Can I ask for Aventurine with a bodyguard reader? Like reader is most of the time just internally crashing out but outwardly being the epitome of calm. But for once they actually express worry and concerned anger when Aventurine is taking on a particularly risky gamble? They don't like that he's constantly putting himself in danger with risky bets. It's unexpected but the poor reader is on their last thread of patience with our resident peacock man. And then later they try to deny it like "I'd get fired if you got hurt so...".
Please take care of yourself btw! Drink water and have some snacks <3
Guarded Hearts and Loaded Dice
Summary: As Aventurine dives headfirst into another high-stakes gamble—risking not just IPC assets, but potentially his own life—his ever-composed bodyguard (you) finally cracks. After months of silent vigilance, your frustration and buried concern boil over, surprising even the cunning strategist himself. But when emotions surface between calculated risks and sharp smiles, who’s really bluffing? And what happens when the bodyguard starts gambling with their heart?
Tags: Aventurine x Reader, Bodyguard!Reader, Slow Burn, Mutual Pining, Emotional Suppression, Angst with Comfort, Subtle Vulnerability, Protective Dynamics, Found Family Undertones, Emotional Walls Cracking, Hidden Feelings, Pre-Relationship (?), Flirty Tension.
Warnings: Implied past trauma (slavery, violence), Emotional suppression/Guarded behavior, Light psychological themes (survivor's guilt, intimacy issues), Mild language, Power dynamics (professional hierarchy), Brief mention of manipulation/betrayal.
You’ve guarded many dangerous men before.
But none like him.
Aventurine moves like a roulette spin mid-twist—bright, loud, unpredictable. You trail three steps behind him, a silent shadow in polished boots, absorbing the numbers, the players, the risks—doing the math he pretends not to care about.
Another meeting ends. Another plan teetering on the edge of lunacy. He’s just wagered a not-insignificant portion of IPC assets into a Penaconian debt sinkhole and now hums, content, as if he’s merely placed a bet on a casual poker night.
You’re not a numbers person. You’re a death-avoidance person. And he’s flirting with both bankruptcy and a bullet to the skull with the same grin.
That grin flashes now as he stops mid-corridor, turning to you as if you’d spoken.
"You’ve been unusually stiff today," he purrs, tilting those ridiculous glasses down his nose to catch your eyes with his stare. "Is it the suit? You hate the golden-brown tie, don’t you."
He’s deflecting. You know he knows.
You clench your jaw. “It’s the billion-credit gamble you just made on a failing sector.”
"Oh?" He raises a brow, folding one arm across his chest, resting his other elbow atop it, fingers curling under his chin. A peacock posing mid-fight. “But darling, you know I always win, eventually.”
You snap.
No explosions. No raised voice.
Just the rare, dangerous edge of emotion leaking into your otherwise impassive tone.
“Eventually doesn’t matter if you're dead before you collect.”
The corridor goes silent. Even Aventurine stills, his eyes narrowing—barely. He studies you like he would a losing hand he hadn’t expected.
Your hands are clenched behind your back, shoulders squared, jaw tight. It’s not protocol. You’ve broken it—cracked your mask. You never speak like this.
He’s heard rage before. This isn’t that.
This is concern—raw and bleeding, barely concealed beneath professionalism.
“You—” His lips part, but then curl again into something unreadable. Not amusement. Something else. “My, my. I didn’t know my bodyguard had such a poetic side. Tell me,” he leans in slightly, “are you worried about the asset, or the man holding it?”
Your eyes narrow.
You take a breath. Then another.
“I’d get fired if you got hurt.”
A lie.
Or rather—your last line of defense.
He knows it. Smiles as if he doesn’t.
Still, he falls quiet.
There’s something about the way you’re holding yourself, the way your fingers twitch slightly behind your back, as if resisting the urge to reach out. It’s not fear of failure.
It’s fear of loss.
His smile softens—not fades, but shifts. From spectacle to intimacy.
