This one if for my lovely Amanda @wasicskosgirl who I love so much! I don’t share my writing a lot but for you I happely make an exception! I hope you like it and yeah haha love you!!!
Amanda's 800 writing challenge.
prompt: would you mind if I kissed you?
character: Steve aka captain America <3
Warning: Sad Steve, Talk about a mission, Fluff, Spelling mistakes
It's been a month since y/n had waved goodbye to Steve and the others. They had a mission, a very important one. They got intel that Hyrda had kidnapped some people for experiments. Normally y/n would have joined on this mission. Not because she did something heroic, no, she tripped and fell off the stairs on her way back to the helicarrier.
So while the others were on their mission y/n had to keep herself busy. It should have been a short mission, just a couple of days but those couple of days quickly turned into a month. She couldn't wait for them to come back home.
Y/n was laying on the couch when her friends walked inside, they looked exhausted. Nat gave her a short wave and immediately disappeared in her room. Bucky just straight-up walked to the kitchen to grab some food. Sam gave y/n a quick hug and joined Bucky in the kitchen but Steve, he just looked at the ground and walked past her, and slowly made his way to his room.
Y/n frowned, Steve would never just walk by without saying something or a quick hug or just a tiny smile. She stood up and followed Steve. He walked to his bed and sat down with his head in his hands. This isn't good y/n thought to herself.
'Steve?' He answered with a soft hum. 'Are you okay?' She knew he wasn't but asking him would give him the chance to choose to talk about it or choose to deal with it on his own. He just shook his head. Y/n closed the door behind her and sat down beside him.
'I should have saved more of them.' He mumbled in his hands. 'If I was just a little quicker I could have saved them all.'
'Steve, it's not your fault. I'm sure you did all you could.'
'But I'm Captain America, I should have saved them all.'
'Steve, what happened?' She whispered softly, she didn't want to push him but she had never seen him like this, they have been friends for a while and they have shared some secrets and had some deep conversations but never had she seen him so vulnerable, she couldn't help but feel really protective of him now.
'They were kids.' His voice broke. 'They were experimenting on kids and I wasn't fast enough. We only saved a couple of them. They were screaming for me to help them but before I could get there, their cell exploded. I was too late. They were counting on me to save them but I didn't.' Tears were streaming down his face.
'Oh, Steve' She mumbled and wrapped her arms around him. 'It's not your fault. I know it feels that way but it's not your fault. You did everything you could.'
Steve shook his head. 'But I'm Captain America... I should have... I should...' He broke down and y/n pulled him as close to her as she could and held him while he let it all out.
They sat like that for some time. Steve held onto her like she was his lifeline. 'Can you please stay with me tonight?' He asked carefully, too scared to look her in the eyes in case she would laugh at him for being so emotional. 'of course I'll stay Steve.'
'Really? You don't think I'm being stupid? Or weak?'
'Why would I think that? Steve, you don't have to be strong all the time. It's not that because people see you only as Captain America that you can't be Steve here.' She gently cupped his face in her hands. 'Honey, you don't have to be strong here. It's just you and me and I could never think less of you just because you have emotions. I love you for you. I love you, Steve.'
'You do?'
'Yes'
He leans with his forehead against hers. 'I love you too.'
She smiled, she was blushing a little and so was he.
I want to write a book called “your character dies in the woods” that details all the pitfalls and dangers of being out on the road & in the wild for people without outdoors/wilderness experience bc I cannot keep reading narratives brush over life threatening conditions like nothing is happening.
I just read a book by one of my favorite authors whose plots are essentially airtight, but the MC was walking on a country road on a cold winter night and she was knocked down and fell into a drainage ditch covered in ice, broke through and got covered in icy mud and water.
Then she had a “miserable” 3 more miles to walk to the inn.
This book already exists, sort of! Or at least, it’s a biology textbook but I bought it for writing purposes:
It starts with a chapter about freezing to death, and it is without a doubt the scariest thing I’ve read in years (and I read a lot of horror fiction).
becoming ill/disabled is hard. changing your whole life around to a new routine and new normal is hard. complaining is okay. being angry or upset is okay. it's normal. all that matters is that you prioritize yourself and keeping yourself safe. don't let that anger turn too far inwards. don't let the grief drag you under. there will always be things in life to enjoy and love that will be within reach. always.
