ᴛʜᴏʀᴏᴜɢʜꜰᴀʀᴇ °˖⋆ ℧
“i met you there in texas, somewhere on the thoroughfare”
“on the side of the road in the same torn up clothes with a pistol in my pocket”
arthur morgan x fem!reader x joel miller
| masterlist | 4.4k words | picture doesn’t depict the appearance of the reader just for aesthetic |yearning, tension, kissing, oral f!receiving, gettin tossed around by two burly cowboys, praise, unprotected piv sex, cuddling fucking from mr miller, aftercare !
summary- Two rugged ranchers, lifelong friends Arthur Morgan and Joel Miller, find their quiet world upended when a younger woman arrives to work their land—and slowly works her way into their hearts. As desire grows into something deeper, the three of them cross the line between friendship and longing, discovering a love too wild and tender to tame.
They didn’t talk much, and that suited them both just fine.
Arthur had always said the land did most of the talking anyway. The wind in the grass. The lowing of cattle at dawn. The metal clang of fence wire tightening under calloused hands. After years of gun smoke and ghosts, the quiet wasn’t so much peace—it was penance. And Joel understood that better than anyone.
They’d run the ranch together for nearly a decade. Fifty head of cattle. A weather-beaten barn. Long days spent working fence lines or chasing down strays in the hills. Evenings filled with whiskey and silence by the fire. Arthur cooked. Joel carved. They didn’t need much. Just the land, the dogs, the horses, and the kind of friendship you didn’t have to label.
They were men who’d lost too much to ask for more.
The work was hard, and that was good. It gave their hands something to do. Their thoughts are something to drown in. Neither of them said it, but the house felt too big for two men their age. There were extra bedrooms no one stepped foot in. An empty porch swing that never moved. Sometimes, Joel would glance at the seat across from him at dinner and imagine someone laughing there.
Arthur would look out across the pasture at sunset and feel the ache in his chest like a ghost pressing a hand to his ribs.
Then came the girl.
She rolled up in a truck that coughed smoke and looked like it hadn’t seen an oil change in ten years. It was early spring—the thaw barely settled. Joel had just come back from hauling feed when he spotted the dust cloud and narrowed his eyes at the figure stepping out.
Boots in the mud. Soft flannel. Strong arms. A stubbornness set to her jaw.
Arthur stepped out onto the porch, wiping his hands on a rag. “You lost, darlin’?”
You shook your head. “Looking for the Lyle property.”
Arthur’s brow furrowed. “Old George Lyle’s place?”
You nodded. “He passed a few months ago. Left it to me.”
Joel leaned against the post, arms crossed. “Didn’t know he had any kin.”
“I’m not,” you said simply. “Just someone he trusted. Taught me everything I know about cattle and fixing fences. I owed him.”
Arthur blinked, then smiled faintly. “That man was a hell of a card player.”
You smiled back. “So I heard.”
Joel muttered, “Place’s damn near falling in.”
“I can handle it.”
You didn’t ask for help. That was what caught their attention first.
────🌾────
Arthur watched you from the hilltop as he lit a cigarette. Joel noticed the way your back stayed straight, even when your shoulders shook from exhaustion.
By the end of the week, Arthur brought you a wheelbarrow and a fresh pair of gloves without a word. Joel handed you a water bottle and said, “You’re stubborn.”
You grinned. “So are you.”
You worked from sunup to sundown, bandaged your own blisters, and cursed loud enough to make Arthur chuckle into his coffee. You shared dinner with them one night, then two, then a week’s worth.
Eventually, Joel fixed the plumbing at the Lyle place. Quietly. Arthur rewired the porch light. You thanked them both with a smile that made something shift behind Joel’s ribs.
Then the rain came. And the roof leaked.
Joel stood in your doorway with his arms crossed, dripping wet. “Get your things.”
Arthur leaned in the truck window. “Spare room’s open. Ain’t much, but it’s dry.”
You moved in that night. One duffel bag. One quiet “thank you.”
────🌾────
Weeks passed like molasses, slow and sticky and sweet in their own strange way.
You never expected to stay this long.
The old Lyle property was half reclaimed from the brambles, but the rain had done a number on the roof, and more than once you’d found black mold in places you didn’t want to name. Arthur had patched what he could. Joel came over one morning with a cordless drill and never really left after that.
Eventually, they offered you the spare room in their house. Said it was temporary. Said it just made sense.
But after a while, no one brought up the word temporary again.
