summary: Andrew has survived his whole life by wanting nothing. Until Craig introduces one of his friends, and suddenly, Andrew wants everything and more.
word count: 20.7k (yeah kinda lost my mind there)
c.w: age gap implied but not explicit; short suicidal ideation; crying; mentions of blood; light physical injuries; angst to fluff; smut - piv sex, oral sex; praising kink; breeding kink if you squint
a/n: sooooo...took me two weeks. had a breakdown. bon appetit! (and thank you to my wife for proofreading it) I really hope you'll like reading it like i enjoyed writing it.
âȘâȘâ€ïžâŹ Thank you so much for reading!
Andrew Cody has never been able to sleep properly.
Nights spent pacing the garden of Smurfâs house, bare feet on the cold ground, counting his steps to keep his mind occupied. It never did. He tried to outrun the memories of his actions, to drown his pain at the bottom of the pool. But on those nights, his torment wore the faces of his ghosts.
First there was Julia, then Cath, quickly followed by Baz. And Smurf. Always Smurf. A cycle of misery that makes his ribcage feel as though it might collapse under the violent pounding of his heart.
Some days, seated at a table with his family, Andrew had felt he could scream until his throat gave out, and no one would have heard. He imagined falling into the pool, slipping under the surface, water closing over his head and staying there, lungs burning just long enough for the noise to finally fucking stop, no one coming to pull him out because nobody would have noticed he disappeared.
There were moments when the thought settled heavy in his bones: he would not survive another day in his family, he didnât want to. He kept straining toward a bond that no longer reached his endâŠif it ever did.
Over the years, Andrew had grown accustomed to his role. Weird Pope, Creepy Pope, the familyâs guard dog: asking for nothing, obeying to the beatings, the killings and never, never, mentioning the ghosts hunting the corner of his eyes each night.
He remembered Smurfâs voice, years ago. âPop him a few pills and heâll follow your commands, baby.â She said it to Baz like it was nothing, like he was nothing. This was before prison, before Andrew felt deep in his bones that the other half of his soul left this merciless Earth without him.
Sometimes he let himself think about Julia, since no one else did. He hoped that at least one of them had finally found peace.
Then, you happened.
And Andrew canât make sense of it, no matter how much he turns it over in his head, how a girl like you ends up being friends with Craig and therefore, near the Cody brothers: you are sweet, kind, nothing but soft edges, and innocent. Almost like the world has spared you the knowledge of what men like him are capable of.
Whenever you are in the house, his gaze follows you from room to room. He tells himself that itâs vigilance and habit that pushes him to act like that. Except he doesnât need to memorize the way you tuck your hair behind your ear, or how he can recognize the distinct sound of your footsteps in a heartbeat.
He learns and catalogues each of your reactions: the faint frown of your nose at the smell of a particular brand of coffee (gone from the house and replaced before sunset), the soft curl of your lips whenever you are kindly refusing his offer to make you a sandwich.
(He wouldnât be bothered if you took a bite of his.)
To see you is a special kind of hell and an indescribable heaven, like pressing on a bruise just to make sure it still hurts.
Lately, you shift the air of the house by simply existing in it. Your laugh, in the rooms where Smurf had once lived, seems to almost cleanse the walls of her memory. Â And Andrew knows. He knows thatâs why Craig is friends with you. Because each day, the sun seems to finally be able to reach the house, even his own room.
It frightens him.
His body instinctively adjusts around your presence, his mind reassessing new rules (the glasses on the bottom shelf so you can have access to them, checking how many drinks you have at Deranâs bar). He memorizes your schedule, notes which books you are bringing with you in your bag, times how long it takes you to get home, parks far enough that you canât notice his truck but close enough that he can reach you if something goes wrong.
All his life, Andrew had survived by wanting nothing. By hollowing himself out until the obedience Smurf wanted from him fitted neatly inside his ribs, because wanting had always been a liability, a weakness someone could press a knife into.
But nowâŠnow that life seems finally good and breathable, that he has the skatepark and his siblings and an almost regular life (if one exists for men like him) without Smurfâs claws on his throat, Andrew finds himself cornered by a simple, terrifying truth: he wants you.
He swallows it. Buries it deep inside, trying to drown it with numbness and even more repetitive actions when you are near: chopping, tidying the house, scrubbing counters that are already clean, fixing hinges that doesnât squeak⊠Anything to keep his hands busy so they donât reach for you.
No, Andrew Cody has never been able to sleep properly.
ââââââââââ
You remember telling yourself that the house felt wrong before you ever understood why.
Craig had asked you to come meet his brothers and from his tone alone, you knew it was a big deal. That something was at stake.
You showed up at four sharp, even if he hadnât given you a specific time (something you would soon realize was typical of Craig), a paper bag pressed to your chest, palms already sweaty. You stood outside for a full minute before knocking, taking a few deep breaths, and stepping over the threshold with a smile as he wrapped you in a hug with his tall frame before dragging you straight into the kitchen.
Thatâs when you saw him.
Broad shoulders, dark curls on a face held tight, back straight and hands braced on his thighs, his posture so still you almost thought he was a mannequin.
âMy brother Pope,â Craig said. âDonât mind him, he almost doesnât bite.â
His gaze was already on you, unblinking, steady in a quiet unnerving way, like he was committing every detail to memory, a look so intense it coaxed words out of you before you could stop them.
âH-Hi,â you stuttered, giving your name as you tried to stay composed. You extended your hand toward him, and he stared at it for a moment. The pause stretched long enough for doubt to creep up your spine (maybe he didnât shake hands? maybe you had already broken some invisible rule?).
You swallowed, blood rising to your cheeks, drawing your hand back to clutch the paper bag as you tried not to stammer on your words. âI brought pastries. I didnât know what you all would like soâŠI kind ofâŠguessed,â you hated how small your voice sounded.
He stayed silent, brows faintly furrowed, as if he was processing what you had just said. Then he nodded. âThank you.â
His tone was quiet, almost a hum, pulled from the depth of his chest, the sound settling low in your stomach, warm and heavy, and your first thought (unwelcome and strange) was how that vibration would feel beneath your palm.
Craig sighed with desperation at the conversation with a quiet âStop being weird, bro!â while his other younger brother, unbothered, simply ignored the awkwardness, nodded as an introduction and handed beers around.
It was a welcome distraction, the cold liquid sliding down your throat, and buying you time to think on what to say next, but the youngest, Deran, beat you to it, asking you about your job and how good a surfer you were.
âYou fuckinâ with me? You live in Oceanside and canât stand on a board?â he laughed and couldnât stop the slight condescending tone from his voice. âNo worry, me or mister El Craigo here will introduce you to it. Youâll only swallow, likeâŠa gallon of water before you get it.â
âOh, umâŠI donât thinkâŠâ  you tried to say, though it was mostly ignored.
Pope hadnât looked away once, hand gripping tightly enough on the beer that you could see his knuckles whitening. There was something careful about the way he held himself: still, contained.
Your eyes met his again and you smiled tentatively.
âUmâŠPope,â you started, uncertain, the name tasting strange on your tongue. âCan I ask youâŠâ
âAndrew.â He interrupted, the tone firm enough to stop you mid-breath.
You suddenly became aware of your heartbeat, your chest lifting as it rattled against your ribs. Your gaze dropped at the intensity. Had you done something wrong? You suddenly felt foolish for the pastries, for the outstretched hand, for trying so hard, and an absurd urge to apologize rose in your throat, even if you didnât know what for.
When you looked up, he was already halfway out of the kitchen.
You never finished your question.
Later that night, when you slipped into your bed, the sheets cold but familiar in their welcoming loneliness, you turned from one side to the other, eyes pinched shut without any release to exhaustion, realizing that you couldnât remember what you had meant to ask.
Only that you wanted to hear his voice, just one more time.
ââââââââââ
The house is too loud. It always is when there are people over.
It reminds him of being a kid, hiding with Julia, hands intertwined, avoiding the drunk and high grown-ups. Whispering that everything would be alright. That no one would find them. Not even Smu-
(Bad thought. One. Two. Three. Four. He counts the dents on the kitchen counter.)
The volume of the music is pushed too high for his comfort, a constant buzz under the conversations in the house and near the pool while Andrew stands in the kitchen, hands deep in soapy water, scrubbing a glass that is already clean.
He finished the dishes ten minutes ago, but he is still washing, still drying, rearranging things that donât need rearranging because it gives him somewhere to put his hands, to put his eyes. Because the alternative is the living room. And you.
(You, in that white dress. He has the stupid thought that you look like an angel and immediately hates himself for it. One. Two. Three. Four. He counts the droplets dripping from his fingertips.)
He tells himself that he is staying in the kitchen because it lets him see everything in the house, because parties mean unlocked doors, strangers who could wander into rooms they shouldnât be in. And there are the habits he canât shake off: watching the exits, the unfamiliar faces, counting heads (Deran, Craig, you), noting who is drinking too much, who is getting loud, who might break something.
He dries the same plate twice in a row before setting it down on the kitchen counter and looking up without meaning to.
You are by the couch, perched on the armrest while Craig, bare chest and shameless about it, tells you the story about the time he smuggled a burrito full of drugs across the Mexico border, story he knew you heard a dozen times these past three months. But still, you are laughing, head tipped back, hair falling down your spine (he wonders what they would feel like underneath his fingertips), one hand wrapped around a bottle you havenât drunk from in a while, like it has more to do with keeping your hands busy while you are listening.
Andrew noticed it the first week he met you.
But the moment your lips wrap around the drink, he looks away and goes back to washing clean and dried plates, hands in the ice water, soap stinging the small cut on his knuckle.
(Good. Something sharp. Something real. Better than counting for now.)
âI bought you a new pair of gloves.â
Your voice is closer than he expected and his head snaps towards you before he can stop it. You are standing at the edge of the counter, smiling, so close that he can smell your shampoo despite the soap and the lingering smell of weed (itâs so clean, so soft, he wants to drown himself in it).
 âWhy?â He asks, his nostrils flaring at his own bluntness.
You shrug, small. âI know Craig threw your pair away yesterday. And, um⊠I know you like wearing them when you clean.â
âWhy?â his voice repeats, breaking at the word.
Of course, you ignore his question, and he canât help but spiral (why did you do that? do you realize how much the gesture is affecting him? no one ever cared about his gloves. One. Two. Three. Four. He counts the freckles on your nose.).
âI got the good ones,â you add, beaming. âSo the soap doesnât mess up your hands.â
While your eyes drop to his hands, his are still enraptured on your face, studying every single feature (you really do look like an angel. and you act like one too. maybe you are his salvation. stop, he needs to fucking stop but he no longer knows what to count.).
Andrew swallows what feels like an anchor in his throat because you look like you worry about him (you have done that for a while now, which still baffles him). Nobody worries about him: they worry about what he might do, not whether he is hurt.
ââm fine.â He mutters, not convincingly enough, judging by the look on your face.
You are still looking at his bruised hands and your fingers twitch on the counter like you had the sudden urge to reach for him, like you might take his hand to look at it.
(He has the overwhelming need to know what you would do with his hands in yours. Hold them? Kiss them better? One. Two. Three- would you let his hands run along your hair? He knows what itâs like to touch you when you need help, but he feels that this would be very different.)
âThey are under the sink,â you say above the music and Andrew canât do anything else but stare, not trusting his own voice.
You linger for a moment at the counter and Andrew wants to ask you to stay (in the kitchen, in his life, doesnât matter), but Craig shouts your name from the living room and suddenly he has some homicidal thoughts. You glance over your shoulder, then back at Andrew, and you lookâŠreluctant.
âIâllâŠâ
âYeah.â
You donât move. Neither does he.
âThanks.â He finally says, his gaze still tracking every shift of your expressions, trying to burn your smile in his retina, hoping one blink would not be enough to erase it.
âOf course, Andrew.â
Andrew. For you, he is Andrew and thatâs all that matters because you are the only one calling him by this name and you make it sound like it belongs to you ever since you first said it by the pool.
With one last little smile, you walk away and his eyes follow you until he knows you have reached Craig but even then, he doesnât look away, afraid you might disappear, just like every good thing always did.
