Out of all the things you couldn't keep yourself from when it came to Leon was his muscles, specifically his biceps. They were just so big and bulky, it was hard not to sink your teeth into them.
At times, it's been out of nowhere. It could be a quiet night in the living room Infront of the TV. Leon could be half asleep when he'd feel your teeth bite into the corded muscle.
The man was used to it, giving a sigh and just letting you do your thing.
"Again, gorgeous?"
"Mhmm."
You'd hum in answer, just enjoying the physique of your lover before detatching yourself from him and pressing a kiss to his scruff.
"Didn't realise I was your new chew toy."
Other times would be when he had you beneath him, on all fours as he rutted into you; fingers circling your twitchy bundle of nerves. It was as if your mind was seeping from your ears from the overwhelming pleasure running through your veins.
So blissed out, when Leon's arm came around in a headlock— not too hard but firm— your first instinct was to sink your teeth into the meat of his bicep, moaning into the skin as the head of his cock slammed to nicely against your g-spot.
"mhh— always bitin' me, so damn good for me."
When you came, you came hard, so hard that afterwards there was a visible mark on Leon's arm. Even if you were a biter, he really loved you.
Summary: A skilled intelligence agent is assigned as the partner of Leon S. Kennedy for a series of bioweapons investigations, and their partnership starts off tense as both expect the other to be difficult to work with. After several missions together, their constant banter at the agency slowly shifts into obvious flirting. As Leon begins finding excuses to stop by her desk and spend time with her, the growing tension between them finally leads to him asking her out for dinner, outside of a mission for the first time.
Pairing: Leon Kennedy x fem!Reader
Warnings/Tags: Slow burn romance, Coworkers / partners dynamic, Workplace flirting, Mission partners to lovers, Banter / teasing, possible terrible grammar and spelling.
Word Count: ~6,100
Read PART 2
a/n: ive been wanting to do a Leon Kennedy fic after i finished my Bucky ones last year… but now that requiem has come out well here i am! an even better excuse to write one teehee.
The briefing room door creaked open just as Leon S. Kennedy stepped inside, shrugging rain from the shoulders of his jacket. He expected the usual—some stiff government handler, a file, a mission he’d be sent on alone. Instead, someone was already sitting at the table, a folder open in front of them like they owned the place. Leon stopped halfway across the room, eyes narrowing slightly as he took in the sight. After a beat, he let out a quiet breath through his nose. “You’ve got to be kidding me,” he muttered, dropping the file he’d been handed onto the table with a dull thud.
“They’re giving me a partner now?”
You didn’t look particularly impressed either. You’d heard the stories about Leon—Raccoon City survivor, government golden boy, the guy they sent when things went bad. Up close, though, he just looked tired. Dangerous, sure, but tired in a way that said he’d seen too much and trusted too little. You leaned back slightly in your chair, crossing your arms.
“Relax,” you said coolly. “I’m not here to slow you down.”
Leon gave a short, humourless laugh, dragging a hand through his hair before meeting your gaze.
“That’s funny,” he replied. “Because that’s exactly what partners usually do.” The tension settled in the room almost instantly—two people already deciding they weren’t going to like working together.
Leon dropped into the chair across from you, the metal legs scraping softly against the floor. He flipped open the folder in front of him, scanning the pages with quick, practiced movements. For a moment the room was quiet except for the rustle of paper. Then he glanced up again, blue eyes sharp.
“So what’s your deal?” he asked. “They don’t usually stick agents on my assignments unless something’s already gone sideways.”
His tone wasn’t exactly hostile—but it wasn’t friendly either. It was the kind of guarded curiosity that came from someone who had learned the hard way not to trust a situation, or the people in it.
You tilted your head slightly, unimpressed by the interrogation.
“Intel division,” you said, tapping the edge of the file in front of him.
“Bioweapons trafficking investigation. Which means I’ve been tracking this operation for months.”
Leon leaned back in his chair, crossing one arm over the other as he studied you like he was trying to figure out a puzzle. “Right,” he said slowly.
“And now they want the guy who kicks down doors and the person who actually knows what’s going on in the same room.”
