Summary: Before Vanessa contacted him but while in the hospital, doped up on less pills than they give him after this incident, Dex finds a single moment of clarity.
Tags: Tweaking over a flashback, Violence, Hospital Dex, he enjoyed the taste of blood so there's that, idk how to do tags
Word count: 1.8k
Extra: If you guys come up with a correlation between the fic and the title and I like it, I'm gonna say it's the reason i picked it (in truth i picked that title cause i was listening to that song when i wrote this lol).
It was a while after his surgery when Dex realized the gravity of his situation. He spent most of his time sleeping, and nobody dared to wake him for fear he might snap unexpectedly; regardless of the amount of sedatives he was on. Today was the first day they let Dex into the common area. He wasnât capable of, or rather willing, to walk on his own, so they wheeled him over to a table that was a safe distance from the more excitable patients. From this position against the wall, he could feel heat radiating from the window right beside his head. He hadnât been able to see the sun very much; the blinds were always closed in his room to allow him to rest. Or perhaps it was a precaution, to keep him from fully gaining awareness of his surroundings. Either way he thought he should feel grateful for finally feeling some warmth from something other than the thin sheets that lay unorganized on his bed. He thought he should feel a lot of things, anything, actually. But he quickly realized that while real life was staring him in the face, he couldnât comprehend anything about it but simple instructions and certain stray words from the patients that surrounded him. He should feel something, remember something, but nothing really came to heart or mind no matter how hard he tried.
And by god was Dex trying. He wanted to do a lot. Wanted to get up and â move. He wanted to move on his own. He wanted to be back to the land of the living. He wanted to remember what it felt like to be alive, what it felt like to be him. But at the moment, he just felt like a husk. A shell of a man who once existed in a story he mustâve read way back when. The idea that he shared a species with the people who surrounded him, or even that he inhabited this body from the very beginning of his existence, slightly baffled him. He felt like he was never a living being to begin with. Like he wasnât born from a womb like the rest of the people on this Earth, but rather spawned in like a hallucination in someoneâs mind.
A patient a little older than Dex bumped into his leg on their way to the front desk and he wanted to jolt backwards but his body was a sack of rocks. All he could do was let out a small groan in his wheelchair as the patient passed by, walking slowly out of sight with their designated nurse to the bathroom. A thought that felt akin to waking your leg after it falls asleep passed his mind in a flash. âI wouldâve killed them for less.â And, for something so heinous, it felt right to think this. It felt like a natural response to his surroundings. In fact, the more time Dex spent out here, the more right it felt to have that want to hurt others. It felt like something completely ordinary, something he could grasp on to for a sense of normalcy. And he did. He held onto that thought as he looked around at the frail little people that ran rampant in this room. He imagined what it would be like to get up, stalk towards one of the weaker patients, the one with the oxygen pump connected to a breathing mask that reminded him of someone he couldnât quite place at the moment, and without much effort removing their mask. Dex wonders what it would feel like to watch them drown in the air he breathes without an issue.
It makes him feel content, knowing heâs strong. That he can overpower anyone here without a sweat. If only his body could respond as well as his mind. If only his body could react to the newly awakened swarm of violent thoughts that are occupying his head â Dexâs eyes caught collective movement. It seems the crowd of people were now heading down the hall, to the cafeteria. Lunch. He hasnât eaten very many solids, much less a full meal, since heâs arrived. A nurse, a short male with black hair, came to his spot by the window. âItâs time to move, Poindexter.â Had Dex been a little more lucid, he would have grinned at the sharp tone of the little nurse. It seemed not everyone was thrilled by his stay here, especially now that he was awake. But at the moment all he could do was lift his head and quickly lock eyes with the nurse who rounded the wheelchair without so much as a glance back at him in an effort to get this task over and done with.
Finally at his destination, Dex was once again sat apart from the more active patients. He didnât mind, it meant he didnât have to deal with noise directly next to his ear when he could already hear his mind buzzing to life. He had a choice of a cheeseburger, a salad, or a small bowl of shredded chicken with rice. He didnât have the energy to speak, so he just pointed towards whatever he saw first. Soon everyone was getting water and their meals handed to them. Of course, everyone got their own medication along with that. Dex was no exception. It just so happened that now that he was more awake, he found himself being more daring. Whether that be in an effort to wake himself up from the mental grogginess heâs been experiencing, or if he was simply looking for something to do with his hands; he was active and he wanted everyone to know. So when the 2 nurses responsible for overseeing that everyone gets their meals and pills glanced away for no more than a few seconds, Dex was quick to act. He unwrapped his meal, attempting to hide his pills in the foil they used to cover a miserable looking burger with barely melted cheese and sad looking patties â flashes of memories came to him in a hurry, Dr. Mercer and the tapes came first. Then his life as a soldier. Then an agent, and then the day that changed his life forever; the day he made the mistake of saving Fisk from the Albanians. He indirectly helped to build the cage that Fisk would use to keep Dex under his control.
Time slowed to a near stop. He could hear his heart pounding loudly in his ears. The room felt hot as he felt the warmth of his blood crawling towards his neck, his face. His breathing wasnât erratic or loud. It was almost nonexistent; was he holding his breath? His legs itched with the need to move, his hands had slight tremors. Dex felt like he was back in the army or in the bureau. Right before pulling the trigger on an unassuming enemy. Someone put a hand on his shoulder, said something he couldnât or rather didnât want to understand. Couldâve been one of the nurses, maybe the same guy from before who couldnât even look him in the eye for more than three seconds without averting his gaze. But before he could process who it was, his body moved. Time seemed to move with him, only that now it moved with a speed he couldnât comprehend. Everything happened quickly and without thought; like grabbing the hand on his shoulder, pulling it closer, and sinking his teeth in just enough to make it bleed. And while the person tried to pull away, he stood up on shaky legs, hand still in his grasp, and broke the personâs wrist. The screaming from nurses and patients alike, the copper he could taste on his tongue, it was enough to fully break his mental fog. He used his wheelchair to push two incoming nurses away from him, giving him enough distance to think of a way to fight back. They came with syringes, he could use that. He approached the nurses with a speed he didnât know he had in him until this point. Avoiding the syringes full of sleep-inducing drugs was a lot harder with a body that felt heavier, but it made it all the more rewarding when he managed to beat one of the nurses unconscious. He felt alive, he felt real, he felt that this is what he was, what he has always been. Something with a switch that can start his instincts to kill at a momentâs notice.
Two guards and three nurses made their way towards the scene. The patients were completely inconsolable at this point, most of them had to be given sedatives to be able to calm them down or knock them out for long enough to return them to their rooms. But Dex wasnât worried about any of that. By now he was already covered in two nurseâs blood, both of which would need serious medical attention for broken bones. He was delirious from the excitement, from the high of finally being back in his body after feeling like a ghost hovering over a rotten corpse. The guards held tasers in their hands and Dex was quick to make use of the syringes on the ground. His aim was a little off but he managed to pierce one guard through the eye with a syringe and another nurse who got too close had the other one sticking out of their chest near their collarbone. Dex wanted to keep going, wanted to continue fighting until his body gave out and collapsed into a dream-filled sleep. But before he could throw a pen he found on one of the nurses he beat, Dex felt a sharp pain near his ribs. The guard had been quicker on the draw with his taser, shooting Dex with a newfound hatred in his eyes on his partnerâs behalf.
Dex felt his body fall in slow motion, could see nurses making their way towards him with restraints and more syringes. God, he wanted to keep fighting, but he knew this was the end of it. He relished in the pain of nurses and guards grabbing him, holding him down, restricting and sedating him. His last bit of freedom, freedom to feel pain and hatred and joy simultaneously. In this last moment of clarity, Dex decided he would kill him. Fisk will die by his hand. Dex made a promise to himself that if he ever got the chance to leave, if he ever got the chance to escape this hospital by any means, Fisk would be his number one target. Just as quickly as this moment had started, he was knocked out by the sedatives, left to wonder when he would once again find an opportunity to be himself.
Sorry if this is a weird ask but Do you think dex is aromantic/asexual? from watching the show I don't think dex ever shows any romantic interest in anyone despite what people may claim about julie he literally says he's not into her. For me Dex doesn't strike me as the type of guy who is interested in romance but I'm honestly curious on your opinion because you understand him very well and I've loved your personality analysis on him.
hello. do not worry it is not weird, i really appreciate this question i enjoy talking about all aspects of his character. yeah i do actually see him that way, iâve talked about this before a bit, but i view dex as aromantic and asexual, somewhere on the greysexual spectrum, and also gay. to me, itâs not something he struggles with or hides from himself; itâs just part of who he is, another quiet truth about him that he doesnât feel the need to explain to anyone. i donât think heâs in denial, and i donât think he was ever âin the closetâ in the traditional sense. i think he realized that he only liked men pretty young and just didnât think it was a big deal. it only became something he kept private because of how other people treated him, how kids can be cruel about things they donât understand. so he learned early that itâs safer to say nothing. itâs not shame; itâs self-protection.
but i donât think dex experiences attraction or connection in the way most people do. heâs not wired for typical romantic longing. he doesnât yearn for romance; he yearns for connection, a sense of understanding, being seen, being safe with someone. romance, love, dating, those things are abstract to him. they donât carry meaning the way loyalty, trust, and stability do. i think heâs capable of having sex, of physical relationships, i can see him occasionally hooking up with men, but not because heâs driven by strong sexual attraction or desire. itâs more about closeness, about needing to feel real next to someone else for a moment. itâs comfort through proximity, not passion. thatâs why iâd call him greysexual: heâs not completely repulsed by the idea of sex, but itâs not something he craves or defines himself by.
i do think that if dex were to have sex, it wouldnât be about romance or even necessarily attraction in the conventional sense. it would be about sensation, grounding, and control in a space where he doesnât have to perform anything emotional. sex for him would probably be more physical than emotional, more about the act itself than what itâs âsupposedâ to represent. i donât think heâs someone who experiences lust or longing in the typical way; itâs more that, when he does engage, itâs to feel something real, something tangible, something that quiets his brain for a few minutes.
and i do think heâd take a more submissive, bottom-oriented role, but not in a purely sexualized or stereotypical way, itâs more about the psychology of it. dex has spent his entire life being forced into control, into precision, into performance. everything he does requires restraint and focus. even his emotions are something he has to suppress and manage constantly. so i think part of him would find relief in being able to let go, to not have to control everything for once. being submissive would be a way of giving himself permission to exist without the pressure of maintaining control. heâs so used to being the weapon, the one who directs, who calculates every movement, and in that space, with someone he trusts, he could finally surrender a bit of that control.
but even then, i donât think itâs something he does often, or with emotional attachment. if anything, it would be rare, sporadic, almost transactional, but not in a cold way. heâd engage when heâs at his lowest points, when heâs desperately trying to feel something real or when his own body feels like itâs slipping away from him. i imagine it as something that helps him ground himself, to remind himself heâs still human, still has a body that can experience touch that isnât violent. but it would never be about love. he wouldnât associate sex with love or intimacy, more with quietness, with reprieve.
thereâs also something about how dex interacts with the world that suggests he views physical touch as both dangerous and necessary. he craves it but doesnât know how to handle it. heâs touch-starved in that very real, painful way that happens when someone grows up neglected and punished for needing closeness. so when he does allow someone close, itâs because heâs built an internal framework that allows him to feel safe while doing it. and that framework often comes through submission, a way to control the situation by surrendering within it.
itâs not even necessarily sexual dominance and submission in a kink-coded sense, itâs more psychological. itâs about power, about where he feels safest. dex doesnât want to be in charge of another personâs body or emotions; he doesnât want to risk hurting someone that way. heâs terrified of his own capacity for harm. but being the one who yields, whoâs acted upon, gives him an illusion of safety, heâs not the threat anymore. he can just exist.
