Sometimes you make me feel like I have a chance with you, but when I try to take that chance, you make me realize that I never really had one.
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@anattami
Sometimes you make me feel like I have a chance with you, but when I try to take that chance, you make me realize that I never really had one.
Dance for two
Summary: Billy Butcher, an awkward and stern man, dances with his wife at a work banquet, reminiscing about their first meeting at university. The next morning, they establish a ritual of dancing in the kitchen every morning, and although Billy never learned to dance, his wife appreciates his tenderness and care.
Warnings: The text contains a romantic scene with elements of flirting, subtle hints of intimacy, and some explicit language. The themes of vulnerability, male insecurity, and acceptance in relationships are explored.
English is not my first language
Word count ~700
The hall is buzzing. Waiters dart between tables, glasses clinking. Billy Butcher stands at the edge of the dance floor, feeling out of place. The white shirt you ironed this morning while he stood next to you, watching the steam curl around your fingers, fits perfectly, but the tie still feels like a noose to him.
He looks at you, his girl, in that dress. All he knows about dresses is that they come off. But now… now she looks so stunning it takes his breath away. Light fabric, thin straps, your hair now pinned up in an elegant bun, baring your neck.
"Come on, Butcher," you laugh softly, reaching your hand out to him. "Don't just stand there like a statue. You're my husband, you're supposed to ask me to dance."
"Supposed to, eh," he rasps with that characteristic Cockney accent, and in his brown eyes flashes that familiar, well-known smirk of his.
"And what if I say I'd rather go pour myself a whiskey before those wankers drink the whole bar dry?"
"You can say that," you reply calmly, looking up at him, "and tomorrow you'll be ironing your own shirts."
Butcher snorts, but his heavy, massive palm gently closes around your fingers. He leads you to the center of the hall. Silence around, slow music playing – something old, bluesy. He places one hand on your waist, feeling, the other holding your delicate hand. And he feels like an idiot all over again.
Because he still doesn't know how to dance.
"Billy," you whisper, burying your nose in his chest. "You're stepping on my feet."
"I'm trying not to crush you, love," he growls into the top of your head. "You're like a bloody dandelion in those heels. I'm afraid you'll break."
You laugh softly, and it's that laugh that makes something warm spread through his chest, making it hard to properly stay angry.
"Remember college?" you suddenly ask. "It was even worse back then." Butcher laughs quietly, deeply. Fuck, does he remember. A tiny stuffy hall, a stupid disco, snotty students. And you, so young, seeing him for the first time as just an awkward bloke. You whispered "one-two-three, one-two-three" in his ear while he, huge as a wardrobe, methodically tried not to stomp on your feet with his army boots.
"You told me I looked like a wounded elephant in a china shop," he smirks. "And you still didn't run."
"I knew you'd learn," you reply softly, gently touching his stubbled cheek with your fingers, tracing his jawline. "You just need time." He looks into your eyes. There's no fear, no judgment. Just light and calmness. The music ends. He reluctantly lets you go, but suddenly you take his hand and pull him toward the exit of the banquet hall.
Home. Kitchen. Early morning.
The kettle is boiling on the stove. You, already in your usual t-shirt with your sleep-mussed hair, walk barefoot across the cool tile floor, swaying slightly as you reach for a teacup. Butcher, disheveled, wearing only old trousers, comes up and wraps his arms around you from behind, burying his nose in the top of your head. His thick beard tickles your neck. You hum a familiar tune under your breath.
"Hey," he whispers hoarsely. "Wanna dance?"
You turn around in surprise:
"Now? In the morning? You have an operation in an hour."
"Fuck the operation," he says, grinning into his beard as he holds you in a slow, clumsy dance right in the middle of the kitchen.
"I decided. Every morning. Until you stop giggling and tell me I finally stopped looking like an elephant."
You snort into his shoulder. Yesterday you were in a beautiful dress, he was in a perfectly pressed suit. But now, in this chaos of the morning kitchen, amid the scent of your shampoo and black tea, you feel truly happy.
He never did learn to dance properly. But he always holds you as if you're the most fragile and precious thing in his cursed life. He melts at your touch, waits for your kisses and your words.
You rest your head on his chest and whisper:
"You stepped on my foot, Billy."
"I know, sorry, love," he growls, kissing the top of your head. "But you're not going anywhere anyway."
From that morning on, they had a ritual. They'd put on old music on a small speaker and move around the kitchen. Billy waited for it every day. Waited for you to finally tell him: "You did well today, Billy. I'm proud of you." And he melted like ice in the sun, because with you. With you, he was just Billy – your husband, who loves you very much and dances very badly.
Thank you for reading.
Golden Bullet
Female Reader / Billy Butcher
Billy, from a family cursed by an ancient forest, has been preparing since childhood for a deadly hunt for a mythical doe with golden horns in order to remove the curse from his family. Entering the thicket, he encounters not just a monster, but the living soul of the forest, which makes him doubt everything his fathers taught him.
Warnings: Cruelty and violence, Hunting scenes, killing of a living being, Psychological pressure, Atmosphere of paranoia, obsessive repetition of fear, loss of identity and memory, feeling of hopelessness, Bodily changes, Death and loss, curse, lack of a happy ending.
~2800 words
English is not my first language
His first gun weighed more than he did. Billy was seven years old when his father put him on his knees in the snow and said:
«The forest is evil. It breathes. It waits. It wants you to forget the way home. Your job is not to let it win.»
His father said this every morning. His grandfather said this every night. His great-grandfather, whose portrait hung above the fireplace, looked at Billy with glassy eyes and also silently said this. In their family, there were no men who died in their beds. They all went into the forest. They all returned to the earth, but not to the human one – to the one that smelled of moss and decay.
Billy learned to shoot before he learned to read. His fingers remembered the cold of steel better than the warmth of his mother's hand. He knew: when his turn came, he would have to enter the forest. Not to survive. But to bring back a trophy – the golden horn of the doe that had cursed his family many centuries ago. Only then would the curse be lifted. Only then could his son live not in the shadow of the forest, but in the sun. That was how he got the scar on his forehead and yet another lecture about gun safety.
"The forest is evil," his father repeated, adjusting the sight on Billy's rifle when he turned ten. "It beckons. It whispers. It promises you what you don't have. But if you enter, it won't give it back. It will only take."
«What does it take?» Billy asked once, when they were sitting by the fire, and the flame traced long, flickering shadows across his father's face.
«Memory,» his father answered. «First you forget your children's names. Then you forget your own name. And then you forget that you are human at all.»
And he showed Billy his palm. On it, right at the cuticle, a thin bark was already beginning to show. Dry, hard, unyielding. His father laughed then – dryly, like the crackling of branches.
«I can already feel the wind blowing through me,» he said. «You have to finish this, son. Finish it for all of us.»
His entire childhood was preparation for one shot.
The forest greeted him with a silence that was louder than any scream.
Billy crossed the border at dawn, where the last trees of the village parted, giving way to the first trunks covered in silvery moss. His father said: «Never go in without an iron rim on your gun. The forest does not like iron, but it fears it.» Billy carried a double-barreled shotgun.
Three steps in.
The fourth.