A private expression.
“I’ll keep the next gamble smaller,” he says, half-teasing. “Only half a billion credits and a minor skirmish.”
Your nostrils flare. You don’t reply.
But when he brushes past you again, his voice drops, almost too soft to catch:
“...Thank you.”
He’s sitting with his overcoat tossed carelessly over the couch arm, shirt still pristine but his tie askew. The lights are low. He spins a chip between two fingers absently, eye catching in the glow.
You stand near the door, arms crossed.
Silence.
Until—
“You lied.”
He doesn’t look up. Just keeps spinning the chip.
“You’re not scared of losing your job,” he murmurs. “You’re scared of losing me.”
You say nothing.
But your hand tightens around your wrist.
He finally looks up. Eyes sharper now. No pretense.
“You don’t have to pretend with me,” he says, voice quieter. Not mocking. Not baiting. Honest, in that rare way he rarely lets slip. “Everyone bets something in this game. You’ve already placed yours.”
He tosses the chip.
It lands between you with a soft click.
“Now,” he smirks again—lighter, warmer, “what do you want to wager next?”
Hiii I hope you don't have too much workload on yourself currently and is healthy! : 3
You can take this as a req or just some elaboration(I would love it if you would take it as a req) but what do you think of aventurine, Dr ratio and Jing yuan seeing reader in a very cute maid dressthey deliberately put it on to take out a reaction out of them or maybe for Aventurine's part reader loses a bet. No smut though just some suggestiveness!
Thank u!
P. S-I LOVEEEEE you blog
The Art of Distraction
Synopsis: A playful display turns into an unexpected emotional chess game when you don a cute maid outfit to get a rise out of the person you know. What starts as teasing fun quickly reveals hidden feelings, subtle tension, and reactions far more intense than you anticipated.
Tags: Aventurine x Reader, Jing Yuan x Reader, Ratio x Reader, Fluff with Tension, Light Suggestiveness, Humor, Emotional Undertones, Reactions To Maid Outfit, Subtle Vulnerability, Power Dynamics, Slow-Burn Elements.
Warnings: Mild Suggestiveness, Hints of Past Trauma (?), Power Imbalance Dynamics, Manipulation Themes.
A/N: Thank you!! <33
The moment you stepped into the room, Aventurine’s smile widened like a cat who had just seen a very entertaining mouse stumble into its trap.
“Well, well, well,” he drawled, reclining further into his velvet lounge chair, one leg elegantly crossed over the other. “And here I thought losing was your least attractive trait. But this? This is dangerously adorable.”
You shifted uncomfortably, tugging at the frilly hem of the maid dress you now regretted wagering. “Don’t get used to it. This was a one-time thing.”
Aventurine tilted his head, his eyes gleaming with mischief as he took you in—from the lace-trimmed apron to the bows on your stockings. “Oh, I’m not getting used to it,” he purred. “I’m savoring it.”
You rolled your eyes. “Pervert.”
“Guilty. But only when it’s artistically deserved.” He rose from his seat, approaching you slowly, hands tucked behind his back. “Now, tell me—what would you like to clean first? My office? My ego?”
You snorted. “I’ll start with the floor, where your humility died years ago.”
He chuckled, brushing a strand of hair from your face with the back of his gloved fingers. “Sharp tongue. You wear it well. But tell me—was this truly just about the bet… or did you want to see what expression you could pull from me?”
Your silence was enough of an answer for him.
“That’s what I thought,” he whispered, stepping away with a wink. “Careful, darling. Gamble with me, and you might just win… or lose far more than you expect.”
He was lecturing again—something about the fallacy of confirmation bias—when you stepped into the room wearing the frilliest, most absurdly cute maid dress imaginable.
Ratio froze mid-sentence. You didn’t think it was possible for a man like him to blink in genuine disbelief, but you had achieved the impossible.
“…What.” he said flatly.
You spun once for effect, the skirt puffing like a bell. “Just thought I’d test your focus.”
