it actually unbelievable archive of our own continues to raise hundreds of thousands of dollars each year. where is that money going. its giving embezzlement. if you feel compelled to donate to them instead of gofundmes for sudan, palestine, etc. or help people asking for food, health care, essentials please unfollow me. i'm pinning this. i love fandom fun but if you all can give sums amounting to 200,000 + dollars and you cant open for wallet for marginalized people who actually need it so if this makes you mad you can fuck off
Fic tropes that I think would be fun w/Sydrichieâ€ïž
- Teacher au: Eva canât stop talking about Ms. Sydney. Richie finally meets her on parent teacher night and he immediately gets the hype. He knows nothing can happen between them but it doesnât stop him from volunteering for every class thing he can.
- Fake dating: Richie decided that he canât go to his ex-wifeâs wedding single so he asks Syd to go as his gf. It pretty much plays out like canon except they kiss at the end. đ
- Drunk confession: Sydney goes out with the girls gets a bit tipsy and doesnât want to get in an uber alone. Solution: call Richie! Richie picks her up without question because they are partners. On that ride home Syd is very talkative about how Richie has stepped up, looks so good in his suits, is so reliable and how hot that is. Richie is dying because heâs been repressing the hell out of his feelings for Syd. They eventually figure it out.
- Sugar daddy au: Richie is a restaurant consultant. Syd is a struggling chef. They meet when Richie is consulting at her restaurant. He asks her out for a drink and makes her an offer. Syd is deep in debt so she takes it. Sheâs just arm candy until they fall in love.đ„°
Fandom: The Bear
Pairing: Sydney x Richie
Rating: *E* (mind the rating change!)
Chapter: 2/2
Summary: âUm.â Itâs a high vibration. âItâs a good photo at least?â Richie accidentally sends Sydney a dick pic. It doesn't feel like the kind of thing they can deal with over the phone.
read ch. 1 on tumblr
Flour dusted patchily across both hands, Sydney passes dough through the sheeter. Sheâs running tests on two noodles today: fettuccini and tortellini. Different techniques, different shapes, obviously. She wants to see how practical it would be to switch between them, or if they should buy another machine. A sleeker, automatic model would do this faster, but thereâs something about doing the whole thing manually, turning the crank steadily with one hand while the dough hangs draped over the back of the other. Sydney breathes evenly as she works the full length of the dough in one side and out the other. No cracks or tears, just a smooth, pale-yellow surface. She stares down at it, pleased. She kinda wants to press her entire hand into it like itâs wet cement. Instead, she wipes that hand across her forehead. Itâs just after 8:30 in the morning. Sauce and filling are next.
Nobodyâs bothering her todayânot that anybodyâs ever exactly bothering her, but today, everybody seems to be working on their own thing. Carmy went into the office with Nat a while ago, and Sydney hasnât noticed him come out yet, so she assumes heâs in there still. Thatâs good. It lets her focus. Sheâs trying to make sure that focus is on the pasta, butâŠ
Richie kissed her. Or she kissed him. Whatever, sheâs not gonna be childish about it. They kissed, and coworkers kiss sometimes, probably, but not her, usually. And not just because her last job was a solo gig. Sydney⊠she, just, sheâs smarter than that. Not that kissing is dumb, because thinking that would be childish, but it can be unprofessional. In her opinion. Itâs, like, a thing, right? Itâs a big thing, being in love or even just into somebody, and being employed is also a big thing. Not that sheâs angling for a spot on the Forbes 30 Under 30 or anything, but she appreciates money in the sense that itâs the legal tender she exchanges to buy the shitty frozen pizzas she likes and to be able to live in an apartment in which her father does not also live. Put kindly, the Bear is fucking crazy. It wants her time, her energy, her sanity, and itâd probably like to have her salary back too. She canât add a relationship to this. Not here. She has to compartmentalize. The kitchen and the dining room⊠those are not two different compartments, as much as they struggle to work together some nights. If she were in a relationshipâwhich, by the way, she canât even imagine right nowâit would absolutely, definitely be with any other person on the planet than a member of the Bear staff.
Well, not anyone, but, basically. The point stands. She canât do both. She certainly canât do both here.
Because, what? Theyâd share little smiles all day long? Sheâd never be the one he raised his voice at anymore? Sheâd find herself always siding with him in arguments against other people? Heâd hold her coat for her at the end of the day, helping her slip her arms into the sleeves, then shoulder her bag for her and drive her home?
That actually sounds really fucking nice.
With a groan, Sydney realizes sheâs pushed her sheet of dough back into a lump, then started kneading that lump on the countertop. She sighs. Alright, test batch, âcause these motherfuckers are gonna be tough.
As sheâs hunting up a rolling pin so she doesnât have to spend extra time easing this dough back through the sheeter, Nat and Carmy emerge from the office. Sydneyâs gaze flicks up to them in interest.
âI didnât tell him to do that,â Carmyâs saying. âHe shouldnât even be handling this. It should all go through youââ
âI know,â Nat answers, smile bright and irritated and sarcastic, and Sydney can immediately tell sheâs repeating herself, losing her patience the more Carmy oversteps. âI know that, Carm, and I will talk to him.â
âWell, good, because I donât know what the fuckââ
âI know, sweetie.â
âTwo cardsââ
âYep, Iâm aware.â The cheer in Natâs eyes is frightening, so intense it threatens to inflict pain, like a magnifying glass held between an anthill and the sun.
âThinks heâs the fuckinâ king of the dining roomââ
âCould you shut the fuck up now?â Nat requests manically. Sydney, eyes wide, turns slowly to put her back to this conversation. âPlease, Carm, for the love of fuck, shut the fuck up. I will speak to Richie.â
Sydney does not look over at Carmy as he comes to work near her, pulling out pans to place on the cold stove. After giving him a minute to set up his station, she steals a couple of glances over at him. She establishes that heâs calmer now, having shaken off whatever that was.
âWhatâd Richie do?â she ventures, grabbing a pot to cook her noodles in.
âJustâŠâ Carmy sighs. âFucking around with bill payments.â
âOh shit. Are we fucked? By which I mean, more fucked.â
âNo, itâs paid, itâs just, he used two different credit cards for some reason.â
âTo cover something?â Sydney guesses. âI didnât know the dining room had any big expenses coming.â
She turns with Carmy as he puts his back to the stoves. He leans forward on the counter with both hands, and she thinks heâs about to divulge some secret purchase that sheâs gonna have to be mad about being kept out of the loop on, but then he just says, âI need shallots,â and heads to the walk-in while she rolls her eyes.
Quickly retracing his steps, Carmy clarifies, âNo, we donât. Itâs just flowers.â
âRichie paid for the flowers?â
âYeah.â
âOn two credit cards?â
âYeah,â Carmy says again, pinching his bottom lip between his fingers and looking thoughtful.
âThe fuckâs that about?â
âThatâs what Iâm saying.â
He goes to the walk-in.
So, Sydneyâs maybe a little more interested than she normally would be, thanks to Richie, but itâs still just one bill, one weird little blip. She has pasta to make. She has things to do. Any thoughts she could be (and is definitely not) having about Richie are easy to sideline. They arenât much in each otherâs way; he organizes the dining room while she hustles in the kitchen. She sees himâthey even say heyâbut nothing out of the ordinary happens.
She forgets all about the thing with the flowers until later, after service. Sheâs trudging to the lockers when she picks up on the sound of Nat talking to Richie. Finally cornered him, Sydney guesses. Sheâs still not overly invested, and not exactly trying to eavesdrop, but she canât help that she can hear them.
âIâm not running the expense through the restaurant, so whatâs it matter?â Richie is asking.
âBecause it shows up on my bill, Richie.â
âOh, your bill?â Sydney can hear the laugh in Richieâs voice, and pictures the way his eyebrows will have risen.
