Lisa is the only woman in Michael's life y'all consistently give grace to, and it's pretty obvious why: she's white, and a lot of y'all live through her because of her marriage to him. 😭
Y'all will criticize D*ana (rightfully so), Stephanie (rightfully so), and pretty much everyone else who was in his life for 50 days and 50 nights. But the second someone brings up the fact that Lisa was in the tabloids calling him weird, adding fuel to the nasty accusations against him, or that the REAL obvious reason she didn't want kids with him was because he was Black, suddenly everyone starts screaming "parasocial."
Don't even get me started on how y'all act like Lisa was the only woman in his life up until his death and that every time he spoke about a woman it had to be about her.
Michael made it pretty clear that he was involved with multiple women throughout his career, but he respected their decisions to stay out of the public eye.
Is anyone else tired of seeing Prince being so quickly thrown away in Michael Jackson x reader fanfics?
Obviously, I am not throwing shade to authors who have done this or trying to insult anyone, but it gets to a point.
I think I'm just jealous that Prince doesn't have even half as many fanfics as Michael does. Legitimately, there is only a handful of Prince fanfics on Tumblr 😪.
⊹ ࣪ ˖ 𝗰𝗼𝗻𝘁𝗮𝗶𝗻𝘀: smut , fingering , smut with plot , soft (subby) dom!mike , secretly engaged , unprotected (don't ever.) Michael basically makes you pregnant
⊹ ࣪ ˖ 𝘁𝗵𝗲𝗺𝗲𝘀: heavy angsty themes, unplanned pregnancy , cameo of j*e Jackson , forbidden love , fem!reader. secret engaged. both scared for their life's.
૮₍ ´ ꒳ `₎ა ⊹ ࣪ ˖ 𝒌𝒂𝒊': first ever long fic damnnnn to my long fic writers THIS IS THE WORST PAIN. so please LET ME KNOW (I'm begging yall.) if this was good! feedback & comments & reblogs IS ALWAYS appreciated. don't be scared to comment <33 ily.
𝟭 𝗮𝗺. 𝗛𝗮𝘆𝘃𝗲𝗻𝗵𝘂𝗿𝘀𝘁 𝟭𝟵𝟳𝟴.
𝑴𝒊𝒄𝒉𝒂𝒆𝒍’𝒔 hand slid up to cup you jaw, thumb brushing softly over your cheek as he pulled you closer.
His lips met yours again, deeper this time, tongue teasing yours as he kissed like he’d been dreaming of this for years. You gasped softly into the kiss and your tug on his soft hair.
Eyes wide, full of longing and need, you whispered, "I need you, mike..." The words made him pause just long enough to glance down at you, chest heaving, a mixture of disbelief and desire in his eyes.
Your big eyes staring up at him, lips already swollen from his kisses, seemed to pull him in further.
He kissed you again, slower, savoring you, before his lips trailed to the side of your neck, his hand still gently cradling your jaw, teasing just enough to make you tremble.
Heat pooled low in your belly, and though nothing else had happened yet, every touch and kiss was enough to make it feel like the world had narrowed down to just the two of you.
He pulled back just slightly, his forehead resting against yours, eyes dark. His voice dropped low, rough with desire. "C-can I touch you?"
you swallowed hard and whispered, breathless, "Please..angel please..." His hand slid further under your shirt, fingers brushing over the soft curve of your breast through your bra. A soft gasp escaped your lips, and he immediately kissed you again.
slower and deeper this time. His mouth is warm and sure, hands trailing along your waist, slipping beneath your sleep dress to touch your bare skin.
His lips move to your neck, dragging along the sensitive skin just below your jaw. "you smell so heavenly...baby," he murmurs, voice sweet and innocent.
Your fingers dig into his shoulders. And when he slips a hand beneath your sleep dress, eyes locked on yours, his sweet voice drops to a whisper that sends shivers straight to your core,
"Let me make you feel good, yeah? but y' gotta be real quiet f'me okay?" His fingers slip, sliding over your panties and the moment he feels the dampness there, he lets out a low groan.
"F-Fuck, lovely." he murmurs, pressing his forehead against yours for a beat. "already wet f'me?"
You nod shakily, unable to speak, hips twitching as he rubs slow, deliberate circles over your clothed slit. The pressure of his fingers through the thin fabric has you gasping, legs parting on instinct.
then he presses a little harder, and your breath hitches, your body arching into his hand with a quiet, needy whimper. Michael smiles against your neck, voice low and sweet. "Sound so sweet f’me, baby."
You shiver as his hands slide up your legs, thumbs brushing gently along your inner thighs. Then he leans in close, until his breath is hot and heavy right against your dripping cunt.
He doesn’t touch you yet. Just breathes. Watches. Fingers going up and down your slick folds as you writhe under him, desperate and aching. "Look at you," he murmurs, completely entranced.
His thumb swipes gently through your wetness. "My sweet beautiful girl." You bite your lip, a whimper slipping from your throat. "Shhh baby, we don't wanna wake the others up don't we?"
then, he presses a kiss to your inner thigh, soft and lingering, before sliding his tongue slowly up your slit, groaning low against you like you’re the only thing he’s ever wanted.
The moment his tongue touches you, it’s over. He moans and whimpers low against your pussy like he’s tasting something he’s been craving for years.
He starts slow, teasing licks through your folds, lips wrapping around your clit just enough to make your whole body jolt. And then he does it again. And again. Each time a little rougher. A little wetter.
A little more desperate. "Fuuuck," he groans into you, hands gripping your thighs, keeping you open for him. "You taste so good, so good baby."
You gasp, fingers tangling in his hair, hips lifting off the bed as he sucks your clit into his mouth. It’s messy, and dirty, the sounds of him licking you echoing through the room, wet and filthy and perfect.
Then suddenly, he’s slipping two fingers back inside you pushing in deep, curling them up in just the right way, and your moan breaks into a whimper. "Ngh—Michael—!" he groans again, like your voice alone is enough to make him lose it. Then he adds a third finger.
Your back arches, legs trembling as he fucks them into your soaked cunt fast and deep, his palm smacking softly against your skin with every thrust. His mouth never leaves your clit tongue flicking, sucking, devouring like it’s the only thing that matters.
"Let go, my sweet girl," he mumbles against you. "Wanna feel you." You’re already so close.
you can’t think, can’t breathe, can’t stop yourself from grinding against his face like your body’s got a mind of its own. The pressure snaps.
you cry out, thighs clenching around his head as your orgasm crashes into you. Your fingers tug at his hair, your hips jerk, your moans breaking into soft, high pitched whines as you fall apart in his mouth. But Michael doesn’t stop.
He keeps licking. Keeps fucking his fingers into you like he wants to memorize the way you cum.
And when you finally start to go still, trembling and breathless beneath him, he pulls back just enough to kiss your inner thigh, lips swollen, chin glistening with your slick.
He crawls back up your body, kissing a trail from your trembling thighs to your stomach, over your chest, leaving warm, messy kisses across your skin before finally reaching your mouth.
He kisses you hard. Hungry, deep, desperate, his lips still slick from tasting you, his tongue dragging over yours like he needs more of you in every way.
You can feel how hard he is now, pressed between your thighs. It’s driving you crazy every movement, every breath just making it worse. Still kissing you, he breaks just long enough to whisper, breathless, "n-need to be inside you, baby. Can’t wait no more." You nod, dazed, still catching your breath.
michael shifts back, and in one smooth motion, he pushes his shorts and boxers down, finally freeing his cock.
You can’t help the soft gasp that leaves your lips, and Michael smirks through heavy breaths. He leans down again to kiss you, while his hand slides up your thigh.
Then suddenly, he grabs one of your legs, lifting it over his shoulder. His other hand cups your breast, fingers squeezing, thumb brushing softly over your nipple as he lines himself up.
"Look at me..please baby." he murmurs, voice low and thick with heat. You do. And then he slides in.
Slow at first, inch by inch, until he’s buried deep inside you, your walls fluttering around him. You moan his name, back arching off the bed.
Michael’s jaw clenches, his hand tightening on your thigh. "F-Fuck, lovely…"
he groans, eyes fluttering shut for a second. "You feel—so good—fuck."
His hips start to move, deep, rolling thrusts that drag every inch of him along your soaked walls. He keeps your leg hooked over his shoulder, the angle letting him hit every sweet spot, his other hand still cupping your breast like he can’t get enough.
"So perfect…so tight for me—fuck!" he pants, voice all praise and heat. You moan louder, nails digging into his arms as he starts to pick up the pace,
hips slapping against yours, breath hot and ragged, all while he keeps watching your face like it’s the most beautiful thing he’s ever seen. Michael's rhythm starts to falter, his hips snapping faster, rougher, his breathing growing messier with each thrust.
His brows are furrowed and lips parted.
"Oh my goodness—shit baby," he moans, head dropping forward.
"Y-you feel so f-fucking good, baby—s-shit, you’re so tight—oh fuckk—" The way he says it, so breathless, whimpering, makes your whole body react.
Your walls clench down around him instinctively, squeezing him hard, and it pulls another choked moan straight from his throat. His voice breaks again.
"Ohhh f-fuck—just like that—my s-sweet g-girl.. shit—" He sounds so good. Ruined. Wrecked.
Like he’s completely unraveling inside you. You’re a moaning mess beneath him, gasping for air, thighs trembling as he pounds into you deep and fast, hitting that perfect spot with every stroke.
Then he brings his hand down, finding your clit like he knows exactly what you need.
His fingers are messy, fast, rubbing tight circles in sync with his thrusts. You cry out, arching under him, clutching at his biceps as he holds himself over you and keeps fucking you through it.
"Yess m-mikey—!" you sob, voice high and desperate. He groans like it’s the hottest thing he’s ever heard.
"That’s it, sweet girl," he pants, kissing your jaw, your neck. "C-come on—cum for me again—please, I need to feel it—need to feel you fall apart on me."
You’re so close, your legs starting to shake, your fingers gripping him like a lifeline, your moans breaking into breathless little whimpers.
And all you can hear is him—moaning, gasping, whimpering, praising you like he’s gone completely stupid from how good you feel.
Your whole body locks up as that final wave crashes over you—tight and hot and overwhelming.
You cry out his name, legs shaking, back arching as you cum hard around him, fluttering and pulsing deep on his cock.
michael chokes on a moan—high, broken, wrecked. "fuuuck—so good—so fucking good, baby—"
He doesn't pull out in time, gritting his teeth through a loud, desperate groan as he grinds a little harder and spills in, all in your pussy, sticky and thick ropes of cum painting your skin while his hips twitch and his breath catches in short.
He collapses forward slightly, chest rising and falling, eyes still glazed with pleasure. Then his gaze drops down, seeing the mess he made of you, and he groans again, softer this time, like it’s too much to handle. "Shit,"
he breathes. "you’re so fucking perfect…" He leans in and kisses you slow and warm.
his hand brushes your cheek before moving to the nightstand, grabbing some tissue from a pack you kept there. "I got you." he murmurs.
you hum softly as he wipes you clean—gentle, patient, still pressing soft kisses to your collarbone, your shoulder, anywhere his mouth can reach.
And when he’s done, he tosses the tissues aside and crawls back into bed, settling in beside you. He wraps his arms around you from behind, pulling you into his chest like he has to keep you close.
You feel his breath in your hair, slow and steady now. His hands finds your waist, his thumb stroking lazily over your skin.
Then he whispers, barely audible in the dark,
"I’m sorry..i'll clean you up better tomorrow yeah? Joseph and the rest are here..so there's not much I can do baby..."
You kiss him back sleepy. "It's okay angelface..you made me feel really..really good."
the room was dark and quiet.
Michael was already asleep beside you, one arm lazily draped across your waist, his breathing slow and steady.
for a moment, you let yourself pretend, pretend you weren't hiding, pretend there wasn't a ring tucked away where nobody could find it, pretend everything was okay.
Then your stomach hurt. You immediately sat up. a sharp wave of nausea hitting you out of nowhere.
Your hand flew to your mouth. "Oh goodness." The movement woke Michael instantly.
He was always like that. Light sleeper. The second you moved, he was awake. "lovely?" His voice was rough from sleep.
You pushed yourself off the bed. "Bathroom." He still doesn't understand what's going on. "Y'okay?"
No.
You weren't. You practically stumbled into the bathroom, shutting the door behind you. the nausea passed after a few minutes, but the panic did stay... because this wasn't the first time.
Suddenly all you could hear was your own heartbeat, Michael's face, The secret engagement ring and...Joe. Joe. Joe.
you leaned against the sink, trying to breathe, trying not to think. Because if you thought about it too hard...you'd start crying.
a soft knock.
"pretty baby?"
Michael. You closed your eyes. "I'm okay angel."
lie.
Because Michael knew you.The door opened a crack.Then he stepped inside. Concern written all over his face. "What happened?"
"N-Nothing baby..don't worry." Immediately —"Nah." His hand found yours. Cold fingers wrapping around cold fingers.
"Baby, What happened?" And that was all it took. Your eyes filled immediately. Michael's expression changed. "n-no." His voice dropped.
"What is it my baby? please..talk t'me baby...did I hurt you while we were makin' love?"
You couldn't even look at him, saying it out loud would make it real. "I think..." Your voice cracked. And suddenly you were crying. "I think I might be pregnant.." It was Completely silence.
Michael froze. For like one horrible second. Then again. You couldn't read his face. Then your chest hurt. "Mike...say something." His eyes finally lifted.
And fuck. He looked terrified. Just as terrified as you felt, i mean hello?....Secretly engaged. Living under the shadow of everybody else's opinions.
And now maybe—Maybe a baby.
A shaky breath left him.You watched him process it, the panic, fear and reality.
Then his hand squeezed yours tighter. not letting go. "Okay beautiful." You stared. "What?"
His voice wasn't steady...Not at all. But he kept talking anyway. "Okay."
"Michael—"
"W-we don't even know yet." His eyes were shiny now. "You hear me lovely?" You nodded.
"We don't know." Another squeeze. "But if y' are..." His voice cracked.
And for the first time all night he looked every bit as young as he actually was. Just a scared young adult.
"If y' are baby...wow." He swallowed hard. "We'll figure it out. 'kay?" Fresh tears rolled down your cheeks.
Because that wasn't the problem, the baby wasn't even the problem. The problem was everything around it.
Joe.
all the pressure,The expectations, The way people already looked at you. Like you didn't belong. Like you were getting in the way.
Michael knew exactly what you were thinking.
Because he looked away. Jaw tightening.
"You talked to my Joseph again, didn't y'?" The question wasn't really a question.
You just stayed silent, and that was enough. Michael closed his eyes. Immediately understanding and angry. not at you, Michael was never mad at you.
At him. "What'd he say?" You shook your head. "Forget it."
"Beloved, talk t'me, What did that bastard say?" The hurt in your expression answered before you could.
And suddenly Michael looked sick. Because he already knew. He knew exactly what kind of things Joe said.
"He..thinks I ruined you.." The words came out before you could stop them. Michael's face darkened instantly. "He said that?" You looked down.
"He thinks I'm a problem." Michael couldn't believe it. "Baby, fuck... y'know you ain't the problem right?" The response came quickly.
"That fucking bustard, how dare he...fuck. i'm so mad.."
"M-michael, it's okay..you know how Joe is."
"I don’t care, he can not talk to my woman like that." His voice shook.
"You are not my problem." Tears slipped down your face. And that made him look even more upset, he hated when you cried.
Especially over things other people put in your head. Michael stepped closer. Both hands finding your face. Making you look at him.
"My Pretty baby, don't cry..listen to me okay?"
You could hear the emotion in his voice now. "I chose y'." Your breath caught. "I chose y'." He said it again.
like, he needed you to understand. he needed himself to understand. "They didn't choose y'...i did."
The bathroom felt too small for all the emotions trapped inside it.
Everything all tangled together. Michael looked down at your hand. At the hidden ring. Then back at you. You cried so hard.
The second your voice cracked in that bathroom—too loud, you already knew what was coming.
You just didn’t want to believe it. Michael was still in front of you, hands on your face, breathing uneven, trying to keep you steady like he always did when everything was falling apart.
But then—Footsteps. Down the hallway.
Both of you froze. Michael didn’t even have to look.His jaw tightened instantly. "No." You barely breathed it.
"Michael…" The knock came anyway. not soft also asking...a warning. Then the door opened.
Joe. He didn’t even bother hiding the fact that he was already angry. His eyes moved first to you. Then to Michael. Then to the bathroom.
"Why the hell is there yelling in my house at this hour?"
Michael stepped slightly in front of you without even thinking. Protective. "Go back to your room."
Joe’s eyes narrowed. "I asked a question."
Michael didn’t move. "Leave." That one word changed the air. Joe walked in anyway. Joe Jackson didn’t ask permission in his own house.
His gaze landed on you again. Longer this time.
"Still here," he muttered. like you were something that had overstayed its welcome.
Your stomach dropped. Michael felt it.You could tell by the way his hand clenched slightly at his side.
"You don’t talk about her like that." Joe let out a short laugh. "Oh, I don’t?" A step closer.
"Then what the hell do you call it, Michael? Sneaking her into my house like this? Acting like I don’t see what she’s doing to you?" Michael’s breathing changed.
"She’s my fiancée." The word hit the room like a gunshot. Joe’s expression didn’t change at first. Then it hardened. "Your what?" Michael didn’t look away.
"Fiancée." You felt your blood run cold.
Because that wasn’t supposed to be said..not like this, not here.
┊ ♡ ﹒ as told through bad to dangerous eras 𖹭
┊ ♡ ﹒ summary : what do you do when the man you built your entire life around disappears without so much as a goodbye for another woman? do you love him enough to stay? or do you respect yourself?
┊ ♡ ﹒ byi : power imbalance (mentor and apprentice), age gap (reader is 20 / michael is 29), slow burn, mutual pining, celebrity romance (reader is a popstar), hurt/no comfort, cheating, marriage, divorce, addiction & substance abuse, rehab, depression, michael is in a lot of pain from his accident (reader helps him wash his hair at some point), anxiety, panic attacks, codependency, emotional neglect, themes of loss, abandonment, media harassment, public scrutiny, character study, ”right person wrong time.” extremely heavy angst, smut, intercourse, creampie, pregnancy. third person pov. use of petnames. no y/n, reader is (name).
┊ ♡ ﹒ disclaimer : this work contains depictions of addiction, substance abuse, deteriorating mental health and discussions the 1993 allegations (fictionalized within an alternate universe narrative). this piece is not an accurate depiction of any real-life individuals. 28k word count.
The studio had long since settled into the comfortable quiet that often accompanied afternoons spent in Michael’s company. It wasn’t ever completely silent because there was always music somewhere at Westlake, but he did like to keep it dark in the room mostly. A distant melody leaking beneath a door, muffled sound of a playback from another room, occasional burst of laughter from a hallway before fading away. Yet neither seemed particularly aware of any of it as hours had a tendency to disappear whenever they occupied the same space, each of them retreated into their respective work while somehow remaining deeply attuned to the other’s presence.
There was just something about the space they shared that neither of them ever learned how to explain. It was unlike the awkward silence that settled between strangers with nothing left to say, or lovers too consumed by one another to speak. This felt beyond either of those things because somewhere beneath language itself, beneath the music, even the friendship, they had stumbled into a frequency only the two of them seemed capable of hearing. They rarely interrupted one another, but every so often one of them would glance across the room to simply bear witness to the other’s existence. It felt spiritual.. it felt strangely.. devotional. As though the simple act of creating in each other’s presence had become its own form of intimacy. They each protected the other’s solitude with the same care another person might protect a confession. There was an unspoken understanding that whatever was happening inside the other’s mind, deserved to arrive in this world undisturbed.
The thing was, truly knowing another person is a remarkably rare experience. Most relationships are built upon performance initially, a person will unconsciously arrange themselves into someone easier to understand, to admire and love. But there are extraordinarily rare occasions people who seem to step past all of that. People who see you and understand you before you have a chance to disguise it. And there are very few things in life more sacred than finding another soul who your own can finally share company with.
Michael and (Name) were just that.
She sat on the floor between two couches in the corner, surrounded by the clutter of an artist’s mind. Open notebooks, loose sheets of paper and pens scattered across the flooring. One notebook housed lyrics and the other contained.. literally everything else from fleeting observations, fragments of conversations and questions she found herself unable to stop thinking about. The thoughts that were too insignificant to piece together in the moment but had too much potential to ignore. Every so often she would pause, chewing thoughtfully on the end of her pen as she stared down at a page, scribbling another line with furrowed brows. Across the room Michael worked through notes of his own, occasionally adjusting something on the mixing console or replaying a section of music.
Neither of them spoke or even seemed inclined to.
This could go on for hours upon hours and it was maybe the most unusual aspect of their friendship:
How easy it was.
Because most people approached Michael Jackson with some level of a mental obstacle he couldn’t look past to see them, even if it wasn’t conscious. Some people became nervous, others became overeager.. but many spent entire conversations attempting to impress him.
But somehow she had skipped every single stage of this discomfort and awkwardness entirely.
Their first meeting months earlier had been brief, a polite little exchange at a charity event attended by dozens of entertainers and industry figures. Neither had anticipated seeing the other again, and yet something about that initial conversation had really stuck. A second meeting followed. Then another. Phone calls became commonplace. Invitations to studio sessions no longer required formal asking. Somewhere along the way, what should have remained a casual acquaintance turned into one of the closest friendships either possessed.
Michael often attributed it to recognition, she felt less like someone new and more like someone he’d forgotten he already knew. He had met plenty of people in his life, but very few made him feel this way in particular and it was intriguing—intoxicating, even.
He couldn’t shake the feeling that he’d seen that kind of ambition before. The way she carried her lyric books almost everywhere she went. The way she dissected her own work with such a relentless scrutiny. The frustration that overtook her whenever an idea failed to match the version she had envisioned in her head. He recognized it because he had spent his entire life battling the same instincts. While others saw a young entertainer on the verge of stardom, Michael saw pieces of himself reflected back at him with this startling clarity. The perfectionism. The sensitivity.
The inability to leave “good enough” alone.
For (Name), the friendship had begun from an entirely different place. Admiration, certainly. How could it not? Michael Jackson had occupied such a permanent space within popular culture that separating the man from the legend often felt impossible. He felt like a deity. But what surprised her most was how quickly the legend disappeared once they were alone. The Michael she encountered in studios, hallways, and late night phone conversations bore little resemblance to the larger than life figure the public imagined. He was thoughtful. Curious. Shy. Nosey. And far funnier than anyone ever gave him credit for. He asked questions and genuinely listened to the answers. He remembered details from conversations months earlier. More importantly, he understood the strange loneliness that came with building a career at a young age in an industry that did more harm than good. Few people in the world could comprehend that reality and fewer still had survived it unscathed.
Which was probably why he felt so protective of her. It wasn’t that he didn’t think she was incapable of protecting herself, but.. he knew exactly how cruel the industry could be. The media, too. At twenty, she was still vulnerable in ways she didn’t even recognize yet, still young enough to believe talent and hard work would shield her from the uglier parts of success. Michael remembered being twenty himself. Bright eyed, eager and convinced that if he gave enough of himself, people would give something back. He wished someone with good intentions had been there to guide him through it all, someone who wanted nothing from him except to see him make it through in one piece.
Granted, their youth had looked nothing alike. Michael had never really been afforded the luxury of a childhood. By the time he was her age, he’d already spent years belonging to the public in one way or another. She meanwhile, had stories. Endless stories. Sleepovers and school dances and family vacations and embarrassing teenage crushes. Entire chapters of ordinary life that Michael found himself fascinated by.
That more than anything, surprised him. He wasn’t a naturally curious man when it came to other people in general. Most conversations with industry stars and such felt like a chore.. But he could sit and listen to her talk for hours, chin propped in his hand, completely engrossed as she recounted some insignificant memory from when she was twelve. To anyone else, the stories would have sounded so pointless and boring. But to Michael, they were so captivating. Hearing someone describe a childhood that had actually belonged to them felt almost miraculous. He never seemed to tire of it, always asking another question, always wanting another detail, as though he could piece together an entire world he had never gotten the chance to know himself.
He’d always be a dreamer, dreaming his life away.
The longer (Name) stared at the notebook in her lap, the more hopeless the page had become. What had started a few hours ago as a verse she was genuinely excited about had since become a shit show of crossed out lyrics, scribbled replacements, and arrows leading to ideas she wasn’t even sure she liked anymore. Entire sections had been rewritten only to end up exactly as they’d been before. Others had been abandoned halfway through, casualties of a train of thought she’d lost somewhere along the way.
The frustrating part was that the song wasn’t bad.
If it had been bad, she could’ve walked away from it. Started over. Scrapped the whole thing without a second thought. But, unfortunately there was potential in it. Every time she read the verse back, she could feel it. The song was close to becoming what she wanted it to be, close enough to keep her chasing it but not close enough to cooperate with what she feels on the inside. Every attempt to improve a line only seemed to draw her attention to another one that suddenly wasn’t working. A word would feel wrong. Then the rhythm. Then an entire section she’d liked five minutes earlier.
Eventually, she stopped making changes altogether and she just sat there rereading the same few lines, hoping that if she stared at them long enough, the answer would appear on its own. It never did.
Without thinking, her fingers drifted toward the rubber band looped around her wrist. The sharp sting against her skin followed a second later. It was a habit she’d picked up years ago and never quite managed to abandon, a small physical interruption to break the endless cycle of thoughts whenever she became trapped inside her own head. Usually she barely noticed herself doing it. Another minute passed. She stared at the page. Read the same line again. Hated it for an entirely new reason.
The rubber band snapped once more, harder this time.
Across the room, Michael’s attention slowly drifted away from the notes spread across the mixing console. They had spent enough afternoons together by now for him to recognize the various stages of her creative frustration. There was the concentration that came with the beginning of an idea. The excited rush that followed whenever she felt something falling into place. Then came this stage. The stage where progress slowed to a crawl and every sentence had her itchy and uncomfortable to be in her own skin. He watched her stare down at the notebook, reading the same section repeatedly and the rubber band snapped against her wrist again. Michael found himself smiling despite himself. Some things about artists appeared to be universal.