And Andrew learned, a long time ago, that if you wanted something to stay alive and safe, you watched it. Guarded it. Didnât blink.
Andrew didnât blink.
ââââââââââ
You stepped outside because the house had started to feel too small, suffocating all at once, Craig and Deranâs voices stacking over each other in the open kitchen, arguing about a job - a part of the Cody brothersâ lives you knew existed but mostly chose not to look at too closely.
You told yourself you only needed a second of quiet, just enough space to breathe properly again after a long day at work full of aggravating customers, meager tips and a coffee spilt by a coworker on your bare legs.
The noise softened once the door closed, letting you draw in a deep breath you hadnât realized youâd been holding.
âFucking hell.â You muttered, exhausted by the shouting.
You hadnât noticed him at first, too busy staring at the pool and ignoring your inner voice telling you to jump straight in the pool fully clothed, a thought that you were soon pulled out of when you heard a sound that didnât belong to the wind or the trees.
Thatâs when you saw him, seated at the edge of a lounge chair, head bowed, a skateboard turned upside down across his thighs, one hand spinning a wheel while the other oiled it with slow, precise movements.
âNot a fan of the shouting matches?â you asked, trying not to startle him.
He glanced up, shook his head before going back to the board. âNo.â
âSoâŠnot keen on loud noises either?â
âNo.â
For a moment, you simply watched him, struck by how different he looked when he was doing something he seemed toâŠenjoy. Less folded into himself, the usual tightness of his posture easing (was it because of the board? the sound of the pool? the absence of his brothers? whatever it is, the view looked precious enough for you to want to capture it).
You lowered yourself onto the warm concrete next to him, your back resting against the lounge chair, knees pulled to your chest, neither of you speaking for a while.
Thatâs when you noticed his hands: knuckles swollen and red, the skin split near the thumb, a faint line of blood reopening every time the skin stretched.
âThey look like they hurt. Y-Your hands, I mean.â
He shrugged without looking at you. âTheyâre fine.â
Your eyes drifted from them to his profile: from his hazel eyes fully focused on the board to the tight set of his mouth and you caught yourself distracted by his lips for a second too long before forcing your eyes back to the floor, warmth creeping up your neck (donât think about that, donât think about that).
âAndrew?â
The wheel immediately stopped spinning. Not gradually, justâŠstopped.
The entire yard suddenly became too quiet as his face snapped towards you, something unreadable flickering across his face and vanishing just as quickly, and you felt the realization settle in slowly that you had finally said his name after almost a month of avoiding it.
âDo you think I could learn how to skateboard? IâŠâ the words got stuck between your throat and your lips while you searched for the courage to finish your sentence without tripping over yourself. âI meanâŠI wanted to know if you could help me. Learn it, I mean. If you wanted to. You donât have to, I justâŠâ (fuck. why? why were you so weird?)
Your fingers picked at the hem of your skirt and pulled on a thread to busy your hands, and from the corner of your vision you caught his brief smile, and the warmth that spread was so shamefully immediate that you bit your tongue until you tasted metal just to keep from blurting out something along the lines of âi really, really, fucking love your smile, please do it again so my day goes from moderately shitty to embarrassingly close to perfection.â
âGive me your phone.â he said, and you didnât hesitate, fishing it out from your pocket, and placing it in his palm.
âThereâs no password on your phone.â
âYeahâŠI know.â
âItâs dangerous.â His thumb hovered over the screen, nose flaring. âAnyone could get into it. Your photos. Your messages. Your address. Everything is in there.â
You barely heard the end of it, too focused on the pull in your chest as his words kept coming, just for you.
âI havenât thought about that.â You murmured, feeling foolish while he muttered to himself something that definitely sounded like âI did.â
He tapped his number in before going through the settings while you were still struck by his intensity and that he was doing this for you without being asked.
âSix digits. Not birthdates and not something simple like six zeros.â He handed your phone back, his fingers lingering for a second too long before pulling away. âPut one.â
This time you knew it was an order and you didnât hesitate a second as you followed it, typing something in, suddenly hyperaware of how close he was standing, your shoulder almost brushing his calf, your pulse loud in your ears and a slow, humiliating heat pooling low in your stomach that you refused to think about at the moment.
âGood.â He said after you saved the password. âText me your work hours.â
âSo, itâs a yes? Really?â
He grunted and whether the dusting of crimson over his freckles was real or something you imagined, you couldnât tell, you were too busy feeling as light as a leaf.
âYes. AndâŠâ
His words were cut off by the screen door banging open, leaning back abruptly just as Craig made his way toward you both with a grin that meant whatever the fight with Deran had been about, he had won.
âDeran agrees for Friday night. And you,â he tapped your forehead. âdidnât hear shit.â
âI donât even know what youâre talking about.â
âThatâs my girl. Now get your ass in the pool.â
Craig was already running to the pool before you could respond, clothes coming off mid-step.
âI canât believe this man has a kid. Has you brother always been a shameless nudist?â
 âUnfortunatelyâŠyes.â
You snorted before murmuring. âThanks, by the way. For the password thing. And for agreeing to teach me. I promise Iâll only be likeâŠaverage terrible.â
âYouâll be fine,â he shrugged. Then, quieter, âIâll make sure.â
His gaze dipped briefly to your mouth when he said it, before snapping back up, and something in your stomach turned warm and gooey, a reckless part of you hoping he might add something else. Or step closer again. But he didnât, just nodded once, before muttering. âGo.â
âOkay, Iâll leave you to your board, Andrew.â
You made it halfway to the pool before you glanced back. He was still watching, not even pretending not to, looking like a leopard ready to jump. Like if you slipped, he would already be moving.
And lying awake that night, window cracked open and the ocean humming somewhere in the dark, you muffled his name into your pillow, trying to quiet yourself, imagining his hands instead of yours. Andrew, Andrew, Andrew.
ââââââââââ
Andrew is used to ending his nights alone because wanting people to stay never goes well for him.
So, when the party finally ends at four in the morning, he does what he knows best: throwing the bottles into the trash, making sure no one is passed out in the backyard or asleep in one of the bedrooms andâŠcleaning.
First the diving board, even if Craig is still making out on one of the lounge chairs with a girl whose name Andrew canât remember and doesnât try to (he knows best). Next, the counter, twice in a row for good measure. Then the sink, while Deran claps a hand on his shoulder with a âDonât stay up too late, okay?â before heading out.
(One. Two. Three. Four. Wash. Rinse. Repeat. He counts the second you spend in the bathroom.)
He stands in the kitchen for a moment before realizing it might look strange and make you uncomfortable. Thatâs the last thing he wants.
He rushes back to his room (he wouldnât exactly call it âsprintingâ. sprinting would mean he is trying to avoid you. which he is not. not at all.).
He doesnât bother turning on the light when he decides to lie on top of the covers, fully dressed, staring at the ceiling because he knows that sleep wonât come. It never does.
(One. Two. Three. Four. He counts the cracks.)
Every time he closes his eyes, something crawls up from beneath his ribs and he is once again plagued by his ghost: Juliaâs voice, Cathâs smile, Bazâs forgiveness. Smurfâs words cutting straight through him.
He thinks about the pool and how easy it would be to let the water close over his head. How all the voices would finally be silent forever, his own included.
(Bad thoughts. One. Two. Three. Four. He recites the number of cameras in the bank for the incoming job.)
He forces himself to think of something else.
Of you, earlier, laughing at Craigâs story (and the immediate, unwelcome ache in his chest as he wonders if thereâs something between the two of you, if this will end the way things always seem to, if youâll be another Cath: close to him before preferring his brother).
Then he thinks about the way he made you laugh on your first skateboard lesson, all because he wanted to make you feel safe and seen, how the simple feel of your waist had nearly made him press his forehead to your shoulder and beg for you to stay and keep looking at him like that.
He thinks about that night when you called him for help, and how he didnât hesitate for even a second when reaching for his keys, truck already running before you even finished explaining because the simple thought of you alone somewhere in the dark, waiting and frightened, had felt like acid running through his veins, the kind of fear that made him beg to the sky âNot here, not her, not again. I wonât fail herâ. Â
He presses his palms against his eyes until he sees bursts of purple light.
(Breathe. One. Tw-)
A faint knock against the door makes him freeze.
Nobody knocks in this house, his brothers justâŠbarge in.
He is already on his feet before he realizes it, his hand finding the handle before he opens to find you there.
Barefoot, hair loose and messy, the mascara smudged at the corners of your eyes and the dress wrinkled. Earlier, Andrew thought you looked like an ethereal angel, something untouchable and holy.
But nowâŠnow you just look human, real and warm, which is worse because real things like you can stay as well as leave.
âHey.â You murmur, leaning against the doorframe.
He grips the handle tightly to steady himself.
âSomething wrong?â
âI was supposed to sleep on the couch,â you begin, talking with your hands the way you always do when you try to explain a situation, âbut signor El Craigo has decided that itâs now his new make out spot with Sam and I really donât need that image burned into my brain. And of course, I thought about taking his room in retaliation, but I donât trust his conception of hygiene,â
That makes him huff.
âSoâŠâ you add, rubbing your arm, almost shy which doesnât make sense in his mind because you havenât been shy with him in a long time with the skatepark lessons or with the âhallway accidentâ you both had together, âCan I stay here tonight?â
You donât say âwith youâ nor âin your bedâ, but Andrew understands and he is pretty sure his brain short circuits for a second or two.
You didnât text Deran or try to Uber home. You just came to him. Because you trusted him.
âYes.â He replies too fast, stepping back from the door.
âYou sure?â
He nods to avoid confessing that he would give you the bed. The room. The house. The air in his lungs.
You slip past him into the room, sitting on the edge of the bed before looking back at him and asking gently, âYouâre not sleeping, right?â.
âNo. NotâŠnot really.â
âYeah, figured.â
You lie down beneath the covers first, curling onto the side of the bed closest to the wall, leaving him space.
âDonât think about staying on top of the covers, Andrew.â
The warning in your tone almost makes him laugh so he complies, lying down beside you, fully clothed and aware of every inch separating the two of you.
He stares at the ceiling again.
(One. Two. Three. Four. He counts your breathing.)
The mattress shifts while you slowly roll onto your back before turning fully toward him, your shoulder brushing his arm.
âSorry,â you mumble sleepily. ââm cold.â
âItâs fine.â He says it like the ghost of your breathing over his collarbone didnât just set every of his nerves on fire, like he was not terrified to shift even an inch.
After a few minutes, you drift closer in your sleep, chasing warmth without thinking, your knee pressing against his thigh, your hand sliding across the sheets until your fingers come to rest on the fabric of his shirt, right over his heartbeat and for a moment he genuinely forgets how to breathe.
Your palm is so warm, and he is painfully aware that you can probably feel how hard his heart is pounding.
Nobody has ever touched him like this, like he is something safe and out of everything that has happened to him: the underground fights, the prison, the jobsâŠnone of that ever made him feel this defenseless.
His eyes suddenly burn because he wants to turn so much to see your peaceful face, tuck a strand of hair behind your ear, pull you closer to know just once in his life what itâs like to hold something good without destroying it, to press his face into your hair and breathe until the ghosts quiet down, but he doesnât.
He stays exactly as he is, lying in the dark, eyes wide open, staring at nothing.
(One. Two. Three. Four. He counts your breaths again. Then the seconds between them. He thinks about the fact that youâre here and the miracle of it.)
Sleep doesnât come, but for the first time in years, the night doesnât feel empty.
Because youâre here. Warm. Alive. Trusting him.
So, Andrew stays awake until morning, guarding the only good thing that ever chose him.
ââââââââââ
You were so, so late.
You had told Andrew on the phone that you would be at his skatepark at 5:15 sharp after work, and it was now 5:42 and you were sprinting the half mile that separated the coffee shop from there, bag smacking against your hip, your lungs burning, already sweaty before you even reached the entrance, trying to slow your breathing with a few useless deep inhales, hands braced on your knees, pretending that you were not seconds away from passing out.
(First lesson and you were already late and a disaster. Great. Very impressive.)
