgown with the fire burning bright behind you.
âSo I see you come bearing gifts.â
Cregan quirks a smile at your words, holding up a tray of food as he responds.
"As promised. I wanted to make sure you had something to eat before you retire.â
He walks over and sets the tray down on the table near the window, the dishes and cutlery clinking faintly as he places them down.
You do quickly to dismiss him. Heâs been around you long enough today.
âRightâŚThank you. Goodnight then.â
Cregan pauses, confusion and disappointment crossing his features as you promptly dismiss him. He stands there for a moment, shifting on his feet, as he stares across the room at your form.
"Thatâs it? I bring you dinner and just like that Iâm dismissed?"
Well that backfired.
âWhat do you want, a piece of my bread?â
âNo. I donât want your bloody bread. I was justâŚ.â
he trails off, his expression clouding slightly, as if he suddenly canât find the words heâs looking for to articulate his thoughts.
He takes a moment, gazing at you, taking in your form by the light of the fire. A hint of vulnerability seeps into his expression, his words suddenly turning quiet and unexpected.
"I was just trying to... spend some more time with you."
âYou said that starts tomorrow. Not today.â
He lets out an exasperated sigh, his eyes fixed on your face, his expression mingling with a hint of irritation and stubbornness.
"Aye, the deal we made says tomorrow. But I donât see why I canât spend some time with you right now. Why are you so adamant to get rid of me?"
âIâm just tired. And I donât need this right nowâ
An excuse.
"You donât need what? My company? Or is it something about my presence you find so intolerable, Princess?â
You raise you voice at him. âJust stop okay. Stop. I said I was tired and you're acting like a petulant child. I just- I want to be alone.â
The stubborn look in his eyes falters, replaced by a flicker of hurt that he tries to hide behind a stoic mask. But itâs there, for a brief moment. Your words hit a nerve, and he falters for just a second, before his expression hardens once again.*
"Petulant? Just trying to spend some time with you, and youâre ready to kick me out as if Iâm some lowly servant."
âThat was not my intention. But now is not the time to spend time with me-â you try and defuse the situation by apologizing but to no avail.
Cregan lets out a scoff, his expression hardening once again. Wounded pride flashes in his eyes, mixed with a reluctant understanding.
"Then when is the time? Tomorrow? When do you feel like dealing with me?"
âYes. Tomorrow. Because thatâs when you said.â
He grits his teeth, his jaw tensing as he struggles to hold back a biting reply. Clearly, heâs not too happy about your decision to push him away.
"Fine. Tomorrow it is then." he mutters under his breath, the reluctance in his tone clear. He storms out, shutting the door loudly.
You distanced yourself, like you wantedâŚbut at what cost? You canât help but feel bad at your blunt words. You feel like you hurt him.
Despite his tough demeanor, Cregan's heart is soft and sensitive, and he's far more emotional than he lets on. Your harsh words, even if unintentionally, have obviously affected him, leaving him confused. He wants to understand why you're pushing him away, why you're being so distant with him.
You don't want to fall back into old patterns, let alone complicate your current situation. It hurt you to hurt him the way you did but you have to be strong...and yet, deep down, something inside you yearns for the familiarity of his presence, the warmth of his smile, the feel of his touchâŚ
*****
You lift the lid of the food he brought and your eyes land on a small piece of paper tucked among the food. It's a note, penned in a neat and familiar handwriting. The ink is dark, the words written with a strong and decisive hand.
As you read the words, you can almost hear Cregan's voice in your mind, the deep timbre of his tone echoing in your ears.
It reads:
"I hope the food is to your liking. Sleep well, princess..."
C.
A note so kind yet you were so cruel.
Tonight was not a night you slept soundly, but rather, a night you pondered your words.
â ⢠â ⢠â ⢠â
đ/đ
Bro why does it feel like Iâm writing a whole lotta nothingâŚđ Cregan barely does anything in this one but pt.3 gets good. Iâm still cooking. And next chapter is gonna be deliciousss.
PS. YES. Their childhood will be in the story, probably pt.3 or 4. Still deciding which one because I donât want the chapter to be more than 6k. (You guys should read the comments for some previews on the next chapterđ
@beebeechaos @iv-vee @aemondwhoresworld @obscure-beauty @cregansfourthwife @6ternalsun @msmarvelknight @melsunshine @littlebirdgot @kingdomzeldaquest @squidscottjeans
the heir and the wolf
summary: Being Rhaenyra Targaryen's heir is a difficult thing, but what happens when you also become one of the Realm's most prized posessions?
pairings: cregan stark x velaryon!reader, reader x platonic targs/velaryon
i. the dear daughter (2.8k) - At one-and-twenty and eight-and-ten, barely a year after their marriage, Ser Laenor Velaryon and Princess Rhaenyra Targaryen welcomed their first child, a daughter, into the world. The girl immediately became dear to the whole court, coddled and spoiled by all, but mostly by her grandsire, King Viserys I. The man saw in his granddaughter her mother, and as the girl grew to look like his late wife, Aemma Arryn, it became even clearer that he doted on her more than he did to his own children or his other grandchildren.
ii. about children and trouble (8.2k) - It is reported that in the year 121 AC, when the Realmâs Jewel was only six summers old, her hatchling Merrax was eaten by the Cannibal in a strange turn of events that found him moving from Dragonstone to the Dragonpit in Kingâs Landing. Princess Rhaenyra demanded to have the dragonâs head cut, but as nobody ever tried nor dared to get close to the Cannibal, it was impossible to do it. Thus, her daughter took the matters into her own hands.
iii. little big lady (5.0k) - Court whispers tell us that during her third pregnancy, Princess Rhaenyra Targaryen was particularly sensitive. She managed to cover it up pretty well, apparently, but she had one weak spot: her daughter, her firstborn and heir, who later on witnessed her little brother Prince Joffrey's birth by request of her mother. Despite openly disliking the experience, it is said that the Realmâs Jewel insisted on being present to future labours in case things went downhill â and she did, attending her mother in giving birth to all her future children.
iv. dragons' scars (6.4k) - And after the events that happened during Lady Laenaâs funeral at Driftmark, two dragons were left scarred.
v. you'll change your name or change your mind (and leave this fucked up place behind) (5.3k) - When the Kingâs Justice â the royal executioner â died, the Realmâs Jewel proposed a perfect replacement: NÄdrÄsy, her dragon, the infamous Cannibal. Even if many eyebrows were raised at the Small Council, the King hastily agreed, happy to have an excuse for keeping his granddaughter close to him, even if it was for only a few days every moon. Or, as it always ended up, for a bit more than that.
vi. but I'll know, I'll know (8.4k) - At the ripe age of ten, the Realmâs Jewel was nominated by her grandsire the King, despite all the protests of the Small Council, the official Royal Ambassador; thus, her voyages throughout the Seven Kingdoms started, and yet another nickname was forged for her by the Smallfolk: the Wandering Princess.
âł interlude (tbd) - Blood stained sheets. The first thing that comes up to your mind? Burning them and fleeing, obviously.
vii. legitimacy (tbd) - âVaemond Velaryonâs petition holds no sense,â it is said that the Wandering Princess reiterated once she heard of her uncleâs accusations. âMy late father always recognised my brothers as his trueborn sons. Whether they look like him or the Baratheon and Arryn side of the family does not matter: they are legitimate.â
more to come!
extras:
pinterest board | spotify playlist | ao3
beautiful fanart | another beautiful fanart | yet another amazing fanart
snippet cut from chapter three
sneak peak at reader and cregan's baby number #1
memes tag
the dragons from nÄdrÄsy's perspective
the time line
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