"Girls Made of Snow and Glass" by Melissa Bashardoust (you can't see it but it's there): One of many books in this list with a title generated from the mad lib "(noun) of (noun) and (noun)." Bewaaareee the frozen hearrrrt.
"This Poison Heart" and "This Wicked Fate" by Kaylnn Bayron: It's Black Poison Ivy, and it's self-aware enough to know it.
The Swizzle Stick Romances by Georgia Beers: A stirring tale that had me rather shaken, after a dramatic twist left the characters' relationships on the rocks.
"I Kissed Alice" by Anna Birch: Well, I kissed Shara Wheeler! What is this, a competition?
"Astrid Parker Doesn't Fail" by Ashley Herring Blake: The sequel to "Delilah Green Doesn't Care," in which stepsister Ass makes an ass of herself, and then gets some ass.
"Dauntless" by Elisa Bonnin: There is a little bit of the discussion of language and the conceptual boundaries of empire that formed the backbone of the Teixcalaan duology, but in this book it takes a back seat to riding around on a giant beast and lobbing spears. Priorities.
"Scatter" and "Transistor" by Molly J. Bragg: Pretty sure that the Hearts of Heroes series started out as Maria Hill x Supergirl fanfiction. Pretty sure that's why it works.
"Those Who Wait" by Haley Cass: Six hundred pages later, we are still waiting. I think I spent less time waiting for Godot.
"Melt With You" by Jennifer Dugan: The food truck episode of Bob's Burgers, basically.
"The Once and Future Witches" by Alix E. Harrow (not to be confused with Harrowhark): There are no reviews of this book. But there will be.
"The Henna Wars" by Adiba Jaigirdar: A treatise on cultural appropriation in art. Needs a reprint with some irl trans peoples' names corrected.
"The Dark Tide" by Alicia Jasinska: Everyone, do the waaaAAAAVVvveee!
"The Midnight Girls" by Alicia Jasinska: A bit heartless, this one.
The Vera Kelly novels by Rosalie Knecht: Dumb kids, or communist plot? Or... a secret third thing?
"Youngblood" by Sasha Laurens: Another 'what if vampires could get AIDS?' book. And they were roommates.
"The Lucky List" by Rachael Lippincott: "I'm gonna keep comphetting it up because it's what my dead mom would have wanted!" Girl.
"Adaptation" and "Inheritance" by Malinda Lo: Remember "Birdemic?" Now, what if the attack of the birds was a government conspiracy, because aliens! And somehow, the least believable thing is that two people are romantically interested in the protagonist.
Shelf Two:
"Last Night at the Telegraph Club" by Malinda Lo: The title works on so many levels! Two! Two levels! Anyway. Being queer was always rough, but fortunately space is gay. Looking forward to reading "A Scatter of Light"... eventually...
"The Christmas Catch" by Clare Lydon: This, right here, is why we need to invest in our public transportation infrastructure. Two disaster lesbians on a disaster road trip.
"Christmas in Mistletoe" by Clare Lydon: The town is named Mistletoe. You know, like in that one episode of Doctor Who. Silence will fall when the question is asked: What happened in this one, again?
"The Long Weekend" by Clare Lydon: Honestly, folks, I spent the first half of this one expecting it to turn into a murder mystery. It didn't, not quite, but there is enough interpersonal drama in this book to keep you busy for a... you know... long weekend.
"Twice in a Lifetime" by Clare Lydon: A solid entry, but not my favorite of Lydon's many works. You might read this one... you know... twice in a...
The Locked Tomb series by Tamsyn Muir: My second-favorite science fiction series about a butch redhead and her dark-skinned, black-haired almost-girlfriend (who is a member of the nobility and whose name is based on a number), who must battle eldritch horrors in service of a morally bankrupt empire (all to make a rhetorical point about colonialism), that was published by Tor.
