love grows — OP81
pairing: small town!oscar piastri x city girl!fem!reader
warnings: fluff, swearing, oscar is so chalant its crazy, not a slowburn, location is purposely ambiguous bc i hate continuity, potential for a part 2 but depends on how yous feel about it, not proofread!!
synopsis: someone has finally swept the towns most eligible bachelor off his feet [7.0k]
a/n: another au im sorry guys its literally all i can write atm 💔
MASTERLIST PART TWO
the first thing you noticed about the town was how quiet it was, not peaceful, although slightly charming. it was just quiet.
there was no distant sirens, no endless streams of traffic, and no people rushing down sidewalks with coffee cups clutched in their hands. just rolling fields stretching toward the horizon and a main street so small it looked like it belonged in an old movie.
you'd had moved here two weeks ago after your job transfer, and every day since then you'd found a new reason to miss the city. the coffee shop closed at three, the nearest shopping center was forty minutes away, and apparently everyone knew everyone else's business.
you sighed as you adjusted the strap of your tote bag and stepped off the sidewalk, at least the weather was nice. that was something you couldn't complain about.
golden sunlight spilled across the countryside, warming the fields of tall grass that swayed in the breeze, and the scent of fresh earth lingered in the air.
you'd been told by a woman at the coffee shop there was a walking trail behind the farms, and after another painfully boring afternoon unboxing your life, you'd decided to explore it.
what she hadn't told you was that there would be cows, lots of cows. and you were pretty sure this was the first time you'd actually seen them in person, your eyes widening when one suddenly appeared beside the fence. "oh my god."
the massive animal stared at you, you stared back, and it took one slow step forward. you took one very quick step backward. the cow took another slow step toward you, its large brown eyes blinked lazily beneath impossibly long lashes, but that didn't make it any less intimidating.
you backed away immediately, the heel of your trainer caught on a loose stone and your arms pinwheeled for balance. "shit-"
"you know she can't actually hurt you, right?" the voice came from behind you and you whipped around so quickly your ponytail smacked against your shoulder, bag slumping down your arm.
he stood a few yards away, leaning casually against the fence. the late afternoon sun sat behind him, outlining his figure in warm gold. he looked like he'd stepped straight out of some countryside advertisement, messy brown hair and a faded shirt complete with mud-caked boot and a grin that suggested he'd been watching your entire embarrassing encounter.
your face immediately grew hot as you fixed your bag back into your shoulder. "i knew that."
the boy's eyebrows slowly lifted, obviously skeptical of your lie and the corner of his mouth twitched. "did you?"
the challenge in his voice made your eyes narrow. "i was being cautious."
a laugh escaped him at your reply, it wasn't loud or obnoxious, just a low, warm chuckle that seemed completely effortless. "cautious?" he glanced toward the cow, and then back at you. "you looked like you were negotiating for your life."
you folded your arms tightly across your chest, and the movement felt defensive even to you. "that thing," you pointed towards the animal behind the fence. "is enormous."
"daisy?" his expression turned almost offended.
"daisy?" you questioned, no way a beast like that had such a name.
"yeah," he pushed himself away from the fence and walked closer, dry grass crunched beneath his boots with every step. "that's her name."
"she has a name?"
"as opposed to?" he was almost smiling now.
"i don't know." you threw your hands up, looking back to daisy the cow. "being cow number three?"
a laugh burst out of him this time, his head tipped back slightly as the sound carried across the field and the sight caught you off guard. god he had one of those smiles, the kind that transformed someone's entire face, one that made you forget what you were annoyed about. "you really aren't from around here."
you groaned at assumption, no matter how true is was. "oh, not you too."
"too?"
"everybody keeps saying that." you shifted your weight onto one hip, feeling your shoes go deeper into the mud and you groaned at the thought of having to clean them later. "apparently I have some giant sign above my head that says 'new girl.'"
the boy studied you for a second, not in a rude way, more like he was genuinely considering the question and then his gaze dropped briefly. "well," the smile returned. "you kind of do."
you looked down at yourself, trainers caked in mud and jeans getting dirty on the bottom. "what exactly is that supposed to mean?"
he pointed at your shoes, "white trainers."
you frowned, glancing down at your choice of footwear. "so?"
"those things won't survive a week here." then his gaze shifted upward. "fancy tote bag."
"it's just a bag." you defended, for some reason you felt the need to, clutching the strap.