“I am a man of science,” he began, arms crossed as his gaze swept over you with a mixture of suspicion and reluctant amusement. “But this… is statistical sabotage.”
You giggled. “Flustered?”
“Hardly,” he lied. He adjusted his gloves like a surgeon about to perform open-heart surgery. “But if you think frills and bows are enough to distract me, then clearly you’ve misunderstood the breadth of my discipline.”
“Are you sure?” you asked, leaning close enough for him to catch the faint scent of sugar and mischief. “You haven’t even insulted me in the last two minutes.”
He paused. “…You look ridiculous,” he said—then added after a beat, “and annoyingly captivating.”
You beamed. “So, I win?”
Ratio turned on his heel. “I’m filing this under 'uncontrolled variables in emotional response testing.’ For research.”
You swore you saw a faint flush on his ears as he walked away.
Jing Yuan was dozing on his favorite bench in the courtyard, bathed in golden sunlight, when you approached in your carefully-chosen ensemble—a classic maid outfit, complete with lace headband and ruffled sleeves.
His eyes opened halfway, then widened—just a fraction, but enough.
“…You’re not one of the palace staff,” he said, a hint of a smile touching his lips.
You bowed playfully. “Reporting for duty, General. I’ve come to clean up your laziness.”
He chuckled, stretching like a lion in the sun. “Ah, how dangerous. I may grow accustomed to such charming discipline.”
You perched beside him, smoothing your skirt. “I thought it would at least make you sit up properly.”
“You thought wrong,” he said, lazily resting his chin on his knuckles. “But I’ll admit, it’s… pleasant.”
His eyes lingered—not hungrily, but appreciatively—as if you were a beautiful painting in motion. “Though I wonder… Did you wear this for me, or merely for the reaction?”
You smirked. “Why not both?”
He leaned closer, his voice soft. “If you're not careful, I may start requesting this uniform for all of our sparring matches. Imagine how flustered you’d be then.”
You pushed his shoulder. “Pervert.”
“Strategist,” he corrected, that mischievous glint returning. “One must know the enemy’s weaknesses.”
Summary: After a difficult day filled with verbal harassment and an accidental injury, you return home to Aventurine, feeling emotionally drained and physically hurt. Sensing something is wrong, Aventurine gently tends to your wounds, offering comfort in his own charismatic yet surprisingly tender way. As the weight of the day settles, he pulls you into a warm embrace, proving that even a man who treats life as a gamble knows when to hold onto what truly matters.
Tags: Aventurine x Reader, Hurt/Comfort, Angst with Comfort, Established Relationship, Soft Aventurine, Emotional Support, Tending to Wounds, Cuddling & Snuggling, Protective, Slow Burn Emotions, Subtle Vulnerability.
Warnings: Mentions of Verbal Harassment, Dissociation, Injury (Scraped Hands/Knee), Emotional Distress, Touch-Starved Reader, Aventurine Being Soft (Which might be dangerous to your heart).
Requested by: @avenrose
The moment you stepped into Aventurine’s lavish suite, the weight of the day pressed down harder. Your leg throbbed, the dull ache of raw skin scraping against your pant leg a constant reminder of your earlier misstep. The sting barely registered, though. Not after what happened before that.
Your mind replayed the cruel words hurled at you, the sneering faces of strangers who had cut through your already fragile defenses with sharp, careless remarks. It left you hollow, as if the world had siphoned away your sense of self and left nothing but a vacant shell behind.
Aventurine’s voice was the first thing that broke through the fog.
“Well, well, you’re late. I was starting to think you finally ran off to live a life free from my overwhelming charm.”
He was lounging on the chaise, one leg crossed over the other, golden rings glinting under the soft lighting as he toyed with a poker chip between his fingers. His signature smirk was firmly in place, but the moment his sharp eyes swept over you, the playfulness wavered.