You all slipped into rhythm without meaning to. Mornings started with coffee and bare feet on cool wood floors. Joel took his black, Arthur loaded his with too much sugar, and you drank yours leaning against the counter in a sleep shirt and shorts, eyes half-lidded. One of them always made eggs. The dogs—Boone and Lady—sat at your feet, loyal and lazy, with their heads in your lap.
You fixed fence posts beside Arthur, sweat beading on your skin, nails between your lips as he handed you the hammer. He liked the way you didn’t flinch around mud, the way you cursed like a 70-year-old rancher and sang old songs under your breath.
Joel taught you how to ride his favorite quarter horse. Big, quiet gelding named Shimmer. Said you had good balance. Strong thighs. His voice always got rougher when he said thighs.
Sometimes he’d linger behind you in the saddle, correcting your grip with a hand on your waist. Sometimes his breath would hit the back of your neck, and you wouldn’t move. Wouldn’t even breathe.
You rode fence lines together at dusk. Swam in the creek on hot days. Played cards and drank beer on the porch at night. You started calling Arthur cowboy when he got bossy, and Joel sir just to see his jaw twitch.
They teased you back, sure—but never touched. Not really.
They were good men. Older. Quiet. They didn’t want to scare you off.
But something was shifting.
Joel caught himself looking at your hands. Your neck. The soft line of your spine when you bent over to stack feed bags. He started lighting his cigarettes farther from the porch—so he wouldn’t be tempted to sit too close.
Arthur got quieter around you. His laugh lingered a little longer, but so did the way his eyes drifted lower when you walked into a room. He fixed things that didn’t need fixing. Made excuses to be near you.
They never talked about it.
But you felt it.
Like that one night you were in the stables brushing Shimmer’s mane and Arthur joined you.
It was late. The horses were fed, the sky painted in fading streaks of gold and mauve. You were still brushing Shimmer down in the barn, sleeves rolled, boots muddy. Arthur stepped in, quiet as always, carrying a mug of tea like it was just something he’d thought to do.
“You keep brushing that horse, she’s gonna shine like polished silver,” he said in a low tone.
You smiled without looking up. “She likes it.”
Arthur leaned against the post. “So do you.”
You paused, glancing at him over your shoulder.
He stepped forward and handed you the mug. You took it, your fingers brushing his—rough against your smooth. He didn’t pull away.
“You work too hard,” he said.
You raised an eyebrow. “So do you.”
He gave a soft laugh, but didn’t move. He was close now. You could smell cedarwood soap and old tobacco. His eyes dropped to your lips, just briefly, and that alone made your breath catch.
“Got dirt on your cheek,” he murmured, lifting one hand.
His thumb brushed your skin. Slow. Careful. You swore he lingered. His hand didn’t drop right away. Instead, it cradled your jaw for just a second too long—his thumb ghosting over your bottom lip.
You didn’t speak. Didn’t dare.
He held your gaze like a man about to say something dangerous—but instead, he only stepped back, knuckles brushing yours as he whispered, “Night, darlin’.”
You stood there in the hay dust, heart pounding, wondering what would’ve happened if you’d leaned in.
Or
That morning with Joel in the kitchen.
The house was quiet except for the soft clink of dishes. You were in the kitchen rinsing out a coffee mug when Joel came up behind you—close, not touching, but close enough that your body noticed.
“You always leave your mugs in the sink?” he asked, voice low and dry.
You smirked. “You always hover behind people in the kitchen?”
Joel didn’t laugh. Didn’t move.
“You been wearin’ my flannel all day,” he said instead, voice rough.
You glanced down and shrugged. “Yeah. It was on the hook.”
He reached past you, slow, grabbed a plate from the drying rack. But his body brushed yours just slightly—his strong chest at your back, his hand ghosting near your waist.
You stayed still.
“I like how it looks on you,” he said, almost to himself.
You turned to face him, breath caught halfway. He was too close now. His eyes dipped to your lips, then back up. His hand rested on the edge of the counter beside your hip.
“I’m not tryin’ to start somethin’,” Joel said roughly.
“Then don’t stand so close,” you whispered.
But neither of you moved.
His knuckles brushed yours. You swallowed hard.
“I do things slow,” he said finally. “But when I want somethin’—I want it all the way.”
Then he stepped back.
And your knees nearly buckled.
────🌾────
It became too much. The two men took over every single thought. Before you’d go to sleep at night you would replay memories and little things they both have done.
You hadn’t meant for this to happen.
At first, it was just about survival. About fences and feed and early mornings with dirt on the window. You were too busy trying to patch the roof and clear out the barn to think about anything else. Joel and Arthur had been kind—quiet and rough around the edges, but kind. You respected them. Trusted them.