A faint smirk tugged at the corner of his mouth, though it didn’t quite reach his eyes. “Sounds like a disaster waiting to happen.”
Leon closed the folder with a quiet snap and pushed it back across the table. For a moment he just watched you, like he was measuring something—skill, patience, maybe whether you’d break under pressure.
Finally he leaned back in the chair, resting his elbows on the armrests.
“Look,” he said, voice lower now, more serious than before.
“When this goes bad—and it will—people hesitate. Partners hesitate. That’s when things fall apart.” His gaze didn’t waver. “So if you’re expecting someone to cover you every second, you should probably ask for a different assignment.”
You held his stare without blinking. “Funny,” you replied evenly. “I was about to say the same thing.”
Leon’s brow twitched slightly at that, the smallest flicker of surprise crossing his face before it disappeared again. You tapped the folder lightly. “I’ve been following this network for months. Supply routes, contacts, funding. If you charge in without thinking, you’ll blow the whole operation.”
You leaned forward a little, voice calm but firm. “So if you’re planning to play the lone hero, you should probably get used to the idea that someone’s going to tell you no.”
For a second the room went completely quiet. Then Leon huffed out a short laugh under his breath, shaking his head slightly. “Great,” he muttered, standing up and grabbing the folder again. “A partner who argues.”
But when he looked back at you, there was something different in his expression now—less dismissal, more interest. Like maybe you weren’t exactly what he expected. He gestured toward the door with the folder.
“Come on,” he said. “If we’re going to prove the suits wrong, we might as well start now.”
You pushed your chair back and stood, grabbing your jacket from the backrest. Leon was already halfway to the door, moving with that easy confidence of someone used to being in control of a situation. You followed him into the hallway, the fluorescent lights buzzing faintly overhead. He slowed just enough for you to walk beside him, glancing sideways for a second.
“So,” he said casually, like the argument in the briefing room hadn’t just happened, “intel division, huh? That means you’re the one who’s been buried in reports while I’ve been chasing ghosts.”
“Someone has to figure out where the ghosts are coming from,” you replied.
Leon let out a quiet hum of acknowledgment, shoving his hands into his jacket pockets as the two of you reached the elevator. When the doors slid open, he stepped inside and leaned back against the wall, eyes drifting to the glowing floor numbers as they started descending. For a moment neither of you spoke. Then he glanced over again, studying you with that same careful look from earlier.
“Just so we’re clear,” he said, voice quieter now, “I don’t do babysitting.”
The elevator slowed with a soft jolt at the ground floor. The doors slid open, revealing the dim parking garage beyond. You stepped out first, turning slightly to face him as he followed.
“Good,” you said simply. “Because I don’t need one.”
Leon paused for a second, then gave a small, almost reluctant smirk. It vanished just as quickly as it appeared, replaced by his usual guarded expression.
“We’ll see about that,” he said, heading toward the row of government vehicles. Even so, something about the way he glanced back at you suggested he wasn’t quite as convinced anymore that this partnership was going to be a mistake.
Several hours later, the quiet hum of the engine filled the space between you as the government sedan cut through a long stretch of empty highway. Night had settled in fully, the road ahead lit only by the sweep of the headlights and the occasional flicker of distant street lamps. Beside you in the driver’s seat, Leon had one hand loosely on the steering wheel, the other resting near the gearshift. He’d barely spoken for most of the drive, his attention fixed on the road while the file from the briefing sat folded in the centre console.
The town you were heading toward barely existed on most maps—a quiet rural place that had recently started showing up in reports connected to suspicious shipments and missing persons… per usual you thought to yourself. According to the intel you’d gathered, something was moving through the area that shouldn’t have been there. Bioweapons, most likely. Leon had read through your notes earlier, silent the entire time, his expression growing more serious with every page. Now, as the highway sign for the town flickered past in the darkness, he finally broke the silence.
“So this is the place,” he said, voice calm but edged with focus. He slowed the car slightly as the road narrowed, trees closing in on either side like dark walls. Leon glanced toward you for a moment before returning his eyes to the road.