after everything that happens to him, especially following fiskâs manipulation and his complete mental collapse, i think his relationship to touch and to his own body would only get more complicated. heâs someone whoâs had his autonomy taken from him repeatedly, by his parents, by institutions, by the fbi, by fisk. i think, in a twisted way, sex could become a way to reclaim that autonomy. not through dominance, but through consent. through choosing to give something, rather than having something taken. thatâs why, for him, being submissive wouldnât be weakness, it would be control, a rare moment where he chooses how heâs seen and touched.
and even though i do think heâs gay, i donât think his sexuality revolves around attraction in the way most peopleâs does. itâs more situational, more emotional than physical. he might be drawn to certain kinds of men, confident, steady, protective, not because he wants them romantically, but because they embody something he doesnât have. and if he ends up being with someone like that, itâs because he feels safe, not because heâs overcome with desire.
as for romance, i donât think itâs something that even really registers for him. he doesnât fantasize about being with someone, or fall in love in that way. if heâs drawn to someone, itâs usually because they represent something, calmness, confidence, moral clarity, safety, control. itâs not romantic or even sexual; itâs aspirational. like, when people talk about his fixation on julie, i think thatâs exactly what it is, fixation. he didnât want her, he wanted what she represented. she was kind, steady, seemingly normal, everything he wasnât. he says outright that heâs not into her, and i think thatâs true. sheâs not an object of desire; sheâs an idea of peace. and dex, as someone constantly trying to regulate himself and appear ânormal,â latched onto that.
i think if dex ever sees, say, a gay couple being openly affectionate or living happily, his response isnât envy of the romance. itâs envy of the freedom. heâd admire that they can be themselves so unapologetically, that they can exist in their truth without fear. thatâs the part heâd yearn for. not the relationship, but the authenticity. he doesnât wish he had what they have, he wishes he was like them. self-assured, comfortable, open.
and i think that fits with his personality as someone whoâs always watching other people to understand how they function, how they express emotions, how they fit in. dex is constantly studying human behavior to replicate it, and romance just doesnât fit into his emotional language. he doesnât really understand it and doesnât see the point of it. itâs too unpredictable, too intimate, too much to manage. his focus has always been survival, structure, and control, and romance, by its very nature, threatens all three.
after everything that happens to him, especially postâseason 3 and into born again, i think this distance from romance and sexuality only deepens. trauma reshapes desire. heâs so consumed by betrayal, pain, and loss that intimacy becomes something almost alien. if anything, i think he seeks connection through understanding and shared purpose, not affection. heâd rather have someone who gets him, even if that connection is violent or fractured, than someone who tries to love him. love doesnât make sense to him, but recognition does.
so yeah, in short i see dex as gayand aroace. his sexuality is real, but itâs quiet, more about who he is than who he wants. he might occasionally act on physical attraction, but romance and emotional intimacy just donât exist for him in the same way they do for most people. what he wants is connection, not romance; understanding, not love. and after all heâs been through, i donât think thatâll ever change.
iâve actually gone in depth before on how i think he views romance and intimacy, itâs something iâve written about a few times if you want to look through my character analysis tag. but i can definitely talk more about it again, especially how his relationship to those things might evolve after the trauma of season 3 and into born again. either way, i think his orientation and emotional world make perfect sense for who he is, someone constantly reaching for something human, even when itâs not what people expect.
So, in case anyone was curious why i stopped being active on this acct: I just lost the motivation, that's all. I still really like Daredevil (and Dex in specific), but I just didnt know what to contribute to this acct when I couldn't really come up with anything đ I am getting back into the fandom tho, so expect a few Dex related reblogs/posts in this time.
That aside, I turned 20, so that's exciting. It was a shock to see "19" still on one of my pages lmao. I've been getting back into The Boys, and Gen V has really been the catalyst for that. If I start posting about that fandom would yall still luv me đ„č Uhm what else...im gonna try to get back to writing, but no promises that it's gonna be up to the standard I've set for myself in previous works. I'm very self-critical, so.
Anyways thanks to all the people who supported me when I was active. I cant wait to interact with more of you guys now that I'm back :)
Pairing: Rhett Abbott x Fem!Reader!
Summary: After a rough couple of years in California, you move to the quiet pastures of Wabang to work in your sister's bakery, finding solace in the life she's built for herself there. A fresh start would've been a lot easier if a certain six-foot, blue-eyed cowboy hadn't waltzed into the shop with his Stetson pulled low.
Wordcount: 13.239k (sorry)
Warnings: SMUT! (it gets filthy pls don't look at me - oral sex f!receiving, fingering, handjob, spit play??, corny dirty talk), Soft Dom!Rhett Abbott, Possessive!RhettAbbott, Sub!Reader, Sub Space (adjacent? Sub-space-ish?), Mentions of Daddy Kink, Massive Praise Kink, Strangers to Friends to Lovers, Porn with a lot of Plot, Angst (can't write anything without it lmao), Fluff, Humor, Slow Burn, Mentions of Drug/Alcohol Use, Implied Bar Fights, Reader has a troubled past, CORNY THIS GETS SO CORNY.
A/N: (this is my belated unsolicited two cents on the Sabrina Carpenter album cover discourse, like let a woman SUB BRO let a gal be a whiny bottom!) Yes, I've been temporarily Rhett-Abbott-pilled...Yes, I've been yee-haw-ed so hard...this was a one-time thing to exorcise my demons
The Disappointment Club
The first time you saw Rhett Abbott, you were behind the counter of your sisterâs bakery, piping lemon-thyme curd onto a fresh batch of muffins with the precision of someone who shouldnât be allowed anywhere near a piping bagâor a convection oven; or anything sharp, really; anything inside of a bakery, possibly.Â
âSo, youâre the new hire?â The man said, all six feet, Wyoming drawl, and his Stetson pulled so low all you could see was his mouth.Â
You were about to speak up when a glob of curd plopped onto your boot.Â
âThatâs my little sister, Rhett,â Maya warned, kicking open the swinging doors as she emerged from the kitchen, a batch of mint-green pastry boxes piled in her arms. âSo you better not get any funny ideas.â
âAlright, I hear you.â He huffed a low laugh, rifling through his wallet before handing your sister a couple of bills. âIâll make sure to keep my ideas void of humor.â
âGood, and keep them to yourself while youâre at it. Greet your mom for me!â Maya added with biting faux sweetness that had haunted you throughout your childhood. She handed him the pastry boxes, and the two of you watched in silence as he lumbered out of the bakery. The ding of the shop bell, the cuff of his boots on the tiles. He looked back once through the shop windows, the brim of his hat revealing a surprisingly tender face. The shape of it there, for a moment, in a soft bar of sunlightâbefore he disappeared from view.Â
You lowered the piping bag and took a long breath.Â
âDonât even start.â Maya thwacked you with a dish towel.Â
âWho the fuck was that?â
âSomeone you will not get involved with.â
âIâm sorry, Mr. Cowboy McDreamyââ
âStop. Donât start with your funny ideas.â
âMy ideas are famously hilarious.â
âTrust me. Rhett Abbottâs the type of guy who goes for buckle bunnies and touristsâ"
"Buckle-what?"
"âand you are very much neither, so how about you make sure those blueberry muffins donât look like someone assembled them with their eyes closed, hm?â She cocked a brow at your army of malformed swirls. You scoffed.Â
âYou know what?â Defiantly, you lifted the piping bag and proceeded to squirt the rest of the curd into your mouthâbefore scrambling to the back, dodging your sister's ardent attempts at skinning your ass raw with a dish towel.Â
· · â · ·
The second time you saw Rhett Abbott, you were on a date at The Longhorn. It was the only bar in town that had decent enough beer and a dancefloor that wasnât slick with liquor and vomit past ten PM.
Your sister had set you up: He was the son of the game warden, Adam or Adrian (youâd long forgotten), awkward but polite, built like a shy greyhound, and stealing glances at your cleavage in intervals growing shorter and shorter the further he worked his way down a bottle of Budweiser.Â
He wasnât terrible company, patiently listening to you talk about the weather and how much you missed San Diego and your current hyperfixation on the baby goat that lived on the farm next door to your sisterâs place. It has three legs, so they built her this tiny prosthetic, so she can walk properly. They named her Tres, as in Tres Leches, get it? Isnât that the most adorable fucking thing youâve ever heard in your whole entire fucking life?
You tried to ignore Adam-Adrianâs audible sigh of relief when you got up to grab another round of beers. Maybe youâd get yourself something stronger. Or maybe youâd find a good enough excuse to call it a night, and you wouldâve, you really, really wouldâve if you hadnât bumped your shoulder into none other than Mr. Cowboy McDreamy himself.Â
Heâd swapped the Stetson for a washed-out baseball cap. Jaw hard and stubbled, nose a long slender slope in the lights reflecting off the dancefloor.Â
âHey there, Shortcake.â His quirk of a smile that aged him backwards.
Shortcake.
It wouldnât have worked anywhere else, with anyone else, but you were a lightweight two beers in, and you liked the way the light hit his eyes, clear blue, like a drop of rain on a car window.Â
You wouldâve said something cheeky, something about having funny ideasâbut he cut you off: âHe sure seems like a good time.â
Tipping his chin towards Adam-Adrian slouched in the booth like a lonely sapling.Â
You didn't like the way he'd said it. You knew men like Rhett Abbott, and you knew what happened when you let them into your life. âYou know what,â you said, âhe is, actually. Not that itâs any of your business.â
Rhettâs eyebrows lifted once, then smoothed out. âOkay.â He took a swig of his beer. âGot it.â Like something had been settled between you two.
· · â · ·
The third time you saw Rhett Abbott, your sisterâs husband, JonahâLike the actor! Oh, and the book! Ha-ha! (which had gotten old the first time heâd said it)âtook you out to the rodeo grounds.Â
You and your sister had grown up in San Diego, amongst beaches and high-rises and palm trees lining manicured promenades. A place of juice cleanses and electric scooters. Men riding bulls in an arena had seemed unthinkable to you; something arcane, something forgotten.Â
The rusty roofing of the grandstands shaded the crowd from the setting sun, its light disappearing behind the mountains, the endless sprawl of the valley. Everyone was buzzing, solo cups swishing beer, kids pressed up against the railing. A glossy nimbus of girls in cowboy boots and jean shorts chirped drunkenly one rung below. Every once in a while the PA crackled with the rumbling voice of the announcer, âAaaaand here we go, folks! Big Joe out the gate, looking strong. Ah! Look at that spin, folks, right in the pocketââ
As a middle-school teacher, Jonah was forever sweet and excited about anything. Even bull riding, it seemed. He explained bull ropes and suicide grips, rattling down the names of the upcoming bulls in the pen. ââokay, so thereâs Rotten Dynamite, rankest motherfucker youâll ever see. Then thereâs Terminator. Oh! And Iron Dome! We love Iron Dome. Blind in one eye, bucks like a whipcrack. Heard Rhettâs riding him tonightââ
Everyone knew Rhett Abbott rode bulls. The framed picture of him and his dad hung above the bar at The Longhorn, the two of them triumphantly holding up a big-buckled belt, the hard set of their twin jaws. People in Wabang rode bucking horses and lassoed cattle, wore their hats to the pharmacy and the supermarket, and hauled feed on their way to church. Old buildings still had hitching posts that cracked and blistered in the sun, like in a Western.