But something changed.
It was in the small things. The way Arthur always made your tea just right. How he’d linger near you in the barn, his warmth close enough to touch. The way he looked at you like you were soft, like you were some delicate thing he didn’t dare grab with dirty hands.
And then Joel—God, Joel. That man carried tension like it was sewn into his spine. Everything about him was hard angles, clenched jaw, calloused hands. But the way he watched you in his flannel, the way his voice dropped when he was near—it made your whole body buzz.
You liked being near them.
Too much.
Sometimes you caught yourself comparing them. Arthur’s steadiness, Joel’s intensity. The way Arthur said darlin’ with that gravel-deep gentleness. The way Joel’s hand would rest on your lower back for a second too long, fingers twitching like he was holding himself back.
It was starting to keep you up at night.
You’d roll over in bed, heart pounding, wondering what would happen if you reached out. If you chose.
But the truth was, you didn’t know if you could.
Because they were both slipping under your skin.
And then—
One night, it all cracked open.
You were curled up on the couch, legs tucked under you, a throw blanket pulled to your chest. The movie playing was old and slow—some western Arthur liked. Joel had fallen into the armchair, nursing a beer, and Arthur sat beside you, closer than usual.
You said something about the sky, about how it was turning purple outside. Arthur hummed.
And then you felt it.
Joel’s eyes on you. Arthur’s hand against your leg, heavy and warm. The silence between all three of you stretched, pulled thin.
You turned your head—and both men were looking at you.
Not casually.
Not kindly.
But like men who had been trying not to want you for a long, long time.
Joel’s gaze dipped to your mouth. Arthur’s thumb traced a lazy circle against your thigh. You didn’t stop him.
Your breath caught.
No one spoke.
But the silence was loud.
And you knew—without a doubt—that this thing between the three of you wasn’t quiet anymore.
It was burning.
Still no one spoke.
Arthur’s thumb was still brushing circles against your thigh, slow and patient like he was memorizing your skin through the blanket. Joel hadn’t moved, but his eyes were darker now—hooded, jaw clenched, fingers tight around the neck of his beer bottle. The air in the room was charged, thick with heat and breath and something unspoken.
You swallowed hard.
And then, just barely above a whisper:
“…what are we doing?”
Arthur’s hand paused. Joel leaned forward.
You looked between them—at Arthur’s calm, unreadable face and Joel’s gaze flickering over your lips like he was already imagining what they’d feel like against his.
Neither of them answered.
So you pulled the blanket back, just enough to show the curve of your thigh, bare under the hem of Joel’s old flannel.
Arthur’s breath caught.
Joel stood up.
He crossed the space in three slow steps and knelt in front of you on the rug, large hands bracing on either side of your legs.
“You really want this?” he rasped. His eyes were locked on yours—hungry, hesitant, already gone.
You nodded, whisper-soft. “I do.”
Arthur let out a breath behind you. You turned slightly, meeting his eyes.
He was leaning close now too, hand still on your leg. “You sure, darlin’? Once we start this…”
“…we’re not stopping,” Joel finished.
You let your knees part between them.
That was all the answer they needed.
Joel leaned in first—slow, deliberate. His hand cupped your cheek, thumb brushing your lower lip before he kissed you. It was careful at first, his lips warm and slightly chapped, tasting faintly of beer and restraint. But when you sighed into him, he deepened it—tilting your face up, tongue sweeping into your mouth with a hunger he’d clearly been holding back for weeks.
Behind you, Arthur’s hand slid higher on your thigh.
“You two gonna make me sit here and watch?” he murmured, voice thick with heat.
Joel pulled back just enough to glance over his shoulder. “Thought you liked watchin’, Morgan.”
Arthur chuckled low, and then his hand moved beneath the hem of your—Joel’s shirt—his palm warm and rough against your bare skin.
You gasped, turning toward him, and his lips were already there—softer than Joel’s, slower, his kiss all patience and promise. He kissed you like a secret. Like he wanted to keep you.
You moaned softly, body caught between them, and Joel let out a sound from deep in his chest.
“Bedroom,” he muttered.
Arthur didn’t answer—just stood and lifted you effortlessly into his arms, your legs wrapping around his waist on instinct. Joel followed close behind, one hand guiding your back, the other grazing your hip.
You were dizzy with it—wrapped in warmth and want, floating somewhere between them, their hands anchoring you. They moved like they’d talked about this before. Like they’d been waiting for the moment you’d fall into them.
