"Here comes a very strange beast which in all tongues is called a fool."
- Captain Beatty (Bradbury, Fahrenheit 451)
⌜⋮⊱□⋄⋑⊛∵◊▧◊∵⊛⋐⋄□⊰⋮⌝
she/her | 20 | FR/GB
❝ one night he wakes, strange look on his face. pauses, then says, “you’re my best friend,” and you knew what it was. he is in love. ❞
you and clark have been best friends forever. everyone can see you’re in love except you. you always choose each other but neither of you has figured it out yet
now playing - you are in love by taylor swift
tags/warning: fluff, friend to lovers, clark being a cutie pie, no smut!!
note: omggg guys… i’m back i really hope u enjoy this!!
you met clark when you scraped your knee in his front yard. it wasn’t anything dramatic, just a clumsy fall while riding your bike past the kent farm. you don’t even remember what hurt more, the sting of the pavement or your pride.
but he noticed.
he knelt beside you like it was the most important thing in the world.
“are you okay?” he asked, eyes wide with concern.
you nodded, biting back tears. he didn’t believe you.
so he ran inside, came back with a damp washcloth and a band-aid, and gently cleaned the dirt from your knee like he’d done it a hundred times before. you were eight.
it wasn’t the last time though. after that day, you started finding reasons to “fall” in front of his yard, little scrapes, dramatic tumbles, anything just to see him again. and from that day on, you and clark became best friends.
he was the kind of kid who always carried extra snacks in case you forgot yours. the one who held the swings still so you could climb on, who walked you home when it got dark, even if it meant being late for dinner.
you grew up side by side. he was your first sleepover, your science project partner, your prom date when no one else asked. people always assumed you were together. teachers paired you up without asking. neighbors smiled knowingly when you sat a little too close on the porch swing.
you never noticed.
to you, it was just clark. the boy who always looked at you like you were the only thing that made sense in the world. the boy who made you laugh until your stomach hurt and always knew when something was wrong without you saying a word. but now, here you are, older, quieter, still orbiting each other like you always have.
it’s a slow monday morning in clark’s apartment. you’re curled up on his couch in one of his old flannel shirts that’s way too big on you, sleeves falling past your hands. the tv hums softly in the background with some random show you barely remember turning on.
you smell pancakes.
in the kitchen, clark is making breakfast, flipping them with one hand while pouring coffee with the other, like he’s done it a hundred times. like it’s natural. like this is normal.
and maybe it is.
because this isn’t new. the sleepovers that turned into staying over for days. the late nights talking until one of you drifted off. the way you wear his clothes without thinking. the way he always makes two cups of coffee, yours just the way you like it.
“breakfast is ready,” he says, his voice gentle, a little raspy from sleep. he places your plate on the counter, right in front of your usual spot.
you get up from the couch and walk over to the kitchen island, sliding into the seat. clark leans against the counter across from you, mug in hand, but doesn’t make a move toward his own plate.
“you’re not eating?” you ask, tilting your head.
he shakes his head and takes a slow sip of his coffee.
“not yet.”
you pause, fork in mid-air. “why not? you know you can’t save the world hungry, right?”
“i’m fine,” he says. “i just wanted to make sure you eat.”
you roll your eyes, but your heart stumbles in your chest anyway. because it’s always been like this. he always takes care of you. always has.
“you know,” you say between bites, “if you keep making me breakfast like this, i’m going to start thinking you’re in love with me.”
you mean it as a joke. kind of.
clark chuckles, leaning back against the counter, arms crossed. “guess i better stop, then.”
you look up at him, raising a brow. “wow. not even gonna deny it.”
“i’m just saying,” he grins, “don’t fall for me just because i know how to make pancakes.”
you smirk. “too late.”
he laughs again, the sound echoing through the kitchen, but there’s a split second where something shifts in his face, just the smallest pause before he brushes it off. you’re not sure if he caught the way you said it. you’re not sure if you meant it.
you stab another bite of pancake. “you used to be way worse at cooking.”
“you used to cry every time you lost at uno.”
“i was eight.”
“you were sixteen.”
you throw a bottle at him, and he catches it without even looking.
“stupid reflexes,” you mutter.
“eat,” he says, nudging the plate closer to you, his voice a little softer now. “we’re gonna be late for work.”
you roll your eyes, grabbing the fork from the table again. “we’re always late.” you say, you can’t help the smile that tugs at your lips.
clark was right.
you’re late.
ridiculously late.
you’re both speed-walking, well, more like half-jogging—down the sidewalk, the city buzzing around you. his hand brushes yours every few steps, and neither of you quite pull away.
clark’s glasses are fogging up from the sudden burst of movement and the heat of his coffee still clutched in his hand.
“i told you,” you laugh, a little breathless, trying to keep up. “we’re always late.”
he grins, pushing his glasses up his nose with the back of his knuckle. “you didn’t have to finish all your pancakes, you know.”
“they were good!” you argue. “you made them!”
“you say that like i had a choice.”
you glance at him sideways. “you did. you always do.”
he looks at you then, like he wants to say something—but he doesn’t. just smiles instead, a little softer this time.
you finally reach the daily planet, breathless and slightly sweaty. as you walk through the doors, lois is already standing near the bullpen, arms crossed.
her eyes narrow, lips twitching into a smirk.
“well, well,” she says, voice echoing just enough to make you both flinch. “look who decided to show up.”
clark clears his throat, pushing his foggy glasses up again. “traffic.”
he heads straight to his desk, setting his things down and reaching to straighten the small framed photo sitting beside his monitor. it’s the halloween picture—him in a half-falling vampire cape, you in a crooked witch hat, both smiling at the moment.
you walk in behind him, dressed properly now, your work blouse tucked in, your coat slung over your arm, but your hair is still a little messy, your cheeks a little too flushed for a monday morning, and there’s something about the way you smell faintly like his soap.
you pass lois’s desk, and she doesn’t even pretend not to notice.
she slides out of her chair smoothly, catches you by the arm before you can make it to your own desk.
“did you spend the night at his place?” she whispers, eyes narrowed in playful accusation.
your head snaps toward her. “what? no. why?”
she smirks, leaning in just enough so clark can’t hear.
“you smell like him.”
you blink. “how would you even—”
“girl,” she says, rolling her eyes. “i’ve worked with the man for years. i know what kind of shampoo he uses. don’t insult me.”
you glance over your shoulder. clark’s at his desk, flipping through papers, sipping his coffee, clearly pretending he’s not listening even though his ears are a little red.
you sigh, dragging a hand down your face. “it’s not like that.”
lois hums, the corner of her mouth twitching up as she leans back against her desk. “whatever you say.”
she lets you go, but her eyes linger on you for a second longer. not judging. just… knowing.
lois isn’t stupid. she’s seen it from the beginning. the way clark looks at you like he’s watching the sunrise. the way your whole face softens when you talk about him.
at first, she thought it was cute. a little childhood crush thing. harmless. sweet.
but then weeks turned into months. inside jokes. matching coffee orders. you fixing his tie in the elevator without thinking. him walking you home every night like it was instinct.
still, you weren’t together. not officially. not out loud.
lois sighs, sitting back down at her desk and muttering to herself, “idiots. both of you.”
you finally reach your desk and sit down, stealing a glance at clark. he’s already looking at you. like he always is.
you smile. he smiles back.
and still, nothing is said.
star wars is playing episode v the empire strikes back clark’s choice of course. the lights are off except for the soft glow of the screen and the city outside your window.
you’re on the couch your legs tossed lazily over his lap a bowl of popcorn balanced between you. clark’s hand rests on your ankle his thumb moving in slow absentminded circles against your skin.
“clark this doesn’t make sense,” you say eyebrows scrunching as you stare at the screen. “how is leia suddenly in love with han like weren’t they just yelling at each other two seconds ago”
clark smiles without looking away from the movie.
“that’s how it works sometimes.”
you scoff. “no it’s not. people don’t just go from arguing all the time to falling in love.”
his thumb pauses for just a second before it starts moving again a little slower now.
“i don’t know,” he says. “maybe they always loved each other. maybe they were just scared to admit it.”
you go quiet turning your head just enough to look at him. he’s still watching the screen but there’s something in the way he says it. like he’s not really talking about leia and han.
you open your mouth to say something but you don’t.
because this moment is safe. this moment is soft. this moment is the in between space you and clark have lived in for a while now.
and if you say the wrong thing maybe it all changes.
so you don’t say it.
instead you toss a piece of popcorn at him. “you’re such a nerd.”
he laughs catching it mid air without even looking.
show off.
“you’re the one watching star wars with me for the third time this month.”
“only because you promised pancakes again.”
he grins. “i always do.”
and his thumb keeps tracing gentle circles on your ankle.
and you let him. and maybe that’s the scariest most comforting part of all.
okay, okay. obviously you love clark.
as a friend, of course.
who wouldn’t love clark?
he’s clark.
he’s the guy who always puts everyone else first. who never hesitates to help someone, a stranger, a neighbor, a friend. who brings soup when you’re sick, who offers his coat when it’s cold, who notices things like the way you like your coffee or when you’ve had a hard day, even when you don’t say a word.
he’s the kind of person you want to be around.
which is probably why you’re here all the time.
you’re the one helping him now. you’re the one looking out for him, because you’ve started to notice that he doesn’t even consider helping himself. he never stops to ask what he needs.
and maybe, just maybe, that’s part of why your heart aches a little whenever he smiles at you.
because you know you’d do anything to protect that smile. you’re not gonna deny that there are probably some feelings there. some soft, stupid, long standing feelings that have been hiding.
like the first time you had a sleepover at his place.
he insisted you take the bed. he slept on the floor. and before he turned off the lights, he plugged in a little nightlight he found in a drawer because he remembered that you were afraid of the dark.
what he doesn’t know is that you aren’t. not when he’s there keeping you safe.
or like that time you both went to prom together.
you didn’t have a date, and neither did he. no one else wanted to go with you, and you almost didn’t go at all. but clark just said, we’ll go together. easy.
like it was the simplest thing in the world.
and okay, fine. you also can’t deny how good looking clark is.
he’s tall. like, really tall. and his hair, all soft and curly, always falling into his face in that annoying, perfect way.
you hate how easy it is to look at him. and you hate even more how easy it is to fall for him.
but the worst part? you’re not sure if he even sees it.
and the fact that you’re the only person he ever runs to after saving the world?
yeah. that’s the part that gets you.
sometimes he just shows up on your couch, bloody, bruised, half conscious. you never ask what happened. you don’t need to.
you just pull him in, patch him up, wipe the blood from his face, try to keep him awake long enough to heal. even half-asleep, he can tell you’ve been waiting for him, hoping he’d come back safe.
so it isn’t a surprise when you walk into your apartment tonight and see him there again.
your bag drops from your shoulder before you even realize it, landing on the floor with a thud. you rush to the couch, falling to your knees beside him.
“clark,” you gasp, your keys hitting the floor with a loud clatter. “what the fuck.”
“hey, pretty,” he says with a half smile, eyes barely open. like he’s just come home from a long day at the office and not from the edge of death.
you shake your head and press your fingers to the side of his neck, checking his pulse even though you don’t need to.
he’s warm. too warm.
“i’ll be fine,” he mumbles. “just gotta wait till morning.”
“you’re bleeding all over my couch,” you whisper, voice cracking. “jesus, clark.”
you run to the bathroom, grabbing your little med kit, the one you keep stocked just for him.
when you come back, he’s shifted slightly, trying to sit up straighter like he’s worried about staining your couch more than the hole in his side.
you kneel again and start working in silence. you just need to do something.
you press the gauze against his side, careful but firm.
he flinches a little. you hate that he flinches.