"Girls of (noun) and (noun)" trilogy by Natasha Ngan: Okay, look, I know that this doesn't actually work because Ngan's fantasy world is not Japanese-inspired, and I know that Western historians make a lot of biased assumptions about the roles of courtesans, but I'm gonna say it anyway: Memoirs of a Gay-sha. You were thinking it, too.
"A Kiss of (noun) and (noun)" series by M. Owens: Blane Grave, the broodiest knight-errant in existence, is unable to turn around without stumbling headfirst into a sapphic romance. The true Lesbian Protector.™
"Forward March" by Skye Quinlan: An asexual lesbian spends more time explaining asexuality than she does actually being asexual. Also there's some weird Republican Apologism? Anyway.
"The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo" by Taylor Jenkins Reid: A really great exploration of duality and identity politics that has been lost somewhere in the midst of the babygirlification of Celia St. James.
"Stealing Mrs. Claus" by Pru Schuyler: Shocker, but Santa is a lousy husband.
"The Coldest Touch" by Isabel Sterling: nah nah nah nah can't touch (me)
"It's Not Like It's a Secret" by Misa Sugiura: A book that I read?
"Love and Other Natural Disasters" by Misa Sugiura: "Love and Other Disasters" was already taken.
"The Valkyrie's Daughter" by Tiana Warner: Okay but... hear me out... Sigrid isn't actually the daughter of a Valkyrie. She's the daughter of [SPOILER]. So I'm not sure why the title was changed; it was originally [SPOILER], which makes way more sense. Anyway. You all know my very complicated thoughts about Warner's work. Moving on.
"Affinity" by Sarah Waters: Am I crazy, or is she actually a medium? This book will never emotionally fulfill you! (takes a drag from an e-cig) KNOW THAT!
"Mistakes Were Made" by Meryl Wilsner: The passive voice was used. Love the inversion of the super-slow burn in "Something to Talk About." And it's still just as age-gappy.
Shelf Three:
The Chronicles of Dorsa by Eliza Andrews: Mid Fantasy at its finest! Stoked for the next book (since Andrews didn't tie up half of the plot threads at the end of the trilogy)...
"Juliet Takes A Breath" (the book and the graphic novel) by Gabby Rivera: You know, I'm pretty sure that I know a Harlowe Brisbane...
"The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue" by V. E. Schwab: Bi erasure.
"Cool for the Summer" by Dahlia Adler: Just your local bisexual disaster. Or wait... That's a different book, isn't it?
"Home Field Advantage" by Dahlia Adler: Does the baseball analogy still work if it's football?
The Collected Chuck Tingle, anthologized in paperback way, proving that LOVE IS REAL! Thanks for trotting your trot and keeping me off of the lonesome train, bud! (There are a lot more but they didn't all fit)
"Legends and Lattes" by Travis Baldere: I don't even LIKE coffee, but this may just be the coziest book I have ever read.
"Any Other Name" by Ela Bambust: If you're not already familiar with this one... It's the magical boarding school story I wish I had growing up.
"Witches Loving Werewolves" by Ela Bambust: As advertised! One story is basically "hey, what if we magically turned each other into GIRLS? Haha that would be the WORST... Right?"
"Galaxy: The Prettiest Star" by Jadzia Axelrod and Jess Taylor: Boys are from Mars, Trans Girls are from Cyandii.
"Thieves" by Lucie Bryon: The only thing more romantic than planning a heist to steal something is planning a heist to give it back!
"Coven" by Jennifer Dugan and Kit Seaton: An Isabel Sterling novel.
"Moonstruck" vols. 1-3 by Grace Ellis and Shae Beagle: It escalates quickly and then ends abruptly. You have been warned.
"Harley Quinn: The Animated Series: The Eat. Bang! Kill. Tour" anthology by Tee Franklin, Max Sarin, and Marissa Louise: As it says on the cover, "Harlivy 4 Eva." Or at least until HBO Max writes it off to finance another insulting reboot of a beloved IP.
"Tell No Tales: Pirates of the Southern Seas" by Sam Maggs and Kendra Wells: I dunno, maybe tell like, one tale?
"Doughnuts and Doom" by Balazs Lorinczi: A biting critique of the failures of the educational system. It's giving "Kiki's Delivery Service" meets "The Worst Witch."
