things you said when you were crying | keiran/yasmin 🥺
@gerrykecy tw lots of gun mentions
For a long time after, Yasmin sat in the bedroom, eyes fixed on the little bit of window not covered by the curtain. The pistol lay, empty and safety on, in her hand, almost like an afterthought. She hardly seemed to be breathing, which gave the room an eerie silence that Keiran's presence disrupted. She didn't react. She didn't turn around. She just sat and watched, unblinking. Unmoving. Unfeeling.
"Babe," he said softly. Nothing. "The officers said--"
"And you believe them?" It was the first time she'd spoken in--god, hours, probably. Her voice was rough from disuse. Made rougher by her offense at the idea that Keiran listened to a blessed the feds said. "I never took you for stupid."
He didn't answer that, though she heard his sharp exhalation. Outside, their neighbor with the yappy dog walked out and let the dog piss right on their mailbox. Bitch. Yasmin's fingers flexed against the pistol. When Keiran spoke again, he was closer. On the other edge of the bed, maybe. She couldn't look. It would mean turning away from her sliver of window. "They've increased surveillance. They are trailing the car we saw. We're--it's going to be okay."
His voice was so gentle that it made her sick. She couldn't stand it. It didn't belong with her, here, in this place. In this time, where the only way to keep them both alive was to hold her pistol, watch the window, and regret that she hadn't brought anything bigger with her.
He belonged with that other woman. The one she had to pretend to be, who smiled and made nice. She could have this man with his gentle, coaxing voice and his soft mannerisms and his trust in the fucking feds. She was welcome to it. All of it. Yasmin would keep her pistol and her watch and keep them both alive.
He continued to approach her slowly and when he was close enough to enter her periphery, she turned her head away. She couldn't see the window, but she didn't have to see him. At least, not until he came all the way too her, right up next to her, the side of his body lightly brushing the side of hers.
When he spoke, this time, it was only a whisper. The quietest sound. "Yasmin." It was that--the sound of her real name, even in the barest whisper--that startled her. His hands came to hers and she let him lift the gun out of her grasp without any fight.
Despite herself, a small sob escaped. It was hardly more than a hiccup, but it was enough. His arms came around her, pressing her gently but firmly to his chest, and the dam broke. She didn't weep so much as shake and sob. He cooed and petted her hair nonetheless, whispering sweet nothings into her ear.
"I don't trust them to protect you," she whispered against his shirt, hoping he could only feel the breath but not hear the words.
He rubbed her back. "It's okay. We're okay."
"It scared me. When I thought they were here, it scared me."
He just shushed her, tracing circles with his palm on her back.
He couldn't hear her. Or he wasn't listening to specifics. Either way, it made her next words safe. "I can't let them get you."
His hands stopped so abruptly, she knew she'd been wrong. He put his hands on her shoulders and pushed her away so he could look her in the eye. So she would have to look him in the eye, after that. "We're going to take care of each other. I won't let them get you, either."
She watched him after he said it, as his eyes seemed to be trying to drill into her. She watched, and blinked away tears as they tried to well up, and sniffled when her lungs wouldn't bring air in right. Twice, she opened her mouth, but she couldn't find the words.
After the second attempt, he slid his hand up to cup her cheek. "Let me take care of you, amali." My heart, he'd told her. She pressed her lips together as her eyes welled up again and gave a small nod. She would let him take care of her, for today.







