Ooopsie.. dropped something.. silly me đ¤
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Ooopsie.. dropped something.. silly me đ¤
ONLYFANS â¤ď¸âŹ FANSLY
kitty butler zayne
sylus x cat!zayne // hybrid au // fluff // 4k words
sylus saved a cat and he got a butler in return.
the rain came down like silver needles on the black hood of sylusâs car. the city lights blurred in his windshield, refracted through the downpour. his hands rested lazily on the steering wheel, one ringed thumb tapping the leather in rhythm with the jazz record playing softly through his speakers.
he hated driving himself. it was boring.
but it was one of those nights where even a man like him didnât want to go home just yet. not to silence. not to marble and shadows.
then he saw it.
a dark shape slumped on the sidewalk just ahead, nearly blending into the wet concrete. at first, sylus thought it was trashâor roadkill. but then the headlights caught the glint of greenish-gold eyes. bleeding. breathing.
a cat.
sylus shouldâve kept driving. he didnât like being interrupted. especially not by strays. but something in the way it looked at himâlike it knew somethingâmade him slow down.
minutes later, the injured maine coon was nestled in a blanket in the backseat, and sylus was already muttering about how ridiculous this was.
/á -Ë-ăâł
a week went by, sylus didnât expect to keep the thing. he called a private vet the next morning, had it checked over, stitched, cleaned, and dosed with enough sedatives to knock out a horse. then he set up a small bed by the fireplace. he even left out fancy gourmet cat food from the organic pet boutique down the street.
but the cat didnât touch it.
instead, it waited until sylus left the room and raided his fridge. half his tiramisu vanished one night. another evening, a delicate rose-shaped tart heâd imported from the old district in france had mysteriously disappeared.
it wasnât just that. the cat watched him. it would sit near the study and observe him reading reports. it followed him into the piano room. and onceâjust onceâsylus woke up to find it curled up on the far corner of his bed, tail flicking, half-lidded eyes glowing in the dark.
then one morning, the cat was gone.
no broken windows. no doors left open. it had simply vanished.
sylus stood at the foot of the empty fireplace, one hand in his pocket, the other nursing a cup of bitter black coffee. the house felt...silent again.
âfigures,â he muttered to the empty room, and finished his coffee without tasting it.
â^. .^ââ
the sound of movement outside his bedroom jolted sylus from sleep.
he never had unannounced visitors. not in this house. security was airtight. his hand reached for the nearest objectâa butter knife resting on the tray of leftover midnight snacks. he was aware it was not ideal. but sylus had won worse situations with worse instruments.
he crept toward the door, barefoot but deadly quiet. then he opened it.
and froze.
there, standing at the top of the grand staircase, was a man.
tall. black hair neatly combed. silver-framed glasses. wearing a crisp black butlerâs suit like he belonged in a gothic manor, not in the home of a man who didnât even like guests.
but that wasnât the strangest part.
perched atop the manâs head were a pair of twitching feline earsâdark furred, just like the catâs. and behind him, calm and swaying like a metronome, was a long, thick tail.
sylusâs hand went slack. the butter knife clattered to the floor.
the man turned. his face was unreadableâneutral, calm, and frankly a little judgmental.
âgood morning, master,â he said, voice deep and disturbingly composed. âiâve prepared breakfast downstairs. itâs best you eat it while itâs still hot.â
â...what.â
sylus blinked. then scowled, crossing his arms. âno, wait. hold on. who the hell are you and how did you even get in here?â
the manâs ears flicked.
âyou donât recognize me?â he asked, tilting his head slightly. âi suppose this form is rather new to you.â
âwhat formââ
and then, without warning, a small puff of smoke erupted around him.
when it cleared, standing where the man had been, was the same maine coonâgroomed, sitting neatly, tail flicking in subtle amusement.
it looked up at sylus with luminous greenish-gold eyes.
the silence stretched.
ââŚwhat the fuck,â sylus said, very quietly.
