21 | Where I love to reblog Supernatural & Leverage fics along with RPF, write a few of my own. Maybe one day Iâll post my Original characters stories
psa. if weâre mutuals, weâre automatically friends. u donât need to say things like âsorry to botherâ or âsorry im annoyingâ bc ur not. ur my friend. u can come to me for anything. u need help? im here. wanna chat? hmu. just wanna gush abt your muse? go for it. weâre friends. ily.
Welcome to the 6th year of Angstober! We're delighted to unveil the prompts for this year of angsty, spooky fun.
What is Angstober?
Angstober is a yearly October challenge with 31 angst-themed prompts to inspire you to create. The challenge is open to all sorts of creative work - writing, art, edits, whatever you want - in whatever medium you want. Original work or fanworks? Whatever you feel inspired for!
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How do I take part?
Tag your works with #angstober or #angstober2025 and the day of the prompt (e.g., #day 01) to share on tumblr. Feel free to @ us directly in the post as well! To share your work on AO3, add it to the Angstober 2025 collection.
You can post your works whenever - early or late - and use as many or as few prompts as you feel inspired for! We'll do our best to reblog as many works to the @angstober blog as we can.
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Are there any other rules or limitations?
No. We do not limit what you can create. Angst can include some darker topics. We do ask you tag your work appropriately.
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This year we have alternate prompts!
Not feeling a prompt? Wanting to do more? Switch it for one of our alternate prompts.
Summary: Unable to control your abilities, youâre stuck in the present with Billy Butcher, his team, and Americaâs first asshole. At this point, youâve become Soldier Boyâs personal punching bag. But when an accident leaves you stranded in 1942, you run into a familiar face and suddenly rely on your future tormentorâs help as your only hope.
Pairing: Soldier Boy x supe!Reader
Warnings: 18+ for language, back in the present, SB being his charming self and every (bad) thing that comes with it, humor, pining, a bit of angst and hurt, enemies to lovers, slow burnin' through this one, fluff
Word Count: 8.1k
Posted on Patreon June 15, 2025
A/N: I'm a sucker for bottle episodes on TV and in stories. Give me two tortured characters sitting on the floor and having deep conversations, and I'll die happy.
âš Chapter title inspired by me-e-ee
Main Masterlist || Series Masterlist || Tag List
Chapter 16: I Don't Care What the Papers Say!
Ben knocked once.
Hard enough to be heard, but not so loud itâd wake the whole damn block. Just loud enough to be undeniable. Just enough for you to know it was him.
No answer, but not surprising either.
He could hear you, of course. Super-hearing or not, Ben always knew the difference between silence and absence. You were in there, alright. Breathing slow. Still. Ignoring him like it was a full-time job. He didnât even need to press his ear to the door. He could hear your heartbeat if he really focused. That steady, annoyed rhythm. Still close â but not coming any closer.
So he knocked again. Slower this time.
Still nothing.
He leaned a shoulder against the doorframe and exhaled. âAlright, I know you in there.â
No response again. Ben could hear the music, though.
Not loud. Not enough to be obnoxious. Just enough to make the old brownstone buzz faintly through the concrete. A record. Vinyl â not fucking digital. He could tell by the soft static and occasional warble.
It was some grunge shit. Female vocals, probably late 90s. Not his thing, but it fit. A little sad. A little angry. Just like you.
âI can hear you breathing, sweetheart. Donât play dumb.â
Fuckinâ nothing.
Ben dragged a hand down his face, then crossed his arms. âCâmon, youâre really gonna make me talk through the door like a fuckinâ sitcom neighbor? You know I hate that shit.â
Still no response. Not even a bratty fucking comment. That stung more than he wanted to admit.
His knuckles softly tapped the wood once more. âYou know, if you open the door, you can punch me again or at least slam it in my face. Tell you what, sweetheart â Iâll let you kick me in the crown jewels once. Howâs that, huh? Hell, might even like it if itâs you, so donât be surprised if I moan instead of flinch.â
A beat passed, and then finally:
âYouâre not coming in,â you said, voice dry as paper.
âFigured,â he muttered and dropped down on the steps just outside your door. His back leaned against the frame and brick wall, one knee up, the other stretched across the concrete like he had all goddamn night. âPlace still smells like cheap paint and lavender. But hey, at least it got character⊠and possibly black mold. Had to pick the shittiest apartment in New York, didnât you?â
You still didnât say anything, but he heard the quiet creak of the floorboards inside and your breathing just behind the door, measured and intentional â you were listening.
And sure, on some level, he knew this was fucking stupid. You didnât want to see him. You made that clear when you told him to fuck off several times by now. But he couldnât not be here â not after today.
Not after everything.
âYâknow, I liked it better when you yelled at me and threw me âround through time,â he said and let his head rest against the wood, shutting his eyes for a second. âNow I knock and donât even get a âgo to hell.â Kinda hurtinâ my feelings, sweetheart.â
âYou donât have feelings,â you bit.
Ben smirked. There you were.
âIâm not here to fight, alright? Just figured if you hate me, I should at least fuckinâ show up for it,â he said and rubbed a thumb over a splinter in the wood.
âYou gonna sit there forever?â you snapped. âGo away and leave me alone.â
âNot yet.â
âYouâre wasting your time.â
âI donât think so,â Ben replied, a smile curling on his lips. âYou havenât vanished yet, which means you donât fuckinâ hate me as much as you think you do.â
âDonât kid yourself. Me staying has nothing to do with you,â you argued. âThis is my home. I like it here. I have friends here. If anyone should fucking leave, itâs you.â
âYou canât even remember most of this shit, including that little whine club of yours.â
You scoffed, and Ben suddenly remembered he wasnât supposed to make you angrier. You were just making it so goddamn hard on him to hold back. And maybe that was your point all along.
âHey, I can remember most of them again. Itâs coming back. I know Annie and Frenchie and Hughie and Butcherââ
âButcher ainât your fuckinâ friend,â he cut in sharply.
âWhy? âCause he blackmailed me?â you asked. âI told you it wasnât that fucking serious â and yeah, I remember that, too.â
âI donât know. Sounds like a good enough reason to me,â he muttered.
âEverythingâs a good fucking reason to you.â
And maybe you were right about that one. Because it surely wasnât the only reason he wanted Butcher dead. The asshole had not only crossed a line by threatening you but also by threatening him with turning you against him.
Mostly, though, he hated to admit that it also may have been a reason he came to see you tonight. Why he couldnât give you time and leave you fucking alone.
He had to talk to you before they fucking got to you and spewed all their poison about him.
Ben exhaled slowly. âLook, I know youâre mad at me. I get it. If I were you, I woulda done the same fuckinâ thing.â
You snorted a dark chuckle. âIf you were me, New York would be leveled and burning right now.â
âProbably.â Ben pursed his lips, head bobbing. âListen, I know this is about what happened last weekââ
âDonât.â Your voice cut him like a knife â cold, sharp, and warning.
Ben swallowed heavily. âI donât wanna rehash it, alright? I just figured you need toâ⊠I had to, okay? I had no choice. I had to push harder. You werenât breaking, and I was runninâ outta tricks. Outta time.â
âThat it?â
âYeah, thatâs it,â he assured, even though your question sounded like a trap. He just didnât know what would activate it yet. âI didnât mean toââ
âBullshit,â you snapped. âYou did mean to. You meant everything. You donât get to have a say in my life for over a year, treat me like a shit, corner me in my own fucking apartment, and then beg for forgiveness on my doorstep like itâs some goddamn romantic gesture.â
âDidnât say it was,â Ben muttered, rubbing his palms on his thighs.
Well, shit. There went his plan.
He closed his eyes, took a deep breath. âIâm sorry, alright? You think that was fuckinâ fun for me?â
âKinda, yeah,â you huffed bitterly.
Ben swallowed, nodding. âYou really think I wanted this? Any of it? You know that IââŠâ He didnât finish, just bit his lips, but you said it for him anyway.
âYou were just like him.â
Ben licked his lips, then smacked them. âI know.â
âYouâre supposed to protect me,â you added quietly.
âI know that, too,â he admitted and tilted his head back against the brick wall, staring up at stars through the city haze. âStill remember your face that night. Itâs been livinâ rent-free in my goddamn skull ever since. You were scared⊠of me. I did that. On purpose, sure, but doesnât mean I donât hate myself for it.â He rubbed his jaw. The heat of shame burned at the back of his neck. âI wouldnât haveâ⊠I wouldnât have hurt you. You know that.â
âNo, I donât know that, because I donât know you,â you argued. âI donât even know if youâre telling the truth or lying through your fucking teeth right now because youâre still playing some sick game.â
Ben closed his eyes for another moment, exhaling a breath through his nose. âIâm not playinâ a game.â
âI. Donât. Believe. You,â you said and slowly pressed each word out with purpose.
He swallowed the thick lump in his throat. âWhat dâyou want me to say, huh? Just tell me what it fuckinâ takes. Fine, alright? Maybe it was more than a little pretense that night. Maybe I was a jealous asshole and a little rougher than I intended. There, I said it. Fuckinâ happy now?â
âNone of this makes me fucking happy!â
âMakes fuckinâ two of us,â Ben scoffed under his breath and rolled his eyes slightly. He waited till the sting in his chest subsided before continuing, âBut you still gotta believe me â I wouldnâtâve hurt you.â
Silence. Fucking crickets. He didnât know if that was good or bad.
He banged his forehead softly against the door. âPlease open it.â
âNo.â
Sure, he couldâve kicked it in a while ago, but he figured heâd probably be making the wrong point. Aside from that, you sure as hell would either freeze him, toss him into some historical catastrophe, or disappear from the face of the Earth.
âYou think Iâve been stuck on what you did this past year, but itâs not just that,â you continued. âIâve been trying to figure out how much of what you became over the last eighty years is real⊠and how much is just for show.â
Ben huffed a humorless chuckle. âYeah, not sure âbout that one, either,â he muttered quietly. âIf you find out, lemme know.â
You didnât say anything, but the record kept playing. The needle scratched faintly as the song faded to its last few bars. Then, he heard you lifting and flipping it.
Side B â fitting.
Your weight inside moved again, heartbeat getting closer. There was a creak of old wood and the rustling of fabric as you seemed to be sitting down on the floor just on the other side of him. If the door disappeared, he could imagine your knees touching. There were no attempts at footsteps or even the door chain shifting, but at least you hadnât vanished yet.
You were still here â listening.
Benâs eyes then drifted to the box next to him, resting a hand on the taped-up lid. âI brought your stuff, by the way. Kept it all. Your shoes, that busted old notebook full of chicken scratch equations, the movie projector you made me, even that shirt that didnât make sense to me till â69,â he listed, chuckling softly. âI saw you there. At that concert, yâknow?â
âYou did?â
âYep. You were gettinâ high with some college kids. Even followed you,â he added.
âOh, yeah, those kids were so nice. I think they were a throuple. Not sure, but definitely polyamorous,â you mused behind the door. âI left when the topic of an orgy came up. But they gave me LSD. Was my first time doing it.â
Benâs mouth opened and closed. âExplains a few things,â he murmured lowly, his eyes swerving back to the box. âYou know, I thought about burninâ all this shit several times over the years.â
âWhy didnât you?â
Because you left. Because he didnât know if heâd see you again. Because it still smelled like you.
He let out a quiet chuckle. âDonât know. Just couldnât do it.â
There was silence again on your side, even the song ended. But another started â same tone with a different flavor of ache.
âYou can leave it outside,â you said.
âIâd rather hand it to you, if thatâs alright.â
âItâs not.â
âRight.â Ben let out a deep sigh. âGot you something else, too. But itâs a surprise. Gotta open the door first, though. Only got about one more hour left, too.â
âGreat, so it comes with a countdown,â you huffed, and Ben imagined you even rolled your eyes with it. âPlease tell me itâs not you exploding.â
He snorted, amused. âNah, not the kinda explosion Iâve planned for you, sweetheart.â
âEw! Why?â
âCâmon, it was right there. Canât serve me like that,â he replied, chuckling.
âYouâre not making a good case for yourself,â you murmured.
âYou used to love it when I made those fuckinâ jokes,â Ben noted, laughing a little as a memory popped into his head. âOnce made you laugh so hard you snorted your soda through your fuckinâ nose.â
âThat was different.â
âHow so?â
âIt just was.â
You had always been a fucking challenge. Didnât matter what heâd tried â making you his lover or his enemy.
âI liked who you were then,â you added after a beat.
Ben was quiet, and for a while, the city filled the space between you â the hum of traffic two streets over, someone slamming a cab door, a dog barking faintly from a second-story window.
âLook, uhm, I donât know how much of that guyâs still in here, but I think some of him is,â Ben said finally. âSpecially âround you.â
âCoulda fooled me,â you scoffed sharply. âYou donât get to act like you care now.â
That one hit harder than he expected, but he didnât defend himself either. What was the fucking point? No matter what he said, you didnât believe him. You never would again, would you?
âIâll go, okay?â Ben said then and heard your weight shift behind the door. âIâll leave you alone if thatâs what you want. I just need to ask you somethinâ first.â
A beat passed before you responded.
âWhat?â
Ben took a breath and swallowed. âBack at the office, you said you trained, so how longâ, uhm, how long have your powers been back? I mean, did you leave on purpose⊠that night?â
There was nothing but silence â heavy, cruel, and suffocating â till the lock clicked. The door cracked open a moment later.
And there you fucking were again.
His heart stopped when he saw you. Still on the floor, back leaning against the wall next to the door, drowning in a Blondie tee, damp hair from a shower, bare legs stretched out over the old wooden boards. You looked better than you did in the afternoon. Tired as fuck, but better.
âHey,â he said softly, like you were a deer in a sunny clearing he didnât want to scare back into the dark woods.
âHey,â you parroted with the same softness in your voice.
Ben could see it then â you didnât hate him anymore. Not like you had. You were pissed and mad and five different flavors of disappointed, but you didnât want to drown him in a volcano any longer.
You swallowed and averted your gaze to your fumbling fingers in your lap. âI was stuck. Nothing was working, no matter what I tried. But, uhm, I got the freezing thing working again after a few weeks,â you explained slowly. âI didnât leave on purpose, though. I told you.â
âYou told me a lotta things.â He smiled weakly. âMost of âem lies.â
âI know. Iâm sorry,â you said quietly and kept your eyes focused on the floor in front of you. âKinda the reason I got scared and panicked. I didnât know how to tell you. Didnât know what the future would look like. Not until I figured out it was a loop.â
He leaned his head back against the door. âYou always had secrets. I knew that much. Youâd look at me sometimes like you knew how everything ended.â
âI guess I did,â you admitted. âOn some level.â
Ben swallowed thickly, nodding. âSo what was the plan? You were never gonna say anything?â
âNo, I would have. I think⊠I wanted to,â you replied. âJust didnât know when⊠or how. I was scared you were gonnaââŠâ
You didnât finish.
âWhat? Kill you?â
You shook your head and met his eyes. âNo, leave.â
âI wouldnât have.â A sad smile twitched on his lips. âSo you really didnât wanna leave?â
âNo.â
The word was barely audible over the music, but he still wouldâve heard it even if someone was standing next to his ear with a jackhammer.
A humorless chuckle escaped him. âYou know, I always figured I drove you off that night. Wasnât exactly subtle.â
âNo, you werenât. You never were,â you said, but it wasnât mean. There was a faint smile on your face.
âNever did get an answer, though,â he noted, swallowing. âStill waiting, yâknow. Still wonderinâ.â
You looked at him then for a long moment. âNot sure you deserve an answer now.â
âMe neither.â He smiled a little. âGive it to me anyway?â
But you shook your head and averted your gaze again. âI didnât mean to fall for you, you know? Didnât mean to hurt you, either.â
He huffed a small laugh. âFunny how that works, huh?â
âI wouldâve said yes. I wanted to,â you said then, taking him by surprise. He hadnât expected an answer. Not when he asked it now and not when heâd asked it back then.
For a while, he didnât know what else to say. Didnât know what to ask that would magically make this all better and fix it. What words were significant enough to bandage a wound this big?
Ben exhaled slowly. âWhy havenât you gone back yet?â
You blinked at him, brow close to reaching your hairline.
âYou could, right? You have your powers again. You could go back right to that moment before it all went to shit,â he clarified.
You were quiet for a beat. âI could. Thought about it.â
Benâs head bobbed thoughtfully. âBut you havenât, right? Otherwise we still wouldnât be sittinâ here.â
âNo, guess notâŠâ
âWhy?â
You found his eyes, and he could see the tears gleaming in yours. Then you gave a weak shrug of your shoulders. ââCause it wasnât real.â
His jaw clenched. âDonât fuckinâ say that. It was. It was real.â
âIt was a lie. A fantasy,â you argued softly. It wasnât cruel â just honest. âIâm not saying my feelings werenât real. They were. But everything else? It wouldâve collapsed. It was inevitable⊠like entropy. We were drifting from order to chaos. From warmth to cold.â
âYou donât know that,â Ben countered.
âMaybe not,â you admitted and looked at him again. âBut itâs not just up to me. Not anymore.â
His brow furrowed. âWhat dâyou mean?â
âItâs your life. You should make the decision,â you told him.
Ben sat with that for a while, let the words sink in, even though he barely understood them.
âYou should go.â
âWhat?â Your brow raised like you hadnât anticipated that answer.
âYou love mâ⊠him, right? So you should be with him,â Ben said, although the answer almost broke him.
You didnât love him. Probably never would. At least not this version of him, so what was the point of holding on? He could get a redo. Maybe even the life he always wanted.
âItâs not that simple,â you said. âThe whole world would change. You would change.â
He snorted bitterly. âMight be for the best,â he muttered. âYouâd make sure I wouldnât cross a line or lose myself along the way like I did without you there.â
âI donât think you understand the implications of it,â you noted. âYou donât know what happens to you â this you.â
He gave a shrug. âI stop existing, right? Just fade away like Martyâs hand.â
You smiled, but it was a sad one. âMaybe. If I go back and stay, the future might rewrite itself, including you. So, yeah, this you would stop existing and get replaced by a new version of you. But thereâs another option,â you explained. âIf I go back, it could just start a new timeline. An alternate one. Which means this one would still exist. Iâd just be gone from it.â
Benâs lips twitched, head bobbing. âSo either I stop existing, or Iâd be here alone forever. That what youâre saying?â
You nodded slowly.
He didnât love that answer. You happy with some other version of him, while he was stuck in eternal misery, forever missing you. He wasnât sure if he could do that â give up on you like that. And maybe that was fucking selfish of him. He knew it was.
âYouâd save a lot of people. Probably,â you added like you were making a pro and con list. âI ran different scenarios, you know? Like simulations in my head of what could happen. Tried to find the right path that would yield the most benefit.â
Ben cocked an eyebrow. âThat what you were doing in the shed?â
âMostly.â You gave a half-sure nod. âI tried to find out how it works. What theory was true.â
âAnd?â
You twitched your shoulders. âInconclusive. Never could figure it out.â
He huffed quietly, shaking his head. âAll these theories and you never thought it was a loop?â
A small smile flashed on your lips. âNo, I did. It crossed my mind,â you admitted and swallowed. âWas just the one I liked the least. Because it not only meant that I couldnât change anything but that I was also the cause for everything.â
âAnd me,â Ben added and met your confused stare. âI sent you back. So I caused it too, right?â
You exhaled musingly. âI guess so. Maybe.â
Benâs brows drew together. âSo who started it? You or me?â
You shrugged again. âI donât know. My guess is as good as yours.â
âYeah, but thereâs gotta be like⊠a starting point, right? A first one?â he asked and saw you hold back an amused laugh. âWhat?â
âItâs a circle,â you said like it would explain everything.
It fucking didnât.
âDoes a circle have a beginning or an end?â you asked in that certain tone of yours he knew all too well â the teacher voice. âThe answer youâre looking for is no, by the way.â
âSmartass,â he scoffed, shaking his head. âThey didnât teach all that futuristic shit yet in my school.â
âWhat, geometry?â You snorted in amused disbelief. âIâm pretty sure they did. You just werenât paying attention.â
âYeah, whatever.â He rolled his eyes back. âBut thereâs gotta be an original version that looked different than all the others, right? Or a version of me that never knew you at all.â
You arched an eyebrow. âJesus, how much have you been thinking about this?â
âA lot. Yeah,â he admitted and cleared his throat. Smiled even. âSo? Whatâs the working theory, Doc?â
âI donât know. Probably?â
Benâs brow wrinkled. âYou ever gonna give me an answer tonight that doesnât sound like itâs cominâ straight outta a Magic 8 Ball?â
You snorted, that little mischievous smirk curling on your lips. âAsk again later.â
âFunny.â He snorted a laugh, but he tried not to be too loud or move too much.
Heâd noticed it a while ago â how the tension faded from your muscles, how the smiles kept creeping in. It was like you werenât even aware you were still supposed to be angry and hurt. You were just doing it subconsciously â talking to him, laughing with him, falling into a pattern with him youâd grown accustomed to over the last few months.
Ben knew better than to point that out and burst it, however. He just enjoyed the bubble. Didnât want it to end. Didnât want you to wake up from your trance. Scared youâd realize then that he wasnât the same guy anymore.
So he said nothing and kept the conversation flowing, hoping you wouldnât catch on for the rest of both your lives. A man could fucking hope, right?
âHmm,â he hummed and feigned contemplation. Then he smirked. âSo, technically, that means the original timeline could be me being on your little history backstage pass, and you payinâ me a visit, right?â
You snorted. âUnlikely. You were never on that list.â
âOh, but fuckinâ JFK is on it?â
You laughed loudly at that. âAre you still seriously hung up on that guy? Heâs been dead for decades. Most likely because of you.â
âHey, I had nothinâ to do with that.â
âLegend said you did,â you countered.
âThat old prick with that coked-up brain doesnât know what the fuck heâs talkinâ about,â Ben muttered. âThat shit about Normandy wasnât true either, was it? I mean, you saw, right?â
âOh, I remember when you made me prove Hughie and I were wrong. Watched you throw a whole-ass tank at like forty Nazis,â you replied wryly.
âYeah, youâre fuckinâ welcome,â he huffed and only snapped out of his internal rant when he heard your soft giggles.
âHow do you even know about my list? I know I never told you about that,â you said then, your brow scrunching into little creases.
âOh, you sure as hell didnât, sweetheart.â Ben smirked wide and lazy. âBut your so-called friends were real fuckinâ chatty today.â
âGreat,â you sighed, then found his eyes. âSo what now? Do you want me to go back?â
Ben pursed his lips for a moment. âCan I think about it?â he asked quietly, foot tapping against the concrete below it.
You gave a shrug of your shoulders. âSure. Timeâs not really relevant. Not for us, anyway. Could tell me tomorrow or a hundred years from now. Literally doesnât matter.â
Ben didnât respond right away. Just looked at you. âDo you wanna go back?â
He for sure thought you wanted to. He thought there could only ever be one answer, almost rendering the question redundant in the first place. You loved the past version of him. That guy could still give you a future and a life you were worthy of. Why wouldnât you want that?
But your answer took him by surprise.
âNo,â you said and didnât break his gaze. âI donât.â
Benâs brow knitted. âWhy?â
âI donât think thereâs a version of us that gets to live the perfect dream life. Where we get everything we ever wanted,â you said. âItâs not how life works. Was just a glitch in the matrix. It was nice while it lasted, though.â
Ben licked his lips, not knowing what he could say to convince you otherwise. âI donât think thatâs true. I think we wouldâve been happy,â he said. âI woulda made sure you were.â
You turned your head to look at him. âI was, and you did.â
Ben nodded and bit the insides of his cheeks. âSo if you donât wanna go back, why you offerinâ?â
âI ruined your life. Only fair you at least get a say in how I do it this time,â you replied, shrugging.
Ben then met your eyes. âYou didnât ruin shit.â
You lifted an eyebrow in disbelief. âReally? Not even a little?â
He huffed a snort. âMaybe a little,â he teased, smirking. âBut kinda ruined me in the best way, sweetheart.â
You didnât say anything to that, just leaned your head back against the wall and stared at the ceiling fan for a while.
âYou know,â you said then, âif I do go back, Russia never happens. You wouldnât have to go through that.â
Benâs lips twitched, almost in amusement. Oh, he thought about it, alright. Surely was fuckinâ tempting.
âYeah? You sure you wouldnât sell me out to the fuckinâ Commies next time you get pissed at me again?â he blurted out before stopping himself.
You inhaled sharply. âNo,â you assured. âAnd Iâm sorry, okay? That wasââŠâ
âA dick move?â Ben supplied with a cocked brow.
You smiled. âYeah, big time.â
ââS fine. Deserved it,â he muttered under his breath.
âNo, you didnât,â you insisted with that same fucking softness in your eyes heâd always seen in you. âWhich is why Iâm sorry.â
There was silence between you again, but it wasnât heavy and loaded anymore. It was comfortable. Calm. Familiar.
âSo what now?â Ben asked then. âWhat happens if you stay here?â
âWhat do you mean?â Your brows scrunched again, and he didnât like that tone in your voice â that finality in it.
âYou still love me, or is this the courtesy break-up talk youâre granting me?â
You looked at him but didnât respond. Just dropped your head back against the wall after a moment and closed your eyes.
âMy parents arenât dead,â your voice broke the silence and made his brows raise.
âI know time doesnât fuckinâ matter to you, and you can see dead people or whatever, but death still fuckinâ exists.â
âNo, I know that,â you said. âTheyâre not dead. Theyâre in Alaska.â
His brow shot up. âAlaska? Butââ
âI did bring them to 1349, and I did leave them there,â you stated and bit your lip. âFor about three years. Then I went back. For them, only five minutes had passed. Still scared the shit out of them.â
âSo what? They fled to fuckinâ Alaska?â
âNo, I dropped them there and told them not to come back, or Iâd leave âem in the Middle Ages for good next time,â you shared, pulling your legs up and leaning forward on your knees.
âRecognizinâ a pattern hereâŠâ
You huffed a chuckle. âI guess so. But thatâs not why Iâm telling you this.â
âWhy are you telling me?â
You swallowed. âThey werenât all bad, you know? I kept thinking about that. I mean, sure, they were addicts, and they didnât really want me, but they had these phases⊠Every once in a while, they tried to get clean, and everything was just suddenly fine.â
Ben could see the tears collecting in your eyes and the lump forming in your throat.
âWeâd go on these family trips,â you continued, laughing softly. âOnce saw Salem Sue. You know that huge cow in North Dakota? And theyâd also pick me up from school and take me for ice cream or pizza or to the mall. Stuff like that. They tried, you know? For a while, they did at least.â
Benâs heart flared up at the sad smile twitching on your lips, however. His gut churned, like it already knew where the story was headed and what morals would be drawn from it.
âThat was the thing, though. It never lasted,â you said. âSometimes it was a week. Sometimes even a few months. At first, I got really exited. Happy âcause I finally had parents who gave a shit, you know? And I figured maybe we could be normal now. But it was always a phase. It wasnât forever. Eventually, theyâd go right back to being the shit parents they were, and I stopped expecting them to change. Stopped being hopeful and excited whenever they had good days because I knew it wouldnât stay.â
âThis isnât a phase,â he said softly. Kept his eyes on you like it might convince you. âItâs not going anywhere. Itâll stick. Iâll stick.â
âSure.â You nodded slowly and pressed your lips into a tight line, then gave a weak smile. âThink I havenât heard it all before? I know all the words in the Book of Addict.â
That cut deep. Trust never came easy to you, and heâd already managed to break it several times.
âIâm notââ Ben didnât finish. Just looked at you and swallowed around the thick lump in his throat while every cell in his body vibrated. He clenched his fists to stop the tremble in his hands â the constant buzz.
âYouâre not, what?â
Ben ground his jaw. âIâve been clean. I havenât touched this shit in months.â
âYou just made me buy pills and coke two weeks ago,â you said. âCalled me at 3AM. Remember?â
âI didnât take it,â he insisted. âI fuckinâ flushed it, alright? Gave it out as party favors. Just called you to keep you busy. Nothinâ more to it.â
And it was fucking true. Sometime shortly after Vought tower and Homelander, heâd stopped. He hadnât used for forty years anyway, and he didnât need the hallucinations of you anymore either because the real you had been right fucking there.
You leaned back against the wall with a sigh â unbothered and unaffected. âIf youâre waiting for applause, youâre wasting your time. Iâve learned not to clap till the showâs over.â
He scoffed quietly, nodding. It was no fucking use, was it? Were you ever gonna believe him again?
âDonât trust me? Thatâs fine,â he said, jaw aching from how hard heâd been grinding it. âI know youâre fuckinâ disappointed in me. Hell, I am too. But Iâll fuckinâ show you.â
âGuess weâll see,â you replied, barely audible.
âDidnât have collateral this entire year, either,â he added like that piece of information would finally convince you. âNot a single asshole died that didnât deserve it.â
You snorted a laugh. âYouâre not serious right now, are you? You woke up in this century with a fucking kill list and unchecked PTSD. You killed like fifty people in the first week.â
âAfter,â he countered. âAfter the tower. After you woke up from your fuckinâ coma, I stopped, alright?â
âYeah, âcause everyone on your list was already dead,â you argued.
âTrust me. Thereâs more,â he rasped.
Stan Edgar. Butcher. Your parents. They were on his fucking hit list now, too. But he knew better than to say it out loud.
âRight.â You clicked your tongue.
âI didnât explode today if you havenât fuckinâ noticed. Iâve got it under control,â he argued further. âEven goddamn apologized to MM a year ago. Did he tell you?â
âHe did.â You gave a small nod. âDid you actually fucking mean it, though?â
âI did,â he gritted through his teeth. âWhat dâyou wanna hear, hm? I did horrible shit, alright. None of it I can fuckinâ take back. And I fuckinâ paid for all of it. Deserved it, too. But I swear to God I wonât let you fuckinâ down again. I wonât.â
You stayed quiet for a heartbeat, licking your lips, head bobbing. Then you met his eyes. âI think you should go,â you said so fucking soft and gentle like those words didnât rip his heart straight out of his chest.
âSweetheart, please.â He hated begging, but for you, heâd be devoutly on his knees for the rest of his goddamn life.
Your fingers curled around the edge of the door, ready to close it, but he stopped it, pushing his hand against the wood to keep it open. His mind, his gut, and his heart screamed at him that itâd never open again once it shut. He couldnât let that fucking happen.
âBenâŠâ
You didnât say his name in anger or annoyance. Your voice was just heavy with a tiredness that seemed to have seeped into your bones.
âJust a little longer? Please?â He stared at you till he saw the tiniest nod and you dropped your hand from the door with a sigh.
âGuess Iâm Jeannie today. Just granting wishes left and right,â you muttered.
Ben lifted a brow. âLike I Dream of Jeannie Barbara Eden?â He grinned then. âMan, I loved that show.â
He didnât mention he fucked Barbara Eden once at the Chateau. Thought it was best to keep that to himself.
âWell, donât expect me to call you âmaster,â Captain,â you huffed wryly.
ââS fine. Eden didnât do that either,â he muttered under his breath.
Your brow furrowed. âWhat?â
âNothinâ,â he said quickly, clearing his throat.
You motioned with your chin to the box next to him. âThat my stuff?â
Ben followed your gaze, gave half a shrug. âUh, well, not just your shit. Just stuff from our time together in general. You ainât gettinâ that projector back.â
You snorted in amusement, then crossed your arms and smirked challengingly. âWhat kinda stuff did you keep in there?â
He pursed his lips. âUh, you know, just memorabilia.â
âLike what?â
He scowled, seeing you barely hide the grin at this point.
âIf you tell me you kept old movie tickets from our date nights in there, Iâm gonna call you a sentimental sap,â you teased.
The frown deepened. âMaybe I just hand âem to you separately.â
You stretched your neck slightly to look behind his torso. âWhatâs in the little box on top?â
âAh.â A slow smirk curled on his lips. âThatâs your little surprise.â
You arched an eyebrow. âYou really think briberyâs gonna work?â
Ben took the small, pink box and held it out to you. âJust open it.â
You kept your little glare on him as you took the box before carefully opening the lid and peeking inside it as if heâd hidden poisonous snakes in there. Then your brow furrowed, head tilting in question.
âCake?â
âStill your birthday forâ,â he checked his watch, ââanother twelve minutes.â
A frown.
âWhat dâyou think youâre doing? This isnât Sixteen Candles.â
âDidnât say it was. Just wanted you to have cake on your birthday,â he said and twitched his shoulders almost innocently.
You inhaled sharply. Bit the inside of your cheeks.
Ha. That one got you.
âIf you let me in, I can you show you whatâs in that box while you eat cake,â Ben added.
âLet me in, children. Your mother has something for each and every one of you,â you said, your voice high and sweet and filled with bubbles of laughter.
Benâs brow knitted. âIs that from a Grimm fairy tale?â
âYup.â
âHuh,â he hummed. âMy mother read those to me.â
âI know.â
âRight.â He clicked his tongue. âForgot I told you that.â
âYup,â you said again and popped the p. Your gaze, however, wasnât on him but focused on the tips of your toes. âMoral of the story, though, I let you in, and youâll eat me.â
Ben bit his lips hard, holding the fucking smirk back. Oh, heâd eat you, alright.
âDonât,â you warned â cute little glare and all. âThe way this has been going so far, I know once youâre inside, youâre never gonna leave, and then I have to leave, and I donât wanna leave my apartment, so youâre staying out.â
Ben nodded, then smacked his lips. âConvincing.â
You exhaled a long sigh, he blinked, and then suddenly, you were skimming through pages of your notebook in concentration, still in the same spot you used to be like nothing had changed, the box next to him gone and now next to you.
Well, shit. Heâd overplayed his fucking hand.
âWhatâs in there anyway?â he asked. âNever could fuckinâ read it.â
âThatâs the point,â you replied without glancing up.
âLooks like fuckinâ hieroglyphs,â he muttered with a scoff.
âItâs a secret language I invented when I was six,â you shared. âI started keeping travel journals after the first few jumps, so I could keep track of everything. The different writing system functions as a fail-safe in case someone steals it or I accidentally leave it somewhere.â
âHuh. And whatâs this one say?â
âUh, itâs some equations, journal entries, memories from the future I wrote down before forgetting, which is why I need this now,â you said, turning pages like you were searching for something specific.
âAnything âbout me in there?â
âEverythingâs about you in there.â
You still didnât look up when you said it. Didnât sound sentimental or even gentle. Just presented it as a fact.
He gestured toward the currently opened page in your lap. âWhat does this one say?â
âOh, uhmâŠâ You hesitated, brow knitting like you werenât sure you cared to share it. âItâs from that day at the lake in May. The one where I pushed you off the dock.â
Ben laughed softly. âRemember that one. Wanna read it to me?â
You looked at him, then let out a breath. Slammed the notebook shut. âNo, look, Iâm tired. Iâve been awake for over thirty hours and this birthday has lasted close to six months. Iâm basically jet-lagged. Can you just get to the point? Why are you here?â
Ben licked his lips and leaned back against the wall. His eyes found yours. âYou already know why Iâm here. Canât tell me that you donât. Just tell me what you want, and Iâll do it.â
âI already told you what I want, and youâre not listening again,â you said, voice sharp as a whip. âLeave me alone. You hovering doesnât help. I swear to God youâre the worst ex-boyfriend ever. I want time. Thatâs what I fucking want.â
Benâs mouth opened and closed, green eyes flickering. The fucking thought alone was making his chest hum alive.
âI donât want you to disappear again,â he admitted and swallowed around the lump in his throat.
You exhaled a deeply frustrated breath. âIâm not, alright? But only if you go now.â
He looked up the stairs leading to the street and away from you. âFor how long? When can I come back?â
âBen,â you sighed his name and rolled your eyes.
He nodded. Relented.
âAlright, fine.â
He rose from the uncomfortable concrete three minutes past midnight and glanced down at you one final time. âHappy birthday, sweetheart.â
You got back onto your feet as well, gave a nod, and the door closed.
Sleep was impossible.
No doubt, you were fucking exhausted. Tired in your bones, your blood, your heart, your goddamn soul.
But still â no fucking sleep.
As soon as you closed your eyes, your mind was racing. It wouldnât shut off. And your heart? That was racing, too. Either from fear, yearning, or fucking both, you werenât sure.
Ben was gone. Yet, he was still fucking everywhere.
You tossed. You turned. You sighed your frustrations at the ceiling and groaned into pillows. Counted sheep and listed the first one hundred decimals of pi. Still nothing.
It was too quiet or too loud. Too dark or too light. It wasnât fucking home.
You hadnât slept in this bed in months. Not really. And now, wrapped in its sterile warmth, blanket pulled up to your shoulder like armor, curled into a ball on the mattress like an Armadillo, you felt even farther from yourself.
Home felt like somewhere else now â in the bed you used to sleep and the guy you used to share it with.
Because not only were you struggling with your feelings, temporal jet-lag, and timelines â you also fucking missed him.
This wasnât your bed. The spot next to you was empty. And nothing fucking smelled like him anymore.
No arms around you. No steady breathing next to you. Just emptiness â like entropy knocked on your fucking door tonight and invited itself in to stay.
Your muscles remembered another rhythm. Another routine. Another weight.
For five months, thereâd been someone next to you. Someone you loved so much it fucking hurt. Now they were gone.
The worst, though? You thought youâd never get him back. Thought there was nothing left to rebuild. But after tonight, you werenât quite so sure anymore. Tonight felt easy. Comfortable. Familiar.
It felt as if he was still there. Still him. Scraps of him buried under inches of shit, sure, but still.
You saw the flickers of light through the thicket. Saw not the supe, but Ben.
Twenty-three. Dumb as hell. Soft in the rarest places. Calloused hands that knew how to touch without hurting. A man who tucked you into his side like you were something worth keeping warm. A man who laughed in his sleep and sometimes pulled you closer without waking.
That was the rhythm you knew now. And without it, your own heartbeat felt wrong.
You shifted onto your back. Then your other side. Kicked the blanket off. Pulled it back on. Flipped the pillow. Nothing fucking helped.
He said he loved you. Then he said you were a liar.
He kept your things for eight decades. Then he pushed you away for a whole year.
And despite all the nightmares and the differences and all the cruel things heâd ever done or said, you still fucking loved him. God, that was the worst part.
You loved him. And Ben? He broke you open anyway.
Then it fucking hit â the first sob that clawed through your body like it had built since January of â42.
The kind that crawled up your throat without warning. Ugly. Choking. Whole body shaking.
You curled into yourself, and it kept coming. Louder now. Guttural. The kind of crying that wracked your chest and made your teeth ache.
Everything fucking spilled out â the grief, the time, the loneliness, the betrayal.
You werenât just mourning what he did.
You were mourning everything you thought youâd found in 1942 â all the people, the places, the versions of you that felt brighter and stronger and freer. You were mourning a life you couldnât go back to. A home youâd built with hope and love, only to have it dissolve in a single blink of an eye.
You sobbed until you hiccupped.
Until the pillow was soaked beneath your cheek.
Until the silence swallowed you up again.
Until the knock came.
It wasnât loud. Not like before. Three slow taps, almost reluctant â like he was giving you time to pretend you didnât hear them.
Your breath hitched again. Your eyes, already raw, squeezed shut tighter. Like that might somehow undo the sound and make him disappear again.
Then came his voice â low and unsure in the night. âCan I come in?â
You stayed silent.
âDidnât go far,â he admitted. âI heard you. Just wanted to check on you. Didnât think you wanted me here. Still donât, probably. But Iâm askinâ anyway.â
You wanted to say something â to yell, to scream, to beg him to go or stay or hold you tighter â but your mouth wouldnât work, and your chest was a collapsed building like a nuclear bomb had torn through it.
The words formed on your tongue, but your lips didnât move.
âIâm gonna open the door now,â he gave you a warning shot. âIf you donât want me to, say somethinâ. Donât fuckinâ disappear on me, alright?â
You didnât, and the door creaked open.
He stepped in slowly, boot steps soft for once. The smell of city air followed him in â summer heat and burning asphalt and different flavors of cuisine.
The couch beneath you dipped. The mattress creaked beneath his weight with carefulness. He didnât reach for you right away. He sat still for a moment â like he was giving you one final out.
He always did.