âAs long as Iâm the one dealing with the paperwork, yeah, my goddamn bill.â
âSorry, Nat. I wasnât tryinâ to fuck with you. It just seemed most convenient.â
âSo, it was just⊠a personal order? The extra item?â
âYep.â
âYouâre not gonna tell me who the flowers are for?â Natâs voice is thick with disbelief.
By now, Sydney is kind of interestedânot jealous interested, but interested. Her tired fingers work open the buttons on her white coat, and she steps out of her clogs. Before Richie can answer Nat, Sydney tugs her locker door open.
On the shelf inside is a single red rose.
The bloom is as big as sheâs ever seen a rose get, each perfect, velvety petal saturated in a colour Sydney usually only sees here when she nicks her finger with a blade. Maybe thatâs what itâs supposed to make her think of: a knife wound.
In place of a vase, itâs a wine bottle the rose protrudes from. From the tannic tang of her locker, Richie rinsed out the bottle hastily before repurposing it. Itâs elegant, even if just in a Lady and the Tramp way, and Sydney is so surprised that itâs not until after she hears an âOh!â from behind her that she shuts her locker.
She looks around nervously to see not only Luca, whose accent makes him easy to identify even while panicking, but Marcus too. And somewhere around the corner, Natâs still teasing Richie about the recipient of his flower order, so when Marcus canât suppress his smile, Sydney knows sheâs fucked.
She decides to ignore everyone and everything, turning back to her locker, opening it, and changing into street clothes. She slams it shut and walks away from the lockers with her eyes down, even though Marcus and Luca have moved off a little ways.
Sheâs almost out the door when she thinks of whatever shitty mix of water and red wine that rose has to drink, and of its waxy emerald leaves drooping and softening without any sunlight. She marches back to retrieve it.
On her way out again, Richieâs there, right in her path. He smiles at her, then his gaze falls to the bottle clutched in her hand. She doesnât ask, and he doesnât confirm, because they read each other well enough to be already beyond that. Of course he left it for her. No question.
He has the grace to look graceless, like heâs not sure how to hold himself, even though heâs still wearing his suit. What now? Sydney wonders, as they stand at an impasse of awkwardness. Does she thank him? Does she say all that stuff she was thinking before, about reasons why she wouldnât start anything with someone she works with?
Before she can figure it out, Richie sinks his hands in his pockets and disarmingly offers, âTuesday surprise?â
Sydney lets out a laugh thatâs amused and taken aback and a little bit wooed.
âThis wasnât subtle,â she says, raising the bottle just enough to indicate it.
âYeah, I donât really know how to do subtle, I donât think.â
âWellâŠâ Sydney doesnât really have a good response to that. Like, he doesnât know how to do subtle, and thatâs fair, and leaving a rose in her locker is a gesture itâs too late to take back.
âI went to the flower shop in person, which I donât normally do,â Richie says, launching into a story she didnât ask to hear. âTheyâve been doinâ a good job for us, and what do I know about flowers, right? I leave the arranging to the professionals. But I went in, and thereâs that big walk-in fridge, you know? Youâve been in a flower shop before. And just these buckets overflowing with the most beautiful roses youâve ever seen, Syd, I swear to god.â He gestures with both arms, demonstrating abundance.
âAnd you only bought one?â Sheâs not teasing him, just curious.
âHey, more doesnât mean better. I thoughtâŠâ He stops to laugh at himself, then confesses, âItâs stupid.â
Now she has to know.
âWhat?â Sydney asks, careful with the bottle as she hitches her tote bag on her shoulder.
âI thought more would be overkill. Just one rose, and you can see how perfect it is, you know?â
âIâm gonna go before this gets any more symbolic,â she says awkwardly, twisting towards the door.
âOk, yeah, thatâs a good idea.â
Sheâs really almost out the door this time when Richie says, âSyd?â
She turns back.
âYou got some flour,â he says, tracing a finger across his own forehead.
âOh, for fuck,â Sydney mumbles, because it was probably there all through service, there since she made pasta this morning. Goddammit.
She gets outside at last. After a few steps, itâs herself that stops her this time. Sydney takes in the immediate darkness, the close quiet while, a street over, cars pass by. She lifts the bottle and presses her nose into the soft petals, inhaling until the whole night smells like roses.
â
âSooooâŠâ Marcus leads off. It might be the longest âsoâ Sydneyâs ever heard leave his mouth, and she rolls her eyes.
âNo,â she counters.
âNo?â He chuckles. Actually stops to stand there and chuckle at her while she keeps moving, sorting into piles which herbs sheâll strip and finely chop for her sauce, and which sheâll leave whole for the roasting pan.
âNo like donât talk or no as an answer to the question you wonât let me ask?â Marcus checks.
Sydney spares him a sideways glance and decides, if he has time to bug her about this, heâs not busy enough. (Sure, he has a cake in the oven right now, and she envies him these long stretches when heâs prepped everything that can be prepped and gets to take a break while he waits for the next thing to happen. The digital numbers on the timer clipped to his apron strap tick over quietly.) Sydney slides him the thyme, gesturing to the knife rack with her chin for instruction, and starts in on the marjoram herself.
Side by side, they separate and cut. She ignores Marcus. She doesnât think about Richie. There is only her and the herbs today.
Is she breathing through her nose more loudly than normal?
Her neck itches, and she tries to satisfy it by rubbing with the back of her wrist.
The silence between them starts to squeeze Sydney in from all sides and she breaks with a loud sigh.
âAsk,â she demands, turning swiftly towards Marcus in frustration at one of themâsheâs not sure who.
Marcus doesnât exactly match her mood; he smirks slowly without glancing up from the task sheâs assigned him.
âAre you guysââ
âNo.â She cuts in before she can summon the strength to resist the impulse. She looks to the ceiling and forces herself to take a deep breath. âNo,â she says again, âwe are not.â
Marcus keeps smiling down at the thyme.
âIâm not jealous, Syd. Thatâs history,â he promises her, easy and honest and impossible not to believe. Marcus glances at her. âIâm just beinâ fuckinâ nosy.â
âYou are beinâ fuckinâ nosy,â Sydney agrees.
Marcus grins.
âSo you get how I gotta wonder. The man left you⊠what was that, a rose? Sure looked like a rose.â
âIt was a rose,â Sydney confirms, because, hey, he already fuckinâ saw it.
âA rose in your locker,â Marcus says in mock awe. But he doesnât look like heâs mocking her when he says, âThat shitâs real romantic.â
âI know,â Sydney responds despairingly.
âAnd youâre definitely notâŠ?â
âNo.â
ââCause it seems like youâre havinâ sex.â
Sydney groans loudly, and the next thing she knows, Lucaâs hovering there, looking concerned.
âIâm fine,â she assures him, gritting it out more than she means to. Itâs not Lucaâs fault Sydneyâs annoyed at Marcusâor that sheâs actually just annoyed at the situation, at not knowing what to do or how she feels or what Richie wants to doâŠ
âAlright,â Luca says easily. He stands at ease, like a soldier, hands clasped behind his back. Is Sydney the only one with shit to do today?
âWe were just talking,â Marcus shares.
âUh huh,â Sydney confirms, delicately wiping marjoram off her knife blade.
âAbout Sydney and Richie.â
âWhat the fuck?â Sydney demands, glaring at Marcus.
âItâs just Luca,â Marcus says with a shrug. They both look to Luca, who also shrugs.
Sydney sighs and allows, âWhatever.â
Not ten seconds pass before Luca pipes up, âSo, are the two of youââ
âNo!â
âI see. What do you need next? Butter? Iâll go get the butter.â
â
She does the stupid thing.