"mhm." his expression said he didn't believe that for a second. "and," he pointed toward the cow. "you're standing ten feet away from daisy like she's a wild predator."
you sighed looking at daisy, and she looked back at you, "okay."
for a moment the breeze swept through the field, tall grass rippled around them like waves and the scent of earth and wildflowers drifted through the warm air. the silence was awkward, yet you couldn't think of anything to say to stop it.
he finally held out a hand. "i'm oscar." his voice was gentler this time, less teasing, and you finally heard the hint of his accent. you glanced at his hand, it was larger than yours, a little tanned and a few faint scratches marked his knuckles.
signs of someone who actually worked with his hands, not someone who spent every day surrounded by concrete and office buildings and you slid your hand into his, repeating your own name back to him.
oscar's grip was firm but careful, warm from the sunlight and his thumb brushed lightly against the side of your hand before he let go. something in your chest fluttered unexpectedly. "nice to meet you, city girl."
you immediately pointed at him, shaking your head, "you are not calling me that."
his eyebrows rose, "no? why not?" the teasing tone to his words was back and you suppressed the urge to roll your eyes. the grin that spread across his face was infuriatingly attractive.
"because it's awful." you argued back, which only further fuelled his amusement.
the sun had begun sinking lower in the sky by the time they reached the north fence. golden light stretched across the fields, painting everything in shades of amber and honey. the air had cooled slightly, carrying the scent of grass and freshly turned earth. you stood with your arms resting against the wooden fence while oscar crouched beside a loose section of wire.
you watched him work for a moment, his movements were easy, definitely practiced like he'd done this a thousand times before. which, knowing him for all of an hour, was probably true. "so this is what passes for excitement around here?" you asked.
oscar glanced up, a strand of brown hair had fallen across his forehead. "you've clearly never fixed a fence before."
"and i plan to keep it that way." you replied quickly.
he laughed quietly, and you found yourself smiling again. after another few minutes, oscar straightened up and dusted his hands against his jeans. "there." he nodded at the fence. "good as new."
you looked at it, then looked back at him. "i genuinely cannot tell the difference."
his hand moved to his chest, mock offense flashed across his face. "that hurts."
"sorry." you shrugged a shoulder.
"no, you're not."
"not even a little."
his grin widened, gathering up his tools from the ground. "thought so."
the two of you started walking back toward the main trail, the conversation came easier now, unlike before you weren't stumbling over words anymore. and somehow, despite having spent days feeling completely out of place, the silence between conversations didn't feel uncomfortable.
it felt almost natural, then the farm appeared in the distance, a large white house surrounded by fields with a painted barn sitting proudly nearby. the sight made something tighten unexpectedly in your chest, because reaching the farm meant leaving, which was absolutely ridiculous because you'd only met him today.
you found yourself slowing your steps, and oscar noticed, from what you'd found out about him so far you knew he was perceptive as hell.
"you heading home?" his voice was casual, but his eyes stayed on you.
and you adjusted the strap of your tote bag. "eventually." you looked up, and he was smiling, small and amused like he was enjoying your company as much as you were enjoying his.
"that's not an answer."
"maybe i'm avoiding going home." you sighed, relenting from the pressure of his gaze on you.
"why?"
you shrugged. "because i'm still adjusting." the confession slipped out before you could stop it, for a second, you regretted it then oscar's expression softened, the teasing disappeared completely.
"it's hard?"
you laughed quietly, small nod of your head. "that's one way of putting it."
his gaze dropped briefly toward the dirt path beneath his boots. "when i was younger, i wanted to leave."
you blinked at his confession, "really?"
"yeah." his shoulders lifted slightly, looking back at you now. "thought this place was boring."
"and now?"
he looked around at the fields, at the open sky stretching endlessly above them and at the farm sitting in the distance. then a smile tugged at his mouth. "now, i think i'd miss it."
the honesty in his voice surprised you, and for some reason, it made you look at the town differently. just for a second, when you reached the road where your paths split, both of you slowed.
neither saying goodbye immediately, the evening breeze tugged gently at your tied hair, strands falling across your face, somewhere nearby, birds called to each other from the trees. "well." you shoved your hands into your jacket pockets. "thanks for introducing me to daisy."
oscar laughed, eyes catching yours. "she'll be pleased."
"tell her i said goodbye."