On the fifth, he turned around, but the village was already gone. In its place stood a wall of fog – dense, milky, smelling of rotten bark and something sweet, like overripe berries. The skin on the back of his neck tightened, as if the forest had touched him with invisible fingers. For the first few hours, he walked along animal trails. The trunks were too straight, too smooth, as if someone's hands had rubbed them. The bark on them gleamed like old skin, and in the crevices Billy noticed eye sockets – empty, but aimed at him. His father had walked the same path twenty years ago. And his grandfather. And his great-grandfather, whose name no one remembered anymore, because the curse ate not only bodies but also memory. Billy carried three bullets on his belt – and only one for himself. The barrel of the gun felt hot even in that icy air. But hotter still was the aching emptiness under his ribs – the place where fear used to live. He thought only of the golden horn, which, once broken, would make the curse disappear forever.
He kept his finger on the trigger.
In the second hour, he heard footsteps. Not animal ones – human ones. Soft, with a hint of moisture.
He stopped. The footsteps stopped.
«Who is there?» he asked, and the gun trembled in his hands.
There was no answer. Only the wind stirred the leaves, and a drop fell from an upper branch. It landed on his shoulder. It was warm, like blood.
In the third hour, he noticed that the trees were changing shape. Their branches reached for him not like branches, but like arms – too long fingers, bent at the elbows. Beneath the bark, faces were emerging. Not clear ones, but blurred – like fingerprints on wet clay. Billy could hear them breathing. The forest breathed deeply, slowly, like a sleeping beast.
"The forest consumes everyone who enters it," they said in the village. The old men crossed themselves when Billy walked past. The old women hid their eyes. He was already dead to them. And he almost believed it himself.
Billy looked ahead. But out of the corner of his eye, he saw one of the faces slowly open its mouth – silently, wide, like a fish thrown onto the shore.
Gold flashed between the grey trunks, like a sunbeam in a broken mirror. Billy fired without thinking – pure muscle memory, honed over years to automatism. The bullet embedded itself in the bark of an old oak, a couple of inches from where the doe's head had just been. The fur flared up and vanished. He rushed after it, tearing his face on branches, scratching his hands on bark, feeling the forest move around him. The trees changed places. The trails closed up with moss behind him. But he ran. Because whoever stops in this forest ceases to be human. On the third night, he came across an old hut. Inside it smelled of dry herbs and decay. On the walls hung guns – old, rusted, with names he had memorized as a child. They had all made it to this hut. They had all sat here and waited. And none of them had come out.
Billy lit a fire, staring at the red embers. He saw his fingers beginning to grow a thin bark at the very cuticle, where the nails meet the skin. Wood. The first sign. He scraped it off with his nail, and under the bark was fresh pink skin, but it was moist, like a plant's. The forest was beginning to dissolve him. The forest was digesting him alive.
He lay on his back, looking up at the canopy, feeling his lungs fill with something viscous, like resin. And then, suddenly, gold. She stood right in front of the hut, at shooting distance. Her antlers – thin, delicate, like lace – shimmered as if molten metal burned inside them.
«You came to kill me,» she said, and her voice sounded not in his ears, but in his chest. Like a second heart. Like an echo in an empty well.
Billy laughed hoarsely. The laugh came out dry, like an autumn leaf.
She stepped closer. And he noticed that her legs, graceful as branches, left not tracks on the moss, but flowers. Small, white, with cold centres. They bloomed behind her and died within a minute, leaving a faint scent of bitterness.
«You are not the first,» she said, kneeling beside him. He looked at her, and for the first time in many years, he did not see prey. He saw something that wanted to die. That longed for it the way a traveller longs for water. She wanted him to kill her. Not because she hated life – but because she was tired of being the only one.
«The forest is eating you,» she said, touching his temple. «In two days, you will stop remembering your name. You will become an oak. In three days, the wind. And in four, you will be gone altogether. Only roots. Only rustling.»
«I know,» he whispered.
She stood up and stepped back. Her antlers gleamed in the morning light, and he noticed that one of them was chipped at the tip. As if someone had already tried to saw it off. As if someone had almost succeeded.
«You want to save your village. And your people. So I will tell you the truth. The golden horn does not belong to me. I am merely the keeper. The horn is the forest. Break it – the forest dies. And everyone inside dies too. I die too. But if you kill me – not the horn, but me – then the curse will be lifted. Only that way. Your bullet must not hit the horn. It must hit the heart.»
Billy looked at her, and his hand gripped the gun. She smiled. Her smile was warm, alive – too alive for a creature that was supposed to be a myth. Time in the forest flowed differently – it did not pass, it crept, like resin down bark. She told him about the forest. About how the trees remember every step, every word, every tear. About how she became the soul of this place not by her own will, but because someone had cursed her many centuries ago. And now she could not die. Could not leave. Only wait until the true hunter came.
She spoke, and Billy looked at her hands, with fingers that ended in a faint golden glow. She touched his shoulder, and where her fingers met his skin, the pain receded. The bark on his hands became softer. His breathing deepened.
«We could be together. Here. In the forest. You would not become a tree. You would be… mine. And I would be yours. The forest would stop eating you, if I asked.»
Billy was silent. In his chest beat one heart – duty to his father. She looked at him with such hope that he wanted to close his eyes. She was beautiful with that special beauty that does not appear in people's dreams, but comes to them just before death. Her eyes were like lakes, deep, reflecting all the stars that had never been lit above this forest. He gripped the gun tighter, and the cold steel burned his palm, pulling him back to reality.
«The forest is evil,» he heard his father's voice. Clear, hard, like a gunstock. «It beckons. It whispers. It promises you what you don't have. But if you enter, it won't give it back. It will only take.»
She is the forest. She promises him love. She promises him life. But his father warned him. His grandfather warned him. His great-grandfather was silent, but his glassy eyes in the portrait also warned him.
«You are lying,» said Billy, and his voice wavered. The forest cannot love. The forest only takes.
She recoiled. The pain in her eyes was real – too real to be an act.
«You said I had to kill you,» he said, raising the gun. «You said the bullet had to hit the heart. You are deceiving me. You want me to stay. You want me to forget who I am. But I remember. I remember everything.»
«I am not deceiving you. If I leave, the forest will remain alive. It will breathe. It will wait for the next one. Only the horn… if you break the horn, everything will end.»
Billy looked at her antlers. Golden. Warm. Radiating light. And in them swirled the same longing as in her eyes. He believed her. He believed every cell of her, every breath. But his father's voice was louder.
She fell asleep at his shoulder at dawn. Exhaustion had broken her – she had waited too long, been alone too long. Her breathing became steady, the golden light on her antlers dimmed, becoming like ordinary gold – dead, cold, lifeless.
Billy looked at her. At her face, relaxed in sleep. At her hands, which had touched him so tenderly. At her lips, which had whispered his name.
He raised the gun. And lowered it. He raised his hand to her head, running it through her shining hair to the patterned antlers, thinner than his little finger, and so beautiful. She opened her eyes the moment his fingers touched the gold. Her gaze held not pain, not terror – only quiet, infinite sadness. She did not cry out. She did not try to stop him.
She whispered:
«I forgive you.»
Crack. The golden horn split like a dry branch. Light burst from it – blinding, white, searing – and died. At that same moment, the ground beneath Billy's feet shuddered. The forest groaned. The trees began to die. Not fall – simply wither. Leaves curled into tubes, blackened, fell off. Bark cracked, revealing dry, dead wood. Moss turned grey, turning to dust. Grass wilted, breaking like old bones.
And she – the doe, the soul of the forest – was melting before his eyes. Gold flowed out of her like water from a broken jug. Her body became transparent, like morning mist. Her eyes were still open, and there was no reproach in them. «They killed me seven times,» she smiled weakly. «Each time I was born again. But now… I will not return.»
She touched his cheek. Her fingers were almost weightless now.