“Should we take a break?”
Her head lifted immediately, brows furrowed. “Why?” The response came far too quickly.
The moment the word left her mouth, embarrassment followed close behind. Because what she heard in his question wasn’t an invitation—it was recognition that she was struggling. She was suddenly hyper aware that he saw how she’d spent the better part of an hour trapped on the same verse and hadn’t written anything in quite some time. The realization that he maybe noticed everything bothering her made heat creep into her face almost immediately. Creative frustration was difficult enough in private but being perceived in it felt infinitely worse.
For a brief moment, Michael simply looked at her. Then understanding settled across his features. He knew exactly where her mind had gone. Knew she thought he’d been commenting on the fact that she’d been losing patience with herself for the last forty five minutes.
His expression softened like she was being silly. “For lunch,” He clarified.
The relief came so quickly. “Oh.”
A smile tugged at the corner of Michael’s mouth. “Unless your plan was to be like Louie and eat your notebook..”
A small laugh escaped her before she could stop it and the tension that had wound itself so tightly around her shoulders throughout the afternoon loosened ever so slightly. Somehow he’d managed to offer her a way out without drawing attention to the song or pointed out her frustration. Michael didn’t like offering advice when she didn’t ask for it because he never cared for it himself. Instead, he’d simply given her an excuse to step away from the problem for a little while.
It was one of the things she appreciated most about him, though she rarely said so aloud. Michael understood creative obsession because he lived with it himself. He knew the difference between helping and making someone feel watched. Knew that sometimes.. the kindest thing you could do for another artist was pretend not to notice the battle they were fighting with their own work. As he gathered a few papers from the console and prepared to leave the studio, (Name) found herself looking down at the notebook once more. The lyrics still weren’t right and they probably wouldn’t be right when she returned. And yet they felt less daunting than they had a few moments earlier.
Sometimes all it took was being reminded there was a world beyond the page.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤ⋆ ㅤㅤApril, 1987.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤㅤ╰ㅤ American Music Awards - Manhattan, New York City.
“Oh my god, you were amazing!”
“Did you see the crowd out there? That pop was insane!”
“You did the damn thing, kiddo. Congratulations.”
The aftermath of her performance felt louder than the actual performance itself. The air backstage was bustling with movement, people calling her name from different directions and hands reaching out to touch her shoulders, squeeze her arms, telling her she had done it—she had really done it. Someone pressed a bouquet into her hands and more people were already talking about reviews they had overheard in the hallway. There were congratulations layered over congratulations until none of them sounded real anymore, just overlapping noise dressed up as celebration. (Name) stood in the middle of it all with the bouquet held tightly against her chest, nodding at the right moments, smiling when it was expected, saying thank you in a voice that felt detached from her own body.
She’s disassociating.
All she could think about was the note.
The one she had nearly missed.
It’s ridiculous, really. It wasn’t noticeable for anyone to catch or enough to interrupt the direction of the set, but she knew it happened. It wasn’t even her fault, it was due to technical slip making her slightly off beat before the problem fixed itself. She had handled it so well that no one even suspected anything, only a note alteration but that was very common during live performances. But she wanted perfection.
(Name) could feel it still sitting wrong in her throat, the memory of it stood out like a thorn more than anything else from the entire night. It replayed behind everything people were saying to her, the praise going in one ear and out the other. She nodded again on cue adjusting her grip on the flowers and tried to keep her face fixed into something that resembled gratitude instead of frustration.
She only noticed Michael when he appeared at the edge of the crowd by the doorway. Unlike everyone else, he didn’t immediately make his way over. He lingered near the back instead, allowing managers, producers, executives, and well wishers to reach her first. It was a habit she’d observed countless times before. Michael understood better than most how quickly a room could change around his presence. One appearance was often enough to redirect an entire conversation. Two steps into a crowd and suddenly every eye belonged to him whether he wanted them or not. Fame had taught him many things over the years. One of them was when to take up space. Another was when to surrender it.
Tonight wasn’t about him, nor did he want it to be. So he remained where he was but not out of indifference, quite the opposite. It was her night. Her performance. Her achievement. The last thing he wanted was for the attention she had earned to quietly shift elsewhere. Michael had spent enough of his life accidentally becoming the center of things to recognize when someone else deserved the spotlight. He knew what it had taken for her to get here. The years of work hidden beneath a handful of minutes onstage. The rehearsals nobody saw. The disappointments. The self doubt. The relentless pursuit of something just out of reach.
From a distance, he looked almost detached from the celebration, standing just beyond its center with his hands hidden in his pockets and sunglasses on while the crowd continued to orbit around her. Yet his attention never wandered very far. Every so often his gaze found her through the sea of people gathered around her, watching with the satisfaction of someone who had believed in her long before the rest of the room had caught up.
There was pride in his expression, yeah. But it wasn’t quite the same pride everyone else seemed intent on expressing. Theirs was loud and straight to the point, entirely built upon the performance they had witnessed.
Michael’s was quieter and more attentive. And perhaps because he knew her so well by now, there was something else beneath it. He knew.
While everyone else saw success, he found himself watching for her reaction to it. The smile that never quite reached her eyes. Watching the way her grip tightened around the bouquet each time another person congratulated her. Watching her nod at conversations she didn’t seem entirely present for.
And unfortunately, he knew exactly what this was.
When her eyes finally met his shades, something in her shoulders tightened without permission. She could feel his stare.
Of course he would have noticed.
Of course he would know.
(Name) looked away first, because looking at him felt like she was acknowledging something she didn’t want to yet. A producer pulled her into another conversation, someone else asked about upcoming plans and she answered on autopilot, the words coming out in trained fragments while her attention kept slipping back toward the same place in the room where he stood.
Eventually, she found herself drifting toward one of the side hallways, retreating from the crowd. The noise softened the moment she crossed the threshold, the cheers and conversations dissolving into something distant and more manageable. For the first time all evening, nobody was speaking to her. Nobody was congratulating her or asking questions. The sudden absence of attention settled around her and she let out a long overdue exhale, leaning against the wall and adjusting the bouquet in her arms before realizing she’d been gripping the stems so tightly that a part of her palm had begun to bleed from a throne that pricked her. Slowly she loosened her hold, watching a few crushed petals spring back into place as she drew in a deeper breath than any she’d managed all night.
“Tinker.” His voice came from behind her.
She didn’t turn right away. “Hi, Michael..”
He stepped closer, not looking at the flowers but he looked at her face instead. “It went well,” He said. “Please, stop.”
“Stop what?” She replied too quickly. “It went okay.”
The silence that followed made it worse because he had seen right through her bullshit. She adjusted the bouquet again and her fingers had started picking at the ribbon
“I messed up.” She said suddenly, like stating it out loud would keep it from growing.
Michael blinked once slowly, as if processing whether she was joking or not. Then he shook his head, removing his shades. “Do you think anyone in there noticed except you? Honestly?”
“I noticed it, Michael..” She says. “I did.”
“Mm.” That sound Michael liked to do. It wasn’t dismissive but he wasn’t really agreeing either. Just acknowledging that her mind had already made a decision and was now refusing to let it go.
She stared down the hallway instead of at him. “I shouldn’t be fucking up on things.”
“Language..”
“I’m sorry. I’m frustrated.”
“You’re allowed to be human,” He said, and there was something faintly amused in it. “Y’know that right?”
“Says you.” Her mouth tightened anyway. “Michael, I rehearsed for weeks..” Her voice had changed. Slightly smaller but tightly bound in a tone that wasn’t aimed at him, even if it sounded like it might be. “I rushed the transition. I came in late on the second verse and I felt it. I felt it and I still did it anyway.”
Michael watched her for a long moment without interrupting. When he spoke again his tone had shifted, less performer observing another performer. “I used to do that,” he said. “All the time. I would finish a show and all I could think about was the one thing I didn’t do perfectly. Not the rest of it. Not what people were screaming about. Just the thing I knew I could’ve done better.”
She finally looked at him then and he wasn’t smiling now.
“I would go over it in my head so many times I’d forget the rest of the performance happened at all,” He continued. “And nobody ever told me what I’m about to tell you now, so I’ll say it because someone should have said it to me when I was your age.”
He paused, just long enough for her to feel it. “People don’t come to see you be flawless,” He said quietly. “They come because of what it feels like when you’re up there. There’s a difference. You’re the only one who turns it into a test.”
Something in her expression shifted, but she didn’t speak yet. Michael tilted his head slightly, studying her like he was trying to make sure the words actually landed where they needed.
“One little thing doesn’t undo the fact that you just held the entire world in your hands,” He added. “But I can already tell you’re not going to believe that tonight.”
A faint, reluctant exhale left her.
The bouquet drooped slightly in her hands as her grip loosened again. The silence returned, but it felt different now, less like pressure and more like space she didn’t know what to do with yet.
Michael didn't push further. He just stayed beside her, letting the noise of the celebration belong to another version of the night, one neither of them was currently living.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤ⋆ㅤㅤ May, 1987.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤㅤ╰ㅤ The (Surname) Residence - Los Angeles, California.
The phone call had long since outlived whatever purpose it may have originally possessed. Not.. that either of them could remember what that purpose had been to begin with. Hours earlier, one of them had called the other for a reason that had likely seemed important at the time. A question about a song. A conversation about an upcoming appearance. Some minor detail neither could recall now. Somewhere along the way, the original subject had disappeared entirely, replaced by the sort of aimless discussion that only seemed possible after midnight, when the rest of the world had gone quiet (Name) sat on her bed painting her toe nails, a mess of different colors of polished, acetone and cotton balls spread out on her silky comforter. Outside her bedroom window, the city stretched into darkness with a pretty skyline and the hallway beyond her bedroom remained still.
Across Los Angeles, Michael was awake too. That part hardly surprised her anymore. Artists seemed to exist on entirely different schedules than everyone else.
The conversation drifted lazily between subjects. Music. His upcoming tour. Childhood. Movies. Family. Stories neither had planned on telling when the call began. There was no urgency to any of it, or destination they appeared determined to reach, just the comfort of two people who genuinely enjoyed speaking to one another. The thing was, neither had expected this. Not the friendship and certainly not the ease of it. When they had first met nearly a year ago, both had assumed the interaction would be brief. Another industry introduction. Another polite conversation destined to disappear among countless others. Instead, somehow, they kept finding reasons to talk. Then reasons to call. Then reasons to stay on the phone long after they should have said goodnight.
Michael understood loneliness in ways most people didn’t. And it wasn’t because he lacked company—quite the opposite. His entire life existed beneath constant observation. Crowds. Interviews. Audiences. Fans. Managers. Family. There were always people nearby. Yet very few of them knew him. Really knew him. And the older he became, the more difficult that distinction seemed to grow.
“I think people have a strange idea about what this is like.” His voice arrived unexpectedly through the receiver.
(Name) glanced up from her polish. “What?”
A brief pause followed. “Everything.” The answer sounded almost sheepish, as though he was aware of how vague it was. “This stuff.”
She smiled despite herself. “Very specific.”
Michael laughed softly. “You know what I mean, Dumbo.”
She did. At least enough to answer. “The music thing?”
“The fame thing.”
Something in his voice had changed slightly. The difference was subtle, but she had spent enough time around him to notice it. Most people spoke about fame as though it were a reward, a finish line, something achieved. Michael always sounded as though he were describing weather. Something that simply existed. Something unavoidable.
“I think people imagine it’s.. exciting all the time,” He said. “They think you’re constantly doing something. They think you’re happy because you’re successful.”
(Name) looked down at her toes. For some reason, she found herself listening more carefully. “Are you not happy?”
The question slipped out before she could stop it and silence followed. A thoughtful silence.
Then Michael laughed quietly. “I didn’t say that.”
“No, but you didn’t answer either.” That earned another laugh, slightly louder this time. For a moment she wondered whether he’d change the subject. Instead, his voice returned softer than before.
“I think sometimes people get confused.”
“About what?”
“Being loved.”
The words settled heavily between them—they sounded like something he’d spent a very long time thinking about.
“They think being loved by millions of people means you never feel alone. But most of those people don’t know you.” A brief pause followed. “They know who they think you are.”
Something tightened unexpectedly in her chest because she understood exactly what he meant. Not entirely on his scale, but enough. Enough to know what it felt like when strangers decided things about you. Enough to know what it felt like to become a version of yourself people preferred over the real thing.
The line remained silent for several moments. Neither seemed in any hurry to fill it.
Eventually Michael spoke again. “You know what I mean?”
His voice carried something unusual now, hope. The kind people rarely admitted to.
“Yeah,” She answered quietly. “I do.”
When Michael spoke again, his voice had softened even further. “That’s why I like talking to you, girl.”
The confession arrived casually, absentmindedly and (Name) forgot how to respond. Her eyes shot immediately toward the window looking at the city, toward anything except the warmth suddenly spreading through her chest.
“Why?” She asked quietly.
A brief pause followed long enough for her to wonder whether he'd answer at all. “Because you talk to me like I’m Michael.”
His voice carried the faintest trace of amusement. The faintest trace of gratitude. “Just Michael.”
Neither of them realized it then or understood that something had shifted. A shift into something infinitely more dangerous than romance.
Trust.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤ⋆ ㅤㅤAugust, 1987.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤㅤ╰ㅤ Motown Records Summer Party - Los Angeles.
The thing that unsettled (Name) most was not that Michael was speaking to Diana Ross. It was that she seemed incapable of treating the sight with the level of indifference it deserved. Rationally, there was nothing remarkable about it. If anything, the opposite was true. So why.. why is she feeling like this? Michael and Diana occupied such a permanent fixture in one another’s lives that seeing them together should have registered as background noise. Expected. The sort of thing a person acknowledged before moving on, like fork found in kitchen. Yet for reasons she could not seem to control, her attention continued returning to them. Like.. often enough for her to notice and often enough for the realization to become uncomfortable.
The problem was that the feeling refused to cooperate with any explanation she attempted to give it. Jealousy implied desire, and desire implied a level of honesty with herself she had no intention of entertaining. Besides, jealousy suggested competition. A rival. An obstacle. Something to overcome. Diana Ross was none of those things. Diana belonged to an entirely different category of person. She represented history. Foundation. Permanence. The part of Michael’s life that existed before (Name) and would almost certainly continue existing long after her.
There was something deeply humbling about the realization. Entire chapters of him remained inaccessible to her. Entire versions of him and his life she would never know. The young boy Diana had met. The young man she had enough influence on to shape at least some way in his thinking whether it be his music preferences or.. his type in women. The memories they shared had nothing to do with her at all. It shouldn’t have mattered. Yet standing there, watching them laugh together across the room, she found herself confronted by an uncomfortable awareness of just how thoroughly Michael existed outside of her.
Perhaps that was the true source of her discomfort. Not the conversation itself, but what it revealed. Somewhere over the past year, Michael had ceased being a person she knew and quietly become a point of orientation. The distinction was subtle enough that she had failed to notice it occurring. Yet now, under the harsh spotlight of self awareness, evidence of it seemed to surface everywhere. He had become the person she saved stories for. The person whose opinion she sought before fully trusting her own. The person she instinctively imagined beside her during moments of success, disappointment, boredom, excitement. And not because she was in love with him. At least.. she didn’t think that was the reason. The truth felt simultaneously smaller and more alarming. Michael had simply become woven into the architecture of her daily life. So gradually, so naturally, that she had mistaken his presence for part of herself.
And that was what made the feeling ugly. If this was romance, it would have been easy. Romance was flattering. Romance transformed emotional dependency into something poetic! and socially acceptable!
This felt.. less noble than that. More selfish. More childlike.
It was deeply embarrassing about realizing how accustomed she had become to occupying a certain place in another person’s world. More embarrassing still was discovering the small sense of entitlement that accompanied it. Not entitlement to Michael himself, she wasn’t foolish enough to believe she possessed any claim over him. Rather, entitlement to access. To attention. To significance. The assumption that she would always occupy the same space she occupied yesterday. The assumption that their friendship existed as a fixed point rather than a living thing capable of shifting beyond her control.
The realization left her feeling strangely exposed. As though she had stumbled upon a private truth about herself she had never intended to examine. Because if Michael had become this important to her without her noticing, what else had changed without her permission? How many decisions had begun orbiting him? How many thoughts ended with his name? How much of her emotional equilibrium depended upon a friendship she had spent months insisting was perfectly normal? The questions arrived one after another, unwelcome and impossible to dismiss. By the time she finally set her drink aside and decided to leave, it had very little to do with Diana Ross. Diana merely happened to be standing in the place where the realization occurred.
The truth was that (Name) no longer wanted to remain in the room because she had become increasingly uncomfortable with the person she was discovering herself to be within it.
She offered a few quick goodbyes to people near the exit, accepted a handful of distracted farewells in return, and disappeared into the Los Angeles night feeling vaguely irritated with herself.
The feeling followed her home.
That was perhaps the most frustrating part.
Because by the time she arrived home, kicked off her shoes, and changed into something more comfortable, she had fully expected the discomfort to dissolve beneath the practical demands of ordinary life. Instead it lingered stubbornly at the edges of her thoughts, refusing to loosen its grip no matter how thoroughly she attempted to dismiss it. She washed her face. Brushed her teeth. Wandered into the kitchen for a glass of water she didn’t particularly want. The entire time, some small part of her remained trapped inside that ballroom, replaying a feeling she had already decided was ridiculous.
The thing was, embarrassment has a way of prolonging emotions long after they’re deserved.
Had she been genuinely angry, she could have justified it.
Had she been hurt, she could have examined it.
Instead she found herself confronted by something far more difficult to defend: self awareness.
Because the longer she sat with the evening, the less interested she became in Diana Ross and the more interested she became in herself. Specifically, in the version of herself that had stood across a crowded room behaving in ways she would have found deeply embarrassing had she witnessed them in someone else. The version of herself who had lingered. Waited. Watched. The version who had discovered, quite accidentally, that Michael’s attention mattered more to her than she had previously understood.
By the time she settled onto the edge of her bed, she had almost convinced herself she was overreacting. That the entire thing had been inflated beyond reason. That she’d imagined it.
Almost.
Then the phone rang, and (Name) stared at it for half a second before reaching for the receiver.
“Hello?”
“Hi, ladybug.”
Michael.
Immediately she smiled and the reaction was such an automatic response she nearly laughed at herself. Of course.
“Hi, apple.”
The conversation began the way it always did. Easily. Comfortably. They spoke about the event. About people they’d seen. Gossip. About nothing in particular. The familiarity of it settled around her almost immediately, smoothing over the sharpest pricklies of whatever had been bothering her. This was the version of their relationship she understood. This part was simple, it was safe. There was a reason she found herself reaching for the phone whenever something happened. A reason conversations with Michael never seemed to require effort in the way conversations with other people sometimes did. Being around him had become easy.
Then, after a brief pause, Michael spoke again. “You know..” Something in his tone caused her grip on the receiver to tighten slightly.
“Hm?”
“It’s not like you to leave without saying goodbye.”
The smile disappeared instantly and her pulse jumped. The thing was, she hadn’t considered the possibility that he would notice. The room had been crowded. The event had been busy. People had been coming and going all evening. In her mind, her departure had occupied the same category as every other insignificant thing she’d been trying to forget since arriving home.
Apparently not.
Apparently Michael had noticed.
“At least not saying goodbye to me,” He added gently. “..Is everything okay?”
Heat rushed into her face with alarming speed. Suddenly she became acutely aware of herself sitting alone in her bedroom, staring at the floor as though he might somehow see the expression she was making through the telephone line.
“Oh.” Brilliant. An excellent response. “I—”
She looked down at the blanket gathered around her legs, the embarrassment arrived all at once.
There was something uniquely humiliating about being known by someone observant enough to notice deviations in your behavior before you noticed them yourself. Most people would not have thought twice about an early exit. Most people would have assumed she was tired, distracted, busy. Michael, had noticed she hadn’t said goodbye.
Specifically to him.
“I’m sorry,” She said quickly. “I just.. wasn’t feeling well..”
The lie sounded flimsy even to her own ears but it wasn’t entirely false. She had felt unwell.. just not physically.
Silence settled briefly between them, the sort of silence that suggested Michael was considering the answer rather than accepting it.
Then: “Really?” One word.
Nothing else, yet somehow it managed to unravel every ounce of confidence she’d possessed in the explanation.
Because she couldn’t tell whether the question made her feel relieved or mortified. For the first time all evening, she found herself confronted by a realization every bit as unsettling as the one she’d fled from earlier.
Michael had become important enough to her that his attention could alter the course of an entire evening. And she had become familiar enough to him that he could hear dishonesty in a single sentence.
Neither realization felt particularly great.
ㅤㅤ⋆ㅤㅤSeptember, 1987.
ㅤㅤㅤ╰ㅤD-1 Bad Tour - The (Surname) Residence, Los Angeles, California.
Michael wasn’t supposed to come. He wasn’t supposed to be there. She didn’t want to look at him or even say goodbye because she knew she’d cry! She had spent the entire day surviving on the fragile, pathetic agreement she made with herself that if she didn’t see it, it didn’t happen.
It would make it easier to cope, she thought.
But by the time she realized what was happening, the door was already open. It wasn’t knock she could prepare for.
It was him, standing there.
He was smiling. Shyly, the way he often did. It rested somewhere between hopeful and apologetic as his sunglasses hid his eyes, those oversized dark lenses he’d developed a habit of retreating behind, but somehow they only made him more unmistakably Michael. His curls fell carelessly across his forehead, disturbed by the breeze outside, and for one absurd, fleeting moment she found herself resenting how beautiful he looked standing there. It was unfair. Unfair that he could come here carrying something as painful as a goodbye and still somehow look so impossibly gentle, so effortlessly beautiful.
He had spent the drive rehearsing this visit in his head, wondering whether he should have listened to her when she’d insisted she didn’t want to say goodbye at all. In the end, he hadn’t been able to. The thought of boarding a plane the next morning without seeing her one last time had settled somewhere beneath his ribs and refused to leave. So he had come anyway, with only the softest version of himself to her doorstep, hoping that if he spoke sweet enough, smiled gently enough would grant him some level of mercy.
“I know you didn’t want to say goodbye,” He said, voice calm which only made it worse, “But I just couldn’t bring myself to not see you before I go.”
That was all it took.
Something in her face gave way the instant she heard his voice. It was imperceptible at first, the slightest tremor beneath the fake composure she spent the entire day constructing, but once the first crack appeared there was no gathering it back together. Her expression folded inward on itself with startling speed, her mouth pulling tight as if she could physically keep the emotion from escaping if she held it there long enough. She couldn’t. Her breathing hitched once, then again, each inhale shallower than the last until even that simple act seemed to betray her. She had been waiting for permission to stop pretending she was fine. He had unknowingly given it to her the moment he knocked on the door.
The sound that left her wasn’t graceful or even recognizable as a word. Just a small, fractured noise that seemed to tear itself free from somewhere deep inside her chest before she had the chance to swallow it back down. It embarrassed her almost immediately, but embarrassment had already become irrelevant. There are certain kinds of grief that strip dignity away before you have the opportunity to protect it.
“..Michael..!” His name left her in a trembling exhale. She hadn’t intended to say it like that. She hadn't intended to sound as though she’d been carrying those seven letters inside her all day, letting them grow heavier with every passing hour until speaking them became less of a choice than a release.
Then she moved.
The distance between them suddenly felt intolerable, something instinct refused to negotiate with any longer. She crossed it in two uneven steps, stumbling in her haste, and collided with him before either of them had time to think about what was happening. Her hands found the fabric of his plaid first, gripping it with desperate certainty, fingers twisting into the material as though she needed proof that he was solid, that he hadn’t already become another goodbye she was remembering instead of living.
The moment she felt his arms come around her, whatever fragile structure had been holding her together dissolved completely.
She collapsed into him.
Every ounce of resistance she’d spent days maintaining abandoned her all at once, her forehead finding the space beneath his chin, her weight settling against him with complete involuntary trust. Her shoulders shook violently against his chest, each breath catching so hard it bordered on painful, her fingers tightening almost helplessly against his back every time she tried and failed to steady herself.
It wasn’t only crying. It was relief—relief that she didn’t have to pretend for one more second. Relief that he had come despite her asking him not to. Relief that, for one impossibly brief moment before tomorrow morning arrived and an ocean separated them, she was exactly where she wanted to be all day.
With him.
Michael spoke softer, close to her hair, he said, “Hey now.. you’re gonna make me cry, silly girl.”
He had seen her cry before.
Artists cried. After bad performances. Long rehearsals. Brutal criticism. Creative exhaustion. She had cried in frustration over lyrics that refused to come, over mistakes she believed were unforgivable, over expectations she placed upon herself that no one else ever would. He knew those tears. He knew how to sit beside them, how to remind her that tomorrow would arrive and the music would still be there waiting. This wasn’t that.
This frightened him because whatever this was wasn’t coming from disappointment or failure or exhaustion.
It was coming from him, not something he had done to her—but something he represented as her mentor.
As she shook against him, the realization unfolded slowly. Somewhere over the last year, without either of them ever acknowledging it, he had become the place she returned to. The first person to hear a new melody. The one she called before bed because conversations with him never seemed to have endings. The familiar face waiting in the studio. Her mentor. He had mistaken it for routine. For a simple friendship. Because it had become routine for him too, don’t get him wrong.
But routines are dangerous things.
You don’t notice how necessary they’ve become until someone asks you to live without them.
His hand moved slowly across her back, trying to soothe something that suddenly felt much larger than either of them. She wasn’t simply crying because he was leaving. She was grieving the sudden absence of the person she’d learned to organize parts of herself around. The thought hollowed him. She never asked for that. He had never asked for it either. It had happened the way the most consequential things often do. Gradually.. one ordinary afternoon at a time.
And now he was leaving.
An ocean.
Sixteen months.
Different time zones. Concerts. Hotel rooms. Crowds so large they’d swallow him whole every night.
Michael had always imagined the tour would be difficult because he would miss home. He hadn’t considered that somewhere along the way he had become part of someone else’s.
