"If you just let me. I can be him. You can call his name. Pretend he's touching you."
Six months since 𝓨𝒖𝒕𝒂 started pursuing you.
The setting sun over jujutsu tech glared you down as your back pressed into the bridge's wooden beams. Was Satoru's glare in the horizon? Was his judgement in the sky? Were his chastises whispered in the wind that kissed your cheek?
His eyes were above you.
His hair tickling your forehead.
His hands on you.
His. But not his. Not your husband. Not Satoru.
Just the man who wore his skin.
Yuta shedded his a long time ago. A miscalculation. A medical horror. Returning to his body became impossible and so, he remained in the man who was once yours. Now twenty three, and all he wanted?
You.
Before you, he stood. Looming over you the way that Satoru did. Caressing your cheek the way that Satoru did.
Whispering to you the way that Satoru did.
"I have his memories," he said, thumb tracing a familiar line on your cheekbone. "I know how he touched you. I know how he loved you. I can love you the same."
He leaned closer. Diminishing both the space between you and your shame.
"We can play pretend," he promised.
The same way Satoru had promised that he would come home.
The same way you had promised him that no one else would ever hold your heart, your body, your soul.
You broke your promise.
All it took was a kiss. From lips you remembered. From a mouth that worshipped you every day of your short marriage.
Your downfall were his hands. Familiar. Once yours. The wedding ring he still wore out of reverence for his sensei.
A kiss. A touch. A memory. That's all it took.
All it took for the sheets to welcome your back. For your thighs to welcome his head. Your hands greeting white hair that you once stroked so tenderly when the world caved in on him.
Your Satoru.
Not your Satoru.
Satoru's body.
Your Satoru's body.
Between your legs. Worshipping you. As he always did. With big, scarred hands spreading you apart. With a tongue that knew every inch of you. A voice that praised you.
The same way your husband would.
"So sweet, taste so so good, sweet girl," the groan soaked into your slick. An aphrodisiac of its own. Seeping into your veins. Dizzying your mind.
"Toru," you whimpered.
Toru.
Satoru.
Your Satoru.
He's not your Satoru.
But you moaned for him as if he was.
Tugged onto his hair. Ground into his face. Whimpered his name— as if he was.
Two orgasms on his tongue alone. Yuta proved that he had committed to his sensei's memories. He knew exactly how to fuck you on the pink muscle. Where to touch. What pressure.
His thumb stroked along your slit. Tracing the quivers as his lips occupied your clit. Sucking on its pulses and worming out another devastating orgasm out of you.
Three. You came three times.
The same number Satoru worked you up to before he kissed you. Held you. Fucked you.
Yuta committed to the routine. Kissed you. Spread your thighs.
Pressed his dick to your twitching cunt.
Shushed your cries.
Held you.
Fucked you.
Your body forgot, but your mind didn't. The stretch burned and tears pricked at your eyes— but your mind keened. Slipped. Soaked in the memory of him.
Of your husband.
Of Satoru.
As Yuta's hips engraved new memories into your thighs.
As his fingers blossomed new bruises.
As his mouth kissed you with a new hunger.
Your arms hugged around his neck. Breath stuttering. Voice breaking. Every plunge of his cock stroked the fire deeper into you. Unravelling your mind into a messy heap of tears and needy.
Rough pants fanned above you. His brows pinched at the centre. One hand gripping your thigh and the other cupped beneath your head. Yuta's thrusts were as nasty as Satoru's. Deep, fast, taking you apart from the inside out.
"That's it. There you go," he huffed, white lashes fluttering. "There's my girl."
"Sat— toru," you sobbed. Because maybe crying would make it real.
Maybe it'd wake you up from this terrible nightmare.
"You're doing so well, sweetheart." His voice slipped into your ear. Clenched your heart. Squeezed your cunt as your nails raked down his back.
"Toru," you whimpered. "T-Toru, toru please. I need— I need you. I need you."
His thumb found your clit, your back bowed into the pleasure. Another sob shook from your lungs. Reaching out for him. Not Yuta. Not his body. Him.
But it was Yuta who cupped your face. With Satoru's hand.
Yuta who bottomed out. Fucked you deeper. With Satoru's cock.
Yuta who whispered to you. With Satoru's voice.
"I'm here." He lied, so sweetly.
As his hips drove faster— and faster. Grinding into all of the sweetspots that Satoru knew. That were now at his disposal.
"I'm here, I'm right here, sweetheart." He lied, so gently.
As he hugged you close. Took you higher— and higher. Perfectly choreographed to the memory he committed to.
Playing with your clit, with Satoru's fingers.
Praising you, with Satoru's words.
Kissing you, with Satoru's lips.
"I'm gonna cum," you cried, and he licked your tears away. Cradled your face. Whispered tenderly.
"Cum," eyes so blue, eyes once yours, stared deep into your soul. Deceived you with promises that had already been broken. "Cum for me. Cum for 'toru, baby. C'mon."
The heat, the need, the memories— they all rushed into a knot that snapped in the pit of your stomach. Your eyes rolled back. Body arched. Tensed.
"Satoru— t-toru. Toru, miss you. I miss you."
You sobbed his name when you came.
Clung to his shoulders.
Squeezed his cock.
But you knew.
That it wasn't him that held you.
Wasn't him that smacked his hips into yours.
Wasn't him that groaned deep, even if it was his voice.
Wasn't him that stilled, that moaned your name, that filled you to the brim and kept pumping as you shook with whimpers.
Eyes so blue. Eyes once yours.
But in your heart, you knew. Satoru was dead.
Knew that the thing wearing his skin wasn't him.
And that the only one who caressed your face, kissed you, told you that he loved you— wasn't your husband.
after all the pain you endured during your delivery, sukuna refuses to ever let his wife go through it again
[a/n: based of that one scene in "when life gives you tangerines"]
11 hours, 34 minutes, and 34 seconds. then 40. then more. sukuna counts them all without meaning to, like something wired too deep into him to stop. each second stretching, dragging, carving itself into his bones as time refuses to move fast enough.
his eyes burn, raw and unforgiving, a kind of ache he’s never known. not even in those long, merciless nights bent over a laptop back in his college days. this is worse. dark circles bruise the skin beneath his eyes, lashes still damp.
he sits rigid in a cheap, dark blue hospital chair, one that creaks every time he so much as breathes too deeply, yet he hasn’t moved from it in hours. maybe longer. his body feels locked in place, but his mind drifts, slipping in and out of a dull haze until the sound of a door jolts him upright again, sharp, alert, feral in the way his gaze snaps toward it. every time without fail. his hands rest on his knees, fingers twitching, trembling despite himself, nails pressing into fabric as if grounding himself is the only thing keeping him together.
the baby is fine. he knows she is. he’s checked too many times for anyone to comment on without risking the look he’d give them. each visit ends the same way: standing on the other side of the glass, large hand pressed flat against it, breath fogging the surface as something unfamiliar tightens in his chest. he doesn’t stay long. he can’t. not when you’re not there.
everything in him had gone cold— no, empty the moment they rushed you away. the world had narrowed down to the sight of you on that bed, face twisted in pain, your fingers clutching his with a strength that spoke of fear you rarely ever showed. and he had felt it too, sharp and suffocating, coiling tight in his chest in a way he couldn’t fight, couldn’t control.
then a clipboard had been shoved into his line of sight, a nurse speaking too quickly. “mr. ryomen, you need to sign this form in case the baby—”
“my wife.”
his voice had cut through hers without hesitation. not loud nor panicked. just final.
for a moment, everything had stilled. even you had looked at him, eyes wide despite the pain. He hadn’t even looked back at the paper.
“i choose my wife.”
after that, they had forced him out, the doors closing between you with a finality that made something ugly claw at his ribs. since then, all he’s done is wait, endless, suffocating waiting, counting seconds like they’re the only thing he has left to hold onto.
people came. of course they did. gojo, loud and insufferable even in a hospital, arms filled with gifts that cost more than necessary. geto, calm, offering congratulations that barely registered. toji lingering off to the side, megumi in his arms as he tried, awkwardly, to show him the newborn through the glass, jin nearby with itadori and choso, their presence filling the hallway with low conversation and quiet excitement.
sukuna acknowledged none of it beyond a glance at best.
because none of it mattered.
not the gifts, not the voices, not the child he had already seen and silently loved.
the only thing on his mind was you.
his wife.
“mr. ryomen?”
his name lands and something in him snaps taut and slack all at once. sukuna is on his feet before he’s fully aware of moving, the chair scraping faintly behind him. the sudden shift makes his vision tilt for a second, exhaustion catching up, but he steadies through it, jaw set, legs carrying him forward even as they threaten to give.
“she’s awake, everything is stable. you may see her now.”
that’s all he needs.
the door barely has time to open before he’s through it, pace quick, bordering on reckless, yet each step feels impossibly heavy as the weight of the past hours clings to him, refusing to let go. the sterile white of the room greets him, too bright, too clean, and then—
you.
everything else falls away.
you’re laid against the stark sheets, small in a way he’s never seen you before, exhaustion carved into every line of your face, the aftermath of something brutal and beautiful all at once. you look fragile. spent. human.
and still— still you’ve never looked more perfect to him.
his chest tightens, something sharp and overwhelming lodging itself beneath his ribs as his eyes lock onto yours. they find him easily, soft despite the fatigue, a faint smile ghosting over your lips as your hand lifts, barely reaching for him.
“my love…” your voice is hoarse, worn thin, and it nearly undoes him.
he closes the distance in seconds, dropping to his knees at your bedside without care for anything else, large hand immediately enclosing yours as if to confirm you’re real, warm and alive. here. he brings it to his face, pressing slow, reverent kisses to your knuckles, your palm, your wrist, lingering like he’s trying to memorize the feel of you all over again.
something wet slips against your skin.
“ryo…?” your voice is softer now, concerned, your fingers twitching as if to pull away, but he doesn’t let go not out of force, never that, but out of something far more desperate.
he tightens just enough to keep you there, head bowed, shoulders trembling in a way that doesn’t belong to a man like him.
“there…” his voice catches, rough, uneven, breath hitching as the memory crashes back; your face twisted in pain, the sound of it, the helplessness of being torn away. his brows pull together sharply, grip faltering for a second before tightening again. “there won’t be another.”
he presses another kiss to your skin, slower this time. like sealing a vow into you.
“there won’t be another,” he repeats, quieter, but no less absolute.
you blink at him, caught off guard, and then despite everythin a soft, breathy laugh escapes you. “don’t be stupid, ryo.”
his head lifts just enough for you to see the way his expression twists, raw and unguarded, eyes rimmed red, lashes clumped.
“i don’t—” his breath stutters, voice breaking in a way he doesn’t bother to hide, “—want to see you like that again.” his hand curls into the sheets beside you, gripping the fabric tight as if grounding himself, “not like that. not ever.”
you soften instantly, both hands coming up carefully to cradle his face, guiding him closer despite the way he resists for half a second.
“did you see her?” you murmur, thumb brushing beneath his eye, catching the dampness there.
he nods, quick, almost eager despite everything, leaning into your touch without thinking. “i did… but—” his voice drops, “i wanted to see my wife.”
“oh, ryo…” you pull him closer, pressing a gentle kiss to his forehead, then the bridge of his nose, and finally his lips; soft, lingering, tasting faintly of salt.
he exhales against you, eyes closing briefly, forehead coming to rest against yours as his hand finds its place around yours again, unwilling to let go.
“there won’t be another,” he says, quieter now. final.
you study him for a moment. at the fear still lingering beneath the surface, and the love that outweighs everything else, and your expression softens into something certain.
“okay,” you whisper, brushing your nose against his. “there won’t.”
it's 2:49am i should fucking sleep but i finally got the idea how to write this and i had to
「✦ i think frat!kuna would be the type of boyfriend who would ALWAYS say "give me a kiss" or "give me a hug" everytime time out of nowhere, like:
he’s sprawled on his bed as you get ready for class, just watching you while you apply lip gloss at the flip-top vanity desk in his room (that he absolutely bought for you even if he denies it) and then—“babe, c’mere. give me a kiss.", you roll your eyes because you just applied your gloss and blah blah, but you still go to him anyway, pressing a soft kiss to his lips and he sighs, tangling a hand in your hair as he deepens the kiss. you never make it to class.
or—
you’re meeting halfway across campus to grab lunch, and as you wave at him, he just opens his arms slightly, the words already on his tongue—“give me a hug.”, you smile and throw yourself into him, and he wraps his arms around your waist, pulling you close. he presses a kiss to your temple before slinging an arm around your shoulders, asking about your day in that deep, gravelly voice of his. ✦」
“easy does it,” 𝐄𝐗𝐏𝐄𝐑𝐈𝐄𝐍𝐂𝐄𝐃 𝐁𝐅 𝐒𝐔𝐆𝐔𝐑𝐔 drawled into your heated ear. “getting too excited there, losing rhythm.”
“shut uuupp,” you huffed into his shoulder. desperate hands clawed at his back while your hips stuttered on his thigh.
black fabric smeared with stringy slick. his hazy eyes fluttered to the wet patch you left on his dark denim and grinned. how cute you were. he could picture your pretty face scrunched in his shoulder— and your adorable clit? oh, it pulsed and thrummed under his gaze.
he hummed and slithered a guiding hand to your hip, easing your clumsy stutter into a slow grind. he hushed your whining protests with a kiss to the ear.
“gotta build up, princess. my angel down there's too sensitive.” he emphasised with a pat over your cunt. intentionally grazing your poor clit.
your jolt had him biting on his lips piercing. he felt you throb on his thigh. fuck, he needed to see his favourite girl. so he cupped your nape and jerked you back.
a painting of sin. with your furrowed brows, teary eyes, trembling lips— his sweet princess who he's corrupting bit by bit.
“there she is,” he awed, grinding your hip faster. “there's my good girl. feel it building up? yeah?”
“sugu,” you whined, already spasming.
“c'mon, show me. mess up my jeans baby. no one does it like you.”
but every time you have a mall date after work, you stop by the store where you both got your frames so you can have them cleaned for free.
so you're sitting together waiting for your glasses and every single time without fail you go
"kei, did you know you're still super pretty even when you're blurry?"
"whatever you say, four eyes," he responds, almost automatically at this point, "but you're still the prettiest."
"you're a four eyes — you have four eyes? is that how you say it? anyway — i can call you four eyes too, you know," you grumble, and he just kisses your pout away.
“And I’m not shaming you or your sex life by the way,” he adds, now crossing the line into over explaining because he is on a fucking mission right now. “I'm just letting you know that I’m an option. You’re fucking laughing, what’s so funny?”
“It’s nothing, I just thought you were done trying to persuade me.”
“I’m not. My cocks also fucking huge,” he says flatly, and that definitely catches your attention quicker than he thought it would. It encourages him to keep going. “You’d like it too.”
“Why do you think that?”
“Because I know how to use it?” he says, as if it were fucking obvious. “I’d probably give it to you just how you’d like without even asking.”
“Sounds like you daydream a lot.”
“More than you know,” he admits, the sexual frustration peeking through. “I’m also not lazy. If I know I’m hitting a spot that makes you feel good, I’ll keep going until you’re digging your nails into my back and cumming around my cock. I’ll fuck you through it too, and when you’re a crying mess? That’s when I know you're done. Not that I’ll stop. I’ll put you in a new position and do it all over again until you're worn out."
Your heart drops to your stomach. He’ll know you're done when you’re crying? You turn to look at your door for a moment while he rambles on. One side of you is thankful that it’s shut and locked, while the other side grows slightly concerned that you are alone in a room with Sukuna, who just basically just admitted he’d fuck you into a coma.
“And I like it ugly,” he casually goes on. “You’ll be crying and begging for more, then wonder why the fuck would you ask for that just seconds later. Tears running down your cheeks. Hair messy from me pulling on it. Cum all over your face, stomach, tits, leaking out of your pussy and dripping down your thighs.”
so i hc that one of suga's kinks is lowkey public sex. okay? BUT he’s a sneaky mf so he’s never gotten caught. if anyone has ever noticed they just kept their mouths shut and enjoyed the show, and he’s been none the wiser. he is a closet F R E A K and no one will ever convince me otherwise.
৲৻⋆.˚PAIRING– k. sugawara x f!reader
৲৻⋆.˚WARNINGS/NOTES– nsfw. MDNI. public sex. suga being a freaky sneaky horndog and speaking absolute filth (he loves dirty talk HELP). suga calling reader 'teacher's pet'.
৲৻⋆.˚ON THE TRAIN
it’s a weekday afternoon like any other. hundreds of bodies trying to squeeze into train cars during rush hour, all in a hurry to get home or to the bar or wherever they all go after a long day of thankless work. you’re packed in like sardines, but at least your boyfriend manages to grab a handle to hold onto so you hold onto him in turn. not that you have much choice with the way your body is forced against his.
maybe it’s the swaying of the train cars, maybe it’s the way he can see your cleavage from this angle, maybe it’s the way his thigh is shoved between your legs, but within just a few moments you feel the familiar press of suga’s semi against you. you gasp and quietly chastise him, but he just grins at you from above.
you have to admit it’s hot - the way koushi still gets so turned on by you after all this time together, the way his cock is getting hard just being pinned against you, the way all these people have no idea that your pussy is getting wet just thinking about it.
you look up at him again and he just knows. you watch as he stealthily licks his middle and ring fingers before dipping them into your waistband. covering your mouth to muffle your gasp, your knees go weak when koushi finds your clit and gives it a few flicks. with the corners of his mouth upturned in a self-congratulatory grin, he looks straight ahead while sinking his fingers inside you. both of your hands grip his shirt, your forehead buried against his chest when you clench around him, making his dick twitch in his pants.
he lowers his mouth to your ear and starts whispering pure filth to help you along: “damn, your pussy is so tight for me” “bet you wish it was my cock” “i wonder how many of these people know you’re gonna cum for me when i tell you to”
your grip on his shirt tightens and you grit your teeth, making a conscious effort to remain standing as suga’s thumb strokes your clit. your bodies are packed in much too tightly for anyone to notice the flick of suga’s wrist. the sound of the tracks is too loud for anyone to hear the way your pussy slurps on his fingers. one of your hands lets go of his shirt and clamps itself over your mouth.
his breath is hot against your ear, his low voice commanding you to “cum for me.” with his cheek pressed to yours you feel him smile when you squeak and gush into his palm. suga slows his thrusts before pulling out, leaving a trail of your slick along your belly before bringing his fingers to his mouth and looking into your eyes while sucking them off.
৲৻⋆.˚IN THE CLASSROOM
it’s been an hour since the last bell of the day rang when you knock on koushi’s classroom door. “come in,” he calls out, not even looking up from his work. the moment you see him, one elbow on his desk with his hand in his hair and his nose scrunched as he looks over one of his students’ papers, you know he’s stressed out.
“still working I see…” you chime, making your way over to him.
“i don’t get it…are some of these kids bad students,” he looks up at you, “or am i a bad teacher?”
your mouth drops open because how could he? you spin his chair around to face you and kneel in front of him “koushi, stop. you’re an amazing teacher.”
you’re not sure how it went from that to him in a proud manspread as you choke on his cock, praising you, telling you what a good girl you are for being the teacher’s pet and earning extra credit.
“godddd, you suck my dick so good~” suga moans, his head falling back against his chair. he’s holding your hair back with one hand while the other grips the arm of his chair.
you’re proud of the way you make him bite his fist to choke back a whimper as your tongue drags along the underside of his hard shaft. you moan when his balls tighten in the palm of your hand and he fists your hair, filling your mouth with his seed.
৲৻⋆.˚OUTSIDE YOUR FRONT DOOR
the two of you make out heavily in the uber all the way home from the bar. suga strokes your thigh and keeps trying to push his hand up your skirt. if it weren’t for you swatting his hand away, suga would be giving the driver the show of his life and you’re sure you’ll leave a wet spot on the backseat.
by the time you make it to your front door, your tipsy boyfriend is behind you, his hands under your top, cupping your tits and teasing your nipples as he ruts his clothed erection against your butt.
he’s in your ear, his breath hot when he moans, “hurry up, need to fuck you…”
you’re giggling at him to stop but you can barely think straight with the painful void between your own legs. truth is, you need him just as much as he needs you.
he’s already unzipping his pants as you fumble for your keys, finally finding them but your hands tremble with so much need and anticipation that they hit the concrete beneath you with a clamor. too horny to wait on you to reclaim your keys and too drunk to care, suga reaches under your skirt and pulls your panties down.
