Tags: Established relationship, fluff, some petting, sickeningly sweet.
Summary: Oz wants to take over the old jazz club Monroe's and restore it to its former glory, with you as the star of the show.
Author's Notes: Dividers by @/saradika-graphics. Originally intended for penguinweek 2025, and is finally being posted July 2026 (it's seeing the light of day!) Enjoy the fic and happy reading :)
A madman had destroyed the city, the floods having killed and displaced many, with buildings being torn into ruins, damaged by the intensity of the water that crashed through them. So many staples of the city were gone, the bricks having crumbled under the pressure of the floods, but one still stood, and this one dear to his heart.
As beaten and bruised as it was, Monroe's still stood strong in the East-Side. The interior left a lot to be desired, the grand chandelier finding its new home on the flooded wooden floors, once polished and sleek in their prime, now ruined by decay. Tile withstood such damage, with only a few squares by the bar having been lifted up, the rest laid flat yet showed signs of scrapes and wear. It wasn't entirely hopeless, floors could always be fixed, and the stage had survived its beating from the violent surges of water.
Inside of him was a selfish desire to buy the building, to restore it to his former glory solely for his own satisfaction. It was a notion based entirely on sentiment, as the first time he had heard live music was in Monroe's, and he had fallen in love with it from that night on. A repair and refurbishment of the club would be a labour of love, and without the Iceberg Lounge to occupy anymore, Oswald was more than willing to devote himself to Monroe's once more.
"You bought this?"
"What, you don't like it?"
"Well, it's a little...run down?"
"Nothing that can't be fixed, baby. C'mon, its got its charms."
"Uh huh." It was difficult to be convinced by his odd sense of optimism about the place, but he seemed to be excited, so you played along for the meantime.
Oswald looked around the room, transfixed by the memories that came back to him, so real that he could almost see a younger version of himself sitting in one of the booths, soaking in the live music. A part of him wanted to feel that way again, to fall utterly in love with the soft and sultry melodies of live jazz music, and he wanted you to help him do it.
He turned to you, hands finding your waist as he gently spun you around to look at the stage. "Can't you imagine yourself up there?" His lips brushed against your ear, his breath sending a shiver down your spine. "I'll make it perfect for ya, I promise. Lights, a microphone, a great band, I'll get it all for you."
"You've got a killer voice, sweetheart, like a songbird. All you gotta do is sing and I'll handle the rest." He wanted you to sing, to be the star of the show while he pulled the strings behind the scenes to make it perfect.
If Oz was truly so passionate about restoring the club and insistent on your involvement, then who were you to deny him?
You turned around to face him, your hands planted on his chest as you leaned in just close enough to make his breath hitch. "Treat me like a star, Oz, and we've got a deal."
His hand cupped your cheek, thumb drifting down to lightly pull at your bottom lip before he spoke. "I'll give you everything you could ever want." Without another word, he sealed the promise with a kiss, lips pressing against your own as he cradled your face.
But before you could truly be a star, Monroe's would have to undergo a transformation to return to its former glory; Oswald would make sure that happened.
The construction process would take a while, you knew that, but you wanted to see the club develop as the days went on, to watch real change happen as it was slowly restored to a functioning state.
As soon as the chandelier had been removed from the floor, the space seemed far more open and easy to work with, allowing you to visualise what it could look like upon completion.
"I know it ain't done yet, but I wanted you to get a better feel for it." Despite the interior looking more like a construction zone than a put together club, Oz wanted you to be involved in the process of putting the pieces back together.
You hummed in approval, steeping over the dance floor to approach the stage, the marble steps slightly scratched but still intact. "So I'll be..here?" You asked, stopping in the centre of the stage to look down at Oz.
A spark ignited in his eye as you took the stage, mouth tugging into a grin as if he had been waiting for this moment his whole life. "You got it, baby. Right there." Like a man starstruck, Oz stepped closer to the stage until he was within reach, grasping your hand to press a kiss along your knuckles. "You're gonna be perfect." His voice was soft, reverent. How could he not admire you? To him, you were a dream come true.
Your thumb brushed against the back of his hand as you entwined it with your own, pulling him closer with a light tug. "Better not lose my voice then, huh?"
The mere idea made him scoff, a breathy huff emerging from his mouth. "Not a chance, sweetheart." His dream was so close to becoming reality, and he wouldn't let anything get in his way now. Hell, if he could speed up the refurbishment, he would.
Oz took a steady step up onto the stage to join you, unable to stop himself as he marvelled at the work he had made. He had built this with you at his side, your hands together with each tile placed.
A tender feeling tugged at his heartstrings as his eye wandered over the club, still in the midst of its restoration, but nothing could look more beautiful to him. Yet even despite soft sentiments, insecurity still shone through the cracks of a put-together man. It was instinctual, really, a gut reaction after years at the bottom.
"You really believe in this?" As much as he hated to sound desperate, Oz could hardly help but seek for your approval. He needed to have someone in his corner and that someone was you.
You turned to face him head-on, palm cupping his cheek as he awkwardly shifted under the weight of his own vulnerability. For a man like him, the idea of being raw was one he often avoided entirely. "I believe in you, so, yeah, I believe in this. There's something special here."
Special was the only word for it, Monroe's had magic in the air. Destruction had only made its flame flicker, but a fresh coat of paint and a few repairs managed to relight the place with a new lease of life. But it still had a long way to go.
"Don't get all sappy on me when the place isn't even finished yet." You chided, giving his cheek a light tap in reprimand.
Oz responded with a faux hiss of pain, pulling back to rub at his cheek as though you had slapped him. "You ain't so sweet, huh, baby?"
"I'm too nice to you as it is."
"You call that nice?"
"Nice enough." You bit back, though you softened as you pressed your lips against his scarred cheek to soothe the sting he pretended to feel.
A chuckle rumbled in his chest as he nudged his face toward your own, seeking more of the affection you had given him. "Don't be too mean to me, honey, my heart can't take it." Oz muttered, wrapping an arm around your waist to hold you close. "Like it better when you're sweet."
Despite his apparent plea for sweet romance, his hand had slid down to palm the curve of your ass, and you could only laugh as a glinting grin flashed across his face. "As if you're being sweet to me." You grumbled, annoyance entirely insincere as you arched back into his hands, letting him grope you.
Oz raised a brow, "What, you think this ain't sweet? C'mon, how am I meant to show ya how much I love ya?" His form of affection was loud and proud, currently on display for the construction crew to watch.
You gestured to the poor men trying to do their jobs, reaching to gently coax his hand back into your own. "Place isn't open and you're already trying to put on a show." A whisper against his ear, one that sent a slight shiver down his back. He took it as a challenge.
"We own the place, sweetheart, let 'em look." His hand had returned to its place on your ass, giving it a more firm squeeze whilst his lips brushed against the side of your throat. Oz could hear the way your breath caught, stifled by teeth sinking into your bottom lip. Now that was sweet.
As much as you wanted to give in to his warm hands and tender lips, the place needed to get fixed up, and for that to happen, the construction team needed to remain focused.
Reluctantly, you pulled back with a soft pout, though not before your lips pressed against his cheek once more. "How about you keep the shows for the paying customers?" That brought a laugh from his mouth, drawn deep from his chest and released into your ear.
"Alright, alright." Oswald conceded as if he were a naughty schoolboy, drawing his hand away from your ass to rest on your back instead. "But I'll have ya on that stage sometime." He rumbled into your ear, giving it a slight nip to prove his intent true.
The grand re-opening had garnered much more attention than you had ever expected, though why did you ever suspect that it would be a quiet affair? Oswald was anything but quiet. This was a passion project for him, so deeply personal that to give it anything but a large burst of new life would be an insult.
He had friends in high places drawing the spotlight back to the once iconic jazz club, forgotten years after its spark had faded. The club was alive with a new energy, pulsating through the walls as though it had experienced a spiritual revival.
You could hear the buzz beyond the curtain, the vibrating hum of clinking glasses and low chatter that spread with eager excitement. Something about it made your stomach churn. Everything was riding on you.
The reborn image of the club rested on your shoulders and depended on your performance. As if he had heard the doubtful thoughts swirling in your mind, Oswald had appeared behind you with a large grin, planting his big hands on your shoulders.
"Well, if it ain't my star. You ready, sweetheart?" His energy was nearly bursting through that grin, his fingertips lightly digging into your skin as if to contain himself. But he noticed your apprehension, that nagging worry that lived in the back of your mind, now rearing its doubtful head.
Before you could get a word out, Oswald gently hushed you, cupping your chin with his hand to guide your face to your own reflection. "Come on, baby. That's a star right there. You ain't got a thing to worry about, not one thing." His voice was soft, coaxing you to relax into his hands as he cradled you close.
"I just want everything to be perfect." The admission came in a soft huff, as though you had already imagined what could come of your failure. But he was having none of it.
Oswald shook his head, darting around to press a delicate kiss to your cheek. "And it will be. Everything is set up especially for you, this ain't just for me, sweetheart." He had gone to the effort to ensure that the microphone was propped to your height, that the spotlight would hit your body just right, and that the sound was perfect.
You could only nod, he had gone to such great lengths to ensure your success. What good would it be to tear down that effort with nagging self-doubt? "Just be close when I'm done, okay?" His reassurance was the key to your calm, a lifeline that you could rely on even if things went wrong.
"I'll be right there with ya, doll." Oswald murmured, brushing another soft kiss to your temple before he gave your shoulders a squeeze. "But right now, we gotta get you out on that stage." Showtime.
The task of meeting and exceeding expectations weighed heavily upon your shoulders, seen through the stiff steps you took towards the curtain, shoulders tight and jaw locked. But Oz was with you, and that meant more than the opinion of anyone sitting beyond the curtain.
You took inhaled a breath and let the air fill your lungs, as if to coat them with courage for the performance that faced you. A lighter step towards the curtain and it was parting, revealing you to the waiting eyes of the crowd.
The microphone was waiting, as were the patrons, and you steeled yourself to grasp onto the stand, wrapping your fingers around it to anchor yourself to the stage, the spotlight almost blurring your vision of the crowd. How could they be scary if you couldn't see them?
Breath came and went as you listened to the sultry tune begin, and as your voice carried the song through the club, all eyes were on you. The eyes of one man in particular were the most important. You had done it, you had made him proud.
Oswald was at the side of the stage, all of his senses engulfed as he drank every part of you in. His eye caught your own, and he gave a wink as if to say 'I told you so' , you could practically hear him thinking it as he let his eyes flicker over the crowd. They loved you.
Despite your newfound stardom under the spotlight in Monroe's, Oz had always known that you were a star; you were his star. All he had to do was give you a stage and some courage, and he had his very own songbird to share with the world. But you were his songbird first.
OH its a software. its a software anyone can download and use. i genuinely thought there was just one jugglegif fiend besieging tumblr with their vision. i thought this was our horse race tests.