“Your intel says shipments started coming through about three weeks ago.” His grip on the wheel tightened just a little. “Tell me something,” he added quietly. “Does any of it remind you of the cases that end with everyone in town turning into something they shouldn’t?”
You glanced out the window at the dark tree line rushing past, the faint glow of the dashboard lighting the inside of the car. “Not exactly,” you said after a moment.
“Those cases usually leave a mess behind—hospital reports, unexplained deaths, something that raises alarms.” You tapped the edge of the file in the console.
“This one’s quiet. Too quiet. People disappear, shipments move through the area, and nobody local reports anything.”
Your eyes shifted back to Leon. “Which usually means someone is making sure they don’t.”
Leon nodded slightly, like that answer confirmed something he was already thinking. The car slowed as the first scattered buildings of the town came into view—dark storefronts, a single gas station still lit under buzzing fluorescent lights, and a long empty street stretching ahead. He pulled the car to the side of the road just before the main intersection and cut the engine. The sudden silence felt heavier than the drive had been. Leon rested his forearms on the steering wheel, staring out through the windshield for a second.
“Place looks dead,” he muttered. Then he glanced toward you again, that focused, calculating look back in his eyes. “First rule in situations like this..?” he said, reaching into the back seat for a small tactical bag.
“Assume it isn’t.”
He unzipped it and pulled out a handgun, checking the magazine with practiced ease before sliding it into a holster under his jacket.
He shut the car door quietly when you both stepped out, the cool night air settling around the empty street. Leon scanned the area automatically, eyes moving across rooftops, alleyways, shadows—every possible place someone could be watching. After a second he looked back at you.
“You said the shipments were coming through an old warehouse near the rail line, right?” he asked. Then he gave a small nod toward the darker part of town. “Guess we’re about to find out if your intel’s as good as you say it is.”
You fell into step beside him as the two of you moved down the quiet street, boots echoing faintly against the pavement. The town felt wrong in a way that was hard to explain—too still, too silent. Even small places usually had something: a television glowing in a window, a dog barking somewhere in the distance, the low rumble of a passing truck. Here there was nothing. Just the wind brushing through the trees and the creak of an old sign swinging outside a closed diner. You noticed Leon noticing it too; his gaze swept across every doorway and alley like he expected something to jump out of them.
“Rail line should be about half a mile that way,” you said quietly, pointing toward the darker edge of town where the streetlights thinned out. Leon nodded once in acknowledgment, though his pace slowed slightly. He tilted his head just a little, listening. For a second you thought you imagined it too—but then you heard it. A faint metallic clatter somewhere in the distance, like something heavy being dragged across concrete.
Leon’s hand moved instinctively to the grip of his handgun under his jacket. He didn’t draw it yet, but his posture shifted immediately, shoulders tightening as he scanned the darkness ahead.
“Please tell me that’s normal small-town activity,” he muttered under his breath. His eyes flicked briefly toward you, the hint of a smirk tugging at his mouth despite the tension.
“Because if it’s not, your ‘quiet investigation’ just got a lot less quiet.”
The sound came again—louder this time. From somewhere past the next block, near where the faint outline of an old warehouse roof could be seen above the trees. Leon stopped walking, listening carefully, then exhaled slowly through his nose.
“Yeah,” he said, finally pulling the handgun free and checking the street one more time. “Something tells me we’re not the only ones working tonight.”
He glanced toward you, giving a small nod toward the direction of the noise. “Stay close.”
You didn’t move closer like he suggested. Instead, you stepped ahead of him slightly, already pulling your own handgun from the holster at your side. The motion was smooth and confident, like you’d done it a thousand times before.
“Relax,” you said quietly, checking the magazine before sliding it back in with a sharp click.
“I didn’t come all the way out here to hide behind you.” Out of the corner of your eye, you saw Leon pause for half a second, clearly not expecting you to take the lead.
Leon watched as you moved toward the corner of the next building, your steps careful but quick. The faint smirk he’d been wearing earlier returned, though this time it carried a hint of something closer to respect.