«You won, hunter,» she whispered. «You destroyed the evil. I hope it was worth it.»
She vanished. Simply dissolved into the air, leaving behind only the smell of wet leaves and the broken golden horn in Billy's hands.
The forest died hard – with a wheeze, with a crack, with the smell of rot and ash.
Billy looked at the horn in his hands. It was broken. The curse was lifted. He was free.
But freedom smelled of death.
He walked back for three days. The forest no longer moved, no longer whispered, no longer beckoned. It was dead. Dry trunks stood like burnt matches. The silence was so deep that his ears rang. No birds, no animals, no wind.
On the fourth day, he reached the border. Where the wall of fog had once stood, there was now emptiness. Dead land stretched to the horizon, and in the centre of that emptiness stood a lone willow.
Billy walked closer and saw that at the very base, among the roots, something golden was hidden. A small, broken horn. Just like the one he carried in his hand.
He knelt and touched the ground. It was dry as ash. No moisture. No life. The willow stood, and in its branches Billy heard a whisper – not in any language he knew, but something natural, something that flew in and scattered the morning dew with the dawn. Billy raised his eyes to the sky. It was grey, empty, without sun. Butcher looked at his hands. The bark on them was gone. He was human again.
His name was carved on a stone in the centre of the square. They gave him land, built him a house, found him a bride – quiet, rosy-cheeked, smelling of bread. He married. A son was born to him. Everything was as it should be.
But every night he dreamed of gold. He dreamed of her – the doe with human eyes. She stood in the centre of the dead forest, by that willow, and looked at him without pain, without reproach. Only with sadness.
The forest beyond the village border no longer gave berries. At first, the old women wondered why the raspberries did not ripen and the blueberries fell off green. The mushrooms, which used to sprout from the ground like soldiers after rain, no longer appeared. Then they fell silent. Hunters returned empty-handed – no hare, no boar, no bird. Game had vanished, as if it had never been there. Traps stood empty for weeks, and rust appeared on them faster than usual, as if the earth itself was turning away from metal.
Now there was emptiness there. A grey, dead field that stretched to the very edge of the sky, and in the centre of that field stood a lone willow, like the last candle in a dark church. It had not died. It was the only living thing in all that emptiness, and its green seemed so bright, so wrong against the grey, lifeless earth. Its trunk was thick, twisted, covered in cracks, but from those cracks no resin flowed – from them came a faint golden light. It pulsed, like a slow heartbeat. The wind stirred the willow's branches, and its leaves rustled thinly, high, almost painfully. They were golden. Not yellow – real golden, shimmering like molten metal, like scales, like fire.
He reached out and touched one of them. The leaf was soft, almost velvety, but when his fingers squeezed it, it did not break. It simply grew warm, like a coin held too long in a fist.
They left the next day. Billy loaded a cart – dry bread, a sack of flour, warm clothes, a cradle for his son.
A month later, they reached a new place – a town by the river, where the earth still remembered moisture.
Billy did not return. He no longer slept peacefully. He knew: the willow was waiting. It would wait forever, because gold does not die. It simply waits for someone to touch it again.
And one day, when his son grows up and asks:
«Father, what is a forest?»
He will answer:
«The forest is evil. It breathes. It waits. It wants you to forget the way home.»
willow in many cultures is considered a symbol of sadness, sorrow and mourning. This association is due to its characteristic appearance of drooping, long branches that resemble tears, as well as its frequent appearance in funeral rites.
Thank you for reading
Light in the Depths
Female Reader/Billy Butcher
Summary: A young warm-water mermaid, who grew up in a pack where the depth is considered deadly, accidentally meets a kraken living at the bottom in the wreckage of an old ship.
(CW / TW): Violence / Trauma, Psychological Pressure, Social Rejection, References to Death, Emotional Vulnerability
~2600 words
English is not my primary language.
You were one of the warm-water mermaids, with hair that gleamed like seashells and scales that sparkled beautifully in the sun. Frequent games by the water were cheerful pastimes with your sisters and friends; your brothers from the pod taught you how to catch small fish for supper, driving predatory and dangerous fish farther away from the family. You always thought that the same fate awaited you as your other friends.
While gathering underwater shells, you would notice beautiful stones and corals on the deep bottom, and sometimes entire sunken ships. Mermaids had long been forbidden from approaching them, warned about the danger of the wreckage and the unpleasant cold water in the depths. The boys always broke this rule, bringing their girlfriends trinkets or baubles from the cold bottom. You wrinkled your nose when yet another merman returned from the cold depths without a reprimand, while your girlfriends loved to bask in the warmth by the empty shores.
One day, you noticed a pattern—the trinkets had similar imprints. On the glass remained a damp, predatory burn, a flawless ring, as if etched by acid. You weren't stupid; the sudden shipwrecks in that area and the elders' frequent talk about the kraken were the reason for the ban on stealing his trinkets and descending to the bottom. Your interest was only fueled by this, making you want to go down and see for yourself.
The elders announced one day that they would soon leave this place, and you managed to slip down unnoticed to where you had never been. The water felt colder and darker. Your fingers slid over rough rocks, eager to descend faster. You didn't notice the too-large drop-off near the very bottom. The stone met your tail with a clang, as if you had struck crystal against granite. Silvery scales scattered like a fan, swirling through the water like coins. At the center of the bruise gaped a ragged wound, like a bitten pearl, and the edges of the scaly covering curled upward, exposing tender, twitching flesh. Panic immediately rose to your throat, making you cover the bruise with your hand and look around. The dark water thickened the panic, and the smell of your own blood reminded you that a predator would find you faster than you could return.
And worst of all, what you had so longed to see at the bottom. The ship lay on its side, its keel deeply embedded in the sand. Its masts were broken like matchsticks and stuck out at unnatural angles, tangled with brown seaweed. Instead of sails, tattered rags swayed in time with the current, like the wings of dead birds. Light barely reached here. Sunbeams trembled somewhere above, and in the hold reigned a greenish-blue twilight, where the outlines of cannons and barrels dissolved into ghostly shadows. Around you was absolute silence—no creaking, no knocking, only the muffled pressure of water against your ears.
Curiosity overcame fear, and the mermaid swam closer to the large vessel. Inside it was even darker, and her eyes struggled to adjust as she tried to make out something. She dived through a breach and saw not the bright baubles her brothers often brought from the bottom, but a pile of tentacles that she mistook for thickets of coral or anchor chains. Only upon closer inspection did she notice that these "ropes" were too perfectly shaped and covered not with growths but with suckers, each the size of her palm.
The kraken did not move. He was wedged into the hull so tightly that he seemed part of it. His enormous body filled the entire captain's cabin, pressing the rotted deck downward. Two of the thickest tentacles coiled around the broken bowsprit like snakes, frozen in that pose. A third hung down through the breach, motionless like a stalagmite. He wasn't crushing the ship—he was sitting in it, like a spider in a discarded jar.
Inside, she felt everything turn to ice. She smelled a mixture of old wood, iodine, and something musty, like from a deep cave. And most of all—silence. The kraken breathed so slowly it was imperceptible. But she knew he saw her. In the darkness of the hold, only the outline of his bulk was visible, and that outline filled the entire space, leaving no room for air.
She froze. One minute. Two. She thought he was sleeping or dead. She began to slowly back away, barely moving her fin. And at that moment, one of the tentacles hanging near her slowly uncoiled, aiming its sucker directly at her, wrapping around her waist just above the cut that was again throbbing painfully. And the mermaid understood: he had known about her the whole time, just waiting for her to come within striking distance.