âIt looks nice,â Richie says, nodding at the rose in her windowsill. Itâs lusher than ever, leaves tilted towards the sunlight. After sheâs been in the apartment for a few hours in a row, she stops noticing the smell, but every night after workâeach night this week, since he gave it to herâthe scent hits Sydney when she comes through the door. This is starting to become the way the place smells, in her mind. Sheâs starting to associate the scent with home.
What she says though is, âYeah, thanks. It seems pretty happy in that spot.â
âSure does.â
Itâs Sunday, which means the Bearâs shut, and which usually also means people from the Bear donât see each other. Anyway, Sydney typically doesnât. She buys groceries and grabs lunch with her dad and tries to be better about keeping up with whatâs going on with TJâseeing her, or at least calling her, or at least commenting on her Tiktoks (which TJ maybe hates). Sunday is Sydneyâs day to have a life. Be a person: someone who has blood relatives, not just restaurant famiglia, who does laundry and other things to keep herself clean and alive, who eats a meal thatâs a meal, not two dozen little spoonfuls as she tastes her way through iterations of whatever everybodyâs cooking that day. Other people who are better at being people than she is also use their Sundays for couple things. But not Sydney. She doesnât do that.
But she asked Richie if heâd maybe, possibly, like, want to come over and hang out, and he got there in fifteen minutes. Tops.
She doesnât even have any recourse to be standoffish in contrast to his evident eagerness, since sheâs the one who asked him over. She has to brave the situation now. She has to do like the pricey rose he bought her and turn her leaves to the light.
Sydney looks at Richie from the corner of her eye. She grew up in this windy city. Thereâs this internal rushing in her, breezing her heart around her insides like a high, persuadable cloud; it feels too light, too susceptible to the forces of nature.
âRichie, Iâve been thinking,â she says, hands out and stiff and serious as she prepares to position the matter before him.
Richie stares right back at her with a curious smile. His expression is fond already, and it makes her nervous.
ââBout us kissing?â
Sydney blinks at him.
âI had a whole thing I was gonna say.â
âPlease,â he encourages.
She opens her mouth and everything sheâs been turning overâeverything she thought out and edited and organized in her mind before she let herself pick up the phone and text Richieâevaporates from her mind. Richie raises his eyebrows expectantly. A little teasingly.
When nothing comes to her, he claps her swiftly on the shoulders, says, âOk,â and walks past her.
Scoffing, Sydney turns her head after him.
âWhere are you going?â
âSweetheart, I swear ta god, itâs not the riddle of the Sphinx.â He disappears into her kitchen. She hears a cupboard door open and close, then the squeak of her crappy tap, followed by water hitting the sink. Just like last time, heâs getting himself a drink.
She goes after him.
âWhat is it about this apartment that makes you so thirsty?â she wonders.
Richieâs just raising his glass, but he turns to glance at her with a look on his face like heâs resisting a laugh. Oh.
âInteresting choice of words,â he remarks.
âYeah, I hear it now,â she assures him, face scrunching.
âYou know, since you texted me.â
She rolls her eyes as he takes a long drink from his glass. Her glass.
She sighs.
âI donât really know what to say,â she admits to them both, loosely crossing her arms.
Richie sets the empty glass on the counter.
âI thought you had a speech or somethinâ.â
âIt wasnât exactly a speech, but it was⊠too prepared, I guess.â
âCan you tell me which way it was gonna go at least?â
Sydney frowns at him. âWhat do you mean?â
Richie plucks at the collar of his sweatshirt, and Sydney watches the motion. His index finger and thumb working together. She wonders how he gets undressed, pictures a practiced grip behind the neck, tugging any top straight up and off. Windy, windy inside her, untethered heart whisked to and fro.
âWas this gonna be a speech where you let me down easy?â he clarifies. âOr maybe, I mean, you didnât think that much of it, since weâŠâ Richie scratches his temple with a finger. ââŠwerenât much. I mean, one spontaneous kiss and a flower. Whatâs that add up to?â
âYou know what?â he adds, like heâs talking himself into something. Heâs not looking at her, but not in an obvious way; heâs almost looking at her, like she wonât notice the difference. But sheâd feel it, even if she couldnât see it, and she can see it. Here in her small but treasured kitchen. âSorry. Donât listen to me. You got no obligation to do that or anythinâ else. Weâre good, Syd.â
She stares back at him until he meets her eyes. Then, she says firmly, âWeâre not good.â
Sydney steps forward on nimbus feet that hardly feel the floor (sheâs so fucking nervous), and stands so close to Richie that he canât misunderstand.
Quietly, he checks, âYou donât wanna show me your tits first?â
She groans in annoyance.
âWell, come on,â he argues jokingly. âI thought we were establishing a certain sequence of events, and if things were ever to be repeated between usââ
Sydney grabs Richieâs shoulder as she stretches up to plant her mouth on his. Maybe she floats up. Maybe sheâs just water vapour and air.
Right away, he pulls her in like heâs going to pull her off her feet, but he doesnât, just holds her against him, and she doesnât have to think about balancing herself because heâs got her so tight. She canât think about it anyway. Chest to chest. His thumb presses lightly, just behind her ear. She canât think.
Her mouth opens under Richieâs, against Richieâs, into Richieâs, and he catches her lip between his teeth for a sharp second before angling his head to kiss her harder, deeper. She feels the pressure of the kiss in her whole body. Sheâs fully pressed against him and just the heat of him is hot, but itâs hotter when she catches her breath enough to groan, spurring a reaction from Richie. Sheâs too close not to feel. Hey, she thinks at the nudge against her abdomen, about time we met in person.
She could fuck him right here in this kitchen, but Richieâs not going to let her. But itâs her apartment.
He tries to pull her, to tug her towards the bedroom heâs never been inside but can obviously locate because this place isnât exactly capacious. Sydney plants her sock feet well enough to let her hand slip through his urgent grip.
âDonât you wantâŠ?â he asks, standing in her kitchen. Standing in her kitchen, hard.
âYes,â she says, to the question and the erection, honestly.
âCome on,â he urges.
âNo.â
âWhy?â
And she canât communicate the feeling, but itâs something far away from not wanting to. She wants to, and she wants to do it right? Somehow? The way Richie would want it to beâelegant, by some measure, which definitely means no thrusting her into her crooked wooden cabinets. But she also doesnât feel done here. In this kitchen. Where they talk, and she flashes him, and he avails himself of the plumbing.
âTake my pants off,â Sydney blurts. She has to say something.
Richie gives her a long stare, and she watches the colour gather in his face, petal-red.
He clears his throat and goes to her, comes to her. His back straightens up. A twitch in his cheek as the back of his fingers skim her stomach through her t-shirt. Richie opens the button of her pants, and his whole face opens as he starts to lower the zipper. Heâs smiling. Itâs not that the people Sydneyâs had sex with before havenât been glad to do it, but she canât remember anyone smiling at her like this. Not seductive, not sexy, just⊠happy. Her cloud-heart stuffs itself into a balloon and rises in her chest.
âThatâs⊠thatâs good,â she says, choked, when her pants drop to her ankles and Richie crouches, about to lift her feet free of the fabric.
âYou said off,â he reminds her.
âWho gives a shit,â she breathes, gazing down at his flushed face and the bulge in his sweats and his hand on her ankle.
Richieâs expression says, Fair enough. Then, he stops looking at her face; he leans in to rest his mouth and nose against the front of her underwear. Itâs the way he shuts his eyes that makes her head hang back, his hot breath through the fabric that makes her fingers curl around the edge of the counter. He licks the cotton and sheâs wet. Already was.