“kou~” you whine in weak protest but the way you feel his warm hard cock glide between your wet lips has you angling your hips for him.
“can’t wait, y/n” he frantically guides his dick until his wet tip finally catches on your opening and he thrusts hard.
thankfully it’s 3am so you’re both pretty sure no one is around to hear you yelp or see you with your panties around your ankles while koushi fucks you under your porch light.
Synopsis. He’s not running a marathon with you, he’s fúcking one.
Pairings. [SEPARATE] Higuruma x Reader, Gojo x Reader, Ino x Reader, Sukuna x Reader, Choso x Reader, Geto x Reader, Nanami x Reader, Toji x Reader
Content. MDNI, fem! reader, MARATHONS, overstím, creampíes, cúmflation, dúmbifícation, making them whímper, cervíx kíssing, breaking the bed, ínnapropríate use of powers, pússydrúnk men, true form Sukuna, dp, bréeding, p talking, they’re FÉRAL, manhandIing, BÚLGES, spítting, cúmplay, L bómbs, boss!Higuruma, pet names, swéaring.
A/N. Hope you have a lovely week!!
♡ TOJI FUSHIGURO - 5 rounds
“C’mooon- only round five n’ you’re already this gone, mama?” Toji departs a breathy whistle from his scarred lips, jaded eyes rolling in time with your cute whimpers.
And you’re just trembling underneath him - your legs turned into complete mush and your eyes permanently homed all the way in the back of your head. A big fat wad of creamy white drips out from your sensitive slit and makes you groan– “As if you’re any hck! better.”
Grumbling gruffly, “Huh? S’that backtalk, doll?”
“M-maybe…”
Well- what else could he have expected after completely breaking your rickety bedframe, two desks, and damn near the floor you were drooling all over.
Toji’s plush pecs grinding firmly against your shoulder, scorching skin-against-skin as one beefy arm loops underneath to keep you arched. The other patting that inflationary, throbbing lil’ bulge rested inside your tummy with a leer, “Because all she’s tellin’ me s’that you’re gonna take this next round like a champ.”
Next.
A marathon - fuck, a marathon.
So many rounds upon countless rounds and he was still aching for more - the fat n’ girthy shaft of his painful cock drip-drip-dripping with even more sappy precum. Flooding your sheeny entrance as if he was slobbering, the cutting edge of his mushroom tip swirls around your milked entrance to open you up further.
“Yeah…” Toji drawls under his breath, low. Pinkish tongue flicking out at the pretty, pretty vision of your ruined pussy– “Tellin’ me she’s gonna t-take it alright.”
And if he stuttered, if his voice broke then you don’t notice - because soon enough your brain melts into nothingness as he traces your teary slit with a harsh jab of his crowned head. Dribbling veering into straight-up bawling from between your legs.
Your head lolls back stupidly, striking the plane of his sharp collarbone. Hands scrambling for anything on the floor right about now, “Oh- oh, please. Toooji–!”
“What, huh? S’that pretty lil’ ngh- head scrambled already?” A hoarse snicker breezes out from above you, in unison with the splintered creeeak! that resonates out once one of his clammy palms press up against the nearby wall.
No- you want to say.
But the only thing that spills out of your spit-glued lips is a few whimpering wails of Toji’s name, your knees weakening as he keeps rutting his bludgeoning cock deeper and deeper.
Fucking you like an animal. He was so big that you could feel his pounding veins scrape every inch of your insides, lightning bolts rubbing up against your snug walls in a way that was so sensual. Zig-zagging across your gooey pussy as your bottom lip catches on your teeth. “Harder h-harder.”
So dizzy that you felt like collapsing-
“Whoops- upsy daisy.” Before you can even blink your tear-stuck lashes, Toji cradles your neck with his bulging bicep. In exactly the lecherous way that makes your mouth spill over with a splash of excited slobber, seeping right down his toned arm. “Tch, made a mess too.”
Manhandling you like you’re boneless, you’re pressed up against every rippling muscle. Every glissading ab, a hot trickle of sweat drips down from Toji’s temple.
“Please- nghhh please, it feels t-too good–”
“Too good, huh?” And you already know he’s rolling his eyes lazily. Grouching out, “M’not even all the way hah- inside this cute lil’ pussy. So tight s’like she’s gonna fuuuuuck- break.”
The image made you want to squirm, held down by the briefest, barest flex of his arms. Knocking out every ounce of wheezed air stuffed inside your lungs, Toji gazes down at you when you moan and sneers.
“And look at that- she’s still throbbing.” His free hand’s flicking over your relentless tummy bulge until ivory cum splatters down your shivering thighs. “Lettin’ out a damn hngh- fountain, too.” Skin glued together with the mess he’d made inside– and somewhere far off in the distance, your eardrums register a sharp snap!
Because Toji Fushiguro was out of control. Out of his mind.
Sharp tendrils of his inhuman power breaking every piece of furniture inside of your heady bedroom, and making his slender hips rut with a sharp spank! It echoes, the sound.
Clap after clap after clap where he’s cluttering your velvety dripping insides with that fattened circumference, gooping out splashing wads of precum that skids right on over to the target of your tummy bulge. Inflating you up even more.
“Tight fuckin’ th-thing–” He’s gasping into the crook of your neck, eyes ogling down at the globular bump through his shaggy Stygian bangs. So sensitive. So tender, the underside of his cock was flinching with every slip n’ slide deeper. Wincing at your saturated clench, “-fit- fit- fit, goddammit.”
Shit- he’d plugged you so full with glutinous bucketloads of cum that every snagging buck pulled your walls so taut.
Struggling to even fit, he’s rovering his thick fingertips over to that invisible line he was jackhammering inside you and pushing. Hard. Snickering to himself as your pussy torrents out a milky flood with a splurch!
You think you might be cumming - you think you don’t even realize as your vision of the wall splinters with splotches of pure white. Clawing down his sweat-simmered skin, your throat tastes rusty with a strained moan of “T-Tooooji—!”
“Yeah- yeah yeah, doll. Scream f’me. Even she’s louder than you.” Smoothing over the doughy patch of his palm on top of your glittery pussymound. His words carry out over the vulgar paps of flesh, stinging your mounds. And even the scratchy gliiiide of Toji’s tufted happy trail leaves your skin all tender, “Scream- scream, because…”
And then there’s a sudden crack!
Thundering across your ears; you’d have thought that your poor bedroom floor would be the last thing that even Toji wouldn’t be able to break. You’d have thought you were safe down here.
But his hand plants away from the wall, a crumbling handprint embedded deep into the plaster. Oh.
That very same one patting your womb - with both his calloused fingers outside your tummy, and the ruby-red cockhead on his vast shaft. Bottoming out until he was shoveled balls-deep, he shivers. Primally, “-because this next one’s gonna be a biiiig one, mama.”
♡ NANAMI KENTO - 8 rounds
“I want to be your…cumdump, Kento.”
That was what had started it - that was exactly what had broken whatever was left of Nanami Kento’s sanity until he’d bent you over and taken you in the lewdest, rawest mating press right then n’ there on your marble kitchen counter.
His thick, frigid wedding ring roams between your swollen pussy folds, peaking right between those slippery edges to watch the way your pretty face twists into a whine. “Are- are you hah! alright? If you can’t, darling-”
“No no- I want it, Ken–” Your words huff into a pout almost as much as your delicious lips were, and Nanami finds himself leaning in to smear a laaaazy peck. “-want you to fuck me rough- again, please?”
“Aww, my love…an eighth round? S’gonna be a biiig stretch, y’know?” And for a second you think he simply won’t agree, for a second you think he’ll simply kiss you dizzy and make slow, sensual love to you.
But, no.
No- what your husband does next is sternly loosen the yellow speckled tie still stuck to his perspired neck, cording it tightly around your own. A sinful little loop that pulls your head off of the frosty counter and up to him.
“-then you better open ‘er up wiiide, m’kay?”
There was something hard in his rugged tonality, something so…feral. And the only thing more feral were his hips, prying apart your puckered lips until you were gasping around his plumped-up girth. Every ridge and vein pushing and pushing until his massive cock was working you open - you could never get used to Nanami’s sheer size.
“Please-” You’re clawing down his half-open shirt, drenched through with such slabs of sweat until you could count every ab. Your head throws back as he further thumbs open your filthy hole with a soppy squelch–! “Please please please-”
Stretching and stretching. He couldn’t get enough of you - your rubbery hole was already opened up so that he could take you maddeningly.
Nanami’s aching tip was burning hot, slurping up your gooey insides with such famishment. And every pistoning drill had his golden happy trail itching your perked clit until you saw overstimulated stars-
“M’kissing you here.” He gruffs out from the depths of his guttural throat, veering an index in a straight line down your cunt. “And here.” Mazing into one of your favorite spots, battering a bruise. “And here…”
Skidding a stripe of pre just millimeters below your throbbing g-spot; your melty insides clench oh-so-adorably at the sensation and Nanami finds himself almost cumming. A singular thin, stringy knot of seed dribbling out of his sensitive orifice and targeting your g-spot - almost like he’d planned it.
He’s smiling as your chest heaves with a wail– “And m’kissing you ngh- there.” Your lips tremble as he leans over to nibble down on your dewy-glossed lips like a gummy, “My favorite. This here-” Your thighs jittery uncontrollably as he draws a firm line across, “-love you up to right here. Love you more.”
“K-Ken- oh!”
And it might be the eighth- was it? You think you’ve lost fucking count. The only thing on your mind right now was the way he hiked a capped knee over to angle his drilling hips just so.
“Mmm– keep these open.” A softened palm latches onto the underside of your thighs and splays you out until your legs hit your tits, such a burning stretch. And yet, Nanami himself was even hotter - even more feverish. Blond bangs tickling your face- “Squeeze- squeeze.”
Before you can even think of listening to his spat-out words, he’s slouching his head back to dart your pussy like a fat splat of spittle. Formulating a shiny sheen right over your entrance, “My pussy- fuck! Squeeze, my wife, m’gonna make sure you c-can feel allll of it. Gonna make sure.”
The swell of his vein-covered shaft protrudes against some of your sweetest spots, probing. “I feel- feel it-”
“Yeahhh—? S’she memorizing it?”
It’s like every vulgar whack has Nanami more pussydrunk by the sultry seconds.
Pound after pound that made the counter shake dangerously with his sheer force, you’re sure that if you tilted your head enough you’d see the way that his toned pelvis was stinging red from his bulky base.
The driveling crown of Nanami’s cock slips across your womb and you cry out, letting him clench that vice-like tie even tighter. Needier.
“She- she is.” You’re croaking out, embarrassingly belated. Oblivious to the way his molten eyes widen, heavy lashes fluttering furiously to remain open. A thin line of saliva leaks from your mouth, which Nanami tenderly wipes away. “Want you to- fuck- faster. Harder.”
Oh.
You evil, evil thing. Lengthy digits curling into a fist, he’s slamming it down inches away from your head at the white-hot sparks of pleasure that sprints through Nanami’s body. He wasn’t just fucking you on the kitchen counter, he was fucking you into it.
Meaty pecs heaving with a wheeze– “M-marry me.”
“Wh-what?”
“Marry me.” Damn near ten inches that drove crazily inside each n’ every time, pummeling out a clean circular bruise on the pinpoint of your spongy cervix. “Marry me marry me marry- fuck!”
He feels the moment you cum before even you do, a sparking hot flash of heat. Not even electricity, not even peaks, just sizzling tingles that make your dripping wet cunt spit out a few more pearly drops of sappy slick.
“Ken- fuckfuckfuck–” Your back arches almost completely off of the cool surface, and right into his arms. “-m’cumming m’cumming–”
The metallic frames of his glasses sag even loser, making him look such a mess. All burnished flush, hooded eyes, and a sleekly slobbering mouth that shapes to form- “Mhmm— cum, cum, my love- n’then m’gonna fuck! wife you up. Make you my gorgeous wife.”
He really was that pussydrunk.
Your shimmering lips crash mindlessly into his and your usually-stoic husband finds himself bloating even larger. Wrenching your head back with every snagging catch of his rock-hard cock, ba-dump–! goes the very bottom of your watery pussy.
Your words are soaked in such utterly loving, “We’re already married, Ken–”
“O-oh.” You never thought you’d hear the day that Nanami Kento stutters - almost even whines. Looking helplessly towards your prettily fucked-out face, and then your matching rings. Oh.
“Then…” But you can’t revel in your accomplishment too much before he rendered you thoughtless with yet another splosh of scalded seed overstuffing your soppy cunt. Spraying down your cervix until you could feel every loooong slide of those heavy ribbons. Eyes widening- did he just cum from realizing you two were married…Nanami grunts, Nanami begs.“-make me a dad?”
♡ GETO SUGURU - 7 rounds
“Mmm, gorgeous–” He’s purring, cherry-pink lips now all stained white with the leaky remnants of his cum. Clinging his greedy maw ‘round your seed-frothed clit and draaagging, “Ya taste even sweeter after the heh- sixth round.”
You’re whimpering, tastebuds overflowing with the saturated taste of your slick saliva. It gurgles at the back of your throat and gushes the very instant Geto flops his prolonged tongue inside your filthy hole, “Sugu- Suguru–”
“Mmm– what’s that?”
“Sugu, I want-”
Before you can even think of finishing your sentence, Geto’s slender fingers come slamming down to leave your dripping pussymound aching. Spank! The manicured crescents of his nails just slightly catching on the hood of your clit while he pinches and leaves you breathless-
“N’ who was talking to you?” The sloped tip of his nose meanly nudges your pert nub, flaring out a scorched huff of laughter right where it struck you the most. “Mhm- s’rude ta talk outta turn, you know?”
And Geto’s gulping so loud it’s just filthy. Letting his heated mouth open wiiide enough that you’re displayed with all the dewy droplets of syrupy white that glisten down his dampened muscle.
Your thighs try helplessly to clench together, mussing up his long, inky locks - in a way he’d never admit that he fucking loves. “B-but, Suguru…” He really doesn’t make it easy for you, thrusting his tongue in rapid, greedy gyrations in and out. Mewling, “Really wan’ you to- to fuck me again.”
Ah, there it went - Geto halts, he gasps - his sanity.
Again? Again?
Oh. And somewhere in the back of his husked throat, he giggles. Has the audacity to fucking giggle whilst his eyeliner-smudged irises drift up to your fucked-out expression, the way you were so needy still. Begging, actually.
“R-round seven?”
He was so pretty - all tear-glittered eyes, lips that were swollen and sopping wet with oozing dredges of his own creamy white seed. He looked like he was about to fucking ravish you to soothe his permanently-drenched throat.
The only thing you can do is fucking nod - before Geto Suguru makes lecherous use of his swift battle prowess to latch a hand on the side of your waist and flip you over.
Sweat-simmered abs kissing up against your arched back, his long bangs tickling down your spine. Down, down, down– inches over where he’s swabbing your drooling cunt with three repeated strikes. One to make your pussy just whoosh! with syrupy gumdrops of sap - coating a burnished lacquer where his glinting piercing was-
“Heh- yer more honest here, gorgeous.” The stretchy band of your hole rings out with a burning streeeetch once Geto’s teasing you with the sweltering hot crown of his length.
So unfairly wide that your teary eyes run away to the back of your head without even a single inch sunken in. Your boyfriend catches the sensitive slit underneath his pretty swollen mushroom tip right where your entrance was, “Mmm– spilling out so much. Take it- take it then, if you want it so bad.”
“More–” Your skin pebbles with so many endless goosebumps at the chilling orb of his Prince Albert’s piercing probin’ your cunt open. In in in- “Fuh-fuuuuck, gimme- gimme more.”
“Greedy girl.”
Dark yukata only half-off, pinning you down. And yet even seven rounds wouldn’t be enough to ever get you used to how truly big he was. Massive.
Fuck- he’s cradling his half-soft, sensitive hilt with those lengthy fingers of his. Tight. Pulling and pulling in tight, rapid tugs so that his aching cock bloats even harder. Whispering a staccato of ‘c’mon c’mon c’mon’, either side of his circumference molding your melty walls never-endingly open. You whine as his throbbing tip starts perking even deeper inside your innards, making himself so fucking painfully hard for you.
“O-ohhhh so big.” You’re gurgling out, knees skittering to a shake on your screeching mattress. “S-Suguru why are you so ngh- big.”
Ruby-red, blushed so fucking pink that it matched the maidenly flush overtaking Geto’s handsome features. “That’s what ya get for thinking more with this hck! pussy than that head.” A creamy ring of cum outlines your entrance as he bottoms out, tender balls-deep. “So take it- take it then.”
Shit, you were squeezing around him so tight that it made him groooan pornographically.
Knotted slivers of spit dolloping out from between his cracked lips and onto your back, Geto’s sneaking a foot down on your hazed head and holding you trapped. Eyed locked on what he could see of your expression while he delved deeply in—
Every minute change, every tiny squeal while his heavy cock drips out hot precum exactly on the target of your g-spot. As if his circular piercing was a spotlight tugging on every tender spot mapped out, “Yeahhh– atta girl.”
You always melted into such mush whenever he cooed at you that way, yeowling out while he opened up every cute lil’ crevice. “Sugu, kiss- kiss?”
How cute, his long, eyelined waterlines flutter with the overstimulated urge to pass out right then and there.
Instead, Geto’s dragging his neatly-trimmed pelvis against the mound of your jiggling ass until your skin scratches raw. “A lil’ kiss- you mean- here?” Pointing a cute lil’ splotch of thick precum where your sloppy entrance was clenching and unclenching furiously. “Orrrr here?” Another barreling poke near where your g-spot was, digging the curvature of his piercing right inside. “Or– oh, you like that, huh, filthy girl?”
“Yes- yesyesyes fuck–!”
Thwack! You’re hit with the edges of his knobbled digits, and then another second strike with a ropey splatter of saliva. “What’d I say about talking out of turn, gorgeous?”
Before you can respond, Geto flicks over a slash of his beaded piercing right over your clit. “Or…” Right prior to the way that rasping breath of his grows shaky. Unsteady. And no sooner are you hit with the realization that you’re positively walloped with the saturated swash of his stringy cum clogging you up. Stretchy, squeezing himself inside you as if he was trying to milk himself dry - and he truly was.
Bumping out an inflationary lil’ pouch where he was knocking on your womb, you felt so full that you couldn’t even breathe.
Finally, finally against your lips– you taste Geto’s cum and overstimulated tears. He whimpers, “-here?”
♡ CHOSO KAMO - 4 ½ rounds
Choso’s crying, he thinks he’s blubbering. Big, great tears that spill from the ends of his eyes and stream down his scorchingly blushed cheeks, “C-can I put it inside again, baby–?”
And almost as if he was afraid of what you would say, your poor boyfriend’s angling your leg just a lil’ higher from behind. Watery mahogany eyes fixed permanently on your expression from behind, on his side - every minute change whilst he slithers his blushing red tip inside to wrench out the sloppiest sluuurp–!
Once. Twice. Three filthy times in succession.
You just leak in milky ribbons of cum that he’d pumped inside of you, all full until his rounded hilt was dripping wet in sticky rings upon rings of it. Drenched.
“Ohhh- pretty pussy. What a pretty pussy.” His breathy gasps humidify your neck, heaving. Leering down, “Hey there— pretty.” Not even talking to you. Panting— oh, and you’re sure right now if you turned around then he would be flushed bright pretty pink. “Please, baby, let me give you one more?”
You can’t help but coo as you’re feeling his warm tears splatter your shoulder drenched, “Of course, Cho– All inside now- don’t be shy.”
“M’n-not…”
And for all he said, Choso has to rim his pearly white teeth over the tender crook of your neck and bite the moment he sinks in. Bloated mushroom tip so fat that it only eases in a single inch before he’s latching two hands on the flesh of your hips and bucking.
Wildly, achingly.
