(this is my first time requesting, so i'm sorry if i'm doing it incorrectly in some way dkdksksj)
i don't have a very specific scenario in mind so you have total creative freedom, but i would really like to request some romantic x reader headcanons or oneshots with sampo, aventurine and sunday (all individually). especially sampo though... i love him a lot and there aren't that many fics of him lately. i absolutely love your writing so i know it'll be amazing! thank you and take care <3
What a Dangerous Thing, to Be Loved So Softly
Tags: Sampo x Reader, Aventurine x Reader, Sunday x Reader, Romance, Fluff, Angst, Emotional Intimacy, Slow Burn, Found Family, Moral Grayness, Subtle Manipulation, Symbolic Gestures, Emotional Vulnerability, Bittersweet Tension, Psychological Depth.
Warnings: Emotional Manipulation, Trust Issues, Past Trauma, Survivor’s Guilt, Moral Ambiguity, Power Imbalance, Existential Themes, Deception, Unspoken Feelings, Subtle Possessiveness, Religious Trauma, Self-Isolation, Mentions Of Oppression.
A/N: Thank you for your kind words! I hope you like these silly and random hcs for these men. 🙏
Sampo calls you every term under the sun except your name: “darling,” “starshine,” “investor of my affections.” It’s unclear if it’s affection or a long con, until he slips and says your name during a moment of real fear.
His teasing is relentless—but only you ever get to see the guilt behind his jokes. When you're hurt or sad, he falters, his mask slipping just enough to reveal genuine concern… before backpedaling into “Well, I mean, I can’t have my best customer dying on me, right?”
Sampo is terrified of commitment, but even more terrified of losing the one person who sees him, not the performance.
He won’t say "I love you" outright. He shows it by giving you the real version of a story—the one without embellishment. He trades honesty like it’s a rare currency, and you're the only one rich enough to afford it.
Pillow talk with him is a chaotic blend of gossip, half-truths, and existential vulnerability. One minute he’s recounting a wild escape from the Silvermane Guards, the next he’s softly asking, “Would you still love me if I wasn’t funny?”
He has trouble sleeping, so he lays on your chest and counts your heartbeat like it's the only real thing in his world.
One day, he gifts you a trinket—a cheap thing by anyone else’s standard, but it’s his lucky charm, the one he swore he’d never part with. He plays it off: “Well, I figured it’s safer with you than me.”
You later catch him reaching for it during a dangerous moment, only to stop himself, remembering he gave it to you. His expression falters. “Guess I’m not used to trusting someone else with my luck.”
He’s used to seduction as strategy—smirking over cards, “accidentally” brushing your hand. But when you flirt back, it catches him off-guard. He stumbles, and it’s the most sincere thing you’ve ever seen.
“You’re playing a dangerous game, darling,” he says, voice low. “And you’re winning.”
He shares his real name, Kakavasha, only once. The moment is quiet, devoid of flair. He doesn’t explain why—he just says it and waits. If you say it back, his breath catches.
His left hand always hides behind his back during high-stakes moments. But when he holds your hand—left hand—he never lets go. It’s wordless trust.
He spoils you in calculated ways. Custom clothing, rare wines, antique books—always things that show he’s been watching, listening.
Yet he’s startled by your small gestures: you make him tea after a long day; you adjust his choker when it sits wrong. Those little things undo him far more than any grand gesture.
After a mission that goes sideways, you find him staring at his own reflection, drenched in blood, laughter long gone. When you touch his shoulder, he flinches—then leans in, forehead against yours. “If I lose you,” he whispers, “there’s no game left worth playing.”
Sunday approaches romance like a sacred thing, delicate and painful. He watches you with reverence, often lost in thought mid-conversation as if memorizing every expression.
You’ll catch his wings flutter when you surprise him with kindness. It’s a silent confession: you matter.
His idea of a date is philosophical. You’ll find yourselves walking under starlight discussing the nature of joy and sorrow, your hands brushing, his halo faintly pulsing behind him.
He speaks softly when he’s vulnerable. “Is it selfish,” he asks one night, “to want a future with you in it?”
He has terrible dreams—half-memory, half prophecy. When he wakes, shaking, he clutches your pillow, grounding himself.
One night, you find him in the observatory, wings drooping, eyes dim. “You remind me that I’m still alive,” he says. “That I’m not just... what the Order made me.”
Sunday struggles to believe he deserves love. But he lets you trace the symbols on his halo, kiss the feathers behind his ear, and hold him during those hollow moments.
He cries, silently, the first time you tell him you love him. And then, with a trembling voice: “I think I’ve been dreaming of you since before I even knew what hope felt like.”
Author's note: More of Veyl of the Shattered Coil in Husbandry AU! Thanks to @sleepyfan-blog for letting me borrow Cedric!
Summary: A wary but increasingly intrigued Arkos Veyl barters future knowledge with the unsettlingly genial Plague Marine Apothecary Hura, learning more about the volatile young Black Templar Cedric and the strange dynamics of Stone Flame base.
Warning: Body horror, disease imagery, corruption/Chaos themes, manipulation, discussion of psychological repression, militarism, implied violence, Warhammer 40k grimdark themes. LMK if I need to add anything else.
"Thank you for your help." Veyl says with a nod of gratitude towards the rather cranky young Apothecary.