Rhett riding bulls wasnât a surpriseâbut seeing it was.Â
When the chute slammed open, you imagined something inside the crowd opened with it. Iron Dome, with its roiling beastly body, black as a hole in the floodlights, thundered into the arena. Dirt spraying. Crowd shouting. Rhettâs slender body meeting each jerk and heave and lunge, face hidden beneath the wide brim of his Stetson. The crowd surged forward all at once, a wild energy shuttling through it like a wave. Jonah hollered next to you, pumping a fist into the cool evening air.Â
Five seconds, six secondsâ
Seven point one.Â
Rhett's body bending back, bow-tight, arm flung as high as the kick of the bullâs hind legs. Fused in perfect symmetry, their golden ratio like something painted.Â
You flinched when Rhettâs arm snagged on the rope, and when Iron Dome finally lashed him off, and he went flying into the dirtâwhatever had settled between you two, all at once, unsettled itself.
· · â · ·
During the biggest fight youâd ever had with your sister, sheâd called you a human hand grenade with the propensity for blowing up your life more than you could afford to. WhichâŠokay, fair.Â
People never expected you to be difficult or complicated or messy. You didnât look it. Most of the time you didnât even act like it. Until you slipped up, and slipped up some more, and then the slipping up turned into something big, and the big thing turned into something unstoppable.
Your mom had been the only one to describe it right, sheâd understood, and in a moment of rare clarity that tore through the molasses of her medication, sheâd whispered it to you like this:Â
It comes in wavesâuntil eventually the tide stops receding.Â
Youâd arrived in Wabang with a duffle bag, wearing a rumpled sundress and hiking boots.
Jonah had picked you up from the bus station with an excited grin and a too-tight hug. Maya had made you chicken and waffles, like when you were kids.
Back then, she'd made it whenever Mom was at her worst, when she was passed out for days, barricaded in her room like a pharaoh in a tomb. Chicken and waffles usually meant things were shitty and couldn't get much shittier. It also meant you'd skip school and spend the day at the mall down Fifth, where the sun slanted through the glass dome in the food court, made it all hot and damp like a terrarium, and the two of you would pretend to be salamanders lazing on the bench by the churros stand, T-shirts covered in cinnamon and sugar and delight.Â
Wabang felt like those afternoons in the mall. Wabang was supposed to be the place where you got better.
You stuck to your routine, you made your bed, you ate enough and drank enough, you slept and woke on time, you went to work, you stuck to beers and cigarettes, you read and wrote and you fed the chickens in the garden, you always came back home.Â
One afternoon, sitting on the porch staring out at the endless bowl of the valley, Maya handed you the keys to the bakery. âI want you to open up the shop. Four-thirty AM on the dot. You think you're up for it?â
âAre you kidding?â
Tomorrow was going to be a day so big, even Jonah was stopping by to help. Theyâd prepped the order for the wedding on Willow Ridge all week. Maya had even pulled an all-nighter the day before. It was a big deal, and she trusted you enough to be a part of that big deal.Â
Trusted you enough to be a part of this life that she'd built so far away from the mall down Fifth, from momâfrom you.
Smiling carefully, you reached for the keys. Maya snagged them away, narrowing her eyes. âDon't eat all the frosting, you little shit.â
âNot making any promises.âÂ
She tossed the keys and you caught them.
You felt like a saint anointed, like someone had tapped a sword to your shoulder, and you glowed with it, and your sister was so beautiful in the sun, and youâd said thank you, and youâd promised youâd do good.Â
Youâd be good.Â
Maybe you deserved to celebrate being so good.
It was a Friday night after all, and you were bored and maybe a little sad, and maybe you were exhausted from following all these rules you were trying to build your life around. And so you rode the rusty bike Jonah had dug up from the bowels of their garage all the way to The Longhorn. And what started with a beer, ended with a bottle of whiskey and a joint on the back of someoneâs pickup. Tame in comparison to what you'd once done on a Friday night, or on any night, really.
So it was fine, right? It was going to be fine.Â
There was a girl with a shiny blonde mane and pink-chrome nails, her deep, lovely croon when she called you ââso fucking pretty, baby girl.â You missed feeling like this. You missed saying yes and yes and yes, bursting from it, unstoppable. You mightâve kissed her, but you werenât sure, you mightâve wanted to marry her, which sounded about right, and you wanted to tell her this, to confess it to her and hold her soft pink-chrome-tipped hands...
The next thing you knew, you woke up next to your bike in the flatbed of a pickup, in a driveway you didnât recognize, in a part of town you werenât familiar with.
Head pounding, throat sore. Five missed calls from your sister. It was Saturday. It was noon.Â
You were still drunk when you reached the green-and-pink awning of Sweet Peaâs, its buttery cream trim like frosting. Inside, the bakery was buzzing with a barrage of patrons on the sunniest Saturday Wabang had seen in weeks. At the counter, Maya didnât speak to you. Instead she sent you straight to the back where you threw up once in the sink and once in front of the convection ovens.Â
âGive me the keys,â Maya ordered, and you patted yourself down, before you remembered youâd stuffed them into your boot. She told you to go home, that she didnât want to see you today. Jonah promised that everything would be fine, that Maya just needed a minute. Get cleaned up, heâd said. Itâs gonna be okay, heâd said. But he hadn't looked so sure.
You hadnât been good.
You hadn't been good at allâ
Head throbbing more than it had before, you dragged your shitty bike through town. You rode until the sparse sprinkling of houses turned into open fields, pastures flat and endless. You struggled down a lonely dirt road, sweat spilling down your back, your chest, your face, stinging your eyes, you were hot, you were so hot, and your arms shook from the rattling of the uneven ground.
The road stopped abruptly at a rusty fence. You dropped your bike and climbed through the wide gaps between the bars. Marching through the field that stretched on forever, an oceanâs worth of it, green, dry, pricking at your bare legs, the afternoon sun battered you like judgment. You kept wading forward until you couldnât get yourself to, until unceremoniously, with the theatrics of a very hungover and very disgraced saint, you collapsed into the shade of a lonesome tree.Â
You were sure then that youâd reached the end of the world, that you were so far away from anything and anyone, and that here, like this, finally, no one would hear you.
When was the last time you cried?
Covered in sweat and dirt, possibly still drunk and possibly still high, key-less, wretched, useless, melodramatic, sobbing, gasping for breath.Â
It comes in wavesâ Â
âLook, I donât mean to bother you, but this hereâs private land.â
Youâd heard it too late.Â
The horse, the gentle pelt of its hooves in the field. Itâs puffs of breath. A manâs low murmured, easy, girl.Â
You refused to open your eyes, feeling like a child, as you flopped onto your side to turn away.Â
Youâve got to be fucking kidding me.Â
âYou doinâ alright?â His voice softer then.Â
âIâm fine,â you murmured into the grass. The buzz of a bug on your cheek. You slapped it away.Â
âAre you hurt?â
âNo, justââ sunbathing? contemplating? ââhaving an existential crisis. Iâm almost done.âÂ
A sound like a huff or a scoff, a swallowed-down laugh maybe.Â
âDo you need me to call someone?âÂ
âJust give me a second.â Pressing your hands to your face, you took long breaths, waiting for that big bawling bone-pelting agonizing throb of exhaustion to settle down. âOkay,â you finally said. âIâm finished.âÂ
Turning towards him, there he sat, high upon his noble steed like a cowboy in a story. With his brows scrunched beneath his Stetson, he was a man fully unprepared to stumble upon some sobbing wildling on a Saturday morning.
You werenât sure if he recognized you. You didnât care. Youâd lost your capacity for public shame a long time ago.Â
âRight. Iâll leave. Uhâsorry.â You got up, wobbling there like a newborn calf, shaking out the damp hem of your dress, before heading down the path youâd trampled into the grass.Â
âWait,â he called out. âDo you want me to bring you back?â
The thought of getting on a horse made bile rise in your throat. You werenât going to risk throwing up a third time.Â
âNo, thank you,â you shouted.
He followed you all the way back to the fence, the steady trot of his horse in the distance. You felt his stare across the field, hot and strange on the back of your neck as you peeled your bike off the road and headed home.Â
It was the fourth time youâd seen Rhett Abbott, and youâd prayed it was the last.Â
· · â · ·
âHey there, Shortcake.â
God didnât like you very much apparently.
You swallowed, hunching lower behind the display case where you were restocking the cardamom cinnamon rolls.
Rhett was tall enough to lean over it. âYou feelin' better?â
So he had recognized you.Â
Standing up straight, you cleared your throat. âAll my demons have been temporarily exorcized, thank you.â
âHm.â He huffed a laugh, that quick smile of his that made him all boyish. âReckon I should try that sometime.â
âWell, I highly recommend hysterically crying on someone elseâs property. Itâs very catharticââ
âThat you, Rhett?â Maya shouted from the back.
âYes, maâam.â He straightened.Â
âJust gimme a sec, Iâll grab your momâs order.âÂ
You busied yourself with wiping down the countertop before your sister caught you fraternizing with the one person in Wabang that needed to be left un-fraternized with.
The two of you had only recently regained some common ground, and part of that truce was the unspoken rule that you please, please, please not obsess over the wrong people.
Rhett Abbott wasn't wrong per se; he just wasn't very right either.
Rhettâs shadow spread across the counter as he leaned over the display case again, close enough you caught the waft of his cologne, the unbearable blue of his gaze. You swallowed. His attention trailed down your throat. When he smiled again, it was soft, it stayed there for a while. His voice low then, âThereâs a rodeo tonight. You should come. If none of us break any bones, we'll head to The Longhorn.â Â
You stared at the spot where the worn collar of his denim jacket pressed into his neck.
âIâll think about it.â You said it to that spot.Â
âGood.â He said it to your mouth.Â
Good.Â
Youâd found out long ago that there was one word that could make you do anything for anyone.Â
Just one wordâand you were piled in the truck bed of Rhettâs Chevy Silverado, squeezed against the cab with some of his old friends from high school, your legs slung over the lap of a woman whoâd known Rhett since kindergarten and who had the sweetest gap-toothed grin youâd ever seen in your life. You told her so, and the gap between her teeth seemed to grow with pride.Â
Driving down the winding roads of the valley, the cool air snapping your hair into your eyes, the hem of your dress fluttering, you tipped your head skyward. Before Wyoming, youâd never seen a sky so black. The nights here hit harder than anywhere else.Â
You cackled when Gaptooth helped you press the hem of your dress down before you flashed the whole truck, laughing harder when she offered a pull off her cherry-red vape. With the smoke citrusy and sweet in your mouth, you turned towards the driverâs seat, your cheek mashed against the flaking metal edge of the truck bed.Â
Rhett was driving. You watched his long tan arm lean out the window, fingers tinkering, playing with the wind. The soft swirl of hair. The faded bull skull tattoo on his forearm, flashing there in the beam of the headlights.
You wanted to reach out, mirror every turn of his wrist, trace the swell of a veinâ
His arm went limp. You realized too late he was watching you in the side mirror.
That buzz in the back of your head, down your chest, places below.
You didnât look away once.Â
· · â · ·
At The Longhorn, everyone scattered, some fighting their way to the bar, others pulling each other to the crowded dancefloor.Â
âWhatâre you drinkinâ, Shortcake?â The voice was too high to be Rhettâs. It was another rider from before. (Lloyd something-something; four point three seconds on a bull named Napoleon, which was fitting considering Lloyd was as tall as a water dispenser.)
âUh.â You hastily checked the meager cash youâd stuffed into your boot. âWhatever five bucks will get meââ
âItâs on me.â The rough twang of that familiar voice as he leaned over you. You could still smell the dirt on him, the sweat. âShortcake.â Rhett shot Lloyd a sharp smile, and you had to physically restrain yourself from rolling your eyes. Â
(You bought yourself your own cider with your own five bucks.)
