we'll snuff out like fire ;
tommy miller x f!reader
Request: You hear the whispersâyour lover lost his brother, how the girl you care for shut down. But when she moves like nothing happened, sneaking out with Dina, you follow them to Seattle. Tommy ensures you pay the price for stepping out of line. Warnings: SMUT. MDNI. No use of y/n. Reader undisclosed age. Mentions/descriptions of violence, death, and gore. Very maternal reader. Established mentor-like relationship with Dina and Ellie. Tommy is upset. Reader is equally as upset. Makeup sex. Unprotected pinv. Doggy. He fucks u against a wall... Undescriptive creampie.
for the lovely elara, <3 thank you for requesting @astraljedi
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â« heat lightning - mitski
Your fingertips tapped an uneven rhythm against the scarred wood of the Tipsy Bison's bar. The quiet knock-knock-knock nearly lost beneath the ambient murmur of dinner hour. Jesse was rambling beside youâsomething about patrol rotations with Tommy, or maybe a new watchtower routeâbut his words blurred into background static.
Your focus had drifted elsewhere.
Across the room, Ellie sat hunched over a plate she hadnât touched, shoulders taut beneath her hoodie. Dina was leaned in close beside her, whispering, her hand twitching near the hem of Ellieâs sleeve. Every so often, they both cast a glance toward the kitchenâtoward Seth. Toward something.
It didnât sit right with you.
Ellie hadnât left her room in days. Sheâd been a ghost, a locked door and a muffled silence since the makeshift funeral. And now, suddenly, she was hereâsitting in the corner of the bar, speaking low and fast like time was running out.
Your stomach twisted.
ââŠand Tommy said we might get hit with rain tomorrow, so I told himâhey, you good?â Jesseâs voice cut in, finally noticing your distance.
You hummed a distracted reply, eyes still trained on the pair across the room.
Something was wrong.
You didnât know what yetâbut you were going to find out.
âJust because Tommy loves me doesnât mean I can twist his arm about patrol routes,â you murmured, eyes flicking toward Jesse. You tried to keep it lightâplayful, teasingâbut the words rang hollow in your mouth.
He didnât pick up on it. Or maybe he did and just let you have the out.
You leaned back, sighing as you nursed the warmth of the coffee mug between your hands, even though the liquid inside had gone cold. Your gaze drifted againâalways, relentlesslyâto the corner table.
Ellie had stopped pretending to eat. She was just staring down now, brow furrowed in thought while Dina talked low and fast, her hand cupped around her drink.
Both of them were a little too alert, their bodies too coiled.
Like they were waiting for a signal.
Something was off. You knew it at this point. Practically confirmed.
If you said somethingâif you told Jesse that Ellie hadnât spoken to you in a week, hadnât so much as looked you in the eye since Joelâs death, and now was suddenly conspiring in corners with Dinaâit would break whatever delicate thread was still binding you to her.
To them.
And if you told Tommy⊠if you went to him with this?
Thereâd be no stopping what came next.
You loved her. Ellie. Like a sister. Like a daughter. Like someone whose fire youâd seen sputter and still tried desperately to keep alive.
You just want to do right.
At least two days had gone by.
Two days of subtle watching. Of quiet steps and careful glances, pretending you were just passing through the stables or the mess hall, when really, you were tracking them like prey.
It felt ugly.
Worse, it felt necessary.
Youâd seen enough now to piece it all togetherâhow Ellie and Dina lingered by the supply room longer than they shouldâve, how food that didnât perish was quietly lifted in small batches. How ammo was skimmed from the armory, just low enough to not trigger suspicion. How they'd begun tucking patrol rifles into their horseâs saddlebags, hidden beneath blankets and feed sacks.
They were going to fucking Seattle.
Your chest ached with the weight of it, like your ribs were bracing for something to crack. You wanted to tell Tommyâevery hour that passed, you felt it clawing at your throat.
But what would that do? What would it fix?
Heâd try to stop them. Of course he would. And if he couldnât, heâd go after them himselfâangry, impulsive, grieving. Just like Ellie.
And youâd lose him, too.
So you swallowed the guilt like poison. Let it rot in your stomach. Because this wasnât about choosing sides. It was about saving what was left of your family, and praying to whatever was still listening that it didnât cost you everything in the process.
That night, you sat in the dim glow of your shared bedroom, boots still on, jacket unzipped, staring at the floor as Tommy paced.
He was talkingâsomething about the next patrol schedule, who was going to shift into rotationâbut you weren't really hearing him.
He stopped.
âHey.â His voice was low, serious. âWhatâs goinâ on in that head?â
You looked up, mouth dry, âNothin' ⊠Just tired.â
It was the first lie you'd told him⊠ever, really.
And it hurt worse than you thought it would.
Tommy watched you for a long moment, one hand braced on the dresser, the other rubbing at the side of his neck like he could smooth the worry out of his spine. Though it never worked.
He was tired tooâyou could see it in the slope of his shoulders, the way his holster still hung loose around his hips like he hadnât noticed it was there.
