virzafar:
“- because honestly I’m fine with the rest of the trail mix, but raisins? Like what the hell is that supposed to be about? If I wanted a grape, I would eat a grape. I can’t imagine the kind of monster who lies awake at night and thinks ‘Fuck the grapes in my fridge right now, let me dry them out and watch them shrivel into tiny little demons, and only then will I consume them’. It’s why I can’t stand croutons either. They’re not even real bread, they’re the version of bread that’s been left out to die that white people want to convince me is still a product in and of itself.” He shakes his head with a profound disgust, though his dad can’t exactly see him from where he’s listening on the other side of the phone. As Vir’s been talking, he’s climbed out of the car and made his way to the front door, unlocking it and pushing it open with the expectation of having the house to himself just like every other evening for a good couple hours - or in the very least, enough time for him to get started on dinner.
Instead, he sees Oliver’s things by the foyer and hears the sound of the television from the other room and thinks, alright, maybe this evening isn’t like the rest. “Hey, sorry, I’m gonna have to call you back later,” he says to his dad before he can fully reply to Vir’s monologue. “Yeah, will do. Aapse pyar karta hoon pita jee.” He presses the bright red ‘END’ and puts his phone in his pocket, slinking off his bag and going over to the other room to investigate. “Hey,” he greets warily. He walks over to Oliver, about to ask him some follow-ups about Oliver’s state, but he’s interrupted by his husband’s lips on his own. It’s a familiar thing, a gesture he can usually melt into, except that Oliver’s lips are lined with an unsettling taste. “You’ve been drinking,” he says instead of answering Oliver’s question. “Why have you been drinking? What happened?”
“Bad day at the office. I don’t want to talk about it.” And he doesn’t. It feels like all Oliver does on most days, talk and talk and talk and talk only to barely be able to follow through on half of his promises. He knows it’s not his fault, that this is just how politics works, you campaign for ten things but you can only actually deliver on three. But he’s tired of it, so fucking tired of tip-toeing around the correct thing to say, especially around Vir - Vir, who always manages to see right through him; Vir, who makes everything he says into something else. He doesn’t want to speak and he doesn’t want to think and he doesn’t want to play any games, just wants to exist tonight as OliverandVir in the way that couples are supposed to when they’re too stupid to be anything but perfectly happy with each other.
He pulls Vir back, claiming his lips again in a way that’s anything but chaste. His hand drifts from Vir’s cheek to the back of his neck, deepening the kiss that much more, until it trails down to the back of Vir’s shirt and he realizes that oh, right, there are layers that need to be shed between them. “Off,” he says as he tugs at the cotton on Vir’s chest. He goes to work on his own shirt, undoing the top three buttons before yanking the rest of it off. He can feel the front of it rip a bit in his impatience, but he can’t find it in him to care. He’s the fucking Vice President, he can replace a shirt here and there. “Did you miss me?” he asks, breath coming out in warm puffs against Vir’s jaw. It’s a rhetorical question, just one of those things he likes to hear Vir say sometimes. I miss you, still. I love you, still. I choose you, still. He doesn’t wait for an answer before he stands up, puts his hands on Vir’s shoulder and shoves him back onto the couch. He joins him a moment later, lips back on Vir’s collarbone, mouthing the reddened skin of marks he’s left in the past.