The rest of the night went on easy. Crowd thick enough you kept drifting away from familiar faces, before meeting them again in the line to the bathroom. Hopping from table to table, clinking bottles and shuffling cards, until Gaptooth pulled you to the dancefloor, where girls in boots and baby-tees taught you how to line dance. âShake those hips, San Diego!â And so you did, and life was at its sweetest, and you didnât have to think about the last couple of days or the last couple of years or how Maya had stopped asking where you went at night. And you spun and spun, spun wildly, and thought only about a blue pair of eyes watching you beneath the wide brim of a Stetson.
Oh God, how youâd missed this feeling.Â
He found you much later; outside, at the back entrance, unlit cigarette between your lips, crouched on the ground with your back against the wall. You were in the process of yanking a boot off, tipping it upside down in the hopes it would produce your lighter. Had it fallen out on the dancefloor?Â
âNeed a light?â
Rhett leaned one hand against the wall, presumably still a little lopsided from facing off a two-thousand-pound bull a couple of hours ago.Â
âOne sec,â you said, yanking off your other boot, revealing a couple of coins and a tube of lipgloss. You looked up at him, his lighter already in hand. You smiled. âYes, please.â
Rhett huffed a laugh. You wondered what his full laugh sounded like, big-bellied and unbridled. Did he tip his head back from so much delight?Â
Leaning against the wall with a stifled groan, Rhett carefully slid to the gravel, knees popping. He landed on the ground with a thud. âShit. Ow.â
âCarefulâ
âThink thatâs too late for me.â
âThat bad?â you asked.
âSurprisingly less terrible than last time.â
âWho wouldâve thought a bull named Bonecrusher would go easy on you?â
âIf by easy, you mean he made me see God a couple of times, sure.â
You snorted, before popping your cigarette in your mouth and waiting patiently for him to light it for you. He huff-laughed at that too. Apparently he was easily amused.
His hand, big and dry as a baseball mitt, came up to shield the flame from the wind, and for a moment all you smelled was him. The earth, the acrid sweetness of sweat slicked across skin for too long. Like youâd been tucked into him, an animal in his burrow.Â
You couldnât look at him like this. You hummed with this feeling. The brim of his hat bumping gently against your forehead. When the flame caught, you leaned away and took a long, long drag. âThanksââ You cleared your throat. âThank you.â
âSure.â
The two of you sat there for a moment, drenched in the red halogen glow of a neon sign. You, crosslegged, playing with your necklace, pressing the pendant to your mouth; him, with one long leg stretched out, the other hiked up for his forearm to lean against, fiddling with his Zippo. You stared at a couple making out against a car. He stared at the men smoking by the bins.Â
You both spoke at once:
âWhy do youââÂ
âWhy were youââ
âOh. Sorry.â You blinked.Â
Rhett pointed his Zippo at you. âBy all means, ladies first.â
You snorted again, offering him your cigarette. He hesitated, like he hadnât expected it, but you were still humming and the night was cool and life was still at its sweetest, and when he took a drag, stubbled jaw working, it felt like you could get away with more than you should.Â
âWhy does everyone say you choose the rankest bulls on purpose?â you asked.Â
Rhett seemed to give it some serious thought, tugging his hat back to look at the sky. He handed you the cigarette. Then, ââCause Iâm convinced I have something to prove. Itâs either that or a real shit attempt at self-sabotage. SometimesâŠitâs both.â
His honesty made something inside of you open.Â
âWhy were you crying the other day?âÂ
Taking a drag from the cigarette, you gave it some serious thought too. Then, âMy sisterâs giving me a second chance. I stopped getting those a long time ago, so Iâm just trying really, really hard not to fuck it up. But I kind of suck at not fucking things up. I donât know, itâsâŠâ You took a breath, trailing off.Â
âComplicated?â he said.
âExcruciating.â
âSounds about right." Rhett hummed in agreement, looking at you from the corner of his eye. âYouâre in luck. Youâre speaking to the Abbott Family Letdown. So.â He gave a silly flourish with his hand.Â
âOh.â You sat up in mock-surprise. âWhy didnât you say so? Always a pleasure to meet a fellow embarrassment.â You popped the cigarette back in your mouth and stretched your hand out. He shook it with a laugh. The squeeze of his thick fingers, warm and dry.Â
âWe could start a support group,â he said. Â
Reaching your hands above your head, like you were hanging a banner: âThe Disappointment Club,â you mumbled around the cigarette.Â
When Rhett Abbott laughed, really laughed, when he shook with it and his shoulders did a little shimmy, he did indeed tip his head back from so much delight.Â
You laughed with him. You wanted to press two fingers down the Adamâs Apple that bobbed up and down his throat. You were so close the brim of his hat bumped against your head again. You told him everything then, told him about the keys and the girl and the back of that pickup. ââand so Maya had to cancel multiple orders and pay it out of her own pocket. Plus, it was, like, the pastorâs daughterâs wedding. So Iâm assuming God was cataclysmically displeased.â
âGodâll forgive you for a couple of fuckinâ muffins.â
âA couple of muffins? Those were toasted pear-and-almond tartlets with a frangipane center and a cardamom crumb topping.â
âFrangi-what-now?â
âExactly.â
âTrust me, it ainât that bad. One time I got so drunk in the barn I forgot to latch the gate, and we lost forty head in a night. Took me days to herd them all back together, and my dad didnât let me into the house until they were all accounted for.â
âIf we turn this into a competition, weâll be sitting out here all night.â
He turned then. His slow crooked smile. âSounds like a good time to me.â
You didnât know how long you sat there, talking. Your cigarette stub forgotten on the cool asphalt. The parking lot was empty now. Even the neon sign seemed to have dimmed.
Whatever had unsettled between you two, unsettled itself so completely you fell wide open. He couldâve reached right inside, he couldâve thrown something inâ
Was it so wrong to look at him like this and hope, with a desperation that mightâve killed you, that he wouldnât look away?
· · â · ·
Friendship.Â
Could you call it that?
It felt a lot sharper, had more blowback.Â
Rhett liked to describe it as your little two-man support group. âHottest club in town,â heâd say. Which wasnât particularly funny, but it was stupid enough it made you snort every time.Â
Time was no longer governed by phasesâno more mornings, noons or nights, no more suns or moonsâinstead, you found yourself adhering to Rhett Abbottâs reliable rhythms.
Your days started when the tiny bell above the shop door rang, and the brim of a worn Stetson swung up to reveal that surprisingly tender face. Maya had her suspicions about Rhett stopping by the bakery almost every day like clockwork: âThereâs only so many errands he can runâŠand do you really think Cecilia Abbott eats that many toffee-nut buttermilk muffins? Woman must be enormous by nowââ
You felt like a puppy, Pavloved, scrambling to the counter every time the shop bell trilled in the quiet. On the days he didnât come in early, you usually met him on your lunch break. You were notoriously terrible at making sure you ate properly, and so heâd bring you a sandwich, or take-out, and youâd eat on the back of his Chevy in the parking lot, legs dangling from the truck bed, kicking up every time he made you laugh. Rhett made you laugh the way youâd forgotten to, that startled smack of a cackle, like you still couldnât believe that there was someone who made you topple over from so much fucking glee.Â
Your favorite days were the ones he was off work early, and heâd come pick you up, toss your bike onto the truck bedââGet in, Shortcake, weâre going on a trip!ââand heâd take you to the lakes or a town one valley over or the mountains, show you Wabang, show you Wyoming. He showed you the delicate difference between yarrow and hemlock when you trekked through the forests.
âWow, dude, real Bear Grylls energy,â youâd said the first time heâd started a fire on a bed of pine needles.Â
âThatâs the most California thing I think youâve ever said.âÂ
âWait until I start talking about the way they stack vegetables at Erewhon.â
He grunted a laugh.Â
âDo you miss it?â
âThe vegetables at Erewohn?â
âHome.â
It took you a moment.Â
The thought of your sisterâs and Jonahâs sweet storybook house, with their porch covered in sun catchers shaped like honeycomb, their little brood of chickens in the garden, how the thought of it all moved through you on reflex. But Rhett hadnât meant that house or those people or this place.
âI don't know, sometimes.â
Sometimes being here makes me forget to miss anything at all.Â
You forgot to miss the most at night, when your days came to an end at the rodeo or The Longhorn. When Rhett sloppily swung you across the dancefloor, the smell of beer and sawdust and the distinct spice of his cologne. Rhett was fierce, he was momentum, he was unstoppable force in a place full of immovable objects. You wanted to hurtle away with him, wrap yourself around his body, thigh to thigh, chest to chest, chin to chinâtake me places.Â
Did he know he did this to you?Â
Did he know how easy you were? Â
That when you chose someone like this, you fell into them, and everything and everyone else fell away?Â
You didnât pay attention to Lloydâs weird come-ons, didnât care about the girls that crushed around Rhett after he tumbled off another bull, or the way he always seemed to sidle up to you whenever anyone tried to buy you a drink.
You were singular, soaking up his closeness until you felt thick and stupid with it, and all you could do was let him turn you on the dancefloor like a drunken spinning top, his gravelly laughter shaking uncontrollably in your ear. Those lean arms looped around your waist, and your hands slid up the skin of his neck, slick with sweat, to cradle his face.
How those eyes crinkled when he grinned, and how easy it was then to imagine him as a child. The defiant thing with bloodied knees getting into trouble at the edge of town. The Abbott Family Letdown, you thought with so much fondness you couldâve kissed his cheek.
Nights always ended like this: The two of you fused to each other, dancing, or squeezed into a booth, or smoking out in the lot, talking and talking about everything and anything, about the places you wanted to see, and the things you wanted to do, and the people you wanted be. The choices you wanted to make and the ones you really, really wished you could remake.Â
Sometimes you didnât speak at all, and you just sat there and stared at each other, as if to say: Out of all the places in the world, this is where I find you.
· · â · ·
You loved the rainy season, loved those humid afternoons youâd sit on the back deck at Rhettâs place.
Heâd fixed up the Abbott's old bunkhouse with Perry, a small cabin at the edge of the forest where ranch hands used to stay back in the day. The two of them had worked on it for a year, and you knew Rhett felt a sense of pride whenever he talked about it, running his hands along the smooth timber walls with a kind of care that felt personal. He and Perry had carved their names like kids into the bottom of the front door, and Rhett knocked the tip of his boot against it every time he left the cabin. âFor luck,â heâd told you once, and heâd looked a little sad.Â
His was a place of wide gridded windows and Navajo rugs. It was surprisingly sentimental, filled with keepsakes and old furniture from his parents or his grandparents, the kind of place that looked like it had been here from the start, as enduring as the soft in-line of a favorite coat.
You liked the traces of him here, the mundanity of them; aftershave and painkillers in the medicine cabinet, forgotten mugs of coffee left on window sills and counter tops, his belts, his toppled boots by the door, his packet of Camels by the sink, his dadâs old CD collectionâThe Black Crows, ZZ Top, Stevie Ray Vaughanâa small army of Amyâs arts-and-crafts projects sprinkled atop shelves, family photos tacked to the refrigerator. Â
Out on the back deck, your eyes trailed over the rocks set in a neat row on the railing. You sat in a wicker chair, listening to the rain pattering against the tin roof, the cradle of pine all around.Â
Youâd had a long day at the bakery, and Rhett had had an even longer day herding cattle out of the west pasture, which had started to flood from all the rain.
He sat on the deck with his legs stretched out and his back against the railing. In a T-shirt and jeans, head knocked back, his baseball cap pulled low.
Heâd closed his eyes a long time ago. Had he fallen asleep?
âStop starinâ,â Rhett mumbled, eyes still closed.Â
You snorted, caught. Ears going hot, you dug your cheek into the weave of the wicker, clenching your eyes closed like a child when he opened his. Your tell-tale grin. His low chuckle.
