- reader has a new dress
- reader's first time (ever) with billy (smut!)
- billy just blurts out "good girl" (smut!)
- billy is addicted to getting you off (smut!)
- billy finds out reader is carrying his baby (tw: pregnancy) 📚 - pt. 1
- reader has started to show (tw: pregnancy) 📚 - pt. 2
- billy & his mermaid lover have an important conversation
- billy has a breeding kink (smut!)
- reader is killed in a shootout (tw: death, suicidal ideation)
- reader is injured in a shootout but lives!! (tw: injury, blood)
- billy holds his baby girl (tw: mention of childbirth)
- reader is a school teacher
- billy doting on an injured reader (tw: injury)
- billy is being...vocal (smut!)
- billy teaches reader to ride a horse
- reader & billy have a fight
- vampire billy
- spooky season shootout au 📚 - pt. 1
- reader feels the baby kick (tw: pregnancy, mention of nausea) 📚 - pt. 3 (pt. 1 // pt. 2 )
- time traveler billy
- billy is reader's guardian angel (tw: attempted roofie, minor injury, intoxication)
- perfect
- reader turns billy into a vampire (tw: injury, death) 📚 - pt. 2 (pt. 1)
- 12 days of christmas: day one
- 12 days of christmas: day two
- 12 days of christmas: day three
- billy dies in reader's arms (tw: death)
- reader is accused of being a witch (tw: death, murder, violence, suicidal ideation)
- billy with a shy reader
- billy breaks down in reader's arms
- billy comforts postpartum reader (tw: body image, body issues, depression, postpartum depression, mentions of pregnancy)
- billy wants a ranch owned by reader (tw: mentions of death/grief)
- billy wants a girl he can't have (tw: mentions of death) 📚 - pt. 1
- billy wants a girl he can't have - conclusion (tw: death, gunfire, murder) 📚 - pt. 2
- only one of two ways (tw: childbirth, suicidal ideation) 📚 - pt. 1
- shelter & adore you 📚 - pt. 2
- never had i seen such beauty before 📚 - pt. 3
- thank god i'm yours 📚 - pt. 4
- there's a house we can build 📚 - pt. 5
- in my life, we'll always go on (tw: major character death)
- come what may, i will love you until my dying day (tw: major character death, childbirth)
- i've just seen a face 📚 - pt. 1
- this night is sparkling 📚 - pt. 2
- how sweet is it to be loved by you 📚 - pt. 3
- 12 days of christmas: day four
- 12 days of christmas: day five
- 12 days of christmas: day six
Disclaimer: I don't know if this will be a success or not, but I want to try it out. If you follow me for any of the above Tom Blyth ships (or haydove), I'd love if you'd participate, even if it's just to tag me for any fic, vid or fan art for the below pairings.
My birthday is May 19th. :) This year I'm going to sincerely try to post a vid of Tom & Rachel's ships that I've seen and adore on my birthday, as well as post one fic (one-shot or update to a current fic) for each of the ships in the above collage (one a day for the week M-F).
Anyone who sees this is welcome to participate as well and write/vid/create for the specific ship on its day - and then please tag me so I can see it! It'll be like a birthday gift for little old, aging me.
If you need ideas or prompts for what I'd like/wouldn't like, feel free to send in an ask and I'll expand on that. :)
i requested that billy body worship fic and i loved it. any chance you could also do the opposite where billy worships dulcinea? no pressure if you don’t have time.
who: William H. Bonney x Dulcinea (Billinea) | rating: M | word count: idk it’s long | tags: body worship • nipple play • cunnilingus • fingering • tender and soft • lots of kissing • feet worship if you squint • edging if you squint • climax • sweet talkin’
Billy body worship oneshot
The room smelled of pine smoke and sweat, of slow-spent want, a sweeter affection rising faint beneath it, like lilacs left to wilt in a jar. Outside, dusk bled down the sky in long streaks of wine-dark red, bruising the edge of the horizon as if the sun had been fought off rather than welcomed in its setting. A coyote yipped once, sharp and lonely, and then was swallowed by the hush of the plain.
Billy sat on the windowsill with one boot propped on the ledge and the other foot flat on the floor, bare and callused. He held a cigarette between his fingers lazily, smoke curling from its end. His elbows rested loose on his knees, spine bowed like a man emptied.
The golden light from the lantern made the bruises along his ribs look deeper than they were, shadows stretching across the lean slope of him like stripes. A trail of dried blood split across his thigh where the saddle leather had rubbed raw, but it didn’t seem to pain him now. Nothing did, not in that quiet hour where the storm had passed and only the wreck of tenderness remained.
Behind him, the bed creaked softly. Dulcinea lay twisted in the center of it, her dark hair spread across the pale pillowcase, cheek flushed where it pressed into the cotton. One bare shoulder had slipped free of the quilt, the skin kissed red from his stubble, and the curve of her throat held the sheen of sweat cooling slow in the breeze through the cracked windowpane. Her chest rose and fell beneath the quilt—lazy, easy, unguarded in the way only peace could make a person.
He looked back at her again. A man like him couldn’t help it, could he?
He swore he tried not to linger on the way her collarbone caught the light, or the faint bite mark he’d left high on her neck. Tried not to stare at the curve of her waist beneath the quilt, or the outline of her thigh pressed toward him beneath the linen. But God help him, she was lying there like a thing made to be touched again and again, and he’d never been much good at resisting holy things.
“You look like a man with ghosts behind your eyes,” she said, voice still thick from loving, lips barely parting around the words.