“anywhere else hurt?” you ask, voice barely above a whisper.
he shakes his head.
you know he’s lying.
you keep going anyway.
he watches you quietly, eyes soft despite the pain. like he’s more worried about you than the blood or the bruises. like he’s memorizing every movement of your hands.
“you scared the hell out of me,” you say finally, not looking at him.
“i know.”
“no, you don’t,” you snap, louder than you meant to. your hands pause. “you didn’t call. you didn’t text. i thought…”
your voice wavers. you swallow hard.
“i thought maybe this time you weren’t coming back.”
clark blinks slowly, like he wants to speak but doesn’t know how.
“i just…” you swallow again. “i hate not knowing if you’re okay.”
a pause.
“i came home,” clark finally says.
“to what?”
“to you.”
you let out a shaky breath, then lean forward, forehead pressed lightly against his. you stay there for a moment, not moving. just breathing him in. just feeling him here, alive, in your arms.
then you pull back, brushing his sweat damp hair from his forehead.
“i’m staying here,” you tell him quietly. all night.
he smiles again, something soft and sleepy and completely clark.
“i like when you do,” he murmurs.
you stay beside him. you don’t get up. you pull a blanket from the back of the couch and gently lay it over him, tucking it around his shoulders.
you slide down to the floor, curling up beside the couch, knees tucked to your chest.
just close enough to hear him breathing.
just close enough to reach out and brush your fingers lightly over his.
you don’t think he notices.
but a moment later, his fingers twitch and curl around yours in the faintest squeeze.
that’s when you realize.
you are in love with clark kent.
and now that you know, it feels like the most obvious truth in the world.
clark shifts above you. his brow is furrowed slightly, a strange look on his face, like he’s trying to remember something or maybe figure out how he feels even in half sleep.
“y/n,” he murmurs, voice soft and rough with exhaustion.
“yeah, clark?” you whisper, tilting your head up.
he blinks slowly, still not fully awake, and then, almost without thinking, he says,
“you’re my best friend.”
the words hang there. small. simple.
you can feel the certainty in them, even if he doesn’t seem to fully know what he’s saying.
you smile softly, brushing a hand over his arm. “i know,” you murmur. “now go to sleep.”
he hums, letting your words sink in, finally relaxing, the strange look fading as he drifts back into rest.
you lie back down, thinking nothing of it at first. just clark, half asleep, being clark.
you don’t realize it yet.
but one day, when you think back to this night, the way he said your name first, like it mattered, like it came before everything else, it will finally click.
he wasn’t confused.
he wasn’t rambling.
he is in love.
you wake up in your bed.
that’s the first thing that doesn’t make sense.
the second is that you’re still fully dressed, shoes off but everything else on, and there’s an ache in your back like you slept curled up on the floor, which you did.
you sit up fast.
the living room. clark.
you swing your legs over the bed and rush out, heart thudding. but when you reach the couch, it’s empty.
clean. like nothing happened. like he was never there.
except you know better.
there’s something resting on the arm of the couch. a neatly folded blanket. and just under it, a small piece of paper with your name on it, scribbled in that familiar handwriting you’d know anywhere.
you unfold it.
hey. you fell asleep. i didn’t want you to wake up on the floor with a stiff neck, so i moved you. hope that’s okay. couch is clean. figured i owed you that much. didn’t want to leave, but i’ll be back after work. i promise.
- clark
P.S. you still mumble in your sleep. it’s cute.
you stare at the note for a moment. then you bite your bottom lip hard and try not to smile.
you fail.
your fingers curl around the paper like it’s something fragile. something important.
-
you’re trying to focus. really, you are.
there’s a half-written story on your screen and an empty coffee cup beside you, but all you can think about is clark.
he isn’t here today-off doing superman things, saving the world, or whatever it is he does when he disappears without explanation.
you try not wait for his text. try not to think about the way he looked on your couch. the note he left. the way your fingers had brushed.
you’re in love with your best friend.
great.
“hey.”
you jump in your chair. lois is leaning against your desk, smirking like she knows everything. she’s holding a fresh coffee in one hand and trouble in the other.
“jesus, lois,” you mutter, snapping your laptop shut like that’ll hide the crisis looping in your brain. “personal space?”
“don’t need it,” she says, setting the coffee down. “you’ve got that post-kent glow.”
you blink. “that’s not even a thing.”
“it’s so a thing. i can tell.” lois tilts her head, eyes narrowing as she watches you squirm.
you scoff. “you’re literally making stuff up right now.”
“oh, come on,” she groans. “we all see it. me and jimmy made a bet.”
your eyebrows shoot up. “a bet?”
“yeah-to see when you and clark are finally gonna get together. i said by the end of the month.”
“you guys are stupid,” you say, trying to laugh it off, but your voice falters near the end. “that’s never going to happen. i mean… he’s my best friend.”
you say it slowly, like maybe if you drag the words out they’ll sound truer. like maybe you won’t think about how long you’ve been friends. since you were eight.
how he always finds his way back to you. how last night changed something and you don’t know how to un-feel it.
“it would ruin everything,” you add, almost to yourself.
lois watches you quietly for a second. then she says,
“right… well. too bad for you.”
you glance up. “what’s that supposed to-”
“because he’s literally walking toward us right now.”
you spin in your chair. and there he is. clark kent. looking like a walking heartache in a slightly wrinkled shirt, his tie crooked, hair still damp from wherever he just came from.
“hey,” he says with a smile just for you. “sorry i’m late.”
your heart’s already racing. you stand up-for no real reason-and before you can even say hi, clark leans in and presses a gentle kiss to your forehead.
“thanks for taking care of me last night,” he murmurs, voice soft and close. “i owe you.”
you freeze. your breath hitches. you can feel the heat crawl up your neck.
“i’m just- i’m going to the bathroom,” you blurt, grabbing your phone like it’s your lifeline. you don’t wait for a response. you just turn and practically sprint away.
clark watches you go, confused, brow furrowing slightly. he glances at lois like maybe she has some kind of explanation.
she does not. she just rolls her eyes and takes a long sip of her coffee.
“you are both so dumb,” she mutters.
you’ve been ignoring clark for a couple of days.
not completely. not in the cruel, radio silence kind of way. but in the subtle, painfully obvious kind of way.
the kind where every time he walks toward your desk, you suddenly need to call someone, or get coffee, or your personal favorite go to the bathroom.
you went to the bathroom ten times in one day.
ten.
even lois started keeping count.
and clark? well, he noticed.
of course he noticed.
he’s clark.
he noticed the shift in your smile. the way your replies got shorter. how you stopped teasing him when his tie was crooked, or how you avoided looking him in the eye every time he tried to start a conversation.
he didn’t do anything wrong.
that’s what makes it worse.
you just didn’t want to ruin anything. not the years of friendship, not the safety of knowing he’s always there, not the quiet, constant feeling of being known by someone who’s been by your side since you were kids.
but ever since that night when he showed up at your door bleeding, bruised, and falling asleep on your couch with your hand in his, it hasn’t felt the same.
you haven’t felt the same.
because something changed.
because you’re in love with him.
because now, when he smiles at you, your heart flinches in a way it never used to.
so you hide.
poorly.
lois cornered you yesterday by the elevator and said,
“you look like a middle schooler avoiding her crush. just go make out already.”
you responded by getting on the wrong elevator.
and clark?
clark finally decides to stop waiting.
you finally got home after a long day at work.
clark wasn’t at the office today, which if you’re being honest was a bit of a relief. one less person to avoid.
one less excuse to make up. he had sent you a few texts throughout the day, checking in, asking if you were mad at him.
you answered each one with something short and vague.
you miss him.
god, you miss him. it physically hurts not being around him, not hearing his voice or seeing that ridiculously warm smile he always saves just for you.
you unlock your door, lock it behind you, and slip your shoes off. you were heading for the bathroom, but something catches your eye clothes. clark’s clothes. draped lazily over the back of your couch.
you don’t remember when he left them here. but then again, he’s always leaving things behind. like it’s his second home.
you scoop them up without thinking. even now especially now you love wearing his clothes.
after a hot shower, you slip into one of his shirts and a pair of shorts. his scent clings to the fabric warm, clean, a little like vanilla and something else that’s just him.
and it makes you want to kiss him.
it makes you ache for him.
you towel off your hair, pad out of the bathroom barefoot, and head to your bedroom.
the room is dark, lit only by the faint orange glow from the streetlights outside. the wind dances through the cracked window, making the curtains flutter.
and then you see him.
clark.
he’s sprawled across your bed like he owns the place.
one arm tucked under your pillow, tie long gone, hair a little messy, glasses resting on your nightstand. his stupidly long legs are hanging off the edge of the mattress because, as always, he doesn’t quite fit.
you sigh softly, but not in surprise.
of course he’s here.
of course he’s in your bed.
you quietly shut the window, then walk over and gently shake his shoulder.
“clark.”
he doesn’t move.
you try again, brushing your fingers against his arm.
“clark.”
he flinches just slightly, eyes blinking open. he squints up at you in the dim light and then, he smiles. soft. sleepy. like he’s home.
“hey,” he mumbles.
you cross your arms. “what are you doing here?”
he shifts, sitting up slowly. rubbing at his eyes with the heel of his hand. “i was waiting for you.”
you raise a brow. “you fell asleep.”
“i know.” he yawns, blinking again. “i figured if i stayed here, you couldn’t keep avoiding me.”
your chest tightens.
you never wanted to hurt him. you never wanted him to feel like this.
“i wasn’t avoiding you, clark,” you lie, voice small, eyes darting to the floor.
he gives you a look. gentle. knowing.
“we’ve been best friends for years, y/n. i know when you’re avoiding me. you do it when something’s on your mind.”
he pats the empty spot on the bed beside him. you hesitate for just a moment, then crawl in.
he watches you settle in, tucking one leg under the other, the hem of his shirt brushing your thighs.
“so,” he says softly, “tell me, pretty… what’s going on in that head of yours? did i do something? i’ll fix it. just tell me. i don’t want you mad at me, okay? i can’t-“
“clark.” you stop him, but you’re smiling. you can’t help it.
even now, with your heart a mess and your brain screaming at you to stay quiet, you still smile when he talks like this. still want to kiss him when he looks at you like that.
you couldn’t help but stare at his eyes. big, blue, and impossibly soft.
your gaze flicked down to his mouth. his lips. the ones you’ve thought about more times than you’d ever admit.
silence hung between you. the kind that buzzes in your ears. you felt your heart thudding, fast and nervous and loud enough that you know clark hears it. and the worst part?
he’s looking at you the exact same way.
you can barely breathe.
“i’m not mad at you,” you whisper, breaking the silence.
your eyes drop again to his neck. and there it is.
the necklace.
the tiny, handmade necklace you gave him when you were eleven. it’s still there. the cheap string hasn’t snapped, the colors are faded, and the little charm you picked out the one that’s supposed to mean strength is still hanging on by a thread.
your fingers move before you can stop them. you reach out and touch it. touch him. the warmth of his skin beneath your fingertips makes your chest ache.
he still wears it.
he never stopped.
even after all these years.
you feel him suck in a breath when your fingers brush his neck.
this isn’t the first time you’ve touched clark. not even close. you’ve shared beds. laughed till you cried. held each other through heartbreak. this kind of closeness it was normal.
but this?
this feels different.
“y/n,” he says, and your name sounds like a prayer coming out of his mouth.
you look up to meet his gaze, but you don’t even get a word out
because clark leans in and kisses you.
his lips crash into yours like he’s been waiting forever.
like he’s been holding back for years and he just can’t anymore.
and you kiss him back like you’ve wanted this for just as long.
after a moment, you both pull back, breath mingling in the quiet space between you.