“Oh- oh my god…” He’s whispering into your skin. Chiseled abs stuck like adhesive to your back, the sizzling sweat between your bodies makes Choso’s fattened girth slip out with a lecherous pop! and he whines– again and again.
You run your hands through the sweaty valleys of his locks, “Aww, s’alright–”
But he gapes, stingingly swollen cockhead almost steaming in your heady bedroom air. Spurting out a viscid jetstream of pre as if to say he wasn’t supposed to be outside. Anywhere but your honeyed pussy. “No- nonono–” Choso mutters, nibbling down on his bruised lips to failingly hold back his soft gasping whimpers. “Inside. Inside.”
“Mmm– lemme help, baby.” You pop the ‘p’ and gaze adoringly at the way his girthy, fat cock massages your outer ring. Treacling out a gooey few splotches of pre that overrun your flooded entrance and stretch you open so wide.
Truly, Choso was way too big for his own good.
Heavy and hard. The curving ridges of his shaft’s help him lean exactly towards where your g-spot was located, smearing out a steamy line of sap straight towards his bullseye there. Your clingy walls were practically melting into him, keening at the curly brown hairs that tickle your inner thighs.
“S-s’it all ngh! inside, baby–?” Your head lolls to the side and drowns in your plush pillow, dragging in deep breaths with every even deeper stroke he was planting on you. Slowly, so that you can feel every sensual lightning bolt of his veins massaging your innards.
“Inside- inside oh-” Choso’s spit-glued jaw drops as if the thought only registered to him. And he’s flapping his long lashes furiously to blink down through the haze, “S’inside.”
As if to prove his point, he snakes over one of his sweat-moistened palms and crams down over where your spongy cervix was being kissed over n’ over. So many loving, lingering kisses that scrubbed his rounded cockhead polished with every glide.
“A-all inside, all safe and hck! sound.” He’s prattling away drunkenly - and you don’t know who’s more fucked, you or him. Another winding arm pressing you to him like two halves of one body, “For the f-fourth time. Fuck- m’gonna cum once more o-or die trying.”
He’s treating your dampened cunt like he’s worshipping you there, such loooong raw grinds that make your eardrums buzz with the intense gulping slurps. Every strike to your most favorite areas leaving your perpetual high just tingles.
Your hand reaches over to drag him by one of his dangling silver necklaces into a sloppy, sloppy kiss. “Mmm– all inside, m’kay? No ngh- missing, Cho–”
“No missing. No…no missing.” He nods from behind, chestnut bangs falling over those half-lidded eyes and still doing nothing to hide the glaring intensity in them. With a puffing heaval of his full lungs, he moans– “Won’t miss- won’t miss…won’t miss so you have to t-take it ngh- all, baby- m’kay?”
And it’s only a few more vulgar slap after slap before Choso throws his head back and cums. Lifting your hips almost middair so that you’re swallowing up each plump wad of seed.
There’s so much of it bursting inside, coating your every nook and cranny in a stark white. You could practically feel the knotted mess streaaaming down your gummy walls, the drooling slope of his crownhead targeting every sweet orifice.
And Choso counts- oh, he counts.
Something smoky that crackles underneath his baritone breath, just barely reaching your popped ears. “One-” Just as his first wiry ribbon weaves its way through your oversaturated walls, “-two-” Another one streaking down your battered g-spot. “-three.‘
That third and final clump of hefty cum could barely even be considered that - only a few pearly droplets before he’s reaching his high dry.
Sparks explodin’ behind those shuttered lids, his sweat-slicked brows furrowing almost painfully. Choso rears his head like some beast and bites down exactly where your pulse was beating the loudest.
Hard enough to break skin whilst he cums and cums and cums and nothing comes out.
“Ngh- nghhhh–” He gurgles from the throaty back of his larynx, voice broken. And it’s just about the most intense high of his life- “Please- take it. P-please take it, baby.”
And take it you do— with open arms, and your legs shoved even more fully open by one of his lanky legs. The skin of his thighs steaming against yours, your cunt throbs once and you leer. And he jolts, primally. “Cho– how about we try till five?”
♡ RYOMEN SUKUNA - 11 rounds
There was one thing no one ever mentioned about the king of curses - one thing no one dared to even question. Never dared to find out.
And that one thing being…his heat.
The very thing right now that had you bent all out of shape on his centuries-old bed into the most filthy mating press; your voice achingly hoarse from crying out, and yet your gushing pussy even louder.
So fucking loud, in fact, that Sukuna himself can’t help but let his cursed second mouth come lolling out to give your dripping lips a lil’ peck. Loud and squelching, the sweltering hot gusts of his breath make you shiver. “Wh-why the hell is your stamina so ngh- good, Kuna–?”
“Heh- m’flattered, brat.” You’re feeling each prominent vein decorating his twin shafts throb, bloating up even bigger until your rubbery orifice was stretched to the max. Your very cervix stinging with how many times he’d whacked it with his globular slopes. “But if yer still sensical then m’not doing a good ‘nough job.”
Though, he supposed that was partly on him for seeping reverse cursed technique throughout your boneless body- but he couldn’t have his dear queen breaking any bones, right?
And if this was any other time then Sukuna’s husky baritone wouldn’t have shaken the way it did, hitching octaves higher as he’s slapping his monstrous tongue down once on your slick-topped clit.
The mushy tip of it flicking over a few glittering beads of stray cum up to his other mouth, and Sukuna shivers. All cleaned up once more for him to ruin. Pink locks of hair flopping over as he throws his head back, “Oh- ohhhh, here it comes- here it comes. Get that cute cunt ready girl, because m’heat is far from over.”
And you’re far from even registering the words in your melted mind before he’s inching his sculptured hips back and hitting them down with a wham!
You can only stare as he barrels his rugged cocks flawlessly, direct hits that simultaneously batter both your g-spot and your poor cervix. And that’s all that it takes for your clingy, overstimulated walls to hold onto his heated lengths for dear life and cum. Sparking with white-hot pleasure while he stretches and stretches and stretches you stupid.
Even the slightest, tiniest movement made your body curl– the burning sparks of bliss way too much for you to handle. After so many continuous rounds you didn’t even know how you hadn’t broken any bones. Spread-eagle by two of his big, beefy arms-
“Oh my god- ohhh s’so big. Kuna s’too big–!”
“Yeahhh, tha’s more like it.” Sukuna snickers from above, eyeing the way your maw gapes open with a torrent of spittle that stains his shoulder tattoos. A sleek gloss that makes his other set of lips smack, “Always love when ya ngh- fuck yerself stupid taking that biiig cock ya said was too big.”
Mindlessly, your hand skims over where he was pounding a rounded bulge right into your tummy. Filling you up snugly. “Please- p-please–”
Tilting his head almost mockingly, “Yeah? Wha’s that, ma?” Oh, his grin makes him look so feral - gleaming white canines on full display. He quirks a brow, “That cute lil’ bulge?”
Your inner thighs shake pathetically as he drifts a fatly-padded thumb right over where he was reaching such tender areas inside, deeper and deeper every time you blinked. “Heh- s’where m’breeding you, human. N’ I think I reeeeeally like her.”
One, two, three whacks of his dual curved cocks until you realize Sukuna wasn’t even talking to you.
No- he was cooing down at that cylindrical outline visible through your tummy. The way every tunneling jackhammer had him pouring out a generous helping of precum that made it inflate even rounder - all from the sensitive bawling divot that rubbed raw along the ridges of your insides.
One of his four hands palming down hard, “And you know what else-”
“Fuuuuck–! Wait- m’sensitive m’sensitive, Kuna-”
“-s’reminding me of…” There’s a filmy haze in his eyes, something feral and gone. And as Sukuna inches in closer, his saccharine steamed breath makes you sweat. Drinking in a deep whiff of your honeyed pheromones and he drools, “-wanting to get you all round n’ full.”
Your mouth lacquers over with a watery bout of sap, the cloying taste of it taking over your senses. Slight strings of it snapping and dangling from your panting crevice, “Y-you mean…?”
“Oh you know what I mean-” Honed fringes of his canines dig deliciously into your earlobe, “-ma.”
There’s an electric trill that runs through you - and not just because Sukuna had taken up to walloping your poor g-spot about four times every single second. Fuck, the man had stray bursts of red, red lightning darting devilishly all over his body with the sheer power it took to keep you two from breaking.
Hard, thorough thrust after thrust that rendered your mind dizzy - your brain clanging around the inside of your empty skull. Excess sloshes of seed that he hadn’t lapped up swashing on your innards, you barely even realize it when you’re hitting yet another orgasm with a shrill–
“M’cumming- m’cumming m’cumming, Kuna–” Your hands claw down his muscular back, feeling his sexily shifting muscles underneath your touch. Pretty noises so loud that he’s reaching up a palm with his second mouth manifested there for you to suck on- “I’m- mmpf-!”
“Good…good.” His titters rumble out in a guttural gruff, prominent veins popping out on either side of his throat. “Mama’s always gotta cum first- n’now ta ngh- give ya my heir.”
Your chest heaves frantically, heart racing at his words. Set free from the heavy make-out with his lengthy tongue with a dampened pwah! “Will- will it even fit?”
Because Sukuna meant double the wadded cum filling you up, and with him being in heat…
“Of course ya can-” Probably, he’s musing inside of his fuzzy mind. And yet, it didn’t matter if a single knotted ounce leaked out because his cursed maw was already manifesting back across his tensed core. Licking its lips just as he twitches warningly inside you - so hard it leaves your tummy lurching- “‘-Kuna’s’ always right.”
♡ INO TAKUMA - 3 rounds
Ino can’t help but hitch out a tiny, rasping sob with each thrust; those sensitive veins covering each side of his red n’ swollen shaft massaging up and down furiously. “So sensitive- so sensitive, think m’gonna- gonna cum, pretty.”
Your throat clogs up with utter bucketloads of saccharine spittle, drenching Ino’s sexy ski mask that’d been stuffed into your sagging maw moments prior. Something about your voice being ‘too pretty’...
“What’s that? What’s that?” His weepy crowned tip stirs around your gummy insides, splotching out a hefty wad of creamed pre - a warning. So many pitches higher, feral. “C’mon m-milk me- milk me milk me with that pretty pussy, sweetness.”
Every vicious pap was so rough that it made your vision blister with pure white - you’re muffling out something that sounds like a jumble of ‘please’.
And before long you’re simply being soaked - if you thought your driveling pussy was wet before, then you weren’t ready for the absolute puddles it was formulating now. Heavy, clumped bucketloads of sappy cum that spills out of your saturated brim.
For the second time now.
Every crevice of your tender pussy is just flooded, the smooth waves of seed treacling down your sides is so sinful that your knees weaken. Doughy heels of your feet sliding down the sweaty skin of his slender waist ‘till his tawny happy trail hits your bleary cunt. “Mmm– feels so h-hot inside.”
So hot that Ino himself was burning, veins bubbling up from underneath his very skin – he’s flushing all the way down to his mahogany roots at the sight of that creamy frothing between your legs.
“Wanna see– s’alright if I- s-see?” And he’s not just probin’ the question at you, he’s targeting it to your pussy. Nodding along with every squelch after squelch emanating out as if holding his own lecherous conversation.
And the very moment that Ino lurches his hips and draaaag his ballooned-up cock out of you, your sloppy hole simply cascades.
So wet that a warm waterfall pours out between your puffed-up folds, enough to soak your sheets and right down to your bedsprings. They ricket creakily following every bulky slap of his round, cylindrical shaft down on your gluey slit.
Grunting, “Yeah- yeah yeah yeah so fuckin’ pretty- so pretty. D’you have any idea h-how hck! gorgeous ya are?”
A clingy, dripping mess dangles from his oozing divot by the time your cottony mind clears up enough to spit out his choking mask. Blubbering out a strained, “Please- please, Taku—”
Oh, that lil’ nickname makes Ino slouch his head back and groan.
“Don’t- fuuuuck, don’t say it like that-” His huffing words depart his chest with every stimulated twitch, full-bodied. Ino was shivering, those trembly thighs of his doing nothing to hide the way his ruby-red cockhead was blushing enough to resemble a lollipop. “Don’t say it or m’gonna…”
“Mhm—?”
You evil minx.
With a determined rut of his beastly hips, Ino’s spanking the tender underside of his length down straightly across your cunt. Making you see for yourself just how loooong and wide he really was, your greedy insides are clenching already.
Drawling up a steady finger to mark on your where he’d be using as his target, “Hiya, pretty- can ya handle one more? J-just- just the tip this time, ngh- okay?” Muttering - more to himself than anything. Those fawny doe-eyes look up at you and you’re noticing that his pupils are practically hearts. “Swear- just the tip, I swear-”
And he’s still so sensitive - so delicate from just cumming that even smooching your glossily saturated lips is enough to leave your pretty boyfriend gasping.
Nose crinkling at the bridge, “Just…just the tip…” He’s talking almost as if he’s in a daze, drunkenly lolling his head down to watch the way your bulging pussylips smear open with his wide circumference, “-for th-this third round- can’t be more than the ngh- tip, okay–?”
Punctuated with slow, sensual grinds.
The pulsating of his tip curves up into your g-spot precisely, over and over. Repeated, thorough strikes where he makes sure you’re being rendered dizzy on his winding veins. Your sensory walls feel along every zig-zagged pattern, rubbing back n’ forth back n’ forth back n’ forth.
“Fuuuuck– it feels so good, baby.”
“Sh-shit.”
He stills at your words - body aching out a ba-dump–! You mewl out, your overstimulation making the blissful sensations increase twofold. And a fat glob of cum spurts out of you as you quiver, heady gaze starin’ dead-on. “Want a bit more…Taku.”
There it was again. And Ino is falling even deeper in love with you, heart racing once he flits his hazed peripheries down to your pussy. Then you. Your pussy. Then you. Your drooling pussy-
“G-gonna…” He starts off, voice low. Rasping. Something primal in them jolting awake, he clings on a hand underneath one of your asscheeks and lifts you up easily. Pliably, to inch in just another solid bulk further, “-gonna take it alllll like a g-good girl, okay?”
Yes- but you don’t even have the time to revel in your success before you’re being split apart.
“Keep- keep your eyes open, sweetness.” You’re hearing grouch into your fuzzy ear canal, the stinging spank of skin-on-skin echoing right along with it. “Keep ‘em open n’ watch me all ngh- deeeep inside.”
Ino wasn’t giving you mercy, he wasn’t giving you even time to breathe before the very cum-capped tip of his cock reaches into your lungs. Carving out a stout, rotund bruise exactly on your sponged cervix, “One.” He counts - counts. “Two- three.” Every hit after hit to the ends of your gooey pussy that make you wail out in whimpers.
Your hands wrap around his craned neck, tangling with the sweat-matted curls at the base. “Are- are you gonna cum all hck! inside this time, Taku–?”
And how could he resist? He’s reaching up to ten before answering, a breathy pant of an answer. “Anything for you, sweetness…”
♡ GOJO SATORU - INFINITY?!
“Sweetheart, look- look at me.” Torrid clumps of spittle cling down Gojo’s lips in a shiny sheen, licked dripping wet as he takes in the sight of you all pretty underneath him and damn near swoons.
For the nth time tonight– you’d lost count.
The strongest frantically flaps his long lashes open, eyes bleary and hazed - your bedroom lights had long since shattered, and yet he was so honed in on you. On the way your slippery slope sloshes out with a creamy white pour of cum the second he slaps his sweltering crowned tip down. Thwack!
Octaves higher, wild. Gojo couldn’t even speak normally at this point- shit, you wonder if he was even thinking. “Look, sweetheart- o-oh my fuck, look.”
And you - you were so fucked dumb you could barely even breathe let alone twist your head ‘round to stare, teeth bitten cutely around the drenched edge of your silken pillow. “Please- please, Toru- d-dunno if I can fit any more…”
“Wh-what?” At this, the strongest has the audacity to flinch- fully bodily, his meaty thighs pressing down further on your ass to prevent you from squirming. You could count every tick and every flex of his calves as he pinned you down in the most lecherous, most raw prone bone ever.
A hot waft of breath empties out near your sensitive ear, “Y-you don’t ngh- mean that…do you?” Desperate. Fattened globs of something wet splatter on top of your shoulder, and only sultry moments later do you realize that you had him crying. Dewy sapphire eyes honed in on your expression of oh! “M-more- c’mon, say it- tell me what you want, my girl.”
Both you and the rickety bedsprings sing in unison as he rests his hefty weight over and smears a thick stripe of buttery pre where you were leaking out. Flooding, actually.
You were so wet that it’d formed a syrupy puddle, your ruined sheets sticking to your slammed skin as if they were made of glue. Because your dear husband had made sure to fill you up till the very brim, knotted ribbons of seed frothing at your entrance like a cap of icing.
Gojo rovers his hands near the base of your spine and arches you, “Again, c’mon- c’mon c’mon—” Your ears ring with a slobbering sluuuurp–! as his rounded mushroom tip leaves peck after peck on your sloppy hole. A huff of laughter vibrating his broad chest from behind you, “Look how loud- how p-pretty.” Yeah, those powerful eyes of his were locked on your dripping cunt. The way those dangling wires of slick streeetch ridiculously. “Look how badly she wants me- but I needa hear it from ngh- you, sweetheart.”
“F-from me?” You’re gurgling, and somewhere along the way he’s curling a dexterous hand around your throat to force you to look up.
He’s rutting into you like an animal - a promise of what was to come. “Mhm— you, my girl.” Those heart-shaped pupils of his finally dead-locking into yours- and a few axons in the air explode from simply the eye-contact. “Say it- say it. Tell me you wan’ me- want more. One more.”
He’d been saying one more for aaaaages now. For so many seconds and thirds and fourths.
If it was anyone but Gojo, then they wouldn’t have been able to catch the minute way your watery lips unfasted into a wobbly shape of something like ‘more’.
But this is Gojo Satoru - so of course, he notices.
“Wh-what was that?” He’s breathing out, globe-headed tip just starting to press against your awaiting pussy. Throb-throb-throbbing, his pounding vein massaging the hood of your clit. “Tell me- tell me what-”
One clammy palm of his reaches out to claw the crown of your head- whining for a second when his limitless flickers on and off. Feverish. Out of control. Gojo’s nose buries inside your throat to drink in your sexed-up scent, slobbering. “Tell your dear S-Satoru here, tell it allll t’me.”
“W-want it-”
“Want whaaat?”
“Want-” Your throat constricts with such a leaden ball of need, the saturated sweetness of it clogging your words. “-want you. Fuck me, Toru-”
And Gojo feels his ears pop! with pressure, every unbolted piece of furniture hovering numerous inches in the air when the strongest reels his toned hips back and slams you incredibly full.
So sensitive that the man flinches, head throwing back with a smoky groan of– “Oh. Ohhh m’n-never gettin’ tired of that.”
It’s a mind-numbing stretch, the taut pull of his girthy cock swabbing apart tender nooks and crevices that only he could. Mixing n’ matching new hefty piles of pre upon the remnants of seed he’d left behind prior. He was just so big.
Before you know it, Gojo’s rubbing one of his doughy-padded hands over your lower tummy. “Woah…” Eager tips of his fingers pressing down hard on the plump, cylindrical outline jutting out of you. “-can feel it-” Peripherals glowing, Six Eyes rendering him light-headed. “-can see it, sweetheart.”
Fuck- it’s about the fifth time that he was uttering those very words to you. And the simple sound of them had your thighs clenching, sticking together with a solid plap! of sprayed juices trapped in-between.
Gojo was so hot collapsing down into you like he was melting - everything from his pants, to his skin to his pace. Practically melting. A fast, pounding pummel over n’ over that rubbed your gummy walls raw every time he’s prodding about.
Can’t stop, won’t stop.
“Gonna- gonna fuck you, m’kay?” His pearly whites sinking down on your soft earlobe, Gojo’s grunts pour out after every slick gliiiide of his meaty muscled front down your prespired back. Up and down.
You think you count six- no, eight of his washboard abs before your cottony mind is put-together enough to mewl, “Y-you already- are. Fuck! Already f-fuckin’ me so deep, Satoru.”
“Oh…” Sexily half-lidded eyes of his fall down to where his viscerally fat length was prying your swollen folds apart. In and out. Split-ended tip rummaging up your gooey insides until hot pearly beads of cum were just oozing out with each thrust. “Oh.”