A strange guilt settled over him.. because he couldn’t remember the moment he’d stopped making sure she would be all right without him. He had spent so long trying to protect her from the industry, from disappointment, from people who wanted too much of her, that he had never stopped to wonder whether she had begun depending on him in ways neither of them understood.
And if she had..
Then leaving no longer felt like boarding a plane.
It felt like walking away from something fragile he’d been trusted to keep safe.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤ⋆ㅤㅤ May, 1988.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤㅤ╰ㅤ The Bad Tour - The World.
By the time Michael got to London, the tour didn’t really feel like traveling anymore. It just felt like doing the same thing in different buildings.
Wembley Stadium was huge, overwhelming in a way that never really stopped being overwhelming, even after soundcheck. Even after everything was set up perfectly. The lights, the sound, all of it technically correct. He moved through it on autopilot now. The same routine every day and every night. The same dressing rooms that blurred together no matter what country they were in. The same faces orbiting him with clipboards, headsets, schedules, questions. He was never physically alone, that had become impossible years ago. There was always someone opening a door for him before he reached it, someone asking what he needed before he’d decided whether he needed anything at all. And somehow that constant proximity had only made solitude he felt internally feel stranger. Conversation had become increasingly transactional, every interaction serving the machinery of the tour.
People spoke to Michael Jackson constantly. Very few spoke to Michael.
There was a show that night. Then more shows after that. Then another one after a short break that didn’t even feel like rest, just a pause before the next thing started again.
Everything started to blur together a bit.
Hotel. Stadium. Hotel. Repeat.
By the time he got back to the hotel, he could feel the tiredness sitting somewhere behind his eyes. Worn down. The kind that came after weeks of answering questions, making decisions, shaking hands, smiling for photographs, stepping onto stages where thousands of people wanted something from him all at once. He loved performing. He always would. But..
At some point in all of it, he reached for the telephone without really deciding to. The gesture felt so, so familiar, muscle memory from a life a year ago that had become increasingly difficult to return to. The receiver rested in his hand while he sat there for a moment, waiting for his thoughts to catch up with what his body had already done.
Then he stopped.
Because he realized there wasn’t really a correct time anymore. Either it was too late there or too early there, or she was probably doing something, or he was probably about to do something, or it just didn’t line up in any way that felt simple.
So he just didn’t call.
He put the phone back down and just kind of looked at it for a second like it was going to give him a better answer if he stared long enough. But it didn’t.
So Michael moved on with his days.
Because everything always kept moving anyway.
The thing about absence is that it rarely announces itself all at once. It reveals itself through instinct. Through the split second after something happens, before reason has time to intervene. He’d hear a melody and think, She’d like that. Someone would say something ridiculous and for one unconscious moment, he’d already be turning to tell her before remembering she was an ocean and a continent away. The feeling wasn’t that she had left his every day, she was still very much built into it. Every instinct still assumed she was only a phone call away.
Reality was simply taking longer and longer to catch up.
He went to more shows.
Hundreds of thousands people. Noise everywhere. Lights. Movement. Everything loud enough to fill his whole body. And somewhere in the middle of it he thought, kind of randomly, that he heard her laugh in his head. It felt like she was right there saying something to him during a conversation that didn’t actually happen.
It was so quick he almost missed it.
And then it was gone.
The weeks became months so gradually that neither of them could have pointed to the moment things changed. There wasn’t one. No falling out or misunderstanding. No conscious decision to stop calling. Life simply grew larger around them. The tour kept moving. London. Paris. Rome. Cologne. Every city arrived with another airport, another hotel room, another stadium large enough to swallow him whole before sending him somewhere else to do it all again. Days stopped existing as individual memories and became pieces of a routine so rehearsed he barely needed to think anymore.
Wake up. Rehearse. Interviews. Soundcheck. Perform. Sleep. Repeat. Sometimes he’d wake in the middle of the night and have to pull back the curtains just to remember what country he was in.
Meanwhile, thousands of miles away, her own life refused to slow down either. The album she’d spent months pouring herself into was finally becoming real. Recording sessions gave way to rehearsals. Rehearsals, wardrobe fittings, choreography meetings, photo shoots, interviews. Suddenly there were people everywhere, each responsible for a different need of her. Stylists discussing image. Executives discussing singles. Publicists deciding how the world would meet her before she’d fully figured it out herself.
Success had a strange way of convincing everyone they knew what came next. (Name) was simply trying to keep up.
The distance stopped feeling temporary when it became increasingly difficult to find a spot of the day that belonged only to them. He still thought about calling. She still thought about calling. But the thoughts always seemed to arrive at inconvenient hours. He’d reach for the telephone only to remember she was probably asleep. She’d hear something that reminded her of him, glance at the clock, and realize he was probably somewhere beneath stadium lights on the other side of the world. “Tomorrow” quietly became next week. Next week became another country. Months passed before either of them realized how long it had actually been.
And somehow, despite all of it, neither of them doubted the other was still there. That was almost the cruelest part. The closeness itself hadn’t disappeared in their hearts, it had only lost its place in the day. Every instinct remained like when she still found herself collecting little stories to tell him before remembering there was no guarantee she’d reach him that week and when he would pick up little trinkets that reminded him of her.
The pluse was still beating with no place to put it.
Then one afternoon in a random European city, she found him—not in person or through a phone call, if course.
But through a television.
Someone had left it playing in the dressing room while the crew reset equipment between rehearsals. Conversations drifted lazily through the room, a production assistant crossed in front of the screen carrying schedules while a few dancers watched the screen with excited smiles.
Michael wasn’t paying attention until he heard her name leave one of their mouths and his attention lifted almost involuntarily. The screen changed and there she was—he recognized her immediately, his heart skipping a beat as he crossed his arms over his chest.
It was her. Right there on the screen. And she looked so.. different since the last time he saw her. Granted, she was sobbing but in his memory she looked more girlish—childish and juvinile in a way. Always a pretty girl but.
Her eyes were the first thing that got him.
He’d always believed eyes were the only part of a person incapable of lying. Smiles could be mimicked and voices could soften. Hands learned where to rest. But eyes always surrendered something, whether their owner meant them to or not. They were the closest thing people had to a window into the soul, it’s why he enjoyed wearing sunglasses so much.
Hers had always been impossibly easy to read. Open in a way that almost nobody was anymore. Honest. Curious. Entirely without calculation. It had been one of the first things he’s noticed about her, and one of the reasons he’d trusted her long before he’d understood why.
But this..
This was different.
Goodness.. she was pretty—beautiful even.
Her eyes seemed to draw him in, leaving him strangely defenseless. He couldn’t have looked away if he’d wanted to. They were hypnotic now, a kind of beauty that didn’t demand attention so much as command it. Like standing too close to the ocean, knowing full well the tide was pulling at your ankles and realizing too late, that you weren’t interested in resisting.
Michael found himself staring longer than he meant to, then unexpectedly, something sharp twisted beneath the admiration.
Because he knew other people would see them too. Her eyes.
They’d look into those same eyes and find exactly what he had always found there: sincerity so complete it bordered on vulnerable, a warmth that invited trust before a single word was spoken. The thought settled uncomfortably in his chest. He had spent nearly two years selfishly treasuring that openness, foolishly imagining it belonged to the private spaces they shared. Seeing it framed beneath studio lights made him realize it had never belonged to him.
Anyone willing to look closely would have access to the same unguarded soul he’d been lucky enough to know. The realization left him with the peculiar ache of jealousy, irrational as it was. The rest of the world was finally being allowed to see what he’d been quietly protecting in his heart all along.
Then her smile came in and that was worse.
When she smiled, her face softened. Her mouth curved easily, warm and unguarded. It caught him instantly, sitting heavy in his throat. A stupid and immediate response. He didn’t even realize he was smiling until it was already happening.
And the way she moved—
It was just.
The way she shifted her weight, the way her hips carried the rhythm. The camera lingers on a small strip of bare skin peeking above her low slung jeans. The lighting is soft with golden halos from stage lights that catch on her skin just right, a thin silver chain glints around her hipbone as she moves
Close up shots follow every sway and tilt—the way fabric stretches tight over curves when she pivots sharply, then how a breathy laugh parts her lips mid dance before she rolls back into rhythm. Every frame shows movement: one second showing only fingertips brushing that exposed waistline as choreography demands; next frame zooming out to capture full body.
Michael couldn’t stop watching, and beneath the admiration sat something quieter. The realization that this hadn’t happened overnight. This version of her had been forming little by little through weeks, through choices and experiences and conversations he hadn’t been there to witness. Somewhere between hotel rooms and sold out stadiums, she’d continued growing without him.
Someone behind him smiled toward the television.
“She’s got a hit on her hands.”
Another voice agreed.
The room moved on but Michael didn’t. He watched until the video ended, until another artist replaced her on the screen. Only then did he quietly leave the area, thinking about her.
Hours later back in his hotel, he reached for the telephone before he’d fully realized he’d made the decision. His fingers rested around the receiver for a moment. Then he dialed her number. Once. Twice. Three times. The line rang.
“Hello?”
He closed his eyes. It was strange how familiar her voice still sounded after all this time. “..Hi, Tink.”
There was beat of silence, then he heard her smile before she spoke. “Michael?”
“Yes, it’s Michael..” He smiled himself a bit.
She laughed softly, almost disbelieving. “I was starting to think you’d forgotten my number.” She teased.
“I could never, my girl.” Another small silence settled between them, awkward only because it had been so long since they’d heard each other’s voices that they seemed to be readjusting to the reality of them.
It was surprisingly easy.
Within minutes, the months between them began collapsing under the weight of ordinary conversation. They spoke about nothing at first. The tour. Her recording schedule. London weather. Los Angeles heat. It felt strangely miraculous how quickly they found the old rhythm again, as though it had simply been waiting patiently for both of them to return.
Then Michael said, almost casually, “I saw your new video today.”
The other end of the line went unexpectedly quiet. “..You did?”
“Mhm.”
“What’d you think..?”
He smiled to himself. “I loved it a lot.”
When she spoke again, her voice had changed ever so slightly. Smaller and shyer. “I’m glad..”
“I mean it.” He could almost picture her looking down at the floor, suddenly unsure what to do with the compliment.
“You seem different,” He said carefully.
She laughed once through her nose. “Different?”
“Yeah,” He searched for the right word. “Confident, happier..”
She didn’t answer immediately, thinking about how to respond. It’s been hard without his guidance. “I’m trying to be.”
Something about that stayed with him. He leaned back against the headboard, looking absently out toward the London skyline beyond the window. Then, gently he spoke.
“Are they taking good care of you out there?”
The question hung between them. It wasn’t about the video. She knew that. “I think so,” She answered after a moment. “Everybody’s been nice.”
Michael nodded even though she couldn’t see him. “Good.”
He realized that the faint ache he couldn’t quite place wasn’t the video that had made him call after all. It was wanting to hear, beneath all the music and interviews and heavily managed appearances, that she was still there.
Just as herself, as his Tinkerbell.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤ⋆ㅤㅤ January 27, 1989.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤㅤ╰ㅤ Final Night, The Bad Tour - Los Angeles, California.
(Name)’s body gets ahead of her thoughts and at this point, refuses to wait for permission as she moves through people. She manages to cast a few polite but rushed smiles when she hears someone recognize her.
“Is that (Name)..?”
“Oh my god, I love her..”
Backstage is alive with the chao that usually comes after shows. People moving too fast, voices stacking over each other, the smell of sweat and heat and stage lights still clinging to everything. The energy manages to give her a second hand high as she’s walking through it. She doesn’t even fully register where she’s going, just that she’s checking faces as she passes them because she already knows the one she actually wants to see. But it feels like she’s already passed a thousand people, and she hasn’t found him yet. He couldn’t have left yet, she knows that much.
But then she sees him. And everything stops, she feels like she might just collapse because she feels weak in the knees.
He’s not even doing anything special, he’s just standing there in the middle of it all, still half caught in the post performance state where everything feels like an in between, where it feels like you’re coming down from a high. But it’s a high that only entertainers could get off on. His hair is damp with sweat, curls falling forward in soft and uneven pieces that stick slightly to his forehead and temples. A few strands are clinging near his cheekbone, darker from moisture and framing his face in a way that makes him look more masculine in nature. He takes a little sip of his orange juice, and she nearly giggles at him.
His skin still has that warm sheen from the lights, luminous under backstage fluorescents. There’s a faint flush at his cheeks, exhaustion sure, but there’s something alive in it like his body is still running a little faster than normal. His lips are slightly parted as he breathes, still regulating himself, still coming down from the energy of being in front of thousands of people. He looks.. he looks good.
Michael looks up, and sees her.
It hits him in a very visible shift, that small pause where recognition lands before anything else can follow. His expression changes subtly but immediately as soon as he drinks her in, and the entire room narrows down to just her and suddenly nothing else really matters anymore.
She doesn’t think before she’s moving to him. It’s fast and uncontained, the instinct inside her has been building pressure for too long and finally stops caring about control. The space between them disappears in seconds as she runs straight into him.
It isn’t graceful, it’s full on impact. Her body forgets how to be gentle about it. Her hands land on him first, gripping whatever she can reach, his jacket, his shirt, it doesn’t even matter. She needs something. Her mind hasn’t actually caught up to the fact that he’s here, in front of her. She can’t be sure if this isn’t some cruel dream she’s going to wake up from.
Michael catches her instantly with no hesitation at all.
His arms are around her in the same breath she hits him, pulling her in because that’s the most natural response in the world right now, there was never going to be any other outcome once she got close enough. One hand settles at the back of her neck, fingers spreading there and steadying her that same way he used to. Before work and fame so selfishly separated them sixteen months ago.
Up close, he still smells like the stage. Sweat, heat, fabric and his perfume warmed from movement. His shirt is slightly damp where she’s pressed into it, curls brushing lightly against her temple when she leans in. It’s still soft despite being flattened in places by sweat and movement.
She can feel him breathing, slightly uneven. His heart his pounding against his chest and she isn’t sure if it’s because he’s just gotten done working or if it’s because of her.
(Name) presses closer without thinking, her body trying to confirm he won’t disappear if she holds on hard enough and his hand at her neck tightens just slightly, anchoring her there without question.
And she doesn’t let go, not even a little.
“I missed you so much..”
“I missed you too..”
The cameras are waiting before the doors even open, a loose cluster gathered near the waiting vans, flashes already firing the second movement appears backstage. Security steps out first, then members of the crew, then managers talking over one another as they funnel everyone toward the vehicles.
The lens keeps searching.
Then it finds them.
They’re walking side by side through the middle of the entourage with their pinkies linked. He stays half a step behind, letting her weave through the narrow path security has made. Their fingers never separate. Every few feet someone calls his name, another voice shouts hers, cameras clicking relentlessly from behind the barricades.
When they reach the waiting van, Michael opens the sliding door himself and instinctively steps aside.
“You first.”
She ducks inside with a small smile, still holding his hand until the last possible second before climbing into the back seat. Only then does he let go, following her inside. The cameras don’t stop, the tinted windows are dark enough to hide most of the interior but the open doorway has already given them more than enough.
Michael drops back into the seat with the exhaustion of someone who’s just finished the final show of a world tour. His hair has mostly escaped the ponytail he’d started the night with, damp curls clinging to the back of his neck and temples. A faint line of eyeliner has smudged beneath both eyes, evidence of two hours beneath stage lights that had long since melted away any attempt at perfection.
He exhales through a tired little smile and reaches up automatically, trying to gather his hair back with one hand while fumbling for the elastic still hanging loosely around his wrist.
It catches almost immediately.
He makes a soft face of mild annoyance, trying again. The elastic twists into a knot somewhere in the curls near the nape of his neck.
She watches him for all of three seconds before smiling to herself. “Come here.”
Without a word, he turns slightly in his seat until his back is angled toward her, surrendering the problem without protest. Her fingers disappear gently into his hair.
“Hold still.” A quiet laugh slips out of her as she carefully works the tangled elastic free, taking her time so she doesn’t pull. Every now and then he winces ever so slightly when a curl catches, and she immediately softens her touch.
“Sorry.”
“It’s okay.”
The camera keeps rolling through the open door, the others around unable to hear more than muffled fragments through the glass. By the time she slips the elastic free, a few loose curls have fallen into his face again.
“There.”
He reaches up, gathering his hair into another ponytail while she smooths one stubborn curl behind his ear absentmindedly .
He looks toward the open door toward the camera, his tired eyes meet the lens. A warm smile spreads across his face despite the exhaustion still written across it.
He lifts his fingers in the smallest wave. “Hiii.” It’s quiet and sweet, a greeting that feels less like an acknowledgment of fame and more like someone politely noticing another person in the room.
Beside him, she catches the expression before turning toward the windshield herself. So cute!
She can’t help smiling. After months on the road, after the final show and the noise and the exhaustion, he still somehow had enough gentleness left to greet strangers with the same sweetness he greeted everyone else.
A second later the door closes and driver eases the van into motion and the entourage follows behind.
The footage ends there.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤ⋆ㅤㅤ March, 1989.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤㅤ╰ㅤ The Children’s Arts Benefit - Manhatten, New York City.
It’s a charity event. Cameras everywhere, flashes going off in little bursts that aren’t really capturing anything interesting, just people standing in groups chatting about anything from business to personal life.
(Name) sees him across the room and her heels click against the marble as she moves to him, steady in rhythm and cutting through the softer noise of the room. One hand gathers her dress slightly, keeping it lifted just enough to move properly through the crowd without it catching as she walks. She’s not really listening to anything people say to her as she passes, only offering small nods and polite smiles when needed.
And Michael sees her before she gets there.
He’s mid conversation, still doing the polite thing and engaging enough so that anyone watching would think he’s fully engaged. But admittedly, his attention shifts the second he spots her coming through the room. And he does something simple.
He reaches out. Not fully stopping what he’s doing nor turning his whole body away from the conversation, he simply extends a hand slightly in her direction because he’s already expected she’ll end up there. This is just how it goes. ESP or something?
(Name) takes it immediately when she reaches him, her hand slipping into his. She’s done it too many times for it to ever feel like a question at this point. His fingers close around hers and squeeze for a quick second in a silent acknowledgement before his hand naturally moves to the small of her back, still half listening to the person he was speaking to like nothing.
That’s the part that would look normal if you weren’t paying attention. But there’s a camera nearby, drifting through the room and catching moments without any real intent. It lands on them right as it happens.
At first, it just looks like a greeting. Two close friends acknowledging each other in a crowded event, nothing unusual.
But the footage holds them longer than that.
It catches her as she leans in to say something to him over the noise. Without thinking her free hand goes up, brushing lightly against his arm and to his collar as she talks, just a small little touch. But she doesn’t fully settle until she’s physically anchored for a moment, her hand resting on the nape of his neck.
He tilts his head down to hear her better, still half in the conversation he was already in, but not really leaving her side either. His hand at her back doesn’t move, and then his expression changes slightly. A small smile caught on camera because of something that sat exactly right in his ear. A joke maybe?
She sees it and laughs a little, quick and soft, still standing close instead of stepping away like most people would after interrupting a conversation. They had the tendency to get caught up in their own world when they were together.
The camera keeps rolling, lingering on them.
The hand still there at her back is rubbing now, and they don’t fully separate even while he turns his attention back to the conversation beside him. (Name) finally walks away
And from the outside, it looks a bit intimate.
All hugged up on each other like that looks too comfortable to be accidental and too natural to question.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤ⋆ ㅤㅤOctober, 1989.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤㅤ╰ㅤ Media Speculating.
By this point in his career, Michael has stopped functioning in the public eye as a person who is simply “famous.” Fame is too small a word for what he has become. He exists instead as a cultural constant—something closer to an event than an individual. Even people who have never seen him in person still recognize his presence through media alone. He's become a shared reference point across the globe.
Her fame doesn’t build in the same explosive, global rupture that defines his. It arrived gradually at first, through structure—an album cycle, organized, styled, and deliberately positioned to place her at the center of pop culture without ambiguity. But what happens after her latest release is what changes her entirely.
The record doesn’t just perform well. It defines her. It gives the public a version of her that feels fully formed, not developing. There is no “breakthrough artist” period that lingers in perception for long. Instead, there is a quick shift in language: she is no longer introduced as emerging but established. No longer “upcoming,” but “leading.”
And then the media assigns her a title.
“Princess of pop” becomes shorthand because it simplifies what people think they are seeing. Her image is polished enough to feel the intention and she's likable. Sweet, funny, humble, which makes her highly legible to the public in a way that spreads quickly across magazines, television segments, and early entertainment coverage culture. The public does not just consume her music; it feeds off her presence as well.
So, no one can quite agree on when it started. Hell, Michael and (Name) are still dancing around it themselves.
The first few times, it’s easy to dismiss. They’re musicians. Award shows are small worlds dressed up as enormous ones, the same artists orbiting the same ceremonies, after parties, and backstage hallways until everyone’s paths blur together. A photograph of them talking after an awards show earns a few inches in the entertainment pages before disappearing beneath the next week’s headlines. Then it happens again. Another ceremony. Another charity gala. Another industry party where someone swears they arrived separately but somehow spend most of the evening within sight of one another. Cameras keep finding them laughing during commercial breaks, leaning close enough to hear each other over the music, slipping into conversations that seem to shut the rest of the room out without either of them realizing it.
At first, reporters treat it like harmless fun. Two of the biggest young stars in music spending time together is easy copy, and the headlines stay playful.
“Music’s golden pair?”
“Just friends, or music’s newest power duo?”
“The King and Princess of Pop share another memorable evening.”
Neither of them acknowledges any of it. There’s nothing to deny and nothing to confirm. Their publicists call them friends, stating that they’ve always shared a close relationship before (Name) even blew up. A mentor and mentee type of relationship. Their managers smile politely through interviews, explaining that successful artists naturally cross paths. For a little while, people accept that answer. The stories begin growing longer than the events they’re supposedly covering, with journalists comparing guest lists before premieres have even happened, noticing that if one of them is expected somewhere, the other usually isn’t far behind.
Then the photographs change.
They stop coming from red carpets and heavily staged press lines. Someone catches them leaving the same recording studio long after midnight, her laughing at something he’s said while he holds the door open behind her. A week later another photographer spots them slipping through a hotel’s side entrance after an industry dinner, heads lowered more out of habit than secrecy. Neither notices the cameras until a flash suddenly lights the sidewalk. The pictures run everywhere the next morning, and nothing scandalous happened. It was just based off the simple fact that they’re together. Comfortable. As though neither of them considers sharing the same space remarkable enough to.. hide. That’s the thing, it didn’t seem like they were attempting to hide anything which made the story more interesting as it progressed.
Then comes the photograph everyone remembers.
It appears on the cover of three magazines before the week is over. (Name) steps out of his private residence just after sunrise wearing a wool coat hastily thrown over last night’s clothes, her hair only half pinned back with sunglasses pushed onto the top of her head despite the overcast morning. She looks like a time was had, no shade. Five seconds later, Michael follows, fastening the cuff of his shirt as he steps through the doorway, pausing only long enough to hold the door open before letting it swing shut behind him. There isn’t any visible attempt to create distance between them.
The captions practically write themselves.
“Breakfast together?”
“Early morning depature raises questions.”
“Friends don't usually leave the same house at dawn.”
Again, neither of them responds.
Their silence becomes part of the story.
A few weeks later a video replaces the photo. This one is grainy, taken beneath streetlights outside a restaurant after what had supposedly been a private dinner with friends. They’re stepping off the curb when someone suddenly shouts their names. Without thinking, she reaches toward him and his hand finds hers. The photographer catches the exact second their fingers intertwine. It isn’t posed or even particularly romantic. It’s the instinct. The unconscious movement of two people who have long since stopped wondering whether reaching for each other is appropriate. By the time either of them realizes cameras are there, the moment has already happened.
The video spreads faster than any interview ever could.
Television hosts spend entire segments analyzing it frame by frame. Magazine covers become bolder.
“Hollywood’s worst-kept secret?”
“More than friends?”
“Inside music's most talked-about relationship.”
Soon, columnists begin noticing details no one had paid attention to before. The way she instinctively looks toward him before answering questions on shared red carpets. The way he visibly relaxes whenever she walks into a crowded room. The fact that they no longer bother introducing one another because everyone around them already assumes they’ll arrive together. It becomes impossible to mention one without acknowledging the other, their names slowly merging into a single narrative that neither of them ever agreed to create.
The speculation eventually takes on a life of its own. They become fixtures in gossip columns because they keep appearing in spaces between public obligations. Leaving bookstores. Walking through airports without entourages separating them. Slipping into restaurants through side entrances. Visiting recording studios on days neither has publicly scheduled sessions. Always ordinary places. Always ordinary moments. Ironically, it’s the ordinariness that convinces people. If it were publicity, surely, they’d choose grander stages. Instead, every photograph feels stolen from a real life the public wasn't meant to witness.
The press develops its own language around them.
“Close friends.”
“Constant companions.”
“Frequent collaborators.”
“Reportedly inseparable.”
“Spotted together once again.”
Every headline performs uncertainty while quietly arriving at the same conclusion that there’s an elephant in the room. Award shows become dinners. Dinners become weekends. Weekends become early mornings leaving the same address. The explanations grow thinner while the photographs grow more intimate, yet neither of them offers the world anything concrete. No announcement. No exclusive interview. No carefully crafted statement. But no denial, either.
They simply continue living their lives, refusing to reshape something deeply personal into a story the public can neatly consume. Eventually people stop asking whether they're together and begin asking why they just won’t admit it. The truth, of course, is that whatever exists between them has never belonged to the headlines. The magazines can stitch together timelines from grainy photographs and whispered sightings, but the life they’re trying to explain is unfolding somewhere the cameras never quite reach, in the ordinary hours between performances, where love quietly becomes routine long before the world ever manages to give it a name.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤ⋆ ㅤㅤNovember, 1989.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤㅤ╰ㅤ BET Soul Music Awards - Los Angeles, California.
The BET Soul Music Awards had become one of the biggest nights of the year, but this one felt different before it had even begun.