If I had a nickel for every time an iconic comic book movie perfectly casted an iconic villain to the point where it felt like the character leapt out of the comics, despite one problem in the script... I'd two nickels.
i love when i reblog a mutual's post and then they immediately reblog one of mine. it's the closest thing to sharing orange slices you can get on this website.
sometimes i look at my wips and wistfully stare at them in hopes of them getting finished and then remember that i wrote them and it's me who has to finish them
was at work today and ten minutes into my shift a man poked me in the back to get my attention so he could ask for assistance, like sir you can just say excuse me rather than poking me in the back.
I like to think Dr. Melfi had at least one of the girls as a patient post-rescue. Treating a still feral Shauna Shipman or Taissa Turner would definitely give you the nerves of steel needed for dealing with Tony Soprano
summary: Clark starts to panic when his Ma and Pa ask him to come back to Smallville for a wedding. Why? He may or may not have accidentally implied he had a girlfriend. So he asks you to come with him as his fake girlfriend.
word count: 14.5k+
pairing: clark kent x fem!reader
notes: i don't think i've ever written the "fake dating" trope and i realized that that was not right. how could i have gone this far without ever writing it?! so, here it is!
warnings/tags: no use of y/n, reader works at the daily planet, fake dating trope, friends to lovers, mostly takes place in smallville, clark is a softie, reader knows clark is superman, fluff, slow burn, oblivious idiots, one mention of reader using bobby pins in hair, slight angst
Clark was pacing. Not unusualâhe did that in the newsroom whenever a deadline loomedâbut this was different. His tie was loosened, his glasses sliding down his nose, and the look on his face wasnât the usual âPerry wants three rewrites before lunchâ kind of stress. This was real panic.
You leaned back in your chair, coffee cup in hand, watching him wear a path into the carpet between your desks. âClark, youâre going to burn a hole in the floor if you keep that up.â
He stopped mid-step, ran a hand through his dark hair, and exhaled sharply. âSmallville.â
You blinked. ââŚThatâs a place, yes. Congratulations, you remembered your hometown.â
He shot you a lookâhalf exasperated, half pleading. âThereâs a wedding. Next week. One of my childhood friends. Ma and Pa really want me to come home for it.â
âOkay,â you said slowly, sipping your coffee. âAnd this is a crisis becauseâŚ?â
Clark hesitated, his cheeks flushing pink. âBecause theyâve beenâŚasking if Iâm seeing anyone. For months.â He adjusted his glasses, avoiding your eyes. âAnd I may haveâŚimpliedâŚâ
âOh, Clark.â You set your cup down with a grin. âYou didnât.â
âI did,â he admitted miserably, slumping into the chair across from you. âI didnât mean to! Ma asked if I was lonely andâI panicked. I didnât want her to worry, so I just... And then Pa said he was happy Iâd found someone, and by the time I realized what Iâd done it was too late.â
You pressed your lips together, trying not to laugh. âSo let me get this straight: your parents think you have a girlfriend, and now youâre about to roll into Smallville looking tragically single at a wedding full of gossiping neighbors?â
Clark groaned, dragging a hand down his face. âExactly.â
âThat is hilarious,â you said, fighting back giggles.
He peeked at you through his fingers. âItâs not funny.â
âItâs so funny. Youâre basically in a Hallmark movie, Clark.â
He gave you a flat look, then took a deep breath like he was bracing for impact. âThatâs why I wanted to ask you something.â
Your eyebrows rose. âOh boy. This sounds serious.â
âWould youâŚâ He swallowed, fidgeting with his tie. âWould you pretend to be my girlfriend? Just for the week. Come to Smallville with me, go to the wedding. Smile at my parents so they donât think Iâm a complete failure at dating.â
You stared at him. For a second, you wondered if he was joking. But noâClark Kent didnât joke like this. His expression was earnest, almost sheepish, and you realized with dawning horror that he was completely serious.
âOh my God,â you breathed. âYou are in a Hallmark movie.â
He said your name softly, and the way it rolled off his tongue almost made you forget this was ridiculous. You leaned back in your chair, crossing your arms. âSo you want me to be your fake girlfriend. To meet your parents. And your entire hometown. For a whole week.â
He winced. âWhen you say it like thatââ
âClark, thatâs not fake dating. Thatâs method acting.â But then you caught the nervous way he was watching you, the faint blush on his cheeks, and the way his hands curled awkwardly in his lap like he didnât know what to do with them. And suddenly⌠you werenât laughing anymore. âWell,â you said finally, a small smile tugging at your lips. âIâve always wanted to see Smallville.â
The relief on his face was so immediate and genuine it made your chest tighten. He beamed, wide and boyish, like youâd just saved the world instead of agreed to play along with his lie. âYou will? Really?â
âYeah,â you said, shaking your head at him. âBut you owe me, Kent. Big time.â
He grinned, sheepish and grateful. âDeal.â
And just like that, youâd agreed to be Clark Kentâs fake girlfriend. For one week. In his hometown. At a wedding. What could possibly go wrong?
---
Clarkâs apartment was exactly what youâd expect from him: neat, cozy, and just a little bit old-fashioned. Stacks of newspapers were carefully folded on the coffee table, a half-finished crossword sat beside a pencil, and a throw blanket was draped across the couch in a way that screamed Martha Kent folded this once upon a time and Clark never changed it.
You perched on the edge of the sofa, eyeing the surroundings while Clark fussed in the kitchen. Heâd insisted on making teaâbecause apparently, if you were going to fake-date him, beverages were mandatory.
He emerged a moment later, balancing two mismatched mugs in those big hands of his. He handed you one, sitting down at the opposite end of the couch like a man preparing for a business negotiation.
âSo,â you said, blowing across the steam of your tea, âwe should probably set some ground rules.â
âGround rules?â he echoed, brows lifting above the rim of his glasses.
âObviously,â you said. âFake dating is a delicate art, Clark. If weâre going to sell this, we need a game plan. Consistency. Coordination.â You ticked off on your fingers. âWe need a backstory, a timeline, rules of conductââ
âRules of conduct?â His mouth twitched, like he was trying not to laugh.
âYes,â you said firmly. âFor example: no kissing unless absolutely necessary. None of this âspur of the momentâ stuff.â
He choked a little on his tea. âKissing?â
You raised an eyebrow. âClark, if your entire hometown thinks youâve got a girlfriend, someone is going to expect us to kiss. Youâre not exactly going to sell the act with a stiff side hug.â
He went scarlet, staring down into his mug like it might save him. âI just⌠didnât think about that.â
âYou didnâtâClark, you dragged me into a fake relationship without considering kissing?â
âI panicked!â he said, voice higher than usual. âI just wanted Ma and Pa to stop worrying, I wasnât thinking that far ahead.â
You laughed, shaking your head. âUnbelievable. Fine, rule number one: no kissing unless we both agree itâs necessary. Rule number two: no embarrassing stories that make me look bad.â
Clark looked up at that, indignant. âI wouldnât do that.â
âOh, you wouldnât?â You leaned forward, smirking. âYouâve got thirty yearsâ worth of baby photos your mother will absolutely whip out at dinner, and you expect me to believe you wonât let me suffer?â
His ears turned pink. âIâd never embarrass you on purpose.â
You sipped your tea, studying him. He meant itâyou could see that earnestness in his eyes, the way his brows knit slightly like the thought of humiliating you was genuinely offensive to him. That sincerity was going to make this entire charade very dangerous.
âFine,â you conceded softly. âRule number two: no intentional embarrassment. Rule number threeâŚâ You hesitated, twirling the mug in your hands. âWe need a believable backstory. How we met, how long weâve been together, that sort of thing.â
Clark perked up a little, as if relieved to be on more solid ground. âThatâs easy. We could just say we met at the Planet. Friends turned into something more.â
You narrowed your eyes. âThatâs boring. And vague. If people ask questions, youâll fold like a cheap suit.â
He frowned. âI donât fold.â
âYou fold,â you said flatly. âYouâre too nice to lie convincingly.â
He sputtered, adjusting his glasses. âI can lie!â
âClark,â you said sweetly, âwhat did you have for breakfast this morning?â
ââŚToast,â he replied, after an oddly long pause.
You arched a brow. âUh-huh. And that little hesitation wasnât suspicious at all.â
âI did have toast,â he muttered, flustered. âI just also had⌠three pancakes.â
You laughed so hard you nearly spilled your tea. âExactly my point. If someone corners you at the reception and asks how we got together, youâll crack in seconds.â
Clark sighed, conceding. âSo what do you suggest?â
âWe build a story with details,â you said, warming to the task. âSomething casual but sweet. Like⌠you asked me out after we stayed late on a story together. You brought me coffee, I brought you takeout, and we realized weâd been accidentally dating for weeks already.â
His mouth softened into a smile. âThatâs actually⌠really nice.â
âSee? Believable and romantic.â
Clark set his mug down, fiddling with his tie like he always did when he was nervous. âOkay. That works. And, um⌠how long have we been dating?â
You tapped your chin. âLong enough that meeting your parents isnât weird. But not so long that people start asking about rings. Four months?â
He nodded thoughtfully. âThat sounds right.â
You could feel his eyes on you as you scribbled the details onto a notepad youâd stolen from his desk: timeline, first date story, favorite things about each otherâfake answers pending. When you finally looked up, he was smiling faintly, like the sight of you planning this out amused him more than it should have. âWhat?â you asked.
âNothing,â he said quickly, looking away. But the tips of his ears were red, and you werenât entirely sure what that meant.
You shook your head, setting down the pen. âAlright, Kent. Weâve got the ground rules. Now all we have to do is survive one week in Smallville without blowing our cover.â
Clark smiled nervously, rubbing the back of his neck. âWhat could go wrong?â
You groaned, dropping your head into your hands. âOh, donât say that.â
---
The drive out of Metropolis stretched on for hours, skyscrapers shrinking into farmland, city noise dissolving into the steady hum of open road. Clark insisted on drivingâsomething about âwanting you to see the view,â though you suspected it was also his way of staving off nerves. He fiddled with the radio more than usual, tuning through stations until he settled on a fuzzy country channel that seemed to relax him.
The closer you got to Smallville, the more he loosened up. His posture uncurled, his shoulders dropped, and for once he wasnât hiding behind that sheepish city-desk persona. This was his worldâcornfields rolling in every direction, red barns dotting the horizon, and an endless sky overhead that felt like freedom.
By the time you pulled into the long dirt driveway, your nerves had caught up with you. The Kent farmhouse came into view: white paint weathered by decades of Kansas sun, a porch swing creaking lazily in the breeze, and a bright patchwork of Marthaâs flowerbeds framing the front steps. It looked like a painting. Too picturesqueâlike the kind of place where pretending to be Clark Kentâs girlfriend could unravel in an instant.