Like, since it happened, he wanted to sleep with it.
The day had worn on him, but not as much as the last few weeks had.
âYou sure?â he asked, quieter now, like maybe he already knew you were lying and was giving you the space to fix it.
You nodded. Too fast.
âYeah. Just⊠lot on my mind, sâall.â
He sighed and crossed the room, lowering himself beside you on the edge of the bed. His hand found your knee, warm and calloused and steadyâalways steady, when the rest of the world tilted sideways.
You leaned into him automatically, pressing your cheek to the side of his arm.
You didnât deserve how good he was to you. Not tonight.
But he didnât know. And he didnât ask again.
Because thatâs the kind of trust youâd built. And thatâs exactly why it was killing you.
You tilted your face up to him, managing a small smile, and his expression softenedâsome part of him still melting at the sight of you, even after all the scars and years.
âYou know I love you, right?â you murmured.
Tommy chuckled, brushing your hair back, his fingers careful as ever. âYou better. I been runnin' this town like Iâm tryna impress you all over again.â
You laughedâreal, for a second. And God, it made the guilt sting deeper.
âI do,â you whispered, âI love you so damn much, Miller.â
His brow furrowed slightly at your tone, but he didnât press. Just leaned in and kissed your temple, lips lingering longer than usual, like he could feel something shifting but didnât know what it was.
You let him hold you that night. You let him trace little circles into your back with the pad of his thumb. And when his breathing slowed, chest rising and falling in the rhythm of sleep, you stared at the ceilingâwide awake, spine coiled tight.
Because tomorrow Ellie and Dina would be gone.
And youâd be right behind them.
Unfortunately. their trail wasnât subtle.
Even if you hadnât known what to look for, the fresh hoofprints in the half-frozen mud and the trampled frost told you everything. One horse is missing from the stable.
It didnât take more than fifteen minutes to catch their rhythm.
Seth had let them out. Of course he had.
Thereâd be hell to pay for that. You could already hear Tommyâs voiceâthe sharp edge of it, all gravel and furyâas he tore Seth a new one.
You almost pitied the man. Almost. But not quite.
For now, you kept your distance. A mile, maybe two. Close enough to keep a line on them, far enough not to be seen. The cold air gnawed at your fingertips through the reins, and the sky had that winter-gray dullness that made everything feel heavier.
It wasnât until your horse crested the ridge past the old pasture that you saw them.
Two figures, stopped just beyond the wooden fence line, where the land dipped low into a grove of wind-stripped trees.
Your breath caught.
Joel.
The air thickened in your chest, something ancient and sorrowful. Of course they would come here before the road.
Before the war. One last visit. One last goodbye.
Your horse shifted beneath you, restless, as if it could feel the grief in your bones.
You didnât dismount.
You didnât need to get closer.
Instead, you watchedâquiet, stillâwhile Ellie knelt at the stones, Dina standing just behind her, a hand hovering like she wanted to touch but didnât know how.
You swallowed the knot in your throat.
They werenât just running away from Jackson.
They were running toward him.
You took a breath, let it burn down your lungs like whiskey, then turned your horse toward the path again. You had to give them time. Just a little longer. Then youâd follow.
Because no matter how far they went, youâd never be far behind.
Not when Tommy was still in the dark.
Not when Joel was still in the dirt.
âââ
Dina noticed you first. No surprise there.
Sheâd always been sharp, wired for survival in a way that didnât make her hardâjust alert. Wiser than her years. Youâd taken a liking to her long before this mess, half-joking once that if she werenât so damn independent, you wouldâve twisted Tommyâs arm to bring her under your wing.
She didnât flinch when she saw you, just narrowed her eyes, the faintest twitch at her jaw.
"You won't make it a day in Seattle acting this recklessly," you said, voice low and even as you stepped from the hang of the tree.
Both girls stiffened. Their hands dropped from the grips of their weapons, not out of ease, but in recognition.
Of you.
You werenât here to threaten them. Not really.
You stepped forward slowly, the leaves crunching beneath your boots, and stopped a few feet away.
Ellieâs mouth openedâwhether in protest or guilt, you couldnât tell. Her face had paled, but her eyes were stubborn, gleaming under the overcast sky like glass about to crack.
"How long?" you asked, not angry.
Just tired. Just worn down.
"Two weeks," Dina answered first. Quiet, but not ashamed. "We've been planning it for two weeks."
Ellie bristled, but didnât speak. Her knuckles were white where they clenched the strap of her pack.
âDoes Tommy know?â Dina asked, her voice low, almost wary, as she guided your horse toward the tack.
âNo.â
"I promise."
You didnât elaborate. Didnât need to.
Ellie shot you a look sharp enough to cut, âYou havenât told your almost fuckinâ fiancĂ©?â
She said it like it was treason.
And maybe it was.
The word fiancĂ© hung heavy in the airâsacred, intimate, too clean for what you felt now. He hadnât pushed for anything official, hadnât said now or soon. He just wanted you with him.
