idk if this is too detailed for a request so feel free to just send thoughts on this if not! but currently thinking about clark and reader sneaking away at a work party and him being all cutedy and flirtyđ€
hi pretty!! thank you so much for your request, Iâll be honest Iâm not sure if I did it justice but I gave it my best shot, hope this is okay x
clark kent x fem!reader, 0.7k words (not proofread again! sorry!)
âHoney. Where are you taking me?â
Clark makes honey sound like actual honey, all languid and smooth, dripping in tooth-aching sweetness. His hand is big and warm in yours, and youâre tugging him down the empty corridors as if heâs not made up of however many pounds of solid muscle. He could plant one foot and itâd be over for you, but he doesnât.
âItâs a secret,â you say. Youâre mildly aware that youâre a bit drunk, but you feel like this â giddy and lovesick â the majority of the time youâre around Clark anyway, so it doesnât make much difference.
Clark huffs softly behind you. âTheyâre gonna be wondering where we are.â
He sounds more amused than concerned, and you know he doesnât really care what your coworkers are thinking of your disappearance from the party. Most of them have guessed by now that you and Clark are together, and thisâll just solidify it to the rest.
A few moments later you find what youâre looking for â an unlocked door â and push it open, tugging Clark in behind you.
âWhat are we doing in here?â Clark asks, skeptical. He glances around and his brow furrows in confusion. âWhose office is this?
You ignore his question. âDo you like my dress?â
You twirl a bit for him, letting your short skirt swish around your thighs, hoping you look pretty enough to seduce him.
Clark blinks at you. âSure,â he pushes his glasses up his nose and gives you a once over. âYou look pretty. I already told you that, didnât I?â
He did, about a hundred times when he picked you up and on the drive here.
âYes, but how much do you like it?â You press, looking up at him from under your lashes.
Clark blinks some more. âI donât see what this has to do with us being in somebodyâs office.â
Poor oblivious boy, you think. You give up on the doll eyes and skirt swishing, and instead grab his tie, flattening your palm to his firm chest.
âOh, Clark,â you say. âIâm trying to seduce you, handsome. Will you just kiss me already?â
Clark blinks at you a bit, looking a bit like a confused puppy. A moment later, realisation dawns on his face.
âOh,â he says. Heat seems to crawl up his neck, the tips of his ears reddening. âThatâs why you bought me in here?â
âWhy else?â You push your hand up his chest, over the slope of his shoulder and into his hair. âYou look so handsome.â
Clark laughs like he canât believe you, âSo you stole me away to seduce me?â
You nod primly. âYeah,â you say, defensive. âDid it work?â
Clark grins at you, his dimples poking into his cheeks, his pretty eyes creasing at the corners. He fits his hand to your waist and pulls you closer. His hands are big and warm, like always. Finally, you think.
âSure thing, pretty,â he says, and part of you knows heâs lying through his teeth, but you canât find it in you to care.
You grin, pushing your free hand around his waist.
âSo youâre gonna kiss me now?â You ask, tilting your chin up.
Clark gives you a fond look. âYouâre drunk,â he says softly.
âJust one?â You plead, softer.
Clark looks for a moment like he might say no. He studies you, nothing but adoration in his eyes, before sighing.
âYouâre trouble, you know that?â He says, fondness colouring his words, his smile shot with sunshine. âOne kiss. Okay?â
Pleased, you nod and shut your eyes, tilting your chin up for him. You wait, patient but brimming with giddiness, until Clark kisses you gently, his thumb rubbing circles into your waist. Heâs never been one to refuse you, but his kiss is softer than youâd have hoped for.
When he pulls away, you chase his mouth and Clark laughs at you.
âBaby,â he says, fond and amused as he presses a finger to your mouth to stop you. âI said one.â
âOne isnât enough,â you whine against his finger.
Clark just laughs, wrapping you up in his arms, your cheek pressed to his firm chest.
âWell, youâre lucky Iâm your boyfriend,â he says, scrubbing a fond hand up your back and down again. âYou can have as many kisses as you like tomorrow.â
đŒ â clark kent using his x-ray vision whilst heâs fucking himself deep into you.
you can feel him twitching inside you when he says itâhis curls damp against your cheek, breath stuttering while your bodies press tight together in the heavy heat of the bedroom.
heâs deep. deeper than usual. your legs are wrapped around his waist, and his hands are shaking just a little as he presses you down into the mattress, keeping you there while he grinds into you slow.
âbaby,â he whispers. âwanna try something.â
that voice. all gravel and apology, like he knows heâs about to ruin you.
you blink up at him, dazed. the room is warm, sticky with sex, your skin sticking to his in every possible place. âyouâre already trying something,â you mumble, breath catching when he rolls his hips again.
clark grins, curly hair falling into his eyes, the cocky side of his smile showing through just enough to make your stomach flip. ânot that,â he murmurs. âjustâlemme see.â
you donât even get to ask what he means. his eyes flicker for half a second, glowing faintly, and you feel the tension bleed out of his body as he groans low and quiet.
then another thrustâslow, devastating, all the way in. and clark chokes on his own breath.
âsweetheart,â he mutters, looking through you nowâinside you, like itâs the most natural thing in the world. his voice goes thin with awe. âyouâre taking itâbaby, youâre really taking it. all of it. fuuuck.â
your mouth goes dry. you clench around him without meaning to, and he groans like youâve punched the wind out of him.
âi can see it,â he whispers. âyour walls are pulling me inâfuckâyouâre so tight, i can barelyââ
another thrust. slower this time. deeper. like heâs following something with his eyes.
âclark,â you breathe, already trembling. heâs moving like heâs under a spell. completely absorbed. like what heâs seeing is holy.
âyouâre so full,â he murmurs, voice rough now, broken. âbaby, iâm all the way inâIâm thereâyouâre stretched so far I can see the bulgeââ
you sob into his shoulder. he kisses you like heâs trying to soothe it, but his cock twitches again and he thrusts just a little harder. heâs watching you take it, his x-ray vision trained on the space between your hips, following how his cock drags through your soaked, aching pussy like heâs mapping you from the inside out.
âgonna memorize this,â he groans. âgonna remember the way your pussy opens up for me forever. the way it sucks me inâfuck, sweetheart, you feel that?â
you do. you feel every vein, every pulse, every slow drag of his thick cock splitting you open. itâs too much. and still, you cling to him like youâll die if he stops.
he shifts his hips, angling himself just a little differentâand when he hits that spot, the one that makes you cry out into his mouth, he moans like he felt it too.
âthere. right fucking thereâyour body shudders every time i hit it. godâi can see your cervix. sheâs twitching, baby. she wants it.â
you whimper his name. your legs tighten around him. and clark loses it.
his hands come under your knees, pressing them back toward your chest, folding you open for him like a book. he holds you there, panting, eyes still burning with x-ray light as he pounds into you, each thrust wetter, messier, more frantic than the last.
âyouâre gonna come for me like this, sweetheart,â he rasps, âwith me balls-deep inside you, watching your body milk my cockâfuck, baby, thatâs itâthatâs itââ
you unravel with a scream. itâs so deep it feels like it cracks something open inside you. he watches the whole thing. watches your cunt spasm and clench, eyes wide and glowing, mouth slack with awe.
he doesnât last long after that.
âoh my god, oh my godâfuck, sweetheart, iâm gonnaââ
he thrusts hard, hips jerking, and then he stays thereâburied to the hilt, forehead pressed to yours, cock throbbing as he fills you to the brim with low, gasping groans.
âlook so pretty like this,â he whispers. âso full of me. and then clark speaks again, softer and reverent this time.
( synopsis ) â after insecurely taking advice from jimmy and spending hours online, clark distances himself from you. scared he mightâve overwhelmed you with his clinginess. all for a crying clark to come back home to you.
( warnings ) â none! just an insecure, clingy clark.
( tags ) â @jordiemeow [to be added]
âJust leave them alone for a second, Clark!â Lois laughs, watching as Clarkâs arms stay locked around your waist, his face practically buried in your shoulder like a big, needy golden retriever.
âYeah, dude. Clinginess isnât cute. I should know. Iâm probably the best guy in the room when it comes to women,â Jimmy adds from beside Lois, nudging her playfully before heâs met with a sharp glare.
âOh, shut up,â you say to Jimmy, leaning back into Clarkâs hold. âJust give me a few minutes, baby. Lois and I are talking about the article.â You give his arm a quick pat before slipping out of his grip.
When you and Lois walk off toward the printing room, Clark stays behind. He frowns, glancing at Jimmy and leaning against the edge of the desk, his arms crossed.
âDo you think thatâs true?â he mutters. âDo you think they get annoyed when Iâm too⊠affectionate?â
Jimmy barely looks up. âMost definitely,â he says flatly. âI mean, come on, man. Youâre like a big dog. Always all over them.. hugging, touching, laying your head on them. If I were dating you, Iâd lose my mind.â
And that conversation sticks in Clarkâs head longer than it should. Later that night, heâs alone in his cold, quiet room. The only light in the room comes from his computer screen. Heâs slouched in front of it, arms crossed tightly over his chest as he stares at the headline on the screen:
âAre Clingy Boyfriends a Turn-Off?â
His eyes scan every word. Each line feels like a hit to the gut. And the comment section? Even worse.
voidsuites: âI dated someone like this once. It was suffocating. I couldnât even stand next to them without their hands on me.â
jordiemeow: âClingy partners are exhausting. So glad I got out of that relationship.â
hrtfilm: âClingy usually means controlling. Red flag behavior, honestly. Be careful, guys.â
jclolz22: âItâs not bad at first.. but after a while, it gets annoying.â
Clark checks every box.
He was always touching you, his hands under your shirt, his chin on your shoulder, his arms around your waist, even in public. Heâd pull you into his lap in front of anyone. You were a constant source of peace for him. A calm he never wanted to be without. But maybe that wasnât how it felt to you. So he thought. So he stopped.
Over the next few weeks, he pulled back. He stopped bugging you at your desk. Stopped waiting outside the bathroom for you. Stopped finding excuses to pass by your apartment after work. No more arms slipping around your waist. No more hands brushing against yours. No more sudden, warm weight of him behind you while you were reading.
And of course, you noticed.
Clark mightâve thought he was giving you space, but you felt the shift immediately. He was always the one who made you feel grounded just when you got too lost in your own head, heâd appear out of nowhere and wrap you up in that warmth like a big blanket. Now, it felt like something important had been quietly taken away.
But being you, you didnât say anything right away. You just kept thinking. Replaying things over and over.
Did you do something? Say something? Had you pushed him away without realizing? Why didnât he want to hold you anymore? When was the last time he stayed over? It was driving you crazy. So you decided to fix it.
On your walk home one night, you nodded to yourself, already planning it out. Youâd invite him over. Cook for him. Make his favorite, rhubarb pie, using Ma Kentâs recipe (which you were absolutely going to call her for).
But while you were lost in your head, something strange happened. A shadow passed over you. The sun was still high, the sky clear. No tall buildings around you. No trees. No reason for a shadow. So you looked up.
And there he was. Clark, flying overhead in full Superman gear, clearly trying to look casual. A blur in the sky, pretending he wasnât watching you from above like some lovesick satellite.
You just smiled. Because you couldnât exactly call him out in public. Superman was supposed to be busy saving people, not floating above his partner on their walk home like a weird, adorable stalker.
But the next day? That was different.
You had the day off. You were in your apartment, music playing quietly from the radio. You leaned against the counter, sliding a tray into the oven. Maâs rhubarb pie. You were trying your absolute best to get it right before inviting Clark over for dinner.
And as you stood back and wiped your hands on your apron, your eyes drifted to the window. There it was again. That familiar blur of red and blue just outside.
You sighed, walked over to the window, and pushed it open.
âClark,â you said dryly. âGet inside.â
He tried to pretend he hadnât heard you at first, looking away dramatically. But eventually, he floated in, landing softly on your floor. He didnât say much, just sat down on the couch, eyes glossy, face tight with emotion.
You stepped between his legs, placing your hands on his shoulders as he instinctively held your hips, his touch cautious.
âWhat happened?â you asked, gently.
âWhat do you mean?â he tried.
You raised your brows. Really?
âI justâŠâ he started, wiping his eyes with the back of his hand. âJimmy said I was being too clingy. And then I read this article online. And all these comments. And I thought⊠maybe I was making you uncomfortable. I thought giving you space was the right thing.â
You lowered yourself into his lap, taking his hand from his face and wiping his wet cheeks with your thumbs.
âAnd you listened to Jimmy Olsen?â you teased softly, trying not to smile too hard.
He sniffled, nodding. âHe said girls hate guys like that. And everyone online agreed. I just wanted to do right by you, baby.â
Your hands moved to cradle his face, your thumbs brushing his cheekbones as he looked up at you, big eyes full of guilt.
âIâm sorry,â he whispered.
âItâs okay, Clark,â you said, leaning in to press a kiss to his lips.
He kissed you back, slow and soft, holding onto you like he was afraid youâd disappear. When you pulled away, you stayed close, your foreheads pressed together, your breath mingling.
âIâm sorry,â he repeated, barely loud enough to hear.
âI told you itâs okay,â you murmured. âIâm not mad. I just wish you wouldâve talked to me first before disappearing like that, alright?â
He nodded, still holding you close. Then suddenly, his eyes widened, nose scrunching.
yearning!clark kent x journalist!reader | note: clark is a lovesick, obsessed puppy in this (just how i like themđ) also, this may be one of my favorite writings ever
clark kent didnât consider himself a yearner. he wasnât one of those tragic types who were moon-eyed and love-drunk, penning sonnets in the margins of his notepad. no, he was practical, maybe quiet. a man with responsibilities bigger than himself. but then there was you and suddenly he was bringing two coffees to the office each morning just in case you hadnât had time. suddenly he was standing every time you entered a room. suddenly he was rearranging his schedule around yours without a second thought, following the sound of your laugh like it was a goddamn north star.
lois called it whipped; jimmy called it pathetic; clark just called it tuesday.
he could hear the click of your shoes from downstairs. he pauses writing mid stroke, eyes zeroed in onto the floor. using his x-ray vision, he saw you tap the elevator door. his chair spun as he sprung out of it. he moved fastânot super-speed fast, not cape-and-crisis fast, but fast enough that jimmy raised a brow from the bullpen and muttered something under his breath about puppy dogs and lost causes. clark ignored him. he straightened his tie (even though it was already straight), swiped the extra coffee off his desk, and positioned himself at your workspace with the same intensity most people reserved for emergency landings. by the time the elevator dinged, he looked casual and effortless. like he hadnât just rerouted the last five minutes of his life to be exactly where you were about to be.
âhey, clark,â your voice was enough to make him feel lightheaded. he turned his head to meet your gaze and the world shifted under him. you were clad in kitten heels and those pants that accentuated your curves. his jaw fell slack. âis this for me?â you smile, motioning to the coffee in his hand.
he blinked, caught in the orbit of your mouth, your eyes, the way sunlight caught in the strands of your hair. âuhâyeah.â his voice cracked like a teenagerâs. he cleared his throat. âyes. i mean, if you want it.â
your smile deepened. âi always want it.â your fingers brush his as you grab the cup. he feels an electric bolt where you touched. âyouâre the best.â he swore his knees buckled a little. he didnât even respond. he just stared at you with that dazed, lovesick lookâeyes soft and dreamy, mouth parted and cheeks red. lois, somewhere behind him, let out a very loud jesus christ.
as you put the cup to your lips, it became harder to watch. he swallowed hard, watching your lips wrap around the lid like it was the most important review of his life. you hum in approval, lipstick staining the paper, and clark had to look away before he did something humiliating. like sigh or propose.
ây/n, can i get your opinion on this headline?â lois called from across the office, already spinning her monitor toward where you stood. you turned your head, casual as anything, but clark sworeâsworeâthere was a breeze that hit just right. your hair moved like you were walking off a film set, backlit and glowing, and the smile you tossed over your shoulder nearly knocked the wind out of him.
âof course,â you said. and just before you turned, your eyes caught his again. one last glance. âbye, clark.â two words. simple and completely harmless. yet, they landed like a truck.
âb-bye,â he stammered, too fast, too breathy. âyeah. see youâlater. or, uh in five minutes. dependingâprobably.â
you laughedâyou laughedâand kept walking. jimmy snorted so hard he nearly choked on his granola bar. âdude.â
lois didnât even look up. âwe get it, clark.â
he sank back into his chair, cheeks burning, heart thudding out some ridiculous rhythm he was pretty sure wasnât FDA-approved. but still, he smiled. youâd said goodbye like it meant something and heâd spend the rest of the day pretending it wasnât the best part of his morning.
clark kent đ± đ«đđđđđ«Â
đđđ đŹ / đđ° â 18+, MDNI, secret admirer au, slowburn romance, mutual pining, radical acceptance and love is the real punk rock, yearning, clark is a softie, smut, piv, oral sex (f!recieving), fingering, creampie, touch starved clark KentÂ
word count: 18k
Summary: You start getting anonymous love notes at the Daily Planetâsoft, sincere, impossibly romantic. You fall for the words first, then realize they sound a lot like Clark Kent. And just when the truth begins to unravel, you start to suspect he might be more than just the writer⊠he might be Superman himself.Â
notes â not proofread and my first full Clark Kent fic!
â reblogs comments & likes are appreciated
The first thing you notice isnât the coffeeâitâs the smell.
Sharp espresso. The exact blend you order on days when the world feels like sandpaper. Dark, hot, and just a touch too strong. But when you reach your desk and set your bag down, the cup is already waiting for you, balanced on the corner of your keyboard like it belongs there.
A single post-it clings to the cardboard sleeve, the ink a little smudged from condensation:
âYou looked like you had a long night.â
No name. No heart. Just that.
You stare at it for a second too long. The office hums around youâphones ringing, printers whining, the low buzz of voicesâbut your ears tune it all out as you reread the handwriting. Rounded letters. Slight right slant. You canât place it.
And no one in this building knows your coffee order. You made sure of that.
Across the bullpen, Jimmy Olsen drops into his chair with a paper bag in his teeth and two cameras slung around his neck.
âSomeoneâs got a secret admirer,â he sings, catching sight of the note.
You glance up, but try to play it cool. âCould be a delivery mistake.â
He snorts. âRight. And Iâm dating Wonder Woman.â
Lois, passing by with a stack of mock-ups under one arm, pauses just long enough to lift a perfectly sculpted brow. âWhoâs dating Wonder Woman?â
âJimmy,â you and Jimmy say in unison.
âRight,â she says, deadpan, and moves on.
You feel a little heat crawl up your neck. You pull the cup closer. The lidâs still warm.
Youâre still turning the note over in your hand when Clark Kent rounds the corner. His hair is a little damp at the ends, like he didnât have time to dry it properly, already curling from the late-summer humidity. His tieâstriped, loud, undeniably Clarkâis halfway undone, the knot drifting lower by the second. His glasses are slipping down his nose like theyâre trying to abandon ship.
Heâs juggling three manila folders, a spiral-bound notebook balanced on top, a half-eaten blueberry muffin in his teeth, and what youâre almost certain is the entire city councilâs budget report from 2024 spilling out of the bottom folder. Itâs absurd. Kind of impressive. Very him.
âClarkâcareful,â you call out, mostly on instinct.
He startles at the sound of your voice and turns a little too fast. The top file slips. He manages to catch it, barely, with an awkward swipe of his forearm, the muffin top bouncing to the floor with a quiet thwup. He rights the stack again with both arms now locked tight around the paperwork, and when he looks at you, heâs already wearing one of those sheepish, winded smiles.
âMorning sweetheart,â he says breathlessly. His voice is warm. Rough around the edges like he hasnât spoken yet today. âSorry, Iâm lateâPerry wanted the zoning report and the express line was⊠not express.â
You donât answer right away. Because his eyes flick toward your deskâspecifically the coffee cup sitting at the edge of your keyboard. And the note stuck to its sleeve. He freezes. Just for a second. A micro-hesitation. One breath caught too long in his chest. Itâs nothing.
Except⊠itâs not.
Then he clears his throatâloud and awkward, like he swallowed gravelâand shuffles the stack in his arms like it suddenly needs reorganizing. âNew⊠uh, budget drafts,â he says quickly, eyes very intentionally not on the post-it. âI left the tag on that one by mistakeâignore the highlighter. I had a system. Kind of.â
You blink at him, watching his ears start to go red. ââŠYou okay?â
âOh, yeah,â he says, waving one hand too fast, almost drops everything again. âIâm fine, sweetheart. Just, you know. Monday.â
He flashes you the smile againâcrooked, a little boyish, like he still isnât sure if he belongs here even after all this time. Thatâs always been the thing about Clark. He doesnât posture. Doesnât strut. Heâs got this open-face sincerity, like the world is still worth showing up for, even when it kicks you in the ribs.
And youâve seen him work. Heâs brilliant. Way too observant to be as clumsy as he pretends to be. But itâs charming. In that small-town, too-tall-for-his-own-good, mutters-puns-when-heâs-nervous kind of way.
You like him. Thatâs⊠not the problem. The problem isâ He turns to walk past you, misjudges the distance, and thunks his thigh into the sharp edge of your desk with a grunt.
You flinch. âYou good?â
âYep.â He winces, but manages a thumbs-up. âJust, uh⊠recalibrating my ankles.â
Then heâs gone, retreating to the safe, familiar walls of his cubicle, still muttering to himself. Something about rechecking source notes and whether anyone notices when hyperlinks are one shade too blue.
Youâre left staring at the cup. At the note.
You run your thumb over the y again, the way it loops low and curls back. Thereâs something oddly familiar about the penmanship. Not perfect. Neat, but casual. Like whoever wrote it didnât plan to stop writing once they started. Like they meant it.
You donât say it aloudânot even to yourselfâbut the truth is whispering at the edge of your brain.
It looks like his. It feels like his. But no. That would beâ Clark Kent is thoughtful, sure. Heâs the kind of guy who remembers how you like your takeout and always lets you borrow his chargers. He holds elevators and never interrupts, and he stays late when you need someone to double-check your interview transcript even though itâs technically not his beat.
Heâs the kind of guy who brings you a jacket during late-night stakeouts without asking. Heâs the kind of guy who makes you laugh without trying. But he couldnât be the secret admirer.
âŠCould he?
You glance toward his cubicle. You canât see him, but you can feel him there. The way his presence always lingers, somehow warmer than everyone elseâs. Quieter.
You tuck the note into the back pocket of your notebook.
Just in case.
-
You forget about the note by lunch.
Mostly.
The newsroom doesnât really give you space to linger in your thoughtsâphones ringing, printers jamming, interns darting between desks like caffeinated ghosts. Itâs chaos, always is, and you thrive in it. But even as youâre skimming through edits and fixing a headline Jimmy typoâd into a minor war crime, part of your brain keeps circling back to that one y.
By the time you head back from a sandwich run with mustard on your sleeve and a half-dozen emails on your phone, thereâs another cup on your desk. Same order. No receipt. No name.
But this time, the note reads:
âThe line you cut in paragraph six was my favorite. About hope not being the same thing as naivety.â
You freeze mid-step, bag still dangling from one hand.Â
You hadnât published that line. You wrote it. Typed it, then stared at it for twenty minutes before deleting itâthought it was too sentimental, too soft for the piece. You didnât want to seem like you were editorializing. And yet⊠it had meant something. Youâd loved that line.
And someone else had read it. Which meansâŠ
Your eyes flick up. Around.
The bullpen looks the same as always: fluorescent lights buzzing, keys clacking, the faint scent of stale coffee and fast food. Jimmyâs arguing with someone about lens filters. Lois is deep in a phone call, gesturing with a pen like she might stab whoeverâs on the other end.
And thenâClark. Sitting at his desk, halfway behind the divider. Fiddling with his glasses like they wonât sit quite right on the bridge of his nose. He glances up at you and smiles. Soft. A little crooked. Familiar in a way that does something deeply unhelpful to your chest.
You stare for a second too long.
He blinks. Looks down quickly. Reaches for his pen, drops it, fumbles, curses under his breath. You see the top of his ears turning red.
Something inside you shifts. The notes are sweet, yes. But this is specific. This is someone who read your draft. Someone who noticed the cut line.
You never shared it outside your initial file. Not even with Lois. You almost didnât send it to copy at all. So⊠who the hell couldâve read it? How could they have seen it?Â
You return to your chair slowly, like it might help the pieces click into place. Your eyes catch the handwriting again.
The loops. The slight leftward tilt.
Clark does have neat handwriting. Youâve seen his notebook, all tidy bullet points and overly polite margin notes.
You tuck this note into your drawer. Next to the other one.