"Bloodlust and Bonnets" by Emily McGovern: The vampire novel that Jane Austen (you know, from books!) never wrote.
"Sunstone" vols. 1-5 by Stjepan Sejic: Fifty shades of gay. No, wait: Lesbian Ally ship. No, wait: LGBDSM. Doesn't matter. Come for the Plot - repeatedly - but stay for the character development.
"Cosmoknights" vol. 1 by Hannah Templer: Fight in-joust-ice! What's a girl gotta do to get a Trans Teen Beauty Queen nomination around here?
"Life is Strange" vols. 4-6: What do you know, it's still hella weird.
"Raven: The Pirate Princess" vols. 1-7 by Jeremy Whitley and a revolving door of artists: There is no volume 8 and 9. Nothing bad ever happened to them ever. The publisher is kinda... yeah... so if you want to read these you should... Pirate... them...
List of titles, authors, and synopses below the break!
Edit: Found a few typos, and that is simply unacceptable.
Shelf One:
"I Kissed a Girl" by Jennet Alexander - Find love where you work, if where you work is a B-horror movie set.
"Guava Flavored Lies" by JJ Arias - Cuban feudin'!
"The Winter Duke" by Claire Elizabeth Bartlett - Fake marriage trope, but to avoid a political assassination.
"Cinderella is Dead" by Kalynn Bayron - In the way Nietzsche said God is dead.
"Written in the Stars," "Hang the Moon," and "Count Your Lucky Stars" by Alexandria Bellefleur - Buzzfeed listicle writers and overzealous dating app creators blunder their way into relationships.
"Nevada" by Imogen Binnie - Disaster transbian meets egg. Not to be confused with "Idaho" by Emily Ruskovich.
"Delilah Green Doesn't Care" by Ashley Herring Blake - Wedding photographer x bridesmaid. Kind of like "A Date for Mad Mary" without the Irish accents.
"The Key to You and Me" by Jaye Robin Brown - Aw, the poor hyperprivileged kid doesn't know how to drive a car.
"Claire of the Moon" by Nicole Conn - The book of the film, itself a prime candidate for "How Did This Get Made?"
"Passion's Shadow" by Nicole Conn - Lesbian "Stacy's Mom."
"She Walks in Beauty" by Nicole Conn - A writer writing about a writer writing about a writer.
"Inkmistress" by Audrey Coulthurst - A thinly veiled metaphor for authors putting pieces of themselves into their writing. Not a Cornelia Funke novel.
"Of Fire and Stars" and "Of Ice and Shadows" by Audrey Coulthurst - A trilogy that abruptly ended after the second book, starring a firestarter and a horse girl named (I kid you not) Mare.
"Dragon Queens" by Kathleen Death Plume - a fun premise that gets mired in Plot.
"I Think I Love You" by Laurianne Desombre - Friends-to-enemies-to-lovers film students: one pretentious, one good. Think Nicole Conn and Marina Rice Bader.
"Hot Dog Girl" by Jennifer Dugan - Mascot love. Chapter 32 is a tour de force.
"Some Girls Do" by Jennifer Dugan - Some girls sue their former schools. Other girls escape their parents' attempts to live vicariously through them on the pageant circuit.
"Verona Comics" by Jennifer Dugan - A nuanced study of cycles of abuse and toxicity in different kinds of relationships. Also, there's a comic book store.
"The Raven and the Banshee" by Carolyn Elizabeth - Fictional lesbian pirates, because there were no real lesbian pirates ever.
"This Is How You Lose the Time War" by Amal El-Mothar and Max Gladstone - The Doctor and the Master in love, basically.
"Cheer Up!: Love and Pompoms" by Crystal Frasier and Val Wise - Cheer captain punches transphobia in the face, literally and figuratively.
"Her Royal Highness" by Rachel Hawkins - She actually /is/ a spoiled princess.
"She's Too Pretty to Burn" by Wendy Heard - Might remind you of an Oscar Wilde novel.
"The Price of Salt" by Patricia Highsmith - The original lesbian road trip! Except that if you read it on a plane, it's edited to just be a story about two friends.