You were limping. That much, he caught immediately. And you weren’t reacting to his teasing—not with a groan, not with a glare, not even with that exasperated little sigh you usually gave him.
You felt his gaze sharpen, his ever-calculating mind shifting gears in real time. But instead of prying, he simply set the poker chip down with a quiet click against the table and pushed himself up. In three smooth strides, he was in front of you, close enough that his cologne—notes of spice and something rich, like aged whiskey—wrapped around you.
“Alright, sweetheart. What happened?”
You shook your head, not trusting your voice. The words sat heavy in your throat, stuck beneath the weight of too much. Too much hurt, too much exhaustion, too much of that sickly, numbing emptiness.
Aventurine didn’t push. Instead, his hand reached out, fingers ghosting just beneath your chin as he tilted your face up. His gaze flickered down, catching sight of your scraped palms, the faint traces of dried blood and grit embedded in the wounds.
“Tch.” His tongue clicked against his teeth, but the sharpness wasn’t directed at you. “You didn’t even clean these, did you? What am I going to do with you?”
Before you could protest, he was already leading you toward the plush sofa, guiding you down with a gentleness that felt at odds with his usual flamboyant arrogance. Then he disappeared into the bathroom, returning moments later with a first aid kit in one hand and a damp cloth in the other.
“This might sting a little,” he murmured, and then, softer, “Try not to hate me for it, hm?”
You barely flinched as he began dabbing at your wounds, carefully cleaning away the dirt and dried blood. His touch was deft, practiced even, as if he had done this a hundred times before—perhaps he had, in one form or another. A man like Aventurine, who danced on the knife’s edge of risk and consequence, surely knew a thing or two about tending to wounds.
He didn’t fill the silence with empty words. No cooing reassurances, no unnecessary questions. Just the quiet, methodical sound of him working, the occasional brush of his fingers against your skin.
When he was finished, he leaned back, inspecting his handiwork with a satisfied nod. “Good as new,” he declared, though his smirk was softer than usual. “Now, about that limp. Let me see—”
You started to protest, but he was already kneeling before you, fingers easing up your leg to inspect the damage. The scrape along your knee wasn’t deep, but it looked painful. His lips pressed into a thin line, a rare flicker of something unreadable in his expression.
“I should start charging for this level of care,” he mused, though his usual arrogance lacked its usual bite. “But since I’m feeling generous, I’ll settle for one thing in return.”
You glanced at him warily. “Which is?”
“C’mere.”
Before you could react, he was shifting beside you, tugging you into his arms with practiced ease. You stiffened at first, but his warmth was steady, his grip loose enough that you could pull away if you wanted.
You didn’t.
Your body slumped against him, exhaustion catching up all at once. Aventurine sighed, his breath ruffling your hair as he adjusted his hold, one hand smoothing over your back in slow, absentminded strokes.
“See?” he murmured. “I’m not just a devilishly handsome strategist. I make a decent pillow too.”
You let out a soft huff, something almost like a laugh. It wasn’t much, but Aventurine caught it. And that, more than anything, made his hold tighten just a fraction.
Neither of you spoke after that. The world outside could wait. For now, wrapped in Aventurine’s warmth, the weight pressing down on you felt just a little lighter.
Hello my dear little scrumptious bowl of soup. I’d like to request mermaid!aventurine x avian!reader.
Silly fish man finds shiny and gives it to the bird. who likes shinies, but not him.
Shiny Things and Feathered Wings
Summary: When a flamboyant mermaid (or merman) named Aventurine finds a gleaming treasure in the depths, he offers it to a wary avian stranger—someone who loves shiny things, but definitely not the giver. What starts as an awkward gift soon unfolds into a high-stakes dance of charm, guarded hearts, and unspoken vulnerabilities. In a world where luck masks cunning and connection is the greatest gamble of all, can these two outwit their own fears to find something real beneath the surface?