“you…” you whisper, still a little dazed. “you kissed me.”
clark doesn’t move right away, like he’s giving you space to run if you want to.
but you don’t.
you’re too caught in the feeling his hand still brushing your wrist, the way he’s looking at you like he’s seen this moment a hundred times before in his head and never stopped hoping for it.
“i’ve been wanting to,” he says, voice low, rough with sleep and something gentler.
“for a long time.”
you blink at him. “since when?”
he smiles quiet and a little crooked, like he doesn’t expect you to believe him.
“since you fell in my front yard.”
you let out a small laugh, breathless. “that wasn’t even on purpose”
clark raises a brow. “the first time wasn’t. but after that?” his head tilts, teasing and tender. “you kept doing it. scraped knees. that dramatic limp you did even when you weren’t bleeding.”
you go still, heart thudding loud enough for him to hear.
“and i knew,” he says softly, gaze never leaving yours.
“but i still waited for you. every day. with a bandaid in my hand.”
something cracks in your chest.
“i thought maybe if i was ready… you’d keep coming back.”
you can’t say anything. your throat’s too tight. your heart’s too full.
then, gently, his fingers brush against yours.
“so don’t avoid me like that again, okay?” he murmurs.
“not when i’ve been waiting for you this long.”
and that’s when it hits you he wasn’t just talking about this week. he was talking about years.
you nod, eyes shining. “i love you,” you say quietly, before crawling into his lap, your arms wrapping around his neck.
clark doesn’t hesitate.
“i love you too,” he breathes against your lips, and then he’s kissing you again.
pairing: clark kent (superman 2025) x journalist!reader
summary: he’s soft. earnest. 6’4 of midwestern guilt and golden retriever loyalty. and he looks at you like you invented the sun. you’re fine. everything’s fine. it’s just friends-with-benefits. you're not a thing. but clark? clark has always been there. warm, steady, maddeningly soft. indulging your commitment-phobic nonsense with quiet patience and those unfairly good dimples. until suddenly—he’s not. listen to the playlist here!
word count: 11.2k (jesus christ, i am so sorry)
content warnings: 18+ mdni, fem!reader, piv sex, they freak NASTY in this one, dom/sub undertones, soft dom!clark, sub!reader, brat/brat taming, oral (fem!receiving), marathon sex, multiple orgasms, overstimulation, shower sex, eye contact, mentions of bdsm and handcuffs, light marking kink, nipple play, protected sex (wrap it before you tap it!), then unprotected sex, rough sex, riding, mentions of sex toys, clark picks the reader up, mentions of reader's hair, commitment issues, situationship survivor!clark, ungodly amounts of yearning and denial, angst, happy ending
It doesn’t start with sex.
It starts with Clark.
Which is to say: it starts with Metropolis’s biggest, most overgrown corn-fed boy scout, who gets flustered every time you swear, who says things like “gosh” and “what the hay” without a trace of irony, and who you once watched spend ten full minutes trying to politely decline a street hotdog but the vendor just “looked so hopeful.”
You met him on your third and a half day at the Daily Planet.
He spilled coffee on you. A full cup. Right down the front of your blazer. Frothy iced caramel latte catastrophe. He panicked immediately—rushed through an apology so fast you barely caught the words—then offered, in complete earnestness, to dry-clean your coat. Not send it to the dry cleaner. Do it himself. Like it was the gentlemanly thing to do. You just stared at him, dripping, blinking. “Are you okay?” you asked, because someone had to.
He nodded—too fast—then proceeded to trip over the recycling bin just trying to get you napkins.
You’ve been friends ever since.
It’s not the cleanest origin story.
But over time, somehow, Clark became your person.
Not in the “call-at-3-a.m.-while-sobbing” kind of way (that’s Jimmy), or the “bring-wine-and-insult-your-evil-ex” kind of way (also Jimmy).
But in a steadier, quieter way. You write your little articles; he helps edit them. You fight with your sources on the sidewalk; he bakes them apology muffins the day after to make sure they don't contact Perry. You cover Metropolis politics like it’s trench warfare, and he smiles across the bullpen at you like you’re doing God’s work even when you're calling the mayor a “power-drunk thumb in a trench coat and a receding hairline you can see from space.”
He’s your constant. Steady and reliable and always five degrees too soft for this world.
Which is exactly why it doesn’t make sense.
Why, one night, it all… shifts.
.
You’re soaked.
Not in the steamy, sexy way. Not even in the Charli-XCX-Spring-Breakers kind of soaked.
Just: wet. Unpleasantly. In that half-drenched, trench-foot, what-is-my-life kind of way.
The weather app lied again (seriously, Metropolis Weather has one job), and your jacket is now suctioned to your body like a bad ex. Your boots have crossed the line from “water-resistant” to a really bad “Swamp Thing cosplay,” and your tote—home to your press pass and a sad little Tupperware of soggy couscous—is dripping like it’s auditioning for a plumbing ad.
So when Clark offers his place—soft-voiced, ever-accommodating, all that big dumb golden retriever energy—you say yes.
Not because you’re weak. Please.
Because he lives closer.
Logistically. Geographically.
(Okay, maybe emotionally, too, but you’ll unpack that when your socks aren’t squelching like a really bad porno.)
So now you’re in his apartment. Standing in the entryway. Leaving a trail of water on his hardwood floors while he gently, gently hands you a towel and fiddles with the thermostat and says things like, “You’re going to catch a cold if you don’t change out of those clothes.”
And you, being the self-possessed adult that you are, snort and say, “Thank you, Mom.”
Clark blushes.
Actually blushes. Like a cartoon character. Like a man who has never, in his life, imagined someone undressing in his home, which is hilarious, given that you’ve seen the size of his arms.
“Sorry,” he mumbles, rubbing the back of his neck. “I just meant… yeah. You’re soaked.”
His place smells like cinnamon and laundry detergent. There’s a candle burning on the kitchen counter—one of those $9.99 specials from Bath & Body Works. You imagine him in the store, earnestly reading the label on something called "Warm Vanilla Sugar" while the cashier tries to upsell him on a five-for-fifteen deal.
The image makes your lips curl. Your mascara's halfway down your cheekbones, your calves are cramping from the walk, and you should really, really, really just go take a hot shower and crash on his couch.
Instead, you look at him.
And he’s looking back.
Not like most men do—not the bar-stool inventory of what you are and aren’t. Not a scan. Not a question. More like a memory. Like he’s already filed you away in some quietly treasured part of his brain and he’s just taking the time to make sure the details are right. Like you are known.
You don’t think. You don’t make a plan. You just move.
Step forward. Grab the lapels of his flannel like it owes you money. Pull him down. Kiss him.
It’s not graceful. Not choreographed. You catch his chin at a weird angle, and your nose bumps into his, and the kiss lands too sharp, too fast. Like you’re trying to stun him. Like you’re trying to win a fight.
But then, he exhales.
And he melts. Not urgently. Not hungrily. Just… fully.
Like this is the thing he’s been waiting on for months, and now that it’s finally happening, he’s scared to spook it. His hands hover for a beat, like he’s making sure it’s real, and then one comes to rest lightly on your waist—tentative, patient. The other curls around your jaw with all the softness of a man who has no business being this gentle.
You break the kiss first, of course.
Because you always break things first.
When you look at him, he's staring at you like you invented language. Like he doesn’t know what to do with his hands, so they hover awkwardly at your sides, respectful, warm, and shaking just a little.
Which is when the panic crashes in.
He’s not supposed to look at you like that. Like you hung the stars. Like he knows you. Like he loves you.
Because if he does. If he really, truly does. Then eventually, he’ll stop.
They always stop.
People love you in the beginning. They love your bite, your snark, the way you know which part of a politician's background are most incriminating. They love the thrill of earning your attention. They love that you make them work for it. But eventually, the charm fades. The sharp edges cut a little too deep.
You forget to text back. You overshare. You undershare. You get tired. You get real.
And they get bored.
You’ve never wanted to risk that with Clark. He’s been yours—just yours, in the safe way—for too long.
You step back like the floor might collapse under you.
Put space. Just… anything between your body and the soft burn of his flannel. Try not to think about how fucking warm he was. “Shit—uh. You don’t have to say anything,” you blurt, voice too fast, too thin. “We can pretend it didn’t happen. Go back to normal. That’s fine.”
Clark’s brows knit, not in offense, just concern. He doesn’t look hurt. He looks… steady. Like he expected this part. “Are you sure?”
The way he asks it is soft. Unhurried. Like it’s not some ultimatum. Like it’s okay if you're not sure.
You open your mouth. Close it. Swallow.
“I just—” You press your fingers to your temple, like maybe that might just reorganize your entire internal filing system. “You know I don’t do relationships.”
“I know,” he says, without hesitation.
You study him—really study him—like you’re trying to find the catch. Some hint of disappointment or wounded ego. But it isn’t there.
He reaches up slowly and tucks a damp strand of hair behind your ear, his touch feather-light. “You don’t have to do anything you’re not ready for.”
You blink. “Even if I’m the one who kissed you?”
Clark smiles, just barely. “Especially then.”
His hand lingers near your cheek, but he doesn’t push. He’s patient in that maddening, disarming way. Waiting, always, for you to meet him halfway.
“Whatever you want,” he says again, quiet. “I’m good with that.”
You stare at him. “You’re really not gonna argue?”
“Nope.”
“Not gonna psychoanalyze me? Tell me I’m avoidant or emotionally stunted or terrified of my own vulnerability?”
He huffs a small laugh. “Already did. Long time ago.”
Your lips twitch despite yourself. “And?”
He shrugs, like it’s the easiest truth in the world. “You’re complicated. But you care. A lot. More than you let people see.”
And damn it, you hate how much that lands. How much he lands. You hate that he’s always been able to see through you, gently, without ever demanding more than you could give. And you hate—more than anything, more than all of that—how badly you want to kiss him again.
So you do.
Maybe to prove a point. Maybe to blow it all up before it can settle. Maybe because you’re already in too deep and part of you is tired of pretending you’re not.
You didn’t plan for it to go further. You didn’t plan anything, really.
But your hands slide up into the open collar of his flannel, and he stumbles a little as you back him into the bookshelf. His glasses tilt when your fingers brush his temple, and you pull them off carefully, reverently, like they’re the only thing tethering you both to whatever was before.
His eyes are wide. His mouth already parted. And when he looks up at you like this—flushed, breathless, undone—you think, mine.
And it’s terrifying.
Because it means it’s real.
It happened.
God.
It happened.
.
You strip him out of that worn flannel with a kind of sick, obsessive care. Button by button, like you were unwrapping a gift, like you were unearthing something you’d been searching for in every bad date, every failed talking stage, every mediocre bar makeout that had ever left you cold.
His flannel hit the floor. He doesn't say a word.
Not until you settle into his lap, thighs on either side of his. Then—quietly, like he wasn’t sure if it was okay to want anything—he says, “You… you don’t have to be gentle. Just, just in case. So you know.”
But you are. Because he is.
Because even now, even with your mouth to his, your hands fisted in his curls, his hands stay light on your hips. Like he doesn't want to take more than you’d give. Like he's still giving you the option to leave.
He makes a sound when your hips tilted forward. Not a groan, not exactly. Something deeper. A noise from his chest, halfway between a gasp and a plea. You kiss more of it out of him, mouths clumsy and desperate, fingers scrabbling at the hem of his undershirt, and it feels like breathing.
His breath's caught between his teeth when you rip a condom wrapper in between yours, slotting it onto him with shaking, shaking hands and trying not think about how he's probably the biggest you've ever had.