Her attempts to break free ended in failure, irritating her skin against the slimy tentacle. She chirped pleas in her language, incomprehensible to his ears—a wounded bird to a predator, already like a ready-made dessert. The darkness allowed your eyes to see the monster. A torso with patterns like your elders', black ink forming strange designs you had never seen. A thick chain around his neck, a beard, and slightly curly hair, with a gaze so painfully sad that all desire to fight vanished. He finally pulled back from the ship's walls, touching her tail with rough hands near the noticeable bruise. A second tentacle, covered in slime, gently pressed against the wound. The slime was cold and viscous but instantly sealed the edges of the cut with a film, stopping the blood.
The kraken made a low, pulsating sound—something between a groan and a rumble—as if explaining: "Bear it, little one, this is sea salt; it disinfects." The mermaid squealed in pain but immediately felt a third tentacle stroke her head, distracting her, like a mother calming her cub. There was a frightening gentleness in his movements, incompatible with his size. The pain subsided, and feeling the kraken release her from his embrace, she quickly swam away and hid higher in the seaweed. Marks from his tentacles remained on her body. She didn't want anyone to see her like this, so she spent the whole day by the coral, gathering food and useful trinkets so no one would notice she had returned later than usual. The elder frowned slightly at her scrape, repeating her rules about the importance of safety. You didn't let anyone treat your wound, since none of the mermaids use salty slime for injuries. You slept sweetly in the pleasant seaweed that the sun persistently warmed each morning.
The next day, trying to learn from the elders about underwater creatures, you heard the same thing: you cannot believe or trust those who live so deep.
Three days passed. Three days in which you carefully avoided the dark water, pretending you had forgotten the strange incident. You laughed with your sisters, caught fish with your brothers, and nodded at the elders when they started up their song about how "there is nothing in the depths but cold and death."
But every night, when your eyes adjusted to the darkness, you saw his gaze before you. Sad. Tired. Understanding. And the marks on your tail—neat circles, healed with a thin, pearlescent film.
On the fourth night, you couldn't resist.
The moon had just begun to silver the water when you left your native reef. Your heart pounded somewhere in your throat, but your tail carried you downward. Into the cold. Into the darkness. Where the sunbeams grew thinner and then vanished entirely. You gave yourself a chance to change your mind. But when you saw him on the border of light and shadow—huge, motionless, grown into the old ship—he didn't stir. Only his eyes—two dim green lanterns in the depths—watched you. And when you stopped a few meters away, not daring to swim closer, one of his tentacles slowly swayed forward. Not toward you. To the side. There, on the bottom, in a crevice of the rock, lay a small object—a glass ball with a flame frozen inside. Like a tiny sun trapped in a transparent cage. You swam over and carefully picked it up. And when you turned around, the kraken had already moved back a little deeper, speaking in your mermaid tongue, which you thought he didn't know: "This is for you. For coming."
You came to him at dawn when the elders left to hunt. You brought him warm water from the surface in coiled seaweed that stored the sun's heat all day. You left small fish at the entrance to his lair, caught early in the morning. Billy showed you sunken cities that lay deeper than even the bravest mermaids dared to swim. He guided your hand over the carvings on ancient columns, and you felt under your fingers a history that couldn't be read in books. He told you about people who once walked those streets, about their gods and fears, about love and war. His voice was low, like the rumble of the deep, but you heard tenderness in it. Then you finally learned his name, and he learned yours.
The elders began to notice your absence. You made excuses—exploring new currents, gathering rare shells, cleaning the reef. But the elder, the one who wore a necklace of shark teeth, once pulled you aside.
"You smell different," she said, narrowing her eyes. "Of the depths. You went down?"
You shook your head, not looking away.
She stared at you for a long time. Then she said something that made your heart clench:
"You're not the first, girl. Twenty years ago, a mermaid like you thought she loved the deep. She gave him everything. And he devoured her light."
You knew she was lying. You felt it. But there was such certainty in her voice that for a moment you doubted.
He was waiting at the very edge, and when he saw you, something warm flickered in his gaze. But you didn't swim closer. You stopped five meters away, finally seeing by the old ship the stones used for burial markings. A design too large for you to have missed while swimming near the bottom. Spirals like his tentacles, stretching into infinity, and at the center of each—emptiness. You ran your fingers over the grooves, and they burned with cold, even though the water around was comfortably warm.
"It's not a burial," his voice came from behind. You flinched and turned. He wasn't looking at you but at the stones. "It's a memorial. To those who are no longer here."
"I didn't kill them," he said quietly. "I tried to save them."
You listened to him all night.
He spoke of a time when the depths weren't dark. When forests of glowing seaweed grew on the bottom, and in them lived creatures that mermaids had never seen. He spoke of his family—of brothers whose tentacles were longer than his, of a mother who sang at a frequency inaudible to human ears, and a father who could stop a current with a single movement.
"We didn't attack ships," he said, and for the first time bitterness crept into his voice. "We guarded the border. Where the light ends, our home begins. Ships fell on their own—storms, rocks, their own stupidity. We only took what was left to keep the iron from rusting and poisoning the water."
"But the elders said…" you began.
"Your elders are the ones who conspired with hunters," he interrupted. "They were afraid. Not of us. They were afraid you'd learn the truth. That we're not monsters. That the depths aren't hostile. That you might go down and no longer need their protection."
He fell silent. His eyes—those two dim green lanterns—looked at you with such longing that your breath caught.
"She was a shapeshifter priestess—could be both in the depths and on the surface. She taught me your language. She said that one day we'd find a way to live together. Mermaids and krakens, light and darkness. They killed her because she believed in that. She was my first love."
"Why didn't you kill me then?" you asked. "The first time. I trespassed in your home, I was wounded, I smelled of blood."
"You smelled of curiosity. Like her," Butcher replied.
You began to visit him more often. Not only at dawn but also at dusk, when the water turned orange and fish hid in the coral. You stopped making excuses. You just swam away, leaving your sisters on the reef, and dove down to where he waited.
He showed you how to feel the depth. How to read the currents—not with your eyes, but with your whole body. How to find clean water even in the darkest place. He taught you the language of touch, because words were too slow for those who live in silence. You brought him fish with bright scales, and he admired them before releasing them back into the water. You brought him your laughter, your sisters', your pod's—and he absorbed it like a sponge.
The elder with the shark-tooth necklace didn't let up.
You felt her gaze on you even when you swam at the surface. She watched you silently, narrowing her eyes, and you knew: she was looking for proof.
One day, as you were returning from the depths, she blocked your path.
"You've been with him," she said, not a question. "You smell of him. Of strange water, of a strange life. I warned you, girl."
"You lied to me," you answered, and your voice came out firmer than you expected. "You said he devoured her light. You said she was a mermaid who loved the deep. But she was a priestess. You killed her. You and your hunters."
The elder froze. Her face, always calm, flickered for the first time.
"You killed his brothers and his mate to preserve your fear and your power."
"You don't understand," the elder grabbed your arm, her fingers digging into your skin. "If you learn there's life in the depths, if you stop being afraid, you'll go down. We'll lose you. The pod will die."
"The pod will die from fear," you said, pulling your arm free. "Not from the truth."
You swam to him that night with trembling hands.
He was waiting at the very edge—where light meets darkness. His tentacles swayed slowly in the water, and his eyes looked at you with that same sadness you'd seen the first time. He said nothing. Billy extended a tentacle and gently touched your cheek—where the elder had left a red mark from a slap.