You straightened, wiped your forehead, and stepped inside, scanning the park before finding Andrew, board tucked under one arm, sleeves riding up his biceps, curls messy from the wind and sweat and you were now positively sure that you had some drool at the corner of your mouth (the universe had decided to sabotage you and that was fucking unfair.)
You watched the tiny smile he had as a girl showed him her board, proud and beaming at him like he had personally hung the sun in the sky (no, you didnât need to think about him being good with kids. you didnât need to picture him with kids, him gentle, himâŠstop. shut up.).
The second his head lifted and locked eyes with you, you were pretty much done for. It was ridiculous, really, how one look from him could short-circuit every coherent thought in your brain, how your feet justâŠmoved, carrying you toward him instinctively, dropping your bag by the fence without breaking your stride as he met you halfway.
His gaze dragged over you once: your face, your hair, your chest.
âYou ran here?â
âYes. And Iâm sweatingâŠa lot. Please donât judge me.â
He took a few seconds, a storm passing through his eyes before he added.
âYouâre late.â
âI know,â you rushed, your hands quickly moving and your words tumbling over each other like they always did when you got flustered around him. âbut a guy ordered for his whole âcheaper by the dozenâ family like three minutes before we closed. Iâm probably sure he sensed my despair and fed on it.â
A small huff escaped him. âYou didnât have to run.â
You shrugged, eyes to the ground. âDidnât want you to think I bailed on you.â
You felt it, his head tilting down just enough to catch your gaze again, stubborn about it.
âI wouldnât. Now you ready?â
âBorn ready.â You lied through your teeth.
âYou look terrified.â
âI can do both, you know,â you shot back quickly. âI am large, I contain multitudes.â
There was the tiniest twitch at the corner of his mouth. âOkay, Whitman.â
âY-You know Whitman?â
A pause.
âI meanâŠnot that I donât believe you or think you canât read poetry or anythingâŠthatâs actually super hot, so good job!â you gave him a thumbs-up, aware you had just lost every ounce of dignity you had ever possessed. âItâs just that last week Craig asked me if âPride and Peaceâ was a good book to impress a girl, soâŠmy bar was very low.â
Andrew stared at you for a moment. âPride and Peace.â
âYeah.â
âThatâs notâŠâ
âI know, I know. But donât worry, I did a good deed for society and told him not to mention any book ever. You and Deran are safe from now on. Youâre welcome.â
And there it was again: that quiet amusement on his lips, the roll of his eyes like he couldnât help himself, making you feel the stupid and dangerous need to continue to jest (keep talking, say anything, make him do it again).
He shook his head once. âCâmon Whitman. Letâs see what you got.â
You trailed after him without thinking and the first few attempts wereâŠhumiliating to say the least: your balance was nonexistent, your feet refused to cooperate, your arms stood uselessly at your sides, and you had absolutely no idea where you were supposed to look while Andrew hovered nearby like he was ready to intervene at any moment.
âI look stupid!â you complained.
âYouâre fine.â
âIâm not fine! This is deeply humiliating. I can barely stay upright and there are twelve-year-olds doing tricks behind me! Tricks, Andrew!â
âYouâre doing good.â
âI almost died.â
âYou didnât.â
âSocially, I assure you I did.â
Your heart did a stupid little skip when a tiny, amused sound escaped him.
(You could bottle that sound and live off it. You were now pretty sure you would commit crimes for it.)
âMakes sense youâre friends with Craig,â he muttered. âDramatic.â
You gasped, unable to contain your grin. âExcuse you mister Cody, but I am layered! I am complex!â
He looked unimpressed and repeated âDramatic.â
You opened your mouth to argue before your foot slipped, the board shooting forward, and for one horrible second you thought that worse than falling off in front of children was falling off in front of the guy you had a crush on.
But you never got to know the feeling before his hands were suddenly there, at your waist, catching you fast and steadying you while you became acutely aware of every nerve under his palms, of his thumbs grazing your hipbones, of his breath brushing your cheek as heat pooled between your legs.
He moved behind your back, still holding your waist before murmuring âDonât lean and bend your knees.â
(You were starting to suspect he was fucking with you on purpose.)
But still, he adjusted you gently, palms rotating your hips and guiding your stance before kneeling to help place your legs on the board and you couldnât stop yourself from blurting:
âI havenât shaved my legs. Sorry.â
âMe neither.â He huffed, his breath warm on your calf and the faintest hint of amusement threading through his voice.
(Was thatâŠa joke? Was he joking? Since when was he doing that? You liked that. You wanted that.)
Andrew pushed himself back on his feet, stepping away just enough for you to feel the sudden absence of his body, leaving you oddly cold, like you had stepped out of the sunlight.
âTry again.â
You nodded, realizing that his joke had somehow shaken the worst of your nerves away, before pushing off, your knees bent like he had shown you, your weight centered and the board rolled.
âOh my God, Iâm doing it! Andrew, Iâm really doing it!â you exclaimed happily.
âYou are.â
You risked a glance over your shoulder, and he was watching you with his usual careful intensity, hands half-raised and prepared to catch you, like protecting you was the only thing on his list right now.
So (naturally), you did the dumbest thing possible and tested him. Just a little bit. Just to know.
You leaned and let your weight tip forward just enough to know ifâŠ
His hands immediately caught you, his hands on your ribs, scanning up and down if you had been hurt, âYou okay?â
You swallowed, realizing that you had never doubted a second he would be there. And that settled something warm and terrifying in your chest.
It was not a silly crush, not your friendâs brother that you thought was hot and interesting, no. It was falling. Headfirst, no parachute.
And judging by the way his hands hadnât moved from your waist yet, you werenât entirely sure he wasnât falling a little too.
ââââââââââ
You are screaming and he is too late.
He is always too late.
Your voice breaks into something small and terrified, the kind of sound that doesnât even feel human anymore, and he is running but his legs donât cooperate, move in slow-motion, the floor stretching longer and longer beneath him and the house smells like chlorine, metal and something sour he recognizes too fast.
Youâre in the pool, face down and the water is red. And you are so, so still. He tries to move, to drag you out, but he canât.
You turn toward him, eyes open and your mouth spilling blood.
âYou were supposed to be there, Andrew. Why werenât you there?â
He jerks awake, his whole body snapping upright while air refuses to enter his lungs, a pain in his ribcage so intense he thinks it might split him open from the inside out.
He doesnât understand why at first: why his pillow feels cold and damp to the touch, why his throat burns, until he drags a shaky hand across his face and touches something wet, the realization feeling nauseating.
He has been crying in his sleep for God knows how long.
He presses his palms hard into his eyes like maybe the pain will help him, like maybe if he suffers enough the images will disappear. That you wonât be floating face down in the pool, covered in blood, your blood, your voice joining all the others, the same disappointed tone heâs memorized over the years with his ghosts.
(One. Two. Three. Four. He tries to count but it doesnât work.)
The house is quiet for once, too quiet, and Andrew has this awful, crawling sensation lodged under his sternum, something cold and irrational that he canât help but spiral into.
(What ifâŠNo.)
He is already moving, because lying back down would mean closing his eyes again and he canât, he fucking canât risk seeing you like that again, canât hear the sound of your voice pleading and begging for him to save you when you are already gone, canât add you to the long list of ghosts that wait for him every night.
Halfway down the hall, he gets as quiet as he can manage, moving through the house like he is on a job, because it feels the same: this sick, urgent need to verify something, to be sure that you are here, that you are safe.
The living room is glowing faintly blue before he even steps in, the light spilling on the floor and he hears it: a narrator speaking about sharks and the distant sound of recorded waves.
You always pick sea life documentaries when you stay over.
He doesnât know when you figured out he liked them.
He stops at the threshold and sees you: curled on the couch, hidden beneath a blanket and alive.
(Your chest rises. Then falls. Rises. Falls. Youâre not floating. Youâre not gone.)
His lungs finally unlock and he breathes sharply, the sound loud enough that you look up immediately, like you sensed him there, like you are now tuned to him in a way he doesnât understand, and your expression softens the second you see his face.
âHey,â you say, voice thick with sleep. âEverything okay?â
He nods automatically but knows that he canât bullshit you.
âYou donât look okay.â
âIâm fine,â he manages, but the words come out wrecked and dragged through his throat.
Your eyes examine him slowly and it clicks behind them. âNightmare?â
(Oh, he hates this word. Hates how small it makes him feel. Hates how childish it sounds. Hates how accurate it is.)
His jaw locks so hard it aches and he canât force out anything more than a stiff, miserable nod, his nails digging crescent moons in his palms as he braces himself for questions, for having to justify why he is standing there at three in the morning, shaking over a bad dream. But you donât push.
You just scrub a hand over your tired face before moving your legs and lifting the blanket, creating space beside you.
âCome here.â You mumble, looking at him, patient.
He crosses the room slowly, the couch dipping under his weight as he lowers himself beside you, hyperaware of every inch of distance, of your arm brushing his, of the warmth bleeding through the thin fabric of your shirt, of how close your knee is to his thigh and how easy it would be to accidentally touch.
Your hand bumps his and even if he should pull away, he doesnât. The contact is small, just skin against skin but for Andrew, itâs the closest to heaven heâs ever been.
Your fingers linger, uncertain, like youâre giving him time to decide, like he is allowed to decide. His thumb moves before he can stop it, brushing lightly over your knuckles, slowly, reverently, like he needs to make sure you are solid and not a trick of his mind. You feel warmer than him.
(Alive warm. Not water cold. Not bloody and floating. Not like in the pool.)
The memory hits so hard it hurts.
He jerks his hand back abruptly, his breathing going wrong again, shame creeping hot and fast because for a moment he wanted something and asked for it, letting the walls go down.
But you donât comment, donât tease and donât pull away in response to his neediness and instead, you shift closer and you help settling the blanket over both of you, your arm following, tugging him in gently, like there has never been a version of this world where he wasnât permitted to be here.
He stiffens when your hand finds the back of his neck and he wants to reassure you that itâs not because he wants it to stop but because he wants it too much, and he doesnât deserve it. But your fingers brush his scalp, and suddenly he is nothing but starving for it, leaning toward it instinctively.
You guide him down gently, so gently and he canât win this fight tonight, his ear pressing against your chest.
The documentary keeps whispering about tides and sharks, but he barely hears it now because all he can focus on is the rhythm under his cheek and the way your fingers keep caressing his curls in slow strokes like you were calming a frightened wild animal.
He wants to move. To slide his arm around your waist. To press his face into your shirt and breathe you. To hold you tight enough so nothing could ever take you away.
But he stays still, terrified of ruining it and breaking something with the weight of his want.
Your fingers drift lower to cradle the back of his head while your other arm tightens around him and pull him fully into you, closing the remaining space between your two bodies. His relief is immediate and overwhelming, pulling a whimper out of him, emptying him of his thoughts.
His chest caves inward on a shaky exhale, his hand finally moving hesitantly until it rests lightly on your waist, barely touching and giving you room to pull away if you want to, but you donât. You tuck him closer, your chin brushing his hair.
 âIâve got you. Youâre okay, Andrew, I promise. Iâm here.â
The words land deep and it takes him a moment to realize he is sobbing in your arms, the tears soaking your shirt while he presses his forehead closer to your chest, just to confirm that the heartbeat under him is real.
(One. Two. Three. Four. He counts your heart now.)
âShhâŠItâs going to be okay, Andrew.â
The storm in his head â the ghosts, the pool, your voice â slowly quiets for the first time all night, dissolving under the simple, undeniable fact that you are here and breathing under his cheek, speaking to him, comforting him.
And somewhere, between one beat and the next, his body finally gives up the fight, his sobs stop, exhaustion dragging him under gently this time, no drowning, no screaming, just the steady rhythm of you and your quiet voice drifting above him.
âIâm not leaving Andrew.â
He knows that for tonight at least, no nightmare will come at him.
You promised.
ââââââââââ
âFuck, Fuck, Fuck.â
Craig was the worst and you were absolutely going to kill him. Not even metaphorically, but in the sense where you would pick up the nearest heavy object and aim for his head the next time you saw him, if only you were able to find him right now instead of wandering through a house you didnât know that smelled aggressively of weed and alcohol.
