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@oldsoul007
here you can find all my writes:
please send requests!
nicholas alexander chavez
joel miller
javier peĂąa
steve harrington
jud duplenticy
Any chance of writing for Jud Duplenticy with a female reader (that is Christian not Catholic), and is Samson's niece and had a falling out in her old church due to butting heads over interpreting the Bible, and possibly a scandalous rumor to add drama. Maybe she arrived in town just before he did, and she wants to understand the Catholic Church in comparison to her Protestant upbringing, but she thinks Wicks is a viper so she strikes up a friendship with Jud because she can tell he is a good priest. She develops a budding crush on him but feels guilty since Catholic priests can't marry once they've become priests. I don't know if this requests will interest you but I can imagine some nice angst and fluff and guilt. I'm imagining loads of drama lol. The very best to you.
I am obsessed with this and it got me out of my writers block âđťâđťâđť
Iâm still here
steve harrington x hopper!reader
summary: angsty final episode
p.s: this isnât my fav but i needed it out of my drafts
The ground still hums beneath your feet.
Not shakingâjust vibrating, like the Upside Down is breathing through the soles of your shoes, reminding you itâs still alive, still hungry. The sky above is a bruised grey, clouds dragging themselves across nothing. You keep walking anyway. You all do.
Steveâs hand is in yours, but it feels fragileâlike if you loosen your grip even a little, he might slip away again. You fall behind the others without meaning to. No one says anything. They donât have to.
âHey,â you try, but the sound breaks before it finishes leaving your mouth. âI really⌠I really thought I lost you back there.â
You slow. Stop.
Steve keeps walking until he realizes youâre not beside him anymore, then he turns, heart already panicking like heâs done something wrong just by letting go.
Your voice is quieter now. Barely there.
âI donât think I couldâve survived that,â you say. âWatching you fall. IâI was already trying to figure out how Iâd breathe after. Like⌠how Iâd wake up every day knowing you were gone.â
Your throat tightens, tears burning behind your eyes.
âI wouldnât know who I am without you,â you whisper. âI wouldnât know how to do anything. And for a second I thought the world took you away from me too.â
You clutch the front of his jacket like itâs the only thing keeping you upright.
âI was so scared,â you admit, voice shaking. âNot just of losing youâbut of living after. Of having to keep going when the person I love most is just⌠gone.â
Steveâs arms are around you instantly, tight, like heâs afraid youâll disappear instead this time. You bury your face into his chest, breathing him in, grounding yourself in the fact that heâs still warm. Still here.
âI canât do this without you,â you murmur. âI donât want to be brave if it means losing you.â
His hands tremble as they hold you.
âIâm here,â he whispers, forehead pressed to yours. âI swear to you. Iâm still here.â
And you cling to him in the middle of the abyss, shaking and alive and in love, knowing just how close you came to learning what life would feel like without himâand how unbearable that almost was.
â
The rest of it happens too fast and too slow all at once.
The fight blurs togetherâVecnaâs scream tearing through the air, the Mind Flayer thrashing like a wounded god as fire and noise and fury crash into it. You remember Steve bleeding. Jonathan yelling. Nancy not letting up. You remember grabbing Mary, hands shaking as you pull her close, the other kids screaming and crying as you herd them toward the truck.
You remember thinking, This is it. This is where we either live or we donât. And somehowâsomehowâyou win.
The Upside Down starts tearing itself apart, the sky splitting, the ground collapsing inward like itâs finally giving up. The gate looms ahead, light pouring through it, and you dive out just as the world behind you begins to implode.
You barely have time to breathe before the truck screeches to a halt.
Strips spike up from the roadâmetal teeth biting into rubber. The tires explode with sharp cracks, the sound echoing like gunfire. Shouts follow. Floodlights. Boots hitting pavement.
They drag you all out before you can even process it, hands rough, weapons raised. Someoneâs yelling about the girl. About Eleven.
Then they turn on the frequency. You feel it before you understand itâthe air changing, pressure buzzing in your skull.
You hear Mike screaming her name.
You look up just in time to see him running toward the gate, wild and desperate, guards tackling him before he can reach it. And thatâs when you see her.
Eleven is standing at the edge of the opening. Your heart stutters. You donât understand. What the hell is she doing?
You look to your dad, searching his face for answers, but his expression breaksâand suddenly you know. You know in the awful, sick way you know things you can never un-know.
The Upside Down starts to fold in on itself.
The wormhole howls, sucking everything inward, light bending, air ripping from your lungs. The gate begins to close.
âNo,â you sob, fighting forward, soldiers holding you back now too. âNo, no, noâEl!â
Her eyes never leave yours. Then the world snaps shut. Silence crashes down like a body hitting the floor. Your knees give out.
You donât remember falling, only the sound you make when it finally hits youâraw and broken and animal. Steve is there instantly, dropping with you, arms wrapping around your shaking body as you curl into him, screaming into his chest.
He holds you as tight as he can while the sky clears above you. While the world keeps going. While your sister is gone.
â
A few years later, Hawkins is quieter. Not healedânot reallyâbut softer around the edges, like a scar that finally stopped aching every time the weather changes.
Graduation day comes warm and bright, the gym packed with folding chairs and proud parents and banners that say CONGRATULATIONS CLASS OF â89. You sit beside Steve in the bleachers, your knee pressed to his, his hand resting on your thigh like it belongs there. Because it does.
The Party lines up in their caps and gowns, taller now, steadier. Still them. Mike keeps glancing toward the empty seat beside your dad, jaw tight. You squeeze Steveâs hand, and he squeezes backâno words, just understanding. Youâve learned thatâs how love survives things like this.
They did it. They survived.
After, there are photos and hugs and laughter that sounds earned. Robin throws her cap too high and Steve groans, already planning how to retrieve it. Jonathan, Nancy, and Robin talk about dorms and cities and classes like the world has finally opened its doors to them. Theyâre leavingâand it hurtsâbut itâs the good kind of hurt. The kind that means something went right.
â
You wake up gasping, like youâve been dragged up from deep water, lungs burning, heart slamming so hard it hurts.
The room is dark and quietâtoo quiet. No sirens, no alarms, no crack in the sky. Just the hum of the heater and the faint glow of the streetlight bleeding through the curtains. Still, your hands shake as if the ground is about to split open beneath you.
âHey. Heyââ Steve is there instantly.
Heâs already sitting up, like some part of him never really sleeps anymore. His hand finds your wrist first, warm and steady, grounding you before you even realize youâre crying.
âIâm right here,â he says softly, like heâs afraid the world might hear him if he speaks too loud. âYouâre okay. Itâs just me.â
You clutch at his shirt, fingers twisting into the fabric like youâre afraid he might disappear if you let go. Your chest heaves, the last pieces of the nightmare still clinging to youâvine-covered walls, screams echoing through tunnels, the sickening certainty that youâre about to lose someone again.
Steve shifts closer, pulling you fully into him. One arm wraps around your shoulders, the other cradles the back of your head, pressing your face into his neck. He smells like clean laundry and sleep and home, something you never thought youâd have after everything.
âIâve got you,â he murmurs. âYouâre not there anymore. Youâre safe. Nothing can hurt you.â
You shake your head against him, breath hitching. âI saw it. I was back. I couldnât find anyoneââ
âI know,â he says gently, thumb stroking slow circles into your hair. âI know.â
He doesnât rush you. He never does. He just holds you while the panic drains out of your body in uneven waves. Your breathing slowly matches his, deep and steady, like heâs lending you his calm because he has extra to spare.
When you finally pull back, your eyes burn and your throat aches. âIâm sorry,â you whisper. âI woke you up.â
Steve lets out a soft, humorless laugh. âLike I was actually asleep.â
That makes you huff, just a little. He cups your face, wiping your tears with his thumbs, careful and reverent, like youâre something fragile but precious.
âYou donât have to be sorry for being scared,â he says. âAfter everything weâve been through? Nightmares are basically our brand.â You lean into his touch, eyes fluttering closed. âWhat if it never really leaves?â
Steve presses his forehead to yours. âThen Iâll be here every time it comes back.â
Your chest tightens at thatânot from fear this time, but from the weight of how much he means it.
He pulls you back down with him, tucking you against his side, arm firm around your waist. His hand rests over your heart, like heâs making sure itâs still beating, like he needs to feel it to believe it.
âIâm right here,â he repeats quietly. âIâm not going anywhere.â
And for the first time in a long time, as sleep slowly finds you again, you believe it.
Do I Wanna KnowâŚ
jud duplenticy x fem!reader
summary: After the mystery ends and Benoit Blanc leaves, you and Jud finally acknowledge your love during a quiet moment , accepting that his vows mean you can never be together.
please send me requests!!
You know before Benoit Blanc ever leaves town.
You know in the way Jud Duplenticy never quite meets your eyes when the truth starts to surface, in the way his voice softens around you and hardens around everyone else. You know because loving him feels like stepping into a church and realizing youâve already started praying.
When Blanc is gone when the questions stop and the house finally goes quietâyouâre left with the aftermath. Not just of the murder, but of everything that was never said while the world was watching. The mystery is solved. The body is buried. Justice, in whatever imperfect shape it takes, has been delivered.
And yet nothing feels finished.
Jud walks beside you through the forest path behind the church, his boots careful on the pine needles, his coat pulled close against the cold. The trees are bare, winter-thin, branches like ribs against the sky. Youâve walked this path a hundred times since everything happened, but never together like thisânever without an excuse.
No investigation. No questions to answer. No one watching. Just you. Just him.
You tell yourself this is what friends do. Parishioners and priests. Two people who survived something terrible and strange together. But your body doesnât believe the lie.
You stop at the wooden bench overlooking the small clearing behind the church. You sit. He sits beside you, close but not touching. The space between your coats feels louder than a confession.
You remember meeting Jud in the chapel because the air felt right.
Too still. Too careful. The kind of silence that settles after something has already happened and everyone is pretending it hasnât. You hadnât known his name yetâonly that a new priest had been sent to town, reassigned in a way that felt less like promotion and more like exile.
Youâve rehearsed this moment in your head for days. Weeks. Maybe longer. You planned the words carefully, afraid that if you donât say them just right, theyâll sound like a sin instead of the truth.
You stare out at the trees and begin, voice unsteady âJud, thereâs something Iââ
âI know.â
You turn to him. His eyes arenât on you yet. Heâs looking at the small chapel in the distance, the stone worn smooth by time and devotion and promises kept at great cost. Your eyes flicker down for just a second, almost without meaning to, and catch the edge of a tattoo peeking from the collar.
âYou donât have to say it,â he continues gently. âI wouldnât let you finish anyway.â Your throat tightens. âYou donât even know what I was going to say.â
He finally looks at you then, and the tenderness in his expression almost breaks you. Thereâs no fear in it. No judgment. Just a terrible, quiet understanding.
âI know what you feel,â he says. âBecause I feel it too.â
Silence stretches between you, thick and heavy. Somewhere, a bell tolls faintly from the church, the sound threading through the trees like a warning.
âIâve spent my life believing love meant sacrifice. That devotion meant choosing God every day, even when it hurt. Especially when it hurt.â He exhales, shaky. âI never imagined loving someone would feel like this.â You laugh softly, bitterly. âLike punishment?â
âLike grace,â he corrects. âWhich somehow makes it worse.â
Your throat tightens. âThen whyââ
âBecause if you say it,â he interrupts gently, finally turning toward you, eyes soft and wrecked, âit becomes real in a way I canât undo.â
Thatâs when it hits youâthe depth of it. Not just your wanting. His.
It hurts in a sharp, sudden way, like youâve been holding your breath without realizing it. âI wasnât asking you to undo anything,â you whisper. âI just needed you to know.â
âI do know,â he says again, and his voice cracks this time. âAnd thatâs the problem.â You laugh weakly, the sound breaking apart as it leaves you. âI hate that youâre so good.â
He shakes his head, a sad little smile tugging at his mouth. âI hate that Iâm not allowed to be selfish.â Silence stretches. The forest breathes around you.
Jud leans forward, slowly, like heâs approaching something sacred. He doesnât kiss you. He doesnât cross the line. Instead, he rests his forehead against yours. The contact is soft, devastating.
You breathe him inâcold air, pine, incense, him. His breath trembles against your skin, uneven, like heâs barely holding on.
âItâs killing me,â he whispers.
Your eyes close. The world narrows to thisâyour foreheads pressed together, noses brushing, breaths syncing without permission. It feels more intimate than any kiss ever could.
âI want you,â he admits quietly. âAnd I wonât take you.â
âIâm sorry,â he murmurs. You nod again. âMe too.â You sit there until the sky begins to darken, until the forest feels too quiet, until loving him starts to feel unbearable.
When you finally stand, he stands with you. When you walk back toward the church, he walks beside you. And when you part ways at the steps, there is no kiss, no confession, no breaking of vows.
And you both learn how to live with a love that will never leave youâno matter how much it must remain untouched.
Jud Duplenticy
intro
please do not plagiarize my work
please request! love new ideas
no smut
do i wanna know
pushing it down and prayingâŚ
strawberries in the summertimeâŚ
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Steve Harrington
intro
please do not plagiarize my work
please request! love new ideas
no smut
im still here
nobody speak to me after that episode.
currently rewatching the last of us and cannot be more excited and terrified for the season two
Class Act
joel miller x teacher!reader
summary: When single dad Joel Miller is called in for a meeting with his daughterâs teacher, you, due to his youngest acting out, you both feel the undeniable tension, making it harder to keep things strictly professional.
coming soonâŚ
dirty cash
rich!joel miller x younger reader
summary: After a reckless hookup leaves you buying a pregnancy test in a pharmacy, the last person you expect to run into is your fatherâs wealthy but quietly tortured friend, Joel Millerâsparking a forbidden, dangerously irresistible affair where passion, power, and vulnerability collide.
a/n: reader and joel smoke, kissing, suggestive scenes, wholesome, 20 year age gap, iâve been deep in writers block so Iâd love some request!!
joel miller masterlist
Itâs probably nothing.
Thatâs what I keep telling myself as I stand under the aggressive fluorescent lights of the pharmacy, staring down an entire wall of pregnancy tests like one of them might have the courtesy to jump into my hand and handle the situation for me.
âWhich one do you want?â Aniâs voice is dry as she squats down to examine the shelves like sheâs choosing a bottle of champagne. âThe one thatâs â99% accurateâ or the one that costs five dollars less?â
âI donât know.â My arms are crossed, jaw tight. âIs there one that says âthis is just a late period and not the worst mistake of my lifeâ?â
Ani snorts and stands, grabbing two boxes. âThis one says itâs easy to read, so maybe you wonât have to Google it when youâre sobbing on the bathroom floor.â
âTouching,â I deadpan, snatching the box from her hand.
Ani grins, brushing her dark hair over her shoulder. âIâm just sayingâyou always get like this when youâre stressed. Remember when we thought I were pregnant that one time in college and it turned out Iâd just been living off coffee and vodka cranberries for three weeks?â
âThis isnât college.â I turn the box over in my hands, stomach twisting. My nails dig into the cardboard.
Ani drops her voice, leaning in close. âOkay, but even if you areâŚâ She shrugs. âYouâd handle it. Youâre not seventeen. Youâve got your own place, a job, your shitâs together.â
âDo I?â I ask, biting back a nervous laugh. âI donât even remember his name.â
âOh, yeah. Thatâs fair.â Ani smirks. âBut in your defense, he was hot.â
âNot helpful.â
âYouâre right. My bad.â
I exhale sharply, shifting the test from one hand to the other. Aniâs already moving toward the register when I hear itâ
âY/n?â
Fuck.
My heart drops into my stomach. Because I know that voice. Low, slow, rough around the edgesâlike honey poured over gravel.
I turn, already knowing what Iâm about to see.
And there he is.
Joel Miller. Standing in the middle of the pharmacy aisle, looking devastatingly expensive in a black cashmere sweater and tailored jeans that sit obscenely well on his hips. His dark hair is messy but intentional, streaked with silver. His watchâRolex, of courseâcatches the light. But itâs his eyes that undo me: dark, sharp, locked on the bright pink box in my hand.
He wasnât like the men I usually met in Manhattanâthe ones who talked too much about stocks and barely knew how to hail their own cab. No, Joel was different. He had built his wealth rather than inherited it, and he carried himself with the kind of quiet confidence that made men respect him and womenâwell, women wanted him.
My throat dries out.
âJoel,â I say, too bright, too casual. âHey.â
His gaze flicks from the box to my face. His jaw tightens. âHey.â
I tuck the box behind my back like thatâs going to erase the last five seconds. âJust⌠picking up a few things.â
Joelâs mouth opensâthen closes. His eyes drag down my body, slow and deliberate. That heatâthe one thatâs always been thereâcreeps into my chest.
Joelâs jaw ticks. âYou okay?â
I force a laugh. âYeah! Justâyâknow.â I gesture vaguely toward the shelves. âGirl stuff.â
Joelâs eyes darken. âGirl stuff.â
Ani coughs to cover a laugh.
My face burns. âIâm fine.â
âYou sure?â Joelâs voice drops, low and dangerous. ââCause if youâre notââ
âJoel.â My voice comes out sharper than I intend.
His mouth presses into a thin line.
Itâs too much. Him standing there, in his cashmere and leather, watching me, piecing it together. I feel naked under the weight of his gaze, exposed in a way that makes my heart pound for all the wrong reasons.
Or maybe the right ones.
Ani steps in. âWell, we should go!â She grabs my arm, steering me toward the register like sheâs dragging me out of a bar at last call.
âY/n,â Joel says quietly.
I freeze.
His eyes drop to the test again, then back to my face. His jaw tightens, something dangerous flickering in his expression. His shoulders square like heâs already figuring out whose name heâs going to have to track down if that test comes back positive.
âIf you need anything,â he says, voice low and steady, âyou know where to find me.â
I swallow hard.
âSee you around,â I manage, and then Aniâs tugging me away.
I donât look back. But I feel his eyes on me the whole way out.
â
âFalse alarm,â I mutter.
Aniâs brows lift. âStarted?â
âYep.â I close my eyes, letting my head fall back. âI hate being a woman.â
Ani grins. âOh, thank God. Youâre off the hook.â
I shoot her a look. âGee, thanks.â
Ani shrugs, sitting up and tucking her legs beneath her. âLook at the bright side. No baby. No weird hookup drama. Just your regularly scheduled period-induced misery.â
âComforting,â I say flatly.
Ani gives me a sly smile. âAlthoughâŚâ
I groan. âWhat?â
âYou could just avoid all this stress in the future by hooking up with someone a little more⌠reliable.â
My eyes narrow. âAni.â
She leans toward me, eyes glinting. âSomeone⌠older.â
âAni.â
âSomeone who clearly already cares about you.â
âAni.â
She grins. âJoel.â
I nearly choke. I sit up so fast my stomach cramps harder. âAre you insane?â
Ani shrugs. âIâm just saying. Heâs hot.â
âHeâs my dadâs friend,â I say through gritted teeth.
âYeah, and?â Ani leans back on the couch, propping her feet up on the coffee table. âDidnât stop him from looking at you like that at the pharmacy.â
She leans forward, eyes narrowing with that mischievous glint she gets when sheâs about to push me into something uncomfortable. âOkay, butâletâs think about this. Youâre not a kid anymore. You can make your own choices. And yeah, heâs older, but I swear, that man is just your type. You two have this thing. Youâve always had it.â
âStop.â I throw my hands up in a half-joking, half-serious gesture. âNo. Just no. Heâs a friend of the family. Thatâs not even on the table.â
Ani tilts her head, sizing me up. âSure, sure. But itâs not like youâve never wanted it. And letâs face it, y/nâwhen it comes to guys, you usually go for the one whoâs unpredictable. Maybe Joelâs exactly the guy you need right now. I mean, come on, youâve got nothing to lose.â
I roll my eyes, standing up to pace a little, trying to shake the idea out of my head. âIâm not dating him, Ani. Itâs not happening.â
Aniâs voice is a little quieter now, but I can hear the knowing smile behind it. âIâm just sayingâmaybe you should think about it. You donât have to rush into anything, but youâve been dancing around this for so long. Why not just see where it goes?â
I stop pacing, my hands still on my hips as I take in her words. The idea is⌠tempting, but I canât. âItâs complicated. You donât get it. Heâs not like everyone else, Ani. Heâs Joel.â
She shrugs, unfazed. âExactly. Heâs Joel. And thatâs what makes it interesting.â
I sit back down on the couch, rubbing my temples. âIâm not going there. End of story.â
Ani leans back, giving me a sly grin. âWeâll see. Weâll see.â
I try to dismiss it, but as much as I tell myself no, the idea lingers, just a little. Because deep down, I know Aniâs not entirely wrong.
â
The thing about New York is that no one ever expects to run into someone at the most inconvenient times.
Itâs a Friday evening, and the streets of Manhattan are alive with people in their after-work hustle, lights flashing from the windows of bars and restaurants like neon beacons in the dark. Iâm walking down the block, heading to my favorite sushi spot, when I spot him.
Of course.
Joel Miller, standing on the corner of the street, waiting for the light to change. Heâs in a perfectly tailored black coat, dark slacks, the kind of man who belongs in a city where money talks and time doesnât. I see him before he sees me, and for a second, I wonder if I should just turn around and make a run for it. But no, that would be too easy.
âY/n?â
Shit.
I take a breath, turning around with an exaggeratedly calm smile. âJoel.â
His gaze immediately sharpens, the same intense look that makes my heart jump into my throat. I swear, if I didnât know better, Iâd think he could hear the rapid beat of it from across the street.
âHey,â he says, his voice a little rougher than usual. âDidnât expect to see you here.â
âWell, you know New York.â I joke, trying to sound like Iâm not totally thrown off. âCityâs small. Youâre bound to bump into people.â
His eyes flicker down to my hand, like heâs still waiting for me to be clutching a pregnancy test like some kind of urban myth.
I clear my throat. âJust to clarifyâIâm not pregnant.â I say it almost too fast.
Joel raises an eyebrow, lips curling slightly in amusement. âWell, thatâs good to hear.â Thereâs a pause, a quiet beat that hangs between us, before he steps a little closer, lowering his voice. âI wasnât really sure how to feel about that whole situation.â
I blink. âWhat do you mean?â
Joel shrugs, his hands buried deep in the pockets of his coat. âYou just looked⌠different that day. A little more than stressed.â He watches me closely, his eyes never leaving mine. âI didnât want to step in and make it worse.â
I look away, trying to hide the flush creeping up my neck. âWell, you didnât. I was just⌠overthinking everything. Itâs a thing Iâm really good at.â
âIâve noticed.â His voice is lighter now, like heâs teasing me in that way he does when heâs not sure if he should be serious or not.
I bite my lip, a grin slipping onto my face before I can stop it. âI wasnât exactly planning on running into you again, you know.â
âRight.â He chuckles, but itâs the kind of laugh that sounds like heâs holding something back.
âSoâŚâ I drag the word out, feeling the weight of the moment settle around us. âAre you just wandering the streets of New York on a Friday night or do you have somewhere important to be?â
He looks at me with that knowing smirk. âA little bit of both.â He glances down the block, then back at me. âIâm headed to a meeting. But honestlyâŚâ He hesitates, as if weighing something. âI could always use a distraction.â
My stomach flips at his words, but I try to play it cool. âA distraction, huh? How convenient. I happen to be a very good distraction.â
Joel steps closer, his voice dropping lower. âIâm sure you are.â His gaze holds mine for a second too long, making everything inside me feel like itâs melting, a tight knot loosening in my chest.
I clear my throat again. âWell, if youâre free after your meeting, maybe we could catch up over a drink. Talk about, you know, how Iâm definitely not pregnant.â
Joelâs lips twitch in that infuriating way he has when heâs fighting a grin. âSounds like a good time.â
âGood,â I reply, trying to sound nonchalant, though I can feel the electric buzz between us, like everythingâs about to go off the rails. âCall me. Iâll be around.â
âI will.â His gaze softens just a little before he turns, and as he walks away, I canât help but watch him go. The tension thatâs been there between usâitâs still there, maybe stronger than before.
And I think, for the first time, I might actually be okay with it.
â
Later that night, after a few too many glasses of drinks and some laughter-filled catching up with Ani, I find myself at home, flipping through the pages of a magazine Iâve barely been able to focus on. My mind keeps drifting. Should I reach out to Joel? Should I wait for him to make the first move?
Before I can talk myself out of it, the phone rings, cutting through the silence of my apartment. I glance at it without thinking, and my heart skips.
Joel.
I answer quickly, trying to sound casual. âHey.â
âHey,â he replies, his voice low and easy, just like it always is. âYou free for that drink?â
A rush of excitement hits me, surprising myself with how quickly I want to say yes. âAbsolutely.â
âGood. Iâll be there in a few.â I put the phone down, a grin pulling at the corners of my lips.
Fifteen minutes later, Iâm stepping out of my building and into the sleek black car waiting at the curb. The door is already open for me, the driver standing by with a polite nod, but my attention is drawn straight to the man inside.
Joel sits in the backseat, legs spread comfortably, a whiskey-colored gaze flicking up from where heâs been nursing a drink. He looks effortlessâone arm resting against the door, the other hand wrapped around a heavy glass. His jacket is slung over the seat beside him, sleeves rolled up to his forearms, watch glinting in the low light.
âFancy,â I say as I slide in beside him, smoothing down my dress.