Shelf Two:
"A Song of Silver and Gold" by Melissa Karibian - Lesbian Little Mermaid.
"Read Between the Lines" by Rachel Lacey - If an indie bookstore fell in love with Amazon, basically.
"No Rings Attached" by Rachel Lacey - Fake girlfriends for a wedding plus-one? What could possibly go wrong?
"She Gets the Girl" by Rachael Lippincott and Alyson Derrick - An autobiography.
"Ash" by Malinda Lo - Cinderella sells her soul to the fairy godfather.
"Huntress" by Malinda Lo - All the worldbuilding that Lo wanted to put in "Ash," but the publisher thought would be a hard sell to yt readers.
"All I Want for Christmas," "All I Want for Valentine's," "All I Want for Spring," "All I Want for Summer," "All I Want for Fall," and "All I Want Forever" by Clare Lydon - Two roommates become Roommates; chaos ensues.
"Before You Say I Do" by Clare Lydon - The wedding planner spectacularly fails at her job.
"Change of Heart" by Clare Lydon - A discarded script for a medical procedural.
"It Started With A Kiss" by Clare Lyndon - How did it end up like this, it was only a kiss, it was only a kiss, etc.
"Nothing to Lose" by Clare Lydon - (in Linda Belcher's voice) It's the mayor! HI, MAY-UH!
"Once upon a Princess" by Clare Lydon and Harper Bliss - What happens when there is only one place to get breakfast in town.
"You're My Kind" by Clare Lydon - A pun.
"The Case of the Not-So-Nice Nurse," "The Case of the Good-For-Nothing Girlfriend," and "A Ghost in the Closet" by Mabel Maney - Slightly-gayer-than-average Nancy Drew mysteries.
"Kiss the Girls and Make Them Spy" and "The Girl with the Golden Bouffant" by Mabel Many - Jane Bond has to take over her brother's spy work because he has finally caught a venereal disease. That's not snark; that's literally the plot.
"The Unbinding of Mary Reade" by Miriam McNamara - Lesbian and GNC pirates. The title is a pun.
"One Last Stop" by Casey McQuiston - Lesbian separatism, across the fourth dimension!
"Gearbreakers" by Zoe Hanna Mikuta - Power Glove.
"The Girl from the Sea" by Molly Knox Ostertag - Selkies!
"When Katie Met Cassidy" by Camille Perri - GNC women in suits sepremacy.
"Her Name in the Sky" by Kelly Quindlen - If gay bad, why girl pretty
"She Drives Me Crazy" by Kelly Quindlen - Enemies to fake lovers (while still enemies) to frenemies to actual lovers maybe to enemies to lovers. High school is hard.
Shelf Three:
"Late to the Party" by Kelly Quindlen - "Her Name in the Sky" for a mass-market audience.
"Catch and Cradle" by Katia Rose - Lesbian Lacrosse. Very Canadian™.
"Stop and Stare" by Katia Rose - Serial monogamist notices that their best friend exists.
"The Devil Wears Tartan" by Katia Rose - An examination of the negative influence of toxic authority figures. Also, highland dance enemies-to-lovers. What is "niche?"
"Just Might Work" by Katia Rose - A send-up of cringe love scenes and bad romance tropes.
"This Used to Be Easier" by Katia Rose - What I imagine all writers say at some point.
"Desert of the Heart" by Jane Rule - The original lesbian age-gap romance!
"Carmilla and Laura" by SD Simper - Unbury your gays (or unstake them, in this case)!
"The Falling in Love Montage" by Ciara Smyth - A mishmash of tropes, but on purpose.
"Not my Problem" by Ciara Smyth - She figures out that it is.
"These Witches Don't Burn" and "This Coven Won't Break" by Isabel Sterling - An interrogation of respectability politics and "us-vs-them" in queer discourse, but witchy.
"Satisfaction Guaranteed" by Karelia Strenz-Waters - Woman inherits her grandmother's sex shop. Chaos ensues.
"Laura Dean Keeps Breaking Up With Me" by Mario Tamaki and Rosemary Valero-O'Connell - I start breaking up with her.
"The Mermaid, the Witch, and the Sea" by Maggie Tokuda-Hall - There's a genderqueer protagonist too, who apparently didn't merit top billing.
