Original request here. Moodboard here. Masterlist here.
You had eloped very young. The kind of young where Sue sat you both down and told you it was a mistake by saying something like, “if you really love each other, then what’s the rush?” You were both 19 when you made Ben come to the court house to sign as your witness, which he had done against Sue’s wishes.
Eventually, Sue came around, although still not understanding, and so did everyone else. You had been in love with Johnny Storm since you were 15. He had told you from your very first milkshake date in downtown Manhattan that you were the one he was going to marry.
So at 19, while you were tangled up in bed, he suggested heading to city hall and making it official. And you couldn’t think of a better idea. So here you both were, seven years into marriage dealing with scenarios you can guarantee no other married couple has to navigate.
Two years ago you were on a mission in space when an accident gave all five of you super powers. Life had been far from easy since then, you were thrusted into the public eye, and put under a microscope both literally and figuratively. The government poked you with every test under the sun for the first year, you were all monitored closely, and for a while none of you dared leave the Baxter Building. The media fell in love with your husband and his charm.
The hardest part was learning to lie with this new body, a body that didn’t feel like your own. You became ice, Johnny became flame. Complete opposites of one another. You had always felt like he was truly the only person to understand you, and that became amplified when both of you went through such dramatic changes.
You look out at the city lights of Manhattan flickering through the window of the Baxter Building, as Johnny’s fire‑hair glows faintly in the dark. It’s moments like this, in the silence between chaos, when you both feel the weight of what’s changed, and how much you’ve had to overcome. Seven years of marriage and two of them spent with powers.
You remember the first morning you woke up after the accident. Cold. Inhuman. You looked at your hands and they weren’t skin anymore—they were frost, translucent, almost crystalline. They didn’t burn, either. They chilled everything you touched. And when you looked in the mirror it showed someone you barely recognized. Your eyes were glowing a light blue hue, much different than any human eyes you’ve ever seen. Going in and out as your powers surged in your new body, you couldn’t figure out how to tame it just yet.
Johnny, on the other hand, burnt from within. Flames that couldn’t be put out. Heat seared at the bed, at your clothes. He would burst awake at night, terrified he’d burn you. Worse, he’d pull away. Not because he didn’t love you, but because he thought the new him was dangerous.
You both had to learn to trust your new bodies. For you, that meant practicing touch. You started with gloves—something soft, protective—and then without, slowly. Johnny taught you how to steady yourself, how to see the frost as extension of your skin, not a prison. And he learned control. His flame became less wild. With every mission, every training session, every desperate moment when you had to save something—or someone—you began to feel more like you again, and you felt a purpose you didn’t know you could, to save the world.
Johnny’s fear was the most vicious kind, he was constantly worried about you. What if you get hurt on a mission? What if he gets hurt and you lose him? What if he loses control and he hurts you? He could never live with himself, and it was hard to not let the fear eat him alive.
It showed up in small ways. When you sat together, he wrapped him arms around himself, avoiding your touch. From what you could tell, you couldn’t literally burn each other, the cold would offset the heat, but it still hurt unintentionally. And he couldn’t bare causing you any pain.
What helped was brutal honesty. One night, after a mission when Johnny accidentally burned the edge of your shirt, you cried. Not for the shirt, but for the lack of control and anxiety you felt. He held you in his arms, his heat softened by your frost, and you said, “I don’t want us to be afraid of one another anymore, I can’t take this.” He let the tears slide down his cheeks and kissed the top of your head, “we’ll figure this out.”
You began to practice soft, controlled touches. First with gloves or oven mitts, easing off of those and learning to control your powers. You missed his hands on you more than you realized. Every day became easier and less dangerous. Both of your anxieties eased and you were able to learn how to love one another with your new bodies. You hadn’t truly kissed since you left for space, before putting your helmets on. So one night after months of practicing, it happened. You were standing in the Baxter Building living room swaying to smooth jazz, when Johnny caressed your cheek and leaned in. It was hesitant at first, but it was a rush of warmth on your cold lips that satisfied you in ways you didn’t know possible. When the kiss deepened you both found yourself smiling and laughing into one another. When you pulled away, you went back to swaying, how many people could say they got to have a second first kiss with their husband?
Before the accident, your identity was your refuge. You could walk down the street, order a coffee, have your face in crowds without being more than yourself. Today, you are part of a story. The world knows your name. The press calls you “Frosty,” “Ice Princess,” “Mrs. Human Torch,” whatever play on words draws traffic.
You hate that sometimes. Hate that people look at you and only see what you are, not who you were. Johnny—blessed with charisma and confidence—embraced it faster. He smiled for the cameras, joked in interviews. The media’s darling. You tend to be more overwhelmed by the publicity of it all, shrinking behind him and letting him deal with it.