You felt young with him sometimes. Like you didnât have to pretend the way you did with Maya, constantly trying to prove that you werenât the useless little sister floundering through life.
It was easy with Rhett, you could be honest. And you had all these big feelings and these even bigger wants, and they were shameful, complicated, and they ached, and you knew this need all too well, had felt it with every crush youâd ever had, never knew what to call it or how to say it, or how to have it be done to you. You didnât just like people; you disappeared into them.
And with RhettâŠ
You wanted to crawl after him on your hands and knees, feel his big, big hand grab you by the hair, pulling and pulling, your teeth sinking into the worn leather of his belt.
Open up, Shortcake.
You swallowed. You pulled your knees to your chest. You wanted to close yourself like a box.Â
âYou want the talking stick?â Rhett asked with one of his huff-laughs.Â
The talking stick was silly.
You didnât know when it had started; something to do with support groups and their strange rituals, and youâd said it as a joke once at the bar when Rhett had looked like he wanted to say something but was holding back. Youâd handed him your soggy coaster and said, You want the talking stick? And heâd taken it with a smile loosened by relief.Â
You shook your head. âNo, thank you.â
âYou sure?â
âSuper.â
âBecause if you ainât taking it, I willââ
âOh god, if youâre going to start talking about that bull rope paste again, Iâll suffocate myself in the mud.â
âFirst of all, itâs called rosin. Second of all, ouch.â He looked genuinely offended. âAnd you better make your mind up quick, âcause Iâm gonna start listing my favorite ones. Also, did you know you have to heat it just right? Otherwise itâs like pulling taffyââ
âI donât think Iâve ever had the kind of sex I really want to have,â you finally said. Blurted, really.
You thought of what your sister had called you once: a human hand grenade. Â
The distinct click of Rhett snapping his mouth shut, teeth on teeth. The rain pattered onâand you knew you had to as well, you had to get it out quick before you stuffed it all back down.
âAnd Iâm scared Iâll never have it because Iâm too chickenshit to tell people about the kind of sex I want to have, and, itâs nothing crazy, it justâitâsâŠa feeling? And like, some people just arenât into it, but I havenât slept with enough people to really know if thatâs true or if Iâve never bothered to get close enough to someone to actually tell them or to know if that really is the kind of sex that I actually want, because Iâve never had it, I just know that I want it, and what if I tell the next person thatâs the kind of sex I want and then I donât like it at allâŠwhat then?â
Youâd closed your eyes again, vibrating, the blackness vibrating with you.
âWhat kind of sex do you wanna have?â Rhettâs voice was so low you barely heard him.Â
Breath catching. You opened your eyes. You stared at his hands.
You pantomimed tossing the stick over your shoulder. âLost it,â you mumbled.
I'm sorry, you wanted to say but you couldn't get yourself to.
Even though you werenât looking at him, you knew Rhett was thinking, trying to figure out if he could push you or if he wanted to wait it out, if he should pave it over with conversation, or if he should stand up to grab a beer. Because in the end, you were friends. And you did know him, and he did know you.Â
Rhett settled for something that broke your heart a little. âYou know, you can talk to me. Right? About anything.â
You swallowed, nodded.Â
âWant a beer?â The soft familiar crack of his knees as he stood.Â
You were too scared of the things youâd say if you had one. Shaking your head, you said, âWater, please.â
· · â · ·
Something shifted after that. It felt tectonic, structural. There was this muscle inside of you strung so tight. It waited. Agonized for relief, for a thumb to rub along its tendons and help it unravel itself.
It was different that morning, and you were curled in the tub, shower head pressed closeâdown there, right thereâand you needed so much, and his name spiraled through you endlessly, oh god-oh god, eyes squeezed shut tight enough the whole world cracked open. You came so hard you felt helpless in it, loosened from yourself, your mouth finding your forearm, your teeth finding your skinâ
Youâd bitten down hard enough Rhett traced a finger over the swell when you met him later that day. âWhat happened?â His voice too low. Unfamiliar.
âHurt myself at the bakery,â you lied.Â
He huffed. No laugh. He didnât believe you.Â
Whatever had started to shift, didnât stop its shifting. It infiltrated your conversations, or rather lack thereof, until both of you felt like you were fumbling through something that used to be easy.
Rhett stopped coming into the bakery, rather opting to drive you home whenever you had to close up shop on your own, even if it meant he had to leave the ranch early to drive all the way to town and back. There was an energy around him, especially at the bar when he was a couple of drinks in.Â
You were used to Rhett Abbott quietly watching over people, making sure no rowdy tourists messed with the regulars, or that the Tillerson boys left Perry alone on the rare occasion that he did join you two at the bar, or looming over you whenever some guy slid up to ask for your number, his blunt: Can I help you, man?Â
There was something about him, like maybe there was a muscle inside of him too, strung too tight for too long, waiting...
The first time Rhett got into a fight in front of you, something incomprehensible roiled in your stomach.
It had started innocently enough. You knew Lloyd liked calling you Shortcake, and youâd never paid it any mind; he was a touchy drunk the girls tolerated, each meeting his relatively tame come-ons with an eye-roll and a middle finger. But heâd had too much to drink that night, and his hands had sloppily snaked their way around your waist to pull you to the dancefloor. ââno, seriously, Iâm good, Lloyd. Like, Iâm running for evil mayor of that town in Footloose. Iâm doneââ
âCome on, Shortcake, for me?â
âI said Iâm fucking good, Lloyd.â His arms tightened around you, breath bloated with liquors unknown. âYou can let go now.âÂ
You saw Rhett too late, shoving his way through the crowd. You lifted your hands like you were trying to reprimand an incoming cyclone, âRhett, donâtââÂ
Leaning in close to slur something in your ear, Lloyd was oblivious to the fact that Rhett's shoulder was about to collide with the back of his head.
What proceeded was a burst of juvenile male posturing that consisted mostly of huffing and shoving, like two big pigeons clucking at each other over soggy bread on the sidewalk. But when Lloyd whacked Rhettâs hat off with an accidental swing, the next thing you knew, a fist met a cheek, and a knee met a groinâand you cursed God for ever making you this hopelessly attracted to dick.Â
· · â · ·
âPlease donât do that again,â you told Rhett much later, sitting next to him on his couch, pressing a bag of frozen peas to his head. âNot for me, okay?â
Rhett sat slouched beside you, the big bend of his back, as he stared at the scuffed knuckles of his right hand.Â
âIâm a big girl. I can deal with Lloyd, for Christâs sake. Heâs, like, three feet. Heâs a human step stool.â
âHe was touching youââ
âPeople touch me all the time.â
âNot like that. I didnâtâŠI donât want anyone else to fucking touch you like that.â
You tossed the peas into his lap.Â
He looked at you then, face hazy in the dim lights of his living room.Â
Anyone elseâŠ
It echoed in your body, over and over, traveled all the way through you. Â
âPretty sure thatâs up to me,â you said.Â
With a sigh, he pressed the bag of peas to his head. âI didnât mean it like that. Iâmâsorry. Okay? Sorry. I didnât realize I was doing it untilâŠYeah.â He took a breath. âIâm a shitty drunk.â
âThat makes two of us.â Shifting, you grabbed his arm to help him up, catching him when he swayed with a groan. âCome on. Letâs get you to bed, Bazooka Man.âÂ
Rhett let you guide him to the bedroom, the same way heâd let you drive him home in his truck. It did things to you, knowing you could wrangle this big cowboy down the hallway and into his bed, without him putting up a fight.
You liked when he listened to youâand you knew full well there werenât many people he listened to in the first place.Â
âGotta admit, I got him good though,â Rhett murmured when he stumbled into bed, that stupid little grin of his, the one that made his canines flash.
You snatched the peas to smack him with it. âStop,â you warned. âYou kneed him in the ballsack, you trigger-happy fuck. Are you proud of yourself?â
âI hope his sperm count plummets.â
You couldnât help your laugh, and he couldnât help his.Â
This, you could handle. This was the Rhett with the crooked smile and the lopsided gait, his intense boyishness that made you wonder about how he got each scar on his body.
With this Rhett, things were easy, almost routine, and you felt lulled into the practiced rhythm of it, unthinking; helping him unbutton his shirt, before yanking off his boots, his jeans, the way you had countless of times after heâd been bucked off a bull hard enough heâd returned to the cabin in a tourniquet and his head foggy with medication.Â
On the first night youâd driven him home from the hospital, heâd told you that he didnât like letting anyone help him like this, and youâd reached over the stick shift to wipe the hair from his forehead, and something about the way he'd leaned into it had made you so unbearably sad. Â
You didnât know when you snapped out of it, crouched before him, about to grab his boots to bring them to the doorâwhen you finally looked up.
His silhouette was black against the glow of the bedside lamp, eclipsed by it, he loomed above you in shadow. Your chest cramped up with a feeling youâd tried so hard to push away.
In your head, you were careless.
In your head, you let his boots fall to the hardwood floor. You crawled to him on hands and knees, and you nuzzled his bare knee, the soft hairs there, the lean muscle of his thigh, ran your nose to the spot where the checkered cotton of his boxers bunched just so. I need. I need and need and needâ
âYou canât do that to me, Shortcake.â Rhettâs voice rumbled in the quiet.Â
âDo what?â
âLook at me like that.â His voice felt like a finger below your chin, tapping it up.
âLike what?â All breath.Â
Rhett didnât answer. His head tipped to the side. You imagined yourself from where he sat, imagined his shadow was big enough it swallowed you whole.
This was a Rhett you didnât know.Â
The bed creaked as he leaned forward. You didnât breathe, didnât move a muscle, when his fingers ghosted along the edge of your jaw. Your breath hiccuped when you felt a gentle tug on the corner of your mouth, and you realized heâd loosened a single strand of hair from your lips. The heat humming there, humming through you.
âAre you ever going to tell me?â he said.Â
Your confusion mustâve been obvious, because he spoke again: âAre you ever going to tell me what you want?âÂ
What I want?Â
It was such a simple answer.
It shamed you how simple it was.Â
In the dim light, you stared at the vein roped along his forearm. You wanted to trace it with your tongue, with soft grazing teeth, wanted to lap up the salt and tang of his skin, gather it all in your mouth, take the sweetest littlest bites.
You wanted to lean all the way in, kiss the inside of his palm, that starburst scar from when his glove had once ripped during a bull ride. You imagined then, taking the thick pad of his thumb into your mouth, letting it press into your tongue until you bit down, until it reached all the way in. Until you writhed from it.Â
With a frustrated huff, you tipped forward. Your forehead bumped against his knee.
You didnât know what to do with yourself anymore.
You couldâve wept when you felt strong fingers carefully run down the curve of your skull. The cuff of nails scraping along your skin. The sound it made.
He held you like this: your head cradled in his big, big hand.
You knew Rhett understood something about you in that moment.Â
You felt young, skinless, unsure in your body. None of you felt grown. You were all baby teeth. You were a tiny stack of bones that shook.
âYouâre okay, darlinâ,â Rhett said it with so much tenderness you made a shameful sound low in your throat, and your nose pressed into the scar that ran up the center of his knee.
What you wouldâve done to kiss it then, just once, to lave it in spit, with your eyes screwed shut and a hand between your legs, there, down thereâ
· · â · ·
Your biggest secret was this: Youâd let anything be done to you if it was just done sweetly enough.Â
Your relationship with intimacy had always been complicated.