"Squad" by Maggie Tokuda-Hall and Lisa Sterle - The love child of "Mean Girls" and "Teen Wolf."
"Crier's War" and "Iron Heart" by Nina Varela - Robosexuals! Spoilers in the timeline.
"Malice" and "Misrule" by Heather Walter - Angsty lesbian Sleeping Beauty. Headcannon: Princess Aurora is a mspec lesbian; her name is literally Aurora.
"Fingersmith" by Sarah Waters - Waters really takes off the kid gloves for this one!
"The Paying Guests" by Sarah Waters - They are in love, your honor.
"Tipping the Velvet" by Sarah Waters - Shipping the velvet.
Shelf Four:
"Something to Talk About" by Meryl Wilsner - The slowest of burns.
"City of Shattered Light" by Clare Winn - Cyberpunk 2069.
"Mooncakes" by Wendy Xu, Suzanne Walker, and Joamette Gil - Cue the discourse on sapphic inclusivity.
"Vampires Never Get Old: Tales with Fresh Bite," edited by Zoraida Córdova and Natalie C. Parker - Killed it first.
"Godslayers" by Zoe Hanna Mikuta - A sequel, I guess.
"I Kissed Shara Wheeler" by Casey McQuiston - Who hasn't, at this point?
"Scarlet Sun" by Isabel Hansen - Transbian Canadian Road Trip™!
"Amber Stars" by Isabel Hansen - Enemies-to-lovers summer reading program.
"The Fate of Stars," "Heart of Silver Flame," and "Death's Abyss" by SD Simper - Grimdark lesbian Little Mermaid duels with eldritch horrors.
"A Memory Called Empire" and "A Desolation Called Peace" by Arkady Martine - Mass Effect: Mesoamerica, basically.
"Honey Girl" by Morgan Rogers - Drunk Vegas wedding brides-to-lovers.
"Skye Falling" by Mia McKenzie - A lesbian disaster with a level of sarcasm I can only aspire to.
"The Boy in the Red Dress" by Kristin Lambert - Gatsby's Drag Race.
"Love and Other Disasters" by Anita Kelly - Sapphic Master Chef, basically.
"Yerba Buena" by Nina Labour - Don't let a tragic backstory get in the way of a good ship!
"Girl, Serpent, Thorn" by Melissa Bashardoust - He's a literal snake in the grass.
Life is Strange: "Dust," "Waves," and "Strings" - Pricefield? Amberprice? Who needs ship wars when we have parallel realities?!
The Legend of Korra: "Turf Wars" and "Ruins of the Empire" - It's canon Korrasami; literally nothing else matters.
Kim Reaper: "Grim Beginnings" and "Vampire Island" by Sarah Graley - Sure, it's basically just a pun, but it deserved a longer run.
Stay tuned for a Sapphic Shelves Two, once I finish my TBR (and find another bookcase...)
Please just note that I will not write anything about parenthood, children, babies, breeding kink or cheating.
Fluff, hurt/comfort, angst and smut prompts below!! Please make sure you tell me which category you are choosing from! Please only request smut prompts if you are 18+.