Lord have mercy.
You ride him like your life depends on it.
You get a thigh cramp halfway through—let out an annoyed groan and tried to keep going—and he, sweet, precious idiot that he is, sits up and says your name like it hurt. Voice quivering like he wants to stop, wants to help, wants to make sure you're okay.
Absolutely no way in hell you wanted that to happen.
“Clark,” you hissed. “Chill. I'm okay, dude. I’m fine.”
“Okay,” he said, dazed, grinning. “Just—didn’t want you to get hurt. I mean. You’re, uh. You were very intense. Just now.”
“Yeah, well, you’re the one with the dick that's slowly rearranging my guts,” you mutter, and he laughs so hard his shoulders shook.
And worse—goddamn it, worse—he looks at you the whole time.
No games. No posing. Just Clark. Holding your hips with those hands—god, those hands, unfairly big and warm and steady—and looking up at you like he meant it.
You’d told him once, over shitty fries past midnight on the curb at McDonald's, that you didn’t trust men who made eye contact during sex. Called it performative. Manipulative.
“Like they’re trying to Jedi mind-trick you into thinking it’s love,” you’d scoffed, and he'd gone quiet in that way he does, not sulking, just thinking. But that he was filing it away.
So of course—of course—when you're bare above him, hair a mess, mascara still clinging to your cheekbones, all vulnerable and exposed and teetering over the edge because his dick was doing wonderful, amazing things to your insides and making you melt—
He looks up at you with that open, earnest face and asks, softly:
“Do you want me to close my eyes?”
You freeze. Like an absolute idiot. Like prey.
And you say no.
"No."
Never.
He nods. “Okay.”
Then he kissed the inside of your wrist—just because it was there—and you lost ten entire emotional minutes and your grip on reality, grinding down on him like your life depended on it.
You come so hard you forgot your name.
Forget what you were supposed to be protecting yourself from. Forget every lie you’ve ever told yourself about the depth of your feelings for him.
It was insane. Deranged.
(Perfect.)
Later, three orgasms later, you collapse over him in a ridiculous heap of limbs and half-dressed post-coital delirium, forehead pressed to his shoulder, chest still heaving.
And he whispered something into your hair—something low and steady and not quite the word love, but so close it that it scraped through your head.
Then he hums.
You don’t recognize it at first—just the vibration under your cheek, the low murmur of a tune, warm and unassuming. You’re half-asleep, boneless, and not fully aware he's still inside of you, pulsing, your fingers curled around his neck.
But you listen.
“You humming Dolly right now?” you murmur, voice hoarse.
Clark hums a little louder. “‘Here You Come Again.’” Then, almost shy, “She’s good. What?”
You groan into his chest. “You absolute dork.”
“I like her,” he says, defensive. “She’s smart. You know she gave away, like, a million books to—wait, are you laughing?”
You are. Full-on giggling into his shoulder now. Giddy and too full and sore in all the best ways.
.
And you really don't mean to keep it going in the morning, let alone in the shower.
Truly.
You're just trying to get clean.
Wash off the evidence of the night before—sweat and come and a whole life’s worth of repressed emotional distress—but then, Clark steps in right behind you, warm and quiet and too gentle.
And suddenly it was over for you. Just absolutely fucking over.
He offers to join, sheepish and bashful, eyes flicking away like he hadn’t just had his face between your thighs just a few hours ago. “Just to save water,” he says. “'Cause of the environment… and all that.”
And sure, Clark. You absolute liar. The environment.
Except the second he steps in behind you—naked, dripping wet, glasses still off so he looked all boyish and wreckable—your resolve crumples like wet newspaper.
He reaches around you for the body wash and that was your downfall. Arm flexing around your waist, that goddamn baritone rumble in your ear as he asks, “This one okay?”
Like you're supposed to just—what? function when his voice was doing that thing? That was supposed to be okay?
But then his hands are on your hips—steady, reverent, huge—and you tilt your head back just enough to graze his jaw. He flinches. Or maybe you do. And before either of you could process it, your palm's flat against the tile and Clark was slowly pressing himself against your back.
“Okay?” he asks, voice a little too hoarse, a little too human.
You nod. “Yeah. Just—don’t be sweet about it.”
“But I'm always sweet about it,” he mumbles, and then he was, dragging a hand up your stomach, brushing your wet hair off your neck, mouthing at the base of your spine like he was making a wish.
He moves inside you slow.
Like he means it. Like he thinks he’d scare you off if he went too fast. And it was disgusting, really, how good it felt. How intimate all of this was.
Your knees nearly buckle. You have to brace yourself with both palms on the glass, forehead pressed against fogged-up safety plastic, biting down on your own goddamn fist to keep from crying out his name like something from a romance novel.
(You still did, eventually. He made sure of that when he pressed one large hand up against your stomach so you can feel him, really feel him, and another down your front, rubbing at your clit like it was a lifeline until you saw stars.)
When it was over—when your legs were jelly and your throat was raw and your spine was doing that post-orgasm melt thing—you turn to rinse the shampoo out of your hair, and he just… helped. Without you even having to say anything.
He lathers it for you, gentle and thorough, massaging your scalp. His cheeks are pink. His mouth is pink. You think about biting him. Maybe.
But instead, you let yourself lean into his chest while the water poured down over both of you, and you didn’t speak, because if you spoke, it would become too real.
So, you just let him wash your back.
He didn’t ask you to stay.
You didn’t ask if he wanted you to.
But when you wander out of the bedroom ten minutes later—half-wet, flushed, wearing his old Central Kansas A&M hoodie like it hadn’t just been folded neatly in a drawer—you find him in the kitchen, humming again.
Making pancakes.
“You want blueberries in yours?” he asks, like he didn’t have his dick in you in the shower ten minutes ago.
And you—traumatized, horny, emotionally compromised—you say, “Sure."
Then, because your brain has finally rebooted just enough to return to its default defense mechanism:
“Also, we need to talk.”
Clark pauses mid-pour, then turns around, spatula still in hand. “Okay,” he says, unbothered. His voice is calm, casual. Like you didn’t almost combust from having maybe, four—no, five or six orgasms in his arms over the past twelve hours.
You cross your arms over your chest, over his sweatshirt. “Last night—and this morning was great. I mean, objectively. A solid eight out of ten. No complaints.”
He looks amused. “Only eight?”
“I’m leaving room for improvement,” you say, defensive. “But I just want to be clear again that this isn’t… this isn’t a thing.”
Clark nods slowly. “Okay.”
You squint at him. “You’re not going to ask what I mean by that?”
“Well,” he says, lips twitching, “I—uh, I figured I’d let you finish your prepared statement first.”
You gape at him. “I knew I was giving Perry's press conference energy.”
“You’re even holding your coffee like a mic.”
You glance down. You are. Damn it.
He walks over, sets your pancake on the table next to you, and then settles into the armchair across from the couch. His legs are way too long. He has to fold them a little awkwardly, which should be goofy, but somehow only makes him look more like someone who could carry you up a mountain and apologize for the inconvenience while doing it.
You sip your coffee. Clear your throat. “So. Ground rules.”
He raises his brows. “Rules?”
“Yes. Rules. Guidelines. Frameworks for how this… goes.”
Clark tilts his head. “You mean for… us?”
“No, for NATO,” you deadpan. “Yes, us.”
He tries to cover a laugh with a sip of his own mug, but you see the dimple twitch. Smug bastard.
You forge ahead. “Okay. Rule one: this is casual. Very casual. Like… like ‘you can sleep with other people’ casual.”
Clark nods, slow. Thoughtful. “Do you want to sleep with other people?”
“No,” you admit. Then scowl. “But I want to have the option.”
“Right,” he says, nodding. “The illusion of freedom.”
“Exactly. Wait—"
He’s smiling at you now. Soft and fond and dangerously amused.
You plow on. “Whatever. Rule two: no romantic stuff. No dates. No—like—Valentine’s Day cards or surprise cupcakes or, God forbid, foot rubs.”
“You’re really against foot rubs?”
“I just think they set a tone.”
Clark looks at his plate. “What if I just make you pancakes sometimes?”
You narrow your eyes. “Pancakes are a gray area. I'm only allowing it this time."
“Noted.”
You tuck your feet under you. “Rule three: no falling in love.”
He looks up.
There’s a pause. A beat of silence so thick it fills the whole room.
You add, quickly, “I know that sounds dramatic, but I’ve seen what love does to people, and it’s terrifying. They lose brain cells. They post Instagram captions like ‘my forever’ with sparkly emojis. They start making weird couple TikToks where they throw cheese slices at each other’s heads. I can’t be part of that kind of ecosystem. I'm lactose intolerant."
Clark’s smiling again. Not in the ha ha you’re sooooo funny way. In the I think you’re the best thing to ever happen to me way, which is very much against the rules.
“Are you even taking this seriously?” you demand.
“I am,” he says, clearly lying. “You’re very intimidating.”
You roll your eyes and gesture wildly. “I’m just saying! I don’t want this to become something that implodes because I—God, because I can’t remember your favorite pizza topping one day and suddenly we’re—we're not friends anymore and splitting custody of houseplants and fucking Cat is stuck writing a gossip column about it.”
Clark chuckles. A pause. “well, for the record? My favorite pizza topping is mushrooms.”
You wrinkle your nose. “That’s a red flag.”
“You’re the one writing up a treaty before brunch.”
“Exactly,” you say, triumphant. “See? We’re incompatible.”
Clark leans forward slightly.
The sunlight from the window cuts across his glasses, but you can still see his eyes, warm and impossibly blue, locked on yours like you’re the only person in Metropolis who matters. “I think you’re scared,” he says gently. “Which is okay. I just want you to know… I’m not going anywhere. Rules or not.”
And that—
God. That should not make your eyes burn the way it does.
You shake your head, fast. “Don’t say stuff like that. It’s dangerous. You’ll trick me into liking you more.”
“I’m just being honest.”
“Well, stop.”
He raises a brow. “What do I do if I want to kiss you?”
You freeze.
Your heart does a complicated backflip-kick into your ribs.
“...well, that's allowed,” you mutter.
He smiles again, dimple sinking deep.
And then, because he’s a menace with zero self-preservation, he leans in.
You meet him halfway.
And it’s soft this time. Sweeter. Slower. No rain, no adrenaline, just his hand cradling your jaw and your fingers twisted in the hem of his t-shirt like you’re trying to anchor yourself to something real.
.
It's been months now of your little arrangement. And you're already destroyed by the time he even speaks.
Not because he’s touched you yet. Not really. He’s just there, mouth warm against the inside of your thigh, hands stroking the back of your knees like you’re something delicate. Something precious.
Which is so fucked. You are not precious.
You told him that that, breathless and still shirtless and sitting on his kitchen counter at midnight while he gently fed you the leftover peach cobbler Martha left for the two of you straight from the fridge.
He just nodded. Wiped away the crumb left on the edge of your lip. Said, “Okay.”
And then he kissed the inside of your wrist again and said, “You’re still allowed to want things, you know.”
Which is—god, so not fair.
Now he’s between your legs, kissing a line up your thigh like he’s praying. He’s been taking his time. Like the goal isn’t to get you off, but to study you. Like he’s memorizing the exact way your breath catches and the little twitch of your fingers every time he licks just close enough to your center, but not quite.
You’re panting. Whimpering. Biting your lip so hard you’re pretty sure you taste blood.
And he’s grinning. Not cocky—just happy. Which is so much, so much worse.
“You’re staring at me again,” you breathe.
Clark hums, kissing just below your hip. “I just like looking at you.”
“That’s crazy,” you whisper. “You’re crazy.”