Forever, if the world allowed.
But you hadnât told him.
Not about Ellie. Not about Dina. Not about Seattle.
And it felt like a betrayal stitched under your skin, pulsing hot with every step you took closer to letting them go.
He probably already knew you were gone.
Waking up for morning patrol to an empty bed.
âYou think I didn't want to tell him?â you asked, voice taut. âYou think I donât wake up every day knowing what kind of man he is? What kind of man Iâd be risking if he followed your stupid fuckin' asses?â
Ellie opened her mouth, but Dina placed a hand on her arm. It was like a conversation without verbals.
"I'm going with you."
It slipped from your lips in a breathless hush, the weight of it settling like dust in the stillness. Dropping your pack to the ground beside theirs, the thud echoed louder than you'd meant.
"Whether you like it or not."
The forest around you seemed to still, the distant rustle of leaves and wind nothing compared to the storm coiling in your stomach.
"You promised," Ellie said after a long beat, quiet but sharp. âYou swore you wouldnât drag anyone else into this.â
You exhaled, steadying your voice.
âAnd Iâm not. Iâm walking in beside you.â
Ellie laughed, dry and bitter. âYou think Tommyâs just gonna let that slide? When he finds out where you are?â
âIâm not doing this for Tommy,â you cut in, your voice low and level. âIâm doing this because I wonât let you walk into this alone.â
There was a silenceâtired, heavy silence. The kind that meant you all knew the shape of what was coming, and knew it wouldn't be kind.
They're scared.
Frankly, so are you.
âLook,â you exhale, low and steady, the weight of the words pressing against the cold air. âWhen I first walked into Jackson, this placeâit felt like home. And then I met Tommy. He felt like home.â
You shift slightly, eyes flicking to their tent, half-pitched and swaying in the restless breezeâfragile, but standing.
âAnd youâboth of youâfeel like home, too.â
Your voice softens, but every syllable carries a fierce certainty.
âIâd be losing a piece of myself if I didnât go out there and try to protect you.â
Ellie looks away again, but you catch the glimmer of something.
Something almost like relief.
Thereâs no argument now, only the hard, fragile bond of blood and choice.
SEATTLE DAY 3
âFuckâfuckâfuck,â Dina hissed through clenched teeth, the words tumbling from her mouth like a broken record. Her leg kicked instinctively, but your hands were already firmâone pressing down on her thigh to slow the bleeding, the other cradling her hip to keep her grounded.
The arrow was still lodged in deepâno exit wound, no clean break. Just ragged pain. Shit.
âI know, ⊠I know,â you murmured, your voice trembling with the effort to stay calm, to sound like safety even when everything around you was falling apart.
Your eyes flicked toward the boarded theatre doorsâshadows stretching and shifting with every sound beyond the wall.
Ellie and Jesse were gone.
Vanished into the dark without a goddamn word, leaving you to tend the bleeding girl with nothing but a half-stocked med kit and the echo of her cries.
âWhere the fuck did they go,â you muttered under your breath, voice low and sharp like a blade unsheathed.
Not angry. Not really. Just scared in that deep way you couldnât showânot with Dina looking up at you like you were the last bit of steady ground she had left.
The theatre lights flickered overhead, humming with weak electricity. You felt the dust cling to your sweat-slick skin, the dampness in the air from the sealed-off walls closing in.
âOkay, youâre gonna breathe for me now, yeah?â you whispered, brushing the hair from her forehead, even as your hands were stained with her blood. âIn, out. Count with me.â
Her grip tightened around your wrist, her knuckles white with pain.
âIâve got you,â you said again, quieter now, like a prayer. Then, more to yourself: âAnd when Ellie gets back, Iâm gonna wring her little neck.â
A pause, then a huff from Dinaâa half-laugh, broken and breathless.
âThere she is,â you smiled faintly, pressing your forehead to your forearm for a heartbeat before you reached into your bag.
âHold still, babygirl. Weâre getting through this."
And you meant it.
Even if you had to tear the whole world apart to do it.
You crouched lower, your knees aching against the moist carpet, breath shallow as your fingers hovered just above the arrowâs entry point.
The shaft jutted from Dinaâs thigh, slick with blood and trembling each time she whimpered.
There was no scalpel. No sterile field. The tin of supplies was down to rusted scissors and half a bottle of alcohol.
This was going to be brutal.
Your hand steadied the arrow. The other braced her leg.
âDinaâŠâ you started, voice a low thread of calm wrapped in exhaustion. âI have to pull it, okay? Thereâs no other wayâIf I leave it in, itâs going to poison you from the inside out.â
You tried to speak gently.
Tried to carry softness in your tone like it might cushion the truthâbut the second she realized what you meant, her panic overtook her.
âNoâplease, donât let me dieâI canâtâI canâtââ Her hands scrabbled against the floor, against your wrist, against the air. Her breath caught in her throat, eyes wide with fear.