His gaze flicked up to meet hers, then dropped just as quick, like it hurt to be watched for too long. He let the cigarette hang from his fingers a second longer, ash bending soft toward the floor. Then he said, low and rough, “And you look like salvation. Which spooks me more than any ghost ever did.”
She blinked slow, one hand curling around the edge of the quilt. He could see the bruises blooming on her neck from his mouth, the soft parting of her thighs beneath the covers where he’d been between them not half an hour ago. She was a mess, and she was beautiful, and he didn’t know what to do with either of those truths.
He leaned forward and ground the cigarette out in the tin dish on the sill, then rose to his feet with a quiet groan. His bones ached the way they always did when the fever left him—whether from gunfire or desire, it didn’t matter. Both made a man burn. Both made a man limp when they were through.
His feet hit the floor quiet as snowfall, bare skin whispering against the pine planks. He didn’t say a word as he crossed the room, just moved through the warmth of her space like he’d been walking toward it his whole life. The lantern’s glow caught the ridge of his jaw, the curve of his shoulder, the place near his hip where her nails had raked and left shallow red tracks that looked proud rather than painful.
She watched him come with her whole body stilled, like a deer watching thunder crawl down from the hills—awake to him.
When he reached the edge of the bed, he didn’t climb in—decided against it. He stood above her, looking down, one hand running up the back of his neck. His chest was still heaving a little, sweat gleaming in the hollow above his sternum. There was dust at the edges of his knees, blood on his knuckles, the raw scrape of travel in every line of him, but his eyes had softened, barely.
“Can I touch you?” he asked, voice above the rustle of the quilt where she breathed.
Her answer didn’t come with words. She reached up and took his wrist in her hand, gently, like she’d done it a thousand times already, and tugged him toward the bed. Her palm was warm and her grip was sure. When she looked up at him, her lashes heavy over those dark, patient eyes, he thought maybe the ghosts might hush awhile, if only he laid himself down beside her one more time.
He sat at the edge of the bed as though the wood might splinter under his weight. The mattress dipped beneath him, soft and warm from her skin. One hand braced on the quilt near her hip, the other found its way to the curve of her calf beneath the cover, his palm dragging over it in a slow stroke—back and forth, rough hand against smooth cotton, learning her shape all over again through fabric softened by time and laundry soap.
The hush between them held weight, thick like molasses in August—sweet and slow and meant to be tasted, not rushed through. Outside, the last of the light died behind the hills, and the sky bled into indigo while the lantern carved its own sun over her bare shoulder.
Dulcinea stirred beneath the quilt, shifting like she meant to rise, eyes still on him. The motion spoke of habit, of instinct—the kind that readied herself to give, to meet her man halfway, to reach for what came next without asking what he needed first.
He pressed his palm to her thigh, tender, steady, firm as a man trying to hold his place in the world, and guided her back down into the mattress.
“Don’t,” he said, voice low and sandpaper-rough with all he wasn’t used to saying. “Don’t rise for me tonight.”
She blinked, confused, head tilting a little as she lay back. He saw the doubt creep across her brow, just a line, just a crease, like she didn’t know how to be still without offering something in return.
His hand stayed warm on her leg.
“Let me look at you, Dulce,” he said, mouth dry. “Not for what you can give. Just for what you are.”
Her brow arched at that, the corners of her mouth tilting with a notion caught between amusement and ache. “And what am I?”
He let his gaze wander now, hungry in a way that went deeper than the body. His eyes swept the line of her throat, the soft roll of her hip beneath the blanket, the mess of curls fanned across her pillow like a halo made of night.
“You,” he said, breath catching, “are the prettiest damn thing I ever hurt to want.”
Her lashes dipped and her mouth parted, then closed again, lips still swollen from his earlier kiss. She looked at him as if seeing him new—not the gunman, or the half-feral boy who rode in when the sky turned violent, but the man sitting quiet on her bed with dirt on his feet and longing stitched into his voice.
Billy’s hand moved slow, callused fingers catching the threadbare edge, pulling it down inch by inch, peeling it back. First the swell of her hip, the dip of her waist. Then the soft mound of her stomach, still flushed and damp with the memory of him. The air touched her skin like a secret passed from lips to flesh.
He kept going. The rise of her breast came next, golden in the lampglow, nipple darkened and peaked from the cool through her chemise. He exhaled softly through his nose, but said nothing. Just looked—his gaze dragging over her like sunlight spilling down the side of a canyon, real.
When he reached her collarbone, he stopped.
He let the quilt rest there, a rumpled border between covered and bare, not because he didn’t want more; he wanted all of her, wanted to drink her in until there was nothing left of him but need, but because she hadn’t said yes yet. Not with her voice or her eyes. And he’d wait.
But Lord, she looked like home lit by firelight. She looked like warmth built from scratch and kept alive by stubborn hands.
Her chest rose again, and her hand moved to rest just above the quilt’s edge, fingers grazing his as though testing the line between surrender and fear.
“Why?” she asked softly, not in challenge but in wonder. “Why now?”
He looked down at her hand. Let his thumb graze across the back of it, slow and warm. Then he met her eyes again, and whatever wild thing lived behind his ribs curled low in his chest.
“Because I ain’t just after your heat tonight,” he said. “I want your quiet. Your rest. Your body, not just to take, but to know.”
He leaned down, lips brushing the slope of her knee through the quilt. Then lower, toward where the fabric no longer shielded her.
“And if you let me, Dulce,” he murmured, voice gone hoarse as a crow in winter, “I’ll show you what it means to be worshipped by a man who knows what it costs.”