Was he seriously so pussydrunk that he’d forgotten? That it was the only thing on his mind?
You’re not getting too far with your half-formed thoughts until a few slender fingers drift over to toy with your knobbled clit and make your eyes swirl cartoonishly. “H-how’s it feel to keep the strongest ngh- hostage like th-this. To know m’not gonna go aaaaanywhere until I’ve plugged up this pretty pussy?”
Your heart races with the implications that his bass steeps primally in, “P-plugged up?”
“Mhm.” As if to prove his point, the rounded curvature of his tightened balls come spanking down near the treacly ends of your cunt. Enough to render you speechless, he floats his sensory touch over where a spurt of white was jetstreaming out. “Until I fill you up so much I c-can’t even fit anymore.”
Your vision’s flashing pure white, “And h-how will you do that?”
Oh- you were so fucked.
And if it wasn’t the way the bed was shifting- floating, then it was the way that something in the air shimmers with power. Your clit twitching as a few tendrils of buzzing cursed energy reach up your body with a low bzzzzzz–!
Whirling your droopy head to see that his pretty eyes were aglow, skin crackling with minuscule blue lightning.
“Gonna…” Gojo cracks a toothy smile - breathy, crazed. Canines gleaming with carnal slobber, “-mold you to my cock forever.”
♡ HIGURUMA HIROMI - 6 rounds
Your boss, Higuruma, was mean - and he fucked even meaner.
Tangling a hand near the satin base of your tight, tight office skirt– one that he all but rips off entirely. A few scruffy tatters of it stuffed into your stupidly unfastened mouth, Higuruma takes one good look at you and takes you for hours on his very own desk.
The mahogany surfaces crackles underneath your clawing, a dopey smile splaying out across your face. Feeling the tattered glide of that condom that was ripping off, “Fuck- more, more– Hiromi.”
“Hiromi?” Higuruma’s grouchy baritone rings across your ears and makes your toes curl cutely, vibrations skittering right down to the dewy spot between your legs. And where it rained, it poured. Out with every rummaging pound being planted on your poor, dripping cunt. “Who the fuck is ‘Hiromi’, angel? Forgot m’your hck! boss after five rounds, huh? Guess m’just gonna hafta- hah- jog- that- memory back-”
And every rut had him stretching and stretching at your gluey walls until you saw white, the pointed probe of his pre-topped cockhead bludgeoning you so thoroughly.
Higuruma throws one of your jittery legs over his shoulders and slicks down a solid splash of viscous spittle, prying apart those glossily stained folds until they let off a ringing sluuurp–! “Ooo– look at you, say ‘thank you’.”
“Th-thank you…” A hefty spitball bubbles out of the edges of your pathetic maw, one that Higuruma wastes no time slouching over and licking away with the edges of his tongue himself.
“Mmm– always welcome, sugar.” The curvaceous fringe of his thumb comes slotting down between your slippery slit, pokin’ just inside to tug on your cozy ring of muscle. “Now how about we test that hah- streeeetch.” Digging right along the sleek flesh to let both his rigid length and his fingers pull you taut.
One of his frigidly cool rings snag on your flooded hole and make you whine– “Please- s’sooo much, Hiro- sir.”
“Now now- don’t whine, angel.” Higuruma’s bloating his cock up a few more mind-numbing millimeters in width, dilated pupils latches permanently on the way it makes your kiss-bitten lips fall into a cute oh! “You begged for this with this- damn skirt n’ that-”
A blazing bite on your lower lip, the corners of his mouth turns up into a leering snarl as your boss takes his languid time draaagging it away. “-this damn s-smile and-” Steady pace getting sloppy, achingly filthy. “-this fuckin’ pussy.”
Oh, your pussy was just yeowling with every ramming slam.
Soggy squelches that rang across all four walls and seeped through the paper-thin plaster of the office. Higuruma watches with a smile as you slap your hand over your mouth, “Now now, let ‘em hear-” Tracing a wet streak of buttery pre that sandwiches each of your sweet orifices, he’s targeting your adorable g-spot and striking it like a dartboard. “-how many rounds- how- how many times have I fucked you stupid, angel?”
“S-s…”
“Speak up.”
Fuck- he was so hot. With his clean-cut, billowing jacket haphazardly draping off, and the way that Higuruma’s hair was uncharacteristically unruly. Mussed-up strands plastering to the perspiration-stuck plane of his forehead, he looked crazed.
Hitting your pussy faster and faster, it was a slaughter fest. “Speak up speak up-”
“Six!” You’re squealing, gasping. Unsure of what came first - the drawling yelp of your whine or the way that you’re running headfirst into your high.
“Oh– filthy girl. Look how she’s ngh- throbbin’ f’me.”
So powerful that every peak of it flashes your vision with nothing but white, and you can only stare up ahead at Higuruma’s sinfully fucked-out expression while he bludgeoned your pussy raw. Lugging you through one peak, another peak, another, another-
Voice cracking with tears at the sheer overstimulation running through your body, “Hiromi- inside, please. Wan’ you inside-” Before you know it, your hand reaches down as if magnetized to caress the dark happy trail leading up to his base. “P-please?”
“Please…?”
“-w-with a hck! ch-cherry on top.”
And almost immediately, Higuruma grins. Depraved.
Pulling out with a spectacularly wet plop! he’s leaving you clenching around nothing for the briefest nanoseconds. Tearing off the mess of rubber that was once a condom - one that was way too small for his massive size.
Because Higuruma was so big that your thighs flinch at simply the idea of fitting all of him once more, mouth watering.
But that’s exactly what you do - in one, sloppy shuddering ram. All the way from his rounded, gummy-pink mushroom tip to the very hefty base. All those prominently veins snaking down your snug walls, vehemently. You’re feeling his hips shudder–
“Inside-” You echo, just about the only thing you can do right now. “-don’t miss. Don’t miss–”
“Think m’gonna miss?” One sappy smack on the awaiting slope of your pussy for you to get your lil’ act together, and another just for fun. “Just w-watch me–” His hissing growl makes you clench; dark brows furrowing, toned abdomen snapping, achy cockhead bursting. “-m’gonna fill her u-up until she fuuuck–! can’t take anymore.”
Your overfilling pussy feels like a slushy as the first few ribbons of cum strike your sloshing bottom. Practically feeling the swashing sensation of a goopy second layer cloaking your insides, and he doesn’t just orgasm once.
No- your dripping cunt is being fed with so many seconds and thirds and fourths. Gripping pussy swirlin’ around the glossy mess until it pinpoints every magical spot inside you.
“S-see?” Higuruma’s stern baritone wavers, unsteady. Stuttering. He’s smoothing over a few dumbstruck droplets of spittle that slip out of you, “There- your Hiromi doesn’t miss. There we go- are we happy now, hmmm–?”
And you can only nod and nod and nod, in awe of the oozing oodles of sappy liquid that stuck your thighs together. “Y-yes, Hiromi.”
🜼 ⋆ toji hates when you cover your face whilst he’s fucking you dumb
tw: spıt, degradation, rough sēx !
“fuckin’ move your hand.”
his voice slices through the thick slap of skin on skin, ragged and breathless, but not any softer for it. his hips grind into you, deep and deliberate, cock dragging along your walls like he’s angry at them. like they’re the reason you’re crying already.
and maybe they are. maybe he is.
you cover your face anyway, forearm thrown over your eyes like it’ll save you. there’s snot on your lip, tears in your hairline, and your voice’s all broken up. you keep trying to tell him something—something about how it’s too much, how he’s too deep, how you can’t stop coming, and he just laughs, a sharp huff against your cheek.
“tch—again?” toji spits, a little amused. a little cruel. “can’t even take a proper fuckin’ dick without fallin’ apart, huh?”
your hand trembles where it shields your face, like it wants to fall. like it knows better. but then he shifts his weight, catches your wrist, and yanks it down to the bed with a slap of sweat-slick skin on cotton.
“wanna see your fuckin’ face when you cry.”
you whimper when toji says that and he simply grins.
“there she is,” he murmurs like he’s mocking tenderness, hips rolling slow now, filthy and sticky, cock buried in you to the hilt. he gives a rough thrust, then another—each one lifting your back off the bed, forcing your chest to arch. “s’pretty when you sob. keep lookin’ at me, baby. don’t go hidin’ now.”
you can’t. he’s so deep it’s nauseating. so thick it feels like your cunt’s gone loose and raw trying to keep him in. his pelvis presses right where it shouldn’t and it makes you jolt, a breathless little hiccup of pain and heat that makes your thighs twitch.
he notices. of course he fucking does.
“you like that? yeah, i know you do,” he pants, voice getting rougher now. his hair’s stuck to his forehead, eyes dark as sin. “cryin’ like a fuckin’ whore but keep squeezin’ me like you’ll die if i pull out.”
he grabs your jaw—his hand huge, fingers curling rough around your throat just enough to make your breath skip. your mouth falls open on instinct, dumb and wet and desperate for more, and he spits right on your tongue. doesn’t ask. doesn’t wait.
“swallow it.” and oh you do.
“good fuckin’ girl.”
he starts moving again, really fucking you now, rough and deep, his balls slapping up against your ass, wet and relentless. the bedframe creaks like it’s gonna break. your head knocks into the pillow with every thrust, dizzy and messy and barely present in your own skin.
“you think i’m gonna let you cum like this? when you keep coverin’ your face like a brat?”
you sob out a “no—no, please—i’m.. toji ngh, i’m sorry,” and he chuckles dark. leans down until your noses brush, until you’re forced to look up into those black eyes while he ruins you.
“yeah,” he murmurs, lips brushing yours. “you are sorry.”
you didn’t expect him to be so gentle with you. not tsukishima kei, whose sharp tongue and cold glares had intimidated half the league. not tsukki, who made sarcastic comments under his breath and rarely looked impressed by anything.
but here he was kneeling behind you on your bed, lifting your shirt with both hands like it was something delicate, like you were. his warm breath hit the slope of your spine as he leaned down and pressed a kiss between your shoulder blades. your soft curves peeked out from under your shirt and instead of mocking you like you’d secretly feared he groaned deeply.
“fuck.” his fingers traced over the swell of your hips, squeezing you gently, thumbs brushing just under your breasts. “you’re so soft. i didn’t think i’d get to touch you like this.”
you let out a shy laugh, your heart hammering in your chest. “we’re dating, tsukki.”
“i know.” his voice dipped. “still doesn’t feel real.”
the quiet affection between long glances and post-match hangouts had started weeks ago. you weren’t the usual girl volleyball groupies whispered about. you weren’t in it for the fame. you were just you. sweet, but sharp sometimes. beautiful in a way kei couldn’t stop thinking about. and now you were naked under him, soft thighs parted, your body plush and warm and everything he ever fucking wanted.
the first thrust made your breath catch. he was big, you’d known that. long legs, huge hands, the way he barely fit in airplane seats. but his cock was another level.
“kei—” you gasped, hands grabbing at the sheets. “you’re…”
he slid in slowly, inch by inch, mouth parted in concentration. “i know, baby. i know. i’ll go slow.”
but it didn’t feel slow. it felt like he was splitting you open. his hands stayed on your hips, thumbs brushing the stretch of your waist as he bottomed out with a hiss through his teeth.
“god,” he muttered, looking down at where your bodies met. “you’re so fucking tight around me. feels like your pussy’s never gonna let me go.”
you whimpered. “you’re too big, kei—”
his head dropped to your shoulder as he kissed your neck, his breath warm and trembling. “you’re taking it so good though,” he whispered, starting to move slow and deep. “i know it’s a lot. but look at you.”
your breasts bounced with every thrust, soft and beautiful and his, and his hands reached up just to feel them. rough thumbs brushing over your nipples until you gasped again.
“you were made for this,” he said, panting now. “all these curves. this body. you were made for me.”
that’s when it shifted. the moment he realized you could take it. that your body could stretch and tremble and open for him. he lost the gentleness. the praise didn’t stop, but the rhythm got filthy. he slammed into you now, hand fisting in your hair, pulling you up against his chest as he fucked you harder than you’d ever been taken before.
“so fucking tight,” he growled into your ear. “so warm. you hear that? hear how wet you are for me?”
the lewd sound of skin slapping echoed through the room, mixed with your breathy sobs. your thighs shook. your stomach jiggled under his grip. your tits bounced as he pounded into you from behind, hips snapping like he had something to prove. and maybe he did. maybe tsukishima, who’s so quiet, so cold on the court, just needed one person to fall apart under him. to let him own them like this. to give him the control he never reached for, but desperately craved.
“mine,” he whispered, kissing the side of your face. “you hear me?”
you nodded wildly, hands clutching the sheets.
“say it,” he growled.
“i’m yours, kei—yours—”
his pace stuttered. his hips pressed deeper, harder until you were moaning like you couldn’t breathe. “good fucking girl. taking this cock so perfectly. letting me stretch this sweet pussy till you can’t walk.”
your orgasm hit like lightning. you came with a cry, clenching around him so tight he snapped. he slammed in once, twice, before groaning loud against your shoulder.
“i’m gonna cum inside you. fuck, you want that? want me to fill you up, baby?”
you nodded, desperate, already too far gone. when he came, his hips stilled deep inside you, cock twitching with each pulse, he didn’t move right away. he held you there, buried to the hilt, one hand still gripping your hip and the other pressed against your belly like he needed to feel how deep he was inside.
“you did so good,” he murmured into your skin, still breathless. “god, baby. you were perfect.”
he carried you to the bathroom after even though your legs wouldn’t work, muttering quiet praises like it was habit now. “so beautiful… all mine… i don’t think i’ll ever get over you.”
you let him take care of you, kissed his flushed cheeks and wondered how someone could ruin you that thoroughly and still hold you like something precious afterward. but that was tsukishima kei, dangerous when he loved you and, god help you, he did.
Warnings: nsfw content, mean! caleb(but in a good way! TRUST ME), use of gege, pussy palming, slight face smacks, fingering , pussy spanks, Caleb is a pussy eater, p in v, ass spanks
“Hey pips, 'been looking everywhere for ya!” He jerks you back to his chest, bicep curling closer to your neck, his muscular build bulging you slightly. You let yourself be dragged away, your eyes locked in on his arm as you thought about how nice it’d be to sink your teeth in. “Where’ve ya been?”
“Oh nothing, just... the weather is good. outside,” you murmur, trying to act as normal as you could. He didn't see the dirty notification on your device, right ? You shouldn't have left your mobile at the dining table.
He seemed to be acting normally enough, his usual overly touchy and friendly-self. It made sense for Caleb to be the first one to find out everything about you. After all, he was probably the most attentive to you. You wondered how attentive he would be in other scenarios. “How ya feelin’?”
“Oh?” You try not have lusty thoughts at the moment, you felt your hazy mind clearing as you try to keep up with Caleb, your feet stumbling beneath you. He was huge. Big guy. He looked down at you fondly, pinching your cheek to annoy you and ruffling your hairs at the same time. You look into his eyes, trying to search for the truth, but finding your mind wandering to indecent places again.
“Y’know, with the cupcakes you ate?”
“Oh, I-I’m totally fineeee,” you drawled out the words, squeezing his arm assuringly, doing your best to seem as normal and casual as you could. You didn’t want to give it away that you were on the brink. “Don’t worry about me, gege.” You hope the cute nickname would throw him off your trail if that were the case.
“Really, yeah?” His warm smile suddenly looked sadistic, a unknown glint in his eye. It’s his tone that sent chills down your back. He gets smug at times like these, it was his ‘I’m gonna call you out on your shit’ tone. And before you know it you’re pulled into his room. You always liked being in his room rather than yours, his one filled with all the airplane models. Before you could question the sudden change in his demeanor, He lets you go and closes the door behind him. “A little birdie told me my pipsqueak is lying.”
“W-What do you mean?” You couldn’t help but flush as you stammer out the words, your cheeks turning red. You were guilty but still kept your act together.
The corner of his mouth turned up and he tilted his head looking at you sinisterly, and you feel the color drain from your face as he reaches into his pocket and pulls out his phone. Your heart started thumping loudly. “Is this account not yours, pips?”
“N-No,” you mumbled, voice stuck in your throat, denying it outright despite how clearly he could see through you, always.
“No?” He snickered at that, pulling up the account, letting it stare you in the face. You tried to nudge yourself away, but his arm traps you against the wall. You yelped at the sudden movement, the screen still closed to your face, “But, it’s got your name. and look at the bio, totally reads like my clumsy pips.” You could see the scowl on his face.
“oh! What a coincidence,” you mumbled, biting your lip as you blatantly lie. Your voice was quivering. You don't lie to him often.
His scowl only deepened, and suddenly his hand gripped your jaw, forcing you to look up at him in the eye. “I wouldn’t recommend lying to me, pips.” You shuddered at that, hands wrapping around his wrist, nails slightly digging in as you whimpered in his hold. “You’re going to tell me the truth now, aren’t you, dumb girl?” Your head was roughly jerked up and down in his hold to nod yes. He smiled gently at that. “Good pips. Now, is this your dirty little secret, don't lie to me, a’ight?”
You closed your eyes, not wanting to look up at him in because of the embarrassment. “Yes.”
“Tsk. Look at me,” He sneered, hand slightly tapping against your face. Your eyes shot up to his once again at his command. “Act like a big girl, why don’t ya?”
“Yes, it’s mine,” you admitted, lips trembling as you spoke those words.
“Why didn’t you show me this before, little girl? You should’ve shown me your little fantasies sooner.”
“Because it’s embarrassing! I don't want you to se- ,” you practically whined in frustration.
“Embarrass yourself for me then.” These words were taunting, enticing you with the seemingly outrageous demand. “In fact, you should be embarrassed. I thought you were a good girl. Good girls don’t want to get fucked like that. You don’t want me to treat you like a good girl, huh?” His snicker sends chills down your spine. “Don’t worry, I got the message, loud and clear.”
“I didn’t m-mean for you to-“ He interrupted you again.
“To what? Discover you’re a perverted little whore? I mean look at this.” The screen was brought back to your attention. Clearly Caleb wasn’t going to let this go, too excited about shaming you for his amusement. He chuckled in your face, enjoying how you writhed beneath him in uneasiness; showing you the different tags only a supposed pervert would look into. “omegaver- what the fuck is that? You want a wolf to rail y- masked men? Step-Brother?” He finally placed his phone down on top of a countertop, and you’re allowed only a sigh of relief that was over with when he’s grinding against you, his hard bulge pressing against your thigh. Your eyes widened as you felt how big he was against you.“You touched that cunt to the idea of having a step brother rail the shit out of you? You're so gross. You dirty little slut. You really get off on this sick shit like a fucking freak?”
You felt your cheeks reddening as you thought of all the fanfictions you saved of brat tamer stepbrothers teaching their little sisters a lesson, fucking them like they were nothing more than fleshlights to be degraded for fun. You regretted waiting so long out the balcony. Who knows how much time Caleb had to scroll through your personal collection and discover your dirty weaknesses.The fact that he had seen it and chose this specific scenario to use it against you only made you hot and bothered, attempting to rub your inner thighs together to get some friction as Caleb went on intimidating you.
Your small hands reached up to grip his shirt, wanting to bury your face against the cloth to hide your embarrassment. Caleb was cruel, gripping your chin again to force you to look up at him. You looked so pathetic and submissive in his grasp, his large hand enveloping your chin, causing your lips to form a cute pout as you stared up at him with big eyes.“Did you do it, pips?”
“Yes…” you shamefully confessed.
“Little pervert,” he hissed, lips pressing against your neck, harshly nipping against the sensitive skin. “Don’t you think that’s a bit cliché, baby? I didn’t know you were this dirty.” His hands went beneath your shirt, fingers teasing the underside of your breasts. His lips slid up against the shell of your ear. “I guess I get it, though. If you were my step-sister I’d be sneaking into your room every night to eat your stupid cunt while you slept. I’d be finger fucking you under the table every family dinner. You’d be my personal slut. Maybe tie up Josephine too, make her watch the whore girl she raised jumping on my cock, yeah?”