And when there was no resistance, the warmth of his arm ghosted around your waist. Slow. Hesitant. Tentative. Like he expected you to pull away. Like he was afraid touching you might set the whole world off again.
You still didnât stop him. You never did.
His chest then pressed lightly to your back. His hand settled just beneath your ribs â warm, solid, steady.
Fucking perfect.
âHey, itâs me,â he whispered close to your ear, breath hot against your skin. âIâm still fuckinâ here.â
That was it â the fucking dam broke again.
You curled inward, sobbing so hard it felt like your lungs were trying to escape your body. Everything youâd buried â the grief, the fear, the ache of missing him â unraveled like a thread pulled too tight for too long, the seams of your heart giving way all at once.
Fury. Loneliness. Need â and somewhere in it, a kind of gut-deep relief that made your ribs hurt.
And Ben? He held you through it. He always did.
Didnât say anything more. Didnât try to fix it. Just anchored you with his body, impossibly strong and steady and safe behind you, grounding you to something fucking real in a world that was absurd.
He was gravity, and you were in free fall.
You pressed your forehead into your pillow and cried until there was nothing left but the sound of your own ragged breath. Benâs nose buried in your hair, lips kissed your crown, arms wrapped around you tighter.
Eventually, your breath began to slow. Evened out into lazy waves.
You turned then in the arms around you â slow, cautious, unsure of what you were doing until your face found his chest, your palms flattened gently against him. Your body still slightly trembled like the aftershocks of an earthquake, but his warmth seeped through your skin and soothed it like a balm.
You looked up, and his eyes found yours instantly â quiet, wrecked, waiting. You searched his face like you were ensuring each freckle was still in place. He looked as tired as you felt, and he wasnât armored now.
No sneer. No shield. Nothing cruel or smug or sure. Just him â the same guy who whispered dumb jokes in the dark to make you laugh and who let you fall asleep against his chest like heâd never let go.
Just Ben.
His hand lifted and brushed a tear from your soaked cheek. Then another. And another. His thumb lingered at your jawline, rough and gentle all at once.
His forehead touched yours, and you exhaled a soft, shaking breath. He tilted his head just slightly. Not pushing. Not rushing. Just waiting.
And you kissed him.
Soft.
Slow.
Salt still on your lips.
â¶ïž Chapter 17: The Stuff That Dreams Are Made of
A lot of you asked me "Omg, how are they ever gonna get back together after all of this and that brutal fight? Something big needs to happen." But I always felt like what they needed the most was a quiet night and no armor (or only little lol). Did you expect to end it there?
And for you angsty souls out there â don't worry. Something big's still coming that will either solidify their bond more or break it altogether đ
Coming Up:
âYou want me to leave?â
Your gaze drifted to the door, then back to him. You shook your head. âActually, I was thinking about taking a drive.â
Ben lifted a brow in surprise. âLike a joyride?â
You scoffed a chuckle. âTrust me. There wonât be any joy.â
âEven better.â He smirked and watched you roll your eyes back.
âItâs a memory thing,â you shared and grabbed your nonsensical notebook from the nightstand. âJust have to check some things I wrote in here. See if it jogs anything.â
Ben bobbed his head, gave you a smirk â just a flicker of it. âYou want company?â
You didnât smile, but your voice came softer this time. âIf you can behave.â
He chuckled low in his chest. âNo promises, sweetheart.â
Summary: Unable to control your abilities, youâre stuck in the present with Billy Butcher, his team, and Americaâs first asshole. At this point, youâve become Soldier Boyâs personal punching bag. But when an accident leaves you stranded in 1942, you run into a familiar face and suddenly rely on your future tormentorâs help as your only hope.
Pairing: Soldier Boy x supe!Reader
Warnings: 18+ for language, back in the present, SB being his charming self and every (bad) thing that comes with it, humor, slightly less angst, fluff if you squint, pining, deja-vus, enemies to lovers to enemies, slow burn pt. II
Word Count: 6.7k
Posted on Patreon June 8, 2025
A/N: Progress? Progress! Finally a "normal" chapter length, too lol. See this as an interlude to calm down a little from the angsty ride we've been on before I slap you again with all the emotions in the next one đ
âš Chapter title inspired by The Lady Eve (1941)
Main Masterlist || Series Masterlist || Tag List
Chapter 15: I May Be a Thief, but I Am Not a Cheat
Ben shouldâve let you go.
After all the shit you threw at him back at the office â after the screaming, every accusation, every inch of distance, the way you looked at him like he was the worst thing that ever happened to you, the threat to toss him back gift-wrapped to the Reds like yesterdayâs trash â yeah, any sane man wouldâve called it. Cut his losses. Walked out and never looked back. Left you to figure your shit out on your own like you always insisted you could. Anyone with half a brain wouldâve taken the fuckinâ hint.
Ben didnât.
Because somewhere after all the yelling and the crushing silence that followed, he noticed what you hadnât taken with you: your purse. No keys. No phone either â since youâd left that thing in â42 and it was still corroding in a box at his place. Plus, there was also the slight issue of spotty memories.
You just stormed out like you had somewhere to go and something to prove, marching off like you had a plan when you were really just bleeding pride and borrowed bravado.
Fuckinâ typical.
And now, here he was â walking the streets like a goddamn idiot, looking for you, all the while assuring himself it wasnât about you. He didnât stalk you because he thought heâd be welcome or even get a thanks â hell no. Youâd made it fucking clear he was the last person you wanted to see. He told himself he was only doing a simple safety check. Damage control. That was all â not care.
But that was all bullshit, and he knew it, too. The truth was a lot uglier:
He still gave a damn about you. More than he wanted to. More than he probably should. But nonetheless, he still undeniably loved you. Still wanted to fix what he broke, even if youâd never let him. So he followed because the idea of you out there â alone, angry, lost â felt worse than anything you couldâve said to him.
Even the part about the Reds.
You could hate him all you wanted. But he wasnât gonna sit on his ass while you bled out in some alley trying to prove you didnât need anyone, least of all him.
The sun was starting to dip behind the rooftops, painting everything in a buttery orange that couldnât even make the cracked sidewalks and rusted window grates look poetic.
Ben stood on the corner of 10th Street and Waverly, jaw twitching and arms crossed like a bouncer on break as he leaned against a rusted lamppost and scanned every damn alley, stoop, and corner store on the block in the waning summer light.
Greenwich Village still smelled like weed, dog piss, and overpriced coffee. Same as always. It also had some of the worst goddamn real estate heâd ever seen. One could slap Monet lighting on a shit neighborhood and itâd still be a shit neighborhood.
âDumb fuckinâ kid,â he muttered and rubbed a hand down his face.
Ben spotted you before you spotted him â easy to do, since you were squinting at every third brownstone like it might suddenly turn into your damn front door. Not to mention, you looked like youâd just walked off the soundstage from The Philadelphia Story.
That damn navy dress still clung to your frame, though it had started to dry and wrinkle in the June heat. Hair slightly mussed, the red bow off-center like it was hungover, while you spun around on bare feet like a broken compass.
Just sheer force of will and bad directions.
You were walking with the determination of someone absolutely certain they werenât lost, which meant you were definitely fucking lost.
Of course you fuckinâ were.
If there was one thing he could count on, it was your stubborn-ass pride. Youâd walk until your legs probably gave out before admitting you didnât know where the hell you were going. It was a character flaw. And oddly fuckinâ adorable.
Ben pushed off the post and crossed the street, dodging a food delivery guy on a goddamn scooter and weaving between pedestrians.
âWell, well,â he said, loud enough to catch your attention. âFancy runninâ into you in the street again.â
âOh, for fuckâs sake.â You spun around mid-step, scowling. âAre you serious right now?â
Ben smirked. âMissed me?â
You, on the other hand, looked murderous. âGo. Away.â
âNot a fuckinâ chance.â
âI told you to stop following me.â
âDidnât do that in â42 either, if I remember correctly,â he shot back, falling into step beside you without invitation.
âYeah, and if youâd fucking listened to me back then, we probably wouldnât be in this goddamn mess,â you retorted and picked up your pace.
Picking you up off the street that day? Still the best fucking decision he ever made.
Ben gave a taunting laugh. âYeah, you yelled at me to stop followinâ you. Then took off like you knew what the hell you were doinâ. No fuckinâ plan. No fuckinâ idea what year it was. Refused help, told me to screw off. Kept sayinâ you were fine like thatâd make it true. Sound familiar? You pulled this same shit back in â42.â
You exhaled like the air around him was toxic and turned again. Ben followed â again. Because thatâs what he did now, apparently. Chasing fucking ghosts who didnât want him.
âGreenwich ainât that big, sweetheart. Even youâre gonna run outta blocks eventually,â he quipped patiently. âWhere you headed?â
âHome.â
âOh yeah?â He slowed to a smug stroll. âNeed help finding your place, sweetheart?â
âI donât need anything from you,â you muttered while squinting at street signs.
Ben held up your purse like a white flag. âYeah? Then whose keys are these?â
Your glare faltered just half a second before you snatched the bag out of his grip. âGive it.â
âCâmon, Iâll walk you home,â Ben said, jerking his chin up the sidewalk. He exhaled a sigh, shook off some of the impatience in his bones, and tried again â a little softer. âLet me walk you home, okay?â
âFuck off,â you spat and thundered right past him.
Of course. Because why would you make it fucking easy for once?
âYou even know what street you live on? What your building looks like? Your front door?â
âYes.â
âYou sure? âCause you passed it âbout five fuckinâ blocks ago.â
You sighed in dramatic annoyance, still checking street signs and shops for some kind of clarity. Didnât look at him. Ignored him â or whatever the fuck you were doing because of your stupid pride.
âIâm looping around, okay? None of your fucking business,â you huffed and spun halfway, glancing back down the direction you came from.
Ben snorted. Couldnât hold it in any longer. âLoop around? You think Manhattanâs a fuckinâ circle now, sweetheart?â
Your glare snapped to him. âIâm taking the scenic route.â
âThrough this shit neighborhood?â Ben cocked a brow. He was still not supposed to laugh, right?
âI have a general sense of direction, okay? I donât fucking need you to play hero. You suck at it, anyway,â you bit and started down the street toward the food carts again.
âAfraid Iâve still got the directional advantage,â he said, slowing beside you. âYouâre not even close to your fuckinâ place. Youâre lost.â
âIâm not lost. Iâmââ You stopped and blinked around again.
Ben rolled his eyes, sighing under his breath. âLemme guess. Youâre close, right?â
âI am close,â you insisted and then pointed vaguely up the end of the block. âMy apartmentâs justâ⊠down that way."
What kind of delusional brand of stubborn fucking were you exactly?
Ben turned his head and looked down the street with theatrical dismay. âReally? âCause youâre not even pointinâ in the right direction, sweetheart. Unless your place got up and walked in the last twenty minutes, youâre âbout three blocks off.â
âGod, do you ever shut up?â
âItâs the third time youâre passinâ the Korean BBQ, sweetheart,â Ben continued, voice full of smugness he couldnât shake. Somehow heâd missed that kind of back-and-forth with you. âGuy inside thinks youâre casinâ the place. Looked terrified. Think heâs about to call the cops.â
âWhy the fuck are you still here, huh? You got what you fucking wanted,â you snapped. âThe loopâs done. Youâre still you in all your fucked-up glory. We can go our separate ways again. You donât fucking need me anymore.â
Ben smiled through the pain in his chest. âYouâre fuckinâ smart, but youâve never been more wrong.â
You were never gonna believe him, were you? You were never gonna trust him again. It was like he could finally see all the shattered pieces floating in the vast space between you and him. He didnât know which ones to reach for first to try glueing it all back together again. It seemed fucking impossible.
You opened your mouth, getting ready to argue again, but were cut off.
âOh my god,â a guy with a DSLR slung around his neck and a shopping bag in hand interrupted brightly, stumbling to a stop beside you. âAre you an extra on Mrs. Maisel? Is this for season six? You look so perfect. My wifeâs a big fan. You think I could get aââ
âSheâs not on some dumb fuckinâ show. Beat it, jackass,â Ben barked. âWeâre in the middle of somethinâ.â
âSorry! Love the costume though!â the guy called back before jogging away.
Ben watched you cross your arms tightly around yourself, suddenly becoming a little more aware of the people around you.
âWhat was that about? Whoâsââ Your brow furrowed, trying to find the words on the tip of your tongue like they were just hiding underneath it.
âYou donât remember?â Ben licked his lips, watched you timidly shake your head. âItâs a show you used to watch with the girls. Some dumb feminist bullshit. Caught five minutes of it that made me want to slit my goddamn throat.â
âIs that why they all are staring at me? Because of the clothes?â you asked him, and Ben wasnât even sure you meant to direct the question at him, but you still did.
He looked around as well. Bystanders, tourists, one idiot with a fanny pack trying to take a picture who Ben was fighting the urge to punch. He nodded slightly, focusing back on you. âThat, and the fact you look like a fuckinâ bootleg Casablanca extra doinâ the walk of shame â which ainât a wrong assumption, I guess.â
You rolled your eyes. âAre you trying to make this worse?â
âDonât have to try.â
You staggered a little then â just a twitch, really. But Ben saw it and felt the worry creep in. Heâd seen it once before. A minute later, heâd jumped out of a window at Vought Tower almost a year ago now.
Ben smacked his lips and took a step closer when you werenât looking. âListen, how âbout we cut the rerun of the pride parade short, and you just come with me instead?â
You whipped around. âWhat?â
âMy place,â he said. âPenthouse. Midtown. Working A/C, real water pressure, clean towels. You can crash there. No strings. Itâs quiet. You can get some rest. You look fuckinâ exhausted. Hell, itâs even big enough so you donât have to see me.â
It worked the first time around. Maybe it would work aâ
âAre you fucking insane?â You stared like heâd just offered to dissect your brain. âIâm not going anywhere with you.â
âFigured.â He shrugged coolly. âStill had to ask.â
Worth a shot.
You resumed walking. He followed again.
âYour apartmentâs a shitty basement unit under a crumblinâ brownstone. Itâs got a busted window latch, cracked blue kitchen tiles, and peeling wallpaper. You can hear every argument from the goddamn street. Really sellinâ the whole âmodern womanâ vibe in that palace,â Ben muttered. âNever liked you livinâ there.â
âI like it. Thatâs all that fucking matters,â you huffed.
âYou canât even remember that shithole.â
âItâs still mine.â
Ben exhaled and ran a hand through his hair. âFine. Whatever.â
Heâd been to your place before â both when you were there and when you werenât. Heâd snuck in sometimes when you hadnât been home, looked through your stuff as he tried to get to know the real you. Find out who you truly were beyond the version of you heâd met in the forties. Heâd stand in the middle of your shitty kitchen like a burglar with no intent. Reading scraps. Photos. Mugs with chipped sides. All of it too small. Too worn.
Not good enough for you â not even close.
âI donât need your help,â you gritted through your teeth. âI didnât ask you to be here.â
âDoesnât mean you donât need someone,â he said softer than he thought he would.
You scoffed in disbelief. âAnd you think that someone is you? After what you fucking did?â
Ben set his jaw. âI didnât come here to argue.â
âGood. Then leave.â
âNot until you stop wobblinâ like a fuckinâ baby deer on meth.â
âFuck you.â
âThere it is.â A slow smirk crawled across his lips. âGotta say â the entertainment valueâs fuckinâ great, sweetheart. Watchinâ you try to outstubborn your own brainâs a hell of a show.â
âI swear to God, if you donât stop following me, thenââ
âThen what? Hm?â Ben prompted and met you head-on, although his heartbeat was slightly accelerating. Heâd heard it the first time â your threat. âYou gonna throw me back to the eighties and the Reds? I donât give a shit.â
He did. He gave all the shits. God, he was praying big time this wouldnât fucking backfire. That he wouldnât antagonize you so much youâd actually do it. But what more did he have than a fucking bluff?
All in or fuckinâ nothing.
You ceased all movements and looked up at him then. Brow a little creased, eyes fierce. But there was something darker in your gaze than just fury or threats â determination.
âNo, I wonât bring you back there,â you said, and he wouldâve exhaled a breath of relief if your voice hadnât been so gentle â so fucking calm. âBut I will go. Iâll leave. Pick a place in time you canât reach, and I promise youâll never fucking find me again.â
Benâs heart sputtered to a stop. Shit. He hadnât accounted for that â not for your powers being fully back once youâd returned and not for you disappearing on him again.
Actually, there was a lot of shit he hadnât correctly calculated. Probably because you were the fucking math genius and not him. And he couldn't exactly turn back fucking time either. All he could do was punch a hole into his own goddamn head and hope that'd make it better.
His jaw locked tight to keep the muscle from twitching. âDonât fuckinâ do that,â he snarled before swallowing the anger down. âDonât-... Don't leave⊠please.â
You stared at him for a long moment then â you angry, him angry (and a little desperate at this point), chests heaving.
âThen finally let me fucking go, Ben,â you said, and the words prickled like knives in his heart.
You wanted him to do the only thing he couldnât do â that he swore heâd never do. Letting you go was not an option. It never had been. Heâd tried it before, so many goddamn times heâd lost count.
Fuckinâ futile.
Still, this time, he almost did. What else was there to fucking do? He was running out of goddamn ideas till his brain reminded him that youâd called him by his name just now. Youâd said it. Actually fucking said it.
To him.
As if he wasnât an entirely different person like you so vehemently claimed he was. So maybe you did see it â saw him like you used to. At least starting to.
Before his brain could supply more brilliant ideas, he caught you staggering another step. One more step backward and your hand darted to the brick wall beside you. You blinked, your knees shook, breaths grew labored. Your nose twitched, and your hand flew up to your face.
The blood came fast â just a drip, then another, your fingertips painted red.
His stomach dropped, his smirk dropped faster. Your knees gave just enough to make him lunge forward, and Ben was at your side in a second, arms reaching for you.
âWhoa, shitâ⊠Hey, easy⊠I got youââ
âDonât fucking touch me!â
Your voice hit like a whip. Not loud. Not harsh. Just final.
It stopped him cold. The words sank deep. Cut clean. Same tone youâd used back in 1942.
Same shit you said to him when he first offered you his hand and you looked at it like it was a trap. You didnât want comfort then. You didnât want it now either.
Ben slowly lowered his hands and backed off â and it hurt like fucking hell.
You leaned heavily against the wall of the corner store and slowly slid down to the cool concrete with a wince. Back slumped, one knee up, blood still streaking down the side of your face. Your eyes were sharp. Distant. Locked up like you couldnât afford to let him close.
He watched you for a beat, jaw clenching. You were breaking. Physically. But you still wouldnât let him in.
Of course not.
Ben raked a hand through his hair. âJesus fuckinâ Christ⊠Fuckinâ always the hard way with you. Youâre goddamn impossible.â
You looked like you wanted to argue but thought better of it in the last second. Just shut your eyes and tipped your head back against the wall.
âYouâve been pushinâ too fuckinâ hard. Same shit all over again,â he swore under his breath, pacing in front of you. âHow many was it, huh? Three time jumps today? Maybe four? Five? What the fuck were you thinkinâ? You think your brainâs a fuckinâ trampoline?â
No response, just you with your eyes squeezed shut and concentrated on your breathing.
âEvery damn time,â he muttered, shaking his head. âCanât take help. Canât slow down. Got a fuckinâ death wish?â
Still nothing.
Ben took a steadying breath. âOkay, fine. You donât want my goddamn help? Fuckinâ fine.â
He yanked out his phone and started tapping that stupid fucking touchscreen, searching for the only number in there that wasnât his dealer or some idiot from Voughtâs PR team.
You peeked at him through half-lidded eyes. âWho are you calling?â
âSomeone whoâll pick you up and get you home,â he said gruffly.
âWho?â
âAnnie.â
Your brow raised. âAnnie?â
âSheâs your friend,â Ben clarified, crouching next to you now, still careful not to touch, although heâd love to do nothing more than reach out and brush a loose strand of hair out of your face. âGoes by Starlight in the cape world. Blonde. Church-girl energy, but donât let that fool you. Sheâd kick anyoneâs ass for you. Kinda talks like a Midwest Girl Scout with a vengeance complex.â
Your lips twitched just barely.
âShe might bring her boy toy along â String Bean. Pale and nervous. Has that wet-rescue-puppy look. Talks too much. Always yappinâ about feelings. Makes me wanna drown myself in Listerine,â Ben added and swore he heard a ghost of a snort. âHell, Baguette Boy and his mutant ninja girlfriend might trail along as well. Probably make it a goddamn team event,â he scoffed and rolled his eyes a little, then looked back at you. âTheyâre your people. You used to trust them. Donât fuckinâ ask me why. Theyâre a bunch of soft-ass weirdos.â
You were quiet. Breathing slow. Still pale.
Ben let out a sigh and then hit the contact he never wanted to use.
âAnnie,â he snapped when she picked up. âYeah, itâs me. Shut up â and donât fuckinâ hang up.â
He looked down at you. You had blood on your hands now. Smudged across your cheek.
âYour bestieâs on West 10th and Bleeker. Alley next to the weird bookstore that smells like fuckinâ feet... Yeah, that one. Says sheâs fine and lying âbout it. Looks like shit.â He exhaled a theatrical sigh through his nose and turned his eyes heavenward briefly. âIâm not fuckinâ touching her! She made that crystal clear⊠You gonna come get your girl or what? Fuckinâ hurry before I duct tape her to a bench.â
Ben hung up.
âSheâs cominâ. Gonna be here soon and get you home, alright?â
He sat back against the wall beside you then, just far enough not to invade. Just close enough to catch you if you tipped. For a long moment, there was only silence between you. Just the hum of traffic and the soft buzz of a city that didnât care who was bleeding or broken, so long as they werenât in the way.
âThanks,â you mumbled almost inaudibly.
Benâs head snapped to you, eyes locking on you before he swallowed. You werenât looking at him, but your voice was clear. Quiet. Honest.
And surprised â like you hadnât expected him to do the right thing.
Progress?
Ben cleared his throat. âYeah, donât get fuckinâ used to it, sweetheart.â
You huffed something like a laugh. Maybe. He didnât ask for clarification.
You were half-passed out against the wall by the time he heard footsteps coming fast down the block.
When Annie rounded the corner about ten minutes later in a denim jacket and moral superiority, Ben stood and gave you two space, letting her do what he couldnât.
She dropped beside you in a halo of blonde hair and vanilla body spray. Her voice was soft and urgent at the same time. âHey, I got you. Oh my God, you okay? Weâre going home, alright? Easy now.â
You stirred a little. You seemed to recognize her â maybe not by name but by feel. You didnât pull away, leaned on her without resistance as she helped you to your feet.
Annie shot him a look as she passed. A quiet one. A little grateful. A little suspicious.
Ben just nodded. He didnât exactly trust himself either. He watched silently as the two of you disappeared around the corner. You didnât say goodbye, but you did look over your shoulder at him for a flash of a second.
And then?
Ben followed. A quiet shadow down the sidewalk. Two blocks behind. Just in case. Because if you passed out again, heâd be there. Even if it wasnât him you wanted. Even if youâd never ask him to catch you.
Because whether you asked or not â he wasnât ready to stop watching your six.
Because he always would.
It was a bad fuckinâ idea.
Ben knew it was a mistake the second he got off the elevator, walked down that too-clean hallway with the too-bright lights, and stopped in front of the most unassuming goddamn door in all of New York.
Heâd stood there for a solid thirty seconds, fist raised, before he finally knocked. Hell, not knocked. He fucking pounded on the door like he was serving a warrant. Three heavy thuds â enough to make the picture frames on the other side rattle.
The kid opened the door cautiously, blinking up at him like someone had just activated his goddamn social anxiety from across the hall. âUh⊠hey?â
Hughie. Small. Pale. Looked like he hadnât slept in a week. Hair sticking up, socks mismatched, holding a bowl of popcorn like it was a fucking shield against intruders.
Ben didnât wait for an invitation. He brushed straight past String Bean and walked right in. Honestly, the kid should be fucking grateful he didnât burst through the door like the goddamn Kool Aid Man.
âYa know, you should really get a chain on that door. You live in New York, not Mister Rogersâ neighborhood,â Ben said, glancing around and scrunching his nose into something that resembled disgust. âSomeone could just fuckinâ walk in and murder you.â
âYou literally just did thatâŠâ he heard the kid mutter under his breath and ignored it.
Everything was fucking soft in here. Ben hated it. The place was small. Clean. A little too put together, which meant Annie decorated it. Warm lighting. Throw blankets. Scented candles. Fluffy pillows. A framed photo of the kidâs dad on the wall.
Jesus fuck.
Ben dropped onto the couch and let out a sigh like he hated furniture on principle. Hughie hovered behind him like a fucking hostage.
âPlace looks like a Crate & Barrel catalogue threw up in here,â he muttered.
âUh, thanks?â Hughie scratched the back of his neck. âIâ⊠uh, Annieâs not here, if thatâsââ
âI know where she is,â Ben snapped. âI didnât come here for her. And would you fuckinâ relax? Iâm not here to kill you either.â
âThat is⊠surprisingly not comforting,â the kid mumbled and stepped a little closer.
âNeed somethinâ,â Ben murmured without looking at him.
âYou need something?â Hughie slowly arched a brow.
âAdvice.â
âAdvice?â
âFuckinâ Christ on a cross, is there a goddamn echo in here?â Ben grunted in annoyance. âI just said that, right? You gonna repeat everything I fuckinâ say?â
âUh, right, sorry⊠No, guess not.â Hughie shook his head, swallowing. âJustâ⊠you know, surprising. You⊠here.â
Ben just stared at him, deadpan.
âOkay, yeah, uh⊠what-, uh, what can I help you with, I guess?â Hughie shuffled awkwardly into an armchair like he was about to be interrogated.
Ben rubbed a palm over his face. Jesus fucking Christ. Big mistake. Colossal.
âSoâŠâ Hughieâs palms drummed on his thighs. âAdvice onâŠ?â
âWomen.â
The kidâs brow furrowed so much Ben worried heâd get an aneurysm.
âFrom... me?â
âAre you deaf?â
âRight, yeah, sorry.â Hughie swallowed once more, then cleared his throat.
Ben looked around the room, jaw grinding. âLook, youâre a scrawny, overtalking anxiety ball in sneakers and a thrift store hoodie who somehow landed a girl ten leagues outta your fuckinâ pay grade. So clearly youâve got something going for you.â
âThanks? Is that a compliment?â
âDonât push it,â Ben grunted. âSo, how dâyou fuckinâ do it?â
Hughie tilted his head. âAre you asking how I got Annie?â
âIâm asking how you got her to stay.â
âOh.â
There was a long pause. Ben felt stupid just sitting there. What the hell was he doing? He shouldnât have fucking come here. Why the fuck did he think the kid was his last resort?
Because you hated him. And not in the fun, flirty, âweâll argue and make outâ kind of way. The real kind. The kind that had teeth.
And Hughie? You liked him. Ben had overheard you say several times over the last year that String Bean was a good fuckinâ boyfriend to Barbie. And if he really thought about it he knew why you liked the kid so much. He reminded Ben a little of himself. He used to be like that, didnât he? Soft. Still better, but he supposed the mushy heart was the fucking same.
Ben leaned forward and looked at the floor for a second, rubbed his palms. âShe hates me.â
âAre we talking aboutââ
Ben gave him a look.
âHer. Right⊠Sorry.â Hughie blinked. âJust wanted to make sure, you know? âCause you two⊠Well, I mean, are you honestly surprised she hates you? Youâve kinda been a dick to her since youâve known her.â
âI was more than a dick to her,â Ben muttered.
âYeah, I was trying to be nice,â Hughie retorted and closed his mouth instantly upon Benâs glare. âSo, what? You... like her now? What did she mean when she said you knew? What did you know?â
âNot fuckinâ important,â Ben huffed.
âMan, câmon, you canât do that. You gotta give me context. Something,â Hughie argued weakly. âHow else am I supposed to help you?â
âJust get to the goddamn part where you tell me how to make her forgive me,â Ben snapped. âAnd you better suggest somethinâ more useful than flowers or jewelry. She hates that fuckinâ shit. Would probably try to strangle me if I gave her a necklace.â
Hughie squinted his eyes at him, straining himself a bit too much. âUhm, so⊠what you said back at the office, that was true?â
Ben stared at him. âWhat part?â
âThe-, uh, the⊠cum part.â
Shoot him. Or better yet â heâs gonna shoot the fucking kid soon.
Ben just glared silently.
âSo you two actually slept together,â Hughie said like he realized heâd entered some goddamn horror movie. âThatâs, uhm⊠Wow, okay.â
âWhat?!â
âNothing.â Hughie cleared the awkward lump from his throat. âJust⊠surprising. Thatâs all.â
âYouâve said that before,â Ben gritted.
âDo youââŠâ Hughie stopped and pressed his lips together.
âSo thatâs a yes,â Hughie surmised and blew a raspberry, thinking. âWaitâŠâ He cocked his head then, the creases on his brow deepening. âDid you know her?â
âWhat dâyou mean?â Ben prompted with his last thread of patience. Something was wrong with your fucking generation. Fuckinâ seriously.
âI mean like⊠from the past? Your past,â Hughie clarified.
Benâs jaw clenched. âNone of your fuckinâ business.â
âSo thatâs another yes,â Hughie muttered under his breath, gaining a little more attitude.
Ben took a deep breath, tongue swiping over his teeth, eyes still on the floor and the godawful carpet. âI fucked up,â he admitted and hated how the words tasted like rust in his mouth.
âYeah, no shit,â Hughie mumbled as if he still didnât know after a goddamn year that Ben had super-hearing. âI mean, what, uh-, what exactly did you do? How did you fuck up?â
âDoesnât fuckinâ matter,â Ben muttered.
âNo, uh, trust me â it-, it does,â Hughie said and gave a nervous chuckle.
Ben exhaled a sigh and found the kidâs eyes. âYou know what I did. Just tell me how I can make her forget all the crap I put her through this year.â
Ben scowled and clicked his tongue. âYou wanna get fuckinâ slapped again? I donât think youâre fuckinâ charged now, are ya?â
Hughie pursed his lips and quietly placed his hands in his lap.
Ben scoffed. âYeah, thought so.â
âIâm trying to help you, alright? Could be a little nicer. I mean, thatâs the real issue here, right?â Hughie shot back.
Well, look at that little shit. Finally grew some fuckinâ balls without the poison.
Ben leveled with him, softened just the tiniest bit. âJust tell me how to fix it, okay? Last year, Barbie was pretty pissed at you, right? What did you do to get outta the doghouse?â
Hughie scratched his head. âHonestly? I just showed up and⊠listened. You know, no ego, no pressure, no superhero shit. Just let her know that I was there for her.â
âThat it?â Ben stared at him like the kid had spoken in tongues.
âUh⊠yeah.â
âI hate that.â He slumped back into the fluffy fucking cushions. He wasnât exactly a patient guy after eighty-one years.
âYeah, I-, uh, I wasnât really a big fan of it at first either,â Hughie admitted with a breath of a chuckle. âStill arenât, actually.â
âGreat.â Ben stood with an exhaustive sigh. âWell, this was a waste of my time. You were fuckinâ useless.â
Hughie forced a tight smile. âGlad I could help.â
Ben walked to the door, hand already curling around the knob when he heard String Bean pipe up again.
âWait, uhmââ Hughie looked at him like he wasnât sure Ben deserved another second or even something that remotely resembled help, but then he crossed his arms. âDoes she love you?â
Ben turned and met Hughieâs eyes, then gave a faint nod, even though he wasnât sure if that word didnât belong into the past tense now.
âOkay, uhm⊠Look,â String Bean started, âfor your very⊠vague situation, maybe remind her what she loved about you in the first place, you know?â
Ben frowned when the kid muttered âif itâs still thereâ under his breath.
âIt is,â he bit but absolutely hadnât meant to fucking blurt that out. Emotional vulnerability felt like peeling his own fucking skin off. But still, his head bobbed with an idea. âI might know somethinâ,â he muttered.
Ben didnât elaborate. Just ripped open the door and left without a goodbye or thanks.
Your head was buzzing like a beehive.
The stairs down to your apartment felt longer than you recalled. Also more narrow. And steeper. The concrete was uneven and damp with the kind of city sweat that never quite evaporated.
The iron gate creaked as Annie pushed it open. She didnât say much as she helped you down them. Just stayed close, her shoulder brushing yours like sheâd done it before a million times.
By the time you reached the door, you were exhausted in a way that had nothing to do with muscle and everything to do with brain. You never wouldâve found this place on your own.
Your front door was green? You couldâve sworn it was red.
âThis is you,â Annie said softly, her voice in that tone that sheâd probably use for a kindergartner too as she unlocked the door. âYour home.â
Home.
A shudder ran down your spine at the word, skin crawling with fire ants.
And the moment you stepped inside, your senses short-circuited.
The kitchen had baby-blue tiles with cracks. There was a worn couch against the wall next to it. A bookshelf next to the door was crammed with notebooks, physics textbooks, photo albums, and mismatched mugs. A hallway led to the bathroom and also served as a closet, apparently.
It was goddamn small. Benâs bedroom had been thrice the size of your entire apartment. But it wasnât just your place â the city as well. Everything suddenly felt too loud, too confined, too hectic.
There was no space to breathe anymore. Worst of all â you didnât recognize any of it.
But it was slowly coming back to you, bits and pieces crawling back into your mind. You remembered Annieâs last name and her birthday again. You knew that youâd always talked French with Frenchie, which was an easy mnemonic. Youâd weirdly remembered Butcher first out of all of them, as if your brain was sorting them all by level of danger to you.
Survival first, friends second.
The apartment looked lived-in. Personal. Even the clutter felt intentional. But none of it truly felt like yours.
Annie hovered behind you for a beat. âStill exactly how you left it. I mean⊠you were only gone an hour from our side.â
You nodded, numbly. âRight.â
âHow long-, uhmââ Annie started and swallowed, âHow long were you gone on your side?â
You pressed your lips together, not really wanting to talk about it â at least not now. It had been one fucking long day.
âFive months,â you still replied.
âWow.â Annie tried not to let her shock show too much, but it was obvious. âAnd Soldier Boy was there? Like, the whole time?â
You swallowed and gave a slight nod, not saying more.
Annieâs frown deepened. âWhenâ⊠or where did youââ
âLook, uhmâŠâ you cut in, squeezing your eyes shut with the next migraine attack. âI donât wanna be rude, but Iâm exhausted.â
âNo, totally. We can talk another time,â Annie said quickly. âGet some rest, alright? Your couch pulls out into a bed, by the way.â
âGreat,â you sighed but still forced a grateful smile. âThanks. For everything.â
âYou sure you donât need anything? I can stay, you know?â Annie checked, gifting you a smile that was probably supposed to be reassuring. âNo talking. I promise.â
âNo, uh, thank you,â you said slowly. âI think I just need some time alone right now. Sleep. Sort through my stuff. Figure out which shirts are my favorite again.â
Annie giggled, but mostly out of politeness to hide her concern. âRight, yeah. Iâll check on you tomorrow again, okay?â
âSure.â You nodded and watched her disappear out the door, releasing a breath of relief.
Alone at last. It hadnât been like this for a while.
You were too goddamn tired to care what shit littered your apartment, or what you remembered and what you didnât. You knew where your shower was, so that was where you headed first.
You peeked into the spotted mirror for a mere second and barely recognized yourself. No wonder all these people had fucking gawked at you in the street.
You turned on the shower and let it steam up the mirror to hide your reflection. Then you undressed â let the navy dress that clung to your skin finally slide down to your feet.
Youâd put it on this morning. But it wasnât yours. Not anymore.
The water was warm, the spray soothing, even though you barely fit into the small shower. However, none of it truly cured the aches you felt everywhere. But the white noise of the rushing water at least tuned out everything else and let your mind finally quiet.
It all happened too fucking fast.
You got up at 7:39 AM on June 16th, 2023. You knew because your alarm always went off at half past seven, and youâd always hit the snooze button once. It was routine.
Only for you, that had already happened more than five months ago. Not today. Not this morning.
This morning, in 1942 on July Fourth that was, you opened your eyes sometime shortly after six. You didnât wake up alone. You woke up when Ben entered you and whispered âgood morningâ into your ear with a lazy, half-asleep smirk like he sometimes used to do. It was almost routine, too.
Then youâd spent the entire day with him by your side. Laughing. Dreaming. Loving.
Now it was nothing. All gone.
Now, you were here.
You used to have a twenty-three-year-old boyfriend, who was equally parts sweet and charming and absolutely fucking unbelievable. He was human. A miracle. A challenge. A secret worth cracking and a man worth loving.
And now? Now he was 104, wrecked, rough, and cruel in ways you still didnât have names for. Selfish. Manipulative. A fucking liar.
Sure, you knew you werenât entirely innocent either in all of this. You couldâve walked away back then. Figured it out on your own. You shouldâve.
But you let Puck take the wheel, saw an opportunity you couldnât resist. What was the harm, after all? Solider Boy was awful and vicious. Heâd deserve it.
Maybe youâd teach him a lesson, just to see if you could. Maybe youâd find something embarrassing or personal or worthy of blackmail.
But you hadnât expected to find this. Never thought youâd fall so fucking hard that itâd hurt to get back up.
You never thought youâd fall in love with him. But you fucking had.
What now?
Rough fucking birthday, even longer fucking dayâŠ
You turned off the shower and stepped out. Another look in the mirror told you you looked slightly better. Not as rough around the edges like before. You didnât smell like him anymore either. That both somehow helped and didnât.
But you still felt him in your fucking bones, your blood, your heart. The hot water couldnât wash it out of your system. Heâd festered in your soul like a cancer â or fucking salvation.
Because truth was, you still fucking loved him. Still saw him â all of him. Still understood him.
And it all made it hurt so much fucking more.
How could he have fucking done this? To you. To everyone. To himself.
Tiredly, your fingers then ransacked through your closet and a stack of t-shirts. You recognized some but not all. You put on the one youâd decided you liked the most and then moved into the tiny living space, pulled out the couch to a bed with a loud squeak, and went through the crate of chaotically organized vinyls next to it before putting one that sounded good on the old record player in the corner.
Then you plopped down and finally closed your eyes. Gave your spinning mind some peace. It took five and a half songs before you heard it â a knock at your door.
Your heart jolted to a halt, released a breath of relief, and then plotted how it could escape your ribcage and jump into his arms. You knew who was standing on your doorstep before you even heard his voice.
Ben.
â¶ïž Chapter 16: I Don't Care What the Papers Say!
Looks like they have a couple of things to figure out next week đ How did you guys like this one? I craved the slower pace a bit, especially after the last one, and loved writing that little deja-vu street chase. Is he still as charming and sweet as he was in the '40s? đ
Coming Up:
Ben exhaled slowly. âWhy havenât you gone back yet?â
You blinked at him, brow close to reaching your hairline.
âYou could, right? You have your powers again. You could go back right to that moment before it all went to shit,â he clarified.
You were quiet for a beat. âI could. Thought about it.â
Benâs head bobbed thoughtfully. âBut you havenât, right? Otherwise we still wouldnât be sittinâ here.â
âNo, guess notâŠâ
âWhy?â
You found his eyes, and he could see the tears gleaming in yours. Then you gave a weak shrug of your shoulders. ââCause it wasnât real.â
His jaw clenched. âDonât fuckinâ say that. It was. It was real.â
âIt was a lie. A fantasy,â you argued softly. It wasnât cruel â just honest. âIâm not saying my feelings werenât real. They were. But everything else? It wouldâve collapsed. It was inevitable⊠like entropy. We were drifting from order to chaos. From warmth to cold.â
âYou donât know that,â Ben countered.
âMaybe not,â you admitted and looked at him again. âBut itâs not just up to me. Not anymore.â
His brow furrowed. âWhat dâyou mean?â
âItâs your life. You should make the decision,â you told him.
Summary: Unable to control your abilities, youâre stuck in the present with Billy Butcher, his team, and Americaâs first asshole. At this point, youâve become Soldier Boyâs personal punching bag. But when an accident leaves you stranded in 1942, you run into a familiar face and suddenly rely on your future tormentorâs help as your only hope.