Her breath stuttered in her throat, and the world held still. Her hand shifted, fingers threading through his, giving her answer without a single word.
Billy brought her joined hands to his mouth and kissed her knuckles, slow. Then he folded the quilt back a little farther.
He sat close now, thigh pressed to the side of her leg, his palm warm and open against her waist. Her skin, freshly bared, carried the warmth of the bed, the flush of their earlier closeness, and the thin sheen of sweat that clung like dew to the hollow beneath her breast. She breathed shallow through parted lips, watching him.
Her chemise had slipped low during the undoing of the quilt, the neckline dragged askew across one shoulder, strap twisted. The thin cotton was damp where it clung between the soft slopes of her chest, translucent now in the low light, clinging like a second skin to her.
Billy’s gaze didn’t roam far. It lingered on her face, searching. There was no hunger in it, not the kind that devours, but a stillness. He reached for the edge of her chemise with one hand, curling his fingers slow around the fabric.
“May I?” he asked, voice rough but low, gravel made gentle.
Dulcinea gave a small nod, throat tight. Her hand settled at his wrist to feel the strength of him there, like she needed to remind herself that this was real—that the same man who’d once torn through towns like a dust storm now touched her like he was handling glass.
He moved slow, always slow, drawing the damp cotton down inch by inch. The cloth peeled away from her skin with a soft resistance, clinging where sweat had gathered. It bared the upper slope of one breast, then the other, revealing curves kissed pink from heat and arousal, the skin sensitive and warm to the touch. Her nipples peaked in the open air, soft and dark, and the lantern’s glow limned every inch of her with gold.
She drew in a breath sharp as a knife’s edge and turned her face enough to shield her eyes from his gaze, to let her hair fall across one cheek like a veil. Her arms stayed down at her sides, but tension rose in her shoulders. A defense, unspoken.
Billy saw it. Felt the shift in her.
He reached out, slow as dusk across a field, and caught her chin in the crook of two fingers.
“Don’t look away,” he murmured, thumb brushing the line of her jaw, his touch neither demanding nor soft enough to vanish. “Let me see you like this. Not hiding.”
She hesitated; just a heartbeat—and then turned her face back to his, hair falling away. Her eyes met his like a gate creaking open under the weight of wind and will. They were wide and wet and dark as stormwater, but they didn’t shy.
Her chest rose on a shaky breath, bare now from shoulder to belly, every inch of her exposed beneath his gaze, and yet she didn’t shrink.
“I ain’t ashamed of you,” he said, voice catching in the back of his throat like it had to climb over a hill to get out. “Not a single bit of you.”
She swallowed hard, and her hand moved to rest on his thigh, steadying him, or maybe steadying herself.
Billy leaned in, pressing his lips to the arch of her shoulder where the fabric had left a crease. He kissed it slow, like a man leaving his name behind in warmth. His mouth lingered there, open and full, tasting her salt, her stillness, her willingness.
“You’re more than I ever thought I’d get,” he whispered against her skin, his breath sinking into her like a promise made from earth and sweat.
She closed her eyes. Her hand tightened on his leg, and her chest pressed closer to him as he held her there in that hush, bare and unhurried, beneath the low flame and the long dark of a world that hadn’t given them much—but had given them this.
The last of her chemise had been drawn down her legs and laid aside, forgotten in a soft heap near the bedpost. What was left now was her—bare, unguarded, wholly formed in warm, imperfect beauty. She didn’t pose, arch or offer herself like a picture from a man’s fantasy. She lay with her knees bent, one arm resting along the quilt, the other across her belly, her hair wild across the pillow, cheek turned toward the window where dusk had gone and night pressed in. Her breasts rose and fell in slow rhythm, neither hiding nor inviting, simply present the way bodies are when they trust they won’t be hurt for being real.
Billy had knelt beside the bed then, his pants riding low on his hips, his body marked by travel and want, jaw shadowed in dark stubble, curls damp against his brow. He wasn’t touching her yet, not beyond the place where his knee brushed the bedframe. But his eyes—hell, those eyes had touched every inch of her already, dragged over her like sun sliding across a lonesome prairie, slow and golden and full of gravity.
He shifted lower without a word, his hands bracing lightly against the edge of the mattress as he ducked his head toward her feet—a sure movement that came from a man who knew what he wanted and had finally learned not to be ashamed of how deeply he did.
He took her foot in both hands, one palm cradling her heel, the other sliding beneath her arch. She gasped soft at the touch, from how deliberate he was, how gently his callused fingers pressed into the tender sole of her foot like it deserved to be handled sweet.
Then he bowed his head and kissed her there.
The arch of her foot. A place no man had kissed before.
His mouth was warm and dry. He held the kiss a second longer than expected, then drew back only to press another just above it, where the skin was thinner and more sensitive. She stirred under the weight of it, her knee shifting slightly, and her toes curled slow into his palm.
His lips trailed lower along the inside curve of her ankle now, where a faded bruise still lingered beneath the skin. He kissed there too, long and soft, like he was apologizing for the hurt he hadn’t caused. Then up, his mouth pressing to the ridge of her shin, then the shallow dip just beneath her knee, where bone met flesh in a line that was uniquely hers. His stubble rasped against her skin, the sound low and intimate in the hush between them.
Dulcinea let out a breath that trembled through her, a breath a woman lets go when she’s holding too much tenderness in her chest and doesn’t know where to put it. Her fingers curled against her belly, pressing in like she could anchor herself through her own body.