At dawn, you didn't return to the pod.
You left a farewell song on the reef—a melody your sisters would recognize if they knew how to listen. You left them shells gathered from the depths and a tuft of seaweed that held the light of your last sunlit swim.
You dove down to where the water became dark and cold.
He was waiting.
He stood by his ship—old, broken, turned into his home, his prison, his sanctuary. His eyes glowed with warm green light when he saw you.
He embraced you carefully, almost weightlessly, as if you were made of glass. His tentacles wrapped around you, warming, protecting. And you pressed against his chest, hearing how slowly, deeply, like the ocean, his heart beat.
"I don't want you to cry," he said. "But if you want to—here it will always be dark. No one will see your tears but me."
He looked at you, and in his eyes a spark lit—the first in many centuries.
"You are my light."
And at that moment, as he spoke those words, everything around you began to glow. Thousands of tiny luminescent creatures, which you had never noticed before, rose from the bottom, enveloping you in warm radiance. The depth came alive—it wasn't dark; it was full of life. You just hadn't known how to see it.
"Welcome home," he said.
And you understood: wherever he was, it would always be warm. Even in the deepest darkness.
Thanks to everyone who read to the end. I will be grateful for any interaction with the post
Salt on the lips
Summary: Captain Billy Butcher, an experienced sailor, encounters a siren while sailing. At first, he perceives her as an ordinary maritime danger and orders the crew to muffle her singing with noise. However, his obsession is growing.
Warnings about the content: Psychological stress, The theme of obsession and self-destruction, Scenes of intimacy, Alcohol, The theme of loneliness.
~3,150 words
There was a small storm trailing the ship, and the floorboards creaked as usual. Billy was crossing off the islands they had managed to plunder over the past few weeks. Their provisions would last them a long while yet. He picked out a few more targets for raiding before consulting the entire crew.
Feeling the weather worsen, the captain barked orders across the vessel. The crew furled the sails, reducing speed, secured the cargo, and left a pair of lookouts on the bow to watch the waves and shout warnings.
The captain sent the rest below deck for safety, while he remained on the bridge to monitor the waves and wind. A light rain intensified, soaking his dark frock coat with its gilded buttons. Everything proceeded as usual. Even when the boatswain handled the sails, the captain kept an eye on whether the mast was overloaded. Wet ropes glistened under the cold light, and the blue moon traced silhouettes across the wet deck. The wind whipped his damp clothes, making them flap unpleasantly.
A thunderclap struck somewhere behind them; the ship slowly approached rocky islands. In normal times, there might have been a military ambush there, but in bad weather, nature itself was the main danger. Captain Butcher took the helm personally, sent the sharpest-eyed sailors to the bowsprit and the tops with a whistle, and turned the ship stern‑to toward the island when the wind blew onto the rocks. The wind was not strong, allowing them to leave just one tiny sail on the mizzenmast so that the stern remained downwind, but the ship would not pick up speed. The captain stood astern, watching the foam around the rocks. The moon painted cold blue waves, and he heard a sweet singing. Lifting his head toward his men in the crew, he sensed that he was not the only one who had heard the siren. Firing a shot into the air, he gave the order: "Hey, on the forecastle! Plug your ears with rags! That's Spanish witch‑poison, not a wench!" The smell of gunpowder hung in the air. To avoid spreading panic, he ordered the cannons fired with blank charges or the ship's bell rung—loud noise would drown out the sirens' voices.
The ship left the dangerous reef‑strewn area. Butcher gave orders to steer the vessel and went below. In his logbook, a succinct entry would appear: "Saw a sea monster. Gave it a wide berth. Crew sober."
Days passed, and the sweet songs still sounded at night. During a check, the captain realised that one man was paying attention to it. To tell the crew would mean being thrown overboard, so he silently blamed the drink for the problem.
Another evening slipped into night. Butcher gazed at the water—its gleam deceptively sketched a fin and a tail. As soon as darkness fell, he heard her call again. Billy looked around in confusion and caught a glitter of sea scales and what seemed like eyes, with that predatory gleam that draws your gaze. Panic stirred somewhere in his gut, making him take a few steps back. "Boatswain, question the lookouts. Who else on the bridge, besides me, looked to port during the third bell? Have them come forward," Butcher ordered, without saying what he himself had seen. And the result was disheartening for the captain: no one had seen anything except him. Although Billy was sure he had seen the gleam of her hair and wet skin, predatory eyes ready to devour him. He would never ask "did anyone see a siren"—that would sound weak, as if he were seeking support. Billy would mention "strange objects," "voices," or "smoke." And if any sailor confessed first, the captain would send him to the hold to clean out the rats.
Billy returned to his private cabin on the ship. Everything was so familiar: the narrow bed, the chart table, the chest for money and weapons, the kerosene lamp. The only thing that had changed in the past few days was the sketches of a mysterious silhouette in the water—sketches of her face, her form. He did not notice when night fell. He was on deck again, hearing her call again. Could it really be the rum? Perhaps lack of sleep was playing tricks on his old brain, making him see a beautiful mermaid over the side? In his thoughts, she already seemed real, about to drag him under with her sweet voice. The wood groaned pitifully as the captain's hands gripped too tightly. On board, everyone had long realised something was off with the captain, blaming it all on alcohol. The sea was calm, and only he paced the ship. The salt spray from over the side invigorated him even as it reminded him of danger. He stood almost at the edge, looking down at the whitecaps, in which he had managed to spot the siren that was driving him mad. Lost in thought, he did not notice the water splash nearby. "Probably a fish," flashed through his mind. Self‑deception again, trying to prove to himself that he was not going crazy over a mermaid who wanted to take him to the bottom.
The distance to the water was about a metre—they had taken on so much cargo that the ship sat lower than usual. Without taking his eyes off the sea, he heard a more insistent splash that jolted him from his thoughts. The mermaid, right in front of him, was not as frightening as in those nights. From her slightly pink lips came a song that took his breath away, making him forget everything. The singing was interrupted by her laughter—like wind chimes—bringing him back to reality as she dived under the water again, surfacing elsewhere. He drew his pistol from his belt, aiming it at her. He would try to outwit her, to keep her from singing, since legends said sirens did not attack without songs. And he spoke with a slight smirk: "Hey, beauty! I'm deaf in one ear, and the other's busy—I'm counting debts here. Save your singing for the Spaniards—their silver rings brighter."
The mermaid did not dive. She paused, lazily stirring the water with her fingers, and laughed softly again, as if she knew a joke understood only by her. Her voice, even without singing, vibrated in the air, resonating somewhere in Butcher's chest with a heavy, syrupy warmth.
"Deaf captain," she said, and her voice sounded not in his ears but directly in his head, "you're funnier than anyone who's sailed here in a hundred years. But you're lying. You hear me even through wax. You hear me in your dreams." She leaned forward, and Billy saw her eyes up close. They were not empty, like a shark's, as he had imagined before—they were old. Infinitely ancient, full of hungry curiosity, and in them sloshed the same cold moonlight as on the wet deck. He did not shoot. His hand with the pistol wavered. Instead, slowly, as if in a trance, he lowered the weapon. He did not see a monster. He saw a mirror of his own loneliness.
"Get lost," he said, but his voice cracked. "You have no power. I am the captain. I am not afraid of death."
"Who's talking about death?" She tilted her head; wet hair streamed over her shoulders, baring her neck. "I don't want to drown you, Billy Butcher."