Pairing: Soldier Boy x supe!Reader
Warnings: 18+ for language, violence, smut & attempted assault, 2022 & season 3, Herogasm, SB being his charming self and every (bad) thing that comes with it, drug use & drinking, PTSD, mentions of torture, physics, one-sided pining, injuries, jealousy, ANGST
Word Count: 18.7k
Posted on Patreon June 1, 2025
A/N: This chapter is one wild, chaotic ride and full of angst! Also apologies in advance for that beginning, the middle, and, uh, the end, probably đđ
âš Chapter title inspired by a line in Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966)
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Chapter 14: Iâm Going to Have a Lot of Drinks
The motelâs Vacancy sign buzzed outside the window in red neon, casting lazy pulses of light across the cracked walls, the sun-faded window frames, and the worn carpet of the room.
Ben sat on the small bed, barely watching his old movie flicker across the ancient TV. The bed springs creaked beneath you both, your head still resting softly against his arm.
He could hear everything that went on in a motel at 3AM: someone snoring next door, water dripping in a pipe somewhere, the vending machine outside coughing out a can, and a cat yowling by the dumpsters.
But what he focused on most was your breathing. Slow. Steady. Trusting.
You were out like a light. Leaned against him like he wasnât a monster but just the comfiest pillow in the world.
Your cheek was warm against his bicep, lips softly parted. His arm had gone phantom numb a while ago where your head rested. Your hoodie was bunched up a little around your waist, baring patches of soft and taut skin to his eyes. Your jean shorts hugged your hips like a sin, one bare thigh pressed against his leg, the heat of you bleeding through his sweats.
Ben didnât know how the fuck this happened. Youâd crashed next to him on the creaky motel bed, all attitude and sarcasm one minute â and then youâd gone still.
He hadnât dared to move since then. Couldnât if he wanted to. Not even to breathe right.
The movie flared with machine gun fire and patriotic nonsense. A sharp boom shook you awake. You stirred, eyes fluttering as you blinked blearily at the screen.
âThere she is. Welcome back to the land of the living.â He looked down at you and met your groggy eyes with a wide smirk. âYou were droolinâ on me, sweetheart.â
âShit. SorryâŠâ You sat up next to him, shifted just slightly to bring enough space between the two of you again.
Ben almost sighed at the loss.
âIs that⊠you?â Your gaze drifted back to the TV.
âYeah, one of the old ones. Itâs a classic,â he said, still smiling.
âArenât they all?â you retorted, voice still laced with sleep. âStill watching old movies of yourself, huh?â
âItâs called nostalgia.â
âItâs called narcissism,â you quipped with that same sharp tongue. âIs that a railgun?â
âSure is.â Ben grinned smugly.
âYou know, thatâs not how electromagnetism works. Youâd need a whole substation strapped to your spine,â you noted. âWhere the hell would you store that much capacitor power? In your ass?â
Ben gave you an amused look, chuckling. âItâs a movie, Doc. Not a science fair. You get off on ruining dreams? Pretty sure itâs illegal to look that good and talk that nerdy.â
You rolled your eyes. âFlattery? Must be the forty-year dry spell talking.â
Ben laughed lowly. âYeah? Care to end it? Could volunteer for science, Doc.â
You snorted, but Ben caught how you shifted on the mattress, how your eyes flicked briefly to his mouth. Unconscious, maybe, but still there.
âCareful,â you warned playfully. âIâve got a thing for self-destructive men with god complexes.â
âLucky for you, Iâve got both,â Ben drawled, spread his legs a little wider, kept his eyes trained on your lips.
And he saw it â the way your thighs pressed together slightly. Subtle, but sure as hell not invisible. Your body gave you away before your brain had caught up.
He knew the fucking signs. Knew them like the back of his hand. Knew what he had to say to get you all hot and bothered.
He deserved nice things, right?
âWanna find out what else I could do with these hands besides holding a weapon, sweetheart?â
Your breath caught.
Bingo.
âThink about it.â Benâs smirk deepened, voice low and coaxing, smooth as bourbon. âHavenât been touched in decades. Havenât tasted anyone in just as long. Think about how starved I am. How much Iâd fuckinâ devour you.â
You didnât respond, but your fingers twitched against the bedsheet. And Ben saw it â saw it all. Saw the little twitch in your muscles that held back the squirm. Saw the war playing out behind your eyes.
Fight or surrender.
âWhat? Youâre gonna tell me that didnât do anything for you?â His head cocked, brow lifting. âBecause Iâm pickinâ up a few signs, sweetheart.â His voice dropped another notch. âLittle tension in your legs. That shift in your hips just now. Not exactly subtle.â
You looked down, as if trying to reset. But he wasnât about to absolve you. He let the words hang in the air for a moment. Waited. Patience was a fucking virtue predators knew how to enjoy.
And then, his fingers stretched a little. Skimmed the bare skin on your thigh. Slow. Deliberate. Barely brushing.
You didnât move but bit down on your lip â like a fish on a hook.
But then, to his surprise, your head tilted, your eyes dragged over him â speculative, curious, challenging â and a smirk curled.
âOh, yeah? Wanna back that up or are you all⊠talk?â
Ben laughed it off. Heâd just been teasing. Talking shit. He knew you wouldnât go through with it. He enjoyed the foreplay nonetheless.
Still, he humored you. Wanted to see how far youâd go before backing down.
His hand slid over his thigh, patted it, fingers spread wide. He grinned â lazy, bold, certain. âWanna find out? Right hereâs the impact zone, sweetheart. You can calculate my thrust velocity.â
Youâd done it once before. It was impressive â you and him. Actually made him wonder if he could break his old record now with super-everything.
Surely, right?
Your eyebrow arched â fucking smug. âThink you can handle me?â
Ben gave a slow, wicked grin. âOh, I know I can.â
And certainly, he thought you would back out now. Heâd done this dance with you before. But in an unexpected turn of events, you rose on your knees, crawled over, and straddled his thighs.
No hesitation. No asking. Just a smooth and taunting swing of your hips, and you settled in his lap like you fucking belonged there, hot against the worn cotton of his sweats.
And Ben? His dick twitched up immediately, thick and straining beneath the fabric, aching from how long it had fucking been. His hands caught your hips on instinct, rough and grounding.
Muscle fuckinâ memory.
âNot sure youâre ready,â you teased, warm breath brushing his ear. Hands pressed against his chest, then slowly slid up to his shoulders, locking around his neck.
âDangerous game youâre playinâ, sweetheart,â he rasped, eyes darkening. His fingers were already itching to pull you all the way. âYouâre sittinâ on a loaded gun.â
There was the little smirk on your lips again. âForty years, huh? Hope youâve been saving up, soldier.â
His breath punched out of him in a low groan. His resolve broke. Hands gripped you hard and greedy, dragging you closer.
He leaned in, lips brushing your jaw, grazing your throat. Fucking inhaled you.
âYou sure, sweetheart?â he growled, hands roaming your thighs, fingers digging into the soft flesh. ââCause you got no fuckinâ clue what youâre gettinâ into here, but Iâm gonna make sure you feel it goddamn everywhere.â
âYeah? Show me.â A slow smile formed on your lips, nose brushing his. Teasing. And then you rocked.
Just once.
And he saw fuckinâ stars.
That was all it took. His hand flew to the back of your head, tangled in your hair, mouth crashing against yours. His tongue claimed you â filthy, desperate, fucking hungry.
But your lips met his with a slow drag and lazy tongue strokes â teasing, daring, coaxing. Not rushed. Not frantic. You kissed him like you were memorizing him â like he was something worth savoring.
Your teeth tugged on his bottom lip till he growled. You rocked your hips forward again, a slow grind, dragging the heat of your pussy right over the thick bulge in his sweats.
âShit, baby,â he hissed. âYou sit in my lap like that, and Iâm gonna fuck you like I own you.â
You moaned into his mouth when he pulled you down harder, one hand gripping your hip and helping you move, the other sliding beneath your hoodie to find bare skin.
Palmed at your waist, your ribs, the fucking softness of your tits.
He couldnât believe he had you again. That you were moving on him like this â raw, aching need in every grind, every gasp.
âFeels like you missed this,â you teased breathlessly.
âOh, sweetheart, you have no fuckinâ idea.â
Your pace got filthier â less teasing, more need. His cock strained hard against the sweats, precum soaking through the fabric, catching where your shorts rubbed down on him again and again and again.
He gripped your ass, rutting up into you. Chasing it. âFeel that, huh? How hard I am for you? That thick fuckinâ cockâs begginâ for you. Forty years of waiting to be buried in that tight little pussy. Imma fuckinâ ruin you. Make you fuckinâ mine again, baby.â
You whimpered, pressing your chest to his. He kissed your neck, licked it, bit down hard, left a fucking mark on your skin.
He bucked up into you, losing rhythm. You chased it anyway â moaning, rocking, dragging your cunt over his cock like you needed it to breathe.
âFâFuck, baby. Just like that,â he grunted, already twitching under you. âFuck yeah, rub that pussy all over me. Make a fuckinâ mess, sweetheart.â
You rolled your hips in sharp little circles, moaning salaciously into his neck. He was fucking addicted to the obscenity. To the fucking sounds he was drawing from you.
His fingers tugged impatiently at the hem of your hoodie. âOff,â he growled. âOr Iâll fuckinâ rip it. Need to see those tits, baby. Been too fuckinâ long.â
You pulled your hoodie off in one swift motion.
No fuckinâ bra. Just glorious tits how he remembered them.
âFuck, baby, still so fuckinâ perfect,â he murmured against your ribs like he was worshipping at a fucking altar.
He latched onto your breast, mouth sucking your nipple between his teeth, groaning like heâd gone a lifetime without the taste. You gasped, arched into him, rubbing your clit against the ridged shape of him.
âFuckâ⊠Need youââ you panted.
âYou have me, baby,â he rasped between bite marks on your skin, loving how they fucking stayed. âYou always fuckinâ had me.â
He shoved a hand between your bodies, past your waistband, dragged his thick fingers through your slick, groaned when it trickled and drenched his fucking hand.
âLook at you, sweetheart. Already such a fuckinâ mess. Already so fuckinâ soaked for me from just a little grinding, huh?â he muttered, rough thumb working your clit. âFuckinâ knew it. Fuckâ⊠Thatâs my girl.â
âFuck me, please,â you whimpered.
And then, fabric ripped. He didnât care, just tore your shorts off and left you bare in front of him. He shoved down his sweats, just enough to free himself, cock springing against his stomach.
Hard. Thick. Flushed dark with need and fuckinâ twitching.
You gasped when the blunt head rubbed against your slit. He slid through your folds, coating himself â teasing, smug, and fucking wrecked.
âYou want it?â he asked. Low. Raspy. Dangerous. âFuckinâ say it.â
âPlease.â
He grinned like the fucking devil. âGood fuckinâ girl.â
He thrust up hard â one stroke, all the way in. You cried out when his dickhead slammed against your cervix, nails digging into his shoulders. Heâd split you open and sealed the wound in one go.
Tight. Wet. Hot.
Just like he fucking remembered. And you? You rode him like youâd done it before. Like youâd missed it. Like it was fucking yours.
âThatâs it, baby. Fucking Christ, just like that,â he praised, head dropping back with a rough moan. His hands guided you, eyes watching as you squeezed him just right and got off on the upstroke. âTake it. Take every fuckinâ inch like I know you can. Fuckâ⊠Be my fuckinâ hero, sweetheart. Ride itâ⊠ride your cock.â
The rhythm was brutal, desperate, punishing. Years of deprivation behind every snap of his hips. The whole bed creaked like it might collapse. You were moaning â open, loud, messy. Like you didnât care this whole dump could hear you getting ruined on his cock.
The sound of your voice fucking shattered him.
âFaster, baby,â you begged breathlessly.
He gave it to you. Gripped your ass â rough and bruising â and started fucking up into you like he meant to breed you.
âFeel that fuckinâ stretch, baby? Feel how fuckinâ deep I am inside this pussy. God, shit, still so fuckinâ tight,â he choked on a moan. âBeen dreaminâ of this pussy⊠Fuck, been dyinâ to be inside you againââ
You gasped, writhing against him, clenching around him, thighs flexing, chasing that high. But then: âFuck, Soldier Boy.â
Ben stopped. Stiffened. His hands went slack around you.
You were still moving, still kissing him, still breathless in his lap. But for him? The moment cracked open like ice underfoot.
A hand cupped your cheek, tried to force you to look at him, but you didnât.
âFuck, baby. Just look at me. Itâs me. Itâs Ben,â his voice tried to reach you, but you were too far gone. âItâs Ben, baby. Please, justâ⊠just look at me. Just fuckinâ remember me.â
ThudâthudâTHUD!
Three heavy pounds rattled not only the door but also him awake. Ben jolted up, chest heaving, weary green eyes blinking around the room
Daylight. TV off. Your spot next to him empty. Cold.
And Ben? Fully clothed and painfully hard as a rock.
He couldnât have fucking nice things for once, could he?
And in a sick twist, you groaned âComing!â from the bathroom and stormed toward the door, pulling a hoodie overhead as you went. Didnât care that he was right there and seeing you half-naked â a fucking stranger.
Yeah, Ben would put a fucking stop to this once you were his again. What happened to goddamn modesty? But hey, at least it was long enough for him to peek: bra, dark navy blue, and a lot of delicate lace around those beautiful tits.
Heâd love to tear that thing off of you.
The asshole then brought presents: a happy hero meal and some fuckinâ drugs â the hard, good shit. He tossed it like Ben was a shelter dog that had bitten too many people and was soon gonna be put down. And you, on the other hand, got some translated folder and a gigantic cup of frap-somethinâ with an obnoxious amount of whipped cream and caramel.
But youâd always had a sweet tooth, so it didnât come as much as a surprise. What fucking killed him, though?
You pulling out the fuckinâ straw and going to town on it, tongue licking cream like itâd never done anything else.
Ben almost blew his load and a gasket in the fuckinâ Geiger counter, wanting to throw the damn thing out the window.
Rough fuckinâ morning⊠And it had only been the first goddamn day of many.
At least, he had some Bennies to get over the pain above (and the ache below) â well⊠until you fucking ruined that, too.
Because you watched him. Sitting on the bed, cross-legged, sipping coffee and still working that damn straw. Eyes on him.
His back was half-turned, but he still caught it in his periphery as he was halfway through crushing pills to dust with his knife.
Judging.
âProblem, sweetheart?â His voice was a little too gruff, a little too deep, a little too defensive. Too confrontational.
âNo,â you replied, bored. Almost deadpan. Then you casually opened the folder in your lap, directed your gaze there, took a slurp of coffee through the straw, and added: âMy parents always snorted their breakfast, too.â
Then, you gave a shrug of your shoulders and started reading â innocent. Like you hadnât just launched him into complete chaos.
You liked teaching people lessons, alright. You also liked fucking with them. On purpose.
This was the goddamn problem with smart women â especially if they fucking knew it, too. They knew exactly where to hit and make it stick.
But Ben couldnât help the little smirk twitching on his lips â almost proud.
Back then, your brilliance and genius was cute â not threatening. Now, though? With all you could do? All that power wrapped inside one tiny girl? A little scary.
Dangerous.
And well, he was a little dangerous, too. You and him had always made a good team in the past. Now, the two of you could be unstoppable.
He just had to ensure you stayed in your fucking lane â and he didnât mean that in a bad way. Just⊠rein you in a little â like taming a fucking wild horse.
His gaze flicked briefly back to you. You were watching him again, subtly, your eyes not on the knife but the tremble in his hands. The way he ground his jaw a little too tight.
Fuck. Heâd forgotten about your shitty parents.
Did you have a fucking problem with this? Probably, if your parents were fucking junkies, right? And here he sat, supposed hero turned nuclear weapon and addict. He felt a little ounce of shame curling in his gut.
And still, he felt his blood itching for it more. But he couldnât do this with you here. Couldnât do it with you watching.
âYou know, all this tension could be solved if you just went and made us breakfast, doll. Maybe put on a skirt and apron, smile a little. Thatâs what you broads were built for, right?â
The room went silent.
Your jaw dropped slightly, eyebrows lifting. But then you ground your teeth and a fire flickered alive in your eyes.
âJesus,â String Bean breathed, eyes wide.
Ben knew where to hit. Knew how to weaponize what he knew about you to get rid of you â or so he thought.
But you only scoffed in amusement and rolled your eyes before delivering your punch: âGod, itâs like youâve been alive for a hundred years only to make cavemen look evolved.â
Then you got up from the bed and strolled over to Butcher, ignoring Ben like he didnât exist anymore.
âIâm taking a break,â you announced and puffed your chest out, shoulders straight. âAnd I want vacation days, Butcher. I know youâre technically blackmailing me, but I still think I have at least basic labor rights. MM and that CIA lady gave me forms to sign, so I know Iâm employed somewhere.â
Ben straightened slightly at that. Blackmail? What the hell did that fucking mean? That asshole better not be threatening you, or Ben would punch that dick to goddamn Uranus.
Butcher sighed â loudly. âJesus fuck, sunshine, how âbout we talk when the jobâs done, alright?â
But you didnât back off â not even a little. Ben listened in amusement. Didnât dare to look fully and give anyone the impression that he actually cared about this little spat, but he still enjoyed it greatly â enjoyed the fucking destructive wildfire you were.
âAfter this jobâs done, Iâm not gonna stick around, so you better figure it out now,â you bit, all flames and heat. Then you held open your palm â waiting, demanding. âGive me your car keys. I wanna go see Kimiko and check on Frenchie.â
Butcher scoffed in response and met your challenging gaze. âThe hell you are.â
Oof. Wrong move.
âWhat dâyou think youâre doing? You know I can just freeze your ass and take them,â you said and raised your open palm a little higher. âGive.â
Butcher met you head-on. âTry. You donât even know where I hid âem.â
âI donât care if you shoved them up Hughieâs ass. Still gonna dive in and find them,â you retorted.
âWhoa, uh, just like to clarify â he did not⊠shove anything up my ass,â the kid muttered nervously, blinking at you with those pleading puppy dog eyes.
Ben almost snorted out loud into his soda.
Butcher groaned dramatically, rolling his eyes back like heâd been dealing with enough sassy employees for a week. He then hauled out a jingling set of his keys from his pocket and placed them in your palm.
You grinned, triumphant and satisfied. Ben wanted to kiss you stupid for it.
âDonât fuckinâ take too long,â Butcher growled.
âIâll take as long as I want,â you called back, already out the door as it fell shut behind you.
Benâs eyes flicked to the messy white lines in front of him, then back to the door. He felt torn. Torn between relief and worry.
Because now you were out there â alone, unprotected, and out of his sight. What if you fucking disappeared again?
He didnât like that thought at all. He had to keep an eye on you â keep you close.
âWhereâs she off to?â he asked, drawing the assholeâs attention to him.
âHospital,â Butcher replied curtly.
âSheâs, uh, visiting a friend of ours,â the kid added helpfully, earning him a raised look from his boss.
âWhatâs this talk about blackmail?â Ben asked with a casualness only he could feign, snorting his first line.
âInsurance policy.â The asshole smirked. âDonât worry about âer, mate. Guarantee she wonât be a problem.â
âGood.â Ben matched his smile while imagining ripping the guyâs throat out with his teeth.
No one got to fucking threaten you and live to tell the tale. For now, though, Butcher was useful in keeping you close, but heâd surely made it onto Benâs hit list with that little stunt.
The assholeâs smirk widened then. âLetâs get to business, shall we?â
After striking his little deal, Butcher eventually went to hunt down the first names on his list and left Ben alone with the kid as his babysitter â like that would actually help if he blew.
Luckily, you came back about three agonizing hours later â made fun of his movie that was playing on TV while plopping down on the worn couch next to the kid.
Not next to him. Not like the two of you were closer. Not like you hadnât already shared every part of you with him.
Drove him and the Geiger counter fuckinâ nuts.
On top of that, you and String Bean were annoying the shit out of him with questions, with your judgment, with your fucking righteousness â like you kids could actually understand what was on the fucking line here.
Ben was trying to protect you. He loved you. And you? You fucking forgot about him.
At least, Butcher then came back with good news â the location of the fucking twins.
Ben suited up in the bathroom, walked out, and found the two idiots shooting something up their veins while you tied your shoes casually on the bed next to them like it was just another fucking Tuesday.
He smelled the Compound V instantly â but different. Green. Didnât look like Vought was even pretending to hide the poison under false advertising anymore.
Ben then glanced at you â same black sneakers, jean shorts, and a new black hoodie that read: âMay the mass times acceleration be with you.â
Christ on a crossâŠ.
Star Wars? Fuckinâ seriously? God, you were a bigger nerd than he ever thought.
âThat what you wearinâ, sweetheart? Whereâs your fucking suit?â Ben asked, eyeing you sideways.
You tilted your head, amused, gaze grazing him from head to toe. Then you snorted a laugh. âYeah, Iâm not gonna be caught dead in something like that,â you replied and then grinned, gesturing down your outfit. ââSides, this is my armor. Iâm not a sparkly unicorn that shits rainbow glitter. Donât need a lot. Got my onyx slippers.â You clicked your heels. âThey used to be red. You know, like ruby slippers? But I switched to black after I lost part of my abilities. Figured it was more appropriate âcause, you know⊠Iâm in mourning.â
Jesus fuck. You were not built for fucking battle. Now, Ben was even more reluctant to drag you into this â Herogasm of all things. Not exactly a place he ever imagined you in the middle of.
Benâs eyes drifted to Butcher, chin nodding toward you. âCan she fuckinâ stay here?â
âNo can do, guv. House full of supes? Weâre gonna need âer,â Butcher replied. âJust try to get along, yeah?â
You smirked winningly and brushed purposely past Ben. He almost pushed you against the nearest wall.
âDonât worry, gramps. I wonât bite as much,â you said, grinning. âAll I need is for someone to be distracted for a second while they read whatâs across my tits.â
Ben made the mistake and looked down at the white lettering again, and suddenly, in the next blink of his eyes, you were on the other side of him, smirking wide.
âSee?â
God, this was gonna be fuckinâ annoying, wasnât it?
Ben gave you an impatient and tight smile, unamused. âCute lil party trick, sweetheart. Donât fuckinâ do that again,â he warned but kept his voice calm â almost playful. Still, he didnât want you to get any fucking ideas. âYou at least got a fuckinâ supe name?â
You grinned then â cocky, bold, and mischievous. âPuck.â
Benâs brow furrowed. âLike hockey?â
âLike Shakespeare, you bardless brute,â you retorted your correction. âIf youâre not careful, Iâll turn your head into an ass as well â a real one, not a donkey.â
Benâs lips twitched with a challenging smirk. âWell, if you pardon, we will mend.â
Ooooh... Your fuckinâ face was glorious. Your brows drew together, you stumped so much your shoulders actually flinched an inch backward, and your head tilted the other way.
You were fuckinâ impressed now, werenât you?
âHuh. Who knew you actually know more than godawful action movies,â you muttered.
âImpressed? Whoâs a fuckinâ bardless brute now, huh?â Ben retorted smugly.
He still fucking was. Only reason he knew that line was because his English teacher once made him participate in a play of Midsummer Nightâs Dream to save himself from a failing grade. But hey, he loved acting and it had been easier than writing a fucking essay.
Heâd gotten a standing fucking ovation, too. Of course he had.
But the look in your eyes? Fuckinâ worth dragging that out from the cobwebbed corners of his mind.
After more curious questions from you about his Shakespearean knowledge, came a four-hour car ride to Vermont (or hell), where he had to share a backseat with you.
And you, you fucking menace?
You leaned your back against the door, stretched your legs across the seat, and rested your bare feet on his thigh.
No asking. No hesitation. Just did. Didnât even look up once.
And Ben? He was strung taut like a wire the whole ride. Tried not to twitch pathetically. Tried not to outright beg for you to touch his dick with your goddamn pinky toe.
He tried to keep his mind occupied instead. Solve this fucking problem, so you could actually touch him. And that was when he noticed it â you touched him.
Not just now, but back at the motel, too. Since the minute you and him first spoke at the trailer, actually. Sure, you kept your distance â but mostly because you didnât like him. Not because you were scared of him.
This whole time, you hadnât cared about close proximity at all. You didnât seem terrified of him even a little â which was fucking frightening for different reasons entirely.
When they finally arrived at their location, Ben then decided to test that little theory in action as he stalked through the mansion with you.
Heâd told you to stay in his fucking eye-line, pretended it was for the sole reason he didnât want you to pull a stunt on him again and freeze him. But in reality, he was protecting you â and making sure those little perverts better kept their clammy hands by their sides.
His experiment, however, came to full fruition then. First test: gently putting his hand between your shoulder blades as he guided you through the house. Second test: letting it rest briefly on the small of your back. Neither of them yielded a fuckinâ reaction.
You didnât flinch. Didnât scowl. Didnât say anything. Didnât give a single fuck.
But Ben remembered the way youâd jumped like heâd burned you whenever heâd done it in the past.
So, what the hell happened between then and now? Or, well, now and some arbitrary date in the future, he supposed.
âGod, I canât believe you founded this depravity,â you muttered, nose and brows scrunched as your eyes drifted around, barely being able to decide which abomination to judge first.
Fuckinâ adorable.
âWhoa, hey, just to fuckinâ clarify â I didnât foundââ his gaze flicked around, tongue poking out between his teeth as he searched for the right words, ââwell, whatever the hell this freak show is. You know, back in the day, this used to be a classy gig. YeahâŠâ A smirk crawled across his face at the memory. You wouldâve loved it â not that he wouldâve fucking shared you with anyone. âCigars, bourbon, even had a flag bikini contest to boost morale. Think, a gentlemenâs club for the Rat Pack.â
You wouldâve fucking won that damn bikini contest.
âLovely.â You gave him a deadpan look, arms folded tightly over those tits underneath that baggy hoodie like you were trying to keep the slime of this place away from you. Your gaze then swerved off to a threesome on the kitchen counter, brow wrinkling even more.
Ben followed it, smirk deepening. âYou know, sweetheart, I bet you could bend that way, too.â
Your head snapped toward him, eyes dark at first, then twinkling with amusement.
âWhat, donât believe me?â he teased. âIâll kick these amateurs outta one of those bedrooms and happily show you.â
You raised a brow. âThereâs about twenty naked women around you. Why are you hitting on the one girl in clothes?â
âI like a fuckinâ challenge.â He grinned, lazy and smug. ââSides, I have an acquired taste.â
You snorted a laugh. âWell, take me off the menu, please.â
Not a fuckinâ chanceâŠ
âCâmon,â you motioned toward the living room area, âButcher said the twins are back there.â
Ben nodded, smirk fading, and stuck close by your side.
âYou want me to freeze them?â you asked, shooting him a glance. You bumped into him slightly when you dodged a couple fucking against the wall of the hallway. âI could only freeze their bodies, you know? Keep the heads. That way they canât run, but they can still talk. They also feel it when you kill them⊠âSides, itâs kinda funny. People get really panicky and freak out when I do that.â
Ben stopped in his tracks, blinking at you for a moment. He watched a small smirk flash across your lips â puckish.
Made his goddamn heart swell and his dick hard.
He hummed and considered it, then gave barely a shrug of one shoulder. âThat does sound kinda funny. Knock yourself out, sweetheart.â
Good team work. Unstoppable force.
As he moved half a step toward the living room, you stopped him, though â hand wrapping around his wrist, pulling him gently back, touching him.
âWaitââ
You dropped it and flinched back when he met your eyes, probably confusing his prayer for a warning. You just couldnât see it.
âYouâre not gonnaâ⊠you know, power up the nuclear reactor in here, right?â
Ben met your request with a tired stare and a deep exhale through his nose. You might have judged these perverts, but you were still worried about their safety, apparently.
Fucking Christ, your generation was nutty. Not exactly how men won wars.
âNo,â he assured you nevertheless. âDonât worry about it. I can dent their teeth in with my fuckinâ pinky.â
Your lips pursed for a second before forcing a tight smile. You gave him a nod and a thumbs up. âGreat.â
Yeah, you didnât belong onto a battlefield but into Lecture Hall B of some ivy-wrapped university. This was the fucking last mission heâd ever take you on (and if only it had been as easy and simple as wishful thinking).
And the rest of the day? Fuckinâ disaster.
The twins went according to plan till they didnât. You froze them, they panicked (which really was satisfyingly hilarious), and the two idiots leaked more than the poop chute on the screen behind them. But then, he fucking heard it â that sound.
That song.
He didnât remember much after. Just that melody, you backing away next to him, eyes wide, asking him what was wrong, and him telling you to run.
He woke up to wreckage and smoke. There was barely a house or people left â at least not ones that could still be recognized as such. When you werenât anywhere in his close vicinity, he felt relief surge through him â before the panic kicked in.
Where the fuck were you?
But Ben didnât get enough time to look for you before the next problem arrived â the caped cunt Butcher wanted dead.
Fuckinâ ridiculous, honestly. A clown, really. But that strength?
Yeah. ShitâŠ
Took him, Butcher, and a butt-naked String Bean to hold the pussy down. Still didnât get to kill him. The coward fled.
Ben then followed Butcher and Hughie â slowly, unhurried, calm. Not like he wanted to run around and scream your fucking name till you answered.
Outside, Ben then finally spotted you â sitting by the curb, blood running down your cheek from a small head wound. The glare and sharp mouth were apparently alive, too.
âYou good?â Ben came to stand next to you, looking down, fingers twitching by his sides to reach out and wipe the blood from your cheek, legs itching to crouch down and check on you properly.
âYeah.â You gave a nod and met his gaze, bringing a flat palm up to shield your eyes from the setting sun behind him. Your brow then wrinkled again. âAre you okay? You look like youâre in pain⊠or constipated.â
ââM fine,â Ben replied with a huff. âYour powers? Still working?â
Your finger pointed behind his right, and he followed it, finding a half-burning supe frozen still â including the little flame on his arm.
Thank fucking God.
âDoes that answer your question?â you asked as the man resumed screaming and running down the road in a panic.
Ben nodded, hesitated for a moment, but then held his hand out to you. You looked reluctantly at it for a second before you placed your palm in his, and he helped you back onto your feet.
He hated letting it go again.
âHow dâyou get out?â
âWell, Iâ⊠I couldnât freeze shit,â you explained, slightly irritated, your eyes watching him closely again. âBut I could at least put it in slo-mo long enough to get the fuck out.â
Good girl.
âWas that Homelander in there?â you asked, looking warily up at him.
Ben glanced at the burning mansion, then back at you. âYeah,â he replied, deep voice raspy. âHe know who you are?â
You blinked at him but shook your head slowly, shrugging. âNo, Iâ⊠I donât think so.â
âGood.â Ben gave a nod. âKeep it that way.â
You didnât ask him what exactly happened or what he meant by that, although he could tell it was on the tip of your tongue the whole car ride back.
Legendâs mansion reeked of old whiskey, ghosts of cocaine, and broken promises â but still fucking better than that shitty motel off the highway.
Ben hadnât left a lot of room for discussion with Butcher when he told the asshole about his idea to knock on his old friendâs door and hide out here from the public. After forty years, he deserved a little luxury and a king-sized bed without creaking springs.
The sun had dipped below the horizon hours ago, but the house still held its burn when Ben strolled through it. Everyone had retreated to their corners, licking their wounds, but he could hear your heartbeat from the hallway.
That little rhythm, steady but tight. Anxious. Heâd memorized it. Could pick it out of a crowd by now.
The lights were dimmed, only a small lamp on a side table held an orange glow while the rest of the room was lit by the flickering blue hues of the TV. You sat alone on the couch, tucked into cushions, barefoot, remote in hand, and eyes tiredly fixed on the screen, watching the late-night news. You were curled into the corner with a blanket haphazardly tossed over your lap as Ben poured himself a glass of forty-year-old Glenfiddich at the bar before flopping down next to you with a grunt, ice clinking in the tumbler â most certainly uninvited.
You didnât glance at him, just kept your eyes trained on the TV like it might give you answers the rest of the world couldnât.
Ben didnât say anything as he lit a joint and leaned back against the couch with a long, exhaustive breath. He stayed like this for a while â no words, no touches, just your presence. He needed that, especially after today.
He hated that he couldnât claim all of it. That this â the two-feet distance at all times, your scent and warmth but nothing else â had to be enough.
âClothes good?â you asked suddenly, voice low and soft as not to disturb the silence of the house too much.
When youâd returned from the hospital this morning, youâd also brought a bag of clothes for him that youâd gotten during a pit-stop on your way back to the motel. No one had asked you to â youâd gone out of your way to do it, anyway.
Nothing fancy. Nothing too modern. Just a few simple and plain tees, a comfier pair of sweats, and jeans. Didnât ask, just did â with a smirk and the explanation that Butcher had left his credit card in the car.
Ben looked at you briefly from the corner of his eye before staring down at the black shirt and gray sweats he was wearing.
âYeah,â he said, voice rough, and added a mumbled âthanks.â
âYouâre welcome,â you replied with an almost inaudible sigh and turned your focus back to the TV.
News anchors, wide-eyed, grim, and breathless, recited the carnage like it was a weather report. Fires. Body bags. Death toll still rising. No comment from Vought yet.
âHell of a show, huh?â he broke the silence with a low chuckle like it was just another night â like he hadnât incinerated a house full of people. He took a sip of his drink and a drag from his reefer, lazily blowing out the thin stream of smoke. âShould charge admission next time.â
âNot funny,â you muttered.
Ben gave a grunt, rolled his eyes slightly. He knew you werenât happy with him â neither was he, but it hit different when it came from you.
Green eyes flicked back to the screen with another sip of his drink. âToo bad Earving wasnât there.â
Your head snapped toward him, brow raised in question. âEarving?â
âBlack Noir.â
âOh.â You sunk back down into the cushions. âWeird hearing real names. Makes you sound like people.â
That was a jab, right? Some fucking guilt trip? He wasnât imagining that, but he let it slide. Couldnât really blame you for it after today.
âWe are people â you included, sweetheart,â Ben retorted nonetheless and took another hit of his joint â a fucking long one. He looked at you for a second, trying to figure out a way to bridge the gap between you two. âMy nameâs Ben, by the way.â
Your gaze met his, and for a moment, Ben thought youâd finally remember him. Braced himself for it. But whatever you were searching for in his eyes, couldnât be found.
You turned back to the screen somberly. âThink Iâll stick to Soldier Boy. Suits you better.â
Ouch.
âCâmon, loosen up,â he scoffed. âNot like you actually liked any of these assholes.â
âThatâs not the point,â you argued, sitting up straighter like you were getting ready for a fight. âJust because I might think theyâre awful people, doesnât mean I wanna see them burn alive. I mean, Jesus Christ⊠They didnât deserve that.â
Ben leaned back, staring at the ceiling. âSure they did.â
And then you went quiet. Thoughtful. The creases in your brow ironed out. Your head tilted ever-so slightly. And Ben knew what that look meant â that fucking softness.
He hated it. Hated that you were soft. Even now.
âWhat happened today?â you asked with that gleam of quiet concern in your eyes like he was a wounded Grizzly with rabies that wandered into your yard and could be fixed with a bowl of water.
âNothinâ,â he muttered, keeping his eyes on the TV, though he wasnât watching. âTwins pissed me off and I put âem in the dirt. They were goddamn traitors. Handed me over to the Reds. All I did was return the fuckinâ favor.â
You leaned forward on your knees, your stare intensifying as you shook your head. âNo, I donât buy it. This wasnât planned. I donât believe you wanted to hurt all these people.â
âBelieve it.â
âWhen I asked you today, you said you wouldnâtââ
âYeah, well, I say a lotta things. Doesnât make âem true,â he said with casual cruelty, but he had to stop you from fucking prodding â from finding the truth. âJust said what you wanted to hear, so you get off my fucking back, sweetheart.â
âYouâre lying.â
That hit deep. Not because it was true â but because you saw right fucking through him. Saw right through the lies, the walls, the mask.
âI was right next to you when it happened,â you added. Same persistence, same fire in your eyes he knew so well. âYou told Hughie and me you blacked out during Midtown. You said you didnât wanna hurt those people.â
âI didnât.â
âThen how did nineteen people end up dead? Not supes, people,â you prompted and waited long enough to let the silence stretch. âYou canât control it, can you?â
âI can,â he growled with a stern look. "Back off. Not gonna warn you twice."
âBut you canât every time, right?â
You were always like this â soft voice, soft hands, soft eyes â but never weak. Never stupid. It made you harder to lie to. Harder to brush off.
He didnât respond. He knew where this conversation was headed, and he wasnât fucking doing it.
He wasnât gonna talk about Russia. Ever. Not with you.
That part of him â the dark, twitching, screaming core of what they did to him â it wasnât something he knew how to name, let alone share. And you⊠you were the last person he wanted to share it with.
Because if you saw the truth â the shaking hands, the blackouts, the Russian lullabies that burrow into his skull and flip the fucking switch â youâd flinch. Or worse, youâd pity him.
And he couldnât fucking take that.
If you knew about the restraints, the isolation, the endlessly cruel tests, you wouldnât look at him the same. Not like someone who was strong, but someone who was broken.
One wrong melody away from burning down a neighborhood.
And you? Youâd try to fix him. You always had. Even before the shield, before the name, back when he was still just a young, dumb kid, you looked at him like he could be more. But now he was something else â warped and weaponized by Vought, cracked open and rebuilt in a Russian lab, and every inch of him screamed 'Donât touch this.'
But if you saw it â if you saw him â youâd reach for him. Youâd say something soft. Youâd try to make it better.
And he couldnât fucking afford that right now. Not when he didnât know what was even going on yet.
âLook, if you wanna talk about itââ you started, but he cut you off quickly.
âI donât.â
âIâ⊠I saw what happened to you, okay? Parts of it,â you said carefully. His eyes snapped to you. He heard your heartbeat accelerate. You then averted your gaze to your fumbling fingers in your lap. âNot in my head, by the way. I just wanted you to know I wouldnât do that,â you clarified, swallowing. âBut we-, uh, we found tapes when we got you outta there.â
Ben closed his eyes and took a deep breath. âDonât.â
âIâm not here to poke at your scars. I just wanna understand. Thatâs all,â you said.
âYou want to understand,â he repeated and scoffed a mocking chuckle, rubbing his eyes. âRight. You want me to lay my head into your lap and cry about it? Light a candle, do a feelings circle, and sing âKumbayaâ?â
You shot him a look. Not amused. âYou donât have to joke your way out of everything.â
âAlright, you want the play-by-play, sweetheart?â he baited you, eyes narrowing. âYou want me to walk you through how I turned a house full of assholes into bone confetti? Or do you just want a hug and a sob story about how Iâm soooo broken inside?â Then he leaned in, arm resting on the back of the couch behind you, smirk dancing on his lips. Cold. Venomous. Cruel. âYou ever stop to think maybe I wanted to kill âem? Maybe it wasnât an accident. Maybe I fucking liked it. Hm?â
That made you stop short for a second, but the fire in your eyes never went anywhere. The flames only rose higher.
âThen why did you save me?â
Shit.
âDonât know what youâre talking about,â he muttered, sipping his whiskey.
âNo, you did,â you insisted and were getting a little more heated. âDonât you dare fucking gaslight me. You told me to run. You looked fucking terrified, and it wasnât because of the twins.â
âShut up,â he huffed dismissively.
âIt was the song, wasnât it? There was a Russian song that came on the radio. It triggered you, didnât it?â
âStop,â he warned, but you were a full wildfire now â all heat and no escape.
âLook, I know what itâs like when youâre not in control. I get why youâre so fucking angry. Trust me. But youâre gonna hurt more people if you donât face your shit,â you argued fiercely. Brave. Foolish.
âYou wanna help me? That it, sweetheart?â He scoffed coldly into his tumbler. âI donât need your fucking pity, and I sure as hell donât need you to fuckinâ fix me.â
âI neverââ
âNo, but youâre thinking it. I can see it,â he cut it, taunting. âPoor Soldier Boy, all alone. Mustâve been so hard, right? Frozen in a box, tortured, abandoned, boo-fucking-hoo.â
âThat is hard,â you countered â still fearless, still soft, still all you. âAnd I know youâre clearly not asking for my opinion, but you should know I donât think youâre broken or weak because of it. I think it made you stronger.â
And that was the worst of it â you meant it. You fucking cared. You looked at him like he was still something worth saving. Like he hadnât just taken out half a goddamn mansion. Like his hands werenât still stained with blood. Like you hadnât seen the monster and decided not to run.