â^. .^ââł
the breakfast table was lavish, though sylus hadnât touched a thing. crisp white porcelain, an artfully arranged spreadâfruits sliced, scrambled eggs the perfect consistency, buttery croissants still steaming.
and a full pot of jasmine tea, its aroma soft and floral.
zayne stood by the table, looking every bit the refined butler. except for the earsâthose velvety black tufts atop his head that flicked subtly every time sylus moved.
sylus sat, arms crossed. his red eyes locked onto zayne like crosshairs.
"talk."
zayne nodded once and poured the tea.
âmy name is zayne. iâm⌠well, i suppose the word âhybridâ applies. some would say shapeshifter. i was part of a long-term bioengineering experiment. escaped six days ago.â
his voice was calm, disturbingly so for someone explaining how they were engineered.
âi donât know who ran the facility. i was taken very young. i was trained to behave, to observe, to survive.â he set the teapot down gently. âi almost died at that curb. you saved me.â
his eyes met sylus's across the table.
âi owe you my life,â zayne continued, âtherefore, i will serve you. as repayment. for as long as you require it. since you⌠donât really have staff around here to take care of you.â
sylusâs brow twitched.
"i donât need it. i donât trust anyone to be here."
zayne tilted his head just slightly, ears flicking. curious. concerned, maybe. sylus didnât like that look.
âiâve had staff,â sylus said. âhad. some tried to kill me. some tried to steal. some were spies. the only reason youâre alive right now is because you turned into a goddamn cat and didnât stab me in my sleep.â
he stood, chair sliding back.
âthereâs no debt. no owing. i helped because i wanted to. thatâs all.â
he turned and started walking away.
"leave."
zayne stood still by the table, hands folded neatly in front of him. his ears drooped just slightly, and his tail stilled. his face remained neutral, but sylusâdamn itânoticed the difference.
it was the smallest shift. but it gnawed at him.
ภá¨ŕ¸
three days later, zayne didnât leave. technically.
he didnât press boundaries either. he just⌠stayed. sometimes on the bench in the garden, watching the wind ripple through the ivy. sometimes curled under the overhang at the back of the mansion, resting like a stray that refused to go but had too much pride to beg.
sylus caught sight of him once on the security monitor.
again at 2 a.m. through the library window.
it was starting to feel like guilt.
and sylus hated feeling guilty.
so he compromised. after almost a week.
âyouâre still here.â
zayne looked up from the grass. he was in his humanoid form, kneeling to rewrap his injured hand. he stood quickly, brushing his pants off. âyes, master.â
sylus gave him a long look, then exhaled sharply through his nose.
âfine. you can stay.â
zayne blinked.
âbut,â sylus said, lifting a finger like a loaded gun, âground rules.â
he stepped closer.
âyou are not to enter the third floor. that includes the west hallway and especially my study. off limits.â
âyes, master.â
âyou do not cook for me. i donât eat food made by others.â
âyes, master.â
âyou can make your own food. you can clean if you want to. but if you get close to any private zonesâor if i suspect youâre up to anythingâi will throw you out. no talking. no warning.â
zayne didnât seem offended. he nodded with a gentle, accepting grace. âunderstood.â
sylus narrowed his eyes. âwhy are you so calm about this?â
zayne only blinked. âbecause i was trained to serve. and because you let me live.â
sylusâs eye twitch.
âright... and donât call me that.â he waved his hand. "master."
ââŚyes,â zayne corrected softly. âma- sylus.â
sylus muttered something under his breathâhalf insult, half frustrationâand turned to walk back inside.
as the door clicked open, zayne quietly followed behind.
/á - Ë -ă
later that night, sylus found the linen closets perfectly reorganized. the glass in the east wing was cleaned to a polish. the plantsâneglected for monthsâhad been watered and rotated to proper sunlight angles. a simple note was left on his bedroom door:
your robe had loose stitching on the sleeve. i repaired it. â zayne
sylus stared at the note, then at the sleeve of the robe he hadnât even noticed was damaged.
he crushed the note in his hand and sighed.
maybe having one person in the house wouldnât be that bad.
maybe.