He swallowed. His throat was parched from salt and the fear he refused to admit. "If I run for help from every sea creature, the crew will think I've lost my mind. Or that I'm drunk. And the only thing worse than a drunk captain is a dead captain." She laughed again, but this time the laugh was softer, almost warm. She threw her head back, and the moonlight slid over her damp skin, the curve of her neck, the collarbones that disappeared beneath the water. Butcher noticed that the scales on her thighs shimmered not silver, as he had expected, but a strange, deep blue, like the ocean on the darkest night.
"You're not afraid of me," she said, and her voice suddenly lost that magical vibration. It became almost human. Almost vulnerable. "You're afraid they'll see the truth. That they'll see you looking at the water, searching for something... someone."
"You see emptiness," she said quietly. "You see shores that will never be home. You see your ships sinking into the water, and people dying with your name on their lips. And you see me."
Butcher flinched, as if struck. He fired a sharp, loud shot—too loud, making his head feel like it was exploding. He fell onto his back and saw not the night sky but the wooden planks of his cabin. Heavy breathing and the thumping of his heart brought him back to real life. He heard again the creak of floorboards, the murmur of conversation on deck, the smell of wood and wet ropes. And was that a dream?
The next morning, Butcher came on deck with a headache, as if he had been drinking raw rum all night, though he had not touched a bottle. The salt on his lips tasted like the echo of her voice. He scanned the crew: sailors fiddled with rigging, the boatswain grumbled while checking the lines. Everything was normal. Everything was in its place. Only inside him something had shifted, cracked.
He walked to the taffrail astern, where he had stood the night before. On the wood, barely noticeable, gleamed a transparent slime, like fish oil. Butcher rubbed it with his finger, smeared it. No doubt—it was real. But instead of the fear he should have felt, a strange, viscous feeling spread inside him. She had been here. She had spoken to me. Not in a dream. He clenched his teeth. He could order harpoons armed, pour a barrel of tar over the side to drive her away, order no one to approach the rail. But he did none of that. Instead, he ordered the course changed two points eastward, to warmer, calmer waters where the sea was clearer and the nights darker. He told the crew it was for better weather.
The boatswain, an old sea dog with a face carved by winds, eyed the captain with a squint. "Something's off with you, Captain—lately you don't look at the charts much. Just stare at the water. Looking for a girl out there, are you?" He chuckled, not realising how close to the truth he was. Butcher spun around. His look was such that the boatswain, no fool, immediately bit his tongue and stepped back toward the helm. A girl. If only they knew. If only they knew that this "girl" could be harnessed to the cannons in place of cannonballs—so much strength was in her.
During the day, he tried to attend to business. Checked the holds, counted barrels of salt beef, argued with the cook over foul water. But his thoughts were over the side. He heard the slap of waves, and it seemed to him that rhythm, a whisper, lay in that slap. He almost heard her name, though she had never told it to him.
Everything changed on the third night.
He came on deck, ordering the lookouts to stay at their posts, and stood on the forecastle, in the shadow of the furled sails. He was not waiting for her. He knew she would come. She appeared silently, rising from the dark water like a thought that had long lived in his head. Tonight she was closer, almost touching the hull with her hands. Her eyes glittered in the dark, but they no longer held that ancient predation. In them was mockery. And, more frighteningly, recognition.
"You came back here, Billy," she said, and her voice again sounded in his head, soft and insinuating. "You changed course. You brought the ship to warmer water. For me."
He wanted to snap back, to say it was coincidence, that he was the captain and had the right to change course whenever he pleased. But he said nothing. He looked at her face lit by the moon, at the shadows cast by her lashes, and understood that he was lost. She was beautiful with that special, deadly beauty that does not visit people in dreams but comes to them on the brink of death.
"Why do you come to me?" he asked hoarsely, gripping the rail so hard his knuckles went white. The mermaid smiled. Her smile was warm, almost human, but deep in her pupils flickered a cold, ancient light.
"Because you look at me not as prey," she said. "You look at me the way you look at emptiness. You don't want to kill me. You want me to fill that hole inside you. Am I right?" But never had he felt such loneliness as now, standing before her. He could order shots fired. He could go to his cabin and bolt the door. Instead, he stepped forward.
"You can't fill the hole," he said, and for the first time in years, weakness crept into his voice. "You're just a dream. Or delirium. Or a curse."
She laughed, but the laugh was quiet, melodic, like wind chimes. She leaned back, turned in the water, and for a moment he saw her tail, shimmering dark blue in the moonlight. It was mesmerising.
"Then why do you look at me, Captain Billy Butcher?" she asked, surfacing again before him. Her face was inches from his. He smelled the sea, seaweed, and something sweet, like rotting fruit. "If I'm just a dream, order yourself to wake up."
She dived, and her hand brushed against his palm resting on the rail. Her fingers were cold as water, but that cold burned him. He flinched but did not pull his hand away. He looked down at the water, where her silhouette flickered beneath the surface, and felt his heart beat faster than in any battle.
Billy did not sleep until dawn. He sat in his cabin, staring at the palm she had touched. The skin there still held a strange cold, but that cold did not frighten him—it beckoned. He ran his fingers over the spot and felt a shiver run down his spine.
In the morning, he came on deck haggard, with red eyes. The crew whispered behind his back. The boatswain, the old grumbler, dared to ask if he should have some rum to "set him right." Butcher only hissed through his teeth: "Get back to work." But he himself felt that his health had cracked. And the crack was in the shape of a female silhouette.
He ordered them to anchor near a small uninhabited islet. He said they needed to replenish fresh water, though the barrels were nearly full. He simply wanted to stop, wanted silence, wanted to hear her voice again.
In the evening, when the ship's lights were lit, he stood on the bow again. He no longer hid. Billy stood openly, gazing into the dark water, waiting. The lookouts exchanged glances but said nothing: the captain had the right to stare at the sea as long as he liked.
She appeared with the first stars. At first, he noticed only a faint glow beneath the water—her scales shimmered turquoise and silver. Then her head rose above the surface. This time she was not smiling, not singing, not mocking. She simply looked up at him, and in her eyes was silence. She swam to the hull and, nimbly gripping the chains, rose from the water to her waist. Her wet hair fell in heavy strands over her shoulders. She was silent.
"You came," he said, and it sounded not like an accusation but like an admission—like he had missed her. "Why do you want this?" he asked, stepping toward the rail. "Why do you want me? I'm old, I'm dry, I'm covered in gunpowder and salt. My soul is blacker than the hold." She tilted her head, her eyes gleaming strangely. She touched his palm with her hand, and this time he did not pull away. He covered her fingers with his rough, calloused hand. She was icy, but he felt life beating beneath that icy skin—strange, alien, but real. "Aren't you afraid I'll drown you?" she asked.
"You would have drowned me already," he replied. "That's not why you come."
She lowered her eyes and traced his scar with her finger.
"You fell off a cliff," she whispered. "Many years ago. I remember. I saw you. You swam and did not scream. You just swam, and blood trailed behind you. I thought then: this man dies beautifully."
Butcher froze. He had indeed fallen off a cliff twenty years ago. He lost consciousness and woke up on the shore with a cracked skull. Back then, he thought it was a guardian angel. But no. It was her.
"You saved me?" he whispered.
She ducked back under the water, looking away. "You were interesting. And now you stand here, and you're still interesting." She dived back into the water but left something in his hand. A shell. Small, pearlescent, surprisingly warm.
They met every night. He lowered a small boat and went far from the ship, supposedly "checking reefs" or "setting traps." The crew began to suspect something. The boatswain once said to his face:
"Captain, you walk the deck like a ghost. You don't sleep, you don't eat, you stare at the water like a lovesick lad. It's none of my business, but God forbid there's a mutiny in the hold..."