“Didn’t say you had to,” he muttered, falling into step beside you again. His eyes flicked briefly toward the gun in your hand before returning to the dark street ahead.
“Just making sure you’re still alive when this mission’s over.”
You reached the edge of the block first, pressing your shoulder lightly against the brick wall before peeking around the corner. The source of the noise was clearer now—a wide, rusted warehouse sitting near the rail line exactly where the intel had said it would be. One of the large side doors was partially open, dim light spilling out onto the cracked pavement outside. And just inside, silhouettes were moving. Not many. Maybe three or four.
You leaned back from the corner and looked at Leon. “Looks like a delivery,” you said quietly.
“Crates, truck parked out back, a couple guys inside.” Your voice stayed calm and controlled, like you were giving a routine report rather than standing a block away from a potential bioweapons exchange.
“So either we sit here and watch them move the product… or we stop it before it leaves.”
Leon studied you for a moment, clearly weighing the situation. Normally he’d be the one making the call. But the fact that you’d already scoped the building and counted the people inside without hesitation didn’t go unnoticed. He exhaled slowly, glancing back toward the warehouse again.
“You always this eager to start trouble?” he asked under his breath.
You gave a small shrug, already stepping away from the wall and checking the safety on your weapon.
“Only when it’s deserved.” Then you looked back at him, a sharp, confident expression settling on your face.
“You coming, Kennedy? Or are you planning to stand out here all night while the evidence drives away?”
Leon let out a quiet breath through his nose, shaking his head slightly as he followed after you.
“You know,” said Leon under his breath, “most people wait for a plan before walking straight into trouble.”
But he still moved with you, stepping lightly across the cracked pavement toward the warehouse. His eyes scanned the area automatically, covering angles you hadn’t looked at yet, the two of you falling into a rhythm without needing to say it out loud.
You slowed near the side of the building, crouching beside a stack of rusted barrels just outside the open door. From here you could see more clearly inside: wooden crates stacked against the far wall, a truck backed halfway into the loading bay, and three men arguing quietly over something near the cargo. You tilted your head slightly, studying the markings stamped on the side of one crate.
“Biotech company label,” you whispered. “Front corporation. Definitely illegal.”
Leon leaned down beside you, close enough that his shoulder brushed yours for half a second. He followed your gaze toward the crates, his expression tightening slightly.
“Yeah,” he murmured. “That’s the kind of logo that usually shows up right before something starts trying to eat people.” His voice was calm, but there was a sharp focus in it now—the same focus that had carried him through worse situations than this.
For a moment the two of you stayed there in the shadows, watching the men move the crates toward the truck. Then Leon glanced sideways at you.
“Alright, intel,” he said quietly. “Your call. You spotted it first.” The words were casual, but the meaning behind them was clear—he was trusting your read on the situation.
You didn’t hesitate. “We stop the shipment,” you said simply. Then you pointed toward the back corner of the warehouse.
“You take the two near the truck. I’ll handle the one by the crates.” Your eyes flicked toward him briefly. “Unless you think you can’t keep up.”
Leon’s mouth twitched at that, a small amused smile appearing despite the tension. He adjusted his grip on his handgun and gave a slight nod. “Careful,” he replied quietly.
“You keep talking like that and I might start thinking you actually like working with me.” Then he glanced back toward the warehouse entrance.
“Lets go.”
The warehouse was quiet now, the last of the men unconscious on the floor, crates overturned, and the truck left in ruin. Outside, the first light of dawn was beginning to streak across the sky, pale and gray over the small town. You sat against the curb, breathing slowly, letting the tension drain from your muscles. Leon came up beside you, wiping a thin layer of sweat and dust from his forehead. For a long moment, neither of you spoke, just listening to the faint hum of early morning life returning to the streets.
He sank down beside you with a soft thud, close enough that your knees nearly touched.
“Not bad,” Leon said quietly, glancing at you with that mix of respect and his usual guarded expression. “You handled yourself… better than I expected.” You gave a small shrug, trying to hide the warmth in your chest at the compliment.