Clark parked the car and turned to you, pushing his glasses up his nose. âOkay. This is it.â
You glanced at the farmhouse. âYour childhood home. No pressure at all.â
âYou donât have to be nervous,â he said, though his own hands tightened around the steering wheel. âMa and Pa⌠theyâll love you.â
The words slipped out before he could catch them. He froze, ears going red. âI meanâtheyâll love meeting you. Because youâre⌠you know⌠nice.â
You bit back a smile. âSmooth, Kent.â
Before he could sputter out a defense, the screen door banged open. Martha Kent stepped out onto the porch, apron dusted with flour, her face lighting up the second she saw her son. She waved, calling his name, and a moment later Jonathan appeared beside her, steady and smiling as he leaned on the railing.
âShowtime,â you muttered under your breath, reaching for the door handle.
Clark glanced at you, nervous, and then did something unexpected. He reached across the console and gently took your hand in his, his palm warm and steady. âWeâve got this,â he said softly.
Your breath caught, just for a second. Then you nodded, squeezing back.
Martha reached the two of you first, arms outstretched. âClark Jerome Kent, you didnât tell me youâd be here this early!â
Clark laughed, pulling her into a hug. âHi, Ma.â
Jonathan followed, giving his son a firm clap on the back before his gaze shifted toward you. âAnd this must be the mystery girl weâve been hearing about.â
Oh God. Here it wasâthe test.
Clarkâs hand was still laced with yours as he pulled you gently forward. âMa, Pa⌠this is my girlfriend.â His voice wavered only slightly. âWe, uhâwe work together at the Planet.â
Marthaâs face broke into the warmest smile youâd ever seen, eyes crinkling as she caught both your hands in hers. âWell, arenât you just lovely. Iâve been waiting years for Clark to bring someone home. Come in, come in, Iâve got pie cooling on the counter.â
Jonathan chuckled low in his throat. âBetter warn her about your Maâs pie, son. Once youâve had it, youâll never eat another slice without comparing.â You laughed politely, though your stomach was still tight with nerves. Clark gave you the faintest smileâreassuring, like youâd passed the first round
Inside, the farmhouse smelled like cinnamon and clean laundry. The living room was cozy, lined with bookshelves and family photos, a worn quilt draped over the back of the couch. A pair of boots sat neatly by the door, clearly Jonathanâs. Every detail radiated warmth and history, a life well-lived.
Martha ushered you both into the kitchen, where she sliced pie and asked question after question. How did you and Clark meet? What was your first impression of him? Did he take you out somewhere nice, or did he settle for greasy takeout again? Clarkâs ears went red at that, but he played along. âIt was good takeout,â he muttered defensively.
You smiled into your fork. âIt was actually perfect. He insisted on paying even though I said we could split it. Thatâs when I knew he was trouble.â
Jonathan laughed, shaking his head. âSounds like our boy.â
Clark glanced at you from across the table, and for a moment it felt less like lying and more like slipping into a story that fit too well.
Later, after Martha declared herself satisfied with your answers and shooed everyone out of her kitchen, Clark led you upstairs to drop your bag in the guest room. He paused outside the door, rubbing the back of his neck. âSorry about all that. They, uh⌠they can be a little enthusiastic.â
âTheyâre wonderful,â you said honestly. âHonestly, Clark, if this is how you grew up, no wonder you turned out soâŚâ You trailed off, realizing you were about to say so good. So kind. So easy to love.
He tilted his head, curious. âSo what?â
You shook your head quickly. âSo polite. Thatâs all.â
He didnât push, though something in his expression softened. Then, awkwardly, âjust so you know, uh⌠thereâs a chance theyâll show you baby pictures tonight. They⌠do that.â
You grinned. âCanât wait.â
Clark groaned. âYouâre supposed to dread it.â
âWhy? I think little farm-boy Clark sounds adorable.â
His cheeks flushed pink again, and he muttered something under his breath about regretting this already. But when he looked at youâreally lookedâthere was something flickering behind his glasses. Something that said he wasnât regretting a thing.
The sun was just beginning to dip low over the Kansas horizon when Martha called you both down for supper. The farmhouse smelled incredibleâsavory roast chicken, mashed potatoes whipped light and buttery, green beans fresh from the garden. You hadnât even sat down yet, and your stomach was already growling.
Clark walked beside you down the narrow staircase, his hand hovering near your back in that tentative way of hisâlike he wanted to guide you but wasnât sure if it crossed some invisible line. When you glanced at him, he quickly dropped it, shoving both hands into his pockets as if heâd been caught.
The dining room was warm and homey, mismatched chairs pulled around a sturdy oak table that looked like it had hosted every holiday and birthday party for decades. Martha bustled at the head of the table with serving dishes while Jonathan poured sweet tea into mason jars. âSit, sit,â Martha said cheerfully, waving you both into the chairs beside each other. âClark, donât let her hover. Sheâs company, not a farmhand.â
âI wasnâtâMa,â Clark protested, but he obeyed, pulling out the chair for you before sitting down himself. The gesture made your chest tighten unexpectedly. Fake boyfriend or not, it was⌠nice.
Dinner began with chatter about the weather, the crops, how the community had rallied to prepare for the wedding. Martha asked you questions in that gentle but probing way mothers have, as though she could piece together your entire character with just a handful of details. âSo,â she said, ladling chicken onto your plate, âwhatâs it like working with Clark?â
You paused, fork poised. Clark stiffened beside you. âWell,â you began, deliberately glancing at him with a mischievous smile, âheâs punctual. Organized. A little too serious sometimes. But heâs also⌠dependable. The kind of guy you want around when things get messy.â
Marthaâs eyes sparkled knowingly, and Jonathan chuckled into his tea. Clark ducked his head, ears turning red. âSheâs exaggerating,â he muttered.
âAm I?â you teased. âYouâre the one who makes sure I eat lunch on deadline days.â
Martha clapped her hands together, delighted. âOh, I like you.â
Clark gave you a sidelong look that said thanks a lot but his mouth twitched like he was holding back a smile.
Halfway through dinner, Martha disappeared into the living room and returned with a thick leather-bound photo album. Clark immediately groaned. âMa, no.â
âYes,â she said firmly, setting it down in front of you. âIf youâre bringing a girl home, she deserves to see the whole truth.â
Jonathan smirked. âBrace yourself.â
You opened the album eagerly. The first page showed a chubby-faced toddler Clark, cheeks smeared with chocolate cake. âOh my God,â you breathed, grinning. âLook at those curls.â
Clark covered his face with his hand. âPlease donât.â
But Martha was already leaning over your shoulder, pointing out pictures with relish. âHere he is at five, trying to wear his fatherâs work boots. Couldnât lift his feet an inch, but he insisted. And this oneâoh, he was seven, insisted on wearing a cape made out of a pillowcase for an entire summer.â
You laughed so hard you nearly dropped your fork. âA cape? Really?â
Clark peeked through his fingers, groaning. âI was imaginative.â
âYou were adorable,â you corrected. âDonât fight me on this, Kent.â
Jonathanâs eyes twinkled as he added, âThat pillowcase got more miles than our old truck.â
By dessert, you were wiping tears of laughter from your cheeks, and Clark was slumped in his chair like a man resigned to his fate. Martha set a fresh pie in the center of the table, looking utterly pleased with herself. âI like how she teases you,â she said to Clark. âYou need someone who doesnât let you get away with hiding.â
Clark shifted uncomfortably. âMaâŚâ
But her words lingered in the air, heavier than she probably intended. You glanced at Clark, catching his expressionâthe faint flush on his cheeks, the way his eyes darted toward you and away again. It sent a flicker of something warm through your chest, something that had nothing to do with pie.
Later, as you helped Martha clear the table, she leaned close and murmured, âheâs happy with you here. I can tell.â
You froze, a plate balanced in your hands. âOh, well, weââ You caught yourself before stumbling over the whole truth. âHeâs easy to be around.â
Martha smiled softly, knowingly. âThat he is.â
When you returned to the living room, Clark was on the couch with Jonathan, who was recounting a story about Clark trying to build a treehouse as a teenager. Clark looked up as you entered, and for just a momentâbarely a flickerâyou saw it, the way his shoulders eased when his eyes landed on you.
Like he really was happy you were there.
And that was far more dangerous than any fake-dating rule youâd written down.
---
The Kent farmhouse was quieter at night than you were used to. In Metropolis, even at 2 a.m., you could hear taxis honking, people shouting, the hum of life never shutting off. Here, the silence felt differentâpeaceful, weighty, broken only by the chirp of crickets and the occasional low moo from the pasture.
You padded barefoot down the hallway, the floorboards creaking in that way old houses did. Clark was waiting near the back porch, leaning against the doorframe, arms folded loosely across his chest. He looked⌠comfortable here, like part of the house itself, a boy whoâd grown into a man but never really shed the soil of Smallville from his skin.
âCouldnât sleep?â he asked softly, pushing his glasses up.
You shrugged, joining him. âToo quiet. My brain keeps waiting for a siren or a car alarm.â
Clark chuckled, holding the screen door open so you could step outside with him. The night air was cool, carrying the smell of cut hay and earth. Above, the stars stretched endlessly, brighter than youâd ever seen them in the city.
For a moment you both just stood there, listening to the rustle of the breeze through the cornfields. Then you nudged him with your elbow. âSo. Pillowcase cape, huh?â
Clarkâs head whipped toward you, his expression stricken. âMy motherââ
ââis a treasure,â you cut in, grinning wickedly. âAnd she told me everything. Little Clark, running around the farm with a pillowcase flapping behind him. Tell me, is that where the whole Superman aesthetic came from?â
He groaned, covering his face with one hand. âPlease donât.â
âNo, really, it makes sense!â You leaned against the railing, smirking. âThe cape, the heroics, the dramatic posesâit all started with a pillowcase. Honestly, Iâm impressed. Youâve been workshopping the look since you were seven.â
Clark peeked at you through his fingers, his ears turning bright pink. âIâm never forgiving Ma for that.â
âYou should thank her,â you teased. âIf not for her laundry, the world wouldâve been deprived of Supermanâs fashion choices.â
âI canât believe youâre making fun of me for this,â he muttered, but his lips betrayed him with a reluctant smile.
âOh, Iâm never letting this go,â you said firmly. âNext time you swoop in to save the day, Iâm going to picture you in cowboy boots and a pillowcase.â
He laughed then, shoulders shaking, the sound low and warm. It curled in your chest, softer than you expected. He wasnât embarrassed so much as he was⌠delighted that you were delighted.
The porch swing creaked as you sat, pulling your knees up and gazing out at the fields. Clark joined you, the swing dipping slightly under his weight. His arm brushed yours, just enough to make you aware of the heat radiating from him.
âItâs funny,â you murmured after a moment. âYou always seem larger than life in Metropolis. But hereâŚâ You glanced at him, silhouetted against the starlight. ââŚyou just seem like Clark. The guy who eats too many pancakes and folds under interrogation about breakfast.â
He turned toward you, his expression soft. âI like being just Clark. At least here, I donât have to pretend as much.â
Something in the way he said it made your heart squeeze. You wanted to ask what he meant, wanted to push past the careful smile and the glasses he always seemed to hide behind. But you swallowed the question. Not tonight.