His name scrapes out of her: âRichie.â
Tucking his fingers into the waistband of her underwear, he peels them down, leaving them clinging high on her thighs by their elastic. Then she feels his breath. Eyes up, Sydney shivers at the thought of Richie looking at her this close, of his mouth poised. She makes a sound at the light stroke of his thumb on her labia. She makes a sound and she jerks, and if sheâs gonna react like that to being touched there, what happens whenâŠ?
All at once, Richieâs mouth, warm and open. And wetâthat becomes the dominant feeling when his tongue brushes slickly over her clit. Sydneyâs eyes flinch shut, and she parts her legs as much as she can with the resistance of the elastic, trying to invite Richie in, hoping for more. Not that Richieâs ever needed any encouragement to make himself at home.
Heâs gentle with her, but that doesnât mean heâs hesitant. He licks at herâbroad passes, flat-tonguedâlike every motion is intentional. Itâs like heâs thought about it, she realizes. Thatâs what it feels like: fucking premeditation. With one hand high to spread her with his thumb and the other hand kneading her thigh, Richie laps at her. Her pulse is already thumping in her clit when he puts his lips over it and sucks.
âOhhh god,â Sydney wavers out, white-knuckling the counter as her knees start to give out and she slumps onto Richieâs welcoming mouth.
She tries to steady herself by forcing one hand off the counter and running her spread fingers up and down the back of Richieâs head. She wants him to touch her. Not her thigh, not the careful, helpful edge of his thumb on her labia. Her cunt is clenching, and she needs his fingers in there. All the attention on her clit is driving her crazy, as he can probably tell from her frantic touch.
Every time she tries to babble out a request, her moaning sweeps in to obscure it. Heâs just⊠criminally good at this. Her fucking thighs are gonna be wet. As he switches from sucking back to licking, she gets the fine scratch of his scruff and cries out. Itâs like the sudden cool puff of air he blows on her clit after the hot suffocation of his mouth is just to tease her. Leave it to fucking Richie to fucking flirt with her without words, after sheâs already won over, when heâs kneeling on her kitchen floor, eating her out.
Mercifully, his tongue returns, which is great because, with him withholding his fingers, she needs something to ride. Sydneyâs hips hitch, her fingers digging into the back of Richieâs neck. The more erratically she rocks, the more he groans, and thatâs good, thatâs good.
Air catches in her throat, then bursts out with an âAh!â too soft for how hard she comes. Sheâd definitely be on the ground, collapsed, if not for Richie wrapping an arm around the back of her thighs as he quickly rises and hoists her up to sit on the counter. Her pants slip off at last, heaped on the floor. Richieâs quick to shove his hand between her thighs, fingers rubbing gently at her clit, dragging out the feeling. Sydney turns her heavy gaze on his, their faces close together. While sheâs watchingâknowing sheâs watchingâRichie lifts his forearm to his face and wipes his mouth on his sleeve. Her cunt throbs. Itâs the look in his eyes; no part of him has been inside her, but his gaze is fucking her right now.
âIâd really like you to take me to your room, Syd.â
âYeah.â It comes out horribly broken, sounding like five different yeahs. She clears her throat.
She hops off the counter (trying not to look surprised that her knees donât give out) and pulls her underwear up. She doesnât realize Richie intends to carry her to her bedroom until he starts to squat like heâs about to yank her up and wrap her legs around his hips.
âWoah!â she yelps, throwing a hand out. âNo no no. I can walk.â
Richie shrugs awkwardly.
âI thought itâd be sexy, or whatever.â
âOne thing at a time,â she urges. âI can walk.â
Which is obviously when she takes a single step and slips on her pants.
âShut up,â she says.
âThe fuck did I say?â
She laughs first because of how genuinely defensive he sounds, and then he laughs at her for the almost-wipeout, and then he kisses her, and then she pulls him closer, and then she feels him against her abdomen again, but fully hard this time. She remembers the chaos when she started at the Beef, and the shot Richie fired into the sky out front, and the sight of the gun against his lower back after he tucked it under his waistband. Sydneyâs mad at her own brain for the comparison, but itâs what comes to her, mind reaching for a visual to match the rigid length she canât see.
â
âThis isnât weird, right?â she checks as she pulls her top over her head.
Richie, under her, blinks and checks, âWeird?â
Sydney tsks thoughtfully and tries to explain.
âYou know, like, we like each other.â
âIâm supposed to think thatâs weird?â he demands, propped up on his elbows. âRespectfully, Syd, respectfully, what the fuck are you talkinâ about?â
She sighs and shifts on her knees, careful not to settle anywhere thatâs gonna make him stop paying attention to her talking.
âLike, people know somethingâs going on, right? Or they guess. And, I donât know, I feel like this isnât going how it was supposed to go.â
âAre you disappointed?â Richie asks cautiously.
âThatâs notââ
âNo, tell me that first.â
Sydney realizes heâs checking that sheâs ok, but not just checking that sheâs ok; thereâs a vulnerability to Richie on his back on her bedsheet that she hasnât seen when heâs almost barfing on her shoes, or when Carmy yells at him, or when heâs just been stabbed (her eternal bad). Heâs afraid sheâs already over it, before heâs even been inside her. Sheâs making him worry that.
Quickly, Sydney assures him, âGod, of course not,â her face scrunching up at the pain of the thought. âShit, Richie, no.â
âOk⊠then what?â His hands venture guardedly to her thighs, holding her just above her knees.
She purses and twists her mouth.
âItâs dumb to care what people think, right?â
âFucking idiotic,â Richie emphasizes. âBut we do.â
âYeah,â she agrees. âSo.â She tucks her braids behind her ear. âWhen Iâm being a fucking idiot like that, I think about how maybe people wouldâve gotten it if weâd hooked up after the wedding.â
âWhen you say âit,â you meanââ Sydney waits for the word to land, the big, small word. ââus,â Richie says.
âYeah.â
âLike that wouldâve been ok and this isnât?â
She feels bad for thinking it, but not for telling him, so she nods.
Giving her a serious look, Richie points out, âThey wouldâve thought you did it because you pitied me.â Sydney opens her mouth and starts to refute that, but Richie shakes his head. âNo bullshit. Iâm not saying you wouldâve, obviously, but come on. Single at my ex-wifeâs wedding.â
âThat really isnât what I mean though,â Sydney persists.
âOk,â he says. âTell me what you mean.â
âI justâŠâ Absentmindedly, she reaches behind her back to unhook her bra. Wordlessly, Richie takes her hands and draws them away, then applies his own fingers to the hooks. The tension of the band around her ribcage gives. She inhales deeply. âI donât think theyâll get it.â
Tenderly, Richie sweeps the thin straps from her shoulders, and Sydney tosses the bra over the side of her bed.
âWho has to get it but us?â he asks. When her gaze starts to slide away, he insists, âNo, Syd, honestly. Who has to get it but us?â
âWeâre just⊠we can be volatile, you and me.â
âAw, not for ages,â Richie argues. âBesides, that ainât anybodyâs problem unless you stab me at work again.â
âOh,â she says, laughing, âbut not at work is fine.â
He gives her a look, then sighs and says, âFuck them if they donât get it, and really, I think they will.â
âYeah?â
âOh yeah. The first time they see the way you fuckinâ undress me with your eyesâ Quit laughing.â
But heâs messing with her, and she doesnât think itâs weird anymore, because heâs probably right: people might be surprised, but then they wonât be. Sheâs not giving them the kind of credit she should. She and Richie are a lot of things, do a lot of things, have a lot of things. Thereâs a lot of respect between them, for one thing. And a hell of a lot of trust. Chemistry? Well, their friends probably havenât seen that, but Sydney has a feeling it might be difficult to hide after thisâafter Richieâs hands on her chest and her shifting backwards to sit on his cock, pinning it to his abdomen inside his boxers. She bends down to kiss him, and one of his hands moves to her bare back. Lightly, she starts rolling her hips.