âDamn right it did,â he snapped and fixed you with a glare. âYou think I want to be soft and bleeding and weak like you? You think because youâve got some tragic backstory of your own, weâre the fucking same? You and me? Not the same species, sweetheart. Youâre not special. Youâre not different. Youâre just a little girl playing hero in a world full of wolves. Youâre soft. You still believe people can come back from the edge. But I jumped off that cliff a long fucking time ago. So donât look at me like Iâm something you can save.â
You inhaled sharply, but still didnât back down. âI know youâre not the cold asshole youâre pretending to be.â
âYou wanna know what Russia did to me? What they did? Little scientists like you, hm?â Ben goaded. âThey tore me apart. Nerve by nerve. Memory by memory. I begged them to stop. I screamed. I cried. I pissed myself. That what you wanna hear?â
âNo,â you said, getting up from the couch. âIâm just trying to help you.â
He hated the look on your face. Hated himself for putting it there.
Ben rose as well, towering over you. Cold. âI didnât fuckinâ ask for it. Wanna know why? âCause, most of all, those forty years in that shithole gave me fuckinâ clarity. Made me realize I donât need people. I donât need kindness. I donât need you. I wanna burn every last thing that tried to take me down to the fucking ground. You think I regret what happened today? I relished it.â
âLiar,â you bit. âI know you didnât.â
And God, he hated you for it. Hated you for giving him fucking hope.
âThatâs because youâre still stupid enough to think thereâs fuckinâ good in people,â Ben retorted. âYou think you know me? You donât know shit. Let me make it real fuckinâ clear â whatever youâre looking for? Itâs not there.â
He wouldnât let you get into his fucking head again.
âIâm not scared of you,â you said and took a fucking step closer.
Jesus fuck, why did you always have to do this?
âYou think because I let you sit next to me, youâre safe? Maybe youâre even dumb enough to think I like you,â Ben growled, stepping into your space â and you still didnât even bat a fucking eyelash. âBut trust me, if I go off again, youâll be the first to fry. And I wonât lose any fuckinâ sleep over it, sweetheart.â
There it was â silence. Finally. But in the end, you still didnât move.
Instead, you scoffed a chuckle and looked him deeply into his eyes â cruel in your mercy. Puckish in your execution. âI think I know now.â
âKnow what?â he huffed, impatient.
âWhy they came for you. Your team.â You smiled, soft and slow and pitying. âYou donât want kindness? Too bad, youâre getting mine: you might be an ass, but I still think you deserved better.â
Fuck you for saying that.
Then you were done. Shoved past him and left for your room. The door slammed so hard it shook the glass in the windows.
And then it rattled him.
That look you gave him â like you werenât sure he was a monster or not, like you didnât know if you could trust him â heâd seen it before.
It all fell into fucking place then and there.
An hour later, Ben knocked on your door.
His heart pounded, he ran a hand over his face, and he thought twice about turning around and storming back down the hall to his room. But he needed fucking answers now.
After a moment, he heard your voice from the other side, guarded. âYeah?â
âCan I come in?â Ben asked, trying to keep his tone light. He didnât really have a plan beyond that â just needed to get in there and talk.
There was a long pause. Longer than he liked. But finally, you sighed, and he heard the soft sound of you getting up from the bed. The door clicked open a moment later.
No welcoming smile. No warmth. No trust.
âWhat dâyou want?â you prompted with a blank expression and crossed your arms, head tilted. Watching. Waiting. Judging.
Ben hauled something from the pocket of his sweats and held it up for you â cross joint. âTruce?â
Your lips pursed, which meant that you at least werenât unimpressed. âFirst one?â
âYup.â
First successful one. Fourteenth try overall â harder than it fucking looked when youâd done it.
Your head bobbed thoughtfully for a moment before you stepped aside to let him in. He shut the door behind him with more care than heâd normally bother with.
Ben rubbed the back of his neck. âDidnât think youâd actually say yes.â
âDidnât think youâd actually ask,â you shot back wryly.
He clicked his tongue. âFair enough.â
âSo, what? Youâre here to apologize?â
Ben bit the inside of his cheek. âLook, I donât do fuckinâ apologies, okay? I know I can be a little⊠direct sometimes, but thatâs your problem. Not mine.â
You snorted a chuckle. âWow. OkayâŠâ You cleared your throat like you were coughing the amusement out of your system.
He knew you hated that, but he had to walk a fine line between getting the information he needed and not ruining it with you by being too⊠friendly.
With a deep groan, Ben dropped down on an armchair in the corner by the large, floor-to-ceiling window front. Legend had given you the guest bedroom on the ground floor with the terrace that led to the garden â aka one giant entry point for all his enemies.
Heâd have to talk to the old guy tomorrow about changing that. Get you bumped up to the first floor, maybe a windowless room.
He was kidding. A little.
âListen, Iâm not great at the whole... people thing,â Ben started with a dry laugh.
âNo shit.â
âI just wanna talk, alright? I try not to be a dick again. Howâs that?â
You considered it, then gave a nod. âFine. What do you wanna talk about?â
Ben licked his lips, searching for the right words that didnât give away too much. âOut there, you said you get it â what itâs like not to be in control. What did you mean by that? Is that why half your abilities ainât working?â
The question seemed to surprise you.
âUhm, yeah,â you replied after some hesitation. âThree years ago, I started getting panic attacks â not that Iâm saying thatâs what happens to you.â
âYou better not,â he muttered from his chair.
âAnyways,â you continued, trying to tame your fire a little â he could tell and tried not to smirk. âIt happened after I got stuck.â
âThat Middle Ages thing?â Ben questioned, cocking his head slightly. A laugh then rumbled through his chest. âWhat the hell happened, sweetheart? You almost got burned on the stake for beinâ a witch?â
âYeah, thatâs exactly what happened,â you replied, almost too casual.
âOh.â He stumped for a moment, then finally lit the joint. âWell, shit. Why dâyou go there in the first place? I mean, no offense, doll, kinda common knowledge theyâre known as the Dark Ages.â
âI didnât go there on purpose,â you said, laughing a little as he passed you the reefer. âI just-⊠Took the wrong exit and⊠couldnât go back in there.â
Ben exhaled a sigh through his nose. This was gonna take longer than he expected, wasnât it?
âIn where?â
He mostly couldnât believe he was having this conversation and it wasnât about where to put his cock.
âWormholes.â
Not better.
Benâs brow creased a little more. Another sigh left his lips. âWhatâs that?â
You arched an eyebrow. âYou want me to explain wormholes to you?â
Ben stared at you for a moment, took a drag from his joint, and then shrugged. âSure.â
Your lips pursed, but your head nodded. âUh, okay. Yeah.â
Ben then watched you pace the room, kick your shoes off in various corners before disappearing into the en-suite bathroom, only to emerge a minute later with your makeup bag, where you fished out a red lipstick. Tossed the bag onto the bed. Uncapped the lipstick, cap flying somewhere behind you and landing next to a shoe.
Ah, shit. Heâd have dreams about this tonight, wouldnât he?
âWormholes are also called Einstein-Rosen bridges,â you explained and drew a long, smudged line across a window pane in deep red. âThey are theoretical solutions to Einsteinâs equations of general relativity. They describe a tunnel-like structure connecting two separate points in spacetime.â
âLike a tunnel?â
âYes, exactly!â you said, and Ben tried not to smile at your enthusiasm. He enjoyed it in silence and sangfroid. âIâm sparing you the folded paper analogy, but basically, it means timeâs not a straight, rigid line. Itâs flexible. Relative. You can bend it.â
Ben didnât know what it was about the scene that got him â maybe it was how natural you looked doing it, talking through half-formed thoughts while your hand moved fast and confident. Or maybe it was because heâd seen this before, a lifetime ago. Chalkboard. Shed. That same furrow between your brows, the way you gestured mid-sentence like your mind was three steps ahead of your mouth.
âThatâs what you do, right? Bend time?â Ben asked, barely keeping up, but he understood enough.
âDid, yes.â
âYou tried jump-startinâ it again? Your abilities?â Ben watched your mouth open and then close, head shaking.
âIâm not a car, you know?â You snorted a small laugh and crossed your arms over your chest with a curious smile. âWhat would you suggest I do?â
âI donât know.â Ben shrugged his broad shoulders. âYou tried jumping off a building yet?â
Your smile twitched a little on your lips. âUh, no, canât say that I have. Why exactly would that help?â
Ben gave another shrug. âI donât know. Facing your fears?â
âIâm not afraid of heights,â you replied, chuckling. âIâm afraid I get stuck somewhere I donât wanna be.â
Like 1942, Ben thought dryly.
âSo, it doesnât work at all right now?â
âNo, it works. I just canât control it. Itâs like a mental block, you know?â you explained. âBut back at the lab when you detonated, you triggered it, and I accidentally jumped. Landed back in New York with a five-minute time difference.â
âHuh. Thatâs how you disappeared,â he muttered under his breath. âWhat triggers it?â
âI donât know. Could be anything. Mostly stress, fear, panic,â you replied.
Ben then realized that was how youâd vanished that night as well, wasnât it? You were scared and emotional, and a minute later, you were gone.
You hadnât left him. Hadnât wanted to. Not on purpose.
His chest tightened, but he didnât let it show. Heâd waited eight decades for that answer.
âSo, how this whole thing work?â Ben asked with a clear of his throat. âWhat happens when you go back and change somethinâ?â
You chewed on your lower lip for a moment. âWell, there are several major theoretical models. Fixed loops â like Novikovâs principle â say you canât change the past because you already did. So time, in a sense, is self-correcting.â
âWhat does that mean?â
Ben watched, half amused, half fascinated, as you scrawled a massive loop across the glass. It wobbled a little, more oval than circle, but your point came across.
âThis is a fixed loop,â you said and jabbed the top of the circle with your lipstick. âEverything repeats. You canât change the outcome because your future self already did whatever youâre going to do. Paradoxes get swallowed up by consistency. Thereâs no free will.â You drew a squiggly line through the loop. âNow, if you diverge from the loop here, you create a branch. Alternate reality. Thatâs the multiverse model. Every choice spawns a new timeline.â
âSo how many timelines are there?â
âInfinite,â you said slowly. âEvery little choice you make on a daily basis creates an alternate timeline where you made a different choice.â
Ben tilted his head, watching your reflection in the glass. âSo, what... you break off one path, and now thereâs two versions of me out there?â
You giggled lightly. âI mean, yes, basically. Itâs Everettâs theory. If you switched your toothpaste, thereâs another version of you out there that didnât,â you said.
âSo, which oneâs the correct theory?â Ben asked, leaning back in his chair, joint halfway burnt.
âI think both theories are true,â you replied. âYou could be in a loop and create branches at the same time. Itâs all quantum probability.â
Ben stared, lips pursing.
You stared back. âWhat part didnât you follow?â
He scratched his jaw. âThe part where I need a damn PhD just to keep up.â
You smiled a little, nodding. âAlright, letâs simplify. Movies.â
Two hours later, youâd explained every working model on time there existed, went through both plots of Terminator and Back to the Future in great detail, and told him about the butterfly effect.
âIn a fixed loop, the butterfly effect still exists, but itâs already been accounted for,â you said and stretched your arms over your head with a yawn. It was already long past midnight. âSo even if you think youâre making a new choice or messing something up, that choice has already been âwrittenâ into the loopâs history. Youâre just fulfilling it.â
âSo itâs like a script?â
You nodded and shrugged. âKinda yeah.â
âWhat if something changes? What happens then?â Ben asked, the feeling in his gut coiling tighter.
If he understood it correctly, you and him were apparently caught in one of those loops. Youâd explained it like a chain reaction â dominos propped up in a circle. If one was removed, the circle wouldnât work anymore.
All he had to do now, was find the missing domino and nudge the first one with his fingertip.
âI mean, theoretically, you can break the loop and create a new quantum branch. But itâs risky,â you said, teeth tugging at your bottom lip. âYou donât know what changes or how much. Thatâs why itâs better not to interfere.â
And that was the problem, wasnât it?
Ben had to ensure everything stayed the same in order for you to go back to 1942 and fall in love with him. But his heart was already stinging â warning him.
He tried to think back, remember every little interaction he ever shared with you in the past. But what stuck was the beginning â how scared you were. Not just of the strange world around you but of him.
You werenât spooked because someone had been after you. Not Vought, not the government, or some other asshole like Butcher.
He recalled how youâd crashed into him in the street, nearly knocking him over. How fast you recoiled when heâd reached out instinctively to steady you â like his touch burned. You looked like someone whoâd been through hell and wasnât going to let anyone drag you back â especially him.
The looks of fear, the no touching, the not trusting â it all had been for him, hadnât it? Youâd hated him when you landed in 1942. Youâd probably seen what heâd done, knew what heâd still do. Some future version of him had done something. Had broken your trust. Hurt you. Betrayed you. Enough that you came back in time and looked at him like he was the worst kind of monster.
And he hated that heâd have to do it to you again. But he didnât have a choice, did he?
Because if he let this go on â the bonding, your smiles, your looks like he could be more â heâd risk losing it all. What if you got stuck in 1942 already liking him? What would happen then?
âYou okay?â you checked with a soft smile.
Ben nodded slowly. âUh, yeah. Just thinking.â
But even when you despised him at first back then, even when you knew everything there was to know about him â every cruelty, every mistake, every life he took â you still fell in love with him.
And he could see it now, too â how you looked past everything that had happened in the last few days, every chaos and death he caused. And still, you were here, smiling and talking to him like he was just another human being and not a cold-hearted killer with tons of baggage.
The beginning of it was already there. He remembered it like it was carved into bone: the way your eyes softened. The way you let your guard down slowly, week by week. The way you started to look at him like he was worth something. Like he wasnât just a weapon someone had pointed at the world and forgotten to leash.
Youâd fallen in love with him despite everything. You were doing it again now, too.
And he hated that he couldnât let it happen. He had to stop it, or it could ruin everything. It was too fucking soon.
Ben squeezed his eyes shut for a moment, jaw grinding tight as the plan formed â quiet and bitter.
He had to make you hate him. He had to be the version of himself you were willing to run from. Even if it killed him.
But he couldnât let you like this version of him. Couldnât let you trust him too easily. If he was too soft, too honest, too goddamn human, you might not look at him the same way when youâd eventually land in 1942. You might not flinch. You might not run. And thenâ
The loop would fracture. It would all fall apart.
âYou wanna stay up and watch Back to the Future with me?â you asked with a little grin.
Ben hesitated for a moment, watched the smile dance on your lips like it was the rising sun. His heart ached.
âYeah,â he agreed with a faint smile. âWhy not?â
And sure, after everything heâd learned tonight, he shouldâve said no. Shouldâve said something mean and cruel and lay the brickwork for the downfall. But he couldnât do it. Not yet.
He decided to let himself have one last night â one night of closeness, of enjoying your smiles, of hearing your laughs. He was allowed to have one nice thing, even if it didnât last.
And tomorrow?
Heâd go back to the cocky, smug bastard he used to be. Heâd tease you. Grate on your nerves. Maybe even push too far, just enough for you to roll your eyes and walk away. Heâd play the part, heâd set the trap, and heâd make sure the loop held.
Even if it broke him more than Russia ever did.
For the next three days, Ben had avoided you as best as possible while he formed his plan. But it was harder than expected because every time he turned around, you were there. Coffee mug in hand, nose in a book, leaning over Legendâs pool table with a stretch that gave him thoughts he shouldnât be having.
And it was starting to piss him off. Because the more he tried to create distance, the more he wanted to be near you.
He doubled down over the following week.
At first, he started small â sexist comments here and there, belittling you, or telling you to fetch shit for him. He made you his personal assistant, which Butcher highly supported. It annoyed you, sure, but it didnât exactly make you hate him. Of course you couldnât make it easy on him.
So, he went a little further next. He started screwing Legendâs maids like clockwork, hoping that would do it and maybe even make you a little jealous. Needless to say, all that did was make you disgusted â your words, not his. Youâd told him as much when he called for you to bring him a new bottle of lube.
But none of it made you hate him. And that terrified him more than anything.
On the morning of day eight, Butcher and Hughie were still neck-deep in trying to trace Mindstorm, and Ben was growing more impatient by the hour. As he padded toward the kitchen, he paused in the hallway when he heard your voice â sharp and pissed.
âYou donât get to act like youâre in charge. You have no plan. Youâre just drugging him up and sending him like a rabid dragon toward your revenge fantasy,â you snapped. âHeâs not a person to you. Heâs a tool.â
Ben leaned his shoulder against the wall just out of sight, listening.
âBut heâs not a person to you either, sunshine,â Butcher bit back. âHeâs dangerous. You said so yourself. Called him a liability if I remember correctly. So help us find Mindstorm, and the sooner you can go back to your life and leave all this bloody shite behind you, Doc.â
âYou want me to help you find Mindstorm?â The laugh you let out was dry and short, laced with disbelief. âAfter everything with Soldier Boy at Herogasm? Did your frontal lobe fall out in the car? I told you â Iâm not gonna help with this little murder spree. You guys are on your own for this.â
âI think you forgot youâre not in a position to play hard to get, sunshine,â Butcher said lowly. âYou wanna stay under the radar, I suggest you help the people that are currently keeping Vought off your back.â
âOh, fuck off,â you shot back. âDonât pretend youâve been doing me a favor. If you wanna turn me in to Vought, be my guest. Itâll take them two weeks just to figure out what name Iâm using this time. Not to mention, Iâll tell them youâve been running around with a war criminal.â
Ben felt his lips twitch. God, you had guts. Butcher went quiet at that â he had no cards left to play and knew it.
âJesus,â Butcher muttered. âBloody useless, the both of you.â
Ben waited until footsteps retreated. Then he strolled into the kitchen like heâd just gotten out of bed and hadnât heard every word.
âMorninâ, sweetheart,â he said, grabbed a beer from the fridge, popped the cap, letting it fall to the tile.
You didnât react. Hughie grimaced.
âWhat, no geriatric gangbang scheduled for this morning?â you deadpanned.
Ben grinned, lazy and smug. âYou jealous? âCause Iâm sure I can pencil you in for noon.â
âGreat,â you replied with a wry smile. âI can draw you a diagram of what an STD looks like.â
Ben clicked his tongue, lips curling. âFeisty, but you know you love me.â
âI really donât.â
Stupidly, that stung. But he let it roll off his shoulders.
Over the next few days, he tried and tried again, but nothing was working. Every time he expected you to snap â to scream, to cry, to tell him you fucking hated him â you didnât. You just looked at him like he was something under your shoe. Sometimes you were too annoyed to care. Sometimes too tired to react. Sometimes you hit him with the most surgical, disinterested commentary that bruised his ego in ways nothing else could.
But you never hated him. You endured him â which was arguably worse.
Ben couldnât tell you what he knew. Couldnât give away that he was watching his every step like a man walking a minefield. But youâd said it yourself â no disruptions, no butterfly effect.
But every night, when he lay awake in that stiff bed, his mind kept drifting back to the soft shape of your smile when you were excited about something, to the way your lips brushed his jaw in the dark, murmuring things you hadnât meant to say. And he wondered â if this version of you never went back, never finished the loop⊠Would you ever love him at all?
So he stayed cold. Distant. Loud. He banged maids and played dumb. He tried everything short of outright cruelty.
Till he realized there was no way around it. He needed to push harder.
Mindstorm had been a fucking disaster â fully yours and Hughieâs fault.
As soon as Butcher had been taken out by that psycho freak with a migraine, the kids had formed an alliance against him â undermined him every step of the way.
When he got meaner and crueler to you, Hughie would step in like your knight in shining polyester. It was fucking annoying. And no matter what he said or did, you still never backed down.
All in all, fucking frustrating â not as frustrating as the news he received, however.
That same night, Ben found you in a place heâd never wanted to find you â Legendâs music room, seated right at the piano as your fingers tickled the ivory keys.
It did unspeakably barbaric things to his heart.
He paused in the doorway for a second, just watching. Enjoying. Reeling.
Luckily, he was already nursing his third whiskey when he stepped inside. You didnât glance up at him, not really, just arched a brow.
âJesus fuck, what now?â you huffed, halfway onto another eye roll. Your patience with him had become thiner than ice over the last week.
âYou got a minute?â
âDepends,â you said grimly. âAm I about to get roped into another errand that involves you traumatizing the staff?â
Benâs mouth twitched. He shouldâve expected that. The maid incidents hadnât exactly landed the way heâd wanted it to. Youâd just gotten more judgy â like you were slowly starting to catalog him the way a scientist would a failing experiment.
âNo lube runs this time. I promise,â he said, strolling in. âThis is serious. I need your help with something.â
And boy, was it fuckinâ somethinâ. Not exactly the conversation he ever planned on having with you. Where would he even start?
Hey, sweetheart, you know how you already think Iâm a mess of bad decisions and unchecked aggression? Well, guess what â Vought used my sperm to make the guy Iâm supposed to kill. Neat, huh?
The worst part, though?
You were the only person heâd ever imagined that with. The only one whoâd made the idea feel like more than some stupid pipe dream â a house, a dog, maybe a kid with your eyes.
Not this â not some fucking lab-bred monster raised in a cage to replace him.
Your face softened then, anger dissipating. âWhatâs going on? Are you okay?â
âUh, no, not really. That freak told me something today, and I need you to check if itâs true.â Ben swallowed, stepping closer.
He crouched down beside you, arms resting on the benchâs edge â close enough to feel your body heat, but not close enough to ask for anything more.
âOkay, what is it about?â
âIn the fall of 1980, Vogelbaum called me into the lab.â He hesitated for a second, licking his lips. âWanted a⊠sample.â
Your brow quirked. âLikeââ
He held up a hand. âYup, sperm.â
âEw.â You grimaced. âDid they at least buy you dinner first?â
God, he fucking loved you and hated how he couldnât tell you.
Ben gave a short, humorless laugh. âNah, just handed me a cup and a dirty magazine. I made do.â
âYouâre so brave.â
âThanks.â He rubbed his face. âThey told me it was just for genetics. Research, you know? I felt flattered. Didnât think twice about it. Hell, they wired me twenty grand. I left fuckinâ whistling.â
You exhaled sharply through your nose, trying not to laugh. âSure, yeah. If Nazi geneticists ask for more of your DNA, you always say yes for money and pride.â
Ben took a deep breath for the next part. âMindstorm said they used it. That they made something with it. Someone.â
Your face shifted then, sobering up fast. Quiet alarm. âYou think he meantââ
âHomelander.â
You bit your lips hard.
âI wanna know if itâs true,â he added. âI wanna know what the hell they did.â
You stared at him a moment longer, then nodded. âOkay, uhm⊠I can look for you.â
You closed your eyes then and only a second later, you gasped â sharp and low. Ben heard your heart beating faster.
Your eyes flew open with a âJesus fuck.â
âThat bad?â Ben checked against his better judgment. Heâd pay a trillion bucks not to know the answer.
You blinked hard, catching your breath. âIt was like watching the Antichrist claw his way out of hell.â
Benâs stomach twisted, head bobbing in defeat. âThat bad. Got it.â
âBut itâs true. Iâm sorry,â you said finally. âThey used your DNA. The embryo was carried by a homeless girl â barely twenty. Vought gave her two grand and a contract she didnât understand. She died during birth. He-, uh, he killed her. Killed a few others too. Floated out of her with the cord still attached.â
Ben frowned. âDid you really have to share that part?â
You twitched your shoulders innocently. âHey, if I had to suffer through that, so do you.â
Ben didnât laugh, only let out a shaky breath and found your eyes. âWhat doâ, uh⊠What do I do now?â
âUhmâŠâ Your lips parted for a moment, thinking. âWell, you know they didnât just make him to replace you, right? They made him to never need anyone. Most of all, you.â
Ben didnât respond to that. He just sat there for a moment longer in your presence. How stupid was it that a part of him still ached for something heâd never had? A different life. A different version of you. One that remembered what he remembered.
Now, in his real life, he was just a man with blood on his hands and a legacy made of ash. A father without knowing it. A failure even in that.
Ben looked up at you then. âYou ever think about kids?â
You gave him a look like heâd asked if you wanted syphilis. âFuck no,â you snorted.
He raised an eyebrow, licking his lips. âThat firm a stance, huh?â
âLook, I like kids. Theyâre undeniably cute,â you said, and heâd almost smiled. But it didnât last â his chest felt hollow. âBut Iâve seen what Vought babies look like. And you practically created the lovechild of King Claudius and Palpatine with a Big Brother kink. This whole thing was like watching a PSA for not having babies. So, pretty sure thatâs a solid no by now.â
âRight,â he said quietly and slowly rose back to his feet.
And then, he felt it â grief.
Heâd lost a lot in his life. Fans. Friends. Family. A future. But this â losing you like that â this was a different kind. Slow poison that killed him from the inside out.
âYou gonna tell Butcher?â Ben asked then. He knew you technically had to â unless he killed the asshole for blackmailing you.
You stayed quiet for a beat and studied him before answering. âNo,â you said, surprising him. âI mean, eventually, yeah. But knowing Butcher, he wonât care. Heâs still gonna want him dead, and heâs still gonna want you to do it. And I think you deserve a night to make your own decision, soâŠâ
âThanks,â he murmured.
âWell, uhm, Iâm gonna go to bed. Kinda beat after today. You know, after the schizophrenic mind freak and, uhm, all the verbal abuse â courtesy of you, of course,â you joked dryly and stood, sauntering to the door, all too happy to get away from him again. But when you still turned around, there was sympathy in your eyes. âDonât worry, okay? Weâll figure it out.â
Ben couldnât bring himself to respond, only slumped down on the bench with a sigh and a whiskey in hand.
The part that hurt most was how badly he wanted to believe you. That maybe we was still something he could count on. That maybe, even after everything, youâd still help him find a way out of the wreckage of his life.
Ben had one job that week.
Not to kill Homelander. Not to show Butcher what a real soldier looked like. Not even to stay alive.
No, the job was simpler, crueler, harder: Make you hate him â or it would all go to shit.
You werenât allowed to love him yet. Not until the loop could hold. Not until history clicked into place and the ugly cycle wore itself out the way it was meant to. So for a week, Ben did what heâd never done before.
He broke his own heart, over and over. With volition. With purpose.
He kept fucking Legendâs maids. Loud, messily, with the doors open and no apology in his eyes. Gave you the worst of himself till he even got bored of it. He threw your past back in your face, mocked the way you still believed in him â if you did at all. He called you a tagalong, a liability, a glorified errand girl.
Ben did what he was good at â what Soldier Boy was good at.
He shut down. Barked orders. Called you useless so many times, hell, even you were starting to believe you were broken. He used that. Leaned into it. Said youâd get someone killed. Maybe yourself. He didnât flinch when you stared at him like you didnât recognize the man in front of you. That was the point.
He went colder. Meaner. He let the old monster fully out, the one who constantly picked fights and kicked in doors and laughed while people begged.
But you werenât useless. You were the only thing in this twisted fucking world that made him want to be more than a weapon again.
And you? And you fucking endured it all â like you were playing a longer game than him.
Maybe you were. Ben had overheard your plans when you chatted with your girlfriends recently â after Homelander, you were done. You were planning to apply for teaching jobs at colleges, striking a deal with Edgar, moving on.
But Ben couldnât let you move on. Couldnât let you out of his sight again. Couldnât just let you walk away into freedom.
But you still never flinched. Never screamed. Even after Mindstorm, when he tried to drown the memory of who he used to be in booze and rage. Even when he insulted you just to escape the gravity of how much he still wanted to be the man you loved in 1942.
You always just watched him like you were memorizing every awful thing he said, every dismissive look, every command barked like you were furniture â filing it away.
You never broke.
But he did â and he hated you for it.
The worst part, though? You still didnât fucking betray him, even when the chance was presented to you on a silver platter â a golden ticket to get rid of him for good â and you didnât take it.
No, fucking worse â you warned him. Helped him. Saved his ass.
When Butcher and Maeve joined him at Vought Tower, Ben made sure you werenât invited. Told Butcher you were useless. Told you that you owed him for it. Probably added some sexist remark that he hadnât used sincerely since the Nixon era.
But of course, you fucking showed up anyways â with Hughie, Annie, MM, Frenchie, and Kimiko.
Chaos ensued in every direction. But before they got to him, you stopped it all.
âWhat the fuck are you doing here? I gave you a fuckinâ out,â he barked at you, concealing his concern as best as possible while the world was frozen around the two of you.
The silence was almost serene â the most peaceful he ever felt on a battlefield.
âI know you did,â you said, not even pretending you hadnât seen right through him. âThatâs why Iâm here.â
You told him then about the other assholes' plan â that as soon as Homelander was in the ground, theyâd come for him next. Ben almost exploded and killed them all right then and there â but you convinced him not to.
âDonât kill them, please,â you begged him with that doe-eyed, reaching-into-a-manâs-soul look. âJust let them go.â
âYou just told me they wanted to lock me back up in that fucking box!â
âAnd they canât, okay? I sabotaged Frenchieâs little Novichok cocktail. Itâs not gonna do anything. I promise,â you assured him. âJust act surprised or tell them youâve built up an immunity against the stuff or some shit. And then walk away.â
Ben only scoffed at the mere suggestion. âYou fuckinâ want me to just let it go?â
âYou killed MMâs family, okay? Canât blame the guy for taking his fucking shot,â you countered, looking intently into his eyes.
âWhat if they fuckinâ try it again, hm?â he asked, quieter now, but his chest was still heaving and firing up beneath his skin.
You exhaled a long breath before answering. âThey wonât. Iâll make sure of it. But you gotta work a little with me here, okay? Just be less⊠belligerent. And controversial.â
Ben considered it for a moment. Considered you. âHow can I fucking trust you, huh? You could just be sayinâ all that shit, so I fight less when it happens. I mean, outta all of them, you have probably the most reason to get rid of me, right?â
And that fucking hurt the most.
âProbably, yeah,â you admitted like it didnât deepen the crater in his chest, but a smile tugged at your lips. âBut I told you a few weeks ago, I thought you deserved better. Still holds true.â
Benâs brow furrowed, his heart stinging. âWhy?â
âEntropy,â you said simply and gave a shrug of your shoulders. âDid you really think itâd all end with Homelander? Iâve heard Butcher refer to himself as a âsupe exterminatorâ on multiple occasions now. Homelanderâs just the biggest threat at the moment, but after heâs goneâŠâ
âTheyâll come for me,â Ben finished.
Fuck, you were smart. No wonder Stan Edgar had been scared enough of you to want you dead.
âAnd me, probably,â you added.
âI thought those guys are your friends,â Ben noted.
âThey are until they arenât,â you replied. âPayback was your team until it wasnât.â
âGot it.â Ben clicked his tongue. âSo, what? You wanna strike a deal now? You watch my back, I watch yours?â
Another shrug. âMaybe.â
And God, fuck, he wanted that. More than anything.
âNo,â he managed to say. And you still didnât react â like youâd expected that answer. âSorry, but youâre on your own, sweetheart.â
You gave him a nod. âFigured. Men make stupid decisions all the time.â
A smile of amusement briefly flashed across his lips. âSorry to disappoint.â
He meant it.
And then, in the next blink of an eye, you were gone. Vanished right in front of him. Took Ryan with you, even though Ben wanted to scorch every last bit of rotten Brooks DNA that had weaseled itself through time and sprouted like weeds.
The fight with Homelander was brutal. Biblical in that kill-your-own-children way. But no one was left untouched. Ben was losing, then winning, then losing again. Homelanderâs strength was impossible. But you changed the game.
You fucking cheated. Came back just to rig it.
Homelander screamed, fought, bled. Maeve leapt into the fray. Butcher took a blast and kept going. Ben punched steel wrapped in daddy issues. You froze Homelander long enough for him to charge.
Together, you all changed the tide.
But the price was high. The detonation burned through every supe in range â Butcher, Maeve, Annie, Kimiko, and you. It took a drop of blood falling from your nose onto marbled tile that made Ben surge forward and tackle the caped supe. And with Homelander in his grip and Maeve beside him, he dove out the fucking window, drawing the blast away.
But it wasnât enough.
Because when he came to, scorched and dazed on the street below and Homelander twitching in a crater, MM was carrying you out of the rubble â body limp, nose gushing red, head lolling, eyes shut.
You didnât wake up.
Not on the way to the CIA facility. Not during Butcherâs rant about being robbed of revenge. Not when Frenchie and Kimiko paced the waiting room floor. Not when Annie cried, or Hughie sat in numb silence, or MM tried to keep everyone calm.
Ben followed them, and no one stopped him. Not even when he stood in the hallway outside your hospital room, hands shaking and heart thundering like it hadnât in eighty years.
He tried to look apathetic. Bored and not like someone with a crushing pain in his ribcage. He sat on the bench outside your room, staring at the wall like it owed him a fucking explanation. Clenched his fists and dug his heels into the linoleum to keep him from going in and reaching out.
Heâd spent a week trying to get you to fucking hate him. Heâd said the worst shit he could come up with. Treated you like garbage. Fucked every distraction within armâs reach.
And you still came back for him. Still saved him. Now you might never wake up to see how it would end.
Inside the room, you werenât moving. Machines beeped steadily. A coma, theyâd said. Not permanent â maybe. Not fatal â yet. But your body had taken the hit of freezing time across an entire floor full of supes while his own powers weakened you. And apparently, something in your brilliant brain had finally gone too far. Lit up and blown out.
He knew it was his fault â somewhere under the anger and the static and the sharp edge of grief curling behind his ribs. If you hadnât stopped him â if you hadnât warned him â heâd have killed them all. Annie, Butcher, hell, maybe even Ryan. He wouldnât have stopped. He wouldnât have thought.
Youâd made sure he didnât become exactly what they thought he already was.
Ben leaned forward and rested his clasped hands between his knees. He didnât pray. He didnât beg. But he came close.
And then, he could smell the fucking bastard before he heard his footsteps stroll down the hallway toward him.
Stan Edgar. Older. Just as smug. Still smelled like overpriced cologne and executive privilege. The last time Ben had seen that face, was in 1984, and Payback had just handed him over like a dog someone got tired of feeding.
Ben didnât even look up when the expensive loafers halted in front of him.
âI was wonderinâ how long itâd take you to slither in,â he said coldly and met Edgarâs eyes. âYou have some fuckinâ nerve showing up here. Canât decide yet if itâs ballsy or stupid.â
Stan Edgarâs voice was the same as it had been in the â80s â cool, measured, and full of contempt he didnât bother hiding. âI almost didnât. But then, youâre not the one I came to see.â
Ben rose to his feet. Slow. Deliberate. Towering.
âYouâre not fucking touching her,â Ben growled. âGive me one good fuckinâ reason I shouldnât put your teeth through the back of your goddamn skull.â
Stan didnât flinch. Didnât blink. Was that a fucking thing smart people had in common?
âBecause you need me,â he replied with a calm smile.
Ben scoffed a laugh â humorless and sharp. âThatâs a new one.â
Stanâs gaze flickered to the closed door beside them. Your room. A hint of interest passed over his face â not warm, not cruel, just precise.
âYouâve done an admirable job pretending you donât care about her,â Stan said. âAlmost convincing.â
Benâs fists clenched, his teeth gritting. âWalk away.â
âBut you do care,â Stan continued, eyes narrowing. âYou always did. Even back then when you first told me about her. We never did find out what exactly she changed. Only she will probably ever know the truth. But I do know sheâs your axis, Soldier Boy. Your tether. Sheâs what youâre fighting to stay alive for, even if youâre too angry and broken to admit it.â
Benâs jaw twitched.
Stan let the silence draw out. Let the words sink in. And then, in a tone that was too casual to be anything but deliberate, he mused, âShe hasnât gone back yet, has she?â
Ben looked up sharply.
Stan gave a small, knowing smile. âI thought so. This version of her â the one lying comatose on the other side of that door â sheâs still in the present. Which means the loop hasnât closed. Which means you still need her. Alive. Close. And willing to go.â
âGo to hell,â Ben hissed and stepped closer. âYou set me up. You handed my team the knife and told âem where to cut. Youâre the reason they sold me out, the reason I was buried under forty years of ice and piss and Commie tests. I donât make deals with fucking snakes.â
Stan stepped back, adjusting his cuffs. âShe doesnât know, I assume. Not about you. Not about what you were to her. Thatâs important. You break that too early, it falls apart.â
Ben scowled â hard and quiet. His blood boiled underneath his skin. âThat a threat?â
âItâs a truth,â Stan said, smiling. âOne youâve gone to great lengths to protect.â
âCareful, Edgar,â he muttered, jaw grinding. âBecause if I start swinging, you wonât come back from that one.â
âYou wonât kill me,â Stand replied calmly. âBecause I know what sheâs planning. I know sheâs applied to universities in Boston, New York, Los Angeles, even Paris. Sheâs waiting until this ends to disappear. Teaching gigs, research grants. A clean, respectable life. Smart girl. Admirable, really.â He tilted his head slightly. âYou canât follow her there. And you know it.â
Benâs fists clenched at his sides. âYouâre here to blackmail me.â
âIâm here to make sure you donât burn your only lifeline,â Stan replied. âThe war with Homelander is almost over. The dust is going to settle, and some of us are smart enough to plan ahead. Someone needs to replace him. Smooth things over with the public.â
Ben scoffed a dark chuckle. âIâm not gonna be your fuckinâ Vought puppet again. Youâre playing with fire, Stan.â
âNo,â Stan said, meeting his gaze coolly. âYou are. By dragging her into this. By trying to keep her close without telling her who you really are. You think she wonât leave? That she wonât hate you when she finds out? Not to mention, if you mishandle this, the loop never starts.â
Ben didnât answer. Didnât have to. They both knew what was at stake.
âYou want her alive and in your vicinity. I want insurance. I think we can come up with something mutually beneficial,â Stan said. âI keep your secret and help keep her here. In exchange, you donât kill me and save the company. And when the dust settles, we both walk away.â
The old rage in Benâs chest itched like a half-healed scar. Everything in him wanted to flatten this bastard with his goddamn boot. Snap his jaw, twist his wrist, spill the truth of 1984 in blood and bone. But if Stan opened his smug little mouth at the wrong time, youâd run.
âGot any bright ideas?â
That same old smug smile curled on Stanâs lips. He knew he won. âI do,â he said. âIâll be in touch.â
And just like that, he was gone â leaving Ben alone again with the silence and the guilt and the weight of the impossible.
Ben thought it would get easier after you woke up. It didnât.
Three days of silence in that hospital room, and the moment your eyes finally opened, he felt something in him uncoil so violently it almost hurt. He didnât show it, of course. Kept the mask on. But deep down? He had nearly fucking broken. It was the damn relief that did it â the blinding, gut-punching realization that you were still here. Still breathing. Still his to destroy.
Because thatâs what this was, wasnât it?
Destruction.
After the showdown with Homelander, youâd lost your other ability, too. That stupid, terrifying power of yours â pausing time like it was nothing â was gone. Burned out, maybe. Broken. Either way, it was one less variable to worry about.
Because without it, you changed.
Ten months later, you were still here, still pretending you werenât afraid of him, but your edges had dulled. No more cocky interruptions, no more smug little barbs when he barked orders. You still seethed â he could see it in the set of your jaw, in the stiff way you handed him his schedule or fetched his dry cleaning â but now, finally, you hated him. Not just with defiance. With disappointment. With bitterness.
Quiet, sharp, cold â just like he needed.
The deal you made with Edgar had made all of this possible. Vought had wanted you dead for years. Ever since you appeared on their doorstep with chronokinesis (and one clumsy meeting in â83), theyâd flagged you as a catastrophic liability. Youâd been in hiding, hunted by the company until Edgar put a lid on it.
A truce, really.
You got your life back, and in return, Soldier Boy became the fucking leash â again.
Public relations rehab. Americaâs first supe rebranded as the woke patriot. Pride parades, womenâs marches, climate rallies â Ben did it all. Sure, he had wanted to throw up half the time and punch someone the other half, but he showed up. Grinned like an idiot. Waved at the cameras. Did what he had to do to stay on the team â because that meant keeping you close.
That was the condition he gave Butcher. And you.
If you left, so did he. And if he left? Edgar would gut the deal. Youâd be back on the hit list in seconds. He didnât have to say it twice. You stayed. You endured.