Deran and Andrew would forgive you, you were sure of it, if you murdered their brother under these circumstances. Hell, they might even help you bury the body. Because you could have had a regular evening at home, watching for the hundredth time Shawshank Redemption but no, you had to be alone in a strangerâs kitchen, trying not to panic.
The party had shifted, you felt it about twenty minutes ago.
It had stopped being loud fun and started being loud wrong when little bags started to be passed around, people disappearing in rooms and coming back with pupils blown wide and white powder on their nostrils.
You had looked for Craig. Texted him. Called. Nothing.
You had found someone who vaguely resembled one of the friends he introduced you to earlier, and when you asked if they had seen him, they laughed and replied something about âupstairs with Renn so it might take a while, Sweetheart,â and you stood there for a second, scared. Really scared.
Because you didnât know anyone there, not really. And you were now surrounded by idiots who were snorting cocaine.
(Okay. Calm down. Breathe. Donât cry. It doesnât help your situation at all.)
A guy you didnât recognize slid a drink toward you with a grin that lingered too long, and the fact that your very first thought was âI wonder if he put something in thatâ made your decision for you: you were leaving. Immediately. Whatever Craig was doing upstairs with Renn was officially no longer your problem.
The night air hit your face, making you regret for the lack of jacket.
You stood on a sidewalk for a moment, trying to calculate the distance back to your apartment. You were too far, with no car and a phone at nine percent.
âCraig is dead. He is fucking dead. I will kill him myself,â you muttered under your breath as you started walking anyway, heels dangling in your hand, bare feet against the cold concrete, just to put some distance between you and the house.
But the further you got, the louder your heartbeat became, pounding in your ears, the fear crawling up your spine.
Still, you kept walking, arms wrapped tightly around yourself, repeating âYouâll be fine,â over and over to your brain.
(You were not fine. You were alone. In the middle of the night. Walking barefoot down a street you didnât know. Why were you like this? Why didnât you just stay? Why didnât you drag Craig out by his stupid hair to drive you back home?)
You didnât want to try to call Craig again and waste your last percentage of battery on someone who would not answer.
And before you could talk yourself out of it, before you could rationalize or be embarrassedâŠyour thumb was already pressing Andrewâs name.
(If you called him, he would come. He wouldnât hesitate. You knew it.)
The phone only rang once before he picked up.
âYes?â
That was all it took for you: the sound of his steady and low voice to make something inside your chest collapse, the fragile composure you had been clinging to dissolving instantly as you let out a shaky exhale, thanking all the Gods above for Andrew Codyâs existence.
âAndrew,â you said, your voice betraying you immediately with a crack right through the middle of his name. âI-Iâm sorry. Itâs late, I know. I justâŠâ
âWhat happened.â
You swallowed, trying to force the tears to back down. âIâm at this party andâŠand Craig left. I meanâŠhe is upstairs with Renn doing I donât know what and he wonât answer me. I left the house because it got weird there and Iâm trying to walk home but I think that was a stupid idea and I justâŠâ
(You hated how your voice wobbled. How small it sounded. You should have bought pepper spray.)
âIâm so scared.â
In the background, you could hear keys jangling, a door closing and his truck starting.
âWhere are you?â
No âwhyâ, no âwhat were you thinkingâ. Just that.
You gave him the street name and the closest intersection you could see, wiping your face with the back of your hand and trying to steady your breathing so you didnât sound like you were seconds away from a breakdown.
âIâll be there in five.â
You let out a weak, disbelieving laugh. âItâs at least ten.â
âFive.â
The line went dead before you could argue, the call cutting off abruptly as your screen went black. Dead battery.
You stared at your reflection for half a second on the dark screen, heart hammering while you counted the seconds in your head, hoping that somehow it would summon him faster.
It took less than three hundred for you to see headlights cut around the corner of the street faster than the required speed limit, relief crashing into you. He didnât even fully stop before the driverâs door was already swinging open, crossing the distance to you in three long strides, eyes sweeping over you from head to toe then past you to the houses.
âYou okay?â
You nodded too quickly and he stared at you, jaw locked so hard you could see the muscles twitching. He looked furious.
âGet in,â he said, opening the passenger door, one hand braced on the roof as he helped you climb up into the seat, taking your shoes to put them in the back seat.
You stayed silent, not wanting to know to whom his anger was directed at. It was only once you were down the street that he finally spoke again, eyes flicking between the road and you.
âDid anyone hurt you?â
You blinked at him. âNo.â
âTouch you?â
âNo.â
âFollow you?â
You shook your head, watching his knuckles tightening around the steering wheel.
âSay anything to you?â
âJustâŠoffered me stuff,â you admitted quietly, wrapping your arms around yourself again. âBut I said no. I would never do that. You know I would not.â
You werenât sure why you felt the need to add that, why you wanted him to understand that you hadnât been reckless. That hanging out with Craig didnât mean being like him. That you wouldnât caught yourself in drugs. You knew better.
The streetlight caught the side of his face and for a split second you saw something raw there before it slipped behind his mask of control. The silence continued to stretch, heavy.
âAre you angry at me?â
The truck slowed to a stop at a red light, allowing him to turn his head toward you fully, eyes dark and intense in a way that made your whole body pulse in response, not from fear but from the weight of being seen.
âIâm not angry at you,â he said, holding your gaze. âIâm angry you were there alone. Angry that my stupid brother left you. Angry that I wasnât there sooner. But not at you.â
The light shifted to green, but he didnât move right away. His eyes remained locked on yours, unblinking, making sure you understood the distinction.
âYou call me,â he added quietly. âThe second you have a problem, you always call me. Okay?â
You nodded, fingers twisting in the fabric of your dress. âI didnât want to bother you.â
âYou donât.â
And there was something in the way he said it, like he was wounded at the idea you thought you might ever be an inconvenience to him, that made you blush.
The truck finally rolled forward, but the air between you felt different, heavier in a way that youâll only be to shake off with a cold shower.
You watched the way his shoulders remained tense all the way to your home and understood then that he had come because he had been frightened, that the thought of you alone in the dark had unsettled something in him, and that he had needed to fix it.
And the scariest part was that something warm and traitorous inside your chest responded to that.
You liked that he had been scared.
You liked that he came in less than three hundred seconds.
That he didnât even hesitate when you admitted you were frightened, he simply moved.
And you liked the way he refused to let you walk barefoot to your apartment, carrying you, as if the idea of your skin touching the cold pavement was something he would not allow.
He didnât put you down immediately. No, he held you all the way from his truck to your doorway, one arm firm beneath your legs and the other steady at your back, your shoes dangling loosely from his fingers, your body tucked close enough to feel his breathing through his shirt, making you aware of how easily you fit there.
When he finally set you down at your threshold, his hands lingered at your waist a second longer than necessary.
âYouâll be good?â he asked quietly, handing you your shoes, your fingers brushing his in the exchange.
You nodded, incapable of trusting your own voice, because if you opened your mouth, you were fairly certain that something reckless would fall out, something dangerously close to âstayâ and you were overwhelmed enough by the urge to step over, to reach for him and press your forehead against his chest just to see if his heart was still beating as fast as yours.
He was still staring at you, something unspoken passing like electricity.
âGood night,â he whispered, the softness of it almost undoing you.
âGood night, Andrew.â
You closed your door slowly, pressing your back against it, listening to his boots on the pavement, realizing that he hadnât moved until he heard the lock click.
Only then did he walk back to his truck.
You would maybe not murder Craig after all.
ââââââââââ
Andrew spends the entire day watching for the moment you are going to change your mind and run from him.
And you donât act differently when you wake up: you drink coffee while humming along to the songs on the radio, trying to coax a laugh out of him, but he keeps waiting for it anyway: the flicker in your eyes that says youâve seen too much of him now, that holding him while he sobbed was enough to scare you off for good.
He replays the night while you are in the shower. How he cried in your arms. How your fingers combed through his curls. How you held him pressed against your chest. How he let himself need you.
He wonders if he should apologize, or explain, or at least even justâŠacknowledge that you saw him at his weakest and that he was thankful it was you.
Instead, he washes the dishes twice in a row to calm his brain, avoiding looking directly at your body when you step back into the kitchen in your coffee shop uniform, hair damp.
(One. Two. Three. Four. He counts the dents on his mug.)
You ask him if he is still taking you to the skatepark after your shift, and he wants to say no. The word sits right there on his tongue, ready to spill, because the park means proximity and proximity means touch and desire which always ends with something being taken away from him.
But you smile at him in such an open and easy way, and if it was something you really wanted to do, far be it from him to deny you after last night when you held him like he was something that could be saved, that was worth saving.
So, he nods and the way your whole face lights up makes him think, not for the first time, that he would probably give you anything you asked for.
That is the part of himself that scares him.
And now that he is finally at the skatepark with you on this late afternoon, he knows that he should be tracking your stance and foot placement the way he always does, but today he notices different things about you instead: how you are not pulling away from him, not avoiding him, how you stand close when you talk, lean into his space without hesitation.
And somehow that unsettles him more than distance would have. Because, if you are not afraid of him, if you are not stepping back after seeing what he is like during his worst nights, then what does that mean?
You sway on the board.
He sees it, but his brain is still half-caught in the memory of your heartbeat under his ear, still waiting for the recoil that doesnât come and by the time his body reacts, youâre already too far from his reach.
You hit the concrete hands first, palms slamming down on instinct before your knees follow, the skin scraping on the ground with a sound that makes his stomach drop. The impact steals the air from your lungs and for a fraction of a second you manage to hold yourself up before your face strikes the ground with a sickening thud.
Andrew is already moving before you even understand what happened, the board rolling behind you while he drops to his knees so fast, he doesnât register the sting tearing through his own skin, doesnât feel the way his jeans split at the knee or how his knuckles scratch raw when he catches himself, because none of it matters to him. He is scanning, assessing and cataloguing the damage, forcing his mind to clear before he dares to touch you.
Your palms and knees are damaged through the torn denim, but itâs the blood beginning to run from your eyebrow that makes him feel abruptly cold. It gathers at the edge of your lashes and runs along the curve of your nose, bright red against your skin, and for a second, the world tilts.
(Blood. So much blood. He knows blood. Knows how to stop it. How to clean it. How to stitch it close. Pope is good with blood.)
The thought lands with cold precision, and even if he hates the name, even if it sounds wrong in his own head, he canât afford to hate the part of himself that steps forward first right now - efficient Pope, steady Pope, the one who does not panic.
âIâve got you,â he says, and his voice is low, measured, trying to reassure you the way you reassured him last night while he broke apart against your chest, even though his heart is hammering through his ribs.
Your eyes flutter, dazed, before you try to sit up, but he is already there, placing one hand at the back of your neck and the other on your shoulder to help you.
âItâs okay sweetheart, Iâve got you. Youâre gonna be okay,â he murmurs, and there is something almost pleading behind his words that has less to do with your eyebrow and more to do with the memory of the pool and your voice accusing him of being too late.
He swipes his thumb gently beneath the cut to assess its depth, his other hand moving to brace your jaw so you donât move, and when fresh blood coats the pad of his finger, he feels the familiar switch inside him flips into place.
(His breathing slows. His hands stop shaking. This he understands. This he can control.)
âItâs not deep,â he says after his inspection, even though he knows youâll need stitches. âYou still with me?â
Your hand lifts and finds his wrist, fingers curling around it, and the contact sends something through him that is not adrenaline and not fear but softer that frightens him more because it makes him aware of how much he needs you to be okay.
âIâm fine,â you whisper, though your voice is small.
He shakes his head once, tearing a strip from the hem of his shirt. âLetâs get you home so I can clean this properly, okay? Keep pressure there,â he instructs, guiding your hand back to your eyebrow and pressing it into place.
You nod, and thatâs enough for him.
He slides one arm behind your back, his broad palm spanning the length of your shoulder blades, the other slipping beneath your knees to lift you, ignoring the sting of his knees and the sticky blood drying across his knuckles because none of it is important compared to the steady rhythm of your breath brushing his collarbone.
He carries you toward the truck, opening the door and lowering you carefully into the passenger seat, one hand coming up to your jaw, his thumb resting lightly on your cheekbone to make sure your eyes focus on him.