Tags: Aventurine x Reader, Mermaid/Merman!Aventurine, Avian!Reader, Fluff, Slow-Burn Romance, Opposites Attract, Emotional Guarding, Slow Trust Building, Enemies to Allies Vibes, Subtle Vulnerability, Gift Giving, Fantasy AU.
Warnings: Mild language, Emotional complexity and hints of trauma, Manipulative behavior (explored thoughtfully), Some tense interactions.
The salt air was crisp and biting where you perched on the jagged cliff, watching the sea shimmer with a restless energy that matched your own. Your wings were folded tightly against your back, talons gripping the stone, eyes fixed on the water’s surface where the flamboyant fish man appeared again—Aventurine, the gambler of the deep.
He surfaced with a grin that seemed both theatrical and genuine, tossing a small, gleaming object into the sunlight before flicking it toward you.
“A token,” he called out, voice rippling over the waves like a secret melody. “For the sharp-eyed watcher of the skies.”
You caught the object reflexively—a tiny, translucent shard that caught the sun in dazzling flashes. Shiny, undeniably so.
You glanced at him, eyebrow raised. “You find these in the depths and think the way to win my favor is to throw them at me?”
Aventurine laughed, water dripping from his hair like liquid gold. “Oh, dear feathered one, it’s not winning favor I seek—only to engage you in the game.”
You held the shard up, its edges sparkling like a promise or a challenge. “I like shiny things. That doesn’t mean I like you.”
He shrugged, unabashed, the smirk never leaving his face. “Well, lucky for me, I’m quite fond of the thrill of chasing what I can’t have.”
You tossed the shard from one hand to the other, watching the light dance across its surface, the glint almost hypnotic.
Aventurine was an enigma you didn’t want to unravel—too chaotic, too risky. Yet, he had this magnetic pull. Like a comet blazing across a night sky, impossible to ignore but dangerous to touch.
“Why do you keep coming here?” you finally asked, voice steady but cautious.
“Because,” he said, tucking a wet strand of sandy hair behind his ear, “every encounter is a gamble. And you’re the rare prize worth the stakes.”
You narrowed your eyes, folding your wings. “You talk of prizes and stakes, but all I see are shiny trinkets tossed by a fish man who refuses to back down.”
He laughed again, the sound rich and unrestrained. “And yet, here we are—playing a game neither of us knows how to end.”
Days became weeks. The ritual was unspoken but understood: he would bring something new, something brilliant—shells that shimmered like stars, bits of glass worn smooth by the tide, polished stones with hidden colors—and you would accept them with a mixture of reluctant amusement and curiosity.
You learned to read his gestures—how his smile sometimes faltered when no one was watching, how he always kept his left hand hidden behind his back when taking risks, as if shielding a secret pain.
Once, when a violent storm stirred the sea into a frenzy, you saw him surface barely clinging to a battered piece of coral. His usual flamboyance was tempered by exhaustion.
“Not all gambles are won with style,” he murmured when he saw you watching.
You offered a sharp, almost protective glance. “You’re reckless.”
“Maybe. But isn’t life a gamble?” He flashed that signature grin, but there was something softer beneath it—a flicker of vulnerability.
You hesitated, wings twitching in the salty wind. “I don’t gamble with people’s lives. And I don’t like being played.”
Aventurine’s eyes darkened, the magenta and cyan hues swirling with complexity. “And yet, you watch me, speak with me. You’re part of this game whether you admit it or not.”
One quiet evening, as the sun dipped low and the sky burned with streaks of crimson and gold, Aventurine swam close to shore, holding out a particularly dazzling gem—a shell carved into the shape of a spade, its surface gleaming with iridescent greens and blues.
“For you,” he said, voice low and earnest.
You accepted it, turning the piece over thoughtfully. “You know I don’t want you.”
“And I know you want the shiny things,” he replied smoothly, “but I offer more than baubles. I offer partnership. Trust. The chance to win together, rather than alone.”
You met his gaze, feeling the weight behind the words. Trust was a currency you’d long refused to spend—too risky, too costly.