“It’s just a job,” you said, though the smirk tugging at your lips gave you away. “You’re the one who’s supposed to be the hero.”
Leon let out a short, humorless laugh. “Yeah, well… heroes don’t usually argue with their partners while crouched behind barrels in a warehouse.” He leaned back, one arm propped on his knee, glancing at you out of the corner of his eye.
“I’ve got to admit,” he continued after a beat, softer this time, “I’m glad you were there. Didn’t think I’d say that by the end of tonight.”
You turned slightly to meet his gaze, the faint light catching the edge of his sharp features.
“I think we make a decent team,” you said, voice calm but firm. “Even if you don’t want to admit it.” Leon’s lips twitched at the corner again, this time a little more obvious.
“Decent,” he echoed, eyes flicking toward the horizon. Then, after a pause, he added quietly, almost to himself, “I could get used to this… working with you.”
The silence stretched comfortably between the two of you, the quiet aftermath of the mission settling around you like a soft blanket. Leon leaned back a little more, letting out a slow exhale, and for the first time that night, you saw him relax. Just a little. Enough that it wasn’t only the adrenaline keeping him on edge. You could feel it too—a subtle shift, the sense that maybe this partnership wasn’t just about survival or completing a mission.
You nudged him lightly with your shoulder, teasing, “You know, Kennedy, if you keep staring off like that, people might start thinking you actually enjoy my company.”
He gave a low chuckle, eyes finally meeting yours fully. “Don’t get used to it,” he said, but there was something in the way he said it, a softness under the warning that made you think he already was.
A month later, the two of you were back in a safe house after another mission, crates cleared, files sorted, and the hum of the air conditioning filling the silence. Leon leaned against the edge of the table, cleaning his gun with methodical precision, but there was something different in the way he glanced at you now. Small things had changed over the past weeks—how he’d make an almost imperceptible comment when you handled a tricky situation flawlessly, or how his smirk lingered a little longer when you disagreed with him. The tension that had defined your first meeting had softened into something sharper, teasing, almost playful.
“You know,” he started, glancing up from the handgun in his hands, “I think the intel division might owe me a favor for putting up with your… creative problem-solving today.” His tone was light, but the way his eyes flicked toward yours carried a spark that hadn’t been there before.
You raised an eyebrow, leaning back against the wall and folding your arms. “Creative problem-solving, huh?” you said, smirking.
“You mean the part where I saved your ass while you were staring at the wrong crate?”
Leon’s smirk widened just slightly. “I might’ve been distracted,” he said smoothly, eyes never leaving yours. “But I didn’t mind being saved… not entirely.” The pause after the words was deliberate, charged in a way that made your stomach tighten just a little.
You shook your head, trying to hide the small smile tugging at your lips.
“Careful, Kennedy,” you teased. “You’re starting to sound like you enjoy my company again.”
He gave a short laugh, leaning just a little closer across the table.
“Maybe I do,” he said quietly, voice low, almost casual, but his gaze lingered. “Maybe it’s growing on me—working with someone who can keep up.”
You caught the subtle tilt of his head, the way his eyes traced your movements with more attention than necessary. It was slow, quiet flirting—never outright, always just enough to make you aware that the man who’d once rolled his eyes at being partnered with you now wanted to be near you, and for the first time, it wasn’t just about survival or missions.
The next mission came a few days later, a surveillance job in another quiet town that looked just as ordinary as the last one—until you knew what to look for. Night had settled over the street as you and Leon sat inside a parked car across from a small warehouse, the engine off and the windows cracked just enough to let in the cool air. The place you were watching had been quiet for hours, which meant there was nothing to do except wait.
Leon sat back in the driver’s seat, one arm resting casually on the steering wheel while the other drummed lightly against the door.
“You know,” he said after a while, glancing sideways at you, “most partners would’ve fallen asleep by now.” His voice carried that familiar dry tone, but the corner of his mouth lifted slightly.
You didn’t look away from the binoculars you were using to watch the building. “Most partners probably wouldn’t trust you not to miss something,” you replied calmly.