For weeks it had dominated every entertainment headline. Television hosts spent entire segments speculating about surprise performances, fashion magazines ran prediction pieces on who would wear what, and columnists had somehow managed to turn the seating chart into front page news. The biggest names in music had all arrived beneath the same roof, filling the theater with enough talent, influence, and ego to power an entire city. Diamonds flashed beneath the chandeliers. Satin caught the light every time someone crossed the aisle. Velvet tuxedos, shimmering gowns, polished shoes, expensive perfume, camera flashes. Everywhere she looked was another familiar face, another legend she’d grown up watching, another artist she’d once only dreamed of meeting.
And somehow..
She was the one standing at the center of all of it.
Hosting.
At twenty-three years old, the woman who was declared by the public as the Princess of Pop.
The title still caught her off guard whenever someone else said it aloud. She’d never introduced herself that way and she never would. Yet tonight it seemed impossible to escape. It was printed across rehearsal schedules and cue cards, spoken proudly by producers introducing her to executives she’d already met three times that afternoon, repeated by reporters camped outside on the carpet as though saying it enough would somehow make it feel less surreal.
“Our host for the evening...”
“One of music’s brightest stars...”
“The Princess of Pop herself...”
Every introduction was met with another smile from her, gracious and practiced, even as a small part of her still wanted to turn around to see if they were talking about someone else.
Backstage was its own world entirely.
The polished glamour visible to millions at home dissolved into organized chaos the second someone stepped behind the curtain. Production assistants darted through narrow hallways carrying clipboards thick with revised schedules. Stage managers spoke rapid fire into headsets, pointing toward lighting rigs and camera operators without ever slowing their pace. Stylists hurried after artists armed with garment steamers, lint rollers, powder brushes, safety pins, and enough hairspray to survive a hurricane. Someone sprinted past carrying an entire rack of wardrobe changes. Somewhere farther down the corridor, someone was arguing over a missing microphone.
She barely had time to stand still.
A stylist appeared to smooth the fabric over her hips before disappearing just as quickly. Another adjusted the clasp of a diamond bracelet she’d somehow managed to twist backwards. Someone gently tucked a loose curl back into place before another production assistant slid fresh cue cards into her hands, apologizing because one category had been reordered less than sixty seconds ago.
Everything moved with the frantic precision of people who’d done this a hundred times before.
She inhaled carefully, then exhaled. Ignored the way her pulse refused to settle and then someone counted her down. They were back from commercial break.
Five.
The conversations around her immediately faded beneath the growing roar of the audience on the other side of the curtain.
Four.
The house lights dimmed until only thin strips of blue glowed backstage.
Three.
She rolled her shoulders once, flexing her fingers around the cue cards as the opening music swelled through the auditorium.
Two.
The stage manager pointed toward the entrance.
One.
The curtain lifted and the sound hit her before the light did.
The applause, cheers and screams rolled across the theater like a wave breaking against stone, thousands of people rising to their feet almost instantly. It was loud enough that she felt it vibrate through the floor beneath her heels. Cameras swung toward her from every angle, red recording lights blinking on one after another as she stepped into the spotlight wearing the kind of smile that almost convinced even herself she wasn’t nervous.
Her heart hammered against her ribs anyway.
(Name) welcomed everyone with effortless warmth, delivering the opening monologue exactly as rehearsed, though somehow better than rehearsal ever managed. Every joke landed cleaner once there was a real audience in front of her. Laughter rolled through the theater in waves, interrupted by applause so often she had to pause and let people finish before continuing. She improvised once when a teleprompter skipped a line, earning an even bigger laugh than the scripted joke had been meant to receive.
By the second hour she’d stopped thinking about where the cameras were.
She moved across the stage without thinking about tripping, transitioning seamlessly between presenters, teasing performers with affectionate humor, exchanging quick conversations with artists seated near the front rows that had the audience laughing as though everyone inside the building were old friends. Even backstage, producers were beginning to relax. She could hear snippets of relieved conversations every time she stepped behind the curtain between segments.
“She’s killing it.”
“Best decision we made.”
“She's carrying the whole show.”
Every time the camera found her, she seemed brighter. More comfortable. More confident. The audience adored her, and she returned every ounce of that energy effortlessly, making one of the biggest nights in music somehow feel intimate despite the thousands of people packed into the theater. It was getting closer to towards the end of the show, she had one last award to present.
She glanced down at the next cue card and smile on her face shifted almost imperceptibly. Not smaller, just softer.
Best Male R&B/Pop Artist.
Her french tip adorned fingers tightened slightly around the card.
Michael.
She swallowed before she could think too much about it.
Artists presented awards to other artists all the time. There was nothing unusual about that. It happened every awards season.
But nothing involving the two of them had felt ordinary in months.
Entertainment magazines had practically built an industry around trying to define whatever existed between them. Every charity gala became another cover story. Every award show became another excuse to analyze who looked at whom first. Every blurry photograph of them leaving the same venue within minutes of each other somehow turned into three weeks of speculation.
“Friends?”
“More than friends?”
“Hollywood's biggest couple?”
The headlines changed but the question never did.
(Name) drew one slow, careful breath, lifting her eyes back toward the camera as though there weren’t thousands of people watching and millions more at home. Her smile returned with a sweet ease.
“..And the Soul Music Award goes to..”
She slipped one finger beneath the envelope’s seal; the paper gave way with a quiet tear and the card was unfolded.
The moment she read the name, a grin escaped before professionalism could catch it.
“Michael Jackson.”
The reaction was instantaneous.
The theater exploded.
Applause thundered through the auditorium so loudly it nearly drowned out the orchestra beginning his walk up music. People were already pushing themselves to their feet before the cameras even found him, cheers echoing from every balcony as the entire room seemed to brighten with anticipation. It wasn’t simply applause for another winner.
It was for him.
She turned toward the aisle, the applause still surging through the theater in thick waves that didn’t seem interested in fading anytime soon. The entire room was on its feet, a standing ovation that felt physical force pressing through the air. Cameras tracked the movement instantly, lenses shifting in perfect sync as Michael stood from his seat.
He rose slowly, even with stadiums and decades of history behind him, there was still a flicker of shyness in the way he adjusted his jacket, a subtle dip of his head that softened the image of him. The smile that formed on his face arrived gently and then stayed, warm and unguarded, only growing the second his eyes found hers.
He began walking toward the stage and the crowd only got louder for him, but his attention didn’t shift. Not even once. He moved with his gentle rhythm and then just before he reached the steps, he caught his bottom lip lightly between his teeth, a nervous little habit that always betrayed him. It’s by far the most attractive tick anyone has seen. When he looked up again, his gaze was straight on her as she stood there standing so pretty in her hair, makeup and dress holding his award.
She felt it immediately. That pull in her expression she didn’t have to think about. The smile came before she could stop it, softer than anything she had given the cameras all night, and suddenly she wasn’t hosting anymore, not in any way that mattered.
He climbed the steps and reached her, stopping close enough that the air between them felt charged and uncomfortably aware. The audience was still roaring, but it was fading into something distant. They looked at each other for a moment that stretched just a fraction too long to be stage timing. They’re both blushing, terribly.
She lifted the trophy between them, hands steady in the way she had trained them to be, even though nothing else about her felt steady at all.
“Congratulations.” She smiles shyly.
His gaze softened as it dropped briefly to the award, then returned to her face. “Thank you.”
Their fingers met as he took it, and for a second neither of them let go properly. An unintentional pause where contact lingered longer than necessary and neither of them had decided who was supposed to move first.
Then he did.
Not backward.
Not toward the microphone.
Toward her.
It was small at first, just the shift of his shoulders and the way the trophy lowered slightly between them, but his eyes stayed locked on hers the entire time and whatever instinct normally governed distance simply didn’t show up to do its job.
She realized what was happening a second too late to stop it from mattering.
He leaned in.
Slow enough that it couldn’t be mistaken for anything else, intentional enough that her mind had time to register every stage of it before it actually happened. The space between them narrowed until there was almost none left, and her breath caught somewhere useless in her chest.
For a brief, suspended moment, he stopped just short, so close that she could feel the warmth of him and that the entire stadium might as well have disappeared if it weren’t for the fact that it absolutely hadn’t.
Then he closed the distance.
The kiss was gentle, certain, and startlingly soft as their lips moved against one another in a slow, intimate movement. She froze for the smallest fraction of a second out of sheer disbelief, and then instinct caught up, and she leaned into it before thought could interfere any further. Her hand covered their mouths from the camera as he smiled into the kiss.
Everything outside them dropped away completely. The audience, the lights, the cameras, all of it vanished into something irrelevant and far away. There was only the feeling of it, brief and unreal in the way moments like that tend to be when they shouldn’t be happening at all, especially not here, especially not like this.
Then it ended almost as soon as it fully registered, the two of them separating with the same stunned awareness, like neither of them had fully decided how they had gotten there or how they were supposed to return to reality afterward.
The theater was nuts.
The sound hit like a physical shockwave, screams and applause colliding into something deafening enough to shake the space itself. People were on their feet instantly, cameras flashing so rapidly the stage flickered in bursts of white light. It felt less like applause and more like chaos given permission to exist.
(Name) stared at him for a second too long, completely unfiltered, eyes wide with disbelief as the reality of what he had just done caught up with her all at once.
Then she laughed to herself, just pure shock breaking through and she lifted her hand and smacked his chest lightly, more out of instinct than anger.
“You—“ The word fell apart into laughter before she could finish it. Her cheeks were already burning, and she looked genuinely overwhelmed the way people only do when something insane happens in front of them and they’re expected to continue functioning anyway.
He immediately dropped his gaze for half a second, laughing under his breath, clearly just as thrown by his own decision as everyone else in the building.
The applause refused to settle. Even as he raised the award slightly and leaned toward the mic, “Thank you,” he said quietly, sheepish and grinning at the same time.
She shook her head, smiling too hard to pretend she was anything close to composed, and stepped back just enough to give him space. He took a breath, still grinning himself, then glanced down at the trophy for a second before speaking.
“I.. I wanna thank the creator above,” He began softly, and the room finally started to quiet in response, the energy shifting from chaos into attention. “My family.. everyone who believed in me, who continues to believe in me and everyone who’s supported me over the years.”
He paused, thumb brushing lightly over the edge of the award as if grounding himself, then looked up again. Straight at her.
(Name) was still standing just off to the side of the stage, trying very hard to look like she wasn’t still recovering from what had just happened. His smile returned, smaller now, more personal.
“And.. I’d like to thank the lady in my life.” A ripple of laughter moved through the audience instantly, followed by cheers that started building again like they were just waiting for permission.
“You all might know her.” That earned louder reactions, people already laughing as if the answer wasn’t obvious enough. “She’s been doing a wonderful job hosting tonight. Don’t you think?” His question is followed by cheers of agreement. Oh, she was going to kill him.
“You know, when she told me that BET had contacted her for the role, she said she was honored to even be considered but she was afraid that she was going to trip and fall.” He said, earning more laughs and endeared awes.
“She’s very special to me, and she takes good care of me.” He looks over at her and eyes never left hers, even as the noise swelled again around him. “And I can’t see myself without her.” He held the look for a beat longer than necessary, like he wasn’t speaking to the room anymore at all.
Then he softened into a final smile before raising the trophy to the lights and audience. “Thank you.”
The applause came crashing back harder than before, the kind that didn’t just fill space but swallowed it completely, while she stood there shaking her head like she still couldn’t decide whether to laugh or disappear.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤ⋆ㅤㅤ 1990.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤㅤ╰ㅤ Neverland Ranch, Los Olivos, California.
By 1990, they’d been boyfriend and girlfriend for a good bit of time. This year was a year of firsts for them, the start of a new and exciting relationship that that been growing from a seed that mad been planted nearly four years ago.
There wasn’t a formal conversation where they decided to spend every spare moment together. It just happened. She found herself leaving more clothes at Neverland because it became easier than packing another overnight bag. Her favorite skincare and hygiene products appeared in his master bathroom right beside his own. A drawer became her own walk-in closet. Her books started collecting on the bedside table, her records found their way onto shelves that hadn’t belonged to her a few months earlier, and somehow half the flowers in the gardens had been planted because she’d once mentioned liking them in passing. She still technically had her own place, but she spent so many nights at Neverland that the staff had stopped asking whether she’d be staying for dinner.
One evening, while they wandered through the house discussing furniture he absolutely didn’t need, Michael glanced at her almost absentmindedly.
“You know…” he said, slipping his hands into his pockets. “I think you should spend more time here.”
(Name) smiled without looking up from the lamp she’d been pretending to consider. “I practically live here already, silly.”
“I know.”
She laughed softly. “So what are you talking about?”
He looked at her then, wearing that shy and gentle smile that always seemed to appear whenever he was about to admit something. “I mean..” He shrugged one shoulder, suddenly fascinated by the hardwood floor. “..Move in.”
She blinked. “..What?”
He finally looked back up, the corners of his mouth lifting just enough to betray the fact that he’d been rehearsing those two words in his head for days. “Move in., with me. Your boyfriend.”
For a long moment, she simply stared at him. The thought had never occurred to her that he could ask so simply, as though sharing a home with her was the most obvious thing in the world.
A smile slowly found its way onto her face. “I think,” She murmured, taking the last few steps until she was standing directly in front of him, “I’d like that very much, boyfriend.”
Michael’s shoulders visibly relaxed, the quiet relief written all over his face before he leaned down to steal a quick kiss.
Things were good that year.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤ⋆ㅤㅤ January, 1991.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤㅤ╰ㅤ ‘92 Grammys - Los Angeles, California.
“Michael, (Name). You’re both queued next.”
The event manager’s voice drifted in through the open limousine door, nearly drowned out by the wall of sound waiting outside. Camera flashes poured through the opening in uneven bursts, briefly illuminating the dark interior before fading again. Beyond the barricades, photographers were already calling their names, their voices overlapping into an indistinct chorus that rose and fell with each arriving guest.
She blinked.
The ring.
She’d been staring at it again.
Her hand rested in her lap, fingers lightly curled, the diamond catching every stray flash that reached inside the car. It scattered little pieces of light across the satin of her gown, dazzling one second and soft the next. She turned her wrist almost absentmindedly, watching it shimmer. It was beautiful, and expensive. She knows that much. Everything beyond that point dissolved into the background.
She still couldn’t quite believe it belonged there. On her finger.
She was someone’s fiancé? What in the world? She remembers being only twenty years old trying to break into this industry. Love was the last thing on her mind.
The proposal returned to her in fragments. Michael’s hands trembling so badly he nearly dropped the ring before he’d even asked. The way he’d stumbled over words he’d clearly spent days rehearsing until they both fell into nervous laughter. The tears she’d never managed to stop before she’d interrupted him with an answer he hadn’t even finished asking for. In retrospect, she probably should have suspected something was up when he brought out the entire Disney park for the day, even more so when her friends acted like it was so urgent to get their nails done the day before.
Sometimes she looked at the ring and remembered that night.
The soft click of the limousine door opening wider pulled her back.
Michael was already moving as he stepped out first, greeted immediately by another explosion of camera flashes and cheers from behind the barricades. For a moment, all she could see was his pretty silhouette against the sea of white light as he straightened his jacket beneath the photographers’ relentless attention.
Then he turned.
Without hesitation, he reached one hand back into the limousine.
Waiting.
She smiled to herself and her hand slipped into his.
The diamond caught the light the instant their fingers met, sparkling brilliantly beneath the flashes as he helped her toward the door with the same sweet care he’d always shown her when no one was looking. Only this time, everyone was looking.
She stepped carefully onto the pavement, her gown falling neatly into place as she straightened beside him. Their hands remained linked between them, the ring resting perfectly where the cameras couldn’t help but find it. Flash after flash reflected across the stone until it glittered almost as brightly as the lights pointed at them.
She looked around for a second then back up at him but he was already watching her. Not the photographers or the crowd.
Her.
That impossibly gentle smile spread across his face, softening everything about him. It was the same smile she’d seen across breakfast tables, in empty hotel hallways after concerts, during quiet evenings when the rest of the world had finally disappeared.
Without thinking, she smiled back and he leaned toward her just slightly, enough to silently ask for a kiss.
(Name) closed the remaining distance herself, brushing a quick, tender kiss against his lips. When they separated, he was still smiling, his forehead almost touching hers for the briefest second before he let out a quiet, breathy laugh that only she could hear beneath the chaos surrounding them.
His thumb brushed once across the back of her hand, and she gave his fingers the smallest squeeze in return before they turned toward the waiting carpet together.
The photographers erupted all over again, calling their names from every direction as flashes exploded like fireworks around them. Tomorrow’s headlines would talk about the kiss, the ring, the glamour, the fashion, every polished detail the cameras had managed to capture.
Neither of them seemed particularly concerned with any of it.
They simply smiled at one another one last time before facing forward, their joined hands swinging naturally between them as they took their first steps onto the red carpet.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤ⋆ㅤㅤMay, 1991.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤㅤ╰ㅤ A private estate - Temecula Valley, California.⠀ ⠀ ⠀
It was strange how quickly a wedding day disappeared.
They had spent months planning it, changing little details, choosing flowers, tasting cakes, arguing over songs, finalizing seating charts. Then the day arrived, and suddenly.. it was evening. A bittersweet feeling, really.
The ceremony had passed in a blur of music, sunlight, trembling hands, and promises neither of them had struggled to make. (Name) remembered seeing him at the end of the aisle, looking happier than she’d ever seen him—crying when he saw her. In that moment she remembered thinking, “you are the love of my life.” Everything after that had unfolded was exactly as it was meant to. A perfect day.
Now they were husband and wife. Mr. and Mrs. Jackson has a nice ring to it, doesn’t it?
The ceremony had been held on the grounds of a sprawling private estate tucked far enough away from the nearest road that the world might as well not have existed beyond its gates. White roses lined the aisle beneath towering oak trees, their branches stretching overhead as though they had grown there specifically to shelter the occasion. Hundreds of candles waited to be lit for the evening reception, and every path through the gardens had been woven with flowers that looked as though they’d bloomed there naturally.
It had been a large wedding by any measure. Family, lifelong friends, musicians, actors, producers, dancers, people who had watched them grow from children into artists, and others who had become part of the life they’d built together. Nearly every seat had been filled, yet somehow it had never felt crowded. The guest list had been expansive without becoming impersonal, each invitation sent to someone who mattered for reasons beyond status or headlines.
The press, for once, had been left outside.
Security had begun preparing weeks in advance, making sure every entrance to the estate remained private, every road carefully monitored, every helicopter route restricted as much as legally possible. The tabloids had guessed at locations, published fabricated schedules, and parked photographers miles away on the chance they might catch a glimpse of something through the trees.
They hadn’t.
The only cameras inside belonged to people Michael and she had chosen themselves. A handful of trusted professional photographers moved through the celebration, documenting the day without interrupting it, capturing laughter instead of spectacle and stolen glances instead of performances. They weren’t there to chase a headline. They were there to preserve memories. Every photograph would remain theirs before it belonged to anyone else.
And for the first time in years, they had been allowed something astonishingly rare. Privacy.
Not complete anonymity—that would never truly exist for either of them. But peace was achievable.
The vows had been spoken without the click of paparazzi shutters competing against every word. They had slipped rings onto one another’s fingers beneath birdsong instead of shouted questions from behind barricades. When the officiant had finally pronounced them husband and wife, the applause had come only from the people who loved them both, echoing warmly through the gardens before disappearing into the afternoon air.
It had been everything they’d hoped for.
Nothing extravagant for extravagance’s sake, despite how magnificent it all appeared. Every flower, every song, every place setting, every handwritten menu, every candle burning across the reception had been chosen because it meant something to one of them. The elegance wasn’t there to impress anyone. It simply reflected the life they had spent years building together, thoughtful in every detail and beautiful.
As daylight faded into evening, the celebration moved beneath a canopy of lights strung through the trees, casting a warm golden glow over the reception. Music drifted across the gardens while conversations blended into soft laughter, crystal glasses caught the candlelight with every toast, and somewhere beyond the estate walls the rest of the world continued searching for a wedding it would never witness.
Inside, hidden from every telephoto lens and gossip column, they were exactly where they wanted to be. Together and finally, husband and wife.
That same night of course they consummated their marriage.
Her hair is soft, slightly messy from the humidity of the suite as her veil fanned out beneath her like a halo against white silk pillowcases. They were tangled in missionary position: Michael braced above her on his forearms, moving with slow but deep thrusts that made every slide inside her feel endless. She held him close; one hand cradling the back of his neck while fingers threaded through sweat damp strands at his temples.
The wedding dress was long gone—discarded somewhere near their feet—but she still wore that delicate garter belt under sheer stockings, and it drove him wild knowing she’d kept something bridal on for this exact moment. Her heat clenched around him like a vise; the drag of his cock against slick walls made every withdrawal feel like torture before plunging back in even deeper than before.
He slowed, stopped entirely before he pressed their foreheads together instead as they caught breathless air between kisses. The space where their bodies joined glistened—an obscene, beautiful mess of frothy white clinging to the base of his cock like liquid pearls. Precum mixed with her arousal; a thin ring that stretched and snapped every time he pulled back just slightly before surging forward again in those slow, deep rolls. And each time he pushed deeper, that slick little ring got thicker. More abundant.
Then losing himself all over again when she arched up for another kiss mid thrust.
“Lovey—I wanna be a daddy..” A pause where he just stared into her eyes, pupils blown with pleasure as he whispered: “Can I give you my baby? Please?” A kiss. “Please, please, let me—lemme make you a mommy, give you a beautiful baby..” He’s babbling at this point, and she watches him above her with a dazed smile hidden behind a bitten bottom lip. She nods at him, lip popping back into place.
“Fill me up, Michael..” She whispered—soft but insistent, her fingers threading through his sweat damp hair as she coaxed him down against her chest. Her heartbeat pounded beneath his ear; a frantic drum of sound matching the stuttering rhythm of his hips now. Each thrust turned sharper, needier—chasing something neither could name anymore beyond more. She came rather suddenly, her body wasn’t cooperating with her plans of wanting to finish together but he just felt so good.
Then she felt it. A gush so sudden and deep inside that it punched a gasp from her throat—wonder.
“That’s it.. give me your baby,” She breathed out raggedly while cradling him closer like he might vanish if she let go even an inch. Her hands stroked over trembling muscles on back as aftershocks wracked through his body.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤ⋆ㅤㅤ August 1992.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤㅤ╰ㅤ Neverland Ranch, Los Olivos, California.
A lamp in the corner cast a warm honeyed glow across the living room, softening everything it seemed to touch. It was around 11 PM when she moved through the space, slowly and graciously as she picked up the mess from the day and straightened out things like pillows and throw blankets for the couch all barefoot on the polished floor. Her movement that had become second nature without her even noticing. She had long since had her baby, but her sense of urgency remained the same. There was a gentleness to everything she did now, motherhood had recalibrated her brain around something so small and precious that existed just a few feet away. She paused near the baby holder, lowering her gaze.
Aladdin was asleep inside it bundled neatly, his tiny face relaxed and completely unguarded the way babies only ever managed when they were fully gone into sleep. One hand had slipped free of the blanket and rested near his cheek. The sight made something in her expression soften even further. She reached down carefully, adjusting the edge of the blanket without disturbing him. Her fingers lingered for a second before she straightened again, exhaling quietly.
The estate still felt like Michael, even when he wasn’t there yet. That was the thing she hadn’t gotten used to and she doesn’t think she ever will, the way his absence didn’t feel empty so much as.. incomplete. He’s been coming home late these past few days, recording for a new album.
The front door clicked open and there was a pause, followed by the sound of him stepping inside and the faint shift of movement as he closed the door behind him. Then his voice, already softer than it probably needed to be, careful in the way it always was when he came home late and knew she’d notice.
“Tink? You were supposed to be in bed by now..” He set something down just out of sight before she finally looked at him.
“You’re late..” Her tone carried enough disappointment to make the point without raising her voice, not that she ever felt the need to even raise her voice at him.
Michael stepped further into the room, loosening his jacket as he looked at her. His expression shifted immediately, whatever exhaustion he had softened the second he saw her standing there in the cozy light, hair loose and her face calm but tired the usual way it was after she had a long day with the baby. His beautiful wife.
“I know, pretty mama. I’m sorry.” He crossed the space between them without hesitation and leaned in to press a gentle kiss against her cheek. “Forgive me.”
She tried to hold the expression for another second, the small pout still lingering like she wanted to stay mildly annoyed long enough for it to count but it didn’t last. Her shoulders relaxed, and she gave him a look that was half warning and half surrender before she leaned in and kissed him properly, soft and brief as her hand rested lightly against his chest.
When she pulled back, her gaze flicked past him for a second toward the baby holder, instinctively checking again.
Michael followed her eyes, then back to her, the smallest smile forming as if he already understood everything she wasn’t saying out loud.
He lowered his voice without thinking. “How’s he been?”
She lingered near Michael without moving away from him properly, the space between them had become something her body naturally refused to widen. Her fingers reached up first, adjusting his collar with an absent tenderness, smoothing the fabric where it sat slightly uneven against his neck. Her hand lingered there before sliding down over his chest in a slow, grounding motion.
“Good, but we missed you today..” Her voice came out soft, already slipping into that tired half sleepy tone that followed long days and late nights. There wasn’t accusation in it, just honesty that came from someone who had spent the day stretching herself between routines and small responsibilities and the demand of caring for a newborn.
Michael looked at her warm and apologetic as he leaned closer, the sound of her voice alone gave him a tingly feeling. His hand came up lightly, resting at her waist anchoring himself there. She had him wrapped around her finger, he hoped she knew.
“I missed you too—you both.”
She let out a small breath that almost turned into a sigh, her hand still resting against his chest for a moment before she finally let it fall, only to look up at him properly.
“Where were you today?” Tired curiosity.
For a brief second, something flickered across his expression. Not guilt exactly.. or anything that could be named easily for that matter. It was more like calculation, as if he was deciding how much of the day belonged in this conversation and how much should stay outside it. He shifted slightly, loosening his shoulders trying to make the answer sound simpler than it was.
“Just meetings. A few things came up—met a couple friends.”