Instead, you bumped his shoulder with yours, light and teasing. âWell, for the record, I like just Clark. Even if his cape beginnings were tragic.â
His laugh was quiet, but his gaze lingered on you longer than it should have, like he was memorizing the way you looked under the stars.
The screen door creaked open, and Martha poked her head out, smiling knowingly. âYou two donât stay up too late now. Big day tomorrow.â
Clarkâs ears went pink again. âYes, Ma.â
When she retreated, you smirked. âShe thinks weâre sneaking kisses out here.â
Clark nearly choked. âWhat? Noââ
âRelax,â you said, fighting a grin. âI didnât say we were. Just that she thinks we are. Which, honestly, is good for our cover.â
He shifted, visibly torn between mortification and agreement. ââŚI suppose thatâs true.â
You leaned back, eyes twinkling. âDonât worry, Kent. Your virtue is safe.â
Clark groaned. âYouâre going to make this week unbearable, arenât you?â
âAbsolutely,â you said cheerfully. âThatâs what fake girlfriends are for.â
But as the porch settled into silence again, you became aware of his hand resting closeâtoo closeâon the swing between you, your pinky brushing his knuckle every time the swing swayed. Neither of you moved. Neither of you acknowledged it.
And in that quiet, under the stars and the scent of hay, the line between fake and real grew blurrier than ever.
---
Clark was up before the sun. You should have expected thatâfarm boy habits die hardâbut you hadnât counted on him knocking softly at your door at seven in the morning, hair still damp from a shower, glasses slipping down his nose, looking far too awake for someone whoâd been teased mercilessly the night before. âSorry,â he said when you opened the door, still in your pajamas. His voice was low, almost sheepish. âDid I wake you?â
You blinked blearily at him. âYou mean, aside from the rooster at five? No, youâre just the cherry on top.â
His lips twitched like he was trying not to smile. âI thought maybe we could get breakfast in town. If youâre up for it.â
You stared at him for a moment, then sighed dramatically. âYouâre really milking this fake-girlfriend thing, huh?â
Clarkâs expression faltered. âWe donât have to. I just thoughtââ
âIâm kidding,â you interrupted, fighting a grin. âGive me ten minutes. Iâll even make myself presentable for Smallville.â
He relaxed, the tension slipping from his shoulders. âYou donât have toââ
âYes, I do,â you said firmly, shutting the door in his face.
Ten minutes turned into fifteen, but when you came down the stairs, Clark was waiting by the door, hands shoved into his jacket pockets. He smiled when he saw you, warm and genuine, and for one terrifying second, you forgot this was pretend.
The drive into town was short. Clarkâs truck rattled a little on the old roads, dust kicking up behind the tires, the fields stretching endlessly on either side. Smallville proper came into view, a few blocks of brick storefronts, a courthouse with a flag flapping in the breeze, a row of shops that looked like they hadnât changed in fifty years.
Clark parked outside a diner with a faded sign that read Maisieâs, its front windows fogged from the smell of bacon and coffee. Inside, the bell above the door jingled, and immediately half the heads in the diner turned toward you. âClark Kent!â an older man in a John Deere cap called from a booth near the window. âWell, Iâll be damned. Thought you were too high-and-mighty in Metropolis to remember us little folk.â
Clark flushed but smiled politely. âGood morning, Mr. Jenkins.â
âMorning,â the man said with a nod, eyes flicking to you. âAnd whoâs this?â
Clark glanced at you, then back at the man, his voice a little tighter. âThis is my girlfriend.â
It was the first time youâd heard him say it to someone outside his family, and the word landed strangely, heavy in the air. Girlfriend. Like it wasnât borrowed or temporary. Mr. Jenkins let out a low whistle. âWell, ainât you full of surprises, Kent.â
By the time you slid into a booth, whispers had already begun to ripple through the diner. You leaned across the table, lowering your voice. âYou realize everyone in this town is going to know I exist within the hour, right?â
Clarkâs smile was small, almost apologetic. âYeah. Sorry. Gossip travels faster than tractors around here.â
âFantastic,â you muttered. âBy lunchtime, someoneâs probably going to ask me when the wedding is.â
The waitress arrived then, a cheerful blonde who looked only a few years older than you. Her eyes widened when she saw Clark. âWell, if it isnât Clark Kent! Back in town for the big wedding?â
âYes, maâam,â he said politely.
âAnd whoâs this?â she asked, smiling at you.
âMy girlfriend,â Clark repeated smoothly, glancing your way. Something about the ease in his voice caught you off guard. It sounded natural. Too natural.
The waitress grinned. âWell, sheâs prettier than the last girl you brought in here.â
Clark nearly choked. âThere wasnâtââ
âSheâs teasing,â you said quickly, rescuing him, though you were grinning. âRelax, Kent.â His cheeks went red, but he ducked his head, fiddling with the laminated menu. When the waitress left, you leaned your chin on your hand, studying him. âYou get flustered so easily.â
âI donât,â he protested weakly.
âYou do,â you said, amused. âIâm starting to think this fake-dating plan was a bad idea. Youâre going to blow our cover by turning red every time someone mentions the word girlfriend.â
Clark sighed, but there was a faint smile tugging at his lips. âIâll get better at it.â
âI hope so,â you teased. âBecause if not, Iâm going to have to start kissing you just to make it believable.â His head snapped up, eyes wide behind his glasses. For a second, you thought he might drop his menu. âKidding,â you said lightly, though your pulse betrayed you.
Clark muttered something that sounded like ânot funny,â but his ears burned scarlet all the way through breakfast.
When the food cameâpancakes stacked high, eggs, baconâthe smell alone made you sigh in delight. You dug in without hesitation, and Clark watched, amused, before following suit. âThis is dangerous,â you said between bites. âIf I lived here, Iâd weigh two hundred pounds from this diner alone.â
âYouâd get used to it,â Clark said with a chuckle. âSmallvilleâs good at simple comforts.â
He looked around the diner, his expression softening. Neighbors waved at him, old classmates stopped by to say hello, and through it all he introduced youâmy girlfriendâwith the same steady tone, each repetition settling deeper into your chest.
By the time you left, the bell jingling overhead again, you could feel eyes on your back, whispers trailing behind you like a ribbon. Smallville was watching.
After breakfast at Maisieâs, Clark offered to give you âthe tour,â which seemed ridiculousâyouâd seen the whole town from the truck window in under three minutes. Still, you didnât protest. Watching him here was different, and you wanted to see more.
The sidewalks were cracked and uneven, lined with lampposts draped in faded bunting for the upcoming wedding. Storefronts had old-fashioned awnings, and the bakery window displayed heart-shaped cookies dusted with sugar. People waved as Clark passed, and he waved back, every smile warm, every handshake firm.
It was strange. In Metropolis, Clark blended in so wellâquiet, unobtrusive, the kind of man you could overlook if you werenât paying attention. But here, he was someone. Not flashy, not larger than life, but rooted. Known. Loved.
You were halfway down Main Street when a voice called out. âClark? That you?â
A tall man in a plaid shirt strode across the street, grinning. Clarkâs face lit up with recognition. âPete,â he said, shaking the manâs hand. âItâs been a while.â
Pete glanced at you, curious. âAnd this must beâŚ?â
Clarkâs hand found yours before you even thought about it, fingers slipping between yours with easy confidence. âMy girlfriend,â he said, the word so smooth it nearly made you stumble. âWe came down for the wedding.â
Pete let out a low whistle, eyebrows raised. âWell, well. Clark Kent finally found someone. Donât let him fool you,â he said to you, âhe was the shyest guy in school. Could barely look a girl in the eye.â
You laughed, squeezing Clarkâs hand just enough to make him squirm. âSome things never change.â
Clark groaned, but Pete chuckled and clapped him on the back before heading off, muttering about telling the whole town Clark finally grew a backbone.
As you continued down the street, Clark muttered, âyou didnât have to encourage him.â
âOh, but itâs fun watching you squirm,â you teased. âBesides, youâre very convincing when you say girlfriend. Almost like you believe it.â
Clark stopped walking, his hand tightening around yours. For a heartbeat, he looked at you with an intensity that stole the air from your lungs. Then he cleared his throat, adjusted his glasses, and said lightly, âwe should stop at the florist. Ma will want fresh flowers for the rehearsal dinner.â
You let him change the subject, though the word girlfriend still buzzed in your chest like static.
At the florist, an older woman behind the counter recognized him immediately. âClark Kent, as I live and breathe! Havenât seen you in years.â Her eyes slid to you, widening with interest. âAnd whoâs this pretty thing?â
Clarkâs voice didnât even waver. âMy girlfriend.â
The woman beamed. âWell, arenât you two a pair. Heâs always been such a sweetheart. You take good care of him, honey.â
You smiled politely, but when you caught Clarkâs pink ears, you nearly laughed. âDonât worry,â you said sweetly. âI plan to.â
Outside the shop, Clark groaned. âYouâre enjoying this too much.â
âYouâre not?â you asked, arching a brow.
He hesitated, lips parting as though he had something to sayâsomething true, not part of the act. But then a car horn blared, and a group of locals waved from across the street, shouting greetings. Clark waved back, the moment gone.
By the time you made it back to the truck, youâd been introduced as Clarkâs girlfriend half a dozen times. Each time, it slipped more easily from his tongue. Each time, it rattled you a little more. Sliding into the passenger seat, you buckled your belt and exhaled. âWell. That was exhausting.â
Clark laughed softly, starting the engine. âThat was Smallville.â
You glanced at him, taking in the relaxed curve of his smile, the way the sunlight hit his profile. For all your teasing, he looked⌠happy. And that, you realized with a pang, was the most dangerous part of all.
---
The community hall in Smallville had been dressed to the nines for the rehearsal dinner, though it still bore the bones of a building that usually hosted county fairs and bake sales. White streamers looped from the rafters, strings of fairy lights cast a golden glow over folding tables covered in rented tablecloths, and someone had gone heavy on the mason jar centerpieces. The place buzzed with laughter, chatter, and the clinking of cutlery.
Clark walked in at your side, hand brushing yours, and instantly half the room turned to look. âClark Kent!â someone called, and then there was a chorus of greetings, neighbors and old friends hurrying over.
You had seconds to brace yourself before you were introduced for what felt like the hundredth time that day. âThis is my girlfriend,â Clark said smoothly, his hand sliding against your back with the ease of a man whoâd been doing it forever. The word girlfriend rolled off his tongue too naturally. Too comfortably. Each time he said it, it landed in your stomach like a stoneâand not in the way you expected.