âFigured Iâd make it easy for you,â he drawls, offering me a drink from the little bar built into the side panel. âThat, and I like havinâ you in my car.â
My stomach does something stupid at that. I take the glass from him, clinking mine against his before taking a sip. The car glides through the city, moving like the night belongs to us.
The bar he takes me to is nothing like the places I usually end up in. Itâs tucked away on some quiet street, dimly lit with dark wood and low jazz humming from unseen speakers. The kind of place where people donât come to get drunk; they come to drink.
Joel guides me through the space with an easy familiarity, his hand resting lightly against my lower back as he leads me to a quiet booth.
âDidnât peg you as a cocktail bar guy,â I tease, glancing at the menu.
He smirks, signaling the bartender with two fingers. âIâm not. Just figured youâd like it.â
I bite back my smile.
Drinks arrive, and the conversation comes easy, like it always does with him.
But thenâ
âSo,â Joel says, swirling the amber in his glass. âYou gonna tell me who the guy is?â
I freeze for half a second, but he catches it. His gaze sharpens just slightly.
I roll my eyes, playing it off. âWhat guy?â
His lips twitch like he knows Iâm full of shit. âCâmon, sweetheart. Ainât dumb. You had a reason for buyinâ that test.â
Heat crawls up my neck. I sip my drink, willing the subject to dissolve. âJoel.â
His expression shifts, something unreadable there. But he doesnât push. Just leans back in the booth, watching me.
I exhale, deciding to change the subject completely. âYou always take women here?â
He raises an eyebrow. âYou always deflect?â
I grin, tipping my glass toward him. âMaybe.â
Joel chuckles, shaking his head, and just like that, the tension shifts. The air between us settles into something familiar, charged but unspoken.
We talk about other thingsâhis latest project, my work, New Yorkâs ever-present bullshit. But thereâs something lingering beneath it all, in the way his fingers graze mine when I reach for my drink, in the way his eyes linger on my mouth when I speak.
Itâs always been like this with us.
The drinks keep coming, smooth and slow, and the conversation drifts into something heavier without either of us meaning it to.
Joel leans back, one arm slung over the booth, rolling his glass between his fingers. âEver think about leavinâ?â
I blink, caught off guard. âNew York?â
He nods, gaze steady. âThe city. Work. All of it.â
I scoff lightly, but thereâs no real bite to it. âWhere would I go?â
âAnywhere.â
Itâs such a simple answer, but the way he says it, so sure, makes something tighten in my chest.
I glance down at my drink, swirling the last of the amber liquid. âI donât know. I love it here, but⌠sometimes it feels like too much, yâknow?â I meet his eyes, watching the way he listens, really listens. âLike you canât breathe without the city pushing in on you.â
Joel hums, nodding slowly. âYeah. Know that feeling.â
I tilt my head. âSo why are you still here?â
His lips quirk, but it doesnât quite reach his eyes. âSame reason as everyone else, I guess.â He lifts his glass slightly. âMoney. Work. Habit.â
âThatâs depressing.â
He huffs a quiet laugh. âLittle bit.â
I study him for a moment, my head buzzing just enough to loosen the words sitting heavy on my tongue. Slowly, I shift under the table, lifting my foot and pressing it lightly against his leg. A small touch, but intentional. His fingers still on his glass.
âWhat would you do if you left?â
Joel leans forward, resting his forearms on the table. His fingers graze the rim of his glass as he thinks, really thinks, like no oneâs ever asked him before.
âDunno.â His voice is quieter now, like heâs admitting something heâs never said out loud. âFind some place quieter. Somewhere no one gives a shit who I am or what I got. Build somethinâ for myself.â He smirks a little, but thereâs a sadness behind it. âGuess I never really let myself think about it.â
I watch him, my fingers toying with the condensation on my glass. âYou still could.â
His eyes flick to mine, unreadable, like heâs trying to decide if I mean it.
Something shifts between us, heavy and unspoken.
Joel exhales, tipping his head toward me. âWhat about you?â
âWhat about me?â
âYou ever think about somethinâ different?â
I chew my lip, considering. âMaybe.â I glance around the bar, the dark wood, the quiet hum of conversation. âBut I think Iâd miss it.â
Joel watches me, something warm in his gaze. âYeah.â He nods slowly. âReckon Iâd miss you too.â
The words slip out so easily, so casually, that I almost donât catch them. But I do.
My breath catches slightly, my fingers stilling against my glass. Joel just watches me, calm, steady, like heâs giving me a second to let it sink in.
And then, before I can overthink it, I knock back the rest of my drink and grin. âYou getting sentimental on me, Miller?â
His smirk is slow, lazy. âMaybe.â
I roll my eyes, but the warmth lingers.
The game continues.
The night stretches on, slow and easy, the drinks disappearing as the city hums outside the barâs fogged-up windows. The conversation shiftsâback to old stories, to things we shouldnât say but do anyway.
At some point, I feel the weight of Joelâs hand on the back of the booth, close enough that if I just leaned back a little, Iâd be resting against him. I resist the urge, barely.
âItâs late,â I murmur, glancing at the time.
Joel takes a slow sip of his drink, his gaze steady on mine. âYou in a hurry?â
âNo,â I admit.
He smirks. âDidnât think so.â
The tension between us tightens, thick like smoke curling in the air. We both feel itâalways have. Itâs in the way I play with the rim of my glass, in the way his fingers drum idly against the table like heâs working through something in his head.
When we finally leave, the night is warm, the city alive with its usual buzz. The car is waiting, sleek and polished under the streetlights. Joel opens the door for me, and I hesitate just long enough for him to notice.
âYou cominâ?â His voice is low, rough.
I should go home. I should get out now, before this turns into something. Instead, I slide inside.
Joel follows, the door shutting with a quiet click. The car pulls away from the curb, and suddenly, weâre alone in the dark, the city slipping past in a blur of neon and street lamps.
I exhale slowly, the leather cool beneath my fingertips.
Joel watches me, silent for a long beat. Thenâ
âWhere to?â he asks, his voice deliberate. The question hangs there, waiting. I donât answer right away. I donât need to. Joel just nods, like he already knows. And then the car changes direction.
His apartment is everything I expect it to beâtoo big, too nice, too quiet. Floor-to-ceiling windows stretch across the main living space, giving a view of the city that most people only dream of. The kind of place that feels like money, like success, like someone whoâs worked too hard for too long and now doesnât know how to sit still.
Joel shrugs off his jacket, tossing it onto a leather chair. His gaze flicks to me, dark and unreadable.
âYou want another drink?â
I shake my head, stepping toward the window, pressing my fingertips against the cool glass. The city sparkles beneath me, the streets moving like veins through the night.
Joel moves behind me, slow and steady. When I turn, heâs closer than I expect, the space between us suddenly small.
For a second, neither of us speaks. Then, his fingers graze my wrist, barely there. I look up at him, breath catching in my throat. His voice is quiet when he finally says, âTell me to stop.â I donât. Instead, I close the space between us.
The bedroom is dark, the city lights bleeding through the curtains.
Itâs slow, at first. Me, still trying to figure out what the hell Iâm doing. Him, patient in a way I didnât expect. But when his hands find my waist, when his lips press against the curve of my neck, when I sigh his name into the quietâ
His lips brush mine, hesitant, like heâs waiting for me to stop this before it starts. But I donât. I canât. I just tilt my chin up, pressing my mouth fully to his, and he exhales against me like heâs been holding his breath.
Joelâs hands slide up my back, slow and steady, as he deepens the kiss, tilting his head to taste me fully. His mouth is warm, careful, his touch reverent, like he wants to make sure I want this just as much as he does. And I do. God, I do.
I thread my fingers into his hair, pulling him closer, pressing myself against him. He groans, low in his throat, like heâs barely holding on. His hands tighten at my hips before one of them slides up my spine, dragging me further into him, chest to chest, breath to breath.
He moves like he wants to savor me. Like he wants to take his time, to make this last.
Joel presses me down into the bed, his body warm and solid against mine, his hands framing my face as his mouth claims me in a slow, consuming kiss. Itâs deep, deliberate, like heâs savoring every second, like heâs memorizing the shape of my lips against his.
âYou sure about this?â he murmurs, voice rough, edged with something vulnerable.
I nod, brushing my lips against his. âYes.â
Thatâs all he needs.
Joel undresses me with the kind of patience that makes my skin burn, like heâs committing every inch of me to memory. He trails his fingers over my bare skin, tracing the curve of my waist, the dip of my spine, his touch reverent.
His fingers skim down my sides, mapping every inch of bare skin, rough but reverent. When I arch beneath him, chasing his touch, he exhales sharply, like heâs been holding something in for too long.
âJoel,â I breathe, my hands fisting in his shirt, tugging him closer, needing him closer.
He groans against my throat, his teeth scraping lightly before he soothes the spot with his lips. âYou donât know what you do to me baby,â he mutters, voice thick, almost strained.
I do, thoughâI can feel it in the way his body moves against mine, in the way his breath stutters when my nails drag down his back.
His hand slides up my thigh, pushing fabric aside, and his mouth finds mine again, hungrier this time.
And when we finally come together, itâs nothing like I expected.
Itâs deeper.
Slower.
Like he wants me to feel it.
Like he wants me to know this isnât just a night to him.
And as I meet his gaze in the dim light of the room, as his fingers intertwine with mine, I realize something terrifying.
Neither is it to me.
Later, when the sheets are tangled around us and the air still smells like sex and expensive cologne, we lie in the dark, passing a cigarette back and forth.
I slip out of bed and pull on his dress shirt. I pad barefoot to the balcony, lighting a cigarette with shaking fingers.
The city stretches out below, golden and endless. The dead of night in New York is never really deadâit hums, it moves, it waits.
Joel joins me a minute later, shirtless, sweat still cooling on his skin. He takes the cigarette from my fingers, taking a slow drag before exhaling right in my face.
The smoke curls into the air in a perfect ring.
I giggle, waving it away. âShow-off.â
He smirks, watching me through the haze. âDidnât mean to.â I raise an eyebrow. âOh, sure. Just a natural talent, huh?â
He chuckles, flicking the ash over the edge of the balcony. âTryinâ to quit.â I steal the cigarette back from his fingers, taking a drag myself. âYeah? Howâs that workinâ out for you?â
Joel tilts his head, eyes dragging over me, slow and deliberate. Then he leans in, close enough that I can feel the warmth of him, the tease of a smirk on his lips.
â
The date wasnât even my idea.
Ani had set it up weeks ago, probably thinking I needed a distraction. And then, of course, she forgot to cancel.
So here I am, sitting across from a guy named Ryan, who is perfectly nice. Perfectly normal. I swirl the last sip of my drink in my glass, barely listening as he talks about something work-related. Maybe stocks. Or real estate. Or his incredibly riveting trip to Aspen.
Iâm about to excuse myself to the bathroom when the waitress appears with a fresh drink and sets it down in front of me.
But thenâ
A drink lands in front of me.
I blink, glancing up at the waitress. She smiles and sets down a glass of a Cosmopolitan. The same drink I ordered that night with Joel. I frown. âOh, I didnât order this.â
âThe gentleman at the bar sent it,â she says, tipping her head toward the far side of the room.
And when I lookâ
Joel. Sitting alone, leaned back in his chair, watching me. Heat crawls up my spine, a mix of irritation and something I refuse to name. I exhale sharply, already irritated.
âExcuse me,â I mutter to Ryan, grabbing the drink and making my way over.
Joel doesnât look surprised when I place the glass down in front of him with a soft clink.
I cross my arms. âWhat the hell are you doing?â He looks up at me, completely at ease. âDrinkinâ.â I narrow my eyes. âYou know what I mean.â
He gestures to the glass. âJust beinâ polite.â
âBy sending me a drink when Iâm clearly on a date?â
He shrugs, gaze flicking over to Ryan for a beat before meeting mine again. âDidnât look like you were enjoyinâ yourself.â
I let out a sharp breath. âOh, and you think you know when Iâm enjoying myself?â
Joelâs lips twitch, eyes dragging down my frame, then back up again. âYeah. I think I do.â
A heat rises in my chest. I shake my head, ignoring it. âYouâre unbelievable.â
Joel leans forward, resting his forearms on the table. âLeave with me.â
Itâs so direct, so him, that it knocks the wind right out of me. I grip the back of the chair in front of me, heart hammering.
God, part of me wants to.
Instead, I take the drink, place it back in front of him, and meet his gaze. âEnjoy your drink, Joel.â
Then I turn on my heel and walk back to my date.
I can feel him watching me the entire way back.
â
Every single one that passes is either full or just doesnât bother stopping.
I sigh, hugging my coat tighter around myself, feeling the lingering annoyance from earlier. The date had been uneventful. The only thing remotely interesting about the night was Joel showing up and acting like he had a right to interfere.
And now, here I am, standing alone, wet, and stranded.
A black car rolls up to the curb in front of me, sleek and unmistakable. The window rolls down.
Joel. Of course.
He doesnât say anything at first, just looks at me, his elbow resting against the door, fingers brushing his mouth like heâs trying to hide a smirk.
I exhale sharply. âAre you following me now?â
He tilts his head, expression unreadable. âGet in.â
I should say no. I should roll my eyes and keep waiting for a cab. I should ignore the way my pulse jumps at the way he says it, low and easy, like itâs inevitable.
But insteadâwithout a wordâI open the door and slide into the seat beside him.
The door shuts with a quiet thud, sealing us inside the warmth of the car, the low hum of the city outside suddenly muffled.
Joel watches me, the corner of his mouth twitching like heâs won something.
I huff out a breath, shaking my head as I lean back against the seat. âYouâre ridiculous.â
His voice is steady, calm. âAnd yet, here you are.â
I donât answer. Because heâs right.
I settle into the seat, crossing my arms as I turn to face him. âYou know, normal people just call if they want to see someone. They donât crash their date and send cryptic drinks across the room.â
Joel smirks, tilting his head slightly. âDidnât seem like much of a date to me.â
I let out a dry laugh. âOh, Iâm sorryâwere you keeping track? Should I have sent you an update?â
He leans back, stretching his legs out, completely unbothered. âWouldnât have minded one.â
I shake my head, biting back a smile. âYou are unbelievable.â
He shrugs. âYou walked over to me, sweetheart.â
That makes me pause. Because heâs rightâI did walk over to him. I did let him get under my skin. And now, Iâm here, in his car, once again letting him pull me into his orbit.
I exhale, glancing out the window as the city blurs past. âWhyâd you do that?â I ask, quieter this time.
Joel doesnât answer right away.
Then, in that low, steady voice, he says, âDidnât like seeinâ you with him.â
I scoff, looking back at him. âAnd what, exactly, gives you the right to not like it?â
He doesnât blink. Doesnât flinch. Just keeps looking at me like he already has the answer.
And I hate that my heart stumbles over itself at the weight of his gaze.
âItâs not about rights,â he says finally. âItâs about what is.â
I shake my head. âThat doesnât mean anything, Joel.â
His mouth twitches like heâs holding something back. âSure it does.â
The car slows as we near my apartment.
I glance at him, trying to ignore the warmth creeping up my neck. âSo, what? You gonna walk me to my door now, too?â
Joel holds my gaze for a second longer before he leans forward, knocking twice on the partition.
âPull over,â he tells the driver.
And when the car stops, he looks back at me. âLetâs find out.â
Joel steps out first, rounding the car as I push open my door. His presence is solid beside me as we make our way up the front steps of my building, the city humming around us.
I try to ignore the way my pulse jumps, the way my skin burns under his gaze.
At my door, I turn to him, arching a brow. âSo, you are walking me to my door. Whatâs next? A goodnight kiss like a gentleman?â
Joel huffs out a quiet laugh, shoving his hands into his pockets. âWouldnât exactly call myself a gentleman.â
I shake my head, smiling despite myself. âNo, you wouldnât.â A pause stretches between us, thick with everything unsaid.
Then Joel does something unexpected. He follows behind me, pushing the door open and walking inside like he owns the place.
I follow him in, shutting the door behind me as he glances around, taking in my apartment. Itâs not muchâmessy bookshelves, half-empty wine glasses on the counter, a record player I never useâbut itâs mine.
Joel smirks. âSo this is your place.â I cross my arms. âYou breaking in is not as charming as you think it is.â
He turns to face me, and just like that, the air shifts. The teasing, the banterâit all simmers down to something heavier. Something real.
âWhat do you want from me, Joel?â I ask, my voice quieter now, less sharp.
He doesnât answer right away. Just looks at me like heâs figuring it out himself. Then, after a beat, he takes a step closer. âNothinâ you donât already know.â
And before I can thinkâbefore I can stop myselfâI reach for him.
Joel meets me halfway.
His hands find my waist as mine slide up his chest, and then his mouth is on mine, slow and sure. Itâs different from the last time, different from the fire that burned between us that night. This time, itâs deeper. Itâs steady.
Like heâs proving something. Like Iâm letting him.
â
The phone ringsâsharp and unexpected, cutting through the quiet of my apartment.
I pick up, pressing the receiver to my ear as I absently start pacing, the cord trailing behind me. âHello?â
A beat of silence. And thenâ
âYou busy?â
Itâs Joel.
I smirk, my voice playful as I move toward the window. âDepends. Whoâs asking?â
I hear the familiar low rumble of his laughter. âYou know damn well whoâs askinâ.â
I bite my lip, glancing out at the city lights. âThen no, Iâm not busy.â
I hear a slight shuffle on his end, the clink of glass. âGot some salmon. Figured Iâd cook.â
I raise a brow, curiosity piqued. âJoel Miller, cooking? Whatâs the occasion?â
âNo occasion.â His voice is steady, but thereâs something in the way he speaks that feels almost⌠softer. âJust thought you might like something better than takeout for once.â
I smile, twirling the phone cord around my fingers. âI like takeout.â
âThat donât mean itâs good for you.â
I roll my eyes, amused. âIâll bring wine.â
âFigured.â His tone shifts slightly, quieter this time, more deliberate. âSo? You cominâ over?â
I donât answer immediately. Not because Iâm unsureâIâm notâbut because something about the way he asks makes my heart beat a little faster.
âYeah,â I say, my voice a little softer than usual. âBe there soon.â
Joel doesnât say goodbye. Just a soft, âSee you soon,â before the line clicks dead.
I sit there for a second, the dial tone humming in my ear before I hang up. My chest tightens, but in a way that feels warm. I grab my bag, the wine, and step out the door, already feeling the pull of him waiting for me.
When I arrive at his place, itâs just as I rememberâwarm, lived-in, familiar. The cityâs noise is muffled here, replaced by the low hum of the lights and the scent of something delicious cooking in the kitchen.
Joelâs already at the table, his back slightly turned, one hand lazily resting on the edge while the other holds a cigar between his fingers. I can see the faint smoke curling upward, mixing with the warm glow from the overhead lights.
I watch him for a moment, then speak up, my voice softer than usual. âDidnât know you smoked cigars.â
He looks up, a small, knowing smirk on his lips. âOnly every once in a while. Special occasions.â
I raise an eyebrow, intrigued. âOh? And whatâs the occasion?â
He exhales a slow stream of smoke, his eyes locked with mine, that familiar warmth in his gaze. âYou tell me, sweetheart.â
I roll my eyes, but the smile that tugs at my lips betrays me. I stand up, stretching my arms overhead, and then I spot themâthe records stacked by his bookshelf. The sight of them brings a sudden warmth to my chest.
âWait.â I crouch down, fingers grazing the covers. âYou have records?â
Joel exhales again, nodding toward them. âYeah. Havenât played âem in a while, though.â
I flip through the albums, smiling as I see the namesâJohnny Cash, Linda Ronstadt, Etta Jamesâand then, nestled toward the back, a cover I recognize.
I pull one out, holding it up with a playful grin. âWhich one is this?â
Joel looks over, then leans forward, a small glint in his eyes. âThat oneâs a classic.â
âClassic, huh?â
He smirks. âYouâll see.â
I stand, taking the album toward the old record player by the window. The needle wobbles slightly as I set it down, and then, after a beat of silence, the room fills with the smooth, velvety voice of Andy Williams.
âMoon River, wider than a mileâŚâ
Something in my chest tightens at the sheer romance of it. I glance over at Joel, and heâs already watching me, his expression unreadable but his eyes soft, like heâs seeing me in a way he doesnât often let himself.
I take a step toward him. Then another.
âDance with me,â I say softly, the words leaving my mouth before I can stop them.
Joel huffs a quiet laugh, shaking his head as if to protest. âI donât dance.â I smirk, reaching for his hand anyway. âSure you do.â
He exhales, like heâs already lost the battle, and then he lets me pull him up. He places his hand against my waist as I drape my arms over his shoulders, the warmth of his skin sending a shiver through me.
We begin to sway slowly, moving together as the song wraps around us, filling the space between us with something unspoken, something deeper than just the music.
Joel exhales through his nose, shaking his head slightly, but thereâs no bite to it now, just that familiar, soft edge. âCanât believe you got me doinâ this.â
I smile, my cheek resting against his shoulder, the steady rhythm of his heartbeat calming me in a way nothing else can.
He chuckles, low and rich, his fingers pressing just a little firmer into my back as we move together, closer now, the distance between us narrowing until thereâs nothing but the sound of the song and the soft shuffle of our feet.
We donât say anything else. We donât need to.
The song plays on, a familiar, warm melody that fills the quiet around us, and for once, neither of us runs from it. Neither of us pulls away. In this moment, weâre just two people, swaying in the dim light, letting the world outside fade away.
â
The night is cool, the air thick with the scent of rain that never quite fell. I tug my coat a little tighter around me, glancing over at Joel as he holds the door open for me, that familiar, easy presence at my side.
âHey, handsome,â I tease as he reaches for my hand.
âHey, baby.â His voice is warm, rough, and he tugs me in for a brief kiss, his palm steady on my waist.
Before I can step toward the car, he pulls something from his pocketâa small velvet box, dark red, almost black under the glow of the streetlights.
I arch a brow, eyeing it suspiciously. âWhatâs this?â
Joel smirks, pressing the box into my palm. âJust open it.â
I flip the lid openâand my breath catches.
Inside, nestled in the velvet, is a bracelet. A delicate Cartier piece, sleek gold with just the right amount of weight to it. Simple. Timeless. Beautiful.
âJoel.â My voice is quieter now, the teasing edge gone. âThis isââ
âFigured youâd like it.â He watches me carefully, his expression unreadable.
I swallow, brushing my fingers over the smooth metal. âYou justârandomly decided to buy me a Cartier bracelet?â
His lips twitch. âYeah.â
A beat of silence stretches between us, thick with everything unspoken.
Then, because itâs easier than acknowledging what this means, I smirk. âYou tryinâ to win me over, Miller?â
Joel exhales through his nose, shaking his head as he reaches for the bracelet, undoing the clasp. âDonât gotta try, sweetheart.â
He takes my wrist in his hands, his fingers warm, rough as he slides the bracelet into place. Careful. Precise. The clasp clicks softly, and his thumb smooths over the gold.
Then, before I can say anything, he lifts my wrist to his lips, pressing a slow, lingering kiss to the inside of it.
My pulse stutters.
Joel pulls back slightly, studying me. âLooks good on you.â
I shake my head, trying to ignore the warmth spreading through my chest. âYouâre ridiculous.â
He smirks, offering his arm. âCâmon, letâs go.â
We step inside, warmth wrapping around us as the low hum of conversation fills the air. Itâs all polished marble and chandeliers, the kind of place that feels expensive just to breathe in. A few people glance our wayâsome nod, some linger.
Joel keeps a steady hand on my back as we move through the room, his presence grounding.
Weâre mid-conversation with a group of men in tailored suits when one of themâJames, I thinkâturns to Joel with a polite smile.
âAnd whoâs this?â
Joel hesitates. Just for a second. But I feel it.
His grip on my waist tightens slightly before he finally says, âThis isââ He exhales, then settles on, âMy date.â
I blink, fingers tightening around my champagne glass. My date. The way he says itâcareful, deliberateâsticks with me, winding itself around my thoughts as the conversation moves on.
â
Itâs late. The city hums around me, distant sirens wailing, the occasional car rolling by. The streetlights cast a dull glow over the sidewalk, and the smoke from my cigarette curls up into the thick night air. I donât even smoke that much, not really, but sometimes it gives my hands something to do when my thoughts get too loud.
The apartment door creaks open behind me, and I know itâs him before I even turn my head.
Joel steps out, his boots heavy against the worn concrete as he lowers himself onto the step beside me. He doesnât say anything at first, just stretches his legs out in front of him and rubs a hand over his face. He looks tired.
We sit like that for a while, the quiet between us stretching, comfortable but charged, like it always is.
And then, before I can talk myself out of it, I ask, âWhat are we doing, Joel?â
His head turns toward me slowly. I donât look at him right away, just keep my gaze trained on the empty street in front of us. My fingers fidget against my knee.
I hear him sigh, long and deep. âYou really wanna have this conversation now?â
I finally look at him, and heâs already watching me, his brow furrowed like heâs bracing himself.
âYes, actually,â I say, keeping my voice steady. âBecause itâs beenâwhat? Months now? And we just keepââ I wave a hand between us, searching for the words. âWe keep doing this. Whatever this fucking is.â
Joel runs a hand down his face, exhaling through his nose. âY/nâŚâ
âDonât do that.â My voice is sharper than I intend. âDonât say my name like that, like Iâm asking for something ridiculous.â
Heâs quiet for a long moment, staring down at his hands like maybe he wishes they could answer for him. Then he finally speaks.