Billy kissed her knee again, slower this time, and then let his mouth rest there as he spoke.
“This here’s the leg that walks me home,” he murmured, his voice rough with meaning, low with dust and affection. “The one that keeps you standin’ tall when the whole town gossips behind your back.”
Her eyes opened wide. She looked down at him, chest rising hard now, a sharp swell of emotion catching her off guard. His head was bowed still, lips pressed against the top of her knee, one hand sliding slowly up her calf like he was holding the truth of her steady.
“They don’t see it,” he said, kissing again. “How you carry the weight of it all—every sideways look, every whisper at the mercantile, every lie they tell ‘cause they can’t stand your light. You walk through it like fire don’t burn.”
Her breath hitched, and this time she didn’t stop it. Her hand moved from her belly to her chest, covering the place where her heart beat hard behind her ribs. Her eyes filled, lashes shining in the lantern glow, and she didn’t wipe them dry.
Billy didn’t just notice the curve of her, nor the heat between her legs or the soft give of her thighs. He saw the part of her that endured, the part that refused to bend under shame. He saw the woman who took up space in a world that kept trying to make her small. And he kissed the proof of her, piece by piece, like he meant to thank every limb for not giving out.
Billy looked up at her now, chin resting on her leg, eyes molten and heavy. His hands kept her steady, but his voice had softened so much it barely touched the air.
“Dulce,” he breathed, not a name so much as a prayer. “You don’t know how strong you are. But I do.”
And when he bent his head again, she let the first tear slip down her cheek, far from sorrow or shame.
He kissed her once more, higher now. And kept kissing.
The heat between them had settled into a low, steady thrum; warmed through the bones. Dulcinea lay sunk into the mattress, bare and open beneath the thin quilt of lanternlight, her chest rising slow, lips parted just enough to show the soft wet gleam where breath passed through. Her body bore his kisses like a field bears rain; welcoming, softened, but still strong beneath it all.
Billy shifted upward from where he knelt, rising to lean over her once more to touch what had gone untouched so far. The parts of her no man had worshipped because they weren’t soft or secret, weren’t coiled in pleasure or laid bare for desire. But they were hers. And he wanted them all the same.
He reached for her hand.
It rested near her ribs, fingers curled loose in the afterglow of tension, palm open. He took it in both of his, careful but sure, and brought it toward him like it was a thing that needed studying in full light.
Her eyes followed the motion, and her brow lifted in quiet question.
Billy turned her hand palm-up, laying it across his thigh like a ledger to be read.
The skin there was darker than the rest of her, sun-kissed and work-worn. Tiny nicks lined the pads of her fingers, proof of knives and needles and split wood. A faint burn near the base of her thumb spoke of a kettle tipped too fast or a skillet too hot. The heel of her palm was rougher than it looked, but it fit against his just right—warm and solid, a match carved out by time.
He bent forward and kissed her fingertips, one by one.
His lips lingered at each, mouth hot, breath brushing down the length of her index finger, then the next, as if those calluses were earned and proud. She shivered beneath him from the way he made her feel like every part of her was worthy of a man’s mouth.
“You cooked me into forgiveness more than once,” he murmured, lifting her hand a little higher, his thumb tracing the seam along her lifeline. “Fed me things I didn’t know I was starvin’ for.”
His gaze never left her face. He saw the way her lashes dipped, the twitch at the corner of her mouth, the way her throat moved when she swallowed back the ache he was coaxing to the surface.
Then he turned her hand, drew it close to his cheek, and pressed her knuckles against the stubble there, scraping soft, holding her there like a balm.
“Ain’t never been hit with a pan and loved it before,” he said, smiling against her skin. “But you got a mean arm when a man deserves it.”
Her laugh came through a tear; wet, warm, unguarded. It burst out like it hadn’t had permission until now, caught somewhere between a sob and a chuckle. She sniffed, covered her mouth with her other hand, then dropped it again, letting the tears fall as they pleased.
“You were askin’ for it,” she managed, voice cracked like lightning through spring rain.
He kissed her middle knuckle and looked up at her through a curtain of unwashed curls. “Probably. But damn if it didn’t make me stay put. No one’s ever made home hurt just right before.”
She wiped at her cheek half-heartedly, still smiling through the salt, and shook her head like he was a fool, but didn’t pull her hand away. Her fingers stayed threaded with his now, palm to palm, warm and locked.
Billy leaned forward and kissed the heel of her hand once more, then tucked it against his chest, right over the thump of his heart, steady and loud.
“You made this beat easier,” he said. “Just by stirrin’ pots and slammin’ doors and lookin’ at me like I ain’t too far gone.”
Her thumb traced small circles into his chest, grounding him, answering in touch what couldn’t be spoken.
He held her hand there a moment longer, their skin pressed tight in the hush. Then he brought her fingers to his mouth again, kissed the callused pads slow and deep, and let them rest against his lips while the candlelight hummed low between them.
Her breath rose and fell in slow tides, ribcage swelling gently beneath the weight of his gaze, the low light skimming across her skin like dusk settling into sand. The shadows played in all the hollows of her—beneath her breasts, along the soft dip of her waist, across the smooth curve of her belly.
Billy stayed close, crouched low beside her with his knee on the mattress and one palm steady against her hip. He watched her with the kind of patience he’d never known how to give anyone else, the kind that came from hunger, yes, but deeper still—a bone-deep gratitude for her stillness, her nearness, her naked, breathing permission to be touched again.