It was vague enough that it didn’t invite more questions unless someone was looking for them. But she honestly wasn’t.
(Name) nodded a little, accepting it the way people accept small absences they assume will make sense later, then let her attention drift back to him instead of the explanation. Whatever part of her had briefly reached for curiosity dissolved quickly under the familiar pull of him being close again.
Michael exhaled quietly, tension easing from his posture as he stepped closer, his hand sliding up from her waist to her back. The conversation stopped being about answers and became softer and more physical. Something she desperately needed after the day she had.
“You look tired,” He murmured, brushing his thumb gently along her side as if checking for it himself.
“I am, baby..” She admitted quietly.
He smiled faintly at that, then he leaned in and kissed her forehead first, before letting his hand slide up to cradle the side of her face.
Her eyes softened almost immediately and whatever trace of curiosity she had, let go without resistance. She leaned into him slightly, her earlier concern dissolving into clinginess, folding back into his touch.
Behind them, the baby slept on, untouched by anything beyond his own small world of warmth and baby breath.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤ⋆ㅤㅤ September, 1992.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤㅤ╰ㅤ Neverland Ranch, Los Olivos, California.
Today had been a fun day for their little family! A cute day out that started with a shopping spree and ended with a nice dinner at their favorite restaurant. But all good things must come to an end.
The bathroom was quiet the way it usually was after a certain time. One of the vanity lights had been left on because she always forgets to do something before she leaves the house. The light reflected softly against the marble countertop and beyond the cracked door, the rest of the house had gone almost completely silent.
She stood at the sink, humming a little melody as she searched through the medicine cabinet for a small bottle of ibuprofen. Her shoulders ached from carrying the baby for most of the afternoon, and she promised herself she would take something before bed.
Michael was only a few feet away, standing in front of the mirror with his sleeves rolled to his forearms, carefully unbuttoning the cuffs of his shirt after the long day. She moved a few things aside before her fingers settled around an orange prescription bottle.
Then another.
She frowned slightly and tilted her head. The first one was nearly empty and she picked up the second without thinking, turning it over to read the label.
Her eyes lingered on it for a second. “..Baby?”
Michael looked up from the mirror. “Hm?”
She glanced between the two bottles in her hands. “I thought you just refilled this prescription...” Her voice was gentle, more puzzled than anything else.
She held up the second bottle a little. “..You have another?” The room seemed to pause, and it was so brief she almost convinced herself she’d imagined it.
Michael’s eyes settled on the bottles before returning to her, his expression remaining calm, though something behind it had tightened ever so slightly. “My doctor wanted me to have another one.”
His answer came easily enough. “You know, just in case.”
She looked back down at the label, her thumb brushing across the plastic cap. “Oh.”
A small silence settled between them. “..Have you had them look at it recently?” She looked up again, concern softening her features. “The burns, I mean. Because baby, you shouldn’t be dealing with this kind of pain..”
He gave the smallest shrug, eyes drifting toward the sink instead of meeting hers immediately. “Yes, of course. But they give me the same answers every time.” There wasn’t any bitterness in his voice, just genuine fatigue.
She nodded slowly and accepted the answer without another thought.
She’d seen the scars; it was the very first thing he showed her before they got really serious about one another. She knew how severe the accident had been. Of course, there were days it still hurt but she just hates the idea that he suffers through this. For God’s sake it happened in ’84, it’s currently ’92 now.
“I’m sorry,” she said softly. “Ignore me.”
He looked back at her then, offering a faint smile that was warm enough to ease the concern from her face. "It's okay."
She smiled back and without another word, she placed the second prescription bottle exactly where she found it, closed the cabinet, and crossed the room toward him. Her hands found the front of his shirt first, smoothing the fabric before they settled lightly against his chest.
“You work too hard.”
A quiet laugh escaped him. “So I’ve been told.”
She leaned up and pressed a gentle kiss beneath his jaw, lingering there for just a moment before resting her forehead against his shoulder. “You should let yourself rest more.”
His arms slipped naturally around her waist. “I know..”
Neither of them spoke again for a while.
The bathroom returned to its comfortable silence, broken only by the faint hum of the lights overhead and the distant creak of the house settling around them.
The prescription bottles remained tucked away inside the cabinet, unnoticed now.
By morning, she wouldn't think about them again. To her, they were simply another reminder that the man she loved still carried pain from injuries the world had long since forgotten.
A year later, she would remember the conversation with an unsettling clarity and wonder if that had been the first time something quietly slipped beyond her reach. At the time, though, it was nothing more than an ordinary night between a husband and wife, ending the same way most of their nights did, wrapped in each other’s arms while the rest of the house slept.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤ⋆ㅤㅤ October, 1992.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤㅤ╰ㅤ Neverland Ranch, Los Olivos, California.
Steam lingered in the bathroom, fogging the edges of the mirror until only blurred reflections remained. The room smelled faintly of eucalyptus and shampoo, warm from the shower that had been running for the last several minutes. The baby monitor rested on the counter, its tiny green light glowing steadily beside the sink, carrying nothing but the gentle sound of Aladdin’s giggles and Janet’s coos the hall.
Michael sat on the small stool in front of the tub; a towel draped around his shoulders while she stood behind him with one hand resting lightly against the back of his neck. He was 5’9 but she always sworn he was taller than that, he just looked so awkward and lanky especially in this position,
His hair was damp beneath her fingers as she worked the shampoo through it slowly, taking her time the way she always did. The soft curls slipped easily between her hands until she reached the patch of scar tissue hidden beneath the dark strands. Without thinking, her touch became even lighter, fingertips barely grazing his scalp as she carefully massaged around the area instead of directly over it.
Michael drew the smallest breath through his nose, it wasn’t quite a wince, but she did notice.
Her hands stopped immediately. “..Too much?”
He shook his head. “No.”
She wasn’t convinced. “You always say no.”
A tiny smile tugged at the corner of his mouth. “’Cause you're always worried.”
“I am worried.” Her voice was quiet, matter of fact.
“It still hurts.” He was silent for a moment before giving the slightest nod. “But I promise, it’s not terrible right now.”
She sighed before she resumed, somehow managing to be even gentler than before. Her fingertips moved with careful patience, and every so often she’d pause just to brush damp curls away from his forehead before continuing.
“I hate that it still bothers you.”
He looked down at his hands resting loosely in his lap. “I’ve gotten used to it, mama.”
She frowned. “That doesn’t mean you should have to, Mi.”
Neither of them spoke after that. The only sounds were the slow trickle of water from the faucet and the quiet rhythm of her hands moving through his hair.
When she finished, she wrapped the towel around his shoulders more securely before leaning down to press a kiss against the top of his head, deliberately avoiding the sensitive places.
“There.”
He smiled to himself. “Thank you, pretty.”
She squeezed his shoulder once before turning toward the sink to rinse her hands. Behind her, she heard the medicine cabinet open.
It barely registered at first. She reached for a hand towel, drying her fingers absentmindedly and she glances up just as Michael tipped two pills into his palm.
He swallowed them with a sip of water and she watched him for a second.
Then her brow knit together ever so slightly.
(Name) crossed the room without another thought, slipping her arms loosely around his waist from behind and he relaxed into the embrace as she rested her cheek against his shoulder, listening to the slow rhythm of his breathing.
But the furrow between her brow never left, lost in thought as her gaze fell into nothing in particular.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤ⋆ㅤㅤ November, 1992.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤㅤ╰ㅤ Neverland Ranch, Los Olivos, California.
The afternoon had settled into one of those slow, sleepy hours where the whole house seemed to breathe a little quieter. Sunlight drifted through the living room windows, warming the hardwood floors in long, golden rectangles that shifted almost imperceptibly as the day wore on. Outside, the gardens were still, save for the occasional movement of leaves stirred by a light breeze.
Aladdin had fallen asleep nearly twenty minutes earlier, the occasional sleepy crackle drifting through the baby monitor on the side table. She’d rocked him until his little fingers finally loosened around hers, laid him carefully in his crib, then stood there for another five minutes anyway, just watching his chest rise and fall because some part of her still couldn’t quite believe someone so small was entirely their responsibility.
His stroller rested near the front door where they’d left it after returning from the pediatrician, a tiny knit blanket folded neatly over the handle instead of where it belonged. A bottle sat forgotten on the coffee table beside a stack of music magazines she hadn’t opened in weeks.
Now, she stood at the window, absently twisting the ring on her finger.
Outside, the gardens swayed gently beneath the breeze. Somewhere farther down the property, she could just make out the stable through the trees, the horses moving lazily in the afternoon sun.
It should have been enough.
But lately, she’d been wondering why it didn’t always feel like enough.
Behind her, Michael sat curled into one end of the sofa with a book open in his lap. Every now and then he’d glance toward the hallway without thinking, listening for any sign the baby had woken before returning to the same paragraph he’d already read twice.
He looked comfortable.
Content.
More at home than she’d ever seen him.
“Lovey, I got a call this morning.” Her voice was so quiet that for a moment he wasn’t sure she’d meant to speak aloud.
He lifted his eyes. “From who?”
“The label.” She didn't turn around. “They wanted to know when I'd be ready to come back.” The words settled into the room without either of them rushing to fill the silence that followed.
Michael lowered the book into his lap. “Oh.”
She watched a pair of birds disappear over the trees. “They’re thinkign about starting another album.”
Another pause. “They asked if I’d started writing anything.” Her thumb absently traced the diamond of her ring. “I told them I hadn’t.”
It wasn't entirely true.
There were notebooks tucked away upstairs with pages she’d filled while Aladdin napped. Half-finished melodies hummed into cassette recorders in the middle of the night. Lyrics scribbled onto grocery lists because inspiration had inconvenient timing.
She just hadn’t told anyone. “I miss it, Mi.” The admission was nearly swallowed by the quiet room. “I miss the studio.”
She then let out a slow breath. “I miss recording until two in the morning because I can’t get something right.” A small laugh escaped her. “I even miss arguing with producers.”
“But.. I feel guilty for missing it.” Michael watched her for a long moment before setting the book he’d been reading aside.
“You don’t have to go back.”
She looked over her shoulder. “I know.”
“You could stay home.” His voice remained gentle. “You don’t have to rush.” He stood, crossing the room until he stopped in front of her. “You’ve got everything right here.” His hand rested lightly against her arm.
“You’ve got him.” Then, quieter. “You’ve got me.”
She smiled faintly. “I know.”
“You could take another year.”
“I could.”
“You could take five.”
A tiny laugh escaped her. “I don’t think my record label would like that.”
“I don’t care what your record label likes.” Michael says, too quickly.
She looked down, smiling for only a second before it faded again. “..I do.”
Silence settled between them.
“I love being his mom.” Her voice caught ever so slightly. “I love it more than I ever imagined I would.” She looked toward the nursery down the hall. “But I love making music too.” She shook her head.
“I don’t know how to be both.”
Michael stepped closer and both of his hands rose slowly to her face, cupping her cheeks with familiar tenderness until she had little choice but to stop staring at the floor.
She couldn’t quite meet his eyes.
“My girl..” His thumbs brushed gently beneath her cheekbones. “You don’t have to figure it out today.”
She let out a slow breath. “I’m scared.” She looked down at her hands. “It feels like I’m supposed to be completely happy just staying home.”
“You are happy.” He starts. “Are you not..?” His brows pinch together.
“I am.” She answered so quickly it almost hurt that he would even question that. “I am, Michael.”
She swallowed and her voice softened. “I love waking up with him. I love feeding him. I love putting him to bed. I love every tiny little thing.”
She smiled to herself, remembering. “When he falls asleep on my shoulder..” Her expression melted for just a moment. “..I don’t think there's anywhere else I’d rather be.”
She looked back up. “But I still miss music.” The confession lingered between them. “I don’t know what that says about me.”
“We need you.” Michael says. The words came so naturally that he didn’t even realize what he was admitting until they’d already left him.
Because he did.
He needed this.
He needed mornings that began with sleepy kisses in the kitchen while a baby laughed from a high chair. He needed evenings that ended with all three of them asleep under the same roof. He needed coming home and finding her barefoot in the living room, humming to herself while folding impossibly tiny clothes.
He had spent his entire life being pulled away by schedules, contracts, rehearsals, flights, interviews, people who always needed another piece of him.
This.. this was the first thing that had ever felt entirely his.
Not fame.
Not success.
Home.
And somewhere beneath all the love he carried for her lived a quieter, more frightened truth.
If she went back.. the world would start asking for her again. The studio. The tours. The interviews. The months apart.
Michael knew that world and he hated what it took from people.
A selfish part of him wanted to keep this exactly as it was. To keep her close. To keep the three of them together inside this peaceful little bubble for as long as he possibly could.
“If it were me..” He hesitated as his thumbs slowed against her cheeks. “I think I’d stay.” The moment the words left him, he saw something shift in her face.
She looked away again and he realized quickly that he’d answered the question he wanted answered. Not the one she’d actually asked.
He knows he’s being selfish, but he didn’t care. He couldn’t care.
Michael stepped just a little closer, trying to catch her eyes again, his hands still cradling her face. “My girl..”
She finally looked back at him, and her eyes were glossy now. “I’m scared, Michael.” Her voice barely carried. “What if I go back.. and I miss all of this?” She glanced toward the nursery. “What if I blink and he’s suddenly five?”
A tear slipped free before she brushed it away herself. “But what if I don’t go back..” She laughed weakly through the tears. “..And one day I don’t recognize myself anymore?”
There wasn’t a real answer.
Michael searched her face for something he could fix.
Anything.
Instead, all he found was the woman he loved trying to hold two equally important parts of herself without dropping either. His hands slipped from her cheeks just enough to brush her hair back behind her ears.
His expression softened. “What can I do for you, baby?”
She closed her eyes for a moment.
Thinking.
Breathing.
When she opened them again, the tears hadn’t disappeared, but they weren’t falling anymore. Her gaze drifted toward the front door, where Aladdin’s stroller still waited from that morning.
“..Can we go for a walk?” She smiled faintly. “With the baby.”
He leaned forward and kissed her forehead, lingering there until she felt some of the tension leave her shoulders.
“Yes,” He whispered. “Of course.”
A few minutes later, they stepped outside together. Michael pushed the stroller with one hand and his other found hers.
The conversation remained unfinished.
It would stay unfinished for months.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤ⋆ㅤㅤ August - December 1993.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤㅤ╰ㅤ Neverland Ranch, Los Olivos, California.
(Name) genuinely believes her husband died somewhere in 1993. Not in any literal sense, but his soul did. His essence. The spark and light in his eyes dimmed into something unrecognizable and broken by a cruel fucking world that never really let him breathe to begin with.
There’s no clean break to grieve or any one moment she can point to and say this is when I lost him. It’s a slow, nauseating realization that the version of him she fell in love within her early twenties stopped existing in a place she can still reach—a place where she could still kiss and hold. And the worst part is that he’s still here in the physical realm. Grieving a man who’s still alive made her feel.. sick in ways she couldn’t possibly explain in words. It feels like a hole is in her heart, a large gaping hole that only he could fill. He had been her other half in the way people don’t usually mean literally. But it started to feel like she was holding something inside her chest that had been torn into pieces and rearranged wrong. She could picture it so perfectly, her own bloody, beating heart held in her hands, not intact and wrong in shape, pieces pulled out of it and stolen. And somehow, she was still expected to keep living like this? It felt like there was no possible way, but she was living through this.
(Name) never left his side.
The days became measured by meetings instead of hours. Attorneys came and went through the front door carrying leather briefcases that never seemed any lighter when they left, heavier even. Conference tables disappeared beneath stacks of legal documents, newspaper clippings, witness statements, calendars marked over so many times the ink bled together. Telephones rang before breakfast and long after midnight. There were strategy sessions that lasted entire afternoons led by conversations spoken in careful, clinical language that managed to strip every ounce of humanity from the man they were talking about. Publicists discussed disgusting headlines. Security discussed routes before they left the house. Lawyers argued over words, dates, timelines, and statements until they all blurred into one endless conversation that never truly ended, only paused long enough to begin again the next morning. Somewhere in the middle of it all sat Michael, shoulders a little more slumped than the day before, listening as strangers dissected every corner of his life while she stayed beside him, her hand quietly finding his beneath the table.
She became his wife in every sense of the word she had promised on their wedding day. She never let go of his hand. She rubbed circles into the back of his neck during meetings that lasted hours longer than they should have. She smiled for him when he couldn’t find it in himself. She carried the pieces of him he no longer seemed strong enough to carry alone and never once let him feel ashamed for needing her to.
But no matter how tightly she held him together, she couldn’t stop watching him disappear. Never complaining once.
(Name) reminded him to eat when the day disappeared beneath paperwork. She coaxed him upstairs after nights spent sitting in the same chair until dawn, still wearing yesterday’s clothes because neither of them had realized another day had already begun. When sleep wouldn’t come, she stayed awake beside him. When he finally managed to drift off from pure exhaustion, she stayed awake anyway, afraid that if she looked away for too long, he’d wake up.
If the world insisted on putting him through it, then it would have to put her through it too.
And that had never felt like sacrifice.
It had only felt like marriage.
The allegations did something to him that she couldn’t fight with tenderness alone. They hollowed him out in places she hadn’t known could become empty. At first the changes were so small she convinced herself they belonged to stress. A missed laugh. A smile that disappeared a little too quickly. His attention drifting halfway through conversations before he gently asked her to repeat what she’d just said.
Then the spaces between those moments started growing.
His laughter became quieter until she realized one afternoon she couldn’t remember the last time she’d heard it. The brightness that had always lived behind his eyes gave way to a guarded wall, every waking moment for him had become an exercise in bracing for impact. He moved through the house weakly, carrying himself with an invisible weight that seemed to follow him from room to room. Even when nothing was happening, he looked as though he was waiting for something terrible to happen next.
There were days he barely spoke unless someone spoke to him first.
Sometimes she would catch him standing in the middle of a room with no clear reason for being there. One hand resting against the kitchen counter. Eyes fixed on nothing. So still she almost wondered if he’d forgotten why he’d walked in at all. When she’d quietly ask him what he needed, he’d blink once or twice like he’d only just remembered she was there.
“I don’t know,” He’d answer. It broke her every time.
Sleep abandoned him first. Then his appetite, though, he is the first to admit he’s never been a great eater but these past couple years she successfully managed to put a little more weight on him. All of which is gone by now.
There were days when she wasn’t sure he remembered how to take care of himself. Because everything else had become so unbearably heavy that the ordinary things were the first to disappear. Eating. Sleeping. Bathing. Changing into clean clothes. Things like that became things she gently coaxed him toward.
She would find him hours later exactly where she’d left him, a cup of coffee gone cold beside him because he’d never made it upstairs from the night before. She’d kneel in front of him without a word, unbutton his jacket while he watched her with tired eyes, and tell him softly, “Come on, baby.” Most of the time, he’d go.
Then the parts of himself that had always reached instinctively toward life. Music no longer drifted absentmindedly from beneath closed doors. The piano downstairs sat untouched for days at a time. He stopped humming while he wandered through the house. Stopped dancing absentmindedly when a song came on the radio. The little pieces of joy that had always escaped him without thinking seemed to retreat somewhere so deep inside him that even he couldn’t find them anymore.
There were mornings she’d find him awake before dawn, sitting in complete darkness with the television on mute because he hadn’t actually been watching it. He would simply sit there, elbows on his knees, staring at the floor while the blue light flickered across his face. She’d kneel in front of him and take his hands into hers because they were always cold lately, rubbing slow circles over his knuckles until he finally looked at her.
“Did you sleep?” She’d whisper.
“I’m okay.” He answered, and it quickly became the sentence she hated most. Because he wasn’t.
He wasn’t okay.
Michael started apologized for everything.
For forgetting what she had just told him. For staring into space when she was talking. For missing dinner because another meeting had run late. For waking her when another phone rang at two in the morning. For snapping at someone and immediately hating himself for it. For crying. For needing medication. For being tired. For existing and feeling like he no longer resembled the man he thought she deserved.
It was as though guilt had rooted itself somewhere deep inside him and started growing in every direction. No matter what she said, no matter how many times she cupped his face and told him she wasn’t going anywhere, he looked at her with the conviction of someone who believed he had already become too much to love.
And that frightened her more than anything else.
Because for the first time since she’d known him, she couldn’t love him out of his pain.
She could only sit beside it, hold his hand through it, and pray that somewhere underneath all that hurt, the man she’d married was still waiting to find his way home.
Elizabeth found her in the sunroom just after sunset.
The house had become strangely still for the first time all day. Most of the staff had retreated to other parts of the estate, the phones had stopped ringing for the moment, and the endless stream of meetings had finally come to an end. Outside, the sky was washed in soft shades of pink and gold, rainwater still clinging to the hedges from an afternoon shower.
(Name) sat curled into the corner of the sofa with a blanket gathered loosely over her legs, though she wasn’t cold. A cup of tea rested untouched on the table beside her, the steam long since gone. She stared through the floor to ceiling windows toward the gardens without really seeing them, her thoughts somewhere much farther away.
Elizabeth lingered in the doorway for a moment before approaching. “There you are, gorgeous girl.”
(Name) turned her head, offering a tired smile that barely reached her eyes. “Hi.”
Elizabeth smiled back, soft and maternal, before lowering herself onto the sofa beside her. She didn’t sit across from her, she sat shoulder to shoulder, close enough that their sleeves brushed. Without saying anything, she reached over and took one of (Name)’s hands into both of hers, warming it between her palms.
“My goodness” Elizabeth murmured, studying her face. “Sweetheart, you look exhausted.”
(Name) let out a quiet breath that almost sounded like a laugh. “I am.”
Elizabeth rubbed slow circles across the back of her hand. “I know.”
For a little while they simply sat together. It was one of the few things (Name) appreciated about the older woman. She understood why Michael was so close to her, how could you not?
Eventually, Elizabeth inhaled softly. “I need to ask you something.”
(Name) looked over at her. The change in Elizabeth’s voice was subtle, but enough that her stomach tightened instinctively. “What is it?”
Elizabeth’s expression remained kind, though there was a seriousness behind it now that hadn’t been there before.
“I think…” she began carefully, choosing each word with obvious care, “,,I think it’s time we talked about having an intervention.”
The room seemed to lose all of its sound and (Name) blinked once, then again.
“No.” The answer came so quickly it surprised even her.
Elizabeth didn’t react, he simply continued holding her hand.
(Name) shook her head, her brows knitting together. “No. Absolutely not.”
She looked away toward the windows again. “He’s exhausted.” Her voice was quiet now, almost pleading. “Everything that’s happened these last few months..” She swallowed. “Anyone would be exhausted.”
“I know,” Elizabeth said gently.
“He’s under more pressure than anybody should ever have to carry--He isn’t..” (Name) searched for the words, shaking her head again. “He isn’t one of those people.”
Elizabeth tilted her head slightly. “What people, sweetheart?”
(Name)’s fingers tightened unconsciously around Elizabeth’s.
“The people you see on television.” Her eyes stayed fixed on the rain-speckled glass. “The ones whose lives completely fall apart.” She laughed once under her breath, though there wasn’t any humor in it. She knew she probably sounded ignorant, but at this point she didn't care. Her husband didn’t.. he didn’t belong in rehab like some addict. That wasn’t a thing, that wasn’t real. Come on, this was her Michael they’re talking about.
Elizabeth waited.
“He has prescriptions,” (Name) said quickly, as though she’d finally found the argument that mattered. “Doctors gave them to him. He’s in pain, Elizabeth.”
Elizabeth’s thumb continued its slow, absent circles over the back of her hand. “I know, my love. You don’t have to convince me.” Every answer was the same. Never argumentative or dismissive. Just heartbreakingly understanding.
(Name) felt tears beginning to sting behind her eyes.
“He just needs everything else to stop,” She whispered. “If these allegations had never happened.. if everyone would just leave him the fuck alone!” Her voice cracked. “He’d be okay!”
Elizabeth was quiet for several long seconds then she turned just enough to fully face her. “Sweetheart.”
(Name) looked up.
“Do you believe that?” The question settled between them.
(Name) opened her mouth but nothing came out. She wanted to say yes. She wanted to believe it with every part of herself. Instead, she looked back down at their joined hands.
Elizabeth spoke again, her voice scarcely above a whisper. “When was the last time he slept through the night?”
(Name)’s eyes closed. “..I don’t remember.”
“When was the last time he finished a meal without you reminding him to eat?”
Silence.
Elizabeth wasn’t interrogating her; she was grieving with her. “When was the last time you saw him smile because he felt happy..”
She paused. “..and not because he was trying to convince you he was?”
A tear quietly down (Name)’s cheek and Elizabeth reached up, brushing it away with the back of her fingers. “I’m not asking you to pass judgement on him.”
(Name)’s breathing had begun to shake. “I’m asking you to be honest with yourself.”
“I..” Her voice broke completely. “I don’t want him to think I’ve given up on him.”
“Oh, sweetheart.” Elizabeth’s eyes glistened. “This isn’t giving up on him.”
(Name) finally looked at her. “It feels like it.”
“No.” Elizabeth gently squeezed both of her hands. “It feels like you’re admitting that loving him isn’t the same thing as being able to save him.”
Those words struck somewhere so deep that (Name) winced. For months she had convinced herself that if she stayed patient enough, gentle enough, attentive enough, eventually he’d find his way back to himself.
She had loved him harder every single day.. she had stayed awake through the nightmares.
Counted pills.
Run baths.
Held him while he cried.
Sat beside him through meetings.
Reminded him to eat.
Reminded him to sleep.
Reminded him that none of this changed who he was.
If love could have healed him.. he would have been healed months ago. The realization settled over her so quietly she almost didn’t notice herself beginning to cry.
Elizabeth wrapped an arm around her shoulders without another word and (Name) folded into her immediately, burying her face against Elizabeth’s shoulder as months of fear finally caught up with her.
“I just want my husband back,” She sobbed, hiccuping.
Elizabeth closed her eyes, holding her a little tighter.
“I know, sweetheart.” Her own voice trembled. “I want him back too.”
That conversation had been eight weeks ago.
