bellamy dreams about her sometimes on the ark, being here with them, with him.
She’s warm in his arms, all soft skin and frizzy blonde hair that tickles his nose as he slowly comes awake. She smells like oranges and summertime and a lazy smile pulls at his lips even as he stubbornly keeps his eyes shut. Clarke mewls something unintelligible, arching against him and he huffs out a hot breath, stirring the fine hair at the nape of her neck as his hand slips from her waist to her hip. He squeezes it, and she rolls back against him, laughing low when a soft whine slips pass his lips.
“Good morning,” she says, covering his hand with hers, letting their fingers lace together. Her voice runs over him like honey, warm and sweet in the early morning sunshine.
“Morning,” he mumbles, lips brushing against the over sensitive skin of her neck.
He keeps his eyes shut still, but can feel her shifting in his arms, turning to face him, and the thin linen blankets slip and slide against his bare skin.
“Sleep alright?” she asks, shivering a little when his lips find that spot where her neck meets her shoulder.
“Better now that you’re here,” he says, and she laughs. Like that, a lightbulb goes off in his head and he finds himself gently caressing the length of her body. She’s soft, almost too soft, skin unblemished and unmarked, and there’s a deep, sinking feeling in his gut.
“Clarke,” he murmurs, feeling the ghost of her lips against his cheek. He blindly finds her hand and holds on to it tight. “Clarke. You’re here.”
“I’m here, Bellamy,” she says, and he feels her fingers cool on his cheek. “I’m here. Look at me.”
“I can’t-”
“Look at me, Bellamy. Please.”
It’s the please that gets him, the sheer desperation that drips from it, and he finds himself doing just what she asks, slowly cracking his eyes open.
The room is bright, sunlight leaking in through the window and the small crack in the roof, and the bed is soft and comfortable.
And then there’s Clarke, smiling up at him and looking so heartbreakingly perfect that all the air rushes out of his lungs.
She’s here, alive, skin unmarked by radiation and glowing, eyes bright and clear.
“Clarke,” he whispers again, reaching up to brush the hair from her face. It’s soft to the touch, softer than it ever was back on earth. “Clarke.”
She bites her lip, looking up at him from beneath her lashes, and she swipes her thumb over his cheekbone, drawing his face down to hers. Their foreheads rest against each others and he takes a shuddering breath.
“Hi Bellamy,” she smiles, soft, and a little sad. “It’s been a while.” Her hand slips around to the back of his neck, drawing him even closer so that their lips brush.
He closes his eyes in preparation for the kiss, but it never comes, and when he opens them again he’s alone on the ark.
No soft, comfortable bed or warm sheets. No sunlight dripping in through the cracks or lazy mornings.
No Clarke lying in his arms and smiling up at him.
Just Bellamy and his silence, hundreds of miles above a still smouldering earth and a girl who’s long gone, leaving a gaping hole in his heart that’s too big to be fixed.