âStay with me,â he says softly.
Your lips twitch despite the pain. âBossy.â
He goes to buckle your seatbelt, adjusting the strap and closing the door gently before circling the truck, wiping his bloody hand against his jeans.
While driving back to your apartment, his eyes keep darting to you every few seconds.
âTalk to me,â he says after a moment.
âAbout what?â
âAnything.â
You take a moment before starting to talk about your day at the coffee shop, just mindless little moments. He doesnât interrupt, he listens and nods at the right moments. You are grounding him on purpose, he realizes, dragging his thoughts back to something ordinary, something alive.
(You are not in the pool. You are breathing. You are not telling him he failed you. He counts your breaths.)
Inside your place, he works methodically, like he always does when someone comes back from a job hurt and bleeding â controlled, shutting everything else out. He lays out all your medical supplies on your desk with a precise spacing: first gauze then antiseptic, needle, sewing threadâŠThe order is important. Order means control.
 You sit on the edge of your bed, looking at him and continuing the pressure of the piece of his shirt against your eyebrow.
âAlright,â he says quietly, stepping between your knees so he can reach your face properly. âHold still.â
He cleans your palms first, his concentration absolute because his entire world has narrowed down to the square inch of skin beneath his fingers.
âI should have caught you.â
âItâs not your fault, Andrew. Donât punish yourself for it, okay? Iâm fine, I promise Iâm fine.â
He doesnât answer. Doesnât trust himself to.
Instead, he goes silent and returns to the work in front of him, bandaging thoroughly your hands before taking off your pants and doing the same with your knees, making sure everything stays in place.
Finally, he allows himself to look fully at your face again, examining the cut on your eyebrow and tilting your chin upward with two fingers, feeling your breath ghosting on his lips in the small space between you.
âYouâre going to need stitches,â he murmurs.
You study him for a second. âYouâre very serious about this.â
âYes.â
âIâm not dying, Andrew.â
âI know.â
âYou look at me like I am.â
His jaw tightens and for a moment, he almost says it. Almost tells you that in his head, heâs already seen that version of you, floating and gone, but he swallows it back.
âHold still,â he says instead.
He cleans the wound carefully by dabbing away the dried blood, and when you flinch, his free hand comes up automatically to steady the side of your head, thumb resting near your temple, not commenting on the way you lean into that touch.
The first puncture makes you inhale sharply.
âBreathe,â he says low, âJust breathe slow for me.â
You obey, focusing on him rather than the pull of the thread, your eyes locking on his face. He works carefully, tying each stitch with precision, trying not to falter at your gaze and even less at the reckless, intrusive thought about pressing his mouth to your brow to undo the wound.
When he finishes, he doesnât move right away. He studies the line of the sutures, checks for tension, checks for bleeding or anything he might have missed before studying you.
âYouâre okay,â he says, trying to convince himself.
You give him a small, tired smile. âI told you. Iâm tougher than I look,â you say before your gaze drops, narrowing as you notice what he has been deliberately ignoring. âAndrew.â
âWhat?â
âYouâre bleeding.â
He shrugs, dismissive, trying to pull his hand back so you canât look too closely. âItâs nothing.â
âNo, itâs not nothing,â you murmur, reaching for him before he can retreat, your fingers tracing carefully over his knuckles, making him go still. âYou canât patch me up and ignore yourself.â
He swallows, and before he can argue, youâre already reaching for the antiseptic with your bandaged hand, fumbling slightly. He catches the bottle before you drop it, his other hand covering your instinctively.
âYou shouldnâtâŠâ
âNone of that,â you interrupt, and there is a flicker of stubbornness there that makes his mouth twitch despite himself.
You tug his hand toward you, and this time he lets you clean the scrape on his hands. He doesnât look at the wound. He looks at you.
At the crease between your brows as you concentrate. At the way your lips press together. At the way you treat his injuries as if they matter. No one ever does.
Your fingers tie the bandage clumsily but securely, and when you finish, you donât let go right away. Your thumb lingers, stroking slowly over the back of his hand. He is not sure how to breathe. The room feels so much smaller now. Quieter?
You lift your eyes up to him and whisper. âCan you stay? Just for a bit. SoâŠwe can check on each other.â
He could tell you itâs starting to get late and he was supposed to meet Deran and Craig for their next job.
He could tell you heâll call you tonight to see how you feel.
But there is nothing in him that wants to leave this room.
âYeah,â he says quietly. âI can stay.â
He helps you shift properly onto the bed, careful of your knees. When you lie back against the pillows, you reach for him, fingers curling into the front of his shirt.
It takes him a second of hesitation before lying down beside you, stiff at first, but you roll toward him, your bandaged hands pressing against his chest as you settle close, your head finding the space beneath his chin.
He exhales through his nose before lifting his arms and resting them around you.
After a few minutes of silence, when he thinks you might already be drifting, you murmur. âI like it when you called me sweetheart.â
He presses his mouth lightly into your hair.
âGo to sleep now.â
You nod, your body going slack after a few minutes while he stays wide awake, his hands moving slowly along your spine.
âYou scared me,â he whispers into the quiet, once he is sure youâre gone.
His fingers move to brush lightly just above the stitches of your brow.
âI canât lose you,â he breathes, pressing his forehead gently against yours.
(He counts your breathing. One. Two. Three. Four. Not because he is afraid. But because he simply likes knowing the rhythm.)
When sleep finally comes at him, he knows there wonât be any nightmare.
Because youâre there.
ââââââââââ
You did not mean to end up alone with Deran.
In fact, if you were being completely honest with yourself, you had carefully avoided being alone with him since you met, not because he had been hostile to you, but because he seemed to have this unnerving habit of seeing through people and you were not a fan of subjecting yourself to that.
Craig had dragged you to the bar âjust for a bit,â (which in Craig language meant âindefinitelyâ) before promptly disappearing with a girl, leaving you at the counter, nursing a soda because you had work in the morning.
Deran was wiping down the bar in front of you.
âEl Craigo has already left?â he asked without looking up.
ââFleeâ would be a better word to describe what happened.â
âAnd so now youâre justâŠâ he gestured vaguely toward you with the cloth, ââŠmiserably contemplating on drowning yourself in your drink?â
âItâs a soda.â
âYou know what? Thatâs so much sadder.â
You exhaled, dragging a hand over your face before saying, âCan I ask you something without you telling Craig?â
That caught his attention immediately, making him glance up.
âDepends how embarrassing it is.â
âItâs not embarrassing,â you protested automatically, then faltered. âFine. ItâsâŠa little embarrassing.â
âA little?â
âA lot,â you admitted.
He huffed once, almost amused, tossing the cloth over his shoulder. âFine. What?â
You took a breath, suddenly aware of how absurd this was and how you were feeling like you were sixteen instead of twenty-nine. âItâsâŠâ you cleared your throat. âItâs about Andrew.â
(Fuck. This was so deeply humiliating. But Craig was not an option. He would weaponize the information and never let you live it down.)
Deran blinked once before leaning his forearms on the counter, a smirk spreading on his lips. âOh, I see.â
You groaned immediately. âOh, please, can you not react like that? Youâre making this worse.â
âI havenât reacted! Iâm justâŠnot quite surprised about this discussion. Come on.â he waved a hand. âWhatâs your question?â
âItâs justâŠâ you stopped. âI donât know how to tell if heâŠâ
(Oh my God. You had faced worst things than this. You could finish a sentence.)
Deran tilted his face slightly, with a shit-eating grin that you absolutely hated. âIf heâŠwhat?â
âIf he likes me,â you blurted out in one breath.
The silence fell for exactly two seconds before he let out a short, incredulous laugh.
âYouâre fucking with me. Right?â
Your face burned instantly. âOkay, great. Never mind, Iâm just gonna dig my gra-â
âEasy tiger. Donât get your panties in a twist. Heâs obsessed with you.â
You stopped, your stomach flipping violently.
âThatâs not true.â
âIt is deeply true,â Deran replied flatly. âHe reorganized the shelves in the kitchen.â
You blinked. âWellâŠI thought he just liked order.â
âOh yeah, he does. Trust me, he fucking does. ButâŠnot that much.â
You opened your mouth. Closed it. Opened it again.
âSurely that doesnât meanâŠâ
âHe drove across town at three in the morning to get you out of a party,â Deran continued, counting off on his fingers now. âHe cancels family meetings to go to the skatepark with you. He did his âscary stareâ to me the last time I drank in your mug.â
Heat crept up your cheeks as you stammered, throat dry. âB-But he doesnâtâŠHe doesnât say anything.â
Deran snorted. âYeah, thatâs Andrew.â
âItâs just...sometimes I donât even know what heâs thinking.â
âNeither do we,â he deadpanned. âWelcome to the family.â
You exhaled, frustration spilling over. âSo, what am I supposed to do now?â
Deran considered you for a moment. âJustâŠlet him try to go at his own pace here. He is not good at the wholeâŠrelationship thing.â he said, his voice stripped of its usual sarcasm before adding. âAnd for the record, the way you look at him? Not subtle. Like, at all.â
You nearly choked on your own spit. âI am subtle!â
âI mean, yes,â he conceded dryly. âYou are subtleâŠfor Andrew and Craig. So donât be proud about it. Thatâs the lowest level of subtility possible.â
âI hate you, Deran.â
âYeah?â he replied with an amused smile. âWell, get in line.â
There was a pause before he said quietly. âYouâre good for him. JustâŠdonât screw it up. Youâre in the tribe now. Which means I have to tell you thisâŠâ
You straightened slightly.
ââŠif youâre not sure about this, about yourself, you go now. Not in a few months. Not after he lets himself think this might be real. You donât get to backpedal if it gets complicated. He wouldnât recover from it.â
You shook your head immediately. âI swear, I wonât hurt him. HeâsâŠheâs-â
You stopped, because the word felt too large to say aloud. But Deran looked at you intensely enough for you to finish.
âHeâs important. To me. I donât want to fix him, because I donât think heâs broken. I like him the way he is. I...I think I wouldnât recover from losing him too.â
Deran held your gaze for a long moment. âAlright.â
You tilted your head. âAlright?â
âAlright,â he repeated. âYou pass.â
âWas-Was it an interview? Are you serious?â
âYep. And congrats, you got the job.â
You rolled your eyes, but your chest felt lighter than it had in quite some time while Deran smiled, a real full grin, almost boyish, making it easier to see the younger brother under his usual cryptic attitude.
âI forgot what it was like,â he said after a beat.
âWhat?â you asked.
âHaving a sister you can annoy.â
âThatâsâŠextremely sweet of you.â
âDonât ruin it,â he warned, pointing the towel at you. âI will absolutely deny this conversation ever happened if you mention it to my brothers.â
You laughed despite yourself, shaking your head.
Then, he leaned forward and whispered to you. âAnd if you hurt him, Iâm stealing your car and slashing your tires.â
âO-Okay.â
He had a little smile before straightening up. âWelcome into the family.â
ââââââââââ
He has not told you.
No one has told you about the job.
Craig said it wasnât necessary, that you would make a big deal out of it. Deran said it was cleaner that way, the less people know, the less risk and Andrew didnât argue, telling himself it was better if you didnât know the details, better if you didnât have to sit there, waiting for them to come back and spiraling about what could be happening to them.
He told himself that ignorance would keep you safe.
The screen door slams and your voice, sharper than he has ever heard it is rising against Craig, whoâs following you in the backyard like a kicked puppy.
Andrew doesnât turn immediately from his spot, staring at the water of the pool. He closes his eyes, preparing himself for the loud noises.
(One. Two. Three. Four. He counts the tiles of the pool.)
âYou asked me to babysit Nick,â youâre saying, your voice shaking like you are about to start crying, âand you made it sound like it was for a date or something stupid! You didnât say it was because you were going to fucking rob a jewelry store!â
âJesus, lower your voice.â
âLower my voice? How about you shut your mouth you liar!â
It isnât only outrage in your voice, Andrew feels it. Itâs fear. A raw, unfiltered fear for them. For him. And he doesnât know what to do with that because no one has ever been afraid of losing him. When he went to prison years ago, his family moved on, sold his place and went on with their lives. For them, it was an inconvenience, for him, it was three years in Folsom.