âYeah,â he murmurs, their lips slipping when her clit nudges the head of his dick and she releases a sharp pant.
âYou should reallyâŠâ she starts. âYou should really be naked.â
Like she is, she means. For a minute, they breathe, Sydney looking into Richieâs heavy-lidded, too-close eyes as they gaze up into hers. His fingers hook into the clammy cranny behind her knees and tug her forward onto his stomach. She laughs as she sits up from being jostled. He lets her go, cracking a smile, shifting and bucking as he strips behind her back. Experimentally, Sydney runs a finger along the gold chain that cuts a shiny river across his firm chest.
He already produced a condom without pointless justification; it sits on her bedside table, on top of the digital clock that tells her when to get up every day but Sunday. Sleeping in today hasnât stopped her from being distracted from the minute she woke up. Now, Richie asks for the condom. Calls her âsweetheartâ when he does, and her eyes roll because of it. And because of the clear appreciation on his face when she has to partly lean over him to get it. His hand grazes up her stomach, palm in the middle of her chest as she shuffles backward to sit on his thighs. Richie must be feeling her heart when she drops her gaze to his cock. She flips the condom onto his chest. Sits tall. Sweeps her braids forward over her shoulder because of the racing heat up her spine: watching him get ready for her. Watching him already ready for her.
Sydney doesnât tell Richie how long itâs been for her, but maybe her body does, her face, her breathing. Heâs gripping his shaft as she takes him a little at a time, too hungry for it for the control she needs being on top; it lasts a second: wishing it were him, that heâd drive home all at once and save her these stops and starts. Adjusting. Wanting. Huffing, âFuck,â when heâs only halfway in and her muscles work his head greedily.
When she looks from her hands braced on his chest to his face, his eyes are shut and his expression is angry. Sheâs just starting to say his name in question when Richieâs eyes open for her to read. Oh. Itâs not angerâitâs restraint. Sydney sinks down fully and Richie groans, face still looking like heâs a second from scuffing his fingers under his chin to flip her off, Italian style. Honestly⊠itâs kinda doing it for her. Though their rapport at the restaurant has come a long fucking way, she remembers what it was like to be passionately pissed at him, to get in his face and have him come right back at her, puffing his chest, even when she had a knife in her hand. Insanely toxic work environment, she knows, but looking back from here, from now? Hot.
She rocks on his lap, and he touches her hips like heâll smooth out her rhythm, but Sydney doesnât let him, and Richieâs hands donât fight. She pants and rides him until her legs ache (doesnât take that long; funny how fast her body forgets how to do some things and remembers others), until she notices how aroused she is by leaning forward to rub her clit against the hair at Richieâs groin and finding it wet.
âFuck, Syd,â he grunts in her ear, hand gripping her ass. She feels it when his fingers creep down to touch where theyâre fucking, to feel her swallow him over and over.
All at once, she gives up, surrenders by gasping, âI canât.â
âBeautiful job,â he mutters to her, helping her climb off him, laying her out on her back, crawling over her and just kissing everywhere he can reach.
He presses her thigh to the side, mouth buried against her neck as he eases back inside her. His warm weight pins her to the bed, and yes, this is what she needed. His dangling necklace skims across her throat as he starts thrusting. He moves like heâll slip clean through. Itâs so easy it almost doesnât feel right, but Sydney reaches back to grab the top edge of her mattress and cocks her head at himâtwo signals. Richie nods, and the next thrust is an impact that makes her grab the mattress.
âYeah, I see what you like,â he says, almost a laugh, but not at her; itâs a laugh that says, staggered, Fuck me, Syd. I get to do this? Youâre gonna let me figure out how to get you off? Probably with some more swearing in there, sheâd guess, but maybe thatâs implied. The focus in his expression implies it. The focus makes her face hot, and her chest hot where his hand covers her breast, and it makes her clench around his dick, sometimes at the wrong times, messing him up when heâs trying to plunge deep. She writhes when he gives it to her hard, maybe too much for him to want to keep going like that, because he switches to something shallower, clutching her body close as his hips twitch, dragging her clit along. She grabs his jaw and forces her tongue into his mouth, locks her arm around the back of his neck. Itâs not like itâs the middle of the night, but the sounds of this neighbourhood through her thin walls are dead to herâall Sydney hears is their breathing, the slick motion of their bodies lurching together and apart.
She notices sheâs shaking without remembering when it started. Richie kisses her shoulder. He noticed, apparently. He keeps moving in a way that stimulates this tremor in her, head down and calmly steadfast, like heâs tending a garden.
âUm,â she pants. âCan you go faster?â
Her thighs tremble. She canât keep them still.
âSure thing,â he says, easy, ready, wanting to help her out. But before he does, he nips her earlobe and breathes right in her ear, âYou gonna come for me if I do?â
After that, Sydney barely needs the speed. âRichie!â she gasps. âRi-chie.â And then just an exhaled âRuh,â the rest of his name unsaid in the air.
She comes quickly, with a feeling like fog burning off a field of wheat at dawn. Her fingers flinch on him, digging into his arms where she took hold when the feeling was building. Heâs still moving in her as she catches her breath, but slower, just enough to extend that pleasant tingle, making it hard to find the edge of her orgasm, hard to say if itâs totally stopped.
Sydney watches Richieâs face, and she can feel his cock, still rigid inside her. Thereâs some strain around his eyes that heâs clearly making an effort to ease, thrusts continuing to gradually slow.
âWhat are you doing?â she asks, since he hasnât come.
On the other side of her own climax, Sydney touches Richie more freely than she has yet. She glides her hands up his shoulders, kneads where the muscle is tense. She rolls her head to the side to kiss his arm.
âCan I say something lame?â he requests. Itâs gonna be so lame, apparently, that heâs squinting in discomfort just asking the question.
âI mean, yeah.â He just made her feel like that. Sheâs gonna deny him this? Nah.
âI wanna make out with you,â Richie declares.
ââŠOk. You know you could just, like, do that.â
âWell, itâs tough when weâre, you know.â Oh, she knows. âBut I really like kissing you.â
Sydney starts smiling because, holy shit, Richie is in her, yet his confession is almost shy.
âAnd I donât know where we go after this, right?â he goes on, holding himself over her. âThere are things I want, and you want, but whatever conversation comes after this, itâs gonna be different. I just want to slow down for a sec. I donât want it to be over yet.â
âThat is,â Sydney says slowly, âincredibly lame. In a pretty sweet way,â she amends.
ââSweet,ââ Richie echoes, like the word is not for him.
But she insists, âSweet. If the shoe fits, man.â
He doesnât argue; heâs staring at her lips. She tilts her chin up, offering, and Richieâs mouth comes down to meet hers.
Warm and comfortable, Sydney feels like sheâs sinking deeper into the bed. Sheâs not really, but her body is heavy and fluid at the same time, palms pressed to Richieâs skin, legs limp on either side of his. The kissingâs like a portal: she can see other moments through it. She imagines them kissing like this at night on a street corner in winter, real snow in the air, bulky coats shushing each other as the fabric rubs together. Or in his carâshe can picture them kissing in his car. A do-over of the night of the wedding, where he drives her home and she just doesnât get out. Where she laughs awkwardly and tosses her head and fingers the lapel of his suit jacket until he puts his hand on her knee instead of the gearshift and leans over it towards her.
She feels sort of upended by it, honestly. By kissing Richie. She keeps listening for any of her old internal alarm bells to go off, but she doesnât hear a sound. What if they just keep doing this? What if they go to work together during the day and then, sometimes, spend the night at each otherâs place? Sheâs come to understand heâs dying to take care of peopleâat work, at the weddingâso what if she lets him take care of her? What if she just doesnât have to be lonely anymore? What if, when he pats her shoulder in the kitchen, she leans back into his hand?