Cedric harrumphed in response.
Veyl gives him a small smile- amused - and concerned with just how grumpy Cedric is. True- Black Templars are temperamental but there seems like there might be... more to it? His intuition is... tingling.
Cedric heads off, still grumbling about condescending old men.
He's rather amused, grumbly Scout- that one.
Hura makes his way over to where Cedric is. He has noticed that Cedric seems extra crotchety, "What's going on? Difficult patients can be offloaded onto older Apothecaries for a little bit for an attitude adjustment."
"There is an injured Chaosy Hydra who is being rude and smug at me." Cedric explains a scowl on his face.
"How annoying, do you want me to take a shift or to see if I can help get him an attitude adjustment?" Hura asks lightly- his mind spinning with ideas.
"Yes please. He's been Insufferably Smug and Hydra to me." Cedric responds with his expression even more annoyed.
"Oh dear," Hura says, gently patting Cedric's shoulder, "I'll see what I can do about that- you should grab a snack and take a break."
“Thank you very much,” Cedric says, smiling a little at that, nodding towards Hura as he heads off to the break room to de-stress.
Hura smiles fondly at Cedric as he heads to Veyl’s room- he had heard of the new inhabitant of one of the secure rooms. He had wondered just what was going on- now he’ll get some answers. Alpha legionaries- while tricky are still… mortal. He is a patient old man.
Veyl had been very amused by how cantankerous the younger marine was- the size of Cedric- the latter is a Primaris Marine. From what his sources told him- what footage he’d seen… He understands some of the hostile, surly grumbles from the Son of Dorn.
Veyl smells what approaches- before it- someone- some thing. Arrives- even with the strong sanitization and ventilation- his eyes water a little bit as the corrupted, vile form of a Nurgle aligned Plague Marine - a Death Guard at that in- a mockery of an Apothecary uniform shows up.
“Hallo!” Hura croons with a lightly malevolent cheer as he looks over Veyl and reads his chart quickly.
“Hey- are you allowed in the medical ward?” Veyl asks as he winkles his nose and eyes Hura like he’s a walking biohazard. “You smell like you’d make things… worse.”
He leans back a little - he had heard the others speak of Hura- and Death Guard and Plague marine in the same sentence- but he hadn’t actually believed that they let him into a supposedly loyalist base to practice medicine.
“Why did Cedric sic you on me?” Veyl asks a touch indignantly, “I haven’t done anything.”
“Yet,” Hura retorts with a smirk, before growing more serious, “I can keep my Blessings to myself, and Cedric sends his regards. You ought to be more polite to your primary Apothecary.”
“I was being polite to the lad!” Veyl protests his innocence- a tad indignant as he hasn’t even done anything. “I never called him cute or adorable to his face- or within his hearing. I figured he would pout at me and sulk over the ‘insult’.”
“Ah…. Cedric is… in denial about certain… gifts. He has. Empathy- to know how others feel about him, among other things.” Hura says.
“Ah! That is what I sensed then- a budding young Psyker.” Veyl brightens before snickering a little and sighing, growing serious- it is dangerous to repress one’s power, it is dangerous to be untrained. “Let me guess- the training for that is going slowly and in a round about fashion?”
“Yes- we are being … not so direct in training him- it’s working so far.” Hura says, “but eventually he- and we will need to confront him on his psyker abilities for him to fully control them.”
“Let me guess- he’s a Black Templar? Especially because of how growly he is.” Veyl adds, astute.
“Yes- Cedric is a Black Templar,” Hura affirms.
“Ah how fun,” Veyl says, “He’s a rather large handful I assume.”
“Oh perhaps- but he’s worth the effort,” Hura says, one of his hands tilting sideways twice, “it’s a delicate work in progress.”
“I bet- he’s a hostile young man.” Veyl adds.
“Oh- this is better, actually,” Hura says with a chuckle - memories of when Cedric first arrived and how much more reactive and aggressive the younger marine had been.
“Oh?” Veyl asks, his eyes glimmering- the hunger for information has him lean forwards a little. “Please, do tell your tales of him?”
Hura smiles at the expression hidden by his helmet- he’s caught the Hydra by his curiosity- excellent. “I don’t give information like that away for free.”
‘Damn,’ Veyl mentally cursed- he had been hoping that Hura would be in the mood to chat stories without prices being involved. “What may you be interested in for bartering?”
He doesn’t have much- besides himself, information of the future as he knows it- and his skills. Veyl is curious to know what Hura wants- and what kind of costs the other will ask of him.
“What do you have to offer?” Hura asks- curious to see what the Hydra will come up with- as his mind spins to what he’d think is a fair price.
“Information,” Veyl says after a few moments of silence, “I am from M42- after the Primaris Rollout. I recognize an oversized Scout when I see one.”
“Oh? How … curious,” Hura is pleased with the offer and nods a little bit at that, “do continue.”
“What would you like to know?” Veyl asks as he keeps his smirk internal ‘got him.’
“As much as you know,” Hura says.
“I feel like that’s an unequal exchange,” Veyl keeps himself from snorting or shaking his head at that- of course- he wants the whole lot for relatively little- but Veyl’s no newbie. He’s not that desperate either, “I will give you one piece of information in exchange for the piece of information that I want.”
Hura shifts a little as he allows, “fair enough I suppose- one story, for a whole truth.”