"i'll pass along the message."
you rolled your eyes, a smile tugging at your lips. then came the awkward part, the part where you were supposed to leave, except neither of you seemed particularly eager to.
finally, oscar rocked back on his heels. "see you around, city girl." and you groaned, hearing him laugh as you both walked the opposite direction.
—
the next morning, the town felt different, not dramatically different. it was still small, and still quiet, still the kind of place where people waved from their cars and knew each other's names.
but as you walked down the main street with your tote bag hanging from your shoulder, you found yourself noticing things you hadn't before. flower boxes sat beneath shop windows, a golden retriever lounged outside the bookstore, an elderly couple shared a newspaper on a bench near the bakery.
it felt less like a place you'd been forced to move to and more like somewhere people genuinely loved living. the realisation was unsettling, and you blamed the lack of caffeine in your system.
the bell above the café door chimed softly as you stepped inside, immediately, warmth wrapped around you, the scent of freshly ground coffee beans mixed with vanilla syrup and baked pastries, filling the small space.
sunlight streamed through the front windows, stretching across the worn wooden floors in golden rectangles, the café itself was tiny compared to the places back home. there were only a handful of tables with mismatched chairs, and small potted plants sitting on every windowsill.
a chalkboard menu hanging behind the counter, everything looked slightly imperfect, slightly worn but somehow comfortable.
it wasn't busy, a few elderly men sat near the window reading newspapers, a young mother occupied a corner booth with two small children, and someone quietly typed away on a laptop near the back.
everyone seemed to know everyone, you'd noticed that already. the barista greeted three different customers by name before turning toward you, which felt absurd, in the city, nobody knew your name. sometimes not even your neighbours.
you ordered your coffee and claimed a small table near the front window, your laptop sat open in front of you, unopened emails filled the screen, none of which you wanted to answer. instead, your attention drifted repeatedly toward the street outside.
watching people pass, watching cars roll slowly down the road, watching life happen at a pace that still felt impossibly slow compared to the city. you wrapped both hands around your coffee cup, the ceramic felt warm against your palms.
you took a sip, and then immediately grimaced. still terrible like the first three times you'd been there. you'd barely set the cup down when the bell above the café door rang again.
the sound was soft, ordinary, yet your eyes lifted automatically, cursing yourself for doing it because there he was, which was ridiculous, completely ridiculous, because god seemed to have it out for you.
outside the fields, the sunlight and open countryside. he looked strangely out of place in the café and yet completely comfortable at the same time. he wore a dark green flannel today, the sleeves pushed up to his forearms, his jeans were slightly faded and his boots looked cleaner than yesterday, though not by much.
his brown hair was still messy as though he'd run his fingers through it while driving over, or maybe rolled out of bed five minutes before leaving, that made more sense than your self indulgent fantasy.
the morning sunlight followed him through the doorway, catching in his hair and illuminating the faint freckles scattered across his nose. he scanned the café once, then his eyes landed on you, and you swore almost immediately a grin spread across his face.
your stomach performed an incredibly inconvenient flip as you quickly averted your attention back to your screen.
his eyebrows lifted, almost as if he hadn't expected to see you either. which somehow made the reaction worse, because that meant his smile wasn't planned. and that physically made your stomach hurt.
"well." his voice carried across the café, warm and familiar despite the fact you'd only known him for a day. "look who it is."
you hated how quickly your own smile appeared, covering it up quickly as you rolled your eyes before he even reached your table, "don't." you already knew what was coming.
oscars grin only widened, "city girl." he laughed, the sound was low and effortless, as he started walking toward the counter but never took his eyes off you.
"what are you doing here?"
you gestured around the café. "getting coffee."
"that explains the coffee." his gaze dropped briefly toward your laptop. "the laptop's throwing me off."
you looked down at the screen as twenty-three unanswered emails stared back at you, and you sighed dramatically. "i'm pretending to be productive."
"how's that going?"
"terrible" you glared at the face he makes. "don't judge me."
"i am absolutely judging you." he leans against the counter, one elbow resting casually on the wood. "who voluntarily answers emails before noon?"
"people with responsibilities."
"can't relate." you rolled your eyes, his grin only widened. he was enjoying this more than you liked him to.
the woman behind the counter appeared beside him, holding a large paper bag. "your mum's order." eleanor, the cafe owner, smiled, wrinkles creasing around her eyes and grey hair framing her face.