áâ ^. .^â
the estate was, as always, immaculate.
not because sylus cared about dust or decorâheâd long grown indifferent to the echo of empty hallsâbut because zayne had taken to his âduties.â floors gleamed. curtains were brushed free of lint. even the antique gramophone in the corner, long forgotten, looked like it belonged in a museum.
sylus sat in his usual chair in the living room, one leg crossed over the other, absently wiping his watch with a cloth. the room smelled faintly of polish and lavenderâzayne's choice, apparently. the fireplace crackled low behind him.
he wasnât watching zayne. not really.
just... occasionally glancing in his direction as the hybrid dusted the velvet curtains, long tail swaying with absent rhythm. he'd long given up correcting zayne calling him master.
zayne worked quietly. always quietly. and efficiently. sylus had noticed that when it came to insects or vermin, zayne was instantaneous in his responseâlike a predator on a hair-trigger. once, sylus had turned his head to a subtle scratching sound, and before he could say a word, zayne had already pinned the rat by the tail with a fireplace poker, calm as ever.
it was amusing. strange. and sometimes entertaining.
sylus turned his wrist slightly. the glass face of his watch caught the light and sent a brief flicker of sunbeam onto the far wall.
he didnât expect what happened next.
zayne stopped mid-motion. his hand hovered over the curtain. the cloth fluttered in his grip, forgotten.
his ears twitched.
his pupilsânormally narrow and controlledâexpanded suddenly into full, wide circles, sharp green irises nearly vanishing. his gaze snapped to the spot of light on the wall with a focus sylus had only ever seen in combat.
thenâ
the light shifted again as sylus adjusted slightly, and zayneâs head moved with it. his ears perked up, tail twitching once, twice, andâ
he took a cautious step toward the light.
sylus narrowed his eyes, lips twitching. â...are you seriously about to pounce on a sunbeam?â
zayne blinked, as if waking up from a trance. he looked at sylus. then at the floor. then cleared his throat. his ears quickly flattened back to composure, and he resumed wiping the curtain.
âi was simply...monitoring a potential source of reflection damage on the wall paint,â he said evenly.
sylus raised a brow, unimpressed. âyou were about to chase a dot like a housecat.â
âno, master.â
âyes, you were.â
âi was not.â
âyou were tracking it with your eyes like a sniper.â
a pause.
â...my instincts may have been momentarily engaged,â zayne admitted, tone as flat as ever. âit wonât happen again.â
sylus leaned back in the chair, folding his arms.
"shame. that was the most expression iâve seen on your face since you moved in.â
zayne didnât reply, but sylus didnât miss the tail that flicked a little faster now.
after a beat, sylus tilted his wrist again, subtly sending another flicker of light dancing across the wall.
zayneâs head snapped toward it.
caught.
sylus smirked. âso much for instincts.â
zayne sighed, setting the duster down on the windowsill. â...permission to chase it properly, master?â
sylus blinked.
he wasnât sure what was funnierâzayne actually asking permission, or the stone-faced delivery.
he leaned forward, resting his chin in one hand. âgranted.â
what followed was absurd. a blur of limbs and grace and precision as zayne leapt lightly to the couch, then twisted mid-air to tag the light across the floor, tail lashing in perfect balance. his sleeves rolled up just slightly, glasses discarded neatly on the side table.
it lasted no more than ten seconds.
but sylus laughed. actually laughed. quietly, under his breathâbut genuinely.
then zayne landed, smoothed his vest, adjusted his collar, and walked back to the curtain like nothing happened.
sylus sipped his tea, eyes glinting.
this odd creature was growing on him.
and thatâ
that was dangerous.
^. .^ââ
sylus had a strict routine: breakfast by 7, morning meetings at 9, calls until noon. every hour of his day was accounted for, calculated, and sharp. his estate reflected that precisionâquiet, cold, immaculate.
but lately, some of that rigidity had...softened.
just slightly.
he noticed it on warmer days, when the sun filtered through the east-facing windows and the halls were wrapped in a golden hush. heâd do a full sweep of the mansionâhabit, mostlyâonly to realize zayne was nowhere in sight.
sylus only found him when he walked past the library.
zayne, in his hybrid cat form, curled like a comma on the leather armchair by the bookshelves. limbs tucked in, tail wrapped around himself, ears twitching gently with every creak of the mansion. fast asleep. softly breathing. practically melting into the upholstery like he owned it.
sylus would stand in the doorway for a long moment, arms crossed, watching him with something between confusion and reluctant amusement.