Veyl nods in agreement as he asks, “What do you mean by the angry grumbling being better?”
Hura lets out a fond chuckle as he tells the tale of how- during the first week of him being in Stone Flame base he had tackled a Slaaneshi marine who’d been dripping poison uncontrollably and had strapped jars to Zaarius’s claws with orders for a heavy flamer to purge the chaos filth before it could corrupt and currode. How he’d occasionally almost press his nose to the windows and growl for hours as Chaos marines simply walked about- going about their business not trying to hassle or make Cedric Irate.
“... Ah- your domestication efforts have gone well then,” Veyl says nodding towards Hura - he’s impressed, “that does sound about right for a Baby black Templar.”
“Oh yes- he’s come along quite well.” Hura says- an almost paternalistic pride coating his voice.
“Ah- a good number of the Primaris Marines were not… well received as reinforcements,” Veyl starts- noticing the way Hura stills and watches him- predatory intent starting to leak from his form. “ And a good… number of them were … Well- it looked to me like they were hunted for sport, by some of the most jealous of the First Born Loyalists.”
“Ah- how utterly foolish, stupid, and tragic,” Hura says shaking his head- as Veyl heard a sneer in his voice, “It - seems like an encapsulation of the Imperium of Man in that whole Era.”
“The decaying corpse of the Imperium is bringing so many down in its long, slow death throws.” Veyl says with agreement, eyes dark for a moment. He watches Hura for a moment- Hura seems an… odd one.
“This was such a pleasant chat, keep your emotions behind a barrier- and Cedric should be less grumbly,” Hura advises as he heads off.
Fandom:The Penguin (2024) Pairing: Sofia Falcone x Reader
You woke to a throbbing ache behind your eyes, a dull, persistent reminder of the previous night's festivities. The echo of laughter, the rhythmic pulse of bass, and the strobing kaleidoscope of club lights still swirled like phantom sensations in your head. It had been a typical Friday night - an escape orchestrated with familiar ease beside your friends. Good music, potent cocktails, and that ephemeral, dizzying freedom that always felt a little too short-lived. The city's energy had been a palpable force, a siren song pulling you deeper into its chaotic rhythm. You'd surrendered willingly, dissolving into the sea of bodies, the cacophony of sounds, and the intoxicating feeling of being momentarily untethered from reality.
But as you pushed yourself up from the tangled bedsheets, your fingertips grazed your neck, and a jolt of unease, cold and unfamiliar, shot through you. There was a strange sensation there, not quite pain, but a persistent, foreign pressure—an unfamiliar warmth that radiated from a specific point. It was subtle, at first, easily dismissed. But then your fingers explored, tracing the contours of your skin, and you realized: there was something there. Something raised, with a jagged, almost deliberate edge, chillingly unmistakable. A bite. The skin around it was angry red, inflamed and tender to the touch. The two puncture marks, small and sharp, seemed almost... intentional. Placed. Something cold and predatory, like the fangs of a wolf, had touched you.
Your breath hitched in your throat, the blood draining from your face as a whirlwind of panicked thoughts took hold. You were certain there was no bite from the previous night - no feral alley cat, no drunken stumble into a rosebush. You had left the club with your friends, the walk home a blur of shared jokes and tipsy laughter - none of them had noticed anything amiss. A quick memory check: no strange encounters, no unexpected contact. Nothing - but this. You stumbled to the bathroom, peering into the mirror, a growing sense of dread coiling in your stomach. The mark was small, concealed just beneath your hairline, at the nape of your neck. It looked… almost like a brand, a warning etched into your flesh. A possessive claim.
The mark itself was small, almost easily hidden under your hair, but it radiated a strange power, a claim, like something had carved itself beneath the skin, changing you in a way you couldn't understand. It felt alien, unnatural. You shook your head, trying to dispel the creeping unease, the primal fear blooming in your chest. You went through the motions of starting the day, a shower, coffee, but the normal routines felt… off. The air seemed to thicken around you, a suffocating blanket of awareness, and a prickling sensation of being watched from every corner. The usual city sounds, the distant rumble of trucks, the chatter of pedestrians, seemed to amplify, echoing much louder in your ears. The weight of the world felt heavier, pressing down on you from all sides, and the sense of being hunted grew with every passing moment. Every now and then, you’d catch a flicker in your peripheral vision – a shadow that darted too quickly, a figure obscured by the crowd, too illusive to pin down. Just a hint of darkness, a vague unease settling in with every glance.
The day passed in a state of anxious paralysis, a constant battle against the mounting feeling of wrongness. That night, after another restless day of unease, your phone buzzed. A message. Plain and to the point: “We need to talk.” The name at the top sent a jolt of cold dread through you: Sofia Falcone. Just the name alone felt like a weight on your chest. A wave of sickening unease washed over you, the dots of fear connecting. You tried to push back the feeling that this all must be a mistake, overthinking, a bad dream, but the fear, the bite, felt solid and real. You knew Sofia, or at least, you thought you did. She was an enigmatic woman, a captivating presence with long dark hair cascading down her shoulders, piercing grey eyes that always seemed to see through you, and an undeniably dangerous air that shimmered beneath the surface of her composed exterior. But this? This was something else, something you couldn't fathom, something terrifying in its unknown nature.