You donât say anything.
-
Later that afternoon, the newsroomâs background noise crescendos into something louderâLois and Dan from editorial locked in another philosophical brawl about media framing. Youâre not part of the fight, but apparently your latest piece is.
âItâs fluffy,â Dan says, waving the printed article like it personally offended him. âIt doesnât do anything. Whatâs the point of it, other than making people feel things?â
You open your mouthâjust barelyâready to defend yourself even though itâs exhausting. You donât get the chance. Clark beats you to it.
âI think it was insightful, actually,â he says from across the bullpen, voice louder than usual. âAnd emotionally resonant.â
The silence is sharp. Dan arches a brow. âListen, Kent. No one asked you.â
Clark straightens his tie. âWell, maybe they should.â
Now everyoneâs looking. Lois leans back in her chair, visibly suppressing a smile. Dan scoffs and mutters something about sentimentality being a plague.
You just stare at Clark. He meets your eyes, then seems to realize what heâs done and looks at his notebook like itâs suddenly the most fascinating object in the known universe.
Your heart does something inconvenient. Because now youâre wondering if it is him. Not just because he defended you, or because he could have somehow read the line that didnât make it to print, but because of the way he did it. The way his voice shook just a little. The way he looked furious on your behalf.
Clark is soft, yes. Awkward, often. But thereâs something sharp underneath it. A quiet kind of intensity that only shows up when it matters. Like someone whoâs spent a long time listening, and even longer choosing his moments.
You make a show of checking your notes. Pretending like your stomach didnât just flip. You donât look at him again. But you feel him looking.
-
The office after midnight doesnât feel like the same building. The lights buzz quieter. The chairs stop squeaking. Thereâs an eerie sort of calm that settles once the rush hour of deadlines has passed and only the ghosts and last-minute layout edits remain.
Clark is two desks away, sleeves rolled up, tie finally abandoned and flung haphazardly over the back of his chair. Heâs squinting at the screen like heâs trying to will the copy into formatting itself.
Youâre just as tiredâthough slightly less heroic-looking about it. Somewhere behind you, the printer groans. A rogue page slides off the tray and flutters to the floor like itâs giving up on life.
Clark gets up to grab it before you can.
âYouâre going to hurt yourself,â you say as he crouches to retrieve it. âOr fall asleep with your face on the carpet and get stuck there forever.â
He offers a smile, crooked and half-asleep. âIâve survived worse. Once fell asleep in a compost pile back in high school.â
You pause. âWhy?â
âThere was a dare,â he says, deadpan. âAnd a cow. The rest is classified, sweetheart.â
You snort before you can stop it.
Itâs late. Youâre punchy. The kind of tired that makes everything a little funnier, a little looser around the edges. He sits back down, stretching long limbs with a groan, and you let the quiet settle again.
âYou know Clark, sometimes I feel invisible here.â You donât mean to say it. It just slips out, quiet and rough from somewhere behind your ribcage.Â
Clark looks up instantly.
You keep staring at your screen. âItâs all bylines and deadlines, and then the story prints and nobody remembers who wrote it. Doesnât matter if itâs good or not. No one sees you.â You tap the corner of your spacebar absently. âFeels like yelling into a tunnel most days.â
You expect him to say something vague. Supportive. A standard âno, youâre great!â brush-off. But when you finally glance over, Clark is staring at you with his brow furrowed like someone just insulted his mom.
âThatâs ridiculous,â he mutters. âYouâre one of the most important voices in the room.â
The words are firm. Not flustered. Not dorky. Certain. It disarms you a little.
You blink. âClarkââ
âNo. I mean it, sweetheart," he says, almost stubborn. âYou make people care. Even when they donât want to. Thatâs rare.â
He looks down at his coffee like maybe it betrayed him by going cold too fast. You donât say anything. But that ache in your chest eases, just a little.
-
The next morning, youâre halfway through your walk to work when you find it.
Tucked into the side pocket of your coatâthe one you only use for receipts and empty gum wrappers. Folded carefully. Familiar ink.
âEven whispers echo when theyâre true.â
You stop walking. Stand there frozen on the corner outside a coffee shop as cars blur past and someone curses at a cab a few feet away. You read the note twice, then a third time.
Itâs simple. No flourish. No name. Just wordsâquiet, certain, and meant for you.
You donât know why it lands the way it does. Maybe because it doesnât try to dismiss how you feel. It just⊠reframes it. You may feel invisible, small, unheardâbut this person is saying: that doesnât make your truth meaningless. You matter, even if it feels like no oneâs listening.
You fold the note gently, like it might tear. You donât tuck this one into your notebook. You keep it in your coat pocket. All day.
Like armor.
-
By midafternoon, the bullpenâs usual noise has shapeshifted into something louderâone of those half-serious, half-combative newsroom debates that always starts in one cubicle and ends up consuming half the floor.
This time, itâs the great Superman Property Damage Discourse, sparkedâunsurprisinglyâby Lois Lane slapping a freshly printed article onto her desk like it insulted her directly.
âHe destroyed the entire north side of the building,â she says, exasperated, as if sheâs already had this argument with the universe and lost.
You donât look up right away. Youâre knee-deep in notes for your community housing series and trying to keep your lunch from leaking onto your desk. But the words still hit.
âTo stop a tanker explosion,â you point out without much heat, eyes still scanning your page. âThere were twenty-seven people inside.â
âMy point,â Lois says, crossing her arms, âis that someone has to pay for all that glass.â
âPretty sure itâs the insurance companies,â you mutter.
Lois raises a brow at you, but doesnât push it. Sheâs used to you playing devilâs advocateâusually itâs just for fun. She doesnât know this oneâs starting to feel a little personal.
And then Clark walks in. Heâs balancing two coffee cups and what looks like a roll of blueprints tucked under one arm, sleeves rolled up and tie already loose like the dayâs been longer than it shouldâve been. His hairâs a mess, wind-tousled and curling near the back of his neck, and heâs got that familiar expression onâhalf-focused, half-apologetic, like heâs perpetually arriving a few seconds after he meant to.
He slows as he approaches, catches the tail end of Loisâs rant, and hesitates. Just a second. Just long enough for something behind his glasses to tighten. Then, without warning or warm-up, he steps in like a man walking into traffic.
âHeâs doing his best, okay?â he blurts. âHe canât help the building fellâthere was a fireball.â
The bullpen quiets a beat. Just enough for the words to settle and sting. Lois doesnât even look up from her monitor. âYou sound like a fanboy.â
âI justââ Clark huffs. âHeâs trying to protect people. Thatâs not⊠easy.â
He lifts his hand to gesture, but his elbow clips the corner of his desk and sends his coffee tipping. The paper cup wobbles, then crashes onto the floor in a slosh of brown across your loose notes.
âClark!â You shove back in your chair, startled.
âSorryâsorryâhang onââ He lunges for a stack of printer paper, overcorrects, and knocks over another folder in the process. Its contents scatter like leaves in the wind. He flails to grab what he can, muttering apologies the whole time.
The tension breaksânot because of what he said, but because of the way he said it. Because heâs suddenly in a mess of his own making, trying to mop it up with a handful of flyers and an empty paper towel roll, red-faced and flustered.Â
You canât help it. You smile. Just a little.
Lois glances sideways at the scene, then turns to you, tone dry as dust. âWell. Heâs⊠passionate.â
You arch a brow. âThatâs one word for it.â
She doesnât notice the way your eyes linger on him. She doesnât see the shift in your chest when you watch him drop to one knee, scooping up wet files with shaking hands, his jaw tightânot from embarrassment, but from something quieter. Fiercer.
Because Clark hadnât just jumped to Supermanâs defense.
Heâd meant it.
Like someone who knows what it feels like to try and still fall short. Like someone whoâs carried the weight of peopleâs expectations. Like someone whoâs watched something burn and had to live with the cost of saving it.
You know itâs ridiculous. You know itâs a stretch. But still⊠your breath catches.
He steadies the last folder against his desk, rubs the back of his neck, and looks upâright at you. Your eyes meet for a second too long.
You offer him a look that says itâs okay. He returns one that says thanks. And then the moment passes. You turn back to your screen, heart pounding for reasons you wonât name. And Clark returns to quietly drying his desk with a half-crumpled press release.
You donât say anything. But youâre not watching him by accident anymore.
-
Youâve read the latest note a dozen times.
âSometimes I wish I could just be honest with you. But I canâtânot yet.â
Thereâs no flourish. No compliment. Just rawness, stripped of any careful metaphor or charm. Itâs still anonymous, but the voice⊠it feels closer now. Less like a mystery, more like someone standing just out of sight.
Someone with hands that tremble when they pass you a coffee. Someone who knows how your voice sounds when youâre frustrated. Someone who once told you, very softly, that your words matter.
You start thinking about Clark again. And once the thought roots, itâs impossible to pull it free.
-
You test him. Itâs petty, maybe. Pointless, probably. But you do it anyway. That afternoon, youâre both holed up near the copy desk, reviewing your latest layout. Clarkâs seated beside you, sleeves pushed up, his pen tapping lightly against the margin of your column draft. His knee keeps bumping yours under the desk, and every time, he apologizes with a shy smile that doesnât quite meet your eyes.
Youâre running on too little sleep and too many thoughts. So you try it. âYou ever hear that phrase? âEven whispers echo when theyâre trueâ?â
He looks up from the page. Blinks behind his smudged glasses. âUh⊠sure. I mean, not in everyday conversation, but yeah. Sounds poetic.â
You tilt your head, eyes narrowing just slightly. âI read it recently,â you say, like youâre thinking aloud. âCanât stop turning it over. I donât knowâit stuck with me.â
He stares at you for a beat too long. Then clears his throat and drops his gaze, pen suddenly very busy again. âYeah. Itâs⊠itâs a good line.â
âYou donât think itâs a little dramatic?â
âNo,â he says too quickly. âI meanâitâs true. Sometimes the quietest things are the ones worth listening to.â
You nod, pretending to go back to your edits. But his pen taps a little faster. The corner of his mouth twitches. Heâs trying to look neutral, maybe even confused. But Clark Kent couldnât lie his way out of a grocery list.
And if he did write it, that means he knows youâre testing him.
You donât call him on it.
Not yet.
-
Later that evening, he helps you file your story. Technically, Clarkâs already done for the dayâhe couldâve clocked out an hour ago, couldâve gone home and slipped into his flannel pajamas and vanished into whatever quiet life he keeps outside these walls. But instead, he lingers.
His jacket is folded neatly over the back of your chair, sleeves still warm from his arms. His glasses sit low on his nose, catching the screenâs glow, one smudge blooming near the top corner where heâs pushed them up too many times with the side of his thumb.
He leans over the desk beside you, one palm braced flat against the surface, the other gently scrolling through your draft. His frame takes up too much space in that warm, grounding wayâshoulder brushing yours occasionally, breath warm at your temple when he leans in to squint at a sentence.
Youâre quiet, but not for lack of things to say. Itâs the way heâs readingâcarefully, like every word deserves to be held. Thereâs no red pen. No quick fixes. Just soft soundless reverence, like your work is already whole and heâs just lucky to witness it.
And his hands.
God, his hands.
You try not to look, but theyâre impossible to ignore. Big and capable, yes, but gentle in the way he uses themâfingers skimming the edge of the printout like the paper might bruise, thumb stroking over the corner where the page curls, slow and absentminded. The pads of his fingers are slightly ink-stained, callused just at the tips. He smells faintly like cheap soap and newsroom toner and something you canât name but have already begun to crave.
You wonderâjust for a momentâwhat it would be like to feel those hands touch you with purpose instead of hesitation. Without the paper buffer. Without the quiet restraint.
He leans a little closer. You can feel the press of his shirt sleeve against your arm now, soft cotton against skin. âLooks perfect to me,â he murmurs.
Itâs not the words. Itâs the way he says themâlike heâs not just talking about the story. You swallow, pulse jumping. You wonder if he hears it. You wonder if he feels it.
His eyes flick to yours for just a second. Something hangs in the airâfragile, charged. Then the phone rings down the hall, and the spell breaks like steam off hot glass. He steps back. You exhale like youâve been holding your breath for three paragraphs.
You donât look at him as he grabs his jacket. You just nod and whisper, âThanks.â
And he just smilesâsoft and private, like a secret passed from his mouth to your chest.
-
You donât go home right away. You sit at your desk long after Clark and the rest of the bullpen has emptied out, coat draped over your shoulders like a blanket, fingers toying with the folded edge of the note in your lap.
âSometimes I wish I could just be honest with you. But I canâtânot yet.â
Youâve read it enough times to have it memorized. Still, your eyes trace the handwriting againâcareful lettering, no signature, just that quiet ache bleeding between the lines.
Itâs the first one that feels more than just flirtation. This one hurts a little. So you do something you havenât done before.
You pull a post-it from the stack beside your monitor, scribble down one sentenceâno flourish, no punctuation.
âThen tell me in person.âÂ
You slide it beneath your stapler before you leave. A deliberate offering. You donât know how heâs been getting the others to youâif itâs during your lunch break or when youâre in the print room or bent over in the archives. But somehow, he knows.
So this time, you let him find something waiting.
And when you finally shrug on your coat and step into the elevator, the empty quiet of the newsroom echoes behind you like a held breath.
-
The next morning, thereâs no reply. Not on your desk. Not slipped into your coat pocket. Not scribbled in the margin of your planner or tucked beneath your coffee cup. Just silence.
You try not to feel disappointed. You try not to spiral. Maybe heâs waiting. Maybe heâs scared. Maybe youâre wrong and itâs not who you think. But your chest feels hollow all the sameâlike something almost happened and didnât.
So that night, you write again. Your hands shake more than they should for something so simple. A sticky note. A few words. But this one names it.
âOne chance. One sunset. Centennial Park. Bench by the lion statue. Tomorrow.â
You stare at the words a long time before setting it down. This oneâs not a joke. Not a dare. Not a flirtation scribbled in passing. This is an invitation. A door left open.
You slide it under your stapler the same way youâve received every one of his notesâunassuming, tucked in plain sight. If he wants to find it, he will. Youâve stopped questioning how he does it. Maybe itâs timing. Maybe itâs instinct. Maybe itâs something else entirely.
But you know heâll see it.
You pack up slowly. Shoulders tight. Bag heavier than usual. The newsroom is quiet at this hourâjust the low hum of the overhead fluorescents and the soft, endless churn of printers in the back. You turn off your monitor, loop your coat over your arm, and make your way to the elevator.
Halfway there, something makes you stop. You glance back. Clark is still at his desk.
You hadnât heard him return. You hadnât even noticed the light at his station flick back on. But there he isâelbows on the desk, hands folded in front of him, eyes already lifted.
Watching you.
His face is unreadable, but his gaze lingers longer than it should. Soft. Searching. Almost caught. You feel the air shift. Not a word is exchanged. Just that one look.
Then the elevator dings. You turn away before you can lose your nerve.
And Clark? He doesnât look down. Not until the doors slide shut in front of your face.
-
You tell yourself it doesnât matter. You tell yourself it was probably nothing. A game. A passing flirtation. Maybe Jimmy, playing an elaborate prank heâll one day claim was performance art.
But stillâyou dress carefully.
You pull out that one sweater that always makes you feel like the best version of yourself, and you smooth your collar twice before you leave. You wear lip balm that smells faintly like vanilla and leave the office ten minutes early just in case traffic is worse than expected. Just in case heâs early.
You get there first. The bench is colder than you remember. Stone weathered and a little damp from last nightâs rain. Your coffee steams in your hands, and for a while, thatâs enough to keep you warm.
The sky begins to soften around the edges. First blush pink, then golden orange, then the faintest sweep of violet, like a bruise blooming across the clouds. You watch the city skyline fade into silhouettes. The sun drips lower behind the glass towers, catching the river in a moment of molten reflection. Itâs beautiful.
Itâs also empty.
You wait. A couple strolls past, fingers laced, talking softly like theyâve been in love for years. A jogger nods as they pass, earbuds in, a scruffy golden retriever trotting faithfully beside them. The dog looks up at you like it knows somethingâlike it sees something.
The wind kicks up. You pull your coat tighter. You tell yourself to give it five more minutes. Then five more.
And thenâ
Nothing. No footsteps. No note. No him.
Your coffee goes cold between your palms. The stone starts to seep into your bones. And somewhere deep in your chest, something you hadnât even dared name⊠wilts.
Eventually, you stand. Walk home with your coat buttoned all the way up, even though itâs not that cold. You donât cry.
You just go quiet.
-
The next morning, the bullpen hums with the usual Monday static. Phones ringing. Keys clacking. Perryâs voice barking something about a missed quote from the sanitation board. Jimmyâs camera shutter clicking in staccato bursts behind you. The Daily Planet in full swingâordinary chaos wrapped in coffee breath and fluorescent lighting.
You move through it on autopilot. Your smile is small, tight around the edges. Youâve become a master of folding disappointment into your postureâchin lifted, eyes clear, mouth curved just enough to seem fine.
âGuess the secret admirer thing was just a prank after all.â You drop your bag beside your desk, shuffle through the morning copy logs, and say it lightly. Offhand. Like a joke. âShouldâve known better.â You make sure your voice carries just far enough. Not loud, but not a whisper. Casual. A throwaway comment designed to sound unaffected. And then you laugh. Itâs short. Hollow. It dies in your throat before it even fully escapes.
Lois glances up from her monitor, eyes narrowing faintly behind dark lashes. She doesnât laugh with you. She doesnât smile. She just watches you for a beat too long. Not with judgment. Not even pity. Just⊠knowing. But she says nothing. And neither do you.
What you donât see is the hallwayâjust twenty feet awayâwhere Clark Kent stands frozen in place. Heâd just walked inâlate, coat slung over one arm, takeout coffee in the other. He had stopped just inside the threshold to adjust his glasses. Heâd meant to offer you a second coffee, the one he bought on impulse after circling the block too many times.
And then he heard it. Your voice. âGuess the secret admirer thing was just a prank after all.â And then your laugh. That awful, paper-thin laugh.
He goes still. Like someone pulled the oxygen from the room. His hand tightens around the coffee cup until the lid creaks. The other arm drops slack at his side, coat nearly slipping from his grasp. His jaw tenses. Shoulders stiffen beneath his white button-down, and for one awful second, he forgets how to breathe.
Because you sound like someone trying not to care. And it cuts deeper than he expects. Because heâd meant to come. Because he tried. Because he was so close.
But none of that matters now. All you know is that he didnât show up. And now you think the whole thing was a joke. A stupid, secret game. His game. And he canât even explainânot without tearing everything open.
He stares down the corridor, eyes fixed on the edge of your desk, on the shape of your shoulders turned slightly away. He watches as you pick up your coffee and blow gently across the lid like it might chase the bitterness from your chest.
You donât turn around. You donât see the way he stands thereâgutted, unmoving, undone. The cup trembles in his hand. He turns away before it spills.
-
That night, you go back to the office. You tell yourself itâs for the deadline. A follow-up piece on the housing committee. Edits on the west-side zoning profile. Anything to fill the time between sunset and sleepâbecause if you sleep, youâll just dream of that bench.
The newsroom is quiet now. All overhead lights dimmed except for the halo of your desk lamp and the soft thrum of a copy machine left cycling in the corner.
You drop your bag with a sigh. Stretch your shoulders. Slide your desk drawer open without thinking. And find it. A note. No envelope. No tape. No ceremony. Just a single sheet of cream stationery folded in thirds. Familiar handwriting. Neat loops. Unshaking.
You unfold it slowly.
âIâm sorry. I wanted to be there. I canât explain why I couldnâtâ
But it wasnât a joke. It was never a joke. Please believe that.â
The words hit like a breath you didnât know you were holding. Then they blur. You read it again. Then again. But the ache in your chest doesnât settle. Because how do you believe someone who wonât show their face? How do you believe someone who keeps slipping between your fingers?
You hold the note to your chest. Close your eyes. You want to believe him. God, you want to. But you donât know how anymore.
-
What you couldnât know is this: Clark Kent was already running. Heâd been on his wayâcoat flapping behind him, tie unspooling in the wind, breath fogging as he dashed through traffic, one hand wrapped tight around a note he planned to deliver in person for the first time. Heâd rehearsed it. Practiced what heâd say. Built up to it with every beat of a terrified heart.
He saw the park lights up ahead. Saw the lion statue. Saw the shape of a figure sitting alone on that bench.
And then the air split open. The sky went green. A fifth-dimensional impânot even from this universeâtore through Metropolis like a child flipping pages in a pop-up book. Reality folded. Buildings bent sideways. Streetlamps started singing jazz standards.
Clark barely had time to take a deep breath before he vanished into smoke and flame, spinning upward in a blur of red and blue. Somewhere across town, Superman joined Guy Gardner, Hawk Girl, Mr. Terrific, and Metamorpho in trying to contain the chaos before the city unmade itself entirely.Â
He never got the chance to reach the bench. He never got the chance to say anything. The note stayed in his pocket until it was soaked with rain and streaked with ash. Until it was too late.
-
Itâs supposed to be routine. Youâre only there to cover a zoning dispute. A boring, mid-week council press event thatâs been rescheduled three times already. The air is heavy with heat and bureaucracy. You and your photographer barely make it past the front barricades before the scene spirals into chaos.
First itâs the downed power linesâsparking in rapid bursts as something hits the utility pole two blocks down. Then a car screeches over the median. Then someone starts screaming.
Youâre still trying to piece it together when the crowd surgesâsomeone shouts about a gun. People scatter. A window shatters across the street. A chunk of concrete falls from the sky like a thrown brick.
Your feet move before your brain catches up. You hit the pavement just as something explodes behind you. A jolt rings through your bones, sharp and high and metallic. Dust clouds the air. Thereâs shouting, then screaming, and your ears go fuzzy for one split second.
And then he lands.
Superman.
Cape whipping behind him like itâs caught in its own storm, boots cracking against the sidewalk as he drops down between the wreckage and the people still trying to flee. He moves like nothing youâve ever seen.
Not just fastâbut impossible. His body a blur of motion, heat, and purpose. He rips a crumpled lamppost off a trapped woman like it weighs nothing. Hurls it aside and crouches low beside her, voice firm but gentle as he checks her pulse, her leg, her name.
Youâre frozen where you crouch, half behind a parking meter, hand pressed to your chest like it can keep your heart from tearing loose.
And then be turns. Looks straight at you. His expression shifts. Just for a moment. Just for you. He steps forward, dust streaking his suit, eyes dark with something you donât have time to name. He reaches you in three strides, body angled between you and the chaos, hand raised in warning before you can speak.
âStay here, sweetheart. Please.â
Your stomach drops. Not at the danger. Not at the sound of buildings groaning in the distance or the flash of gunmetal tucked into a strangerâs hand.
Itâs him. That word. That voice. The exact way of saying itâlike itâs muscle memory. Like heâs said it a thousand times before.
Like Clark says it.
It stuns you more than the explosion did.
You blink up at him, speechless, heart stuttering behind your ribs as he holds your gaze just a second longer than he should. His brow furrows. Then heâs goneâinto the fray, into the fire, into the part of the story where your pen canât follow.
You donât remember standing. You donât remember how you get back to the press line, only that your legs shake and your palms burn and every time you try to replay what just happened, your brain gets stuck on one word.
Sweetheart.
Youâve heard it beforeâdozens of times. Always soft. Always accidental. Always from behind thick glasses and a crooked tie and a mouth still chewing the edge of a muffin while he scrolls through zoning reports.
Clark says it when he forgets youâre not his to claim. Clark says it when youâre both the last ones in the office and he thinks youâre asleep at your desk. Clark says it like a secret. Like a slip.
And Superman just said it exactly the same way. Same tone. Same warmth. Same quiet ache beneath it.
But thatâs not possible. Because Superman isâSuperman. Bold. Dazzling. Fire-forged. He walks like he owns the sky. He speaks like a storm made flesh. He radiates power and perfection.
And Clark? Clark is all flannel and stammering jokes and soft eyes behind big frames. Heâs gentle. A little clumsy. His swagger is borrowed from farm porches and storybooks. Heâs sweet in a way Superman couldnât possibly be.
Couldnât⊠Right? You chalk it up to coincidence. You have to.
âŠSort of.
-
You donât sleep well the night after the incident. You keep replaying itâframe by impossible frame. The gunshot, the smoke, the sky splitting in half. The crack of his landing, the rush of wind off his cape. The weight of his body between you and danger. And then that voice.
âStay here, sweetheart. Please.â
You flinch every time it echoes in your head. Every time your brain folds it over the countless memories you have of Clark saying it in passing, like it was nothing. Like it meant nothing.