Unhurriedly, Richieâs hips begin to move again. Sydney welcomes the warmth, the friction, not trying to get off, but basking in the simmering pleasure. When Richie finally lets himself come, he makes this jagged sound, as if some part of himâs been torn off to be used as a bandage for some other part. She kisses his mouth like itâs the wound.
â
Sheâs just supposed to walk him to his car, but when they get there, theyâre talking, and she convinces him to drive home. Sheâll take the train back.
He wants to walk her to the train, and by the time heâs waited around with her on the platform, he wants to get on beside her when it comes. They laugh and sheepishly take their seats, looking down instead of at one another. Sydney bumps her knee into his.
âI gotta head back,â Richie says, only once heâs walked her to her apartment.
âThis is stupid,â she says, cringing a little bit, because itâs gotta be embarrassing how they canât stop now theyâve started, right? How they donât know how to separate?
âYeah,â he agrees, âso tell me to go.â
Sydney chuckles, keys still in her pocket, leaning in her doorway.
Fandom: The Bear
Pairing: Sydney x Richie
Rating: M
Word Count: 4347
Summary: âUm.â Itâs a high vibration. âItâs a good photo at least?â Richie accidentally sends Sydney a dick pic. It doesn't feel like the kind of thing they can deal with over the phone.
Have you seen this?
Sydney gets four words to prepare her for Richieâs dick pic.
His dickâs not the only thing in the photo, but it might as well be. She stands there, stunned, with her phone in one hand and the outfit she wore to the wedding in the other. She showered after Richie dropped her home. Was just having the realization of how clearly she could detect the scent of his cologne on her top when her phone chimed with a message and she picked it up in her still-damp hand.
Her brainâs telling her to relax the muscles sheâs suddenly tensed, get back to how things were a few minutes ago in the shower, and she has to very carefully cradle the phone in both palms before letting the fingers clutching her clothes unclench; sheâs scared sheâll drop the wrong thing. From shock.
On instinct, she taps the call button. She rolls her lips together as she lifts the phone to her ear.
âSydney? Shitââ
Sydney sucks in a frantic breath and hangs up on Richie. Well. Ok. Sounds like he probably didnât mean to send that then.
She stares at the screen with wide eyes as it switches from their aborted call to a new one incoming. From Richie. Sydney answers. Taps to put him on speaker. Too consciously, she tugs at the place where she tucked in the end of her towel when she wrapped it around herself. Sheâs good, sheâs secure. He canât fucking see her anyway.
âHeyyy,â she says. It wavers out of her, and she immediately starts pacing her bedroom.
ââFucking sorry, Iâm so fucking sorry, Syd. I didnât meanââ
âYeah.â Her voice is coming out way too high. âNo, I figured.â
âTed sent me the picture he took earlier, all of us under the table, and I didnât know if he had your number, so I thought Iâdââ
âYeah,â she says again, distant to her own ears. âYeah, no, thatâs great. Thatâs, uh, really thoughtful, Richie.â
A pained âFuckâ erupts down the line. Sydney nods, agreeing. Which, again, Richie canât see.
In the photo, heâs wearing his suit, the one he had on at the wedding. Jacket and everything. Tie nice and neat. Erection jutting from his open fly. She can see the full-length mirror he took the photo in, and some of Richieâs bedroom in the background.
âLemme try to delete it,â he says. âI fuckinâ tried right away, I swear ta Christ, but I keep tappinâ the wrong shit.â
âI mean,â she offers. âThereâs nothing you really couldâve done. My phone was literally in my hand when your text came through, so.â
She taps to at least delete it on her end and ends up enlarging the photo instead.
âUm.â Itâs a high vibration. âItâs a good photo at least?â
One of them figures it out, and itâs suddenly gone. Back to their last exchange before the wedding.
Richie: Five minutes away.
Sydney: Iâm out front.
Thereâs no sound from her phone, so Sydney takes it off speaker and raises it to her ear. She can hear Richie breathing. Not like heâs going to barf, but kinda bad.
âUm,â he finally says. âUh, yeah, Iâll send you Tedâs picture.â
And then he hangs up on her. Sydney makes a face at the phone, and just like that, Richieâs calling back.
âHello,â she says flatly.
âI donât know, I panicked.â
âClearly.â
âWhat dâyou mean itâs a good photo?â
Sydney hangs up on him.
â
Sheâs gotten pretty good at falling asleep quickly. Every night since she started working at the Bearâformerly the Beefâshe comes home either exhausted or stressed plus exhausted. She eats a low-effort dinner courtesy of the frozen aisle of the grocery store. Sometimes she doesnât shower, and regrets it the next day when her sheets fucking reek. She even sleeps well on Sundays, just out of habit. There was no reason to think she wouldnât sleep well on this one.
Sydney sits up in bed and blinks despondently into the dark. She has to go to work in the morning. She cannot lose sleep to the vision floating behind her closed eyelids.
She goes to the kitchen for a glass of water she isnât thirsty for, then to the bathroom, peeing without turning the light on so she wonât get even more awake. Mindlessly washing her hands, she thinks of what she has to do tomorrow, what she wants to try. She lines up proteins in her mind, wonders what produce Tinaâll find for them. Ghosts of flavours materialize on her palette as she imagines them. Citrus, or something sharp and green that mimics it.
On her way back to bed, Sydney takes a detour past her window, casting her eyes down to street level. Thereâs a plume of smoke that the streetlight reveals only for the darkness to interrupt, the soft shape of the cloud abruptly cut off as it rises beyond the halo.
She stands at the window in her shorts and big t-shirt, apartment dark, watching Richie chain-smoke. Itâs a sign heâs troubledâthat and the way he scratches at his scruff with the same hand that holds the cigarette. Kinda careless. Like the way he sends photos.
It becomes almost hypnotic, and Sydney jolts when Richie grinds the butt into the sidewalk and makes for the entrance to her building. Ok, no. She didnât think he was coming inâthat heâd have the balls, or the guilt, for it. But who the fuck cares, she guesses. Itâs not like sheâs sleeping anyway.
When she turns on a light and opens her front door, it embarrasses them both; he hadnât knocked yet, and his face says he hadnât actually decided whether he was going to.
âYou saw me,â Richie guesses.
While Sydneyâs nodding, they hold eye contact just a little too long and clearly both remember precisely what Sydney has seen.
âYou better come in,â she says.
He gives her this uncertain look, eyebrows way up high.
âYou sure?â
âNo.â
Richie offers the sort of expression of concern and consolation that people paying their respects give to the dead personâs family at funerals, but he steps through when she widens the gap in the door. At least heâs been here before; that should make it less weird.
The floor creaks under his sneakers. She hasnât learned all the squeaky spots yet, might actually never do that. Not like at her dadâs, where she knows every spot that can give her movements away, thanks to a youth of occasionally sneaking out to do not very cool or dangerous things, like buying the worms she likes at the convenience store and chewing them while she provided silent emotional support as her friend called her crush. Sydney canât remember being the teenager who called their crush. Looking back, it feels like her whole childhood happened to her by accident, and that her adulthood is still constantly threatening to happen to her by accident, as much as she tries to be smart and make decisions and have, like, a calendar just for her bill payments.
Right now, Richie is happening to her. Heâs happening to her entryway, and though she ushers him into the main living space once heâs kicked his shoes off, he seems to be happening in there too. Sheâs barefoot, grounded by the fact that it feels like she needs to clean her floors. Fuck absolutely everything.
âWhat are you doing here?â she asks, just so itâs been asked.
âJeeze, Iââthey arenât sitting, though there are places to sitââsent you a fuckinâ photo of my cock. A fuckinâ nude, like a huge creep.â
âI donât know if it technically counts as a nude. You had clothes on.â
âDonât try to excuse my behaviour with semantics,â Richie berates, making Sydney frown at him in irritation.