You even tried to look forward to something, curb your disappointment. You got an offer to teach at NYU that made you smile brighter than the sun, not knowing heâd already crushed it behind the scenes.
But that wasnât enough. He needed proximity. Pressure. Something deeper and more convenient.
So he made you his PA.
His old ones never lasted. Never could handle him and for sure as hell hated him. And you? You had no choice. No power. No way out. So you agreed.
For the past ten months, he turned your life into something small. Something gray. Verbal jabs turned into long, punishing days. Coffee, coke, and condom runs at 3AM. Paperwork dumped in your lap without warning. Public ridicule disguised as jokes. Every time you smiled at someone else, he punished it with ten more errands. Every time you looked like you might find a second of peace, he shattered it.
He never laid a hand on you, but he didnât have to. He broke your spirit in slow, deliberate pieces.
And it fucking worked.
You hated him. Truly. Deeply. Visibly. That sparkle in your eyes he loved so much was gone, replaced by exhaustion and contempt.
But still not enough.
You hadnât gone back yet. Hadnât slipped. Hadnât triggered the loop. And he was running out of time. Your birthday was in a week â the day he was banking on. The day youâd finally break. Heâd rehearsed every possibility. Every variable. Every sharp word and final blow.
And then, right when things were at their most frayed and he didnât know what else to do to push you over that cliff, Vought PR sent him to a fucking middle school â which turned out to be his saving grace.
Edgar thought it would be good for Soldier Boyâs image â the kids would love it, marketing said. He had to suit up. Shake hands. Sign notebooks. Let a bunch of snot-nosed brats ask him questions about courage and justice like he hadnât spent the last year slowly mutilating the best person he ever knew.
Annie stood beside him as Starlight, all practiced smiles and warm answers. The kids screamed when she flipped the light switch in the gym and lit the damn rafters up with gold. Soldier Boy, meanwhile, flexed once and signed a forehead.
But then, he saw you.
You were off to the side, chatting with someone he hadnât noticed before. Young guy, decent build, probably early thirties, wearing a NASA sweatshirt like he earned it. Tall. Clean-cut. Big smile. Middle school science teacher, from the look of him.
The two of you were huddled near the supply room door, leaning against lockers like the rest of the world didnât exist. You were holding a paper cup of coffee as if it was the Holy Grail and gesturing mid-rant with your free hand. The guy was nodding along, wide-eyed and grinning like a fucking rescue mutt who just found a forever home.
The way you laughed, the way you leaned in without even noticing â something in Ben fucking snapped. And before he could stop himself, he perked his ears to catch the conversation.
âYup. Had to smuggle dry ice across the border in a cooler from Vermont. Worth it.â
âWow, thatâs dedication,â he chuckled.
âPlease,â you grinned. âYou havenât seen dedication until youâve tried to explain wave-particle duality using glow sticks and a laser pointer from Canadian Tire.â
Ben felt something unpleasant twist behind his ribs. You were glowing. Beaming.
âAnd you said youâre running something today?â you asked, curious now.
Ben stepped in closer, pretending to inspect the trophy case. His teeth ground together so hard he swore his molars would crack. If you dared so much as to touch the guyâs arm now, heâd blow up the whole goddamn school.
âOh, yeah,â the guy said and lit up. âItâs the old NASA demo with vacuum and marshmallows. Iâve got a bell jar, vacuum pump, camera rig⊠We film the expansion in slo-mo and talk about gas laws. I also bring in Peeps for maximum horror.â
You laughed, full-bodied and joyful. âStop! I love that experiment!â
âCome sit in,â he said, clearly encouraged. âYouâd be great with them. Honestly, if youâre ever interested in guest lecturing, I know my eighth graders would lose their minds.â
Ben had heard enough.
âSheâs got work,â he cut in behind you, voice casual and deadly. âSheâs got a schedule. Doesnât have time to blow up candy with middle schoolers.â
You didnât flinch. Didnât even turn. âAnd youâve got an audience to pander to, remember?â
Ben moved into the space beside you, shoulders squared, gaze sharp. âThereâs a meeting in twenty minutes. Youâre coming.â
âYou and Annie have a meeting. Iâll catch up.â
âYou sure about that?â
You raised your brows and stepped closer, your eyes flickering around the gym full of kids. You lowered your voice as you spoke, âWhatâre you gonna do? Throw me over your shoulder in front of a class of children and ten reporters? You canât pull your usual bullshit with the world watching.â
He couldnât say it. Couldnât threaten you here, not with dozens of kids around and Annie two feet away. Couldnât risk the cameras catching even the edge of a snarl.
He clenched his jaw.
âGuess Iâll go help inspire the next generation. You and Annie have fun with the mayor.â You smiled sweetly â fake as hell. Then you turned back to the teacher, tone instantly brighter. âLead the way, professor. I want front-row seats for the Peep implosion.â
The guy smiled and opened the door for you. You went willingly â laughing again, relaxed, glowing, as if you hadnât spent ten months taking his orders and swallowing his poison.
And Ben stood there, fuming, watching the door swing closed behind you like a goddamn slap in the face. His stomach twisted into knots he hadnât felt since â42 â the kind of jealousy that bordered on nausea. That pussy got a smile out of you. Got real laughter. Got your attention.
He hadnât seen you that fucking happy in months. And you hadnât looked at Ben like that in eighty-one goddamn years.
Now, none of it was for him.
That night, Ben waited.
He stood across the street for hours. A half-lit cigarette dangled between his fingers, long since dead. He didnât light another.
Your little dungeon-level walk-up apartment was tucked under one of those overpriced brownstones with wrought iron railings and chipped stairs leading down from the sidewalk. Half a planter wilted on the stoop. A bike was chained to the gate like it had given up.
It was close to midnight. You still werenât fucking home.
His jaw worked till he got a migraine. Youâd left the school with that fuck. That smug, soft-spoken, teacher-voice fuck who probably graded tests with smiley faces and called his mother every Sunday. Probably had a cat. Or worse â a golden retriever.
Then, there you were â laughing.
You were walking up with that pussy now, your bag slung over your shoulder, hair pulled into a loose knot, your shoulders bare in the warm June air. You had your keys in hand before you even reached the steps. Ben followed your movements, watched as you gestured animatedly, then laughed again at something the science teacher said.
He hated the way you looked at the guy. Open. Interested. The bastardâs hand was way too fucking close to your back as you unlocked the door, and you smiled â all bright and easy. That sharp little smile that meant your brain was working overtime.
You let the teacher inside, and that was it.
Ben was across the street before youâd barely closed the door. By the time you answered his knock, loud enough to wake the damn neighborhood, you were already pissed.
âWhat the fuck do you want?â
âCoffee,â Ben said, his lips curling into a slow, lazy smirk. âI want fucking coffee. From that place on 12th.â
âSeriously?â you scoffed, stepping half into the doorway.
âNow.â
âIâm off the clock.â
âYouâre never off the fuckinâ clock.â Ben tilted his head a fraction. âYou gonna make me ask twice?â
Thatâs when the guy inside appeared behind you, standing awkwardly with one of your mugs in hand, already halfway into his little âI should give you two a minuteâ face.
Benâs eyes were locked on you. Not moving. There was no yelling. No words. Just a look. A cold, sharp threat that made your stomach flip â not for yourself, but for the man behind you.
You knew it instantly.
If you donât go right now, Iâll snap his fucking neck.
Your throat worked before you turned back to the teacher, forcing a laugh that was half a breath too tight. âGive me ten minutes?â
The guy smiled, easy and trusting. âSure, Iâll wait here.â
âDonât break anything while Iâm gone,â you muttered to Ben as you brushed past him.
Ben didnât bother answering.
When the door slammed shut, the teacher guy was still standing by your couch, probably confused. Probably nervous.
Good.
Ben didnât waste time. He walked a slow, heavy loop around the room. Took in the bookshelves, the cluttered little desk, the framed photo on the wall of you with Annie and Kimiko. His lip curled at the sight.
The teacher offered him a tight, awkward smile. âDid you need something, orâŠ?â
Ben turned to face him. He didnât speak at first, just stared. But when he finally did, it was low â gravel scraped off pavement.
âIf you donât walk out that fucking door in the next three seconds, Iâll break your neck so fast your brain wonât have time to know youâre dead.â
The teacherâs face went white.
âDonât ever think you can fucking come back, either,â Ben added. âLose her number.â
That was it. The door clicked shut a few seconds later.
And ten minutes later, when you finally came back, it all unraveled then.
You looked around, confused, before realizing the teacher was gone.
âWhat the hell did you do?â you snapped, storming toward Ben without waiting for an answer. âHe was a decent guy, for once. And you scared him off like some rabid fuckingââ
âI gave him three seconds,â Ben cut in, voice low and bored like heâs just filed his taxes. âHe got out in two. Smart guy. You think Iâm gonna let you go fuck some science fair reject?â
You crossed your arms, the dim light throwing shadows up your bare collarbones. âI think youâre bored. Again. And I think you should leave.â
Ben stepped forward. Just one little step. Measured.
You didnât move â not yet.
âThatâs cute,â he said, sneering. âReal fuckinâ cute. You think you get a say?â
His eyes dragged over you like a lazy threat.
âGod, you canât stand that I might have a goddamn moment to myself, can you? You donât get to decide who I talk to. You donât get to decide anything about my life.â
âI do when your life is fuckinâ mine. I own you. Get this through your stubborn fucking head.â
He said it like it was truth. Like the sky was blue, gravity was real, and you belonged to him.
You stepped closer, trembling with fury. âYou treat me like a slave, you stalk me, you ruin any fucking chances I have at being happyââ
Ben chuckled â the kind of sound that set nerves on edge. âHappy?â He took a slow, deliberate step toward you. âYou think flirtinâ with some soft-handed twink whoâs never been in a fight is happiness?â
You stepped back instinctively.
Benâs smile twisted. He saw it. Smelled it â fear.
âHereâs the thing, sweetheart,â he murmured, closing the gap like a lion circling the kill. âYou wanna get laid so bad, maybe you shouldâve just asked. Iâm right fucking here.â
You scoffed, but he still came closer.
âCâmon, doll, youâre already playing the part. Dressing like that. Batting your lashes. Might as well bend over and get what youâve been fuckinâ begging for.â
You backed up another half step, but the wall was coming up fast behind you â that little strip of space between the bookshelf and the door.
And Ben fucking followed.
His hand grazed your hip. Not a grab. Just fingers brushing the fabric. Deliberate. Familiar â the same fucking move his father had used. Fourth of July, 1942.
You flinched, just slightly, but that was all he needed. His stomach turned, but he didnât stop.
Because this was the goddamn plan. This would push you far enough, wouldnât it? It would probably make you hate him so much youâd go back in time just for the sole purpose of finally killing him.
Ben had never hated himself more than in this moment.
âThat it, hm?â He caged you in with one arm against the wall, the other trailing down the curve of your waist like a slow threat, fingers dragging over fabric, flesh, and bone. âYou thought some middle school dweeb was gonna fill you up? You wanted fuckinâ affection that bad?â
His fingers dug into your waist, just enough to stake a claim â just enough to threaten. He didnât kiss you. Didnât move beyond the line. But he hovered on the fucking edge of it. Close enough to burn.
Your pulse began to race, panic biting at the edges â he could hear it. But your voice was steady and your shoulders straight. You didnât cower.
âIâm not afraid of you,â you bit.
âYou should be.â
His fingers tightened just barely again â enough to warn, not enough to bruise. Yet.
But as you looked up at him, stared into his eyes as if you could stare into his soul, something shifted in your gaze. Cold. Empty.
âI see it now,â you whispered. You didnât sound afraid anymore, but he knew you still were. âThatâs what this was always about. You want to break me.â
Ben froze, throat closing, but he didnât take his hand off you.
âThis is what it takes, huh? You want my dignity next? You wanna feel like a man? Rape me?â You spit the word in his face. âGo ahead, Ben. Itâs still not gonna fucking break me.â
First time you ever used his actual name.
Ben flinched. Breath hitched. Heart hammering like heâd been the one cornered. He looked at you, really looked, and saw the hate there.
Clean. Pure. Uncompromising.
Heâd finally fucking done it â and it felt like swallowing glass.
Finally, he took a step back like your sheer heat was burning him. âCareful, sweetheart,â he muttered. âNext time I wonât be so goddamn nice.â
And then he left. Fled your apartment, practically.
Because it was all he could do to keep himself from dropping to his knees and fucking screaming. The pressure that had been building in his chest all year â all eleven fucking months of playing the villain, twisting the knife deeper every day â it all burned too hot and sudden.
Ben kept telling himself then that it was just one more week. Seven fucking days. He could stomach anything for that long.
But each time you passed him in the hallway, eyes fixed on the floor, shoulders drawn in like you were bracing for impact, something inside him cracked further. You flinched when he cleared his throat. Stiffened when his shadow crossed yours. And when you looked at him, on the rare occasion you did, it was like you were finally seeing the monster.
It broke his fucking heart.
He had told himself this was the only way. That when it was over, when you were back â really back â he could explain everything.
But now, watching you move around him like a ghost of the girl heâd once known, he wasnât so sure anymore. He didnât know how to fix this. How to fix you. How to fix himself.
And the sick truth of it was, he wasnât even sure he deserved the fucking chance.
â¶ïž Chapter 15: I May Be a Thief, but I Am Not a Cheat
Going back to the present next week! Yay đ„ł
What did you think of this one? Did you expect Ben to go this far? Did you enjoy their little moments of bonding before Ben turned up the volume? Hope those last few chapters filled in some gaps. Writing his pov is always a bit wild đđđŠ
Coming Up:
Before his brain could supply more brilliant ideas, he caught you staggering another step. One more step backward and your hand darted to the brick wall beside you. You blinked, your knees shook, breaths grew labored. Your nose twitched, and your hand flew up to your face.
The blood came fast â just a drip, then another, your fingertips painted red.
His stomach dropped, his smirk dropped faster. Your knees gave just enough to make him lunge forward, and Ben was at your side in a second, arms reaching for you.
âWhoa, shitâ⊠Hey, easy⊠I got youââ
âDonât fucking touch me!â
Your voice hit like a whip. Not loud. Not harsh. Just final.
It stopped him cold. The words sank deep. Cut clean. Same tone youâd used back in 1942.
Same shit you said to him when he first offered you his hand and you looked at it like it was a trap. You didnât want comfort then. You didnât want it now either.
Ben slowly lowered his hands and backed off â and it hurt like fucking hell.
You leaned heavily against the wall of the corner store and slowly slid down to the cool concrete with a wince. Back slumped, one knee up, blood still streaking down the side of your face. Your eyes were sharp. Distant. Locked up like you couldnât afford to let him close.
He watched you for a beat, jaw clenching. You were breaking. Physically. But you still wouldnât let him in.
PSA to fic readers, it is so hard to freak a fic writer out with your comments. we are just as crazy about the fic as you are.
tell me you love it. tell me it made you slam your laptop shut. tell me you brought it up at your college lecture about kink. key smash in all caps. quote the passage that made you think. i promise, weâll love it.
we spend hours thinking about it, writing it, editing it. there is no such thing as over enthusiasm when youâre talking about our fics to us. we are sooooo weird about them, i assure you. you are just matching my freak. the freak bar is already set so high. feel no anxiety about enjoying something and letting the creator know.
Summary: Unable to control your abilities, youâre stuck in the present with Billy Butcher, his team, and Americaâs first asshole. At this point, youâve become Soldier Boyâs personal punching bag. But when an accident leaves you stranded in 1942, you run into a familiar face and suddenly rely on your future tormentorâs help as your only hope.
Pairing: Soldier Boy x supe!Reader
Warnings: 18+ for language, violence & death, 2022 & season 3, SB being his charming self and everything that comes with it, drug use & drinking, PTSD, mentions of torture, physics, angst, one-sided pining & steamy thoughts, fluff if you squint
The first thing he noticed when he woke up was the cold crawling through his blood and biting his skin. His skull buzzed with static, not a single clear thought coming through like the worst hangover of his life â and he used to have a lot of those.
Then came the sound.
Footsteps. Voices. English. American.
None of them sounded familiar. Not his old team. No one from Payback â not that heâd really expected them to come for him. Not after what they fucking did.
But then he heard the only voice that ever mattered â yours.
âUh, Butcher, I donât think this was a good ideaâŠâ
âDonât worry 'bout it.â
British. Male.
And for a second, Ben thought it was another hallucination of you. It wasnât uncommon for him to hear your voice in his head, after all. It had been the only constant for⊠well, however long itâd been. But then:
âNo, I donât think you understand. This podâs got like three inches of lead, borated polyethylene, and some kind of heat sink. I canât read most of this since itâs in Russian, but if Iâm reading these charts right, the decay signatures are insane. Thereâs Americium-241 in the isotopic yields. You only see that as a byproduct in low-burnup plutonium fuel cycles. Alpha and gamma radiation is peaking simultaneously. I mean, this spike right here is equivalent to a 3 Gray dose in under four seconds.â
Yeah, Ben didnât understand a single word of that. His hallucinations of you had always been realistic, but theyâd never been as fucking smart as the real thing. There was only so much his brain could do. Which meant:
You werenât a figment of his drug-induced imagination.
âEnglish, sunshine,â the British guy prompted impatiently.
You sighed loudly. âThe Russians turned him into a walking nuke.â
Great.
Benâs eyes snapped open in that moment, blinked a couple of times to get rid of the blur in his vision and the dazed fog in his mind, and then, sure enough, there you were â live and in the flesh.
Not more than two feet away from him, staring wide-eyed and horrified between strange men in blue worker overalls and guns in their hands.
Your face was the same, hadnât aged a day since â42. Your hair was a mess, your skin was smudged with dirt and sweat, and you were wearing the same overalls as the rest of them, holding a thick folder in your hands like you belonged with those fucking strangers.
You came. Freed him. Saved him.
But as Ben took a step closer, you took one back and hid halfway behind one of the men, clinging to the guyâs arm like you were fucking scared. Scared of him.
You didnât run to him. Didnât sling your arms around him. Didnât seem happy in the slightest to see him again.
Just⊠terrified.
And then, Ben felt it â the pressure building behind his sternum, white-hot and untamable.
âUh-ohâŠâ You took another cautious step back.
âWhat now?â the British asshole huffed, voice louder over the low hum that began to rise in the room.
âHis decay constants are collapsing. His metabolic feedback loopâs destabilizing,â you said.
Benâs chest started to glow. Lights vibrated in their sockets. Dust lifted from the floor.
âEnglish!â
âRight. Heâs gonna fucking blow,â you clarified.
Yup.
Still fucking smarter than a room full of men.
And then, the bomb inside him went off, he blacked out for a few seconds, and when the disorienting haze lifted and he opened his eyes, you were gone. Vanished.
Again.
Ben didnât think long and hard at that moment â he knew this was his chance to finally escape, so he took it. Staggered out through the hole he blew into the wall, past humans and bodies on the ground.
He found a locker room in the facility, broke one open, stole some godawful and grimy tracksuit and boots that were too tight in the toes. He grabbed a lonely duffel bag filled with a gun, a combat knife, a pack of smokes and a box of matches, a ration bar, some rubles, and a half-empty bottle of vodka.
Good enough.
Tunnels turned into roads. Chain-link fences and barbed wire turned into forests. He walked till he found train tracks, followed them to a station, and read the word âĐĐĐ ĐĐĐĐ Đąâ on a screen there.
Airport? Good enough.
He took his chances and, sure enough, made it onto an airfield. Found a plane leaving for New York City and hid with the cargo like a goddamn stowaway. But it didnât matter. He was nothing if not resourceful, and more importantly, he was going fucking home.
The most shocking thing, though, aside from your sudden reappearance in one of the most devastating places on Earth during one of his strangest times?
How much time had fucking passed.
Ben knew the fucking Reds had locked him into that box and kept him frozen for a little while. He didnât have a sense of time in there, just weird dreams, but he judged from the length of his hair and beard that it had been at least a few months, maybe even a year or two. The last date he could remember was 1990 before they put him on ice.
Well, cut to the airport where he found a newspaper that said it was 2022.
Thirty-two fucking years?!
By the time he hopped over the perimeter fence at fuckin' JFK and disappeared into Queens, he suddenly realized how much had truly changed. It was a different world now, and he was fucking lost.
No identity. No money. No plan.
As he moved through the outer boroughs toward Manhattan, everything around him was wrong. Too fast. Too loud. Too bright. It wasnât the New York he remembered.
Billboards werenât paper anymore and cars were sleeker and quieter. A kid with blue hair and a nose ring, two gay dudes, and a guy who talked into the watch around his wrist walked by him. Storefronts had rainbow flags, and a bus passed him with a star-spangled caped cunt plastered on its side, advertising another Vought-produced movie.
Some things didnât change, he supposed.
The smell of the city was the same â diesel fuel, pot smoke, piss, and hot dogs â but the city itself wasnât. This wasnât his America â not even close.
The only fucking thing he disturbingly recognized in this brave, new world was the small, rectangular slab everyone carried around in their hands and stared obsessively into like they were seeing God in church.
Youâd had one of those as well, and eventually, he realized that the thing heâd kept safe in a box for forty years was a goddamn phone â cordless.
Ben then stole a cup full of quarters from a bum and found a payphone, dialing a number he remembered from forty years ago. It rang once and went dead.
So he went old school.
He started poking around pawn shops and old Vought haunts till someone finally whispered the name he was after.
The Legend.
Old bastard probably still had a Rolodex bigger than Fort Knox. He knew every back door in Vought and where bodies were buried because he helped bury half of them.
And then, a plan slowly formed in Benâs mind: hole up at Legendâs, get cleaned up, find his old team, and kill their backstabbing asses â preferably as brutal and merciless as possible.
Permanent measures, Ben scoffed internally, remembering Stan Edgarâs words from a meeting back in â83.
Well, who was fucking laughing now?
And then, finally, when all of it was said and done, Ben would come for you.
After some roughing up of a man in a bar, he then got an address in Midtown, but somewhere between Sixth Avenue and 59th Street, he heard it.
Tinny, distant, but unmistakeable â the same melody and sharp vowels of a Russian pop song. It drowned into his ears from a small radio in a parked food truck.
Something inside him cracked then.
His vision blurred. His knees buckled. His mind flooded with images he tried to bury deep. But the hum in his chest, the pressure, the fire under his skin had already started, violent and unstoppable.
Then came the flash.
He didnât remember much more. He woke up to car alarms, sirens, and people screaming. Thick smoke hung in the air like fog and rubble was everywhere. He stared at the scorched remnants of a building that looked like a hurricane of flames had blown through it.
And Ben felt bad. He really did. Because, sure, one could argue heâd killed a lot of people over the long span of his career, so what were a few more?
But this was different. He hadnât meant to.
Getting tortured by the fucking Commies was one thing, but they turned him into one of those supe freaks heâd always despised. Strongest man alive turned walking, uncontrollable nuke.
He fucking hated what they made him into. If he could fucking nuke the entire upper part of the Asian continent, he would.
Ben then kept his head down, moved through the back alleys and side streets, avoiding ambulances, police cars, and cameras till he ducked into the lobby of a pre-war high-rise on West 55th, next to a cigar shop and a boutique vodka bar.
The elevator then creaked up to the penthouses â PH4.
Ben raised his fist and knocked â three hard pounds, each one echoing through the hallway. The paint on the doorframe cracked slightly.
Footsteps. Slippers shuffling. Then the clunk of a lock sliding back. The door swung open, and there he was.
Legend. Older. Softer. But still himself. Robe loose, silk pajamas, gold chain on bare chest, slippers that cost more than a car, and a whiskey tumbler in hand at 10 AM. Eyes like saucers. He looked like he was seeing a fucking ghost.
Maybe he was.
âJesus H. Roosevelt Christ,â the old man breathed. âBen?â
Ben didnât answer right away. He was tired â bone-tired, blood-tired. Heâd walked out of a Russian grave, burned a street down in Midtown, and ridden the subway in a stolen tracksuit like some goddamn hobo. The whole journey had already taken him five days.
âYou gonna let me in or just stare at me like I crawled outta your fuckinâ toilet?â
Legend stumbled backward with a stunned laugh. âOf course! Of course! Come on in, come on in, you beautiful bastard! I thought you were dead! I mean, you were dead! The whole world thinks youâreâ⊠Oh, man, wait âtil I tell Margeââ
âStart with a drink,â Ben grunted as he stepped inside, looking around.
Legendâs place hadnât changed much. Just a new location and a better view. Crystal decanters. Too many mirrors. A leopard print robe draped over a $9,000 couch. It smelled like citrus cologne, stale cigars, and money that hadnât been earned honestly. The walls were plastered with nostalgia: framed magazine covers, awards, posters, photos of stars long dead. And there were more pictures of Soldier Boy than any museum dared hang. It was like stepping into a shrine of himself.
He peeked at one photo and felt fucking nothing.
Legend closed the door behind him and scrambled to keep up. âYouâre really here. Youâre alive. What the hell happened to you?â
âReds,â Ben muttered.
âJesus Christ, I thought they buried you. I mourned you, man.â
âYeah? Mustâve been a real touchinâ tribute,â Ben said dryly.
Legend blinked. âHey. I liked you, alright? I didnât sign up for whatever Vought pulled. I wasnât in the room when they made that call.â
âYou sure about that?â Ben said quieter. Dangerous. âYou werenât in on it?â
Legend looked wounded, but he always had a flair for theatrics. âBen, listen to me. I had nothing to do with it. Swear on my motherâs grave, I didnât know a goddamn thing. You were the crown jewel. The whole plan was to sell you forever. Why would they toss the best brand they had?â
Ben watched him closely. Legend still had that salesman gleam, but his hands were fidgeting. The man might be a rat for a living, but he wasnât a traitor.
âI believe you,â Ben said finally.
Legend sagged, relieved. âJesus. Thank God.â
âDonât thank him. He didnât help.â
Ben accepted the drink offered to him without blinking. Scotch. Strong. First thing heâd tasted that didnât remind him of a basement in Russia. Legend never poured anything cheap.
The older man then refilled his own glass with shaking hands. âThey said you died. Nuclear meltdown in Ohio in â84. You went in alone. They did the whole shtick â flag over the casket, moment of silence at Vought Tower, candles, parade. Even got you a statue. Beautiful PR, really. You didnât know?â
Ben turned his head slowly. âDo I look like I fuckinâ knew?â
So this was what it had come to? This was what his life had amounted to? Buried like a hero, commemorated for a blink of an eye, and then fucking forgotten.
A fuckinâ statue?!
âNo, no, I guess not,â Legend said, still rambling. âYou look like shit, frankly. You wanna catch up first or take a shower? âCause, no offense, you smell like Cold War ass.â
Ben quirked an eyebrow. âYou offerinâ to join me?â
Legend raised both hands. âHey, man, I donât swing like that â anymore.â
Sure. Ben scoffed under his breath and rolled his eyes slightly. Not like Bogart was ever balls-deep inside the guy.
They stood in silence for a beat. Legend then gestured vaguely back at the liquor cart. âYou want something else? Shrimp? Bump? You still do coke, right?â
Ben glanced at him and plopped down on the velvet couch with a grunt. âYou offering or reminiscin'?â
The old man moved behind the bar and opened a drawer. âYouâre not gonna believe what I saved for a rainy day.â
He pulled out a round mirror, the kind they didnât bother hiding in the â80s, and set it gently down on the coffee table. From a thin glass vial, he tapped out two tight white lines.
âPeruvian flake. 1983. From that last gig in Cartagena, remember?â
Ben dipped his pinky first and tasted it on his tongue. Still burned just right. He stared at the neat, shimmering lines like they were a goddamn miracle.
It had been forty fucking years.
He hadnât touched coke since Reaganâs first term. His heart rate picked up just looking at it. He leaned down over the mirror, one finger closing a nostril, and inhaled the line in one clean, practiced motion.
The burn climbed straight to his brain and lit up every nerve ending like someone flipped a breaker. His eyes watered. His spine straightened like heâd just been recharged with jumper cables.
âStill burns like it used to.â Ben sniffed, nose tingling.
Legend grinned like a man watching the resurrection of a god. âAtta boy.â
âNow thatâs the America I remember.â Ben dragged a hand down his face, leaned back against the couch, and let out a dark, satisfied chuckle. âYou always did age like a cockroach. I figured if anyone made it, itâd be you.â
Legend laughed too hard and raised his glass, sitting down in a leather arm chair across from him. âThey donât make âem like us anymore.â
The men drank. After a few more quiet sips and more bumps of coke, Legend stood, dusted off his robe, and disappeared into a back room. He returned with a garment bag slung over one arm.
âKnew this day might come,â he said, grinning. âCouldnât throw it away.â
Ben unzipped the bag and stared.
His suit. His real one. Emerald green, armor-ribbed, the star still proud on the chest. He could almost smell the battles in it. Almost hear the roar of the crowd.
He stood. âShower?â
âGuest bathroomâs down the hall. Still stocked with aftershave from â87. Towels are clean.â
The bathroom was as opulent as the rest of the penthouse. Marble floors, a gold-trimmed mirror, a steam shower the size of a phone booth. Ben finally dropped the sweat suit, stepped under the spray, and let the water scald his skin â first real shower in fucking decades.
The grime peeled off in waves â Russian chemicals, blood, dirt, something green and sticky he didnât ask questions about. He washed his hair twice. The beard had gotten too long, too wild. And as he finally stepped out of the showerâ
âThere you are,â he said with an almost amused sigh. At some point, heâd just accepted the fact that you were haunting his conscious.
Canât fight the universe.
You sat on the counter next to the sink, smirk on your face, bare legs dangling over the edge â like fucking clockwork. âMissed me?â
Ben only nodded with a hum as he stepped up to the mirror above the sink. He wiped a circle clear on the fogged surface and stared for a long moment.
âYou look like shit,â you noted and crossed your arms, giving him a scrutinizing sideways glance.
And yeah, Jesus fuck, he looked like heâd just crawled out of fuckinâ hell. Forty years of Commie torture and dark basements were written on his skin. Heâd only seen daylight two times during his stay there â when theyâd field-test the fucking Little Boy in his chest. And it had rained both goddamn times.
His eyes were sunken, the green a little faded. The beard made him look like a mountain man who lost his fuckin' mountain. He picked up the clippers. Hovered over the switch. Heâd never really been a beard kind of guy. Vought had always insisted on a clean-shaven image.
âKeep it,â you said. âGive it a trim. I think it looks good. Dangerous. Edgy. Perfect for puttinâ the fear of God into your enemies.â
Ben smacked his lips and got to work. He trimmed the beard, shaping it into something neater and harder. He then grabbed a pair of scissors and cut his own hair with slow, methodical snips. Piece by piece, the ghost peeled away, and underneath it, something familiar started to reemerge.
âThis is your time, right?â he finally spoke and peered at you from his periphery. âThat fuckinâ flashlight was a phone, wasnât it?â
You grinned cheekily. âWell, I couldnât give that away. Canât fault me for that.â
âGuess not,â he huffed a strand of hair out his face.
Ben then dried off, suited up, adjusted the straps. The fabric settled against his skin like it remembered him. Tight in the right places. The weight of the shield in his hand felt like gravity returning. He finally felt anchored again.
Less like a ghost, more like a weapon.
âYou really sure about this?â you asked and gave him a look that was half-concerned and half-judgy. âKilling your old team? Your ex?â
Ben exhaled a deep breath through his nose but didnât look at you, green eyes focused on his mirror image. âThey betrayed me. Left me to rot.â
âNot like you didnât deserve it,â you muttered under your breath, then tilted your head. âAm I on your hit list?â
Ben licked his lips and clicked his tongue. âDepends.â
Your brows pinched. âOn what?â
Ben met your eyes. âIf you fuckinâ left me on purpose.â
When he finally emerged from the bathroom, Legend whistled.
âStill looks good. You could be on the cover of Time again.â
Ben ignored that. âWhat happened to Payback?â
Legend hesitated, swirling the ice in his drink. âSplit up. Disbanded. Most of âem are ghosts now. Black Noirâs made it into the new group â The Seven. Crimson Countess does livestreams now. Weird stuff.â
Ben didnât know what that meant and didnât care.
âWhere is she?â
Legend hesitated. âYou sure?â
Benâs expression didnât change.
âAlright, sheâs local. Iâve got an address. But Ben â donât expect her to cry when she sees you.â
âIâm not going for tears,â Ben said coldly.
Legend handed over a scrap of paper with her address scrawled on it. âYouâre not who you used to be.â
Ben paused mid-way to the door and turned his head slightly. âI know,â he said. âThat guyâs dead.â
And with that, he left the penthouse.
The wooded clearing was dead quiet as Ben stepped into it like it was a battlefield â except his eyes werenât on the war anymore. The old trailer lights flickered in the distance, his boots crunching the gravel with heavy thuds.
And apparently, the universe had a fucking sense of humor.
Because the last person heâd expected to find in front of his ex-girlfriendâs trailer was his other ex-girlfriend â you. But Ben heard your voice before he even saw your face.
âJesus, Butcher, I told you not to drug him. Heâs gonna have a concussion,â you bitched.
Ben then recognized the second voice that answered you as well. Still that same British asshole from the lab.
âItâs fine, sunshine. Focus on the task at hand, yeah? Weâve got bigger fish to fry now than MMâs moral compass.â
Ben stepped closer till figures came into view. The British asshole was standing and found his gaze immediately with a wide smirk. But Benâs eyes slid past the man, landing squarely on you, crouched down and tending to an unconscious guy by the trailer steps.
A flicker of anger roared alive inside of him. Familiar. Old. Heâd carried it around with him for eighty years already, and a part of him wanted to see you burn for it.
For fucking lying. For ever darling to leave him.
But something stirred underneath the anger and hurt â longing.
For your voice, your body, your heart.
But you only glanced at him briefly â unfocused, unbothered. You looked pissed and worried, but none of it was for him. You sent a glare to the asshole in front of Ben before your attention slipped back to the man on the ground, checking his pulse and muttering a few more curses under your breath.
Did youâ
Did you not recognize him?
Ben couldnât entirely fault you for the lab. Heâd crawled out of that pod a complete fucking mess. But now he looked more like himself again. Sure, maybe not the â42 version of him, but he hadnât changed that much. Still as handsome as ever. Was it the fucking beard? Should he have shaved it after all?
The Brit then mumbled something about good faith and a team up, but Ben didnât really listen. Whatever the fuck was going on here, you seemed to be a part of it, and he wasnât going to lose your trail again.
Not now. Not ever.
And maybe, just maybe, youâd walk out of it alive, depending on how this would go â once heâd figured out what the hell was going on.
âWhat about her?â Ben gestured with his chin toward you once the asshole had finished his pitch. âWhoâs she?â
âSheâs one of you. Supe. Chronokinetic,â the guy told him and smirked. âBit of a wildcard, but bloody handy in a pinch.â
So Ben had been right. He was almost proud of himself for solving that one.
But what the fuck were you doing here? Why were you so fucking calm around men with guns? This shouldnât be your fucking life.
âOi, sunshine. Câmere. Introduce yourself,â the Brit called you over.
You stood slowly and dusted off your jean shorts, muscles tense as Benâs eyes pinned you in place like a knife through a photograph. You werenât wearing a band shirt, a â40s dress, or even an overall this time. Just a plain black hoodie with white lettering that read: âWithout geometry, life is pointless.â
Yeah, definitely you.
âWhatâs your name, sweetheart?â Ben asked, a charming but feigned smirk tugging at his lips, eyes squinting and grazing over you. Observing. Studying.
Still not a trace of recognition in your eyes.
Did you really not know him? Were you lying again? Might as well give it a shot and see what poured out.
And then you just gave him your name. No muss, no fuss, no lies. Like it wasnât a big deal to begin with. You werenât guarding it like a state secret or nuclear codes. Just your name, plain and simple.
âYou know who I am?â Ben asked next and watched your face contort â brow knitted, nose scrunched, lips pursed. You thought he was fucking crazy â but definitely not someone you once shared a goddamn bed with.
âI mean, yeah,â you said and snorted an amused laugh. âYouâre Soldier Boy. You were in my high school history books. My grandpa liked to talk about you when I was a kid.â
Ben bit his lips, hummed. Nodded. And he wasnât sure yet what, but something had died inside of him.
The fuckâ
What the hell was he supposed to do with that?
You clearly had no fuckinâ clue. Did you forget? Did you really not know? What the fuck did that even mean?
This was fuckinâ absurd.
The first hint of disappointment then crashed over Ben. Anger gone. Hurt gone. Just disappointment that you couldnât remember the real him, that you didnât recognize him beyond what the world knew. You knew Soldier Boy, and for the first time in eighty years, he realized youâd be disappointed in him, too.
Sure, his hallucinations of you had been plenty opinionated over his actions, but theyâd also been easy to ignore. But this was the real you, and he wasnât the guy he used to be anymore.
Coming here to fry his ex probably didnât helpâŠ
âAlright, Doc. Time to give the man his gift,â the asshole said and nodded toward the trailer.
You sighed, rolled your eyes slightly but didnât argue. You looked fucking bored â like this was a goddamn chore. You dragged your feet back and held the trailer door open for him.
One thing the real you and his hallucination had in common, however: they were both fucking judgy.
Yeah, this first meeting wasnât ideal. You were already looking at him like youâd decided you hated him the minute he opened his mouth.
He knew that look well.
But youâd done that back then, too. It didnât mean anything. He could still turn it around.
Ben moved past you into the dim light of the trailer, cluttered with relics of a woman clinging to the scraps of fame. You followed, and then the two of you just stood there by the entrance. He narrowed his eyes past the beaded curtain, and sure enough, there was Countess, tied up on a chair and frozen mid-wail.
JesusâŠ
âSo, how does it work? Your powers?â Ben asked, his voice rough like gravel as he tried to keep it steady.
He pretended to be unbothered, curious only for the sake of the reason why he was here, but on the inside, he was trembling and itching.
Because you were right fucking there â so close that if he stretched out his pinky right now, he could touch yours. He could feel your warmth radiate off your skin and brush his. He could fucking smell you â a scent he had never forgotten and chased for over eight decades trying to find it again.
He never could.
Heâd forgotten so fucking much. Hadnât even realized it till the temptation returned. The longing was fucking winning.
Over anger. Over pain. Over everything.
All he wanted to do now was grab you and kiss you like there was no fucking tomorrow because there truly never was a guarantee thereâd be another one.
But how? To you, he was just a name in a book. A ghost on a screen.
Not Ben. Not yours. Not his.
His mind was goddamn racing, his heart pounding. He could already feel the hum in his chest.
This was all too goddamn much.
âItâs like a remote control. I can push Pause on a single object, a room full of people⊠Theoretically, even the whole world, but thatâd take a lot of juice,â you explained.
âCanât swing that much?â
You shook your head.
Ben gave a nod.
âShe canât feel anything right now. Not until you tell me to push Play,â you added.
âLike a VHS tape?â Ben quirked a brow.
Your lips rose to a faint smile. âYeah, exactly like that.â
âThis all you can do? Fuckinâ freeze people?â Ben tried to act goddamn normal, but every time he glanced at you, his heart almost exploded. âCanât you hop through time as well? Chronokinetics can do that shit, right? Like the Terminator?â
You gave a soft chuckle. âI mean, yeah, I used to jump through time.â
Benâs brow furrowed. âUsed to?â
âIt doesnât work anymore. Long story,â you replied and didnât elaborate further. âBut hey, unless, you want me to drop off your ex during an Ice Age, this should be enough, right?â
Ben swiped his tongue over his lips, nodding slowly, still thinking. Still trying to make sense of it all.
Were you telling the truth or were you lying? Did you really not know him or just pretending you didnât? Should he say something? Ask you flat out?
No, not yetâŠ
His eyes fixed back on Countess, still frozen like a turkey before it was shoved into an oven.
âWhy did you freeze her, anyway? Sheâs already tied up. Seems like overkill,â Ben said, glancing at you sideways.
Your gaze was on Countess too, head tilted, brows scrunched. Watching. Thinking. Judging. Ben could see the cogs turning in your head. He knew that look of yours well.
âShe was annoying Butcher,â you replied with a hint of amusement. âAnd frankly me. Sheâs kinda a bitch.â
âTell me about it.â He snorted a scoff, then nodded toward the door. âAnd Butcher? Heâs the asshole outside?â
You simply nodded, a faint smirk twitching on your lips.