âI donât know what you want me to say.â
I let out a humorless laugh, shaking my head. âHow about the truth?â
âThe truth?â He looks over at me, his jaw tight.
âYes, Joel,â I press, my voice raw now. âWe sleep together. We spend all our time together. You take me to work things, I take you to family things. You leave your clothes at my place. You kiss me like it means something, and thenââ I pause, my throat tight, my chest aching. âAnd then you act like it doesnât. Like weâre justââ I shake my head, my voice catching. âLike weâre just something easy to walk away from.â
Joelâs eyes darken, his hands clenching into fists against his knees. âThatâs not true.â
âThen what is?â My voice is barely above a whisper. âBecause it feels real to me, Joel. And I thinkâI think it feels real to you too.â
Joel drags a hand over his face, looking away like he canât bear to meet my eyes. âY/nâŚâ
âJust say it,â I plead. âTell me Iâm wrong and Iâll drop it.â
He watched me, his brown eyes dark under the low lights of the street. âYou know why it ainât that simple.â
I tilted my head. âIs it because Iâm your friendâs kid? Or because youâre terrified that if you let yourself want thisâwant meâyou wonât be able to stop?â
Joelâs jaw flexed. He had a tellâthis little muscle that twitched when he was trying to hold back what he really wanted to say.
âYou think I donât want you?â His voice was lower now, rougher. âY/n, Iâve been trying not to want you since the day I met you.â
Heat spread through me, but I wasnât about to let him off that easy. âSo stop trying.â
He doesnât say anything. Just sits there, jaw tight, muscles coiled like heâs holding himself together by a thread.
And then, after what feels like forever, he exhales sharply and shakes his head.
âI canât.â His voice is rough, broken.
My breath catches.
Joel looks over at me then, and thereâs something raw in his eyes, something I donât think Iâve ever seen before.
âI canât, because youâre right,â he admits, voice low, unsteady. âIt is real. Itâs been real since the damn start. And Iâve beenââ He exhales, shaking his head. âIâve been tryinâ to keep it casual, keep it simple, because I thought maybe if I didnât say it out loud, it wouldnât be true.â
I swallow hard, my pulse hammering. âAnd whatâs the truth?â
He looks at me then, really looks at me, and when he finally speaks, his voice is steady.
âIâm in love with you.â
It slams into me like a freight train, stealing the breath from my lungs.
Joel swallows, his gaze never leaving mine. âIâve been in love with you. And IâI didnât wanna say it. Because if I did, then it meant Iâd have to admit to myself that this was never just a casual thing. That it was never just something I could walk away from.â
He leans forward, his elbows resting on his knees, his hands twisting together like heâs holding onto something fragile. âAnd that scares the hell outta me, y/n. Because I donât know how to do this. I donât know how to be the kind of man you deserve. And Iâd rather ruin myself keeping you close than lose you by not being enough.
I donât even realize Iâm crying until a tear slips down my cheek.
Joel notices, his eyes flickering with something unreadable, and for the first time, he looks scared. Like maybe heâs already lost me.
But then, before he can say anything else, I shake my head, my throat tight.
âJoel,â I whisper.
He doesnât move, doesnât breathe.
And then, slowly, I reach over and take his hand in mine.
His fingers twitch under mine before he exhales, his whole body seeming to relax, like maybeâjust maybeâheâs finally allowed himself to believe it.
I squeeze his hand, my heart pounding. âIt scares me too.â
Joelâs eyes search mine, and for the first time, we donât hide from it.
I canât look away from him, not now, not after everything heâs just said. My breath hitches, heart thundering in my chest, and itâs like everything inside of me is pulling towards him, like I canât fight it anymore.
Joel shifts, and for a second, I think heâs going to pull away, but instead, he leans in, his face inches from mine, his eyes flicking down to my lips.
Without thinking, I close the space between us, my hands finding his shoulders as I pull him closer. His lips crash into mine, urgent and hungry, like heâs been holding back for far too long.
The kiss is everything Iâve been waiting forâraw, desperate, full of all the things neither of us could say before. His hands slip into my hair, tugging me closer as if he canât get enough, and I answer with the same intensity, matching the fire heâs ignited in me.
We pull back for a breath, both of us gasping, but before I can even say anything, heâs kissing me again, this time slower, more deliberate, like heâs savoring it, savoring me. His arms wrap around me, pulling me into him so tightly I feel like I might disappear into him.
I let myself fall into it, into him, into everything weâve both been holding back. His lips trail down my jaw, to my neck, and I can feel the beat of his heart against mine, steady, grounding me.
âGod, y/nâŚâ His voice is thick, husky, and I can hear the rawness in it. âI donât ever wanna let you go.â
I pull back just enough to look him in the eyes, my hands still tangled in his hair. âThen donât.â
And just like that, the walls weâve been building between us shatter. He pulls me into another kiss, even deeper this time, as if we both know thereâs no turning back now. No more holding back.
I wrap my arms around him, holding onto him like Iâm afraid he might disappear.
His hands slide down to my waist, holding me close, pulling me against him like he needs me as much as I need him.
When we finally break apart, itâs not because we want to, but because we have to breathe. I rest my forehead against his, my chest still rising and falling rapidly.
âI love you,â he whispers, voice soft but sure.
âI love you too,â I answer, my voice shaky but steady.
And when he pulls me into his arms, holding me tight, I know that this is it. This is the start of everything.
taglist: @aomi-recs @millers-girl @suzysface @picketniffler @justsarahbella @heartlessvirgo @paleidiot @orodaeh @ccmoonshine @joelmillerisapunk @callmebyyournick-name @urlivingdeadgirl @comfortzonequeen @partypoison00 @whaddupbaby
Dirty Cash
rich!joel miller x younger!reader
summary: After a reckless hookup leaves you buying a pregnancy test in a pharmacy, the last person you expect to run into is your fatherâs wealthy but quietly tortured friend, Joel Millerâsparking a forbidden, dangerously irresistible affair where passion, power, and vulnerability collide.
available to read
stuck here like me
joel miller x reader
summary: After twenty years apart, you and Joel reunite in Jackson, but while he spent decades surviving, you built a life without himâone he can only look at from the outside before walking away in silence.
a/n: angsttttttyyyyy, some fluff, takes place when joel and ellie make it back to jackson to live there, let me know if you want a part two because I reached the limit hehe, enjoy ;)
joel miller masterlist
I spot Tommy before he even makes it up the path.
I know that walkâslow, deliberate, like heâs carrying something heavy and trying to figure out how to put it down. Itâs the same way he used to walk when we lost people, back when grief was a daily visitor we learned to live with.
He doesnât come out this way often. Not unless itâs important.
The ranch is a little ways from town, far enough that most folks donât bother making the trip unless theyâve got a reason. Tommyâs got a reason.
I wipe my hands on my jeans and step off the porch as he slows to a stop by the fence. He swings off his horse, and I meet him halfway.
âHey, stranger,â I say, brushing the dust off my hands. Tommyâs mouth twitches into something close to a smile. âY/n.â
I step into him easily, arms wrapping around his shoulders. He hugs me like itâs nothing, like itâs second natureâand maybe it is, after all this time. After everything.
âDidnât think youâd make it out here today,â I say as I pull back.
âYeah, well. Thought Iâd check in on you.â His eyes flick toward the house. âBeen a while.â
âTwo weeks, Tommy. Youâre slacking.â
Tommy huffs out a laugh, the corner of his mouth tilting up. But the lightness doesnât stick. His gaze drops to the ground, hands sliding to his hips.
I donât notice at first. My mindâs already moving, still caught in the easy rhythm of conversation.
âWell, the kids were just talking about you the other day,â I say, wiping my hands on my jeans. âThey wanna hang with Uncle Tommy soonâtake the horses out maybe, orââ
I trail off when I see the way heâs looking at me. âWhatâs wrong?â
His mouth pulls tight. The lightness in his eyes fades into something heavier.
âWe got some new folks in town,â he says carefully. My stomach tightens. âYeah?â
Tommy hesitatesâjust for a secondâbut itâs enough.
âItâs Joel,â he says finally.
My breath catches.
I stare at him, feeling like Iâve misheard. But I havenât. I know it in the way Tommy looks at meâsoft and steady, like heâs bracing himself for impact.
Joel.
My Joel.
The world tilts under my feet.
I hear him, but my body wonât catch up. My breath locks in my chest. I shake my head, staring at Tommy like I can will the words away. âNo,â I say, too quiet. âThatâs notââ
Tommyâs expression softens. âItâs him, y/n.â
âHeâs not alone,â Tommy had added, his voice soft. âGot a little girl with him.â
Something deep inside me clenches so tight it hurts. My vision blurs at the edges, and for a second, I feel untetheredâlike if I donât hold on to something, I might just float away.
Heâs alive, and heâs here, in Jackson, in the same place as me, breathing the same air, walking the same streets.
For the first time in twenty years.
I donât realize my hands are shaking until Tommy steps closer and grips my arm. âHey,â he says gently. âI know this is a lot.â
I nod, but itâs automatic. My throat feels tight, my chest too full.
Tommy hesitates, like heâs not sure if he should say more. But in the end, he just squeezes my arm once before letting go. âYou okay?â
No. But I donât say that.
Tommy shifts his weight, the heel of his boot scuffing against the dirt. âHe asked about you.â
My heart jolts painfully against my ribs. âWhat did you say?â
âTold him youâre doing fine.â
I press my lips together, nodding.
Tommy watches me closely. His eyes soften. âY/nââ
âIâm fine.â My voice is too quick, too thin.
Tommyâs mouth twitches like heâs about to say something else, but in the end, he just sighs.
âYou donât have to see him,â he says quietly. âIf you donât want to.â
I swallow hard. âI know.â
Tommy hesitates for a second longer, like heâs waiting for me to crack. When I donât, he steps back toward his horse and grips the reins.
âIâll be around,â he says.
I nod. âAlright.â
He swings back into the saddle. His eyes linger on me a beat longer before he clicks his tongue and guides the horse down the path. I stand there, arms crossed against the chill, watching him disappear toward the tree line.
The breeze shifts through the dry grass, brushing over the porch steps. I hear the faint sound of the horses in the stables, the quiet creak of the weathered barn door swinging in the wind.
Joel is in Jackson. And he asked about me.
I head back toward the house, the screen door creaking under my hand as I push it open. My hand is still on the doorframe when I pause, looking out toward the horizon.
I know this land better than I know myself. The stables, the hills beyond the creek, the trails that lead into the woods. Iâve walked them a hundred times.
But now it feels different.
Like maybe thereâs a ghost in these hills.
â
I donât see him. Not at first.
âHeâs not alone,â Tommy had added, his voice soft. âGot a little girl with him.â
A little girl.
Thatâs what pulled me toward town, even when I knew I should stay put. I didnât even remember leaving the ranch, but somehow I was here now, standing just outside the square, breath hitching in my throat as my eyes caught him.
Joel.
He was talking to Tommy, his back to me, but I knew him like Iâd seen him just yesterday. Broader now, a little more gray in his hair, his shoulders tense beneath his worn jacket.
And next to himâthere she was. The girl. Maybe fourteen. Freckles, wild brown hair, arms crossed over her chest with the kind of defiance only a kid could wear so comfortably. Joel stood close to her, protective. Always protective.
My chest squeezed.
I should leave. I should turn around, go back to my house, pretend this moment never happened. But I donât.
I stayed frozen there, my boots planted firmly in the dirt. I couldâve turned back. Maybe I should have. But then Joel shifted, like he felt me, and when he turnedâ
His lips part slightly, like he wants to say my name but canât. His face flickers through a thousand things at onceâshock, disbelief, something deeper, something broken. His hands twitch at his sides, like he doesnât know whether to reach for me or run.
The world shrinks to just the two of us.
His face⌠the years were carved into him like stone. Deep lines at the corners of his eyes, at the crease of his mouth. But those eyesâthey hadnât changed. Dark brown, the same way they used to soften when he looked at me.
âY/n.â
It wasnât a question. Just my name, rough and low and familiar.
My breath hitched. His eyes swept over me like he was trying to take me apart, piece by piece. My knees locked to keep from swaying under the weight of it.
I took a step toward him, then another. Joel didnât move at firstâhe just stared, his eyes sharp and dark. And then his jaw tightened, and he crossed the distance between us in three long strides.
And then his arms were around me.
I stumbled into him, my hands pressing against his back as his arms locked tight around me, one hand curling at the back of my head. My breath hitched as his chin dropped against my shoulder.
âHey,â I whispered against him.
He breathed out, his chest rising and falling hard beneath my hands. His arms stayed locked around me, one hand splayed against my back like he was grounding himself. My fingers curled into his jacket.
We stood there too long. Longer than anyone would call just a casual hug. But neither of us let go. His heart thudded against mine. My eyes burned.
Finally, Joelâs hand slid from the back of my head, brushing down my hair. He pulled back just enough to look at me, his hands framing my arms. His eyes softened, but there was something sharp in them. Something guarded.
Joelâs jaw tensed. His hands flexed around my arms, but he didnât let go. âTommy said you knew.â
âI did.â My breath hitched. âI just⌠I didnât know if youâd want to see me after all this time.â
Joelâs eyes darkened slightly, but he didnât say anything. His gaze flicked over my face, searching, and then his brow furrowed like he was trying to figure me out.
A small voice broke the silence.
âUh⌠hi?â
Joelâs head turned toward the girl standing a few feet away, arms crossed over her chest. She was watching us with open suspicion, one eyebrow raised.
Joelâs hand dropped from my arm. His posture shifted slightly, more guarded now, his protective instinct flaring up the way it always did when Sarah was nearby. My stomach squeezed painfully at the thought.
Joelâs gaze lingered on me for half a second longer before he spoke.
âEllie,â he said. His voice was steadier now. âThis is y/n.â
Ellieâs eyes narrowed. âYou know each other?â
Joelâs gaze sharpened. His mouth twitched like he wasnât sure how much to say. âYeah,â he said quietly. âWe know each other.â
Ellieâs eyes slid toward me. âHow?â
Joel hesitated. His jaw flexed. âItâs⌠complicated.â
Ellie snorted. âFigured.â
Joelâs hand dragged down his face, weariness etched into the lines of his face. His eyes met mine again, dark and searching.
I glanced toward Ellie, then back at him. âShe yours?â
Joelâs eyes widened slightly. His mouth parted like the question had caught him off guard. Then he shook his head. âNo,â he said quietly. âSheâs not mine.â
Ellie made a face.
Joel shot her a look. Ellie just shrugged.
âSheâs⌠with me,â Joel said after a beat, his voice low. âBeen taking care of her.â
My heart twisted painfully.
âSheâs lucky to have you,â I said softly.
Joelâs jaw tightened. His eyes lingered on mine for a long moment. âI donât know about that.â
Ellie made a scoffing noise. âYeah, well, Iâm still alive, so heâs doing something right.â
Joelâs gaze sharpened toward her. âEllie.â
She held up her hands, but there was a hint of a smile at the corners of her mouth.
Joelâs eyes softened just a fraction as he looked at her. My chest squeezed at the sight. That protectivenessâthat quiet steadinessâit was still there. Still Joel.
Joelâs eyes slid back toward me.
I hesitated. My hand twitched toward my chestâtoward the thin gold band on my fingerâbut I stopped myself before it could catch his eye.
âIâm glad youâre here,â I said quietly.
Joelâs eyes softened, something flickering beneath the guarded expression. âYeah.â His voice was low. âMe too.â
Ellie shifted impatiently.
âYall should get settled,â I say, my voice steadier than I feel. âJacksonâs a good place. Safe.â
Joel watches me a second longer, his jaw tight, like thereâs something he wants to argue, something he wants to say. But instead, he nods.
I turn before I do something stupidâlike let my heart remember what it was like to be his.
I avoid him after that.
Itâs not easy. Jackson isnât a big place, and people talk. I hear his name in passing, see glimpses of him from a distanceâhelping with patrols, talking with Maria, fixing up some old building with Tommy. The girl, Ellie, is always nearby, a shadow at his side. She reminds me of Sarah in some ways, the way she carries herself, the sharpness in her eyes.
But I donât go near him.
I donât trust myself to.
The hug was a mistake. I should have turned and walked away the moment I saw him, but I didnât. I let myself feel something I buried a long time ago, something I had no right to hold onto anymore. And Joel⌠Joel felt it, too. I could tell in the way he held me, in the way he didnât want to let go.
I canât let it happen again.
So I stay away.
I stick to my routines, my family, my home. I keep my head down, and for a while, it works. Until it doesnât.
â
It happens a week later.
Iâm standing near the garden beds in the middle of town, hands resting on the edge of a planter as Maria talks. The smell of soil and cold air hangs between us.
âSo, weâll need someone to cover the north patrol this week,â Maria says, arms crossed over her chest. âCould use someone who knows the area.â
I glance toward the street where my kids are playing with a couple of the other town kids. Their laughter cuts through the crisp air, sharp and clear.
âI donât know, Maria,â I say, quiet but steady.
Mariaâs gaze follows mine. âTheyâre old enough now,â she says, voice soft. âYou know theyâll be fine.â
My stomach knots. I know that. But it doesnât make it easier.
âYouâve done your part,â Maria says. âHell, youâve done more than your part. But Jacksonâs safer with you out there.â
Iâm opening my mouth to respond when I feel itâsomeone watching me.
Itâs not loud or obvious. Just a shift in the air, the way my skin prickles under the weight of a gaze I know too well.
I turn toward the street, and there he is.
Joel stands a few feet away, hands shoved into his jacket pockets, broad shoulders tense beneath the worn canvas of his coat. His face is unreadable, but his eyesâhis eyes are heavy and sharp, searching me for something Iâm not ready to give.
Mariaâs gaze flicks toward him, then back to me. Her expression sharpens. âThink about it,â she says, tone clipped. Then she gives Joel a look before stepping away.
I donât move until sheâs gone. Then I force myself to turn toward him fully. âHey.â
Joelâs mouth presses into a thin line. âBeen tryinâ to find you.â
I shift my hands to my jacket pockets. âBeen busy.â
Joelâs eyes narrow slightly. âYeah,â he says, but thereâs doubt in his voice. âGuess I just thought⌠after all this time⌠you might wanna talk.â
My gaze flickers toward my kids again. I force myself to keep my expression even.
âThereâs not much to say.â
Joel tilts his head, studying me with that quiet intensity that always made it hard to breathe. âThat why you been avoidinâ me?â
My chest tightens, but I keep my face neutral. âI havenât been avoiding you.â
His brows lift slightly. âRight.â
The weight of his gaze is unbearable. I glance toward the street again, toward the sound of my kidsâ voices, and it feels like Iâm standing on the edge of something sharp.
Because I have a husband. A family. A life.
But Joel doesnât know that. And I donât tell him.
Because the moment I say it out loud, the moment I name it, everything between us will become real again. Heâll look at me the way I know he willâlike Iâve slipped through his fingers all over again.
So I donât say anything. I just shove my hands deeper into my pockets and shift my weight. âI should go.â
Joel watches me, his jaw tightening. His hands twitch at his sides like he wants to reach for me, but he doesnât.
âYeah,â he murmurs. âGuess you should.â
I turn and walk away before I do something stupid.
Before I tell him the truth.
I try to keep my distance after that. I really do.
But Joel has never been the type to let things go.
â
The next time I see him, itâs late. The town is quiet, the sky thick with stars. Iâve just finished putting my kids to bed when I step outside for air, wrapping my arms around myself as I breathe in the cold. The past week has been suffocatingâknowing Joel is here, knowing I canât let myself get close.
And yet, somehow, he still finds me.
I hear the scuff of boots before I see him.
âYou always did like the quiet,â he says, voice low and rough.
I turn, and there he isâleaning against the wooden railing of my porch, arms crossed. He looks older in the moonlight, more worn than he did all those years ago. But heâs still Joel. That part of him hasnât changed.
âYou shouldnât be here,â I say, but my voice lacks any real conviction.
Joel huffs a soft breath. âYeah, well⌠got the feelinâ you werenât gonna come find me.â
I sigh, pressing my hands to my face before letting them fall. âJoelââ
âJust talk to me, y/n.â His voice is quiet but firm. âYou canât justâsee me again after twenty years, hug me like that, and then disappear.â
I close my eyes briefly, willing the lump in my throat to go away. When I look at him again, his face is softerâlike heâs pleading, like heâs just as lost as I am in all of this.
I sink down onto the porch steps. For a moment, I think heâll leave, but instead, Joel exhales and eases down beside me. We sit in silence, the night stretching wide around us.
âDidnât think Iâd ever find you again,â he admits after a while. His voice is lower now, almost hesitant. âHell, didnât think there was anything left worth findinâ.â
I swallow hard, staring at my hands. âI stopped wondering a long time ago,â I say quietly. âHad to. Didnât see the point in hoping for something that wasnât gonna happen.â
Joel nods slowly, like he understands. Like he lived through the same kind of grief. âGuess I shoulda known youâd make it,â he says. âAlways were tough.â
I huff a laugh, shaking my head. âI wasnât tough, Joel.â
âYou were,â he insists. âYou are. You⌠You saved me more times than I can count, you know that?â
I glance at him, startled. âJoelââ
âYou did,â he says again, voice thick. âEven when you didnât know it.â He exhales, rubbing a hand over his jaw. âAfter Sarah⌠I wasnât sure I was gonna keep goinâ. Didnât see the point. But youââ He pauses, shakes his head like heâs searching for the right words. âYou kept me human. Kept me from beinâââ
The kind of man he became.
He doesnât say it, but I hear it anyway.
I blink back the burn in my eyes and look away. âI shouldâve been there,â I whisper. âI shouldâveââ
âNo.â Joelâs voice is firm. âThere wasnât anything you couldâve done, y/n.â
I clench my jaw, swallowing against the ache in my chest. âI still think about her.â
Joelâs breath shudders. âMe too.â
The silence that follows is heavier than the last. I stare out at the town, at the flickering lights in the distance, at the life I built. A life Joel was never supposed to be part of again.
âI miss her,â I admit.
Joel nods, his voice barely audible. âMe too.â
We sit like that for a while, side by side, ghosts between us.
I know I should end this here, should get up and go inside before I let myself get too close again. But I donât.
Because for the first time in twenty years, I donât feel so alone.
â
Joel doesnât show up at my house again right away.
For a while, things stay the sameâI see him in passing, hear his name spoken in town, feel his presence like a shadow I canât shake. We donât talk about that night on the porch. Maybe we both know itâs better that way.
So when I open my front door one evening and find him standing on my porch, Iâm not surprised.
I am, however, completely unprepared.
âHey,â he says, voice rough, hands shoved into his jacket pockets.
I grip the doorframe like it might hold me upright. âJoel.â
His gaze drifts past me, into the house, and I know heâs taking it all inâthe warmth of the fire, the sound of laughter from the other room, the smell of dinner lingering in the air. A home. A life. One that isnât his.
One that never could be.
âYou gonna invite me in?â he asks after a moment, his voice light, but thereâs something beneath it, something heavier.
I hesitate, just for a second, before stepping aside. âYeah. Come in.â
Joel moves past me, slow, his eyes sweeping over everythingâthe framed drawings on the wall, the worn blankets draped over the couch, the little boots by the door. His jaw tightens. I can see it in the set of his shoulders, the way his hands curl into fists before he forces them loose again.
Heâs seeing everything he never had. Everything he lost.
And thenâ
âDaddy, look!â
I freeze.
Joel does, too.
My son barrels into the room, waving a wooden toy in the air, and runs straight into the arms of the man who walks in after himâmy husband.
I feel the air shift before I even turn to look at Joel.
Because I know what heâs seeing.
My husband laughs, ruffling our sonâs hair, his smile easy, warm. Heâs kind, steady, everything I needed when the world felt like too much. He doesnât hesitate when he lifts our son into his arms, doesnât flinch when our boy clings to him, laughing.
Joel watches it all, silent.
I force myself to breathe.
âY/n?â My husband looks up, finally noticing Joel. His brow furrows. âWhoâs this?â
I swallow hard, ignoring the way my hands feel unsteady at my sides. âThis is Joel,â I say carefully. âAn old friend.â
Joelâs face doesnât change. He just nods, his voice even when he says, âNice place you got here.â
My husband nods back. âThanks. Been a long time since y/n had any old friends show up.â He chuckles, bouncing our son once before setting him down. âShe doesnât talk much about the past.â
I feel Joelâs eyes flick to me. I donât look at him.
âThat so?â he murmurs.
My husband claps a hand on Joelâs shoulder, always friendly, always welcoming. âYou should stay for dinner. Weâve got plenty.â
Joel doesnât move for a long moment. I wonder if heâs going to refuse, if heâs going to say something, if heâs going toâ
But then, he just shakes his head, offering the smallest of smiles. âNo, I should get going, just wanted to stop by.â
He looks at me then, really looks at me, and thereâs something in his eyes I canât name. Something deep, something that aches.
I wonder if heâs thinking about all the things he never got. A home. A family. A son who runs into his arms without fear. A wife who waits at the door, smiling when he comes home.
Joelâs gaze lingers for a second longer before he steps back toward the door. âIâll see you around, Y/n.â
And then heâs gone.
I let out a breath I didnât realize I was holding, my chest tight, my heart unsteady.
I donât go after him.
Because I knowâjust as well as he doesâsome things arenât meant to be spoken out loud.
â
I hadnât been on patrol in years.
Maria had askedâno, begged me, reallyâabout a dozen times to come back on the rotation. My kids were older now, the ranch wasnât as demanding, and I wasnât getting any younger. She said it would be good for me to get back out there. Said Iâd be helping the community.