You moved fast, crawling up beside her and cupping her cheek with a blood-warm hand. âLook at me,â you said, urgent now. âRight here, eyes on me.â
She blinked, her pupils blown wide.
âYouâre not going to die. Not on my watch. Not in this theatre. You hear me?â
A pause. Her breath stuttered.
âThatâs my girl,â you whispered, nodding, trying to ground both of you. âNow hold on to me. Bite down if you have to.â
You reached into your coat pocket, pulled out the rag youâd been using to keep your hands dry, and gently offered it to her.
âUse this. Scream into it if you need to.â
She took it with shaking hands, her lips already parted in dread.
You braced her thigh again. Drew in a breath.
âThree,â you said softly. âTwoââ
You didnât wait for one.
The arrow came out with a sickening wet sound, torn muscle giving way beneath your fingers. Dina let out a strangled scream, her whole body convulsing in your arms. You threw the arrow aside and immediately pressed gauzeâwhat little you hadâagainst the wound, applying pressure with everything you had left in you.
Her screams faded into broken sobs.
You didnât speak for a long time. Just held her as the blood slowed, your hands trembling now too.
When she finally stopped crying, you stroked a thumb beneath her eye and whispered, âYou did it. Youâre here. Still with me.â
And though she didnât say it, her grip around your arm said everything you needed to hear.
Though the world outside was still a war zone. Ellie and Jesse were still out there chasing ghosts. But in this flickering, blood-stained theatre, you were someoneâs safe place.
And that had to be enoughâfor now.
After what felt like hoursâyour hands sticky with old blood, your knees stiff and soreâyou finally wrapped the last strip of cloth around Dinaâs thigh. The wound still wept a little, but the bleeding had slowed. She was pale, quiet now, drifting in and out of a fevered sleep against a backstage dressing room cot youâd thrown together with old coats and torn curtains.
You sat with her until her breathing evened out, brushing damp hair from her face, whispering promises she probably couldnât hear: Iâve got you. Youâre safe. Iâm right here.
But then the theatre groaned, and something shifted.
You stood slowly, pistol already warm in your palm. The doorâbarely barricaded, creaking against the night windâstood like a challenge. The silence outside felt wrong. Too quiet. Like a breath held too long.
Thenâfootsteps.
Fast. Familiar.
You didnât even have time to raise your gun before Ellie and Jesse burst in, panting and soaked through, rain trailing down their necks.
But it wasnât them your eyes locked on.
Tommy.
Jesse had never told you that's who he brought.
He stood in the doorway, backlit by pale grey light, coat dripping, rifle slung low across his chest. You could see it before he even opened his mouthâanger clinging to him like a second skin.
Cold. Alive. Unforgiving.
You froze. The words stuck in your throat.
âJesus Christ,â he muttered, stepping inside, boots heavy on the warped floor. âI had to hear from them that you were in Seattle? That you lied to me? That you followed them out here like some goddamn fuckin' idiot?â
âTommyââ you started, voice small and broken already.
âNo. Noâyou donât get to speak first.â His voice cracked like a whip. âYou lied to me. You. The one person I thought I could count on to be straight with me.â
Ellie and Jesse stayed silent, watching the unravel happen from the sidelines, rain still dripping from their sleeves.
âI couldnât tell you,â you said finally, stepping forward just once, slowly. âBecause if I had⊠You wouldâve stopped me.â
âYouâre damn right I wouldâve.â His eyes were blazing now, jaw clenched so hard you could see the muscle twitch. âYou were supposed to be safe. You were supposed to wait for me to make a decision.â
âYour brother died, Tommy,â you hissed. âYou think I was gonna sit in Jackson and bake pies, and knit while the people I love walked straight into hell?â
Almost immediately, "And you think I need to lose you too?!"
It was loud. Echoed through the entire building.
The hurt in his expression sliced through the anger just long enough for you to see it: guilt, grief, the kind of ache that never sets right in a manâs bones
And stillâhe looked at you like he didnât recognize you.
âI thought you were dead,â he said, voice lower now, hoarse. âEvery fucking day since you left, I thought Iâd find your body strung up by those freaks, or rotting in some back alley. You know what that did to me?â
He looked away.
âUpstairs,â you said quickly, voice low and clipped, already moving toward the staircase that led to the mezzanine.
You didnât wait to see if he followed.
The creak of the steps beneath your boots was the only sound between you. That, and the distant static of Jesseâs walkie-talkie downstairs. When you reached the upper level, the silence cracked.
âWhat the fuck were you thinking?â Tommyâs voice cut through the dark like a rifle shot. âJesus Christ, you really went and followed âem?â
You turned to him. âWhat did you expect me to do? Let them walk into hell alone? Let you come out here andââ
âNo.â His jaw clenched, and he stepped forward. âI expected you to stay. I expected you to protect what we built. I expected you to be there when I got back.â
âYou think I didnât want to?â you shot back, heat rising in your throat like bile. âYou think this was some fucking joyride?â
âI donât give a damn if it was a funeral march!â he barked. âYou promised me. You promised me, and then you left like it meant nothinâ!â
âIt meant everything!â you shouted, stepping into him. âIt meant I couldnât watch them die too!â
He flinched like the words slapped him. Your chest rose and fell violently, heart pounding in your ears, âJoel died, Tommy."