And now?
They had you.
And they weren’t about to let go.
Arthur laid you down with care.
The mattress dipped beneath his weight, creaking softly under the solid strength of his body. Joel stood at the edge of the bed, watching—his eyes burning dark, like he was trying to memorize you just like this: flushed and breathing heavy, hair mussed, legs parted slightly on the sheets.
“You’re beautiful,” Arthur murmured.
His hands were on you already, calloused palms sliding up beneath the borrowed flannel. You gasped when his fingers brushed over your ribs—feather-light at first, then firmer as they moved up to cup your breasts, thumbs stroking lazy circles over your nipples.
“God,” you whispered.
Joel leaned over, hands braced on either side of your thighs. “Look at you,” he muttered. “Fuckin’ perfect.”
Arthur was kissing your neck now, his beard rough against your skin, lips soft. He moved slow, like he wanted to savor it—each kiss dragging lower as he pulled the shirt higher, exposing your bare stomach inch by inch.
Joel’s hand slid up your thigh, spreading your legs wider. “She’s shakin’,” he rasped.
“I know,” Arthur murmured. “I got her.”
He kissed the curve of your hip as Joel leaned in and kissed your mouth again—this time harder, deeper. His tongue met yours with raw hunger, his grip on your thigh tightening. You moaned into him, your hips twitching upward, aching for more.
Arthur moved between your legs now, dragging his mouth lower, slower, lips brushing your inner thigh.
You whimpered.
“Patience, sweetheart,” Arthur said, voice low and warm. “We’re gonna take care of you.”
Joel’s hand came up to cup your jaw, turning your face back to his. “Gonna treat you so fuckin’ good. You hear me?”
You nodded, breathless. “Yes.”
Arthur’s mouth pressed right where you needed it, hot and open, licking and sucking on your clit, and your back arched. Joel swallowed your gasp with another kiss, his hand sliding under your head, cradling you there, grounded and worshipped all at once.
They worked in tandem—Arthur’s tongue slow and methodical, like he was learning every response you gave him, every tremble. Joel’s lips at your ear, whispering things that made your skin burn:
“Can’t believe you’re lettin’ us have you like this.”
“Such a good girl.”
“Never gonna forget the way you sound, takin’ us like this.”
You reached down blindly, fingers threading through Arthur’s hair, and he groaned low against you, the sound vibrating through your core.
“Joel—please,” you breathed.
He growled softly, undoing his belt with one hand, kissing along your jaw with the other. “You want both of us tonight, baby?”
You nodded frantically. “Yes. Please, I want—”
Arthur’s mouth dragged up your body again, kissing your sternum, your throat. “Then you got us, darlin’. Every fuckin’ inch.”
Joel’s mouth met yours one more time, possessive and rough.
And as they undressed—hands and mouths and quiet praise—you realized something:
This wasn’t just desire.
It was need.
Arthur kissed you again—slow, steady—his mouth hot and tasting faintly of you. He’d shed his shirt somewhere between the bed and your thighs, and now his body was pressed against yours, warm and solid. You could feel every inch of him, every deliberate drag of his chest over your nipples, every reverent pass of his hands over your hips.
Joel was behind him now, kneeling on the bed, jeans tugged halfway down. His eyes never left your face.
“You want Arthur first?” Joel asked, voice low, almost a growl.
Your breath caught.
“I—yes,” you whispered.
Arthur groaned. “Good girl.”
He kissed down your body again, this time moving slower. Not teasing—just devoted. He wanted to feel every shiver. Wanted you pliant beneath him when he finally slid into you.
You reached for him, fingers threading through the back of his hair as he nudged your thighs apart again, lining himself up with practiced care. You felt the thick press of him at your entrance, and your whole body tensed in anticipation.
Arthur cupped your face with one hand, brushing his thumb over your lip.
“Breathe for me, darlin’.”
You did.
And then—he pushed in.
A long, slow slide that made your toes curl and your jaw drop, gasping as he filled you inch by inch. He held himself there once he was fully seated, forehead pressed to yours, both of you panting softly.
“You feel that?” he whispered. “How good you take me?”
You nodded helplessly, overwhelmed by the fullness, the stretch, the heat.
Joel sat beside you now, one hand stroking your hair back from your damp forehead, the other trailing down to your chest. He cupped your breast, watching Arthur move inside you with a hungry, reverent stare.
“Fuckin’ hell,” Joel muttered. “Look at you.”