The bride, a sweet-faced woman named Lucy who looked at Clark like he was still the boy who carried her books in high school, hugged him tightly before turning to you with eager eyes. âSo this is the famous girlfriend! I was beginning to think he made you up.â
âOh, Iâm very real,â you said, smiling as Clark went red. âAnd Clark has been nothing but a gentleman.â
âOf course he has,â Lucy said warmly. âHe always was.â
The groomâbroad-shouldered, with the air of a man used to tractors and long days in the sunâshook your hand firmly. âBrave of you, coming to Smallville with this one. Everyoneâs gonna talk.â
You laughed lightly, squeezing Clarkâs hand beneath the table as you all sat down. âLet them. I can handle it.â Clarkâs glance was quick, but his eyes were warm.
Dinner was served family-style, platters of fried chicken and bowls of mashed potatoes passed around the tables. Clark helped fill your plate before his own, a small gesture you noticed more than you should have.
The conversations flowed easily at firstâneighbors asking Clark about Metropolis, about the Planet, about his parents. Then, inevitably, the spotlight shifted. âSo,â an elderly aunt asked, leaning forward with sharp eyes. âHow did you two meet?â
Clark froze. You felt it in the way his shoulders stiffened, the way his hand under the table tightened around yours like a lifeline. He was going to stumble. You could see it coming. You jumped in. âWe worked late on a story together. He brought me coffee, I brought him dinner, and the next thing I knew weâd been accidentally dating for weeks.â The table chuckled approvingly, the aunt nodding as if youâd passed some kind of test. Clark exhaled, sending you a grateful look that made your stomach twist. But the questions didnât stop.
âWhat was your first date like?â someone else chimed.
You opened your mouth, ready to spin another tale, but Clark surprised you. His voice was quiet, steady. âIt was simple. Dinner, conversation. I remember thinking I didnât want the night to end.â
The table cooed. You stared at him, caught off guard, because he wasnât embellishing. He wasnât grinning or winking like he was playing a part. He was looking at you with a softness that felt alarmingly real. Your heart skipped.
The music started after dinner, a local band striking up a tune that was more enthusiasm than skill. Couples drifted to the dance floor, laughing, clumsy but joyful. âDance with me?â Clark asked suddenly, his hand outstretched.
You blinked. âClark, people are watching.â
âThatâs the point,â he said, though there was a nervous edge to his smile.
Reluctantly, you let him pull you up, his hand settling warm and careful at your waist. The band played something slow, the kind of song that made small-town folks sigh and sway. At first, you were hyper-aware of every step. His palm against your back. The way his thumb brushed lightly as if by accident. The heat of his body so close to yours.
But then the room blurred. The chatter and laughter faded. There was only Clark, his eyes behind the glasses searching yours like he was memorizing you. âYouâre good at this,â you said softly, trying to lighten the moment.
âIâm trying not to step on your toes,â he admitted, smiling faintly.
âYouâre doing fine.â
The song stretched on, and neither of you pulled away. His hand was steady, his touch gentle, but the way he held youâit didnât feel fake. It didnât feel like a performance for the town. And you knew he felt it too, because when the song ended, he didnât let go right away. His fingers lingered at your waist, reluctant, like he hadnât quite remembered this was supposed to be temporary.
Applause rippled through the hall as couples clapped for the band. You and Clark stepped back quickly, both a little flushed. âYouâre enjoying this too much,â you teased, though your voice wasnât as steady as you wanted.
Clarkâs smile was soft, almost shy. âMaybe I am.â And that was the problem. Because maybe you were, too.
The hum of the truck filled the silence, a low steady sound as Clark steered them down the two-lane road back to the farm. The headlights carved pale cones into the dark, catching glimpses of cornfields stretching endlessly on either side. The town lights had faded in the rearview, leaving nothing but Kansas night skyâvast, jeweled with stars, endless.
You leaned back in your seat, still warm from the glow of the rehearsal dinner. Your hair smelled faintly of fryer oil and wildflowers from the centerpieces, your cheeks still held the flush of laughter and dancing. And yet, for all the noise and chatter of the evening, this silence felt louder.
Clarkâs hand was loose on the wheel, but his knuckles were pale where he gripped it tighter than necessary. âYou did good,â you said finally, breaking the quiet.
He glanced at you, puzzled. âGood?â
âConvincing,â you clarified. âNot even a single stutter when you called me your girlfriend.â
His mouth twitched. âPractice makes perfect.â
âPractice, huh?â you teased, tilting your head to study him. âWell, if you keep this up, youâre going to make half of Smallville jealous. There were at least three women tonight who looked ready to throw me out the window.â
Clark groaned softly, adjusting his glasses. âDonât say that.â
âItâs true,â you pressed, amused. âYou really didnât notice? They were practically glaring daggers. And Lucy? She nearly swooned when you walked in.â
âSheâs married,â Clark protested.
âDoesnât mean sheâs blind.â That earned you a startled laugh, deep and genuine. It rolled through the truck, warm enough to loosen something tight in your chest. The road stretched on, the stars overhead brighter than anything the city could offer. You found yourself watching him instead of the fieldsâthe relaxed way he held himself here, shoulders a little looser, smile a little easier. And then, because you couldnât resist, you said, âso, Kent. About that dance.â
He stiffened almost imperceptibly, eyes fixed on the road. ââŚWhat about it?â
âYou didnât seem like a man faking it.â
His jaw worked, but he didnât answer right away. The truckâs engine filled the silence, the gravel crunching beneath the tires. When he finally spoke, his voice was quieter. âI wasnât trying to fake anything.â
The words sat between you, heavy, undeniable. You swallowed, suddenly very aware of your pulse. âClarkâŚâ
He cut you a glance, something raw flickering in his eyes before he turned back to the road. âI just meantâit was nice. Thatâs all.â
You wanted to push, to ask what nice meant when his hand had lingered at your waist, when his eyes had looked at you like you were the only thing in the room. But the farmhouse lights appeared in the distance, saving him from having to say moreâand saving you from having to admit you werenât sure you wanted this to stay fake anymore.
Martha had left the porch light on, warm and welcoming. The moment the truck rumbled into the driveway, you exhaled like youâd been holding your breath the whole ride. Clark parked, cut the engine, and for a long moment neither of you moved. Finally, he cleared his throat. âYou donât have to come out to chores tomorrow if you donât want to. Most people donât find feeding chickens relaxing.â
You smiled faintly, grateful for the reprieve. âIâll think about it.â
When you stepped out of the truck, the cool night air rushed around you, carrying the scent of hay and summer. Clark walked you up the steps, his hand brushing against yours in a way that couldnât be accidental, not anymore.
At the door, you paused. âGoodnight, Clark.â
He hesitated, his mouth opening like he wanted to say something more. But all he managed was a quiet, âgoodnight.â You slipped inside, heart racing, leaving him on the porch with the night sky and whatever thoughts he couldnât quite bring himself to voice.
---
The smell of coffee drifted up the staircase before sunlight even fully crept through the curtains of your guest room. By the time you stumbled downstairs, hair mussed and still tugging on a sweatshirt, Clark was already at the stove, spatula in hand. He glanced up at the sound of your footsteps, smiling in that calm, easy way that made you feel like mornings werenât so bad after all. âMorning,â he said. âI made pancakes.â
Of course he did. You sat at the table, wrapping your hands around a steaming mug of coffee. âDo you ever not make pancakes?â
âTheyâre easy,â he replied simply, sliding a plate stacked high onto the table. âBesides, Ma says Iâve been hooked on them since I was five.â
You took a forkful, begrudgingly admitting they were goodâfluffy and warm, just sweet enough. Clark watched you like he was waiting for a verdict, and when you gave him a satisfied hum, his whole face brightened. âSee? Worth it.â
After breakfast, he offered to show you around the farm, which apparently meant actual chores. You protestedâhalfheartedlyâuntil he handed you a pair of boots and led you out into the yard. The Kansas sun was already hot, beating down on fields of tall corn and stretching pasture. The barn loomed ahead, red paint faded but sturdy, and the distant lowing of cows echoed across the property. Clark walked like heâd done this a thousand times, easy and relaxed, while you tried not to trip over uneven ground in borrowed boots. âYouâll like this part,â he said, leading you toward the chicken coop.
The smell hit before you saw them. A dozen or so hens clucked and strutted around the pen, feathers ruffling, beady eyes watching like tiny sentries. Clark opened the gate with practiced ease, stepping inside. You hesitated at the threshold. âThey look⌠aggressive,â you muttered.
âTheyâre harmless,â Clark promised, grabbing a tin bucket of feed. âCome on.â
Against your better judgment, you stepped in. The hens crowded closer, clucking louder, pecking at the dirt near your boots. âSee?â Clark said reassuringly. âThey just want food. Here.â He handed you a scoop of feed. âScatter it on the ground, not on yourself.â
You tossed a handful of feed nervously, and the chickens surged forward. One particularly bold henâa plump white one with a sharp little beakâmade a beeline for you. Your eyes widened. âClark. Clark, itâs coming at me.â
He barely looked up from scattering his own feed. âSheâs fine. Just toss it further away from you.â
âSheâs not fine! Sheâs charging!â The hen flapped its wings and darted closer, pecking eagerly at the ground right by your feet. You yelped, stumbling backward and nearly dropping the bucket. âClark!â you shouted, scrambling toward him. âDo something!â
Finally looking up, Clark triedâand failedâto hide his grin. âSheâs just curious.â
âSheâs a demon,â you shot back, clinging to his arm as the hen advanced again. âThat thing is going to kill me.â
Clark laughed then, full and unrestrained, the sound echoing across the yard. He gently nudged the hen away with his boot, then steadied you with his free hand, warm and solid against your waist. âYouâre safe,â he said, still chuckling. âI promise.â
You glared at him, though your heart was thudding from more than just the chicken attack. âYou think this is funny?â
âA little,â he admitted, eyes twinkling. âI didnât know you were afraid of chickens.â
âIâm not afraid,â you insisted, scowling. âI just have⌠a healthy respect for animals with sharp beaks.â
Clarkâs smile softened, though it lingered at the corners of his mouth. âDonât worry. Iâll protect you from all terrifying poultry during your stay.â
âGee, thanks, Kent. Youâre my hero.â
His expression shifted almost imperceptibly at thatâsomething flickering in his eyes, something you couldnât quite name. He looked at you a beat too long before clearing his throat and stepping back, releasing your waist.