Leon huffed a quiet laugh at that, shifting a little in his seat. “Wow,” he muttered. “You wound me.” His gaze lingered on you for a moment longer than necessary before he looked back toward the warehouse.
“Though I guess I should be used to it by now.”
You lowered the binoculars and glanced at him. “Used to what?”
He met your eyes, that small smirk returning. “You giving me a hard time.” He tilted his head slightly, studying you in the dim light of the dashboard. “It’s kind of becoming your thing.”
You raised an eyebrow. “And you keep coming back for more.”
Leon didn’t answer right away. Instead, he leaned back in the seat again, eyes drifting toward the windshield like he was thinking something over. Then he looked back at you, the smirk softening into something quieter.
“Yeah,” he said after a beat. “I guess I do.”
The next morning at the agency building was already busy when you stepped into the operations floor, reports being passed between desks and the low hum of conversations filling the room. You had barely set your file down when a familiar voice spoke from behind you.
“Careful,” Leon said casually, leaning one shoulder against the edge of your desk. “If you keep showing up early like this, people are going to start thinking you actually like the job.”
You glanced up to see him holding two coffees. One of them slid across the desk toward you before you could even ask. You raised an eyebrow.
“You bribing me now?”
Leon shrugged lightly, taking a sip from his own cup. “Not bribing,” he said. “Just making sure my partner stays functional.” His blue eyes flicked down briefly to the report you’d been reading before returning to your face.
“Would be a shame if the best agent on my missions collapsed from caffeine withdrawal.”
You leaned back in your chair, crossing your arms. “The best agent?” you repeated. “Pretty bold statement coming from the guy who walked into the wrong room during the last raid.”
Leon smirked immediately. “Yeah, well,” he said, leaning a little closer over your desk, lowering his voice just enough that the surrounding agents couldn’t hear, “if I didn’t do that, you wouldn’t have gotten the chance to dramatically save the day.”
His eyes lingered on yours for a second longer than necessary. “And I know how much you like showing off.”
You scoffed softly, though you couldn’t stop the small smile tugging at the corner of your mouth. “You’re impossible.”
“Maybe,” Leon replied easily. Then he straightened up, pushing himself off the desk. As he walked past you toward the briefing room, he paused just long enough to add over his shoulder, “But you keep agreeing to be my partner, so I must be doing something right.”
About an hour later the office had quieted a little, the earlier rush fading into the usual rhythm of typing keyboards and low conversations. Papers were spread across your desk as you worked through another report, highlighter tapping lightly against the page while you reread a line of intel. You didn’t notice someone approaching until a shadow fell across the desk.
“Still working on that?” Leon asked, his voice amused.
You didn’t look up immediately. “Some of us actually read the reports before missions,” you replied calmly.
Leon pulled out the chair next to your desk and sat down sideways in it, one arm resting across the back like he planned to stay a while.
“Hey, I read them,” he said.
“Eventually.”
You finally glanced at him, unimpressed. “Eventually.”
He grinned at that, clearly entertained. “What can I say? I prefer the fieldwork part.” His eyes flicked down to the notes in front of you, then back up again. “Besides… I’ve got you for the detailed stuff.”
You leaned back slightly in your chair, crossing your arms. “So that’s the plan? Let me do all the work?”
Leon tilted his head, studying you for a second like he was considering his answer. Then he leaned forward, resting his elbows on your desk.
“Not all the work,” he said, voice lower now. “Just the parts you’re better at.”
You narrowed your eyes slightly. “And what parts would those be?”
His smirk returned instantly. “Outsmarting people,” he said. Then, after a small pause, his gaze softened just a little. “Keeping me alive.”
The comment hung in the air for a moment longer than expected. You shook your head, trying to hide the smile threatening to appear.
“Your survival rate was pretty good before I showed up, Kennedy.”
Leon shrugged lightly. “Sure.” His eyes stayed on yours, relaxed but focused. “But it got better.”
He leaned back in the chair again, stretching his arms over his head briefly before standing. As he started to walk away, he paused and glanced back at you.
“Don’t work too hard,” he added casually. “I’d hate for my favourite partner to burn out.” And then he kept walking.