Arthur started to move—slow, deliberate thrusts that rocked your body up the bed. He kissed your neck, your collarbone, whispered soft praise as your fingers clawed at his back.
Joel leaned in, kissed your cheek, then your lips—deep and lingering, tasting every moan Arthur pulled from your throat.
“You’re so good,” Joel murmured. “So fuckin’ good for us.”
You were unraveling, every nerve lit up, caught between Arthur’s steady rhythm and Joel’s mouth and hands. You felt possessed, held, worshipped.
And then Arthur pulled out slowly, pressing one last kiss to your sternum.
“Think she’s ready for you,” he murmured, looking at Joel.
Joel didn’t wait. He was on you in seconds, flipping you gently onto your side, spooning in close behind. His chest was slick with heat, breath ragged against your ear.
“You okay, baby?” he murmured, lining himself up.
“Please,” you whispered.
He pushed in with a groan—deeper than Arthur, thicker, dragging a broken cry from your throat as he filled you completely. Joel’s hand curled around your waist, holding you in place as he began to move—grinding slow and deep, his mouth pressed to your shoulder.
“Fuck, you feel so good,” he hissed.
Arthur knelt in front of you now, brushing hair back from your face, kissing your mouth sweetly while Joel fucked you slow and unrelenting from behind.
“You’re ours now, ain’t you?” Arthur murmured. “Both of us.”
You nodded, tears at the corners of your eyes from how full you felt, how overwhelming it was to be held between them.
Joel’s thrusts grew harder, his breath turning rough against your skin. “Say it,” he growled. “Say you’re ours.”
“I’m yours,” you gasped. “I’m—yours.”
And when you came—loud, shaking, completely undone—they didn’t stop holding you. Didn’t stop whispering how good you were, how beautiful you looked, how they’d never let you go now.
You belonged to them.
And tonight, they made sure you knew it.
────🌾────
The room was quiet.
The kind of quiet that settles in after a storm—soft and sacred, broken only by the sound of three tangled breaths.
You were between them again, your body boneless and glowing, cheek pressed against Arthur’s chest. His heartbeat was a slow, steady thump beneath your ear, and one of his hands ran lazy circles along your spine, grounding you.
Joel lay behind you, his arm wrapped firmly around your waist, his body flush against your back. You could feel the steady rise and fall of his chest, the heat of his skin, the quiet way he breathed your name like a prayer.
“You okay, baby?” he whispered, pressing a kiss to the crown of your head.
You nodded, lips brushing Arthur’s skin. “Yeah. Just… wow.”
Arthur chuckled low in his throat. “That a good ‘wow,’ or a we-gotta-run-away-and-never-talk-about-it-again kinda wow?”
You laughed softly. “The first one.”
Joel hummed, and you felt his lips move against your shoulder. “Good. ‘Cause we’re not lettin’ you go now.”
Arthur shifted just enough to cup your face, thumb brushing over your cheek. “Didn’t hurt, did it? We didn’t push too much?”
“No,” you said, voice thick and quiet. “It was perfect.”
They exhaled together, that tension in their bodies finally melting all the way out of them.
Joel sat up first, kissed your shoulder, then leaned over to grab a warm cloth from the bedside. He was slow and gentle cleaning you up, murmuring quiet things like I got you, just relax, you were so good for us. Every motion was careful, reverent. Like you were something fragile. Something theirs.
Arthur pulled the blankets up, letting you settle again between them.
You felt completely safe. Wrapped in warmth and worn flannel and calloused hands that held you like you were the softest thing they’d ever touched.
“You always this quiet after?” Arthur asked, his fingers trailing along your ribs.
You shrugged, half-smiling. “Not always. But I’ve never… done this before.”
“With two men?”
“With two people who actually care.”
They both stilled.
Joel leaned forward, brushing hair from your face. “We do,” he said quietly. “Care.”
Arthur nodded, resting his forehead against yours. “This wasn’t just a one-time thing for us. Not if it ain’t for you.”
You looked between them, your heart thudding louder than it had all night.
“I don’t want it to be,” you whispered.
Joel smiled—soft and warm and rare. “Good. Then stay.”
“I'm already here.”
Arthur kissed you again—slower this time, with all the gentleness in the world. Joel tucked himself closer to your back, his hand slipping under your shirt to rest flat over your heart.
You fell asleep wrapped in both of them.
And when the sun rose through the dusty window panes the next morning, they were still there—one hand in your hair, the other tracing your spine, like they’d never let go.
And maybe they wouldn’t.
tags: @zevrra @xodilfluvr @whimsydoe