He leaned in slow and lowered his head to her stomach, brushing his lips over the bare skin just above her navel. Her belly jumped beneath him—an instinctive tremor—and he smiled into her skin, lips dragging sideways as he worked his way across the softness there.
She wasn’t carved like marble or stitched together with dainty threads. She was real; rounded where a woman should be, plush where the world called her too much. But he didn’t see too much. He saw plenty. He saw enough. He saw the woman who fed him, fought him, held him together and pushed him when he deserved it, and still laid her body bare like she trusted him not to break it.
His kisses moved lower, then slightly to the side.
And there it was.
Just above her right hipbone, pale against the gold of her skin, lay the faint line of an old scar. Not jagged or cruel, but quiet, worn by time. A little crescent, maybe three inches long, where skin had once been split open. The kind of wound you carry longer in memory than in flesh.
He paused there, his breath warm against the mark. His thumb brushed the skin beside it.
“You told me once,” he murmured, voice rasped down to a whisper, “you got this fallin’ off that ladder pickin’ apples. Said you were twelve and too proud to ask your daddy for help.”
Her belly rose again under him, a quiet breath catching at the memory.
“Said you came down hard. Split clean on the edge of the cart rail.”
She didn’t answer, but her fingers curled in the quilt. Her body had stilled beneath him, listening with all of her, as though his mouth carried something worth holding onto.
He bent lower and pressed a kiss to the scar.
“Ain’t fair,” he said against her skin. “Ain’t fair the world tried to mar you. Tried to mark you up for daring to climb too high.”
Another kiss, this one longer.
“But I’ll kiss every fight you survived.”
His lips sealed over the line of the scar once more, softer now. His hand slid to her side, anchoring her, and his breath brushed across her as he kissed a path along the ridge of her belly. The skin there was sensitive, and she twitched beneath him from the sheer intensity of it, the weight of his mouth, the heat of his breath, maddening.
Billy kissed just beneath the scar, then higher, up the plane of her stomach, where it curved into her ribs. He dragged his mouth slowly, painting her in heat and intention, letting her feel not just his want, but his awe.
Her skin quivered again, the muscle tightening briefly beneath his lips.
He smiled an aching smile.
He rested his cheek against her belly a moment, listening to the soft gurgle of life beneath her skin, the deep rhythm of breath and blood and survival. His hand smoothed up her side, across the lower swell of her breast to feel her there; so alive, warm and his.
And when he spoke again, it was into her skin, voice barely carried.
“You didn’t need to be perfect to be beautiful. You only needed to be mine.”
Her hand slid into his hair then, slow and tender, nails grazing his scalp, and her body curled faintly toward him to hold him closer. The rise of her chest moved slow beneath him, tide-like and patient, the kind of rhythm that belonged to dusk, to summer heat, to the hush that came after a storm had passed and left the world soft-edged and steaming. Her body was warm all over now, bare from shoulder to knee, sunk deep into the quilted hollow of the bed, every curve offered without pretense or pose. The golden spill of lamplight clung to her skin like honey dripped slow from a spoon—thick, sweet, meant to linger.
Billy lifted himself up from where he’d been resting along her belly, the press of his cheek leaving a faint dampness behind, a mark he didn’t try to hide. He rose over her on his elbows, jaw rough with stubble, hair fallen loose around his temples. His gaze swept upward—along her ribs, past the soft slope where breath gathered—and landed on the fullness of her chest, bare and waiting.
He looked at her like a man of his kind being allowed to see something he’d only known through the safety of clothing, the tease of an embrace, the accidental brush of a breast beneath a flour-dusted apron. Now it was all there for him—her nipples erect from the chill and the thrill of his mouth so near, the heavy curve of her right breast rising higher than the other, the faint crease beneath where gravity and time had left their prints. She was all flesh and breath and the kind of woman who didn’t ask to be worshipped but had earned it just the same.
At last, he let his hands move; slow and callused, palms cupping the full weight of her breasts like he’d been born to hold them. He lifted them in his hands, learning the shape of her, the warmth, the softness that belied the strength she carried in every line of her spine. Her breath caught as his thumbs brushed over the peaks, circling once, then again. Her nipples responded to the attention—tightening, darkening—and she arched just slightly into his touch, thighs brushing together beneath the quilt.
Billy leaned down, his mouth hovering over her right breast. His breath washed warm across the skin there, teasing her nipple without touching, watching it twitch under the heat.
“These fed me without food,” he murmured, voice low and raw as riverbed stone. “Laid me down without fear.”
Her eyes fluttered open. She stared up at the beams overhead, as if afraid that meeting his gaze might make her come undone too soon. Her hands had drifted to her sides, clutching the quilt like she might fly apart if she didn’t hold fast.
His mouth dipped lower, brushing the swell with the faintest pressure, the curve of his lips grazing along the outer edge before finally closing over the peak. His tongue flicked it first—just a quick stroke, testing, tasting—and she shuddered beneath him, back arching just enough that her breast pressed further into his mouth.
A whimper left her lips, a soft, breathy sound, very sweet. Her hips shifted, and her thighs parted wider beneath the cover.
Billy suckled her lovingly, his lips drawing the hardened tip into the heat of his mouth, tongue curling around it slow, patient, thorough. He didn’t move to the other just yet but stayed where he was, coaxing pleasure from her in long pulls and warm licks, one hand still cupping her other breast, thumb dragging circles around the waiting peak.
She moaned this time, fuller now, and her hand found the back of his head, fingers sliding into the tangle of curls like she couldn’t help herself. Her nails scraped his scalp, urging him closer, and he obliged, just barely, deepening the suction, letting her feel him there, firm and steady and giving.