“Probably.” He kisses your navel. “Do you want me to stop?”
You whine. You actually whine. You feel like you've just set feminism back by centuries. “No.”
“Didn’t think so,” he murmurs, nuzzling into your skin. And then, because he’s the devil in a button-up: “You know, the way you objectify me is honestly very inappropriate. I’m not just a—just a piece of meat, you know.”
You bark out a laugh, head tipping back against the pillow. “So bad news, you're actually a mountain of meat, man.”
“See? Objectified.” He presses a kiss just below your ribs. “Reduced to my—”kiss“—ridiculous shoulders—”kiss“—and tragic dimples—”kiss“—and stupidly proportionate thighs—”
“I didn’t say anything about your thighs—”
“Oh, but I think you were thinking it.”
You giggle, delirious. Drunk on this man. “God, shut up and fuck me.”
Clark goes still.
Not awkwardly—this isn’t early-days Clark, the one who used to stammer when you wore red lipstick when you came over and knocked over his own coffee trying to offer you a napkin.
This Clark—the one under you now, hands broad and firm against your thighs, spine pressed into the worn couch like it’s the only thing keeping him from rising into the sky—this Clark is different.
He’s grown into himself. Into this. Into you.
Not cocky, not exactly. But assured in a way that makes your stomach clench and your mouth go dry. You’ve seen it happen slowly. Like the sunrise—you didn’t notice until the whole room was full of it.
This Clark doesn't flinch when you flirt, doesn’t panic when your mouth goes sharp or your eyes go guarded. He just… waits. He sees it all. Lets you burn yourself out. And then lays a hand on your cheek like you’re made of something precious.
Still, he doesn’t move.
And that’s what sets you off.
You squirm, shifting your weight in his lap, irritated now. “What?”
He looks up at you, his jaw tight, hands still splayed over your thighs like he doesn’t know whether to hold on or let go. There’s something in his eyes, sharp, patient, impossibly tender, and it makes your chest ache in a way you refuse to name.
“You really want that?” he asks, voice low.
You roll your eyes. “You think I climbed onto your face to do taxes?”
“That’s not what I asked.”
Your stomach flips. You hate when he does this. Gets all serious and calm and measured while you’re flailing, clearly two seconds away from combusting. You cross your arms over your chest—petulant, defensive. “Clark.”
“You say stuff like that,” he murmurs, one hand slowly dragging up the back of your thigh, “but then you pull back like I’ve asked for your soul.”
You glare at him. “I’m not pulling back.”
He lifts a brow. “You haven’t even kissed me yet.”
You scowl. “I was about to, but you’re being annoying.”
His smile is crooked, lazy, maddening. “Yeah? Gonna punish me for it?”
Your heart skips. You hate that you love it when he talks like that. You hate that he’s right—that you’re the one drawing lines in the sand and then pretending you don’t care when he steps over them.
You lean down, hover over his mouth. “I swear to god, if you don’t do something soon, I’m walking out that door.”
He catches your jaw in one hand, gentle but firm. “You won’t.”
“Watch me.”
His thumb drags over your bottom lip. Lets it pop out just a bit, so you can feel the way the wetness drips over your chin. “You always say that. You never do.”
Your breath stutters. Your spine goes stiff. You hate how much he knows you. You hate that he’s always so calm about it, so damn tender, even when he’s calling you out.
“I’m not just a warm body, you know,” he says after a beat, the faintest furrow between his brows. “If that’s what you wanted, you should’ve picked someone who doesn’t look at you like I do.”
You blink. “And how is that?”
Clark tilts his head, eyes never leaving yours. “Like I actually see you.”
You hate him for that. A little.
But you kiss him anyway.
Hard. Sharp. Like a warning.
And then he flips you—effortless, smooth, like it doesn’t take more than a breath. One of his hands pins your wrists above your head. The other trails slow up the curve of your thigh. His mouth finds your neck, and you gasp—not in surprise, but because it’s too much. He’s too much.
“You keep asking me to take you apart,” he murmurs against your skin, “but you never let me show you what it actually means.”
“Oh my god,” you groan, shivering under him. “You are so fucking—”
“What?” he interrupts, dragging his mouth back up to yours. “Soft? Serious? A buzzkill?”
You don’t respond. You’re too busy squirming, too busy arching into him, because he’s right. Again.
“Too bad,” he murmurs, smiling like a secret. “You don’t get to run the show tonight.”
And you're already clawing at his back by the time he finally pushes in. And god, fuck, it’s—
He’s so much. Too much. Even now, even after months of attempting to get used to him, after a minimum of one hour of foreplay every time, hours spent fingering you open and devouring you whole and it still makes your spine tingle in the best way possible. The push and pull of it every time, the struggle, the way he looks at you so, so proudly when he's bottomed out and your smiling from under him like you've just won the lottery.
You make a sound—something small, strangled, "Clark."—and he doesn’t shush you this time.
He smiles.
“There it is,” he murmurs. “Now we’re being honest.”
.
Then one day, Clark cancels a lunch.
That’s it. That’s all. Not the end of the world.
He texts you a sweet apology. Too many words, as always, classic Clark, something about a lead on some money laundering story and “I’ll bring dinner to make up for it, promise, anything you want, even that overpriced pasta from the place with the weird chairs.” He adds three emojis. Two are completely nonsensical (a chicken and a rain cloud?). One is a little heart. You stare at it longer than you should.
You text back something breezy. Casual. “You’re the one missing out on my lunchtime TedTalk about corrupt city councilmen and their tragic toupees.”
He doesn’t respond until hours later. Just a thumbs-up emoji.
You tell yourself it’s fine. You tell yourself you don’t care.
.
Then it happens again.
This time, you're already standing outside the Planet, coffee lukewarm, watching a construction crew down the block try to maneuver scaffolding around a new billboard. It’s another Superman PSA—third this month. Something about disaster preparedness and blood drives. His cape’s caught mid-whip, expression noble and inhumanly calm. You roll your eyes, but your stomach tugs a little. Something about the stillness in his posture—it looks almost familiar.
Your phone rings.
Clark.
You answer with a smirk, trying to make it light. “Should I be worried you’ve joined a pyramid scheme? Please tell me you’re not selling supplements.”
There’s a pause, then his voice, warm but ragged around the edges: “I’m so sorry. Something came up. Can I explain later?”
You make some offhand joke about mafia debt collectors and say, “No worries,” even as your stomach twists.
He sounds tired. Tired in a way Clark never really gets. You’re the one who burns out, who rants and paces and flirts with deadline-induced breakdowns. He’s the one who shows up with coffee and an extra pen. Always.
But now his voice has this roughness to it. Frayed edges. Like he’s trying not to breathe too hard into the receiver. Like he just ran here. Or ran away from somewhere.
“Are you okay?” you ask, before you can stop yourself.
Another pause. “Yeah,” he says, and he softens, like he always does when he hears your voice. “I will be.”
.
By week three, he’s dodging plans like it’s his new hobby. You’re not hurt, obviously. You’re busy too. You have other friends. You go to bars. You flirt with bartenders you’ll never text back. You have a whole life outside of this whole thing with Clark.
It’s not a relationship. It’s just a thing. A nice, dependable, sometimes pantsless thing.
That’s all.
But still, there’s this night.
You’re at your apartment. There’s an old movie playing, something black and white and miserable, and Clark was supposed to be here an hour ago.
You’d ordered his favorite takeout. You’d even found that dumb craft soda he likes, the one that tastes vaguely like melted gummy worms. You told yourself you just wanted someone to share the noodles with.
He doesn’t show.
No call. No text.
You sit through the entire movie. Alone.
And when your phone finally buzzes—close to midnight, just his name and a short, “I’m so sorry. Can we talk soon?”— you stare at it for a long moment.
Then you flip your phone over, face-down.
And in the dark, you think, Shit. This is how it starts. The distance. The shift. The slow pulling away.
You’ve done it to people before.
You just never thought you’d be on the receiving end.
Not from him.
Not from Clark.
.
Around 11:30, you open Twitter out of boredom. You don’t cry. That would imply something was wrong. That you were hurt. You’re not. Obviously.
You’re just a little annoyed.
And maybe, just mayb, you’re thinking about how Clark used to be your safest person. Your sure thing. Your just-text-me, just-call-me, just-walk-right-in-without-knocking guy.
And now he’s something else. Something slippery. Something you have to squint at sideways to understand.
Your thumb scrolls through the usual mess. Politicians being embarrassing, memes you’re already tired of, some half-hearted discourse about whether the Metropolis skyline is over-designed or “delightfully optimistic.”
Then: a video clip.
No sound. Just shaky phone footage.
A blur of red and blue moving fast—streaking through the air over Hobbs Bay, pulling someone from a collapsed scaffolding, leaving behind a wake of stunned bystanders and bent steel.
You pause. Watch it again. Retweets piling up.
BREAKING: Superman saves construction worker after scaffolding collapse.
You stare at it for a second longer than you mean to, then snort under your breath.
Must be nice, you think. Some people get rescued. Some other unlucky fuckers just get ghosted.
.
The message comes on a Thursday. One of those weirdly warm spring evenings when Metropolis smells like asphalt and deli grease and the last ten years of your bad decisions.
Hey. You free tonight?
You stare at it for a moment too long. Thumb hovering.
Then:
yeah. yours?
A pause.
If you want.
God, he’s infuriating. Polite even now. Careful with you, like you’re made of something breakable. Like you haven’t already cracked half a dozen times this month alone.
Still, you go.
.
It’s not tense at first. It’s easy. Familiar.
Clark opens the door wearing one of those threadbare t-shirts that should be illegal, sleeves barely containing his biceps, neckline just a little too stretched from use. His hair’s damp. There’s flour on his cheek.
“You baked?” you ask, stepping past him before he can do that thing where he tries to gauge your mood like a barometer.
He shrugs. “Felt like it.”
There’s banana bread cooling on the counter. Two plates. One knife. He’s already sliced yours and left the end piece—your favorite—on the left, like always.
You want to be mad. Or suspicious. Or anything that would make this easier to navigate. But it’s hard to keep your footing when he’s being like this. Soft. Normal. Like he didn’t flake three times last month. Like you hadn’t spent the last few nights half-dressed and overthinking on your bathroom floor
But them again, you could never really resist him for that long.
So maybe it’s no surprise that your dress ends up pooled around your ankles. The lamp’s still on. Your mouths are moving like they’ve done this a hundred times—because you have, but it's not enough, will never be enough—and you’re both pretending it’s still casual. Still nothing.
Except it doesn’t feel like nothing.
And then Clark pulls back.
Not sharply. Not like he’s been burned. More like he just remembered something, which, again, not unusual. You’ve seen that look before. That oh shit look.
But tonight, he doesn’t immediately jump up.
He doesn’t mutter something about needing to check in with Perry or help Lois edit her headline.
He just… stares at you.
And not in the usual way, not with those soft, soft eyes like you’re something he stumbled across in a field and decided to treasure. He looks—serious. Scared, even. His hand is still on your hip, but his other is twitching slightly at his side like it doesn’t know what to do with itself.
“We need to talk,” he says.
You still have one shoe on. You don’t even remember kicking the other off.
You blink at him. “I—what?”
He licks his lips. His glasses are smudged. He doesn’t take them off.
“Something’s been—there’s something that I need to tell you,” he says, slower now, like he’s rehearsing this in real time and trying not to panic.
And that—that is when your stomach drops.
Because you know this script. You’ve seen this scene. The music swells, the camera pans in, the guy who smells like safety and Sunday mornings says he “needs to talk,” and then boom. Heartbreak, cut to black, roll credits.