âyouâve got the entire estate and you pick my chair?â he muttered one day.
the cat twitched but didnât stir.
sylus rolled his eyes and walked off. but he didnât reclaim the chair for the rest of the week. not even once.
but when winter came, zayne would be in a different spot.
the cold hit early that year. snow layered the rooftop like icing, and frost webbed across the windows overnight. the mansionâs heating worked perfectly, but the air still bit in the corners of the hallways.
sylus came downstairs one morning after loading fresh laundry into the dryer the night before. he was expecting silence. maybe the faint hum of the boiler.
instead, he paused just outside the laundry room, hearing a faint rustling.
when he opened the door, he stared.
in the center of the laundry basket, nestled like royalty, was a large maine coon.
zayne, in his feline form, had buried himself deep into the mountain of freshly dried bedsheets and blankets, barely peeking out. only his ears and one wide eye were visible above the warm cotton.
the sight was so absurdly domestic that sylus actually blinked.
zayne blinked back.
they stared at each other.
âyou are not sleeping in my sheets,â sylus said flatly.
a soft, lazy chirp came from zayneâs throat, muffled by fluff.
âi just cleaned those.â
another blink. a tail flick.
sylus pinched the bridge of his nose. âyouâre lucky i have no guests. or shame.â
he left the room.
he came back with a heated pad ten minutes later.
/á . .á\ âł
sylus didnât say it aloud. he never would. but it happened slowly, like water wearing down stone.
he started ordering extra blankets.
replaced the reading chair in the library with one that had a deeper cushion.
adjusted the mansionâs thermostat when he noticed zayne tucked his tail tighter at night.
sometimes sylus would glance up from his reports and catch zayne in human form, his tail swaying as he wiped down the windowpane. the reflection of snow behind him. his profile lit softly by morning sun.
or find him curled up in a patch of warmth, dead to the world, his breathing slow and steady, ears twitching as if chasing something in his dreams.
it was ridiculous.
he was a powerful man. someone feared, respected, untouchable.
and yet, somehow he found himself making excuses to pass by the library.
or to start laundry earlier in the week.
he told himself it was routine.
he didnât call it care.
not yet.
but deep down, in the quiet hours of the mansion, he was beginning to realizeâ
zayne didnât just live here now.
he belonged here.
/á ・â¸ď˝Ąá\
the afternoon light stretched long shadows across the marble floors of the estate. sylus stepped through the front door with the usual chill of control in his stride, the quiet click of his shoes echoing across the entry hall.
he paused.
no sound. no soft clink of porcelain from the kitchen. no gentle sweeping noises. no footsteps approaching to greet him.
no zayne.
odd.
zayne always knew his schedule. hell, the cat probably memorized it down to the minute. on normal days, heâd be standing a few paces from the door, hands folded behind his back, ears perked, offering a stiff but polite, âwelcome home, master.â
today?
nothing.
sylus loosened his tie with a growing knot in his chest and walked briskly to the library.
empty.
he tried the kitchen. the sunroom. (which sylus didn't even know exists until zayne cleaned it up because he takes offense at how dark the house was.) even the laundry room.
still nothing.
he stood at the bottom of the staircase, tension prickling in his jaw. his mansion was largeâbut it was never hard to find zayne. the hybrid moved like a shadow, but he never truly hid.
something was off.
sylus ascended the stairs two steps at a time.
then, rounding the second-floor corridorâhe stopped cold.
there, slumped on the floor just outside the linen closet, was zayne.
his long limbs were tangled awkwardly, his back against the wall, one gloved hand gripping weakly at the hem of his vest. his glasses were slightly askew, cheeks flushed deep pink, and his breath came in shallow, uneven pants. even in his unconscious state, his ears twitched faintly, tail limp and curled near his legs.
âzayne.â
the word came out sharper than intended.
sylus dropped to his knees in front of him and reached out without thinking, pulling zayne upright by the shoulders, slow and steady. the moment his hand touched fabric, heat slammed into his palm.