But it means something now.
You come into the office the next day wired and quiet, adrenaline still burning faintly at the edges of your skin. You arenât sure what to say, or to whom, so you say nothing. You stare too long at your coffee. You snap at a printer jam. You forget your lunch in the breakroom fridge.
Clark notices. He hovers by your desk that morning, a second coffee in handâone of those specialty orders from that corner place he knows you like but always pretends he doesnât remember.
âRough day?â he asks gently. His tone is careful. Soft. As if youâre a glass already rattling on the edge of the shelf.
You donât look up. âItâs fine.â
He hesitates. Then sets the coffee down beside your elbow, just far enough that you have to choose whether or not to reach for it. âI heard about the power line thing,â he adds. âYou okay?â
âI said Iâm fine, Clark.â
A beat.
You hate the way his face flickers at thatâhurt, barely masked. He pushes his glasses up and nods like he deserves it. Like heâs been expecting it. He doesnât press. He just walks away.
-
You find yourself whispering to Lois over takeout later that afternoonâhalf a conversation muttered between bites of noodles and the hum of flickering overheads.
âHe called me sweetheart.â
She raises an eyebrow. âClark?â
âNo. Superman.â
Her chewing slows.
You keep your eyes on the edge of your desk. âThatâs⊠weird, right?â
Lois makes a soundâsomewhere between a scoff and a laugh. âHeâs a superhero. They charm every pretty girl they pull out of a burning building.â
You poke at your noodles. âStill. It feltâŠâ
âWeird?â she teases again, nudging her knee against yours.
You shrug like it doesnât matter. Like it hasnât been clawing at the back of your brain for three days straight. Lois doesnât press. Just watches you for a second longer than necessary. Then she moves on, launching into a tirade about Perryâs passive-aggressive post-it notes and the fact that someone keeps stealing her pens.
But the damage is already done. Because you start thinking maybe youâve just been projecting. Maybe you want your secret admirer to be Clark so badly that your brainâs rewriting realityâlatching onto any voice, any phrase, any fleeting resemblance and assigning it meaning.
Sweetheart.
Itâs a common word. It doesnât mean anything. Maybe Superman says it to everyone. Maybe he has a whole roster of soft pet names for dazed civilians. Maybe youâre the delusional oneâsitting here wondering if your awkward, sweet, left-footed coworker moonlights as a god.
The idea is so absurd it actually makes you laugh. Quietly. Bitterly. Right into your carton of lo mein. You tell yourself to let it go. But you donât.
You canât. Because somewhere deep down, it doesnât feel absurd at all. It feels⊠close. Like youâre brushing against the edge of something true. And if you get just a little closerâ
You might fall right through it.
-
Clark pulls back after that. Subtly. Slowly. Like heâs dimming himself on purpose. Heâs still thereâstill kind, still thoughtful, still Clark. But the rhythm changes.
The coffees stop appearing on your desk each morning. No more sticky notes with half-legible puns or awkward smiley faces. No more jokes under his breath during staff meetings. No more warm glances across the bullpen when youâre stuck late and your screen is giving you a headache.
His chair now sits just a little farther from yours in the layout room. Not enough to be obvious. Just enough to feel. You notice it the way you notice when the air shifts before a storm. Quiet. Inevitable.
Even his messages change. Once, his texts used to come with too many exclamation marks and a tendency to type out haha when he was nervous. Now theyâre brief. Punctuated. Polite.
âGot your quote. Sending now.â
âPerry said weâre cleared for page A3.â
âHope your meeting went okay.â
You reread them more than you should. Not because of what they sayâbut because of what they donât. It feels like being ghosted by someone who still waves to you across the room.
You try to talk yourself down. Maybe heâs just busy. Maybe heâs stressed. Maybe youâve been projecting. Maybe itâs not your admirerâs handwriting that matches his. Maybe itâs not his voice that slipped out of Supermanâs mouth like a secret.
Maybe, maybe, maybe.
But the space he used to fill next to you⊠feels like a light thatâs been quietly turned off. And you are the one still blinking against the dark.
And yet, one afternoon, someone in the bullpen makes a snide remark about your latest piece. You donât even catch the beginningâjust the tail end of it, lazy and smug.
ââbasically just fluff, right? Sheâs been coasting lately.â
Youâre about to ignore it. Youâre tired. Too tired. And whatâs the point in arguing with someone who thinks nuance is a liability?
But thenâClark speaks. Not from beside you, but from across the room. Youâre not even sure how he could have possibly heard the guy talking across all the hustle and bustle of the bullpen. But his voice cuts through the noise like someone snapping a ruler against a desk.
âI just think her work actually matters, okay?â
Silence follows. Not because of the volumeâhe wasnât loud. Just certain. Unflinching. Like heâd been holding it in. The words hang in the air, charged and too real.
Clark looks immediately horrified with himself. He goes red. Not a faint flushâcrimson. Mouth parting like he wants to take it back but doesnât know how. He tries to recover, to smooth it overâbut nothing comes. Just a flustered shake of his head and a noise that mightâve been his name.
The other reporter stares. ââŠOkay, man. Chill.â
Clark mumbles something about grabbing a file from archives and practically stumbles for the hallway, papers clenched awkwardly in one hand like a shield.
You donât follow. You just⊠sit there. Staring at the space he left behind. Because that momentâthose wordsâit wasnât just instinct. It wasnât just kindness. It was him.
The way he said it. The emotion in it. The rhythm of it. It felt like the notes. Like the quiet encouragements tucked into the margins of your day. Like someone watching, quietly, gently, hoping youâll see yourself the way they do.
You think about the phrases heâs used before.
âThe line you cut in paragraph six was my favorite. About hope not being the same thing as naivety.â
âEven whispers echo when theyâre true.â
And now:
âHer work actually matters.â
All said like they were true, not convenient. All said like they were about you.
You start to notice more after that. The way Clark compliments your writingâalways specific. Never lazy. The way his eyes crinkle when heâs proud of something you said, even when he doesnât speak up. The way he turns the thermostat up exactly two degrees every time you bring your sweater into work. The way he walks a half-step behind you when you both leave late at night.
Itâs not a confession. Not yet. But itâs a pattern. And once you start seeing itâ
You canât stop.
-
Itâs a quiet afternoon in the bullpen. The kind where the overhead lights hum just loud enough to notice and everything smells like stale coffee and highlighter ink.
Clarkâs sprawled in front of his monitor, sleeves rolled to his elbows, brow furrowed with the kind of intensity he usually saves for city zoning laws and double-checked citations. Youâre helping him sort through quotesâmost of which came from a reluctant press secretary and one very talkative dog walker who may or may not be a credible witness.
âCan you check the time stamp on the third transcript?â he asks, not looking up from his notes. âI think I messed it up when I formatted.â
You nod, flipping through the stack of papers he passed you earlier. Thatâs when you see it. Folded beneath the top printout, half-tucked into the margin of a city planning spreadsheet, is a different kind of note. A loose sheet, scribbled across in black ink. Not typedâwritten. Slanted lines. A few false starts crossed out.
At first, you think itâs a headline draft. A brainstorm. But the longer you stare, the more it reads like⊠something else.
âThe city is loud today. Not just noise, but motion. Memory. The way people hum when they think no oneâs listening.â
âI canât stop watching her move through it like she belongs to it. Like it belongs to her.â
You freeze. Your eyes track down the page slowly, like touching something sacred.
The letters are familiar. The lowercase y curls the same way as the one on your very first noteâthe one that came with your coffee. The ink is the same soft black, slightly smudged in the corners, like whoever wrote it holds the pen too tight when theyâre thinking. The paper is the same notepad stock heâs used before. The same faint red line down the margin.
You donât mean to do it, but your fingers curl around the page. Your chest goes tight. Because itâs not just similar.
Itâs exact.
You hear him coming before you see himâthose long, careful strides and the faint jangle of the lanyard he keeps forgetting to take off.
You tuck the paper into your notebook. Quick. Smooth. Automatic.
âHey, sorry,â he says, rounding the corner with two mugs of tea and a slightly sheepish smile. âPrinterâs jammed again. I may have made it worse.â
You nod. Too fast. You canât quite make your voice work yet. Clark hands you your teaâjust the way you like it, no commentâand sits across from you like nothingâs wrong. Like your whole world hasnât tilted six degrees to the left.
He launches into a ramble about column widths and quote placement, about whether a serif font looks more âestablishedâ than sans serif.
You donât hear a word of it. You just⊠watch him. The way he gestures too big with his hands. The way his glasses slip down his nose mid-sentence and he doesnât bother to fix them until theyâre practically falling off. The way his voice drops a little when heâs thinking hardâlow and warm and utterly unselfconscious.
He has no idea you know. No idea what you just found.
You murmur something about needing to catch a meeting and excuse yourself early. He nods. Worries at his bottom lip like heâs debating whether to walk you out. Decides against it.
âThanks for the help,â he says quietly, as you shoulder your bag. âSeriously. I couldnâtâve done this draft without you.â
You give him a look you donât quite know how to name. Something between thank you and I see you.Â
Then you go.
-
That night, you sit on your bedroom floor with the drawer open. Every note. Every folded scrap. Every secret tucked under your stapler or slid into your sleeve or left beside your coffee cup. You line them up in rows. You flatten them with careful hands. And you compare. One by one.
The loops. The lines. The uneven spacing. The curl of the r. The hush in every sentence, like he was writing them with his heart too close to the surface.Â
Thereâs no room for doubt anymore. Itâs him. Itâs been him this whole time.
Clark Kent.
And somehowâsomehowâheâs still never said your name aloud when he writes about you. Not once. But every letter reads like a whisper of it. Like a promise waiting to be spoken.
-
The office is quiet by the time you find the nerve.
Desks are abandoned, chairs turned at angles, the windows dark with city glow. Outside, Metropolis hums in its usual low thrumâsirens and neon and distant jazz from a rooftop barâbut here, in the bullpen, itâs just the steady tick of the wall clock and the slow, careful steps you take toward his desk.
Clark doesnât hear you at first. Heâs bent over a red pen and a half-finished draft, glasses low on his nose, the curve of his back hunched the way it always is when heâs lost in edits. His tie is loosened. His sleeves are pushed up. Thereâs a smear of ink on his thumb. He looks soft in the way people do when they think no oneâs watching.Â
You speak before you lose your nerve. âWhy didnât you just tell me?â
Clark startles. Not dramaticallyâjust a sharp breath and a too-quick motion to sit upright, like a kid caught doodling in the margins. âIâwhat?â
You donât let your voice shake. âThat it was you. The notes. The park. All of it.â
He stares at you. Then down at his desk. Then back again. His mouth opens like it wants to offer a lie, but nothing comes out. Just silence. His fingers twitch toward the edge of the desk and stop there, curling into his palm.
âIââ he tries again, softer now, ââI didnât think you knew.â
âI didnât.â Your voice is gentle. But not easy. âNot at first. Not really. But then I saw that list on your desk and⊠I went home and checked the handwriting.â
He winces. âI knew I left that out somewhere.â
You cross your arms, not out of angerâmore like self-protection. âYou couldâve told me. At any point. I asked you.â
âI know.â He swallows hard. âI know. I wanted to. I⊠tried.â
You watch him. Wait.Â
And then he says it. Not loud. Not dramatic. Just the truth, raw and shaky and so Clark it nearly breaks you. âBecause if I told you it was me⊠you might look at me different. Or worse⊠The same.â
You donât know what to say to that. Not right away. Your heart clenches. Because itâs so himâto assume your affection could only live in the mystery. That the truth of himâsoft, clumsy, brilliant, realâwould somehow undo the magic.
âClarkâŠâ you start, but your voice slips.
He rubs the back of his neck. âIâm just the guy who spills coffee on his own notes and forgets to refill the paper tray. Youâre⊠you. You write like youâre on fire. You walk into a room and it listens. I didnât think someone like you would ever want someone like me.â
You stare at him. Really stare. At the flushed cheeks. The nervous hands. The boyish smile heâs trying to bury under self-deprecation. And then you say it. âI saved every note.â
He blinks.
You keep going. âI read them when I felt invisible. When I thought no one gave a damn what I was doing here. They mattered.â
Clarkâs breath catches. He opens his mouth. Closes it again. He takes a slow step forward, tentative. Like heâs afraid to break the spell. His eyes search yours, and for a momentâfor a second so still it might as well last an hourâhe leans in. Not close enough to kiss you. But almost. His hand brushes yours. He stops. The air is heavy between you, buzzing with something fragile and enormous. But it isnât enough. Not yet.
You draw in a breath, quiet but steady. âWhy didnât you meet me?â
Clark goes still. You can see it happenâthe way the question lands. The way he folds in on himself just slightly, like the truth is too heavy to hold upright.
âIâŠâ He tries, but the word doesnât land. His jaw flexes. His eyes drop to the floor, then back up. He wants to tell you. He almost does. But he canât. Not without unraveling everything. Not without unraveling himself.
âI wanted to,â he says finally, voice rough at the edges. âMore than anything.â
âBut?â you press, gently.
He just looks at you and says nothing. You nod, slowly. The silence says enough. Your chest achesânot in a sharp, bitter way. In the dull, familiar way of something you already suspected being confirmed.
You glance down at where your hand still brushes his, then look back at himâreally look. âI wish youâd told me,â you whisper. âI sat there thinking it was a joke. That I made it all up. That I was stupid for believing in any of it.â
âI know,â he murmurs. âAnd Iâm sorry.â
Your throat tightens. You swallow past it. âI just⊠I need time. To process. To think.â
Clarkâs eyes flickerâhope and heartbreak, all tangled up in one look. âOf course,â he says immediately. âTake whatever you need. I mean it.â
A beat passes before you say the part that makes his breath catch. âIâm happy it was you.â
He freezes.
You offer the smallest smile. âI wanted it to be you.â
And for the first time in minutes, something in his shoulders unknots. Thereâs a shift. Gentle. Quiet. His hand lingers near yours again, knuckles brushing. He doesnât lean in. Doesnât push.
But God, he wants to. And maybe⊠maybe you do too. The moment stretches, unspoken and warm and not quite ready to be anything more.
You both stay like thatâclose, not touching. Breathing the same charged air. Then he laughs under his breath. Nervous. Boyish.
âIâm probably gonna trip over something the second you walk away.â
You smile back. âJust recalibrate your ankles.â
He huffs out a laugh, head ducking. âI deserved that.â
You start to turn away. Just a little. But his voice stops you againâquiet, sincere, something earnest catching in it. âIâm really glad it was me, too.â
And your heart flutters all over again.
-
Lois is perched on the edge of your desk, a paper takeout box balanced on her knee, chopsticks waving in lazy circles while you pick at your own dinner with a little too much focus.
You havenât told her everything. Not the everything everything. Not the way your heart nearly cracked open when Clark looked at you like you were made of starlight and library books. Not how close he got before pulling back. Not how you pulled back too, even though your whole body ached to close the distance.
But you have told her about the notes. About the mystery. About the strange tenderness of it all, how it wrapped around your days like a string you didnât know you were following until it tugged. And LoisâLois has been unusually quiet about it. Until now.Â
âIâm setting you up,â she says between bites, like sheâs discussing filing taxes.
You blink. âWhat?â
âA date. Just one. Guy from the Features desk at the Tribune. Youâll like him. Heâs taller than you, decent jawline, wears socks that match. Heâs got strong opinions about punctuation, which I figure is basically foreplay for you.â
You stare at her. âYou donât even believe in setups.â
âI donât,â she agrees. âBut youâve been spiraling in circles for weeks, and at this point, I either push you toward a date or stage an intervention with PowerPoint slides.â
You laugh despite yourself. âYou have PowerPoint slides?â
âOf course not,â she scoffs. âI have a Google Doc.â
You roll your eyes. âLoisââ
âListen,â she says, gentler now. âI know youâre in deep with whoever this guy is. And if it is Clark⊠well. I can see why.â
Your stomach flips.
âBut maybe stepping outside of the Planet for two hours wouldnât kill you. Let someone else flirt with you for once. Let yourself figure out what you actually want.â
You press your lips together. Look down at your barely-touched food.
âYou donât have to fall for him,â she adds, softly. âJust let yourself be seen.â
You exhale through your nose. âHe better be cute.â
âOh, he is. Total sweater vest energy.â
You snort. âSo your type.â
âExactly.â She lifts her takeout carton in a mock toast. âTo emotionally compromised coworkers and their tragic love lives.â
You clink your chopsticks against hers like itâs the saddest champagne flute in the world. And later, when youâre getting ready, you still feel the weight of Clarkâs almost-kiss behind your ribs. But you go anyway. Because Lois is right. You need to know what it is youâre choosing. Even if, deep down, you already do.
-
The date isnât bad. Thatâs the most frustrating part. Heâs nice. Polished in that media school kind of wayâcrisp shirt, clean shave, a practiced smile that belongs on a campaign poster. He compliments your bylines and talks about his dream of running an independent magazine one day. He orders the good whiskey and laughs at your jokes.
But itâs the wrong laugh. Off by a beat. The rhythmâs not right.
When he leans in, you donât. When he talks, your thoughts driftâto mismatched socks and printer toner smudges. To how someone else always remembers your coffee order. To how someone else listens, not to respond, but to see.
You realize it halfway through the second drink. Youâre thinking about Clark again.
The softness of him. The steadiness. The way he over-apologizes in texts but never hesitates when someone challenges your work. The way his voice tilts a little higher when heâs nervous. The way his laugh never lands in the right place, but somehow makes the whole room feel warmer.
You pull your coat tighter when you leave the restaurant, cheeks stinging from the wind and the slow unraveling of a night that shouldâve meant something. It doesnât. Not in the way that matters.
So you walk. You tell yourself youâre just passing by the Daily Planet. That maybe you left your notes there. That itâs just a habit, stopping in this late. But when you scan your ID badge and push through the heavy glass doors, you already know the truth. Youâre hoping heâs still here.
And he is.
The bullpen is almost entirely dark, save for a single desk lamp casting gold across the layout section. Heâs hunched over itâtie loosened, sleeves rolled up, shirt rumpled like heâs been pacing, thinking, rewriting. His glasses are folded beside him on the desk. His hairâs a messâfingers clearly run through it too many times.
He rubs at his eyes with the heel of his palm, breathing out hard through his nose. You donât say anything. You just⊠watch. It hits you in one perfect, unshakable moment. The slope of his shoulders. The cut of his jaw. The furrow in his brow when heâs thinking too hard.
He looks like Superman.
No glasses. No slouch. No excuses. But more than thatâhe looks like Clark. Like the man who learned your coffee order. Like the one who saves all his best edits for last so he can tell you in person how good your writing is. The one who panicked when you got too close to the truth, but couldnât stop leaving notes anyway.
And when he finally lifts his head and sees you standing thereâstill in your coat, fingers tight around your notebookâyou watch something shift in his expression. A flicker of surprise. Panic. Bare, open emotion. Because youâre seeing him without the glasses.
âCouldnât sleep,â you murmur. âThought Iâd grab my notes.â
He smiles, slow and unsure. âYou⊠left them by the scanner.â
You nod, like that matters. Like you came here for paper and not for him. Then you walk over, slow and deliberate, and retrieve your notes from the edge of the scanner beside him. He swallows hard, watching you.
Then clears his throat. âSo⊠how was the date?â
You pause. âFine,â you say. âHe was nice. Funny. Smart.â
Clark nods, but youâre not finished.
âBut when he laughed, it was the wrong rhythm. And when he spoke, I didnât lean in.â
You meet his eyesâclear blue, unhidden now. âI made up my mind halfway through the second drink.â His lips part. Barely. You move to the edge of his desk and set your notebook down. Thenâcarefully, slowlyâyou pull out the chair beside his and sit. The air between you goes molten.
Clark leans in a little, eyes flicking to your mouth, then back to your eyes. One hand moves down, like heâs going to say something, but instead, he reaches for the leg of your chairâfingers curling around it. And pulls you toward him. The scrape of wood against tile echoes, loud and deliberate. Your thighs knock his. Your breath stutters.
Heâs so close now you can feel the heat rolling off him. The weight of his gaze. Your heart hammers in your chest. And lower.
âClarkââ But you donât finish because he meets you halfway. The kiss is fire and breath and years of want pressed between two mouths. His hands come upâone to your jaw, the other to the back of your headâand tilt your face just so. Fingers tangle in your hair, anchoring you to him like heâs afraid you might vanish.
You moan into his mouth. Soft. Surprised. He groans back. Rougher. You reach for his shirt blindly, fists curling in the cotton as he pulls you fully into his lapâinto the chair with him, your legs straddling his thighs. His hands donât know where to land. Your waist. Your thighs. Your face again.
âYouâre it,â he whispers against your mouth. âYouâve always been it.â
You know he means it. Because youâve seen it. In every note. Every glance. Every moment he looked at you like you were already his. And now, with your bodies tangled, mouths tasting each other, breathing the same heatâyou finally believe it.
You donât say it yet. But the way you kiss him again says it for you. Youâre his. You always have been.
His hands roam, but never rush. Your fingers are tangled in his shirt, your knees pressing to either side of his hips, and you feel himâall of himâunderneath you, solid and steady and shaking just slightly. The chair creaks with every breath you share. His mouth is still on yours, slow now, like heâs memorizing the shape of you. Like heâs afraid if he goes too fast, youâll disappear again.
When he finally pulls backâjust enough to breatheâitâs with a soft, reverent exhale. His nose brushes yours. âYouâre really here,â he murmurs, voice hoarse. âGod, youâre really here.â
You blink at him, your hands sliding to either side of his jaw, thumbs brushing the high flush of his cheeks. He looks so open. Like youâve peeled back every layer of him with just a kiss. And maybe you have.
His lips find the edge of your jaw next, slow and aching. A kiss. Then another, just beneath your ear. Then one lower, along the soft skin of your neck. Each press of his mouth feels like a confession. Like something that was buried too long, finally given air.
âYou donât know,â he whispers. âYou donât know what itâs been like, watching you and not getting toââ Another kiss, right beneath your cheekbone. âI used to rehearse things Iâd say to you, and then Iâd get to work and youâd smile and Iâd forget how to talk.â
A laugh huffs out of you, but it melts fast when he leans in again, his breath fanning warm across your skin. âI didnât think Iâd ever get this close. I didnât think Iâd get to touch you like this.â
You shift in his lap, chest brushing his, and his hands squeeze your waist gently like heâs grounding himself. His mouth finds your temple. Your cheek. The corner of your mouth again.
âYouâre soââ he breaks off. Tries again. âYouâre everything.â Your pulse thrums in your throat. Clarkâs hands stay respectful, but they wanderâcurving up your back, smoothing over your shoulders, settling at your ribs like he wants to hold you together.
âI used to write those notes late at night,â he admits against your collarbone. âDidnât even think youâd read them at first. But you did. You kept them.â
âI kept every one,â you whisper.
His breath catches. You tilt his face back up to yours, studying him in the low, golden light. His hairâs a little messy now from your fingers. His lips pink and kiss-swollen. His chest rising and falling like heâs just run a marathon. And still, even nowâheâs looking at you like heâs the one whoâs lucky.
Clark kisses you againâsoft, like a promise. Then a trail of them, across your cheek, your jaw, your throat. Slow enough to make your skin shiver and your hips shift instinctively against his lap. He groans quietly at thatâbarely audibleâbut doesnât press for more. He just holds you tighter.
âIâd wait forever for you,â he murmurs into your skin. âI donât need anything else. Just this. Just you.â You bury your face in his shoulder, overwhelmed, heart pounding like a war drum. You donât say anything back. You just press another kiss to his throat, and feel him smile where your mouth lands.
-
The city is quieter at nightâits edges softened under streetlamp glow, concrete warming beneath the fading breath of the day. Thereâs a breeze that tugs gently at your coat as you and Clark walk side by side, your fingers still loosely laced with his. His hand is big. Warm. Rough in the places that tell stories. Gentle in the ways that say everything else.
Neither of you speaks at first. The silence isnât awkward. Itâs thick with something tender. Like a string strung tight between your ribs and his, humming with each shared step.
When he glances down at you, his smile is small and almost shy. âI canât believe I didnât knock over the chair,â he says after a few blocks, voice pitched low with laughter.
You grin. âYou were close. I think my thigh is bruised.â
He groans. âDonât say thatâIâll lose sleep.â
You look at him sidelong. âYou werenât going to sleep anyway.â That earns you a pink flush down the side of his neck, and you tuck that image away for safekeeping.Â
Your building looms closer, brick and ivy-wrapped and familiar in the soft hush of the hour. You slow as you reach the front step, turning to face him.