âWhatâs his deal?â
Your amusement didnât fade when you replied, âMuch like you, heâs clinging to revenge fantasies. Heâs CIA.â
âYeah,â you snorted. âDidnât buy it either when he knocked on my door, but itâs true.â
âAnd youâre CIA, too?â
âUh, noâŠâ you said slowly at first and hesitated. âI mean, now I guess I am. Iâve only known the guy for a month. I donât usually get involved with all this supe shit.â
Supe shit.
The way you said it made Ben think you didnât count yourself as one of them. Like you were something better. Above it all â especially the theatrics that came with it.
But Ben didnât like any of it. Didnât like you being here. Didnât like you working with these people. Didnât like how that asshole out there used you to do his bidding like you were some goddamn pet.
Made him fuckin' angry.
Ben arched an eyebrow, gave you a little smile â harmless like a lamb. âAnd what did you do instead then, sweetheart? Before all this?â
âI was a physics professor at a small college in Canada,â you replied.
Huh. That fit. Fit with what youâd told him. And it made more sense to him than anything else in this world â more sense than seeing you here in the middle of this shit.
âYou know, I can keep her like that, and you can just do your thing,â you noted carefully. âThat way she wonât feel anything.â
Benâs jaw tightened, his gaze swerving back to Countess. âNo, I want her to fuckinâ feel it,â he said after a beat.
Your head bobbed thoughtfully. âYou sure about that?â
Ben looked at you then, eyes finding yours. His heart stuttered. He almost smiled, thinking his hallucinations of you had never been far off.
But you were⊠real.
You might have lied to him about parts of your life â about who you truly were or where you came from â but underneath it all, you were still undeniably you. Still judging, still observing, still asking impossible question he never really had an answer to.
He swallowed once and kept his eyes on you as he spoke, âShe lied to my face. Said she loved me but then fuckinâ left when I needed her the most.â
You didnât flinch. Didnât twitch a single muscle, like those words had no affect on you at all. You just listened and stared at him with a trace of sympathy in your eyes.
âYeah, I saw what they did to you, you know?â you said. âYour old team. In Nicaragua.â
Benâs brow furrowed. âHow?â
âI can⊠glimpse into moments of time, too,â you explained. âPast, mostly. Futureâs still fluctuating. Not as certain. Too many variables. But I can tell you who wins the next Super Bowl.â
You gave him a little grin. He matched it.
âWho?â
âChiefs.â
Ben grunted, rolling his eyes back.
You giggled softly, the sound snaking into his heart. âYou a Giants fan, huh?â
âEagles.â
âHuh. Really?â
âIâm from Philly,â he found himself saying.
And then suddenly, it all became too much. Too fucking real. You had no idea who he was, who heâd been. You didnât know him at all.
And what, was he supposed to pretend he didnât know every part of you already, either? He wasnât sure he could do that. How the fuck did he end up here?
Fuckinâ absurdâŠ
His eyes landed back on his other ex tied to a chair. If he wanted a future with you, he had to clean up his past first. But he didnât want you to see who heâd become. He just wanted you to see who heâd been.
âYouâre gonna keep chattinâ or get the fuck out now? Donât need a fuckinâ audience for this,â he said, colder now. He didnât want you to watch. Maybe to protect you or maybe to protect himself. He wasnât sure which one it was yet.
But he was determined to drag you out of this fucking mess with both hands.
âSides, what was he supposed to fucking do anyway? Walk back out there and say heâd changed his mind because the smartass with tits had a heart to heart with him?
No fuckinâ way.
He had to portray strength to his fucking enemies, or theyâd come for him again. Sure, Ben hadnât cared about shit, but if there was one thing heâd learned â no one else did fucking either.
But more importantly, a supe like you? The world would be coming for you.
To use you. To kill you.
You were too naive, too good, too fucking soft to see that. But he wasnât â and heâd take fucking care of it.
Your brow scrunched at his harsher tone in that same miffed way of yours. It always had. Itâs how he knew itâd work. Youâd be fine.
âGee, as you wish, asshole,â you huffed and then stomped your little feet back outside.
And as soon as the door swung shut behind you, Crimson Countess roared back to life â at least for the next ten minutes before it all went up in flames.
The asshole managed to pick the shittiest motel straight off the highway. It stank of mold, old cigarette smoke, and bleach. This was where someone came to murder fucking hookers â not have a goddamn reunion after eighty years with the love of their life.
But alas, here he was, in a bathroom with rusty red rims around the drains, as if people had already been dismembered by the fucking mob in here.
Heâd washed of the grit and grime, the smoke and ash of earlier and found himself in a pair of gray sweats that fit a little too loose and a goddamn Giants jersey. Youâd gotten it for him at a gas station. Gave it to him with a tiny smirk, like you were messing with him on purpose because heâd been unreasonably mean to you earlier.
And boy, had you fucking judged him once heâd walked out of that trailer â well, whatever had been left of it anyway. You didnât say a word, not the whole car ride here, just glared at him every once in a while and let him feel it.
Luckily, that wasnât entirely new. Youâd done that to him in the past as well â the silent treatment, that fucking pout⊠Whenever heâd done something back then that irked you, youâd let him stew in it. Sometimes youâd even punished him for it â and not in the fucking fun way. Especially whenever heâd underestimated you, youâd hit him with a mental slap so hard his head was still spinning hours later. Heâd secretly loved it, though. Turned him the fuck on.
But from experience he knew â your anger would pass. It always did.
For now, though, you were here, chatting outside this very bathroom with a British asshole and some scrawny kid that looked like heâd pissed himself after his girlfriend yelled a little at him.
But God, your fuckinâ voiceâŠ
He hadnât heard that sound in decades â not the real thing at least. And the original was goddamn better than the stupid recording in his skull.
âWhere are you guys off to?â your honeyed melody flowed through the thin wall â suspicious, pissed.
Those idiots out there thought he couldnât hear them. But Ben could even hear the couple fucking three doors down.
âSupply run,â the asshole replied. âThe patriotic princess in there gave us a ryder like heâs fuckinâ Mariah Carey. Youâre on Cold War nuke duty, sunshine, while me and little Hughie go out there and shake down a cuppa dealers.â
Who the fuck is Mariah Carey?
âWait, what?â String Bean threw in.
âDonât worry 'bout it,â the asshole dismissed.
âDo I look like a fucking babysitter for a nuclear warhead to you?â you huffed. âIâm about to freeze both of you and walk out of here.â
Nuclear warhead? Babysitter?!
âAlright, alright,â the asshole soothed. âLook, sunshine, hate to break it to ya, but if grandpa in there goes nuclear again, youâre the only one who can cool down the bloody core, so to speak.â
Ah. So that was why they were leaving you with him â you were his goddamn fail-safe. Fuckinâ greatâŠ
âOh, so you want me to freeze the Fat Man in there every time heâs about to fucking drop,â you realized dryly.
The fuckâ
âSmart as always,â the asshole confirmed.
âWell, you know, thereâs, like, a lot of people in this motel, and heâs not⊠stable,â String Bean said, voice weak and jittering, probably giving you a fucking puppy dog look on top of it. âYou said so yourself.â
You have?
âYeah, what he said, Doc.â
Ben could hear the assholeâs triumphant smirk through the goddamn door.
ââSides, would be nice if we could catch a couple hours of sleep. Maybe? Please?â The kidâs voice was pleading, and Ben knew youâd break at that whiny tone.
You exhaled a deep sigh, capitulated as expected. Ben waited a couple more minutes after they left, spritzed cold water on his face before feeling ready enough to face you.
When the bathroom door creaked open, you didnât look up. He found you sitting on one of the beds, glowing rectangle in your hands, thumb gliding over the sleek surface like it was second nature. The phone flickered with light and colors like a handheld television from some alien planet, while you were all angles and distance, backlit by a blue hue.
Ben cleared his throat, but you didnât even glance up.
âBathroom didnât explode. Guess thatâs progress,â you commented wryly.
He pursed his lips, biting the insides of his cheeks. The room felt fucking suffocating. What was the goddamn plan here? Was he just supposed to talk to you and act like any of this was fucking normal?
He needed more goddamn answers. Drugs. Booze. Somethinâ.
âSo, they stuck you with babysittinâ duty, huh?â Ben asked with a small chuckle, trying to break the ice. Trying to bond. Talk to you like he used to.
âYup,â you said and popped the p, still not looking up. âIf youâre gonna be a good boy and not blow up, Iâll get you a juice box, some crayons, and a coloring book.â
Ben frowned, smacked his lips, and bobbed his head, sauntering over to the dresser where Butcher had put down the bottle of cheap whiskey.
Yeah, he needed some goddamn booze to survive this nightâŠ
âYou know, I could hear you guys in there,â Ben noted lightly and flicked his chin toward the bathroom.
âI know.â
He then sighed a little and ran a hand through his hair. âYou called me a nuclear warhead.â
âYou are a nuclear warhead,â you replied unapologetically, eyes still focused on the screen.
âSoâŠâ Ben started, ignoring your little jab with a deep exhale. âYou and that asshole?â
âWhat about it?â You still didnât give him the time of day. Didnât even flinch or shift.
And all Ben could think about was how you once looked at him like he hung the goddamn moon for you.
âYou two a thing?â He tried to sound casual â not like a positive answer would cause him to torch this entire dump.
You snorted a loud laugh at that and finally looked at him. âWhat? No.â
Your nose scrunched, and Benâs heart calmed slightly till the next thought crossed his mind.
âWhat about the twig? The one who looks like heâd snap in a stiff wind?â
You arched an eyebrow. âWho? Hughie?â
Ben hated how you said that name â caring, fond, familiar. You always had a soft spot for the weaklings.
âYeah,â Ben grunted and gulped down a big sip of whiskey straight from the bottle.
Luckily, you chuckled in amusement. âNo, nothing going on there. Hughie is like a little brother I have to keep from accidentally killing himself.â
Yeah, that makes sense, Ben thought with relief and felt his chest unclench. Just another kid playing soldierâŠ
âWhy are you asking about my love life?â you prompted with a suspicious smile, making his shoulders flinch subtly.
ââM not,â Ben brushed it off casually with a sniff of his nose. âJust wondering how a smart girl like you ended up with that crew of fuckups.â
âItâs complicated,â you said simply and turned your focus back to your phone.
âBet it is,â he muttered under his breath and took another gulp of whiskey. âCare to fuckinâ elaborate?â
âNot reallyâŠâ
Ben rubbed his eyes, then his temples. Jesus fuck, you were harder to crack than the goddamn Zodiac Killer code. Had it been this hard the first time around, too? He couldnât remember exactly, but he recalled he had to work for it back in â42 as well.
âAlright, just tell me what Iâm gettinâ into here,â he said honestly, trying a new angle.
You looked up then, titled your head, and blew out a sigh between your lips. âAlright, fine. Butcher found me about a month ago. Wanted me to find a weapon.â
âWeapon?â Benâs brow furrowed, keeping the whiskey bottle attached to his lips.
Your lips rose to a wry smile. âYeah, you.â
Ben swallowed, drank more, and tried to ignore the tear in his gut. A weapon. So that was what you saw him as now â not someone to love, not a boyfriend. Just a walking nuke in need of round-the-clock supervision.
Great. That really put a dent into his romantic dinner plans.
âWell, technically, Butcher wanted me to find the weapon that killed you,â you clarified. âThey discovered your death in Ohio was a cover-up by Vought. Frenchie has contacts in the Russian mob or something, I guess. He works for Butcher, too.â You shook your head, clearing your wandering mind. âAnyways, they found out about a botched operation in Nicaragua, so Butcher wanted me to look where the weapon is now.â
âWith that little glimpsing thing of yours?â
âYeah,â you confirmed, smiling in a way that made his heart ache. âTurned out the Russians didnât kill you.â
âDamn straight they didnât.â Ben nodded and downed more whiskey. He was already halfway through the bottle. Good thing the asshole went out on that supply run.
âBut Butcher still wanted to find out how they knocked you out,â you said with a small grin. Teasing. âSo he booked plane tickets to Russia.â
Ben nodded slowly, letting the information settle. âWhat does he need a weapon for?â
You let out a long breath, lips curling. âIâm sure heâs gonna tell you that himself. Canât give away the big surprise. He kinda lives for that.â
Benâs brow wrinkled, but he didnât press. Frankly, he didnât care enough to. He just wanted answers about you. âWhy did you agree to help? You donât seem like the type to get involved in all this⊠supe shit.â
You laughed a little, twitched your brows. âYeah, I usually donât. I honestly never had much contact with the others. And the few Iâve met so far wereâŠâ You licked your plush lips, trying to find the right words.
Ben found them for you.
âPsychotic little freaks?â
You snorted and nodded. âYeah, I guess so.â
âSo, why are you helping that British twat?â Ben ventured a little further.
Your head bobbed thoughtfully for a moment, like you were deciding if you could trust him or not. Ben ignored the stabbing feeling in his ribcage.
âBecause itâs the right thing to do,â you said, then bit down on your lower lip â thinking. âIn physics, we have something called the Second Law of Thermodynamics. It describes how in a closed system, entropy always increases over time.â
Jesus fucking Christ, heâd forgotten about that part â the endless physics lectures. At least back then, heâd get rewarded for listening â with you taking his cock into your mouth.
Now heâd just get the words without the fucking.
âMeaningâŠ?â he played along as his fucking migraine started.
âThings naturally fall apart. Systems tend toward chaos, not order. It means you have to expend energy to maintain structure,â you explained with a small smile.
Ben mirrored it, finally understanding why youâd always loved standing in front of a blackboard.
Professor. Yeah, that made fucking sense now. Youâd always gotten so turned on by teaching him shit.
Were you turned on right now, too? Ben was sure he could probably get you to fuck him. If he just upped the charm and went fully in, he could make you writhe underneath him tonight.
But then what? He needed to figure this shit out first.
âIf we apply that to the modern world, weâre watching a complex societal system steadily lose coherence,â you continued. âInstitutions are eroding. Trust is decaying. Information systems are overloaded. Weâre heading toward maximum disorder â fast.â
Ben scoffed a chuckle. âIs this your way of telling me the worldâs ending, sweetheart?â
âNo, Earth will be fine. Humanity wonât be,â you said matter-of-factly. Logically. âLook, I donât⊠agree with all of Butcherâs methods, but without intentional energy, weâll spiral into decay. Entropy loves apathy. It starts with âwho cares,â ends with âHeil whatever.â And sure, I couldâve stayed home, not gotten involved, and told myself it wasnât my fucking problem, but eventually, decay wouldâve come for me, too. Fascism thrives on unconsciousness. History always fucking repeats itself.â
âAinât that right,â Ben huffed in agreement with another sip of his drink. But something else tugged at him.
It all struck a nerve deep inside him. He had seen a lot of shit over the decades, but heâd never cared about it. Played hero for the glory and the money, but you spoke with such conviction as if you actually believed in the product you were selling.
You scoffed, tilting your head at him. âReally? You agree?â
Ben remained calm, even though he could see the challenging gleam in your eyes. âWhatâs that supposed to mean, hm? I fought for my fuckinâ country.â
âRight.â You gave him a nod â sarcastic to the bone. Then you slowly leaned forward on your knees â collected, fearless, not backing the fuck down. âYou killed my friendâs family back in the â80s. Called it collateral. You went after people till there was no one left when they came for you. Youâre the fucking poster boy for decay. You talk like youâre fighting the rot, but youâre just part of the problem. Youâre all manufactured patriotism, empty slogans, and fists over facts. Tell me â whenâs the last time you actually cared about something that wasnât your own goddamn ego?â
Well, fuck him. Brains won over brawn once again. He tried not to show how deep your words truly cut. His hallucination of you always called him fucking hollow. Seemed like real you did, too.
Ben nodded, clicked his tongue, and gave you a tight smile. âNot a fan, huh?â
âNo.â
Simple, cold, and brutally honest. Just like you always had been. Made his heart swell for all the wrong reasons.
Benâs face twitched. He couldâve argued. Said that the last time he cared about something, heâd cared about you. He couldâve even slipped on the mask like he wouldâve done if anyone else had said that shit to him. Said some bullshit about how he wasnât the rot, but the one that survived it. But instead, he went for something in between:
âYou donât know shit about me, sweetheart. Trust me.â
âI know enough,â you muttered just as quick and returned to your phone, not bothering to argue further.
Ben locked his jaw tight, clenched his fists subtly by his sides. So that was what you truly thought about him, huh? But the worst part was how fucking right you were in your assessment â and how much it fucking hurt.
Click, click, click.
Your eyes flicked to another strange device on the nightstand, brow furrowing as lights of green, yellow, and red flashed alive. Then your gaze landed on him.
âThe fuck is that?â Ben gestured to the item in question.
âItâs a Geiger counter. Measures radiation. Tells me when youâre close to blowing a fuse,â you explained, narrowing your eyes at him, head tilting again. âApparently, itâs tied to your emotions. Interesting. Is your pulse spiking?â
Fucking Christ on a crossâŠ
âTurn it off,â he growled. He didnât want a stupid little box to tell you when he was getting upset like some goddamn hall monitor.
âNo,â you bit back with that fiery look in your eyes. âIâm trying to keep a block of civilians safe from you.â
âJust fuckinâ freeze me when I start glowing. Thatâs what youâre fuckinâ here for, right? Howâs that?â
âToo risky,â you countered. Didnât expand on your answer like you thought he was too stupid to understand it.
âWhy?â Ben gritted through his teeth.
You let out an exhaustive sigh and contemplated something again. But after a beat, you seemed to cave. âItâs not that simple. Your powersâ⊠the little nuclear reactor in your chest?â
âWhat about it?â Ben asked gruffly but slumped down on the second bed across from you, ready to listen nonetheless.
You licked your lips, surely weighing how much you could share without getting into trouble. Like he still couldnât be fucking trusted.
âYou donât just go off like a regular bomb. As soon as you emit enough radiation, supes around you also lose their abilities. I think itâs because the nuclear energy reacted and bonded with the Compound V in your system in some way. Probably to help your body withstand that much energy. But back at the lab, you hit a friend of mine. You burnt the V right outta her. Made her human.â
Ben was quiet for a minute â a rarity. Good to know. And fucking bad for his enemies, which he had plenty of. But it also meant something else.
âSo you canât freeze me anymore when Iâm too far gone. That what youâre sayin'?â
You nodded and smiled like heâd gotten an A on a test. âYeah, thatâs what Iâm saying.â
Ben sighed and ran a hand over his face, drumming his palms on his thighs. âAlright,â he said at last. âKeep the fuckin' thing on, I guess.â
Frankly, he didnât care as much about the junkies, prostitutes, and other scum in this shithole that could potentially die from his fallout. But he fucking cared about your safety.
Also wouldnât be in his interest if you lost your fucking powers. Heâd fling himself off a building if he had to keep playing pretend with you forever. The last few hours had already scorched him from the inside out.
âAs you wish,â you said, but he caught the little winning smirk twitching on your lips.
It almost made him goddamn smile.
Ben rubbed his jaw then, watching you for a moment. You were right fucking there. And still, he couldnât just reach out. It seemed like some goddamn cosmic joke. The Reds mightâve been done torturing him, but the universe clearly wasnât.
And you obviously werenât, either.
âLook, uhm, maybe we got off on the wrong foot,â Ben said, clearing his throat a little. âIâm not the same guy anymore, alright? Maybe I changed. Isnât there some physics law for that shit too that you could apply?â
You smiled â genuine this time. And fuck, did it make his heart burn alive like it hadnât in decades.
He still knew how to talk to you â like riding a fucking bike. Like youâd never fucking left.
âNewtonâs First Law,â you replied.
âSee? Well, letâs go with that,â he agreed casually and leaned back against the headboard, feet up, satisfied.
You snorted slightly and cocked an eyebrow. âDo you even know what it means?â
âDo I need to?â Ben raised his brow, although he knew the answer already, but he let you talk anyway, listened to your voice in his ears like it was gospel.
Because to him, it fucking was.
You giggled softly, the sound like warm honey. âKinda, yeah. Would probably help. It just means that a person in motion stays in motion in the same direction â unless something acts on them. You donât change paths because you want to. You change because something hits you hard enough to knock you off your trajectory.â
Ben nodded, drank a little more, then gave you another tight-lipped smile. âWell, consider me fuckinâ hit, sweetheart.â
And he was â by you.
âGuess weâll see,â you replied with a part-intrigued and part-challenging shimmer in your eyes, but for once you seemed happy with his answer.
And thank fucking God for that. He wasnât sure how many rounds he couldâve still held up before youâd knocked out his fucking brain.
âBut maybe youâre not wrong,â you added and bit your lip, surprising him. âI mean, Vought did you dirty, right? Maybe you can finally use all that energy and anger you have and aim it at something that deserves it.â
âYou bet your ass I will,â he said. Smirked. And your lips even hiked up a little. âSo thatâs what this little dysfunctional group is about? You guys wanna bring down fuckinâ Vought?â
âIn a way, yeah. Itâs part of it,â you replied as mysterious and closed off as ever.
Some things really never fucking changed.
âAlright, tell me somethinâ. Iâm curious. What beef you got with Vought?â he asked slyly. Felt fucking smug for being so clever. âI mean, youâre a chronokinetic or whatever. Rare ability, right? Powerful, too. âM sure they had their greedy claws all over you. What, got tired of being their little puppet?â
âI never was their puppet,â you said. âAnd sure, chronokinesis can be a⊠powerful, messy, possibly disastrous ability, which is why they probably wanted to kill me in the first place.â
âThey, what?â His head snapped toward you.
âDonât look so shocked,â you said with an amused snort like it wasnât a big deal. âVought was scared I could mess up the timeline, fuck with their business too much... You think someone like Stan Edgar is gonna risk keeping that around? Thereâs powerful, and then thereâs too powerful. Oneâs useful, oneâs a threat. You know that better than anyone.â
Ben nodded slowly, the words sinking in. âStan Edgar? That bastardâs still around?â
âYeah, heâs the CEO of Vought now.â
That slimy fucking asshole. Of course he was. Legend wasnât the only one that survived like a goddamn cockroach.
âHe the one that threatened you?â Ben tried to sound fucking calm, but he was grinding his molars down to dust.
âYeah, he thought I was gonna mess up⊠history, I guess,â you said. âI didnât really use my abilities in that way, though.â
Benâs brow knitted slightly, putting the bottle back to his lips. He squinted his eyes, watched you closely. âHow did you use âem?â
You pursed your lips, so he clocked instantly that youâd done some shit. They all fucking had â supes, that is. Ben understood the temptation only too well. The only question was:
What was your goddamn poison?
âYou know⊠fun stuff. Things that made life a little easier. Like more time on homework or pranking very⊠bitchy classmates. Sometimes used it to teach people a lesson.â
Well, shit. Looked like heâd gotten himself a little trickster on his hands. Adorable â and fuckinâ exhausting.
He gave you a little smirk. Charming. Coaxing. âThat all, sweetheart? Skip the high school years.â
And there it was â a little twinkle in your eyes. He still got it, and you still fucking fell for it.
âWellâŠâ Your lip looked almost swollen the way youâd been chewing that thing. Made him fuckinâ crazy. âYou know, I went to see historical events I was curious about or talk to famous scientists and philosophers⊠Went to concerts of old bands. Like sixties, seventiesâŠâ
Sixties. Old. Ben snorted internally at the pain in his chest.
âSo you partied a little and talked to a bunch of dead nerds,â he summarized wryly.
He could handle that. Shut that shit down, even. Keep you in line.
âGuess so.â You giggled, cheeks turning a little rosy. âBut I was always careful not to screw anything up. Never shared too much. Never stayed anywhere longer than three days. Except the last time.â
Benâs jaw moved a little. âWhat happened last time? Where dâyou go?â
âMiddle Ages â on accident. There was a⊠glitch. Got stuck there for a week.â
Ben stalked one, two steps closer to you. âStuck, huh?â
âYeah, but before that, it was pretty awesome,â you said, a little grin crossing your lips. âI even had this whole birthday tradition of working through my bucket list of the coolest things history had to offer.â
Well, well, look how far a little smirkâll getâchaâŠ
Had he been on your bucket list? Was that why you came there? He couldnât really blame you if that was the case. Heâd had groupies before.
But you werenât a fan, were you?
So, did you get stuck in â42? Was that why you stayed? Why you left?
âAnd how did you get out? Vought had you in their sights, right? I know they donât lose track of their assets, and youâre clearly not in a body bag,â Ben noted slyly, smirking even though the thought hurt. âSo, who did you break, burn, or bribe?â
You gave him a raised look. âNo one,â you replied. âI still had my full abilities back then. Little hard to catch me.â
Oh, he knowsâŠ
âI disappeared to 1925 Paris. I met Paul Langevin at one of Gertrude Steinâs parties there,â you said, and Ben nodded like he knew who those fucking people were. Probably physicists, so who the fuck really cared? âHe told me about McGill University in Canada. Went there the next day â my present time â stole some dead personâs ID, and kept my head down for the next few years. Got my PhD in Quantum Gravity.â
Ben didnât even pretend to understand any of that. He also knew asking you more questions about it would only lead to more complicated words.
He understood gravity. It made things fucking fall. What more was there to know?
And then, suddenly, a memory hit him like a goddamn backhand to the face.
1983. That stupid meeting he had with Edgar. Heâd put you on Voughtâs radar back then, running his mouth like a fucking dumbass. And Edgar, that smug piece of shit, filed it away and fucking waited for you. Waited for Ben not to be around and protect you.
Stan had always been ten fucking steps ahead, hadnât he?
Ben swore in that moment heâd kill the guy. Not like Stan hadnât already been on his list, but now heâd make sure heâd enjoy it too â tearing that asshole apart piece by fucking piece. Slowly.
His blood was boiling, but he wasnât just mad at Edgar. He was mostly mad at himself â and he hated admitting that more than anything else. But it was all his fucking fault, wasnât it?
Ben was the reason you were here. He was the reason why Vought had hunted you. He was the reason why no one had protected you. Why you worked with all these assholes and put yourself in danger.
Because he hadnât been there when youâd needed him the most. Hadnât been the man he was supposed to be â the one heâd promised you heâd be.
You shouldnât fucking be here.
Click, click, click, CLIIICKâŠ
The Geiger counterâs needle spiked dangerously into the red. Your eyes flicked to the device, then warily to him.
Ben hated that fucking thing.
âYou good?â
âPeachy,â he grumbled.
âYou sure?â
His glare slowly wandered to you. âI said Iâm fine.â
You pursed your lips and raised your hands in surrender, letting it go. âMaybe we should talk about something else.â
Ben exhaled a frustrated breath and shook his head clear. âNo, look, Iâm good, alright? Promise,â he assured you, and your shoulders lost a little bit of their tension. âSo you hauled up in Canada with the fucking leaf lickers for the past few years, huh?â
Your lips involuntarily curled into a smile. You tried to push it down â unsuccessfully. Ben felt like he won the goddamn Super Bowl. Fuck the Chiefs.
âYep, lived in a cabin off the grid,â you said. âBut it was kinda a blessing in disguise, you know?â
Benâs brow pinched doubtfully. âHow so? âCause you got to date fuckinâ lumberjacks with moose breath?â
âJesus,â you snorted, laughing. âWhatâs with the obsession over my dating life?â
âNothinâ,â he lied and shrugged it off. Gave you a lazy smirk. âJust making polite conversation.â
Phew. You bought that, right?
You quirked a brow. âThatâs your idea of polite?â
âShut up,â he grumbled. âWhat dâyou know about it, huh? Youâve been living under a rock and buried in books forâ⊠well, I donât know how long, but Iâm guessinâ itâs been a while since you canât even hold a goddamn conversation like a normal fuckinâ person.â
âSays the guy whoâs been frozen since the nineties,â you quipped. You then leaned your head softly back against the headboard and sighed almost theatrically â like youâd held that one in for hours already. âI canât wait to get back to my old life. I miss my grad students.â
Ben watched you then for a long time. Didnât even care to hide it. Heâd seen that look in your eyes before â that⊠dread. Youâd had it as well when he first met you. He understood it more now.
Youâd been missing something, hadn't you?
âHow old are you anyway?â he prompted, taking you by surprise. He cleared his throat more casually, got rid of the rasp in his voice and the awkwardness on his tongue. âI mean⊠you look a little young for a professor. Youâre, what? Twenty? Twenty-⊠four, maybe?â
Luckily, you only laughed softly at his⊠well, whatever the fuck that was.
âUh, flattering, but no. Iâm twenty-nine.â
Twentyâ⊠WHAT?!
His brain was fuckinâ hurtin'.
So, 2022 minus 29 was like⊠Nope. 42 plus 24⊠Nope, that didnât sound right either. 2022 minus 24 plus 29⊠What the fuck was he missing?
Youâd told him you were twenty-four in â42, but now you were twenty-nine, which meant⊠Well, what the hell did it mean?
Shit.
You should remember him, right? That was the whole goddamn point. He didnât need fucking math for that answer.
So, what? Was it memory loss? Was he supposed to kiss you awake like you were some goddamn Disney princess?
No, he figured that wouldnât go over well either just by looking at you right now. You still didnât like him a whole lot.
What the hell did it mean?
Click, click, click, clickâŠ
Goddammit!
âAre you okay?â As expected, you cocked your head and looked at him like he was a toddler with a flamethrower. âYou want some weed?â
His head lifted, eyes blinking. His brow raised. âYou packinâ?â
Well, there was something fun the two of you had never done together before.
âI bought some earlier at the gas station,â you replied, shrugging your shoulders.
âAt the gas station?â His brow furrowed.
âYeah, they had a shop there.â
âA shop?â
âWhat is this, Jeopardy?â you retorted before your eyes widened almost apologetically. âOh, right! You donât know. Itâs legal now. You can just go in a store and buy it.â
âThat shitâs legal now?â
You grinned, all teeth and sunshine. âPretty cool, right?â
He huffed a sigh and let his head fall back, staring at the clattering AC in the ceiling. âFirst good news Iâve heard all weekâŠâ
And he meant it.
Ben then watched you pull a little vile from your jeans pocket and grab a small tin box from the nightstand. But as he tried to take it from you, you slapped his reaching hand away, which â bold fucking move.
But you didnât seem to care. Didnât twitch. Just carried on â like he couldnât punch a hole into you.
It was sort of nice. You treated him like he was normal (well, sort of if he excluded the annoying clicking thing). But he couldnât remember the last time anyoneâs treated him like that.
And Ben didnât know if it was the V in your blood and the fact you could just fuckinâ freeze people like they were some mere vegetables that made you so daring, or if it was just⊠you.
âJust trust me. I got this. This is your first time in a while, right?â you said, sounded excited even. He nodded slowly. ââM gonna make it fucking hit.â
Did you ever fucking hear yourself sometimes?
âIâm not a virgin, yâknow?â he retorted, smirking, but his eyes drifted to your skilled fingers as they rolled their little arts and crafts project.
âOh, you are when it comes to this,â you said, tongue sticking out between your teeth in concentration. Drove him fuckinâ nuts. âYou ever had a cross joint?â
He swayed his head from side to side, hummed. âHeard of it. Never had the pleasure.â
âWell, youâre about to be fucking pleasured.â You grinned all cheeky and smug, making his goddamn heart flip.
Seriously, did you not fucking hear yourself?!
âYou know, thereâs other ways to pleasure me, sweetheart.â He smirked. You didnât say anything, just cocked your brow, waiting for him to talk circles around himself. And he did. âJust sayinâ, itâs been forty years since I had some goddamn pussy.â
Your lips rose to a smile â amused. âAnd youâre going for a pity fuck?â
âWouldnât be pity, sweetheart. Trust me,â he replied smugly, gave you his most charming grin that always used to get your panties fucking wet.
The amusement grew on your face. âTrust me. It would be.â
He frowned. Sighed. âWhatever, suit yourself,â he huffed. âYour fuckinâ loss.â
Worth a shot.
Was this gonna take him fuckinâ months again? Heâd already fucked you. What was the goddamn big deal? And now, you were right there. He could touch you. He could, couldnât he?
Fucking absurdâŠ
âAnd what a loss that is,â you retorted teasingly and went straight back to building your little weed airplane.
âYou know what I donât getââ he started, but you cut right in.
âIâm guessing a lot.â
Ben pursed his lips, swallowed another sigh down. âCareful.â
You looked up and blinked. âI didnât mean it like that. Justâ⊠you missed forty years of pop culture and technological advancement. Gotta be confusing. A lot happened since the â80s.â
âYeah, no shit,â he muttered, his eyes drifting to the little sleek, black box next to you on the mattress. âSo, thatâs what counts as a phone these days, huh?â
Your gaze followed his. âOh yeah, but itâs more than that. Itâs a camera, a photo album, a TV, a shopping list, a⊠Walkmen.â
âFlashlight?â
âYup.â You grabbed the phone and a light flared up with the tap of your finger. âVery handy when you need to pee at night.â
Fuck me.
Benâs brow knitted more, eyes narrowing at the device. âIs that why everyone keeps staring at that thing like itâs a Sears catalogue and they just hit the lingerie section?â
âSomething like that, yeah.â You snorted a laugh. âGuess it is a bad habit of the 21st century. Kinda guilty of doom scrolling myself. Pretty sure itâs part of our little entropy problem.â
âDidnât understand a single word of that,â he said, chewing his bottom lip.
âTrust me. Youâre lucky you donât,â you said and then brought the half-finished joint to your lips, wet the paper with your pink tongue, and rolled it into a tight little stick between your delicate fingers.
God, he was fucking jealous of that thing.
âIs it done?â
âNo. Now comes the best part. Youâre gonna like this one,â you said and gave him a little smirk again. âNow, we make a small hole into the big one and thread the other one through it.â
And then you did just that, and Ben watched you make art out of junk again like heâd done so many times before, just spending endless afternoons sitting next to you in the shed, chatting your ear off and trying to poke holes into your walls while you performed brilliant little miracles.
âLook at this baby.â You grinned proudly and held up your creation. âItâs a marvel of combustion engineering.â
Fucking shoot him now.
âChrist, youâre even nerdy when it comes to fuckinâ drugs,â he muttered, sighing. And God, was he getting hard.
âHow can you not be?â You smiled, unbothered, just happy in all your nerdy glory. âItâs a trifurcated burn front. Youâre maximizing both surface area and burn velocity with this thing.â
Fuckin' cute.
âWhat that mean in fucking English?â he deadpanned.
âYou get stupid high and it looks cool as hell,â you said, smirking wide, and handed the mother of all joints to him.
âHow do I light this little science fair project?â Ben asked as he put the filtered tip between his lips and hauled out the Zippo from his pocket.
You grabbed not one but two more lighters from your little box, gave him a countdown like you were launching a fucking rocket to the moon, and then you lit the two ends on the sides while he did the middle one.
And Jesus fuck, did it hit.
He swallowed smoke and tried not to cough like a fucking pussy. He still huffed out a deep laugh with a cloud of weed. âFuck me, youâre like the Cosby of fuckinâ joints, sweetheart.â
You gave him a look. âUhmâŠâ
âItâs a compliment.â
âNot sure about that one,â you mumbled in sing-song. âDoes it help?â
Ben smirked lazily. âBest damn babysitter I ever had.â
âWell, as long as you donât blow us all up now, I count it as a win,â you said and got up, plopping down on the old couch in the room, phone in hand.
âYou want to?â Ben held out the reefer to you, but you shook your head.
âNo, Iâm good.â
He sighed a little again. So much for his plan to get you fucking high and crawl between your thighs. But he was a persistent motherfucker, and âgiving upâ wasnât really part of his vocabulary.
You used to steal his cigarettes and drinks. Now, look at you. What the fuck happened?
âSo, tell me about me you,â he prompted, watching you from the corner of his eye.
âWhy?â
Jesus fuck.
âJust answer the question,â he retorted with a huff and a thin thread of patience. âIâm tryna make conversation. Hadnât had one in a while with someone who speaks fuckinâ English. Not that you count. You donât speak fucking English either most times.â
You smiled a little at that, amused. âFair enough,â you relented and gave him your full attention then, folding your hands over your knees and leaning forward. âWhat dâyou wanna know? First grade basics? Favorite color? Do I like unicorns?â
Ben scowled. âYou know, back in my day, women were a little different.â
âI think the word youâre looking for is âoppressed,ââ you quipped all fucking smug.
His frown deepened, but he decided to move past it, knowing better than to fucking argue with you about that one. Wasnât the first time he heard it, either. But Ben knew you'd been fucking happy back then. He'd made you happy.
Now you were treating him like he was the goddamn enemy of the state.
How did he fucking end up here? That shit surely hadnât been on his damn bingo card.
He was supposed to have a house and kids and maybe a dog if you wanted one. He was supposed to watch you tinker on little inventions, get fucking rich, and live happily next to you till he dropped dead at a reasonable age.
That had been the dream. Simple, really.
And now? Now, he sat in a shitty motel, 103-years-old and a nuclear bomb, with a 74-years-younger girlfriend (he finally did the math), who couldnât even fucking remember him. Never married. Never had kids. Never even had a fucking gold fish. Technically homeless as of this moment. And poor. And fake dead.
Fucking absurd.
But still, he found the silver lining â he could finally receive answers to questions heâd been asking himself for fucking decades.
âHow about you just cut the sarcasm back a little and tell me where you grew up, huh? Canât be that hard to fuckinâ answer,â he muttered.
Oh, but it was, wasnât it? You never could tell him that. Guarded it like you knew where fucking Jesus went after his resurrection.
âJersey.â
âHuh.â Ben stumped. Well, that was fucking easy this time âround. Jersey girl. Who knew?
âGrew up in a trailer park,â you added.
âNo shit.â Ben tried to seem unaffected, but something curled inside of him. âThat why you became a supe? Hoping itâs your ticket out?â
He couldnât really blame you. He fell for that stupid trap himself. Even his reasons had been the same â escape the life he had. It could happen to anyone, even to the fucking smartest on this planet â like him and you.
âWasnât really my decision,â you replied, somewhat bitter. He sat up straighter at that and found your eyes. âMy parents signed up for that Vought program.â
âWhat Vought program?â
The sting in his chest grew more intense. Like someone punched a fist between his ribs and squeezed.
âVought ran these programs â recruited parents,â you explained slowly like you didnât really want to talk about it. âMostly from low-income families. They told them if they had kids, they could get them into Compound V trials. Have their kid become a hero, make money off of them⊠Well, you know the story.â
He did.
âThey made parents sign NDAs too,â you continued. âTell kids their abilities were a ânatural gift.â Truth didnât come out till a couple years ago. Mostly because of Butcher, so heâs at least got that going for him, I guess.â
Ben was quiet for a moment, took a long drag from his weird-ass doobie. Tried not to make the fucking clicking thing go off again.
Heâd heard it all before â in whispers in the hallways, in secret notes passed in meetings. Words like âspecialâ and âGodâs chosenâ getting tossed around like warm bread.
Hell, they did it to him. He just didnât give a fuck. Because heâd always known Santa Claus wasnât fucking real. He knew where the fucking presents came from, and it wasnât elves.
But what did he care if Vought shoved another fucking marketing lie down the publicâs throat? Coca-Cola did it â âsugar is good for you.â Doctors recommended fucking Camels back then. News flash, ladies â diamonds werenât fucking forever.
Hadnât been his fucking problemâŠ
âYou believed that?â he asked after a pause.
You gave a small shrug of your shoulders. âNot really. For a while, yeah,â you replied at first, then bit your lip. âBut when I was seven or eight, my powers really manifested, and I guess I was too curious not to peek. I had these weird dreams about it.â
âNightmares?â he asked, and maybe he shot a little too quick at that one, but you didnât seem to notice. Why would you?
âKinda. I guess labs are scary for some people,â you mused. Ben frowned. âBut they were actually just visions. So, you know, kinda ruined the magic.â
âSo you were never actually human?â
His own question made him halt. You had no clue what it felt like?
There were days when he still missed it â not waking up with the screaming in his veins. Maybe that was the real reason why most supes were such fuckups. They didnât know any better. Didnât know what it was like to be free of burning poison.
You didnât know.
âGuess not.â You shrugged simply like the thought had never even occurred to you at all.