âCome on,â he said, voice a little rougher than before. âThereâs more to see than just chickens.â Clark led you out toward the pasture after depositing the empty feed bucket back at the barn. The air smelled of grass and sun-warmed earth, and the low, steady sounds of cattle drifted over the fence line. âYouâll like this better,â he said, leaning his arms casually over the wooden fence. âCows are easier than chickens. Slower. Friendlier.â
You eyed the herd suspiciously. Half a dozen big, lumbering animals grazed lazily in the field, tails flicking. They didnât look dangerous, but they also didnât look like creatures you wanted charging at you. âFriendlier?â you asked doubtfully. âTheyâre huge.â
Clark smiled, the kind of patient, good-natured smile that was annoyingly reassuring. âJust follow my lead.â
He swung the gate open and gestured for you to follow. Reluctantly, you stepped in after him, boots sinking into the soft dirt. The cows barely acknowledged your presenceâuntil one of them, a massive brown one with a curious face, lifted its head and started walking toward you. You froze. âClark.â
He glanced back at you. âWhat?â
âItâs coming this way.â
âThatâs okay,â he said calmly. âTheyâre curious animals. Just stand still.â
The cow picked up speed, ears flicking forward. Your heart lurched. âClark, itâs not walking. Itâs charging.â
âItâs not charging,â he said, though his brow furrowed now. âShe probably just wants to sniff you.â
âSniff me? Clark, sheâs the size of a car!â
By now the cow had broken into a lumbering trot. Instinct kicked inâClark moved in front of you, his arm shooting out like a protective barrier. For a split second, you thought he was going to push you down out of the way. Instead, the cow barreled straight into him. The impact was less of a crash and more of a giant, clumsy bump, but it was enough to knock Clark off-balance. He stumbled backwardâinto youâand the two of you went down in a heap onto the grass.
The world tilted, your breath whooshed out, and suddenly you were flat on your back with Clark sprawled half over you, his glasses askew, his face inches from yours. For a moment, neither of you moved. The cow huffed once, sniffed Clarkâs jacket, then wandered off with a flick of its tail, entirely unconcerned. You blinked up at him, stunned. âDid Superman just get taken out by a cow?â
Clark groaned, pushing himself up on one elbow, his hair sticking up from where it had been mussed in the fall. âDonât start.â
âOh, Iâm starting,â you said, laughter bubbling up uncontrollably. âThe man of steel, the hero of Metropolis, flattened by Betty the cow.â
His ears went pink. âHer nameâs Daisy.â
That only made you laugh harder. âEven better.â
Clark rolled off to the side with a sigh, flopping onto the grass beside you. He pressed the heel of his hand to his forehead, muttering, âIâm never going to live this down, am I?â
âNot a chance,â you said, still giggling. âIf the chickens didnât take you out, at least the cows did.â
He turned his head toward you then, and despite your teasing, his expression was soft. His glasses were crooked, his cheeks flushed, but there was something in his gazeâsomething warm, unguardedâthat made your laughter catch in your throat. âGlad I broke your fall, at least,â he murmured.
The words hung there between you, heavier than they should have been. You swallowed, your heart pounding far too fast for a moment that was supposed to be funny. You forced a smile, breaking the tension. âDonât flatter yourself. The cow did all the work.â
Clark chuckled, shaking his head, but his eyes lingered on you a beat too long before he sat up and offered you his hand. As he pulled you to your feet, steadying you easily, you realized something unsettling: for all the jokes and the pratfalls, falling with himâliterallyâdidnât feel like a mistake. It felt like the most natural thing in the world.
By the time you and Clark trudged back up the dirt drive, you were both dusted in grass stains and flecks of dry earth. His jacket was smeared with a suspicious streak of mud, and your hair was sticking out in directions you didnât think hair could manage.
Martha was waiting on the porch. The second she saw the state of you, her eyes widened, then narrowed in the way only a motherâs could. âWhat on earth happened to you two?â
Clark winced. âThe cows.â
âThe cows?â
âThey, uh⌠got curious,â he said diplomatically, shooting you a warning glance not to elaborate.
You ignored it. âOne of them full-on tackled him.â
Marthaâs hand flew to her mouth, stifling a laugh. âA cow tackled you?â
âBumped into me,â Clark corrected quickly, color rising in his cheeks. âIt wasnâtââ
âShe flattened him,â you cut in, grinning. âAnd took me down too, by the way. So much for Supermanâsmall-town livestock is apparently his one weakness.â
Clark groaned, dragging a hand over his face. âYouâre never going to let that go, are you?â
âNot in a million years,â you said sweetly.
Martha was still smiling as she ushered you both inside. âWell, I hope you had the sense to laugh about it. Jonathan always said the farm humbles everyone eventually.â
You kicked off your boots by the door, muttering, âsome of us more than others.â Clark shot you a look but didnât argue.
Upstairs, you tried to fix your hair in the guest room mirror, but it was a lost cause. A gentle knock sounded on the door, and when you opened it, Clark stood there with a damp towel in one hand and a sheepish expression. âThought you might need this,â he said, holding out the towel. His hair was still mussed, a little dirt streaking his jaw. He looked less like the put-together reporter you knew in Metropolis and more like⌠Clark.
âThanks,â you said, taking it from him. âYouâve got grass in your hair, by the way.â
He reached up blindly, fumbling at the wrong spot. âHere.â Without thinking, you reached up and plucked the stray blade of grass from his dark curls, holding it out between your fingers. His breath hitched, just faintly. He smiled, soft and lopsided. âGuess I lost the fight, huh?â
âYou lost to a cow, Kent,â you reminded him, grinning. âThereâs no coming back from that.â
âTechnically, you went down too,â he pointed out.
âDetails,â you said quickly, fighting to keep your tone playful even as your heart thudded.
His eyes lingered on yours for a beat too long. The air between you seemed to hum with something unsaid. You stepped back first, breaking it with a forced laugh. âAnyway. Go clean yourself up before your mom decides we canât be trusted unsupervised.â
Clark chuckled, rubbing the back of his neck. âYeah. Good idea.â
---
Morning broke bright and clear over the Kent farm, sunlight spilling across the fields like it had been ordered special for the occasion. Inside the farmhouse, however, it felt less like a tranquil Saturday and more like a staging area for a major operation.
Martha was already bustling about the kitchen before either of you made it downstairs, humming as she packed pie and potato salad into carefully labeled containers for the reception. Jonathan was outside, making sure the truck was clean, muttering something about âshowing up respectable.â
And then there was Clark. You stopped short in the hallway when you saw him in the mirror by the coat rack, fumbling with his tie. His dress shirt was crisp, sleeves rolled up to his elbows while he triedâand failedâto wrangle the silk knot into something passable. His brow was furrowed in concentration, glasses slipping down his nose. He looked unfairly handsome. âYouâre going to strangle yourself,â you said finally, stepping into the room.
Clark looked up, flustered, and immediately shoved his hands into his pockets like youâd caught him in something compromising. âItâs⌠fine. Iâve got it.â
âYou donât,â you said, laughing softly. âCome here.â
He hesitated, then stepped toward you. The tie hung loose against his chest, and you slid your fingers along the fabric, tugging it free. The scent of his cologneâsomething subtle, woodsyâdrifted around you as you worked. âStand still,â you murmured, looping the tie neatly. âYou wear these every day and you still donât know how to tie one?â
âI usually donât rush,â he admitted, watching your hands. His voice was quieter now. âGuess Iâm nervous.â
Your eyes flicked up to his. âAbout the wedding?â
âAbout all of it,â he said simply.
Something in your chest tightened, but you didnât push. You finished the knot, smoothing it down against his shirtfront, your fingers lingering longer than necessary. âThere,â you said softly. âNow you look like you could charm a whole town.â
Clark gave you that boyish smile that still managed to undo you. âThanks.â
Before you could step back, Martha appeared in the doorway, beaming. âWell, donât you two look nice.â
Clark immediately straightened, ears turning pink. You, however, only smiled. âYour son cleans up well.â
Martha winked knowingly. âHe does.â
The rest of the morning blurred into a whirlwind. Martha insisted on fussing over your hair, pressing bobby pins and a sprig of babyâs breath into it like you were family. Jonathan handed Clark a fresh boutonniere, clapping him on the shoulder. âYou two ready?â he asked as he grabbed his jacket.
âAs weâll ever be,â Clark said, glancing at you with a smile that felt like it was meant just for you.
The truck ride into town was quieter than usual. You smoothed your dress nervously in your lap, feeling the weight of what was coming. Clarkâs hand rested casually on the seat between you, close enough that the back of your hand brushed his every time the truck hit a bump. Neither of you moved it away.
By the time the church came into viewâwhite clapboard, steeple stretching into the sky, steps already crowded with guestsâyou were acutely aware of every eye that would be watching you today. Not just strangers. Clarkâs entire world. Clark parked, turned off the engine, and looked at you. For a long moment, he didnât say anything. Just⌠looked. Like he was memorizing you. Finally, he said, quiet and certain, âweâll be fine. As long as we stick together.â
You swallowed hard, forcing a smile. âTogether. Got it.â
When he offered his arm, you took it. And as you walked toward the church doors, the weight of his hand steady against yours, it was impossible not to wonder if thisâthis closeness, this easeâwas really something you could just pretend.
The church was packed. Benches creaked as families crowded in, dressed in their best Sunday clothes. Ceiling fans whirred overhead, stirring the faint scent of flowers from the bouquets lining the aisle. The organ player struck up a cheerful hymn while chatter swelled, punctuated by the rustle of paper programs and the occasional shush from an impatient grandmother.
Clark guided you toward a pew near the front, his hand pressed lightly against your back. Heads turned as you walkedâneighbors, childhood friends, people who clearly remembered Clark Kent as the lanky boy who once tripped over his own shoelaces at the harvest festival. Now, here he was, with you. âDonât look now,â you murmured as you slid into the pew beside him, âbut weâre officially the second-biggest event at this wedding.â
Clark adjusted his glasses, pretending to study the program. âTheyâll get over it.â
âWill they?â you whispered, glancing at the row of ladies behind you, all of whom were leaning close and whispering as they stared. âFeels like weâre about to be written into the town newsletter.â
That earned you a faint, amused smile. âThereâs no newsletter.â
âOh, please. Every town has a newsletter. Even if itâs just Mrs. Henderson calling everyone after Sunday service.â He huffed a quiet laugh but didnât argue.
The music swelled, and the bride appeared at the back of the church, radiant in lace and satin, her father beaming proudly at her side. Everyone stood. Clark rose smoothly, tugging you up with him, his hand curling around yours where it rested against the pew.
Through the ceremony, you felt the weight of that hand, steady and warm, grounding you. Every time you shifted, every time your nerves prickled under the gaze of curious neighbors, he squeezed gently, as though reminding you: Iâm here. Youâre not alone.
The vows were sweet, the kind only small-town sweethearts could makeâfilled with promises of âforeverâ and âhomeâ and ânothing fancy, just us.â The brideâs voice trembled as she said âI do,â and the groom grinned like heâd won the lottery.
Something tugged at your chest then. You glanced sideways at Clark. He was watching intently, his expression soft in a way that made your stomach flip. For a moment, you wondered what his vows would sound likeâwhat promises he would make, who he would look at with that same quiet devotion.
The kiss was met with applause, cheers echoing through the church. As everyone settled back into the pews, Clark leaned close enough that his breath tickled your ear. âThey look happy,â he murmured.