You tried to rationalize, to find a logical explanation, to convince yourself it was all a misunderstanding, but deep down you knew this feeling wasn't something that could be explained by rational thought. There was no escaping it, you were caught in this web. You had been marked, and the familiar world that surrounded you was about to shift into something completely alien.
When you arrived at her penthouse, the door opened before you even had the chance to knock, as if she had been expecting you. The cool, calculating gaze of Sofia Falcone met yours immediately, sending a shiver crawling up your spine. She was standing in the dimly lit entryway, the soft glow of candlelight casting long, unsettling shadows around her. Her eyes, sharp and assessing, lingered on your face, her expression unreadable.
“Come in,” she said, her voice smooth and inviting, but laced with an edge of something predatory that sent an icy chill down your bones. “We need to have a conversation.” The words were polite, almost casual, but there was a definitive authority in their tone, an unspoken command that brooked no refusal.
As you stepped inside, your heart hammered against your ribs, each beat a frantic drum against the silence. You tried to ignore the subtle burning sensation at the back of your neck, the insistent throb that was a constant reminder of what had happened. The atmosphere inside the penthouse was thick, a heady mix of expensive perfume, polished leather, and a faint, lingering smell of something old, almost like cigar smoke, a ghost of a previous life and history clinging to the air.
Sofia closed the door behind you with a soft, deliberate click, each movement graceful and controlled, like a panther stalking its prey. You felt small and vulnerable, insignificant in her presence, like you were in the presence of something far older and more powerful than yourself, something that could devour you whole without a moment's hesitation.
You swallowed hard, your throat dry with fear. “What’s happening to me?” Your voice was barely a whisper, the fear bubbling uncontrollably to the surface.
Sofia tilted her head slightly, her eyes scrutinizing you. Her gaze flickered to the bite mark on your neck, a spark of something knowing, something almost triumphant, flashing behind her eyes. “You’ve noticed it, then,” she said, her voice dangerously calm, like the stillness before a storm. “Good. I was starting to wonder if you’d be too oblivious to understand what happened.” Her words were a subtle taunt, a challenge to the fear that was clearly visible in your eyes.
You took a step back, shaking your head, trying desperately to piece together the words, the situation, but it was all blurring together into an incomprehensible nightmare. "What do you mean? What is this bite? Why is it—why is it hurting?" You ran a hand across your neck, the tenderness of the skin a sharp reminder of the violation.
Sofia moved closer, each step slow and deliberate, narrowing the distance between you. Her presence was suffocating, like a thick fog that robbed you of air. Before you could protest, she was close enough to touch, her fingers brushing against the sensitive skin around the mark, her touch light, almost affectionate, but there was a chilling coldness in her eyes, the calm gaze of a hunter who has cornered its prey.
“I’ve marked you,” she said softly, her voice a hypnotic whisper, a silken thread that bound you to her word. “And it’s more than just a bite. It’s a symbol. You’re mine now.”
The words hit you like a physical blow, a wave of cold shock that paralyzed your body. You couldn't move, couldn't pull away from her gaze, the weight of her words sinking into your very core. The heat of the bite on your skin began to intensify, spreading across your neck and chest, filling you with a strange and unfamiliar warmth, but it wasn't the comforting warmth of a fire. It was a consuming heat, like you were being devoured from the inside out. Your heart pounded in your chest, hammering out a frantic rhythm against the silence.
“I’m… yours?” you managed, the words foreign and forced in your throat, tasting like ash. You couldn’t believe what she was saying, what was happening, yet the truth of it rang loud and undeniable.
She smiled, but it wasn't a kind smile. It was full of something dark, something predatory, a flicker of malice that made the hairs on the back of your neck stand on end. A wolf showing its teeth before the kill.
“You’re more than you think. More than you were. You’ll understand in time,” she murmured, her hand lifting and stroking your cheek, her touch a strange mix of fondness and malice. “This bite isn’t just a mark. It’s a bond, a promise that we’re connected now.” Her voice was soothing, but the undertone was unsettling, like the murmur of a predator lulling its prey into a false sense of security.
“No one else can take you from me now,” she continued, her eyes locking onto yours with a possessive intensity. “No one. The bite means you belong to me—body, soul, and every last breath you take. You are mine.” Each word was a claim, a chain forged in the depths of darkness, binding you to her.
A shudder ran through your body at her chilling declaration, your heart racing in panicked flight, trying to escape the truth that she was weaving before you. You opened your mouth to protest, to deny, but no words came out, your voice caught in the web of her carefully wrought words. The heat, the overwhelming sensation of being bound to her, of being claimed, choked you. You had to close your eyes, unable to meet her gaze any longer, the horror of what she was saying washing over you like a tidal wave.
“I never wanted to hurt you,” Sofia said softly, her fingers trailing down your cheek as if offering a twisted comfort, the light touch almost a brand. “But you’re mine now. And this… this is your new reality.”
The pressure at the back of your neck grew stronger, the bite throbbing, your body trembling with an agony that wasn’t physical, but emotional, as the weight of her control settled deep into your bones. You were hers now—marked and bound in ways you couldn't yet comprehend, a puppet dancing in her hands.