"He fucking died, and weâve all been tearing at the seams since.â
He looked away, shoulders tight, breathing hard.
That undid something.
âI had to go,â you whispered, voice cracking. âIf I stayed, I wouldâve broken into a hundred pieces. YouâYou donât get to be the only one with grief in your bones.â
âYou think I donât know that?â he snapped, eyes glossy, teeth clenched like he was holding something back. âYou think I havenât woken up every goddamn night reachinâ for you?â
Your face twisted at the words.
He took a breath, like he was steadying himself.
âI was scared,â he said, quieter now, but no less angry. âNot of the WLF, not even of those damn cultists. I was scared Iâd lose you, and I wouldnât even be there to say goodbye.â
That landed.
Fuck.
You crossed your arms, holding yourself steady, âIâm right here.â
âFor now,â he said bitterly, voice shaking. âBut for how long?â
You stepped toward him again, slower this time, your voice tender despite the storm in it.
âI didnât leave you. I followed them because they needed me. Just like you wouldâve.â
Tommy laughed. It was cold. Hollow. Nothing like the man you used to curl up with in front of the fireplace. âDonât you fuckinâ dare,â he spat. âDonât you put me in the same breath as what you did.â
âWhat I did?â your voice cracked, turning sharp, âYou think this was easy? You think I just packed my shit and skipped out of Jackson with a smile on my face?â
âYou left without a word,â he said, stepping in. âYou left me. You lied. To my fuckinâ face.â
âI had to!â
âNo, you didnât!â he exclaimed, stepping so close your chests nearly brushed. âYou just didnât trust me.â
âThatâs not true.â
You could feel the anger simmering under your skin.
âThe hell it ainât!â His voice was thunder now, echoing against the empty theatre walls. âYou didnât even give me the chance to say no. To say anything. You decided you knew better."
"Like always.â
You shoved at his chest, hard.
âBecause you wouldâve stopped me!â
âDamn right I wouldâve!â he shouted. âBecause I love you!"
"Because I couldnât take losing you too!â
The silence after that was vicious.
Not soft, not comforting. Just ringing.
You fucked up.
You knew that deep, and fleshed out.
"I love you," It came out deep, breathless, like it had torn a hole in your chest just to leave your lips.
"I love you so fucking much."
Tommy didnât answer. Didnât breathe, didnât blink.
Just stared at you like he wanted to yell or throw somethingâor maybe fall to his knees and beg for time to rewind.
Then, suddenly, he moved.
One hand was in your hair, the other grabbing your waist so tight it almost bruised, and then his mouth crashed into yours.
No patience. No sweetness. Just teeth and desperation and too many sleepless nights spent hating the distance between you. The whole four days.
You gasped into him, fingers digging into his jacket, pulling him closer like you could anchor yourself in the wreckage of him.
It was violentâthe way your mouths moved against each other, like a fight without fists, like you'd been waiting weeks to tear each other apart and this was the only language you still knew how to speak.
âFuck you,â he growled into your mouth, hands shoving you back against the mezzanine wall, his breath hot against your cheek.
âYou came all the way out here, didnât you?â you bit back, tugging him down by his collar, lips brushing his.
He kissed you again, harder this timeânothing tender, just fury and need and that sharp edge of grief that never seemed to dull. You groaned against him, back arching into the wall as his hands mapped the curve of your waist, gripping, grounding, like he could crush the betrayal out of his own lungs.
Hands underneath fabric, frantic and rough. Bruises from fingers pressed too hard, teeth catching lips too sharp.
You didnât care. Neither of you did.
Youâd both lost too much to ask for softness.
He broke first, forehead pressed against yours, panting like heâd just been in a shootout. âYou fuckin' wrecked me,â he said, voice shredded.
And you kissed him again, even harder this timeâbecause you both knew this might be the only way youâd survive each other.
His hands moved to your shirt, undoing the buttons with ferocious intent, uncaring of the fact that the girls you had practically helped raise were only a floor below you. Your breath came in short, ragged gasps between the crash of mouths.
âYou think this fixes it?â Tommy rasped against your neck, voice thick with anger, teeth grazing the bruise blooming at your jaw. âYou think this makes up for you leavinâ me behind, thinkinâ you were dead somewhere in this hellhole of a city?â
You leaned up to kiss him just as hard as he talked, because you needed him to know you hadnât fallen out of love with himâyouâd just been burning in its silence.
His hands found your belt, fingers working the worn leather loose with swift, practiced intent. It slipped through the loops with a slow hiss, unspooling like breath between clenched teethâuntil he yanked it free and let it fall, forgotten, to the floor.
âTurn aroundââ
"Bend over.
It came out rough. Hoarse. A command, not a question. Nothing of the man who kissed your forehead at dawn or teased you with whip-creamed slick fingers at breakfast.