"lifesaver, thank you." oscar accepted the bag with one hand. "she would've disowned me if i forgot."
eleanor laughed, leaning in as he pressed a chaste kiss to her cheek, like she was family. "again?"
you watched the exchange with amusement, everyone seemed to know him, not only know him but like him. the kind of familiarity that only happened in places where people grew up together.
where lives overlapped for years, it was strange. back home, most people barely knew their neighbours and yet here, everyone seemed connected somehow.
oscar turned back toward you, his eyes immediately finding yours again, and there was that strange feeling, like the room got slightly smaller every time he looked at you.
"so," he shifted the paper bag under one arm. "have you stopped being afraid of cows yet?"
you groaned, eleanor couldn't hep but smile beside him, before chastising him for teasing you. it was clear she'd watched him growing up, feeling comfortable enough to do it. "i wasn't afraid."
"right." he nodded at your answer, like he believed you, but the tone in his voice revealed the truth.
"i wasn't." you argued back, closing your laptop as if you were going to leave, but you made no effort to move.
"oscar," eleanor spoke up, small warm smile on her face. "leave her alone."
"thank you." you nodded toward her, and she gave you a knowing look, which you couldn't quite understand yet.
"oscar's impossible." she added.
"exactly."
"hey." he looked genuinely offended. "i'm standing right here."
you smiled into your coffee cup, trying and failing to hide it. for a moment, oscar simply watched you, his expression softening slightly and the teasing fading around the edges.
the noise of the café continued around you, cups clinking together, the espresso machine hissing behind the counter with quiet conversations filling the room. yet somehow the moment felt oddly separate from all of it. eleanor glanced between the two of you, smile never leaving her face as she took this as her cue to leave.
his gaze dropped briefly toward the empty chair across from you, and then back to your face. "you busy?" the question was casual, almost too casual.
but you noticed the way his fingers tapped once against the side of the paper bag, noticed the slight hesitation before he asked and suddenly you had the distinct feeling he wasn't asking about your emails. your heart betrayed your head again. "depends."
his eyebrow lifted. "on?"
you leaned back in your chair, pretending to think about it. "what's your definition of busy?"
the smile that appeared on his face was immediate, bright, victorious and entirely too attractive. "i'll take that as a no."
you tried not to smile, failed completely. and for the second time in less than twenty-four hours, you found yourself wondering if moving to this tiny town might not be quite as terrible as you'd originally thought.
the chair opposite you scraped softly against the floor as he pulled it out, he didn't sit, just rested one hand against the back of it. towering slightly over you and you hated how aware you suddenly became of how close he was.
warmth and fresh air clung faintly to his clothes, mixed with the scent of hay and something clean. something that was very distinctly him. his eyes immediately flickered back to your face, and lingered.
just for a second, the look made warmth creep into your cheeks. thankfully, he seemed to notice the same thing at the exact same moment, because he suddenly looked away first, clearing his throat and you tried not to smile again. you found yourself doing that a lot with him already.
"so," he shoved his hands into the pockets of his jacket, rocking back slightly on his heels. "what are the chances?"
you raised an eyebrow, glancing up from your half written email. "of?"
"running into me twice."
you looked around the café dramatically, then out the window for good measure. "there are approximately six buildings in this town."
his laugh escaped immediately, a low sound that made the elderly men near the back glance over. "fair."
"thank you."
"still." his head tilted slightly, brown eyes settling on you again. "i was kind of hoping i'd see you." the words were casual, almost too casual. but something about them made your pulse stumble.
because he said them like he meant them, like it wasn't just a joke to him, like it wasn't teasing. you released a breath you hadn't realized you'd been holding, and oscar noticed. of course he fucking noticed.
his grin returned immediately, slower this time, more knowing. which was somehow worse. "what?" you asked, raising an eyebrow suspiciously.
"nothing."
"you're smiling." you narrow your eyes at him, he was being odd, but then again you didn’t truly know him enough to call him out on it.
"am i?"
"yes."
"interesting." he looked entirely pleased with himself, after a moment, he glanced toward the door, reluctantly, as if remembering he actually had somewhere to be. "i should probably get this home before mum thinks i got lost."
"probably."
he nodded, but didn't move. finally, he stepped backwards. "i'll see you around."
you looked up at him, standing there with wind tousled hair and a ridiculous grin, and for the first time since moving here, the thought of staying didn't seem quite so awful.