Eight weeks since she’d watched him zip up a suitcase she wished had never needed packing.
Eight weeks since she’d stood in the driveway with one hand tucked into his coat, trying to memorize the feeling of him before he disappeared behind tinted windows and boarded a plane bound for Europe.
Eight weeks he’d been away from home.
Some days she counted them. Other days she tried very hard not to.
The house had settled into a strange quiet without him. His slippers still sat where he’d kicked them off weeks earlier because she couldn’t bring herself to move them. His favorite sweater remained folded over the arm of the sofa. His piano downstairs gathered a thin layer of dust no one dared wipe away. Every room still carried traces of him, little reminders that he belonged there, while the only place he actually was sat thousands of miles across an ocean she couldn’t simply cross whenever she missed him.
She kept herself busy because she had to.
There was still a little boy who needed breakfast every morning. Baths every evening. Stories before bed. Aladdin had begun asking for his daddy in the innocent way only toddlers could, toddling over to the front door some afternoons after hearing a car outside, convinced for one hopeful second that this time it would be him. He was a little over one years old now, she can’t believe how quickly time flies
Each time, she’d scoop him into her arms. “Daddy’s getting better, sweetheart.” The words never became easier to say but she hoped one day they’d become true.
Every afternoon, usually around the same time once Aladdin had gone down for his nap, she’d reach for the telephone. It became part of her routine as naturally as brushing her teeth. She knew the number by heart now.
Sometimes the phone rang long enough that she caught herself holding her breath but when the phone picked up it was never Michael.
The conversations had become painfully familiar.
“I’m sorry, Mrs. Jackson. He’s unavailable right now.”
Or..
“He’s resting.”
Another day..
“He’s with his doctors at the moment.”
Then..
“It’s not a good time.”
The reasons changed and none of them made much sense. If he was resting yesterday, surely, he’d be awake today. If he was with doctors this afternoon, why couldn’t he call her back that evening? Once, someone told her he’d stepped outside. She found herself staring at the receiver after the call ended, wondering how someone could step outside and somehow stay there for three days.
She never argued or demanded to be put through. Never raised her voice. She simply thanked whoever answered, hung up gently, and told herself she’d try again tomorrow.
Tomorrow always sounded more hopeful than today.
On the days they did manage to connect, she treasured every minute she was given, even when the conversations never lasted very long.
She’d ask if he was sleeping any better.
If he was eating.
If the doctors were kind to him.
If they were taking good care of him.
She’d tell him about Aladdin learning a new word, or how he’d nearly toppled over trying to chase one of the peacocks that wandered the grounds, smiling through tears Michael couldn’t see as she painted little pictures of home she hoped might make him feel less alone.
“I miss you,” She’d tell him softly. “So does your little boy.”
There would almost always be a pause that felt like listening for someone standing at the other end of a long tunnel.
Then his voice would come back, quieter than she remembered.
“I miss you too.”
Or…
“Give him a kiss for me.”
Sometimes that was all. Sometimes before she had the chance to tell him she loved him, another voice would gently explain that their time was up.
She’d thank them, set the receiver back into its cradle.
Then sit there for a little while longer anyway, her fingertips still resting against the telephone as though somehow it remained connected to him. She never once considered that the distance between them wasn’t only measured in miles. It never crossed her mind that the unanswered calls weren’t always because he was asleep, or in treatment, or meeting with doctors.
She believed every explanation they gave her because she wanted to.
Because the alternative was too painful to imagine.
She didn’t know that, somewhere in Europe, the sound of the telephone ringing had become something he sometimes asked not to hear at all.
The phone remained stubbornly silent for another four days.
By the fifth, (Name) had stopped pretending she wasn’t waiting for it.
She carried the cordless handset from room to room without realizing she was doing it, setting it beside her while she folded tiny pairs of Aladdin’s pajamas, balancing it on the bathroom counter while she washed her face, leaving it on the kitchen island while she picked absently at toast that had gone cold long before she’d taken a second bite. Every sound outside made her glance toward the front windows. Every time the phone rang, her heart launched itself into her throat before sinking again when another familiar voice greeted her instead.
By late afternoon, she felt wound so tightly she thought she might snap.
She stared at the telephone for nearly a full minute before finally dialing Elizabeth’s number.
It rang once.
“Hello?” Elizabeth’s warm, unmistakable voice filled the line. “Sweetheart?”
(Name) opened her mouth to answer, but nothing came out except an uneven breath. She hadn’t even realized she’d started crying until she tasted salt on her lips. “..Hi.”
“Oh, honey,” Elizabeth said gently. “What’s happened?”
(Name) pressed trembling fingers against her forehead, closing her eyes as she slowly sank into one of the kitchen chairs. The room suddenly felt too bright. “I.. I’m sorry.”
“What are you apologizing for?”
“I shouldn’t be calling you like this.”
Elizabeth’s voice softened even further. “You can call me however you need to.” That kindness almost made everything worse.
(Name) laughed weakly through another shaky breath, wiping beneath her eyes with the heel of her hand. “I don’t know what’s wrong with me.”
Elizabeth simply asked, “Tell me.”
(Name) looked toward the nursery down the hallway where she could hear the faint hiss of the baby monitor. “I can’t stop thinking about him. I keep telling myself he’s exactly where he needs to be.” She nodded to herself as though trying to make the words feel true. “I know they’re helping him. I know this is supposed to take time. I know all of that.”
Her breathing caught painfully in the middle of the sentence. “But…” She pressed a hand flat against the center of her chest. “I just…” Her voice dropped to almost nothing. “I have this terrible.. terrible feeling.”
Elizabeth remained quiet. “What kind of feeling, sweetheart?”
“I don’t know.” (Name) stood abruptly from the chair and began pacing across the kitchen, one arm wrapped tightly around her waist while the other held the phone against her ear. “That’s what’s scaring me.” She shook her head. “I don’t know what it is.”
Her breathing had become noticeably uneven now. “It feels like..” She searched helplessly for words. “Like something’s wrong.”
Elizabeth listened.
“I know he’s in treatment and I know this isn’t supposed to be easy. But every time I call..” (Name) stopped walking, staring blankly out the kitchen window. “..there’s another reason.”
Her voice trembled. “He’s resting.” She swallowed. “He’s with his doctors.” Another shaky breath. “They’ll let him know I called.”
She laughed once, though it sounded hollow. “It just.. it never makes any sense.”
Elizabeth’s brows furrow in confusion on the other end of the line. “So, you haven’t been able to speak with him much?”
(Name)’s shoulders slowly slumped. “No..”
“How often?”
“I don’t..” She frowned, trying to remember. “I don’t even know anymore.” She rubbed tiredly at one eye. “When I do get him..” She whispered, “It’s only for a few minutes.” Her throat tightened. “He sounds so far away.”
(Name) continued to speak. “I don’t even care if we don’t talk about anything important.” She laughed through another sob. “I’d listen to him tell me what he had for lunch if it meant hearing his voice for five more minutes.”
Elizabeth’s expression shifted and silence settled between them. Then absentmindedly, (Name) asked, “..When was the last time you talked to him?”
Elizabeth sounded genuinely puzzled by the question. “Honey, we’ve been talking fairly regularly.”
(Name) blinked. “What?”
“I’ve been checking in on him. I actually spoke to him today.. which is why I’m so confused to hear this..”
Everything inside (Name) seemed to stop. “…Today?”
“Yes.” Elizabeth nodded. “We had a lovely conversation.”
(Name) didn’t answer.
“It must’ve been..” Elizabeth thought aloud. “Nearly two hours, I suppose.”
Two hours.
The words echoed through her mind and her grip tightened around the receiver until her fingers ached.
Two hours.
She couldn’t remember the last time Michael had spoken to her for longer than ten minutes.
“…He…” Her lips barely moved. “He talked…” Her heartbeat became deafening. “…for two hours?”
Elizabeth’s heart drops a bit. “…(Name)? My love? Let me give him a call, okay? I’m sure this is just a misunderstanding...”
The kitchen blurred around her. The walls suddenly felt too close. Air refused to reach her lungs no matter how deeply she inhaled. Somewhere on the other end of the line, Elizabeth was still speaking, her voice growing increasingly concerned.
“Sweetheart?”
“(Name)?”
“Talk to me.. Please talk to me, I’m on my way.”
She couldn’t hear anything except the blood rushing through her ears. With trembling fingers, she lowered the receiver from her ear, and she stared at it for one long, disbelieving moment. Then she pressed the button.
The line went dead.
The silence that followed was suffocating as she remained standing in the middle of the kitchen, the disconnected phone hanging uselessly at her side while tears slipped silently down her face.
He had spent two hours talking to someone else.
And suddenly, for the first time since he’d left for Europe, a thought entered her mind that she had refused to entertain before.
Maybe the person he was avoiding…
…was her.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤ⋆ㅤㅤEarly 1994.
⠀ ⠀ ⠀ ㅤㅤㅤ╰ㅤ Neverland Ranch, Los Olivos, California.
When Michael was released from treatment, (Name) truly believed the hardest part was finally over. She held onto that belief with both hands because she had to. It was the only thing that had carried her through the endless weeks he’d spent in Europe, through the unanswered phone calls, the sleepless nights, the ache of watching Aladdin toddle around without his dad. She told herself that rehabilitation didn’t end the day someone walked out of the building. He would need time. Space. Patience. She could give him all of those things. God knew she’d already given him everything else. She washed the sheets on their bed before he was due to return. She asked the kitchen staff to stock the pantry with all the little things he’d missed while he was away. She even caught herself smiling one afternoon while folding one of his sweaters, thinking how nice it would feel to complain about finding his socks scattered across the bedroom floor again. For the first time in months, hope felt safe enough to exist. Things would go back to normal.
He never came home.
At first, nothing seemed particularly unusual. A day passed, then another. There were explanations, always reasonable enough that she never questioned them. He was resting. The doctors wanted him to ease back into daily life slowly. Travel would take some time. She accepted every answer with the same quiet understanding she’d carried throughout the last year because that was what loving Michael had often required, faith in circumstances she couldn’t control. Every morning she still called without fail and every evening she called again if she hadn’t heard from him. Nothing changed, it was the same few excuses. She was told he’d stepped out. Other times he’d already gone to bed.
Occasionally she managed to hear his voice, but even those conversations seemed to disappear before they’d properly begun. He sounded distant, exhausted, like every word cost him something to speak to her. She asked the usual, if he was eating. If he was sleeping. If he needed anything from home. She told him she loved him. She told him Aladdin had started stringing little sentences together now, that he’d learned to point at photographs and proudly say, “Daddy.” Michael answered kindly enough, but there was always something absent underneath it all, as though part of him had already drifted somewhere she couldn’t follow. She was afraid of bringing up her concerns about his communication, especially since learning he was present with other people. How could she? He.. he was kind enough to take her call, and besides, she missed him too much to potentially mess up her few chances to talk to him. So, she ignored it. Her time with him couldn't even settle into the comfort of simply hearing him breathe before another voice would gently interrupt, telling him someone needed him, that another appointment was beginning, or something. The line would click dead, and she’d sit there holding the receiver against her ear for another minute anyway, staring into nothing.
Days quietly became weeks. One week became two, then three, until she realized she’d stopped marking the calendar altogether because looking at the dates only made the silence feel heavier. The house had become unbearably still without him. His slippers remained tucked beneath their side of the bed because she couldn’t bear to move them. His piano sat untouched, gathering the thinnest layer of dust no one dared wipe away because wiping it meant they were wiping him away. Even Neverland itself seemed to notice his absence. The laughter that usually drifted across the grounds had disappeared, replaced by long stretches of quiet broken only by the distant carousel or the soft chatter of staff trying not to speak too loudly. Aladdin babbled for him constantly. Every answer she gave grew a little weaker than the last. “Soon,” she’d whisper, kissing the top of his head while silently begging God not to make a liar out of her.
By the fifth week, something inside her had begun to change. Hope unraveled slowly, thread by thread, each unanswered call loosening another piece until she found herself lying awake at three in the morning, staring at the empty space beside her where Michael should have been, unable to silence the dreadful feeling settling deeper into her chest. It wasn’t anger. It wasn’t even resentment. It was fear. Quiet, instinctive fear. The kind that arrived without explanation and refused to leave. She couldn’t shake the feeling that something had shifted while he’d been away, that somehow, she’d lost him without realizing the exact moment it happened. She just didn’t know yet that the silence wasn’t accidental. It was a choice.
By the sixth week, she had stopped asking herself when he was coming home.
Instead, she found herself asking why he wasn’t.
The question followed her everywhere. It lingered while she stood at the kitchen sink washing dishes she hadn’t dirtied, while she folded laundry that still smelled faintly of his cologne, while she rocked Aladdin back to sleep in the middle of the night. She turned every conversation they’d had over and over inside her mind until she could practically recite them from memory, searching for something she’d missed. Had she said something wrong? Had she pushed too hard? Not enough? Had she spent so much time trying to keep him alive that she’d forgotten how to simply be his wife? Every answer only led to another question, each one crueler than the last.
Then, as though the silence itself hadn’t already hollowed her out, the news found her anyway. It wasn’t Michael who told her, not a phone call or even a conversation. It was another headline. Another photograph. Another piece of her life handed to the public before it had ever been offered to her.
Someone had seen him in Las Vegas.
Not alone.
With Lisa.
Eight days.
Eight days that stretched across newspapers and entertainment programs with the same relentless appetite that had consumed every other private moment of their lives. Restaurants. Casinos. Hotel entrances. Smiling. Talking. Walking side by side with their hands held as though the weight of the previous year had somehow become light enough to carry in someone else’s company.
(Name) stared at the photographs until they blurred together.
For eight weeks she’d been told, directly or indirectly, that he was too fragile. Too exhausted. Too unwell to hold a conversation with the woman who had stood beside him through allegations, investigations, lawyers, hospitals, intervention meetings, sleepless nights, withdrawal, and rehabilitation.
Ghosted her for six weeks after his release.
Yet somehow, he’d found eight days for another woman.
Something inside her finally gave way.
The first drink came almost absentmindedly. A glass of wine she poured while dinner sat untouched in front of her, thinking it might finally silence the noise in her head long enough to sleep. But of course, it didn’t.
The second night, she poured another.
By the end of the week, she had stopped bothering with glasses altogether and opted for drinking straight from the bottle. She discovered alcohol did one thing remarkably well. For a little while, it made her numb. It softened the endless loop of unanswered questions. It dulled the image of those photographs long enough that she could breathe without feeling like her chest was caving in. It hushed the instinct that still made her glance toward the front door every time she heard a car outside.
Morning always punished her for it. She’d wake with pounding headaches, swollen eyes, and the same emptiness waiting faithfully beside her the moment she opened them. Nothing had changed. Michael was still gone. The bed was still half empty. The phone still refused to ring.
So every evening, when the house finally grew quiet and Aladdin had fallen asleep upstairs, she’d wander into the kitchen almost without thinking. The bottle had become as much a part of her nightly routine as locking the doors or turning off the lights. She hated herself a little more each time she reached for it.
She drank because it was easier than feeling everything. She drank because the silence was louder sober. She drank because she couldn’t survive every night with the version of him she loved walking endlessly through her memories, while the man still alive somewhere in the world seemed to want nothing to do with her anymore.
It happened on an ordinary afternoon. The moment where she died. If her Michael left her in ’93, then she followed soon after in ’94.
There was no warning. No phone call asking if she was home. No request to meet. No conversation she could cling to afterward and tell herself at least they’d tried.
Just a knock at the front door.
She almost didn’t answer it herself. One of the house staff had been busy with Aladdin, so she crossed the foyer without thinking, smoothing the sleeves of her sweater as she reached for the handle.
The man standing outside wore an apologetic expression she didn’t understand until he asked her name. “Miss (Name)?”
“Yes?”
“I need you to sign for these.”
She accepted the large envelope automatically, thanked him then closed the door.
For several seconds, she simply stood there in the middle of the foyer, turning it over in her hands. Her name was typed neatly across the front in stark black letters. No handwriting. No familiarity. Nothing to suggest it had come from the man who had once traced that same name across birthday cards with hearts and little notes left beside her pillow.
Something deep inside her already knew. Her fingers trembled as she slid the papers free. The first page was enough. She didn’t make it past the title before the packet slipped from her hands, scattering crisp white pages across the polished floor like they weighed nothing at all.
Her knees nearly buckled. “No..”
The word escaped before she’d even realized she’d spoken. “No..”
She shook her head, staring at the papers, hoping they might rearrange themselves into something else if she looked long enough.
This couldn’t be how it happened. Not after everything that’s happened. Not after the allegations. After the meetings. The sleepless nights. Rehab. Not after standing beside him when the entire world had seemed determined to tear him apart.
Not like this.
Her breathing became shallow. Fast. And suddenly she stumbled backward before turning blindly toward the nearest bathroom, one hand clamped over her mouth as panic climbed so violently through her body it made her dizzy. She barely reached the sink.
The first wave came without warning.
A clammy gripped the porcelain so hard her knuckles burned as everything in her stomach came up in painful, emptying heaves. Tears blurred her vision until she couldn’t tell where the sink ended and the room began.
When there was nothing left, her body kept trying anyway.
Again. Again. Again.
She collapsed onto the cold tile floor, coughing so hard her chest hurt, one hand pressed against her sternum as though she could physically hold herself together.
Everything she’d known since twenty. Her mentor. Her protector. Her best friend. Her husband. Her fucking soul.
Her life was seemingly being severed over black and white.
Michael didn’t even give her the respect of a conversation or an explanation. Not even goodbye?
Just a case number.
She curled forward until her forehead rested against the edge of the bathtub, shaking so violently she could hardly catch her breath. Somewhere else in the house she could hear Aladdin laughing at something, blissfully unaware that only a few rooms away, their world had just been split cleanly down the middle.
(Name) had survived watching the world try to destroy her husband.
But she wasn’t sure she would survive discovering he had chosen to leave her himself.
𝄞⋆ ݁♪ introducing WYNNIE DOVE ╱ singer , songwriter , dancer , record producer , actress , model & philanthropist !? she is also the wife of MICHAEL JACKSON !?
( MARIAH CAREY as WYNNIE DOVE ) * wynnie dove is an oc with a fully fleshed-out backstory, detailed lore, and her own distinct personality. however, she is written in a way where she can easily be read as a y/n / self-insert if that’s your preference! if you aren’t a fan of ocs or a named reader, please protect your peace and feel free to block my blog. don't like, don't read!
Synopsis: Michael falls for a journalist but she's all about her business, and that doesn't include him. Can he make her give in?
Content: 18+, smut, NO MINORS, mutual pining, descriptive dirty talk, descriptions of female anatomy, needy!Michael, soft-dom Michael, bad era!Michael, era 1988, journalist!reader
Request: @artflooo : Omg… queen, I’m just gonna leave this here and kindly ask for a fic based on this look 🥵🙏🏽 https://www.tiktok.com/t/ZTSSbmJMh/
Author's Note: I love writing for this era and will never get tired of it, send me all the requests 😂 also this is sooo filthy so read at your own risk 😝
The room was large and bright with lighting equipment. Rows and rows of chairs and the monotonous hum of camera equipment and its crew bustling about filled the room. Journalists murmured to each other quietly, discussing Michael Jackson’s newest project.
You were seated off to the left side in a small press section. Eyes roaming the room as you tapped your pen on your notepad, legs crossed one over the other. The room smelled of coffee and faint cigarette smoke, and something sickly sweet like hairspray.
Patiently, you waited for your turn to interview Michael. He was in the process of completing his previous one, and then you’d be next. Your eyes wandered over his physique. He was dressed down more than usual today. But in a way that only Michael Jackson could manage to make look polished. A cobalt blue overshirt hung open over a soft white V-neck t-shirt. The bright color made his complexion glow under the studio lights. His sleeves were rolled up just enough to expose the veins in his forearms. Loose black slacks draped cleanly over his long legs, cutting neatly above his signature loafers.
No matter how hard you tried to ignore it, you kept feeling the thrumming heat of his gaze fall on you. He was trying to focus on the interviewer in front of him. He really was. But he couldn’t help the way his wandering eyes kept gravitating in your direction.
“So, Michael,” The interviewer started, leaning in close as if he was about to share a scandalous secret.” “A young woman says to you, “Come over, I’m gonna make love to you,”
Instantly, Michael visibly cringed, shoulders drawing in slightly. He was a bashful man. Then— a look so quick that almost anyone would have missed it. Michael’s eyes flickered over to you, and a faint knowing smile ghosted over his lips. Just as quickly as you saw it, it vanished.
He was about to start his shit. You shifted in your seat, preparing for the show.
In a dead pan tone, Michael responded “Yes, I’m scared”. Immediately, the interviewer was roped in. His eyes lit up as he leaned in even further.
“Really? That’s fascinating. Tell me more—” the interviewer continued to prod at Michael’s answer.
He was such a smug asshole. He knows that isn’t true. And he looked right at you while he said it, because you knew better than anyone in the room just how untrue it was.
Your eyes fell to his fingers that were tapping against idly his knee. A nervous habit you’d observed a hundred times before. Intrusively, an unwanted memory slammed into you.
“Just like that—p-please don’t stop”
Michael’s hand was fisted in your hair, gaze holding yours intensely in the mirror as he stroked into you deep and deliberate, cock stroking your overstimulated walls and making you see stars. A sharp crack of his palm came down on your ass.
A sharp voice startled you from your daydream.
“You’re on in 5, ready?”
“Always” You stood smoothly, shoulders back and radiating unshakeable confidence that had come from years of practice. You made your way to the powder room, praying that it wasn’t obvious you were flustered. Inside, you brushed your hair away from your face before touching up your lip combo, studying your reflection. You took a deep breath. Showtime.
Michael’s amusement was evident from the time you came back in the room. Hips swaying to an invisible rhythm as you made your way to the seat across from him. He stood up, adjusting his collar. He extended his hand outward to you. He didn’t offer a standard, business-like grip. Instead, his large hand closed gently over your fingers. Thumb tracing a slow, agonizing circle over your knuckles before he allowed your fingers to slide away.
He said your name softly, teasing the syllables. It rolled off his tongue like a familiar melody he’d been humming in the dark. His doe eyes were bright, studying you.
“Good to see you again. It’s been a while”
Pulling your hand away, you sat down as if unphased by the soothing gesture. You settled into the seat before replying,
“Mhm, what’s it been? 3 or 4 months?” You pretended not to remember the last time you had crossed paths with the popstar. Truthfully, you remembered the exact date. Michael continued observing you with quiet curiosity.
“Something like that.” He sat back down; eyes fixated on you. He glazed over your features with warm scrutiny. Your eyes, your hair, your lips. Like an art collector confirming every detail of a priceless painting is exactly as he remembered. He lingered on your lips for a moment. A grin made its way across his features as he realized you’d worn it. A specific lip combo you only wore for him. Michael was certain. He’d watched plenty of your interviews, and this specific combo was a rarity for you. However, you always seemed to adorn the look when he encountered you.
The scent of Michael’s cologne enveloped you as you tried to gather your question cards. It was warm and smelled expensive. He waited patiently, seemingly enjoying how you seemed to be fumbling with them, nearly dropping them at one point.
Aw. She’s flustered. Michael thought to himself.
After a final sound check, cameras started rolling. And instantly, you stepped into your persona.
“Michael, it’s good to be here with you today. We’re celebrating the start of the second leg of your Bad world tour for those who don’t know. Congratulations.”
Michael nodded humbly, “Thank you”. His hand rested against his knees, long fingers relaxed. His shirt fell open at the collar, exposing the smooth skin of his chest. You hated that you noticed.
“The album has been doing excellent, five hit singles from one album is an incredible feat. I have to ask. When you’re creating a visual piece for an album like this, do you hear the music first or see the details of the visual?”
There it was. The reason Michael always picked you to do his interviews whenever he did a press run. His face lit up and he began explaining his creative process, talking with his hands and making expressive faces. You tried to ignore the flutter you felt in your tummy as the passion continued to build in his tone.
“Sometimes it’s a sound I’ll hear. Other times it may be a color. Sometimes… it’s a face I can’t stop seeing.” The words settled between you two, crossing an unspoken barrier.
You had been scribbling notes down for the article you planned to write until that last sentence. Recovering quickly like the professional you were, you cleared your throat and moved to the next question. A little too quickly, and unfortunately for you Michael noticed.
“You’ve often said you think of your music videos as short films. How much creative control do you have over the final product?”
Questions about his craftsmanship. That was your angle. While other interviewers focused on salacious, invasive details, you focused on what was important.
Michael pondered the question for a moment before answering.
“Usually, the idea comes to me and immediately I can see it playing out in my head. The music comes to me, and I see it come to life, it’s a gift really.”
Foreplay. That’s what this was for you and Michael.
As the interview continued, Michael became more detailed with his answers. His posture became more relaxed, and the flow of the conversation became a tennis match of sorts. Not competitive. But steady in rhythm. You were picking his brain, and he loved it.
Behind the scenes, a producer leaned over to an executive.
“He never usually gives this much. This girl’s really lucky.”
Michael found his gaze wandering down to your lips as you spoke, flowing effortlessly from question to question. They were lined with a chocolate brown and filled in with a blush-colored gloss. So pretty. And distracting.
“Sometimes,” he said, “the smallest thing changes the whole picture.” His eyes dropped to your lips again. Your cheeks warmed. You hated that your next question came out a fraction softer than you intended.
“That sounds like a lot of control,” you said. “Do you ever get tired of paying attention to everything?”
Michael’s smile turned up slowly.
“No,” he said. “Not when it’s worth looking at.”
He’s doing this on purpose, reading me in front of everyone. you thought.
After your last question, you’d stood to shake Michael’s hand. This time, he pulled you in for a hug by the small of your waist, lips brushing your cheek as a departure greeting. Despite the heat you felt creeping up your neck, you allowed the gesture. Gotta be professional, right?
When it was all over, you packed your things. Quickly. Usually, you were in control of your interviews. No one phased you. And you did not like being out of your element. Your get away was made clean by Michael’s manager pulling him aside as soon as the two of you had finished your polite departure.