“Why me?” you asked quietly.
“Because,” he said, “I see the strategist beneath the feathers. The sharp mind that weighs every risk. You remind me that not all strength is brute force—sometimes it’s subtlety, patience, and knowing when to fold or double down.”
You paused, fingers curling around the spade shell. “And if I say no?”
“Then I keep playing,” he said, voice smooth as velvet but edged with steel. “Because the game itself is my only constant.”
Over time, the boundaries between water and sky, risk and safety, sharp claws and glittering scales blurred.
You noticed the small things—the way he adjusted his chains when nervous, how his left hand twitched behind his back when stakes were highest, the brief, unguarded moments when his mask slipped and you glimpsed the haunted survivor beneath the gambler’s facade.
Aventurine, the master of calculated risk, had gambled more than most knew—and lost more than he admitted.
“You hide your pain well,” you remarked once, wings folding close.
He smiled, a slow, wistful curl of lips. “Pain is part of the game, feathered one. But so is hope.”
“You don’t believe that,” you said softly.
“Maybe not,” he confessed, “but I bet on it anyway.”
One day, after a fierce debate over strategy that left you both exhausted and exhilarated, Aventurine surfaced near your perch, holding something different—a small, rough stone that seemed ordinary at first glance.
“This?” he asked with a teasing smirk, “Is a reminder. Not everything shiny is valuable. Sometimes, the true worth is hidden beneath a rough exterior.”
You studied the stone, then looked at him. “Why give me this?”
“Because I see the beauty in the rough, and maybe, just maybe, I hope you see it in me too.”
You considered the gamble—the choice between guarded silence and risky vulnerability.
Slowly, you reached out and took his hand. The contact was brief but electrifying.
“I like shiny things,” you said with a faint smile, “but I’m still not sure about the fish man who brings them.”
Aventurine’s eyes sparkled with triumph and something softer.
“That’s fine,” he said. “I’ll keep finding new ways to win you over—one gamble at a time.”
👀 Valentine’s Day is coming up, can we get a date between Reader and Aventurine?
All in, Sweetheart
Summary: When you challenge Aventurine to plan your Valentine’s Day date, he turns it into a high-stakes gamble—one where the currency isn’t credits, but secrets. What starts as a playful game in a lavish casino soon becomes something deeper, as each round peels back a layer of his carefully guarded persona. But when you finally win, the real question remains: is Aventurine ready to reveal what truly scares him?
Tags: Aventurine x Reader, Fluff with a Hint of Angst, Slow Burn, Gambling as a Metaphor (for Emotional Walls), Subtle Vulnerability, Witty Banter & Flirting, Mutual Pining, Secret-Keeping & Unraveling Layers.
Warnings: Mild Gambling Themes (No financial consequences, just for storytelling), Mentions of Trauma & Emotional Guardedness, Light Angst (But with a resolution), Aventurine Being a Smooth Yet Emotionally Repressed Disaster.
You should’ve known better than to let Aventurine plan your Valentine’s Day date.
It had started as a casual remark—half a joke, really—when you’d teased him about whether he ever did anything sincerely romantic. His response? That signature grin, all mischief and mystery.
“Why don’t you leave it to me, sweetheart?” he had purred, adjusting the glasses perched on his nose. “Let’s make a little wager. You trust me to plan our date, no questions asked. In return, if I manage to impress you… well, I’ll think of a suitable prize later.”
And now here you were, standing at the entrance of a lavish, high-stakes casino in the heart of an IPC entertainment district, dressed to the nines because Aventurine had sent you a cryptic message demanding you “look like you belong in a game of fate.”
The lights shimmered overhead, reflecting off opulent chandeliers and the golden accents of the room. The scent of expensive cologne, spiced drinks, and polished leather filled the air, and a hum of conversation mixed with the occasional triumphant cheer or groan of a gambler losing it all.