A little later, the office had thinned out even more. A few agents were still at their desks, but most had moved to meetings or headed out for lunch. You were still working through a stack of intel when someone leaned against the edge of your desk again—familiar enough now that you didn’t even look up right away.
“Starting to think you live here,” Leon said casually.
You sighed, finally glancing up from the papers. “Starting to think you don’t have anything better to do than hover around my desk.”
Leon placed a hand dramatically against his chest. “Wow. After I brought you coffee this morning?” he said. “That’s cold.”
“You brought yourself coffee,” you corrected.
He laughed softly at that, clearly enjoying the back-and-forth. Instead of leaving like he usually did, he slid into the chair next to your desk again, spinning it slightly so he faced you. “So what are we looking at now?” he asked, nodding toward the files.
You tapped one page with your pen. “Shipments of an item of some sort.. someone’s moving something through three different ports.”
Leon leaned closer to look at the map you’d drawn across the paper, his shoulder brushing yours again. This time neither of you moved away. He studied the page for a moment before pointing lazily at one of the locations. “That one.”
You raised an eyebrow. “And your evidence is…?”
He shrugged. “Gut feeling.”
You stared at him for a second. “Your investigative method is incredible.”
“Thank you,” he said immediately.
You shook your head, turning the paper back toward yourself. “You’re impossible.”
Leon rested his elbow on your desk, watching you work instead of leaving. After a moment he said, quieter now, “You know… you say that a lot.”
“That you’re impossible?”
“Yeah.” His lips curved slightly. “But you never actually sound annoyed.”
You paused, pen hovering over the page.
When you looked up again, he was already watching you—relaxed, amused, and just a little too aware of the way the conversation had shifted.
“You flirting with me at work now, Kennedy?” you asked.
Leon didn’t even hesitate.
“Maybe,” he said lightly.
Then his eyes flicked down to the report again, tapping the paper where you’d marked the port.
“But if it helps,” he added, smirk returning, “my gut still says that one.”
The afternoon dragged on, the office quieter now except for the steady tapping of keyboards and the occasional shuffle of papers. You were halfway through organising the shipment reports when someone set another coffee down beside your elbow.
You didn’t even have to look up this time. “Kennedy,” you said flatly.
“I’m impressed,” he said sounding amused as he leaned one hip against your desk.
“Didn’t even turn around and you already knew it was me.”
You finally looked up at him, eyeing the coffee. “You keep bringing me these like you’re trying to bribe me into liking you.”
Leon raised an eyebrow. “Trying?” he said, feigning surprise. “I thought that part was already going pretty well.”
You stared at him for a second. “Your confidence is concerning.”
“Confidence?” he repeated, crossing his arms casually. “No, that’s observation.” His gaze dropped briefly to the report you were holding before returning to your face. “You don’t roll your eyes nearly as much when I’m around anymore.”
“That’s because I’ve accepted you’re not going away.”
Leon grinned at that. “Exactly.”
You took a sip of your water just to hide the small smile threatening to show, but he clearly caught it anyway. He leaned forward slightly, lowering his voice just a bit.
“You know,” he said, “most partners I’ve had try to avoid me once the mission’s over.”
You tilted your head. “Maybe they had better instincts.”
“Or,” Leon replied smoothly, “maybe they just weren’t as interesting to work with.”
The words hung there for a second.
You set the coffee down slowly. “You calling me interesting now?”
Leon didn’t look away. If anything, he leaned a little closer across the desk.
“I’ve been calling you interesting for weeks,” he said. “You’re just finally noticing.”
You blinked once, clearly not expecting him to be that direct.
He straightened again like he hadn’t just said something bold in the middle of the office, but the smirk on his face gave him away.
“Don’t worry,” he added casually. “I’m pacing myself.”
Your eyebrow lifted. “Pacing yourself for what?”
Leon pushed himself off the desk, starting to walk backward toward the hallway.
“For the day you finally admit you like working with me.”
And then he flashed that annoying, confident grin, before he begun to walk off.
You called out “You know I don’t even like coffee??”