"yeah." a smile tugged at your lips.
"see you around, farmer."
oscar froze, completely and you watched realization dawn across his face, followed by disbelief then amusement "farmer?"
you shrugged innocently. "seems fitting."
his laugh filled the café, warm enough to chase away the rain looming in the clouds. he shook his head, still smiling. then pushed open the café door. the bell chimed overhead, cold air rushed briefly inside before disappearing again.
—
three weeks after your first meeting, you had come to one very unfortunate conclusion. oscar piastri was incapable of behaving normally around you.
every time you saw him, in the cafe, the one and only supermarket in the town, or at the bar on a random friday, he found a new way to be annoying. and by annoying, you meant flirtatious, which was arguably worse. he flirted the way other people breathed, effortlessly and constantly, without any shame too.
you were beginning to suspect he enjoyed watching you get flustered. the worst part being? it worked, which was information you planned to take to your grave.
today, however, you weren't thinking about oscar's flirting, you were thinking about paperwork, which was something a lot worse. the small medical clinic sat at the edge of town, attached to the doctor's office.
sunlight filtered through the blinds behind your desk as you worked through patient notes, the waiting room beyond the door was unusually quiet.
for once, you'd almost finished your last chart when the front door opened. voices drifted through the reception area, and you paid them little attention. until one of them sounded familiar.
far too familiar, your pen paused, looking up and immediately regretted it.
because oscar was standing in the doorway, of course he was. this was the only place he was yet to find you, somehow, yet given the circumstances of your job you were thankful.
his brown hair was windswept, his hoodie was dirty, there was mud on one sleeve, and there was blood on his hand. your chair scraped against the floor as you stood, all traces of amusement disappeared instantly. "oscar?"
he looked up, the second he spotted you, his face lit up, actually lit up. you could see it happen in real time, like showing up injured had somehow improved his day. "well, hello there."
you ignored that entirely, professional face well and truly on. "why are you bleeding?"
his gaze dropped toward his hand. "oh yeah" oscar only shrugged. "that's what you're concerned about?"
you stared at him, noticing the bleeding was still happening, yet he acted like nothing was wrong. "oscar."
"right." his smile remained completely intact, which was concerning. "apparently i met a fence post."
you blinked, raising an eyebrow. "a fence post."
"it attacked me."
the older man standing beside him snorted and you recognized one of the neighbouring farmers. "he walked straight into it."
"oscar." you pinched the bridge of your nose already developing a headache.
"traitor." oscar shouted towards the spot his neighbour was in before he left.
"exam room."
he grinned. "yes, ma'am."
you pointed toward the hallway. "don't."
his grin somehow widened, which should have been illegal. and a few minutes later, he was sitting on the examination table while you pulled on a pair of gloves.
the room smelled faintly of antiseptic, bright fluorescent lights reflected off white walls. outside, you could hear distant voices moving through the clinic, inside, however, it was just the two of you.
which immediately felt dangerous, mostly because oscar looked far too pleased about the situation. you stood in front of him and carefully reached for his injured hand.
his teasing expression softened slightly, just enough that you noticed. "let me see."
for once, he didn't make a joke, he simply turned his hand over. your fingers wrapped gently around his wrist, warm skin met your palm.
a small cut stretched across the side of his hand, not deep. but enough to require cleaning to make sure no dirt had gotten in it. you let out a quiet breath, relief settled in your chest. "oscar." you grabbed a disinfectant wipe. "how exactly did this happen?"
his shoulder bumped against the wall behind him."i told you."
"you walked into a fence post?"
"yes."
you looked up from the cut. "how?"
"well." he seemed to genuinely consider the question, before the smug smile returned back on his face. "i was distracted."
you narrowed your eyes. "by?" and his gaze met yours immediately, without hesitation.
you rolled your eyes, hard, yet the warmth creeping into your cheeks betrayed you instantly and his eyes sparkled with amusement. "there it is."
"what?"
"that look."
you frowned, still carefully cleaning his cut, hearing him groan a little in pain. "what look?"
"the one where you pretend i'm annoying."you pressed the disinfectant wipe directly against the cut and oscar hissed. "that was sore."