âThank you,â you murmur. You donât mean just for the walk.
He holds your hand a beat longer. Then, without a word, he lifts itâpresses his lips to your knuckles. Itâs soft. Reverent.
Your breath catches in your throat. And maybe thatâs what breaks the spellâmaybe thatâs what makes it all too much and not enough at onceâbecause the next second, youâre reaching. Or maybe he is. It doesnât matter. He kisses you againâthis time fuller, deeperâyour back brushing against the door behind you, his other hand cradling your cheek like heâs afraid youâll vanish if he doesnât hold you just right.
It doesnât last long. Just long enough to taste the weight of whatâs shifting between you. To feel it crest again in your chest.
When he finally pulls back, his lips hover a breath away from yours. âIâll see you tomorrow,â he says softly.
You nod. You canât quite say anything back yet. He gives your hand one last squeeze, then turns and disappears down the street, hands stuffed in his pockets, shoulders curved slightly inward like heâs holding in a smile he doesnât know what to do with.
You unlock the door. Step inside. But you donât go to bed right away. You walk to the front window insteadâbare feet quiet on hardwood, heart still hammering. Through the glass, you spot him half a block away. He thinks youâre gone. Which is probably why, under the streetlight, Clark Kent jumps up and smacks the edge of a low-hanging banner like heâs testing his vertical. He catches it on the second try, swinging from it for all of two seconds before nearly tripping over his own feet.
You snort. Your hand presses against your mouth to muffle the sound. And then you smile. That kind of soft, aching smile that tugs at something deep in your chest. Because thatâs him. Thatâs the man who writes you poems under the cover of anonymity and nearly breaks your chair kissing you in a newsroom.
Thatâs the one you wanted it to be. And now that it isâyou donât think your heartâs ever going to stop fluttering.
-
The bullpen is alive again. Phones ring. Keys clatter. Someoneâs arguing over copy edits near the back printer, and Jimmy streaks past with a half-eaten bagel clamped between his teeth and a stack of photos fluttering behind him like confetti. Itâs chaos.
But none of it touches you. The world moves at its usual speed, but everything inside you has slowed. Like someone turned the volume down on everything that isnât him.
Your eyes find Clark without meaning to. Heâs already at his deskâglasses on, shirt pressed, tie straighter than usual. He mustâve fixed it three times this morning. His sleeves are rolled to the elbow, a pen already tucked behind one ear. Heâs doing that thing he does when heâs thinkingâlip caught gently between his teeth, brows drawn, tapping the space bar like it owes him money.
But thereâs a softness to him this morning, too. A looseness in his shoulders. A quiet sort of glow around the edges, like some part of him hasnât fully come down from last night either. Like heâs still vibrating with the same electricity thatâs still thrumming low behind your ribs.
And then he looks up. He finds you just as easily as you found him. You expect him to look awayâbashful, flustered, maybe even embarrassed now that the newsroom lights are on and youâre both pretending not to be lit matches pretending not to burn.
But he doesnât. He holds your gaze. And the quiet that opens up between you is louder than anything else in the building. The low hum of printers. The whirr of the HVAC. The hiss of steam from the office espresso machine.
You swallow hard. Then you look back at your screen like it matters. You try to focus. You really do.
Less than ten minutes later, heâs there. He approaches slow, like heâs afraid of breaking something delicate. His hand appears first, gently setting a familiar to-go cup on your desk.
âI figured you forgot yours,â he says, voice low.
You glance up at him. âI didnât.â
A smile curls at the corner of his mouth. Soft. A little sheepish. âOh. WellâŠâ He shrugs. âNow you have two.â
You take the coffee anyway. Your fingers brush his as you do. He doesnât pull away. Not this time. His hand lingers for half a second longer than it shouldâjust enough to make your pulse jump in your wristâand then slowly drops back to his side. The silence between you now isnât awkward. Itâs taut. Weightless. Like standing at the edge of something enormous, staring over the drop, and realizing heâs right there beside youâready to jump too.
âWalk with me?â he asks, voice barely above the clatter around you. You nod. Because youâd follow him anywhere.
Downstairs, the building atrium hums with the low murmur of morning traffic and the soft shuffle of people cutting through the lobby on their way to bigger, faster things. But hereâbeneath the high, glass-paneled ceiling where sunlight pours in like gold through waterâthe city feels a little farther away. A little quieter. Just the two of you, caught in that hush between chaos and clarity.
Clark hands you a sugar packet without a word, and you take it, fingers brushing his again. He watchesânot your hands, but your faceâas you tear it open and shake it into your cup. Like memorizing the way you take your coffee might somehow tell him more than youâre ready to say aloud.
You glance at him, just in time to catch itâthat look. Barely there, but soft. Full. He looks at you like heâs trying to learn you by heart.
You raise a brow. âWhat?â
He blinks, caught. âNothing.â
But youâre smiling now, just a little. A private, corner-of-your-mouth kind of smile. âYou look tired,â you murmur, stirring slowly.
His lips twitch. âLate night.â
âEditing from home?â
He hesitates. You watch the way his shoulders shift, the subtle catch in his breath. Then, finally, he shakes his head. âNot exactly.â
You hum. Say nothing more. The moment lingers, warm as the cup in your hand. He stands beside you, tall and still, but thereâs something new in the way he holds himselfâlike gravityâs just a little lighter around him this morning. Like your presence pulls him into a softer orbit. Thereâs a beat of silence.
âYou⊠seemed quiet last night,â he says, voice gentler now. âWhen you saw me.â
You glance at him from over the rim of your cup. Steam curls up between you, catching in the morning light like spun sugar. âI saw you,â you say.
He studies you. Carefully. âYou sure?â
You lower your coffee. âYeah. Iâm sure.â
His brows pull together slightly, the line between them deepening. Heâs trying to read you. Trying to solve an equation heâs too close to see clearly. Thereâs a question in his eyesânot just about last night, but about everything that came before it. The letters. The glances. The ache.
But you donât give him the answer. Not out loud. Because what you donât say hangs heavier than what you do. You donât say: Iâm pretty certain heâs you. You donât say: I think my heart has known for a while now. You donât say: Iâm not afraid of what youâre hiding. Instead, you let the silence stretch between youâsoft and silken, tethering you to something deeper than confession. You sip your coffee, heart steady now, eyes warm.
And when he opens his mouth againâwhen he leans forward like he might finally give himself away entirelyâyou smile. Just a soft curve of your lips. A quiet reassurance. âDonât worry,â you say, voice low. âI liked what I saw.â
He freezes. Then flushes, color blooming high on his cheeks. His gaze drops to the floor like itâs safer there, like looking at you too long might unravel him completelyâbut when he glances back up, the smile on his face is small and helpless and utterly undone. A breath escapes him, barely audibleâbut you hear it. You feel it. Relief.
He walks you back upstairs without another word. The movement is easy. Comfortable. But his hand hovers near yours the whole time. Not quite touching. Just⊠there. Like gravity pulling two halves of the same secret closer.
And as you re-enter the hum of the bullpen, nothing looks different. But everything feels like itâs just about to change.
-
That night, after the city has quietedâafter the neon pulse of Metropolis blurs into puddle reflections and distant sirensâthe Daily Planet is almost reverent in its silence. No ringing phones. No newsroom chatter. Just the soft hum of a printer in standby mode and the creak of the elevator cables descending behind you.
You let yourself in with your keycard. The lock clicks louder than expected in the stillness. You donât know why youâre here, really. You told yourself it was to grab the folder you forgot. To double-check something on your last draft. But the truth is quieter than that.
You were hoping heâd be here. Heâs not. His desk lamp is off. His chair turned inward, as if he left in a hurry. No half-eaten sandwich or scribbled drafts left behindâjust a tidied workspace and absence thick enough to feel.
You sigh, the sound swallowed whole by the vast emptiness of the bullpen. Then you see it. At your desk. Tucked half-under your keyboard like a secret trying not to be. One folded piece of paper.
No envelope this time. No clever line on the front. Just your name, handwritten in a looping scrawl youâve come to know better than your own signature. A rhythm youâve studied and traced in the quiet of your apartment, night after night.
You slide it free with careful fingers. Your heart stutters as you unfold it. The ink is darker this timeâless tentative. The strokes more deliberate, like he knew, at last, he didnât have to hide.
âFor once I donât have to imagine what itâs like to have your lips on mine. But I still think about it anyway.â
âC.K.
You stare at the words until the paper goes soft in your hands. Until your chest feels too full and too fragile all at once. Until the noise of your own heartbeat drowns out everything else.
Then you press the note to your chest and close your eyes. His initials burn through the paper like a touch. Not a secret admirer anymore. Not a mystery in the margins. Just him.
Clark. Your friend. Your almost. Your maybe.
You donât need the rest of the truth. Not tonight. Not if it costs this fragile thing blooming between youâthis quiet, aching sweetness. This slow, deliberate unraveling of walls and fears and the long-held breath you didnât realize you were holding.
Whatever youâre building together, itâs happening one heartbeat at a time. One almost-confession. One note left behind in the dark. And youâd rather have thisâthis steady climb into something realâthan rush toward the edge of revelation and risk it all crumbling.
So you tuck the note gently into your bag, where the others wait. Every word heâs given you, kept safe like a promise. You donât know what happens next. But for the first time in weeks, maybe months, youâre not afraid of finding out.
-
Youâre not official.
Not in the way people expect it. Thereâs no label, no group announcement, no big display. But youâre definitely something nowâsomething solid and golden and real in the space between words.
Itâs not office gossip. Not yet. But it could be. Because you linger a little too long near his desk. Because he lights up when you enter a room like itâs instinct. Because when he passes you in the bullpen, his hand brushes yoursâjust barelyâand you both pause like the air just changed. Thereâs no denying it.
And then comes the hallway kiss. Itâs after hours. The building is quiet, the newsroom lights dimmed to half. Youâre both walking toward the elevators, your footsteps echoing against the tile.
Clark fumbles for the call button, mumbling something about how slow the system is when itâs late, and how the elevator always seems to stall on the wrong floor. You donât answer. You just reach for his tie. A gentle tug. A silent question. He exhales, soft and shaky. Then he leans in.
The kiss is slow. Unhurried. Like youâre both tasting something thatâs been simmering between you for years. His hands find your waist, yours curl into his shirt, and the elevator dings somewhere in the distance, but neither of you move.
You part only when the second ding reminds you where you are. His forehead presses to yours, warm and close. You breathe the same air. And then the doors close behind you, and he walks you out with his hand ghosting the small of your back.
-
You start learning the rhythm of Clark Kent. He talks more when heâs nervousâlittle rambles about traffic patterns or article formatting, or how heâs still not entirely sure he installed his dishwasher correctly. Sometimes he trails off mid-thought, like heâs remembering something urgent but canât explain it.
He always carries your groceries. All of them. No negotiation. Heâll take the heavier bags first, sling them both over one shoulder and pretend like itâs nothing. And somehow, he always forgets his own umbrellaâbut never forgets yours. You donât know how many he owns, but one always appears when the clouds roll in. Like magic. Like preparation. Like heâs thought of you in every version of the day.
You donât ask.
You just start to keep one in your own bag for him.
-
The third kiss happens on your couch.
Youâve been watching some old movie neither of you are paying attention to, his arm slung lazily across your shoulders. Your legs are tangled. His fingers are tracing idle shapes against your thigh through the fabric of your leggings.
He kisses you onceâsoft and slowâand then again. Longer. Like heâs memorizing the shape of your mouth. Like he might need it later.
Then his phone buzzes.
He stiffens.
You feel the change instantlyâthe way his body pulls back, the air between you tightens. He glances at the screen. You donât catch the name. But you see the look in his eyes.
Regret. Apology. Something deeper.
âIâIâm so sorry,â he says, already moving. âI have toâsomething came up. Itâsââ
You sit up, brushing your hand against his arm. âGo,â you say softly.
âButââ
âItâs okay. Just⊠be safe.â
And God, the way he looks at you. Like youâve given him something priceless. Something he didnât know he was allowed to want.
He kisses your temple like a promise and disappears into the night.
-
It happens again. And again.
Missed dinners. Sudden goodbyes. Rainy nights where he shows up soaked, out of breath, murmuring apologies and curling into you like he doesnât know how to be held.
You never ask. You donât need to.
Because he always comes back.
-
One night, youâre curled into each other on your couch, your legs thrown over his, your cheek resting against his chest. The movieâs playing, forgotten. Your fingers are idly brushing the hem of his shirt where itâs ridden up. He smells like rain and ink and whatever soap he always uses that lingers on your pillow now.
Then his voice, quiet in the dark, âI donât always know how to be⊠enough.â
You blink. Look up. Heâs staring at the ceiling. Not quite breathing evenly. Like the words cost him something.
You reach up and cradle his face in your hands.
His eyes finally meet yours.
âYou are,â you whisper. âAs you are.â
You donât say: Even if you are who I think you are.
You donât need to. You just kiss him again. Soft. Long. Steady. Because whatever heâs carrying, youâve already started holding part of it too.
And he lets you.
-
The night starts quiet.
Takeout boxes sit half-forgotten on the coffee tableâone still open, rice going cold, soy sauce packet untouched. Your legs are draped across Clarkâs lap, one foot nudged against the curve of his thigh, and his hand rests there now. Not possessively. Not deliberately.
Just⊠there.
Itâs late. The kind of late where the whole city softens. No sirens outside. No blinking inbox. Just the low hum of the lamp on the side table and the warmth of the man beside you.
Clarkâs eyes are on you. Theyâve been there most of the night.
He hasnât said much since dinnerâjust little smiles, quiet sounds of agreement, the occasional brush of his thumb against your ankle like a thought he forgot to speak aloud. But itâs not a bad silence. Itâs dense. Full.
You shift, angling toward him slightly, and his gaze flicks to your mouth. Thatâs all it takes.
He leans in.
The kiss is soft at first. Familiar. A shared breath. A quiet hello in a room where no one had spoken for minutes. But then his hand curls behind your knee, guiding your leg further over his lap, and his mouth opens against yours like heâs been holding back for hours.
He kisses you like heâs starving. Like heâs spent all day wanting thisâaching for the shape of you, the weight of your body in his hands. And when you moan into it, just a little, he shudders.
His hands start to move. One tracing the line of your spine, the other resting against your hip like a question he doesnât need to ask. You answer anywayâpressing in closer, threading your fingers through his hair, sighing into the heat of his mouth.
You donât know who climbs into whose lap first, only that you end up straddling him on the couch. Your knees on either side of his thighs. His hands gripping your waist now, fingers curling in your shirt like he doesnât trust himself not to break it.
And then something shifts.
Not emotionalâphysical.
Clark stands.
He lifts you with him, effortlessly, like you donât weigh anything at all. Not a grunt. Not a stagger. Justâup. Smooth and sure. His mouth never leaves yours.
You gasp into the kiss as he walks you backwards, steps confident and fast despite the way your arms tighten around his shoulders. Your spine meets the wall in the next second. Not hard. Just sudden.
Your heart thunders.
âClarkââ
He doesnât answer. Just breathes against your mouth like he needs the oxygen from your lungs. Like yours is the only air that keeps him grounded.
His hips press into yours, one thigh sliding between your legs, and your back arches instinctively. His hands span your ribs now, thumbs brushing just beneath your bra. You feel the tremble in themânot from fear. From restraint.
âClark,â you whisper again, and his forehead drops to yours.
âYou okay?â he asks, voice rough and close.
You nod, breath catching. âYou?â
He hesitates. Not long. But long enough to count. âYeah. Just⊠feel a little off tonight.â
You pull back just enough to look at him.
Heâs flushed. Eyes darker than usual. But not winded. Not breathless. Not anything like you are. His chest doesnât even rise fast beneath your hands. Still, he smilesâlike he can will the oddness awayâand kisses you again. Deeper this time. Like distraction.
Like he doesnât want to stop.
You donât want him to either.
Not yet.
His mouth finds yours againâslower this time, more purposeful. Like heâs savoring it. Like heâs waited for this exact moment, this exact pressure of your hips against his, for longer than heâs willing to admit.
You gasp when his hands slide under your shirt, palms broad and steady, dragging upward in a path that sets every nerve on fire. He doesnât fumble. Doesnât rush. Just exploresâlike heâs memorizing, not taking.
âCan I?â he murmurs against your mouth, fingers brushing the underside of your bra.
You nod, breathless. âYes.â
He exhales, soft and reverent, and lifts your shirt over your head. Itâs discarded without ceremony. Then his hands are on you againâwarm, slow, mapping out the shape of you with open palms and patient awe.
âGod, youâre beautiful,â he murmurs, more breath than voice. His mouth finds the edge of your jaw, trailing kisses down to the hollow beneath your ear. âI think about this⊠so much.â
You shudder.
His hands move againâdown this time, gripping your thighs as he sinks to his knees in front of you. You barely have time to react before heâs tugging your pants down, slow and careful, mouth following the descent with lingering kisses along your hips, the dip of your pelvis, the inside of your thigh.
He looks up at you from the floor.
You nearly forget how to breathe.
âIâve wanted to take my time with you,â he admits, voice rough and low. âWanted to learn you slow. Learn how you taste. How you fall apart.â
And then he does.
He leans in and licks a long, deliberate stripe over the center of your underwear, still watching your face.
You whimper.
He smiles, just slightly, and does it again.
By the time he peels your underwear down and presses an open-mouthed kiss to your inner thigh, your knees are trembling.
Clark hooks one arm under your leg, lifting it over his shoulder like itâs nothing, and buries his mouth between your thighs with a groan that rattles through your whole body.
His tongue is warm and soft and maddeningly slowâcircling, tasting, teasing. He doesnât rush. Not even when your fingers knot in his hair and your hips rock forward with pure desperation.
âClarkââ
He hums against you, and the sound sends a full-body shiver up your spine.
âIâve got you,â he whispers, lips brushing you as he speaks. âLet me.â
You do.
You let him wreck you.
Heâs methodical about itâlike heâs following a map only he can see. One hand holding you steady, the other splayed against your stomach, keeping you anchored while he works you open with mouth and tongue and quiet, praising murmurs.
âSo sweet⊠thatâs it, sweetheart⊠you taste like heaven.â
Youâre already close when he slips a thick finger inside you. Then another. Slow, patient, curling exactly where you need him. His mouth never stops. His rhythm is steady. Focused. Unrelenting.
You come like thatâpanting, gripping his shoulders, thighs shaking around his ears as he groans and keeps going, riding it out with you until youâre trembling too hard to stand.
He rises slowly.
His lips are slick. His eyes are dark.
And youâve never seen anyone look at you like this.
âCome here,â you whisper.
He kisses you thenâdeep and possessive and tasting like you. Youâre the one tugging at his shirt now, unbuttoning in frantic clumsy swipes. You need him. Need him closer. Need him inside.
But when you reach for his belt, he stills your hands gently.
âNot yet,â he says, voice like thunder wrapped in velvet. âLet me take care of you first.â
You blink. âClark, Iââ
He kisses you againâsoft, lingering.
âIâve waited too long for this to rush it,â he murmurs, brushing hair from your face with the back of his knuckles. âYou deserve slow.â
Then he lifts you againâlike you weigh nothingâand carries you to the bed. He lays you down like youâre fragileâbut the look in his eyes says he knows youâre anything but. That youâre something rare. Something heâs been aching for. His palms skim over your thighs again, slow and deliberate, before he spreads you open beneath him.
He doesnât ask this time. Just settles between your legs like he belongs there, arms hooked under your thighs, holding you wide.
âClarkââ
âI know, sweetheart,â he murmurs, voice low and raw. âIâve got you.â
And he does.
His mouth finds you againâwarm, skilled, confident now. No hesitation, just long, wet strokes of his tongue that build on everything he already learned. And thenâwithout warningâhe slides two fingers back inside you.
You cry out, hips jolting.
He groans into you, fingers moving in tandem with his mouthâcurling just right, matching every flick of his tongue, every wet press of his lips. He doesnât stop. Doesnât falter. He watches you the whole time, eyes dark and hungry and so in love with the way you fall apart for him.
You grip the sheets, gasping his name, over and over, until your voice breaks on a sob of pleasure.
âClarkâGod, IâI canâtââ
âYes, you can,â he breathes. âYouâre almost there. Let go for me.â
You do. With a cry, with shaking thighs, with your fingers tangled in his hair and your back arching off the bed.
And he doesnât stop.
He rides your orgasm out with slow, worshipful strokes, kissing your thighs, murmuring into your skin, âSo good for me. Youâre perfect. Youâre everything.â
By the time he pulls back, youâre bonelessâdazed and trembling, your chest heaving as he kisses his way up your stomach.
But the way he looks at you thenâlike he needs to be closerâtells you this isnât over.
His hands brace on either side of your head as he leans over you. âCan IâŠ?â
Your hips answer for youâtilting up, chasing the heat and weight of him already pressed between your thighs.
âYes,â you whisper. âPlease.â
Clark groans low in his throat as he pushes his boxers down just enough, lining himself upâhis cock flushed and thick, already leaking, and you feel the weight of him between your thighs and gasp.
âGod, ClarkâŠâ
âI know,â he murmurs, forehead resting against yours, hips rocking forward just barely, teasing you with the head of his cock, dragging it through the slick mess he made with his mouth and fingers. âI know, baby. Justâjust let meâŠâ
He nudges in slow.
The stretch is slow and steady, his breath catching as your body parts for him. Heâs thick. Too thick, maybe, except your body wants himâtakes him like it was made to.
You whimper, and his jaw clenches tight.
âYou okay?â
âYâyeah,â you breathe. âDonât stop.â
He doesnât. Not even for a second. Inch by inch, he sinks into you, whispering your name, kissing your temple, gripping the backs of your thighs as you wrap your legs around his waist.
âFuck,â he hisses when he bottoms out, buried deep, balls pressed flush against you. âYou feelâJesus, you feel unbelievable.â
Youâre too far gone to answer. You just cling to him, nails dragging lightly down his back, moaning into his mouth when he kisses you again.
The first few thrusts are slow. Deep. Measured. He pulls out just enough to feel you grip him on the way back in, then does it againâand againâand again.
And then something shifts.
Your body clenches around him in a way that makes his head drop to your shoulder with a groan.
âOh my god, sweetheartâdonât do thatâIâm gonnaâfuckââ
He thrusts harder.
Not rough, not yet, but firmer. Hungrier. The control he started with begins to slip. You can feel it in his grip, in the sharp edge of his breath, in the tremble of the arm braced beside your head.
âBeen thinkinâ about this,â he grits out, voice low and wrecked. âEvery nightâevery goddamn night since the first note. You donât even know what you do to me.â
You whine, rolling your hips up to meet him, and he snapsâhips slamming forward hard enough to punch the air from your lungs.
âClarkââ
âIâve got you,â he gasps, fucking into you harder now, his voice filthy and tender all at once. âIâve got you, babyâso fuckinâ tightâcanât stopâdonât wanna stopââ
Youâre clinging to him now, crying out with every thrust. Itâs not just the way he fills youâitâs the way he worships you while he does it. The way he moans when you clench. The way he growls your name like a prayer. The way he falls apart in real time, just from the feel of you.
He grabs one of your hands, laces your fingers with his, pins it beside your head.
âYouâre mine,â he grits. âYou have to be mine.â
âYes,â you gasp. âYesâClarkâdonât stopââ
âNever,â he groans. âNever stopping. Not when you feel like thisâfuckââ
You can feel him getting closeâthe way his rhythm starts to stutter, the broken sounds escaping his throat, the way he buries his face against your neck and pants your name like heâs desperate to take you with him.
And youâre almost there too.
You donât even realize your hand is slipping until heâs gripping it againâpinned tight to the pillow, your fingers laced in his and clenched so tight it aches. The bed frame is starting to shudder beneath you now, the headboard knocking a rhythm into the wall, and Clark is gasping like heâs in pain from how good it feels.
His hips snap forward againâharder this time. Deeper. More desperate.
âFuckâfuckâIâm sorry,â he grits, voice ragged and thick, âIâm trying toâbabyâI canâtâhold backââ
You moan so loud it makes him flinch.
And then he breaks.
One second heâs pulling your name from his lungs like itâs the only word he knowsâand the next, he slams into you so hard the bed shifts a full inch. The lamp on the bedside table flickers. The candle flame bursts just slightly higher than beforeâflickering hot and fast, the wick blackening with a thin curl of smoke. It doesnât go out. It just burns.
Clarkâs back arches.
His cock drags over everything inside you in just the right way, hitting that spot again and again until youâre clutching at his shoulders, babbling nonsense against his skin.