Andrew turns then.
Youâre standing a few feet from Craig, hands still bandaged, the thin line of stitches above your eyebrow visible, pointing a finger at Craig angrily while he tries to stay calm, running a hand through his hair.
âItâs not a big deal.â
âYouâre breaking into a jewelry store, Craig. Thatâs not exactly Disneyland.â
âWeâve done jobs for years,â he snaps. âWeâre good at it.â
Andrew watches the way your shoulders rise and fall too fast with your breath, the way your fingers flex like youâre resisting the urge to grab something and throw it at Craig.
âYou know what happens if you get caught, right? You know what that would do to Nick?â
Craigâs jaw tightens. âWe donât get caught.â
You let out a bitter sound that is half a laugh, half a sob.
âRepeat this in the eyes of your brother, I fucking dare you. Thatâs not how life works, and you know it. You can get caught.â
Andrew feels the words hit him in the chest and rip something out of him. He doesnât know when you learn about it. Doesnât know who told you or the extent of your knowledge about those three years of fights and isolation.
If you know â truly know - why arenât you running away? Why are you still here?
(He doesnât understand. He canât understand. Itâs too much. Itâs too little. One. Two. Three. Four. He counts the cracks on the floor.)
âWeâre not idiots, just trust us, okay?â Craig argues, rolling his eyes.
âYou left me alone at a party in a house full of people doing coke,â you fire back, your finger jabbing hard against his chest. âYou are the exact definition of an idiot, Craig.â
Craig winces. âWe donât have to do this right now, okay? I already told you I was sorry about it. Pope, back me up.â
Both of you turn toward him at once, the weight of the fight landing on his shoulders. He doesnât move immediately. Doesnât speak either. Andrew has never been good at splitting himself in two, at giving his opinion. He was raised to follow orders.
Craig gestures toward you. âSheâs acting like weâre amateurs.â
You slap his arm, wincing, forgetting for a moment about your bandage. âFuck.â
Andrew walks up to you, checking your hand while you keep repeating him. âIâm okay, Andrew. I promise.â
He lifts his eyes to yours, angling his head to catch them, and when your gaze finally locks with his, he holds it, stubborn and unblinking. Your eyes shine brighter tonight than they usually do, so he doesnât give himself permission to look away.
(Youâre about to cry. Itâs his fault. It must be his fault. He should have been better. But the voices are too loud. He doesnât like when itâs too loud. One. Two. Three. Four. He remembers your breaths when you sleep.)
âI justâŠI thought you all trusted me,â you say, your voice breaking halfway through, fighting back tears of frustration.
Craigâs shoulders drop while Andrewâs thumb strokes over the back of your hand, grounding himself.
âWe do,â Craig says, less combative now. âThatâs why I asked you to watch Nick.â
âThatâs not making me feel like you trust me. Itâs making me feel like Iâm a convenience.â
The word hangs there, making Andrew feel like he failed something. He has never wanted you to feel like this. He wanted you to be protected.
His gaze doesnât waver as he keeps your hand in his, stroking over the bandage.
Craig looks between the two of you, seeing the hand, the closeness and mutters, âJesus, bro, this is the worst time,â under his breath.
âOkay,â he exhales finally, turning fully toward you. âI fucked up. Massively. About the party. About not telling you. AboutâŠprobably a million other things. I didnât mean for you to feel unsafe.â
You donât look convinced.
âTrust me,â Craig adds quickly, throwing Andrew a sideways glance, âI got my ass kicked enough by Pope to regret this party for the rest of my life.â
Your lips twitch a little, trying to keep it contain.
âNow, if you could hand me back my brother, I would be very grateful because we have a job to do, and you have a kid to entertain,â Craig says, rolling his eyes and retreating inside the house.
Andrew doesnât let go of your hand, refusing to blink and terrified of losing a moment of you. He has the irrational feeling that if he does, something will waver on your face, the moment when you realize what this life looks like and he wonât be able to see his failure in time.
 âWeâve planned it,â he murmurs finally.
You hold his gaze. âAnd if something goes wrong?â
He doesnât answer right away because he knows the answer to this, and he is certain you donât want to hear it.
(If something goes wrong, he goes down first. He makes sure Deran and Craig are safe. He doesnât come home because he wonât ever go back to prison. He prefers to die trying to escape than go back in a cell. One. Two. Three. Four. He counts your eyelashes.)
You are still waiting, searching his face.
âThen I handle it,â he says quietly.
You shake your head, your jaw working as if youâre trying to physically hold yourself together. âPromise me to come back safe.â
His hand lifts before he can stop himself to settle against the side of your face, his thumb resting just beneath your eye, making you go very still, waiting for what he will do next.
His thumb caresses your cheekbone once, just enough to fill his mind with the memory of your skin.
âI wonât let anything happen to me,â he whispers, and he doesnât know if itâs meant as a vow or a lie heâs trying to force into becoming true. âI promise,â and before he allows himself to overthink it, he presses a careful kiss to your forehead, his lips brushing just above the line of stitches.
He can hear you catch your breath and it makes him pull back, his lips tingling at the contact. He knows it now: if he stays longer, if he lets himself feel the warmth of you, he might not leave at all.
He memorizes the sight of you like this: looking like losing him would break you and it does something unfamiliar to his chest. No one has ever been scared at the thought of him disappearing. No one has ever demanded that he come back.
He turns quickly, putting distance between the two of you before he changes his mind, the promise he made echoing in his head.
He hears it when Deran cuts the alarms. Promise me to come back safe. When he cuts through the back entrance. Promise me. And when Craig tries to improvise. Promise. He is not one to do reckless things but tonight, he is particularly unyielding each time the job almost goes sideways.
He knows you are in the house with Nick, probably pacing the kitchen and waiting to see the outcome of his word. So, when he finally reaches the main display room, he is quick to reach for the highest value pieces that will be cut down and reshaped. No traces or evidence will be left, they have done this long enough to know how to make everything disappear completely.
Andrewâs hand hovers for half a second over a particular velvet cushion before picking up the thin gold chain, a small heart-shaped pendant set in the center. Itâs delicate and quiet, reminding him how it feels to bask in your light. He turns it between his fingers once, twice, imagining it resting just below the hollow of your throat, his thumb brushing over it absentmindedly while you are both sitting on the couch and watching a documentary.
He slips it securely into the inner pocket of his jacket, pressing it flat against his chest for a brief second before stepping back into motion and leaving with his brothers without any alarms or police sirens cutting through the night.
And when they get at the warehouse to stash the duffel bags, Andrew doesnât stay like he usually would to make sure about getting his fair cut of the job. He nods once, quiet, ignoring their snickers and comments about him being âdown badâ all the way to his truck.
The house is dim when he enters, a soft glow coming from Craigâs bedroom and before he sees you, he hears your voice. Itâs so soft.
âAnd baby whale swam all the way across the ocean to find mama whale,â you murmur.
He quietly walks up to the threshold to see you sitting on the bed with Nick lying, his eyes dropping with sleep, his thumb in his mouth and clutching to his monkey plushie. You slowly close the illustrated book before pressing a kiss onto the his hair and something expands in Andrewâs.
(You would be good at this. At building something steady. He can picture you pregnant, swelling with a child. His curls and your smile on a being that would never know the kind of hurt he had to go through.)
You stand up from the bed and see him, the relief crossing your face so achingly tender it nearly knocks the breath from his lungs.
âAndrew.â
He nods once, trying to convey his feelings, âI came back.â
You smile, closing the bedroom door behind you and stepping close to him, scanning for injuries the way he did for you at the skatepark. He lifts his hands, showing you his palms.
âIâm fine. I promised you I would.â
Your shoulders drop in a way that tells him youâve been holding yourself rigid for hours, managing a barely audible, âThank God.â
His lips tilt upward before reaching into his jacketâs pocket, âTurn around,â before adding a quiet, âPlease.â
âBossy,â you reply, amused, before turning your back to him.
He closes the one last step between you, pulling out the necklace from his pocket, careful not to let his hands shake as he lifts your hair to expose the back on your neck. He fastens the chain, the clasp clicking softly into place and for a second he doesnât step away, the pad of his thumb grazing at the nape of your neck.
âAndrew,â you whisper, turning back toward him, your fingers lifting to trace it. âItâsâŠItâs beautiful. Thank you.â
He keeps staring at the pendant who rests exactly where he imagined it would be, then at your mouth before quickly going back to your eyes. You are close enough that he can feel your breath on his face, the world narrowing to the space between you.
He wants to close the distance, to press his mouth to yours.
Instead, he rests his forehead gently against yours, grounding himself with your scent, refusing to close his eyes.
âYou should sleep,â he murmurs.
You smile softly and suddenly, Andrew wonders how he can extract a memory and preserve it forever in resin.
Because this moment feels like the dawn of his existence.
ââââââââââ
When Andrew was seven years old, the house was already too loud.
Somewhere down the hall a door slammed hard enough to be heard from the bedroom he shared with Julia, who was sitting on the floor with a deck of cards spread between them while he lined them into exact rows instead of playing War.
He liked the rows and the symmetry of it. It calmed him each time the edges were precisely following the pattern of the carpet. With this, he didnât need to count.
In the backyard, someone shouted about money, making the twins flinch in fear. Julia reached for his hand, and they sat like that for a long time: her fingers curled tightly around his, his eyes fixed on the the cards. (Hearts. Diamonds. Clubs. Spades. Everything will be all right.)
Smurf emerged in the doorway with her bright smile, eight months pregnant with their little brother, tilting her head, âMy baby is a strange one,â she whispers to his new stepfather, âBut useful.â
Andrew heard it. He didnât know what strange meant exactly, but he knew it was something you said when you didnât want to say wrong.
At school, boys kept snatching his skateboard, tossing it across the asphalt because he rode the same loop over and over during recess, memorizing how many pushes it took to reach the fence.
(Fourteen. Fourteen every time. An even number. He liked them. Thatâs why he always counted till four.)
The first time a boy shoved him and called him a freak, Andrew didnât respond. Just took back the board and kept doing his loops. The second time, when the board got kicked away and Julia was not there to held his hand, Andrew swung without warning. He couldnât remember deciding to, just the sound of the impact and how the noise inside him went blissfully silent.
After that, teachers called him difficult, the kids stopped approaching him and Smurf congratulated him with a kiss on his mouth.
At night, when Julia was asleep beside him, Andrew kept staring at the ceiling, wondering something he couldnât say out loud to his mother or his sister: would anyone ever see that he was trying? Trying to keep himself together so he didnât explode? Trying to be good? Trying to stop the noises in his head?
-
When you were seven years old, the house smelled like warm cookies.
You were sitting on the couch, your small arms cradling your cousin, afraid to drop her. You didnât know how to act with a baby. Your parents had sat you down a few months ago at the kitchen table and told you that you were their little miracle, that Santa sometimes forgot things and that maybe it would always just be the three of you â which sounded a little sad until your father had squeezed your hand and told you that three was already perfect.
But it was alright, because now, you had your cousinâs fingers clutching onto your hair, âSheâs holding me!â you squealed, delighted and in awe because here, in this house, you were allowed to be amazed and to grow at your own pace.
The day you scraped your knee on the sidewalk, trying to teach yourself how to roller skate, you cried for less than a minute before your mother knelt in front of you, cleaning the wound and kissing the sting away. âYouâre gonna be okay,â she said, and you believed her.
At school, you had a best friend who whispered to you how babies were made, and that made you giggle all day, the teacher shaking his head and calling you incorrigible, even though you had no idea what that meant and decided it must be something wonderful if it made you laugh that hard.
And the day you asked what you could be when you grew up, no one laughed. âYou can be anything my little monkey,â your father had told you, and you thought about it for the whole day. Because anything was a lot for your brain: a teacher, a vet, a marine biologist. You always circled back to the same answer: something to help people.
And at night, as you looked at your glow-in-the-dark stars on your ceiling, you wondered about other things: would someone look at you the way your father looked at your mother when she was singing in the kitchen, with that love that said I am home?