When he finally drew back, her nipple was slick with his mouth, glistening in the lamplight. He looked up at her from beneath his lashes, his breathing ragged now, chest rising in shallow waves.
He kissed her breast again, just beneath the nipple this time, and whispered against her skin.
“Let me worship you slow, mujer mía.”
She didn’t answer. She couldn’t.
But the way she pulled him up, the way her thighs opened wider beneath the quilt, the way her other hand pressed to his side, palm flat and seeking skin—
That was answer enough.
He came up her body slow, the weight of him pressing into the mattress like a tide rising along the shore; inevitable. His hands slid across the swell of her hips as he moved, over the soft plane of her stomach, over the valley between her breasts, passing through as if her body were land he knew by feel and not by sight. Her skin had taken on a sheen in the lanternlight; heat and breath and a glimmer of sweat at her hairline, and she watched him come up over her like a woman watching the stars draw near.
Her breath hitched when his thigh pressed between hers, the quilt still barely clinging across her hips. She felt the heat of him then, low and hard and patient, a promise yet to be claimed. But he didn’t grind into her or rush to take what she’d already offered. He didn’t even kiss her mouth.
Instead, Billy stopped at her face.
He settled above her, one elbow braced at her side, his body held just high enough to keep his weight from bearing down. With both hands, he cradled her face; rough palms cupping her cheeks, thumbs sweeping up beneath her eyes. His touch was steady, a little too warm from the heat still pulsing in his blood, but careful. Like holding her this way required a steadiness he hadn’t known he had until now.
She blinked slow, lashes fluttering beneath the sweep of his thumbs. He saw the tear tracks that hadn’t dried yet, the flush of desire still pulsing at her throat, the deep stillness in her that wasn’t silence, it was trust. Full and quiet and raw as anything he’d ever seen.
His thumbs swept again, tracing from cheekbone to jaw, and his breath shuddered out between his teeth like he’d been holding it longer than he realized.
“You’re the kind of beautiful a man bleeds for,” he said, voice hoarse with the truth of it. “And don’t regret it.”
Her lips parted. Her brows pulled in faint, like the words cut clean through her ribs. She let the weight of it settle between them like dust in sunlight.
He bent down to press his lips to the line of her eyelid. Her lashes were damp. He tasted salt and skin and something softer beneath it all that gripped him by the throat. He kissed the other eye next, slower this time, his hand slipping back into her hair as her head tilted slightly beneath him.
Then her cheek; warm, flushed, still wet in the hollow where a tear had left its trail. He kissed her there too, mouth open and full against the curve of bone and the soft give beneath it. Not just a brush, but a seal. A stamp. The way a man might sign his name if he only had lips instead of ink.
He lifted his head again, just enough to breathe her in.
Then her temple.
His mouth pressed there like it was a vow, a whisper, a place to rest his faith. Her pulse beat there beneath his lips, quick but steady, and he stayed there a long moment, just breathing her in, letting his nose brush the wisps of hair clinging to her skin.
Dulcinea’s hands came up to his arms, to hold. Her fingers curled around his biceps, her thumbs stroking the muscle in time with her breath.
He pulled back then, just far enough to see her whole face again. Her hair lay mussed and wild against the pillow, her lips kiss-swollen and damp, her eyes still heavy with that mix of longing and disbelief he’d seen from the moment he walked in her door.
And he said her name slow, like it cost him and soothed him in the same breath.
“Dulcinea.”
It stretched long in his mouth, shaped by hunger and awe, a sweetness he didn’t know how to carry but would carry anyway, if it meant he could keep her. He offered it, like a prayer made flesh, like it belonged more to her now that it had passed his lips in that hush.
Her breath caught again. Her hand slid up to his cheek and the look in her eyes said it all.
He could have died right then and thanked God for it.
He watched her longer before he moved again, the rise and fall of her breath shallow now, stirred up by everything he’d said, everything he’d touched, everything he hadn’t yet. Her eyes were heavy-lidded, dazed, locked to his, yearning.
Billy kissed her jaw once, then her collarbone, then began the slow descent again, purposeful. His mouth dragged down her chest, over the soft valley between her breasts, and across her ribs where her skin was thinner and her breath caught. Her hands followed him briefly, fingers grazing his shoulders as he made his way down her belly towards where she wanted him most nights.
He reached the crease of her hip and lingered there, one broad hand bracing beside her thigh, the other smoothing up the length of her leg from calf to knee, his palm warm and worn from work. She parted her legs for him—slow and shameless—and the air between them changed, heavier now, sweeter, with the heady scent of her rising up to greet him. Her thighs trembled faintly as he settled between them, one on either side of his shoulders, and he dragged his hands along the inner edges.
He kissed her there, on the inside of her thigh first, his mouth open and hot. Then again, closer to where she pulsed for him, the kiss deeper now, tongue dragging along the crease as she let out a low gasp and rolled her hips once, involuntary, toward his mouth.
His breath landed warm against her folds, and she shivered.
Then he licked her.
It was a long, slow press of his tongue, parting her as he tasted the slick heat of her, thick and sweet on his mouth. She cried out—a sound made from surprise and hunger both—and her thighs pressed in before they fell back open, her hips arching into his face.
He growled low, not for her ears but from the depth of him, a sound rooted in the bone. He parted her gently with two fingers, exposing the soft, trembling bud at the top, and drew his tongue up through her again.