You hold up a hand before he can say anything else. “Wait. Just… don’t. Yet.”
Clark pauses. He blinks at you.
“Look,” you say, backing up a step, scanning the room like you’re looking for your dignity. “If this is about how I’ve been kind of, I don’t know, evasive or inconsistent or, like, deeply emotionally unavailable, I just want to say — I know. Okay? You don’t have to do this so gently.”
His face twists. “What?”
“You’re trying to break things off,” you continue, steamrolling him, your voice way too steady for the freefall happening inside your chest. “And I get it. I do. You’ve been pulling away for weeks, you disappear all the time, you don’t sleep anymore, you look like you’ve been hit by a truck most days, which I assumed was just bad reporting hours, but who knows, maybe it’s metaphorical.”
Clark tries again. “I’m not—”
“It’s fine,” you say, voice louder now. “It’s fine if you met someone. You don’t have to pretend it’s not happening.”
“I didn’t—”
“You’re allowed to outgrow this. Me. Whatever this is.”
Your dress is still on the floor, and you suddenly want it back on like it’s armor. You crouch to grab it, clumsy with urgency, your hands all wrong.
“I should’ve seen it coming. You were too good to last. Guys like you don’t stick around for girls like me.”
“Hey,” he says sharply, stepping forward, but you back away before he can reach you.
“Don’t,” you say, holding your dress to your chest like a shield. “Don’t be nice to me about it.”
Clark runs both hands through his hair. He looks like he’s short-circuiting. “You’re not even letting me—I’m not trying to end this with you.”
You stare at him, lips parted.
He’s breathing hard now. His glasses are askew. His shirt’s wrinkled, and his jaw is clenched like he’s holding something back with both hands.
“I was going to tell you something,” he says, voice raw. “Something real. Something I’ve never told anyone who didn’t already know.”
You freeze.
Because that doesn’t sound like cheating.
That sounds like confession.
“What,” you whisper, suddenly breathless. “Like a dark secret? You have a kid? You’re actually married? Are you part of a mafia? Are you—Oh my God. Are you a stripper?”
“What?” he blurts, completely thrown.
“I don’t know, Clark!” your voice spikes, hands flying up. “What the hell could you possibly say right now that starts with ‘we need to talk’ and isn’t a relationship guillotine?”
His eyes flick to the window. Just for a second. A glance, like instinct. And then right back to you.
And for the first time, you see it.
The quiet panic. The way his entire body is buzzing like a live wire under skin.
Like he’s not scared of you. He’s scared for you.
But it’s too late. You’ve already built the wall and bricked yourself in.
You grab your dress, yanking it on with the dignity of a raccoon being evicted from a trash can. Somewhere behind you, Clark says your name again, gentle, like a bruise he’s afraid to touch. You ignore it.
Instead, you just start collecting your things like a squirrel in crisis.
Because—and this is humiliating—you’ve essentially moved into his place over the last year in the slowest, most passive-aggressive way possible. Not officially. Not “hey, should we get you some keys?” But enough that the signs are there.
Enough that you now have to do this, which is to say the break-up equivalent of packing a go-bag in the middle of a fire drill.
You grab the mug with the faded “Central City Gazette Student Press 2013” logo you refuse to drink out of at home because it’s chipped, but which you do drink out of here, because Clark always makes tea the right way — hot, strong, too much honey. You grab the copy of Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow you stole from his shelf three months ago and meant to pretend was yours all along. The sweatshirt he “forgot” you left here, that you “forgot” he noticed you wore to bed six times in a row.
You jam it all into your work tote like it’s a goddamn body bag.
Then there are the smaller things. The stupid things.
The half-used notepad from a city council meeting where someone tried to blame vigilante-induced infrastructure damage on solar panels. The disposable camera from that one weekend in Smallville — the one you never developed because the idea of seeing his parents smile at you felt too dangerous, too much like you might belong there.
And then you eye the drawer next to his bed. Your drawer, to get that clear, which was never explicitly claimed but which somehow holds one (1) pair of fuzzy pink handcuffs, two (2) half-empty bottles of lube, and three (3) protein bars, one of which is probably from last fiscal year. You shove it all into your bag, zipper groaning like a sad, sad accordion.
Clark’s still standing near the window, looking bewildered. Like he walked into the scene five minutes late and can’t tell who started the fire.
“Wait—are you leaving? You don’t have to—just—can we talk? Please?”
You don’t look at him.
Instead, you gesture vaguely at your bag. “This is just me doing a quick inventory of my terrible judgment. Don’t mind me.”
“Can you stop for two seconds and just let me—”
“Clark,” you say, and your voice comes out quieter than you meant it to. “It’s okay.”
It isn’t. But you’re trying to win the emotional Olympics in the “cool and detached” category, and you’re not about to blow it with something as devastating as eye contact.
You sling the bag over your shoulder and pause by the door.
You consider saying something devastating and poetic. Something from Hamlet, maybe. You’ve always liked the line about cutting love out with a knife and it still bleeding. But instead, you give him a big, fake smile and an inexplicable hand up, like a contestant leaving Rupaul's Drag Race in disgrace.
“No harm, no foul,” you say. “Tell whoever you're seeing that I say hi.”
And then you leave.
.
You are, in every measurable way, unwell.
You don’t call it a breakup.
That would imply there was something official to break. That you were ever really together. That there was something solid under your feet to begin with, instead of months of teasing the edge, hovering over the line like two people too chicken to admit they’d already crossed it.
So, no. Not a breakup.
Just—a recalibration. A pause. A hot minute.
You say this to Jimmy, who narrows his eyes and says, “You’re holding a spoon like a murder weapon right now, so I’m gonna circle back on the ‘hot’ part of that minute.”
You even say it to the woman at the corner bodega—the one who always gave Clark an extra packet of honey for his tea and once slipped you a protein bar when you looked particularly anemic on a deadline.
She glances up from restocking the gum and says, “He’s okay? The tall guy? With the glasses and the very... polite shoulders?”
You blink. “Sorry, what?”
“He always said thank you. For the bag. Like, sincerely.” She squints at you. “You were good together.”
You make a sound of vague agreement and exit before she asks if you want your usual. (You do. But the idea of holding a wrap in your hands right now makes your stomach lurch.)
You take your PTO. Two weeks. You don’t tell anyone where you’re going, mostly because you’re not going anywhere. You lie in bed. You eat cereal out of a mug. You watch a three-hour documentary about the collapse of a bridge in Gotham and cry when a random city engineer says, “We tried our best, but it wasn’t enough.”
You don't let yourself think about that… that stupid drawer by Clark’s bed.
Or the banana bread.
Because there is banana bread.
It shows up on your doorstep the morning of Day Three, wrapped in wax paper and still warm. No note. Just a faint imprint where a palm must’ve rested on the foil, like he wasn’t sure if he should knock. You don’t bring it inside right away.
You stare at it. Then the door. Then back at the bread like it might explode.
Eventually, you take it in. Set it on the counter. Eat half of it standing over the sink with your fingers, because you don’t trust yourself to not drop it.
He texts you the next day. Just your name. Then a minute later: Just wanted to check in. Hope you’re doing okay.
You stare at the dots blinking at the bottom of the screen until they disappear.
You don’t answer.
He calls a few times, a few days later. Your phone lights up with his name, and you let it ring out. Not because you’re angry—okay, maybe you are, a little—but because you know the sound of his voice will wreck you. Because if he says your name in that soft, patient, Clark way, you’ll crack like a fucking fault line.
He doesn't leave a voicemai any of the times l. Just hangs up.
(You spend the rest of the night clutching a throw pillow to your stomach like it’s a life raft.)
You tell yourself this is temporary. You’ll get it together tomorrow.
And then tomorrow happens.
And then the next day.
And then—on the seventh day, like Jesus, you rise.
Kind of.
You pull on the ugliest hoodie you own, some too-large sweatpants with a questionable stain, and a pair of knockoff Crocs. Your hair is doing something that technically defies gravity, and you haven’t worn deodorant since Tuesday. Your soul is gone. Your standards are lower. All that remains is one singular thought:
Hotdog.
.
Which is how you find yourself under the flickering fluorescent lights of a 7/11 at 1:42 a.m., perched on the curb out front like a feral raccoon, holding a lukewarm hotdog in one hand and a Red Bull in the other, actively disassociating while Whitney Houston’s I Will Always Love You plays through a tinny outdoor speaker with all the emotional resonance of a dying Roomba.
You stare off into the distance.
Which is, of course, exactly when Clark walks up.
You see him in your periphery first. Hear the crunch of gravel, the telltale weight of his sneakers.
“No,” you say, out loud. “No. No. Absolutely not.”
Clark stops short. “Hi,” he says, voice soft. A little nervous.
You hold up the hotdog like a loaded gun. “Turn around.”
“I—”
“I swear to god, Clark.” You don’t even look at him. “I am mentally and spiritually clinging to life by the barest thread, and if you say something kind to me right now, I will vomit on the pavement.”
He nods. Raises both hands. “Okay. Not saying anything.”
You stare at him. His flannel is wrinkled. His hair’s sticking up at the back. There’s a scuff on his glasses like he’s been rubbing at them all day.
Goddammit. He looks like home.
You turn your burning eyes back to the pavement and try to focus on your dinner. Try to remember how this whole dignity thing works.
“Why are you here,” you say finally, flat.
He swallows. “Because I needed to see you. Because I’ve been calling, and—”
“Right,” you cut in. “The calls. That I didn’t answer. On purpose.”
“I know.”
“And you took that as a challenge?”
Clark exhales slowly. He takes a tentative step closer.
“I’ve tried everything else,” he says.
You roll your eyes. “Maybe that’s because you’re not supposed to fix this. Maybe this is just what it is now.”
“That’s not what I want.”
You shrug. “And? Sometimes we don’t get what we want. That’s life. Welcome.”
He’s quiet. Long enough that you glance sideways and catch him staring at you with a look you can’t name. Doesn’t defend himself. Just stands there, quiet, while a beat-up minivan idles past the edge of the lot and the Whitney Houston outro fades into static. And you’re just about to tell him to cut it out—whatever this whole tortured-eyes, kicked-puppy thing is—when he steps forward.
One arm wraps around your waist.
And then—
You are no longer on the ground.
You shriek like a B-movie scream queen, clutching your 7/11 hotdog in its sad foil wrapper like it might save your life. “WHAT THE FUCK,” you yell. “WHAT—ARE YOU KIDDING ME—WHAT IS HAPPENING.”
“I’m sorry!” Clark yells over the wind.
“ARE YOU—IS THIS YOU?! ARE YOU—”
“Yeah!” he shouts. “Hi! Surprise!”
“SUPERMAN?!”
“…Yes!” he calls back, cringing midair.
“YOU’RE SUPERMAN?!”
Clark doesn’t answer that. Just… grimaces. Flying sideways. His arm tightening around your waist like he’s half-expecting you to elbow him in the ribs and wriggle free.
You might, honestly. As soon as your brain catches up. You’re only just vaguely aware of your Croc flying off somewhere over a used car dealership.
“My toothbrush is still at your apartment!” you shriek.
“I know!”
“I HAVE A TOOTHBRUSH AT SUPERMAN’S APARTMENT!”
“I know! That’s why I—listen, I panicked! You weren’t picking up! You blocked me on like, four platforms—”
“I BLOCKED YOU BECAUSE I THOUGHT YOU WERE GHOSTING ME FOR ANOTHER GIRL, NOT MOONLIGHTING AS A NATIONAL TREASURE.”
The wind roars past your ears. Your teeth are chattering. You’re barely holding onto the last few shreds of coherence. And Clark—no, Superman, apparently—he’s not even breaking a sweat.