But every time she asked, I just found an excuse. I didnât want to leave my family behind, didnât want to risk being away from them for too long. They were my everything, my anchor.
But eventually, I relented. Maria practically wore me down. And so, here I was, gearing up for a patrol, reluctantly pulling my vest on and checking my gear.
I watched my three kids in the living room, the boys, already getting into some roughhousing, while my little girl, sat on the couch, clutching her stuffed bunny. She was so small, so fragile, even after all this time.
She was sensing the shift in the air, stood up and waddled over to me. Her little hands reached for my legs, and she looked up at me with wide, uncertain eyes. âMama, I donât want you to go,â she whispered, her voice small but heart-wrenching.
My heart clenched in my chest as I bent down to scoop her up, holding her tight against me. âI know, sweetie,â I murmured, kissing her forehead. âBut I have to go. Iâll be back soon. I promise.â
I kissed her forehead, whispering, âBe good for Daddy.â
My boys, still half-distracted by their wrestling, looked up.
My husband stepped into the room just then, his eyes soft as he walked over to me. Without a word, he pulled me into a kiss, brief but full of unspoken feelings.
âCome back safe,â he murmured, his forehead pressing against mine for a moment.
âI will,â I said again, pulling away, my heart aching.
I turned to leave, one last look at my kids as they waved from the door.
âBe safe, Mama!â They shouted.
âI will, I promise,â I called back before heading out the door.
They waved from the window, and I waved back, trying to smile. My oldest hand was resting on my youngest little head, her face pressed against the glass.
â
âIâll be fine,â I said to myself, as much as anyone else, as I checked my rifle. It wasnât the patrol I mindedâit was the thought of facing things I didnât want to face again.
Jacksonâs streets were quieter than usual as people prepared for the oncoming winter, most already taking refuge inside their homes. My boots crunched against the snow as I made my way to the stables, where the patrols usually gathered.
I shouldâve known something was off when I saw Maria standing there, looking tense as she talked to a familiar figure. Joel.
Great.
My stomach twisted into knots when I saw him.
Joel was standing by one of the horses, adjusting the straps on his gear. He looked differentâharder, with a rougher edge than I remembered. His eyes had the same weight to them, the same depth, but his body was broader, more solid, like heâd taken years of wear and tear and only gotten tougher.
Maria caught sight of me and gave a small wave. âHey, y/n, thanks for doing this. Joelâs new at patrol. Thought you could show him around the area.â
I nodded curtly. âSure. No problem.â
Joel turned at the sound of my voice, his eyes locking onto mine almost immediately. There was no surprise there, no flicker of recognition at the moment. It was as if he was already expecting me to show up, though his expression softened just a bit when our eyes met.
âY/n,â Joel said, his voice as rough as I remembered.
I raised an eyebrow but didnât respond. I wasnât sure what to say, or if I even wanted to speak. The tension between us still hung in the air like an unspoken apology, the years that had passed only thickening it.
Maria handed me a map and some supplies before giving us both a nod. âIâll leave you two to it. Just make sure to stick to the area. Stay close to town.â
I barely acknowledged her as she walked off, my attention already on the horse Iâd need to ride. I kept my gaze trained forward, refusing to meet Joelâs eyes again.
Joel mounted his horse first, adjusting his gear, the weight of his gaze lingering on me.
âYou gonna teach me the ropes, or what?â he asked, his voice quieter this time.
âJust stay close and follow my lead,â I said, trying to keep my tone even, but the underlying edge was there.
We started riding in silence, the snow crunching beneath the hooves of our horses as we made our way toward the outskirts of Jackson. My stomach was in knots, the quiet between us stretching longer than it should. The past twenty years felt like a lifetime, and every inch of space between us seemed to weigh a ton.
Finally, as we rounded a bend, Joel spoke. His voice was calm, but I could hear the tightness in it.
âWhy didnât you tell me?â
I shake my head, exhausted. âTell you what, Joel?â
âWhy didnât you tell me you were married?â His voice hardened, just a bit, with the question. âWhy didnât you tell me you had kids?â
My chest tightened. I didnât want to have this conversation. Not now, not like this. The words were already thereâsitting on the tip of my tongueâbut I forced myself to swallow them.
âIt wasnât your business,â I said, more sharply than I meant to.
Joelâs jaw clenched, and I could see the way his hand tightened on the reins. âIt wasnât my business?â His voice was low but raw. âYou think I wouldnât care? You think I wouldnât want to know what happened to you?â
I could feel his eyes on me, and I kept my gaze straight ahead. âItâs not like that, Joel.â
âThen what is it?â he demanded, his voice thick with frustration. âYou didnât think I deserved to know? Or you just didnât want me to know the truth? That you went off and got a family, while IâŚâ His voice trailed off for a second, and I could see the way his fingers flexed around the reins, his knuckles white.
âYou know what happened to me,â I said quietly, the sharpness in my voice slipping just enough for my vulnerability to bleed through. âI didnât want anyone to know. I didnât want you to know.â
Joelâs eyes softened for a fraction of a second, but his frustration didnât subside. âYou think I wouldnât have wanted to be there for you? To help you?â
I shook my head, my breath catching in my throat. âI didnât need your help, Joel. I needed to move on. I needed something⌠something normal.â
He scoffed, clearly frustrated, his gaze turning cold. âNormal? Is that why you couldnât tell me? Because you were so busy trying to create some perfect little life that didnât include me?â
âDonât you dare,â I snapped, finally turning to face him. âYou donât get to throw that in my face. You donât get to act like I owe you some explanation for how I lived my life. You left. You disappeared.â
His face hardened, his lips pressed tight as if he were holding something back. âYou think I wanted to disappear? I didnât have a choice, y/n. None of us did.â
I took a deep breath, trying to steady my shaking hands. âI couldnât just wait around. I couldnât just stand still while my world kept falling apart.â
Joel opened his mouth to say something, but I turned away, refusing to let him see how close I was to breaking.
âI donât need your forgiveness, Joel,â I said softly. âI just need you to understand that I did what I had to do.â
There was a long, painful silence as Joel rode beside me. I could feel his gaze on the back of my head, but I didnât dare look at him.
âYeah,â Joel said after a while, his voice quiet. âI get it.â
But we both knew it wasnât that simple.
â
The gates creaked open as we approached, the familiar faces of the patrol guards nodding at us. Maria waved from the guard post, her smile genuine, but I could tell she could sense something was off. She always had that way about her.
âY/n! Joel! Good to see you back in one piece,â Maria said, her voice bright but laced with concern.
âYeah, weâre good,â I said, forcing a smile, the kind that didnât quite reach my eyes. âNo problems out there.â
Joel, on the other hand, didnât even glance at Maria. He just gave a small grunt and walked past her, disappearing into the gates without another word.
I sighed, rubbing my forehead as I followed behind. The weight of everything was crushing, but I didnât want anyone to see it. Not now. Not in front of Jackson.
Inside the gates, everything was calmâtoo calm for what had just happened. The kids were playing in the streets, some people were talking, others were tending to the animals or making their way home. It was a normal evening in Jackson, and I should have felt relieved to be back in the safety of the settlement, but all I could think about was Joelâs words. His accusations. His anger.
And the way heâd looked at me before we left, like I was some stranger he couldnât even recognize anymore.
I walked past a few familiar faces, nodding and greeting people, but my thoughts kept drifting back to him. He wasnât okay. I wasnât okay. But I had to pretend. For everyone else.
âY/n,â Tommyâs voice called from behind me, pulling me out of my thoughts.
I turned to see him walking toward me, his face lighting up when he saw me. âHey,â I said with a forced smile, trying to push the weight of the argument and the silence from my shoulders. âEverything okay here?â
Tommy grinned. âYeah, everythingâs fine. Just got back from the stables. Weâve got a new batch of supplies in from the west side. How about you? How was the patrol?â
I didnât want to talk about it, but I couldnât avoid it. âIt was fine,â I said quickly, trying to make it sound like it had been just another patrol. âWe got into a bit of a scuffle, but nothing we couldnât handle.â
Tommyâs brow furrowed, but he didnât push. âYou sure? You donât look like youâre fine.â
I forced a smile again, brushing off his concern. âJust tired. Itâs been a long day.â
He didnât look convinced, but he let it go. âAlright. Well, if you need anything, you know where to find me.â
I nodded, stepping away as I tried to make my way toward home. I couldnât help but glance over at the direction where Joel had disappeared, hoping to catch a glimpse of him. But there was nothing. The world was moving on, and I was stuck in this mess of old feelings and unspoken words.
I wanted to make everything okay. I wanted to fix things, to make it feel like it used to. But I knew it wasnât that simple.
Joel wasnât the same anymore, and neither was I.
But for now, all I could do was put on the mask and pretend. Pretend everything was okay.
Because there was no other choice.
Days pass. I avoid him. I shouldnât, but I do.
I have a life now. A family. I canât just let Joel drag me back into the past.
â
20 years ago
The kitchen was warm, filled with the smell of garlic and onions sizzling in a pan. I moved around the counter, chopping vegetables, the soft sound of the knife cutting through them mixing with the low hum of the oven. The evening light was fading outside, casting everything in a soft, golden glow.
Sarah in the living room, sprawled out on the couch, doing her homework or readingâsomething that kept her distracted. Her laughter occasionally bubbled up as she talked to me from across the room. She didnât mind the quiet either.
I loved these quiet nightsâjust the simple rhythm of cooking dinner, the familiar routine. It made everything feel right, grounded. As I stirred the pot, I could hear the soft creak of the floorboards behind me, the sound of someone moving closer. I didnât need to turn around to know who it was. The familiar weight of his presence, the warmth in the air, was enough.
And then, just as I added the last of the spices, I felt his arms slip around me from behind, pulling me in close. His chin rested on my shoulder, and for a moment, everything stopped. The knife in my hand was forgotten as I leaned back into him, feeling the steady beat of his heart through the fabric of his shirt.
âYouâre making my favorite,â he murmured, his voice low, warm with affection. His breath brushed against the back of my neck, sending a shiver down my spine.
I smiled softly, glancing over my shoulder at him.
He tightened his hold a little, like he wanted to pull me into him more. His lips brushed my neck in a soft kiss, lingering for a moment. I closed my eyes, letting the warmth of him flood over me, savoring the comfort of this.
âI donât think Iâll ever get tired of this,â he whispered, the words so quiet they almost seemed like a secret just between us.
I felt my heart tug at the simple honesty in his voice. The world outside, everything that had happened, seemed to fade away in that moment, leaving only thisâusâtogether in the quiet of the kitchen.
âI hope not,â I whispered back, turning in his arms, our faces only inches apart. Joelâs eyes softened, the weight of everything weâd been through settling between us, but in that moment, there was nothing else but the peace weâd found here, together.
With a small, quiet smile, he leaned down and kissed me, his lips soft and sure. It was gentle, but it carried the weight of all the things we didnât need to say. Just us. Just this.
And in that instant, I realized that no matter what else happened, Iâd always hold on to this. This small, perfect moment. Just Joel and me, in a kitchen full of the smell of dinner and the quiet hum of life moving on.
â
We were careful. Cordial. Friendly, even, in that way people are when they have too much history and not enough words. We saw each other in passing, at the stables, at town meetings, in the market. He kept to himself most of the time, but I saw how he watched over Ellie, how he was trying, even if he didnât always know how.
And then there were the moments that caught me off guard.
Like when Iâd be in the town square, helping my husband with the livestock trade, and Iâd glance up to find Joel watching from a distance. His eyes would flick from me to my husband, to my kids, to the life I had built without him. He never said anything about it, never let his expression betray anything more than quiet observation, but I knew him too well.
I knew what he wasnât saying.
And maybe that was why, on a cool evening, I found myself walking up to his house with a basket in my hands.
It wasnât much. Just a small batch of cookies, warm from the oven, the kind I used to make for him before.
I hesitated outside his door. It was stupid, really. He might not even remember. But before I could overthink it, I knocked.
The door creaked open a moment later, and Joel blinked at me, looking more surprised than anything. âY/n.â
I lifted the basket slightly. âBrought something for you and Ellie.â
Joel glanced down, and for the first time in a long time, something like warmth flickered in his eyes.
âYou remember,â he said quietly.
I huffed out a small, nervous laugh. âHard to forget how you used to hoard these things like they were gold.â
Joel shook his head, a ghost of a smile tugging at the corner of his mouth. âStill are.â
Something in my chest ached. Thisâthis easy familiarity, this old rhythm of knowing each otherâwas dangerous. It made me remember too much.
Before I could linger too long in it, there was a noise from inside.
âWhoâs at the door?â Ellieâs voice called out.
Joel sighed, stepping back and nodding for me to come in.
I hesitated.
And then I did.
The house was simple but warmâlived in. A fire crackled in the hearth, the scent of old wood and leather filling the space. Ellie sat on the couch, legs kicked up on the coffee table, whittling something in her hands. She glanced up as I entered, brows raising.
âHey,â she said, studying me like I was a puzzle she hadnât figured out yet.
âHey,â I replied, setting the basket down on the small table near the couch. âBrought you something.â
Ellie perked up instantly, setting her whittling knife down and leaning forward. âWait. Are thoseââ She lifted the cloth covering the cookies, eyes widening. âOh, hell yeah.â
Joel exhaled, shaking his head. âManners, kid.â
Ellie ignored him completely, already stuffing a cookie in her mouth. Her eyes fluttered shut. âOkay, these are so much better than the ones they make in town.â
I smirked. âWell, I was always better at baking than Joel, so that tracks.â
Joel let out a sharp breath, somewhere between a sigh and a scoff. âI didnât bake.â
âExactly,â I said with a grin.
Ellie perked up at that, something sparking behind her eyes. âWait, wait, waitâyou knew Joel before all this?â
Joel stiffened slightly, but he didnât say anything. Just waited, watching me.
I hummed, tilting my head. âOh, yeah. Way before.â Ellieâs brows shot up. âHow far back?â
I glanced at Joel, but his expression was unreadable. âBefore the outbreak,â I admitted.
Ellieâs mouth fell open slightly. âWhoa. So, like, you knew young Joel?â
I bit back a laugh. âWell, I wouldnât say youngâhe was already an old man in spirit.â
Ellie choked on her cookie, grinning. âOh my god. I knew it.â Joel sighed, pinching the bridge of his nose. âJesus.â
Ellie ignored him, leaning forward like Iâd just promised her the juiciest gossip of all time. âOkay, What was he like?â
I tapped my chin, pretending to think. âHmm⌠well, he was stubbornââ
âBig shock,â Ellie deadpanned.
ââand bossy,â I added.
âStill checks out.â
âAnd,â I drawled, smirking at Joel, âhe thought he was so cool, but really, he was just a huge dork.â
Joel groaned, shaking his head. âY/n.â
I grinned. âWhat? You were! Always muttering under your breath, acting all broodyââ I turned back to Ellie. âYou know, I once caught him singing to himself while he was fixing his truck?â
Ellieâs face lit up. âNo way.â
âOh yeah,â I said, nodding solemnly. âAnd not just any song. It was some cheesy â80s ballad, and he was really into it.â
Ellie clutched her stomach, laughing. âJoel, is this true?â
Joel sighed heavily, like he was reconsidering his entire existence.
I leaned in slightly, lowering my voice like I was sharing a secret. âAnd he used to smile all the time. Like, actual, real smiles.â
Ellieâs laughter slowed as she blinked at me. âSeriously?â
Joel went quiet.
I felt my own smile falter, something heavier settling between us.
I cleared my throat, forcing some lightness back into my voice. âYeah. He was a good man.â
Ellie looked between us again, clearly picking up on something, but thankfully, she didnât push.
Instead, she sat back, munching on another cookie. âHuh. You know, I think I like you.â
Joel shook his head, exhaling sharply. âLord help me.â
I laughed, shaking my head.
For a second, it was easyâtoo easyâto pretend like things werenât broken. That Joel and I werenât standing on opposite sides of something too wide to cross.
â
I shouldâve known better than to let my guard down.
That night at Joelâs, sitting with Ellie, laughing, letting the past slip off my tongue like it wasnât still a woundâit was a mistake. A stupid, reckless mistake. Because now I canât stop remembering.
The way Joel used to smile at me like I was his whole world.
The way I used to look at him like he was mine.
The way we used to belong to each other before everything fell apart.
And now we live in the same town, breathing the same air, orbiting around each other like ghosts of the past we never buried.
I do my best to avoid him.
I keep myself busyâtaking care of the kids, helping my husband on the farm, working in the stables. Itâs easy to pretend when my hands are full, when my days are long, when I fall into bed too exhausted to think.
But Joel doesnât make it easy.
I see him everywhere. Walking through town, talking to Tommy, riding out for patrol. I feel his eyes on me when I pass him on the street, when Iâm at the market, when Iâm laughing with my kids. And every damn time, I pretend I donât notice.
But then, some nights, I slip.
Like tonight.
Itâs lateâspring air thick and cool, the sky stretched wide and star-freckled above Jackson. Iâm at the stables, brushing down one of the horses, the rhythmic strokes lulling me into a quiet, distant place.
I donât hear him at first. Not until his voice cuts through the quiet.
âYou always did love the stables.â
I freeze. My heart lurches painfully, betraying me before I can shove the feeling down.
Slowly, I turn.
Joel stands a few feet away, holding a saddle in one hand, the other resting against the wooden stall. His eyes are dark in the dim lantern light, watching me like heâs trying to read the parts of me I keep hidden.
I swallow. âAnd you always loved sneaking up on me.â His lips twitch like he wants to smileâbut doesnât.
He steps closer, setting the saddle down on the nearby bench. âDidnât mean to scare you.â
âYou didnât.â
He nods, but his gaze flicks over me, like he doesnât believe me. Like he still knows me well enough to see through the cracks.
Silence settles between us, heavy with things we donât say.
I turned toward him, sweeping my hair over my shoulder. His eyes flicked down immediately, and I realized too late what Iâd done.
The scar.
It stretched over my shoulder, pale against my skin even in the dim light. My husband always told me it had faded, but I knew better. It was still there. A reminder.
Joel went still.
His gaze darkened, brows pulling together, and before I could say anything, his fingers twitchedâlike he wanted to reach out but wasnât sure if he should.
âWhat happened?â His voice was low, rough around the edges.
I swallowed. âJoelââ
âY/n.â
I exhaled slowly, my grip tightening around the brush in my hand. âIt was years ago.â
Joel didnât say anything, just waited.
I turned away, running a hand down the horseâs mane, grounding myself before I spoke.
âIt was before Jackson,â I murmured. âBandits found our camp. We fought back. Iââ I swallowed. âI got lucky.â
Joelâs jaw clenched. âThat ainât lucky.â I forced a small smile. âI survived.â
Something in his expression shifted, something deep and unspoken. He took a slow step forward, his hand hesitating before it finally reached out.
His fingers barely grazed the scar, the lightest touch, but it sent a shiver through me.
I shouldâve pulled away. I shouldâve stepped back, laughed it off, said something to make it less. But I didnât.
Because his touch was careful. Reverent. Like he was mourning something he never even knew he lost.
Joel swallowed thickly, his voice quieter now. âDid he take care of you?â
I knew who he meant.
âYes,â I whispered. Joel nodded, but something in his eyes was raw, something heavy pressing between us.
We stood there for a long moment, neither of us moving, his fingers still hovering just barely over my skin. The air between us felt thick, charged with something we werenât supposed to name.
Then, just as quickly, Joel pulled back. I cleared my throat, stepping away. âYou should get some rest.â Joel exhaled, like he was letting something go. âYeah.â
And then, without another word, he turned and walked away. I let out a shaky breath, pressing a hand over my shoulderâwhere his touch still burned.
â
It had been a few months since Joel and Ellie settled into Jackson. Things were⌠good, mostly. Better than I expected, considering everything. Joel and I had found a rhythm againânot quite the way it used to be, but close. Close enough that some days it felt easy to slip into old habits.
Heâd come by the stables when I was working, make some dry comment about how I hadnât changed, and Iâd roll my eyes and give it right back to him. Heâd show up at my house sometimes, tooâusually under the pretense of asking about patrols or Jacksonâs defensesâbut heâd stay longer than necessary, and weâd find ourselves talking about things that had nothing to do with Jackson. Things like Sarah. Things like the life we almost had.
And it was fine. It was safe. It was a line we both knew better than to cross.
Until today.
Weâd just gotten back from a longer patrolâa rough one. A couple of clickers had gotten too close to the perimeter, and Joel had gotten clipped. Nothing serious, but he was pissed. His shirt was torn at the sleeve, dried blood crusting the fabric. He wouldnât stop flexing his shoulder like he was trying to work the soreness out, and it was starting to grate on me.
âYou shouldâve let me handle it,â I muttered, brushing down my horse as Joel stood nearby, watching me with that same hard look he always wore after a fight.
âYeah, and let you get yourself killed?â Joel scoffed. âNot a chance.â I rolled my eyes. âI had it under control.â
âYeah, sure,â Joel bit out, shaking his head. âLooked real under control from where I was standing.â
I spun toward him, frustration bubbling over. âGod, Joel, why do you always have to make it a thing?â
âBecause it is a thing!â His voice rose, sharp and cutting. âYou think Iâm just supposed to stand there and watch you throw yourself into danger?â
âThatâs how patrol works, Joel. Iâve been doing this a lot longer than you.â
Joelâs jaw clenched so hard I could see the muscle twitching beneath his skin. His eyes were sharp and dark, cutting right through me.
âYeah? And where the hell was your husband while you were out here risking your life?â
I froze. My hand stilled on the horseâs reins, my breath catching in my chest. Slowly, I turned toward him. âWhat the hell is that supposed to mean?â
Joel took a step closer, his shoulders tense, his eyes burning into mine. âIt means youâve got a whole family waiting for you back home, y/n. And yet here you are, out on patrol, risking your life every damn day.â His voice was low, rough, like he was trying to hold it together but barely managing. âWhy the hell are you still doing this?â
I shook my head, trying to laugh it off. âYou donât get to ask me that.â
âDonât I?â Joelâs voice sharpened. âBecause last I checked, weâve been doing this together for months now. And I donât see him coming out here with you. I donât see him keeping you safe.â
My chest tightened. âThatâs not his job.â
âIt should be.â His eyes flashed. I felt the heat rising to my face. âWhat are you even trying to say, Joel?â
Joelâs face twisted into something complicatedâanger and hurt and longing all wrapped up together. He shook his head, raking a hand through his hair. âYou know what Iâm saying.â
âNo, I donât,â I shot back, my heart pounding. âSo why donât you just say it?â
Joelâs mouth curled into something bitter. âFine,â he bit out. âYour husbandâhe got everything I wanted.â
The words hit me like a gut punch.
Joel took a step closer, his eyes burning into mine. âYou think itâs easy for me? Watching you with him? Watching you with your kids?â His voice cracked, and he exhaled sharply. âYou built a life with him. A whole life. A family.â His jaw flexed, his voice trembling. âAnd it shouldâve been me.â
My mouth went dry. My heart hammered so loud I was sure he could hear it.
âYou think I donât think about it?â Joelâs voice dropped, low and raw now. âAbout how different things couldâve been if youâd stayed? If I had pulled myself together and told you how I felt before you left?â His eyes darkened. âBut I didnât. And now I get to watch him have the life that I shouldâve had with you.â
My chest squeezed painfully. âJoelââ
âNo.â He cut me off, his eyes hard. âI need to say this. You think it didnât kill me? Knowing that you moved on? That you built a life with someone else?â His breath hitched, his eyes sharp with something almost desperate. âThat you had his kids?â
I blinked, feeling the sting of tears that I refused to let fall.
âIâm happy for you,â Joel said, but his voice sounded anything but. âReally. You deserve to be happy. But donât stand here and act like it doesnât kill me every time I see him put his arm around you. Every time your kid calls him âDad.ââ He took another step toward me, close enough that I could feel the heat coming off his body. âIt shouldâve been me, y/n. It was supposed to be me.â
My throat tightened. âJoel, you donât get to say that.â
âWhy not?â His voice sharpened again. âBecause itâs true?â
I swallowed hard, shaking my head. âBecause itâs not that simple.â
âIsnât it?â His eyes searched mine, desperate, angry. âTell me youâve never thought about it. Tell me youâve never looked at him and wondered if it shouldâve been me instead.â
My mouth opened, but nothing came out.
Joelâs eyes were sharp, his breath shallow. âYeah,â he said bitterly. âThatâs what I thought.â
We stood there in the cold barn, the sound of the horses shifting restlessly around us, the storm still lingering in the distance. I didnât know what to say. What the hell could I say to that?
Joelâs chest was rising and falling rapidly, his hand flexing at his side like he was barely holding himself together. I couldnât breathe. Couldnât think. All I could feel was the weight of what heâd just said sitting between us like a live wire, burning and dangerous.
Joel shook his head, his eyes dark. âYou donât have to say anything. I already know.â Then he turned, his hand running through his hair as he started toward the barn doors.
âJoel,â I said, my voice strained. He stopped, his back to me.
âIâŚâ I trailed off, not even knowing what I wanted to say.