âYour parents seriously signed you up for that shit?â
Another shrug. âYeah, I mean, they were addicts, you know? They just thought in terms of their next fix. Heroin, meth, opioids⊠Saw my dad once drink antifreeze. Almost died. Did it again the next day. I mean, the only reason why they had me was to sell me. They didnât want a kid beyond that. I used to sleep outside on an old couââ
Click, click, click, CLIIIIIICK!
Your eyes flicked from the blinking counter to him.
âAre you okay?â you asked so innocently.
ââM fine.â
He fucking wasnât. This shouldâve never fucking happened. You didnâtâ⊠You hadnâtââŠ
He shouldâve said something. Done something. Instead he just smiled for fucking cameras and let it fucking happen. He let you down. He just never thought youâd be around again to care. He never thought it would affect you.
But that didnât really justify it, right? âCause youâd argue that he was supposed to care anyway. Heâd had that conversation before with you â just not the real you.
It was all his fucking fault, wasnât it?
CLIIIIIIIICK!
âJesus fuck! Can you shut it off?!â
âAre you nuts? It went off like five times in the last ten minutes. This is the worst time to shut it off,â you argued fiercely. Annoyed. âJust-⊠calm the fuck down for maybe three hours, and Iâll think about it.â
How was he supposed to fucking think clearly like this? A man needed fucking peace and quiet.
âWould youââ Your mouth opened. Closed. You groaned and lifted your eyes to the ceiling for a second. âJust take another hit, alright? Why are you so tense, anyway? I mean, youâre free now. Just relax for a minute instead of going straight onâ, I donât know, a killing spree.â
Ben snorted a laugh and took a long drag from his joint, chuckled till tears stung his eyes. Was he fucking losing his mind? That had to be it, right?
Free. Yeah, he felt so fucking free right now.
Felt more like some cosmic fucking prison. Like the universe had finally granted him his biggest wish and plopped you down right in front of him â all perfect and warm and fucking soft. And then it fucking told him not to touch.
Look but donât taste.
Biggest fucking torture on the planet. Enough to break a man.
Who was fucking laughing at him now? God?
Click, click, click, clickâŠ
Ben groaned, let his head fall into his hands, you jumped up from your seat, and then were suddenly right in front of him. Kneeling.
What were youâ
It was like you wanted this whole goddamn motel to go up in flames.
You put the little paper plane back into his mouth like he was a fucking toddler, lit it, and told him to breathe deep.
Thank fucking God you hadnât told him to âopen upâ as he breathed into his fucking blue balls.
âWhy did you get so upset when I told you that story?â
You didnât move back to your old spot. You lingered. Sat down on the floor cross-legged in front of him, wide-eyed and curious.
Distraction.
âYou knowââ he started and smacked his lips, cleared his throat subtly like that one acting class Vought made him attend had taught him to. âJust upsetting. Fuckinâ VoughtâŠâ He gave a shake of his head. âOutrageous, really. You should be more angry about thisâŠâ
Your lips pursed, so he knew he was on the right track.
âYou know, I didnât know about it,â he added and licked his lips. Swallowed the guilt. And maybe he shouldâve stopped right there. âIf I had, I wouldâveââŠ. You know, I-⊠I wouldâve killed these bastards. This shit wouldnât have happened on my watch, alright?â
âYeah, okay,â you said quietly, almost like you didnât believe him. Then you were silent for a moment. âWasnât really your fault. But itâs the thought that counts, right?â
He gave you a small nod and forced a smile, swallowing. âYeah.â
The thought counted for fuckinâ nothinâ.
ââSides, not sure thereâs anything you couldâve done,â you added, voice soft and gentle like you were trying to make him feel better. He didnât fucking deserve it. âUnless your plan wouldâve been to burn down a whole lab with a bunch of perverted scientist in it.â
He shouldâve done that! Why hadnât he fucking thought of that? Why hadnât he done exactly that?
This was why he needed you. Youâd always been fucking smarter than him. You always had the best ideas.
God, fuckinâ shit.
He couldnât figure this out on his own. You were the one who understood all that science and time crap. You were the one with the chalkboard. You could tell him what to fucking do here.
He should just fucking tell you the truth about everything. Youâd know what to do. Youâd understand all this shit, right? You could fix it. You wouldnât think he was fucking crazy.
Right?
Yeah, he was just gonna tell you and ask for help. Tell you to make it right. Ask you to go back to â42 and fall in love with him.
Ah, fuck. That did sound fucking crazy. Youâd probably run. Never speak to him again. Vanish.
Why couldnât you fucking remember him? How could he explain that heâd already been in love with the girl sitting right next to him over eight decades ago?
You donât, his brain chimed in. You sit there and fucking take it like a man.
And you just sat there too and stared at him like he was a fucking stranger â all perfect and close and out of reach. You were here but also werenât. Like a fucking paradox.
ParadoxâŠ
Youâd once said something about that. About cause and effect. Or was it fucking Schrödinger again? NoâŠ
No, Ben remembered the two of you were in the shed and you talked about it. Something about how actions have consequences. Said something about impossible situations. Called it a brain glitch.
Well, that didnât sound fucking good, right?
Goddammit! Why couldnât he remember the full fucking conversation? Why did that little shit back then have to stare at your ass so goddamn much?
If he could change time, heâd go back and tell that idiot to fucking listen for once.
Click, click, click, clickâŠ
âJesus! What now?â You frowned and threw your arms up in frustration.
Ben shook his head, tried to clear his mind again. âNothinâ.â He then took another long drag of his joint.
He just had to stay fucking calm and figure this out on his own. Slowly. Not make any rash decisions like trying to fuck you into the floor. Not say something crazy like being in love with you for over eighty years.
âMaybe you should lay off the weed now,â you said, brow scrunched. âYouâre getting kind of⊠sad⊠and⊠weird.â
Sad and weird. Fuckinâ great. Add lethal to that. Exactly what heâd been going for when it came to first impressions.
âYou grew up on the streets, right? Did your parents sell you out, too? Is that why youâre so upset?â
Ben snapped out of his trance then and looked at you. He scratched his jaw, hesitating. You really didnât know shit.
âUh, no⊠to both,â he replied, clearing his throat, palms rubbing together like he could still fucking sweat. âVolunteered when I was twenty-five. Grew up rich, actually. Mansion.â
âOh.â
Nope, didnât seem to ring any bells for you. No mansion. No recognition. No memories. Even worse, Ben could feel your disappointment â as if the only thing youâd liked about him so far was a piece of Vought propaganda.
Yeah, he was tapping out for the night. Maybe forever. He couldnât solve this shit. Couldnât do fucking anything.
With a deep sigh that sounded more like a groan and defeat, he rose from the bed and paced the room, green eyes looking anywhere but you because if he did, he didnât know how much longer he could control himself.
He just wanted to be with you. Just wanted to drag you out of this dump and live the fucking life he was supposed to have. Why couldnât it be that fucking easy?
His eyes then landed on the little laminated pay-per-view program. A smile rose. âWell, look at that. They have some of my movies. Still bringing in the views.â
âIn sleazy motels across America, maybe,â you muttered under your breath.
Ben ignored you and glanced over his shoulder, switching on the TV. âYou ever seen one of mine?â
âUh, not entirely, no,â you said, curling your lips. âCaught glimpses of some in those classics specials.â
âWell, youâre in for a treat, sweetheart.â He smirked broadly. âWanna watch?â
You took a deep breath, exhaled a sigh, then gave him a fake fucking smile. âSure. Whatever you want. Iâm just here to babysit you, remember?â
Like he could fucking forget. You said it like it was a goddamn chore. Like you were getting paid to sit here and keep him calm â which to be fair, you sort of were.
Containment with a side of pity. Thatâs what he fucking got. Not admiration. Not love. Not you.
Something to manage, not something to miss.
But Ben didnât let your mood deter him from his plan. He picked out a movie while you dragged yourself back to your old spot on the bed, settled in with another sigh â like you were humoring a petulant child.
Still, he plopped down next to you with a satisfied grin. You gave him a disapproving sideways glance and groaned slightly, but he didnât care. He was gonna sit right next to you and enjoy this. Your look mightâve said âfuck offâ, but your mouth didnât, so he was gonna stay.
Maybe it wasnât about the past at all. Maybe it was about the here and now. Maybe the universe was rewarding him.
He just needed to accept it and grab it. Make you fucking his again. Maybe thatâs all there was to it. Heâd just been fucking overthinking.
After everything heâd been through, after everything heâd fucking done for this country, he deserved to have nice things.
As the movie started with some obnoxious synth music, you still sat next to him, stiff and guarded. You kept just enough space for your thigh not to touch his â but still enough to drive him fucking insane.
Your shoulder brushed his arm slightly. Then you kicked off your shoes, stretched out those bare legs. His gaze followed naked skin from your ankle all the way up to where the hem of your jean shorts hugged your thigh. He almost goddamn came in his pants.
Yeah, maybe this had been a fucking bad idea after all.
âIs that Phoebe Cates?â Your head tilted at the screen and ripped him from his stupor.
âHuh?â His eyes squinted at the television where Phoebeâs character cooed and giggled and clung to his bicep. âOh, yeah. She played my love interest.â
Your brows scrunched again. He used to kiss that spot above your nose where they met.
âShe looks twelve.â
Ben frowned. Sighed internally this time. âShe was twenty-one,â he huffed. Little too upset, maybe. âThis was after sheâd done Fast Times. Not so innocent. Trust me.â
âStill young,â you mumbled. Shrugged. âHow old were you in this?â
âVought billed me at thirty,â Ben said and stared stubbornly at the screen till the picture blurred, clearing his throat.
Slowly, your legs slid up to your chest as you rose to a sitting position, leaning forward. Raised your brows. Gave him a look.
Very judging.
âAnd in realityâŠ? Câmon, I wanna know how many felonies Iâm watching.â
Ben bit the insides of his cheeks. Hard. Mightâve tasted blood, then sniffed like it wasnât a big fucking deal. âBorn in 1919.â
âFuck. Really?â A laugh spluttered out of you. Almost crippled you in half and threw you off the bed. âI mean, I knew you were in World War II, right? Soâ⊠Wait, that means youâre a⊠hundred-andââ
âDonât do the fucking math.â
ââthree! Holy shit!â
Ben groaned. Didnât even hide it. He could still remember all of it. Same fire. Same mouth. Same razor-sharp wit that used to make him flinch and ache in equal measure. Never held back. Never tried to impress him. That was probably why heâd fallen so damn hard.
Fucking smart, too. He used to get off on it â literally. There were nights where youâd calculate the square root of something with his cock in your mouth just to screw with him.
The memory of your skin touching his burned through every inch of him. He could still feel you under him â warm and reckless and so fucking soft. The sounds you used to make. The way you used to bite your lip when you were trying not to laugh, how youâd curl your fingers into his shirt when he kissed you too hard, how you clung to him when heâ
Click, click, clickâŠ
Of fucking course! Would only take a few seconds till you askâ
âYou good?â Your eyes studied him.
Ben hummed and hoped you wouldnât notice the damn ache in his sweats. âYeah. Just excited to relive the glory days.â
âSure.â You frowned, unconvinced.
You leaned back against the headboard and shifted, keeping a few strategic inches between you and him like it was habit. Like youâd done this kind of thing before with dangerous men who didnât know where the line was.
âSoâŠâ He cleared his throat once more, gave you a smile that said he was probably trying a little too hard. âWhenâs your birthday?â
âI already told you,â you said, eyes not lifting from the glow of the TV.
âYou told me your age,â he pointed out with as much patience as he could. âDidnât tell me your birthday. When is it?â
âWhy dâyou wanna know?â Still didnât look at him. Just dismissed him in hopes heâd go away.
Hadnât worked for you the first time, though, had it?
âHumor me. Movie date etiquette,â he replied dryly, sent you a deadpan look that made you groan and roll your eyes. âMarch? December? January?â
âJune.â
Huh. Well, fuck him. He hadnât seen that one coming.
June. 1993. Twenty-nine. The world tilted on its axis. The moon dropped from the sky. The sun came with it. Nothing made fucking sense anymore.
Was this even the real you? Maybe it was a fucking clone. Or something else. Maybe he was dead and this was some weird fucking afterlife vision, his corpse still fueled by blue poison.
How was this possible? Unlessâ
Unless you fucking lied.
Ben jerked his head, narrowed his eyes, and watched you closely now. Youâd always had an edge to you. You werenât a full-blooded good girl. Youâd always been that sweet spot in between.
So, okay... If he assumed you lied, he had to find out why, right?
The age thing â women lied about it all the time. Wasnât a big deal. Over the years, heâd even begun to automatically add three to five years to whatever age theyâd given him. He figured youâd lied, too.
But the birthday thing? That was fucking weird. Why would you do that? To blur your traces? To hide who you were? What you were?
Ben tried to remember the exact conversation. It was in his roomâ⊠No, the study. First night. Youâd worn one of his shirts. You were still fucking closed off and guarded and didnât like or trust him a whole lot â kinda like now. But heâd asked you to tell him at least one true thing about you, and youâd told him that today, January 24, was your birthday.
You hadnât lied about it then. He could tell.
But you hadnât actually said the date, had you? Youâd just said today. Which mightâve been true â for you.
A half-truth.
Ben grinned smugly. Heâd figured something out â without your help. You hadnât been of any fucking help at all, actually.
âWhy do you keep looking at me like that?â you asked and furrowed your brow at him.
Oh shit. Heâd still been staring.
âWould you ever, you know, lie about your age?â
The question threw you, but not as much anymore. Like youâd gotten used to the weirdness.
âWell, if youâre asking for yourself, Iâd definitely lie next time you go on a date,â you replied wryly.
Good enough.
The two of you then went back to watching TV. He didnât ask more weird questions and left you in peace. You looked tired. He was, too.
He tried not to get worked up whenever you accidentally touched him or heâd catch a whiff of your scent when the AC would graciously carry it to his nose. He didnât know the shampoo or the perfume but recognized what was underneath it.
He wanted to touch you. Wanted to close the space, let his hand rest on your thigh, let his thumb brush over your skin, see if youâd still arch into him the way you used to when you were tangled up in his sheets.
Touch me, Ben thought, almost hoping his thoughts were loud enough for you to hear. Just once like you used to. Just look at me like Iâm still that guy.
But you didnât. You kept watching the screen. He followed your eyes and looked at Phoebe moaning his name under a fake rain machine â barely resisted the urge to shut it off.
You were younger than Phoebe. Smarter than all of them. You were the first woman whoâd ever rolled her eyes at him â shocking, yes. The first one to tell him he was full of shit and then kiss him like she meant it. And when youâd kissed him, it hadnât been about movies or hero worship or fear.
Youâd kissed him because you wanted to.
Because even when he was just a rich asshole with nothing but a fast car and a faster mouth, you saw through all of it.
Now you didnât see him at all.
And he was scared shitless that maybe you never would again.
If you didnât remember him, it meant this you next to him hadnât gone back and met the past version of him yet. But itâd also meant you mustâve known him then because you knew him now.
God, his head was startinâ to hurt again.
You hadnât told him anything. Pretended you didnât know him already â like he was doing now.
Ben figured you had your reasons, probably smart ones, so maybe he was actually onto something here, too. Maybe he had to just keep playing the game â like you had.
But for how fucking long?
Youâd stayed in 1942 for five months? Six? It was fucking July now. Your next birthday was in eleven months â and that was best case fucking scenario. Could be five more years, could be fucking ten⊠And youâd told him your abilities didnât even work in that way anymore. That was another fucking problem.
Shit.
âHey, so, that time jumping thing, how does itââ But Ben stopped mid-question when he glanced down and noticed youâd dozed off.
You were out cold, curled up on your side, head tipped slightly toward him like it had just happened mid-eye roll. Youâd made it a point to keep space between you the entire night, but now your head was resting against his arm.
Funny how that worked.
Ben didnât dare move for a long moment. Just watched you while the credits rolled to that awfully cheesy â80s synth again. Watched your chest fall and rise, watched your eyelashes rest against your cheek.
He hadnât seen you sleep in eighty years. Took everything in him not to reach out and pull you into his side.
âMissed you, sweetheart.â
He sighed softly under his breath, tipped his head back, eased into the mattress, and shut his eyes. And for the first time since 1942, he let himself fall asleep beside you again.
â¶ïž Chapter 14: I'm Going to Have a Lot of Drinks
Poor guy, will he ever figure it out? The answer is yes â in the next part đ (aka the part where Ben realizes he needs to switch tactics and becomes a complete asshole). We'll see how it goes. It won't be a battle won by math skills for sure đ
Coming Up:
Rough fuckinâ morning⊠And it had only been the first goddamn day of many.
At least, he had some Bennies to get over the pain above (and the ache below) â well⊠until you fucking ruined that, too.
Because you watched him. Sitting on the bed, cross-legged, sipping coffee and still working that damn straw. Eyes on him.
His back was half-turned, but he still caught it in his periphery as he was halfway through crushing pills to dust with his knife.
Judging.
âProblem, sweetheart?â His voice was a little too gruff, a little too deep, a little too defensive. Too confrontational.
âNo,â you replied, bored. Almost deadpan. Then you casually opened the folder in your lap, directed your gaze there, took a slurp of coffee through the straw, and added: âMy parents always snorted their breakfast, too.â
Then, you gave a shrug of your shoulders and started reading â innocent. Like you hadnât just launched him into complete chaos.
You liked teaching people lessons, alright. You also liked fucking with them. On purpose.
This was the goddamn problem with smart women â especially if they fucking knew it, too. They knew exactly where to hit and make it stick.
But Ben couldnât help the little smirk twitching on his lips â almost proud.
Back then, your brilliance and genius was cute â not threatening. Now, though? With all you could do? All that power wrapped inside one tiny girl? A little scary.
Dangerous.
And well, he was a little dangerous, too. You and him had always made a good team in the past. Now, the two of you could be unstoppable.
Summary: Unable to control your abilities, youâre stuck in the present with Billy Butcher, his team, and Americaâs first asshole. At this point, youâve become Soldier Boyâs personal punching bag. But when an accident leaves you stranded in 1942, you run into a familiar face and suddenly rely on your future tormentorâs help as your only hope.
Pairing: Soldier Boy x supe!Reader
Warnings: 18+ for language, angst, humor, reader is a supe with chronokinesis (time manipulation), 1942 says hi, fluff if you squint, SB being a nice and kind human
Deep breaths, you reminded yourself as you squatted in a puddle of mud in an abandoned alley, throbbing and roaring head in your hands. If you could only manage to control your jittering, fragile nerves, maybe youâd find your way back.
Come on, come on, come onâŠ
âMiss?â
Fuck.
Your gaze lifted to the tall, shadowy figure by the mouth of the alley, already recognizing the unmistakeable deep timbres of Soldier Boy before he stepped into the light.
âI believe I told you to leave me alone,â you muttered, annoyed.
An idiot like Soldier Boy would not be historyâs downfall. You had to ensure the timeline stayed intact. The less interaction you had with him, the better.
âI know. Iâm-⊠Iâm sorry, miss,â he apologized once more to you.
If you hadnât heard it with your own ears, you wouldnât have thought apologies were even part of his vocabulary, hearing him say the word twice was almost mind-boggling. Then your eyes fixed on the little black box tightly clasped in his left hand and widened in horror â your phone.
Losing futuristic devices like this was a big time-traveling no-no.
Luckily, Soldier Boy was probably too much of a moron to puzzle it altogether. That might just be historyâs saving grace.
âYou-, uh, you lost this. Just wanted to return it,â he said and tentatively held the phone out to you.
With an exhaustive sigh, you jumped to your feet and ripped the device out of his hand. âGive that to me!â
You huffed a âthank youâ and stomped down the alley, back towards the busy street. All you needed was a quiet and warm place to figure this out and return to your own time. But Soldier Boy was still hot on your tail, following you with a swift pace.
âMiss, wait! Wait a second! Hey!â
With a few long strides of his bow legs, he had flagged you down before youâd even reached the main street. But that didnât halt your feet completely, although heâd slowed you down significantly.
âWhat? I told you to stay away. Stop following me,â you snapped.
âIâm just trying to ensure youâre alright,â he insisted, attempting to appear as harmless as possible.
At this point, you thought you were beginning to hallucinate because your mind tried to convince you there was actual, legitimate worry gleaming in his forest green eyes. In reality, he was probably just acting to save the damsel in distress, so he could warm her up at his penthouse and slip something into her drink.
Not fucking happening.Â
âIâm fine.â You gritted a smile and opted to ignore him as you scurried past the first crowd of people on the sidewalk.
âNo offense, miss, but you donât seem fine,â he insisted and ran in front of you, blocking your way. With a frustrated groan, you finally stopped and sent him a glare, but he only met you with a sincere look. âLet me help you, alright? I promise I mean no harm or ill-intention if that is what youâre worried about.â
Ha!Â
Internally, you snorted. But he raised his open palms again as if to prove his words, his eyes boring intensely into yours. He might as well have been fucking Mindstorm.
âListen, you look like someone whoâs used to getting what he wants all the time, but no means no. Stop following me, okay?â
You hoped you had finally drilled the message into his thick skull and heâd leave you alone after this, but alas he wouldnât be Soldier Boy if he listened to you. One step past him, and a hand grabbed your arm.
Ready to fend him off, you were surprised to find his grip wasnât strong by any means. It was barely a brush before he dropped his hand again and looked at you remorsefully.
âIâm sorry! I just-⊠Please let me help you,â he reiterated with imploring green eyes. âLook, you clearly seem lost. Just tell me where you live, and I can get you home safely, okay? Câmon, you canât do this to me.â He tried to loosen you up with a charming smile and a puppy dog look. âIf you leave like this, Iâm going to be up all night, worrying youâve died of hypothermia out here.â
And my God, he seemed sincere! No wonder he had gotten attention from women like a goddamn bunny in a petting zoo.
Musingly, you then chewed on your lower lip and assessed the man in front of you. The people who strolled by you threw you the occasional weird looks â youâd chosen a bad day to wear a Led Zeppelin t-shirt and ripped jeans.
Admittedly, you could use a little help here. Maybe if you were being careful with the timeline â and him â you could risk it.
You exhaled a hesitant breath, but your head nodded slightly. âJust-, uh, just get me to Fifth Avenue. I can find my way from there, alright?â
It was a simple request, but his brows drew together as if youâd just asked him something insane.
âFifth Avenue as in New York City?â he questioned.
Oh no, you didnât like where this was going.
âYes?â
He clicked his tongue, scratching the nape of his neck where the collar of his coat ended. âWell, uh, I guess I could take you there tomorrow. Itâs about a four hour car ride in this weather. I mean, if we took the train, weâd be a little faster.â
Four hours?!Â
âWhere-, uh⊠What, uh, what city am-, am I?â
He clicked his tongue again. This time, a little smirk twitched on his lips too, but he tried his best to hide his amusement. âUh, Philadelphia. You know, Pennsylvania?â
âYeah, no, I know geography, thank you.â
âAre you sure?â
Curling your lips, you tilted your head at him, your cheeks catching heat, even though you were practically freezing. Oh, he was trying to be clever now, wasnât he?
Sheepishly, he met your eyes and smiled innocently.
But when that little fascinating moment had passed, you realized you were still stuck here, and the panic set back in. Your gaze flickered around â there was nowhere you could go. However, you then noticed something else â no one was staring at Soldier Boy, even though he was supposed to be Americaâs greatest hero. Was he in a disguise? Was that what he did back then?
âSo, uhm⊠is this the 40s?â
There was beat of silence as he licked his lips. âYeah, uh, this is the 40s, sweetheart.â He laughed heartily, throwing his head back. âYou know, Iâve had some bad hangovers and woke up someplace, not knowing where I was, but Iâve never forgotten the year before.â
No surprise, you thought wryly and then swallowed, glancing back up at him.
âSo, uhm, what year is this?â
âItâs January 24, 1942,â he replied patiently, his eyes watching you closely.
And then, it began to dawn on you.
âAnd what dâyou do? Are you, uhmââ Soldier Boy? ââa soldier?â
He laughed again, his cheeks slightly blushing in the cold. He adjusted the flat cap on his head. âUh, no. Well, not yet anyways. I actually just came from the office downtown and enlisted when I ran into you.â
Holy fucking shit.
The man before you wasnât a supe yet. He wasnât Soldier Boy yet. He was just a normal human, and you felt like you were staring through the looking-glass and seeing Wonderland.
And if your math was correct, it also meant the guy in front of you was no more than 23 years old.
Holy fucking shit.
âBut, uh, I also work at my fatherâs office,â he added after you hadnât said anything. âWhy are-, why are you looking at me like that?â he then asked with a flustered chuckle, and you realized you were still staring at him.
âOh, uhm, Iâm sorry,â you apologized quickly and forced a smile. âYou just looked like a soldier, I guess.â
His cheeks reddened even more as he bashfully averted his eyes to the snowy pavement and scratched the back of his neck. âWell, uh, thank you.â
He clearly took it as a compliment that he already looked the part of a hero. Nice save, you praised yourself.
âWhy-, uh, why donât we get you warmed up a little, huh?â he suggested kindly and finally dared to step closer. Swiftly, he took off his coat and draped it over your shoulders and bare arms. âHere, take my coat. You poor thing must be freezing. Look at you, youâre shaking.â
His smile was friendly and reassuring as he adjusted the collar around your neck. Uncomfortably, you rolled your shoulders, though, and backed away from his touch.
âAlright, uhm, just please donât touch me,â you said, your voice meek and barely audible. You knew technically it wasnât the same guy who had abused, tortured, harassed, and bullied you for months on end, but you still didnât want his hands anywhere near you.
âOkay, yeah, sure,â he resigned and raised his palms again before gesturing down the street, trying his hardest not to lay a hand on the small of your back and lead you there himself. âThereâs a diner a few blocks from here. Would that be okay?â
Reluctantly, you nodded, wrapping the thick coat, which smelled like his cologne and cigars, tighter around you as you followed him.
Fortunately, the diner was quaint and dimly lit. The bell above the door jingled as you entered with your unwanted sidekick. He made sure to always stay one step behind you, and you didnât know if it was because it was polite to let the lady go first, or if he just wanted to keep a watchful eye on you in case youâd make a run for it again.
You passed a row of customers sitting hunched over at the counter before Soldier Boy â or not Soldier Boy yet â then picked a table in a quiet corner, away from everyone else as if he knew youâd appreciate the privacy. The less people saw and noticed you, the better. You knew you had to get home fast before messing up the intricate fabric of time too much.
âSo, uh, whatâs your name?â he asked as the waitress placed down his simple black coffee and your Earl Grey, your cold hands quickly grasping onto the hot mug and warming against the ceramic.
âUh⊠Cindy,â you replied quickly, not wanting to give him your real name and share too much. It was smarter to be careful.
âCindy, huh?â The name rolled off his tongue with a subtle smirk as if he liked the sound of it. âDoes that come with a last name?â
âUh, yes⊠Lauper,â you replied and bit your lip hard. âIâm, uh, from the Lauperâs of Upstate New York, you know? From a small town called, uh⊠Flatiron.â
âHuh. InterestingâŠâ he mused, pursing his lips. âNever heard of it.â
âYeah, well, like I said, itâs a small townâŠâ you deflected and sipped on your drink.
âWell, uhm, Iâm Benjamin Brooks,â he introduced himself with a suave smile. âBut, uh, most people just call me Ben.â
When you only gave him a disinterested nod, he licked his lips, his fingers tapping against the coffee mug in his hold before he looked at you again and cleared his throat.
âYouâve, uh, probably heard of the name. My father owns half the steel mills in the state,â he said with a bragging grin, which lost its energy when you still didnât give him the time of day.
âUh-huhâŠâ
âBrooks Steel Company? Youâve never heard of it?â
âNope.â
âHuh.â Somewhat defeated, he pursed his lips, his fingers tapping on the table this time. Then, a soft smile formed as he leaned back in his seat. âSo, uh, what about you? What brings you here to Philadelphia?â
âUhm⊠business,â you said as if you were answering a customs question at the airport.
âReally? What kind of business?â
âYou ask a lot of questionsâŠâ
He chuckled slightly, his cheeks blushing. âWell, uh, excuse my curiosity, please. Itâs just-⊠well, the clothes youâre wearing and the, uh, weird black box youâre carrying⊠What is it, anyway?â
Shit.Â
âUh, itâs a⊠flashlight,â you replied, thinking of the most basic function of your phone.
âFlashlight?â
âYes, itâs a⊠prototype. Uses lithium-ion batteries instead of the carbon-zinc ones you find in flashlights at this⊠current time⊠right now,â you explained in a careful stammer and only realized you might have said too much when his brow raised.
âHuh.â He stumped for a beat. âYou know a lot of technical things for a woman.â
Internally, you wanted to groan at the sexist remark, but considering it was 1942, you had to admit he was probably right. Even in the 21st century, it was still a rarity to find a woman in a STEM field.
âYes, uh, well, my father taught me some stuff,â you lied. As a matter of fact, your father was a drunk loser, who couldnât change a single lightbulb even if you turned it into a joke. âYou know, just small⊠simple things. God knows I could barely understand what he was saying half the time.â
Your silly giggle at the end was the cherry on top of your sales pitch.
âAh, that makes sense,â Ben bought it, chuckling.
Jesus fuck, shoot meâŠ
âWhere did you get it?â
âHuh?â
âThe flashlight.â
âOhâŠâ Think fast. âI-, uh, I built it, yeah⊠To sell, you know? Itâs an experiment, but it failed, so you can forget about it, okay?â
That was believable, right? Wozniak got nothing on you. And technically, you had already swapped out the broken screen glass of your vPhone multiple times â by yourself. It wasnât so far-fetched if you really thought about itâŠ
âAlright.â Ben nodded, a smile playing on his lips as he took a sip of coffee. âAnd, uh, is that why youâre wearing those clothes? Are you a mad scientist or farmhand orââ
Your eyebrows drew together. âA farmhand?â
He laughed lightly, shaking his head. âI promise I donât mean any offense, sweetheart. Itâs just women⊠people usually donât really run around wearing⊠well, that,â he explained and gestured a hand up and down your frame.
Uncomfortably, you wrapped his wool coat tighter around you, the small, pleased twitch of his lips at your action sending a shiver down your spine. As you let your glance wander through the small establishment, you noted the tight dresses and skirts with tailored waists all women were wearing. You definitely looked odd and out of place compared to all the Mrs. Maisels around you.
Most of them were even wearing hats, too. Hats. Wide-brimmed ones and pillboxes and snoods and berets. Fucking berets.
And here you sat â with a messy bun that you hadnât even bothered to brush once after rolling out of bed this morning.
âNo, I-, uh, I just grabbed what I found,â you answered him quickly then but could see his lips parting with another question. Luckily, you were interrupted this time.
âBenjamin Brooks! You rat bastard!â
Benâs green eyes widened almost comically as he shared a brief look with you before turning his head to the young, furious woman who stormed into the diner, heels clicking on the floor.
Ah yes, finally a more familiar side of the man you recognized from the future.
âGrace, darling!â Flustered, he rose from his seat with an awkward laugh, and you could tell he was trying to keep the drama on the down-low for your benefit.
The harsh slap across his cheek he instantly received, however, echoed loudly through the quiet diner. A few heads turned as cutlery clinked against tableware, but no one dared to say anything. You buried your face in your tea and tried to stifle your laugh.
Man, you would love to slap the human version of him, too.
âDonât darling me, Benjamin, after youâve been two-timing me with that tramp Betty Vanderbilt!â the girl yelled loud enough for the whole diner to hear.
Sheepishly and with a bit of charm, Ben scratched the back of his neck. âWell, to be fair, I thought you knew about Betty. We werenât exactly exclusââ
He barely got the word out before another slap rang through the diner as her hand came down hard on his cheek once more. It was turning crimson red rather quickly and was a sight to behold. You had to admit you liked that girl.
âI already forgave you once for sleeping with Sheila! I canât believe you did this to me again!â
As much as you enjoyed the show, you appreciated the distraction and saw it as a perfect opportunity to sneak away and finally get rid of him. Stealthily, you rose from your chair and crept by the arguing couple to the exit.
You were warmed up enough to find shelter on your own and hoped the timeline wasnât too cracked when youâd return. Mostly, though, you hoped Soldier Boy was too self-centered to remember someone like you.
You had made it all the way to the sidewalk again before his voice reached your ears. You sighed your frustration but kept on walking, ignoring his calls.
âCindy! Hey, uh, wait!â
Shit.
Why was he so fucking fast? He wasnât even a supe yet.
Once more, he came to a stop in front of you and blocked your way. âWhy-, uh, why did you leave? I mean, I know this looked really bad, butââ
âLook, uh, thank you for everything,â you interrupted his beginning of an excuse with as much patience as you could find within yourself. âI know youâre trying to be nice and all, and youâve been super kind⊠But Iâve got it from here, alright? Just forget you ever met me, okay?â
Amused, he snorted. âWell, kinda hard to forget someone like you, sweetheart.â
Fucking fuck.
âWhat dâyou mean? Iâm completely normal.â You tried to shrug it off, but youâd never been the best actress â another thing the two of you had in common.
âNo, youâre not.â A smirk rose on his lips that he tried to bite back. âI mean, sure, youâre exceptionally beautiful, but youâre also kind of⊠mysterious. Guess thatâs what intrigues me.â
Fuck. In all your effort to get rid of him and save the timeline, you had actually attracted his attention more. It seemed like your dismissiveness and aggression had only piqued his interest instead of deterring it. Your fallacy was thinking heâd back off from a strong, rude, and unruly woman like you.
You probably shouldâve acted more like Grace, Betty, and Sheila â be forgettable.
âAlright, out of curiosity, does this little routine usually work for you?â you challenged, arching a brow. A smile played across your lips as you watched his reaction.
âWhat routine?â
âOh, you know⊠Turning up the charming smile and being nice, while also dropping your rich daddyâs name and how much money youâve got,â you retorted. âI mean, I guess it must work, right? Surely worked for Grace, Betty, and Sheila so far.â
Bobbing his head, he pursed his lips for a moment while you enjoyed your win. But with a smack of his lips, he found your eyes, the little smirk on his lips not fully vanished yet.
âAlright, I know how this looks, okay? But itâs not what you think,â he started.
âOh, so you didnât sleep with all of these women?â
âWell, uhmâŠâ
Complacently, you threw him a smile. âGoodbye, Benjamin.â
âNo, wait! Why donât you come back inside with me where itâs warm and let me explain everything?â he proposed and then sent you that charmingly cute smile again. âIâm kinda starting to freeze here, you know? Youâre still wearing my coat, sweetheart.â
âOh, uh⊠Sorry.â Your brow knitted as you stared down at the warm, long clothing item around you. Flustered, your cheeks blushed, but as you began to take it off with the intent to hand it back to him, he stopped you.
âNo, uh, please keep it. I can find another one,â he said, laughing softly. âBesides, it looks better on you.â
God, you wanted to slap him like Grace.
âWell, uhm, thank you, but Iâm still not coming back in there with you again, alright?â you said firmly. âI have to get going now. Donât follow me anymore.â
You tried to push past him, but of course, he still wasnât listening to you.
âWait! Just wait a second!â
And you knew if you didnât stop, he would just keep following you till you both died of hypothermia. So, you spun to face him with a deeply impatient frown.
âDo you even know where youâre going? Do you have a place to stay?â
âYes.â
âWhere? In New York? You know, youâre not going to make it there on foot today. Especially during this weather,â he noted with a bit of playfulness in his voice. âUnless, youâre planing on stealing a car.â He chuckled but then lifted a brow at you. âYouâre not, are you?â
âNo, of course not!â
Well, not the worst ideaâŠ
âAlright, look, my parents are out of town for a month. Got the the whole mansion to myself. Just stay at my place for the night, and we can figure out how to get you to New York in the morning, alright?â
âYou do know what that sounds like, right? Are you even hearing yourself?â you questioned, causing him to laugh again. It was still weird to hear it without undertones of viciousness in it â like a temporal whiplash.
âThe house is big enough, and I promise youâll have your own bedroom. Not mine, alright?â he clarified but tried to hide a smile. âUnlessââ
âNope.â
âAlright, well, uh, the point is, itâs big enough, so you donât even have to see me if you donât want to,â he added with an innocently imploring look. âJust let me help you, please.â
You crossed your arms over your chest, your brow only creasing more. âWhy do you wanna help me so badly, huh? I donât understand. I mean, are you really doing this out of the sheer goodness of your heart of gold? Whatâs your angle here, soldier boy?â
He chuckled, his cheeks warming with a flush. âGotta say, kind of like that nickname.â
âI bet you do,â you muttered wryly. âSo, why? Why are you helping me?â
Ben scratched his jaw and took a step closer to you. The air shifted, a part of you wondering if heâd finally drop his mask. He kept his deep voice low as he spoke.
âLook, I donât know whatâs going on here, but I know youâve been serving me a lot of bullshit today.â Your heart stopped, but when you glanced at him, he wasnât angry. He was⊠worried. âI donât mind, okay? You just-⊠you look like someone whoâs in a bit of trouble, and I guess I can relate, so let me help you, alright?â
âI-⊠I donât know,â you replied honestly this time, both hesitation and caution shimmering in your eyes as your teeth clawed into your bottom lip. âWhat if I say no, youâre gonna hand me over to the cops? The asylum people?â
âIs that where you broke out from?â
A bit offended, you gasped. âThe asylum?!â
Granted, you were acting a little crazy â for the time period. You were perfectly ordinary and sane in your own century.
Oh God, was that how Soldier Boy felt in your time? Always displaced and out-of-touch? What a horrible feelingâŠ
âNo, jail,â he said then, which caused your brow to raise in surprise.
âOh.â
He cocked an eyebrow at you. âWait, did you break out of jail?â
âNo!â
âAlright, uhmâŠâ Ben laughed and rubbed his palms together, probably to keep himself warm. His sandy-blond hair had collected quite a bit of snow. He mustâve forgotten his cap inside the diner. âListen, Iâm not going to call anyone. I promise you can trust me, okay?â
That seemed like a trap, right? A demon tricking you into making a deal for your soul.
âAre you, uhm, running from someone?â he asked, with not only concern but also determination to fight whoever was after you gleaming in his eyes.
Ironic, you thought since you were running from him.
âUh, no, not really,â you replied hesitantly.
âWere you held somewhere?â he asked next, carefully licking his lips. âYou know, against your will?â
Yes, by you, you wanted to scream.
âKinda, yeah,â you admitted softly. And in a way, it felt weirdly therapeutic to confess that to the Dr. Jekyll version of your future Hyde.
âOkay, uhmâŠâ He swallowed subtly, nodding. Then, his eyes bored so sincerely into yours you really thought youâd fallen down the rabbit hole. âWell, you donât have to be scared. Youâre safe with me, alright?â
Fuck. You were fucking screwed, werenât you?
âSo? Youâre finally gonna let me help you?â
You exhaled a deep breath as you assessed the man in front you once more. You had no place to go, it was cold, and the sun was beginning to set. Your powers, on the other hand, still seemed to be dormant.
âFine,â you caved at last. âOne night. And you better not crawl into my bed, alright?â
Placatingly, he raised his hands again but there was a broad smile on his freckled face this time. âUnderstood, loud and clear. I heard you earlier â no means no.â
Wow. You began to wonder what really happened to the guy in the following 80 years to shape him into the toxic piece of shit you have to deal with on a daily basis.
âLong story,â you sighed. When you first had told Soldier Boy about your past, heâd been kind and understanding. Heâd said it was a good thing that all those people who tried to burn you were dead now â which was about the nicest thing a guy like him couldâve said.
Then he turned around and made fun of you for months on end.
âThatâs not what she said,â you pointed out. You were definitely believing that woman over him. He was a fucking dog â as Grace put it. You were sure that personality trait was the same at any point in time.
âTechnicality.â He shrugged it off. You arched a brow. He smirked. âItâs a long story, too.â
You rolled your eyes, sighing. âAlright, fine.â
Benâs smile twitched eagerly to rise higher by the heartbeat. âOkay, uhm, my carâs over there.â
He gestured down the street past the diner and let you pass, only walking closely next to you but careful not to touch as his arm only hovered protectively behind your back.
âStill no touching there, alright, Romeo?â you reminded him with a stern finger.
âI know,â he sang, chuckling. âJust trying to be proactive here. Thereâs a lotta ice, you know? Wouldnât want you to slip in your basketball shoes.â
For reference, you were wearing a simple pair of black Chucks.