Noâthis wasnât Tommy wrapped in warmth. This was him stripped down to his marrow. A man burning with too much love, too much fury, too little time.
This wasnât about gentleness.
This was about need. The kind born from war echoing in the distance and the knowledge that peace is always borrowed, never owned.
About staking a claim in the only safe place heâs ever knownâyou.
Here, in the hollow of a mezzanine doorway, with the world outside teetering on the edge of collapse, he held you like a last prayer.
There was no performance. No pretending.
Just a man who had survived too much and still chose to love like thisâfierce, unrelenting, and all in.
âTommyââ you started, voice catching on the weight of it. But the look he gave youâ
God.
It hollowed you out, stripped the fight clean from your bones. That look didnât ask. It ached.
âThis doesnât fix the problemââ you tried again, even as your body betrayed you, leaning in, breath stuttering.
But he was already thereâso close his breath tangled with yours, lips not touching but hovering, like he didnât trust the moment to hold if he moved too fast.
âYou got a fuckinâ solution, then?â he murmured, low and splintered. Somewhere below, you heard the soft clink of his belt buckleâquiet, final. You swallowed hard, nerves pulling tight.
And then he said your name.
Not casual. Not soft. He said it like a confessionâlike every syllable dragged sin out from his lungs.
Like the way he said it the first time. The night he crumbled in your arms saying he loved you.
âTell me,â he whispered, â⊠tell me that feelinâ you come apart in my hands ainât gonna fix somethinâ. Even if itâs just for a minute.â
His voice almost cracked into a smile. But it didnât reach his eyes.
âTell me if I make you scream my name, I wonât believeâjust for a secondâthat youâre still here. That I won't lose you.â
His gaze was burning now, unblinking, like if he dared look away you might vanish into the next loss.
âThat I got time left. That I ainât already lost you.â
He swallowed hard, jaw flexing, every breath shaking loose from somewhere buried deep.
âThat I donât gotta bury you too.â
Now, as he stands before youâscared, desperate, begging without prideâyou realize the danger isnât in loving him.
Itâs in the thought of ever having to live without him.
âYeah,â you breathe, voice steadier than your heart. âI⊠need you.â
He stirsânot in body, but in something quieter, deeper. A flicker behind his dark eyes, calculating. Weighing. His gaze snaps toward the row of half-folded theater seats, now ghostly in the low light.
A step back. Then another. His eyes rake over you, still burning with that same relentless heat heâs worn like a second skin for the past thirty minutes. Deliberate, he turns, moving toward the seats. One broad hand spreads over the velvet cushion, pressing it down with a controlled grace. His chin tiltsâan invitation. Or a command.
âKnees here,â he murmurs, voice rough with restraint.
âFace down. Ass up.â
A startled laugh slips from youâquiet, breathy, incredulous.
He can't be serious.
âYouâre joking.â
He doesnât move. He doesnât speak.
That silenceâso complete, so unwaveringâis the answer.
Heâs serious.
Heat floods your face, blooming down your neck, across the delicate tips of your ears. Youâre burning. Embarrassment crackling just beneath the skin.
This feels exposed. Laid bare in his gaze. Too open. Too visible.
Too wrong.
And yet⊠it coils low in your bellyâright.
You hesitate only for a heartbeat. One last glance at the cracked door down the hallway. Then back to him.
And then you move.
A few tentative steps. A breath caught in your throat. A knee pressed to the worn cushion. The rustle of fabric and nerves.
Heâs unhurriedâdeliberateâas he reaches for you. His hands already at your waist, anchoring you. Guiding you.
Slow. Certain.
âYouâre gorgeous.â
The words are quiet, almost reverent, spilling from his lips like a confession. His hands shift from your waist, finding the edge of your jeans. Fingers curl, drag, tugâslowly peeling the fabric down your thighs.
The air hits you like a snap of winter.
Skin prickling. Every nerve lit with cold.
The seatâs metal edges dig into your calvesâunforgiving, near bruising. But you stay. Let it press. Let it mark. It angles your body forward, bends you in offering.
And there you areâbare, open, arranged before him.
He guides you down with a gentleness that contradicts the sharpness of the moment. One hand at your spine, coaxing you into a deeper arch. The edge of the adjacent seat bites into your midsectionâunyielding, coiled pressure digging in.
He doesnât rush. His touch drifts lower, tracing the heat that pulses between your thighs.
His fingers lingerâbarely there. Not giving. Just knowing.
âFor a woman who just screamed at me,â he breathes, voice low and amused, ââŠyouâre awfully excited, huh?â
âTommyââ you warn, breath catching, but heâs already thereâpressing the tip of his cock against you, a ragged exhale slipping between clenched teeth.
âIâm kiddingââ he murmurs, the words meant to disarm, to softenââFuck, sweetheart.â
The push is deliberate. Low. Slick. He moves slowly, savoring every inch as he slides in, like he wants to memorize the feeling.