Making your way through the rows of chairs and still cramming your things into your purse, you tried to tune out your assistant editor.
“That was amazing. How did you get him to open up to you like that? I know you’ve interviewed him before, but wow.” The editor continued bumbling about the best parts of the interview as you made your way to an empty lounge area.
“Thanks. Did you make sure to get extra candids at the end? I need a cover for the article.” The editor nodded eagerly, chirping about how natural the chemistry between you and Michael had been. Her rambling was interrupted by the door of the lounge opening slowly.
Michael’s eyes had trailed you from the moment the interview ended. He heard his manger talking, but every word went in one ear and out the other. There was no chance he was letting you get away that clean. And that was why he knew exactly where you’d gone in an effort to escape him.
“Hi…” He spoke softly, hoping he wasn’t intruding on your conversation. The editor squeaked in response, literally. She glanced between the two of you, and sensing the change in air in the room, quickly dismissed herself.
The lighting in the room was dim, and it was silent, with the exception of the hum of the press suite which was only a few feet away.
“Why you runnin’ from me?” He teased, stepping closer and working to close the gap between the two of you. “You know I can’t let you get away that easy.”
“I’m not running. Just got a busy day, that’s all.” Your fingers fidgeted at your sides, having nothing to do.
Michael tutted, a smirk gracing his lips. “Don’t tell me you got plans more important than me”
His smugness both irritated you and stirred something in the pool of your stomach. You rolled your eyes, arms crossing over your chest.
“Don’t you have another interviewer to play with? Scared when you get a booty call? Really? You know damn well you’ve been gettin’ panties thrown at you since you were 17.” You were all too aware of the enjoyment Michael got out of toying with journalists. Most were leeches who would latch on to the most salacious detail they could find to make a dollar. And Michael knew it. Honestly, he thought it was funny to troll them.
Michael’s lips shifted to one side, trying and failing to hide a laugh.
“You didn’t like that one, huh?” He stepped closer again, further decreasing the gap. “I had to find some way to keep myself entertained 'til I could get to you. The only reason I agree to do these things is so I have an excuse to see you. You’re hard to get a hold of, girl.”
Another step.
“What do I gotta do? Drop another album for you to agree to see me?” His eyes stayed on you, tender and containing something else you couldn’t pinpoint. Maybe yearning. Maybe lust.
Michael was no fool. You were about your business. Initially, you despised interviewing him. But no journalist in their right mind would ever turn down the opportunity to interview Michael Jackson. Besides that, Michael genuinely enjoyed your interviewing style. Before he had ever met you, he’d watched a plethora of your interviews. You were truly a credible journalist. A rarity in your field. And this— was why you were his top pick whenever he decided to give the press the time of day.
“I haven’t seen you since that awards show out in Vegas. And you barely gave me the time of day.”
“Michael, you said you wouldn’t do this.” Bottom lip caught between your teeth, you continued to keep your arms crossed tightly. “Last press run was just that. Last press run.”
Something dark flickered in Michael’s eyes that resembled disappointment.
“Don’t tell me that baby, you quittin’ me already?” He was right in front of you now. One hand rose to rest on the wall on the side of your head. “Is there somebody else? You can tell me” He eyes wandered over your features, lingering on your lips before flickering back up to your eyes.
With a pointed finger at his chest, you began your tirade. “I’m not the one traveling the world and disappearing for months at a time, Mr. Fishes. What do you want me to do? Sit around waiting until you call? I have a career and a life too, Michael.”
Michael’s eyebrows rose at your directness, still maintaining closeness. Enough that the sweet scent of your perfume could invade his sense, taking him back to his last encounter with you.
“Hey, I write you. You never write me back. And tour has been non-stop lately...” You rolled your eyes again, this time looking away from his intense stare. Then, softer, “You’re the one who told me you didn’t want anything serious. You basically avoided me for weeks when I asked you to go steady. I thought this was what you wanted. Space.”
That, you couldn’t deny. You had outwardly rejected the idea of anything legitimate with Michael. Mostly due to a desire to protect your career. You worried about what the title of "Michael Jackson’s girlfriend" would do to your credibility, especially amongst your peers. Most of whom were men. Who you definitely didn't want to say you got the best gigs because of your relationship with him. For that reason, you’d refused Michael.
Stubbornly, you held his stare. Refusing to admit, and refusing to secede. God, you were so stubborn. Michael didn’t know if it was just your professional training or a trait you’d honed over the years, but he just couldn’t get you to give in to him. For anything.
“Okay how about this. You’re here. I’m here. Come see me tonight. Spend some time with me. My chef’s making dinner. It’ll be quiet, just us.” His doe eyes searched yours, hope dancing in them. You continued to stare, raising an eyebrow. Still unimpressed. Michael rolled his eyes. Shaking his head at your refusal to submit, even when he was putting his best foot forward. “Please, come see me tonight? I miss you.” The hand next to your head came down to your face, backs of his fingers caressing your cheek. At this, your lips turned upward.
“That’s right papa, talk to me nice” And with that, you slipped out of his grasp, hips sashaying as you exited, a sweet trail of perfume following you.
Michael felt a stir in his pants as he watched you leave. He loved to watch you coming, but damn, he really loved to watch you leave. Michael swallowed thickly, adjusting himself subtly before taking a deep breath.
That was good, right?
That night, Michael changed his outfit three times. He was standing in front of the mirror in a burgundy silk button up he wasn’t sure about. Catching the time on a nearby clock, Michael mumbled a curse under his breath. He ran his hands over the material, and looked in the mirror, fixing his curls one last time. He sprayed the lightest touch of cologne at his throat just as the knock came at the door.
Everything was perfect. His private chef had made your favorite cuisine, and he made sure someone picked up your favorite candles. He was wise not to make a fuss. He knew the more extravagant he went, the more he would inadvertently push you away. So, this was good.
When he opened the door and saw you standing there, his whole face lit up like a Christmas tree. A rare, unguarded smile.
“You came” He breathed, voice soft with relief. “I wasn’t sure you would… after the letters. And with how we left things on tour, I thought maybe you’d change your mind”.
You stepped inside, allowing him to close the door behind you. The suite smelled like garlic and herbs, and something rich and buttery from the chef. A small table by the window was set for two, candles flickering and two glasses of red wine. Your fingers trailed gently over the tablecloth as you noticed what type of candles were lit.
“Honestly, I wasn’t sure if I was gonna come either….” a small smile touched your lips at his thoughtfulness. Cashmere and vanilla candles were one of the small comforts you always tried to bring with you on the road. “Told myself I was only coming to clear the air. Not because you asked.”
There it is. That unrelenting stubbornness. Michael shook his head, laughing to himself at your refusal to soften. His hand hovered near the small of your back as he pulled your chair out for you. “Still glad you’re here”.
Dinner started off easy. The chef had gone all out; seared salmon, roasted vegetables, and a dish of pasta that tasted suspiciously like the one you’d mentioned once in passing. Michael watched you take the first bite, something quietly pleased in his eyes.
“You remembered my favorite pasta too?” you asked, raising an eyebrow.
“I remember the important things” He admitted shyly.
You nodded, deep in thought. You took another bite and then set your fork down.
“Michael, this is nice. The dinner, the suite. All of it. But I meant what I said on tour. I’m not looking to go steady. Not when it could mess with my job. I’m a woman and I’m one of the top earners in my field. I don’t need people saying I only get the good assignments because I’m sleeping with Michael Jackson.”
Michael set his fork down to now. He nodded slowly, eyes not leaving yours. “I know,” he said softly. “I hate that you felt like you had to choose. That’s why I wrote you instead of pushing. I was scared you’d leave, but you did that anyway…” he trailed off, thumb tracing the stem of his wine glass.
You felt your guard lowering for half a second from the guilt. Recovering quickly, you responded,
“Distance was safer. For both of us. I’m not some girl who’s gonna drop everything because you’re looking at me like…”
Michael’s eyes raised to yours, mischief twinkling in them. “Like what?” his tongue trailed his bottom lip lightly. Eyes trailing from your rose petal lips up to your eyes.
“Like that, Michael.” You give him an agitated look, but your lips twitched. “Don’t push it.”
The conversation stayed charged after that. Both of you had relaxed into it, flowing from topic to topic naturally. He asked about the cities you’d done stories in since the first leg of tour ended. You asked him about his new songs from Bad that were added to his setlist for the second leg. Every time his fingers brushed yours reaching for the wine, the air got a little heavier. Every time he licked a drop from his lower lip, your eyes followed.
By the time the plates were mostly cleared, the tension had become a living thing between you two.
Michael leaned forward slightly, lacing his fingers through yours. “I missed this. Missed you. The way you argue with me even when your eyes are telling me something else”.
You met his gaze, allowing him to stroke his thumb over the hand that was currently laced with yours.
“I’m not giving in just because you made my favorite pasta and wore that shirt.”
At this, Michael was genuinely tickled. You hated how your tummy flipped when he tilted his head back and covered his face, erupting into giggles. He stood and came around the table, still laughing. He pulled your chair out and held his hand out to you. Reluctantly, you stood. His hands settled at your waist and drew you in until your bodies were flush against each other.
“Tell me to stop” he murmured. Voice low and raspy. “And I will. But if you don’t, I’m not letting you walk out of here tonight without reminding you how good we are together. How good I am for you.”
You opened your mouth, trying to think of something to say to push back. Some type of quip about boundaries and your career. But then, his lips were against yours before words could form. It started slow and deep, almost like he was testing to see if you’d pull away. You didn’t. You kissed back harder, tongue sliding against his.
He walked you backwards into the next room. The backs of your calves made contact with the bed, and that’s when your palms raised to his chest, fingers curling in the silky marerial.
“Michael— we shouldn’t. This is what I was afraid—” He kissed you again, swallowing the protest. One of his hands slid under your dress to grip your thigh, thumb brushing it gently.
“Then tell me to stop” He whispered against your mouth. His fingers found the edge of your panties, gently pushing them aside. The pads of his fingers slid through your folds, already slick with your arousal. Your head tipped back with a gasp,
“I—fuck — I’m not giving in to you Michael. This doesn’t mean I’m giving in.” But your hips rolled toward his hand anyway. Michael groaned softly, fingers finding the bundle of nerves between your legs that made your thighs shake.
“There she is,” he cooed, voice warm. He brushed his lips over your cheek near your ear as his fingers continued to toy with the bundle of nerves. “My stubborn girl. Still fighting me even when you’re this soaked.” You tried to glare at him, but it melted into a moan when his fingers began teasing your entrance.
“Michael—I’m serious. My job—”
“I know baby,” he breathed. “Let me have you tonight. Just tonight. Please?” His kisses grew needy and desperate, trailing from your jaw to your lips. His opposite hand cradled the back of your neck.
“Just tonight.” You gasped and his fingers continued their torment.
The bedroom was bathed in soft, amber light. A tall mirror rested against the wall, catching your every movement. A soul record hummed lowly from the corner of the room as Michael guided you onto the bed. He stripped you completely bare with slow, deliberate hands until there was nothing left between his skin and yours.
He turned you gently, kissed down your spine, and murmured against the back of your neck, “On your knees, baby. Face down. Arch that pretty back for me… right here where we can both see everything.” You moved into position without hesitation — cheek and breasts pressed to the cool sheets, knees spread wide, back arched deep so your ass lifted high and presented. The mirror gave you both the perfect view: your body open and vulnerable, glistening already from how badly you wanted him.
Michael knelt behind you, large hands smoothing over your hips before gently spreading you apart so he could see every glistening inch of you. He leaned in without warning and buried his face right between your thighs from behind. His tongue dragged flat and slow through your slick folds, from your clit to your entrance. He tasted you deep before he sealed his mouth over your clit and sucked.
A low, cracked groan tore from his throat as he buried his face deeper, nose pressing against you, tongue working your swollen clit in relentless circles while he sucked like he was starving for you.
The sounds were obscene in the quiet room — the wetness of his tongue against your sopping folds, his muffled groans vibrating straight through your clit. The slick noises every time his tongue fucked shallowly into you.
Your pussy drooled fresh arousal onto his tongue and he lapped it up greedily, sucking your clit back into his mouth with another hungry moan that made your thighs shake. You couldn’t keep yourself from pushing your hips backward against him. His hand roamed over your ass, squeezing gently.
He rasped against you, voice wrecked and muffled. “Taste so good like this… I missed you so much.”
Only after he had you shaking and leaking did he finally pull away, lips shiny and chin wet. He dragged two fingers through your soaked folds first, spreading you open, then gently pushed just his thumb inside. A soft moan, almost a whimper escaped his throat the second your walls fluttered around the digit, immediately suckling and clenching like they were trying to pull him deeper. “Oh baby…” he breathed, thumb stroking slow and shallow, feeling every tiny ripple and squeeze. “Already so needy for me, princess.”
He withdrew his thumb slowly, watching the way it glistened, then lined up the thick head of his cock with your entrance, pushing inside you with one long, steady glide that stretched you open around him. Your walls welcomed him with the same fluttering, rippling grip that he remembered, and a helpless whimper slipped from your lips as you stared into the mirror.
Michael’s hand wrapped around your ankle, thumb brushing the heel of your foot. The delicate gold anklet you wore caught the light with every movement. He held you steady as he started to stroke. Long, deep strokes that dragged every inch of him along your sensitive walls. His eyebrows furrowed in concentration, jaw tight, eyes flicking between the mirror and where you were joined.
You couldn’t look away. In the reflection you watched everything: the way his cock disappeared into your soaked pussy over and over, the sticky strings of your essence mixed with his pre-cum stretching and snapping between your bodies every time he pulled back. Filthy and glistening. Your pussy looked puffy and greedy around him, clenching visibly with every thrust.
He kept stroking, rolling his hips smoothly with immense control from years of dancing, making every grind deep and precise. Then he looked up in the mirror, dark eyes heavy-lidded, and found your gaze already locked intensely on him.
He continued rocking his hips into you, drawing the prettiest moans from you. The cockiest grin slowly spreading across his lips as the thought hit him.
She’s enjoying watching herself like this — all submissive and spread open for me in the mirror.
He kissed his lips at you in the reflection, slow and sensual, and winked, never breaking the rhythm of his hips. Then he brought his hand down in a sharp smack to your ass, the sound cracking through the room as pleasure jolted straight through your cunt.
Your tummy fluttered hard at the way he looked at you — that slow, heated stare like he could devour you whole, and your pussy creamed around him in response. You were hypnotized by the way he rolled his body into you, sinking deep with a smooth, wave-like grind that made every inch of him fill you up in a way that made your eyes flutter and roll back.
“Look at you, baby,” he rasped, voice low and rough as he kept those long, deep strokes going. “Watching yourself get fucked like this. So pretty, mama.”
"T-thank you. J-just like that" You squeaked through your moans.
He glanced down at where you were connected in the mirror, admiring the mess. The way your pussy clenched and leaked around his cock, creamy and slick, painting his abdomen with your arousal. He was stroking you so deep your walls were milking him, a glossy white ring formed at the base of his cock with every thrust.
“Fuck, baby… look at how deep I’m buried in this pretty pussy,” he groaned, eyes coming back up to meet yours in the mirror. “Filling you up so good... making you cream all over me. You getting off on watching yourself give in to me like this? Watching me fuck you open… good girl.”
You couldn’t talk if you wanted to. Non-sensical babble fell from your lips as he continued to dig deeper into your walls.
The filthy words and the sight of him, eyebrows furrowed, bottom lip caught between his teeth now as he watched himself stroke your arched body in the reflection — pushed you right to the edge.
Your eyes rolled back in the mirror as the first orgasm crashed over you. Your cunt clamped down hard, gushing around him while you sobbed into the sheets, drool soaking the fabric under your cheek. Your thighs shook violently, walls fluttering and milking him through every wave.
Michael didn’t stop. One hand stayed wrapped around your ankle while the other slid under your belly, palm pressing firm and steady against the lower swell where he was buried so deep. He kept stroking, long, deep, relentless. Even as you came.
“Please— Michael, you’re gonna make me squirt,” you whimpered, voice broken and desperate, thighs already quaking.
His mouth fell open at your vulgarity, eyes darkening with raw hunger in the mirror. For a split second he just stared at you, lips parted, like the words had short-circuited something in him. Then he pressed his palm a little firmer against your belly and kept stroking. He ignored your pleas, grinding his thick cock so deep the head kissed your cervix and brushed over the sensitive ridge of nerves deep inside you.
The combination was intoxicating. Your second release hit like a wave breaking. You squirted hard around him, a hot, messy rush that soaked his thighs and the sheets beneath you. Your whole body jerked, thighs shaking involuntarily as you gushed and clenched.
Overstimulation crashed into you hard and you tried to bury your face in the sheets to hide from it. But of course, Michael’s hand left your belly and slid up, wrapping firmly around your throat just under your chin. He held your head up, forcing you to keep your eyes on the mirror.
“Be a good girl and watch yourself cum for me,” he growled, voice thick with lust as he watched the way your face melted into raw, helpless ecstasy. Your features softened and twisted in pure overwhelming pleasure, eyes fluttering and rolling back as it completely took you.
“That’s it. Give it to me. Good girl, baby. Don’t you dare look away. Look at how pretty you are when you’re taking it— mouth fallin’ open every time I hit that spot. I want you to see exactly how needy you look when I’m buried this deep inside you... How pretty you are with that fucked out look on your face”
“I know, baby,” he rasped, never loosening his grip under your chin, still rolling his hips deep and steady while you squirted and clenched around him. “Watch yourself. Watch how perfect you look cumming like this for me. Say thank you, baby.”
Your voice came out wrecked and stuttering as another wave hit, “T-Thank you— fuck, thank you, Michael— thank you for fucking me like this—”
The sound of you thanking him while he held your throat and forced you to watch yourself come undone pushed him over the edge. Michael groaned deep and filthy, hips stuttering as he started pumping thick ropes of cum inside you, still holding your throat and forcing you to watch both of you come undone together in the reflection. His cum mixed with your squirt in messy, creamy pulses that leaked out around his cock with every thrust while he kept stroking through it.
You were completely overstimulated — thighs quaking violently, body twitching, broken little pleas spilling from your lips as another weak, shattering wave hit you while he filled you. Only when the last pulses faded did he finally ease his hand from your throat, both palms smoothing over your trembling hips and lower back as he slowed to lazy, shallow grinds.
When he pulled out, a thick, messy flood of cum and your squirt poured from you onto the sheets. He cooed contently at the sight, turning you carefully onto your side and pulling you into his chest. Immediately he wrapped both arms around you. One big hand found your lower back again, rubbing slow, soothing circles while he pressed soft kisses to your temple, your jaw, the corner of your drool-slicked mouth.
“I got you, princess,” he whispered, voice hoarse and full of awe, nose nuzzling against your cheek. “My good girl… You were so perfect. Looked so pretty squirting all over me like that.”
You were still floaty and twitching with aftershocks, voice small and wrecked. “Maybe I need to reconsider this "just one time" thing…”
He smiled against your skin, pulling the sheet over both of you and keeping that steady hand on your lower back. Mission accomplished. Make you cum so hard for him that you wouldn’t wanna leave him.
“Just rest, baby. We’ll talk about it later. I’m right here.”
He stayed exactly like that. Holding you close, rubbing your lower back in those slow, grounding circles, and pressing soft kisses wherever he could reach until your breathing evened out and the tremors finally eased.
note: there is no y/n. the reason why i have pam grier and joyce walker gifs is to help me, creatively. also, please expect inaccuracies, especially with dates.
WITH LOVE FOR MY DEAREST — A Michael Jackson fanfiction
synopsis:
In the glittering chaos of the 1990s music industry, Michael Jackson and Jackie Thomas become each other’s safest place. As tabloids, rumors, and public obsession try to tear their lives apart, the two build a quiet world of love, music, and family behind the headlines.
general tags: 80s/90s music industry, racism, s*x, slow burn, Implied/Referenced domestic Ab*se, blackfemoc.
Notes: For general image purposes only, Jackie is based entirely on Halle Bailey image, she's the main faceclaim of Jackie. This story is also posted on archive of our own, but I want post it here because why not? hehe. I only want to share my baby girl Jackie with the world and give my homeboy Michael a healthy (though it is not so much) love story. If someone want it, you can ask to tag you in the next chapters and I'll do with love.
PROLOGUE.
Jacqueline Thomas was just as beautiful as the magazine covers she had graced in the late 80s, even though she was no longer the chubby-cheeked preteen. Her brown cinnamon skin glowing, curly hair was styled into braids, a French curls extension with wavy ends, pulled into a half-updo. Her brown eyes were lined in a way that made their color even more intense, and her lips were painted with a peachy-pink gloss, giving her the look of a princess who had just stepped out of an animated film. She wore a dress in the same shade as her lips, a leather jacket draped over her shoulders and arms, and mid-heel Mary Jane shoes.
She also had expressive eyes that looked at everyone with warmth, making a point of engaging minimally with the room. Penelope was a little nervous seeing her up close, but Jacqueline carried herself with such humility and warmth that it made the job easier.
"Mrs. Thomas, thank you for having us," she said, holding her notes and offering an polite smile.
"No problem at all. I'm happy to have you here," Jackie Thomas smiled brightly.
The rookie journalist, Penelope Wood, was still learning the ropes of her field, and this was her first interview with someone at Jacqueline Thomas's level of fame. There was nothing particularly strange or off about Jackie as many claimed. Maybe the fact she kept fidgeting with the fabric of her dress? It didn't seem noteworthy, probably just nerves, even though her body language otherwise looked calm.
"How are you feeling today, Miss Thomas? I'm sure much of America is watching you right now. It's been many years since your last interview. I imagine your fans have missed you."
"Oh, well, there have been a lot of strange events over the years. And the media hasn't exactly been the artist's best friend during times of crisis, so to speak. But I do admit I've missed my fans dearly, and I've tried to show them my love through my work over the past few years," she said, her voice always soft and whisper-like, yet steady. A smile lingered at her lips.
"You say the media isn't the artist's best friend in times of crisis. Is there something behind that statement? Anything recent you'd like to clarify?"
Penelope immediately felt she had been too blunt, that she should have eased into it first, but Jacqueline's expression didn't change.
"Hmm," she said, her eyes drifting upward as if thinking, then returning to the journalist. "When you grow up in this industry, there's always something to clarify. But nothing comes to mind at the moment. I prefer to let people think critically for themselves. It's not worth believing everything you see on TV or in fiction." She smiled, showing a row of white teeth, and her calmness made Penelope swallow and adjust herself in her seat.
"Of course. What can we expect from your new work? Can you tell us a little about it?"
"I'm happy people have been interested in the hidden fairies and flowers within my compositions. I'm also grateful for my new productor and cousin Jasmine Hallow's collaboration. She supported me throughout the entire process."
"All of your previous solo albums have carried something almost spiritual, haven't they? It's no surprise many say your voice sounds like it comes from a heavenly choir. Can we expect gospel influences again in this new album?"
"Spiritual? I'll have to remember that one. God knows my ego is about to have a field day," she laughed softly, and the journalist followed along. "I always carry the essence of the church with me wherever I go. That's how I was raised. Is it the same as my other albums? An artist's essence is always the same. We just change aesthetics from era to era. At the end of the day, you're still hearing Jackie Thomas," she smiled wider. "Though this album has something the others didn't."
Penelope leaned forward, intrigued.
"Oh? Can we know what that is? I'm sure your fans are extremely curious right now."
That was when Nia, Jackie Thomas's assistant, stepped in and helped her rise from the chair. Penelope Wood's eyes widened, her hand flying to her mouth as the young woman smoothed the front of her dress and placed a hand beneath the curve of her stomach, clearly a very pregnant belly, maybe six months along.
And then, as if nothing else about the interview could possibly be more shocking, Jackie turned around and lifted the back of her dress, holding the leather jacket aside.
Written in thick black marker across the fabric were the words:
"LEAVE THE FATHER OF MY BABY ALONE. MJ IS INNOCENT."
A/n: everything I write is purely fictional and out of love for MJ
My chat and ask box are open for requests or if just want to talk
Currently writing:
✒︎The love you give - series (9 chapters out)
✒︎Figure me out - upcoming series
More below ⇲
Red chapters contain smut - minors do not interact +18
The year is 1987, Michael is still riding the high the Thriller album gave him, but he's stuck, stuck somewhere he doesn't want to be and all because of the people around him, people who are supposed to have his back, but they don't. You might just be what he needs, his salvation! But things are never that easy! God no! You, despite being a woman in the '80, are a very well respected lawyer and when your boss who has a thing for saving celebrities out of doom sends you to handle Michael Jackson, you rise to the occasion. All your life seems to be in place, but the moment you meet him, he rocks your world so much that you find yourself falling.
From strangers to becoming friends, to falling for each other, but the timing just never seems right. It’s one step forward two steps back and it’s a sort of sick dance that you end up dancing. But you and Michael never lose sight of the fact that there’s feelings involved, so though it might be years or forever that you have to wait for, it’s worth it.
Themes: slow burn, friends to lovers, he falls first but she falls harder, fluff, smut
A/n: none of the events related in this story have anything to do with reality so take that with a grain of salt. English is not my first language!!
〘Chapter 1〙
〘Chapter 2〙
〘Chapter 3〙
〘Chapter 4〙
〘Chapter 5〙
〘Chapter 6〙
〘Chapter 7〙
〘Chapter 8〙
〘Chapter 9〙
〘Chapter 10〙- coming soon
More coming soon…
✒︎Figure me out
Upcoming series….
Bad ! Michael x fem! Reader
Themes: slow burn, age gap (6 years) , friends to lovers, angst, fluff, diabetes awareness, mentions of being sick, poor, bad family dynamics, abuse, hard language, mature content
At 24 life has already dealt you some of the most unfortunate cards to play. Alone in the big city of New York, struggling to keep your diabetes under control while trying to get your nursing degree. You get a part time job for an online magazine to help pay for health insurance. After the release of the long anticipated album “Bad” you are one of the journalists offered the opportunity to interview Michael Jackson. The article you write doesn’t satisfy your boss who was looking for cheap trashy piece on the star, one you know you could never deliver, not after staring into those hypnotizing brown eyes.