ââââââââââ
Deranâs bar is louder than usual tonight, crowded by sports fans watching a game between Los Angeles and Atlanta. Craig has tried to tell him why it was so important to win at least five times since their arrival, but Andrewâs attention remains elsewhere entirely, watching you from across the room the way he has been watching you for four months now: trying to read something in your posture or in the tilt of your head that could give him an answer.
Because the truth isâŠhe doesnât know what you are after last night and if what happened in the hallway, or every night youâve spent wrapped together, mean the same thing to you that they mean to him. He wants to ask, to spill the question out before it eats him alive: what are we?
Andrew hates not knowing. On a job, he knows every camera, every blind spot, every possible way things can go wrong but with you, thereâs no map. And he hates that he canât predict your next move.
You are standing at the bar, ordering a drink, your back half-turned to him and wearing a dress that shouldnât be allowed to exist in public. It makes his pants grow tighter and has him readjusting on the stool, trying to pretend he isnât affected while his brother sits three feet away and would never let him live it down if he knew.
And he knows he shouldnât be staring, but you keep touching absentmindedly the necklace, your fingers tracing the pendant as it moves with your breathing, and before he can stop himself, heâs counting it.
(One. Two. Three. Four.)
You had said thank you last night in a way that felt like you meant something more, had let him secure the necklace around your neck and had met his eyes when you called it beautiful as if you were promising you would always wear it.
Always.
(Oh, how he doesnât trust that word. Doesnât trust anything that implies staying. He knows better. He should know better.)
And yet, there you are, wearing it for everyone to see, which does nothing to steady his accelerated pulse, and leaning across the counter to collect your cocktail from Deran. The movement doesnât reveal much more of your skin, but it still sets ablaze Andrewâs brain, his lips going dry as he tries to resist the urge to walk up to you and beg for you to tell him that he isnât the only one picturing rings, and a cradle in a quiet house and your head on his chest until he is old and grey.
âYouâre not being subtle, you know that?â Craig says, cutting through the haze of his thoughts.
âDonât start.â
Craig raises his hands innocently. âJesus, relax.â He immediately reaches for the bowl of peanuts on the table, and Andrew feels his jaw tighten at the thought of how many unwashed hands have touched that bowl already. âSeriously, whatâs wrong with you tonight?â
Whatâs wrong is that he just stole diamonds worth more than all of the jobs he did last year and it doesnât compete to the way you look with the chain resting against your collarbone.
Whatâs wrong is that he would give back every dollar from last night if it meant waking up beside you for the next fifty years.
Whatâs wrong is that he is one second away from walking across that bar and lowering himself at your feet for your hands to baptize him clean, as if loving you were the only absolution worth asking for because whatever heaven exists for a man like him begins and ends with you.
And whatâs wrong right now is that a man slides into the empty space beside you, leaning too close and touching your arm to get your attention. You turn toward him politely, your lips curving into the small smile you once called your âcustomer smileâ. Â You had explained it to his brothers and him: that you always kept the worst-case scenario in the back of your mind and that a smile felt safer than a hard no since it could mean the difference between walking away or not.
(Andrew doesnât know the names or the faces of those who made you feel like that but he wants to find them. He wants to press them on the ground and feel their pulse panic under his thumbs. He wants them to understand what fear tastes like when it turns metallic into the mouth. He wants the air stolen from their lungs the way it must have been stolen from yours when you felt scared. He no longer wants to count. He wants to hurt. To see this manâs blood on the bar.)
Andrew starts walking towards you before he even formulates the thought, shoulders squared, already calculating how much force it would require to grab the stranger by the collar and steer him outside of the bar.
His vision narrows as he sees the stranger laughing, his hand lifting to linger near your elbow as if he was testing whether he can push for more and that makes Andrewâs vision blur at the edges. He is three steps away. Two.
Your eyes find his instantly, and something shifts in your expression. Your hand leaves the cocktail and you smile at him. Itâs not the customer smile. No, itâs the real one that unravels him each time.
âHey, honey,â you say brightly as your arm wraps around his neck and you press a kiss to his cheek, your hand traveling down his side before sliding into the back pocket of his pants, settling against him.
Andrew is almost sure he died at some point on the way there because he is pressed against you and now, he is no longer Andrew or Pope. For a brief moment, he gets to just be honey, and the word makes him happier than any name ever has.
The stranger glances between you. âOh. I didnât realizeâŠâ
âMy boyfriend,â you cut him off with a smile, looking up at Andrewâs face.
His eyes were already on yours, searching for the smallest flicker of fear. Because if the man has dared put some in them, Andrew would dig an unmarked grave without blinking. When he finds none, his hand comes to your waist, his thumb strolling along your hip as he dips his head and presses his mouth above the faint line of stitches on your forehead.
âHey, sweetheart,â he murmurs, low enough that the word belongs only to you.
He feels your breath hitch against his skin before turning to the man and saying lightly. âNo worries, he always gets a little intense about men crowding me,â you tilt your head, thoughtful. âNot sure if itâs the boxing or the prison time. But donât mind himâŠhe almost doesnât bite.â
The strangerâs smile falters just enough to satisfy something dark in Andrewâs chest. âOh, umâŠyeah. Sorry man, I didnât know she was taken.â
Andrew doesnât raise his voice or move, he just stands there with your hand in his pocket, letting the silence stretch until it feels suffocating. âShe is.â
âRight. Iâll go back toâŠthe match.â
Andrew doesnât blink and keeps track of the manâs back until he is laughing again at his friendsâ table like nothing happened and only then does he let his focus shift back to you. You, whoâs still close and warm, holding onto him like you have no intention of letting go.
His hand remains at your waist as he turns toward you, the movement bringing your faces close enough that your noses almost brush and your breaths mix between you. He lowers his head slightly, almost enough to kiss you.
âYou okay?â he murmurs while his thumb keeps its slow movement on your hip.
You nod, your mouth curving up in that smile he loves. The real one. The one that you have at the skatepark each time you manage to stay upright a little longer than the day before: proud, bright and stubbornly pleased of yourself. And he canât help but think about those lips and the way they said âhoneyâ.
(He wants to hear it again. Wants to hear it softly. Wants to hear it moaned in the dark and against his mouth. He wants to kiss them every day for the rest of his life. To learn them. To know how they would part as he pounds into you. Stop. He has to stop.)
He blinks twice, grounding himself in the feel of your waist.
âAndrew. Iâm good, I promise,â you murmur, sliding your hand out of his pocket and lace your fingers with his instead, interlocking them. âLetâs get out of here, please. Itâs too loud.â
He doesnât say it out loud, but relief settles at your suggestion. The bar feels too loud, too crowded and the idea of how many unwashed hands like Craigâs have been over the counters keeps coming back at him. So, when you tug gently at his hand and turn toward the door, he follows without hesitation, grateful that you were the one saying it.
The door swings shut behind you and the noise from the bar dulls instantly, reduced to a muted thud. The air is cooler than inside, smelling like the salt of the ocean mixed with your shampoo and he doesnât understand how he gets to still have your hand in his and your thumb moving across his knuckles.
Itâs only when you stop beside the truck and turn toward him that his eyes drop to the thin gold chain resting around your neck. His free hand lifts carefully to brush the chain first, following it down until the pad of his thumb rests over the pendant itself, flattening it against your skin.
âStill got it on,â he murmurs, tracing the outline of the pendant.
(He imagines doing this, years from now. In the kitchen. In bed. In the shower. Adjusting it before you leave the house. Brushing it aside before he kisses the curve of your throat. Seeing it against your skin when you are carrying his child.)
âLooks better on you than it did in the store,â he adds.
Your fingers slide slowly between his, guiding his hand so it settles flat over your heartbeat. He can feel it beating loud and fast under his palm, matching his own.
You tilt your face enough to find his eyes back. âThank you for what happened in there, Andrew. You were good.â
His eyes slip shut for half a second because he doesnât trust himself to survive the way you are looking at him, smiling at him with such warmth he shivers of pleasure.
(Good. You think he is good. If thatâs what you want, he can be good. He can kneel. He can find how to rebuild himself from the bones if it means you keep calling him good.)
âYou shouldnât say things like that,â he says under his breath.
âWhy?â
âBecause Iâd do anything if you asked.â
Your fingers start to caress the back of his hand. âAnything?â
He nods, his gaze unwaveringly focused on your eyes. âIf you told me to walk away from the jobs, I would.â
Your hand pauses against his.
âAndrewâŠâ you murmur, but thereâs no panic in it, no immediate rejection. âYou know why I wanted to reject him, right?â
He doesnât answer, too scared of startling the moment with another word.
âYou know why Iâd reject any other guy in that bar and why I wanted him to know?â
âKnow what?â
âThat Iâm not available.â
âYouâre not?â he asks, as his mind races.
âI donât know,â you say softly. âAre you?â
The question hangs there, in the small space between your bodies, his mind fumbling with a thousand overlapping questions.
(Are you with him? Calling him yours? Defining what this was? Finally answering the question that has been rattling his brain for weeks?)
âAre you available Andrew?â you repeat gently, your hand lifting up to cup his face.
He exhales slowly, trying not to whimper at the contact, shaking his head.
You lean closer, your nose brushing his and your voice dropping lower. âNo?â
âNo.â
Your thumb traces patterns along his cheekbone and it takes him a few moments to realize that you were mapping his freckles. âHow long?â you whisper.
He feels too weak to reply, overwhelmed by the tenderness of your touch. If his heart had not been already yours, he would lay it at your feet right there, so long as you promise to treat him with this gentleness and care for the rest of his life.
âBefore the party? When I called you to help me?â he nods. âBefore our night on the couch?â another nod. âBefore our first skateboard le-?â
 âWhen we met. And you brought pastries,â he replies, on the verge of a sob, shameful to confess that he keeps thinking about you on top of him, under him, any way you want it as long as he could disappear into your light and be drown whole by your grace to wipe out every horror he has ever seen or done for the sake of others.
âAndrew. Honey. Please, look at me.â
He keeps his gaze darted to the ground, like looking anywhere but you might prevent him from saying anything more revealing about the depth of his feelings, before his eyes close on their own instinctively, only realizing a heartbeat later that itâs because your lips found his.
And for the first time in Andrewâs life, that deep pit of misery in his heart goes completely silent, frozen for a flash before kissing you back.
Your lips are warm and a little reckless, tasting like mint and something entirely yours that he knows he will crave for the rest of his life. Your fingers thread into his curls, pulling a groan he canât control out of him. He moves closer without thinking, his hand sliding along your waist until your back meets the metal of the truck door.
The second he registers the force of it, he pulls back just enough to search your face, to scan for any sign that he has gone too far, but the pause barely lasts a breath before your fingers tighten in his hair, guiding him back down as your body arched into his, slipping his tongue past your parted lips.
You are an oasis and he is nothing but a thirsty man wandering in the dark who gets to finally know what itâs like to drink every drop of it. You taste dizzy and intoxicating and he knows that he has been feeding on scraps of affection all his life and nowâŠnow he understands what it means to be full.
He is about to tell you how much sweeter you taste than in his fantasies before you bite down on his lower lip, drawing another sound of his throat.
You tilt your head, your arms wrapping fully around his neck as his drop to your hips, steady and sure, to raise you higher against the door, a gasp spilling out of you that he swallows eagerly and your dress hiking up as your legs wrap around him, denying any space between your bodies.
He feels you pull away for air by an inch or two, making him whine at the loss of contact, but he quickly recovers as he sees the flushed smile on your kiss-swollen lips. âShow off.â
âYeah?â he asks while one of his arms tightens under you, anchoring your body to the door while the other frees itself to trail up your body and adding a smug, âYeah,â skimming your inner thigh and marveling at how many sounds he can coax out of you, wondering how much more heâd pull if he could trace his thumb along your heat. But instead, he cups again your cheek, tracing slowly the bow of your lips.
âDimples,â you murmur.
âWhat?â
âDimples, Andrew,â you repeat, delighted, like youâve just discovered something rare. âI didnât know you had them.â
(Oh. Of course. You can see them because he is smiling. For real. A real one. Not the tight, guarded version. Not the twitchy one. A full unguarded smile. When was the last time he did that?)