"good." his laugh filled the room, warm and familiar, the sound bounced off the walls. and despite yourself, you found yourself smiling.
his smile softened, something gentler replacing the teasing, something that made your stomach do strange things and for a moment neither of you spoke, you focused on wrapping the bandage around his hand.
absolutely refusing to acknowledge the way his gaze seemed fixed on your face "there." you secured the bandage. "all done." you pointed at him, your professional facade back in full force. "try not to walk into any more fence posts."
he glanced down at the bandage, then back at you. "i'll do my best."
"i'm serious."
"so am i." his voice was quieter again now, less teasing. his eyes stayed on yours, holding them. "i'd hate to lose my favourite nurse."
your heart stumbled, completely and hopelessly. and judging by the smile threatening to appear on his face, he knew it.
you stepped back immediately, creating distance, professional distance. "oscar."
his grin returned instantly. "yes?"
"out." he laughed, loud enough that people probably heard it from reception. then he hopped off the examination table, still smiling and still entirely too pleased with himself.
when he reached the doorway, he paused, turning back. "see you tomorrow."
you folded your arms. "how do you know you'll see me tomorrow?"
his eyes danced with amusement, as he glanced over your figure, "small town." and before you could think of a response, he disappeared down the hallway. leaving you standing there.
trying and failing not to smile.
—
by friday evening, you had spent an entire week trying not to think about oscar piastri. which was proving to be annoyingly difficult, mostly because he seemed to appear everywhere.
once, you'd looked out the clinic window and spotted him driving a tractor through a nearby field, which felt incredibly excessive.
he was becoming an actual problem. unfortunately, your coworkers had noticed too. which was why you currently found yourself sitting in a crowded pub while they interrogated you. the transfer celebration had been their idea, apparently it was tradition whenever someone new joined the clinic.
you'd only been in town for a month now, but somehow they'd already decided you belonged. the pub was warm and noisy, golden lights hung from wooden beams overhead and laughter echoed throughout the room.
glasses clinked together, music played softly somewhere in the background. every table seemed occupied, the place practically radiated small-town charm.
you were beginning to suspect this town did everything deliberately, even its pubs looked like they belonged on postcards.
"so," across the table, one of the other nurses, ruby, leaned forward, her eyes narrowed. "how many times have you seen him now?"
you sighed, immediately knowing where this was going, and you took a sip of your drink in anticipation. "i don't know."
"that's not an answer." she argued back, playfully rolling her eyes at your stubbornness.
"it wasn't meant to be." your coworkers exchanged looks, the kind of looks that made you nervous. you pointed at all of them. "don't do that."
"do what?" ruby answered back.
"that."
they looked entirely too innocent, which meant trouble. another nurse, amy, took a sip of her drink. "we're just asking about oscar."
you groaned, suddenly feeling like you needed a stronger drink, there it was, the name, always that name. "why is everyone obsessed with him?"
the entire table laughed, actually laughed, which felt unfair, like a joke you were being left out of. "you genuinely don't know?" amy asked.
"no?"
"you haven't noticed?" brad is the next one go ask you.
"i've noticed he's annoying." that earned several snorts and ruby doctor nearly chokes on her drink.
"annoying?"
"very." you hum.
"he flirts with you."
"exactly!” the table erupted again, and you stared, completely confused. "what?"
"oh sweetheart." one of the older nurses, janet, patted your arm "that's why."
you blinked. "what does that mean?"
three different people answered at once. "it means he likes you." "it means you're hopeless." "it means you're blind."
your jaw dropped. "excuse me?"
amy beside you shook her head. "you should see your face every time he walks into the clinic."
"my face doesn't do anything."
"it absolutely does." you buried your face in your hands, this town was impossible, all of them were impossible. when you looked up again, every single person at the table was smiling, waiting, watching and judging. "stop looking at me like that."
"we're just saying." brad shrugged. "oscar's a good guy."
"i never said he wasn't."
"then what's the problem?" you opened your mouth, then closed it again. because unfortunately you didn't actually know. there wasn't a problem.
that was the issue, oscar was kind, funny, charming and annoyingly handsome. everyone liked him, you liked him. which was precisely why you were avoiding the topic. "there isn't a problem."
"ah!” ruby pointed dramatically. "there it is."
"there what is?"
"you like him!" amy practically shouted this across the bar and you could feel your cheeks start to burn.
"i do not." the response came far too quickly, everyone noticed.