… Normally I don’t like thinking about it bc it makes me sour I got betrayed, but… I don’t think Jin actually forgot anything when Horobi ‘reset’ him, I think he just reset some of his programming to disrupt the singularity, not that he completely reset him. Bc none of the MaGear-d HumaGears seem to forget anything, they just are controlled by… The Ark?
Fandom: The Penguin (2024) Pairing: Sofia Falcone x Reader
The rain fell in relentless sheets, each drop a fat, cold hammer against the slick pavement. Gotham's neon signs, fractured and distorted through the downpour, painted the city in lurid, bleeding colors. It was a city perpetually shrouded in gloom, a place where the shadows felt heavier, the air thicker with unspoken betrayals. This city, with its labyrinthine alleys and towering skyscrapers, had a way of consuming people, stripping them bare and leaving only husks. It was the same city that had whispered promises of greatness, of purpose, a different life. But tonight, standing in the heart of its underbelly, you felt a chilling doubt. Had that promise been a cruel joke all along? Was this cold, unforgiving landscape all it had ever offered?
You stood now, the rain plastering your clothes to your skin, before her—Sofia Falcone. The very name sent a shiver tracing down your spine. She was the daughter of Carmine "The Roman" Falcone, the kingpin whose name echoed through the city's underbelly. More significantly, she was the woman who had woven herself into the very fabric of your being. It wasn't merely physical attraction, the magnetic pull of her dark, striking beauty. Nor was it just the intoxicating allure of power that clung to her like a second skin. It was something far deeper, a mirror reflecting the fractures in your own soul. You saw the same raw, aching vulnerability that hid beneath her carefully constructed mask. It was the broken pieces of her that called to the broken pieces of yourself, a silent, desperate plea echoing across the chasm between you.
"You shouldn’t be here," Sofia's voice cut through the storm's roar, each word sharp and cold as a shard of ice. It was a voice that could command armies and shatter hearts with equal ease. The cadence suggested a weary resignation, as if she'd spoken these words a thousand times before. "You know what this means, don’t you?" The question hung in the air, thick with unspoken threats and a bone-deep understanding of what was at stake.
Your breath hitched in your throat, the cold rain suddenly feeling like a physical weight. Her words pressed against your chest, each syllable a vise tightening around your heart. But the danger lurking in her tone, the palpable tension that crackled between you, wasn't the only thing that resonated. It was the rawness, the flicker of vulnerability that shone, however briefly, behind her calculated façade. It was that vulnerability that had always drawn you in, an irresistible siren’s song.
"I don’t care what it means," you said, the words trembling slightly, despite your desperate attempts at control. You had rehearsed this scenario countless times, imagined the words you would speak to her. Yet, faced with her icy gaze, your carefully planned bravado evaporated, revealing the stark truth beneath. "I can’t walk away from you, Sofia. I never could." The confession was raw, stripped bare of pretense - a testament to the deep hold she had on you.
She looked at you, her eyes the color of storm clouds, and you saw a kaleidoscope of emotions swirling beneath the surface. Confusion, pain, the deep, ingrained fear of allowing anyone to truly see her. You saw the wall she’d so diligently built, the carefully constructed barrier designed to keep everyone, especially you, at arm’s length. "You don’t understand," she said, her voice softer now, more fragile than you’d ever heard it. It was a whisper that bordered on a plea, a desperate attempt to convince herself as much as you. "You think you can fix me? You think you can save me from this life? It’s too late for me." Her tone carried a heavy weight of self-condemnation, a resigned acceptance of her own fate.
Instinctively, you reached out, your fingers brushing against the curve of her cheek. The contact sent a jolt through your system, an electric current that felt like both a lifeline and a death sentence. It was a burn so hot, so raw, that you had to pull back your hand, as if the intense heat would consume you entirely if you lingered. The physical sensation mirrored the burning conflict within both of you.
She looked at you, her gaze unflinching, as if she had anticipated the pain, the way your touch had managed to wound you both with its simple intimacy. It was a shared hurt, a silent testament to the impossibility of your connection.
“I never wanted this for you,” she whispered, the carefully constructed walls she had erected between you finally crumbling. The confession was a crack in her armor, revealing the woman beneath the hardened exterior. "I never wanted you to be a part of my world, because this world will ruin you." Her voice was laced with a raw vulnerability that tore at the very core of your being. It was an admission that brought with it a terrifying truth – her love for you was a burden, a curse she wished to spare you.
But you were already ruined, in ways you couldn't quite articulate. It had happened the moment you met her, the moment her darkness had entwined itself with your own. And even now, standing before the woman you loved, knowing that your very presence could be your mutual undoing, you were still unable to walk away. You were caught in her web, hopelessly, irrevocably.
“I’m already in your world, Sofia,” you said, your voice low and unwavering, your eyes locked on hers. It was a declaration, a promise you made not to her, but to yourself. “And no matter what happens, I’m not leaving.” The conviction in your voice was absolute, a defiant stand against a force that threatened to crush you both.
She closed her eyes, as if the sheer weight of your words were too much to bear. She was trying to shut you out, attempting to escape the undeniable pull of a love she knew was her own undoing. But even with her eyes tightly closed, a single tear escaped, tracing a glistening path down her cheek. It was that single tear that spoke volumes, a testament to the depth of the emotion buried beneath the surface, the feelings she had tried so desperately to suppress.