Joel sighed, his shoulders sinking. Without looking at me, he said, âIâll see you around, y/n.â
Then he walked out, leaving me standing there, heart racing, head spinning, wondering how the hell we were supposed to come back from this.
a/n: part two coming soonâŚ
stuck here like me
joel miller x reader
After twenty years apart, you and Joel reunite in Jackson, but while he spent decades surviving, you built a life without himâone he can only look at from the outside before walking away in silence.
here it is
Collide
joel miller x famous!reader
summary: A famous pop star and a reserved contractor find an unexpected connection when their paths cross at a concert, leading to a complicated and intense relationship despite their vastly different worlds.
a/n: 20 year age gap, suggestive scenes, kissing, fluff, teen Sarah, please request!!
joel miller masterlist
I was still coming down from the high of the show, the pulse of the bass lingering in my veins as I sat in my dressing room. My legs were stretched out over the couch, my body buzzing with exhaustion in the best way. Another sold-out night. Another crowd screaming my lyrics back at me.
Someone knocked, and my manager popped her head in.
âYour meet-and-greet winner is hereâSarah Miller.â
âSend her in,â I said, smiling.
The door swung open, and in walked a teenage girl, clutching a crinkled tour poster with wide, almost disbelieving eyes. Iâd seen that look beforeâpure, unfiltered excitement, the kind that made all the work worth it.
But what I hadnât seen beforeâwhat I wasnât expectingâwas the man following her.
Older. Tall. Broad shoulders filling the doorway, a flannel stretched over his chest, sleeves rolled up his forearms. His hair was dark but streaked with gray, and the scruff along his jaw was salt-and-pepper. He wasnât moving like he was part of this worldâhe lingered, arms crossed, scanning the room with wary eyes like he wasnât sure if heâd just stepped into a trap.
I was used to seeing dads at my shows, usually half-asleep or scrolling on their phones, counting down the minutes until they could leave. But this guy?
Something about him felt different.
Sarah, completely unaware of the shift in my focus, let out a sharp breath. âOh my God,â she whispered. âI canât believe Iâm here.â
I grinned, forcing myself to drag my attention away from the man hovering behind her.
âBelieve it, babe. You made it.â I patted the couch beside me. âCome sit. Letâs take some pictures.â
Sarah practically collapsed onto the seat, still clutching her poster like it might disappear if she let go. âYou were amazing. Like, I love your albums, but live? Insane. And the outfits? Oh my God.â
âThank you!â I laughed, flicking my hair over my shoulder. âGotta give the people a show.â
I felt it thenâthat weight of a gaze pressing into me. Not from Sarah.
From him.
I glanced up, catching him watching me. Not in a creepy way. Not in a casual way, either. It was assessing, lingering, like he wasnât expecting this from me. Like I wasnât what he thought Iâd be.
Sarah rolled her eyes dramatically. âThatâs my dad Joel. He insisted on coming. Thought Iâd get kidnapped or something.â
âSmart,â I murmured, turning my gaze back to him.
His eyes flicked to mine, and for a second, the room felt smaller.
âYou didnât have to stay back here,â I said, tilting my head. âMost parents just drop their kids off and wait outside.â
His jaw twitched, like he was debating if it was worth answering.
âDidnât feel right leaving her alone,â he said finally. His voice was deep, roughâlike gravel warmed by the sun.
I studied him, smirking a little. âDidnât seem like you hated the show.â
Something flickered in his eyesâlike he hadnât expected me to notice him in the crowd, let alone call him out on it.
Sarah gasped dramatically. âWait. Did you actually like it?â She turned to him, eyes wide. âOh my God, Dad, are you a fan now?â
JoelâJoel. I liked the nameâexhaled through his nose, shifting his weight. âLetâs not get carried away.â
I laughed. I liked this. The push and pull of it. He was clearly out of his element, but he wasnât running from it either.
Sarah turned back to me, still buzzing. âHe literally never listens to anything but old music. Like, dad music. So this is, like, a huge deal.â
I arched a brow at him. âOld music, huh? Let me guessâSpringsteen? Tom Petty?â
Joel just stared at me. âNothinâ wrong with Petty.â
I grinned. âDidnât say there was.â
He held my gaze for a beat too long, something unreadable flickering in his expression before he looked away.
Sarah didnât seem to notice any of it, too busy gushing about her favorite songs. I signed her poster, took a few selfies, and listened as she told me about how she and her best friend had waited all night to get tickets.
Eventually, my manager cleared her throatâa signal that it was time to wrap things up.
Sarah pouted but nodded, clutching her signed poster like a lifeline. âThank you so much. This was, like, the best night of my life.â
âAnytime, babe,â I said, giving her a wink.
Then my eyes flickered back to Joel.
He lingered a half-second longer than he needed to, that same unreadable expression on his face. Like he wasnât sure what the hell just happened here.
I smirked.
âSee you around, Joel.â
His throat bobbed. His hands flexed at his sides. But he didnât say anythingâjust gave me one last look before following Sarah out the door.
I watched them go, my body still hummingânot just from the show, but from him.
Something told me this wasnât the last time Iâd be seeing Joel Miller.
â
I woke up to a pounding headache, the kind that made me instantly regret every single tequila shot from the night before. The afterparty had been a blurâflashing lights, too many hands grabbing mine, bodies pressed close, music so loud I could still feel the bass vibrating in my bones.
I groaned, rolling over in bed, burying my face in the pillows. My mouth was dry. My limbs ached. And judging by the way my phone was blowing up on the nightstand, Iâd missed something important.
I squinted at the screen, ignoring the dozens of notifications, and instead focused on the text from my assistant:
âContractors are at the house today. They need you to sign off on finishes. Be there by noon.â
I groaned again, rubbing my face. Noon? That might as well have been dawn.
But I couldnât push it off any longer. The house was almost done, and I wanted to make sure every little detail was perfect before I moved in. So I forced myself out of bed, took the longest shower of my life, and threw on a pair of oversized sunglasses to hide the absolute disaster happening on my face.
By the time I pulled up to the house, it was already hot, the kind of Texas heat that made the air shimmer off the pavement. My head was still pounding as I stepped out of the car, tugging my hoodie up over my messy hair.
Then I saw them.
Two men on the porch, deep in conversation. One was younger, dark-haired, grinning as he gestured toward the house. The otherâŚ
Oh.
I froze.
It was him.
Joel.
He was standing there, arms crossed, that same unreadable expression on his face as he listened to the other guy talk. He looked just as solid as he had last night, except now he wasnât in a dimly lit dressing roomâhe was in daylight, in his element, wearing a dark t-shirt that clung to the broad planes of his chest, work-worn jeans slung low on his hips. His sleeves were pushed up, revealing forearms dusted with hair, veins prominent beneath tanned skin.
Fuck.
I was hungover. I was in no shape for this kind of thing.
But he turned, catching sight of me, and for a second, I swore I saw something flicker in his expression. Recognition. Amusement. Maybe even something else.
The younger guyâwho I was now guessing was his brotherâlooked between us, raising an eyebrow. âWell, damn. Youâre the client?â
I pushed my sunglasses up, smirking. âSurprised?â
Joel exhaled through his nose, something like a chuckle under his breath. He shook his head slightly, looking down before glancing back up at me. âDidnât expect to see you again so soon.â
I stepped closer, my headache momentarily forgotten. âYeah? Youâre not exactly my usual demographic either.â
Joelâs jaw ticked. He shifted his weight, hands resting on his hips. âThat what you call it?â
I let my eyes flicker over himâjust briefly, just enough for him to feel it. âYou tell me.â
His throat bobbed, but he didnât answer.
His brother, though, was eating this up. He let out a low whistle, grinning between us. âAlright, what am I missinâ here?â
I smirked. âYour brother was at my show last night.â
The younger man lit up. âOh, no shit.â He turned to Joel, grinning. âMan, you didnât tell me you were a fan.â
Joel exhaled sharply. âJesus Christ.â
I laughed, biting my lip, watching the way his jaw clenched. He wasnât flustered, not exactly. But he was⌠affected. And I liked that.
âTommy,â Joel muttered, clearly done with this conversation. âGo check the tile in the kitchen.â
Tommyâwho now had a nameâwas still grinning as he backed away. âOh, Iâll check the tile, alright.â
When he was gone, I turned back to Joel, crossing my arms.
âSo. You do this for a living?â
Joel nodded, rubbing the back of his neck. âYeah. Been doinâ contracting work a long time.â
I let my gaze drift around the house, imagining him working hereâhis hands on the walls, the floors, every little detail touched by him.
âGuess that means youâll be around for a while.â
Joel met my eyes, something heavy in his gaze. âLooks that way.â
The air felt thick, the heat between us stretching, pulling, tightening.
I smirked. âGood.â
Then I turned and walked inside, knowing full well he was watching me go.
â
I stepped into the house, my heels clicking on the polished floors, the cool air inside a welcome relief from the heat outside. Joel followed me, his footsteps steady and even behind me, but it was his presence that made the room feel smaller. He was still there, lingering just at the edge of my periphery as I looked around the space.
âSo, what do you think?â I asked, motioning to the wide open spaces, the unfinished but impressive featuresâhigh ceilings, sleek lines, all of it still a work in progress.
Joel took a slow turn, eyes scanning the room. âItâs big,â he said. âI mean, damn. Youâre gonna need a lotta furniture to fill this place.â
I chuckled, shrugging. âIâll figure it out.â I didnât mind the emptiness. I liked the potential of it. The house was a blank slate, just like the life Iâd started to build here.
âTexas sure knows how to do things big,â he muttered under his breath, walking over to inspect the kitchen island.
I caught the slight surprise in his voice, and it made me pause. âYou surprised?â
He turned to face me, his brows raised slightly. âGuess I didnât expect someone like you to be from here.â
I tilted my head, genuinely curious now. âSomeone like me?â
He shrugged, his eyes flickering to mine before he looked back down at the stone countertop, his hands moving slowly over the surface. âI dunno. Youâre, uh⌠different. Thought people from Texas were moreâŚâ He trailed off, not quite sure how to finish the thought.
âMore what?â I prodded, a small smile tugging at the corner of my lips.
He rubbed his jaw, clearly trying to avoid saying something that might come out wrong. âI dunno. More country, maybe. More⌠traditional.â
I raised an eyebrow, amused. âYou think Iâm not âtraditionalâ?â
Joel shifted uncomfortably. âNo, itâs not that.â He looked like he was realizing how much trouble heâd gotten himself into with his words. âIâm just sayinâ, Texas is a big place. People think itâs all rodeos and oil rigs and cowboy hats.â
I laughed, walking over to a window that looked out over the land. The sunlight was softer now, casting a warm glow on the fields beyond. The house felt like a fortress here, its high walls keeping out everything I didnât want. But in Texas, even the wide-open spaces felt like they were mine.
âWell, I grew up here,â I said, looking out at the view, my voice softening a little. âI didnât think I could build a house anywhere else. Texas is home.â
Joel stayed silent for a moment, the weight of my words hanging in the air. Then, when he spoke again, his voice was quieter. âI get that. Texas has a way of sticking with you, doesnât it?â
I nodded, turning to face him. âYeah. You can take the girl out of Texas, butâŚâ I let the sentence hang, a half-smile on my lips.
He met my gaze then, something almost reflective in his eyes. âBut you canât take Texas out of the girl.â
I let out a soft laugh, relieved that he understood. That we didnât need to say everything. Iâd always known that about Texasâthat it was big, that it was loud, but also that it was home in a way I couldnât explain to anyone who didnât feel the same pull.
âSo, where are you from?â I asked, stepping closer to him, wanting to shift the conversation away from the weight of what Iâd said.
He paused, looking down for a second, like he wasnât sure if he should say. Finally, he met my eyes, his expression shifting to something more grounded. âCame from a small town outside Austin. Grew up on a farm, learned the trade from my old man.â
I smiled. âSounds like a different world than this.â
âIt was,â he agreed. His gaze drifted toward the large windows, his tone thoughtful. âBut Texas has a way of making you feel like you belong, no matter where you come from.â
There was something in his voice, something that made me pause. He wasnât just talking about the land anymore. He was talking about Texasâand maybe even about himself, too.
For a second, the tension between us shifted. It wasnât just about the house, or the project we were both now a part ofâit was about something deeper. Something about us both finding our places, making a home.
I broke the silence, clearing my throat. âGuess thatâs what makes it so special. Doesnât matter how far you go, you always find your way back.â
Joel looked at me, his expression unreadable, but there was something lingering there. Something unsaid. He cleared his throat. âGuess youâre right.â
I smiled, the weight of the moment fading into something lighter, easier.
But as we stood there, looking at each other in the stillness of that unfinished house, I knew one thing for sureâTexas wasnât just a place. It was a feeling. And for the first time, I wasnât sure I wanted to leave it behind. Not now. Not ever.
â
The days passed in a blur of emails, meetings, and decisions about finishes and fixtures, but my mind kept wandering back to that house. The house that was almost finished, but not quite. Every day, Iâd get updates from my manager or the construction crew about progress, but I couldnât stop thinking about the two men working on it.
Joel and his brother, Tommy.
They were good at what they didâno surprise there.
Every time I visited, I saw them in action, meticulously working on the smallest details. Joel was particularly focused, his movements efficient but thoughtful, like he took pride in making everything just right.
I found myself going there more often than I needed to, and I could feel itâsomething shifting in the air between Joel and me. It wasnât obvious, but it was thereâthe lingering glances, the moments where we found ourselves alone, if only for a few seconds, before either Tommy or one of the other workers came around the corner.
Iâd always been good at reading people, and Joel didnât seem like the type to show much of his cards. But there were times when our eyes met across a room, a long, drawn-out moment where neither of us looked away.
Once, I was standing by the kitchen, debating whether the granite countertops Iâd chosen would clash with the cabinets. Joel had been in the other room, but when I glanced over, there he wasâwatching me. Not just looking, but studying me. The way his gaze lingered made my heart skip a beat, even though I was trying to act like I didnât notice.
I forced myself to focus on the materials. âWhat do you think about the backsplash?â I asked, knowing I needed to fill the silence.
Joel shifted, scratching the back of his neck before walking over, his boots thudding softly against the floor. âThe tileâs fine,â he said, his voice low. âBut Iâd go with something a little more subdued. You donât need to compete with the countertops.â
I nodded, stepping back to look at it through his eyes. âSubdued. Got it.â
I could feel him so close now, his body just a breath away, the heat from him lingering in the space between us. But before I could respond, Tommy rounded the corner, grinning. âYou two makinâ progress in here, or just talkinâ shop?â
I shot Tommy a playful smile, but I couldnât shake the feeling that Joel was still standing a little too close, like he didnât want to walk away. I ignored it, focusing on Tommy instead, but there was no denying the tension simmering beneath the surface.
The next few days felt like thatâlittle moments.
Iâd walk through the house, discussing where I wanted certain pieces, and Joel would be there, eyes on me just a little too long. Iâd catch his gaze in the reflection of a window, or heâd be watching me from across the room when I wasnât looking, and when I did catch him, heâd quickly look away.
Tommy, oblivious to the energy between us, was always there too, cracking jokes and making the work feel light. It was clear that he and Joel were close, and I appreciated thatâhis easygoing attitude balanced Joelâs more serious demeanor.
But still, there were those moments when it was just Joel and me, alone.
Like the time I walked into the garage, planning to check on the paint job in the hallway. Joel had been working on some cabinetry, and when he saw me enter, he set down his tools and wiped his hands on a rag. âHey,â he said, his voice gravelly, like he hadnât been talking much today.
âHey,â I said, trying to act casual, but the moment stretched longer than it should have. I could feel the distance between us closing. He was so close now that I could smell the faint scent of wood and sawdust on his skin, and I couldnât help but notice how good he looked. It was the kind of ruggedness that worked on himâlike he didnât have to try, but still somehow looked effortlessly put together.
âI was thinking about the flooring,â I started, trying to steer the conversation to something safe as my heart raced in my chest. But the words felt stupid in my mouth when his eyes were on me like that. Like they were seeing right through me.
âFlooringâs good,â he said, leaning against the workbench. He crossed his arms, and his gaze dipped just slightly before meeting my eyes again. âYou just need to decide what you want the most. Itâs your house.â
His words felt more like a challenge than advice.
I took a slow breath, swallowing hard. âI know. I just⌠want it to be perfect.â
Joelâs expression softened. âIt will be.â He stepped forward then, closer than he had before. So close I could feel his presence in a way that was more than physical. âYouâve got a good eye. I donât think youâll be disappointed with anything you choose.â
I could feel my pulse quicken at the way he was looking at me, the weight of the moment too intense for me to shake off. There was an invisible line between us now, a line I wasnât sure if I should cross, but I couldnât look away.
Just as the air thickened, the sound of Tommyâs voice came from the other room. âYo, Joel! We need your help with these measurements.â
Joel exhaled, breaking the spell. He stepped back, his gaze still lingering on mine for just a moment longer before he turned and walked toward the doorway.
âGuess I better get to work,â he said, his voice quieter than before, like it had been touched by something.
I stood there for a beat, trying to compose myself, but my heart was still pounding in my chest. I couldnât deny it anymore.
The tension between us was undeniable, and I wasnât sure how much longer we could ignore it.
â
Joel was kneeling by the baseboards, smoothing out the last coat of sealant with practiced precision. The steady scrape of the tool against the wood filled the quiet space, but his attention kept flicking toward me as I sat cross-legged on the floor nearby, flipping through fabric samples for the living room.
âYou know,â he said, finally breaking the silence, âI still donât get it.â
I looked up. âGet what?â
He rested his forearm on his knee, tool still in hand, and nodded toward me. âAll this.â He gestured vaguely around the room, but I knew he didnât mean the house. âYouâve got people screaming your name, selling out arenas⌠but here you are, sitting on the floor, stressinâ over couch cushions.â
I laughed softly and set the samples down. âYeah, well⌠those arenas donât exactly help me figure out if sage greenâs gonna make me regret all my life choices.â
He huffed a quiet laugh, but his eyes didnât leave mine. âStill. Must be kinda⌠wild. All that attention.â
I leaned back on my hands, glancing toward the window where the late afternoon sun poured in, warm and golden. âYeah. It is. It still doesnât feel real most days.â
His brow furrowed slightly, like he was trying to understand. âWhat part?â
âAll of it.â I shrugged, feeling the familiar wave of disbelief wash over me. âI mean, I was just a kid with a guitar writing sad songs in my bedroom. And now⌠there are people who know those songs. Who sing âem back to me. Who care enough to show up.â I shook my head with a small, disbelieving smile. âItâs insane.â
Joel was quiet for a moment. âYou ever get used to it?â
âNot really.â I met his gaze again. âAnd honestly, I donât think I want to. I donât ever wanna stand on stage and not feel completely floored by the fact that people gave me a night of their lives. You know?â
He nodded slowly, his eyes softening. âYeah. I get that.â
âLike⌠Iâm just grateful, you know? For all of it. The chaos, the weirdness, the fact that I can make music and it actually⌠matters to someone. It could all go away tomorrow, and Iâd still feel lucky that it happened at all.â
His mouth quirked into a faint smile. âYeah, well⌠reckon that attitudeâs why they show up in the first place.â
My cheeks warmed, and I ducked my head with a laugh. âOkay, stop, youâre gonna make me weird about it.â
He chuckled, shaking his head as he went back to the baseboards. âJust callinâ it like I see it, superstar.â
âSuperstar,â I repeated with a groan. âGod, donât let Sarah hear you say that.â
âOh, too late,â he said, smirking. âShe already thinks you hung the moon.â
I smiled at that. âYeah, well⌠donât tell her, but I think she might be cooler than me.â
He didnât look up, but his voice softened. âYeah. Sheâs got pretty good taste, though.â
And just like that, the air shiftedâjust a little. And I couldnât help but wonder if he realized he was included in that.
â
The clock on the wall read 9:42 p.m., and Joel Miller was still here. I could hear the faint scrape of a utility knife coming from the other side of the room, followed by a frustrated sigh.
I padded down the hall, leaning against the doorway to find him crouched near the kitchen island, squinting at something on the floor. His flannel sleeves were rolled up, forearms dusted with sawdust, hair slightly disheveled from the long day.
âEverything okay?â I asked.
Joel exhaled through his nose and sat back on his heels, turning to look at me. âYeah, just⌠missinâ a piece I need to finish this trim.â He ran a hand through his hair, leaving it even messier than before. âIâll go grab it from the hardware store real quick. Be outta your hair after that.â
I smiled, crossing my arms. âYeah, you better. Donât you have a daughter to get home to?â
He huffed a laugh, eyes crinkling at the corners. âYeah, yeah. Sarahâll be fine. Sheâs probably still on the phone with her friend complaininâ about algebra.â
âSmart girl.â I hesitated for a second before straightening. âYou mind if I tag along?â
His eyebrows lifted slightly. âTo the hardware store?â
âYeah.â I shrugged. âIâve been cooped up here all day. A quick trip sounds nice. Plus⌠Iâve never been to a hardware store this late. Kinda curious what kind of characters weâll run into.â
He chuckled under his breath. âAll right, suit yourself. Just donât blame me when itâs not as exciting as youâre imagininâ.â
The hardware store was exactly as Iâd pictured itârows of tools, pipes, paint cans, and that faint metallic smell that reminded me of childhood. My dad used to drag me to places like this on weekends, letting me pick out paint colors for walls that never actually got painted.
Joel walked ahead of me, eyes scanning the aisles like heâd been born here. I followed, occasionally stopping to run my fingers along unfamiliar tools.
âWhatâs this?â I held up something that looked like a cross between scissors and a medieval torture devil.
He glanced over his shoulder. âTin snips.â
âAh.â I turned them in my hand. âFor⌠snipping tin, I assume?â
âSmart girl.â
I gave him a mock glare. âWatch it, Miller.â
He smirked and kept walking, turning into the next aisle. I followed, catching up just as he crouched down to grab a small package from the bottom shelf.
âThere she is,â he muttered, holding it up.
âThrilling.â I clapped my hands together. âThat was⌠what, a seven out of ten on the adventure scale?â
He chuckled. âMore like a two.â
âWell, maybe next time weâll hit up the plumbing section. Really go wild.â
His eyes met mine, and we both broke into laughter. I felt the warmth of it spread through me, the ease of being around him so simple and effortless. I didnât notice the kid with the phone a few aisles over, or the faint click of a camera shutter.
Joelâs pov
I had barely managed to get some sleep after the late-night trip to the hardware store with y/n. The drive had been strange, in the best way possible. It was the kind of moment where everything felt familiar and carefree, yet I couldnât shake the weight of the unspoken tension between us. The way she looked at me last nightâso open, so realâmade me feel like I was standing on the edge of something I wasnât sure I was ready for. But I couldnât ignore the way she made me feel, how easy it was to be around her.
This morning, I had to snap myself out of those thoughts. The quiet of the house was a bit too loud as I stepped into the kitchen, trying to shake off the remnants of sleep. Sarah was still asleep in her room, thank God. I had a few hours to get myself together before the day really started.
Thatâs when I heard her.
âDAD!â Sarahâs voice rang out from the living room, startling me. I rubbed my face and made my way down the hall, already bracing myself for whatever was coming.
When I reached the living room, Sarah was standing there, phone in hand, eyes wide with excitement. She was practically bouncing on her heels, her face flushed with energy. I wasnât sure what was going on, but I knew I wasnât going to like it.
âLook what I found!â she exclaimed, holding up her phone, the screen pointing directly at me. I squinted at it, immediately regretting the choice.
There was a picture of y/n and me from last night at the hardware store. It was a candid shotây/n had been laughing, her head thrown back, her eyes sparkling in the dim light. I was standing close to her, my face right beside hers, both of us sharing a moment that, to anyone else, probably looked⌠well, too intimate. Like we were more than we were.
I could feel my heart rate picking up, my stomach knotting. This wasnât how I wanted Sarah to see this. I wasnât ready to explain anything yet, least of all to her. I didnât want to complicate things between me and Lauren, but now⌠now it was out in the open, whether I was ready or not.
Sarahâs eyes were wide with excitement, but there was a hint of curiosity too, like she was waiting for me to say something.
âDad, is that you and⌠y/n?â she asked, her voice laced with both excitement and surprise. âYou guys look like youâre having so much fun. Whatâs going on? Were you two hanging out last night?â
I felt the heat rising in my face, and I could tell that I was doing my best to hide the anxiety gnawing at me. This was not the conversation Iâd planned on having today.
âItâs not what you think, Sarah,â I said, my voice low, trying to keep it casual, trying to keep things under control. âWe were just getting somethings for her house. Itâs no big deal.â
Her expression didnât change. She wasnât buying it. âNo big deal?â she repeated, raising an eyebrow. âDad, youâre literally standing there, like, super close to her. You two look like youâre having the best time. Whatâs going on? Are you two, like, friends orââ
âSarah,â I cut her off, trying not to sound too defensive. âI know how it looks, but I swear itâs just a friendly moment. We were just⌠talking. Thatâs all.â
But she wasnât convinced. âTalking? Dad, Iâve never seen you look at someone like that before.â
The weight of her words hit me harder than I expected. I wasnât sure why it stung so much, but it did. Sarah wasnât wrong. There was something between me and y/n. I wasnât blind to it. But this? This was complicated.
I ran a hand through my hair, trying to collect my thoughts. âItâs nothing to worry about,â I said, my voice steady, but the truth was that I wasnât even sure if I believed myself. âSheâs just⌠sheâs a friend, Sarah. Thatâs it.â
But the way she was looking at me told me she wasnât buying it, not for a second. âDad, youâre really bad at lying,â she said with a laugh, but there was a sharpness in her tone. âIâm just saying, youâre looking at her like⌠like you really like her. You should be honest with me.â
It wasnât the words, but the toneâthe way she said it, like she saw right through meâthat made me feel exposed. I had always prided myself on being able to manage my emotions, to keep my thoughts locked up tight. But with Sarah, with y/n⌠it was becoming harder and harder to hide what I felt.