Part of overcoming that has been reclaiming silence. Finding places the cameras can’t reach: a small café uptown, a bookstore with no windows, a little bench by the Hudson. Together, you slip away. You allow yourself to just be “you and me,” no power displays, no interviews, no questions. And sometimes, you also learned to step into the light. Put on the mask, answer the questions honestly (as much as you can), but without losing your sense of self in the performance.
Frost and flame. Fire and ice. Opposites, the media loved the poeticness of it all. When your power is cold, still, cautious—measured—you sometimes feel weak. Less explosive. Watching Johnny blaze, commanding heat, force, people were so drawn to him and you hated the way it made you jealous.
Johnny, when in flames, sometimes feels raw, uncontrolled. He envies your clarity, the way frost preserves edges, the way you can wait, calm, plan. He fears that his flame will burn out or burn all. He wonders if love, between you, is a blaze that consumes or an ice that isolates.
You almost drifted for this. In silence, in unspoken feelings. One night, during one of your fights, you said, “I wish this never happened, I wish we were still normal, so that we can be how we were.” He came home, coat singed, hair tousled. He sat beside you on the bed. He didn’t disagree, “we need to be more open with each other when we’re having these feelings, instead of letting it boil over,” you agreed. You both cried and vowed to never keep something like that from one another again.
The first year after acquiring powers, you were test subjects. Strange machines, scientists asking you to do things you couldn’t always understand. They ran scans, poked at your mind, measured your body. Johnny disappeared into a lab one day for three hours—you later found out they were calibrating his flame, testing its limits. You had to trust people with your privacy, your body, and secrets you didn’t even know about yourself yet.
The public expected you to be invincible. To always win. To always be perfect. Every slip-up exposed. Cold fingered frostbite; a moment when Johnny’s flame scorched something unintended. Every time, people would question if maybe you weren’t heroes at all—that maybe such powers were dangerous and should be contained.
What saved you was anchoring yourself in truth. “We are more than what we do,” you both kept repeating. Building allies who saw your humanity. A small circle: Sue, Ben, the few friends who always believed in you, who saw you before powers. When doubts would creep in, you and your husband would remind each other, “You are still the person who loves ice cream at midnight.” Or “You still sing badly in the car.” Or “You’re still the one who holds on tight when fear comes.”
Also, you made rules. With the government. With the agency that wanted your “use.” Boundaries: no experiments without your consent. No missions you aren’t ready for. Time off. You refused to let the situation become political, you were not for hire, and you all had to make that very clear.
Over time you crafted rituals: morning touch‑points, even when it’s just fingertips brushing as you step out of the door for the day. Dinner together as often as you could and specifically on Sundays, no gadgets, no news feeds, just being present.
You learn to lean on each other’s strengths. When Johnny’s flame is too wild, you cool him, literally—wrap him in your cold aura, cloak him in calm. When you feel frozen—emotionally or physically—Johnny’s flame lights you, warms you, breaks through the shell you sometimes build. Together you become something more than flame, more than frost. Where one fails, the other uplifts.
You both screw up. You lie (sometimes by omission), driven by fear—maybe you didn’t tell him how bad the burn felt because you didn’t want to worry him; maybe he didn’t tell you how unsafe the flame in his chest made him feel. Sometimes you blame powers when really the hurt is deeper: old insecurities, fear of being enough.
Forgiveness becomes as important as strength. Saying sorry when you push away. Accepting apologies even when they come harder than the mistake. Letting go of “I should have known” or “you should have told me sooner,” and just being thankful you’re letting one another in.
Two years later, so much has changed. Tonight you lie together. You press frost‑cold fingertips to his cheek; he presses flame‑warm hands to your back. Balance. Not perfect. But real. You fight less about fear, more about how to protect what matters—each other. He reminds you of your worth; you offer him patience and containment.
You walk public sidewalks with bravado and laughter. You jest about media headlines: “Frosted Fire”? “Melted Ice Queen?” You let people see that love can hold even when bodies change. When identities get rearranged. When the whole world is watching.
Your vow wasn’t about powers. You said “for better or worse, in sickness and in health.” Powers are just a new version of sickness—or health, depending on how you see them. And you are choosing “better.” Every day.
@azzygami Thank you so much! I love everything about it from the expressions to the colors and all the tiny details. You made them look so precious ✨️🌹✨️
While some are in love with others, I'm in love with Columbina, she's so cute.🌷😭
I'm learning to draw little by little. And I also find some really beautiful art from creators, so I'll post it here and of course I'll include the creator's username (@).