âI canâtâI canâtâClark!â
âYou can,â he pants. âPleaseâplease, baby, cum with meâI can feel youâI can feel it.â
Your body goes taut.
A white-hot snap of pleasure punches through your spine, and your vision blacks out at the edges. You tighten around himâclenching, pulsing, dragging him over the edge with youâand he loses it.
Clark cursesâactually cursesâand growls something between a moan and a sob as he slams into you one last time, spilling deep inside you. His body locks, every muscle trembling. His teeth scrape the soft skin of your throatânot biting, just grounding himself. Like if he lets go, heâll come undone completely.
The lights flicker again.
The candle sputters once and steadies.
He breathes like a man starved. His chest heaves. But you can feel itâunder your hand, against your skin. His heartâs not racing.
Not like it should be.
Youâre gasping. Dazed. Boneless under him. But Clark⊠Clarkâs barely even winded. And yetâhis hands are trembling. Just slightly. Still laced in yours. Still holding on.
After, you lie thereâchests pressed close, legs tangled, the sheets barely clinging to your hips.
Clarkâs arm is slung across your waist, palm wide and warm over your belly like it belongs there. Like he doesnât ever want to move. His nose is tucked against your temple, breath stirring your hair in soft little pulses. He keeps kissing you. Your cheek. Your jaw. The edge of your brow. He doesnât stop, like heâs afraid this is a dream and kissing you might anchor it in place.
âStill with me?â he whispers into your skin.
You nod. Drowsy. Sated. Floating.
âGood.â His hand runs down your side in one long, reverent stroke. âDidnât mean to⊠get so carried away.â
You hum. âYou say that like I didnât enjoy every second.â
He smiles against your neck. You feel the curve of it, his lips brushing the shell of your ear.
A moment passes.
Then another.
âI think you short-circuited my bedside lamp somehow.â
Clark freezes. ââŠDid I?â
You roll your head to look at him. âIt flickered. Right as youââ
His ears turn bright red. âMaybe just⊠a power surge?â
You arch a brow. âRight. A romantic, orgasm-timed power surge.â
He mutters something into your shoulder that sounds vaguely like kill me now.
You grin. File it away.
Exhibit 7: Lightbulb went dim at the exact second he came. Candle flame doubled in height.
-
Later that night, long after youâve both dozed off, you wake to find Clark still holding you. One of his hands is under your shirt, splayed low across your stomach. Protective. Possessive in the gentlest way. His body is still curled around yours like a question mark, like heâs checking for all your answers in how your breath rises and falls.
You shift just slightlyâand his grip tightens instinctively, like even in sleep, he canât let go.
Exhibit 8: He doesnât sleep like a person. Sleeps like a sentry.
-
In the morning, you wake to the scent of coffee.
Your kitchen is suspiciously spotless for someone who swears heâs clumsy. The pot is full, the mugs pre-warmed, your favorite creamer already swirled in.
Clark is flipping pancakes.
Barefoot.
Wearing one of your sleep shirts. The tight one.
You lean against the doorframe, watching him. His back muscles flex when he flips the pan one-handed.
âMorning,â he says without turning.
You blink. âHowâd you know I was standing here?â
âI, uhâŠâ He falters, then gestures at the sizzling pan. âHeard footsteps. I assumed.â
You hum.
Exhibit 9: He heard me from across the apartment, over the sound of a frying pan.
-
Youâre brushing your teeth later when you spot the mirror fogged from the shower.
You reach for a towelâand notice itâs already been run under warm water.
You glance at him, and he just shrugs. âFigured youâd want it not freezing.â
âFigured?â you repeat.
He leans against the doorframe, smiling. âLucky guess.â
You donât respond. Just kiss his cheek with toothpaste still in your mouth.
Exhibit 10: He always guesses exactly what I need. Down to the second.
-
That night, he falls asleep on your couch during movie night, head on your thigh, hand around your wrist like a lifeline.
You swear you see the movie reflected in his eyesâlike the light isnât just hitting them but moving inside them. You blink. Itâs gone.
You look down at him. His lashes are impossibly long. His mouth is parted. His breathing is steadyâbut not quite⊠human. Too even. Too perfect.
Exhibit 11: His pupils did a thing. I donât know how to describe it. But they did a thing.
-
The next day, a car splashes a wave of slush toward you both on the sidewalk.
You brace for impact.
But Clark steps in front of you, faster than you can blink. The water hits him. Not you.
You didnât even see him move.
You narrow your eyes. He just smiles. âReflexes.â
âClark. Be honest. Do you secretly run marathons at night?â
He laughs. âNope. Just really hate laundry.â
Exhibit 12: Literally teleported into the splash zone to shield me. Probably didnât even get wet.
-
And still⊠you donât say it.
You donât ask.
Because heâs not just some blur of strength or spectacle.
Heâs the man who folds your laundry while pretending itâs because heâs âbad at relaxing.â Who scribbles notes in the margins of your drafts, calling your metaphors âdangerously good.â Who kisses your forehead with a kind of reverence like youâre the one whoâs unreal.
You know.
You know.
And he knows you know.
Because heâs hiding it from you. Not really.
When he stumbles over his own sentences, when his smile falters after a late return, when his jaw tenses at the sound of your name whispered too softlyâyou donât see evasion. You see weight. You see care.
Heâs protecting something.
And youâre trying to figure out how to tell him that you already know. That itâs okay. That youâre still here. That you love him anyway.
You havenât said it yetânot the knowing, not the loving. But it lives just under your skin. A second heartbeat. A full body truth. You think maybe, if you just look him in the eye long enough next time, heâll understand.
But still neither of you says it yet. Because the space between whatâs said and unsaidâthatâs where everything soft lives.
And youâre not ready to let it go.
-
The morning feels ordinary.
Thereâs a crack in the coffee pot. A printer jam. Perry yelling something about deadlines from his office. Jimmyâs camera bag spills open across your desk, and he swears heâll fix it after his coffee, and Lois is pacing, muttering about sources.
And then the screens change.
Itâs subtle at firstâjust a flicker. Then the feed cuts mid-commercial. Every monitor in the bullpen goes black, then red. Emergency alert. A shrill tone splits the air. Someone turns up the volume.
You look up.
And everything shifts.
The broadcast blares through the newsroom speakers, raw footage streaming in from a local news chopper.
Metropolis. Midtown. Chaos. A building half-collapsed. Smoke curling upward in a thick, unnatural spiral.
The camera joltsâand then there he is.
Superman.
Thrown through a brick wall.
You feel it in your bones before your brain catches up. Thatâs him. Thatâs Clark.
Heâs on his knees in the wreckage, panting, bleedingâfrom his temple, from his ribs, from a gash you canât see the end of. The suit is torn. His cape is shredded. Heâs never looked so human.
He tries to stand. Wobbles. Collapses.
You stop breathing.
âIs Superman going to be ok?â someone behind you murmurs.
âJesus,â Jimmy whispers.
âHeâll be fine,â Lois says, too casually. She leans back in her chair, sipping her coffee like itâs any other news cycle. âHe always is.â
You want to scream. Because thatâs not a story on a screen. Thatâs not some distant, untouchable god.
Thatâs your boyfriend.
Thatâs the man who brought you coffee this morning with one sugar and just the right amount of cream. The man who kissed your wrist in the elevator, whose hands trembled when he whispered I want to be enough. Who holds you like youâre something holy and bruises like heâs made of skin after all.
Heâs not fine. Heâs bleeding.
Heâs not getting up.
You freeze.
The bullpen keeps moving around youâhalf-aware, half-horrifiedâbut you canât speak. Canât blink. Canât breathe.
Your hands start to shake.
You grip the edge of your desk like it might anchor you to the floor, like if you let go youâll run straight out the door, out into the chaos, toward the wreckage and the fire and the thing trying to kill him.
A part of you already has.
A hit lands on the feedâsomething massive slamming him into the pavementâand your knees almost buckle from the force of it. Not physically. Not really. But somewhere deep. Something inside you fractures.
You donât know what the enemy is.
Alien, maybe. Or worse.
But itâs not the shape of the thing that terrifies youâitâs him. Itâs how slow he is to get up. How much his mouth is bleeding. How his eyes are unfocused. How youâve never seen him look like this.
You want to run.
You want to be there.
But youâre not. Youâre here. In your dress pants and button-up, in your neat little office chair, with your badge clipped to your hip and your heart breaking quietly.
Because no one else knows. No one else understands whatâs really at stake. No one else sees the man behind the cape.
Not like you do.
Your vision blurs.
You wipe your eyes. Pretend itâs nothing. The bullpen is too loud to hear your breath catch.
But stillâyour hands tremble and your heart pounds so violently it hurts.
And you cry.
Quietly.
You cry like the city might if it could feel. You cry like the sky should. You cry like someone already grievingâlike someone who knows what it means to lose him.
The footage wonât stop. Superman reels across the screenâhis suit torn, the shoulder scorched through in a blackened, jagged arc. Blood smears the corner of his mouth. Thereâs a limp in his gait now, one he keeps trying to mask. The camera catches it anyway.
The newsroom is silent now save for the hiss of static and the low voice of the anchor describing the damage downtown.
You sit frozen at your desk, the plastic edge biting into your palms as you grip it like it might stop your body from unraveling. The taste of bile has settled at the back of your throat. Your coffeeâs gone cold in its cup.
Across the bullpen, someone mutters, âJesus. He took a hit.â
âLook at the suit,â Lois says flatly, standing by one of the screens. âHeâs never looked that rough before.â
âDudeâs limping,â Jimmy adds, pushing his glasses up. âThat alien thingâwhat even was that?â
Their words feel like background noise. Distant. Warped. You canât seem to hear anything over the white-hot panic blistering in your chest.
You blink, your eyes burning, throat tight. You canât just sit here and cry. Not in front of Lois and Perry and half the bullpen. But your body is trembling anyway. You clench your hands in your lap, nails digging crescent moons into your skin.
Heâs hurt.
And heâs still out there.
Fighting.
Alone.
You canât just sit here.
You shove your chair back hard enough that it scrapes against the floor. âIâm going.â
Lois turns toward you. âGoing where?â
âIâm covering it. The attack. The fallout. Whateverâs leftâI want to see it firsthand.â
Loisâs brow lifts. âSince when do you make reckless calls like this?â
âI donât,â you snap, already grabbing your coat. âBut I am now.â
Jimmyâs already halfway to the door. âIf weâre going, Iâm bringing the camera.â
Lois hesitates. Then sighs. âHell. You twoâll get yourselves killed without me.â
You donât wait for her to finish grabbing her phone. Youâre already out the door.
-
Downtown is a war zone.
The smell of scorched concrete clings to the air. Smoke spirals in uneven plumes from the carcass of a building that must have been beautiful once. Sirens scream in every direction, red and blue lights flashing off every pane of shattered glass.
You arrive just as the dust begins to settle.
The battle is over but the wreckage tells you how bad it was.
The Justice Gang moves through the remains like figures out of a dreamâtattered and bloodied, but upright.
Guy Gardner limps past, muttering curses. âNext time, Iâm bringing a bigger damn ring.â Kendra SaundersâHawkgirlâhas one wing half-folded and streaked with blood. She ignores it as she checks on a paramedicâs bandages. Mr. Terrific is already coordinating with local emergency crews, directing flow with a hand to his ear. And MetamorphoâGod, he looks like heâs melting and re-solidifying with every breath.
And thenâŠ
Him.
He descends from the smoke. Not in a blur. Not with a boom of sonic air. Slowly. Controlled.
But not untouched.
He lands in a crouch, shoulders tight, the line of his jaw drawn sharp with tension. His boots crunch against broken concrete. His cape is torn at one edge, flapping limply behind him.
Heâs hurt.
Heâs so clearly hurt.
And even through all of itâthrough the dirt and blood and painâhe sees you. His eyes lock onto yours in an instant. The rest of the world falls away. Thereâs no press. No chaos. No destruction.
Just him.
And you.
The corner of his mouth liftsâjust a flicker. Not a smile. Just⊠recognition.
And something deeper behind it.
You know know.Â
And he is letting you know.
But he straightens a second later, lifting his chin, slotting the mask back into place like a practiced motion. He squares his shoulders, winces barely perceptible, and turns to face the press.
Lois is already stepping forward, questions in hand. âSuperman. What can you tell us about the enemy?â
His voice is steady, but you can hear it nowâhear the strain. The breath that doesnât quite come easy. The syllables that drag like theyâre fighting his tongue. âIt wasnât local,â he says. âSome kind of dimensional breach. We had help closing it.â
Jimmyâs camera clicks. Kendra coughs into her hand.
Youâre not writing.
Youâre just watching.
Watching the soot along his cheekbone. The split in his lip. The way he shifts his weight to favor one side. The way the âsâ in âjusticeâ drags like it hurts to say.
He looks tired.
But more than thatâhe looks like Clark.
And itâs never been more obvious than right now, standing under broken sky, trying to pretend like nothingâs changed.
You want to run to him. You want to hold him up.
But you stay rooted.
When the questions start to slow and the press begins murmuring among themselves, he glances over. Just at you.
âAre you okay?â he asks, barely audible.
You nod. âAre you?â
He hesitates. Then says, âGetting there.â
Itâs not a performance. Not for them. Just for you.
You nod again. The look you share says more than anything else could.
I know.
Iâm not leaving.
You donât have to say it.
When he flies awayâslower this time, one hand brushing briefly against his ribsâitâs not dramatic. Thereâs no sonic boom. No heat trail. Just wind and distance.
Lois exhales. âHe looked rough.â
Jimmy nods. âStill hot, though.â
You say nothing. You just stare up at the empty sky. And press your shaking hand over your heart.
-
You fake calm.
You smile when Jimmy slaps your shoulder and says something about getting the footage up by morning. You nod through Loisâs sharp-eyed stare and mutter something about your deadline, your byline, your blood sugarâanything to get her to stop watching you like she knows what youâre not saying.
But the second youâre alone?
You run. Itâs not a sprint, not really. Just that jittery, full-body urgencyâthe kind that makes your hands shake and your legs move faster than your thoughts can follow. You donât remember the trip home. Just the chaos of your own pulse, the way your chest wonât stop aching.
You replay the scene again and again in your mind: his landing, the blood on his lip, the flicker of pain when he looked at you. That not-quite smile. That nearly imperceptible tremble.
Youâd never wanted to hold someone more in your life.
And when you reach your door, keys fumbling, heart still hammering? Heâs already there.
You pause halfway through the doorway.
Heâs standing in your living room, like heâs been waiting hours. Heâs not in the suit. No cape. No crest. Just a plain black T-shirt and flannel pajama pants, his hair still damp like he just showered.
He looks like Clark. Except⊠tonight you know thereâs no difference.
âHi,â he says quietly. His voice is soft. Familiar. âI didnât mean to startle you.â
You blink. âDid you break through my patio door?â
He winces. âYes. Sort of.â
You lift a brow. âYou owe me a new lock.â
âIt doesnât work like that.â He says with a roll of his eyes.Â
A silence stretches between you. Itâs not tense. Not angry. Just full of everything neither of you said earlier.
He takes a step toward you, then stops. âHow long have you known?â
You drop your keys in the bowl by the door and toe off your shoes before answering. âSince the lamp. And the candle,â you say. âBut⊠mostly tonight.â
He nods like that hurts. Like he wishes he couldâve done better. Like he wishes he couldâve told you in some perfect, movie-moment way.
âI didnât want you to find out like that,â he says quietly.
You walk to the couch and sit, your limbs finally catching up to the adrenaline crash still sweeping through you. âIâm glad I found out at all.â
Thatâs what makes him move. He sinks down beside you, hands on his knees. You can see it in his profileâthe exhaustion, the regret, the weight heâs been carrying for so long. Youâre not sure heâs ever looked more human.
âIâve been hiding so long,â he says, voice barely above a whisper. âI forgot how to be seen. And with you⊠I didnât want to lie. But I didnât want to lose it either. I didnât want to lose you.â
Your throat tightens. âYou wonât,â you say. And you mean it.
His head turns then, slowly, eyes meeting yours like heâs trying to memorize your face from this distance. You donât look away.
When he kisses you, itâs not careful. Itâs not shy. Itâs like something breaks open inside himâsoftly. The dam finally giving way.
His hands cradle your face like youâre something heâs terrified to shatter but needs to feel. His mouth is hot and open, reverent, desperate in the way it deepens. He kisses like heâs anchoring himself to the earth through your lips. Like everything in him is still shaking from battle and youâre the only thing that still feels real.
You reach for him. Thread your fingers into his hair. Pull him closer.
It builds like a slow swellâhands tangling, breathing harder, heat coiling low in your stomach. He pushes you back gently against the cushions, his body moving over yours with careful precision. Not to pin. Just to hold.
You feel it in every motion: the restraint. The effort. He could crush steel and heâs using that strength to cradle your ribs.
He undresses you with reverence. His fingers tremble when they touch your bare skin. Not from hesitationâbut because heâs finally allowed to want. To have. To be seen.
You undress him too. That soft black T-shirt comes off first. Then the flannel. His chest is mottled with bruises, a dark one blooming across his side where that alien creature mustâve hit him. Your fingertips trace the edge of it.
He exhales, shaky. But he doesnât stop you.
Youâre straddling his lap before you realize it, chest to chest, foreheads pressed together.
âAre you scared?â he whispers.
Your thumb brushes his cheek. âNever of you.â
He kisses you againâslower this time. More control, but more depth too. His hands glide down your back and settle at your hips, thumbs pressing into your skin like he needs the reminder that youâre here. That you chose this.
The rest unfolds like prayer. The way he touches youâthorough, patient, hungryâitâs worship. Every gasp you make pulls a soft, broken sound from his throat. Every arch of your back makes his eyes flutter shut like heâs overwhelmed by the sight of you. The way he moves inside you is deep and aching and full of something larger than either of you.
Not rough. But desperate. Raw. True.
And even when he faltersâwhen his hands grip too tight or the air warms just a little too fastâyou hold his face and whisper, âI know. Itâs okay. I want all of you.â And he gives it. All of him. Until the only thing either of you can do is fall apart. Together.
Later, when youâre curled up on the couch in a tangle of limbs and quiet breathing, he rests his forehead against your temple.
The city buzzes somewhere far away.
He whispers into your skin: âNext time⊠donât let me fly off like that.â
Your smile is soft, tired. âNext time, come straight to me.â
He nods, eyes already fluttering shut.
And finally, for the first time since this beganâyou both sleep without secrets between you.
-
You wake to sunlight. Not loud, not harshâjust soft beams slipping through the blinds, spilling across the floor, warming the space where your bare shoulder meets the sheets. You blink slowly, the weight of sleep still thick behind your eyes, and shift just slightly in the tangle of limbs wrapped around you. He doesnât stir. Not even a little.
Clark is still curled around you like the night never endedâhis chest at your back, legs tangled with yours, one arm snug around your waist and the other folded up against your ribs, fingers resting over your heart like heâs guarding it in his sleep.
You donât move. You canât. Because itâs perfect. You let your cheek rest against his arm, warm and solid beneath you, and you just listenâto the steady rhythm of his heart, to the rise and fall of his breathing, to the way the silence doesnât feel empty anymore. You donât know if youâve ever felt more grounded than you do right now, held like this. It isnât the cape. It isnât the flight. It isnât the power that quiets the noise in your chest.
Itâs him. Just Clark. And for once, you donât need anything else.
He stumbles into the kitchen half an hour later in your robe. Your actual, honest-to-god, fuzzy gray robe. Itâs oversized on you, which means it fits him like a second skinâbelt tied loose at the hips, collar gaping just enough to make you lose your train of thought. His hair is a mess, sticking up in soft black tufts. His glasses are nowhere to be found. He scratches the back of his neck, blinking at the cabinets like heâs not entirely sure how kitchens work.
You lean against the counter with your arms folded, watching him with open amusement. âYou own too much flannel.â
Clark glances over, eyes squinting against the light. âIâll have you know, that robe is a Metropolis winter essential.â
âYouâre bulletproof.â
âI get cold emotionally.â
You snort. âYouâre such a menace in the morning.â
âAnd yet,â he says, opening the fridge and retrieving eggs with the careful precision of someone whoâs clearly trying not to break them with super strength, âyou let me stay.â
You grin. âYouâre lucky youâre cute.â
He burns the first pancake. Which is honestly impressive, considering you werenât even sure it was physically possible for someone with super speed and heat vision to ruin breakfast. But he flips it too fastâlike way too fastâand the thing launches halfway across the skillet before folding in on itself and sizzling dramatically.
You raise an eyebrow. Clark stares down at the pancake like it betrayed him. âI didnât account for surface tension.â
âDid you just say âsurface tensionâ while making pancakes?â
âIâm a complex man,â he says solemnly.
You lean over and pluck a piece of fruit from the cutting board he forgot he was slicing. âYouâre a menace and a dork.â
He pouts. Full, actual pout. Then shuffles over and kisses your shoulder. âIâll get better with practice.â
You roll your eyes. But your skinâs still buzzing where his lips brushed it.
Later, you sit on the counter while he stands between your knees, coffee in one hand, the other resting warm on your thigh. Itâs quiet. Not awkward or forcedâjust soft. Full of little glances and sips and contented silence. Thereâs no fear in him now. No carefully placed pauses. No skirting around things. He just⊠is. Clark Kent. The boy who spilled coffee on your notes three times. The man who kept writing to you in secret even when you didnât see him.
âYouâre not what I expected,â you say, fingers brushing his arm.
He lifts an eyebrow. âOh?â
âI donât know. I guess I thought Superman would be⊠shinier. Less flannel. More invincible.â
âAre you saying Iâm not shiny enough for you?â
âIâm saying youâre better.â
He blinks. And thenâjust like thatâhe smiles. Not the bashful one. Not the public one. The real one. Small and warm and honest. The kind of smile you only give someone when you feel safe. And maybe thatâs what this is now. Safety. Not the absence of dangerâbut the presence of someone who will always come back.
His communicator buzzes from somewhere in the bedroom. Clark lets out the most exhausted groan youâve ever heard and buries his face in your shoulder like itâll make the world go away.
âYou have to go?â you ask gently, threading your fingers through his hair.
âSoon.â
âYouâll come back?â
He lifts his head. Meets your eyes. âEvery time.â
You kiss him thenâslow and deep and familiar now. The kind of kiss that tastes like mornings and memory and maybe something closer to forever. He kisses you back like he already misses you. And when he finally pulls away and disappears into the sky outside your windowâless streak of light, more quiet partingâyou just stand there for a moment. Barefoot. Wrapped in your robe. Heart full.
Youâre about to start cleaning up the kitchen when you see it. A post-it note, stuck to the fridge. Just a small square of yellow. Written in the same handwriting you could spot anywhere now.
âYou always look soft in the mornings. I like seeing you like this.â
âC.K.
You read it three times. Then you smile. You walk to the cabinet above the sink, open the doorâand stick it right next to all the others. The secret ones. The old ones. The ones that helped you feel seen before you even knew whose eyes were watching.
And now you know. Now you see him too.
All of him.
And you wouldnât trade it for anything.
-
tags: Â @eeveedream m @anxiousscribbling @pancake-05 @borhapparker @dreammiiee @benbarnesprettygurl @insidethegardenwall @butterflies-on-my-ashes s @maplesyrizzup @rockwoodchevy @jasontoddswhitestreak @loganficsonly @overwintering-soldier @hits-different-cause-its-you @eclipsedplanet @wordacadabra @itzmeme e @cecesilver @crisis-unaverted-recs @indigoyoons @chili4prez @thetruthisintheirdreams @ethanhoewke (<â it wouldnât let me tag some blogs Iâm so sorry!!)
Hello there! I hope you're having a great day/night, I'd like to request a SiriusxFem!Reader in an AU where the Marauders are in a band based on the song "English Love Affair" by 5 seconds of summer?
sirius canât get over his short-lived university love affair.
rockstar!sirius x fem!reader 9.0k masterlist. 18+ for non detailed NSFW mentions
AN | rockstar!sirius anyone??? also side note: 5sos actually bangs
The late summer air was thick with heat, sound, and the unmistakable scent of beer and sweat. The main stage of the Fawley Fields Music Festival was lit like a warzoneâbright white strobes slicing through the haze, catching glimmers off sequinned tops and raised cans. Thousands of people were packed into the field, bodies crushed together, limbs raised, voices raw from screaming. And at the centre of it all, silhouetted against the glare, stood The Marauders.