That's it. There was no going back now. You gasped at his words and he took the opportunity to slip his thumb into your mouth, his other hand pinching on your nipple, “You want that, pips? Like the idea of me fucking you like the bratty little step-sister you want to be so badly?”
You moaned against the thumb in your mouth, causing him to grin. He slipped his thumb out and put his mouth against yours to devour your moans. Your knees went weak as you felt his tongue slip into your mouth. He was surprisingly a good kisser, even though you both haven't dated anyone yet. He pulled away to let you catch your breath,“But I think I have another idea, pips...”
He pulled your arms up to wrap around his neck, started to tug down your shorts and panties in one go. You gripped onto his broad shoulders, burying your face in his neck and squealing quietly. His palm enveloped your pussy, feeling the warmth against his hand. He ground his palm against the wet folds, “ofcourse this pussy gets wet from this weird shit. Stupid slut getting all worked up?” He picked you up to sit on top of the desk. Your hips jumped at being stimulated so much so quickly by the mere touch of his hands, but his arms pinned you down, making sure you don't move. His nose brushed against yours, watching your pitiful expression carefully and wickedly grinning as he watched you suffer, not letting you lift even a centimeter. “Say the line.”
“W-What?”
“That cheesy, corny line in the disgusting step-sibling porn you like,” He scoffed, degradation spilling from his mouth, rolling his eyes in annoyance and lightly slapping your face again. “Say it if you want your precious step-brother to dick you down the way you’ve always wanted.”
Tears started to form at the corners of your eyes as you trembled on top of the desk, Caleb's grip holding you firm. You internally cringed from the humiliation he was making you endure, his sadism milking every moment he could to watch you squirm in embarrassment for him. “W-What’re you d-doing step-b-bro?”
He laughed at that. He was so cruel, making you even more flushed. “You really do sound like a fucking pornstar, pips. You should be proud!” His thumb slides down to your clit, the added pressure vibrating as one hand fingers your gummy walls, “Say thank you, step-bro.”
“T-Thank youu step-p brooo,” you rode out your orgasm, shaking as you slump against Caleb, gripping onto his shoulders for support.
His nose nuzzled into your hair, hands dragging you closer to the edge of the desk. He pulled your legs apart, angling your hips up to reveal your bare cunt to him. You moaned out when he slaps his hand against the wet surface. His palm pressed against your mouth, muffling your cry as he scowled at you. “Want our parents to hear what a slut you are? Shut the fuck up.”
He threw his fingers into you, the digits vibrating as he curled them against your sweet spot, you were still feeling sensitive from your previous orgasm. You tried to moan out his name from under his palm, but he pressed it harder against you. “Awww, this dumb mind is empty isn't it?you’re a big girl, right? Then fucking take it.”
You’re forced to submit to his punishing pace, moans suppressed as he moved his fingers in an animalistic speed. Watching his forearm flex before you in an effort to make you cum was so hot. Then fluids spilled from you as you squirted, your legs spasming. Caleb got wet in the process, a large wet spot covering the lower part of his white tank top. He cursed under his breath, yanking his fingers out to rub his fingers quickly over your filthy wet clit, making you whine. “Messy little slut. Got everything fucking dirty.”
He dipped down to give a few licks to your swollen and bruised pussy, the one he abused; making you cry in overstimulation. Your thighs tense and twitch near his head, but his grip is too firm, not allowing you to close them together. He bullied his way between your legs, thumbs parting your folds to properly inspect your twitching and swollen cunt. “gege, please, I need…”
“Need what?” He dove his tongue into your pussy, your sensitive walls twitched around the wet muscle. “Want more? Want someone to catch you riding your step brother’s face because you couldn’t shut up like I told you to? Want to dirty my tongue and let me use you? Those sex cupcakes still have you horny after you squirted for me?”
“Want your cock,” your fingers grabbing his locks, whining as you felt him toy with your abused pussy.
“Yeah? Want it?” He licked you a little more until he was satisfied before coming up and kissing you, forcing you to taste yourself on his tongue. He pulled back, warm breath ghosting over your lips, “Need your step-brother’s cock in your little pussy?”
“So much,” you begged, nodding as you grabbed his face, locking lips. “Want your cum so bad.”
He loved you. He did, truly a lot. But at the time he was engrossed with your dirty games; his mind hazy from your wetness in his mouth, quickly dragging you off the desk with little patience, roughly twisting you around and bending you over it. “Nasty little bitch, begging for cum without being asked. Fucking greedy.”
You jiggled your ass when you felt him against your entrance, but it only earned you a stinging spank to the ass for your impatience. You couldn’t help it, though, your body throbbing with need that only Caleb could fulfill. He bent down to have his chest press against your back, hand coming to the front of your neck to squeeze lightly. “Here’s the dick you craved so badly, dumb slut.”
It was a tight push into you, but the feeling of having him fill you up so completely was so worth the delicious stretch. Your head went dizzy and blank as his grip tightened, hissing as he adjusted to the feeling of you wrapped around him. “Fuck!” He cursed, slapping your ass as you squealed and sunk down deeper on his cock. “Of course you get this wet over being used like a fucking cum whore. Should’ve known you were a sex toy, I would’ve dicked you down the way you deserved sooner.”
He softly kissed you, hips pulling back as he begins to thrust into you. His hand glided up to your jaw, keeping you in place as he devoured you, hungrily swallowing ever whimper and moan that escaped your lips. And he called you the greedy one. “Take my cock so fucking good,” he mumbled against your lips. “Knew a dumb slut like you was good for something.”
You nodded along, feeling yourself get closer to the edge with his degradation. “Am I the first one to fuck this slutty pussy, hmm?” he questioned you as he focused on battering the sweet spot inside you.
“Yes, y-you-”
“Good,” he grunted. “Your step brother should be the first one to feel how tight this wet cunt is. It’s my right.”
“Yes, it is!” You whined against him, rolling your hips against his. “C-Caleb-“
“Gonna cum again? Horny fucking slut.” His calloused fingers travelled down to toy with your clit. “Fucking cum then while I fill you up, pretty.”
You let go, shaking beneath Caleb as your orgasm washed over you. You felt the warm sensation of his cum painting your walls white. Quickly, he turned you around, yanking out his cock to give the last few strokes, spreading your legs before cumming on your swollen pussy, covering your folds in cum. He let his cock stroke against you, smearing the cum against you. And he called you dirty.
Feeling it drip out of you and smeared on top of you felt super degrading, like you were just something for him to dump his fat load on.
As if to further his point, he plunged his fingers inside, watching the milky white substance coat his fingers along with your slick. He wiped his fingers against your cum covered skin, smearing it on you to dirty you further, biting his lip as he admired his art work.
He then kissed you slowly, softly, calming you down as you both came down from your highs. He was practically the only thing holding you up, his arms wrapped around you tightly as you processed the intensity of what you just did. His hands ran over your trembling body, calming you down.
“pips,” he muttered under his breath, gazing at your fucked out expression. “my baby's okay?”
Your cute snores filled his room quickly, he chuckled. There was no going back now. Your were his, entirely.
↳ A curse lies on the northern line. Every Duke who falls in love loses everything. Zayne knows this. That's why he keeps you at arm's length, cold and cruel. But love creeps in like winter. Slow, silent. (warning: childbirth, blood)
You knew it would be cold.
The capital's gossips loved to whisper about the North. How the wind there could skin a man, how the rivers froze deep enough to swallow whole horses, how no flowers bloomed past the frost line. You listened with a wine glass in hand and a velvet stole around your shoulders, too busy admiring your reflection to care.
You knew it would be cold.
But you did not know it would be this cold. The kind that bites. Makes your bones ache and your eyes water even through layers of fur trimmed silk and the thickest travel cloak gold could buy. Cold that felt personal. The kind of cold that made you want to scream. Instead, you sniffed once, delicate and gritted your teeth behind chattering lips.
"I swear to the gods." You muttered voice muffled against your scarf. "If I survive this journey, someone is getting exiled. Personally. By me."
The carriage creaked violently as it hit another frost covered rock. You were jolted sideways, nearly colliding with the window. Snow and gray pines rushed past the glass in a blur of pale death.
Across from you, Mira sat huddled under three layers of wool, trying very hard not to breathe too loudly. Smart girl. You tugged your gloves tighter, folded your arms, and let out a long, shivering sigh.
"I was supposed to be a crown princess." You said for what was likely the seventh time that hour. "You remember that, don't you, Mira? Everyone said so. I had the smile. The connections. The posture. And now I'm being hauled off like unwanted goods to marry a man who probably has an accent and a beard."
Mira made a polite sound of agreement. Or maybe it was despair. Hard to tell under all the scarves. You didn't stop. "'It's a great honor.' They said. 'A diplomatic necessity.' Bah. They just wanted to get rid of me. One little fight at a state dinner and suddenly I'm a liability. What nonsense. I was provoked."
The wind outside howled, and the carriage shuddered again. You groaned into your gloved hands. "This isn't duty." You spat. "This is exile. A political burial. I'll freeze to death before I see my wedding bed."
You stared at the sky through the fogged window. Flat and pale and unforgiving. Even the sun looked like it had given up.
"They didn't even let me bring my harp." You added quietly, almost mournful now. "Or my champagne crystal. Or my comb set." Mira did not answer. She was likely imagining her own funeral.
-
The road sloped. And then, finally, the trees thinned.
You sat up straighter, spine aching, lips numb. Snow gave way to black stone walls that rose like the edge of the world itself. Jagged, bleak, and utterly unwelcoming. No banners. No color. Just dark spires and shuttered windows like watching eyes. The carriage rolled through the open gates of the Grand Duke's estate, wheels cracking over frozen stone.
It felt like a tomb. A very large, very expensive tomb. You pressed your forehead to the glass. "Oh, gods." You whispered, voice flat. "It's worse than I imagined." The carriage jerked to a halt. A footman opened the door. You didn't move.
"I'm not going out there until someone confirms the Duke is missing at least three teeth." You said. Then. A voice. Quiet. Low. Controlled. "Lady (Your Name), I presume." You blinked. And turned your head.
He was standing at the base of the stairs. Alone. Tall. Straight backed. Clad in a coat as black as the stone behind him, trimmed with fur, snow still melting on the shoulders. His gloves were on, his scarf loose around his neck, dark hair brushing the sharp line of his jaw.
And his face- You had braced for something hideous. The capital's rumor mill had done its usual dance. He's unsightly. He's malformed. He never shows his face in public because the ice warped it in the womb.
But this. No one had warned you he'd look like this. The Grand Duke was beautiful in the way a sword is beautiful. Cold, gleaming, and dangerous to touch. His eyes were dark, unreadable. His mouth unreadable. His everything unreadable.
You stared. For too long. Then caught yourself, scowled and finally stepped out of the carriage like your feet weren't half frozen and your heart hadn't just thumped a little too hard.
He gave a single, shallow bow. "Zayne Li." He said. "Grand Duke of the North. Welcome." You didn't return the bow.
You crossed your arms, tilted your chin, and studied him through narrowed lashes. "You're not what I expected." You said plainly. A pause. His gaze didn't flinch. "Neither are you."
There was something distant in the way he looked at you. Not disdain. Not interest, either. Like he'd filed you away in his mind already, categorized you into something neat and unthreatening. It irritated you more than disgust would've.
"Well." You said, brushing snow from your sleeve. "I suppose that's the first thing we'll have in common." He didn't smile. You hated that you sort of wanted him to.
Just then the doors opened behind him. Warmth flickered inside, firelight, finally. But the air between you remained frigid.
He turned, motioned for you to follow. Didn't offer an arm. Didn't wait to see if you came. Typical.
You took one step forward. Then paused. Looked back at the empty woods. You'd cursed this day since the moment your parents sealed the deal. An arranged marriage. An alliance no one asked your opinion on. A frozen, forgotten land.
But somehow. Now that you'd seen him. This didn't feel like exile anymore. It felt like the start of something else. Something you didn't yet have words for. And that, more than anything, terrified you.
-
The castle was quiet. Too quiet. Even the firelight seemed hesitant.
The walls were dark stone, lined with old tapestries in muted shades of silver and navy and the air inside still carried a chill that no hearth could fully banish. Somewhere, in some wing of this sprawling estate, servants moved unseen. Efficient. Silent. Like the building itself taught them how to vanish.
You sat on the edge of a velvet chair in a sitting room that smelled faintly of wax and cold steel, legs curled under you despite the formality of your dress. You hated the way your gown looked here, too bright, too soft, too southern. It belonged in a ballroom. Not in a room like this. Not in a life like this.
Across from you, Zayne Li stood near the fire, half in shadow. He hadn't removed his gloves and part of you wondered if he ever did. His coat hung open now, revealing a fitted high collar shirt and understated jewelry, black metal against pale skin. His posture was always straight. Always.
And his voice, when he spoke, was smooth and sure. "The ceremony will be modest. No press, just the required houses and a few witnesses from court. Two days from now, if the mountain passes stay open." You nodded. Or meant to. But your body had gone still, breath caught somewhere in your throat.
You always thought your wedding would be the happiest day of your life. Silk petals raining from balconies. Music trailing into moonlight. The city cheering your name. You thought you'd be radiant. Laughing. In love. And now. It was going to happen in the snow. With a stranger who barely looked at you. A man carved from silence. A man you didn't choose.
Zayne's voice paused. He turned slightly. Studied you. "You've gone quiet." He said. "Is something wrong?" You blinked, startled. Your lips parted. And then it all came out. "This isn't how it was supposed to be." Zayne tilted his head. "The ceremony?" "No." You stood, suddenly burning. "All of it. The marriage. You. This place. I didn't ask for this."
A beat. Stillness. Zayne's expression didn't change. "I see." "Do you?" You took a shaky breath, hands curling at your sides. "Because you've barely said a full sentence to me since I got here. You're cold and quiet and you're not even trying."
He didn't answer. He didn't react. It only frustrated you more.
"I've spent my entire life being groomed to be a queen. And instead, I was sold off like a pawn to the furthest edge of the continent to marry a man who looks at me like I'm something he forgot to order." Your voice cracked, not from weakness but rage. "I didn't want this. I don't want you."
There it was. All of it. Too loud. Too honest. Your throat felt raw. Your heart thundered with the aftermath of your own voice. You looked at him. And instantly froze. His face was unreadable. But his eyes... They weren't angry. They weren't hurt, either. They were something worse. They were disappointed.
"I-" Your voice faltered. "I didn't mean" "I"m sorry." The words stunned you silent.
Zayne exhaled, long and low. He stepped closer to the fire, not to you, and his voice gentled in a way you hadn't heard before. "Your parents insisted you were in agreement. That you understood the purpose of the arrangement. I didn't know they kept it from you." You blinked at him.
Zayne, the terrifying Duke of the North, looked almost tired.
"If I had known you were being forced." He continued. "I wouldn't have agreed either. I have no desire to harm someone who didn't choose this." You swallowed hard. Your anger cooled in your chest. Turned to something tight and sour. "You're not mad?" "At you?" Zayne glanced at you again, calm. "No. I can't fault honesty."
You dropped back into the chair, slowly, the cold catching up to you again. "I thought you'd yell." You admitted, voice small. "Or... Throw me back into the carriage." "You said I was cold." He said. "I don’t yell." You almost laughed. Almost. "Then what now?" You asked. "We just cancel it?" "That's up to you."
Zayne looked at you then, really looked. And for a breathless second, you felt something unfamiliar settle over the room. Not affection. Not warmth. Just... Truth.
"If you wish to leave, I will make the arrangements. You are not bound until you say the words. Not to me. Not to the King." You stared at him, heart pounding. And he added, quietly. "Rest assured, I won't love you. That was never part of the plan."
You flinched. You weren't sure why. "Then why agree to any of it?" He looked back at the fire. "Because the King wants me watched. And marrying someone from court means I'm never truly alone." His mouth curved, not into a smile, but into something cold. "Even a Grand Duke isn't free."
You didn't say anything after that. You couldn't. Because in that moment, sitting across from a man you thought was a monster, you realized the truth. He was just as trapped as you. And far less cruel than the rumors said.
-
It had been a day. Almost.
Half a day since you had told Zayne Li. The Grand Duke of the North, Lord of Snow, apparently secret political hostage, that you needed time to decide whether to marry him.
He hadn't argued. He hadn't said anything at all after that. Just gave you a curt nod and left the room, the hem of his coat trailing behind him like a shadow that had learned how to walk.
You had slept fitfully. Woke early. Refused breakfast. Changed your gown three times. Yelled at no one. Which, in your maid Mira's eyes, was a full sign of emotional apocalypse. "Would you like to walk, my lady?" Mira had asked gently that morning, helping you tie the last ribbon of your cloak. "If I stay inside another minute, I'll scream." You replied.
So now here you were. Wandering through endless gray stone halls and austere corridors that smelled faintly of old paper and colder decisions. The castle was too big. Made for war, not for living and everything echoed. Even your footsteps.
Occasionally, you passed servants. They bowed, quickly. Too quickly. Eyes never meeting yours. You frowned at one, an older woman carrying linen, who nearly dropped the whole bundle just to get away faster.
"Do I look like I bite?" You asked Mira as you passed a second young girl who flinched when you brushed past. Mira, as usual said nothing. Her silence was respectful. Possibly afraid. "What?" You pressed. "Out with it."
"It's just… The staff, my lady. There are some rumors." She admitted carefully. You paused in the hall. Turned. "Rumors?" "About you." "Which ones?" "…All of them." You blinked. Then let out a short, incredulous laugh. "Let me guess. Arrogant. Loud. Entitled. Too many gowns." "And you burned your last suitor's love letters in front of him."
"He cheated on me with a stable boy. He deserved it." "And… That you threw a soup bowl at a maid once." You gasped. "That wasn't soup, it was saffron paste. And she tried to pluck my brows in a moving carriage." Mira said nothing, but the smile was there, hidden, almost proud.
You huffed and pulled your gloves tighter. "Well. Let them gossip. If I'm to be trapped in this glacier of a castle, I may as well be the villain."
You turned the next corner. And walked straight into a child. Both of you yelped. The boy, maybe six or seven, stumbled backwards, nearly falling flat onto the stone floor. A bundle of books fell from his arms, scattering at your feet.
His face paled. And the fear in his eyes was instant, wide. You saw it hit him all at once. The stories. The name. You. He opened his mouth, about to stammer some apology, maybe cry. "Oh gods." You muttered. "Don't faint. That would be dramatic. Even for me."
The boy froze. You bent down, knees creaking, gown gathering snow dust from the stone and carefully picked up a book. Then another. You handed them to him without ceremony. "There. You didn't break anything. Well. Except my pride." The boy blinked. "You're… not mad?" You gave him a slow look. "Are you mad?" He shook his head quickly. "Then neither am I."
You stood, smoothed your cloak, and gave him a nod. "Watch where you're going next time, Little Lord Disaster." To Mira's visible horror, you ruffled his hair. Then you turned and walked off, trailing silk and confusion behind you like perfume.
-
Elsewhere in the northern Wing. "She's not what I expected." Came the voice of a young man leaning against the table, arms crossed.
Zayne said nothing. His eyes were fixed out the tall glass windows, where frost climbed the edges of the panes in careful, bitter spirals.
Two retainers stood with him. Commander Richard, ever loyal and ever critical and Advisor Ren, whose job mostly consisted of soothing political fires and watching Zayne like a man waiting for a dam to break.
"The wedding may not be necessary." Richard said. "Her family's already pledged their fealty. You've played your part." "She hasn't decided." Zayne murmured. "Then make the decision for her." Richard snapped. "Send her back before this becomes more complicated." "It already is." Ren said mildly.
Zayne's gloved hands rested against the windowsill. Cold pressed against the glass. He didn't flinch.
"And if she stays?" Ren asked. "What would you have us do then?"
Zayne didn't answer. Because something outside caught his eye.
In the garden, white and empty but for a cluster of hardy snow roses. There you stood. Hair half loose, hands bare despite the cold, laughing softly as the little boy from earlier threw a ball of snow at you with all the seriousness of a duel. You caught it midair, barely, and pretended to stumble. He howled with delight.
The child ran to show you something, a patch of tiny, pale buds poking out of the snow. You bent low, gently brushing the frost aside.