"You have no idea what you’re saying," she whispered, her voice a raw mixture of anguish and self-loathing. The pain in her voice was palpable, a confirmation of the darkness that plagued her. "I’ll destroy you, and I’ll destroy myself. It’s only a matter of time." Her words were a chilling prophecy, a stark warning of the future that awaited both of you. She had accepted her fate, resigned to a life where love was only a prelude to destruction.
And that was the truth, wasn’t it? You both knew it, deep within your bones. Your love was a doomed romance, a moth drawn to a flame, destined to be burned. No matter how much you tried to cling to it, no matter how bravely you fought for it, there would never be a happy ending for you. Your love story was a tragedy pre-written, a symphony of heartbreak playing out beneath the unforgiving gaze of Gotham’s neon lights.
The days that followed were nothing more than a blur of pain. Each moment spent with Sofia was like walking through fire. She kept her distance, kept her walls up, but the cracks were there—small, barely noticeable—but they were enough. Enough for you to see how deeply she was hurting. How much she was trying to push you away, yet how much she needed you.
But you couldn’t leave. You couldn’t.
Even when her father’s enemies circled closer. Even when the danger threatened to pull you both under.
One night, you found yourself in the back office of one of her father’s businesses. The air was thick with smoke, the tension palpable. Sofia stood at the desk, her fingers drumming nervously against the wood.
"You should leave," she said, without looking at you. Her voice was quiet, but the edge was unmistakable. "It’s not safe here."
“I’m not going anywhere, Sofia,” you said, your voice firm, but there was a tremor beneath it, betraying your own fear. "You can’t push me away."
Her eyes flicked to yours, dark and unreadable. "You don’t understand," she repeated, her voice barely above a whisper. "You never will. You’re not a part of this life. You don’t belong here."
"I don’t belong anywhere without you," you said, your heart pounding as you took a step forward. "I’m not leaving you. I will never leave you."
Sofia’s breath hitched, and for a moment, you thought she might let her guard down. She might actually let you in. But then she did what she always did. She recoiled, pushing you away before you could get too close.
"You think this is love?" she asked bitterly, her words laced with scorn. "You think this is love when all I do is hurt everyone I touch? When all I do is destroy? How long do you think it’ll take before I destroy you too?"
You reached for her, but she flinched back, her face contorting with a mix of pain and rage. "You’re the one who’ll end up destroyed," she spat, her voice shaking with the weight of what she knew was coming. "This—this can’t end any other way."
You gritted your teeth, your chest tight with emotion. "I don’t care. I would rather be destroyed by you than live without you."
The silence between you two was suffocating, both of you caught in the tangled mess of love and hatred, of the past and the future that would never come. She was right—you were both doomed. But that didn’t change the fact that you would fight for her until there was nothing left.
The final time you saw Sofia, it was on a rain-soaked night much like the first. The world outside felt like it was crashing down around you, but even so, you walked toward her with that same defiance in your heart. You had never given up on her, even when you knew, deep down, that it was a lost cause.
She was standing by the window, staring out at the city. The same city that had both broken and shaped her into the woman she was. The same city that would swallow her whole, just like it would swallow you if you allowed it.
"Sofia," you whispered, your voice barely audible in the dim light. "I’ve never been more sure of anything in my life. I love you. I will always love you."
She didn’t turn around, but her body trembled. "Don’t," she said softly, her voice breaking. "Don’t say that. Don’t make this harder than it already is."
Your heart ached as you walked closer to her, placing a hand on her shoulder. "I can’t walk away from you, Sofia. I’ve tried. But I can’t. I won’t."
She turned around then, her eyes filled with unshed tears, her face a mask of regret. "You don’t understand," she repeated, the desperation clear in her voice. "I will ruin you. I’ll drag you down into this hell I’ve made for myself. You’ll never be the same after this."
"I don’t care," you said, your voice hoarse with emotion. "I don’t care if it destroys me. I just want you to know that I will always be here. No matter what."
Sofia’s lip quivered as she took a step back. "I can’t love you like this," she said, her voice shaking. "I can’t drag you through this darkness with me."
"You’re not dragging me," you whispered, your hand reaching for hers. "I’m walking into it with you. Because I choose you."
For a moment, you thought she might actually break. That maybe, just maybe, she would give in. That the years of isolation, the years of suffering she had endured, would finally break, and she would let you love her.
But then the walls slammed down, harder than ever before.
She pulled her hand away, stepping back. "You don’t get it," Sofia whispered, her voice trembling with the weight of a thousand unsaid things. "I will destroy everything we have. I will destroy you."
And that was it. The moment when you knew that no matter how hard you fought, no matter how deeply you loved her, it was never going to be enough.
Her love—if it could even be called that—was as broken as she was. It was too late to fix either of you.
And you realized, with a shattering certainty, that you were both always doomed. Doomed to never be enough for each other. Doomed to suffer.
And so, as she walked away from you, you felt it.
The end.
The final loss.
And all you could do was stand there, shattered, broken, waiting for the emptiness to consume you whole.
Because in the end, even your love wasn’t enough to save either of you.
Day 16: “What do you mean you don’t want to go sledding?”