Sirius tipped his head back, the tail end of his black button-down sticking to his sweat-slicked chest. The band had just nailed their penultimate track, a thunderous, guitar-heavy number that had the mosh pit in full chaos. The final chords echoed into the dusky sky, and the crowd roared with it, feeding on the energy like addicts. A chant began that rolled over the sea of people, a chant for more, louder, always louder.
Sirius gave it a second, basking in it. Not out of arroganceâwell, maybe a littleâbut because heâd worked his arse off for this. From the dingy pub stages in East London to this: a sunset slot on the main stage, a crowd 10,000 strong, and the press already calling them the ânext big thing in alt rock.â He deserved this moment.
He reached for the mic, fingers adorned in silver rings, and grinned beneath the curtain of sweat-dampened hair falling over his face.
âAlright,â he said, voice cracking from overuse, low and melodic with that accent that made interviewers go stupid. âThis oneâs a bit different,â
The crowd stilled just enough for his voice to carry, a ripple of anticipation moving through it.
âNormally weâd end on Lilyâs Lullaby or something with a filthy breakdownââ
A cheer from the crowd.
ââbut Iâm gonna be selfish, yeah?â
He shifted his guitar strap slightly, fingers brushing the strings absently.
âThis next oneâitâs not on any of our albums. Never played it live before,â
More noise, wilder this time. The crowd lived for unreleased content. That, and the enigma of Sirius Black doing anything unpredictable. He was the heartbreaker, the rebel, the beautiful bastard who wrote anthems about one-night stands and sleepless nights.
âThis oneâs not for the radio,â Sirius continued, a little softer now. âWrote it back in uni. About a girl,â
He pauses.
âSomeone Iâve never really stopped thinking about,â
The scream that tore through the crowd was feral. Phones shot into the air like missiles, filming, snapping, documenting. It was like someone had dropped a match in petrol.
Because Sirius BlackâMr. I-donât-do-feelings, Mr. Probably-shagged-your-favourite-actress, Mr. Writes-a-new-love-song-every-weekâwas standing in front of thousands, half-smiling, admitting to being hung up on someone from his past.
A million TikTok theories were born on the spot.
Sirius just laughed, a bit self-conscious, scratching the back of his neck. âAnyway,â he said. âThis oneâs called English Love Affair. Hope sheâs listening,â
He looked out across the crowdânot really expecting to find who he was looking for, of course, but somehow hoping the universe might oblige. Then, fingers deft on the strings, he struck the first chord.
It started on a weekend in May
I was looking for attention
Needed intervention
Felt somebody looking at me
The library at Hogwarts University smelled like stress, highlighters, and the slow decay of hope. It was the last few weeks before final exams, and the building was packed wall to wall with students muttering formulas under their breath and flipping through textbooks like salvation could be found between the pages of Financial Accounting and Corporate Strategy: Vol. II.
Sirius was not one of them.
He sat in a corner near the back, long legs stretched under the table, black hoodie rucked up to his elbows, a biro tucked behind his ear. His textbook lay open in front of him, unread and unhighlighted, the margins empty, the pages pristineâunlike everyone elseâs, which were cluttered with notes, frantic underlines, and colour-coded tabs.
He hadnât turned a page in half an hour.
Not because he was clever enough not to need to reviseâalthough he could bullshit his way through most subjects if he had toâbut because, frankly, he just did not care.
Finance. Fucking finance.
He hated the word. Hated the suits, hated the spreadsheets, hated the suffocating inevitability of it all. He only chose this degree because his mother nearly had an aneurysm when he said he wanted to study music. Now here he was, slogging through a degree in numbers and company law, just so she could parade him around at family dinners like some stock option.
And still, none of it meant anything to him.
The only reason he was even in the library was because James had confiscated his guitar that morning and told him to âgo fail somewhere quiet,â
So he was here. Not failing exactly, but definitely not succeeding.
He sighed and let his head drop forward, forehead thunking softly against the open page.
âKill me,â he muttered into the textbook. âJust⊠kill me and tell my parents I died doing something noble,â
He sat there a moment longer, pretending to care, then lifted his head.
And thatâs when he saw you.
You were sitting two tables over. Hair pulled back, earbuds in, laptop open. You looked like the sort of person who had colour-coded tabs and knew how to use them. The sort of person who had probably made a revision schedule and stuck to it. The sort of person Siriusâ mother would call âsensible,â which, in Siriusâ world, meant âsoulless.â
But you didnât look soulless. You looked⊠distracted.
Because youâd just glanced at him. And then, when you thought he hadnât noticed, you glanced again.
He smirked, straightening slightly. A distraction. Just what the day needed.
He watched you for a secondâlong enough to realise you were pretending to type while your eyes flicked back to him every few sentences. Something about it made his stomach twist, in a way that was more exciting than it should have been.
He gave it two more seconds.
Then he stood.
You saw him coming out of the corner of your eye and quickly looked back at your screen, like the spreadsheet on your screen had suddenly become the most fascinating thing on earth.
âAlright?â he said, stopping by your table. Voice low. Lazy.
You pulled out one earbud and looked up at him.
âHi,â you replied cautiously. He was standing very close.
Sirius smiled. âYou keep looking at me,â
You blinked. âDo I?â
He nodded. âYeah. Not that I blame you. Iâm devastatingly handsome and tragically bored,â
You snorted. âBit full of yourself, arenât you?â
âJust self-aware,â He grinned, and you hated that it made him even more attractive. You looked back at your screen, but the smirk tugging at your lips gave you away.
âWell, if youâre so bored, shouldnât you be studying?â
He leaned one elbow on the table, peering at your notes.
âIâve been staring at the same page for an hour. Thought I might die from the lack of stimulation. Then you started looking over,â
You raised a brow. âAnd that was enough stimulation?â
âDebatable,â he said, âbut worth investigating. Whatâs your name?â
You tilted your head. âYou donât remember me, do you?â
He frowned. âShould I?â
You closed your laptop with a little snap and turned to face him properly. âWeâve been in the same lecture for Corporate Markets and Investment Policy all year.â
There was a long pause. Sirius blinked, visibly scrambling to remember. â...Seriously?â
You nodded. âSeriously,â
He rubbed the back of his neck. âWell, shit. In my defence, I donât actually attend most of those. I just... exist in proximity,â
You laughed, properly this time. âYeah, I know,â
His hand dropped to his side, and he gave you a sheepish smile. âAlright, that was rude of me. Letâs try again,â He held out a hand. âHi. Iâm Sirius Black. Chronic underachiever and part-time nuisance,â
You raised an eyebrow but shook his hand anyway. âYeah, I know who you are.â
He grinned, pleased. âReputation precedes me?â
âSomething like that,â you said.
He laughedâloud enough that someone nearby glared over their textbook.
You didnât apologise.
Sirius sat down in the chair across from you without asking, stretching out like he belonged there.
âSo,â he said. âYou clearly know everything about me, and Iâve got absolutely nothing on you,â he muttered, leaning forward to rest his arms on the table. âGive me something to work with,â
You looked at him, considering. You didnât really have time for thisâyou had an entire section on financial derivatives to memoriseâbut the prospect of watching Sirius self-destruct over economic theory was weirdly entertaining.
And maybe... a bit flattering. The hottest boy in your courseâmaybe in the whole uniâhad noticed you. And now he was sitting across from you, eyes warm, grin easy, pretending like this wasnât completely out of the blue.
You introduce yourself, and he smiles.
âSuits you, your name,â he tosses you a wink and you roll your eyes.
âCharming,â You leaned back slightly. âAlright. Lets get revising,â
Sirius blinked. âWhat?â
You gestured at your notes. âRevising? For the exams? Iâll help you,â
He blinked again, visibly confused. âYou will?â
You nodded. âOn one condition,â
A pause.
âYou buy me a drink after,â
Sirius stared. Then laughed, a little too loud. âThatâs it? Just a drink?â
You shrugged. âMy standards are low. Plus, itâll be fun to watch you fail in real-time,â
He clutched his chest dramatically. âRuthless,â
âYou love it,â
âI do,â he agreed, leaning in again. âYouâve got this terrifying no-nonsense thing going. Itâs veryââ His eyes flicked to your collar, then back to your face. ââcompelling,â
You rolled your eyes but couldnât quite stop the smile creeping across your face. âEyes on the prize, Black.â You tap the textbook on the table with your finger. âThis is your last chance to not flunk out,â
He sighed. âFine. But I reserve the right to flirt with you shamelessly through every single concept,â
âDeal,â you said. âBut if you ask me what âliquidity ratioâ means, I will hit you,â
Sirius smiled like heâd just won something. âBring it on, sweetheart,â
â
Over the next hour, the two of you settled into a rhythm. You explained things with more patience than you thought you had, and Sirius surprised you by actually listening. He wasnât as clueless as he made outâhe just hadnât bothered to try. But with you, he leaned forward, asked questions, made jokes that were half-clever and half-chaotic.
And every time you laughed, he looked pleased with himself.
The library didnât feel as heavy anymore. The air around your little corner was warmer, brighter, tangled up in whispered banter and the scratch of your pens.
At one point, you reached over to show him something in his notes, and your hands brushed. It was stupid. Brief. But it sent a flicker of something down your spine.
Sirius glanced up at you, and you knew he felt it too.
He didnât say anything. Neither did you.
But when he caught you watching him a few minutes later, he didnât look away.
â
By the time the clock ticked past five, your brain was fried, your stomach was grumbling, and Sirius looked genuinely shocked to have filled an entire page with actual revision.
âWell,â he said, stretching, arms over his head. âThat was productive,â
You nodded, packing your things away. âTold you Iâm good,â
âYou are. Absolutely,â
He stood with you, grabbing his bag, then hesitated.
âSo. That drink?â
You slung your backpack over your shoulder. âYou buying?â
âObviously,â he said, throwing you a grin. âConsider it payment for saving my academic life,â
You paused, then leaned in, voice low. âIf you actually pass, I might let you buy me a second one,â
He looked delighted. âMotivation. I like it,â
You nudged his shoulder. âSee you at nine,â
Every single step had me waiting for the next
Before I knew it, it was serious
Dragged me out of the bar
To the backseat of her car
The bar was packed, noisy, and swimming in neon. It smelled like vodka, cheap perfume, and the burnt citrus of a bad cocktail. A proper student hauntâthreadbare booths, sticky tables, and drinks so discounted they might as well have been charity. It was the kind of place people ended up when deadlines were done and mistakes were begging to be made.
And tonight, you were absolutely here for the mistake.
You walked in just before nine, wearing a dress that left little to the imagination and a lipstick shade that promised trouble. You didnât do it for himânot entirelyâbut you did want to look good.
You spotted him before he saw you. Slouched at the end of the bar, drink in hand, legs stretched out like he owned the place. Heâd dressed up, sort ofâfitted black shirt with the sleeves rolled to his elbows, rings flashing on his fingers, and a ridiculous silk tie hanging loose around his neck. Burgundy, patterned, completely unnecessary.
He looked infuriatingly good.
When his eyes finally met yours, it was immediateâlike a live wire connecting across the room. His mouth tugged into a slow, deliberate grin. And then he stood.
âBloody hell,â he said when you reached him, voice low in your ear. âYou clean up terrifyingly well,â
You gave him a smirk. âSo do you. Whatâs with the tie?â
âStatement piece,â he said, tugging it dramatically. âMakes me look respectable. Like I havenât just failed two modules,â
You laughed, and he motioned to the bar. âWhatâs your poison?â
âWhatâs the most expensive drink on the menu?â you asked sarcastically, leaning on the counter.
He raised a brow. âBrutal. I like it,â
And then the night began.
He bought you drinks. You made fun of his posh voice and the fact heâd never once brought a pen to class. He pretended to be offended when you called him a trust fund degenerate, and you pretended not to notice the way his eyes kept dropping to your mouth when you sipped your drink.
You talked for nearly two hours, and not a single thing either of you said truly mattered. It was all smoke and mirrors, banter and bravado. He told you about some summer internship he was meant to be doing in London. You told him about your part-time job at a bookshop, about your roommate who kept hogging the shower.
He laughed at everything you said. You rolled your eyes at everything he said. And yetâyour knees brushed. His hand lingered too long when he passed you your drink. And the air between you got heavier with every sip.
By the third round, you were tipsy. Loose-limbed. Bolder.
âYouâve got a tell, you know,â you said, swirling your drink.
Sirius leaned in. âOh?â
âYou stare,â you said, eyes meeting his. âLike, a lot,â
He didnât flinch. âSo what?â
The silence after that was thick and deliberate. He looked at you like he knew what you were thinking. Like heâd been waiting for the moment you stopped pretending.
So you stood. Downed the last of your gin.
And said, very casually, âCome with me,â
He blinked. âWhat?â
You reached down, grabbed the end of that ridiculous tie, and gave it a tug. Not hard. Just enough.
He stumbled forward, grin spreading.
And then you dragged him out the back entrance of the bar.
â
The car park was half-empty, dark but not quite silent. Your little hatchback was parked in a corner, under a flickering lamp. You fumbled with your keys, laughing under your breath, and Sirius followed like a moth to flame.
The second the doors were shut, it was chaos.
You were in the backseat, lips on his, hands everywhereâhis hair, his jaw, his shoulders. He was kissing you like heâd been waiting all term, like the world might end if he didnât get another taste. His hands were on your waist, under your dress, against your thighs, and his mouth was hot and hungry against yours.
It was rushed. Clumsy. Perfect.
Clothes were pulled aside, not off. Your dress rucked up. His belt undone. Breathless laughter between kisses. The car fogged up quick, your back pressed to the front seat, knees hitched around his hips. The phone in his pocket dug into your thigh. Neither of you cared.
You moaned into his mouth, fingers tangled in his stupid hair, and he groaned like it physically hurt to hold back.
â
He thought about that night.
A lot more than he meant to.
It was supposed to be a one-time thing. A stress relief. An impulsive decision wrapped in gin and flirtation. Youâd both gone home that night in your separate directionsâhim to his flat, you to yours. No promises made. No numbers exchanged.
But Sirius didnât stop thinking about you.
He tried to laugh it off, at first. Made a joke to James the next morning about the perils of student bars and the danger of sharp women with sharper tongues. But then he couldnât stop hearing your voice. Couldnât stop remembering the exact shade of your lipstick or the way youâd yanked him by his tie like it was the most natural thing in the world.
And when he couldnât sleep, which was often, he played his guitar.
Loudly.
At three in the morning.
âMate,â James groaned one night, pillow over his head. âYou are killing me.â
âIâm expressing my feelings,â Sirius muttered.
Remus poked his head in from the hall. âCan you express them a bit quieter? Some of us have dissertations.â
Peter mumbled something incoherent from the other room, which sounded vaguely like âmurderâ and âstrangle.â
But Sirius just kept playing. Over and over again. New chords. Snatches of melodies. Half-formed lyrics that always started in May and ended with a car seat and a laugh he couldnât get out of his head.
James, one bleary-eyed morning, said, âYouâre obsessed.â
Sirius didnât argue. Because it was true, you haunted him.
Not in a spooky, ethereal way. In a maddening, brain-eating way. You were a thought that scratched at the back of his skull. A loop he couldnât escape. And the worst part? He hadnât seen you since that night. No sightings. Nothing.
He looked around in lectures. Couldnât see you.
He went back to the bar once, under the pretence of meeting someone else. You werenât there.
He even almost asked around.
But something held him back. Pride, maybe. Fear that youâd already moved on and that it had just been one night for you. No regrets. No repeats.
Still, when he lay in bed at night, staring at the ceiling, guitar across his lap, he could still hear your laugh. Still remember the exact pitch of your voice when youâd said, âCome with me.â
And every time he closed his eyes, he was back in that car.
When the lights go out, She's all I ever think about
The picture burning in my brain
The lyrics came easily after that.
Sirius had written songs beforeâsome good, most chaoticâbut this one poured out of him. Every line was sharp-edged, vivid. He remembered your fingers in his hair, the way your perfume clung to his hoodie. The rush of it. The rawness. The feeling that something had tilted in the universe that night and hadnât corrected since.
James found the scribbled lyrics one afternoon and raised an eyebrow.
âThis about the library girl?â
Sirius didnât look up from the guitar. âWhat library girl?â
âOh come on,â James said. âThe one you ditched us on a friday night for?â
Sirius strummed a chord, nonchalant. âMaybe,â
The movie playing in my head
Of her king sized bed
Means I can't forget my English love affair
You werenât expecting him to approach you again.
Youâd told yourself it had been one night
âa spectacular, toe-curling, sanity-erasing night, sureâbut still, just one night. And Sirius Black didnât strike you as the type to chase anything other than a bottle of whiskey or a reckless thrill.
So when you heard your name called across the quad, three days later, you were surprised enough to turn around.
And there he was. Strolling toward you with his bag slung over one shoulder and a grin already formingâthe sort that suggested either mischief or flirtation, probably both. He looked slightly dishevelled in a way that was too intentional to be accidental. Button-up undone at the collar, necklace peeking out. That same stupid leather jacket strewn over his shoulder.
âAlright?â he asked casually, falling into step beside you.
You arched a brow. âBack for round two?â
âActually, yes,â he said, and the shamelessness of it made you laugh. âBut not the kind youâre thinking. I need help with business economics.â
You blinked. âYou need helpâŠÂ from me?â
âYouâre the only one who can talk about GDP without sounding like a dementor,â he said, matter-of-fact. âAlso, I wonât lieâthe button-upâs distracting in a way that makes learning bearable.â
You looked down at your shirt, then back at him. âSo youâre bribing yourself into revision by ogling me?â
âExactly,â he said brightly.
âCharming,â
âI try,â
He gave you a look thenânot intense, not over-the-top, just curious. A bit hopeful around the edges. You didnât have to say yes. But you were already smiling. You were already shifting your books and mentally clearing your schedule.
âFine,â you said. âBut if Iâm going to babysit you through fiscal policy, youâre buying the coffee,â
He gave a dramatic bow. âIâm a man of honour,â
âAnd of short attention span,â
âThat too,â
â
You studied together later that day in a quiet alcove of the libraryâyou with your notes, him with his tongue between his teeth as he tried to understand elasticity graphs. Every time you leaned over to explain something, he stared. Not subtly. Not even a little.
âEyes up, Black,â you muttered.
âCanât help it,â he said without shame.
But you could tell he was trying. He asked questions. Made actual notes. Repeated terms back to you with enough confusion that you knew he was listening, even if he was wildly out of his depth.
At one point, you looked up to find him watching you with a strange sort of intensity.
âWhat?â you asked.
âNothing,â he said, too quickly. Then added, âJust wondering how the hell I didnât notice you before this term,â
You smiled, trying to ignore the warmth that crept up your neck. âMaybe because you only come to half the lectures,â
He chuckled. âMaybe,â
â
Two nights later, he was at your flat.
Youâd invited him this time.
âYou sure?â heâd asked, leaning against the kitchen counter when he arrived. âYou couldâve dragged me to the library again,â
You handed him a glass of cheap vodka. âAnd let your eye-line drift all over the place in public? Absolutely not,â
He grinned. âFair point,â
He looked around your flatâsmall but tidy, the kind of space that felt lived in, comfortable. A few mugs on the table, textbooks stacked under the telly, a random scarf hung by the door even though itâs almost June.
âFlatmates?â he asked, sipping.
âTheyâre out,â you replied.
He raised a brow.
You added, very smoothly, âI told you to come over today for a reason,â
That made him pause.
He didnât reply right away. Just looked at you like he couldnât decide whether to laugh or lunge.
Instead, he sat on the sofa, stretched out like he owned the place, and said, âAlright then. Teach me things, professor,â
You groaned, grabbing your laptop and books. âIf you call me that again, Iâll throw you off the balcony,â
âWouldnât be the first time a woman tried to kill me for being too charming,â
âGods, youâre exhausting,â
âYet here I am. On your couch, with you. Alone,â
You tried to study. You really did.
But between the flirting and the alcohol and the way he kept leaning in to comment on the terrible formatting in your notes, it was a lost cause. The vodka burned. The music you put on (mostly as a distraction) didnât help. By the third drink, you were both a bit giggly, a bit warm, sprawled sideways on your couch with your legs tangled together.
He was fiddling with your highlighter, spinning it in his fingers. You reached over to steal it back, and he caught your hand.
âWhatâs your deal then?â you asked, half-curious, half-buzzed.
âMy deal?â
âYou dress like you mugged a punk band,â you said, gesturing at his worn boots and tattered denim, âbut you sound like you came out of a Jane Austen novel,â
He snorted. âItâs the trauma,â
âOh, obviously,â
He sighed, let his head fall back on the arm of the sofa. âMy familyâs a nightmare. Old money. Very proper. Think they invented the stock market,â
You watched him for a moment. He looked tiredâthe sort of tired that sits in your bones. The kind you donât fix with sleep.
âSo why are you here?â you asked quietly.
He shrugged. âThey paid my tuition. All of it. That was the dealâget the degree, then âjoin the family legacyâ or whatever. Be a good Black,â
âYou donât want to?â
âNot even slightly,â he said, voice dry. âI hate it. I hate the lectures, I hate the people, I hate the smug twats who think balance sheets are sexy,â
You laughed. âSo what do you like?â
He hesitated, then looked at you sideways. âWriting music. Playing. Screwing around with the band.â
âYouâre in a band?â
He grinned. âWeâre called the Marauders. James, Remus, Pete and me. Mostly just gigs around campus and dive bars. Weâve got maybe one good song and three that sound like drunken karaoke.â
âSo, what? You write songs about getting high and having sex?â
The words came out before you could stop themâa joke, half-serious, mostly cheeky. You were smiling.
âPretty much,â Sirius shrugged lightly. âYouâve been quite the inspiration lately,â
You stared at him. For a full beat. âYouâre taking the piss.â
âIâm really not.â
You started to laugh. âAre you serious?â
He gave you a wink. âThatâs my name,â
You threw a cushion at his face. âThatâs such a bad joke.â
He pulled the cushion off his lap and said, âIâm not kidding. It just sort of happened. Couldnât stop thinking about it,â
You paused.
âYouâre serious,â
He nodded.
âWhy?â
He shrugged. âIt was good. You were good. And I donât know â I kept seeing it in my head. The windows fogged up, that stupid tie, the way you looked at me,â
You werenât sure what to say.
Part of you wanted to laugh againâit was absurd, wasnât it? The campus heartbreaker, Sirius bloody Black, writing actual music about an actual one-night stand. Another part of you⊠didnât quite want to make a joke.
You looked at him, really looked at him.
He wasnât smirking now. Wasnât leaning into the charm.
He looked oddly nervous.
âYou said you couldnât stop thinking about it,â you said.
âYeah.â
âAnd now what?â
He tilted his head. âNow Iâm on your couch, half-drunk, trying to pass my finance exam so my mum wonât disown me,â
You smiled.
He smiled back.
â
Later that night, you kissed againâslower this time, more sure. Your hands in his hair, his on your waist. His lips soft and searching, like he was learning the shape of your mouth by heart.
You pulled back at one point, breathless, and said, âYouâre not just here for the notes, are you?â
He laughed, low in his throat. âNot even slightly,â
And then he kissed you again.
You were the one who pulled back first.
Not because you wanted to stop. Just because the weight of what you were doingâthe feel of his hands on your waist, the heat building behind his lipsâhad finally caught up with the moment. The couch was small, the flat was quiet, and Sirius Black was looking at you like you were already halfway into a dream he hadnât realised he was having.
You gave him a look. One eyebrow arched, all faux-detachment and teasing heat.
âSo,â you said casually, brushing a finger along the collar of his shirt. âWhat youâre saying is⊠Iâm the best lay youâve ever had?â
He didnât even hesitate.
âAbsolutely.â
You blinked, caught off guard by how quickâand how seriousâhe was. âThat was fast,â
âIâm decisive,â
âYouâre drunk,â
âAnd still right,â
You laughed, trying not to feel flustered, but your heart gave a weird little thud in your chest. âSiriusââ
âI mean it,â he said, sitting back just enough to meet your eyes fully. âDo you want the whole list? Cos I canât even remember anyone elseâs name when youâre looking at me like that,â
That shut you up.
He was smiling, yesâthat usual grin, all teeth and troubleâbut something in his voice felt weighted. Not a joke. Not really.
You searched his face, waiting for the punchline, the wink, the smug little shrug.
But he just looked at you.
Earnest.
Soft, even.
And your brain, already muddled by the vodka, the warmth of him, the whole surreal magic of the night, completely short-circuited.
âRight,â you said eventually, standing up too quickly. âBedroom. Now. Before I change my mind and make you sleep on the sofa,â
He grinned, leaping up after you. âYou love me,â
âShut up,â
âYou want to marry me and have my terrible punk babies,â
âOh my God,â
âGonna name one after James, obviouslyââ
You smacked him with a pillow before dragging him by the hem of his shirt toward the hallway.