I sighed, trying to soften the tension. âLook, Sarah⌠I donât want to get into this right now, okay? Just trust me when I say that nothingâs going on. I care about you, and thatâs my focus right now.â
She seemed to consider my words for a moment before giving me a knowing look. âFine, but just so you know, DadâŚâ She smirked. âI think you really like her.â
My stomach twisted at her words, but I tried to push the feeling down. âI donât know what youâre talking about,â I said, my voice a little too forceful, but I wasnât ready to dive deeper into this yet.
Sarah looked at me, her eyes narrowing just slightly. She wasnât giving up that easily, but thankfully, she dropped the subject. âWhatever, Dad. But if you do start liking her for real, you better tell me first. Got it?â
âGot it,â I said, giving her a reassuring smile, though I wasnât sure if I was reassuring myself or her.
She shrugged and walked off, heading back to her room with the picture still in her hand. My heart was still pounding in my chest. It wasnât just the photo that had me rattledâit was the truth that I wasnât sure how to confront yet.
Was I starting to like y/n? The answer was obvious. And yet, as I stood there in the silence of the house, I couldnât figure out if I was ready to admit it, especially not to Sarah.
The question lingered, unanswered, in my mind. But one thing was clear: this was just the beginning. And it wasnât going to be easy to figure out where it would go from here.
â
Joel was different the next time I saw him.
He showed up like usualâpunctual, focused, still dressed in that same worn flannel and faded jeans. But the easy warmth that usually hung between us was gone. The quiet jokes, the teasing smiles, the way his eyes would linger just a second longer than necessaryânone of it showed up today.
He barely looked at me.
I tried to ignore it at first. Thought maybe he was just tired or preoccupied with work. He and Tommy had been running around nonstop to finish the details on the house. But when I brought him a coffee mid-morning and he mumbled a polite âthanksâ without even glancing up, my stomach twisted.
Something was wrong. And whatever it was, it had to do with me.
I hovered in the doorway while he knelt by the fireplace, adjusting the custom mantel weâd argued about for a full twenty minutes last week. âOkay,â I finally said, gripping the edge of the doorframe. âWhatâs going on?â
Joel didnât answer right away. He kept working like I hadnât spoken at all. I watched the muscle in his jaw tighten as he used his level to check the alignment.
âJoel.â My voice softened. âTalk to me.â
He sighed through his nose, set down the tool, and wiped his hands on his jeans before finally turning toward me. His face was unreadable. âDid you see the picture?â
The picture.
My chest tightened. âWhat picture?â
His eyes flicked toward mine like he didnât believe me. âThe one from the hardware store.â His voice was low, careful. âThe one that ended up all over the damn internet.â
The words hit me like cold water. âWait. What?â
âYou really didnât see it?â
âNo.â My heart started to race. âJoel, I donât go looking for that stuff. Whatâwhat picture are you talking about?â
He rubbed a hand over his face and pulled out his phone. After a few swipes, he turned the screen toward me.
There it was. The photo. Us, standing in that stupid hardware store aisle, laughing like we didnât have a care in the world. From this angle, it did look⌠cozy. Familiar. Like we were something we werenât.
God.
I felt my stomach drop through the floor. âShit. IâJoel, I had no idea.â
He lowered the phone, his jaw tight. âYeah, well⌠Sarah found it this morning.â
I blinked. âSarah?â
He gave a short nod, eyes hard. âShe came runninâ downstairs with her phone, askinâ me if I was âdating a pop star.â Thought it was funny.â His mouth twisted like the word tasted bitter. âDidnât feel so funny to me.â
The guilt hit me hard and fast. I took a step toward him. âJoel, Iâm so sorry. I swear, I didnât know someone took that picture. I didnât mean for it toââ
âI know you didnât,â he cut in. His tone was sharp but tired. âBut it happened anyway, didnât it?â
The truth of it settled like a stone in my chest. He was right. Intentions didnât erase the fact that his lifeâhis daughterâs lifeâhad just been yanked into my world without warning. Without permission.
âLook,â I said, voice cracking slightly. âI can call my manager. Get them to reach out, try to take it down.â
He shook his head. âDoesnât matter. Once itâs out there, itâs out there.â
The silence that followed was thick and suffocating.
I wrapped my arms around myself and swallowed against the lump in my throat. âJoel⌠Iâm really, really sorry.â
He stood there for a long moment, eyes dropping to the floor like he was weighing something.
âI know you are,â he said finally. âBut I canât let Sarah get caught up in all this. I just⌠I canât.â
His voice was low, almost gentle, but it still hit like a gut punch.
Because âall thisâ was me.
And no matter how much I cared about himâhow much I liked him, admired him, wanted to be around himâthis was the part I could never change. The part I hated. The part where my life bled into someone elseâs without permission. Where someone like Joel Millerânormal, grounded, fiercely protective of his daughterâwould look at me and realize that whatever this had been?
It wasnât worth it.
I gave a small nod and forced a weak smile. âYeah. I get it.â
Joel didnât say anything else. He just gave a tight nod, turned back to the fireplace, and got back to work.
And I stood there for a few more seconds before heading upstairs, heart heavy, throat burning.
I didnât cry.
But God, I wanted to.
The next few days passed in a blur.
Joel came and went with Tommy to finish the last of the work on the house, but things between us were different nowâstrained, distant. He didnât avoid me completely, but he didnât go out of his way to talk to me either. No more lingering conversations about the best gas station snacks. No more teasing glances when I asked dumb questions about tools. Just quick, professional exchanges about the house.
It shouldnât have hurt as much as it did.
I tried to stay busy. Studio calls, interviews, brand meetingsâthey all demanded my attention, and I gave it to them. I smiled, answered questions about upcoming music, joked about how I was âjust a Texas girl at heart.â But the whole time, the memory of that picture, of Sarahâs name on Joelâs lips, sat heavy in my chest.
It was an accident. I hadnât asked for it. And yet, somehow, I still felt like Iâd broken something.
By the fourth day, Iâd had enough.
That evening, just after the sun dipped below the horizon, I heard the familiar rumble of Joelâs truck out front. I didnât overthink it. I walked downstairs, pulled open the front door before he could reach it, and stepped outside.
Joel stopped short on the porch, toolbox in hand. His eyes flicked to mine, guarded as ever. âEveninâ.â
âHey.â I crossed my arms, ignoring the way my heart jumped just from standing this close to him. âYou got a minute?â
He hesitated. âKinda gotta finish the bathroom groutââ
âIt can wait.â
His brows lifted slightly at the sharpness in my voice. He set the toolbox down with a sigh. âAll right.â
I leaned against the porch railing and took a breath. âLook⌠Iâm sorry about that picture. I know it put you in a bad spot with Sarah, and I swear I didnât know it was being taken. But I canât keep pretending everythingâs fine when youâve barely looked at me all week.â
Joel shifted his weight, rubbing the back of his neck. âI ainât been avoidinâ you.â
âYeah, you have.â I tilted my head. âYouâve been avoiding me since the picture thing. And I get itâit sucks. You didnât ask to get dragged into all that. But I thought we were at least friends.â
He exhaled heavily and looked down at the porch. âWe are.â
âThen act like it.â I gestured toward the front door. âI feel like youâve been treating me like Iâm radioactive or something.â
His mouth twitched, not quite a smile. âAinât you, like, a global sensation or whatever? Radioactive sounds about right.â
I let out a sharp laugh. âSeriously?â
He finally met my eyes. There was something softer there now, something that chipped away at the tension. âI dunno, y/n,â he said after a moment. âI guess I just⌠got caught off guard by all of it.â
âThe picture?â
He shook his head slowly. âNah. More like⌠what it stirred up.â
I froze. âWhat does that mean?â
He dragged a hand down his face, clearly frustrated. âI mean⌠I spend most of my time tryinâ to keep life simple. Easy. Predictable. And then I meet you, and suddenly thereâs a picture of us floatinâ around the internet, and Sarahâs gigglinâ about it, and Tommyâs givinâ me shit every day about how I âcanât handle all that.ââ He let out a humorless laugh. âAnd the worst part is, heâs probably right.â
My heart stuttered. âWhy?â
Joelâs eyes caught mine, steady and unguarded for the first time in days. âBecause Iâve been in denial about this whole thing since the minute I saw you onstage.â
My breath caught.
There it was. No dancing around it this time. No quiet looks or lingering glances. Heâd said it out loud.
âYouâve been⌠what?â I asked, voice unsteady.
He gave a small shake of his head and ran a hand through his hair. âPretendinâ it donât mean anything,â he said softly. âThat youâre just some client and Iâm just here to finish a job. But Iâm lyinâ to myself.â
The air between us thickened. I gripped the railing so tightly my knuckles ached. âJoelâŚâ
âI know,â he said, cutting me off. His voice was rough. âItâs complicated. Sarah, my job⌠your life, your whole⌠world.â He huffed out a breath and glanced at me. âI just⌠needed you to know I ainât avoidinâ you because I donât care. Iâm avoidinâ you âcause I care more than I should.â
The confession knocked the air out of me.
I couldâve kissed him then. Couldâve stepped forward and closed the gap, erased every last inch of distance. But instead, I smiled softly and reached out, brushing my fingers lightly over his forearm. âYou think too much, Miller.â
Joel let out a low chuckle and shook his head. âYou donât think enough.â
âMaybe.â I squeezed his arm once before dropping my hand. âBut Iâm not scared of complicated.â
It was one of those rare moments-those fleeting ones where everything felt like it was shifting into place.
The house was still a mess, not completely finished, but it felt intimate, in its own way. The lights were dimmed, casting a soft glow over the room, and for some reason, everything else seemed to fade away.
The music playing softly from a Bluetooth speaker in the corner was barely audible. It was just us, in this moment, and the world outside didn't matter.
Joel's eyes were on me, steady and intense, like he was studying every inch of my face. There was something in the way he looked at me-something that had been building for weeks, simmering beneath the surface.
I stepped closer, drawn to him. Every part of me wanted to bridge the distance between us, to finally give in to whatever this was, this magnetic pull that had been growing since the moment we met.
"You know," I started, my voice softer than usual,"I'm really glad you're working on my house. It feels... different when you're here."
His gaze flickered down to my lips for a fraction of a second, and that was enough. My heart skipped a beat.
"Yeah?" he said, his voice low, his usual confidence faltering slightly. "I'm glad to be here, too."
I could feel the tension in the air, thick and tangible now. We were standing close, too close, but neither of us was stepping away. I could hear my own breathing, shallow and quick, as if my body was already betraying me, telling me what I already knew.
I could feel the heat from his body, the warmth of his breath, and I knew-we both knew-that something was about to happen.
I took another step forward, my fingers brushing lightly against his arm. He didn't pull away. Instead, he reached up, his hand hovering near my face, like he wasn't sure if he should touch me.
"You're so..." he started, but his words trailed off.
I didn't need him to finish. I could feel it-the pull, the magnetism. I leaned in just a little bit more, my lips barely brushing against his ear as I whispered, "I've wanted this for a while Joel."
The words hung in the air between us, thick and heavy. For a second, I thought I saw his resolve crack. His eyes softened, the sharpness from before blurring into something warmer, something more vulnerable.
He stepped in closer, his breath on my neck sending a shiver through me. His lips were inches away from mine, and I could feel the moment hanging on a thread.
Then, just as our lips were about to meet, the door slammed open.
"Hey, Joel! I need your-" Tommy's voice came booming from the hallway, interrupting everything.
I froze, and so did Joel. His eyes darted away from me, that familiar guarded expression slipping back into place.
He stepped back, like he was trying to pull himself together, but I could see the way his hands were trembling slightly, betraying the tension that had been building between us.
Tommy appeared in the doorway, blissfully unaware of the moment he'd just interrupted. "Oh, sorry, I didn't mean to... well, yeah, justâ" He cleared his throat, clearly sensing the awkward energy. "I need your help with something in the garage."
Joel let out a heavy sigh, his shoulders slumping.
He looked at me, and for a split second, I could have sworn I saw regret in his eyes-like he was frustrated, too.
"Alright, Tommy. Just give me a minute," Joel muttered, walking past me without another word.
I stayed where I was, my body still buzzing from what had almost happened. The connection between us hadn't dissipated-it lingered, humming between us like an electric current.
Tommy was already halfway down the hall before Joel caught up with him, offering me a brief, almost apologetic glance.
I stood there in the dim light of the living room, my heart racing. I didn't know if I was more frustrated or relieved.
But deep down, I knew one thing for sure: this wasn't over. Not by a long shot.
â
The next day, the air felt thick with tension, like something had shifted between us and I wasn't sure how to navigate it. I hadn't heard from Joel since last night, but I couldn't stop thinking about that almost-kiss. The way everything felt in that moment-like we were so close to crossing a line that neither of us fully understood. It lingered in my mind, that charged silence, the unspoken words that seemed to hover in the air between us.
I'd tried to go about my day, tried to keep myself busy with meetings and interviews, but all I could think about was Joel. The warmth of his touch, the way his eyes had looked at me as he'd almost kissed me-like he wanted to but couldn't let himself. It was maddening.
Finally, after hours of pretending like everything was normal, Joel showed up at the house. He was here to do some more work with Tommy, but I could tell from the moment he walked through the door that something was different between us.
There was a heaviness to his steps, a tightness in his jaw that made the air feel suffocating.
I was in the living room when he came in, and I knew this was it-the moment where we would either pretend it hadn't happened or face the truth of what had been building between us for so long.
He cleared his throat, a little awkwardly, as he stopped just inside the door.
"Hey," he said, his voice lower than usual, like he wasn't sure how to start. "I... I wanted to talk about last night."
I glanced up from where l'd been sitting, my heart instantly picking up pace. "Yeah?" | tried to keep my voice casual, but there was no hiding the fact that I was still processing everything that had happened.
Joel ran a hand through his hair, clearly uneasy.
"Look, I... I just want to say that what happened-what almost happened-was a mistake. I don't want you to think I'm some kind of... I don't know, some guy who takes advantage of situations like that."
My chest tightened, and I stood up from the couch, crossing the room to face him. "Joel, it wasn't a mistake," I said softly, but firmly. "You don't have to apologize for it."
He looked at me, his brows furrowing, like he was trying to figure out if I was being serious. "Y/n, it was a mistake," he repeated, his voice a little more strained now. "I mean. you're... you're so young, and I'm-"
I cut him off, not wanting to hear him talk down to himself like that. "I'm not a kid, Joel," I said, the words coming out sharper than I meant. "And I don't need you to protect me from myself."
He looked taken aback, clearly not expecting my response, but there was something else in his eyes-something softening, something that told me he wasn't as sure about his apology as he was trying to make it seem.
"I just didn't want you to think I-" he started again, but I took a step closer, interrupting him once more.
"No, Joel. I've been in this world, l've dealt with a lot more than people think. And you..." I paused, looking up at him, feeling the weight of everything that had been building between us.
"You're not just some guy l've been casually seeing. There's something here. I feel it, and I know you do too."
His eyes softened at my words, and for the first time, I could see the walls he'd been building around himself start to crack. He let out a deep breath, his hands running over his face as if he was trying to come to terms with the fact that he couldn't deny what was happening between us anymore.
"Y/n..." He stopped, the words catching in his throat. "I don't know what this is, but I'm trying to figure it out."
"Me too," I whispered, finally closing the last bit of distance between us. "But maybe we don't need to figure everything out right now. Maybe we just need to stop pretending that this isn't happening."
I reached out, my fingers brushing lightly against his chest, and I felt him freeze under my touch. His eyes were locked on mine, and for a long moment, we both just stood there, both of us breathing a little too quickly, both of us waiting for the other to make a move.
Then, finally, Joel spoke in a low voice that made my heart skip. "Are you sure about this?"
I didn't answer with words. Instead, I leaned up slowly, giving him every chance to pull away if he wanted to, but he didn't. And when our lips met, it was like everything fell into place.
It wasn't a slow, tentative kiss this time. It was desperate, passionate-an unspoken release of all the tension that had been building between us for so long. His hands were at my waist, pulling me against him as if he couldn't get close enough.
I tangled my fingers in his hair, feeling the way his body tensed beneath mine, the way he was finally giving in to something he had been holding back for so long.
I could feel the heat between us, the raw energy that pulsed through every touch, every kiss. It was like nothing else mattered in that moment-no fears, no regrets, no questions about what this would mean. There was only him, only us, caught in the rush of something real.
Our lips moved together, urgent and hungry, as if we were both finally acknowledging the truth we'd been dancing around. The kiss deepened, becoming more frantic, our bodies pressing closer together, craving the connection we'd been denying.
When we finally broke apart, we were both breathless, our chests rising and falling as we tried to catch our breath. I could see the same question in his eyes-the same look of wonder and disbelief, like neither of us could believe what had just happened.
But I didn't need words this time. I didn't need him to apologize again, or explain himself. I just needed him to know that it wasn't a mistake, and that I wasn't backing away from this.
I stepped back slightly, my fingers still tracing his jaw, and I looked up at him, my voice low. "It wasn't a mistake, Joel. It never was."
And for the first time in what felt like forever, I saw him smile-genuinely. It wasn't forced, or awkward, or hesitant. It was real.
And in that smile, I knew. This wasn't over. This was only the beginning.
â
We spent hours together in the quiet of my house. The sound of my music barely registering in the background as we talked, laughed, and touched. There were no real words for the way we fit togetherâhow perfectly we seemed to complete each other. And the way we kissedâGod, the way he kissed meâit was like he was marking me as his own, like every kiss was a promise.
One night, after a long day of working on my house, Joel and I found ourselves alone in my bedroom, the door cracked open just enough for the light from the hallway to seep in. He was standing by the window, watching the last slivers of sunlight fade behind the trees. I couldnât help myselfâI walked up to him, standing just behind him, letting my hands brush over his shoulders.
Without turning, he murmured, âYouâre always so quiet around me.â His voice was low, almost a growl. He tilted his head slightly, just enough for his lips to graze the side of my neck. âWhatâs goinâ on in that head of yours?â
I closed my eyes, leaning into him. âYou know whatâs going on,â I whispered back. I slid my arms around his waist, my chest pressing against his back. The warmth of his body, the scent of his cologne mixing with the musk of sweat, was intoxicating. He turned around then, his eyes darker than before, as if he were trying to fight back something deeper inside him.
Joel was always so controlledâalways careful with his emotions, with what he let slip. But I knew it was different with me.
His hand cupped my face, his thumb tracing the curve of my cheek as if memorizing every inch of me. âYouâre makinâ it hard to breathe, darlinâ.â
âYou make me forget to breathe,â I admitted, my fingers brushing against his chest. I leaned in, the distance between us practically nonexistent. âDonât fight this. Donât fight us.â
His lips met mine, urgent and hungry. There was no hesitation this time, no distance between us. The kiss was full of needâyears of repressed emotions finally crashing together in one fluid motion. His hands were on me, under me, pulling me closer, as if he couldnât get enough. My hands found his hair, tangled in the strands as I deepened the kiss, needing to feel him closer. The energy between us was electric, an unspoken connection that neither of us could deny anymore.
We stumbled back toward the bed, not breaking apart for a second. I couldnât think, couldnât focus on anything other than the way his lips moved with mine, the way his body pressed against me. The yearning, the hungerâit was all too much and not enough all at once.
He pulled back for a breath, his chest rising and falling in quick succession. âYou sure about this, Lauren?â His voice was rough, like he was fighting against a tide pulling him under.
I nodded, pulling him back toward me, my hands gripping his shirt, desperate for him. âIâm sure. God, Joel, Iâm so sure.â
And then there was nothing but us, lost in the pull of one another. Nothing else mattered. Not the noise of the world outside, not the worries that had plagued us both. In that moment, all we had was the now, and it felt like the most powerful thing we could ever give each other.
The night blurred by in a haze of soft whispers, heated touches, and frantic kisses. We explored each other like we had all the time in the world, but both of us knew we were racing against something unspoken. The desire was overwhelming, and every inch of his skin against mine made me ache for more.
When we finally lay in bed together, tangled in the sheets, the silence felt heavier than the night before. I turned to him, running my fingers over his chest, tracing the faint outline of a scar near his ribs.
Joelâs eyes were still dark, a fire burning in them, and his hand rested on my back, his thumb rubbing slow circles. He glanced down at me, his lips curling into that familiar lopsided grin. âYou were right, darlinâ,â he said softly, his voice husky. âWe do get better with practice.â
I smiled, my heart still racing from the intensity of what we had shared. âIâll take your word for it.â
But deep down, I knew one thing: this was just the beginning. There would be more. So much more between us. And even though it was complicated, even though we were still figuring it all out, I wouldnât change a thing.
We were finally where we were meant to be.
â
Sneaking around with Joel was a dangerous game.
Not because we were doing anything illegalâbut because every glance, every brush of his hand against mine when no one was looking, every stolen moment made me want more. And when it came to Joel, more was a slippery slope I was already tumbling down headfirst.
It started small.
The first time, we were in my kitchen. Tommy was in the living room talking on the phone with some supplier, and I was pretending to organize my spice cabinet while Joel installed a new light fixture above the island. I didnât need to be in there. I couldâve left and let them work. But when Joel was around, leaving didnât feel like an option.
He was on the ladder, arms raised as he adjusted the fixture, his shirt riding up just enough to show a strip of tan skin. I didnât realize I was staring until his voice snapped me out of it.
âSee somethinâ you like?â he murmured without looking down.
Heat shot through me. âYeah. My new light fixture.â
Joelâs shoulders shook with a quiet laugh. He climbed down, stepping close enough that I caught that familiar mix of cedar and sawdust clinging to his skin. âSure it is.â
Tommyâs voice carried from the other roomâloud, oblivious.
Joelâs eyes flicked toward the doorway, then back to me. His hand brushed against mine on the counter. He didnât grab it. Didnât lace his fingers with mine. Just⌠touched. A whisper of contact that sent a shiver down my spine.
I bit the inside of my cheek to keep from smiling. âCareful, Miller. Tommyâs right there.â
Joelâs thumb grazed mine. âDonât tempt me, sweetheart.â
And just like that, the light fixture was the least interesting thing in the kitchen.
The next time, we werenât quite as subtle.
It was late, and Joel was helping me move some furniture in the upstairs guest room. Sarah had just gone to a sleepover, and Tommy had headed home for the night, leaving us blissfully alone for the first time in days.
Weâd started with actual workâreally, we had. The guest bed was heavy, and the dresser was wedged at an impossible angle against the wall. But somewhere between Joel teasing me about my lack of upper body strength and me calling him âold manâ one too many times, things shifted.
I was standing against the wall, still laughing from some joke heâd made, when he caged me in with his arms.
âStill think Iâm old, huh?â he asked, voice low.
I swallowed hard. âWell, you did complain about your back twice today.â
His lips twitched. âYouâre pushinâ your luck, darlinâ.â
âI like pushing it.â
Joelâs eyes darkened. He leaned down and kissed meâslow, deep, his hand slipping beneath my T-shirt to rest against the small of my back. I melted into him immediately, fingers tangling in his hair as he pressed me harder against the wall.
The kiss turned messy fast. He groaned when I nipped his bottom lip, and I gasped when he responded by gripping my hips and dragging me closer. It was the kind of kiss that promised more, the kind that made me forget that the guest room window was cracked open and that sound carried.
The slam of a car door outside brought us crashing back to reality.
We broke apart, breathing hard. Joel wiped his mouth with the back of his hand and gave me a lopsided, regretful grin. âGuess we should get back to work.â
âYeah,â I panted. âTotally.â
Spoiler: we didnât move the dresser for another twenty minutes.
Sneaking around with Joel meant stolen phone calls late at night, when Sarah was asleep and his house was quiet.
It meant me dragging him into my music room one afternoon, away from Tommyâs curious eyes, just to kiss him breathless on the worn-out couch.
It was ridiculous. It was fun. It was dangerous.
And neither of us could stop.
â
One afternoon, Tommy caught us almost-red-handed.
I was sitting on the kitchen counter, legs dangling, Joel standing between my knees with his hands on my thighs. We werenât kissingânot yetâbut we were definitely standing too close to be discussing drywall.
âYouâre gonna get me in trouble,â Joel muttered.
âYou love it.â
He grinned and squeezed my leg. âI do not.â
Before I could argue, the front door creaked open.
âJoel? You still here?â Tommyâs voice echoed from the entryway.
Joel jumped back so fast I nearly fell off the counter. I caught myself just in time, schooling my face into what I hoped was an innocent expression.
Tommy stepped into the kitchen, eyes flicking from me to Joel. His brows lifted. âInterrupt somethinâ?â
âNope,â Joel said quickly. âJustâuhâtalkinâ about the backsplash.â
I bit my lip to keep from laughing.
Tommy didnât buy it for a second. He smirked and shook his head. âYeah, all right. You keep tellinâ yourself that.â
Joel turned bright red. I couldnât stop smiling for the rest of the day.
Sneaking around wasnât sustainable. We knew that.
But every time I caught Joel looking at me across the room when he thought I wasnât paying attention, every time his hand brushed mine on purpose, every time we kissed like we didnât care who sawâŚ
I knew one thing for certain.
When we finally stopped sneaking, the fallout was going to be worth it.
It had been a slow, steady build-upâevery stolen glance, every touch, every quiet moment. But in the heat of the moment, I didnât realize how obvious we were being until Tommy walked into the living room and caught us.