Your head dips forward, jaw tightening to trap the rising whine, the overwhelming fullness. One arm lifts blindly, bracing against the cold metal of the chair, your forearm muffling the wet, trembling sound that escapes.
âFuck,â he rasps, shifting forward, body heaving to find a deeper angle. âIââ
He faltersâgenuinely faltersâfor the first time since youâve known him, words catching like breath in his throat.
His hips draw back, then roll forwardâmeasured, indulgent. Not brutal. Not frantic. Just slow, deliberate depth. His grip is unrelenting, palms anchored as he pulls your hips into each thrust. It isnât him moving anymoreâitâs you, guided and used, rhythm dictated by his hands, and brain alone.
Your fingers stretch forward, then curl tightâwhite-knuckledâinto the fabric of the next theater seat. The sharp sound of skin meeting skin echoes through the closed space, amplified by its hollowness.
You canât feel the room. Canât process the world outside this moment. You're buried in sensation, in the obscene fullness of him, your thoughts unravelingâreduced to nothing but heat and ruin.
âToâTommây.â It tears out of you raw, breathlessâhalf-whimper, half-animalâdragged up from somewhere deep and trembling.
âI knowââ he breathes, voice thick, wrecked with restraint. One hand leaves your hip, slipping beneath the hem of your shirt, calloused palm sliding up until it cups your breast in full possession.
âYou look so fuckinâ good from this angle.â
The praise doesnât wane. If anything, the way heâs buried so deep only sharpens his hungerâmakes his words rougher, more reverent.
âMissed this⊠Beinâ so fucked up inside you.â
He shiftsâjust enoughâlifting one knee to brace against the chairâs arm, angling himself deeper. The new alignment drags him forward, deliberate and unrelenting, until heâs brushing in soft, pulsing rhythm against your cervix.
Fucked up barely begins to cover it.
You clench around him, tighter, your whole body shivering with the effort to stay silent. He groansâlow and gutturalâmouth grazing your shoulder as he sinks down, chest flush to your spine, every inch of him sealed to your trembling form.
Youâre already wreckedâthighs trembling from the sheer effort of holding yourself upright. Every motion spreads slick heat between you, each slow thrust leaving you messy, glistening, undone.
âCanât lose you,â he gaspsâstrained, breaking apart. His voice cracks beneath the weight of it, tangled in groans and ragged whines.
âFuckââ
Your name falls from his lips like a curse, again and again. Like heâs punishing himself with it. Worshipping it. Haunted by it. Every syllable like gold.
âOh my godââ It escapes you in a panting breath, fragile and frayedâhovering somewhere between a cry and surrender.
He noticesâyour trembling, the way your body starts to falterâand lets out a frustrated exhale. But it isnât your exhaustion that draws it from him. Itâs everything heâs been holding in. All the tension coiled tight beneath his skin, buried deep in muscle and bone, haunting him through every hour of the day.
He pulls out with a groan, rough and reluctantâlike the absence of your warmth physically pains him. You echo it, a soft, broken whimper slipping from your lips as your head drops lower, hips unsteady and shaking.
He leans forward into the narrow aisle, hands threading beneath your arms, one anchoring at your waist. He lifts youâeffortless, like muscle memoryâbut this time, thereâs a fever behind it. A kind of urgency.
Your back meets the cold theatre wall with a shiver, stark against overheated skin. And without a wordâno warning, no pauseâhe drives you down, presses you forward. Fucking up into you, hard and sure, with the wall at your spine and nothing to catch you but him.
This time, you can see him. The way he looks at youâreally looksâas your flushed face lifts, eyes half-lidded and dazed, finding his. Itâs desperate, a silent plea hanging between parted lips, breath caught, no sound escaping.
His arms are locked around your waist, holding you closeâcoiled, trembling with something deeper than lust. His head dips forward, brushing a kiss against youâsoft, dry-mouthed, his breath ragged.
âI was so fuckin' scared.â
It slips out like a confession, barely above a whisper, his eyes flicking up through the weight of his lashes.
âI canât live without youââ Before, he was slowâdrawn-out, savoring, lost in the rhythm of his own need. But now? Heâs driven.
His hips pound into you with punishing precision, each thrust unrelenting, slamming up into that one devastating spot he knows by heart. No mercy. No pause. Just raw, rhythmic force.
It doesnât take longâseconds, reallyâbefore the pressure starts to build, that tight coil gathering low in your belly, threatening to snap. Your eyes betray you first, going wide, glassy.
He sees it. And breathes it in like a promise.
âThere she isâŠâ he murmurs, mouth brushing yours before crashing inâtongue, teeth, breathless urgency. âCome on⊠give it to meâgive it to me, sweetheartâŠâ
You think itâll be his name that slips out.
But itâs not.
âIâm sorryââ It leaves you like a broken sob, breathless and cracked, your head thrown back, eyes clenched tight.
âFuck, Iâm so sorryââ But the rest is stolenâdevouredâhis mouth crashing into yours in a kiss thatâs all desperation and heat, messy and unrelenting, more collision than connection.