"oh, she definitely likes him."
you reached for your drink, desperately, downing the rest it. "this conversation is over."
the entire table dissolved into laughter again, and you considered leaving. or moving towns. both felt reasonable. then the front door opened, and every thought immediately vanished. because oscar walked in, because of course he fucking did.
because apparently the universe enjoyed making your life difficult, the cool evening air followed him through the doorway and he paused near the entrance.
talking to someone, a few people waved in his direction. others called greetings across the room and he returned every one with easy familiarity.
it was almost fascinating to watch, he belonged here. you'd never seen someone fit so naturally into a place before. and apparently you weren't the only one watching. "there he is." the nurse beside you nodded toward him.
"town's most eligible bachelor."
you nearly spat out your drink. "town what?"
"bachelor."
"absolutely not." you looked around, only to discover multiple women glancing in his direction. one waved. whilst another smiled and oscar greeted both without missing a beat.
you immediately hated how unsurprised he looked by the attention. "you're joking."
"we are not."
"everyone's had a crush on him at some point." you stared at ruby's confession.
"everyone?" you query, looking back to where he was standing at the bar now, buying himself and the guy beside him a round.
the older nurse laughed. "welcome to town."
you looked back toward oscar, unfortunately. because the second you did, his eyes found yours. as though he'd been searching the room, the noise around you seemed to blur for a second. his face brightened, that familiar smile appearing the moment he spotted you.
and somehow it felt different from the smiles he'd given everyone else, warmer, more genuine, more dangerous for you.
"oh." janet beside you noticed. "oh, that's bad."
"what?" you looked back at her, confused on what she was saying.
"he likes you."
"i know he likes me." the words slipped out before you could stop them. the table fell into silence, complete silence. and you froze, horrified, then the realisation hit a second later.
"oh my god." brad his head onto the table, laughing. "you just admitted it."
one of the nurses pointed toward oscar, warm smile on her face as she waved over to him. "give him a chance."
your eyes widened, wishing now you'd saved some of your drink as you reached for an empty glass. "what?"
"give him a chance." amy repeated herself, "he clearly adores you."
"he does not-" you tried to argue back before brad cut you off.
"he drove himself to the clinic for a paper cut." the table erupted in laugh again, and your face immediately burned.
you covered your face, feeling like you wanted to the ground to open up and swallow you whole. "oh my god."
"you deserve someone nice." their teasing softened slightly, janet smiled, gentler now. "and oscar's one of the nicest people in this town."
you looked toward the bar again, toward the brunette farmer currently laughing at something someone had said, the sight of him smiling tugged at something inside your chest.
annoyingly, inconveniently and as if sensing your gaze, he looked up. there it was again, that damn smile. the one he reserved just for you, the one that somehow made the crowded room feel a little smaller.
a little quieter, a little less overwhelming and your coworkers followed your gaze, then exchanged knowing looks. "you should really give him a chance."
for the first time all evening, you didn't immediately argue and judging by the grin spreading across your coworkers' faces, that answer told them everything they needed to know.
"i'm getting another." you pushed your chair back, immediately, every face at the table lit up, suspiciously. "no." you pointed at them before anyone could speak "whatever you're thinking, stop."
"we didn't say anything."
"you didn't have to." brad looked far too amused at your outburst.
"have fun." their laughter followed you across the pub, traitors.
the closer you got to the bar, the louder everything became, conversations overlapped from every direction and glasses clinked together. music hummed softly beneath the noise. the smell of beer, wood polish, and fried food filled the warm air.
people crowded shoulder to shoulder around the counter, thankfully, there was one familiar face among them. unfortunately, it belonged to oscar.
he was leaning against the bar with one elbow resting on the polished wood, a half-finished drink sat beside him. his sleeves were rolled up again and somehow he'd managed to make standing still look unfairly attractive.
you hated that, the second you approached, his attention shifted. his face brightened immediately, like it always seemed to when he saw you. and for reasons you refused to examine too closely, that realisation made your stomach flutter. "well."
his eyes flicked toward you, then over your shoulder, then back again and slowly a grin appeared, you knew that grin. "what?"
his grin widened. "oh, nothing."
"that's a lie."
"it is." he admitted putting up no fight.
"just say it." you sighed.
instead of answering, oscar glanced toward your table and you followed his gaze, immediately regretting it. because every single one of your coworkers was watching. janet actually waved and you nearly dropped dead on the spot. "oh my god." you buried your face in your hands.