You knew what you looked like to men; you were the young desperate thing to be flung face-down and taken, filthy little whore, you asked for it, you want it like this, right? You want it like thisâÂ
The few times youâd had sex, that assumption had left you shaking in the bathroom after, still drunk or high or both, wiping cum off your face or scraping it out of yourself, rubbing the tacky film of it between your fingers until it got grainy.Â
The shame of it all, the shame of your body glaring back at you in the mirror like a creature unknown. Because you had wanted it like that, but not really, and you hadnât known how to say it right, or maybe they hadnât listened, and you hadnât blamed them for it, except you had. Most of the time you blamed yourself, an archaic miserable reflex that seemed to define every aspect of you being a fucking woman.Â
When you thought about what you wanted, sometimes all you were left with was a feeling.
You thought of big sure hands helping you out of your shoes, unlacing one, then the other. You thought of your hair being washed and your mouth being fed and your cheeks being kissed, one at a time.
It was so embarrassingly sexless.
All you wanted was to know with a kind of relief that you could let go now, that it was going to be okay, and that for a blissful fucking moment, you didnât have to be yourself anymore.Â
You could just want.Â
You could be all of your wanting at once and nothing more.
· · â · ·
âMorninâ.â
You didnât open your eyes.
A low chuckle from above. âI know you ainât asleep.â
With a tired groan, you cracked one eye open, then the other. Rhett had changed into a T-shirt and sweats. Heâd showered, hair still damp and curling at his neck.
He was staring. You knew why. Your dress lay puddled on his living room floor.Â
Still hazy from sleep, was it so terrible to let yourself be looked at like this? The worn cotton T-shirt youâd snatched from Rhettâs drawer riding up your stomach as you stretched.
You caught the bob in his slender throat. He was pretty like this, you thought. A patch of sunlight spilled across the side of his face, eyes a tremendous shock of blue. He smelled like his deodorant, his aftershave. His hand so close to your face all youâd have to do was open your mouth.Â
âYou feeling better?â you said, voice frayed with leftover sleep.
A night on Rhettâs couch always left you a little discombobulated. It was deep and wide, all buttery brown leather, the kind you sunk into as if lazing in a palm.
Your gaze climbed from his hand up to his bare arm, from his throat to his freshly shaven jaw. You were so tired you couldnât hide from him.
You fell all the way open.
His hand twitched like maybe heâd reach out.Â
But you two were good at this game. Especially sober, in the daylight.Â
Rhett cleared his throat. âMaking breakfast. You hungry?â His attention wavered on your mouth.Â
You swallowed. He tracked it. Â
âStarvinâ,â you drawled in some faux-impression of him, in the hopes it was silly enough to lighten the mood. Â
He chuckled. âStarvinâ, huh? Okay, cowboy.â He grabbed a pillow and whacked your thigh, âGiddy-up,â before heading to the kitchen, limping slightly.
Had he not taken his painkillers?
âHow do scrambled eggs and pancakes sound?â he tossed over his shoulder.
âUhâHeavenly?âÂ
âOkay, calm down, theyâre more for me than for you.â
âLiar. If I werenât here, youâd have a cigarette and a Bud Light.â
âIf I didnât make sure you ate properly, youâd be having orange juice Captain Crunch three times a day.â
âItâs delicious?â
âItâs deranged, is what it is.â
You laughed, more out of relief than anything else. This was normal. You could deal with normal.Â
Not bothering with putting on your dress, you dragged yourself to the kitchen in nothing but his T-shirt and your underwear. It wasnât an unfamiliar sightâyouâd weathered the occasional hangover on his couch wearing lessâbut something about this felt different. There was too much inside of you, and after last night, you didnât know how to look at him without thinking about the way heâd called you darlin'. Â
You managed to sit through a painfully normal breakfastâradio on, mundane small talkâand even though it wasnât Captain Crunch with orange juice, it would do (a mumbled statement that earned you a balled-up paper towel to the head).
You helped clear the table after, before heading out to brush your teeth. When you returned the radio was off, and Rhett was stooped over the sudsy sink, placing a plate onto the drying rack. You hoisted yourself onto the kitchen table and watched as he washed his hands, slowly, methodically, staring out the window like he was thinking.Â
âYou want the talking stick?â you said.Â
Rhett huffed a laugh, bracing his hands on the edge of the sink, looking down, looking up. His wide back expanded as he took a breath. You almost expected him to shake his head when he finally spoke: âWho bit your arm?â
You blinked. âWhat?â
âI know what a bite mark looks like.â Of course Rhett Abbott would know what a bite mark looked like. It almost made you laugh, the ridiculousness of it. âAre you getting into fights I donât know about? Or is Mayaââ
âOh God,â you pitched forward, âno, of course not! Bitingâs not her style. She prefers dish towels.â You were joking but Rhett wasnât laughing.
This whole moment felt unreal. You hadn't thought about it in days. The bruise was already healing anyway, yellow and mottled and absolutely not worth being contemplated on.
You raked through yourself for another answer, something stupid enough, something unbelievable: Tres, the three-legged goat? The wonky convection oven at the bakery? A rabid child on the streetâ
âAre you ever going to tell me?â Rhett gripped into the sink so hard his hands paled from the pressure.Â
The question surprised you.
You remembered how heâd asked you that the night before. Â
It made the same frustrating weight sink onto your chest. You squeezed your eyes shut and opened them again, vision splotchy. Staring at the tender swirls of hair gathered at the nape of Rhettâs neck, you took a breath and you said, âIt was me.âÂ
You watched as the color blotted back into his hands.Â
âI was in the shower,â you said. Then, âI was...thinking of you.â
Remembering then how his finger had traced along the tender swell of the bruise just hours later, in the bar, in the red lights, and how youâd secretly hoped heâd press down to make it ache, make you remember how much youâd wanted him, in that moment, in the bathtub surrounded by the splotchy shower curtain, the tiles painted in dried suds, like Venus in her shell, shaking open, shaking apart.Â
I was thinking of you.
You closed your eyes when Rhett finally turned. Sitting on the kitchen table, legs dangling over the edge, you kept yourself still. You listened to his breath ragged and strange in the quiet. A warble of birds outside. The creak of the floorboards as he came to you.Â
His closeness was a cloud bank rolling in, suddenly all around, the smell of him, coffee and deodorant and soap. Your face lifted on instinct. Eyes still closed, you basked in the heat of his breath pouring across your forehead, your cheeks.Â
I was thinking of you.
All of you sighed open.Â
And you waited for him in that blackness, until you felt the distinct prickle of skin on skin, a knuckle maybe, a single finger running down the inside of your forearm, down, down, before it reached that tender spot.Â
He pressed.Â
Your eyes snapped open. Sunlight turned that blue stare into something startling, electric.Â
As if moving through a trance, your hand settled atop his still on your arm, finding his thumb and digging it into the bruise even harder. That dull ache turned sharp, shot right through you.
Eyes twitching, mouth opening. The sound you made.
Rhett looked at you like heâd never seen you before.Â
Letting go of his hand, you reached for him, digging your fingers into the hair bunched at the nape of his neck, and you pulled him close, pulled him all the way down. Your forehead rolled against his, your nose mashing into his skin, mouth open, waiting, wanting so fucking much. Pleasepleasepleasepleaseâ
Rhett stopped you with a thumb on your bottom lip. You couldnât even feel ashamed for spewing out the most pathetic huff. Filthy little whore. Your jaw loosening, tongue darting out to taste him, to dig your teeth into him just a little.Â
But Rhett slid his thumb away, pressed it like a gentle warning into your cheek.
âDo you want this?â His voice cracked right in the middle.Â
You nodded, nose bumping against his a little too hard.Â
âSpeak up for meââ
âYes.âÂ
âGood,â he said, he smiled small. You wanted to bite at it, make it bigger. âYou say the word and we stop, okay?â
You nodded. He waited.
"Okay," you said.
âWeâll go slow. Yeah?â
You nodded again, numbed to everything except for him. âYes, please.â
Rhett groaned, leaning into you so completely your mouths almost collided. âGod, you kill me with all your please-and-thank-yous. Youâre so good. You wanna be good for me?â He said it like he was testing something. And your chin nudged forward, body bending towards him, and whatever he was looking for, he found it in the way your legs fell open all the way.
Gripping into the back of your knees, he dragged you closer, his thighs sliding between yours, and you sputtered a breath when you felt the hot press of him against all of you.
âYes,â you breathed.Â
âYou are, darlinâ. "
Darlin'
"Fuck, you are. You donât even know how damn good you are.â His hands sliding back up your side, your throat, gripping your jaw to tip your face towards him. Your fingers fumbling to hook into his forearms. You felt as though all you were doing was holding on.
Letting him lead. Letting him keep you like this.
He made you wait. Ran the tip of his nose almost soothingly along the bridge of yours. Lips taunting, that terrible shudder of closeness that escaped you every time your mouth tried desperately to meet his. Â
You thought of the way he ran his hand along the flank of his horse, patted her once, twice. Easy, girlâ
Maybe you hated him for it. How much he undid you. How he had you sitting there, soaking in it, vibrating inside all of your unbearable catastrophic fucking need like he had you leashed.Â
âPlease,â you finally mouthed into the heat of his breath. And his eyes flashed. And when you were ready to plead just one more time, without an ounce of shame left, his mouth collapsed against yours.Â
It surged through you like a spinal tap.
Drawing out, deeper, digging all the way in, tongue and teeth, the smooth jut of his chin.
Your hands were everywhere, unsure of what they wanted to grab hold of first, like a woman drowning; in his hair, on his jaw, scraping down his wide shoulders, sliding up the heat of his neckâHere and here and here, let me touch you right here.Â
Rhettâs hands stayed bolted to your jaw. You felt like he was the only thing keeping you upright, like youâd unspool if he ever let you go.Â
You were a wanton thing, wincing into his open mouth. A constant drool of need. And you were hot. God, you were so hot. You couldnât breathe with how hot you were. Yanking at your shirt, you just wanted it off, off. Rhett nipped at your bottom lip once, and then he was smiling. Was he laughing? Like he was catching on, like he took such pity on you. Your teeth clacked against his. You couldn't keep your shit together. You couldn't think, you couldn't think...
âI wantââ You tugged at the shirt until his hands joined yours. âI want all of it off.â You sounded drunk, like you were listening to yourself from one room over.
âOkay. Okay, darlinâ, I got you.â And he did. He helped you peel the shirt off, but it snagged on your elbow, and your face was stuck against threadbare cotton, and you laughed, because what the fuck? Here you were, going crazy on Rhett Abbottâs kitchen table.Â
You were still laughing when the shirt finally came off, laughing harder when Rhett tossed it over his shoulder and it landed on the coffee maker.
He was smiling above you, the morning light painting him soft and perfect as he combed the hair out of your eyes.
You wanted to run your fingers over his face, read him like braille.
It was a foreign realization that, now, here, you could. You could do so much. You could have all the things that had piled inside of you, one on top of the other. All of your fucking wanting, it felt bigger than your body. You were so full. And it was just the two of you, and this was Rhett, and it was all going to be okay, it was okay to let go of him and to lean back, push the leftover coffee mugs to the edge of the table, to let Rhett huff a strangled laugh when one of them thunked to the floor, like he couldnât believe that he was here like this, with you.
âFuckinâ hell,â he muttered, staring down at youÂ
A hand traced where your body met the table, like he was cutting along the shape of you, skin sliding against yours as he traveled up and up, past each dip of your ribs, your arms, shoulders, up the hollow of your throat to your collarbone, to that dip right in-between, where the pendant of your necklace rested.
He pushed it in just a bit, and the pressure made you arch, made you mad with it. âFuck, look at you, baby."
Baby.
You were baby.Â
âNo oneâs ever taken care of you, huh? You poor thing.â His lilting condescension left you gaping. âRemember what you told me? Youâll tell me what you want. Youâll tell me, yeah? How do you want it, baby? Iâll take such good fucking care of you.â
He leaned over you, ghosting his mouth over your jaw, kissing you there, so unhurried. âWhere do you want me?â
Everywhere.