“You couldn’t have called?” you snap.
“I did!”
“WITH WHAT, MORSE CODE?”
“I showed up at your apartment!”
“With a cape, Kent?!”
“No! No, the cape’s new—look, I didn’t know what else to do. You wouldn’t talk to me. Jimmy said you took PTO and haven’t left your apartment in four days and I just—I needed you to see me. To listen.”
You make an inhuman noise, somewhere between a wail and a curse. “So your solution was to airlift me like a stolen asset out of a CIA bunker?!”
“I checked to make sure no one was looking!”
“YOU TOOK ME HOSTAGE.”
“I swept the parking lot, I swear! The cameras at 7/11 are fake, and there was one guy but he was busy dropping a Big Gulp.”
You blink at him. Wind in your eyes. A foot still bare. There’s an onion from your hotdog stuck to your shirt. Your heart does a slow, brutal somersault.
“…Okay,” you breathe. “Okay, so this is real.”
“It’s real,” he says.
“Like, capital-R Real.”
“Yeah.”
You shake your head once, sharp. “Jesus Christ.”
And then something in you quiets. Something that’s been vibrating with panic for days—for weeks—sputters out like the end of a bad engine. You’re too tired to scream again. You’re too wrung-out to cry.
So you just say, quietly: “I'm sorry. For not listening. Or giving you the time to explain. But, what the fuck, dude.”
Clark swallows. His eyes flick to your mouth, then away. He nods—once.
“I didn’t want to lie to you,” he says again, quieter now. “I hated it. Every second of it.”
His breath fogs slightly in the night air. He still won’t quite meet your eyes.
“I thought I could keep it separate. You and… that part of me. I thought if I just kept my head down and made you pancakes and let you call me out when I forgot to text back, it’d be enough.”
He runs a hand through his hair, still wind-tossed from flight. “But then it wasn’t. Because I started… I don’t know, noticing stuff. Like the way you always get a little mean when you’re scared. Or how you never remember to lock your front door but you’ll glare at me for refusing to jaywalk. And every time I had to run off and I saw the look on your face—I wanted to tell you. I almost told you, like, like, forty darn times.”
His voice cracks a little. He’s still not looking at you.
“I kept thinking, if I say it out loud, you’ll leave. Or worse—you’ll stay, but only because you think you owe me something. Because I have the suit. Because I can lift a building. But I don’t want you to be impressed by me. I just want you to look at me the way you used to. Like I’m just… Clark.”
He laughs, sudden and shaky. “God, I sound insane.”
You say nothing. You’re not breathing very well.
And then, softly, finally, like he’s pushing it out before he loses the nerve: “I love you. Not in a heroic, save-the-day kind of way. Just—I love you. I think I’ve been in love with you since you made me help you tail that councilman with the suspicious hair plugs. And you made fun of me the whole time, but you still brought snacks.”
He swallows. “I don’t need anything from you. I just wanted you to know.”
The wind whips gently around you both now, slower, softer. Like the world has dialed down to listen in.
Clark hovers easily in place, arms strong around you, careful and warm, like he’s afraid you’ll wriggle free again and drop straight through the clouds.
He’s flushed. Nervous. He looks like he’s trying to prepare for every possible version of the moment after this. Every soft or horrible thing you might say. Every joke you might make to dodge the weight of it. Every silence.
You lean back a little to look at him.
And then, honestly, you just kiss him.
Because it’s easier than saying the whole thing. Easier than listing every moment that’s led to this, every reason you tried not to fall for him and did anyway.
The time he walked (not flew) across the city in the rain because you forgot your keys.
The fact that he never interrupts when you’re spiraling, just waits it out, steady and warm and right there.
The way he let you drag him into that adult store and joked around and made him blush with the pink handcuffs, and then he bought them for you anyway.
The banana bread.
“I love you too, you idiot.”
His whole face crumples. And then he laughs, messy and relieved and a little helpless, like he wasn’t expecting you to say it back. Like he wasn’t hoping.
“You do?”
You nod, eyes stinging. “Yeah. In every kind of way.”
And Clark—not Superman, Clark Kent, the world’s most ridiculous man, the guy you’ve known and kissed and run from and found again—leans in and kisses you silly again.
.
You’re still smiling when he stumbles through your front door with you in his arms.
Not gracefully. Not like some poised, soap-opera seduction —more like the two of you crash through the threshold like a couple of drunk fucking idiots who forgot how to use their limbs. You reach back and slap the door shut, barely catching the knob, breathless from altitude and adrenaline and everything that’s been boiling under your skin for months.
Clark kicks over your shoe rack by accident. It topples over with a loud bang and suddenly, all your shoes are on the floor.
“Sorry,” he says, half-choking on a grin, already pressing you to the wall. “I’ll—clean that up—later—”
You cut him off with your mouth. Sloppy, desperate. Fingers tangling in his curls, tugging just to feel him gasp against you. You can feel the way he hardens close to you, and you're really, really liking where this is going.
It’s not like you didn’t know he was strong.
You’ve seen his biceps. You’ve felt the hand at your back steady you when a cab came too close. You’ve watched him shoulder his way through panicked crowds, through chaos, through life, always quietly making space for you.
But this is different.
This is him holding your entire body like you weigh nothing. Like physics doesn't apply to you anymore. Like his hands were made to carry you and his mouth was made to ruin you.
“Clark,” you gasp, because you don’t know what else to say. Your hoodie’s already halfway up your torso. His hands are under it, up your ribs, one squeezing your thigh like he’s staking a claim and the other splayed wide across your spine. “You’re—fuck—”
“I know,” he pants, nosing down your throat, licking into the hollow like he’s starving for it. “I know, baby. You’re—God, you’re actually killing me.”
He lifts you—actually lifts you—like you’re nothing, just sweeps you up with one arm under your ass and carries you toward the bedroom, leaving a trail of your jacket, your hotdog wrapper, and one of your slippers behind.
You claw at his shirt, frantic, trying to get it off. Buttons ping off somewhere near the kitchen island and you both flinch, then laugh again, dizzy with it.
He drops you on the bed and follows fast, crawling over you, shedding the remains of his flannel and undershirt like he’s being hunted for it.
"Fuck, fuck—take this off," and yank off your hoodie and he groans at the sight, like the skin of your chest is some sort of a revelation, like he hasn’t had it memorized since the first time he saw you in a tank top at work and forgot what day it was.
His mouth is everywhere. On your collarbone, your shoulder, between your breasts.
Hot and open and eager, tongue twisting ruthlessly around your nipples. He’s making sounds now, those broken, happy little gasps like he’s surprised every time you let him touch you again.
You’re squirming under him, soaked and breathless, tugging at the waistband of his pants like it might save your life.
“I am gonna ruin you,” you manage to say. "Baby, let me fucking ruin you."
Clark laughs again, the kind of laugh that goes straight to your core, deep and bright and boyish, and then he flips you effortlessly onto your stomach, pushing your thighs apart with his knee, dragging his mouth down your spine like he’s tracing poetry there.
“Oh yeah?” he murmurs, low and smug and reverent. “Get in line, pretty girl.”
He pushes into you with one smooth, slow thrust, so much of him, too much, your jaw goes slack, and he just stays there for a moment, his hand curled over yours, forehead pressed to the back of your shoulder.
“I love you.”
Your breath stutters.
He doesn’t give you time to recover, emotionally or physically. Doesn’t let you laugh it off or throw up your usual wall of flippant sarcasm. He kisses your shoulder again, hips moving deeper, slower.
You twist beneath him, trying to turn over because as much as you love doggy, you can't bear to not look at him right now.
But his hand presses gently between your shoulder blades, grounding you. “Wait,” he murmurs, and you freeze. You’re still so full of him you can barely think. “Just let me—can I just—”
He grinds forward, pushing all eight inches of him inside, and you choke on a moan. You’ve never heard him like this. Not just desperate, not just lost in it — but open.
“I love you when you’re mean,” he pants, voice fraying around the edges. “I love you when you roll your eyes at me in meetings and mutter under your breath during interviews. I love you, God, you're so tight," another thrust. "—when you wear those socks with the tiny dogs on them and try to pretend you’re not soft.”
You turn your head, mouth parted, eyes wide. “Clark—”
He leans down, kisses your cheek, your temple, the place behind your ear that makes your thighs shake.
“I love you when you’re being impossible. When you steal my flannels. When you pretend you don’t care. When you kissed me for the first time and then gave me a whole spiel about it.”
“Stop—”
“I love you,” he says again, brokenly this time, like it’s being torn out of him. “I love you even when I’m scared you’ll leave. Even if this is all I get.”
You turn fully this time, eyes glassy, fingers curling around the back of his neck to drag him in.
And you kiss him.
Hard.
Hungry.
Grateful.
“I love you,” you whisper against his mouth. “I love you, you wonderful, wonderful man.”
Clark lets out a sound that’s not quite a laugh and not quite a sob.
Then he flips you under him and fucks you like it’s a promise.
You say it again when you come the second time, breathless, high-pitched, hands clutching at his shoulders, and again when he follows with a low, shuddering groan, spilling into you like he’s got nowhere else he’d rather be.
.
The car smells like spearmint gum and way, way too much coffee. Clark’s got one hand on the wheel and the other laced through yours like it’s always been there. Which, lately, it has.
You’re about halfway to Smallville.
“So,” you say, tapping his knuckles with your thumb. “How many embarrassing baby photos am I being subjected to this time? Just give me a ballpark.”
Clark chuckles. His dimples show. “Oh, uh… probably all of them. Again."
You groan. “Even the corn maze one?”
“There are multiple corn maze ones,” he corrects gently. “There’s one where I’m dressed as a scarecrow.”
You stare at him.
He nods solemnly. “With face paint.”
“Oh my God,” you wheeze, turning toward the window. “I don’t know if I’m emotionally prepared for that.”
“Don’t worry,” he says, squeezing your hand. “Ma loves you. You could commit tax fraud in front of her and she’d ask if you wanted seconds.”
You snort. “That’s very comforting.”
He shrugs, smiling again. “It’s true. She already set up the guest room.”
You blink at him.
“…The guest room?”
A pause. Clark glances over. “Well, I didn’t want to assume we’d—uh—share a bed. With my parents in the house.”
You raise a brow. “Clark. We had sex in a supply closet at the Planet.”
“That was—okay, yes—but that was under different circumstances.”
“We are dating.”
“I know.”
You lean your head back against the seat, grinning. “You’re so weird.”
“You love it,” he mutters, cheeks pink.
You do.
God, you do. You love him.
It still sneaks up on you sometimes. The clarity of it. The quiet, persistent fact of Clark Kent: the man who once made you blueberry pancakes the morning after you nearly ran out on him, who kissed your wrist like it meant something, who never—not once—looked away. Who told you he was Superman in the middle of a 7/11 parking lot, like some fucking lunatic.
And now here you are. In his car. On the way to meet his parents.
Officially.
Not just as the girl who sleeps over sometimes. Not as the coworker who won’t stop pretending she doesn’t care. Not as the idiot who thought she could get away with loving him and not doing anything about it.
No. Now, you’re his girlfriend.
Which means this is real. Which means you’re going to their farmhouse in Smallville. And Martha is probably going to offer you pie. And Jonathan is probably going to show you Clark’s fifth grade spelling bee trophy like it’s the most precious thing in the world.
Which should terrify you.
(And maybe it does, a little.)
But mostly—mostly it feels like the best thing you’ve ever said yes to.
Clark clears his throat. “Hey.”
You turn.
He’s watching you with that expression again. That soft, unguarded, ruined look like he still can’t believe you’re real. It’s so sincere it nearly undoes you.