Zayne watched you tilt your head, eyes narrowed thoughtfully as if trying to understand the bloom rather than judge it. You said something to the child. He threw his arms around your waist, clinging like a vine. You didn't push him off.
You just stood there, a spoiled southern noblewoman with cold stung cheeks and silk gloves wet from snow, surrounded by what everyone assumed you'd hate. And you smiled. Soft. Unpolished. Real.
Zayne looked away first. He turned from the window. Returned to his men. His voice, when it came, was quiet but certain. "Leave her be. For now."
-
The dining hall was too quiet.
No music. No chatter. Not even the clink of cutlery from elsewhere in the estate. Just the echo of fire crackling in the hearth, too far from your seat to warm your fingers and the faint hum of wind pressed like a ghost against the windows.
You sat at the long end of the table, dressed in a wine colored gown that looked far too alive for a room like this. At the other end, Zayne, still in his usual shades of black and brushed steel, sat calmly, eyes fixed on his untouched wine.
Two candles burned between you. The light didn't reach his side. You hated how dramatic it looked. You also hated how your nerves felt real for the first time in days. You picked at the meat on your plate, then set your fork down.
"I've decided." You said. Flat. Crisp. "I'll marry you." Zayne"s head tilted slightly. But he didn't look surprised. Just curious. "May I ask what changed your mind?"
You shrugged, reaching for your goblet like it might give you something better to say. It didn't. "I needed a change of scenery." You replied, looking at your reflection in the dark surface of the wine. "The capital was... Suffocating. Too many eyes. Too many expectations. Here, at least, no one's pretending to like me."
He didn't laugh. But his mouth twitched, barely. As if he found something in that statement familiar. "I see." He said.
You glanced up. He was watching you again, not intensely, just... Steadily. With that same unsettling stillness. "Besides." You added, looking down again. "I've already ruined the scandal papers. Might as well commit."
That made him smile. A real one this time. Small. Short lived.
"Then let's make a deal." He said, setting his own goblet aside. "One year." You blinked. "What?" "We remain married for a year. No talks of annulment. No divorce. After that, if either of us wishes to dissolve the marriage, we do so quietly. No drama. No retaliation."
You looked at him. "You've done this before, haven't you?" "Made deals?" He said. "Many." You considered it. Your fingers traced the rim of your glass. "Fine. One year." He nodded. "One year."
Then, as if it cost him nothing, he added. "You can have anything you want. Clothes. Horses. A wing of the estate to yourself. Servants. Gardens. A title in court. I'll make the north a palace if you ask."
You looked at him carefully. "Anything?" "Anything." He confirmed. "Except love." You raised an eyebrow. "That's all?" "That"s all." You leaned back in your chair, arms crossing over your chest. "Honestly, I thought you were going to say no affairs. Or no running off with a gardener."
"You're free to do as you like. I don't ask for loyalty." His voice was calm. But something about that quiet hurt more than it should've. "Only honesty."
You stared at him. He looked like a man who had given up something long ago. You weren't sure what. But it made your chest feel strangely hollow.
You turned your gaze to the window beside you, where snow was falling in a slow, patient blur. "Love's overrated anyway." You said, as if it meant nothing. "It's never done anyone any favors."
Zayne didn't reply. He just nodded, once. And poured you more wine.
-
It wasn't the wedding you imagined.
There were no gold draped balconies. No orchestras playing beneath flowering arches. No endless applause, no tearful speeches, no grand train sweeping through marble halls while noble ladies dabbed at their eyes with silk.
There was only snow. White, endless, soundless snow, falling in thick drifts outside the old stone chapel tucked behind the northern estate’s east wing. Only a handful of witnesses lined the pews. Mira, two of Zayne's retainers, a court officiant from the capital and a few senior staff in formal uniform. Everyone else had been dismissed or sent to their duties.
It was a quiet ceremony. But not a cold one.
The chapel was lit with dozens of tall candles. Not gaudy ones, not the kind you'd grown up with, carved and gilded and scented with peony oil but plain, white tapers placed carefully in brass holders. They bathed the room in amber light. The stone floors were dusted with petals, scattered like someone had walked through with shaking hands. And the altar, though small, was dressed in fine velvet cloth embroidered with silver threads that shimmered like snow when you moved past.
You had expected something hollow. But this. It felt holy. Like it meant something. Which only made it worse. Because the truth was, this wasn't a wedding for love.
It was a pact. A treaty sealed in noble blood. A rope tied around both your throats to keep you tethered to the King's plans. And you stood there, in silk and sapphires, feeling like a lie wrapped in something sacred.
When the ceremony went on, you almost missed your cue. The officiant said your name once, and you blinked, startled from thought. Your eyes drifted up from the chapel floor. And landed on Zayne.
He stood across from you in full ceremonial dress. Dark coat trimmed in deep silver, high collar, clean lines. His gloves were gone. The first time you'd seen his hands bare. Long fingers with scars, quiet strength in the way they rested calmly at his sides.
His hair had been combed back neatly, though a few strands defied order near his temple. He looked... He looked wonderful. Sharp and still and so composed you almost hated him for it.
He wasn't watching you. His gaze was fixed forward, unmoving, jaw tight. But when the officiant asked if he would take you, formally, by name, with the required titles, he said. "I do." Without hesitation. Without resentment. Just calm, clear certainty. Like this was always going to happen.
When your turn came, your voice didn't shake. "I do." It surprised you, how easy it was. How final.
You hadn't asked for rings. There would be no exchange of vows beyond what the court required. No kiss. No fanfare. Just signatures and sealed parchment, and the tightening of invisible chains that now bound you to the North.
But as you turned beside him to face the small, quiet room of strangers and servants, you felt something shift.
Zayne offered you his arm. You took it. And for the first time, he looked at you, really looked at you and gave a faint, near imperceptible nod. Not approval. Not affection. Something simpler. Respect. You weren't sure why it mattered. But it did.
Later, as you sat together at the small wedding supper, not a banquet, not even a proper feast, just a meal of warm soup, roasted venison, and a modest white cake glazed with sugared pine. You found your voice again.
"It wasn't... Terrible." You said, cutting into the cake with practiced elegance. "Not the wedding I pictured. But the flowers were real. The chapel was tasteful." Zayne sipped from his glass. Non alcoholic, you notice. "And the groom?" You paused. Looked at him over the rim of your fork. "Well dressed. Surprisingly tolerable."
A flicker of something passed between you. Not quite humor. Not quite warmth. But not nothing. He inclined his head. "The bride." He said evenly. "Was... Not as terrifying as the castle staff suggested." You scoffed. "I'll take that as a compliment." "It was meant as one."
Another silence. This one... Companionable. You sat together well past the meal, neither of you in a rush to retire, speaking quietly of nothing. The weather, the estate's seasonal patterns, your thoughts on how the soup had too much thyme.
It wasn't romantic. But it wasn't distant either. Somewhere, beneath the ashes of what this marriage could've been, a small ember flickered. Not of love. Not yet. But of something gentler. Perhaps even trust.
And as the snow fell quietly outside the tall chapel windows, you thought, maybe, just maybe, that would be enough. For now.
-
The study was colder than expected.
It always was, you were starting to learn. The North didn't yield warmth easily, not from its people, not from its stones, not even from its hearths.
You'd taken to wearing heavier sleeves and fur lined robes when indoors, something you once swore you'd never be caught dead in. Now, it was second nature.
Zayne had summoned you to the long table in his private study that morning. No greeting. No conversation. Just an opened ledger and a quiet. "Sit. There's something you should understand." You did as told, not because he ordered it, but because you were curious.
The table was lined with maps, ledgers, sealed reports. The duchy's pulse laid bare in ink and wax. Border routes, grain quotas, tax logs, merchant inspections. It should’ve been boring. Exhausting. But you leaned in. You read. And most surprisingly, you listened.
Zayne spoke without flourish, fingers tapping on page corners and trade routes, explaining the seasonal patterns of the northern passes and the way southern traders manipulated tariffs depending on court rumors. He spoke of your name, your new name, now inked on edicts. You would need to sign three that week. And attend one grain appeal in his place.
He had expected fully, sincerely, for you to argue. To sneer. To yawn. To say something biting like 'I wasn't married off to be your clerk, you know.' But you didn't. You just turned the page. And kept reading.
For a while, the room was nothing but rustling parchment and the quiet scratch of your pen as you practiced the formal signature of your duchess title. It was neat. Sharp. Slightly curved at the end. The only hint of vanity you allowed it.
You looked up once, mid paragraph. "The Windmere route." You said, tapping the map. "Why not reroute the goods through the southern ridge to avoid the freeze?" Zayne paused. You weren't being clever. You were being... Practical.
He looked at you then, long and quiet, and for the first time, not like you were a burden he had to tolerate. But like you were something intended for this. Not the North, maybe. But for this game. This kind of power. This kind of responsibility.
He had forgotten. That you were never raised to be idle. You were raised in a palace. Educated alongside princes. You'd spent your life preparing to one day become a queen, sharp enough to spot deceit behind praise, graceful enough to rule with a smile, ruthless enough to do it without flinching.
You weren't just arrogant. You were capable. Spoiled, yes. Vain, perhaps. But you were no fool.
Zayne looked down at the papers again. "The southern ridge is viable." He murmured. "But prone to rockfall. Still, the idea has merit. I'll send an inquiry to the engineering guild." You raised an eyebrow. "Was that a compliment?" "It was an acknowledgment." "Close enough."
He looked at you again. Your hands, now ink stained. The small furrow between your brows as you scanned another trade list. The quiet way you absorbed knowledge not because you had to, but because you wanted to.
You weren't what the capital said you were. You never had been. And for the first time since the wedding, Zayne realized this alliance might not be just bearable. It might be dangerous. In the best possible way.
-
By the third week, you knew which window to stand near for warmth in the morning.
Not because anyone told you, they wouldn't dare, but because you'd figured it out yourself. The long hall in the west wing caught the sun just so at dawn, striking through the frost laced glass and painting gold across the stone.
You liked to stand there with your tea, cupping the heat between your palms, listening to the silence settle around the castle.
It was a different kind of life. Slower. Colder. Heavy in ways the capital never was. But you weren't flinching anymore.
Mira had noticed it before you did. She stopped waking you so early, stopped fussing over what you wore to morning meetings. One day she'd asked, almost too casually, if you wanted to change the floral arrangement in the entrance hall.
You blinked, confused. "Why?" She'd just smiled. "Because people look at them now. And they'll wonder what you meant by it." You didn't answer then. But you did change them. You picked winter hellebores. White, pale green, and sharp around the edges.
The staff no longer hesitated before knocking.
They stopped bowing as deeply, stopped watching you like you'd throw a shoe. And they began to ask things. Small things, what color you wanted for the invitations to next month's court gathering. Whether you'd prefer to be addressed formally or not in council minutes. One footman even asked if you'd like the kitchen to start making your southern tea blend again.
You declined. Told him you'd gotten used to the bitterness of Northern blackroot. You surprised yourself when you realized that wasn't a lie.
What caught you most off guard was how the estate began to... Answer back.
You hadn't noticed it at first. But the floors stopped groaning under your boots the way they used to. The draft near your sitting room lessened after the servants, unprompted, sealed the cracks near the fireplace. Even the horses, nervous at first, let you near them now without that wary twitch. It was subtle, but it was there.
The North, for all its silence and pride, had begun to make space for you. Not because you forced it. Not because you asked. Because you stayed.
And still, Zayne barely said a word.
You passed in the halls sometimes and he nodded, polite. At council, he listened, occasionally asked your thoughts, rarely disagreed. There was no warmth in it, but no contempt either. You got the sense he was watching, not because he doubted you, but because he... Wasn't sure what to do with what he was seeing.
He'd expected a fight. Expected tantrums. Expected velvet clad boredom and a long string of complaints. What he got instead was a woman who read tax ledgers by the firelight and corrected trade reports without blinking. A woman who learned names.
Who started walking the estate grounds alone, in furs you once swore were hideous, now worn without comment. You were still proud. Still sharp. Still you. But something had shifted.
-
The first time you handled an appeal without Zayne present, no one argued.
You sat at the table where he usually did, back straight, fingers steepled the same way he'd taught you. The farmer who came in stammered at first, unsure how to speak to you. You let him. Waited. Asked him what he needed, and why. Listened. Asked three questions he didn't expect.
When you gave him the grain, the entire room seemed to still. You didn't bask in it. Didn't gloat. But when you left, the clerk followed after you, silent until the hallway bent and the chamber doors were well behind you.
"You're not what they say." He said, not looking at you. You smiled faintly, hands clasped behind your back. "I never am."
Zayne heard about it before dinner.
He said nothing when you entered the dining room that night, just glanced once in your direction when Mira poured the wine.
Later, when he left before dessert, you found a single folded document placed beside your plate. The engineering report for the southern ridge trade route, the one you had suggested.
There was no note. But your name had been written into the recommendation as co-signer. Your signature. Beside his.
That night, as you returned to your chambers, the snow outside had begun to fall again. Soft, quiet, not a storm but a hush. The kind that settles gently. The kind that blankets everything before you know it.
You stood by the window in your nightdress, watching the snow catch the moonlight. It didn't feel like a cage anymore, in fact, it never does. It felt like something else entirely. Not freedom, no. But belonging.
And somewhere down the hall, behind a door you had yet to open fully, Zayne sat alone at his desk, still pretending not to notice the way the North was shifting around you.
Still pretending not to notice you at all.
-
Six months had passed since your arrival.
The Northern estate was unrecognizable now. Not because it had changed but because you had. The stone walls no longer loomed. The cold no longer bit. And the silence, once sharp and watchful, now felt... Familiar.
You had long since memorized the path from the chapel to the western tower. You knew the cook's preferred salt measurements and which bannermen still held quiet suspicions about the Crown. You sat at council without Zayne sometimes. They listened to you now.
No one doubted your place here anymore. And tonight, the North celebrated.
The Midwinter Feast held just past the first full moon after the solstice was not like the southern revels you had grown up with. It wasn't extravagant. There were no courtiers draped in silk, no jeweled masks or peacocks brought in from the coast.
The Northern celebration was quieter, grounded. Rougher in its joy. Fires lit in every hearth, children weaving pine into the bannisters, the halls alive with scent of smoked meats, honeyed rootcakes, clove wine.
You wore furbtrimmed velvet tonight, slate gray and deep green, a color Mira said matched the pine and would soften your usual sharpness. Your hair was swept up, held by a pin carved from northern antler. No diamonds. No gold.
You hadn't expected to feel beautiful. But you did. And when Zayne offered you his arm in the entrance hall, quiet, gloved, tailored to perfection in dark wool, something in you stilled.
He looked at you. You looked back. No nod. No smile. But something passed between you. A flicker. A recognition. Not husband and wife. Not yet. But something.
He led you into the great hall just as the fire crackled to life at the head of the room, a roar of warmth blooming out across the stone. The people stood, not for show, but out of custom. Every retainer, every steward, every knight and handmaid rising as the Duke and Duchess entered side by side.
Zayne's fingers flexed slightly against your gloved hand. You didn't let go. He guided you to your seat at the long table. You sat without a word. The music started, soft at first, the low pluck of strings and a slow drum rhythm. The feast began.
You made it halfway through a sip of clove wine before you noticed it. The looks. They were different now. Not wary. Not scrutinizing. Just... Watching. Softly. Not in fear. But hope.
As if the image of you and Zayne sitting shoulder to shoulder at the head of the hall, not fighting, not cold, just together meant something.
It hadn't occurred to you before now. You were no longer just filling a space here. You had become part of the image.
Just then, Zayne leaned slightly toward you as one of the bannermen made a toast, long winded and boisterous, praising the North's resilience and the 'iron spined grace' of its Duke and Duchess. You rolled your eyes very slightly.
Zayne noticed. "You hate speeches." He murmured, lips near the rim of his cup. "So do you." "Difference is, they make you look good when they exaggerate." You arched a brow, biting back a smile. "And you?" "I never look good."
You glanced at him then. The slope of his jaw lit by firelight, the way his eyes followed the hall without ever resting too long on one face.
"You're wrong." You said quietly, surprising even yourself. Zayne blinked. Just once. But you saw it. Then, softer than before, he replied. "You look... At ease tonight."
You didn't say anything. Not right away. Because yes, you were. And maybe, that was the problem.
Hours passed.
Laughter rose and fell. The younger knights danced, the older bannermen drank too much and reminisced. A bard sang an old soldier's song in the corner by the hearth. You kept expecting something to interrupt it, a moment of awkwardness, a reminder that this was all performance.
But it never came. At some point, your arm brushed Zayne's when you reached for another drink. He didn't pull away.
Later, a woman tripped and spilled cider at your feet. You steadied her. Zayne offered his handkerchief. You both acted without thinking.
It wasn't romance. It wasn't affection. But it was something solid. Something warm. Something earned.
You looked at him again, hours into the night, when your cheeks were flushed with heat and drink and light, and he was watching the snow fall outside the window.
You wondered, not for the first time, what it would feel like if he ever looked at you like that. You didn't say it. You didn't dare. But Zayne turned then. As if feeling your gaze. He said nothing. You didn't look away. And in the flicker of silence that passed between you, amid firelight and clove and soft music in the background.
Something in your chest cracked just slightly. Like a window someone had left ajar.
-
You didn't go straight to bed.
Not after the feast, not with the music still echoing faintly through the halls and the scent of pine and clove still clinging to your sleeves. Mira had offered to help you undress when you returned, but you waved her off. Told her you were tired. That you needed a moment.
It wasn't a lie. Not exactly.
You stood alone by the window instead, your fingers curled around the edges of the fur lined mantle, eyes fixed on the snow beyond the glass. It was falling heavier now, thick and slow, blanketing the courtyard below in silence. The sky was bruised gray and quiet. The only sound was the distant creak of settling stone.
The fire behind you had dulled to an amber glow. And still, you hadn't moved. Not even when your fingers began to go cold.
You were trying to name it. The feeling blooming behind your ribs. The thing that had been quietly, slowly unfurling in the hollow space you once kept full with pride and defiance and preened sarcasm.
You had been raised to marry for duty. You had practiced smiling through silks, studied flattery like scripture. You were meant for politics and position, not for sentiment. Love had always felt like a fable for lesser women. Or bored ones. Or desperate ones.
You were not meant to love. And yet. Your hand, still gloved, curled against your side.
You saw it now. All the ways it had happened, quietly, beneath the frost. The slow, creeping kind of affection that didn’t announce itself, just settled into your routine like breath.
It wasn't the way Zayne spoke. He rarely did but the way he listened. The way he passed you maps without explanation, trusting you'd understand. The way his presence no longer felt like pressure, but gravity. Something you leaned into without realizing.
You remembered the first time he offered you his arm. He didn't look at you. Didn't smile. But his hand had been steady. Unmoving. Like a pillar.
You remembered the winter afternoon he'd passed you a letter addressed to your father without a word, the wax still unbroken, the gesture quiet, respectful.
You remembered the corner of his mouth twitching when you insulted the southern lords under your breath at council. The way he coughed, once, to hide a laugh.
You remembered how, after your first grain appeal, he’d left his signature beside yours on the final edict, equal, not above.
And tonight… Tonight, when you stood beside him in the hall, wrapped in firelight and the murmurs of your people, he hadn't looked away from you when you spoke. Not once.
You sat slowly at the edge of your bed, loosening the laces of your gown, your fingers fumbling. Not from cold. Your chest felt too tight. Not painful. Just full. Like you were holding something too large in too small a space.
You pressed a hand to your heart as if that would help. It didn't. "I love him." You whispered aloud and the words felt too soft for how real they were.
There it was. A truth, finally named. You had fallen in love with the Duke of the North. With Zayne. Not because he was kind. Not because he doted or swooned or chased. But because he didn't.
Because he stood still and steady and let you come to him, without forcing it. Because he left space for your pride, for your sharpness, for your name. Because he made room without saying he had. And because he didn't pretend to love you. Not once.
That, maybe, was what undid you the most. He had never lied about it.
Your throat burned. Not with tears. You weren't crying. But with something deeper. Something like fear. Because you remembered what he told you once, plainly, honestly, without cruelty. "I can give you anything. Everything. But love."
You hadn't cared, then. You thought you never would.