You tried, genuinely, to be patient, but you were both far too drunk to have anything resembling grace. You got halfway down the corridor before Sirius managed to tangle one foot under the other and slam into the wall with a bark of laughter.
You wheezed trying to pull his shirt off and he ended up getting both his arms stuck through one sleeve.
He tripped over your shoes and nearly brought you down with him.
Your elbow went into a doorframe. His jeans got stuck on his ankle.
By the time you finally collapsed onto the bed, you were both half-dressed, breathless with laughter, and absolutely gone â the sort of drunk where everything is funny and your hands donât quite do what you tell them to.
And still, somehow, your mouths found each other.
It was messy. Clumsy. Loud. Rushed in some places, slow in others. There was a lot of giggling. Some frustrated huffing. His necklace got caught in your bra strap and you ended up yanking it off entirely and throwing it across the room.
âGentle,â you hissed at one point, when he tugged your hair a little too roughly.
âSorry,â he mumbled against your collarbone, voice already hoarse. âJustâfuck, you smell good,â
âYouâre really drunk, huh?â
âDrunk on you.â He throws you a wink.
You smacked his shoulder. âGag, thatâs such a cliche line,â
âYou wonât remember it anyway,â
You didnât speak after the initial teasing. There was no need for words when his hands were on your thighs and your mouth was tracing the shell of his ear and the whole world had shrunk to your mattress, your body, him.
And then it was overâor it wasnât, you werenât sure. The minutes blurred. The vodka didnât help. You were sweaty, tangled together under your duvet, his arm flung lazily across your waist, your leg hooked over his hip like it had always belonged there.
You stared at the ceiling.
âYouâre quiet,â he murmured after a while.
âThinking,â you whispered.
âAbout?â
You turned your head to look at him.
Sirius Black. Shirtless. Sleepy-eyed. Absolutely ridiculous. And completely still.
You didnât answer.
â
You woke up before him.
The sunlight coming through the blinds was far too bright for your hangover, but you didnât move. Not immediately. You were too aware of the weight beside you, the arm still draped across your stomach, the soft sounds of his breathing as he dozed.
He looked younger when he slept.
Less arrogant. Less sharp around the edges.
And fuck, you thought, staring at the ceiling again. What the hell are you doing?
This wasnât supposed to mean anything.
It was supposed to be hot, chaotic, meaningless fun. A distraction. A break from your assignments and your own mess and the looming terror of the post-uni void. He was supposed to be a good shagânothing more.
But youâd seen the look on his face last night.
He meant it.
And, worseâsome traitorous, pathetic, unguarded part of you wanted to believe it.
You let out a long breath.
Sirius stirred beside you, groaning as he blinked against the morning light.
âMâhead,â he mumbled.
âThatâs the vodka,â you said softly.
âBetrayed by my own choices again,â
You smiled despite yourself.
He looked over at you and smiled too, all sleepy and unfiltered, the kind that made something in your chest flutter before you could stop it.
âMorning,â he said.
âMorning,â
He stretchedâlimbs long and tangled in your sheetsâand then rolled onto his side, propping himself up on one elbow.
âDo you always look this fit in the morning?â he asked.
âDo you always flirt through hangovers?â
âOnly with people whoâve ruined me sexually,â
You laughed. âYouâre so full of it,â
âAnd yet,â he said, leaning in to kiss your shoulder, âyou keep inviting me back,â
You rolled your eyes. âYouâre tolerable when asleep,â
âIâm irresistible always,â
âI think the word youâre looking for is insufferable,â
âNo, no,â Sirius shakes his head carefully, trying not to worsen the impending headache. âDefinitely irresistible,â
â
He left mid-morning.
You offered him toast. He accepted. Ate it half-standing in your kitchen like heâd done it a hundred times before. Then he grabbed his shirt, kissed your temple without thinking, and promised to see you later.
And then he was gone.
You stood there in the quiet.
Trying not to feel the loss in the room.
When I got out I knew
That nobody I knew would be believing me
You didnât hear from him much over the next few weeks.
A couple waves, a few hellos, but nothing proper.
You were too busy. Exams swallowed your brain like quicksand. You crammed until your fingers cramped, drank enough energy drinks to probably cause a coronary, and watched the sunrise from your desk too many mornings in a row.
Your social life dwindled to caffeine-fuelled library whispers and the occasional flatmate making sure youâd eaten something other than toast.
When the final exam finishedâthe bastard of a quantitative finance paperâyou nearly cried walking out of the lecture hall. Someone popped champagne in the quad. You high-fived your study group. You stood on the steps and screamed into the sky.
And in July, you passed. Somehow.
Everything felt lighter.
And then, just as you were heading to your car with your results in handâsun out, heels clicking against the pavement, wind tugging at your open shirt collarâyou saw him.
Sirius.
Leaning against the railing with his hair tied back and his leather jacket slung lazily over his shoulder. Like no time had passed at all. Like this wasnât the first time youâd seen him properly in weeks.
âHey, stranger,â you said, grinning.
He looked up, and smiledânot the usual smirk, but the softer one. The one you always had to pretend didnât get to you.
You crossed the last few steps and launched into your news without hesitation. âI passed. All of them. Barelyâand I mean barelyâscraped through quantitative, but I did it. No resits. No crying. Well, I cried a bit, but not during any of the examsââ
He caught you mid-ramble with a laugh, pulling you into a hug before you could finish.
You sank into him automatically.
He smelled like cigarette smoke and warm leather. Your heart did that stupid little dance again.
âIâm proud of you,â he said, voice low against your temple. âKnew youâd smash it,â
You pulled back slightly, looking up at him with a grin. âYou owe me dinner. Or celebratory sex. Your choice,â
He laughed, but it didnât quite reach his eyes. âBoth?â he offered, light-hearted but off-kilter.
You narrowed your eyes, teasing but watchful. âWhy do you look like someoneâs kicked your puppy?â
He didnât answer straight away.
That was the first clue.
The second was the way his hand stayed on your hip longer than necessaryâlike he was anchoring himself. Like he didnât trust his legs not to bolt.
You stepped back fully.
âSirius.â
âAlright,â he said, voice carefully casual. âDonât get mad,â
You crossed your arms. âWhy would I get mad?â
âBecause Iâm about to say something stupid,â he replied, then ran a hand through his hair. âAnd possibly ruin the vibes,â
You waited.
He sighed.
âIâm leaving,â
You blinked. â...What?â
He gave a weak laugh. âI failed. Most of my exams, anyway. Except the one you helped me withâ so really, youâre the reason Iâve got any academic credibility at all,â
You opened your mouth, then shut it again.
âI got the notice yesterday,â he said, stuffing his hands in his pockets. âUniâs not letting me back next year. They were⊠diplomatic about it. Said I could reapply after a break, provided I prove academic discipline, blah blah. But Iâm not going to,â
âOh,â you said quietly.
He shifted. âThe bandâ the Maraudersâ weâve been getting attention. Played a couple gigs in Camden, some scout liked us. Said weâve got a sound. Heâs offered to get us into a studio. Independent label, nothing big, but⊠itâs something,â
You were quiet.
âIâm moving out next week,â he added. âMight end up up north for a bit. Or Manchester. Depends where the recording space is. Everythingâs still up in the air,â
He glanced at you, then away.
âBut I wanted you to know,â
You nodded.
He watched you, a flicker of worry behind his lashes. âYou alright?â
You let out a soft breath. âYeah,â you said, and meant it. âIâm happy for you,â
âYou sure?â
You gave him a small smile. âI mean⊠Iâll miss you. Obviously. Even if it was just a friends-with-benefits situation, or whatever the hell this was. But this is what youâve wanted, right?â
He nodded. âYeah,â
âThen Iâm proud of you too,â
Something in his jaw tightened.
You tilted your head, half-grinning. âBesides, what kind of monster gets mad at a guy for chasing his dreams?â
He smiledâproperly this time, though a bit bittersweet.
You nudged his shoulder. âSo, one more round before you go?â
He blinked.
âSex, genius,â
His eyebrows shot up. âYou serious?â
âCall it a send-off. My treat,â
He stared for a beat longer than necessary, then grabbed your hand and pulled you towards your car.
You were both half-laughing, half-running â high off adrenaline and the electric sort of sadness that feels like holding fireworks too close to your chest. The air smelt like summer pavement and exam dust, and Sirius looked at you like he couldnât quite believe you were real. You didnât let yourself read too far into it.
You knew better than that.
Still, when he pressed you against the passenger door and kissed you with every ounce of tension heâd held in since telling you he was leaving, you let him.
And when you got back to your flat and climbed the stairs two at a time, limbs tangled and mouths chasing the next inhale, you let yourself want him.
Because why not?
What were you saving yourself for?
It felt like a dream, the way you stumbled into your room. His hands on your waist. Yours in his hair. The low clatter of keys falling to the floor. Clothes tugged off, discarded without aim. Your jumper. His shirt. The way he looked under the dim light of your lamp, mouth red and eyes blown wide.
When the lights go out
She's all I ever think about
Except⊠you didnât even have sex.
You wanted to. So badly you couldâve screamed.
But something about itâsomething about the way he looked at you, or the silence between your heartbeatsâshifted.
Maybe you both knew that this wasnât going to be another carefree romp. That if you went any further, it would mean something. Something you werenât sure either of you could walk away from.
So instead, you just⊠sat.
You climbed into his lap, straddling him where heâd dropped onto your bed. Your bare legs wrapped around his hips, your lips brushing his jawâand instead of unbuckling his jeans, you let yourself settle there. Let yourself exhale.
Dusk painted the walls violet and blue. There was a breeze through the open window, and the smell of distant cigarettes from someone smoking below.
And you talked.
He told you about the producing deal in more detailâhow the scout was a friend of someoneâs cousin, and how it wasnât official yet, but theyâd been invited to record a demo. Theyâd booked a session in a dingy little place near Camden, and the label guy said if the sound was tight, heâd see what he could do.
âI mean, weâre still technically a uni bar band,â Sirius admitted, rubbing the back of his neck. âBut weâve got followers. And if it goes well, itâs a foot in the door. A real one,â
âThatâs brilliant,â You nodded, tracing the edge of his collarbone absentmindedly. âAnd terrifying,â
âOh, itâs horrendously terrifying. I havenât told my family yet,â
You quirked a brow. âWhy not?â
He gave a bitter little laugh. âBecause theyâll cut me off. Or worse â be disappointed,â
You leaned your cheek against his shoulder. âDo they even know about the band?â
âNot really. They think itâs a phase,â
âTheyâre in for a surprise, then,â
He snorted. âThey think musicâs fine as a hobby â as long as Iâm also taking over Black & Co. eventually,â
You hummed. âIâll take your place,â
He paused. âWhat?â
You pulled back just enough to grin. âOnce I graduate. Iâll apply to be the heir to your familyâs cold, corporate throne. Could do with the cash,â
âDonât even joke about that. Youâll be wearing grey slacks and developing caffeine dependency within weeks,â
You poked him in the chest. âBetter than moving in with my mum,â
âDebatable,â
You mock-pouted. âYou donât think Iâd make a great junior partner?â
âNo offence,â Sirius said, lips twitching, âbut my family are absolute twats, and I wouldnât wish them on you,â
âNone taken,â you replied. âThey do sound like twats,â
He laughed, and you kissed the corner of his mouth. His hands slid along your thighs in a way that felt instinctive, not lustfulâlike he was memorising you.
You stayed like that for ages.
Talking. Drifting. Laughing into each otherâs skin. The vodka stayed unopened on your desk. The city hummed around you. And every time you looked at him, something soft bloomed in your chest that you didnât have a name for.
The picture burning in my brain
Kissing in the rain
He stayed the night.
You didnât askâjust curled under the covers with him once the sky turned navy and the streets below went quiet. He didnât object. Just pulled you close, his arm around your waist, your head tucked under his chin.
You both slept badly, but neither of you cared.
It was enough to be near.
To exist in the same breath, if only for a few more hours.
â
The morning came too soon.
You dragged yourself out of bed in an oversized hoodie while Sirius rifled through your room looking for his jeans. He finally found them behind your desk chair, tangled in the blanket heâd somehow pulled down during the night.
You tried not to stare at his back as he dressed. Tried not to think about how quiet it felt.
He pulled on his jacket, fingers catching the zip, and you reached out before you could stop yourselfâsmoothed it for him. He blinked, just once, then smiled that same smile youâd seen on the steps outside campus.
Like he was trying not to let something show.
The clouds outside were thick and heavy, grey like wet concrete. You walked him to the door anyway.
Neither of you said much. Until you opened itâand found the rain waiting on the other side like a punch to the face.
Sirius blinked, stunned by it, before laughing. âBloody hell,â
It was *pouringâ*sheets of rain, bouncing off the pavement, flooding the drains. The kind of rain that soaked you through in seconds. That made umbrellas feel pointless.
You reached for the car keys beside your door, but he stopped you.
âIâll be alright,â he said, pulling his hood out from where it was shoved inside the back of his jacket, but not putting it up.
You stared at him. âYouâre going to walk to your flat in this?â
âItâs only fifteen minutes,â
âIn that?â You gestured to his torn jeans and thin cotton tee beneath the jacket.
âIâll dry off,â
âYouâll drown,â
He chuckled, then hesitatedâthat same beat-too-long pause he always did before saying something real.
âIâll be alright,â he said again, more softly.
You didnât argue this time.
You just watched him step into the doorway and reached for the pen on the side table, scribbling his number on a crumpled receipt.
âJust in case,â He said, holding it out. âIn case we get lucky,â
You took it with a grin. âUnlikely,â
âStill. Now youâve got no excuse,â His eyes met yours, storm-dark and unreadable.
And then he kissed you, with feathered lips and hands gentle enough that they donât even leave fingerprints on your cheeks.
You barely had time to kiss him back before he stepped into the rain.
Let himself get soaked.
Didnât even pull up the hood.
He just glanced over his shoulder one last time, gave you a two-fingered salute, and vanished down the street, hair already dripping, receipt crumpled in his hand.
You stood in the doorway until he was gone.
And then longer still.
The movie playing in my head
Of her king sized bed
Means I can't forget my English love affair
The song ends, but the crowd doesnât.
Theyâre still screamingâstill throwing themselves toward the stage like they could grab onto the final chords and keep them going, as if their voices might convince the band to stay just a little longer. The lights pulse overhead, hot and gold and dizzying. The air tastes like sweat and smoke and bassline, like summer caught in a bottle and shaken until it fizzes over.
Sirius stands at the mic, breathless, his shirt clinging to his back. Hair damp, jaw sharp beneath the spotlight. He looks⊠elated. Wrecked in the best way. The kind of tired that feels like triumph.
Youâre somewhere in the crowd, but he canât see you.
Doesnât know youâre there.
Not yet.
Because you hadnât planned to come. Not until the very last minuteâuntil your best mate shoved a last-minute ticket in your hand and said âCome on, itâll be funny. Isnât that your uni crush? The one who played guitar instead of going to lectures?â
Youâd laughed.
And then youâd come.
Because somewhere after the goodbye, Sirius Black had turned into someone people recognised. Someone who got played on indie radio stations and reviewed in music blogs. Someone with tattoos and a fandom and a press schedule. The kind of person who said things in lyrics that made strangers cry.
âHoly shit,â James says, breathless as he steps offstage, clapping Remus on the back. âThat crowd was insane,â
âInsane,â Remus agrees, wiping sweat from his brow and reaching for a bottle of water. âI thought we were going to lose the speakers during Track Six,â
âWe mightâve,â Peter adds, looking mildly terrified and thrilled in equal measure. âI saw security taping one of the subs mid-song,â
James lets out a bark of laughter. âI didnât notice. Too busy watching Sirius dry-hump his mic stand again,â
âNot my fault the crowdâs thirsty,â Sirius replies, dropping onto a crate near the back of the tent and fanning himself with a setlist. âIâm simply giving them what they came for
âThatâs what she said,â Peter grins.
âIâll leave you all to form your own relationships with your microphones, thank you,â Remus mutters, shaking his head.
Sirius just smirks.
He should be riding the high. The set went better than theyâd hopedâno technical issues, the crowd was electric, and the reaction to the unreleased song was mental. Heâd watched people mouth along to the chorus by the final repeat, like they already knew it. Like they felt it.
And maybe they did.
Maybe everyone has someone they canât forget. Even the people who pretend not to care.
âYouâre getting softer by the year,â James says as he flops onto the crate beside Sirius, elbowing him lightly. âSoon youâll be writing acoustic shit about holding hands,â
âDonât tempt him,â Remus says, snorting. âWeâll get a ballad about library desks and crosswords next,â
âFinance Girl,â Peter says dramatically, holding an invisible microphone. âTrack one off the next album,â
Sirius doesnât respond immediately.
Heâs smilingâthe kind of half-amused, half-resigned smile that means yeah, alright, fair enough. He tosses his towel over his shoulder, grabs a water bottle to throw in Jamesâ direction, and watches as he raises it in mock salute.
âTo Finance Girl,â James says, voice dry. âThe unofficial fifth member of the band,â
âOh, donât say that,â Remus groans. âYouâll jinx it. Sheâll turn up in a dramatic twist of fate and demand royalties,â
âSheâs probably a CFO somewhere now,â Peter adds. âDrinking oat milk lattes and marrying some bloke named Quentin,â
James leans in conspiratorially. âSo, remind us again. Why did you never go back for her?â
Sirius pauses. The air buzzes with leftover feedback and adrenaline. Somewhere outside, the next band is warming up.
He shrugs. âDunno. Life got loud,â
âBet sheâs still fit,â Peter says with a dreamy grin. âImagine the sexual tension if she did show up now,â
âSheâs always in your head anyway,â James says. âYou write more songs about her than I have about Lily, and weâre married,â
âThatâs because you two are boringly vanilla,â Sirius replies without missing a beat, unlocking his phone.
Dozens of notifications. Mentions on Twitter. Clips of the performance already circulating. A missed call from their PR. A text from a number he doesnât recognise.
And itâs that one that makes him freeze.
still writing songs about how good our sex was? count me honoured
The room falls away.
The noise fades.
He stares at the screen like it might combust in his hand.
Because no one else would know to send that.
No one else could make him feel like a second-year uni student again with just one sentence.
No one else ever dragged him into the backseat of their car by his tie.
Then a second message.
I really hope you havenât changed your number otherwise whoever is getting this text is gonna be really confused
James notices first. âYou alright?â
Sirius doesnât look up. Just stares at his phone like heâs forgotten what itâs for.
i was wondering if you could do a james potter fic where the reader and james have been together for a while and she decides to get her boobs pierced james is taken by surprise when he sees the piercings for the first time?
i just got mine done so thatâs all i can think about right now đ«Łi just got mine done so thatâs all i can think about right now đ«Ł
james is just as excited as you are about your newest body modification.
16+ for suggestiveness and sex-talk
modern!james x fem!reader 1.3k fluff masterlist.
AN | this request was actually crazy coincidental, one of my best mates just got her nips pierced and her account of how it went down was insane đđ
You barely get the key turned in the lock before you hear the thudding of socks on wood flooring. The door swings open and James is right there, bright-eyed and dishevelled, like heâs been waiting for this exact sound all day.
âMerlin, finally, I thought youâd never come back,â he says, grin stretched wide as he reaches for you. âI was beginning to think youâd run off to join some secret society without me,â
But you donât let him get a proper hold on you, batting his hands away before he can even start one of his signature welcome-home hugs.
âWaitâwait, I have to show you something!â you say, too giddy to contain it any longer. You toss your bag down carelessly by the shoe rack and tug your t-shirt up right there in the hallway, not caring that the hem snags on the way or that the draft immediately kisses your stomach.
James freezes mid-step, arms still half-outstretched, staring like youâve pressed pause on his movements.
You beam. âLook!â
For a few suspended seconds, thereâs nothing but silence from him. His gaze drops instantly, sharp and curious, but then he goes still again as his eyes land on what youâre showing offâsilver barbells through each of your nipples, the skin around them still slightly pink and a bit cross-looking from the whole ordeal, but undeniably there.
He blinks. Hard. Mouth parting like heâs about to speak, then promptly shutting again, like his brainâs lagging behind what his eyes are seeing.
And thenâthen he lets out the exhale of all exhales, this low, reverent sound of utter disbelief. His shoulders sag, hands falling dramatically to his sides, like all the airâs been knocked out of him.
âWow,â he says at last, slowly, reverently. âWhat did I do to deserve this?â
You laugh, dropping the hem of your shirt just enough to tease covering up but still keeping your chest somewhat bared because frankly, his reaction is too good to waste.
James presses his palms together like heâs praying. âThank you,â he says, gazing skywards. âThank you God, whoeverâs out thereâ for this absolute gift,â
Rolling your eyes, you plant your hands on your hips. âItâs not for you,â
âYeah, yeah,â James says, completely distracted, already stepping closer with that familiar boyish gleam in his eyesâthe one that usually means trouble. âBut I mean, if I get to look, Iâm still counting that as a win,â
He stops just in front of you, hands hovering like he wants to touch but knows better. Except knowing James, restraintâs not exactly his strongest suit, so the next second, his fingers start reaching out, making a beeline straight for the new jewellery.
You swat his hands away with a sharp little smack, and he immediately looks affronted, like youâve just denied him his birthday present.
âTheyâre still sore, you canât touch,â
He groans, dropping his head back dramatically. âYouâre joking,â
âNope. Hands off,â
His head snaps back upright, hopeful. âHow long, though? Realistically. Like... a week?â
You shake your head, giving him your best mock-serious face. âEight to twelve months,â
James lets out a strangled noise somewhere between a whimper and a groan. âYouâre having me on,â
âIâm not! Itâs an open wound, Jamie, it has to heal properly,â
âThatâs nearly a whole bloody year!â
You canât help the grin that tugs at your mouth. âYou can look,â
He gives you an exaggerated pout. âBut my boobs,â
âMy boobs, babeâ you warn, but thereâs no real menace behind it. James, predictably, doesnât look convinced.
âSame thing,â
Still, he keeps his hands dutifully by his sides, even as his gaze remains firmly attached to your chest like itâs the most fascinating thing heâs ever seen. Which, to be fair, with James being James, it probably is.
Eventually, he bends at the hip to get a closer look, squinting a bit. âThey look a bit angry. Did it hurt?â
You scoff. âJames. I cried. Cried. Not the dainty, single-tear-down-the-cheek kind either. Full-on, red-faced, snotty crying,â
He winces in sympathy, scrunching his nose. âYikes,â
âI was lying there like some pathetic, blubbering mess, justâsniffly and snorting and wishing Iâd made better life choices,â
âI donât blame you,â James admits, eyes still flicking between your face and the piercings. âIâve stubbed my toe on the bed frame and sworn off life, so I canât imagine... that,â
You grin. âBut I look sexy though, so itâs okay,â
James snorts, voice warm and adoring. âSexy is the biggest understatement of the year. Honestly, loveâlook at you,â
You drop your shirt properly now, half for your own comfort and half to torture him a bit, because the crestfallen face he pulls when the view disappears is downright comical.
âRude,â he mutters. âI was enjoying that,â
âYou can enjoy it later,â you say, breezing past him towards the kitchen, figuring youâve earned a tea or a snack after the day youâve had.
James is hot on your heels. âBut not touch,â
âCorrect,â
âNot even aâ?â
âNo, babe,â
âA graze?â
You turn on your heel to point a warning finger at him. âNo grazing either,â
He sighs dramatically. âYouâre trying to kill me,â
You grin wickedly. âI like to keep you on your toes,â
James pouts, stuffing his hands into his pockets like heâs trying to keep them under strict lock and key. âWell, I hope youâre happy. Iâm going to be suffering for the better part of a year,â
âOh, Iâm ecstatic,â you retort. âItâs a test of character,â
âI was already character-tested when I didnât snog you on our first date,â
You snort. âPlease. You cracked in under three weeks,â
âYeah, well, some things are impossible to resist,â
You roll your eyes fondly, opening the kitchen cupboard to grab a packet of biscuits. James watches you, eyes soft even as he puts on his best long-suffering expression.
âStill,â he says, tone more genuine now, âIâm dead chuffed you did it. You wanted it, and you did it. Thatâs dead cool,â
You glance back at him. âEven if it means youâll be suffering?â
He grins. âEspecially because it means Iâll be suffering. Youâll owe me when the time comes,â
âOh yeah? And whatâll you cash in for?â
James raises his brows. âA whole weekend of free rein, obviously. Me, you, and the girls. Absolute bliss,â
You snort, chucking a biscuit at his head. He dodges it easily, laughing.