âIâm not. Youâre just clearly overreactingââ
âOh yeah?â He snorts.
âYeah,â she grits out. âItâs the middle of the goddamn night, Richie.â
âYeah, well, I guess you werenât sleeping either or you wouldnât have seen me outside,â he accuses, hands smugly on his hips. âAnd excuse me for wanting to deal with this now, like an adult, instead of having things be weird tomorrow.â
âI wouldnât have made them weird.â Itâs pretty unconvincing, what with how sheâs mumbling and not meeting his eye.
âSure, Syd.â
And then he strides off towards her kitchen.
âWhat the fuck are you doing?â she demands, more tired than angry.
âGetting myself a glass of water. Host much, Syd?â
She rolls her eyes. Begrudgingly, she drags herself after him.
Grateful that he hasnât turned on more lights, she hauls herself up to sit on the counter and stares at Richie while he stands in her kitchen, drinking from her glass. The light from the other room is enough to make them more than shapes, but theyâre less stark than they usually see one another. She doesnât usually see Richie in sweats anymore, not since he started wearing suits. Even when heâs dressed down, itâs jeans now. Sydney notices that, like she notices she can smell him. Cigarettes, mostly. The scent of his cologne might still be under there. Hard to say if heâs showered.
He sips from the glass, then sets it aside.
âI didnât mean to send that photo,â he says.
âTrust me, Richie, that has been well established.â
âYeah, but I wanted you to hear it from me. Face to face.â
It actually is hard to hold his gaze, but she makes herself do it, even as her chin tries to tuck away into her neck in discomfort. The look on Richieâs face is questioning.
âI hear you,â she assures him.
His sigh of relief feels profound. Richie nods to himself, looking down.
âOk,â he says. âGood.â
Sydney bites the inside of her cheek for a second, then asks, âWhyâd you take it?â
Richie shoots her assessing side-eye like heâs trying to figure her out, or check if sheâs comfortable with her own question. She just sits there, legs dangling. She tucks her braids behind her ear.
Eventually, he sighs.
âI just felt fucking good about myself, I guess. Nervous as fuck, of course. For the wedding. As you know. But I also thought I looked goodâyou know, that Iâve been trying to look goodâand I was⊠tryinâ to hype myself up, or somethinâ. I donât know.â
âYou do know,â Sydney counters. âThat makes sense.â She looks at him. âSo, it wasnât, like, for anyone?â
âFor anyone?â His expression is stricken. âSyd, I swear to godââ
âNot me. I mean, like⊠anyoneâŠâ
Richie laughs and leans against the counter.
âI didnât take that shit for anybody. Iâve never even sent a nude before.â
That is a little funny, and Sydney smiles that much.
âMaybe I still havenât,â Richie adds, âif you say it doesnât count.â
âNah, I think it counts. I was just being weird.â
âWell, fuckinâ justified. Iâve been pretty goddamn weird myself.â
âGood night though,â she comments.
âInsanely good night. Stratospherically better than I anticipated,â Richie admits.
They sit with recent memories for a minute or so. Sydney leans back, knocking shut a cupboard door that mustâve been ajar. This place isnât exactly home yet, but itâs starting to feel like she can at least imagine that feeling arising sometime, the future getting a little realer each day. Sometimes it sneaks up. Like with the restaurant. Suddenly, you just belong somewhere.
Sydney slips off the counter, intending to refill her own water glass, and thatâs the moment Richie chooses to inquire, âWas it just you beinâ weird when you said it was a good photo?â
She stands in her pajamas, wrongfooted, a little too close to Richie because she meant to step around him to reach the sink until the question stopped her. Heâs looking down at her gently. Just enough light to put shadows in his eyelashes, this smudgy blackness like you see at the back of old fireplaces, remnants of burning.
Sydney says, âNo,â heartbeat bigger than her body can handle.
Her mouth is tensed as she looks up at him, but Richieâs easy; he just steps around her to clear her path to the sink, a light pat on her arm.
He seems fine, but she turns the tap just to shut it off again, glass unfilled. She studies him over her shoulder. He stands in her kitchen like heâs loitering, but his eyes get more intense the longer she stares into them. When she turns the water back on, she does it too hard. It strikes the bottom of her glass and sloshes back out, wetting the back of her hand. Sydney sets it beside the sink, then shakes her hand to flick the water off, drying it the rest of the way on the hem of her t-shirt.
âI think thatâs keepinâ me up as much as anything,â Richie carries on. He rubs his eye, dragging his eyelid so the white would peep out at her if it was a little brighter in here. âWondering what you meant by that.â
âRight, yeah.â
Heâs between her and the way out of the kitchen. Itâs only claustrophobic if she wants to leave, and she doesnât really want to leave; like Richie said, itâs better they resolve this tonight. She was not normal at work after Marcus asked her out, and she canât afford to bring any discomfort in there again. Addressing this is practical. The way asking a trusted coworker to be your date to your ex-spouseâs wedding is practical. Sheâll just answer him.
âI guess I was just picking up on what you said,â Sydney offers. âThat you looked confident. And nice. I mean, not about that.â She squeezes her eyes shut and pinches the bridge of her nose at how she fumbled this so fast. âThe suit,â she clarifies, pained.
âI appreciate that,â he says, so gently that she has the courage to drop her hand and lift her head.
âIf you did send nudes, I think that one would go over well.â
That makes him laugh lightly.
âThanks, Syd.â
She clutches the edge of the counter and twists her mouth to the side.
âWhat?â Richie wonders.
âI donât know. It just still doesnât feel right, right?â
âIâm thinkinâ itâll just take a bit, you know? I give this, like, two days tops for staying on our radar. Too much crazy shit happens every day for it to be otherwise.â
And sheâd like to believe that, but in the meantime, Richieâs dickâs gonna be there every time she shuts her eyes.
âWhat if I flashed you?â
She asks the question as quickly as she thinks it, and while Richieâs still saying, âWhat?â in the middle of a surprised laugh, Sydney whips her t-shirt up and shows him her boobs. Richie blinks, but he looks. He definitely looks.
âOk, cool,â she says. âGoodnight.â
She motions him back the way he came, towards her front door, with jerky, oversized gestures, as though sheâs herding a half-blind sheep. He keeps trying to talk to her, and she keeps firmly saying, âNope.â She gets the door open, and would push him through it if she werenât terrified to touch him. He steps out into the hall anyway, compelled by her mental forcefield. Sydney shuts the door on him.
As soon as she looks down, she sees his sneakers.
Richie waits nearly a minute before she hears his tentative knock. Apparently, sheâs waiting too.
âUh, Syd? My fuckinâ shoes are in there.â
When she doesnât reply, Richie says, âSydney? Are you there?â
His voice is too quiet, unless sheâs by the door. She is by the door. Does he know she didnât move? Did he listen for the creaky floorboards?
She gets even closer to the door, fingers skimming the lock she hasnât engaged.
âWhyâd you do that, Syd?â Richie asks softly. The questionâs muffled a little by the door, but not as much as it would be if sheâd rented a nicer place with thicker doors, thicker walls. If she werenât so fucking impulsive.
âI donât know,â she says, resting her forehead against the door with a deep sigh out her nose. âI thought itâd make us even. Do you feel better?â
âI canât tell yet. You gonna open up?â
Is she? She pretty much has to, right? Or else send Richie home without shoes. Sheâs obviously not gonna do that. Maybe she can tell him to walk down the hall so she can put the shoes out and shut the door again. And then he can find out how big a coward she can be on top of what her boobs look like. Great plan.