But now you sat alone, half undressed and trembling slightly from the weight of it all. The snow thickening outside, the fire slowly dying behind you and you realized how cruel it was to be given a place, a title, a life… And still be denied him.
Not his presence. Not his loyalty. But the one thing you had finally, unexpectedly, stupidly given him without asking in return.
Love.
You pressed your fingers to your lips. As if to stop it. As if it could be undone. But it couldn't. It was too late now. You loved him. And worse still You weren't sure he ever would love you back.
-
The snow was soft that afternoon.
Not the kind that howled or cut across your cheeks, but the quiet kind. Pale and slow, like ash drifting from a fire long since extinguished.
You walked beside him, gloves tucked into gloves, boots crunching lightly through the frost laced path near the stables. No guards. No servants. Just the two of you and the low gray sky above the North.
It had been peaceful lately. Calm. But calm had never meant safe. You could feel it in your bones. The shift in air before something breaks. The weight of something unsaid pressing harder with every step.
Zayne didn't speak much. He never did. But you had learned to read him. The subtle twitch of his jaw, the way his fingers flexed inside his gloves, the way he watched the ground more when he was thinking too much.
So you stopped walking. He took one step more, then noticed. Paused. You didn't look at him right away.
"I need to say something." You said finally. "Not because I think you'll like it. And not because I expect anything back." Zayne's brow furrowed, but he didn't interrupt. He just waited like he always did.
You turned to him fully, snow catching in your hair. And for the first time, you said it aloud without flinching. "I love you."
He didn't move. The silence that followed wasn't cold, just heavy. Like snow piling on rooftops. Like breath held too long.
You smiled, small, sad. "I'm not saying it to guilt you." His throat worked around a reply that didn't come. "I know what you said before. That you couldn't love me. That you wouldn't. I believed you." You swallowed. "But I think you once told me you value honesty. So I thought... You deserved mine."
He didn't meet your eyes. He just said, low, almost a whisper. "… I see." You nodded once. "If it's too much, we can end it here. We haven't reached the one year mark. You're free to ask for a divorce." You didn't mean to say it so calmly. But your voice had learned to sound composed when your chest was falling in on itself.
Zayne didn't answer right away. You turned away slightly, to give him the dignity of silence. But then. "I do." He said. It came so softly, you almost didn't hear it. You turned back to him. Slowly.
He was looking at you now and there it was. His face wasn't indifferent. It wasn't cold. It was shattered. Eyes wide. Lips parted. Expression drawn tight like someone trying to stay still while bleeding.
Your voice caught. "If you mean it." You said gently. "Then why do you look like you're about to cry?" He didn't answer. You took one step closer, your boots crunching lightly in the snow. "Why are you looking at me like I just tore your heart out, when you're the one asking to leave?"
Zayne flinched, almost too subtly. But you knew him well now. You saw it. He looked away again. Shoulders squared, chest rising once, slow, deep. Like a man preparing to be cold. To be cruel. Because it was easier than being bare.
You didn't touch him. You just spoke quietly. "If you value honesty in me, Zayne... Then you should try being honest with yourself." Another breath. "I can't love you." He said finally. His voice hoarse. "I'm not-" He stopped. Then added, almost in a whisper. "I shouldn't."
You stared at him for a long time. Let it hang there. Let him squirm in the truth of it. You didn't ask why again. Because if he wanted to tell you, he would. And if he didn't, then maybe he couldn't bear to hear it said aloud.
You took a step back. "I agree with the divorce." You said softly. "If that's what you want." He didn't nod. He didn't speak. You looked at him one last time, your breath fogging between you.
His eyes searched your face like he was trying to memorize it. Or maybe trying to find something in it that wouldn't hurt.
But you didn't give him anything else. You turned gently, snow whispering beneath your boots and started back toward the estate. Then, just before you disappeared into the stone archway that led inside. You paused. Glanced over your shoulder. And said, almost too softly. "… Don't forget to keep warm."
Then you disappeared into the hall. And left him there alone in the snow with all the honesty he'd ever asked for. And none of the warmth he didn't know how to accept.
-
He stood there long after you were gone. Long after the snow had started to settle on his shoulders. On his gloves. On the stone path behind him.
The courtyard was empty. But it felt louder than any battlefield. Zayne didn't move. Didn't speak. Didn't even blink.
You had looked back at him. Soft, beautiful, tired. And still, still, you had managed to tell him to keep warm. Like it was a kindness. Like it wasn’t the last thing you would ever say to him as his wife. His jaw tensed. And still, he did nothing.
He hadn't meant for it to happen. But it had.
Somewhere between the ink stains you left on his reports and the way you always knocked before entering, even after marriage. Somewhere in the sound of your laughter when you mocked the southern nobility or the quiet dignity with which you held the estate on his behalf.
Somewhere in between your fire and your silence. Zayne had fallen in love.
Not the thunderous kind. Not the storm. But the slow, creeping sort that seeps into the marrow. The kind you don't notice until you can no longer stand without it.
He loved you. And he'd known it for weeks now.
It should have been easy to say. To admit. He was a man of logic, wasn't he? Precision. Discipline. He could recite treaties from memory, navigate terrain in the dark, command armies with a flick of his hand. But this? This was different.
This was your hand reaching for his in public and him pretending it was only for show. This was the sound of your footsteps in the hall and the way it made something in him settle like a wound that no longer bled.
This was the way he had learned the shape of your silences before your words ever came. And today, you had spoken honestly. Because of course you had. Because you were always braver than he was. "I love you." You had said. He had said nothing.
Because if he said it back, the world would shift. And he was so, so terrified of what might come next.
He remembered his father's voice, jagged with grief and rage. How he had spat Zayne's name like it was poison. 'You took her from me. You were never worth what it cost.' He remembered standing in front of his mother’s grave at five years old, too young to understand what death meant, only old enough to understand that it was his fault.
That to be born from love meant to destroy it. So when he grew up, he vowed never to take. Never to ask. And most of all. Never to love. But then there was you.
You with your spoiled temper and your perfectly sharpened tongue. You, who walked into the North like it was beneath you and then made it yours anyway. You, who once called his library 'pitiful' and then reorganized it better than the archivist ever had. You, who kissed a crying maid's forehead after she spilled your wine.
You, who said I love you with a kind of stillness that shattered him.
He hadn't wanted to hear it. Because once he heard it, he could never pretend again. And he knew, knew in his blood, that to keep you would mean to risk losing you. Forever.
But then you'd said it was okay to leave. And something in him cracked open. Because he didn't want to leave. And even worse. He didn't want you to leave.
His chest hurt. Not the kind of hurt that startled. The kind that lingered. Like a second heartbeat. Wrong. Loud. Heavy.
And then he was moving. He didn't remember deciding. But he turned. He left the courtyard behind. Snow slushed under his boots. The wind picked up, brushing hair into his eyes.
He walked fast. Then faster.
By the time he reached your wing of the castle, he was breathless. He raised a hand to knock. Then stopped. His knuckles hovered over the wood.
He stared at the door. You were on the other side. Maybe packing. Maybe crying. Maybe already deciding what to do next, what to do without him.
He pressed his palm flat against the door instead. Cold wood. Steady rhythm of his pulse beneath it. He closed his eyes. And said, just once, too soft for you to hear. "I lied." His voice broke on the words. "I lied..." Then, quieter. "I love you."
-
The knock never came. Instead, the door eased open without warning, and there he was.
Snow dusted his shoulders. His breath came shallow like he'd run the whole way here. He looked as if he'd walked straight through a storm just to stand in your doorway and maybe he had.
You sat on the edge of your bed, still half dressed from the walk earlier, fingers curled in the furs as if gripping for composure. Your eyes met his.
You opened your mouth. But he beat you to it. "I lied." His voice was hoarse. Sharp at the edges. You didn't move. "I lied when I said I wanted the divorce." He stepped forward. "I lied when I said I couldn't love you. I-" He faltered. His throat worked around the rest. "I do. I do love you."
You blinked. Once. Twice. He kept going, even though his voice cracked. Even though his hands had curled into fists at his sides like he was bracing for battle.
"I thought it would be easier." He said. "To let you go. To not give it a name. To pretend this- you- was something I could survive losing." Your lips parted, but your voice was gone. Lost somewhere between breath and heartbeat.
Zayne stared at you like he was memorizing. Or begging. "But you were honest." He whispered. "So now I have to be too." You rose slowly. The silence was heavy. Full. "You love me?" You said softly. His breath hitched. You stepped toward him, tentative, watching him like he might vanish if you moved too fast.
Then he nodded. And in the space between your exhale and his inhale, the distance vanished. He kissed you like he was trying to undo every quiet cruelty he'd inflicted. Like he was trying to apologize for every word he never said. His hands framed your face, trembling slightly, as if this was something fragile and sacred.
You kissed him back with the same ache. The same hunger. The same slow burn that had lived between you since that first quiet night in the snow. No more pretending. No more silence. You fell into bed tangled together, the cold forgotten, the world narrowed to breath and skin and truth.
It wasn't rushed. It wasn't reckless. It was reverent. Like prayer.
He touched you like he was learning you. Not just your body, but your name, your temper, your honesty. You undid his layers like they were armor and left nothing between you.
And when he moved inside you, slow, steady, aching. He whispered your name against your throat like a vow. Not of marriage. But of love.
The thing he had tried so hard to run from. The thing he now gave you, wholly.
Later, much later, you lay with your head tucked beneath his jaw, his arms wrapped around you, fingers tracing the edge of your spine. The fire had burned low again. But neither of you noticed the cold.
Zayne was quiet for a long time. You didn't push. Then, almost inaudibly, he said. "My mother died giving birth to me." You opened your eyes slowly. "She was sick." He continued. "The physicians warned her. Said her body wouldn't survive the strain. But she wanted a child. A legacy." A long pause. "Me."
You didn't interrupt. He took a breath. "My father… Blamed me. Said love made her reckless. That if he hadn't loved her, he would've stopped her. That love- Not me- Was the real curse." Your hand slid to his chest. Over his heart.
Zayne's voice dipped. Hollow. "I told myself I'd never love. Never want. Not like that. That it wasn't worth the price." Silence again. Then. "But you made it so hard not to." You shifted, barely, enough to look up at him. His face was unreadable in the dark, save for the glint of firelight catching wetness near his lashes.
"I was terrified." He whispered. "That if I loved you, I'd lose you too." You pressed a kiss to his chest. Right over his heartbeat. "I'm not gone." You murmured. "I'm here." He pulled you tighter. Like he didn't believe it. Like he didn't deserve to. But he didn't let go. Not again. Not now.
-
You woke before the fire.
Before the light crept in through the window and melted the frost from the glass. Before the hallways stirred, and the kitchens rumbled to life. Before even the ravens began their low calls from the tower eaves.
And beside you, Zayne slept.
It was the first time you'd seen him like this. Bare of title and tension. His hair mussed, one hand curled near your pillow, his lips parted slightly in sleep. The sharp lines of his face were softened in the quiet, younger somehow like the boy he never got to be.
You didn't touch him. Not yet. You just lay there, tucked close to his warmth, the weight of his arm still draped across your waist as if his body had decided something before his mind could.
He had said he loved you. Not once. Not flinching. You had said it first, and he hadn't run. That alone felt like a miracle.
The morning passed gently.
Zayne had never been one for idle chatter but now his silence felt different. Not closed, but careful. Like every word he chose to say had weight, and every word he didn't say could be read in the way he poured your tea before his own. In the way he noticed your gloves were damp and handed you a new pair without asking. In the way he didn't leave the breakfast table until you did even though he had meetings lined up before midday.
Nothing dramatic. Nothing loud. But the quiet had changed. And the staff noticed. Of course they did.
You caught the glances from the maids, subtle, barely masked smiles as you passed hand in hand down the corridor without realizing. Mira nearly dropped her tray when she found the two of you seated beside each other in the garden, Zayne gently brushing snow off your shoulder like it was habit.
Even the steward, a man who once flinched when you raised your voice at a miscounted ledger, now greeted you with something bordering on warmth. Respect, yes. But also relief.
The North had held its breath for months. Waiting. And now, it exhaled.
By the time the evening fire was lit, the castle felt lighter. No announcements were made. No formal declarations. But a few of the kitchen hands quietly brought out the sweet mead that hadn't been touched since the wedding.
And the scullery maid, barely fifteen, gave you a single pine sprig tied in red ribbon and stammered. "It's good luck, m'lady. For lovers." You were about to correct her. But you didn't. You took it. Smiled. Tucked it into your sleeve.
That night, as you sat beside Zayne in his study. Not for business, just out of habit now. He glanced at you over the rim of his cup. "What is it?" You asked. He didn't answer immediately.
Then, setting his drink aside, he said in that calm, unreadable voice of his. "You were always meant for more than court pageantry." You arched a brow. "Is that supposed to be a compliment?" He didn't blink. "Yes."
You snorted quietly and looked away but you couldn't stop the smile from tugging at your lips. And Zayne saw it. Saw you. And for the first time in what felt like forever, he allowed himself to smile back. Small. Barely there. But real.
-
It had been one year.
One full cycle of winters, one snowmelt and spring thaw, one harvest beneath Northern skies. Your chambers no longer felt borrowed. The halls no longer echoed when you walked them. The people no longer whispered when they said your name.
You were Duchess of the North. Not by blood. Not just by title. But by presence. By love.
And the man beside you, the man once called cold and cruel, kissed your temple before council meetings now. Ran his thumb down your wrist when you fidgeted with your ring. Watched you, always, like you were the only fire left in a storm ridden world.
Zayne was no longer a stranger in your bed. And you were no longer afraid to sleep with your heart bare beside him.
The messenger arrived mid morning. Wrapped in the sigil of the royal court, wax crimson and sharp, the scroll as stiff as the men who escorted it.
The steward paled when he brought it to your shared study. "From the capital." He said, bowing low. "His Majesty's seal." Zayne took the scroll without a word. You stood from your seat at the table beside him, coming to read it over his shoulder. No hesitation now, no need for permission.
You were both silent as your eyes scanned the words. A review of the arrangement. A reminder of royal interest in the North. A courteous invitation to the capital to discuss the future of the union. Polite. But pointed. You exchanged a look with Zayne. He didn't speak. Not yet.
His jaw twitched once. The way it always did when he was trying not to start a war. "They want to know why we're still married." You said dryly. Zayne's fingers folded the scroll in one smooth motion and handed it back to the steward. "Burn it."
"My lord?" "They've received our answer already." He looked at you. "A year without petition. Without hesitation." You raised a brow. "Without killing each other." His lips twitched, almost a smirk. "A miracle, really." You smiled and stepped closer, adjusting the collar of his coat without thinking. "Shall I write a letter instead?"
"Not necessary." He leaned in, his voice low near your ear. "If they come, they’ll see what they didn't expect." "That we're in love?" "That we're dangerous." He murmured. "When united."
The court sent envoys anyway. Dressed in velvet and suspicion.
You and Zayne received them at the steps of the estate. Side by side, hands brushed, posture straight. You didn't bow. He didn't smile. But you did not look afraid.
The chamberlain, an old man with a younger duke's ambition glinting in his eyes. Looked between you both with something close to confusion.
"No petition for separation?" He asked. "No need." You said. "Is that all?" Zayne didn't flinch when the man tried again. "The Crown had concerns-" "Then the Crown should learn." Zayne said calmly. "To mind its own borders."
You nearly laughed. But you didn't. You just reached for your husband's hand, right there, in front of the envoys. And to their quiet horror, he didn't pull away.
They left two days later.
No statements made. No demands left behind. Only the lingering smell of southern perfumes and polished court shoes that had never known snow.
But the castle remained unchanged. Still quiet. Still winter bound. Still warm where it mattered.
And Zayne? Zayne found you in the solar that night, your hair down, eyes half lidded from wine and relief. He didn't say anything. Just crossed the room. Sat beside you. And laced your fingers together.
Like a promise. Like the peace he had once thought impossible but now claimed for himself. With you.
-
You found the note on your desk after breakfast. No seal. Just your name, written in Zayne's handwriting, neat, slanted, precise.
Meet me at the western stables by sundown. Wear something warm.
No explanation. You turned the note over. No other writing. No signature. Just that. And somehow, that made your heart beat faster than any letter he'd ever signed
Your Husband.
By the time the sky began to bruise violet with early dusk, you had wrapped yourself in the thick wool cloak he gifted you last winter. The one you said made you look like a walking curtain, and he said made you look like you ruled the forest.
You made your way to the western stables, boots crunching gently through the slush where the snow had melted unevenly. There was no one there but Zayne.
He wasn't in armor or furs. Just a heavy coat, dark gloves, his hair faintly mussed from the wind. He stood beside a horse saddled for two, yours.
When he saw you, something eased in his shoulders. He reached for your gloved hand in greeting, then led you toward the saddle without a word. "You're not going to tell me where we're going?" You asked. "I will." He said. "When we get there."
Which was, of course, typical. So you mounted behind him and held on, your arms wrapping around his waist, face resting against his back as the horse started its slow, steady gait up the path that wound behind the estate.
It took half an hour. By the time you reached the ridge, the sky had gone dusky blue, and the stars had begun to bleed through.
Zayne dismounted first, then helped you down with a care that always surprised you. Not because he was gentle, but because he always had been, even when you hadn't noticed. "What is this place?" You asked, stepping closer.
Then you saw it. A small clearing. Carefully kept. A circle of winter lilies, rare in the North, almost sacred. A stone bench nestled at its center, new and unweathered, carved with unfamiliar script.
You blinked. "What is this?" You asked again, softer now. Zayne stood beside you, gaze steady. "A place that belongs to you." You turned to him, heart tight in your chest. "I had the gardeners plant them months ago." He said. "They only bloom after the first full snowmelt. You said once… You missed flowers." You swallowed hard. "I didn't expect them to live." He added. "But they did."
There was a pause. He turned to the bench, brushed snow from its surface with one gloved hand, then stepped aside so you could read the inscription. You leaned in. Your breath caught. It wasn't your name. It wasn't a title. It was a single line.
For the one who brought spring to the North.
You didn't speak for a long time. Neither did he. And in the quiet, he knelt slightly to adjust your cloak, tugging it tighter around your shoulders as the wind picked up.
You stared down at him. "What are you doing?" You asked, voice barely steady. His eyes flicked up. "You get cold easily." He said simply. You looked at him, really looked at him and felt your chest ache.
"I love you." You whispered. "You know that, right?" He didn't nod. Didn't smile. Just stood slowly, took your hand, and pressed a kiss to your knuckles, reverent, silent, real. "I know." He said. And that, somehow, was enough.
-
It started with the nausea.
At first, you thought it was the stew. Then the cold. Then nerves. But as the weeks went on and your appetite vanished and your hands shook when you stood too fast, the healer said what you'd already begun to suspect.
"You're with child." She said gently. "Nearly two moons along." You blinked. Swallowed. And for a moment, your body felt too small to hold the weight of the words.
Zayne was in his study when you found him. Not brooding. Not buried in maps. Just... Still.
He always looked calm when he worked, but today, there was something quiet behind his eyes. The kind of quiet that comes before snowfall.
He looked up as you entered. And before he could speak, you whispered. "Zayne." He stood. Instantly. Came toward you. You weren't sure how to say it. Not right away. So you placed your hand over your belly, still flat, still unchanged and looked up at him. "I'm pregnant."
It took him three full seconds to react. And when he did, it wasn't what you expected. He didn't smile. He didn't speak. He didn't move at all.
"Zayne?" His face, so often unreadable, gave way to something hollow. His hands twitched once at his sides, like he didn't know what to do with them. Then he turned away from you. "Zayne." You repeated, louder this time. "Did you hear me?" "I heard." His voice was hoarse.
You stepped closer, confusion curling behind your ribs. "You're not happy?" Silence. Then, finally, he turned back and he looked pale. Like something had drained from him entirely. "You could die." He said softly. You froze. He didn't say it like a warning. He said it like a memory.
"I shouldn't have-" Zayne cut himself off. Pressed the heel of his hand to his brow. "I shouldn't have let this happen." "This?" You echoed. "This? Zayne, it's not a mistake." "I told you what happened to my mother." You stared at him. "This is different." You said.