You swallowed, shaking your head, eyes screwed shut.Â
Fucking everywhere, all at once, all the time.
You make me want so much it pushes out everything else.Â
He chuckled into your neck. âGotta tell me, baby.â Sucked at your skin with tongue and teeth. His T-shirt hung low enough it grazed over your nipples. You arched into him.
He hummed. âHere?â His thumb tenderly traveled up the swell of your breast and tapped against your nipple. Breath hitching, you shook your head.
âWhat about here?â His mouth pressed a wet kiss to your clavicle. No. Going lower, kissing a path to your other breast, breath gathering over it. You closed your eyes when he looked at you.
âAnd here?â His tongue like a small flame over your nipple, laving at it so softly, round and round, the wet sweep making you dizzy. Losing yourself in it. Chest bowing up into his mouth, arching so high it hurt.Â
He bit down once. You whined. Shook your head again, not there.Â
On and on it went:
Here? Mouth on your sternum. And what about here? Hands grabbing your waist. A soft scatter of kisses around your belly button. Biting into the soft flesh of your tummy until it kicked a laugh out of you. No, stop, stop. Okay, okay. Here? He fed your fingers into his mouth, the warm glide of his tongue, snag of teeth when they caught on your knuckles. And here? Baby, what about here? Spit on his chin as bent down to lave at each hipboneâNo, no, no.
Here? Traveling lower and lower to kiss the top of a thigh, then inside of it with a drag of his tongue.
Your body hiccuped once and hard with need.Â
Rhett moved around you with the same intensity he had waiting in the chute at the rodeo, holding something back, containing it. You wanted to slam it open, wanted him thrashing and sweating and tossed around, you wanted and you wanted, you wanted so much.Â
Maybe he took mercy on you, or maybe heâd run out of patience, when he finallyâfinallyâparted your legs. That pained sound of his. That sweet little oh. âFuck. Youâre so wet. You need it that bad, hm?"
You were nodding again. "Yesâ" Could he tell how hard you were nodding?
You heard the distinct drag of a chair on the hardwood floor, and you couldâve laughed at the ridiculousness of seeing him sitting at the kitchen table, the very one youâd just had breakfast at, now covered in the sprawl of your naked body, soaked and aching, your thighs parted for him, right foot resting on the back of the chair.Â
Rhett mustâve caught on because he laughed, tipping his head against your leg, kissing your calf. You hissed when he nipped at you there. âGod, I couldââ Groaning into your skin. âI could take a fucking bite out of you it's not even funny. Jesus.â
With his arms hooked around your legs, his kisses traveled up the inside of your thigh. You watched, open-mouthed, slack-jawed, as his dark swirl of hair traveled between your legs.Â
Youâd fucked yourself to the thought of this.Â
âYou want it here, baby?â He nosed at the elastic of your underwear, warm breath pouring over you.Â
You nodded so hard your head knocked against the table. You were swimming in it. The whole world swimming with you. âYes, pleaseâŠâÂ
His murmured curse.
Your desperate whine.
Before finally, a kiss to your cotton-covered clit.Â
It made your whole body still.
âHow you do you want it?â he mumbled it against you. Right there. Down there.
You knew he wasn't expecting you to answer, but your needing felt vicious like this, burned in the back of your throat, and you thought:
Messy.
And with a shame that bloomed hot and red across your chest, you realized you'd pleaded for it out loud, voice like a frayed rope one pull away from snapping.Â
Rhett's lashes were long and dark as he looked up at you. He huffed a laugh.
Something about it sounded very, very mean.Â
He gave your clit another quick kiss. And then another and another, longer this time, until his mouth opened, tongue flattening against the center of you. You felt him gather spit, felt the hot gush of it. How he grabbed the elastic of your underwear to stretch it across you so tight it made your clit thrum, holding you there, strumming his thumb up and down, playing with it. âLook at this.â Before giving you a quick pat, once, twiceâthe peeling wetness of it in the quiet. âFuck, babyââ
Before you had time to gather enough breath, Rhett buried his face into you, mouth mashing against you there, right there. Taking big bites. Spit and tongue and heat that drooled right through you. He groaned, pressing in deeper, the wide pad of his tongue nudging your clit, over and over, working you like this, until you were soaked enough a string of wetness followed when Rhett finally pulled off your underwear.
He flung it across the kitchen, uncaring, and you heard it land somewhere on the floor with a slop.
You were completely naked then, and he stared down at you like he wanted to be everywhere but he knew he had to make a choice.Â
It made your brain light up. It made you writhe when his palm pressed a smooth circle over your aching core, before cupping it once and hard, holding you like this, holding all of you at once. âYouâre so perfect, baby. Look at you being so perfect for me.â His endless reserve of nonsensical drivel, slow and honeyed and drawling, like he was pouring it into you.Â
You wanted more, you waited for it, legs opening wider, wider.
A breath, thenâhe spit on your hole.
It felt fucking preposterous.
And then his mouth was on you again. Without that barrier of cotton from before, everything was raw, wetness wetter, pressure harder. His tongue, spongy and hot against you, teeth scraping across your clit. Pulling in a deep mouthful. You felt it everywhere when he moaned. His head shaking once like something gone rabid.
One of his hands dug into your stomach, the other crept up the front of your throat, digging for entrance when it reached your mouth. You let him in, his thick fingers pressing into your tongue.Â
âSpit.â He said it right against your clit, before sucking.Â
Youâd caught the undertone: You want messy? Iâll give you fucking messyâ
You grabbed his wrist, laved at his fingers, until you felt a dribble down your chin, and before you could get lost in the pressure of something thick and foreign in your mouth, he pulled his hand back, smearing the mess over your aching hole. Thumb flicking fastâbefore stopping. You punched out a pitiful cry.Â
âYou want my fingers, hm? You think this sweet pussy wants my fingers?â
You knocked your head into the table so hard your ears rung, yesyesyesyesyes. Nodding and nodding and nodding and nodding.Â
You were so open and so wet, he easily breached you.
Full of him. You were full with him.
His fingers curled against that spongy rippling spot inside of you, that spot that gave way completely. He pressed down on your stomach, hard, and you keened, elbows digging into the table, your hands hovering, twitching in the air.Â
Rhett was strong enough to keep you from moving too much. You blamed all those damn bulls. His body moved on instinct, meeting each buck and squirm of you. Heâd told you once that it was never about anticipating the next move, it was about response, action-reaction, it was all reflex when he was on that saddle.Â
You couldnât keep still, hips jerking, lurching wildly beneath him. You were everywhere. You were fucking dynamite. But he pressed you down, fingers working inside of you with that steady unbreakable rhythm. His tongue on your clit. The filthy sounds of it dripping into the kitchen, all the lapping, the squelch of his fingers, your wet keening sobs. You let him fuck you and fuck you and fuck you and fuck you like this. Your hands finally tearing in his hair. Feet fumbling to find the back of the chair for leverage, trying to ride his face, his fingers.
Donât stop, you thought so hard it charged through you like voltage. Please, âDonât stopââÂ
His hand on your stomach splayed wider, pressed down, gripping into youâand you realized heâd felt your body tense up faster than you had.Â
Something about Rhett feeling you were about to come made your vision blurry. His body meeting yours at every turn.Â
You said his name then. He groaned something into you, but you couldnât hear it over the pulsing in your ears. Chest arching, legs buckling around his head.Â
You came in complete and utter silence.Â
Eyes screwed shut, dropping into blackness.
You thought you might've reached the bottom of something.
It was so perfect you wanted to cry.
The slow drag of his tongue coaxed you back slowly. His fingers had slipped out, now tracing soothing wet circles on the inside of your thigh. You couldnât believe Rhett's head was still between your legs, mouth lazily lapping up the mess. You gently pushed him away, clit too sensitive for more.Â
Rhett blinked, bleary-eyed. He looked wild. Hair a mess, face ruddy and wet. Covered in you.Â
âHoly shit..â His voice was nothing but a low rasp.
Holy shit.
The chair jerked back as he stood again, roughly wiping his face on his T-shirt with such habitual boyishness you couldnât help but reach for him. Delirious, gooey-warm. You were kissing him and kissing him, kissing him all over. You could taste yourself on him.Â
"Did so well for me, baby." He murmured in between kisses, smiling slow. "So fucking good." His hands gripped your head, turning you this way and that like he was checking in.
You couldn't do anything but nod. Your legs felt gummy as you wrapped them around his hips to pull him close. His hardness ground right against you.
Rhett hissed. Eyes squeezing shut. Nodding his head almost absentmindedly when you hooked your fingers into the waistband of his sweats to pull them down.Â
You felt hungry with it. Insatiable.
Rhettâs cock was heavy and full as it sprung free, the glossy-pink tip swollen with all his aching. Your mouth went numb, filling with spit, with how much you wanted to taste him, slide him all the way into you until you stopped breathing.
But Rhett was shaking his head, no. âI wonât last, babyââ Raw enough it almost felt like he was the one pleading with you now.Â
You didnât want him pleading.
You wanted him to feel good. All you wanted was for him to feel good.
Without a word, you wiped a hand through the wet mess between your legs, all his spit, all yours, all your cum, the terrible gush of you, and you spread it over him in a slow filthy pump. He was so big, you stacked one hand over the other.
Rhett tipped forward, his jaw slack, transfixed as he watched your hands move over him. âHahâfuck me...â One wet deliberate slide after the other, his hips bucking forward.
Next time, you thought, you'd have him all the way inside of you. You could almost imagine it when Rhett leaned over you, caged you in with shaking arms. His mouth buried in your throat, licking a hot strip to your ear, slurring more of his sweet nonsense, so fucking good, baby, oh my god, baby just like that, fuck fuck fuckâ
He was thrusting into your hands so hard the table kept jerking back, hitting the window sill. The little ceramics there rattling. One fell to the floor. The back of your head knocked against something hard enough it left you dazed, and Rhett's bumbling hands came up to cradle you there, soothe you through it. Fuck, you good, baby?
He was so perfect it killed you, he fucking killed you.
You kissed him, breathed straight out of his mouth. All you wanted was to make him come for you. Come for me. Please, please.
And when he finally did, when his hips met yours in a wet cuff, when he groaned into your mouth, broken, out of itâhe spilled hot onto your stomach.
Forehead to forehead.
Breathing heavy. Â
You felt the wet drag of his spent cock run from your stomach down to your pubis, where he patted it against your clit, once, like some nasty little parting gift, like a promise.
You kissed him one last time before you collapsed onto your back.
For a moment, neither of you said a word. You watched each other. Eyelids heavy. You realized you were breathing in time.
Out of all the places in the world, you thought.
Somewhere in the thick of it, you ran a finger through the puddle of cum on your stomach. Cool now. Spread it across your tongueâacidy, bitter.Â
The taste of him.
You wanted to disappear into it.Â
âYouâve gotta stop or youâll actually kill me,â Rhett groaned, leaning in all the way. He gently grabbed you by the jaw, kissed you, wet and open-mouthed, the slip of his tongue going deep. âYouâre so good,â he murmured against your lips. "You're so good..." Giving you one sweet peck, then another.Â
And you were still stuck in your daze, sitting at the bottom of this thing that felt vast and everywhere. Sunlight poured through the windows, cradling you in the warmth of your afterglow.
Before you could feel ashamed for it, you let it slip: âthank you, daddy.â
And Rhett looked at you like he'd received an answer to a question he hadnât known how to ask.
· · â · ·
Afterward, Rhett piled you into his arms and carried you to the bathroom.
You thought distantly of all the other times youâd had to clean yourself up alone.