Fluff, angst, hurt/comfort prompts:
Picnic together
Visit the forest together
He walks/drives you home from work
Candlelit dinner
Gardening together
You call him when you’re afraid and he protects you
You “borrow” his jumper
Slow morning together
Sending each other letters
He leans in to hear you better when you’re shy and he knows it makes you even more shy
He flirts with you because he likes to get you all flustered
He holds your hand when you’re anxious/afraid
Forbidden romance
He keeps asking for your book recs but they aren’t his type of genre AT ALL but he still asks as an excuse to talk to you
You climb into his lap when you’re tired/afraid and it surprises him and he has NO IDEA what to do
You leave cute notes for each other
Neighbours to lovers
Roommates to lovers
Short!Reader needs help getting stuff from high up and he’s more than willing to help
Movie night
Housewife!Reader
He accidentally loses his temper with you/hurts your feelings and has to resolve his own mistake after realising how much he fucked up
Buys you stuffies as a surprise
He’s the first one you call in an emergency
He wants to ask you out but he doesn’t know how so he asks you advice for asking another girl out and you’re secretly sad that you’re not her (spoiler alert, you are her)
One of you starts to avoid the other when you realise that you’ve fallen in love
One of you thinks the other has feelings for someone else
Smut prompts - I think most of these can be used in a regular soft or dark/dubcon scenario:
BDSM (can include anything you like, including any kinks or other prompts)
Dark smut (feel free to pair this with kinks or other prompts with this)
Daddy kink
Roleplay
Innocent/naive!Reader
Corruption kink
Size kink
Overstimulation
Toys (please specify)
Threesome
Semi public “might get caught” trope
Only one bed
He makes you read poetry out loud while he pleasures you
One of you walks in on the other touching themselves
Jealousy/possessive sex
Candlelit sex
Putting his hand over your mouth to keep you quiet
Touching you in public
Whispering the most sinful things to you while he takes you
Claiming/cum marking
Intense makeout session
Fingering
Sex pollen/intense aphrodisiac/love or lust potion
Dubcon
Age gap
Bad boy x good girl
Uniform
Tagging some friends/mutuals/followers who might be interested (but please don't feel like you have to request anything!):
𝐒𝐮𝐦𝐦𝐚𝐫𝐲: After the success of the blind accessible chess board you bought for Matt a few months ago, you've since moved in with him and noticed that he could really benefit from a braille label maker. And maybe, Matt has a little too much fun with it.
𝐂𝐨𝐧𝐭𝐞𝐧𝐭: Light fluff, some sexual banter but honestly nothing that bad. Matt has a moment of chaos with his new braille label maker.
𝐖𝐨𝐫𝐝 𝐂𝐨𝐮𝐧𝐭: Approx 710
𝐌𝐲 𝐖𝐨𝐫𝐤𝐬 | 𝐓𝐚𝐠𝐥𝐢𝐬𝐭
𝐀𝐮𝐭𝐡𝐨𝐫'𝐬 𝐍𝐨𝐭𝐞: Hello!! This fic is connected to Chess! Feel free to read that first, but it's not a big deal if you don't.
It's been quite a while since I've posted anything. In any case, I hope I've picked Matt back up well, sorry if he feels a bit off, I'm also currently in bed with a flu so please excuse any silly mistakes! I appreciate the support so much, if you'd like to reblog/comment, it is always appreciated but not at all necessary, thank you for reading my fics!
Please let me know if you'd like to be removed from my old taglist! I may refresh this, idk yet. Anyway, enjoy!
Matt should be used to this by now. You, unlike anyone he’d known thus far, had a tendency to find as many blind accessible solutions for him as possible.
He insisted he could do fine by himself, of which you did not doubt for one second and you respected wholeheartedly. The aim wasn’t to remove his freedom to do it alone, or to make it feel like he couldn’t do things without your help, but it was more to make life easier.
The truth was, Matt seemed to enjoy letting you guide him, even if he could do it himself. And after the pure joy and excitement he had displayed from you finding him a blind accessible chessboard a few months prior, you had been on a search to make life as easy as possible for Matt in the comfort of his own home.
It hadn’t taken long after you became friends, before you were even dating to notice that for Matt, things having a specific place to sit was very important for him to be able to tell where they were and what was what. But the problem was, that even with his best efforts, it was too easy for things to get a little mixed up, especially in the kitchen and especially after you moved in with him.
It wasn’t just his things anymore, they were accompanied by your things too and that made it harder for Matt to tell quickly what was what.
Which is why, as you came home one afternoon with Matt and several bags of food shopping, you had to suppress the squeal of excitement at the sight of a brown package inside of the mailbox.
“What did you order, sweetheart?” Matt asked, setting down the bags of food on the kitchen floor.
“A little surprise.” You replied, prying it open with great difficulty.
“For me?”
“For you.” You confirmed, watching as his cocky little smirk appeared on his lips.
“Ooh for me.”
“It’s not lingerie Matthew.” You quipped, snorting as your boyfriend gasped and brought his hand to his chest in false disappointment.
“Then what is it?” He asked, sidling up to you.