You shudder against him, unraveling fast, sobs catching in your throat as your thighs clamp hard around his hipsâtight enough to bruise, to mark, to mean it.
He pulls back just enough to press his forehead to yours, breath hitchingâshallow, ragged. His eyes are half-lidded, glassy, like heâs barely holding on.
âThatâs it⊠FuckâJesus Christ,â he groans, voice breaking around the edges. His hips stutter, slipping in and out with erratic desperation, like his body refuses to let go, refuses to stop feeling.
âShitâIâmâŠâ
His mouth finds yours again, quick and needy, like the words are too dangerous to finish aloud. His grip tightens, grounding himself in the curve of your waist, the tremble of your body under his.
âDonât let go yet,â he breathes, almost pleading. âNot yetâstay with me. Just a little longer.â
One hand drifts upward, tracing the curve of your spine before tangling gently in the thick, tangled strands heâs come to crave. He doesnât tugâjust lingers there, holding you captive in the ache of his touch.
Itâs his snarl that betrays himâa ragged, breathy growl caught between a plea and a promise.
Then the heat crashes in, spilling fiercely into you, relentless and unforgiving as he drives himself hilt deep, locking you together in raw, brutal surrender.
He leans closer, lips brushing the shell of your ear, voice low and ragged.
âGodâfuckâyou're all I've ever needed."
You settle into the quiet between breaths, bodies entwinedâbreathing in each others every release and inhale. His forehead presses gently into the hollow of your neck, still holding you captive against the cold wall.
âIâm sorry.â Your voice is a soft murmur, thick with exhaustion and something fragile as your hands lift from your slack side to rest against his collarbone and jaw.
âIâm so fucking sorry.â
âI know,â he exhales, tilting his head back to meet your gaze. His hand rises slowly, brushing away a stray lock of hair plastered to your sweat-dampened forehead. âI know.â
He swallows hard, those deep brown eyes tracing the contours of your face like a bittersweet memoryâlike youâre already slipping away and heâs mourning every second.
âI wouldâve done the same,â he whispers, voice thick with regret. âThatâs why Iâm angry. Because I wouldâve left you in Jacksonâjust like you left me. Because I want to keep you safe. Hide you from this fucked up world.â
You nod, the weight of his words settling deep inside you. Because fuckâif you could cage him, shield him from every shadow that prowls this city, you would.
God wants to tear him away from you.
He will. One day.
But not today. Heâd have to pry him from your cold, dead fucking clenched hands.
The aftermath is gentle. He lowers you from his hold with care, tugging at the hem of whatever undershirt heâs wearing to blot the sheen of sweat from your skin before discarding it somewhere haphazard.
He mutters something about the mess he's madeâhow the moment youâre back in Jackson, heâll draw you the warmest bath. How all this grime and sweat canât be good for you.
Itâs strange. Almost laughable, reallyâhow, amidst this fractured, war-torn world, his mind lingers on something as tender and mundane as your cleanliness.
You only catch his words when his fingers, gentle but sure, thread your belt through the loops of your jeans, tugging your zipper closed.
âJust⊠let me speak,â he murmurs, low and steadyâknowing full well that if he stumbles, if he says too much, youâll cut him off without hesitation.
âI love you.â
âI love youâand Iâm not letting you die out here. Not like this.â
âI wonât let this fucked-up world steal away the one thing Iâve got left.â
You part your lips to reply, but he shakes his headâwarning, fierce.
âWe have so much left to do.â
âSo much I havenât given you.â
âA real goddamn house⊠a ring⊠a familyâŠâ
He pulls you closer, voice dropping to a rough whisper, almost desperate.
His hands tighten on your waist, thumb tracing slow circles, grounding you in the moment.
âI swear, Iâm gon' make it right."
"I'm gon' fix it."
But beneath it all, you knowâhe cannot sever the threads fate has woven tight. No matter how he pleads, how he weeps, how fiercely he fights, the relentless clock beats on for both of youâunyielding, inevitable. Only sheer raw defiance stands between you and that monster.
Your hand rises, trembling, to his faceâsoft, reverent. Thumb tracing away a stubborn speck of dirt, lingering over freckles you adore.
âIâm not losing you to this city, Tommy,â you breathe, voice fragile yet fierce. Tongue swiping nervously over your lips, your resolve shaking.
âIâm not losing them. Iâm not losing you. And damn it, youâre sure as hell not losing me.â
He leans in, pressing a kiss thatâs deep and urgentâsoft but laden with a desperate hunger. Not like the hunger before, not the hesitant tremble of uncertain resolve. This kiss is a silent confession, a wordless sobbing into each otherâs mouths, like gasping for breath in pools of water.
Because come morning, who knows if youâll still find each other alive.
authors note: did you understand the position i put them in on the chair.. or did u have to do the thing.. where ur like.. ??what they doin' . anyway. mwah mwah
if you're confused on the position.. (sfw) post here