"they're staring." oscar hummed, not bothering to hide the shit-eating grin on his face.
when you looked up again, his eyes were sparkling with amusement. "they look invested."
"they've lost their minds."
"possibly."
"they've spent the last hour interrogating me." you feel the words slip past your lips before you can stop them, and internally you curse yourself.
"oh?" his eyebrow lifted, head tilting slightly in amusement. "what about?"
you stared at him, and he stared back, completely innocent. completely full of shit. and maybe it was the confidence the alcohol gave you, or maybe you were finally done running from the inevitable because you found yourself answering honestly. "you."
his grin became positively unbearable. "really?" he was becoming more cocky by the minute you wished you hadn't said anything. "what did they say?"
"i'm not telling you."
"was it nice?"
"it was embarrassing." you groaned, turning toward the bar, resting your elbows on the worn wood, feeling whatever sticky substance has been spilled on it who knows how long ago. "i'm getting a drink."
"a strategic retreat."
before you could respond, the bartender approached. "what can I get you?"
you opened your mouth, but the words that came weren't from you. "i've got it."
your head whipped around. "what?"
oscar looked entirely unbothered, shrugging slightly. "put it on my tab." the bartender laughed and nodded.
you stared at him, stuck on what to say. "you don't need to buy me a drink."
"i know." he answers simply, as if the most obvious thing in the world.
"then why are you?" his gaze met yours, steady and easy.
the teasing softened slightly, "because i want to."
your heart immediately became a problem, you looked away first, which only seemed to amuse him further. when your drink arrived, oscar slid it across the counter toward you.
his fingers brushed yours briefly, the contact lasted less than a second. yet somehow it felt longer, dangerously longer. and you swore you felt the surge of electricity between you.
"there." he nodded toward the glass. "enjoy."
you wrapped your hands around it, the cold glass grounding you slightly, as you twirled the straw between your fingers. "thank you."
"you're welcome." for a moment, neither of you spoke, the noise of the pub filled the space around you.
people laughed nearby, someone cheered from across the room and music drifted through the air. yet standing beside oscar somehow felt oddly separate from all of it. comfortable and easy, which was becoming a recurring issue.
his shoulder rested lightly against the bar, close enough that you could feel his presence beside you. close enough that you were very aware of it. "so." your voice pulled his attention back.
"so?" he answered, dipping his head slightly to hear you better.
"town bachelor?"
at your jibe he nearly chocked on his drink. "oh, absolutely not." his laugh burst out instantly, "you heard about that?"
"my coworkers told me." you couldn't help but giggle at his reaction, taking the straw between your lips as you took a sip. "you wanna know what else they told me?" you asked, raising an eyebrow as he nodded his head.
"that i should give you a chance." his grin was unstoppable when he heard your words, the quiet confidence he exuded was bordering on cocky now, but god would you be lying if you said you didn't enjoy it.
"yeah?" he asked, tilting his head as he looked down at you, eyes shamelessly flickering to your lips before finding yours again. "they're right."
"oscar." he looked delighted at the effect he had on you, watching the way your chest rose and fell, hearing your heartbeat begin to race.
"yes?" oscar whispered back, so close you could feel his breath on your face.
"you are unbelievable." you tried not to smile, failing. immediately and his expression softened when he saw it. something warm flickering across his face, more genuine than teasing, more dangerous than flirting. for a second, he simply looked at you.
like he'd forgotten whatever joke he was about to make, the noise around you seemed to fade slightly, the moment stretching and settling between the two of you. "you're so beautiful you know." his voice was so quiet now, like he was telling a secret he only wanted you to know, and you could feel the heat creep up your neck.
the sincerity of his words had your stomach hurting, and you couldn't look at him any longer, letting your eyes fall to the drink laid abandoned on the bar, when you felt his hand on your cheek directing your attention back to him.
you had to shake yourself out of the trance like state he'd put you in, clearing your throat as you reached for the drink, before pointing toward the exit. "leave."
"it's my town."
"then i'm leaving." his grin returned immediately and you sat the drink back down, turning away from him before beginning to walk away, when you felt his hand wrap around your wrist pulling you back to him.
"not before you finish the drink i bought you." you rolled your eyes, but as you lifted the glass, you couldn't stop the smile tugging at the corners of your mouth, and judging by the look on oscar's face, he noticed that too.