Her hands flew to his head, fingers diving into his curls, gripping tight when his lips closed around her clit and sucked, steady and slow, as though he meant to pull the storm straight from her body and swallow it whole.
He drew back a fraction, his mouth moist with her now, his breath ragged against her heat.
“Tell me what you like,” he rasped, voice dragging gravel behind every word. “I’ll learn it like scripture.”
She moaned, from the weight behind the words—the vow he’d made in his chest, in the heat of his breath, in the way his mouth hovered there, hungry but waiting. She tugged his head back down to guide. Her thighs widened. Her heels pressed into the bed. Her voice came rough, breathless.
“Stay right there… don’t stop.”
Billy obeyed without question.
He licked again, tongue patient, keeping the pressure steady where she’d shown him. He used his mouth the way a man might use his hands at a forge; full and careful with heat. He sucked softly at her clit, then traced it in tight circles with the tip of his tongue, every motion guided by the way her body arched, the way her fingers tightened in his hair, the way her breath caught and broke apart when he moved just right.
She rocked her hips into him, and he let her, chasing her rhythm, letting her ride his mouth until her legs began to tremble and her sounds turned sharp at the edges. She cursed once under her breath, said his name like it was the only word she knew, and he hummed into her, dragging her deeper into it with the vibration.
He lost track of time like that; face buried in her, lips slick with her arousal, the salt and sweetness of her smeared across his chin and jaw. He let her grind against his tongue, let her show him with every gasp and tug and breath where to go, how to touch, how to please.
And when her thighs started to shake, when her hands stilled in his hair, when her voice cracked open on a gasp that didn’t end in words—he didn’t stop.
It was worship in the oldest language a man could speak, with his body, with his patience, with the way he gave himself to her pleasure like it was the only map he’d ever trusted.
She was close, he could feel it in every tightening of her thighs, every ragged breath that caught in her throat before spilling out as a moan half-formed. The kind that cracked around the edges, full of need, of disbelief, of a woman no longer holding back. Her hands were in his hair, pulling, not to guide now but to anchor herself, and he let her, let her clutch at him like a lifeline, because he meant to be one. Meant to hold her steady as the pleasure came rushing up from wherever she kept it hidden.
Billy buried his face deeper into her heat, mouth slick with her, his tongue working steady against her, never chasing, never forcing, just coaxing her open, begging her body to give him everything it had. His lips wrapped around the soft, trembling bud of her clit and suckled tenderly, then harder, then gently again, reading her body by the way her hips rolled, the way her gasps slipped into curses and then back into breathless pleas.
His hand slid up from her thigh, palm dragging along the damp inner flesh, fingers slipping between her folds. She was soaked, hot and pulsing under his touch, and when he eased two digits into her, slow and thick, she cried out, the sound sharp as summer thunder over dry hills. He curled them up, knuckles dragging against the place inside her that made her thighs quake, and her hips bucked into his face as she sobbed out his name like it was a prayer she’d tried to keep quiet too long.
He didn’t waver.
“So sweet it hurts,” he rasped between licks, the words barely formed against her skin, muffled by her warmth. “Jesus, Dulce, you break me.”
She sobbed again, hands tangled in his curls, her head tossed back against the pillow. The lamp on the nightstand sent a warm golden wash across her belly, her breasts, her throat stretched taut with gasping breath.
“You always taste like home,” he whispered next, tongue circling, then dragging firm and wet. “Like everything I ever ran from and still couldn’t forget.”
She arched again, thighs clenching around his ears, shaking now, her body caught in that final edge where pleasure twisted toward pain, and she didn’t care anymore who she was beneath it—only that she was his, and she was coming undone in the mouth of the man who knew how to break her just right.
“I’d die here,” he said, kissing her clit now, lips open and tender, his fingers still working her slow and deep. “Right here between your thighs. And I’d be glad for it.”
Her thighs clamped tighter, breath gone entirely now, her whole body seizing around him, the tremble in her hips turning into a shudder that rolled all the way through her limbs.
Then she gasped—sharp, broken, breathless.
“Billy.”
And he’d never heard his name sound like that before.
She didn’t scream it or beg, she breathed it raw, sacred, stripped down to its barest bones. Like it wasn’t just his name but something holy, something carved into her ribs, bled into her spine. Like it belonged to her, because he did.
That sound cracked open in him, down deep where he didn’t keep words. And still, he didn’t stop. He licked her through it, felt her body pulse and quiver, her walls clenching around his fingers as she came hard, wet and shaking in his mouth. Her moan turned into a sob, then a laugh, then a soft noise, and he drank it in like rain.
He stayed there long after she’d crested, licking her gently now, soothing the place he’d worshipped raw, his hand still pressed against the trembling flesh of her thigh.
When her hands finally eased in his hair, when her chest slowed and her breath came in deep waves, he kissed her once more above her mound, where sweat had gathered. Then he rested his cheek there, his arms wrapped around her hips, holding her like a precious gift he’d carried a long way just to lay down safe.
And in the hush that followed, he whispered her name, once, soft, with all the awe of a man who’d just seen God and rejected Him for the woman who’d stolen his body and soul; Eve could not compare.
**
Dulcinea lay stretched across the bed, one arm above her head, the other draped across her belly, breath rising in soft waves that smoothed with each passing moment. Her skin bore the flush of release, slick at her chest and collarbone, damp where his mouth had left her shaking. A fine sheen of sweat caught the lantern’s dying glow, clinging to her brow, the bridge of her nose, the hollow just beneath her throat.