âshit.â
sylus rarely cursed.
he pressed the back of his hand to zayneâs cheekâburning.
his fingers tightened slightly as he felt the way zayne leaned into the touch unconsciously, a soft, muffled sound leaving his lips.
fever.
no use calling doctorsâzayne wouldnât react well to strangers. hospital? not happening. heâd likely bolt in panic or shift into a cat and disappear into the snow.
he needed warmth. hydration. bed.
and the most secure, private, well-equipped room in the entire house was on the third floor.
sylus hesitated for a second.
then exhaled.
to hell with the rules.
zayne barely stirred as sylus lifted himâhe was light, deceptively soâand carried him up the staircase. his body was radiating heat, his breath ragged against sylusâs neck.
the third floor was a fortress of solitude. no one had entered it since sylus built the estate. it was where he worked, rested, lived when the rest of the world became too suffocating.
and now, it was where zayne would recover.
sylus kicked open the door to the master bedroom, carried him to the bed, and laid him down against the silken sheets. he stripped off zayneâs gloves and vest, careful not to jostle him too much. then he grabbed a cool cloth from the bathroom and pressed it to zayneâs forehead.
for a moment, he just stood there.
watching.
zayne, usually so composed and stoic, looked... small. vulnerable. his black ears twitched weakly in his sleep, and his tail curled closer like a child trying to hold himself together.
sylus clenched his jaw. âyou idiot,â he muttered. âyou kept working yourself stupid again, didnât you?â
there was no answerâjust a soft, hoarse exhale.
sylus turned and left the room. fifteen minutes later, he came back with a tray: water, warm broth, and fever meds crushed into honey for easier swallowing. he sat on the edge of the bed and carefully helped zayne sit up, half-conscious and blinking slowly.
zayneâs voice was little more than a rasp.
â...masterâŚ?â
âyou passed out in the hallway.â sylus kept his tone neutral, but his grip didnât leave zayneâs back. âdonât talk. just drink.â
zayne obeyed, sipping slowly. his body trembled under the weight of fever, but he didnât resist.
when sylus moved to adjust the blankets, zayneâs gloved fingers caught weakly at his sleeve.
â...sorry,â he murmured, barely audible. âdidnât mean toâbreak protocol.â
sylus paused.
for once, he didnât have a cold retort. didnât have a lecture ready.
he looked at the flushed face, the sweat-dampened hair, the ears twitching in half-conscious guilt.
ârest. thatâs an order.â
â˝^- Ë -^âź
zayne recovered fast. unnaturally fast.
the fever had burned hot for a day and a half, but by the end of the third day, he was already back on his feet, dressed and polished like the collapse in the hallway had never happened.
âhybrid biology,â heâd explained quietly, as he changed the sheets of sylusâs bed, already resetting the space with practiced ease. âfever burns fast, heals faster.â
sylus hadnât said much. heâd stood in the doorway watching him, arms crossed, trying to justify the fact that zayne hadnât been banished back downstairs.
and then never did.
because he didnât want to.
the third floor was no longer off-limits. there was no talk of boundaries. no new rules, no updated contractâhell, zayne had signed the last one with a paw print, and sylus hadnât even laughed at it. now the whole damn thing might as well be shredded.
letting zayne into this spaceâhis private floors, his world, his routinesâwasnât just about territory.
it was letting him in.
into the stillness. the silence. the real pieces of sylusâs life no one else had ever seen.
and it shouldâve set off every warning bell in his head.
but it didnât.
it felt right.
it was his mornings that changed first.
sylus used to wake to cold light filtering through blinds, the soft ping of updates from his tablet, and silence. now, he woke to the low clink of ceramic, the faint smell of jasmine or dark roast, and the quiet rustle of someone moving through his space.
and when he opened his eyes, it was zayneâs face he saw.
sometimes human. sometimes feline, curled up near the pillow, blinking at him with those wide, calm green eyes.
sylus would grumble something incoherent and roll over. zayne never commented.
but internally, sylus wasâunsettlinglyâpleased.
waking up alone was normal. waking up to zayne?