“It’s a– ah hold on,” you grappled with the packaging before finally wrangling it free and plopped the device into his hands. “Ta da! A braille label maker, so we don’t get our stuff mixed up ever again.” You grinned up at him, waiting for his reaction.
Matt held it in his hands for a moment, feeling the different edges and textures, a smile growing on his lips as he turned to face you. He didn’t ask how it worked, nor did you feel you had to explain, because after a few moments of turning it over in his hands and exploring the shape of the dial, the feel of the braille letters and the pointer on the label maker, Matt knew exactly how to use it.
His smile, soft and sweet, turned into a devilish grin as he turned the dial and squeezed the trigger to indent the label tape until he successfully pulled free the label, peeled off the sticky back and stuck it to your boob.
Matt had labelled you “girlfriend” and giggled far too much about it before getting genuinely quite excited to label his cereal and coffee and face wash and just about everything he could think of that did or did not need a label to be identified.
As his joyful chaos ensued, you sat back watching him with his new label maker, going from pure chaos and labelling everything down to the dog, to the two of you carefully labelling all of your groceries before putting them all away in the cupboards and the fridge.
And when all of the bags were empty and everything was sufficiently labelled, Matt pulled you close.
“You’re way too sweet to me.” He spoke softly, pressing gentle kisses to your forehead. “Way too good to be mine.” Matt kissed you, lips soft against yours, his touch warm and gentle and sweet until– something cold and sticky was pressed against your neck and you couldn’t help but snort out a laugh.
Feeling over the little braille label, you giggled before being captured in a kiss that mirrored the word exactly.
Mine.
Oooh. How about a hc for you and Matt going to pick out a new dog? I feel like you’d be all over the puppies and wanting to take all of them while Matt is more hesitant and tuned in with his senses to find the right dog
Matt is rightfully nervous. Adding a dog to your lives is a big step and will certainly be a new strain on his senses. His focus is set on finding the right dog. The perfect dog.
You, on the other hand, just want a dog. You couldn't care less what kind or how old or anything else. You just want one.
The puppies naturally catch your eye first. They're just front and center and So. Freaking. Cute. They have an assortment of them, NYC is a big place after all. There's bound to be loads to choose from.
Matt, however, is drawn more towards the back of the place, where the older dogs are. So while you're being bombarded by little ones, Matt is quietly making his way through the older ones.
It's not that he's against puppies, he just figures an adult dog would be better suited for your lifestyles.
When you finally realize he's not next to you, you go and hunt him down. And what you find melts your heart.
Matt is sitting with an adult dog who has climbed its way into his lap and is being pet. It's a mutt of some sort but it's adorable and the sight of Matt actually bonding with the dog makes you happy.
The two of you agree on that dog and bring it home.
I have a little Matt Murdock fic going up tonight!! 💕
Also I'm going to have a little redo of the theme (masterlists and the nav will stay the same) but a new icon and header and maybe a new shade of brown are overdue lmao
Hi ♡ its been a long time, wanna talk about stuff we wish our comfort characters would do??
I'll start: I love when people who are taller than me lean in super close to hear what I'm saying bc I'm both short and shy and will try to hide the second I feel my cheeks burning - probably would faint if any of my fictional bfs would do that 😵💫
I would love to have a quite evening with some tea or moon milk, cuddling in our pyama/underwear, have some soft music on the background and softly talk about how lovely it would be to live in a cottage in the woods away from the world and just create a beautiful fantady world togheter.
Honestly that sounds like perfection and I can 100% imagine you doing that, going to live in a little cottage with nothing to worry about other than which cute outfits you're gonna wear and what you're going to do together that day 🥰
Hi ♡ its been a long time, wanna talk about stuff we wish our comfort characters would do??
I'll start: I love when people who are taller than me lean in super close to hear what I'm saying bc I'm both short and shy and will try to hide the second I feel my cheeks burning - probably would faint if any of my fictional bfs would do that 😵💫
I would love to have a quite evening with some tea or moon milk, cuddling in our pyama/underwear, have some soft music on the background and softly talk about how lovely it would be to live in a cottage in the woods away from the world and just create a beautiful fantady world togheter.