âI do,â he says, trying and failing to smooth it away. âSo do you.â
Your eyebrows lift. âI do not.â
âYou do,â he insists quietly, shifting his hold slightly to keep his arm secure around you, his thumb pressing gently at the corner of your mouth. âRight thereâŠâ
Inside the bar, the crowd erupts in a wave of shouting, making you glance at the door before erupting in laughter, eyes wide.
âOh, fuck,â you whisper, incapable of stopping your giggles. âI forgot.â
Andrew exhales through his nose, trying to calm the blood pumping hard all the way down his length. He knows that youâve been feeling him against you the whole time, your hips still rubbing together, and for once in his life, he doesnât want to excuse himself or feel ashamed of his desires, of how much he wants. He has spent too many nights thinking about how youâd taste, how youâd moan. Too many cold showers to try get rid of his hard-on whenever he was picturing you.
âMaybeâŠâ you murmur against his mouth, pecking soft kisses along his jaw. âMaybe we should relocate.â
He looks at you, at the way your lips are still swollen and glistening from kissing, at your panting and the tremors of your legs.
He nods, lowering you carefully back onto your feet, his hands still trailing along your sides to still have some ways of being connected to you before reaching for the door handle of the passenger seat and helping you in.
He feels, walking around to the driverâs side, that he is still smiling. Dimples and all.
ââââââââââ
âMaybeâŠâ you sigh, struggling to keep your composure and pressing kisses along the freckles dusting his jaw. âMaybe we should relocate.â
The intensity of his eyes on you, trailing along your body and taking in your rampant arousal, feels like he is on the verge of taking you against the door. You are pretty sure that if heâd ask you for permission, youâd grant it promptly. You want him. You want to know how long it would take for his unwavering hazel eyes to become pleading wet just by your lips telling how good he is to you.
But he just nods, jaw tight before lowering you carefully back onto your feet, making you bite down a protest at the loss of contact, like even the air feels like too much distance, until you feel his fingertips dragging over your waist.
He opens the door for you and not so long ago, you would have described his current behavior as controlled and cold, but now that you know himâŠyou recognize a man whoâs trying to contain himself, like a wild animal finally freed.
(Devour. You want him to devour you. To ruin you. Four months of trying â miserably â to have a date with him and it took only a gross man and a âhoneyâ to get him to kiss you like that and tell you he would quit everything? Fuck. Focus.)
He starts the engine, snapping you out of your thoughts, before pulling out of the parking lot, still smiling. You stare at his profile: the line of his jaw that has now faint traces of your lipstick, the way his tongue briefly drags across his lower lips like he can still taste you and his hand on the gear shift that slowly drifts to your thigh.
Your breath stutters the moment his palm settles just above your knee, the pads of his fingers tracing patterns over it while he keeps his eyes on the road. That definitely doesnât help your craving for more.
(How much can be a fine for having sex in a car anyway? Andrew has money. Plenty from what you understand soâŠthat would just be a drop in a bucket, right?)
You slide your fingers over his, intertwining them on your lap and stilling his slow, absent movements. He glances at you immediately, probably to understand why you stopped him. But the look you give him is enough to answer his question.
His eyes trail your face a fraction too long before looking back to the road, purposefully, the streetlights passing by a little faster.
âWeâll be there in five,â he declares without looking at you.
âAndrew, itâs at least ten minutes away,â you say, with a barely contained smile.
âFive.â
âIâm timing you, you know,â you smirked, pointing at the car clock.
The truck moves through an intersection just as the light turns yellow - once, then again at the next block â while Andrew doesnât do so much as blink.
âSee?â he says, the hint of a smug smile on his face when the car finally parks home.
You check the dashboard clock. Four minutes.
You shake your head, laughing as you both unbuckle your seatbelts. âShow off.â
Of course, you should know better now, he is not a man to stop there. So, when he opens the door for you before you even reach for the handle, and offers his hand, you should see it coming.
He helps you down carefully and for half a breath you think that maybe this time heâs not going to do it. No, you definitely should know better cause the moment your feet hit the ground, his arm slides behind your knees, sweeping you off while the other moves behind your back.
A breathless gasp escapes your mouth. âAndrew!â
(God you are so fucking gone for him. Is this what it would feel like? Crossing a threshold with him as a young bride? Completely besotted in a white dress? No. Not would. Will.)
He shuts the door with his hip, adjusting you against his chest as your arms loop around his neck automatically, your body relishing his touch as the thought slips out before you can stop it: âI feel like your bride right now.â
His steps slow on his way to the door, just enough for you to notice and wonder if you should just tell him to brush off your stupid words. That you are just drunk (you barely had the time to drink a sip of your cocktail earlier) and tired (you just spent two nights in a row sleeping like a baby in his arms).
The garage light flickers as he reaches the front door. âYou are.â
He carries you inside like heâs done it in a million other lifetimes while you are still gaping, mouth wide open at his words. You shake your head a bit wobbly before moving your hand from the nape of his neck to the place on his cheek where you know a dimple is hiding.
âCareful,â you murmur, smiling softly. âKeep talking like that and I might start looking for a dress rea-â
Your words are being cut off by his mouth, kissing you like he is trying to drown in the sensation, tilting his head to fit you better, to take more of you, and you canât stop the moan passing your lips. It feels like stepping into the fire and realizing you donât ever want to be pulled out.
Your feet carefully find back the ground as his hands slide along your backbone, fingers spreading between your shoulder blades. His lips part yours with the same confidence he has when he catches you at the skatepark. You feel him everywhere and you still want more.
(Is it ever going to stop? This feeling? This whole tremor that dances under your skin every time he touches you? Every time he kisses you like he means forever?)
He pulls away just enough, heavy breath mingling with yours, hazel eyes half-lidded in pleasure and his nose brushing yours softly with your foreheads pressed together, âWe can just kiss. If thatâs what you want. I donât need more. Just you,â he murmured in a broken voice.
The words settle deep in your chest, heavy and large as if they have roots. It makes you want to answer him with your mouth, to kiss him until his doubts leave his bones entirely. You bring your fingers to the bow of his lips and he kisses them gently, one after the other, the softness of it making you tremble.
âAndrew,â you say quietly, smiling despite your racing pulse. âTake me to bed.â
He regards you for a long moment, his eyes moving slowly over your face as though he is searching for hesitation and when he finds none, a smile begins at the corner of his mouth, enough to carve that rare, gorgeous dimple into his cheek. âBossy,â he smirks before lifting you back by the waist so your legs can wrap up around his waist, walking around the house guided only by his memory since his lips are too busy coaxing moans out of you.
You are almost blacking out from the lack of oxygen when the kiss suddenly breaks. In the soft lighting of his bedroom, you distinguish most of his expression: lustful and bewildered that this is finally happening.
âI want to taste you. Please,â he breaths and you nod, not trusting yourself to reply.
The look that passes through his hazel eyes is hazy, fingers finding the hem of your dress and carefully pulling it up.
âDonât want to mess it,â he says, folding it neatly on his chair. âYou look pretty in that.â
You sit on the edge of the bed, trying not to feel too self-conscious about being only in your underwear, braless as he kneels down to the floor, still fully clothed and face a few inches lower than yours, prying your legs apart.
âAndrew,â
He doesnât respond, pressing his lips to the inner corner of your thigh and moving further up between your legs.
âYou donât have to Andrew.â
He only lifts his gaze up to yours, unwavering as he continues his kisses, âYou donât want it?â
âIâŠIâm not saying that. I justâŠI donât want you to feel obligated to it. I know itâs notâŠwhat men like the most,â you gasp, your hand finding his curls and twisting them around your fingers, making him grunt.
âItâs what I want to do the most, right now,â he says with a sinful gaze. âCan I?â
âYes. Okay. Sure,â you choke, closing your eyes and lying down as he continues his torturous path, his hands slowly tugging the last piece between him and your pussy.
You donât think you have ever been this wet with a man. Or a woman. Or anyone at all. Normally, you feel a bit uncomfortable with men going down on you cause they never seem to know what they are doing or are too impatient of having âreal sexâ to let you finish. But here with Andrew, you are nothing but pleasure, his lips fiddling with you like you are an instrument that he is tuning to his own harmony.
You gasp as his tongue finally probes your folds stopping just underneath your clit, earning from him a low whimper.
âYou taste delicious,â he goes, coming up for air by an inch. âJust like how I dreamt,â he adds, making you feel close to delirious.
He lowers his face again, tongue working its way up your pussy again, finally reaching for your clit and rolling over it, making you shudder and writhe on the bed, incapable of keeping your moans down and your hands running through his scalp.
âAndrew, please. Just like that. Itâs perfect,â you praise him, feeling how it makes him pick up the pace.
Your last straw is the sight of his face between your legs, eyes burning with nothing but want, his hands used to stealing and hurting now holding onto your legs to keep them open and making you come with a hoarse cry. If thereâs a heaven on Earth, you know now that it must only exist in this man. In his hands, his chest, his mouth, his eyes. He is nothing but your sanctuary, your promised land and your altar.
When your orgasm subsides, you feel Andrew crawling over you and pressing his lips against you, making you taste yourself on his mouth as you slip your tongue in it. The small noise of pleasure from the back of his throat is the most delicious sound youâve ever heard.
âYou,â you breathe against him, your lips brushing his, pupils probably wide. âI want you. Like right now. So pleaseâŠtake off those clothes. I love them. Really. But take them off.â
His lips twitches again to the side, âAnything.â as he starts to undress, folding them before going above you, his hard cock pressing against your heat.
His eyes keep searching your face, looking for an ounce of backtrack in your eyes before slowly entering you. Thatâs when you realize how grateful you are for the previous climax because in any other situation, you would have probably wince at his thickness. Thankfully, he seems to catch on with it - probably due to his gaze not leaving your face and refusing to blink â and takes his time to be fully inside you.
For a couple of minutes, the two of you donât move, give you the time to marvel at how good he feels inside of you. You know now that youâll have other days and nights to ask him to stay like this for hours, just to be one.
Andrew presses his forehead against yours, lips brushing yours as he whispers. âI love you.â
The word hums through your body. Love. Love. Love. Andrew loves someone and itâs you. From your scalp to your toes, you can feel it resonating through you. Love. Love. Love.
âI love you, Andrew. My Andrew,â you murmur happily, moving a drenched curl from his forehead. âSo good to me.â
His face ends up in your neck, trying to cover his reaction to your words. âYou really think Iâm good?â
âOf course you are. Look at me, honey,â you say, holding onto his chin to bring back his face close to yours as your legs wrap around his waist. âYou are good. You are kind. You keep making me feel safe. AndâŠIâm so lucky to have you,â you add, rolling your hips and making him shiver.
You drink in the sight of him: his sweaty hair sticking to his head, curls messy from where your fingers had run through, the freckles dusting his chest and the traces of old wounds that youâll ask about one day. But the most important of all is the way he is looking at you â as if he loves you. Because he does. He said it. I love you. I love you. I love you.
You keep whispering sweet nothings into his ear, just to see the flush spreading on his cheeks, his ears, his chest and encouraging his thrusts to go harder, deeper. Soon enough, you are quivering around him, your nails digging in his skin as you bite on his lower lip in retaliation for making you wait so long for this moment.
He lets out a desperate moan. âI wonâtâŠlast long. âm sorry. You feel soâŠâ
âItâs okay,â you encourage him. âI want you to come.â
He slams his cock one more time and goes. âWh-Where?â
âIn me,â you beg, and you know you have hit the right nerve from the way his whole body trembles.
âReally?â he breathes.
âPlease.â
The sight of his body, eyes fighting to not shut tight from the pleasure, mouth pursuing yours, mixed with how good he is making you feel, is too much. Your back arches as you reach your second climax tonight, quickly followed by Andrew, clinging to you as his warm load fills you up. Both of you are gasping for one another, time almost freezing as your eyes are sharing the same thought. I love you. I love you. I love you.
After a couple of minutes, Andrew slips out of you and lays most of his body against your side, putting his head above your breasts, on your heartbeat, intertwining your hands together.