Butcher did not answer. He just looked at the boatswain with such a mix of indifference and menace that the man backed off. He was ready to kill anyone who came between him and his nightly meeting.
That night, he took a bottle of rum with him—not to get drunk, but to warm his hands. She was waiting in a quiet cove where the water was like glass. She lay on a large boulder, her tail dangling into the water, and in the moonlight she looked like a statue of silver and dreams.
"Do you have a name?" he asked, sitting down nearby but not too close. An invisible boundary still lay between them—marine and human. "We don't have names," she answered. "We are just voices. We are just water."
She lifted her head and looked at him for a long moment, her wet eyes reflecting the stars. "I thought of you as 'hot stone.' You were warm even in ice‑cold water."
He laughed bitterly and took a swig of rum.
The siren tilted her head, and her wet hair fell onto his arm, leaving a salty trace.
Butcher took her face in his hands. The mermaid did not resist. Her skin was icy, but her gaze was warm. For the first time in his life, he kissed not a woman, but the sea. He kissed what could never belong to him.
And she kissed him back. Her lips tasted of salt and seaweed, and in that taste was both death and immortality.
Hello there! This is my first experience writing fanfiction. English is not my native language, I hope you enjoyed it <3
now lets discuss butcher coming home to find you wearing just his black sweater (yall know the one) and a pair of panties i just KNOW that man would go absolutely ape shit and fuck you stupid
A/N: so sorry for the radio silence, but also yall I hit 1k followers 🥺🫶🏻 thank you my bbys xxx
A sigh left butchers mouth as soon as the apartment door closed behind him. It had been a long day, staring at files but not reading them, the endless yapping of the other guys in his vigilante group - he needed to just decompress, relax… and being home with you sounded like a dream come true.
As soon as you came into view- your back towards him, bare legs on display, the swell of your ass adorned with those laced trimmed cotton panties he drooled over and that black sweater- his sweater you kept swiping from his limited amount of clothing he owned.
Not that he minded seeing you wear it, but it sure made it hard to keep himself in check when you looked so irresistible.
When he made his way to you, immediately pressing his nose into your hair and muttering greetings and how much his missed you… all while his rough fingers smoothed down your sides, creeping up under the sweater to feel the heat of your soft skin, smirking while hearing your breath stutter while you try to make words form…
“My sweet girl, wearin’ my stuff… looking like a right fuckin’ four course meal.”
Billy wouldn’t wait, lifting you to the counter and standing between your legs before kissing you harshly and hungrily - moving swiftly to pull your panties off and unzip his own pants.
“Fuck Billy- been thinking of you all day-“ you muttered, trying to pull off the jumper but being stopped by him.
“Nuh uh- ain’t takin’ that off…” he’d rasp, fingers collecting the slick of your pussy, using it for lubing up his cock as he strokes it. “Gonna fuck you in it.”
He pulled you forward, sinking to his knees to taste you on his tongue - making slow, deliberate circles on your clit before he stood back up, knees cracking slightly as he lined himself up before sheathing himself inside you - a pleased grunt leaving both of you as he rocked himself into you.
Your walls fluttered around his cock, moaning his name as he fucked into you faster- hearing him grunt when you tugged on his hair, egging him to thrust harsher into you.
The onslaught of you crying out his name, he indulged in it - biting down on your shoulder as he continued and rubbed his thumb on your clit.
“So perfect f’ me…my girl.” He’d breathe out, his hips stuttering as he tried to keep his pace amidst his oncoming orgasm. “Cmon- cum for me-“
He pressed his lips hard onto yours, swallowing your cry of passion as you came hard - your cunt convulsing around him gave the last motivation to come deep inside you.
Billy rocked every little drop he gave into you, softening his kisses to your lips and cheeks.
“Billy…” you whispered, cheeks red and mind fucked dumb - but your eyes still sparkled with need for more. “Felt too good.” You grinned softly.
He smirked, thumbing your bottom lip.
“Yeah lovey, I know… but I ain’t just stoppin’ there tonight. Need to have more of you in my jumper.”
Artblock
prompt by @anattami (goodluck on your studies!)🤭
Next door neighbor Billy Butcher x F!Reader Here’s part 1 please give it a like too🫶✨
tw: cum swallowing
Artblock sucks especially when your best friend commissioned you to make a cover art for their upcoming crime novel. The main character was about rugged middle aged man, a runaway assassin.
This isn’t your first time drawing men. Though gritty art wasn’t your strong suit, you needed the money. Your friend hadn’t given you a due date, so there was no rush. Still, staring at online references wasn’t getting you anywhere. You needed something more—someone to draw inspiration from. You already knew who that someone was. The problem was that while he was the perfect muse, he was a terrible idea.
໒꒱₊˚✧⋆⟡ꕀ˖✧˖°⊹₊⟡⋆
“Thought you wouldn’t ask ,luv” He hung his coat and storm to your living room like he owns the place. Rolled your eyes, sign of annoyance.
“Do I need to take off m’clothes?” Butcher said while already unbuttoning his shirt
“Maybe just the top” you said begrudgingly. He smirked at your response. Various poses was shown to him, he was expected to do two to five poses. He started with both of his arm resting on his waist. Butcher can’t help to boast his chest a bit.
“I need you to hold still for a long time, okay?”
“Anythin’ for you ,doll”
You start your sketches with a pencil, nice thin lines, then bold lines to accentuate the curve of his muscles. Dust from the eraser kept forming more and more. The floor was covered by it by the time you finish one arm.
The paper wore thin after being erased too many times. One paper, two paper. Another pose and the other. Paper scrap thrown here and there. You can’t seem to get the fluidity of the muscles right. You scratch your head in frustration. Second guessing your ability to draw.
“Oi! Wrinkles doesn’t suit y’face. Why don’t ya take a break?”
His voice broke your busy mind. You nodded yet, your eyes lingered on his arm. Butcher noticed you zoning out and it strike a cord in him. You come closer to him, eyes still lingering on his toned arm. Your hands suddenly moved by itself, hovering slightly above his skin. Your sudden touch awakened something in Butcher.
“Oh sorry! I didn’t meant to do that!”
“No worries, luv.” he awkwardly replied
Gaze shifted to the clock, an hour and half has passed. Mind still thinking of ways to make the best shade of shadows and the strokes of pencil. A small cough from Butcher broke the tension. He knew your head was still not in the room.
“For fuck sakes ,luv. What’s on yer mind?!”
Again, his voice snapped you back to reality. You didn’t realized how lost you might look. You were used to making art alone and tend to zone out when you’re stuck. Feeling guilty for ignoring him, you decided to get it off your chest.
“Can I feel your arms just to get the fluidity of the muscles?”
Butcher ears perked up and rubbed his chin, pretending to think of a good response. Your eyes gleamed in desperation as if pleading for him to accept. He didn’t expect that kind expression from you.
“You owe me two pints of beer ye?”
You jumped in excitement and without any doubt starts massaging his arms. Butcher unironically grunts, trying to hold his composure. You didn’t give him room to breathe. Eyes locked on his muscles, genuinely admiring how built he was.
Occasionally, you will feel the contours of his muscles, gliding your fingers gently on to his skin. Then, suddenly you found yourself guilty, leaning to close to him, your knee grazed his crotch. But, you feel a warmth radiating and something hard wedged between it. Before you realized what it was, Butcher unconsciously grunted.