You nodded, forcing a smile even as your heart did a strange little twist. âYeah. They do.â
When the ceremony ended, the couple walked back down the aisle, hands clasped, faces shining. Guests followed in pairs, spilling into the sunlight. Clark offered his arm again without hesitation. As you looped yours through his, someone behind you whispered, just loud enough, âdonât they make a picture?â
Another voice replied, âMartha must be over the moon.â
You felt the flush creep up your neck, but Clark only squeezed your arm a little tighter, leading you out into the bright Kansas day like it was the most natural thing in the world.
The crowd spilled out of the church in a blur of chatter and laughter, guests making their way toward the hall where the reception would be held. Martha and Jonathan disappeared into the throng, happily stopping to greet old friends. The bride and groom were swarmed with congratulations, a blur of white lace and wide smiles.
Clark guided you through the press of people, his hand firm against your back, until you slipped around the corner of the church into the shade of a big oak tree. The sudden quiet was almost startling after the crush of voices. You leaned against the rough bark, tugging at the hem of your dress. âIs it always like this here? Everyone staring like they know your business before you do?â
Clark chuckled softly, adjusting his tie. âPretty much. Smallville doesnât have secrets. Just⌠stories waiting to spread.â
âGreat,â you muttered, glancing around to make sure no one had followed. âBy now, half the town has us married with three kids.â
His lips curved into a smile, but he didnât look at you right away. Instead, his gaze lingered on the sunlight spilling across the fields beyond the churchyard. âWould that be so bad?â
You blinked. âWhat?â
Finally, he turned toward you. There was no teasing in his eyes, no smirkâjust something earnest and steady, the kind of look that made your throat tighten. âI mean,â he said quickly, a touch of color rising in his cheeks, âIâm not saying⌠I justââ He broke off, raking a hand through his hair. âForget it.â
You tilted your head, studying him. âClark.â
He sighed, shoulders slumping. âYou make this whole thing feel⌠easier than I thought it would. Thatâs all.â
The words sat heavy in the air, more than they seemed at first glance. Your pulse quickened. You forced a light laugh, trying to ease the tension. âWell, you picked the right fake girlfriend. Iâm very convincing.â
But Clark didnât laugh. He stepped a little closer, the sun catching in his dark hair, his glasses slipping slightly down his nose. âYeah,â he said softly. âYou are.â
For a heartbeat, it felt like the world held its breath. The quiet hum of cicadas in the grass, the faint murmur of voices around the cornerâit all faded until there was just him, so close you could see the flecks of grey in his eyes. Then the church doors burst open, and a gaggle of bridesmaids spilled out, their laughter shattering the moment. Clark stepped back instantly, clearing his throat, tugging at his tie like it had betrayed him. âReception time,â he said, his voice steadier than his expression.
You pushed off the tree, heart still racing. âRight. Reception.â
The reception hall was already buzzing by the time you and Clark arrived. Fairy lights twined along the rafters, mason jars filled with wildflowers lined the tables, and the smell of fried chicken and barbecue lingered in the air. A local band tuned their instruments in the corner, testing notes that rang out sharp before melting into twangy chords.
As soon as Clark stepped through the door at your side, a ripple went through the room. Heads turned. Smiles widened. It was subtle, but you felt itâthe way people were watching, whispering. âHere we go again,â you muttered, leaning closer to him.
Clarkâs lips quirked faintly. âThey mean well.â
âSure,â you said. âUntil one of them asks when weâre having kids.â
You barely had time to catch your breath before Martha appeared, beaming as she drew you both toward a cluster of relatives. Jonathan trailed behind, more subdued but no less proud. âThis is her,â Martha announced warmly to a group of older women who looked like theyâd been waiting for this exact moment. âThe girlfriend I told you about.â
The women descended like hawks.
âOh, isnât she lovely.â
âClark, you clean up nice, donât you?â
âLook at the way heâs holding her handâso sweet.â
You smiled politely, answering questions about how you met, what you did for work, what Clark was like at the office. Every time you stumbled, Clark jumped in smoothly, filling the gaps, his voice steady. And each time he said my girlfriend, the words felt heavier, pulling at something inside you.
Dinner was a blur of chatter and food passed down long tables. You barely managed a few bites of potato salad before the brideâs uncle leaned across to ask, âso how long have you two been together?â
âFour months,â you answered quickly, sticking to the story.
âFour months?â The man grinned. âWell, Iâll say thisâhe looks at you like itâs been forty years.â
Your fork froze halfway to your mouth. Heat crept up your neck, and when you dared to glance at Clark, he was staring fixedly at his plate, ears red. The band struck up a lively tune, and the chatter shifted to laughter as couples drifted toward the dance floor. The bride and groom took the first spin, twirling under the string lights while the crowd clapped in time. Then the music shifted to something slower, sweeter. âGo on,â Martha urged, nudging Clark toward you. âDonât just sit there. Dance with her.â
Clark hesitated, but when you raised your brows in challenge, he sighed and offered his hand. âWould you like to dance?â
You let him lead you to the floor. His palm slid to your waist, warm and steady, and your hand rested against his shoulder. For a moment, the chatter around you dimmed. The music swelled, and Clark moved with a surprising grace, guiding you easily. You tried to focus on the swirl of couples around you. But the weight of his hand at your back, the gentleness in his touchâit didnât feel fake. Not one bit.
The song ended, but Clark didnât let go right away. His fingers lingered, reluctant, until the band launched into a faster tune and the floor filled with laughing dancers. Only then did he step back, clearing his throat. Before you could recover, the brideâs voice rang out. âBouquet toss!â
A gaggle of women gathered in the center, cheering. You were herded into the group before you could protest, Clark grinning as he leaned against the wall to watch. âThis is ridiculous,â you muttered, glancing back at him.
He only shrugged, amusement dancing in his eyes. âTradition.â
The bride tossed the bouquet high, petals scattering. It arced through the air, and before you could even think, it landed squarely in your hands. The crowd erupted in cheers. Someone shouted, âlooks like Clarkâs next!â
Your face burned. Clarkâs ears went pink, but he laughed, shaking his head. He crossed the floor toward you, slipping an arm around your waist as if it were the most natural thing in the world. âGuess thatâs our cue,â he murmured.
You looked up at him, bouquet clutched in your hands, your heart thudding far too fast for something that was supposed to be a joke. âDonât get any ideas, Clark.â
The cheers still hadnât died down after the bouquet toss. People were laughing, clapping, shouting things like, âbetter start ring shopping, Clark!â and âdonât let her get away!â
Clark groaned softly, though his arm stayed firmly around your waist. âI told you this would happen,â he muttered, his voice low, just for you.
âOh, donât blame me,â you shot back, clutching the bouquet like a weapon. âYouâre the one who grew up in a town that treats weddings like a spectator sport.â
Before he could answer, someone in the crowd called, âkiss her, Clark!â
The chant caught like wildfire. âKiss her! Kiss her!â
Your heart stopped. You looked up at him, wide-eyed, panic prickling your chest. This was supposed to be pretendâhandholding, dancing, smiles for his parents. Not this. Clark froze too, his grip tightening at your waist as if to anchor himself. His eyes flicked to yours, searching, questioning. âWhat do we do?â you whispered, your throat dry.
âTheyâre not going to let it go,â he murmured, voice taut with nerves. âIf we donâtââ He didnât finish the sentence, but you both knew what he meant.
You swallowed hard. âSo weâŚ?â
His Adamâs apple bobbed as he nodded. âOnly if youâre okay with it.â Your pulse thundered in your ears. The crowdâs chant grew louder, impatient. Clarkâs hand slid from your waist to the small of your back, pulling you gently closer. âItâs just for show,â he whispered. âRight?â
âRight,â you breathed, though it sounded anything but convincing.
And then he kissed you.
It was tentative at first, carefulâlike he was afraid to push too far. His lips brushed yours, soft and warm, a touch that should have been fleeting. But the second your mouth met his, the world seemed to tilt. The noise of the reception hall faded. The cheers dimmed. All you could feel was Clarkâsolid, steady, trembling faintly like he was holding back something bigger.
Your fingers curled against his chest before you even realized what you were doing, holding on like you didnât want it to end. He deepened it just enough, the faintest pressure that sent your stomach flipping.
Then it was over. Too soon. The hall erupted into applause and whistles, but you barely heard it. Clark pulled back, his forehead brushing yours for a dizzying second before he straightened, his glasses askew, his cheeks flushed red.
The crowd roared, satisfied, moving on to the next round of dancing. But you stood there, bouquet still clutched tight, your lips tingling, your heart in your throat. Clark leaned close, his voice low and rough. âGuess that sold it.â
You forced a shaky laugh, though your hands still trembled. âYeah. Totally believable.â
But as you looked up at himâat the way his eyes lingered on you like he couldnât quite look awayâyou both knew the truth.
It hadnât felt fake at all.
---
The farmhouse was quiet when you returned from the reception. The drive back had been filled with the low hum of the truck and little else. Clark had kept his eyes on the road, hands steady at the wheel, but you noticed how his knuckles were tight on the leather. You didnât speakâdidnât dareâbecause every word you thought to say came back to the same impossible thing: the kiss.
You lingered in the living room with Clark, the faint tick of the old clock filling the silence. He pulled at his tie, loosening it, and you pretended to smooth the wrinkles out of your dress though your hands were still trembling faintly. Neither of you mentioned the kiss. âLong day,â he said finally, voice quiet.
âYeah,â you agreed. âYour whole town knows my life story now.â
His lips quirked faintly, but the humor didnât quite reach his eyes. âTheyâll forget in a week.â
You snorted. âYou donât actually believe that.â
For the first time since youâd left the reception, his gaze lingered on youâsteady, searching. Your heart tripped. Then he looked away, running a hand through his hair. âYou should get some rest. Tomorrowâll be busy too.â
âRight.â
You both moved at the same time toward the staircase, falling into step side by side. It felt like a scene from a play you hadnât rehearsed, every move too careful, every breath too shallow. At the top of the stairs, the hallway stretched in two directionsâhis room one way, the guest room the other. You turned first, gripping the doorknob. âGoodnight, Clark.â
He hesitated, his hand resting on his own doorframe. âGoodnight.â His voice caught just slightly on the word, low and rough, like there was more he almost said.
You held his gaze for a heartbeat longer than necessary. Something unspoken pulsed between youâlouder than any words you couldâve managed. Then you slipped into your room and shut the door softly behind you.
Leaning back against it, you let out the breath youâd been holding. On the other side of the wall, you swore you heard him do the same. Something had changed. Neither of you named it, neither of you touched itâbut it hung heavy in the air between your rooms, undeniable and terrifying.
And maybe⌠thrilling.
---
Sunlight slanted through the curtains when you woke, soft and golden, carrying the faint crow of the rooster outside. For a moment, you just lay there, staring at the ceiling, the weight of the previous night pressing down. The laughter, the bouquet, the kissâthe kiss most of all.