âFine, Iâll allow it.â
âYou allow it, huh?â he teased with a boyish grin.
âYeah, Iâll allow you to protectively guard me from a distance,â you retorted. âYouâre not supposed to enjoy it, though.â
âOh, I donât think that was the deal we made, sweetheart.â His grin grew even wider now.
âDonât make me regret this already,â you sighed.
âWell, uh, too late. Weâre already here,â he then said and stopped, motioning to a deep emerald green, elegant, sleek car with a beige convertible roof. âThatâs it. Itâs a Cadillac 75. What dâyou think?â
âI donât know enough about cars to be impressed,â you told him.
He laughed, rubbing his chin. âWell, worth a shot.â
Ben then opened the door for you and waited till you were safely seated inside (or trapped) before rounding the vehicle and sliding into the driverâs seat.
And as the two of you drove down the snowy streets of Philadelphia, you wondered if you had just gotten into a car with Clarence or with the fucking devil himself.
â¶ïž Chapter 3: I'm Going To Be a Lady If It Kills Me
Ah, yes... Wouldn't we all love to slap him like Grace in the future? đ What do you think of young Ben so far? While he seems nicer and kinder than his alter ego, there are surely some core personality traits present đ
Coming Up:
Reluctantly, you stepped into the hallway, unsure of how to ask, but the need to find something â anything â took over. It wasnât like you could just wander around in a towel, although you were sure your host would probably appreciate the sight.
âUhm, Ben?â you called softly, your tone a little shakier than you'd intended.
A few moments passed before his voice answered from down the hall, a bit too loud, as though heâd been waiting for this. âYeah?â
âI-, uh, I donât have... anything to wear,â you said quietly and swallowed, your gaze drifting to your bare feet on the floorboards.
There was a long pause before he appeared in the doorway, his face flushed. âRight. Well, I-... I can get you something,â he said. His eyes flicked to the floor for a moment before meeting yours again, the awkwardness hanging between you like a palpable thing that you could reach out and touch with your fingers. âIââ His voice dropped lower as he turned away for a second, his hand on the doorframe. He then gave a brief chuckle, almost self-conscious. âI donât usually keep spare clothes for, uh, guests. But Iâm sure I can find something that fits you. One second.â
You felt tethered to the ground as he disappeared down the hall, unsure whether to laugh or fucking scream. He came back a few moments later with a shirt and pants, an outfit clearly meant for a man, and you were pretty sure they were his own. The fit would be loose, but better than nothing.
âHere,â he said, offering it to you. His gaze lingered on you a second longer than was probably polite before he turned away again, his cheeks tinged pink.
Yeah, you had to get rid of the towel. You didnât want to give him any ideas â or more, for that matter. Heâd already seen you naked various times in the future. You knew privacy was an alien concept to that man.
Summary: Unable to control your abilities, youâre stuck in the present with Billy Butcher, his team, and Americaâs first asshole. At this point, youâve become Soldier Boyâs personal punching bag. But when an accident leaves you stranded in 1942, you run into a familiar face and suddenly rely on your future tormentorâs help as your only hope.
Pairing: Soldier Boy x supe!Reader
Warnings: 18+ for language, angst, Soldier Boy being an insufferable ass, reader is a supe with chronokinesis (time manipulation), post S3 alternate ending, enemies to lovers & slow burn, set partially in 1942
Word Count: 6.0k
Posted on Patreon March 1, 2025
A/N: Weeee, so excited to finally share the first part of this series with all of you! From mortal enemies to classic romance, crazy and angsty time travel theories, and a glimpse behind the green suit (in both ways), we're gonna have a lot of fun with this one đđ
Main Masterlist || Series Masterlist || Tag List
Chapter 1: Of All the Gin Joints...
âMove, or Iâll move you.â
Annoyed, you huffed a sigh and lifted your feet off the coffee table, shifting a few inches to the right, so Soldier Boy could pass by with a deep grumble. You rolled your eyes back slightly when he plopped down next to you on the worn, old couch in the office of the Flatiron Building.
âA âpleaseâ wouldnât hurt you every once in a while,â you muttered with a glare at the supe.
âDisagree,â he huffed.
When Butcher and his team tracked you down and recruited you almost a year ago, you surely hadnât signed up to spend your days with a fossil from the past century. All they had wanted you to do was find the weapon that could destroy Homelander. That weapon turned out to be Soldier Boy.
And you had found him, freed the man from forty years of Russian torture without receiving so much as a âthank you,â and helped the team take down Homelander, who was currently powerless and safely locked up in a CIA black site. Now, you were still here â as was Soldier Boy.
To your dismay, he wasnât just the most powerful supe on the planet, especially after his own sonâs steep fall from grace, but he was also the biggest motherfucking asshole that ever walked the earth.
Soldier Boy was obnoxious, loud, rude, sexist, racist, lazy, arrogant, selfish, cruel, deceitful, complacent, vindictive, inconsiderate, paranoid, ruthless and unsympathetic. Honestly, youâd need a whole dictionary just to get through every single character trait you hated about that man.
This morning heâd been particularly belligerent as soon as he had set foot inside the office and Hughie bumped into him, causing Soldier Boy to spill his iced latte. To be fair, the guy had just been standing in the doorway like a moron for a full three minutes â heâd stared at you the whole time, probably thinking of new ways to torture you.
Today marked your 30th birthday of all things, so it was only natural your over six-feet playground tormentor would be present for the occasion.
âLed Zeppelin, huh?â he noted with an arched brow, eyeing your choice of outfit. You mostly wore band shirts from tours youâd been to from your time traveling adventures.
âYeah, I got it for my twenty-fifth birthday. I went to Zeppelinâs first tour in 1969. Only wear it on special occasions,â you told him with a smile.
In some rare moments, it was actually possible to have a normal fucking conversation with him. You hoped it was one of those. Aside from his grumpiness in the morning, maybe heâd decided to give you a break on your birthday.
âOh, yeah, rightâŠâ He rolled his eyes and scoffed. âHappy fucking birthday, I guess.â
âThat is so sweet of you, thank you,â you replied wryly.
He knew what you were doing. His smile rose â and then morphed into a provocative smirk. âSo, thirty, huh? Howâs that feminist bullshit working out for your biological clock, sweetheart?â
âDonât kill him,â Annie reminded you of the office mantra with calm in her voice as she sat behind you at her desk, causing Soldier Boy to snort a laugh.
âIsnât it time for your nap, gramps? Youâre sundowning,â you retorted instead with a teasing smile.
You took his taunts lightheartedly. After all, you didnât think youâd have to worry in that department â much like him. For some reason, you didnât age⊠a lot. At least, it was slower than the average supe and human. You figured it might have to do with dropping in and out of wormholes. You had aged just fine as a kid but it progressively began to slow around your sixteenth birthday â the first time youâd traveled through time and jumped to Nirvanaâs MTV Unplugged show in New York of December 1993.
You remembered your parents had been fighting behind the broken and yellowing partition slider of a trailer you had called your home. Youâd lain on the pull-out bed with your headphones on and a Walkmen, trying to drown out their screaming. You listened to that record and wished you could be there â and then you were.
Youâd found your ruby slippers.
To this day, you still got IDâed at every bar, club, and liquor store alike. Soldier Boy had never been carded. Heâd once claimed it was because he was famous, to which youâd almost spat out your drink and told him the wrinkles didnât lie. Least to say, that little joke hadnât flown well with the supe.
âYou know, doll, if you ever need that tension to disappear from your shoulders, Iâm right here.â Soldier Boy smirked cockily at you and spread his legs a little further apart. Not a day passed by when he didnât hit on you either â or anything with tits, really. âJust say the word, and I fuck it right outta you. I do like âem older, you know, so I donât give shit. But if you wanna get cracking on this baby thing, we better fuck on this couch right now.â
âPlease donât,â Hughie pleaded in a high-pitched sigh, glued in his spot next to Annie.
âNo, thanks,â you scoffed and scrunched your nose in disgust. âYouâre a fucking pig.â
âHey, câmon, I know you want to,â replied Soldier Boy without an ounce of self-reflection, his smirk only widening as his hand crawled up your thigh. âBet youâve been waiting for a big dick like mine, havenât you?â
âGet your fucking hands off of me!â You slapped his fingers away, huffing in frustration.
Not even your kindergarten bully had been this fucking annoying â and that kid threw a dodge ball at your face and broke your nose.
Fortunately, while your own powers were on the fritz, you still had some superhuman strength. Sure, not as much as Soldier Boy, but if he shoved, you could at least push back enough for him to leave you alone.
For, like, five seconds.
Soldier Boy laughed loudly at your rejection. âI do like âem feisty,â he murmured with a sultry voice, invading your space even more as he shifted closer on the couch. Lion king on the prowl. âYou know, youâd be less useless if you spread your legs every once in a while.â
Jumping up from your seat, you rounded the table to bring space between you and face him properly. It was always smarter when he was in your view at all times and you could watch his brazen hands with an eagle eye â the same hands that currently began to roll a blunt on the coffee table.
âHey, if it werenât for me, youâd still be frozen solid in a box in Russia,â you bit.
âWell, weâd like to think we wouldâve found him eventually, love,â Butcher threw in from across the room, the sly grin on his face telling you he was enjoying the show.
âSee?â Soldier Boy sneered complacently. âFucking useless.â
âYouâre fucking useless!â you yelled, anger surging through every inch of your body. âNo one fucking likes you! You donât have friends, you donât have family, and everyone in this room fucking despises you â just like your old team!â
Slowly, he rose from his spot on the couch, nostrils flaring, his sheer height imposing as he towered over you like the Empire State. A part of you was glad there was still a piece of furniture between you â even though that wouldnât stop him in the slightest.
âYou take that fucking back,â he snarled, one hand balling into a fist by his side while the other pointed a warning finger at you.
However, you stood your ground, crossing your arms in front of your chest, a challenging look in your eyes but a subtle swallow in your throat. âNo,â you said defiantly and bristled. âIâll drop you into the fucking Jurassic era where you belong, fossil. Watch you become a T-Rexâs fucking chew toy.â
âOy, simmer down, kids,â Butcher assuaged but didnât even bother to glance up from the newspaper in his hands. Instead, the Brit leaned back in his chair and threw his legs up on the desk, settling into a more comfortable position.
Soldier Boy threw him a dismissive look, annoyed at the interruption, before his attention turned back to you with a spiteful sneer. âYou know, if I were you, I wouldâve used those powers properly. I wouldâve gone back and fucking killed baby Hitler or some shit.â
You scoffed a humorless chuckle. âYeah, not surprising you wouldâve killed a fucking baby,â you retorted dryly.
âSee, this is why youâre a fucking failure,â he taunted and stepped closer, his face only inches away from yours now. You could feel his hot breath against your skin. âThose powers were clearly wasted on you, doll. Women are too fucking soft.â
You snorted, shaking your head. You didnât even know why you still argued with that asshole. Heâd never change. And you sure as hell couldnât say shit like:
What dâyou know? Youâve never seen a war zone from the inside, you fucking bigoted coward.Â
âIâm not soft,â you insisted instead, narrowing your eyes to a glare.
âProve it.â
âI wouldnât hesitate to go back in time and fucking kill you!â
At this point, you wouldnât. You really wouldnât fucking mind at all.
However, Soldier Boy only laughed in your face like you were the bug about to hit his shield. âOh, you can certainly try, sweetheart. But you canât, can ya? âCause youâre fucking broken. Like I said, useless,â he reiterated harshly, his sneer widening when his hand reached out and clasped your chin between his fingers. âDonât worry. Iâll find some good use for you. Especially for that mouth.â
Furiously, you thwarted his advances once more. âI said donât fucking touch me!â
âYo, Soldier Boy, câmon! Leave her alone now,â MM warned, finally getting fed up too. He usually avoided the supe to the best of his abilities, only snapping every once in a while when the asshole took it too far.
This time, MM only got involved because Hughie kept sending him frantic looks of panic during your heated exchange, probably worried youâd antagonize the supe so much heâd detonate the whole building.
âMind your own fucking business, punk,â Soldier Boy dismissed the intervention, his venomous eyes still fixed on you.
The anger was storming through your body and closing your throat with a tight chokehold. You could barely breathe as your chest heaved and your ears rang. It was always worse when you got angry. Unfortunately for you, Soldier Boy had a way of pushing your buttons and setting off your triggers.
Your superpowers had the ability to control and bend time â or at least they used to. You had mostly used it to stop the clock and get an extension on your homework deadlines. But technically, you could also travel through time.
Once you had found out how that worked, well, you quickly became addicted. You went to concerts of bands that didnât tour anymore, youâd shamelessly make money on Wall Street and placed bets on football games, and sometimes, you even ate dessert twice.
It was all about the little things.
But that all stopped when you accidentally cast yourself into the Middle Ages and almost got burned at the stake for witchcraft. For some reason, your powers wouldnât work until the last second â you figured extreme distress had been a factor.
When you closed your eyes at night, you could still feel the scorching heat underneath your bare soles and smell the smoke reaching your nose and lungs.
Afterward, you didnât want to use your powers any longer â not that you could. PTSD was a real bitch sometimes.
So, maybe, Soldier Boy was right when he said you had never used your gift wisely.
After your flight from Vought, you lived under a fake name and took up online college classes in physics and history to understand your abilities better and avoid grave mistakes.
And boy, time travel was a fucking bitch.
Years of study could be summarized to this, however: If you even so much so as killed the wrong fly in 1783, the whole world could go extinct.
Or in Voughtâs terms: If you accidentally fucked up history, it might fuck with their business and money.
That was the reason why they had been trying to get rid of you for the longest time â until Butcher showed up on your doorstep. You had no idea how the Brit couldâve found you or even known about your powers in the first place. After your escape, Vought had kept your existence quiet. They knew if the wrong people found you, it would end direly for them.
Wrong people like William Butcher.
At first, he wanted you to go back in time and, in his words, âkill the chubby, little cape cunt.â Needless to say, you had declined. Even if Homelander was the worst creature to ever walk this earth, excluding his sperm donor, you wouldnât kill a baby. You wouldnât kill anything or anyone, really.
If anything, you could be classified as a bit of hedonist â or âa fucking hippie,â as Soldier Boy once had put it. Which, granted, was probably a trait you both shared. Although, Soldier Boy took the whole fucking cake and ate it, too. At least all you ever did was steal a tiny slice every once in a while.
In the end, you had never asked for these powers. You were just trying to make the best out of a bad situation.
But when Butcher then asked you if you could at least âhop backâ to retrieve the weapon that had neutralized Soldier Boy in 1984, you finally told him you were essentially useless.
A part of you wanted to help, though. While you had closed yourself off from the rest of the world, you had still followed the news. You knew it had gotten bad out there. You could see Homelander spinning out of control and threatening to burn the world. You knew soon enough your house would burn, too.
You knew the monster needed to be stopped.
So, you offered Billy Butcher the only thing you could â a glimpse into the past, so he could find the weapon in the present.
And you did. You saw how Soldier Boyâs own team had despised him so much they handed him off to the Russians during an ambush in Nicaragua â but they hadnât killed him.
The diabolical smirk on Butcherâs face had scared you. You knew heâd realized in that moment that you could be valuable after all. So, naturally, he threatened to give up your location to Vought if you didnât join his team.
And well, here you were.
Youâd traveled to Russia, youâd freed Soldier Boy, and youâd defeated Homelander. But even after the job was done, you stuck around.
Hughie, Annie, MM, Frenchie, Kimiko, and even Butcher â they had all sort of become your friends. And they protected you, even though Vought had sworn they were done hunting you. No one trusted Stan Edgar, and you knew he would probably still rather have you buried six-feet-deep if he ever got the chance.
So it was nice to know the whole team stood behind you. Well, all but one.
Part of the deal with Edgar had been a request to keep Soldier Boy away from Voughtâs business. The guy was smart enough to know he wanted nothing to do with the ticking time bomb, either.
âAnd what are we supposed to do with that wanker, huh?â Butcher had asked as all of you stood in a very breezy office at Vought Tower â which had still been under heavy construction after the fallout.
âLet him play hero, keep an eye on him, and Iâm sure weâll have no issues, Mr. Butcher.â Edgar had smiled cunningly, his eyes flickering to you.Â
Afterward, you had decided to pack up like Maeve and finally live your life. Youâd even applied as a physics professor at a small college. But then Soldier Boy made his own request: Either youâd stay, or heâd walk. And if he had walked, your deal with Edgar wouldâve fallen through.
Soldier Boy was a bully. In fact, he could teach master classes in it. You didnât think there was one good bone in his body. So far, you could count the times the guy had actually been nice to you on one hand â two fingers to be exact.
The first time had been the very first night youâd spent together in that rundown motel after heâd killed Crimson Countess. You took over the nightshift of babysitting while Hughie and Butcher took a snooze in the adjoining room. That night, Soldier Boy had shown you a glimpse of a human being.
âWell, currently, there are two working theories on time travel: The closed loop theory and the alternate timelines theory,â youâd explained after he had asked you how actual time travel worked. Most people gave up after a minute, but he had still been in it after five.
âWhat the fuck does that mean?â
âWell, lemme seeâŠâ Musingly, you had pursed your lips and thought for a moment. âTerminator came out in â83, right? Youâve seen it?â
His lips had slowly risen to a smile. âYeah⊠Actually one of the last fucking movies I watched before the fucking Reds got me.â
âRight.â Youâd nodded. âStill remember what happened?â
Heâd scoffed and rolled his eyes a little. âIâm not that oldâŠâ
âWell, itâs been forty years since youâve seen itâŠâ
âSchwarzenegger comes from the future to kill that blonde chick,â heâd summarized with a cocky smirk that shouldâve proven to you he wasnât demented.
âYeah, remember the soldier who came back to save her, too?â
âOh. Yeah, that guyâŠâ His nose had scrunched slightly. Of course heâd be rooting for the killing machine. âWhat about that fucking wimp?â
âThe Terminator was supposed to kill Sarah because her yet-unborn son would defeat the robots in the future, but the soldier who came back to save her is actually the babyâs father.â There had been no way you couldâve explained it any simpler than that. âSo, the Terminator actually created the circumstance, which made him go back in the first place. Thatâs a closed loop. Does that make sense?â
Heâd nodded slowly, his brow creasing heavily in concentration. âYeah, I think it fucking doesâŠâ
For hours, heâd asked you questions about your powers, and when he was through all of that, he even asked you about your life, what you did for work, and how you ended up here. And youâd figured he was trying to schmooze up to you to use you for his gain â or maybe heâd just been coming down from all the drugs heâd taken that day.
Either way, after what youâd seen the Russians do to him, you could understand why someone like him might want to turn back time and get a redo. The unpleasant images, the inhumane torture heâd endured, actually caused you to have sympathy for the supe.
For a second.
When youâd tried bringing it up and be his friend, he had quickly shot you down. Heâd been an even bigger dick since then, as if the sheer thought of someone seeing his weaknesses scared him.
Yes, a little, gray mouse like you apparently fucking terrified the biggest and strongest elephant in this world.
Honestly, you didnât know why the supe had insisted on your presence. Maybe he just needed the perfect victim to antagonize as he passed the time. Sometimes, you did feel like the new Black Noir of Payback.
Thereâd only been one other incident where heâd shown something remotely resembling kindness:
Heâd complimented you.
A real, sweet compliment â and heâd actually meant it â and he hadnât hit on you in the same breath.
One night, a few weeks ago, Annie and Frenchie had dragged everyone of you to a karaoke bar to âdecompress.â Even Soldier Boy tagged along and seemed in somewhat good spirits all night â thereâd been no heinous taunting, only the usual flirtatious teasing.
One of those flirtatious attempts had been a dare for you to sing.
âOh, câmon! One song,â heâd begged and shifted closer to you on the small leather sofa in the corner of the bar. âHow about something from the fucking 80s? Like Cyndi Lauper! Iâm sure youâd like that, huh?â
âWhat, you want me to sing âGirls Just Wanna Have Funâ? Really? You?â Youâd arched a brow at him.
Heâd chuckled, and itâd been a sweet sound instead of a mocking one. âHey, look, Iâm all about the girls having some fucking fun,â heâd said coolly before a lick of his lips turned him a bit more serious, mysterious even. âHow about something a little slower⊠Time After Time!â Heâd grinned proudly and raised his expensive whiskey glass to your cheap beer. âThatâs fucking perfect for you!â
And then you actually went on stage and sung. You werenât a bad singer, either, but you were by far no Mariah. However, you could see Soldier Boy watching you intently the whole time with that strange look he sometimes carried whenever he was staring at you â something he did quite often.
In fact, heâd stared at you pretty intensely when heâd first walked out of his cryo-chamber, too. It gave you the creeps the same way that naked homeless man had once done in a subway after 1 AM. And then, he had fucking detonated, which had freaked you out so much youâd accidentally disappeared back to New York with a five minute time difference forward â the only time youâd actually managed to travel into the future.
But after your performance, Soldier Boy had passed you on your way down from the stage and intercepted you by placing a tentative hand on your arm.
âYou have a really beautiful voice,â heâd said and even gifted you a small but genuine smile.
âYou okay there, gramps?â youâd checked with a bit of a teasing smile, and maybe thatâd been your mistake.
ââM fucking fine,â heâd huffed. Heâd suddenly turned cold again, the hard lines on his freckled face crestfallen. Heâd spun around, marched out of the bar, and ditched you there on the spot.Â
So, that was what you had done for the past few months â babysit Soldier Boy and keep the bomb from exploding. Which brought you back to this exact moment:
âWhat the fuck is wrong with you, huh? Seriously!â you snapped, feeling the fury overtaking you. âWhat the fuck happened in your life to turn you into such a miserable, toxic, overbearing, narcissistic, insufferable piece of shit?!â
âInsufferable?â He scoffed as if your words didnât affect him, but you could see it was starting to get to him. âYouâre the one whoâs fucking insufferable, doll. Probably because you havenât been fucked in a while by a real man.â
Exasperatedly, you gripped your temples. âOh, it all trickles down to that, doesnât it?â you deadpanned. âYou sound like a fucking broken record, gramps!â
âOh, you wanna fucking jump on me badly right now, donât you?â he gritted through his pearly-white teeth, a challenging smirk playing on his plush lips as he leaned closer, his face only inches away from yours now.
âPlease, itâs not gonna fucking make me like you more. Your dickâs not a magic eraser,â you bit sharply, your voice low and poisonous. âGod knows you fucked your last girlfriend for years, and she still fucking hated you.â
Growling, he bristled, his jaw ticking. Mentioning Crimson Countess always hit a nerve. You knew as much.
âYouâre just a drug-addicted loser with daddy issues. Nothing more, nothing less,â you nonetheless continued bitterly. âNo one likes you! And believe me, asshole, I fucking hate you!â
As you looked up at him, you could tell he was close to exploding. Kimiko even desperately tugged on your arm to drag you out of the blast zone â not that it wouldâve mattered.
âButcherâŠâ
Hughieâs panicked voice and wide eyes reached the Brit, who finally got out of his chair and slammed the paper on the desk.
âOy, you two! Fucking stop it!â
And somehow, that had miraculously seemed to work. Soldier Boy managed to snap out of his temper tantrum, his breathing steadying, his smirk reappearing.
His lips twitched as he dipped his head and whispered into your ear, âYouâre not fucking worth it.â
His thick fingers trailed up your hips before he grabbed your waist and pushed you closer to his body. You tried to shove him away, but this time he used his full strength on you to keep you caged.
âGet off of me!â
âButcher!â
âOy! What did I fucking tell you lot?!â
Kimiko tried to pull you away harder, but that only made Soldier Boy chuckle more.
âI said stop it! Get the fuck off of me!â you yelled louder, and he finally let go with a cunning laugh.
âAlright, youâve had your bloody fun, mate. Why donât you take a bit of a time-out now, huh?â It was the most Butcher could do as far as an intervention went. Everyone in the room knew Soldier Boy couldnât be stopped.
âFine,â the supe relented with a roll of his green eyes, but then his gaze landed back on you.
You hated to admit that he had gotten to you, but it was hard to deny when your whole body was trembling and tears stung your eyes.
âFucking Christ on a cross, are you actually gonna fucking cry now?â Soldier Boy snorted condescendingly.
âFuck you. Leave me alone,â you snapped with what little strength you had left and wiped the burning tears out of your eyes.
âExactly why I said youâre fucking useless. This is the problem with women. Canât even take a goddamn joke,â he ranted. The more he got to you, the more pleasure he took out of it. You could see it by the vicious twinkle in his eyes. âYou keep talking how everyone hates me, but what about you, huh? Youâve got fucking no one, too. Your own fucking parents didnât want you, and I donât see an army of men lining up to take care of you, either.â
âShut up!â
âWanna know why? âCause youâre a broken, useless, stupid, weakââ
âStop it!â
But he didnât. You couldnât even hear the words properly anymore as they strung together into one explosion of abuse. Your vision blurred, and the ringing in your ears only got stronger.
âCâmon, fucking show me what you can do! Prove to me youâre not fucking useless! Do it!â
âI said fucking stop it!â you screamed loudly till he fell silent.
And then, poof. You were gone.
Soldier Boy blinked at the suddenly empty space before him. Knitting his brow, he shrugged your disappearance off only a second later and plopped down on the couch with an exhaustive groan.
âFucking finally⊠Took her long enough,â he commented dryly and stretched out on the small two-seater, sighing blissfully.
âThis isnât fucking funny,â Hughie threw in, the anxious expression on his face only causing Soldier Boy to roll his eyes once more.
âRelax, squirt, sheâll be back,â the supe quipped, snickering. âProbably.â
âY/Nâs got PTSD, okay? She canât control it,â Hughie argued, placing his hands on his hips in upset, his gaze scolding. âYou know, youâd think you of all people would be a little more sympathetic to that.â
Soldier Boyâs eyes glowered darkly. âWhat the fuck are you talking about? I donât have that shit. I told you.â
âYou know, kidâs right,â Butcher chimed in, catching the ancient supeâs attention. âIâd be a little more worried if I were you.â
âWhy? Not my fucking problem. And like I said, sheâll be fine,â he reiterated with a careless grumble.
âIâm sure youâre right, mate,â Butcher replied with a conniving smirk and a casualness that made the supe wary. âLetâs just hope our little Y/N doesnât take your advice to heart about the proper use of her abilities. But if I were bloody you, Iâd hope old-me watches me back.â
Soldier Boy snorted a laugh of amusement. âOh, Iâd like to see her try,â he replied arrogantly and stretched his spine with a yawn. âWell, anyways, Iâm taking my fucking nap now. Just wake me when she gets back. Iâm not fucking finished with her yetâŠâ
Hughie and the others hurried around Butcherâs desk, their voices only whispers as not to disturb the grumpy supe, and the Brit knew by the worried looks on his teamâs faces that heâd have to deal with this bloody problem now.
âButcher, what are we gonna do?â Hughie asked, eyes still wide and kind heart surely beating a marathon on his sleeve.
âYeah, how are we gonna get her back?â Annie agreed, calmer than her boyfriend, questioningly folding her arms and arching a brow.
âMon dieu, what if she changes the timeline, Butcher? I donât want to wake up speaking German,â Frenchie threw in.
âAnd I donât want fucking slavery back,â MM added.
âOy, calm down,â Butcher spoke with placating hands. âY/Nâs a smart girl. She knows more about this shite than anyone of you. Iâm sure sheâll fucking figure it out.â
âWhat if she doesnât, Butcher?â Annie pressed.
âWell, then, letâs hope worst she does is kill the snoring cunt over there.â Butcher smirked devilishly and gestured to Soldier Boy fast asleep on the couch as if he were hoping for that outcome. âGod knows Iâd be bloody fine with it.â
It took less than a second, a blink of an eye, but you felt it immediately, knew instantly what had happened as gravity itself stretched out its tentacles and wound them around your limbs, tearing and tugging until you ripped at the seams and atoms spilled out of you.
There was a stark drop in temperature â that was the first thing youâd noticed. Goosebumps formed within a beat on the bare skin of your arms, the biting cold making you not only shiver but fear for your life.
Please donât be the Pleistocene... Death by saber-tooth? No, thank you.
But to your relief, you heard a strange, but familiar set of sounds around you â animated chatter, chiming bells and closing doors, and the occasional low rumble of a car. Your heart was pounding a furious and relentless rhythm in your ribcage as your eyes fluttered open and warily scanned your strange surroundings.
Youâd landed on a street, your feet safely planted on a sidewalk. Glistening white snow covered the pavement in a thick veil, the sky a dull gray blanket above. Icicles hung from lampposts with patriotic banners flying in the chill, proclaiming messages to buy war bonds and save scrap metal.
HuhâŠ
Powdered flakes swirled around you as a streetcar clattered past you on a cobbled street, the sound muffled by the snow. Storefronts and shops lined both sides of the road, shoppers bustling by you in coats, hats, and scarves. Your brow furrowed softly at the row of parked, snow-covered cars that looked a tad⊠old.
Oh noâŠ
You had definitely traveled back a smidge, but luckily not as far as the Middle Ages again. Judging by the moderately busy street, you assumed you were at least still in New York City. A paperboy was shouting loudly further down, but you couldnât understand him from the distance. The only word that was plastered everywhere was war.
World War I or World War II, maybe?
Wherever â or whenever â you were, you couldnât get stuck here. Your short-lived fascination with your new environment was then quickly replaced by a rising panic in your throat.
You had to get home somehow.
Squeezing your eyes shut as tightly as you could, you tried to wish yourself back â unfortunately, you didnât possess your pair of ruby slippers anymore that you could simply click. The more you tried and failed, the more anxious you became, and you knew a full-on panic attack was just waiting for you around the corner.
âWhoa! Hey, carefulâŠâ
With your hands on your knees, you bumped backwards into a man, your lungs constricting so much they barely let any air pass. You spun around, eyes wide and body trembling as a set of hands landed gently on your shoulders and waist for support.
âMiss? Are you alright?â
What little breath you had got caught in your throat as you stared into an all-too familiar set of outlandishly green eyes.
Soldier Boy.
âDonât fucking touch me!â
It was a reflex at this point to slap his hands away and keep them as far from your body as possible. Of course the guy couldnât leave you alone in any era.
Admittedly, he was hardly recognizable, though. While he was just as tall as his 21st century counterpart, he wasnât as broad. Instead of the signature green outfit, he wore a long, black wool coat over a three-piece suit and a checkered flat cap. His hair was maybe an inch shorter, his beard replaced by a clean-shaven face. And while Soldier Boy surely didnât look a 104, he didnât look as young as the guy in front of you either. No furious lines from decades of anger management issues decorated his freckle-dusted face yet.
Maybe your reaction was ill-advised, considering the power he wielded. You figured any past version of the supe was even more ruthless than the current one youâd gotten to know. Moreover, you didnât have the advantage of being spared because you had saved him from an ice box.
To your surprise, however, there was no detection of malice or offense on his features. To the contrary, he seemed strangely taken aback by your aggressive response, his hands swiftly shooting back as if your very skin was made out of scorching coals. They raised in surrender.
Surrender.Â
Well, that was new. He had never, ever, ever done that before. Did you land in some alternate timeline where Soldier Boy was a nice guy?
âI-Iâm so sorry, miss. Please forgive me⊠I was just checking if you were okay,â he stammered and forced a reassuring smile, his hands still held high in good faith.
âJust stay away from me. Leave me alone, okay?â
You backed farther away from him, your eyes desperately flickering around for an exit. Your voice jittered in sync with your body before you bolted down the street and sought shelter in a dark and quiet alley.
âMiss! Wait!â he called after you, his hands picking something up in the snow that youâd dropped during your flight. âYouâve lost yourââ
His brow furrowed as he twisted the thin, rectangular device in his hand, his thumb wiping bits of melting snowflakes off the sleek, black glass. As he glanced more closely at it, it lit up brightly and vibrated in his hold. He startled at the unexpected tremble, almost dropping it into a pool of mud by his shoes. Fuddled, his gaze lifted down the busy street in search of you.
âWhat the hellâŠâ
â¶ïž Chapter 2: Is This the 40s?
I think his curiosity is piqued lol... What did you think of his 1942 version vs. the, uhm, less nice future dickbag? đ
Coming Up:
Ready to fend him off, you were surprised to find his grip wasnât strong by any means. It was barely a brush before he dropped his hand again and looked at you remorsefully.
âIâm sorry! I just-⊠Please let me help you,â he reiterated with imploring green eyes. âLook, you clearly seem lost. Just tell me where you live, and I can get you home safely, okay? Câmon, you canât do this to me.â He tried to loosen you up with a charming smile and a puppy dog look. âIf you leave like this, Iâm going to be up all night, worrying youâve died of hypothermia out here.â
And my God, he seemed sincere! No wonder he had gotten attention from women like a goddamn bunny in a petting zoo.
Musingly, you then chewed on your lower lip and assessed the man in front of you. The people who strolled by you threw you the occasional weird looks â youâd chosen a bad day to wear a Led Zeppelin t-shirt and ripped jeans.
Admittedly, you could use a little help here. Maybe if you were being careful with the timeline â and him â you could risk it.
Series Summary: Unable to control your abilities, youâre stuck in the present with Billy Butcher, his team, and Americaâs first asshole. At this point, youâve become Soldier Boyâs personal punching bag. But when an accident leaves you stranded in 1942, you run into a familiar face and suddenly rely on your future tormentorâs help as your only hope.
Pairing: Soldier Boy/Ben x supe!Reader
Warnings: 18+ due to language and mature themes, reader is a supe with chronokinesis (time manipulation), a lot of time travel talk, set partially in 1942 and the present (alternate S3 ending), PTSD, Soldier Boy before Soldier Boy (aka no powers yet, plus meet his childhood home and parents), slight Beauty/Beast vibes, enemies to lovers, slow burn, smut, fluff, humor, angst
A/N: Been wanting to write about time travel again since this fun one-shot. Got the idea while writing Bad Reputation years ago but never got to it. Felt challenged again after rewatching the Community episode where Dean Pelton whines, "Time travel is really hard to write about." Welp, challenge accepted đđ€
Main Masterlist || Soldier Boy Masterlist || Tag List
Chapter 1: Of All the Gin JointsâŠ
Chapter 2: Is This the 40s?
Chapter 3: Iâm Going To Be a Lady If It Kills Me
Chapter 4: After All, Tomorrow Is Another Day
Chapter 5: We'll Always Have Paris
Chapter 6: I Don't Mind a Reasonable Amount of Trouble
Chapter 7: Lions and Tigers and Bears, Oh My!
Chapter 8: Frankly, My Dear, I Don't Give a Damn
Chapter 9: As Time Goes By
Chapter 10: Here's Looking at You, Kid
Chapter 11: When Youâre Slapped, Youâll Take It and Like It
Chapter 12: Youâre Not Just a Man, Youâre a Monument!
Chapter 13: It's Alive! It's Alive!
Chapter 14: I'm Going to Have a Lot of Drinks
Chapter 15: I May Be a Thief, but I Am Not a Cheat
Chapter 16: I Donât Care What the Papers Say!
Chapter 17: The Stuff That Dreams Are Made of
Chapter 18: Love Means Never Having to Say Youâre Sorry
Chapter 19: Youâre Gonna Need a Bigger Boat
Chapter 20: What Weâve Got Here Is Failure to Communicate
Chapter 21: Round Up the Usual Suspects
Chapter 22: Thereâs No Place Like Home
Chapter 23: The World Is Not a Pleasant Place to BeâŠ
Chapter 24 â âŠWithout Someone to Love
Epilogue: Until It Ends, There Is No End
|| SERIES COMPLETE ||
One-Shots & Drabbles:
A Study in Emerald (1942)
Headcanons, Imagines & Other:
đ 15 Questions about creating TAT
đ Headcanon: Would Ben sacrifice himself for you in a worst case scenario?
some wonderful person is reading and commenting their way through a fic I wrote eleven years ago, and I don't even have the words to express how delightful an experience this is đđ
Ever since you awoke in a cell in the cultâs compound youâve been able to hear the apologetic whispers of their god. Apparently while they are fanatically loyal they arenât very good at actually listening to their god.
Summary: When the reader is released from captivity by Homelander, she's reunited with a familiar face. Soldier Boy. Her childhood friend. Her true love. The loss of her life. The man she was taken from in 1957. Sixty eight years later and Soldier Boy is baffled not only by her being alive but her young age and apparent powers. Old memories resurface as the pair try to navigate what truly happened all those years ago. New fears emerge as they come to terms with who they now are in a frightening modern world. All the while, Homelander poses a looming threat to not only the two of them but the entire world. Hard truths must be faced. Lines must be drawn. Two fated souls must make an impossible choice. Run or fight. Monster or anti-hero. Soldier Boy or Ben. Alone or together, once and for all...
Pairing: Soldier Boy x reader
Word Count: ~80K
Warnings: spoilers through S4, language, violence, smut, captivity, mention of torture/miscarriage/parental abuse, supes vs. humans, death, illness, adultery, threats of violence against a child, attempted murder/murder, vigilantism, mention of drug use/drinking/WW2 violence and more
A/N: It's finally here! I am so excited to finally be sharing this one! This is something completely different for me to tackle a romance of this size that takes place in two different decades. There's a lot of surprises to come and mystery to unfold as we go on this journey. I really hope you guys have as much fun with this one as I have writing it!
Hi All! I made the decision to post the entirety of All Too Well to Ao3 (linked in the masterlist). I did this for a number of reasons but primarily, this is just not a very well received story on Tumblr I've found over the past few weeks so I'm hoping 1) It gets more traction there and 2) I decided to post the entire story there so you may read at your own pace as it is quite lengthy!
I won't be posting Part 3 forward as individual parts on tumblr as it takes a lot of time to do that many posts and again, I think most people have Ao3 at this point.
All this to say, I adore this story and I think it's some of my better writing so I hope if you do like Soldier Boy stories, you decide to check it out!
Oh wow... I'm really glad I have Ao3 so I can read the rest of this there, but I am sorry this series hasn't received the reception you hoped for. I really enjoyed chapters 1-2 and I'm looking forward to reading the rest đđ
I also hope this shows people why reblogging and sharing your thoughts on what you read and enjoy is important, not just "liking" and moving on. Writers and other artists want to share their art with you, but we also want to build community together. Like, you know, a fandom.
Thank you friend! đ This isn't to say I'll never put the other parts on Tumblr as standalone parts but it's just very much not a priority. Maybe someday!
This was a strangely easy decision to make? Which is good or bad depending on how you look at it đ I'm not the kind of person to look at a story and say it needs X number of notes or it's not successful. But this was more like...I have 20 parts of this thing and there's a literal handful of people interested? So it didn't make sense for me at that point to keep the fic going long term for the people who are interested. It also means I don't have to post it every week and potentially let a lack of outside interest sway my own feelings towards this story because that has absolutely happened to me in the past.
You in particular know how excited I've been for this one and how long it's been in process so I kind of refuse to let that happen to a story that imo is just plain damn good (like, top five fics I've written good). I'm looking at it as an opportunity to check out the Ao3 playground and see if I want to post or cross post there more.
I really do miss the community aspect of tumblr that's gone by the wayside whether it's comments, reblogs with all caps cause people where excited or shocked, asks in the inbox about fics or silly little random things. It's very...transactional in a way now. It's hard to gauge what people like. It's not just this one fic (which hey, maybe I just have rose colored glasses for this one) but in general I see it (and I know other creators do too). It'd be nice if that could somehow return someday. đ
Okay, so I havenât been on Tumblr much, lately so I was attempting to catch up on you some of my favorite writerâs works⊠and so when I came across this last night, let me tell you⊠I was so excited to see you had posted the entire series to Ao3! I read through chatter 18 last night, yes I was up until 3 am no Iâm not sorry for it. (Work went fine today!)
But I love it! I agree it is definitely one of the best series you have written! It is not getting the recognition on Tumblr it deserves! I hope it does on Ao3!
Anyway! Thank you so much for sharing your work, and sharing your creativity and passion with us!
in 2026, remember how GOOD writing feels. remember how satsfying it is to get your characters to the point you have been dying to get to, where they will experience the love, fear, relief or whatever the feeling you want to bring to life may be. let this year be the year of writing, prgress and of satisfactory endings.
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