âYouâre incorrigible,â
âAnd you love it,â
You roll your eyes, but your cheeks hurt from smiling. Heâs impossible, but heâs yours. And truthfully? Thereâs a smug little part of you that delights in driving him just a bit mad.
James steps closer, his grin tilting slyly. âJust a peek, though,â
âYou already looked,â
âYeah, but like, another peek,â
You sigh, feigning exasperation. âFine. One more peek,â
âGod bless you,â James says fervently, like youâve granted him an impossible boon.
You prepare yourself for the inevitability of him asking to see them every ten minutes for the next 48 hours.
if you are 6â5, have glases, speak latin,greek,french and sanskrit, have a peculiar obsession towards ancient greece, a devoted stoic & rationalist, have a scar on you forehead and a chipped tooth & are planning on murdering your annoying best friend hmu
SYNOPSIS  James just canât stop bumping into you. literally.
CONTENT WARNING Â fluff! humour!, this came to me in a dream (again), not proofreadÂ
AUTHORâS NOTE slowly descending down the path of James Potterism but im so here for it. if you saw me posting this earlier this day no you didn't <3 also! leave requests!
WORD COUNT Â 1.3k
You could tell from the moment you woke up that today would be the day James Potter finally pushed you over the edge.
It started with the way he looked at you across the Gryffindor table at breakfast, eyes glinting with boyish mischief, tie knotted too loosely (for fashion, not function), and hair, of course, in a permanent state of post-explosion disarray. The nerve of him. He had blueberry jam on the corner of his mouth and was laughing too loudly at something Peter had said. And when he caught you glaring?
He just winked.
That shouldâve been your sign to go back to bed.
But no, you had Apparition practice with a Ministry instructor today, and McGonagall made it clear: miss one more, and youâll be lucky to get your license before youâre thirty. So you powered through.
You just hadnât anticipated a certain troublemaker to knock into you three separate times before lunch. Would it be immoral to swoon your instructor into giving you a pass without attending a single lesson?
âRight,â barked the lanky, passive man from the Department of Magical Transportation who was tasked with shaping Hogwarts students into competent apparators. âThis lesson, weâre focusing on precision. That means your body should not be ending up inside anyone elseâs body. If that happens again, Mr. Potter, I will start docking house points. I will figure a way.â
You were reasonably sure he was bluffing, but you were also too annoyed to care.
James, looking very sheepish (and maybe a little too pink in the cheeks), rubbed the back of his neck and offered a lopsided grin.
âSorry, Sir. Hard to stay away from Y/N. Must be a gravitational thing. You know, since she's so attracted to me.â
âI will punch you, Potter. I swear to Godrick's bullocks that I am going to hit you square in places you don't even know have pain receptors.,â you said flatly.
âSee? Sheâs drawn to me.â
He was so pleased with himself that you contemplated learning how to apparate directly into his kidneys.
âConcentration!â T something snapped, clapping his hands. âFocus on your target. Remember the three Ds: Destination, Determination, Deliberation!â
You took a deep breath. The white chalked X marked the floor a few meters away. Everyone was taking turns now, one at a time, so the likelihood of body-melding incidents shouldâve decreased.
You closed your eyes.
Destination. Determination. Deliberation.
With a slight warmth embracing you, you felt something inside of you, and for a glorious half-second, you thought youâd finally done it.
Until you opened your eyes and saw calloused hands sticking out of your sternum and the warm, musky smell of Jamesâs aftershave hit you square in the face.
You opened your eyes.
He was inside your torso again.
âFOR FUCKâS SAKE, POTTER!â
âItâs not my fault!â he squeaked. "I actually followed the instructions this time!â
"Then how could you have missed by 6 meters?! Make it make sense, you baboon!", you were actually near tears.
You pulled your wand out and removed him from your body like he was contagious and fixed him with a glare that could have frozen the deepest pit of tartarus.
âIâm hexing you. I'm so going to hex you,â you muttered.
âOh, come on,â he said, grinning. âThat was kind of romantic, in a horribly invasive way.â
Before he could say another string of word vomit, you raised your wand and muttered a limb freezing spell (All thanks to Marlene for teaching you this).
A gold light shot from your wand and wrapped around his legs like invisible vines. James wobbled and fell forward onto the floor like a cut down tree.
âWhat the hell?â he yelped, trying to stand. His legs didnât budge a bit.
âYouâve been grounded, Potter,â you said sweetly, internally high-fiveing yourself for the comeback.
Around you, the Gryffindors burst into laughter. Even Alice let out a snort.
The instructor barely glanced over. âAs long as heâs not Apparating anymore, I donât care. Class dismissed.â
And then he walked out like that, briefcase in hand and an abandoned crossword puzzle in the other, abandoning James Potter to his fate.
You felt amazing, marvelous even.
You returned to the corridors with a smug sort of satisfaction, ignoring the trail of confused, increasingly concerned Marauders dragging James through the hallways like a wounded lion.
âI can still hex you more from here!â you shouted over your shoulder.
âY/N!â James wailed, legs stiff and dragging pathetically behind him. âYou canât leave me like this! I have Quidditch practice!â
Sirius tried lifting him by the armpits and immediately dropped him.
âYouâre like dead weight, Prongs,â he said, panting. âDo you have bricks in your pants?â
"Oh, Pads, I sure have something bricked inside my pants, that I do."
âUnbe-fucking-lievable,â Remus groaned out, âno, but he has the emotional maturity of a pebble.â
âI hope you all suffer,â you called, rounding the corner with a satisfied huff.
The common room was peaceful for approximately twenty-three minutes on the dot.
You had just opened your Muggle Studies textbook and gotten to the good part (extremely inaccurate descriptions of muggle transportation) when Sirius burst in, clothes even messier than usual, eyes wide.
âEmergency,â he panted. âProngs is crying, honest to heart.â
You blinked. âCome again?â
âReal tears. Actual snot. He thinks heâs going to die foot-first.â
âHe is not crying.â
âHe is,â said Remus, entering behind him. âHe just wept on my shoulder about lost dreams and doomed toes.â
Peter nodded solemnly. âHe also said something about never dancing again and dying young.â
You groaned and slammed the book shut.
âWhere is he?â
He was still in the boysâ dorm, sprawled across his bed sideways, feet frozen rigidly parallel to the wooden floor. His legs stuck out like a doll with no articulation points.Â
You folded your arms and glared âAren't you a little bit too old to be sulking like that, Potter?â
James looked up, and okay, maybe his eyes were a little glassy. Maybe they're just the lenses from his oversized glasses.
He whispered your name like a prayer answered, voice wobbling. âI canât feel my feet. Did you cut them off?â
âNo I did not, you idiot. And you can. Thatâs the point. You just canât move them. They're just frozen, that's allâ
âIâm dying, you evil demon of a woman. I can feel the magic running up my bum.â
You rolled your eyes and walked over, wand in hand. âIâll remove the hex-â
Jamesâs expression immediately transformed into smug glee. âHah! I knew it. So you care.â
You froze.
âNope,â you said. âNope, nevermind that. Good evening, gents.â
âNO! Y/N, wait-â
You raised your wand and muttered a reversing spell, but pointed at Siriusâ feet instead.
Sirius immediately collapsed, even though he hadnât been the one hexed.
âYouâre all brainless hippogriffs,â you said, walking away. âIâll fix it when Iâve had tea and silence. Maybe not even then.â
âWait!â James shouted as you left. âY/N! PLEASE! Iâm SORRY! FOR EVERYTHING! FOR WHATEVER I HAVE DONE!â
You eventually relented.
Mostly because you liked having leverage. But also, if you were honest, you were sort of fond of James Potter. In the most frustrating, infuriating, makes-you-want-to-continuously-hex-his-face-off kind of way.
And when you finally unhexed him three hours later, after heâd declared you the most beautiful, terrifying goddess of mercy, you told him, âDo it again, and Iâll glue your hands to your knees."
He didnât. For exactly six days. Impressive, honestly.
Then he tried to apparate again during a solo practice and landed once more too close in your personal space.
This time, you just stepped back, let him fall, and hissed âNext time, Potter, I will remove your brain since it seems like it's taking dead space in that big head of yoursâ
James groaned from the floor.
âStill think itâs gravitational?â you asked sweetly.
He looked up at you, grinning despite the wince.
âNah. I think I just like being close to you, mate.â
Your breath caught in your throat. Damn him. Damn him. Damn his little 'mate'.
You turned away before he could see the smile tugging at your mouth. Oh you're so doomed.
at the country house and either henry walks in on you touching yourself (i think this is most likely) or you walk in on him touching himself. but just think about it. in case 1, him leaning against the doorframe with his eyes blown wide and cheeks pinkâ itâs polite for him to leave, he wants to, he should, but he canât do anything but stare at the way your fingers are moving, the way your body is archingâ just getting hard as he watches. maybe you finish before you see him, maybe he finally comes back to his sense and tries to leave, alerting you to his presence. but not before he hears you whimper out his name. one thing leads to another and he is soon dragging his tongue against yours, two fingers pressed inside you as you moan against his mouthâ heâs so big, you absolutely need to be stretched out by his fingers first. letâs be real. ugh that makes me feral already. anyway, option 2, youâre usually the knocking type, but youâre looking for henry to bring him a book you borrowed or some papers or something like that, so this time you swing his door open. and there he is, shirtless (though he doesnât need to be, i just like thinking of his sculpted body and being able to see itâ especially the way his stomach probably tightens and virtually caves in when heâs close) with a hand wrapped around himself and his glasses off, head tipped back in pleasure. you donât want to look, you swear! except you do, you really really do. you canât keep your eyes off him, swollen red and leaking with that big hand wrapped around it just right, thumb brushing over the head every now and againâ because he knows better than anyone how he likes to be touched. and you wish it was your hand, or he was fucking your mouth instead of his fist, or even just you. it makes your cheeks so red. it makes you so wet. and then he sees you, probably as you try to leave, one thing leads to another, and you do get to experience one (or all 3) of those fantasies, after all. if option 1 made me feral option 2 has me going fucking insane ok. ugh. just being on your knees for henry with one hand on his stomach to âbrace yourselfâ but really just to feel the way his muscles tighten and move & the other hand slipped beneath your underwear while you wordlessly encourage him to use your mouth and throat however he likes? your eyes watering which only makes him impossibly harder bc i do believe henryâs a bit of a dacryphiliac⊠this is so long, but i had to curse you as i have been cursed.
babe youâre making me wet with this request. I love you and your mind, please donât ever dieđđ
So Iâm obsessed with both of these scenarios, which means that I obviously have to continue this curse, and curse everyone who reads my stuff with this gorgeous scenario your beautiful brain has craftedđđ
Itâs late enough that the house has gone quiet, save for the ticking of that heavy antique clock in the drawing room, the one Bunny always complains about, claiming it gives him headaches. Youâve left the door to your room cracked slightly, letting in a slice of faint, yellow lamplight from the corridor. The kind of light that makes everything feel a bit suspended, as if this moment exists outside of time altogether.
Outside the window: faint fog, a silver wash across the trees. Somewhere far off, a bird cries once, sharp and plaintive, before the silence folds back over the landscape.
Inside, your body is restless. Thereâs a loneliness to summer nights at Francisâs townhouse. A kind of opulence that breeds want.
You hadnât meant to, not really. Youâd only slipped out of bed to get water (thatâs what you told yourself) but the hem of your nightdress felt particularly soft brushing against your thighs, and the stillness in the house made your skin feel sensitive, primed. You thought of Henry, because you always do. In your mind, he was still in the library downstairs, a book in his lap, brow furrowed in that quiet, ecclesiastical way he gets when he reads Latin for hours without speaking. You hadnât expected him to be anywhere near your room.
Thatâs what makes it worse. Thatâs what makes it all so horribly, wonderfully unforgivable.
You lie back against the sheets, one knee drawn up. Fingers brushing slowly between your legs, unsure at first, but not for long. Thereâs something sinfully indulgent about it, touching yourself while everyone sleeps. You move carefully, one hand slipping beneath the lace, the other resting lightly above your navel. The breath you release is quiet, almost reverent. You imagine itâs him. Not just because heâs beautiful, (though he is) but because youâre convinced that he, above all people, would know what to say if he walked in. Heâd understand. He wouldnât flinch from you.
He knows this in the abstract, in the way one knows not to look directly at the sun, or press a finger too close to the flame. And yetâŠhe stays.
Youâre saying his name.
Whimpered, not spoken. Soft, breathy, broken, like a prayer torn halfway through confession. He jolts when he hears it, as though it absolves him of something, or damns him further. You havenât seen him yet. Your eyes are closed, lashes fluttering as your hips shift slightly on the bed, wrist working in slow, wet circles between your thighs. His name again, quieter this time. The shame should have driven him away. But instead, it only hardens him.
He doesnât remember crossing the threshold. Only that the door creaked, and your head snapped toward the sound.
You freeze.
And he wants to look away. He really does. Wants to stammer something gentlemanly and shut the door and disappear into the ancient hallways of Francisâs country estate and pretend this never happened. But your legs are still parted and slick and trembling, your chest rising and falling, breath caught between arousal and embarrassment. And your lips, your mouth is pink and parted, and youâre blinking at him like the thought of him standing there is worse than the thought of him seeing.
âHenry,â you whisper. Just once. Not with the same needy lilt as before. This time itâs real. Unsure. And when you move to cover yourself, it jolts something feral in him.
âNo,â he says, and itâs barely a sound. âDonât.â
A beat of silence. Then: âPlease.â
His voice cracks a little on the word. He doesnât sound refined or collected. He sounds ruined. Ruined by what youâve done to yourself, what heâs imagined doing to you for months. The way your fingers had moved, the way your spine had curved, the way your cunt had gleamed in the filtered moonlight through that old glass window. Heâs breathing hard now, like heâs run somewhere to get to you, but really, itâs only the effort of holding himself back.
You donât cover yourself again. Thatâs enough.
Heâs in front of you in seconds.
His mouth is on yours before either of you can think to stop it. His hand, shaking a little, cups the back of your head as you kiss, all teeth and wet heat and the kind of hunger that tastes like guilt. He doesnât mean to press you back against the pillows, but thatâs where you end up, limbs tangled and chests heaving, your bare thighs brushing the starched fabric of his trousers. The friction makes you keen softly, hips tilting up in search of more. Itâs that sound that makes him groan.
âYou were- â he starts, then shakes his head, the flush blooming all the way up to his ears. âGod, you were touching yourself. I- I didnât mean to look.â
You reach up and tug at his collar.
âYes you did,â you murmur, eyes glassy.
A beat.
He swallows. âYes,â he admits hoarsely. âYes, I did.â
When he touches you again, itâs with reverence. Two fingers trailing along the inside of your thigh, the skin damp and warm, gliding higher with agonizing patience. His hand is large, elegant, scholarâs hands, all knuckles and control. You whimper when he brushes your clit, and he bites back a curse.
âStill so wet,â he murmurs, almost to himself. âStill fluttering around nothing.â
Then his fingers slip in.
Slow. Stretching. He curses softly under his breath, resting his forehead against yours.
âJesus Christ,â he whispers. âSheâs so warm- feels like she knows me.â
The heat between your thighs pulses at the filth in his tone, at the quiet, shaking reverence of it. Like your cunt is something divine, and heâs a worshipper on his knees, fingers trembling in the act of devotion.
âYou donât know what you do to me,â he breathes. âYou never have.â
He curls his fingers, slow and deliberate, watching the way your mouth falls open. The way your eyes glaze over. The way your body responds without thought.
Natural.
This has always been natural. Every line between friendship and this was drawn in sand from the beginning. And now, with your walls clenching around him, your soft moans swallowed by his mouth as he kisses you again, he wonders if there was ever a line at all.
lovely amber would you be interested in writing something about gym bro!james potter? i fear i canât stop thinking about his muscles đ„”đ«ŠâŠ and i think youâd work magic w this sort of au! maybe things are getting flirty between james and the girl who works at the check in counter at his gym, but would love n appreciate anything! feel free to ignore if inspiration doesnât strike x đ«¶
jolie!!! Thank you so much for this request, I am absolutely obsessed with gymbro!James, I want to bite his biceps plz and thank youuuuu. Hope you enjoy this one <3
gymbro!James Potter x frontdesk!reader who needs to eat breakfast âż 950 words
cw: fem!reader, James' biceps are all I can think about, reader is sleepy
james potter masterlist
°Ëâ§âżâ§Ë°
You donât bother looking up at the light âdingâ that sounds as the front doors slide open. You yawn, sitting back in your chair, having just sat back down from unlocking them. The sound of footsteps head in the direction of your desk, right on time.
âGood morning, James.â You greet, peeking one eye open. Youâre exhausted and want to rest your eyes for a little longer but youâd be doing yourself a disservice if you didnât catch at least a glimpse of him as he walks by.
âGood morning!â A human embodiment of a ray of sunshine even this early in the morning, James Potter beams brightly at you. The fabric of his tank-top is loose, the sleeveless nature of it giving you an unblocked view of his biceps, and even a little bit of the side of his chest. You soak in the view as much as you can regardless of if he notices or not. He steps up to the counter, but doesnât swipe his card right away. Instead, he says, âI brought you something.â
This catches your attention, making you sit up, rubbing at your eyes a bit. âOh yeah?âÂ
He swings his bag around in front of him and opens it, pulling out a brown bag and handing it to you over the counter. Itâs warm when you take it, and when you open it, you see itâs a breakfast sandwich.
âJames, you didnât-â
âYou mentioned how you donât usually eat breakfast. You should, though. Remus tells me itâs the most important meal of the day!â He flashes you a wink, and somehow you feel incredibly awake despite the early morning hours.Â
âWell⊠thank you?â You smile back at him, trying to ignore the way your heart seems to be doing jumping jacks in your chest. It almost takes your breath away, how pretty he is.Â
âYouâre welcome! Iâll see you later!â James waves again as he finally swipes his card, followed by a small beeping sound, and heâs off, ducking away into the locker room.Â
You eat your sandwich in silence, eyes focused on James through the glass windows of the gym walls as he lifts. You barely glance up at the rest of the patrons that enter, waving them on once their card beeps.Â
James is the perfect entertainment, given that everything he does is hot. Your stomach flutters when he curls his biceps, when he drinks water, when he wipes sweat off, all of it.Â
This is a routine for you. James is always the first one in the gym, in the doors right as you unlock them. When youâre stumbling over your feet, trying to get a few more minutes of sleep before your boss shows up, James has already had a protein shake with preworkout and a warm up. You donât know how he does it but youâre so incredibly grateful he does it in front of you. The breakfast, though, thatâs new. Heâs said good morning before, the two of you exchanging casual pleasantries, but never more than that. You had mentioned last week that you usually donât eat breakfast, a combination of the early morning shift and not feeling hungry when you're still waking up. You didnât think anything of it at the time, butâŠ
He brings you a sandwich the next morning, too.
âOh, thank you!â You say, more awake this morning when he walks in. You take the bag from his hands, setting it aside and smiling at him. âYou really donât have to.â
âDid you already eat breakfast?â He asks, his hands absent-mindedly playing with one of his sweatbands.Â
âWell⊠no.â
âThen, I did have to.â James smiles again, and he is so bright and beautiful you think he might blind you. âCanât have you wasting away. Then who would let me in?â
âYou know they would replace me the moment I keel over.â You argue, opening the bag to pull out the sandwich, setting it on a napkin next to you. âI donât even think it would take a day.â
âIt wouldnât be the same without you.â James argues with a shake of his head, his curls bouncing just slightly, mostly held in place by his headband. âIâd have to find a different gym.â
Well, that certainly had your heart racing.Â
The third time he brings you breakfast, you give him a look.
âYou have to stop doing this.â You say, leaning forward on your elbows to smile up at him, lips glossier than usual. If you actually woke up early to doll up a little bit before you saw him this morning, then who can blame you? âDonât get me wrong, the sandwich is great, but isnât this expensive?â
He shrugs with one shoulder, his dark eyes sparkling, and a smile on his lips. âGuess youâll have to repay me.â
âOh?âÂ
âYouâll have to take me out to breakfast sometime.â His words reach you, that twinkle in his eye brighter than before. You find your breath catching. Is he asking you out, by telling you to take him out?
âOkay.â You say with a nod, a little breathless but the both of you brighten further at your agreement. âWe can- um- after your workout sometime?â
James sends you a wink and a nod, adjusting his bag on his shoulder. âSounds great, love. See you later!âÂ
You watch as he walks past you into the locker room, feeling a bit light headed. Youâre pretty sure James just asked you to ask him on a date. And you did.Â
Youâre going to go on a date with James Potter.
You canât help but blush when he catches you watching him through the windows this time.
Sirius likes to think of himself as a pretty sharp guy. He can tell when Remus just wants some quiet company, heâs learned the pattern behind James' chaotic mood swings, and â after a lot of trial and error â heâs even figured out what Regulus' barely noticeable shifts in expression mean. So yeah, Sirius considers himself fairly perceptive.
That is, until you show up out of nowhere, your head suddenly popping into the narrow space between him and Remus with your arm twisted behind your back, making him nearly jump out of his skin.
âChrist,â he mutters, a hand flying to his chest. âshould get you a bell or something.â
âHello, Sirius,â you grin at him, beaming like you havenât just startled him half to death. âIâll start stomping around more if thatâll help.â
Youâre impossible to stay annoyed with â not that Sirius tries particularly hard. Thereâs something disarming about the way you grin, unapologetic and radiant. Itâs endearing, honestly, how you make the effort to chat with him at all. He knows youâre not really here for him. Not when your eyes keep flicking sideways toward Remus like youâre trying not to look too eager.
Sirius suppresses a sigh, already feeling secondhand embarrassment bloom in his chest on your behalf. Moonyâs in one of his usual silent moods today, the kind that comes with a permanent scowl and a drawn brow. You havenât been seeing him long enough to recognise that yet, to know that sometimes he doesnât want affection or words or even eye contact.Â
Sirius is halfway through crafting an excuse to get him far away from whatever is about to happen, when you finally turn your full attention to Remus.
"Hi, honey," you say, soft as anything. Your fingers move before Remus can flinch or lean away, gently brushing a stray bit of hair off his forehead and away from his eyes.
Sirius watches with morbid fascination. Heâs seen Remus Lupin do a number of things over the years. Heâs watched him break up fights, endure full moon recoveries, and drink Jamesâ horrible attempts at fancy coffees without so much as a grimace. But now? With your fingers ghosting across his hair and your smile all warm and unbothered?
Remus is blushing.
And not just a faint, dignified flush either â no, this is a full-bloom, down-to-his-neck pink, the kind that looks particularly unfair on someone who normally prides himself on his unshakable composure. Remus clears his throat, eyes darting to Sirius for one mortified second before you continue like you havenât just completely dismantled him.
âOh!â you say, suddenly remembering yourself. âI brought you something.â
Remus blinks. "You⊠what?"
You smile wider and reveal the hand youâd hidden behind your back, a small, slightly crushed wildflower. Yellow, with ragged petals and a bent stem, clearly plucked mid-walk or from somewhere inconvenient. Sirius squints. It looks like the kind of flower a child would press between book pages and then forget about for a decade.
âI saw it and it made me think of you,â you say, tone offhanded, like the connection between Remus and a half-wilted flower is the most obvious thing in the world. âItâs pretty.â
Remus stares at you like you've grown a second head.
Then, without saying a word, he takes it. Heâs careful, absurdly so, and before you can flit away again â because youâre already turning back toward the door, likely off to check on whatever it is sunshine people check on â Remus reaches out.
His arm slips around your shoulders, pulling you gently into his side.
Itâs awkward at first, mostly because you werenât expecting it, but then you melt against him like you were built for it. Your head tips to rest against his collarbone, just for a second, before you hum contentedly and pat his chest.
Sirius canât believe his eyes.
âBe back in a bit,â you say, already halfway out the door again. âLook after it, please!â
The door closes.
Thereâs a moment of silence.
Remus exhales, the faintest sound of breath escaping as he starts fiddling with the flower. He doesnât look at Sirius, he can't stand the thought of it. The pink is still climbing up his ears.
Sirius, for his part, stares at him like he's trying to solve a riddle.
ââŠYouâre cuddling now?â
Remus grunts, still very pink. âShut up.â
Sirius exhales dramatically and leans back against the couch. âMate...â
Remus only half-hides the smile tugging at the corner of his mouth. He tucks the flower into the page of his book, precisely, carefully.
Sirius watches this development unfold and mutters, not without fondness, âYou poor bastard.â