Rhett was dense and fumbling after âcoming my damn brains out, Christ.â But he was trying his best to be slow with you, helping you into the shower.
The two of you swaying like drunkards in the hot spray of the shower head.
You were so tired.
Youâd been holding on to something so deeply for so long, it was knocked loose now, it was open like a wound. You imagined the water rushing in, clearing it out until the blood ran clear.
While you both rinsed yourself off, Rhettâs mouth found you every once in a while. It felt like he was making sure you were still there. Pressing a kiss to your temple, the top of your head, a scatter of them on your shoulder.Â
Once even, he lifted your hand and kissed the inside of your palm with such tenderness you wanted to die.
· · â · ·
âWhat now?â Rhett murmured into your damp hair.Â
You were on the back deck, curled in his lap on your favorite wicker chair. Sunlight splintered through the trees as it hit the floor. A patch of it warming your bare feet.
It had taken you a while to climb out of the daze, find your way back to your body. Slowly, slowly, mind un-blurring until you felt coherent.
Your voice was a dry rasp when you finally spoke. âDo you think people should be fucking members of their support group?â
âOkay.â Scoffing, Rhett jiggled you in his lap. âFucking? Really?â
âFine. Fraternizing.â
He shot you a withering look. It made you snort.Â
You knew he was right.
Whatever youâd done on his kitchen table, it had left something big inside of you. It felt important.Â
âWho wouldâve thought Rhett Abbott was such a closet romantic,â you mumbled, delighting in the way he rolled his eyes.Â
Leaving it at that, you curled back into his chest, lazily lifting a finger and tracing along the soft slope of his nose, down his Cupidâs Bow, each curve of each lip.
Look at youâso surprisingly tender.
He opened his mouth to nip at your finger.
âWeâll go slow,â you whispered, echoing the words heâd said to you before, with such reassurance it felt rooted deep.
âAlright,â he murmured, nodding, letting you press your finger to his jaw to make him look at you. âSlow. I can do slow.â
You couldn't help your grin, thinking about all the things he'd done to you in his kitchen just an hour ago. âYeah. Tell me about it.â
He quirked a mean smile, pinching your side until you laughed.
Like this, you didnât feel difficult or complicated or messy.
Your laughter spiraled as you tipped your head back from so much delight.Â
You let it shake through you.
You let it shake through the tin roof and the wicker chair and the rocks on the railing and the sun and the pine trees and the grass and the dirt and the valley that rolled all the way to your sister's house, the very place you'd started calling home the second your duffle bag hit the welcome mat.
And finally, you let it shake through him, sitting there, washed in shards of sunlightâlooking at you like you were the easiest thing to love.Â
I've actually never seen the original media where this character is from, but I have been getting into lewis pullman as an actor (it started as a simple interest and it's now grown into something unstoppable). That being said, this was one of the best pieces of fiction I've read in a while, disregarding my lack of knowledge of the character. I could perfectly picture everything, and your descriptions of every event were clear and beautiful. I love it when people write about emotions as they're meant to be written. They're supposed to be grand, whether it's a fear thats been locked away and now presents itself as shallow, or a want that's explosive and shows itself as such; no matter how they're expressed, emotions are extreme. I mean, YOU CAN LITERALLY DIE FROM A BROKEN HEART WHAT MORE PROOF DO YOU NEED? I genuinely appreciated it all; from those small indecisive glances to every solid touch and affirmation that finally released the tension between the characters (and honestly I was pretty wound up bc of this fic and the ending made it all worth it).
Sorry for being all over the place. But anyways, you deserve all the praise you receive for this. As many have stated in your comments, this made me feel very seen, and I really appreciate the thought you've put into this.
thoughts on dex being autistic or potentially misdiagnosed in canon?
hello! first off, i seriously love this question. iâve had a dex autism character analysis in my drafts for months now, so you bringing this up is honestly really exciting for me ahaha. i will try my best to finish my full dex neurodiversity character analysis asap, but for now, here are my thoughts. i 100% believe dex is autistic, and i also think dr. mercer misread a lot of his autistic traits as early signs of borderline personality disorder. not that he doesnât have bpd, because he definitely does, but it was something he developed later, not something he fully had as a child. bpd usually isnât diagnosed until young adulthood, because it forms over time through trauma, unstable relationships, and invalidation. but dr. mercer was seeing him when he was twelve. she was looking at an abused, grieving, hyper-emotional orphan who just killed his coach, and she probably wasnât thinking in terms of neurodivergence or disability at all.
keep in mind this was the late 90s. autism was more recognized in boys by then, but the understanding was still incredibly narrow and pathologized. even in the best clinical environments, there was still a huge bias toward seeing autism only when it presented in extreme or âclassicâ ways. so in dexâs case where he was verbal, high-masking, emotionally volatile, and deeply traumatized, his autistic traits couldâve easily been interpreted as personality issues instead of neurodevelopmental differences. dr. mercer likely saw a traumatized boy who needed structure and emotional guidance, not someone whose entire brain wiring was different. she tried to help him with coping strategies, but those strategies were rooted in helping him perform better, not helping him understand himself. so instead of teaching him how to express who he was, she taught him how to hide it more effectively. she unknowingly taught him to mask.
dr. mercer didnât have bad intentions, she genuinely wanted to help dex. she saw a traumatized, isolated boy and gave him structure, coping tools, and someone who cared. but even the most well-meaning neurotypical people can carry deep, unconscious ableism. they assume that what works for them will work for everyone, because they canât imagine experiencing the world differently. so when dex couldnât regulate his emotions the ârightâ way, or when he clung to rules and rigid morality, or got fixated on specific people, she saw pathology instead of difference. her therapy wasnât meant to hurt him, but it still taught him that his natural instincts were wrong, and that love was something you earned by performing correctly.
on the flipside of that is wilson fisk. vincent dâonofrio is autistic and plays fisk as openly neurodivergent. fisk is blunt, intense, sensitive to noise, obsessive, strict with routine, emotionally rigid, and you can tell fisk recognizes those same patterns in dex. he sees a masked, autistic man trying desperately to follow the rules to be accepted, and instead of helping him, fisk uses that. he intentionally exploits dexâs need for order, approval, structure, and belonging. fisk gives dex a false sense of identity, scripts his behavior for him, mirrors dr. mercerâs language, and makes himself the only person who âunderstandsâ him. but he doesnât just manipulate dex he also teaches him how to unmask. the primal scream scene is one of the clearest moments of that. fisk gives dex permission to stop pretending, to stop bottling everything up, and to let the chaos come out. and that changes something in dex permanently.
as the season goes on, dexâs mask starts to slip away. his voice drops lower and gets raspier, less controlled, more raw. he stops performing polite facial expressions. around ray, especially, you can see it; heâs not bothering to fake empathy anymore, heâs just being. and itâs complicated, because on some level, unmasking feels amazing. thatâs why in episode 12, when he says âiâm more than a fed now. i feel more myself than i have in my whole life. fisk gave me that,â because it actually feels true. he feels alive. more like himself than heâs ever felt. and fisk gave him that, too. for the first time in his life, dex is expressing himself. through violence, yes, but also through unfiltered emotion. fisk didnât just weaponize dexâs neurodivergence, he unleashed it. and dex probably doesnât even realize thatâs whatâs happening, because when youâve masked your whole life, unmasking can feel like freedom. even when itâs being twisted into something dangerous.
and dex is really good at masking. he doesnât just mask behavior, he masks tone, body language, affect. when heâs trying to come off as ânormal,â his voice gets noticeably softer, gentler, more socially acceptable. itâs not just wilson bethelâs acting choices, itâs even dexâs conscious effort to sound less threatening, more likable. you see it clearly in the scene with julie. the way he pitches his voice higher, softer, more cautious. you can visually see him thinking about what to say and how to react. but then when heâs alone or emotionally unfiltered, like during the suicide hotline call or the latter half of the season, his voice is naturally lower, raspier, heavier. heâs not performing there. the shift is so telling, he literally changes how he sounds depending on how safe or accepted he feels.
dr. mercer even points it out in her therapy notes. she says dex makes strong eye contact when heâs being praised or when he wants to form a connection. and that lines up with a lot of autistic people who learn to force eye contact as a way of being perceived as engaged or polite, even if it feels unnatural. he does it because he wants to be cared for. he wants people to love him. heâs not cold or antisocial, he just doesnât know how to show himself without fear. so he builds a version of himself thatâs easier for people to understand.
thatâs where his bpd comes in too. i donât think he orginally had the disorder as a kid, but over time, after years of masking, invalidation, isolation, and losing every attachment he tried to make, it formed on top of the autism. bpd is rooted in chronic relational trauma, and dexâs entire life is just loss after loss after loss. so his fear of abandonment, identity issues, emotional dysregulation, it all makes sense. he was autistic first, and the world punished him so thoroughly for being different that he developed a personality disorder on top of it. which unfortunately is extremely common for highly masked autistic and adhd individuals.
also, iâm medically diagnosed as autistic, and there are elements of dexâs behavior that i recognize in myself in such a visceral way itâs hard to explain. in episode 5, when julie realizes heâs been following her and he panics, he does that little hand motion, like heâs about to throw something, or trying to redirect the overwhelming feeling inside him. thatâs a stim. he also fidgets with the tableware when heâs anxious, blinks rapidly when heâs emotional, and moves his hands in repeated patterns when heâs overwhelmed. i do that same exact hand motion when my anxiety spikes. iâm also high-masking. (iâm shit at it but nonetheless lmao) i have a flat affect and a monotone voice, and people often treat me differently just because they sense something is off. same with dex, even though he was good at masking, people still gave him looks even before fisk got involved. his coworkers were cordial, but uneasy, like they knew something about him didnât fit, even though he hadnât done anything wrong. he was formally criticized for ânot working well with othersâ in both the suicide hotline and the fbi. and i relate to that too, iâm not good at my job, at least not in a practical sense. dex is good at his job, physically and tactically, which is the only reason he was kept around. they tolerated his social âdeficitsâ because he was valuable, not because they understood him.
and thatâs the thing, no matter how much research someone does on autism, unless youâre autistic or neurodivergent yourself, youâll never truly understand what it feels like. dex feels like one of the most accurate, painful depictions of a high-masking autistic adult iâve ever seen, even though itâs never labeled outright. and i fully believe he is autistic. heâs already canonically neurodivergent, he has bpd, but the depth and texture of how he moves through the world, how people react to him, how he breaks, that feels autistic.
you even see it again in born again, when he asks matt, âyou hear that out there? thatâs the roar of the jungle. is that what i am to you? an animal?â that line is so telling, he desperately wants to know how others perceive him. he wants to understand who he is through someone elseâs eyes. itâs not just rage, itâs identity confusion. and when fisk gets him transferred to gen pop after ten years, thatâs basically a death sentence. itâs betrayal at the deepest level. when dex breaks out and shows up at fiskâs gala, he doesnât go after vanessa even though he has every reason to, he goes after fisk. that was the man who âfreedâ him, who saw his brain and made it feel like a gift instead of a flaw, and then shattered him by turning that difference into a weapon. and when dex finds out in season 3, episode 13, that fiskâs been manipulating him from the start, he snaps. not just because of what happened to julie, though that hurts, but because of the personal betrayal. fisk was his favorite person. his anchor. and when that trust was broken, dex redirected all of that devotion into vengeance. that autistic sense of justice, especially personal justice, kicks in. once he realizes the truth, he doesnât hold back.
dr. mercer didnât just misdiagnose him, she misunderstood the foundation of who he was. and because of that, she couldnât help him in the way he actually needed. dex learned how to function, but not how to exist. and that misunderstanding shaped everything that came after. his brain works differently, and no one ever gave him the language or safety to understand that, only the tools to keep pretending.