Fandom:The Penguin (2024)
Pairing: Sofia Falcone x Reader
The soft glow of winter sunlight, filtered through the intricate patterns of frost clinging to Sofia’s expansive estate windows, painted the room in a warm, golden hue. Dust motes danced in the slanted beams, creating an almost ethereal atmosphere. The air, though crisp with winter's chill outside, held a cozy warmth from the crackling fire in the hearth. You stood near the ornate fireplace, the heat radiating against your cheeks, cradling a steaming mug of hot chocolate. The rich aroma of cocoa and vanilla filled the air, a comforting scent against the undercurrent of unspoken tension. Sofia leaned against the heavy, carved doorway, her posture relaxed yet somehow coiled, like a predator observing its prey. Her sharp, dark eyes were fixed on you with an intensity that sent a shiver down your spine and made your chest tighten, a hummingbird trapped against your ribs. You could feel the weight of her gaze, probing, assessing, somehow knowing more than you intended to reveal.
"I don't know how else to say it," you said, forcing a light, apologetic smile that felt slightly brittle in the face of her unwavering attention. "I'm just not much of a sledding person." The words felt inadequate, a meager defense against the force of her personality. You took a small sip from your mug, hoping the warmth would calm your nerves, but the silence in the room only seemed to amplify the rapid thumping of your heart.
Sofia slowly tilted her head, the cascade of her dark hair slipping in waves over her shoulder like a silken curtain. The movement was graceful, deliberate, and somehow theatrical. "Not a sledding person?" she repeated, her voice a smooth alto, each syllable measured and edged with a subtle undercurrent of disbelief. It wasn't a question, but a challenge. “That’s like saying you’re not a winter person,” she added, a hint of playful mockery lacing her tone.
“I didn’t say that," you teased lightly, attempting to defuse the building tension with humor. A small, self-deprecating laugh escaped your lips. But Sofia didn't budge, her expression remaining unchanged. Her full lips pressed into a thin, almost imperceptible line, her arms crossing over her chest, creating a subtle barrier as she continued to study you, her gaze unwavering and unsettlingly perceptive. It felt as if she could see every reluctance, every doubt hidden within you.
“You’ll go sledding,” she said, her tone final, absolute, brooking no argument. The words weren’t a request, but a decree, delivered with the quiet power that only Sofia seemed to possess. You weren't sure if she was joking, using her usual dry wit or issuing a genuine command and that uncertainty made you feel like a small boat caught in a very powerful current.
You chuckled nervously, a sound that echoed in the space between you. "Why are you so invested in this?" you asked, your voice laced with a mixture of amusement and genuine curiosity. Why did this seemingly trivial thing matter so much to her?
Sofia took a step closer, her beautifully crafted leather boots clicking softly against the polished, wooden floor of the estate, each step deliberate and purposeful. The subtle sound seemed to punctuate the silence and amplified the closeness she was creating. “Because I want to see you laugh,” she admitted, her voice dropping to a softer, more vulnerable register. The shift was subtle, but profound. It was as if a wall had been lowered, revealing a glimpse of the heart beneath the hardened exterior. “I want to see you happy, free.” The words hung in the air, imbued with a yearning that resonated deep within you.
Your heart ached at her words, a soft ache of tenderness and understanding. Sofia had always been a fortress of strength and control, a bastion of unwavering resolve. But moments like this—when her guard slipped, and she let you glimpse the vulnerability, the longing underneath—reminded you of the complex weight she carried, the unspoken burdens that defined her existence. A wave of affection washed over you, a silent promise to offer support, understanding, and love in return.
“Sofia…” you began, a myriad of emotions swirling within you, but she interrupted, closing the remaining distance between you. Her presence was magnetic, drawing you in with an irresistible pull.
“You deserve joy,” she murmured, her hand reaching out to brush against yours in a touch that was light, hesitant, almost tentative, as though she was afraid you might pull away, afraid of shattering the fragile moment. “And if I have to drag you onto that sled myself, I’ll do it.” The playful threat was spoken with a dark glint in her eyes, a hint of something possessive that flickered beneath the surface.
You laughed softly, the tension finally beginning to ebb. You placed your now-lukewarm cup of hot chocolate gently down on the cool marble mantel, no longer needing its warmth. "Okay, okay. I’ll go sledding," you conceded, your voice laced with amusement. "But only because you’re so persuasive." The words were designed to lighten the mood, but they felt inadequate, like a piece of driftwood tossed into the vast ocean of her feelings.
Sofia’s lips curved into a small, satisfied smile, a rare and genuine expression that lit up her face and made you catch your breath. But her gaze remained locked on yours, dark and searching, as if she were trying to read the very depths of your soul. “That’s not why,” she said, her voice dipping lower, becoming husky with undisguised emotion. “You’ll go because you trust me. Because you know I’d never let anything happen to you.” The declaration was raw, unfiltered, delivered with an intensity that sent a tremor through you.
A shiver ran down your spine, not from the cold, but from the sheer force of her conviction, the raw and unwavering emotion that radiated from her dark, fathomless eyes. She stepped closer, her fingers trailing up your arm in a slow, deliberate caress, sending goosebumps skittering across your skin, until they cupped your face, her touch tender and possessive at the same time. The warmth of her hands against your cheeks was grounding, reassuring, like an unspoken promise.
“You’re everything to me,” she whispered, her thumb brushing lightly against your cheek, and the tenderness in her voice resonated deep within you. “And I’d do anything to make you see that.” The declaration was a heavy weight, a beautiful burden to bear, a testament to a deep and complex love you were only beginning to fully understand.