Over the next few weeks the routine at the office barely changed—missions, reports, late nights under harsh fluorescent lights. The only thing that slowly shifted was the dynamic between you and Leon S. Kennedy. The flirting never really stopped; if anything, it became easier. More natural. At some point it wasn’t just teasing in passing anymore—he’d stop by your desk just to talk, lean against the doorframe during briefings, find excuses to work through reports with you instead of alone.
The one thing that did stay consistent was the shitty office coffee.
Leon kept bringing it to your desk every morning like clockwork, setting it down with that same smug little smirk like he was doing you a favour. And every morning you pushed it back toward him.
“Still don’t like coffee,” you said one day as he started walking away.
Leon paused mid-step.
You leaned back in your chair, arms crossed. “I’ve told you that, like, five times now.”
He turned around slowly, looking at the cup like it had personally betrayed him. Then he glanced back at you, squinting slightly. “You’re serious.”
“I hate it.”
There was a short pause.
“Well,” Leon muttered, grabbing the cup back off your desk, “that explains a lot.”
After that the coffee stopped showing up. A few days later he started dropping other things on your desk instead—water bottles, iced tea, sometimes a random snack from the vending machine. He never made a big deal about it, but you noticed.
A few hours later, Leon dropped by your desk… again.
“Your still here?” he asked.
“Your still here,” you replied.
Leon shrugged lightly, glancing around the mostly empty office. “Yeah, well… someone’s got to keep an eye on you.”
You raised an eyebrow. “Right.”
He shifted his weight slightly, which immediately caught your attention. Leon didn’t usually look unsure about anything.
He rubbed the back of his neck briefly before speaking again. “So… there’s a diner a couple blocks from here that’s still open.”
You waited.
“And before you say anything,” he added quickly, pointing a finger at you, “they don’t serve coffee. Or at least you don’t have to order it.”
That earned the smallest smile from you.
Leon noticed it immediately.
He exhaled slowly, like he’d just committed to something. “What I’m saying is… maybe you could come with me.” His eyes met yours, a little more serious now.
“Not for a mission. Just… dinner.”
The office was quiet around you.
Leon gave a small shrug, trying to play it casual even though the tension was obvious.
“So,” he said, “what do you think?”
You studied him for a second, leaning back slightly in your chair. Leon was trying very hard to look casual—hands still in his jacket pockets, shoulders relaxed—but you could tell he was waiting for your answer a little more carefully than he wanted to admit.
“You’re asking me out,” you said plainly.
Across the desk, Leon exhaled through his nose, the corner of his mouth twitching. “Wow,” he muttered. “You make it sound way more intimidating when you say it like that.”
You tilted your head slightly, watching him. “Just making sure we’re on the same page.”
Leon shifted his weight, but he didn’t backtrack. If anything, he looked more certain now. “Yeah,” he said finally. “I’m asking you out.” Then he added, a little more lightly, “Figured I’d try doing it the normal way for once.”
You tapped your pen lightly against the desk, pretending to think it over longer than you needed to.
Leon caught that immediately. “You’re enjoying this, aren’t you?”
“Maybe,” you admitted.
He huffed out a quiet laugh, running a hand through his hair. “You know, most people don’t make a guy wait this long after he works up the nerve to ask.”
Your lips curved slightly. “Kennedy, you’ve been flirting with me in this office for two months.”
“Yeah,” he said, nodding once. “And look where that got me.” His eyes flicked toward the hallway. “Standing here awkwardly waiting for an answer.”
The small smile on your face finally widened just a little. “Alright,” you said, pushing your chair back and standing up.
Leon blinked once, clearly not expecting you to stand up immediately.
“You coming,” you added, grabbing your jacket from the back of the chair, “or were you planning to keep hovering around my desk all night?”For a second he just watched you, then that familiar confident grin slowly spread across his face.
“See,” he said, falling into step beside you as you walked toward the elevator, “I knew you liked working with me.”
Had to fix my previous drawing of him, I really loved the colours but not how it previously turned out... had to fix that jaw lol, here's the results now !! ( new vs old from september )