Offered more chances to write “something worth reading” you bump into Michael time and time again and the spark of something catches. Unfortunately for you, you can’t bring yourself to write a single bad word about any of the celebrities you interview. Jobless and unable to pay for your medication you jump at the opportunity to write a blog covering the behind the scenes of Michael’s Bad world tour over the summer.
What can happen in a summer, traveling the world with him? Will you fall in love with him? Will he give you his heart? If he does will you take it?
“I’ve never seen him so hung up on anyone before, you’re somebody special!”
“Why are you telling me this?”
“Because one of you has to man up and take the first step kid, you caught lightning in a bottle, don’t let it get away!”
AUTHOR'S NOTE: this was born after this thought i had. this actually turned out way different than i thought it would be, but im actually happy with it lol. thank you for reading!
PERHAPS YOU WERE tapping the brush a little too hard against the back of the powder, or perhaps you were not being nearly rough enough for your liking, since Michael was still staring at you without batting an eyelid, the corner of his lips slightly turned up. With a roll of your eyes, you dusted his face, the bristles pressing against his skin without much mercy.
Today, he would not be getting a single bit of special treatment from you ━ that was decided!
"Lift your head up a bit," you ordered firmly.
Michael complied without grumbling, his teeth biting the inside of his cheek as if to stop himself from speaking… or laughing. His eyes remained fixed on you ━ on the crease appearing between your eyebrows, on the way your jaw was clenched, and on how your fingers were turning slightly paler as you held the brush oh so firmly in your hands.
He had been sitting perfectly still in the chair for a good fifteen minutes. Michael was already wearing his stage costume ━ a skin-tight metallic top that caught every beam of light, black straps that hugged his forearms, while a slanted zipper cut across his chest. Thick black curls framed his face, one single stubborn curl kept clinging to his forehead and you had had to pin it down back in place. This had earned you a reaction from him you had shut down with a look.
As you applied his make-up ━ foundation matched to his skin tone, applied delicately, especially to the depigmented areas of his face, concealer under his eyes to brighten them, and light contouring along the sides of his nose ━ all the tension that seemed to have built up in him melted away, to the point where he began to watch you with amusement, his fingers occasionally reaching for your thighs, hidden beneath the jeans you were wearing.
You fended off every advance, your annoyance with him growing with every brushstroke across his face. When you tapped his nose a little too hard, that was when your boyfriend decided something had to be said.
"Ouch! Careful," he complained. "C’mon… how much longer you gonna keep lookin’ at me like that?"
Your only response was an exasperated sigh, as you carried on applying the powder to the rest of his face. Once that was done, you took a black eyeliner pencil from your make-up bag to tackle his eyes.
"Look up."
Michael hesitated for a moment, looking away from you for the first time. What you were holding in your hands was a veritable weapon to him, and he had absolutely no intention of performing at tonight’s gig with one eye missing. In an almost instinctive movement, he raised his hand to try and rest it on yours ━ you dodged his touch as if it was the plague.
"Baby…" he sighed.
"Don’t baby me and look up. I’ve got better things to do than put up with your fucking antics."
In a perfectly automatic reflex, Michael coughed as if to erase the swear word that had just slipped from your lips, and that was enough to set the fire that had been simmering inside you for several minutes absolutely ablaze.
"Oh, fuck off! You say far worse than me sometimes!" you exclaimed. "Look the fuck up, I said."
"Ask nicely."
And he had the fucking audacity to grin at you! You let out another sigh ━ the day was going to be longer than expected. The liner was still clenched between your fingers, the heels of your three-inch shoes tapping impatiently against the floor.
"Michael... I'm really not in the mood to play games with you right now."
"'t's a simple request, woman. It's called politeness ━ ever heard of that?"
You decided to ignore him completely, your free hand grabbing his face, fingernails digging just deep enough into his jaw ━ you were not about to ruin all your hard work, after all. The liner was now just a few millimetres from his eyes when he closed them.
Fucking stubborn.
"You're so mean to me," Michael pouted, trying to move his head.
"Fire me," you challenged, a small smirk showing itself on your very distracting lips.
"So you'll be free to go work for Prince? Never."
And as if nothing had happened, you let go of him in one swift movement, as though he had burnt you, taking a few steps back. He was always doing that. Michael made you believe he was not angry any more, that everything was forgotten and that he was ready to carry on as if nothing had happened, because he could not bear the thought of you harbouring any negative feelings toward him, even for just a few hours. Then he had to ruin everything, his jealousy catching up with him in a flash.
Michael tried to catch you again, but to no avail. You dodge him, throwing the liner back into your make-up bag ━ you were done.
"C’mon, girl, you can’t possibly still be ma━"
"Cant fucking still be mad at you for being a fucking controlling, jealous asshole? Oh yes I am! Yes I am!"
You started to pack away your kit, your arms moving frantically. Even though you were really annoyed with him, it was all just an act. After all, you were a professional, and even though Michael was your boyfriend and was getting on your nerves, he was still your employer ━ the one who paid your wages ━ and you certainly were not going to let him leave half-ready. Although…
"Baby… you can’t possibly leave me like that! I have to be on stage in━" he looked at the clock. "━fifteen minutes!" Michael whined. "I’ll shut up. Please, don’t leave."
You took advantage of the fact that you had your back to him to smile. Got him. Slowly, you turned your head slightly to the side, one eyebrow raised, your chin held high.
"Oh, really? Are you just going to shut up and let me get on with my work?" he nodded. "No more touching?" another nod. "No more comments about me doing Prince's makeup?" there was an hesitation on his part. "Michael!"
There was a long sigh.
"... ‘romise," he mumbled.
You turned your head toward your make-up bag, rolling your eyes. He really was stubborn.
It was at that moment that you felt two hands rest on your hips, a warm breath brushing against your neck. The very next second, something damp pressed against your skin, and it took you half a second more to realise it was his lips. The bastard.
"’m sorry," Michael pressed another kiss.
"Are you now?"
With his hands, he pulled you toward him so that you were sitting on top of him on the chair. Your hands automatically wrapped round his neck ━ for fear of falling, of course ━ his palm resting flat against your thigh. His mouth wasted no time in finding your throat.
"’m just a jealous idiot," Michael murmured against you. "I hate the thought of him lookin’ at you… you touchin’ his face━"
"It’s just work!" you cut him off, trying not to moan at his ministrations. "It’s literally my fucking job!"
Ahem.
"I swear to God if you ahem me once more━"
His laughter cut you off mid-sentence, reverberating against your upper chest. Michael planted a burning kiss just above your heart, which was pounding wildly.
"You’re cute when you’re mad."
You simply rolled your eyes at him, shoving his chest weakly which made him laugh a little more. His hand, which until then had remained quietly on your thigh, began a slow journey up your body, leaving a trail of shivers in its wake.
"You’re being inappropriate," you managed to say, acting like you were about to stop his fingers from touching your heated skin. "I’m your employee."
"Mmm, my favourite employee," Michael kissed your jaw.
You let yourself be swept away by his caresses and kisses for a moment, your eyes closing with desire. He had always been very good at making you forget why you were angry in the first place, but this time you were determined to make him understand that he had gone too far.
Ignoring the way your thighs instinctively clenched around nothing, you opened your eyes again and brought your hands to his face once more. His chocolate-brown eyes met yours and, for a moment, you were on the verge of begging him to devour you just before his concert.
Patience is a virtue, you reminded yourself.
His wayward strand was still perfectly pinned in place by the clip you had put in, his curls brushing against your fingers as you lifted his face toward yours.
"I need you to understand that your reaction was really hurtful, Mike," you said softly, trying to keep your anger at bay for it would not help the situation he was trying to resolve peacefully. "I know you have… Whatever your relationship with Prince is, but… this is a great opportunity for me."
Michael looked down, his lower lip clenched between his teeth ━ a clear sign that he regretted his behaviour. His hands had stopped moving, only his thumb kept tracing circles beneath your shirt. He exhaled before meeting your gaze.
"You’re right…" Michael admitted. "I know you’re right and I apologise for my reaction. Truly. You’re the most talented make-up artist, it should be expected that… that anyone would want you to make them look pretty."
"You don’t need me to make you look pretty, silly," you bit the inside of your cheek to stop you from smiling.
"Does that mean I’m prettier than Prince?" he grinned.
This time, it was you who let out a laugh, swatting his chest.
"Fishing for compliments is sooo unlike you."
"I’ll take that answer as a yes," Michael chuckled, kissing the corner of your mouth.
"Whatever," you looked up.
Stretching on his lap to reach for your make-up bag, you searched for your liner. There was only ten minutes left before the show and he still needed his eyes done. Once you had found it, you tilted his chin up, repositioning yourself better with your legs fully capturing his.
"Hold still," you said gently.
Michael did as he was told, letting you do your work peacefully. He was still wearing that proud grin on his face, knowing full well that you were finally going to forgive him. His hands slid over your bottom, under the pretence that it was to stop you from slipping. You raised an eyebrow at him, not fooled for a moment, whilst your fingers traced a symmetrical line around his eyes.
"You know, with all your bullshit, I believe that I deserve a raise," you spoke, finishing off the outline of his left eye.
"Done."
"I didn’t say how much," you chuckled.
"Doesn’t matter," Michael’s fingers were rolling over your jean. "Whatever you want, baby, you’ll get."
"You’re terrible at managing your money," you exhaled, amused, working on his right eye.
"Good thing I have people to help me with that," he squeezed your bottom. "Name a price, woman, it’s all yours."
"You’re being ridiculous," you chuckled under your breath.
"I’d buy you a house, an apartment ━ whatever you want or…" Michael hesitated in a whisper. "… or... A ring… if… if that’s somethin’ you’d want…"
The liner almost slipped from your fingers, and you left a black smudge on his eyelid as you tried to catch it.
"Shit."
You picked up a cotton bud that was lying on the table, your eyes fixed on absolutely everything except his. You could feel his gaze on you, his hands still resting on your bottom. You wiped away the mark you had just left on his skin before resuming your task, your fingers trembling slightly.
Unable to resist any longer, Michael took the hand holding the liner and brought it to his lips, planting a kiss on your knuckles.
"What do you say?" he asked, raising his eyes at yours. "Mm?"
You stilled for a second. He was so pretty like this, his doe brown eyes looking up at you with a warmth so inviting that you almost leaned in to kiss him.
"I say that… that you don’t need to say that type of things to make me forgive you," you could feel the heat rising in your cheeks.
"That’s good to know, sweetheart, but I’m actually being serious," Michael released your hand, bringing his own to your face. "What do you say?" he repeated shyly.
"I…" you were truly at loss for words, swallowing slowly. "I’d say that…" come on, girl, speak! "… that this better not be your official proposal."
A genuine smile broke his face as he brought you closer to him, his nose and mouth finding the side of your neck. Michael pressed small kisses there again, the scent of mandarine and strawberries enveloping him in a warm embrace.
"Don’t worry, the real one will be much better," you could feel his smile against your skin. "I really am sorry for what I said," he said again, really needing you to know he was sincere. "You know you don’t need my permission to do anything, right?"
Your hands gently caressed the nape of his neck.
"I know."
"Good," Michael nodded before lifting his head, the corner of his mouth doing the same thing. "That said..."
"Oh, here we go again..." you sighed, rolling your eyes again.
"... Go do your job and do as good as you always do," he continued, catching your hands in his. "Make him jealous. He'll never have the best make-up artist for himself ━ the best girl."
Your breath caught at his words as his brought your hands to his mouth, kissing your fingertips softly.
"And to say I almost believed you when you said you wouldn't be jealous anymore..." you managed to breathe, but there was another kind of heat that tainted your tone.
"But this," Michael gestured to you sitting on his lap. "This special treatment is for me only."
You snorted at that, releasing yourself from his grip, your arms coming around his neck as you bit your lip.
"I don't think that's in my contract, Mr. Jackson."
His hands came to rest on your bottom, squeezing harder than before.
"You should read your contract more carefully, girl," he grinned. "It even specifies that before every show I should take extra care of you."
"Extra care?" you smirked. "Can you even do that in..." you turned just enough to look at the clock. "... five minutes?"
The challenge was there. You saw how his eyes widened slightly before going back to their usual size, a determined look now dressing them. In one swift movement, Michael stood up, bringing you with him as you let out a small, surprised scream.
"Watch me, woman!" he shot back, lying you down on the couch as you giggled.
for years, you and michael have blurred the line between friendship and something more, never admitting what either of you really feels. but after one messy night everything changes.
ps: this is kind of based on the bodyguard's book about mj, which says that he had two girlfriends at the time, according to the ᴏʀɪɢɪɴᴀʟ ʀᴇǫᴜᴇsᴛ.
this is my first time writing something like this, so i hope y'all enjoy it i'll probably go back to my usual fics after this one, but let me know if you'd like me to write more in this nsfw style.
thank you so much for the 700 followers!! love y'all 💗
you're lying on his chest drawing soft circles on his skin, paying attention to his calm breath. he looks like a true angel, perhaps a fallen angel. you're not sure when your relationship with michael started to change—maybe it was that time he took care of you when you caught a cold or when he said that you were more than special to him.
you don't think of him as a lover—or maybe you don't want to think about him being more than a friend. a really close friend. and there you are, watching him while he sleeps. he has a woody fragrance that somehow fascinates you, you want to close your eyes, but seeing his view makes you awake.
he holds you as tight as if you were born to be in his arms; his hands are pressed against your head and on your waist.
maybe he does this with her too?
but this time, he's here with you. not with her.
you swallow hard. don't think about it. not now, when he's here by your side. don't waste your thoughts, not when you have him for this moment. michael gently starts to move; he carefully opens his eyes, and that's when he sees you:
“you’re staring hard, baby,” his warm voice hits you. his grip is firm around you while he brings you closer. you lean on him, watching his expressions; he raises one eyebrow when he hears your sleepy voice:
“how long have you been awake?”
he doesn't say that you're weird for staring at him while he sleeps. he presses his lips on your forehead, stroking your arm. the feeling is good; it's as if he's putting you to sleep.
“i just woke up. did you sleep well?”
“i did, mike. actually i think i slept more than 5 hours; that's already a win. i was waiting for you to wake up.”
“oh, i thought you were appreciating how handsome i am, baby.” you just roll your eyes, because how can he be so convinced of it, even if he's right.
“michael—”
“what do you want for breakfast? i can ask them to make your favorite pancakes, those ones with bana—”
you interrupt him, and it's not intentional. but having breakfast with your best friend after having sex with him doesn't sound like a good idea.
“mike, i can't right now. look it's already 09 AM—i’m probably late for my meeting. i’m really sorry, i'll make it up to you, alright?”
you say as you slowly pull away from his arms. he doesn't try to stop you; he doesn't reach for your hand. he just lets you go.
“no problem, baby, let me help you”
he's lying. you know that is a problem when his voice sounds so hurt. you don't understand the reason for it. it isn't the first time that you ran away.
you can't say anything after he grabs your black velvet dress, and helps you to put it on. his fingers trace your skin with such care, it's like a feather—provoking shivers down your spine. he gives you a tender kiss, so tender, but at the same time so hungry for something that you don't know the name. yet.
he doesn't say goodbye.
he says ‘see you soon.’
his chauffeur takes you home. and that's when you finally break down, it has been like this for a while; being with mike means holding yourself back.
you don't cry; there is no reason to cry. but you feel an uneasiness inside your heart—it's sharp as a knife. michael jackson is your friend. you have known him for more than four years now; you met him at a charity event—when you were heartbroken over your last boyfriend. he offered you a glass of wine—you accepted it, and danced with him the whole night.
almost as if you were cinderella.
but michael? he wasn't your charming prince and you didn't lose your glass slipper.
he called you in the same week—asking you to dinner.
a dinner and nothing more; after that, you proceeded to have a lot of dinners with him.
back then, your initial thought was that it could become something more, but you quickly shut down this stupid idea.
and it wasn't because you found out about her.
his other close friend.
you don't even know her name—but every time you think about her, you feel as if a thorn is inside of your flesh that is capable of making you bleed on the inside. needless to say, michael didn't tell you about her. his chauffeur was the one that didn't keep his mouth shut, he said that he preferred you to her.
a likely compliment to you.
you thought it would be better to just keep your distance from michael. but, if you just saw him as a friend, what is this jealousy that creeps up on you day and night.
he doesn't even know that you know about her.
nevertheless, your relationship with him eventually changed. the attraction that was always there, on the edge of you and him, finally slipped. you fell for his soothing touch that lingered in your soul, and made you feel like the only one, even if you knew you weren't.
he kissed you and you kissed him back. deep, raw, his tongue searched for yours with greed.
it felt good. it felt real. it felt too good to be true.
it didn't become just a forgotten memory. not when he often searched for you, when his touch couldn't leave you alone. it hunted you, in your dreams, in your sleep, in your reality. you finally surrendered to it.
the cold breeze of the autumn was synonymous with gentleness for you. it hugged your skin while you decided to go out of the ladies' room. it wasn't the first time you would go to a party without a date. it wasn't a traditional party in a club.
you were in a large cottage garden, that smelled like roses and tulips, a nice cocktail with fancy people.
obviously, he was there.
he isn't alone. he was with her.
you finally found out—suddenly the realization that she is real, and she is there with him, brings discomfort to you, the sharp pain that you want to forget is there again.
she is a stunning woman, and her name is lucy.
he's staring at you, as if he doesn't have a date by his side. you don't keep yourself away; you go there. straight to them, clearing your throat when you talk to her.
“so, lucy! i finally had the pleasure of meeting you. michael spoke so highly of you!”
she licked her lips before saying anything to you. a gorgeous woman indeed.
“i didn't know mike was talking about me! we are just good old friends.”
friends. as you and him.
lucy is nice. gentle and soft. she smells like peaches. she is older than you, but she isn't his age. nothing new about it.
he always preferred the older ones anyway.
the night is cold, but you don't feel cold—you’re drinking more than normal; you feel hot inside. the lights of the garden are somehow relaxing; mike is by your side. he's dancing with you—like the very first time. you don't know what it is, if it is that night in particular or how he is looking at you with a curiosity that he's terrible at hiding.
you see all. you, him and her—lucy.
you're sweating. you danced so much, slow dances can kill your feet. they are hurting like hell.
you feel dizzy. your feet are hurting. and suddenly you can't walk straight—michael opens the doors, and ladies go first.
the room is big enough for three. she's right beside him, and michael looks at you—with so much desire. you're infatuated with all of it, and this, this is happening.
right now, you don't feel any regrets. not yet. you just feel your instincts bumping inside your body, telling you how to act. how to live. even if, later you'll be hurt. you need to see it with your own eyes.
oh—you kiss her. you're kissing her, her lips are soft like cotton candy. you're trembling down there. and mike is watching you and her. the whole situation is so erotic.
lucy is biting your lower lip—fuck so sexy. you're digging your nails in her long hair; sweet moans are all you can hear. when you shove your hand between her legs—she’s so wet.
does he touch her like this?
she's playing with your nipples, sucking and biting them while she clutches against your middle finger. good girl—this is what mike says to you. just for you. he's whispering in your ear; just like that baby, she's so wet. taste her. feel her. is it good, huh? do you also want to cum?
he's standing right beside you—fuck. you feel his cock throbbing against you, and when lucy finally cums, you turn to michael grinding on his cock, burning, aching, too much. you're still wearing your dress, but it isn't a problem; he pushes the fabric up to your waist. mike pulls you down to the bed, and now you're lying against the mattress.
he slides your black panties with lace to the side.
“you're soaking wet. let me put a finger—yeah, look how well you're welcoming me”
“m-mike”
“say it baby”
“i want it”
“what? say with your words, baby”
“i need your cock inside me”
“there it is. good girl” he finally buried himself in you. god—you're a sloppy mess, crying out every time he hits that spongy spot. he interlocks his fingers with yours. lucy is on the edge of the mattress watching mike fucking you, she spreads your legs—and delves her tongue into your clit, playing with your juices, the wet noises can be heard, the frenetic pressure of him inside you, it's all overwhelming; your heart is pounding—the roaring in your ears is loud.
you're sobbing while michael growls every time he feels you tightening around his cock—he is losing his pace. and you're close, so close. when he looks at you and presses your hand, there is just you and him. the electricity dissolves into pleasure, the shockwaves run all over your body.
it's shattering.
he cums deep inside you. and for a short moment it is just you and him in that bed. he feels you against him, you're beautiful.
and he wants more than ever to kiss you.
but reality hits back in that same moment.
you're looking at him with those pretty misty eyes. you let his hand go. and he feels empty, waiting for more from you. but you don't react, not in the way he wishes.
you look to the side, lucy giggles at you. it's a bitter laugh, one that makes you feel uneasy. a knot formed in the pit of your stomach. you can't stay here.
give a smile and go away. that's it.
fuck
you force a beatific smile on your face. you feel indigestion taking over you.
“well, i enjoyed our night a lot, lucy. but it's better if i go, and leave the lovebirds alone.”
perfect. convincing.
michael clenches his jaw; he hates how composed you sound.
“another meeting, baby?” he calmly says with a bit of venom in his eyes.
“yes, mike. i should go now”
he doesn't help with your dress this time, he just watches you run away—like always. the moment you pass through the door, he wishes he could stop breathing. lucy places her hand on his shoulder. he briefly closes his eyes; he doesn't know what to do.
“mike, are you okay? something happe—”
“don't worry lucy, i swear everything is fine. i’m just so exhausted”
he lets out a tired laugh, while he fixes his shirt.
“you like her don't you?”
“is that so obvious?”
“for a moment i thought i was interrupting you and her. or i did interrupt. mike, you weren't having sex with her—you were making love.”
“making love?”
“yes, you were. from the moment you saw her in the garden i knew you loved her, we call that women's intuition. and that's why i know that she also loves you—go after her, mike”
“i’m sorry—”
“go mike, don't make me regret saying these things”
michael walks through the door, he can't see you anywhere in the hallway. maybe you're back to the garden, the sound of classical music is loud. he had a threesome with you. this is probably the most insane thing he did in his life. i mean, he's already old enough to understand how life works. you—you’re an exception in his life. you were his best friend. but more than that, he is head over heels for you.
and it's so funny, because he didn't expect it to be the way it went. he thought it would be the same deal he had with lucy. he was careless with you. he let you permeate his life, you grew roots inside him.
everything was intense with you. he was afraid, because you—you always keep your distance. he was the one trying to scratch something from you.
it's the quietest corner of the place. the sound is stuffy. it's a hidden living room—you’re sitting in a leather armchair. your expression is serious and your legs are crossed.
he found you.
he doesn't wait for you to notice his presence—he walks and leans into you. he holds your chin with his hand.
“look at me baby, tell me what's wrong”
you shift your weight and you're no longer crossing your legs, your voice is just a whisper
“i can't do this anymore, mike, i swear i tried so hard. but i just can't”
he is scared of asking what is it; he kneels on the floor between your legs, kissing your inner thigh. his voice is dangerously low;
“just tell me angel, i need to know”
the warm kisses mess with your mind—but you still….you don't let yourself drown in the sensation.
“i always knew of lucy—since the very beginning of our friendship. i knew all along that you have her and you have me—in the same way. and i can't…..i can't take it anymore mike…. pretending that i see you only as a friend, as a best friend. because the truth is that i hold myself every time i'm with you…i love you mike.
he doesn't know what to say. he starts saying with his touch, his fingers trail your inner thigh with so much knowledge—he knows exactly where to touch you. “spread for me baby—right there”
this time he doesn't slide your panties, instead he takes them off. the scene makes you intoxicated by his touch. it's so good—he grabs your panties with his left hand and inhales your scent.
“i love how you smell. you smell so good, huh?”
he slipped them on his pants pocket. fuck. now, he's right in front of your wetness—he gently presses his finger on your clit. it's enough to make you clench. he shoves his mouth around your cunt. fingering and playing with your juices. he flicks his tongue to your sweet spot. and fuck.
“i love how you taste…mhmn.. i love how wet you always get for me. that's it, let it go, let it go my pretty girl”
you're a fuzzy messy mumbling how much you need to cum. he likes it. he loves it.
“but the main thing is that i love you, princess. i love you so much—yeah that's it, cum on my fingers, princess”
the friction makes you drown in the pleasure, you're splitting, it's so damn good, you're bursting in his mouth.
“m-mike fuck i’m gonna-aa cum”
“yes, that's it. so fucking good—i love you baby, huh, say you believe me, alright?”
“i believe you mike, i do.”
he stands up from the floor and searches for your mouth with passion, he kisses you so devotedly—he explores your mouth with his tongue, and when he's out of breath. he stops. he presses his forehead against yours, and whispers while staring at you “i love you. i love you. i love you. i love you” and you understand in that moment, that he is yours as you're his.
Now I am not particularly familiar with michael jackson or his fandom, but I do have some respect for the dude and his music- But after the recent movie 'Michael' came out, I've been seeing ALOT of michael jackson x reader shi on my fyp's and allat and I jst wanna ask, is this normal within that fandom?? 😭😭
Ik it's common to see celebrity x reader content- which is heavily dominated in kpop fandom's i believe. But idk, this one just feels weird cuz he's no longer with us yknow??
Open to ideas and reasonings ofc, jst a little confused.
Michael isn’t the first nor the last dead person to have fanfics written about him. 😭😭 I’m confused by these posts because fanfics about dead people have been around for yearssss??
Not to mention, fanfics were being written about him long before he passed away, and he was aware of them. Please put this tired question to rest.
“In a world filled with hate, we must still dare to hope. In a world filled with anger, we must still dare to comfort. In a world filled with despair, we must still dare to dream. And in a world filled with distrust, we must still dare to believe.” - Michael Joseph Jackson (August 29, 1959 - June 25, 2009)
from gary to global icon. from little michael to a loving father. you had a gift that nobody else could possess. although the world was cruel to you, you continued to show beauty and kindness until the end. though you are not here physically, you live on through the music, memories and magic you left behind for us to experience. thank you for sharing your gift with the world. rest easy angel, you are missed eternally🕊️🤍