Sydney squeezes her eyes shut and says, âThereâs a problem.â
âWhatâs the problem?â
âIf I open the door, weâre gonna have to kiss.â
âWhy, because you showed me your boobs?â
Richie sounds rightfully baffled by that line of reasoning. Does it even make sense? If it does, itâd probably be easier for Sydney to just cop to that rather than saying anything more.
But she has to say âNo,â shakily.
She hears him shift on the other side of the door before he asks, âHow come then?â
âBecause Iâm attracted to you,â she whines. âI donât know if I was before, but going to the wedding with you did something to me I donât know how to undo!â
Richieâs side of the door is dead silent, so Sydney grabs the knob and wrenches the door open, suddenly furious at the thought that heâs decided to slip away because of her confession, convinced sheâll see his back as he scampers down the stairs.
Heâs still standing there. He looks startled.
âThe wedding?â Richie blurts. âI thought all this was about you seeinâ my cock.â
âI donât fucking know, Richie, Iâm tired!â The words burst out of Sydney, and she flings her arms out, childishly.
âOh, so I should just forget that then?â He sounds sort of pissed, which makes her scowl at him, annoyed.
âI mean, yeah!â she says, matching his tone, before correcting, âNo,â shoulders sagging.
Still not past the threshold, Richie looks at her warily.
âYou think itâs just, like, temporary?â he asks.
Still a little on edge, she fires back, âDo you want it to be?â
âI ainât flyinâ the fuckinâ plane right now, sweetheart.â Richie winces. âSydney. Sorry. Goddammit.â
Sydney shifts and crosses her arms, burrowing her hands up into the opposite sleeves of her t-shirt. She kneads her arms with her fingers.
âLook,â he says. He takes a breath that seems to move his whole body, straightening it up, then dropping it back down. He extends a hand in her direction as he gestures at her. âDo you want it to be temporary?â
âProbably.â
Sheâs looking at him and trying to be honest, but sheâs tired and itâs hard and as much as she touches her own arms, itâs the texture of his suit jacket she feels. How it was under her palm, how she didnât have to think about letting him guide her, how it wasnât fancy but he kept them in time. How he never stepped on her feet. How he smelled. Itâs a tiredness thing. Itâs an emotional-overload thing. Todayâs been good, like she told him, but itâs been a lot: a lot of people, a lot of one-on-one time with Donna Berzatto, a lot of wondering whether knowing other peopleâs fears makes her feel better or worse. Right after that, Sydney found herself kinda wanting to be around somebody she knew was happy, or at least more happy than afraid. And that was Richie. It is Richie.
When he asked her to go to the wedding with him, she thought he meant for her to be some kind of life preserver, keeping his head above water. Sheâd never met Tiffany or seen the two of them interact, so she hadnât been totally sure how hard the day would be for him. Her yes was reluctant, because she couldnât in good conscience leave Richie to handle the thing alone, and yet she wasnât sure it should be her helping him with that. Wouldnât it be enough that heâd have other people there? Natalie? Neil? Wasnât bringing a date to your exâs wedding basically just about bringing a date to your exâs wedding? Sydney didnât want to be a prop, but Richie seemed ok when he asked herâa little nervous, but okâso she agreed to go.
And then he was actually great. He was maybe the calmest sheâs ever seen him. He showed up for his daughter. He showed up for Tiffany. Hell, he showed up for Frank. Sydney watched Richie be gracious, attentive, tactful, social. She also watched him almost hurl, but he was even tactful about that. He easily couldâve fucked up one of Frankâs bathrooms instead. Sydney wandered around the house a little. There were a lot of them.
If the version of herself that accidentally stabbed Richie could see the guy now, she wouldnât think it was possible that heâd gone from who she knew then to this. And itâs not even that hard to explain. So maybe itâs not hard for her to recognize why exactly sheâd be tempted to come down on the more hopeful side of âprobably.â That âprobablyâ is a little more pragmatic than what she really meansâSydneyâs thinking of work, and of not wanting to make a mess thereâbut sheâs not totally sure yet. She might not be ready to pick up the steps, even if Richie leads.
âThen I think we kiss,â he suggests.
âYou think?â she asks earnestly.
âItâs kinda like a date we went on today, right? I mean, if you really fuckinâ squint and set all context to one side.â He mimes relocating the context, lifting it between his hands.
âSure, yeah.â Sheâs nodding.
âOk,â Richie declares, âwell, end of the date, here we are at your door, we kiss⊠It feels finished, you know? Weâve checked all the boxes, or what have you.â
âMakes sense,â Sydney allows. âAnd then I can sleep.â
âYeah, then we can both fuckinâ sleep. Separately.â
âSuper separately,â she agrees.
âCan I put my shoes on first?â
âOh my god, yeah, shit.â
Richie hasnât been inside her apartment many timesâthree, and two of those times tonightâbut this time is definitely the most charged. Sydney steps back farther than she needs to, and Richieâs not looking her in the eye as he seeks his shoes and rams his feet into them. He raises his head and puffs out a big breath from his mouth, like heâs an athlete about to compete.
âAnd then we say none of this ever happened?â Sydney checks.
Richie laughs a little, apparently caught off guard. âIâd love to agree, but you gotta admitâŠâ
âIt feels a littleââ
âUnrealistic?â
She swallows and nods, and then heâs close to her, and she has this urge to go back and redo what they just said, because it feels like they tripped at the starting line, or at the finish line, or whichever the hell line theyâre crossing as Richieâs face descends with relaxed mouth and lowering eyelids, and Sydney grasps a too-intimate handful of the front of his shirt. Right before their lips touch, she inhales through her nose and smells his cologne.
It canât be, like, dispassionate. That wouldnât prove anything. But it very quickly becomes something else itâs not supposed to be.
Sydneyâs arm is hooked around the back of Richieâs neck without a memory of putting it there, and one of his arms catches her when sheâs literally unbalanced by his unexpected talent for kissing with tongue.
The only smart thing they do is stop, but itâs too late.
âIâm sorry to tell ya: I think we have a new problem.â
Sydney can feel her heartbeat in her lips from the pressure of kissing Richie. Probably not visible, but he looks at them anyway, and then his gaze sweeps all the way down, a plummeting elevator.
She nods, fast and anxious.
âYeah,â she says tightly, âweâre basically fucked.â
Richie gasps and holds up a finger, reaching into his pocket with his other hand.
âUnless. Unless.â He extracts his phone. As heâs swiping and tapping to unlock it and get to the screen he wants, he says, âItâs still fine. We just fucked up. How we really cap this off is with me rectifying my earlier mistake. I correct it, and then itâs like nothing happened, capiche?â
Sydney doesnât exactly capiche, but sheâs patient while Richie finds what heâs looking for. She looks at his screen too when he stands next to her to show her.
Itâs the photo of everybody under the table at the wedding.
As Sydney looks on, Richie very deliberately sends it to her. Her phoneâs in her bedroom, but she thinks she hears the distant chime, and Richie looks at her, pretty pleased with himself.
âWeâre good,â he says.
She laughs sarcastically. âWeâre so not.â She gathers her braids together in her hands and adds pensively, âI think you better go.â
He really shouldnât be egging her on, but itâs Richie, so he goes, âBefore what?â He has this teasing grin on his face that justâŠ
âBefore Iâm dumb enough to answer that question.â She closes her eyes and, before he can  respond, says insistently, âWeâre good, I swear weâre good. Just get the fuck out of my apartment.â
She doesnât open her eyes until she hears him walk past her.
âI had a nice time with you today,â he says with sincerity, back in the hall.
âMe too, Richie.â
âAnd kissing you,â he says. âThat was really fuckinâ nice.â
Sydney doesnât dare say anything, but she doesnât close the door on him. She stands in the doorway as Richie walks to the stairs, and starts down them, and glances back up at her before he falls below her line of sight.