“Ah fu— I didn’t mean to lean in that close!”
“C’mon ,luv. It’s not ye first time meetin ’ him. He loved your company”
His comment made you shift your focus to it directly. You paused on how the sheer size of it was stretching the fabric of his pants. He’s right, you’ve seen it. But, not up close. No excuse this time, you were caught zoning out and starting right at it.
“Don’t you wanna study…how he looks? Maybe y’need more than just reference?”
໒꒱₊˚✧⋆⟡ꕀ˖✧˖°⊹₊⟡⋆
“Grip it tighter” you said
While standing, he obeyed your command and gripped his length tighter. You did need a reference for how hands grabbing an object looked, and he had insisted on showing you. He gently began to move his hand up and down. His hand circled around the tip, twisting it like a doorknob.
You could see the veins on his hands in contrast to the ones on his cock, his dirty nails, and the calluses on his fingers, all in detail. Yet your fingers were no longer holding the pencil to sketch instead, they were busy rubbing your own clit.
The next thing you knew, his hot tip was hovering over your swollen lips. You parted your lips and rolled your eyes up, making eye contact with him. Butcher was never ready for your cheeky response.
“Let me fuckin’ paint your lil mouth”
You opened your mouth wider while sticking your tongue out. The tip of his cock sat nicely on your tongue. The wetness and heat radiating from your mouth sent rushing waves of excitement through his body. He grunted as his body jerked, and a string of thick, translucent cum splattered all over your mouth. Not a drop was wasted as you licked it all clean while Butcher grinned in exhaustion.
໒꒱₊˚✧⋆⟡ꕀ˖✧˖°⊹₊⟡⋆
my wife
Another example why I think Karl’s a dirty minded old guy
Because why did he post a selfie infront of a downward sign that says “Fire Hose” 🤔
Unless, he’s implying….something….down his pants—
I had a dream about Billy the Cowboy 😋 has anyone written about this?
bohemian blasphemy and her wife (butcher)
I can't stop thinking that a boy soldier will be able to control his outbursts, and will be able to control their temperature, including in winter, he will be able to warm the reader by raising his body temperature, as some birds do.
( I live on a patch of permafrost and would love to fall asleep on his warm chest)
A/N: I LOVE THIS
Ben generally is a warm person, and with you feeling the cold more than him he teases you for it.
But in winter, even with layers of pyjamas on and a thick duvet is not always enough for you to not shiver- He’d roll his eyes, before he pulls you into his chest.
He’d mutter about how you were being dramatic, not to press your cold feet on him or he’d make you sleep on the floor (said as he’s pulling you almost inhumanly close to him)
With a sigh, his chest started to heat up, the slight glow under his skin giving you the warmth that you truly craved. He felt the instant relax in your body, humming with the warmth against your cheek, and he smiled slightly… knowing that he made you feel that way.
My conscience torments me, but I want to corrupt his defiant image far too much.
Hii, I saw under someone’s ask that you replied saying you study space and stars in terms of physics. Can you tell me more about doing a physics degree at university? How much workload is it and is it insanely insanely difficult? Thanks!! Hope u have a nice day!!
Oh, hello. actually, it's just my hobby, and my degree is a bit related to this topic, so I'm researching this question again, so I'm not a PhD candidate or anything like that.. my family has scientists who work in this field + my city is scientific, where there are many universities, and I have attended lectures since childhood. My favorite childhood books were about space, just like everyone else's, I think, only with a stronger scientific bent.
In recent episodes, Butcher had a bit of gray on his beard. how will the reader, who is younger than the Butcher, react when he sees a gray hair on his groin😇😇
A/N: greying butcher 🫦🫦🫦
“Mm… you got a lil silver in your hair.”
Your fingers delicately traced the rough scruff of his beard- dark hair mixed with little slivers of white, giving his lips soft pecks as you perched on his lap in your shared bed- the early morning sun just peeking through the curtains.
A light scoff was heard.
“You callin’ me old now are ya?” He feigned offence, his weathered hands roamed along the softness of your thighs, lighting grabbing your flesh in his palm.
“Well, am I wrong?” You teased him, giggling as your lips peppered along his strong neck.
He just scoffed once more, giving your ass a tight squeeze.
“Careful sweetheart, remember how you were told to respect your elders?” He joked, humming as your lips traveled further down his bare skin. “You gonna call me Daddy now?”
You chuckled, the flush on your cheeks suggested you didn’t hate the idea.
“Dirty old man...” You grinned, gazing at the swirled of dark and silver chest hair. “Besides… nothing wrong with the white hair, I think it’s looks hot on you.”
He chuckled, his eyes locked onto you like a hawk.
“You flatter me love…”
Your lips slid further down, taking in the warmth of Billy’s freckled skin under your soft tongue as you reached below his navel. You listened as his breathing hitched when your fingers hooked underneath his briefs, his hardened cock twitching as you let it spring free.
Your gentle yet wanton stare at his hardness standing at attention made Billy smirk.
“Like what you see, sweet thing?” He asked lowly, feeling your lips back on his skin again.
“Mm… you know I do, like always.” Your mouth now reached the base of his cock, tongue giving teasing kitten licks as you gazed up at him, before A long wet stripe along the underside of him made his hips stir.
“Fuck…” Billy groaned, one of his hands moving to fist in your hair. “Don’t tease me…”
You giggled, your lips now wrapped around his tip. As you slowly sucked along it Billy’s head rolled back as he groaned again.
“That’s it… such a good fucking girl.”
His praise sent a vibration through you, letting out a soft moan around him as you took him fully into your mouth.
Your eyes fluttered open, gazing down as you spotted along his pubic mound little specks of white hair amongst the dark. Your lips moved off of him, fixating on the greys.
“You got them down here too.” You grinned up at him.
“W-wha-“ Billy’s pleasure was cut off as you stop and spoke, reverting his eyes down to you.
“You’re greying here too.” You said almost too casually, an index finger pointing to a patch.
“Damn it, sweetheart-“
His fingers tightened in your hair, bringing you back to his cock to keep you from being distracted further.
He guided his cock back into your mouth, his hips lightly pushing up between your lips as he hit the back of your throat- the both of you moaning harmoniously.
“That’s it… take it deep, lemme see your eyes water.” He growled, seeing your mouth filling encapsulating him, your nose pressed against the thick corse hair.
Billy took control, thrusting himself up into your mouth. Multitudes of praises and groans were given to you as your cheeks hollowed around him, giving him that sweet suction as he started to come undone.
“Fuckin’ hell love I’m close- lemme come in that sweet mouth of yours-“ he purred, thrusts becoming sloppy as he groaned out your name, spilling his hot seed deep into your throat as he held you there, his cock twitching against your tongue.
Billy loosened his grip on your hair, your mouth pulling off his with a soft ‘pop’.
Fingers wiped away the small droplets of water from the corners of your eyes, before cupping your flushed cheeks.
“Look at ya… taking me so damn well.” He praised, pulling you up to straddle him again. He kissed you tenderly, full of care and love he’d only dare share with you.
You smiled hazily at him, now stroking his greying hairs on his jaw again.
“Not too bad for an old man.” You were back to teasing him again.
Billy rolled his eyes, as he often did, but he couldn’t help but let out a laugh.
“Hey… this old man can make ya forget your name with just a touch of his tongue, keep giving me lip and I’ll just have to put ya over my knee.”
With a raise of your brow, you smirked.
“Is that a threat or a promise?”
Today is my birthday
Maybe I should start publishing art...