that was contentment.
then, it was the study room.
zayne never spoke unless necessary in the study. he moved in silence, a ghost in tailored black and silver, setting down a cup of coffee or a tray of pastries with an elegance sylus hadnât realized he liked so much.
sometimes, zayne would sort the bookshelves, tail swaying idly. other times heâd be perched on the second ladder tier, dusting the upper spines, ears perked and alert. sylus would pretend not to watch him.
but on days where business bled into irritationâwhen reports came in botched, when meetings dragged, or when one of his men made a move without his say-soâsylus would glance up from his deskâŚ
âŚand there zayne would be. adjusting a frame. rearranging the cups. tasting a pastry as if testing for poison.
one look at those ears twitching ever so slightly or the way zayne flicked dust off the shelves like it offended him personallyâand sylus could feel the tension in his spine loosen, bit by bit.
the stress didnât melt. it evaporated.
this is dangerous, he thought, once more. comfort is dangerous.
but the truth wasâhe liked it.
he liked it too much.
/á . .á\ŕ¸
sylus sat back in his chair, rubbing his temple, the firelight painting long shadows across the dark wooden shelves. zayne entered silently with a fresh pot of tea, and sylus glanced up, eyes shadowed with fatigue.
âyouâre supposed to be off-duty,â sylus said. his tone lacked bite.
âi noticed your tea was cold.â
zayne set the tray down, his motions precise. as he turned to leave, sylus surprised himself by saying, âstay.â
zayne paused. blinked. tilted his head.
âjust⌠stay.â
zayne didnât speak.
he simply pulled the second chair closer, sat down, and began calmly flipping through the latest books sylus had left scattered on the coffee table.
the room was silent. but not empty.
sylus leaned back and looked at the faint reflection of the two of them in the window.
one cold, sharp man in a pressed suit.
and a hybridâcat ears twitching, tail curled near the leg of the chair, eyes gently focused on a book heâd probably already read a dozen times.
it was stupid.
it was healing.
and sylus, powerful and feared as he was, finally understood something mundane.
this is why people keep cats, he thought. they donât do much. but they make it better just by being there.
he didnât say thank you.
but the next morning, zayne found a new blanket folded on the library chair.
tailored. heated. monogrammed.
with a single stitched letter in the corner.
z.
â˝^-Ë -^âź
the door creaked shut behind him with a dull thud that echoed too loud in the stillness of the estate.
sylus exhaled. or maybe groaned. it was hard to tell.
he didnât even make it two full steps before his polished shoes tangled with each other and he collapsed, graceless, against the cool marble wall. his back hit the surface with a quiet thud, and he slowly slid down, the buttons of his blazer pressing into his ribs.
his vision spun just slightly. his head felt heavy. his body, sluggish.
heâd lost track of how many glasses they poured after the second hour. heâd intended to leave earlyâhe always didâbut every time he turned, someone was refilling his drink with forced laughter and an insistence he couldnât be rude. company loyalty, they said. toast after toast.
for someone who rarely drank, he held his own longer than he shouldâve.
but now, it caught up to him.
footsteps padded softly across the foyer, light and quick. sylus knew who it was before the voice even came.
âmaster?â
zayneâs tone was even, but tinged with concern. âyouâre home quite late.â
sylus tilted his head lazily, looking up. his eyes met zayneâsâsharp green, framed by silver-framed glasses and topped with two very twitchy black cat ears.
right. no phone. zayne didnât own one. all their communication at home relied on scribbled notes on the kitchen counter.
sylus frowned faintly. something about that fact settled wrong in his chest.
âiâll get you a phone,â he mumbled, the words slurring slightly. âyou should have one. in case.â
zayne blinked once. â...you smell like alcohol.â
sylus grinned lopsidedly. âtell your nose to mind its own business.â
zayne scrunched his nose. just slightly. a minuscule expression. but it was there. sylus caught it and chuckled low in his throat.