You dressed quietly, smoothing your hair, then padded down the creaky staircase. The smell of coffee and frying bacon filled the air. Martha was at the stove, humming, her apron dusted with flour. Jonathan sat at the table, paper folded neatly, coffee steaming in front of him.
Clark was already there, of course. Shirt sleeves rolled, hair still damp from a shower, glasses slightly fogged from the steam rising off his mug. He glanced up as you entered, and for a split second his eyes softenedâthen he quickly looked back at his plate. âMorning,â Martha greeted cheerfully, sliding a plate of eggs onto the table for you. âSleep well?â
âFine,â you said, sliding into the chair opposite Clark.
Jonathanâs eyes twinkled over the rim of his paper. âYou both look a little tired. Long night?â
Heat rushed to your cheeks. Clark coughed into his coffee. âReception ran late,â he said smoothly.
Marthaâs smile was quiet, knowing. She didnât press, but when she set the plate in front of you, her hand lingered on your shoulder, a gentle squeeze. Breakfast passed in near silence, punctuated only by the clink of silverware and Marthaâs occasional chatter about neighbors or crops. Every now and then, you caught Clark glancing your way, then quickly dropping his gaze. The air between you was different nowâcharged, careful, like neither of you knew how to step without breaking something fragile.
When the last of the dishes were cleared, Martha dried her hands on her apron and turned toward you both. âYouâll be heading back today?â
Clark nodded. âYeah. We should get on the road before it gets too late.â
Martha smiled, but there was a softness in her eyes, a weight in her voice. âWell, weâre glad you came. Both of you.â
Jonathan folded his paper, looking at Clark. âDrive safe.â
The goodbyes on the porch were warm, lingering. Martha hugged you tightly, whispering, âCome back soon.â Jonathan shook your hand with a firm squeeze, then pulled Clark into a rough hug that spoke volumes. And then it was just you and Clark, back in the truck, the farmhouse shrinking in the rearview mirror. For a long while, neither of you spoke. The road stretched ahead, dust rising behind the tires, the Kansas sky vast and endless. Finally, you said, lightly, âso. That went well. No one threw tomatoes. No one questioned our act.â
Clarkâs hands tightened faintly on the wheel. âIt wasnât an act to them.â
You glanced at him. His jaw was tight, his gaze fixed straight ahead. Something in his voice made your chest ache. âClarkâŚâ
He shook his head, cutting you off gently. âI just meanâthey believe it. Thatâs what matters.â
You wanted to argue, to ask if that was really what he meant, but the words tangled in your throat. Instead, you leaned back in the seat, staring out the window at the fields rushing by.
The silence between you wasnât uncomfortable. Not exactly. It was something elseâfull, heavy, brimming with all the things neither of you were saying. And as the city skyline of Metropolis eventually came into view, you realized one thing with terrifying clarity: leaving Smallville didnât mean leaving this behind. Whatever had shifted between you⌠it was coming home, too.
---
The Daily Planet was just as loud and chaotic as when youâd left it. Phones ringing off the hook. Perry barking orders from his office. Reporters weaving between desks with half-empty coffee cups and stacks of notes. It was as if the world hadnât paused at all while you were gone.
But you had.
You slipped back into the rhythm easily enoughâsorting through emails, drafting headlines, scribbling notes on the pad by your desk. Clark sat across from you, glasses in place, tie neat, typing with steady precision. Everything looked exactly as it had before. And yet, nothing felt the same.
You didnât talk about Smallville. You didnât talk about the kiss. You didnât talk about the way his hand had steadied you during vows, or the way the town had cheered when his lips touched yours. Instead, you talked about work. Sources. Deadlines. The article due by end of day.
Normal.
Except every so often, when you glanced up, you caught him looking. Not at youânot exactly. At your lips. His gaze would linger for half a second too long before flicking guiltily back to his monitor.
The first time, you almost convinced yourself you imagined it. The second time, your pulse jumped, and you immediately ducked your head, pretending to rifle through your notes. By the third time, you couldnât ignore it anymore. You set your pen down, leaning back in your chair, fixing him with a look. âDo I have ink on my face or something?â
Clark startled, blinking behind his glasses. âWhat? No. Why?â
âBecause you keep staring,â you said lightly, arching a brow. âAt my face. My mouth, actually.â
Color crept up his neck, blooming hot across his ears. âIâI wasnâtââ He pushed his glasses up in a flustered motion, fumbling with his tie like it had suddenly betrayed him. âI was justâthinking. Aboutâabout the article.â
You bit back a smile. âRight. The article on zoning ordinances thatâs apparently written across my lips.â
His expression was pricelessâcaught between mortified and desperately trying to regain composure. He ducked his head, typing furiously, as if the clacking of keys could drown out the truth.
You watched him for a moment longer, your heart thudding, then shook your head and turned back to your own screen. Neither of you said anything more, but the silence buzzed, alive, charged with everything left unsaid.
Later, as the office bustled around you, you caught yourself glancing at him too. At the curve of his mouth, the softness in his smile when he thought no one was watching. And you hated to admit it, but you werenât thinking about zoning ordinances either.
The next few days slipped into routine again. Deadlines, coffee runs, editing sessions where Perry barked orders from behind his glass office door. On the surface, everything was exactly as it had been before Smallville.
But beneath it, the air between you and Clark buzzed differently. It started with little things. Reaching for the same file at the same time, your fingers brushing briefly over his. Neither of you pulled away as fast as you should have. Walking back from the copy machine, his hand at the small of your back to guide you through the crowded bullpen. You didnât shrug it off, and he didnât remove it quickly enough. Leaning over his desk to point out a typo on his notes, your shoulder pressed against his. You swore you felt him stop breathing for a second.
And through it all, Clark was Clarkâearnest, soft-spoken, trying desperately to pretend nothing was different. But he was also terrible at hiding the way his eyes lingered. Sometimes youâd catch him staring not at your face, but at your lips, and the pink in his ears would give him away instantly when you tilted your head like youâd caught him red-handed. âProblem?â youâd ask innocently.
âNo,â heâd mutter, ducking behind his screen.
And still, the cycle repeated. It didnât help that people were starting to notice. One afternoon, Jimmy stopped by your desk with a grin. âSo, uh, when are you and Kent gonna make it official?â
Your pen froze mid-sentence. âWhat?â
Jimmyâs grin widened, oblivious. âOh, come on. You two have been joined at the hip for weeks. Everybodyâs talking about it.â You opened your mouth, ready to protest, but across the bullpen you caught Clarkâs reactionâhis chair jerking upright, his tie tugged nervously, ears bright red. Jimmy laughed. âOh, I get it. Playing it cool. Respect. But seriously, donât wait too long, or someone else might swoop in.â With a wink, he sauntered off, leaving you staring after him with your pulse hammering.
You turned back to your desk slowly, only to find Clark watching you. The moment your eyes met, he dropped his gaze, fiddling with his glasses like the frames themselves had betrayed him.
The rest of the day was torture. Every glance felt weighted, every brush of contact charged. Even simple thingsâsharing a pot of coffee, exchanging notesâseemed to hum with the memory of that kiss in Smallville.
By the time the office emptied for the night, you were both wound tight with unspoken words. You gathered your things, slinging your bag over your shoulder. Clark stood too, smoothing his tie, clearly debating whether to say something. But he didnât. He only offered a small, quiet smile. âSee you tomorrow.â
You nodded, forcing your voice to sound normal. âSee you tomorrow.â As you walked away, you felt his gaze on your back. Warm. Lingering. Like he was holding back an entire storm of feelings he didnât know how to let loose. And the worst part? You realized you were doing the same.
---
It was nearly midnight when you heard the knock at your apartment door.
Youâd been curled on the couch, still awake despite the late hour, nursing a half-empty mug of tea while the city hummed faintly outside your window. The knock startled youânot loud, but steady, unmistakable.
When you opened the door, Clark stood there. He looked⌠disheveled. His hair mussed, his shirt rumpled, a faint smear of dirt across his jaw like heâd just come from something he didnât want to explain. His tie was missing, his sleeves rolled unevenly. And his eyesâthose soft, steady eyesâwere brighter than usual, like he hadnât been able to talk himself out of whatever had driven him here.
âClark?â you asked, confused. âItâs late. What are youâ?â
âIâIâm sorry,â he blurted, shifting on his feet. âI didnât mean to wake you, if you wereâwere sleeping. I justââ
He broke off, pushing his glasses up his nose, then immediately dragging a hand through his hair in frustration. âI couldnâtâgo home withoutââ
âClark,â you said gently, stepping back to let him in. âYouâre rambling. Come inside.â
He hesitated only a second before stepping past you. You closed the door, watching as he hovered awkwardly in your living room, as if unsure whether to sit or stand, whether he belonged here at all.
âYou look like you wrestled a tornado,â you teased softly, trying to ease the tension.
âSomething like that,â he muttered, not meeting your eyes.
You tilted your head. âWhatâs going on?â
Clarkâs jaw worked as if he were chewing over the words. He started pacing, slow and deliberate, like movement might untangle the knot in his chest. âIâve been trying to ignore it,â he admitted, his voice low, rough. âBack at the office, on the drive home, even in Smallville, I told myself it was justâpretend. That it didnât matter.â
Your heart thudded. âClarkâŚâ
He stopped pacing, finally looking at you. His expression was raw, unguarded in a way youâd never seen before. âBut it does matter. More than I thought it could.â
You swallowed hard, your throat suddenly dry. âWhat are you saying?â
Clarkâs hands flexed at his sides, restless. âI want to kiss you again.â The words tumbled out, fast, like heâd been holding them back for too long. âI know we said it was fakeâthat it was just for show. But I canât stop thinking about it, and Iââ His voice faltered, his cheeks flushing as he pushed on. âI donât want the only time I kissed you to be in front of everyone else. I want it to be real. Just⌠between us.â
The silence stretched, heavy with everything unsaid. You stared at him, at this man who could hold up the weight of the world but still stood here, shifting nervously like a boy confessing a crush. Your heart hammered in your chest, every nerve alive. Slowly, you stepped closer, close enough to see the faint streak of dirt still smudged across his cheek, the way his breath caught when you moved.
âClark,â you whispered, a smile tugging at your lips despite the way your pulse raced, âfor someone who can fly, you really are terrible at subtlety.â
His laugh was shaky, breathless. âI know.â
You reached up, brushing your fingers lightly against his jaw, the smear of dirt soft beneath your touch. âThen stop talking.â
And before he could overthink it, you leaned in.
This kiss was different. Not hesitant, not for show, not careful under the eyes of a crowd. This was heat and softness and everything youâd both been holding back. His hands came up, cupping your face as if you were something fragile and precious. Your fingers tangled in his shirt, pulling him closer, and he went willingly, melting into you with a sigh that made your knees weak.
When you finally pulled back, both of you were breathless, foreheads pressed together.
âThat,â Clark whispered, his voice low and reverent, âthatâs what I wanted.â
You smiled, your heart racing. âGood. Because I think I want it too.â