Your breath hitched in your throat as she leaned in, her lips brushing against yours in a kiss that was both tender and possessive, hesitant and demanding. The brief contact was electrifying, sending a jolt of pure sensation through your body. She pulled back just enough to murmur, her breath warm against your lips, “Now, let’s get you dressed for the snow.”
Fandom:The Penguin (2024) Pairing: Sofia Falcone x Reader
The knock on your door was gentle, hesitant, as though the person behind it wasn't sure how to introduce themselves. You’d just moved into the neighborhood, and, feeling the weight of isolation creeping up on you, you decided that a little friendliness couldn’t hurt. Opening the door, you found yourself face-to-face with the woman who would soon become your neighbor: Sofia Falcone.
She was striking, tall, and carried herself with an air of quiet authority that you couldn't quite place. Her eyes, dark and sharp, scanned you as though she were evaluating your very soul. Her lips held a tight, polite smile, but there was something in her gaze that made your stomach twist with uncertainty.
"Hello," she greeted you, her voice smooth, but with an edge you couldn't ignore. "I’m Sofia Falcone. I just moved in next door." She paused, as if measuring whether the information would matter, then added with a slight tilt of her head, “It’s a pleasure to meet you.”
You returned the greeting, trying to mask the unease building in your chest. There was something magnetic about her, something dangerous hidden behind her immaculate appearance. But you smiled warmly, extending a hand.
"Nice to meet you, Sofia. I’m [Your Name]. Would you like to come in for some tea? It’s a little quiet here, and I’m sure it’d be nice to have some company."
She regarded you for a moment, as if pondering your offer, before nodding ever so slightly. "Tea sounds lovely. Thank you." She stepped inside, her heels clicking against the hardwood floor, each step deliberate and certain. You led her to your living room, the space bathed in soft afternoon light, trying to push away the feeling that something was off.
Once you were seated, the silence stretched between you two, both of you sipping your tea in what should’ve been a calm, relaxing atmosphere. Yet, there was an undeniable tension in the air. Something hung there, thick and suffocating. You couldn’t quite pinpoint it, but the way Sofia watched you, almost too carefully, made your skin crawl.
Her eyes never left you as she took another slow sip of her tea, and her lips curved into a faint smile. “You seem... a bit different from the others around here," she said, her tone too casual to be truly innocent. "But then again, I like that about people. Unpredictability. It makes life more... interesting.”
You frowned, unsure of how to respond. “I guess I don’t quite fit the usual mold, if that’s what you mean.”
Sofia leaned in, her gaze never faltering. “Oh, I wasn’t talking about your personality, darling. I meant your... heart." Her words were slow, deliberate, like she was savoring every syllable. "I can see it in your eyes, in the way you carry yourself. There's a desperation hiding there, isn't there? Something... you’re running from?”
Your heart skipped a beat, your breath caught in your throat. For a moment, all you could do was stare at her, unable to form a response. Had you been that obvious? Was it that easy to read you?
Sofia’s smile widened, but there was no warmth in it. “You don’t have to answer, of course. I’m just... observant. I know what it’s like to want to hide, to want to escape your own mind. You think people like me have everything together, don’t you? That we have control. But I don’t. No, darling, not at all.”
You shivered slightly, her words lingering in the air, each one cutting deeper than you expected. Your mind raced, trying to make sense of what she was saying and why it felt like she was getting under your skin so easily.
She leaned back, the faintest edge of amusement in her eyes as she noticed your unease. “But you’re not here for therapy, are you? You just wanted a friendly chat. I don’t mind that. I do enjoy... getting to know people, especially when they’re hiding things.”
There it was again—that look. You swallowed, trying to steady yourself. “I’m not hiding anything,” you replied, but your voice cracked ever so slightly. Was it possible that she knew more than you were willing to admit? You didn’t want to confront it—your desperation, your secrets, your darkest fears—but somehow, Sofia was digging them all out of you without even trying.
A long, drawn-out silence stretched between you, the air thick with the weight of things unspoken. And then, just when you thought you might suffocate from the tension, Sofia stood, her movements fluid and graceful.
"I think it's time for me to leave," she said, her voice low and cold now, as though her kindness had been nothing more than a mask she could discard. "But remember, [Your Name], we’re neighbors. And I always keep an eye out for my neighbors. You don’t have to hide from me, not anymore."
Your heart clenched in your chest, your mind spinning. You stood as well, your body shaking slightly, though you tried to keep it under control. “I—I didn’t mean to make you uncomfortable,” you said quickly, but the words fell flat. You could see the game she was playing now, the manipulation, the way she was pulling at your very soul, forcing you to confront your own loneliness, your own desperation for connection.
“I’m not uncomfortable,” she corrected, her voice smooth but with an underlying menace. “But you might be. Eventually.”
And with that, she turned, her heels clicking sharply against the floor as she made her way to the door. When she opened it, she paused for a brief moment, glancing over her shoulder. Her gaze locked onto yours, piercing and knowing.
“Goodbye for now, [Your Name]. I’ll see you around.”
And just like that, she was gone, leaving you standing alone in the middle of your own home, the weight of her words pressing down on you like a thousand-pound stone. Your body shook, heart thundering in your chest, as the room seemed to close in on you.