âi was out drinking with the company,â he admitted, head tipping back against the wall. âthey were persistent. didnât let my glass stay empty. bunch of bastards.â
âyouâre drunk.â
âobviously. thatâs what happens when people drink.â
zayne sighedânot annoyed, but resignedâand crouched down beside him. âletâs get you upstairs.â
sylus allowed himself to be hauled upright with the kind of reluctant compliance only the intoxicated could pull off. he was taller than zayne, heavier too, but zayne was surprisingly strong. he moved with purpose, hand braced under sylusâs arm as they made their slow, careful way toward the stairs.
each step up the marble staircase felt like it took an eternity. the walls pulsed with shadows. the mansion was quiet enough to hear every breath, every shift of fabric, every soft tap of zayneâs shoes on the floor.
and at this proximityâŚ
sylus noticed.
zayneâs hair was soft at the ends, brushing against his cheek. his posture was strong, but his earsâthose cat ears perched on his headâtwitched nervously every time sylus so much as exhaled near them.
up this close, they really were expressive. the kind of thing sylus could read if he paid attention long enough.
he smiled to himself.
âsuch a good kitten you areâŚâ he murmured, voice low, just above a whisperâdeep, lazy, husky from both alcohol and sleepiness.
zayne froze.
sylus felt it instantlyâthe way the hybridâs body tensed under his grip, how his ears twitched violently and folded flat against his head in a sudden, instinctual movement. his tail, usually calm and slow, flicked with quick, defensive agitation.
zayne cleared his throat, ears still down. â...please watch your step.â
sylus laughed again, quieter this time. âsensitive to sound?â
zayne didnât respond.
but sylus could feel the way zayneâs heart rate had subtly increased. he wasnât embarrassed. he was rattled. or flustered. something between the two.
they reached the third floor landing. zayne moved with extra care now, keeping sylus upright with an even firmer grip. not a word passed between them as they entered the master bedroom.
zayne helped him out of his blazer, steady and methodical, unbuttoning the cuffs and sliding it from his arms. he draped it over the chair by the fireplace, straightened it, and only then said:
âiâll bring water.â
but as he turned, sylus reached out.
fingers caught zayneâs wrist gently.
âyou donât have to act like this is just duty, zayne.â
zayne blinked. his tail twitched.
â...i donât understand what you mean.â
sylusâs gaze softened, the drunken fog in his eyes briefly parting. âyou get flustered. you worry. you stay even when i donât ask you to. donât pretend youâre just here to work.â
zayne looked down, unreadable.
then he smiled. barely there. a slight curve of the lips. â...youâre very drunk,â he whispered, "sylus."
sylus released his wrist. âyouâre dodging.â
âiâm making sure you donât choke in your sleep,â zayne said, voice flat again, though his ears remained suspiciously twitchy. âiâll be back with the water.â
he turned and left.
sylus collapsed onto the bed, an amused smirk tugging at his lips. âgood kitten,â he whispered again to himself.
from the hallway, he swore he heard the faintest exasperated sigh.
I'm so done with bllk good lord they did killed nagi
Joined a hypnosis vrchat world⌠wow. Omg. Iâm literally dizzy from how much I was fractionated that was amazing I love using my headset for hypnosis wowđđđ Iâm so droppedand drooly wnd stupid from looking at pretty spirals, I couldnât look away. I didnât want to look awayâŚđ
As it turns out, you canât toss a man in jail for posting a meme.ďż˝ Felony charges were dropped Wednesday against Larry Bushart,ďż˝a Tennessee
As it turns out, you canât toss a man in jail for posting a meme.Â
Felony charges were dropped Wednesday against Larry Bushart, a Tennessee man who spent the past five weeks behind bars after being arrested for posting a meme that shrugged off conservative activist Charlie Kirkâs murder by quoting President Donald Trump.
Bushart, a retired law enforcement officer and outspoken gun control proponent, responded to a social media post about a local vigil for Kirk with an old meme featuring Trump saying, âWe have to get over itâ in response to a 2024 school shooting in Iowa.
âThis seems relevant today,â Bushart captioned the post.Â
And while Bushartâwho built a reputation for posting left-leaning memes across social mediaâwas using Trumpâs words to react to Kirkâs death, parents seemed to take it as a threat against a local high school.
At least, thatâs the claim.