Billy rose from between her thighs like a man surfacing from deep water, slow and blinking, the scent of her still clinging to his jaw, his mouth wet with her and tasting of salt, of truth, of the kind of pleasure that made a man forget who he’d been before he tasted it. He climbed up beside her, his limbs aching in that good, ruined way, the kind that told him he’d given everything and still wanted to give more.
She turned her face to him when he settled at her side. Her eyes were half-closed, lashes damp, lips swollen and parted. She looked like dusk looked on the prairie; spent, golden, barely holding on to the light. Her hand found his chest, then slid up to his cheek, the pad of her thumb stroking the corner of his mouth where a drop of her still lingered.
Billy kissed her brow gently, deeply, his lips pressing into the damp heat there like a seal. Then again, softer, lower now, across her temple, until her hand slipped into the curls at his nape and tugged him closer.
Her breath eased beneath him, slowed. She shifted her thigh to touch his, curling inward just enough that their bodies touched from knee to shoulder—warm skin against warm skin, heartbeats syncing.
Her voice came quiet, rough with wear and wonder.
“What was that?” she asked.
His eyes stayed on her face, on the way her brows drew together in the hush. He slid his hand across her stomach, resting it low beneath her navel, the heel of his palm warm where he’d once worshipped with his mouth.
“Call it penance,” he said, voice low and worn. “Call it love.”
Her eyes softened, and her mouth twitched like she didn’t know whether to cry or kiss him. Instead, she tilted her face to his, their foreheads brushing, and her hand smoothed down from his hair to cradle his jaw. Her thumb dragged across the stubble there.
“Don’t ride off at dawn,” she whispered.
It was a heartbeat and a breath, the closest thing she had to a confession. She didn’t reach to hold him tighter.
But he heard her. God, he heard her.
Billy turned his face into her palm and kissed it, once, slow, eyes shut.
“Not without you.”
She let out a breath that melted her deeper into the bed. Her hand stayed at his face, her leg curling around his. He slid his arm beneath her shoulders, pulling her in, the heat of her pressed tight to his chest, her hair fanned across his skin.
The quilt was half-drawn over them, crooked and heavy with their sweat, their heat, the damp weight of spent wanting. It clung to the curve of Dulcinea’s hip and the ridge of his thigh where they met beneath it. Their skin was warm where it touched and cooling where it didn’t, and neither of them minded the ache.
Billy lay curled behind her now, his body pressed along the length of hers like it was built to fit there, to bend around her spine and hold the line of her ribs. One arm was beneath her head, elbow hooked so his hand could rest just below her breast, the other stretched low, palm cradled against the soft round of her belly. His fingers stayed still, resting there. Telling her in touch what he didn’t have the breath to say anymore.
Dulcinea’s hand was buried in his hair, her fingers tangled in the sweat-damp curls at the base of his neck. She stroked slow, over and over, a lullaby made of skin. Her breath moved in the shape of sleep, but she hadn’t quite let go. Her thigh pressed back into his, the curve of her splendid backside tucked to his hips. When he shifted to breathe her in, she made a low sound, not a word, just a hum that told him she knew he was still there.
The world outside had gone still—no coyotes now, no boots on the road, no rattle of wagon wheels, reduced to the creak of old pine as it settled around them and the sigh of wind through the gap in the windowsill. The smell of her lingered in the sheets, on his mouth, on his chest where her body had melted against him.
Billy bent his head forward, lips brushing the back of her shoulder. The salt of her skin was still there, along with the scent of woodsmoke and flour-dust and the sweet ache of the woman who had wrecked him with her kindness. He moved his lips against her shoulder like a kiss, and let the words ride the breath between them.
“Gracias por esta mujer,” he whispered, the Spanish thick on his tongue from years of hearing it spoken in kitchens and on porches by women who knew the weight of prayer better than any preacher ever did.
Thanks for this woman.
She shifted at that, just barely. Her fingers tightened in his hair. She heard him. He knew she did.
And then she relaxed again, breath slipping into sleep that came only after a body had been made love to like it mattered, touched like land after drought. The kind of sleep that didn’t worry about morning.
Billy let his eyes drift closed. His hand rose once more, just to touch her belly again—then stilled.
Billy stood at the edge of the market square, the dusty clothes from his long journey still on his shoulders, and let his gaze wander over the bustling town. The sun beat down on the cobbled streets, and the air was filled with the cries of merchants and the smell of freshly baked bread. But all that faded when he saw her. She moved with a grace that instantly captivated him—a young woman, barely older than him, with eyes that sparkled like a quiet lake in the morning sun, and her smile, fleeting as a breath of wind, struck him like an arrow to the heart. Who was she? What might her name be? A name, he thought, that surely sounded as sweet as a song. Thoughts swirled in his head. Should he approach her, introduce himself, perhaps exchange a few words? But the memory of his best friend, who with his talent for chaos could turn any good intention into trouble, made him hesitate. Jesse was like a storm that always came up just when Billy had gotten his footing. What if he threw himself into something new only to end up in another mess? And yet—this woman—seemed worth the risk. Billy's heart beat faster when she turned briefly and their eyes met for a tiny moment. It was as if the world had stood still for a moment. He didn't know if it was fate or coincidence, but something inside him whispered that he had to act. Not today, maybe, not now—he had just entered the city, wanted to find work, start a new life. But she, this nameless beauty, was like a beacon in his weary heart. He would wait, gather himself, but he vowed that he would find out her name. And maybe, just maybe, he would find the courage to speak to her—before everything got mixed up again.