“I’m really glad you’re coming,” he says. Quietly.
You look at him. You squeeze his hand back.
“Me too, Michigan.”
His ears go a little red. “Don’t call me that.”
“Oh? I thought you liked when I objectify you by state.”
“I like it slightly less when it happens in front of a rest stop attendant while you’re holding beef jerky and winking at me. And when it's the wrong state."
You smirk. “Not my fault you were born with that jawline and a humiliation kink.”
Clark coughs through a laugh. “God help me.”
He reaches across the console, dragging his thumb lightly over the inside of your wrist. The same spot he kissed that night. The one you think might still hum a little under your skin.
You let your head fall against his shoulder, smile tucked into your cheek.
“Wake me when we’re ten minutes out?”
“You sure?” he murmurs, already lowering the volume on the radio.
“Mhm.” You close your eyes. “I gotta mentally prepare myself for the scarecrow photos.”
You feel the press of his lips against your knuckles. Gentle. Familiar.
“You’re gonna be fine,” he says. “They love you, you know that. I do too."
(feat. accidental truth serum, public chaos, and one very flustered reader)
It starts during double Potions.
Snape’s droning on about the stability of truth serums, and Mattheo Riddle (gorgeous, brooding, completely full of himself) is stirring his cauldron with that signature air of boredom and menace.
You’re seated next to him. Unfortunately.
Well, technically it was alphabetical. But you’re starting to think fate just has a sense of humor.
Snape snaps his fingers. “Taste test. Two drops each.”
It's obvious he thinks no one made the potion right.
You arch a brow. “Taste the potion? Isn’t that, like, illegal?”
Mattheo shrugs. “Probably. But I’m dying to know what secrets you’re hiding.”
You roll your eyes and raise your vial. “Bottoms up, Riddle.”
And then.
He drinks. You pretend to drink.
You blink. He blinks.
And then... chaos.
“Your eyes,” he says dreamily, “should be illegal in academic settings. I can’t focus. I think I failed last week’s quiz because of them.”
You look over at him in horror. “What?”
“Oh no,” he says cheerfully. “I think it’s working.”
Snape narrows his eyes. “Mr. Riddle, is there a problem?”
Mattheo turns to him, absolutely beaming. “No, Professor. Unless you count the fact that I’m catastrophically in love with the girl next to me and have been writing her name over and over in the margins of my Arithmancy textbook for three months.”
There is a beat of silence.
You drop your quill.
Snape sighs. “Hospital wing. Now.”
“But I feel fine,” Mattheo says. “Better than fine. Actually, I feel free. Do you know how long I’ve wanted to tell her that her laugh makes me feel like I’m choking on happiness?”
You slap a hand over his mouth.
“Sorry, Professor,” you mutter, dragging him out of the classroom as fast as your legs can carry you. “He’s clearly unwell. Tragic. Don’t wait up.”
In the hallway, Mattheo’s grinning like a madman.
“Wait,” he says, eyes wide. “Did I tell them about the dreams yet?”
You freeze. “WHAT dreams?”
He looks slightly panicked. “Oh no.”
You push open the hospital wing door and hiss, “Mattheo Riddle, if you say one more thing that makes me want to throw myself out a window—”
“I think you’re smarter than me,” he blurts. “It’s not fair. You’re so clever. I watch you solve things and it’s like... like watching lightning happen in real time. And you don’t even brag about it. It’s disgusting. I’m obsessed with you.”
You gape at him.
Madam Pomfrey appears with a raised brow.
“Veritaserum, I assume?”
You nod numbly. “Yes. And please. Make it stop before he proposes.”
Mattheo places a hand on his chest, gasping. “Do you want me to?! Because I will. I have the ring picked out.”
A/N: missed this trainwreck | mattheo masterlist |
military!mattheo’s favorite things about reader orrr what it’s like before he goes away WINK WINK
⊹ ࣪ ˖ military!mattheo’s favorite things about you
warnings: nsfw 18+, fem!reader, fluff, sexual content
₊⊹ navigation. military!mattheo. m.list.
there isn’t a single thing military!mattheo doesn’t love about you. not one. he’s tried to think of something before—some little habit that might get under his skin, some quirk that should annoy him—but he always comes up empty. especially when he’s been away for so long, when all he has are memories of you, replaying like a goddamn prayer in his head. it only makes him love everything more. every little thing.
because you’re perfect to him, made for him, and no matter how hardened he’s become, no matter how much blood stains his hands, you’re the one thing that’s still soft, still untouched by the ugliness of the world. here are some of his favorite things, just to name a few:
the way you always make sure he’s taken care of when he comes home.
when he steps through the door, dusty and tired, he’s greeted with a warm meal—something homey, something familiar. a plate of his favorite food, even if it’s just something simple, with a glass of whiskey on the side. and there’s always a hot bath waiting for him, the water perfectly steamy, the bubbles just right.
but it’s the little things you slip under his pillow that get him—your letter. handwritten. always waiting for him, like you’ve been waiting all along.
how you fold his uniform when he’s home.
you’re careful, gentle, like it’s something delicate and not something that’s seen blood. you smooth your hands over the fabric, over the creases and patches, your fingers lingering at the frayed edges like you can will them whole again. he watches you do it, watches the way your brows knit in concentration, and he thinks—if anything in this world is holy, it’s you.
the way you hold his dog tags between your fingers.
as though they haven’t stuck through war. like they don’t weigh heavy with all the things he’s done. you twist the chain around your knuckles absentmindedly, press the cool metal against your lips when you think he isn’t looking. but he sees. he always sees.
the way your fingers trace the veins in his forearms.
following the lines like a map, like you’re learning him by touch alone. you press down where his pulse is strongest, smiling a little when he shivers.
“still alive,” you murmur, half-teasing, and he grabs your hand and kisses your fingertips like a prayer.
how you kiss his scars.
not just the old, faded ones, but the fresh, angry ones too. the ugly ones. the ones that still ache when he moves a certain way. you never ask where they came from, never make him speak about things he’d rather forget. you just kiss them, soft and slow, like your lips alone can rewrite history.
the way you never let him leave without a kiss.
even if he’s already got his boots on, even if his bags are packed and waiting by the door, you pull him down and kiss him like you can anchor him here, like you can press your love into his skin so deep it’ll never leave him. he doesn’t know if you realize how much it wrecks him. how he carries the taste of you like a ghost, like a promise, like a reason to come back.
the little crease between your brows when you’re focused.
he sees it when you’re curled up with a book, when you’re doing something mindless but deep in thought—folding laundry, stirring tea, brushing your hair. sometimes, he watches you in the mirror, that soft little furrow between your eyes, and it makes something ache inside him.
so he kisses it, every time. presses his lips there and murmurs, “don’t think too much, baby.” like you don’t have to. like he’ll do all the thinking for you.
how you hum when you cook.
not a full song, just little bits and pieces, half-formed melodies that drift through the kitchen as you move. sometimes, it’s a tune he recognizes, sometimes it’s just soft nonsense, but it stays with him. when he’s away, crouched in some cold, godforsaken place, he swears he hears it. swears it keeps him warm.
how you run your fingers through his hair when you’re half-asleep.
slow, lazy, dragging your nails against his scalp in a way that makes his eyelids go heavy. he pretends not to need it, pretends he’s too tough for it, but you know better. and when he finally does fall asleep, his head in your lap, you kiss his temple and whisper, “i’ve got you.”
how you always know when he needs to be in control.
he doesn’t have to ask for it—you sense it, feel it before he does. the way you let him flip you onto your stomach, let him take you from behind like he’s claiming you, letting him hold you in place with one hand on your back while the other digs into your hips. you don’t complain when he gets rough, don’t beg him to slow down—you love it when he takes what he wants, when he uses you like his own personal playground.
you just let him fold you in half, pressing your knees to your chest as he drives into you. the breathless little whines you make, the way you blink up at him, glassy-eyed and dazed. he knows you could squirm, fight, tell him no, be gentle—but you don’t. you let him toss you around, pin you down, grip your waist hard enough to bruise. you want it, and fuck, if that doesn’t drive him crazy.
“missed you so much,” he pants against your throat, and you nod, gasping, “missed you too, missed you so bad.” it does something to him. makes him want to keep you like this forever, pretty and pliant and his.
how you taste when he finally presses his lips to your cunt after a long deployment.
like honey and desperation, soft and sweet but with a hint of something darker. he can’t help but moan into you when you pull him closer, when you tug at his hair, pushing him deeper. you beg him to take his time, but he’s fucking starving, needs to devour every inch of you until you’re trembling and crying out his name.
the way you sound when he’s got you beneath him.
when he’s stretching you open, murmuring, “easy, baby, let me in.” the little whimper that catches in your throat when he bottoms out. the way your fingers clutch at his wrists, your nails digging into his skin, like you’re barely holding on. he loves that. he loves ruining you.
the way your nails leave marks on his back.
long angry red lines and deep crescent shapes from where your fingers dug into his skin, desperate for something to hold onto. he never tells you, but he loves it. loves the way it stings when he runs his hand over the scratches later, feeling the indentations like little imprints of you. it’s like you’ve marked him, branded him, and it gets him hard every time he so much as notices them in the mirror.
the way you bite him when you cum.
sometimes, it’s nothing too hard, nothing painful—just a little scrape of teeth against his shoulder, his neck, his jaw. sometimes, it’s straight up animalistic, going deep enough to leave marks. you bury your face in his throat, gasping against his skin as you tremble in his arms. and it makes him fucking feral. makes him rut into you harder, chasing after that feeling, after the little please that falls from your lips when it’s too much but you still want more.
the simple feeling of you beneath him.
wet and warm, your legs wrapped around his waist as he fucks you slow, each movement deep and deliberate. he never wants to rush these moments—wants to savor how you squeeze around him, how you moan when he presses deeper, closer, until you’re clinging to him like he’s the only thing keeping you grounded.
how you always cry a little when you’re cumming.
not sobbing, not loud, just quiet little tears slipping down your cheeks as you tremble beneath him. he brushes them away with his thumbs, licks them up, shushing you, kissing you, whispering how good you are, how sweet. he tells you he loves you then, like it’s a confession, like it’s something fragile and sacred. and you always say it back. always.
how fucked-out and pretty you look when he's done with you.
glossy eyes, swollen lips, breath coming in short little gasps. you always reach for him after, even when you're boneless, even when you can barely move. you curl into his chest, soft and sleepy, and he holds you like you're the only thing in the world worth holding.
🌻 In a field filled with sunflowers I would still pick you. Send this to the people who mean a lot to you and let them know you're greatful for having them in your life 🤍 (hey pookie!)
hey pooks!!! it feels like its been so long since ive been on tumblr lmao
im the sunflower to your sun, always drawn to your light and warmth <333
series summary ➥ In which, james has had longing feelings for you—christmas holidays are nearing and james confesses his love towards you in the letter, expect you never read the letter, didn’t know it existed.
Warnings: angst, fluff, james pov, this inspired by awae (aka the best show ever), James is complicated...ofc, nothing else
#1 she ignored my letter!
➥ In which, James writes you a love letter and hides it into your luggage carrying your clothes, not knowing he put it in a pocket you never open.
#2 she can date whoever she wants to, i don't care.
➥ In which, James and you still aren't on talking terms, he avoids you, never gets too close to you, yet complains to everyone when he sees you get close to your new charms partner.
#3 this is awkward..
➥ In which, you were fed up with James, deciding to put aside your pettiness you drag him away from the gryffindor party to talk to him.
#4 what letter? sirius, what letter?
➥ In which, you never planned on talking to james ever again, not after your last encounter with him. Luckily Sirius saves the day.