We were standing by the couch, Joelâs hands tangled in my hair, his lips pressed against mine with a desperation neither of us was trying to hide anymore. It was like the world outside that room ceased to existâuntil it didnât.
Tommyâs voice broke through the air like a cold slap. âWell, this is⌠something.â
Joel pulled away instantly, eyes wide, and his hand shot up as if to ward off the inevitable. âTommy, waitââ
But it was too late. Tommy was already leaning against the doorframe, arms crossed, a smug grin on his face. He raised an eyebrow, looking from Joel to me and back again. âIâm just gonna go ahead and assume this isnât the first time this has happened.â
I opened my mouth to explain, but Tommy cut me off, his grin widening. âYâknow, Iâve been tryinâ to avoid this. But now that itâs right in front of meââ He looked down at his shoes with exaggerated thoughtfulness. âI gotta admit⌠I owe Sarah so much money.â
Joel froze, his face going red. âWhat the hell are you talkinâ about?â
Tommy uncrossed his arms and looked at Joel with amusement. âSarah. She bet me you two were already messinâ around.â
Joelâs jaw dropped, and I felt my face burn. âNo way,â he muttered. âSheâshe bet you? Seriously?â
âYep. Sheâs been on my case about it for weeks. Figured I owed her that money anyway, so Iâm glad to be rid of it.â Tommyâs tone was casual, but there was a hint of something else thereâa mix of mischief and, maybe, a little concern.
I looked at Joel, trying to process what was happening. âSo, she knew?â
âOf course she knew. Sheâs not as oblivious as you two seem to think,â Tommy teased, before his expression shifted to something a little more serious. âBut⌠yâall didnât want her to know, right?â
Joel sighed, running a hand through his hair, looking like he was suddenly about to burst from the pressure. âNot yet,â he said, voice low. âWeâre still trying to figure this out. I havenât even had the chance to take her out on a real date, man. Everythingâs⌠messy.â
Tommy raised an eyebrow, leaning against the doorframe. âYeah? Messy, huh? You two sure look like youâve got everything figured out.â
âNot exactly,â Joel muttered, rubbing his face in frustration. âBut weâre not ready to deal with it. Not yet.â He met Tommyâs gaze, tone more serious now. âCan you keep it quiet? Just until we figure out what the hell this is?â
Tommy paused, then grinned. âI can keep quiet. But this is gonna be fun to watch.â He held up his hands, like he was surrendering. âNo promises, though. Iâm still Team Sarah on this one.â
Joel shot him a look that couldâve frozen water. âYou better not say anything to her, Tommy. Iâm serious.â
Tommy held up his hands in mock surrender, laughing. âI wonât. For now, anyway.â He pushed off the doorframe and gave us a knowing smile. âBut, you two better figure it out quick, because Sarahâs gonna want to know why her dad is sneaking around with her favorite pop star.â
âThanks for the heads-up,â Joel grumbled, clearly still uneasy, but Tommy had already turned and left, muttering something under his breath about needing a beer.
I turned back to Joel, heart still racing from the confrontation. âSo⌠this is really happening, huh?â
Joel ran a hand over his face again. âI guess so. But we gotta take it slow, y/n. We owe it to Sarah⌠and to ourselves.â He stepped toward me, his expression softening. âLetâs not rush into this. I canât promise Iâll be perfect, but I can promise Iâm not running away.â
I nodded, feeling a wave of relief wash over me. âWeâll figure it out. No pressure.â
Joelâs lips curved into a small, tentative smile. âGood. I donât want to mess this up.â
âMe neither.â
The tension in the air had shifted, but it wasnât over. Not yet. We had a lot of questions left unanswered. But for the first time, I felt like maybe we were on the same page.
We still had a long way to goâbut at least we were taking the first step together.
â
Being with Joel felt different than I expectedâeasier in some ways, harder in others. It wasnât like the whirlwind relationships Iâd had before, the ones that burned hot and fast before fizzling out. Joel was steady, deliberate. The kind of man who made sure things were built to last.
Once we stopped pretending we didnât want this, everything changed. He was still his gruff, no-nonsense self, but now his touch lingered when he brushed past me. Now his eyes softened when they met mine across a room. Now he kissed me slow and deep when no one was watching and sometimes even when they were.
But being with Joel also meant being with Sarah and Tommy.
Sarah, of course, was ecstatic. The morning after we finally made things official, she nearly tackled me in the kitchen, eyes bright with excitement.
âI knew it,â she practically yelled, grinning. âI mean, I bet on it, so I really knew it.â
I raised an eyebrow. âBet on it?â
Sarahâs grin widened, and thatâs when Tommy strolled in, smirking.
âDonât tell her, Sarah,â he said, pouring himself coffee. âI ainât got the cash yet.â
Joel groaned from where he stood by the fridge. âYâall gambled on my love life?â
âMore like invested,â Tommy shot back, winking at me.
Sarah wiggled her eyebrows. âSo, do I win the pot, orâŚ?â
I laughed, but Joel just shook his head, rubbing a hand over his face like he was seriously reconsidering his life choices.
Being with Joel meant stolen moments in between my hectic schedule. It meant late-night dinners when I got home from rehearsals, sitting on the kitchen counter while he cooked something simple, rolling his eyes when I tried to help. It meant quiet mornings, wrapped in his arms, pressing sleepy kisses against his jaw before slipping out of bed to get ready for the day.
It also meant dealing with the outside world.
We had kept things quiet for a while, but people caught on fast. A blurry picture here, a leaked story there, and suddenly, headlines were calling me the pop star dating a Texas contractor, which was ridiculous and not even remotely close to who Joel actually was.
I expected him to hate it, but surprisingly, he handled it well.
âIgnore it,â I told him one night, lying on the couch with my head in his lap as he scrolled through his phone.
âDidnât say nothinâ,â he murmured, but his jaw was tight.
I reached up, running my fingers along his beard. âIf it really bothers youââ
âIt doesnât,â he said, looking down at me, expression softening. âLong as weâre good, I donât give a damn what anyone else says.â
And we were good. Better than good.
One night, after a show, I came backstage to find Joel leaning against the wall, arms crossed, waiting for me.
âTook you long enough,â he said, smirking.
I rolled my eyes. âYouâre just mad âcause Tommy and Sarah dragged you here early.â
âThey did,â he admitted, pushing off the wall and stepping closer. His voice lowered as he murmured, âWorth it, though.â
I smiled, reaching up to fix the collar of his shirt. âYeah?â
Joel didnât answer with words. He just pulled me in, his lips brushing against mineâslow, steady, full of promise.
It was still surreal sometimes, having this lifeâthe fame, the lights, the chaosâand him all at once. But as long as I had Joel, I had something real. Something worth holding onto.
somewhere in northern italy
older!joel miller x younger!reader
summary: A summer in the heart of Tuscany rekindles an unexpected connection between y/n, a spirited traveler with Italian roots, and Joel, an enigmatic older man from her past, as love blooms amidst sunlit vineyards, secret ambitions, and the allure of second chances.
a/n: I miss summer, reader speaks Italian, Joelâs business man, this is all fluff, kissing
joel miller masterlist
There was something about summers in Italy that made me feel like I was living in a dream. Maybe it was the slow mornings spent sipping cappuccinos in the sun or the way the golden light bathed everything in warmth. Or maybe it was just the way life felt simpler here, quieter, like I could finally breathe.
Nonna always said I belonged here more than anywhere else. âSei come me, y/n. Il tuo cuore è italiano.â Youâre like me, y/n. Your heart is Italian.
Maybe she was right.
It was another warm evening when I saw him.
I had just left the market, a bag of peaches cradled in my arms, when I caught sight of someone who looked so entirely out of place that I almost didnât believe it.
Joel Miller.
For a second, I thought I was imagining things.
He didnât belong here. Not in the way the locals did, with their easy smiles and the familiarity in their movements. He stood apartâtoo refined, too polished. His clothes were simpleâdark slacks, a crisp button-down with the sleeves rolled upâbut they fit him too well, like they had been made just for him. And then there was the watch. Sleek. Understated. Expensive.
But it wasnât just the way he looked. It was the way he carried himself. Relaxed, but deliberate. Like a man used to being in control.
I should have kept walking.
But then he looked up, and our eyes met.
Something in my chest tightened.
His brow creased slightly, and he glanced at his phone before looking back at the buildings around him.
I slowed. âTi sei perso?â
Joelâs head snapped toward me, his gaze sharp before recognition flickered across his face. Then came the smirkâslow and knowing.
âWell, hell,â he muttered.
I raised an eyebrow. âAre you lost?â
He exhaled a short laugh, rubbing the back of his neck. âSomethinâ like that.â
I shifted the bag in my arms, studying him. âWhat are you doing in Tuscany?â
His smirk didnât fade, but something about his expression changed, like he was waiting to see how Iâd react to whatever he said next.
âWork.â
Interesting. Joel looked like a man who worked with his hands, but he didnât carry himself like a businessman either. Not the kind who sat behind a desk all day, at least.
âWhat kind of work?â I pressed.
A pause. âBusiness.â
Vague. Purposefully so.
I hummed, but let it goâfor now.
Joel chuckled, shaking his head. âDidnât expect an interrogation when I stopped to ask for directions.â
I smiled. âFine. Where are you trying to go?â
He glanced at his phone, then back at me. âSome restaurantâuh, Trattoria del Sole?â His pronunciation was terrible.
I laughed. âYou mean this Trattoria del Sole?â I turned and pointed to the restaurant just across the piazza.
Joel followed my gaze, then exhaled another quiet laugh, shaking his head. âWell, hell.â
I bit my lip to hide my smile. âGuess you were lost.â
Joel looked at me for a long moment, like he was still trying to piece together how, out of all places, I was standing in front of him.
âYou always spend your summers here?â he asked.
âYes and no,â I said, adjusting the bag in my arms. âMy grandmother lives here. I grew up coming to visit.â
He nodded, considering.
Then, after a beat, âJoin me for dinner.â
It wasnât a question.
I studied him, weighing the offer.
Joel had always been like thisâstraightforward, sure of himself. It wasnât arrogance, exactly, but he wasnât the kind of man who expected to be told no.
I liked that. But I liked keeping him on his toes more.
I raised an eyebrow. âYou always invite old acquaintances to dinner?â
Joel smirked, slow and lazy. âOnly the ones who used to babysit my kid.â
A laugh bubbled up in my throat. âThat was a long time ago.â
His eyes glinted with something unreadable. âStill happened.â
I exhaled, shifting the bag of peaches in my arms. âAlright,â I said finally. âBut only because Iâm curious.â
âAbout what?â
I stepped past him, toward the restaurant, glancing back just enough to catch the glint of amusement in his eyes.
âAbout you.â
And just like that, dinner became the start of something I wasnât sure I was ready for.
The restaurant was warm and intimate, the kind of place where locals lingered over wine and spoke in hushed, easy tones. Golden candlelight flickered against the stone walls, and the scent of garlic and fresh basil filled the air.
Joel sat across from me, one arm draped over the back of his chair, fingers lightly tapping against the wood. He looked at ease, but I could tell he was studying me, the way I moved, the way I spoke. Like he was trying to figure me out.
I let him wonder.
The waiter approached, speaking to me in rapid Italian. âAcqua naturale o frizzante?â
I glanced at Joel. He looked completely lost.
Biting back a smile, I turned back to the waiter. âNaturale, grazie.â Then, I glanced at Joel again. âStill need a translator?â
He smirked. âWorkinâ on it.â
I hummed. âYou should work faster.â
Joel let out a quiet chuckle, shaking his head. âSomethinâ tells me you like havinâ the upper hand.â
I tilted my head. âMaybe.â
The waiter returned with the water, and we placed our ordersâwell, I did. Joel simply glanced at me and said, âOrder for me.â
I raised an eyebrow. âYou trust me with that?â
His lips twitched. âReckon I do.â
Interesting.
I ordered us both pastaâsomething simple, fresh, the kind of meal that let the ingredients speak for themselves. When the waiter left, I leaned forward, resting my chin on my hand.
âSo, Joel,â I said, tasting his name on my tongue, watching the way his expression flickered when I said it. âWhat kind of business brings you to Italy?â
His gaze held mine for a beat, unreadable. Then, he exhaled, leaning back. âInvestments.â
I considered him. âNot exactly a vacation, then.â
âNot exactly.â
I twirled the stem of my wine glass between my fingers. âYou donât stay in one place long, do you?â
Joelâs jaw ticked slightly. âDepends on the place.â
Something in his tone made my stomach flip.
Outside, the night had deepened, the piazza quieter now, bathed in the soft glow of the streetlamps.
Joel walked beside me as I led him through the winding streets. His pace was slow, deliberate, like he was in no rush to leave.
I stopped at a small bridge overlooking the canal, leaning against the stone railing. He stood beside me, close but not touching.
âYou enjoyed yourself,â I said, watching the water ripple below.
He smirked. âThat obvious?â
I turned to face him. âYou donât strike me as the kind of man who does things he doesnât enjoy.â
Joel exhaled, his gaze drifting over my face, pausing just briefly at my lips before meeting my eyes again.
âYouâd be right,â he murmured.
I should go.
But then his fingers grazed my wrist, settling lightly against my skin. Not pulling, not demanding. Just⌠there.
I could have stepped away.
But I didnât.
I should have walked away sooner.
That was the smart thing to doâleave before I got too comfortable, before the pull between us became something I couldnât ignore.
But when Joelâs fingers grazed my wrist, lingering just enough to make my breath hitch, I knew I was already in trouble.
Still, I smiled softly and pulled away. âGoodnight, Joel.â
He didnât stop me. Didnât try to convince me to stay.
But as I walked away, I could feel his eyes on me, the weight of his presence still thick in the warm summer air.
And for the first time in a long time, I left someone behind and actually wished I hadnât.
â
I didnât expect to see him again.
Tuscany was big enough for two people to never cross paths twice, but small enough that fate sometimes had other plans.
It was three days later when I spotted him again, standing near a vineyard just outside of town, speaking with a man I recognized as one of the local winemakers. His sleeves were rolled up again, exposing strong forearms, and his brows were furrowed as he listened, nodding at whatever was being said.
I should have kept walking.
But something made me stop.
Maybe it was curiosity. Maybe it was something else.
I stepped closer, tilting my head with a smirk. âYou still lost?â
Joel turned, his expression shifting from mild surprise to something softer, something unreadable.
âWell, if I was, reckon youâd enjoy that too much,â he said, that slow drawl making me bite back a smile.
âMaybe,â I admitted. âYouâre fun to mess with.â
He exhaled a quiet chuckle, shaking his head.
The winemaker excused himself, leaving us alone.
Joel watched me, that same way he had the night we metâlike he was still trying to figure me out.
âYou stickinâ around long?â I asked, arms folding over my chest.
âFor a little while,â he said.
A beat of silence stretched between us. The midday sun was high, casting long shadows over the vineyard.
Then, I made a decision.
âYouâve only seen the surface of Tuscany,â I said. âThe tourist spots. The places people write about in guidebooks.â
Joel raised an eyebrow. âAnd you know better?â
I smirked. âI know the good places.â
His lips twitched. âThat so?â
I took a step back, tilting my head toward the narrow road leading away from the vineyard. âCome on, Mister Miller. Let me show you the real Tuscany.â
Joel exhaled, shaking his head slightlyâlike he couldnât believe he was agreeing to thisâbut he followed.
And just like that, our summer began.
â
I didnât give him the tourist tour.
I took him through the narrow alleys tourists never found, past crumbling walls where wildflowers spilled from cracks in the stone. We ducked into the tiny bakery run by Signora Valli, where Joel nodded politely as she scolded me for staying away too long.
âShe likes you,â Joel said when we stepped back into the sun.
âThat was her being nice,â I said, breaking off a piece of warm cornetto and handing it to him.
He chewed thoughtfully. âSo, whatâs she say when sheâs mean?â
I grinned. âYou donât want to know.â
We wandered down to the olive groves, where the cicadas hummed and the sun turned the leaves silver-green. I showed him where the best figs grew, and when I pointed to the twisted old tree near the stone wall, Joel surprised me by stepping forward and tugging a ripe fig from a low branch.
âDidnât think youâd climb a tree,â I said as he handed it to me.
He shrugged. âDidnât have to. Got you to do all the hard work.â
I shot him a glare and bit into the fig, sweet juice dripping down my wrist. His eyes followed the movement, dark and intent. I didnât wipe it away.
By late afternoon, we ended up at the old stone bridge overlooking the vineyards. I leaned against the warm stone, watching the distant figures move between the vines. Joel stood beside me, arms crossed, gaze on the horizon.
âYou really spend every summer here?â he asked after a while.
âEvery one I can.â I smiled faintly. âNonna likes having me around. Says I keep her young.â
Joel huffed a laugh. âDonât reckon she needs help with that. She looks like she runs the place.â
âShe does,â I said, grinning. âThe whole villageâs scared of her.â
He smirked but didnât respond. The breeze tugged at the hair curling against his temple, and I caught myself staring.
I glanced away. âWhat about you? Youâre supposed to be working, arenât you?â
His jaw shifted. âYeah.â
âThat convincing?â
He shot me a sidelong glance. âNo.â
I waited, but he didnât offer more. I shouldâve been annoyed, but it was hard to be when he stood there like thatâsolid and unyielding, like the bridge itself.
The wind shifted, carrying the scent of rosemary and cypress. I rubbed my thumb along the stone. âSo, is Tuscany what you expected?â
Joelâs eyes flicked to mine. âDidnât expect Tuscany.â
The air thickened between us. His gaze didnât waver.
I felt it againâthat pull, familiar now but no less disorienting. Like standing at the edge of a step you didnât know was there.
I opened my mouth to deflect with a joke, but Joel shifted closer, his arm brushing mine. The warmth of it sank through the fabric of my dress, solid and steady.
The sun dipped lower over the vineyards, painting the sky in soft strokes of orange and pink. We sat on the low stone wall at the edge of the hill, our legs dangling over the side. The breeze carried the scent of wild thyme and warm earth, and somewhere in the distance, a church bell rang.
Joel stretched his legs out in front of him, his boots scuffed against the old stones. His hand rested beside mine on the wallâclose but not touching this time. The warmth of it still lingered from when heâd held it earlier. I couldnât quite decide if I missed it or if I was relieved heâd let go.
âSo,â I said, breaking the silence, âdid you ever think youâd run into me here?â
Joel huffed a laugh. âDidnât think Iâd run into anyone I knew. Tuscany ainât exactly down the road from Austin.â
I smiled faintly. âYeah, well. You never know where Texas will follow you.â
He grinned, and the sight of it hit me harder than I expected. I wasnât used to seeing him like thisârelaxed, amused. It made him look younger. Less weighed down.
âyou ever miss it in summer?â he asked after a beat.
âTexas?â I considered, tilting my face toward the sun. âSometimes.â
âLike what?â
I tapped my fingers against the stone. âSummer storms,â I said after a moment. âThe ones that roll in out of nowhere. The smell of rain on hot pavement. And barbecue. God, I miss barbecue.â I sighed dramatically, and Joel chuckled. âWhat about you?â
His eyes softened. âYeah. Miss the little stuff. Morninâs on the porch with a cup of coffee. That first cold snap in October when the air actually feels different. And the stars.â He exhaled. âStars here are nice, butâŚainât the same.â
âYeah,â I agreed softly. âNot like home.â
The word slipped out before I thought about it. My cheeks warmed, but Joel didnât say anything. He just nodded, like he knew exactly what I meant.
The cicadas buzzed louder in the trees.
He didnât press me for more. Joel was good at thatâgiving me space to say what I needed without pushing.
Instead, he reached down and picked up a stray pebble, rolling it between his fingers. âSarah still talks about you, yâknow.â
That surprised me. My chest tightened. âShe does?â
Joel smiled faintly. âYeah. Told me the other day she still remembers when you made her those chocolate chip pancakes with the smiley faces.â
I laughed, the memory sharp and clear. âI did that every time I babysat her. She used to insist on extra chocolate chips for the eyes.â
âShe still does.â His voice was soft. âYou were good to her.â
âShe was easy to be good to.â
Joel didnât respond right away. His thumb traced the edge of the pebble, eyes distant. I wondered if he was thinking about Sarah, or maybe her mom, or maybe something else entirely.
âI remember when you first showed up to babysit,â he said eventually. âYou were whatâtwenty?â
âBarely.â I smiled wryly. âAnd nervous as hell. Your daughter had more confidence than I did.â
âShe liked you right away.â His mouth curved slightly. âKept askinâ when you were cominâ back.â
My chest warmed. âShe was always the sweetest.â
Joel nodded, but his expression turned more thoughtful. âDidnât expect to see you here, though. In Italy, I mean.â
I arched a brow. âWhy not?â
He shrugged. âI dunno. Back then, you were always talkinâ about Texas like you never wanted to leave.â
I laughed softly. âYeah, well. Life has a way of surprising you.â
Joelâs eyes flicked to mine. âYeah,â he murmured. âIt does.â
The weight of his gaze settled over me, heavy and warm. My pulse stuttered. I wanted to look away, but something held me there, locked in place.
The sun dipped lower. The cicadas hummed. And Joel Miller, the man I never expected to see outside of Texas, sat beside me like heâd always belonged here.
I cleared my throat, breaking the moment. âAnyway,â I said, forcing a teasing lilt into my voice. âHow does it feel to have a Texan showing you around Italy?â
Joel chuckled, the tension easing just slightly. âHumblinâ,â he said, straight-faced.
I snorted. âYeah, right.â
He turned his head to look at me again. âNah. I mean it.â
My smile faltered. âWhy?â
Joel shifted slightly on the stone wall, his shoulder brushing mine. ââCause I know how much you love this place,â he said after a beat. âAnd you donât share it with just anyone.â
I swallowed hard, my chest tightening. He wasnât wrong.
But the realization that he knew thatâthat he saw me like thatâhit harder than I was ready for.
I didnât know what to say, so I just smiled faintly and bumped my shoulder against his. âDonât get a big head, Miller. Iâm just making sure you donât embarrass Texas while youâre here.â
His eyes twinkled. âToo late.â
I laughed, and the tension shifted. But later, when we walked back down the hill toward the village, Joel let his hand brush mine again.
This time, I didnât pull away.
â
The sun hung high in the sky, casting a golden glow over the villa and everything it touched. The heat of the day was starting to settle in, the warm air wrapping around us as I walked barefoot toward the pool. The sound of the water was calming, a gentle lapping as it caught the sunâs reflection, sparkling with every movement.
Joel was already in the pool, his figure cutting through the water with ease. He had his arms resting on the side, looking up at me as I approached. His eyes twinkled with that easy smile he wore so often, but there was something different about his expression todayâsomething a little more intent.
I didnât hesitate, peeling off my sundress and stepping into the water, the coolness of it a perfect relief from the heat. The water lapped against my skin, and I felt weightless, free. I swam toward Joel, the soft splash of my movements the only sound between us.
He reached out, taking my hand as I neared, his grip warm and firm, guiding me closer. âYou look like youâre enjoying the summer,â he said, his voice low and steady, a slight teasing note beneath it.
I grinned, the warmth of the sun on my skin mixing with the coolness of the water. âI am,â I replied, letting my fingers brush against his. âItâs hard not to when youâre surrounded by this.â
He studied me for a moment, his eyes dark and intense as they locked onto mine. There was a quiet moment, a small shift in the air between us. I could feel the pull, the way everything seemed to slow down when we were near each other, the way the world felt a little bit more alive in his presence.
I swam a little closer, not breaking eye contact, until I was standing just in front of him, the water lapping gently at our waists. My heart was beating faster now, not from the swim, but from the closeness between us. The tension that had been building in little moments over the past few weeks was palpable now, the air thick with it.
Joelâs hand gently cupped my face, his thumb brushing over my cheek as if memorizing the feel of my skin. His touch sent a shiver down my spine, the connection between us undeniable. Slowly, deliberately, he leaned in, and before I could even think about it, his lips brushed softly against mine.
The kiss was slow, a gentle exploration of what had been building between us for days, weeks even. The water seemed to heighten everythingâthe way his lips moved against mine, the way his hand slid down to the back of my neck, pulling me closer as the world seemed to fade away.
My hands found their way to his shoulders, and as I leaned in deeper, the kiss became more intense, more desperate. His breath mingled with mine, and I could feel his heart beating just as fast as mine. Every moment felt electric, like the entire summer was being condensed into this one perfect second.
Joel pulled away slightly, his forehead resting against mine, his breath coming in short bursts. âYou drive me crazy,â he murmured, his voice rough.
I smiled, my fingers tracing the line of his jaw, savoring the feel of him, the warmth of his body against mine. âI think you do the same to me,â I whispered back.
There was something in his eyes, something vulnerable and open, as he looked at me. It was as if we both knew this moment was more than just a kiss, more than just a summer fling. The intensity was undeniable. But for now, there was no need to rushâeverything felt right in this suspended moment.
We lingered there, our faces close, letting the soft splashes of the water and the warmth of the sun settle around us. He kissed me again, this time deeper, a kiss that spoke of longing, of something unspoken but understood between us.
I closed my eyes, leaning into him, feeling the pulse of the water around us as I pressed my body closer to his. The coolness of the pool mixed with the heat of our skin, creating a contrast that only made the moment more intoxicating.
For a moment, nothing else existed but the two of us, lost in the water, in the sun, in the quiet intimacy of the summer. It was a perfect kind of peace, the kind that wrapped itself around you and made you feel like you were exactly where you were meant to be.