At the center of it all, Aventurine stood waiting for you at a VIP table, leaning lazily against the velvet-backed chair, one leg crossed over the other. His eyes gleamed under the soft glow of the ambient lighting, the black slits of his pupils narrowing when he caught sight of you.
“Ah, there you are,” he mused, his grin widening as he gave you a slow once-over. “Looking dangerously good tonight, my dear. I might just lose my edge if I’m not careful.”
You rolled your eyes but couldn’t help the way your heartbeat quickened at his smooth tone. “A casino, Aventurine? Really?”
He chuckled, tapping the side of his cheek. “Come now, did you really expect me to take you to a candlelit dinner and serenade you under the moonlight? That’s far too predictable.” He gestured to the empty seat beside him. “Take a seat, darling. Tonight, we gamble with something far more interesting than credits.”
You arched a brow but sat down anyway. “And what, exactly, are we gambling with?”
His fingers tapped rhythmically against the table, his smirk widening. “Why, secrets, of course.”
Your breath hitched slightly. Aventurine wasn’t the type to share much of himself. He deflected with charm, misdirection, and laughter. But now, he was offering—no, wagering—a piece of himself.
“I win a round,” he continued, “and you have to answer a question truthfully. No dodging. No half-truths. But if you win…” He leaned in, his voice dropping to a velvet whisper, “I’ll do the same.”
You studied him carefully. His posture was relaxed, but his fingers twitched near his stack of chips. He was taking this seriously, even if he pretended otherwise.
A challenge. A game. A moment of honesty disguised as a gamble.
You exhaled, reaching for your own chips. “Alright, Aventurine. Let’s play.”
The night stretched on in a series of wins and losses, each round peeling back a layer between the two of you.
You learned that Aventurine hated sleeping in silence. He needed the soft hum of music or the distant sound of activity to keep his mind from wandering to places he’d rather not visit.
He learned that you kept a tiny lucky charm in your pocket, something sentimental you never let go of.
You learned that he had once conned a corrupt IPC official out of a fortune—not just for profit, but out of sheer spite.
He learned that, despite all his maddening qualities, you had never once truly doubted him.
By the time the final round rolled around, you were neck and neck. One last hand. One last chance.
Aventurine slid the last chip forward with a flourish, his golden rings catching the light. “All or nothing, sweetheart.”
You met his gaze, the challenge clear between you. Your fingers hovered over your cards, your heart pounding. If you won, he’d have to answer one last question. Something real. Something raw.
You took a breath and flipped your hand.
A royal flush.
Silence. Then—Aventurine laughed, the sound rich and full of something almost… relieved. “Well, well,” he murmured, removing his glasses and setting them aside. “Seems luck favors you tonight.”
You tilted your head. “A promise is a promise. Tell me something real, Aventurine.”
For the first time that evening, his smile faltered—just slightly. Then, instead of answering, he reached across the table, his fingers brushing against yours before curling around your hand.
“Something real?” he echoed, his voice quieter now. “Alright, then.”
He lifted your hand to his lips, pressing a kiss against your knuckles. His grip was warm, steady, and despite everything—the games, the deception, the walls he built around himself—there was something achingly genuine in the way he held you now.
“I suppose,” he murmured, his lips ghosting over your skin, “the realest thing I can tell you… is that you terrify me.”
You blinked. “What?”
His eyes met yours, unguarded for just a fleeting moment. “Because you’re the one thing in this world I can’t bluff my way through.”
Your heart skipped a beat.
Then, just like that, the moment was gone. He grinned, slipping his glasses back on, masking whatever vulnerability had been there before. “Now, how about we celebrate your victory properly?” He stood, offering you his arm. “A toast? A dance? Or, if you’re feeling particularly daring, another round?”
You shook your head with a chuckle, threading your arm through his. “You really don’t know when to quit, do you?”
His smirk softened. “Not when it comes to you, sweetheart.”
And just like that, the game continued.
But tonight, just for tonight, you weren’t playing against each other.