And as we pulled away once more, his hands resting on my waist, I knewâwhatever happened when the summer ended, this moment, this connection, was something that would stay with me. Something that I would carry long after the warmth of the sun had faded.
â
The night was calm and peaceful, the kind of evening that made you feel like you could stay outside forever. My grandmotherâs villa was perched on a small hill in Tuscany, and the view from the terrace was breathtakingâendless fields of green, the soft glow of street lamps below, and the distant hum of a town that was slowly quieting down for the night.
Joel and I sat across from each other at the dinner table, my grandmother beside us. The meal was simple but deliciousâfresh pasta, roasted vegetables, and a glass of red wine that had already started to loosen our tongues.
Joel looked more relaxed tonight, his smile easy and natural. Every so often, his eyes would linger on me, but he didnât say anything outright. We had danced around itâthe unspoken pull between usâbut neither of us was ready to admit what was happening. It was as if we were both waiting for something to tip the balance.
My grandmother, who was always a bit of an enigma, sat across from us, watching with an air of amusement. She didnât press us with questions, but I knew she could tell something was different. She always knew.
âSo,â she said casually, cutting a piece of chicken, her eyes flicking between the two of us. âJoel, I hear youâre enjoying your time here in Tuscany.â
Joel smiled, taking a sip of his wine. âI am. Itâs⌠beautiful here.â
My grandmother nodded. âAh, Tuscany. Itâs magical. But the most magical part is the company.â She paused for a beat, her lips curling into a mischievous smile. âEspecially when you find someone who makes you feel like youâre living in a dream.â
I nearly choked on my wine, coughing lightly as I caught her meaning. She had said it with such ease, but the double entendre was clear. I shot her a look, but she only winked at me, a glint of mischief in her eyes.
Joel raised an eyebrow, sensing something in the air, but didnât press it. Instead, he turned to me with a grin. âI think sheâs got a point, y/n. It is magical here. The whole experience.â
I smiled, trying to hide the blush creeping up my neck. âYes, itâs beautiful. But I think Nonna just likes to talk about love, even if itâs not quite the right time for that conversation,â I said with a teasing tone.
My grandmother gave a short, knowing laugh, then shifted in her seat. âSĂŹ, y/n, parli troppo poco di amore,â she said in half Italian, half English. (Yes, y/n, you talk too little about love).
I rolled my eyes, knowing exactly what she meant, and shot Joel an apologetic look. âIgnore her,â I said, but there was no mistaking the glint of mischief in my grandmotherâs gaze.
âAh, love,â she continued, tapping her fingers on the edge of her wine glass. âIt has a way of finding you when you least expect it, no?â She raised an eyebrow, clearly enjoying herself. âA volte piĂš tardi, a volte piĂš prestoâsometimes later, sometimes earlier.â
Joel chuckled, taking it all in stride. âSounds like good advice.â
âWise words from a very wise woman,â he said, glancing at me with a playful smile.
My grandmother smirked but didnât say anything more, letting the conversation flow naturally. It wasnât that she didnât notice the tension between us; she just wasnât pushing it. She knew how to let things unfold at their own pace, and thatâs what I admired about her.
The night passed by quietly, the air cooling as we continued our meal. My grandmother, despite her subtle jokes, was content to let us be. She didnât need to say much to let us know that she saw what was happening between Joel and me. It was written all over us. But tonight, there was no pressure, no rushingâjust the gentle, unspoken bond that had begun to form.
When we finished eating, my grandmother stood up, her hands smoothing down her dress. âWell, I think itâs time for me to get some rest. You twoââ she glanced at us with a playful smile, ââdonât stay out too late. Va bene?â (Alright?)
I nodded, a soft laugh escaping me. âVa bene, Nonna.â
Joel stood as well, offering her a polite smile. âThank you for the wonderful meal. It was delicious.â
âYou are welcome, Joel,â she said, her eyes twinkling. âGood night.â
As she disappeared into the house, I turned to Joel, my fingers instinctively brushing against his under the table. There was a comfortable silence now, a quiet tension that hummed between us but didnât feel overwhelming.
âSo,â I said, my voice a little quieter, âwhat did you think of her?â
Joel smiled, his gaze never leaving mine. âI like her. Sheâs⌠sharp. But she knows how to make you think.â
I chuckled softly. âThatâs one way to put it.â
His smile softened, and he reached for my hand, giving it a gentle squeeze. âSheâs right, though, you know. About love, I mean.â
I raised an eyebrow, meeting his eyes. âHow so?â
Joel leaned in just a little, the soft glow of the moonlight casting shadows on his face. âSometimes later, sometimes earlier⌠maybe we donât always get to decide when we find something worth holding on to.â
I swallowed, his words hanging in the air between us. It felt like the weight of everything unsaid, everything still untold, was starting to settle into something real.
âI think weâre both figuring that out,â I whispered, my hand still in his.
And for the rest of the evening, we didnât need to say anything more. The quiet between us said everything that needed to be said.
â
The mornings after we got together were my favorite.
Italy had always been beautiful, always been magicâbut now it was different. Warmer. Softer. Like the sun rose just for us, spilling gold across the hills and sneaking through the cracks in the wooden shutters of our small apartment. The air smelled like coffee and jasmine, and the sheets were tangled around us, skin against skin, heart against heart.
Joel wasnât much of a morning person, but he never complained when I woke up first and ran my fingers along his jawline, tracing the scratch of his stubble. Heâd just hum low in his throat, eyes still closed, and tighten his arm around my waist to pull me closer.
âYouâre starinâ,â he mumbled one morning, voice rough with sleep.
âYouâre pretty when you sleep.â
His lips twitched. âDonât lie to me this early.â
I laughed, leaning in to kiss the corner of his mouth. âOkay. Handsome. Ruggedly handsome.â
His eyes cracked open then, dark and lazy, and he shifted just enough to roll me beneath him. The mattress dipped under his weight, and I grinned up at him as he braced himself with one arm beside my head.
âBetter,â he said.
The mornings blurred into days spent wandering cobblestone streets and driving through the countryside with the windows down. The radio crackled with Italian ballads, and Joel tapped his fingers on the steering wheel as I translated the lyrics with a grin.
âSheâs singing about her lover who promised her the moon and left her with nothing,â I said once, over-exaggerating the drama of it with a hand over my heart. âTi ho amato fino alla fine! I loved you until the end!â
Joel smirked. âThat so?â
âItâs very tragic.â
âGuess I better not leave you, then.â
My breath caught, and I turned toward the window, biting back a smile.
At sunset, we took our glasses of wine to the balcony and watched the sky bleed pink and orange over the rooftops. Joel leaned against the railing beside me, his arm brushing mine.
âNonna used to sit out here every night,â I said softly. âSaid the sky looked like a painting God left just for her.â
Joelâs gaze didnât leave the horizon. âSmart woman.â
The silence stretched, comfortable and familiar, before he shifted closer. His hand found mine, warm and solid. I squeezed it and exhaled slowly, the kind of breath that settled in your chest like peace.
âNever thought Iâd be here,â he said after a while.
âIn Italy?â
Joel shook his head. âHere. With you.â His thumb brushed over my knuckles. âNever thought itâd feel like this.â
âLike what?â I asked, voice quieter than I meant it to be.
His jaw flexed, eyes softening when he met my gaze. âLike I can breathe again.â
My throat tightened, and I stepped into his arms without a word. He held me there, against his chest, the world fading into nothing but the steady beat of his heart beneath my ear.
Later that night, after the city quieted and the moon rose, we danced barefoot in the kitchen while pasta boiled on the stove. The record player crackled in the corner with an old Italian love song, and Joelâs hand pressed against the small of my back, guiding me in slow circles across the tile.
I sang along under my breath, the lyrics instinctive and familiar. Joel didnât know the words, but he didnât need to. His eyes never left mine.
âSei il mio destino,â I whispered as the music slowed.
âYouâre my destiny,â he repeated softly.
I smiled and kissed him, tasting wine and forever.
â
The beach was quiet, secluded, the kind of place only locals knew about. I had taken Joel there a few times now, and even though he pretended to be indifferent, I knew he loved it just as much as I did.
Today, he had stretched out on a towel beneath the shade of an olive tree, a book in his hands, looking as unbothered as ever.
I, however, had other plans.
Grinning to myself, I sauntered over, still damp from my last swim, droplets of water trailing down my skin. Joel didnât even glance up as I hovered over him, too engrossed in whatever he was reading.
I huffed. âYouâre really going to spend the afternoon reading instead of enjoying the water?â
He turned a page, the hint of a smirk playing at his lips. âAinât stoppinâ you from enjoyinâ it.â
I narrowed my eyes before dropping down on top of him, effectively pinning him to the towel.
That got his attention.
His book tipped slightly as he peered down at me, an amused exhale escaping his lips. âYou tryinâ to suffocate me?â
I smirked, resting my chin on my hands as I lay against his chest. âIf thatâs what it takes to get you in the water, then maybe.â
Joel sighed, but there was no real protest in it. His free hand found the small of my back, resting there like it belonged, his thumb grazing my skin absentmindedly.
âYouâre trouble, you know that?â
I grinned. âYou love it.â
He exhaled, shaking his head before looking back at his book. I watched as his eyes skimmed the words, waiting, waitingâthen I reached up and snatched it right out of his hands.
âY/n,â he warned, reaching for it, but I was faster.
I sat up, holding the book above my head. âThe book or the water, Miller. Pick one.â
He squinted up at me, like he was actually considering his options.
I laughed. âUnbelievable.â Then, before he could argue, I bolted.
Joel let out a gruff damn it before chasing after me. I ran straight into the waves, squealing as the water hit my skin, my victory short-lived because in a matter of seconds, his hands were on me, lifting me right off my feet.
I yelped. âJoel, donât youââ
Too late.
I was tossed into the sea with a splash, the cool water swallowing me whole.
When I resurfaced, gasping, hair plastered to my face, Joel was standing there, arms crossed, watching me with a smug expression.
âHappy now?â he drawled.
I lunged, grabbing his arm and yanking him toward me.
He stumbled, cursing as he splashed into the water, the smugness wiped clean from his face.
I burst into laughter.
Joel pushed his wet hair back, shaking his head. âYouâre somethinâ else.â
I grinned, swimming closer. âYou love it.â
This time, he didnât argue.
Instead, he pulled me flush against him, the warmth of his body stark against the cool waves.
And when he leaned in, pressing his lips to mine, I decided that maybe, just maybe, I had won this round after all.
â
The night was thick with summer heat, the air scented with lavender and salt from the distant sea. We had spent the evening wandering through the hills, ending up at my favorite hidden spotâa quiet overlook where the world stretched endlessly before us, rolling green and gold beneath the moonlight.
Joel stood beside me, hands in his pockets, his gaze fixed on the horizon. He had been quieter than usual tonight, but not in a way that made me uneasy. More like he was thinking about something, rolling it around in his mind, trying to decide whether or not to say it out loud.
I turned to him, smirking. âYouâre thinking too hard.â
His lips quirked, but his eyes stayed on the view.
âThat obvious?â
I nodded. âI can practically hear the gears turning.â
He exhaled a quiet chuckle, shaking his head. But he still didnât look at me.
That wouldnât do.
So I stepped closer. Just enough that my shoulder brushed against his, just enough that I could feel the heat radiating off his skin.
âJoel.â My voice was softer now. âWhat is it?â
He hesitated. Then, finally, he turned to me.
And for the first time since I met him, he looked uncertain.
Something shifted between us thenâsomething unspoken, something inevitable.
I swallowed, my pulse quickening.
I had never been nervous around him before.
But now, standing this close, his gaze fixed on mine, the weight of the moment settling between us like something fragile and delicateâI suddenly felt everything.
My breath hitched as he reached up, brushing his fingers against my jaw. It was the lightest touch, barely there, but it sent a shiver down my spine.
âYou make it real hard not to fall for you,â he murmured.
My heart stopped.
Then, before I could overthink it, before I could talk myself out of itâI closed the distance.
Our lips met, soft and slow, hesitant for only a second before the hesitation disappeared entirely.
Joel exhaled against my mouth, his hands finding my waist, pulling me closer. I melted into him, my fingers tangling in his shirt, the warmth of him overwhelming, grounding.
It wasnât rushed. It wasnât desperate.
It was something deeper. Something dangerous.
Something that made me wonder if maybe, just maybe, this wasnât going to be just a summer after all.
â
The soft evening light spilled across the stone steps as we sat there, our glasses of wine nearly forgotten between us. The air was warm, with a cool breeze now and then that made the leaves rustle above our heads. The soft hum of life from the villa seemed distant, almost nonexistent in this quiet moment we were sharing.
Joel had been unusually quiet, his gaze often drifting to the horizon, his fingers lightly tapping against the glass. I knew what was on his mind. The conversation about the end of the summer hadnât been the easiest one, and it lingered in the air between us like a weight neither of us wanted to acknowledge.
âI guess Iâve been thinking a lot about what happens after,â Joel said, his voice breaking the comfortable silence. His eyes were still distant, but his hand shifted toward mine, his fingers brushing over my skin, making my heart skip a beat.
I met his gaze, my throat tight. âMe too,â I said, swallowing the lump that had formed there. âItâs hard to imagine going back to my life without⌠this. Without you.â
He glanced down at our hands, which had somehow ended up intertwined, his thumb brushing across my knuckles in a comforting, almost absent way. âItâs the same for me,â he murmured. âBut⌠itâs not like this is the first time Iâve had to leave someone behind.â
I frowned, not fully understanding. âWhat do you mean?â
Joel sighed, shifting slightly on the steps to face me more directly. âI travel a lot for work,â he said, his voice low. âIâm never in one place for too long. Even when Iâm home, itâs for a short time before I have to leave again.â
I blinked, surprised by the revelation. âI didnât know that,â I admitted. âYou never really talked about your job.â
âI know,â he said, and there was a slight hesitation in his voice. âI donât talk much about it. Itâs⌠complicated.â He gave a small shrug, almost like he didnât want to elaborate further. âBut⌠thatâs why I try not to get attached to anyone. Itâs easier this way. No long-term ties, no complications.â
I nodded slowly, absorbing what he was saying. âI get it,â I replied quietly. âYou have your life, your responsibilities. But it still doesnât make this easy.â
Joel met my eyes, his gaze softening. âNo, it doesnât. But itâs not like Iâm going to forget about you, y/n. This summerââ He trailed off, his hand still resting on mine, his fingers gently tracing the lines of my palm in an almost hypnotic pattern. âWhat we have⌠itâs real. Even if itâs only for now.â
I shivered slightly from the way his fingers moved, the light touch making me feel like his hands were drawing on more than just my skin. He was tracing me, memorizing me. His fingers sketched over the curve of my wrist, down to the delicate curve of my elbow, as if he was drawing something in the air only he could see.
âIâm not good at this,â he admitted, his voice barely above a whisper. âNot good at⌠saying how I feel, at letting people in.â
I nodded, understanding that more than I wanted to. I wasnât exactly good at it either. But something about the way he spoke, the way he touched me so gently, made it feel like he was letting me in, bit by bit.
âMaybe we donât need to figure it all out right now,â I said softly, my free hand reaching up to tuck a strand of hair behind my ear. âMaybe we can just⌠be here. Together.â
Joel looked at me with a tenderness that almost broke me. Then, his fingers moved to trace the line of my jaw, then down the side of my neck, his touch light, deliberate. His hand was warm against my skin, and his eyes followed the path of his fingertips, as though he were painting a picture of me in his mind.
âI like that,â he said, voice thick with something deeper. âI like just being with you.â
His hand lingered on my neck, his thumb grazing the soft skin there before moving back to trace the curve of my collarbone. The intimacy of the gesture, the way he was touching me as if I was something precious, made my heart race.
âDoes it ever scare you?â I asked, my voice barely above a whisper. âThe idea that you wonât be here after the summer?â
Joelâs hand paused, his fingers resting lightly on my skin, and he met my gaze with a mixture of sadness and understanding. âIt does,â he admitted quietly. âBut I donât think we should let fear stop us from living the moments we have now.â
I swallowed, feeling that familiar ache deep in my chest. âI donât want to say goodbye,â I whispered.
Joelâs gaze softened, and he leaned closer, his lips brushing the side of my cheek in a tender kiss. âWe donât have to say goodbye yet,â he murmured, his voice warm against my skin. âWe still have time.â
I nodded, closing my eyes as his hand moved to cup my face, his thumb gently brushing over my lips. âI want to make the most of it,â I whispered, my breath shaky.
And there, under the fading light of the evening, we stayed close, letting the silence speak for us. Joelâs hand rested on my neck, his fingers slowly moving down again, tracing the lines of my body with an intimacy that felt so natural, so right, despite the uncertainty of what was to come. It was a language we spoke without wordsâone touch, one breath, one shared moment at a time.
Collide
older!joel miller x singer!reader
summary: a famous pop star and a reserved contractor find an unexpected connection when their paths cross at a concert, leading to a complicated and intense relationship despite their vastly different worlds.
here it is
kiss me
grumpy!joel miller x reader
summary: Joel despises the superficiality of Valentineâs Day, and you, a hopeless romantic who adores love in all its forms, find your friendship tested when you spend Valentineâs week together as single friends, only to discover unexpected feelings that blur the line between friendship and love.
a/n: a little valentine story for yall đ
joel miller masterlist
Valentineâs week was my favorite time of year. Everything felt lighter, softerâlike the world was wrapped in a warm, pink haze. Even if most people thought it was cheesy, I loved it. Love letters, heart-shaped candies, couples holding handsâit made me believe that love, real love, was still out there.
Joel Miller didnât share that belief.
âDonât even start,â Joel grumbled the moment he picked up my call, his deep, tired voice crackling through the phone.
I grinned, curling up on my couch with a cup of coffee. âStart what?â I teased, already picturing the irritated look on his face. âI was just calling to check on my favorite Valentineâs Grinch.â
He let out a long sigh, and I bit back a laugh.
âWhat do you want, y/n?â
âWell,â I drew out the word, knowing exactly how much heâd hate what I was about to say. âWeâre both single this year. Why donât we spend Valentineâs week together?â
There was a beat of silence. I imagined him blinking in disbelief.
âYouâre joking.â
âCâmon, itâll be fun!â I insisted. âMovies, takeout, no pressure. And who knows? Maybe Iâll even convince you that love isnât as terrible as you think it is.â
âNot happening,â he muttered, but I heard the faintest smile in his voice.
âIs that a yes?â I pressed, holding my breath.
Another long sigh, thenââFine. But donât expect me to wear anything pink.â
I laughed, my heart fluttering. âDeal.â
The next few days felt like walking a tightrope.
We spent almost every moment together, but never crossed the line. We did all the things couples doâlate-night drives with music humming softly in the background, sharing breakfasts at the little diner on Main Street, walking through the park while I pointed out every couple holding hands just to watch Joel roll his eyes.
But neither of us said it. Neither of us dared to admit what was simmering beneath the surface.
âThis is exhausting,â Joel muttered as we sat on a park bench, sipping coffee.
âWhat is?â I asked, smiling into my cup.
âAll of this. People pretending for a week that theyâre in love.â
I nudged his shoulder playfully. âNot everyoneâs pretending, you know.â
He scoffed. âName one couple that ainât puttinâ on a show.â
I didnât even have to think. âMy grandparents.â
Joel raised an eyebrow.
âTheyâve been together for 53 years,â I said softly, my smile turning wistful. âThey met in college. My grandpa still brings her flowers every Friday. And she still laughs at all his bad jokes.â
Joel let out a low hum, like he wasnât sure if he believed me.
âIâm not saying itâs common,â I added, reading his mind. âBut just because itâs rare doesnât mean itâs not real.â
He glanced at me then, his gaze lingering a little too long, a little too soft. My breath caught, but I looked away before my feelings betrayed me.
One afternoon, we ended up in the bookstore downtown, wandering through the aisles. Joel found himself in the history section, while I was drawn to the romance novels, of course.
âYouâre really gonna read one of those?â he asked, leaning against the shelf with a teasing smirk.
âYes, Joel,â I shot back, holding up a book with a dramatic cover. âItâs called escapism. You should try it sometime.â
âIâll stick to the real world, thanks.â
âWhere love doesnât exist?â I teased.
âExactly.â
I sighed dramatically, shaking my head. âYouâre hopeless.â
As we walked out, I couldnât help myself. I nodded toward an older couple sitting on a bench, their hands intertwined, lost in their own little world.
âLook at them,â I whispered. âDonât tell me thatâs not real.â
Joel followed my gaze, but said nothing. I wished I knew what he was thinking.
It started with a simple planâcook dinner, keep things light, pretend my heart wasnât on the verge of bursting every time Joel Miller looked at me.
I wasnât exactly a gourmet chef, but I knew my way around a kitchen well enough to whip up something decent. Joel sat at the counter, watching me with an amused expression, a beer in hand.
âYou sure youâre not gonna burn the place down?â he teased.
I shot him a playful glare. âIâm perfectly capable, thank you very much.â
He chuckled, leaning back in his chair like he didnât have a care in the world. I, on the other hand, was trying not to melt under the weight of his gaze.
I turned on some music to fill the silence, letting the soft strum of a guitar filter through the room. And then it happenedâone of my favorite love songs started playing. A soft, sweet melody that made my chest ache.
âUh-oh,â Joel muttered, already sensing what was coming.
I grinned, turning to face him. âDance with me.â
âY/nâŚâ he warned, shaking his head.
âPlease?â I stretched out the word, giving him my best pleading eyes. âFor me?â
He let out a long sigh, but when I reached out my hand, he took it without a fight.
His hand was warm as he pulled me close, his touch gentle despite the roughness of his calloused fingers. We swayed in my tiny kitchen, the smell of dinner forgotten, the music weaving around us like a secret only we knew.
âThis is ridiculous,â he whispered, but there was a softness in his voice, in the way his hand rested on my waist.
âMaybe,â I whispered back, resting my head lightly on his shoulder. âBut itâs nice, isnât it?â
He didnât answer, but he didnât have to. I could feel itâthe way his grip tightened ever so slightly, the way his breath hitched when I leaned in closer.
For a moment, it felt like we werenât pretending anymore. Like the feelings we never spoke about were real, tangible.
When the song ended, Joel pulled back slowly, his eyes lingering on mine. The air between us crackled with something unspoken.
âDinnerâs gonna burn,â he muttered, clearing his throat as he stepped away.
I laughed softly, but my heart still ached.
Because even when we danced around our feelings, I knew the truth.
Valentineâs Day arrived quietly, the way it always did.
I felt like I was losing my grip. Every smile, every lingering glance, every time Joelâs hand brushed against mine felt like it was unraveling me.
When I opened my apartment door that morning to find Joel standing thereâgrumpy expression firmly in placeâholding a small bouquet of wildflowers, I froze.
âUh⌠these are for you,â he mumbled, looking like heâd rather be anywhere else.
I stared at the flowers, then at him, trying to process the fact that Joel Millerâthe man who swore up and down that Valentineâs Day was nothing but a commercial scamâwas holding flowers for me.
âIs this a joke?â I teased, even though my heart was racing.
âDo you want âem or not?â he grumbled, shoving them toward me.
I laughed softly, taking the bouquet from his hands. âTheyâre beautiful, Joel. Thank you.â
âDonât make a big deal out of it,â he muttered, rubbing the back of his neck. âItâs just⌠you like this kinda thing. Figured you deserved somethinâ nice.â
My chest tightened at his words. Joel Miller, who claimed not to believe in love, had just done something more thoughtful than any grand gesture ever could be.
That night, we ended up back at my apartment, a bottle of wine between us, laughing over old memories.
âI donât get it,â Joel said, leaning back on the couch, his voice quieter now. âYou got your heart brokenâbadâand you still believe in all this love stuff.â
I swallowed hard, the memory of my past relationship still a dull ache. âBecause I know what it feels like to be loved, Joel. Even if it wasnât forever. And I know what it feels like to be alone, too.â
He looked at me then, something unreadable in his eyes. âYouâre not alone,â he whispered.
And for a moment, I let myself believe him.
The night felt endless, every moment stretching out between us like a question neither of us wanted to answer.
I could feel Joel beside me, the weight of his presence grounding me, but also unraveling me. The flowers heâd given me sat on the table, delicate and unexpected, just like him.
âJoel,â I whispered, barely able to hear my own voice over the pounding of my heart.
He turned to me, eyes darker than usual, something unreadable flickering in them.
I opened my mouth to say somethingâanythingâbut before I could, Joel was already moving.
His hand cupped my face, rough fingertips trailing along my jaw, and then his lips were on mine.
This wasnât a tentative kiss. This wasnât careful. This was Joel Miller finally giving in, finally letting go of every wall he had built around his heart.
His mouth pressed urgently against mine, and I melted into him, my hands gripping his shirt as if holding on for dear life. His other hand slid around my waist, pulling me closer until there was no space left between us.
I felt everything in that kissâevery unspoken word, every moment weâd danced around our feelings, every piece of him heâd kept hidden from the world.
When we broke apart, breathless, Joel rested his forehead against mine, his voice rough and low.
âI canât fight it anymore,â he whispered. âI donât want to.â
I swallowed hard, my heart aching in the best way. âThen donât.â
He kissed me again, softer this time, but with the same intensity, the same longing that had always been thereâwaiting for us to finally stop pretending.
In that moment, I knew. Joel Miller didnât just care for me.
He loved me.