He looked at you and there was no coldness. No cruelty. Just fear. Raw. Naked. The kind that cracks even the strongest man from the inside out.
You softened. "Zayne…" But he flinched when you stepped closer. And that broke something in you. "I'm not her." You whispered. "And you are not your father." His hands trembled.
You reached out again, this time slower and rested both palms on his chest.
"I know you're afraid." His eyes closed. "But I'm not." He opened them. And he looked at you like you were made of glass. Not because you were fragile, but because he was the one who might break you.
"I've lost too much to call this a blessing." He said. "I don't know how to carry joy without waiting for the grief." You leaned forward, pressed your forehead to his. "Then we carry it together." A breath. Then another. And finally, finally, his arms came around you.
Tight. Fierce. Like holding you might stop the world from spinning. Like if he could keep you close enough, nothing would take you away.
That night, he didn't sleep.
He stayed awake long after your breathing slowed. One hand on your stomach. As if guarding something sacred. As if the simple weight of his touch might keep you both safe.
He never said the word father aloud. But in the silence, in the way he held you, he didn't need to.
-
You had barely slept.
The fire was low, and the wind outside had softened to a hush, like even the snow had decided to stay still for once. You sat near the hearth in a robe far too large for your shoulders, wrapped around yourself like armor, with your feet tucked under you and a shallow bowl of diced fruit on the table nearby.
Your appetite had been strange lately. Some days you couldn’t keep anything down. Others, all you wanted were apples. Fresh. Peeled. Chilled. Served in silence. Zayne had noticed. He always noticed.
You heard the door open gently behind you. No dramatic entrance, no voice calling your name. Just soft footfalls. Then the subtle weight of a blanket settling over your shoulders.
"You're cold." Came his voice, quiet, matter of fact. "I'm always cold now." You muttered, even as your body sank slightly under the extra warmth.
Zayne sat beside you on the fur lined bench, not touching you just yet. He smelled faintly of ink and snow and something grounding like the soft ashes of a fire that hadn't died. His coat was still on, dark and dusted with frost.
You looked at him sidelong. "You’re supposed to be in the study." You said. "I was." He replied, calmly. "Then I realized you'd been gone from bed for almost an hour." You blinked. "… You noticed?"
Zayne gave you a look. Not annoyed. Not even pointed. Just deeply Zayne. As if the answer had always been obvious. "You weren't sleeping well." He added, tone gentler now. "I could tell."
You didn't say anything at first. Your fingers curled under the blanket, resting low on your stomach. There wasn't much to feel yet, just the faintest pressure, the promise of what was coming. But Zayne had taken to watching you like something could shift at any second. Not in alarm. Just… Readiness.
His gaze dropped now to where your hand rested. Your breath caught slightly, not from discomfort but from that look. That look that lingered whenever he thought you weren't watching. Like he was trying to memorize your shape before it changed again.
You spoke before he could stop you. "You're afraid." He didn't flinch. Just breathed. Low. Measured. "Yes." You turned, blanket shifting as you moved. Your knees came up a little, body angled to face him.
"You're not scared of the baby." You said, carefully. "Not exactly." "No." You tilted your head. "You're scared of losing something again." He said nothing to that. Didn't need to.
You reached for him slowly, your palm resting against the back of his hand, where his fingers were curled against the bench, the knuckles pale from how tightly he'd been holding still.
"I know it's early." You said softly. "And I know… Nothing's certain. But I'm here. And I feel okay. I promise." His fingers shifted under yours, wrapping around them without thinking. Like instinct. "I'm not trying to be distant." He murmured. "I just- if I let myself get too close-" "You'll fall harder." You finished for him.
Zayne’s jaw clenched just slightly, and you squeezed his hand. "You're already close, Zayne." That startled something in his eyes. Not fear. Not sadness. Just truth.
He nodded, just once, a soft, almost broken gesture. Then reached up and brushed a piece of hair from your cheek, fingers trailing behind your ear. The motion was slow, reverent. Like touching something fragile that might vanish. "I don't know how to do this." He admitted. "But I want to. With you."
It wasn't romantic, not in the way people from the capital would speak of it. There were no flowery confessions, no breathless declarations under moonlight. Just that one line, small, honest and heavy enough to anchor your heart.
You leaned forward until your forehead rested against his. "Then we'll figure it out." You whispered. "Together."
He stayed there like that for a while your forehead to his, your breaths mingling. The quiet hum of the fire was the only sound between you, until your stomach turned again, gently, not with pain, but with life.
Zayne blinked. Then, carefully, he lowered a hand, slow and unsure and rested it over the place where your child was growing. It was the first time he had done it without hesitation. You didn't speak. But you watched him.
And when his eyes closed and his shoulders loosened for the first time in weeks, you felt something shift, not outside, but within him. Hope. It was blooming. Quiet. Scared. But real.
-
The winter air bit deeper than usual.
It wasn't the cold outside, it the kind that covered the mountains in frost and cloaked the pines in white. It was the cold inside the walls of your own body. Beneath your skin. A cold that settled behind your ribs and made everything ache.
You were eight months pregnant. Eight slow, merciless months. The bloom of your belly had once brought you a soft joy, a fluttering warmth, the secret thought of we made this. But now, even that warmth had dulled beneath the weight of your bones trying not to splinter beneath it.
The nausea had returned sharp, acidic, worse than it had ever been in the first trimester. Your ankles were swollen. Your spine felt like it had been carved by a blade. Every breath caught beneath your ribs like it didn't quite know if it wanted to go all the way in. Every step sent pain crawling up your sides like vines.
You didn't tell Zayne. Not all of it.
He already watched you too closely. Already hovered, quietly, pretending not to. Already read your face in the way a starving man studies the sky for rain. As if the first sign of suffering meant the storm he feared most was coming.
You didn't want to give him that. You couldn't.
That morning, you had gotten out of bed too fast. Your head spun, vision swimming. But Mira was already waiting with a warm basin and a scarf for your hair. "Let me—" "I'm fine." You lied. "I just stood too quickly."
You dressed. Painted your lips. Smiled like you weren't hollowed out by the effort it took to sit upright for longer than half an hour. The Duchess of the North did not crumble, not when the staff looked to her like she was more than just a consort now. Not when the people left flowers at the chapel doors praying for your safe delivery. Not when Zayne still refused to hope but couldn't help trying.
So you walked. You reviewed supplies. Toured the nursery. You smiled.
Until your body betrayed you again.
It happened in the western corridor. You'd finished inspecting the linen stores when the world tilted.
A wave of pain hit you so hard you gasped, not a sharp pain but a deep one, something that curled low in your back and spread outward like fire in a paper room. You reached for the wall. Missed. The corridor swam. And then an arm. Strong. Familiar. Cold from the outside.
Zayne.
He had rounded the corner just as you collapsed. He caught you before you hit the stone. You couldn't speak. Could barely breathe. Mira shrieked. A servant dropped a tray somewhere behind you.
Zayne didn't say a word. He scooped you into his arms as if you weighed nothing, like you were glass he had already seen broken once and wasn't going to let shatter again. "Call the physician." He barked over his shoulder.
He carried you to your chambers and didn't leave your side, not even when the healer arrived, not when the maids lit the fire, not when Mira whispered about warm cloths and ginger tea. He held your hand like it was the only thing keeping you tethered to the earth.
You were fine. That's what the healer said. No early labor. No bleeding. Just stress. Overexertion. A body nearing its limits. You had pushed too far. And Zayne said nothing the entire time. Not until everyone left. Not until the room was dark again.
You turned your head and found him still there. Sitting on the edge of the bed, hunched forward, both hands clenched tightly, one in yours, one against his lips like he was trying to stop something from coming out.
"Zayne…" You started. Then stopped. Because he was crying. Not with sound. Not with force. But quietly. Steadily. Like something inside him had been holding a dam shut for eight long months and had finally cracked beneath the weight.
"I can't…" He whispered. "I can't lose you." You stared at him, stunned. He didn't even seem to realize the tears were falling. "I never asked for a child." He said, voice hoarse. "I only ever asked for you." His hand trembled in yours.
"I would have given you the world. Burned the crown. Renounced the estate. All of it. If it meant keeping you." He finally looked at you, and the heartbreak in his face was unbearable. "Don't give birth." He said. "Don't do this. Don't die. Please."
You broke then. Your throat closed. Your heart cracked. And hot tears spilled down your cheeks. You wanted to scream at him, not in anger, but in agony. Because you loved this child.
You loved it like a second heartbeat. Like a shared secret. You loved it because it was yours, because it was his. Because even if he couldn't say it aloud, you knew it had been made in love.
You opened your mouth. Shut it again. In the end, all you could do was whisper through the tears. "Zayne… I want this baby. I love them." He didn't answer. You reached up, wiped a tear from his cheek with a shaking thumb. "I know you're scared. I am too. But I am still here."
"I don't know how to keep you here." He choked. "I don't know how to love you without being afraid." "Then love me through it." You said. "And I'll love you back." A silence. Then he leaned forward, pressed his forehead to yours, and breathed, ragged, hollow, alive.
"I can't lose you." He said again. "You won't." You whispered. "But I need you to believe that or I'll lose you before anything else can take me." And that's when he finally pulled you into his arms, gently, carefully, mindful of the curve of your stomach, the ache in your spine, the tears on your cheeks.
He held you for a long, long time. And neither of you said anything else. Because sometimes, the only thing love can do in the face of fear… Is stay.
-
It started in the early hours before dawn.
The fire had burned low. The snow outside hadn't stopped for two days, soft and constant, like the heavens were mourning something you didn't yet understand.
You had woken up to a strange kind of ache. Dull. Low. Not sharp enough to scream, not sharp enough to wake Zayne, whose arm lay gently over your waist, hand curved protectively across your belly even in sleep.
You waited. Waited to see if it would pass. You didn't want to wake him. Not again. Not after yesterday. But then it came again. Stronger this time. And lower.
You shifted slightly. His hand followed the movement. You could feel his breath warm against your shoulder.
"Zayne." You whispered. He stirred. Blinked once. Then twice. "What is it?" "I think…" You swallowed. "I think it’s starting."
He sat up immediately. The sleep vanished from his face like it had never been there at all. His eyes flicked to your face, then to your body, then to the floor. Already halfway to summoning the physician before you could even shift upright.
You reached for his wrist. "It's early still. It's not- It's not bad." Zayne stilled. Turned to you. And you realized. He wasn't breathing. You sat up slowly, teeth clenched against the pain in your spine. "It's just pressure right now. No bleeding. No water. Not yet." "I'll call her anyway." He said quietly. And he did.
By mid morning, the pain came in waves.
Gentle. Then sharp. Then gone again, as if it had never been there. The healer confirmed it. Labor had started. Slowly. Naturally. No signs of complication. You were strong. The child was strong.
You should rest, she said. So you tried. But rest was difficult when Zayne kept pacing the length of the room like a soldier waiting for siege.
You were bundled in blankets near the hearth, a warm cloth pressed to the back of your neck. The fire crackled. Outside, the snow fell in heavy, heavy silence. You watched Zayne's silhouette cross the room again. Then again. Then again.
"You're making me more tired." You said hoarsely. He stopped mid step. "I'm sorry." You gave him a weak smile. "You'll wear down the carpet." He tried to smile back. It didn’t quite reach his eyes.
You saw it again, that fear. That slow, creeping dread that lived beneath his ribs. He was trying so hard to hide it. You held out your hand. He came immediately. Kneeling beside you.
You ran your fingers through his hair, smoothing it back, just once. "I'm going to be okay." He didn't nod. Just pressed his lips to your palm and held it there.
By afternoon, the pain had changed.
It wrapped around your spine. Pulled at your muscles. Burned low in your hips. You began to tremble. Mira and the midwife arrived quietly, hands practiced, calm voices like wind through dry leaves.
Zayne didn't leave the room. Not once. Even when they tried to send him away. Even when they said it might be hours yet. Even when they told him it would be hard, and bloody, and painful, and not for men like him to witness. He stayed. At your side.
And then… The quiet broke. You screamed once. The pain hit like fire. A crackling white, hot force that ripped through your lower half and left you gasping. Your hands clenched the sheets. Sweat poured down your face.
You heard someone say your name. And then you felt it, Zayne's hand. Firm. Steady. Wrapping around yours like it was the only anchor left in the world.
You blinked through tears and found him beside you, pale, jaw tight, eyes locked on yours. "I'm here." He whispered. "I'm right here." Another wave hit. You sobbed. Mira held your shoulders. The midwife said something about breath. About pushing. About holding on.
But all you saw was Zayne. Not stoic now. Not silent. But terrified. Not of blood. Not of pain. But of you slipping away.
You sobbed his name. And he leaned forward pressing his forehead to yours, lips brushing your temple, hand trembling in yours.
"Stay with me." He said. Another contraction tore through you. "Please." He choked. "Stay." You tried to smile. Tried to speak. Couldn't. But you squeezed his hand. And he squeezed back like he'd never let go.
-
The snow hadn't stopped.
By the time the midwife cried out that it was time, it was near midnight. The wind howled outside the stone walls like it was mourning you already.
Your skin was pale. Too pale. Zayne could see it. Even through the haze of heat and pain, even through the shaking of your arms as you were braced upright and told to bear down, he saw it.
And he knew. He knew before the rest of the room did. Something was wrong.
-
The healer whispered to the midwife. Urgent. Tight. Mira tried to hold your shoulders steady, but you were already swaying. There was so much blood. Too much.
Zayne's mouth moved soundlessly. His feet wouldn't obey him. His heart beat so hard he couldn’t hear anything but your cries. You screamed again, not from the baby, but from tearing. From something inside you, ripping.
Zayne reached for you. The midwife pushed his hand away. "She needs to focus." Someone hissed. "She needs me." He snapped.
Your hands searched blindly. And then he was there. You caught his wrist and gripped like you were drowning. Your eyes locked with his, wild and terrified and already too far away.
"Zayne-" "I'm here." He whispered. "I'm here, I swear-" "I'm scared." You gasped, voice trembling. "I don't- I can't-" "Yes, you can. You've come this far. You're almost there, just a little more-" "Promise me." You choked. "Promise me you'll hold them. If I- If I don't-" "Don't say that." "Zayne." "Don't say it."
The baby's first cry came just before the silence. Wet. Piercing. Beautiful. The kind of cry that breaks open the heavens.
And then… You went quiet. Too quiet.
The midwife caught the child in trembling arms. Mira took it, turned, vanished into the corner. Someone sobbed.
Zayne didn't look at the baby. He was still looking at you. Your head had tilted back. Your lips were parted. Your hand had gone slack in his.
The healer pressed her fingers to your throat. Said nothing. Then again to your wrist. Still nothing.
Zayne's body folded. Not gently. Not slowly. Like a man struck in the chest with an arrow that no one else could see. "No." He breathed. "Your Grace-" "No-" His voice cracked. "No, no, I- She- She promised- she said-"
"My Lord." It was Mira now, kneeling beside him. Her eyes wet. Her arms holding the newborn child. "She's gone." He couldn't look at the baby. He couldn't even breathe. "She-" His voice collapsed. "She just- She was just here-"
The hours after blurred.
He didn't cry at first. Just sat beside you, one hand still clutching your cooling one, the other tangled in the folds of your ruined sheets, as if he could stitch the moment back together if only he held tight enough.
Mira tried to hand him the child. He didn't move. "She wanted you to." he whispered. Still, he didn't take her. "My lady said-" Mira's voice broke. "She said if she didn't make it, she wanted you to hold them first."
Zayne looked up slowly. And finally, finally, he took the child into his arms. And wept. He didn't weep like a man defeated. He wept like a man destroyed. Like someone who had loved too hard and hoped too much and learned, in the end, that even a year, even a lifetime, was not enough.
The baby, tiny, wrinkled, breathing, nestled against his chest and made a sound, soft and new and alive. Zayne bent his head. Pressed his lips to the newborn's brow.
And whispered, brokenly. "She was the warmest thing I ever held." And then. "I will never let them forget you." Not your voice. Not your fire. Not the way you taught a cold man how to love.
Even if it destroyed you. Especially because it destroyed you
[ⓒdark-night-hero] 2025°
: I'm not really confident into writing that giving birth part because I've never done it. I had to rely on the stories I've read and that one time I witness a childbirth in person and of course, research. So I'm sorry if it ain't accurate to the realistic way of giving birth.
: Also, Zayne's bloodline is actually cursed by a witch, which is in Sylus story. The princess from Caleb is from Xavier. Also, I'm back to uni tom so bye.
clark kent 𝐱 𝐫𝐞𝐚𝐝𝐞𝐫
𝐭𝐚𝐠𝐬 / 𝐭𝐰 – 18+, MDNI, secret admirer au, slowburn romance, mutual pining, radical acceptance and love is the real punk rock, yearning, clark is a softie, smut, piv, oral sex (f!recieving), fingering, creampie, touch starved clark Kent
word count: 18k
Summary: You start getting anonymous love notes at the Daily Planet—soft, sincere, impossibly romantic. You fall for the words first, then realize they sound a lot like Clark Kent. And just when the truth begins to unravel, you start to suspect he might be more than just the writer… he might be Superman himself.
notes – not proofread and my first full Clark Kent fic!
— reblogs comments & likes are appreciated
The first thing you notice isn’t the coffee—it’s the smell.
Sharp espresso. The exact blend you order on days when the world feels like sandpaper. Dark, hot, and just a touch too strong. But when you reach your desk and set your bag down, the cup is already waiting for you, balanced on the corner of your keyboard like it belongs there.
A single post-it clings to the cardboard sleeve, the ink a little smudged from condensation:
“You looked like you had a long night.”
No name. No heart. Just that.
You stare at it for a second too long. The office hums around you, phones ringing, printers whining, the low buzz of voices, but your ears tune it all out as you reread the handwriting. Rounded letters. Slight right slant. You can’t place it.
And no one in this building knows your coffee order. You made sure of that.
Across the bullpen, Jimmy Olsen drops into his chair with a paper bag in his teeth and two cameras slung around his neck.
“Someone’s got a secret admirer,” he sings, catching sight of the note.
You glance up, but try to play it cool. “Could be a delivery mistake.”
He snorts. “Right. And I’m dating Wonder Woman.”
Lois, passing by with a stack of mock-ups under one arm, pauses just long enough to lift a perfectly sculpted brow. “Who’s dating Wonder Woman?”
“Jimmy,” you and Jimmy say in unison.
“Right,” she says, deadpan, and moves on.
You feel a little heat crawl up your neck. You pull the cup closer. The lid’s still warm.
You’re still turning the note over in your hand when Clark Kent rounds the corner. His hair is a little damp at the ends, like he didn’t have time to dry it properly, already curling from the late-summer humidity. His tie, striped, loud, and undeniably Clark, is halfway undone, the knot drifting lower by the second. His glasses are slipping down his nose like they’re trying to abandon ship.
He’s juggling three manila folders, a spiral-bound notebook balanced on top, a half-eaten blueberry muffin in his teeth, and what you’re almost certain is the entire city council’s budget report from 2024 spilling out of the bottom folder. It’s absurd. Kind of impressive. Very him.
“Clark, careful,” you call out, mostly on instinct.
He startles at the sound of your voice and turns a little too fast. The top file slips. He manages to catch it, barely, with an awkward swipe of his forearm, the muffin top bouncing to the floor with a quiet thwup. He rights the stack again with both arms now locked tight around the paperwork, and when he looks at you, he’s already wearing one of those sheepish, winded smiles.
“Morning sweetheart,” he says breathlessly. His voice is warm. Rough around the edges like he hasn’t spoken yet today. “Sorry I’m late. Perry wanted the zoning report and the express line was… not express.”
You don’t answer right away. Because his eyes flick toward your desk, specifically the coffee cup sitting at the edge of your keyboard. And the note stuck to its sleeve. He freezes. Just for a second. A micro-hesitation. One breath caught too long in his chest. It’s nothing.
Except… it’s not.
Then he clears his throat, loud and awkward, like he swallowed gravel, and shuffles the stack in his arms like it suddenly needs reorganizing. “New… uh, budget drafts,” he says quickly, eyes very intentionally not on the post-it. “I left the tag on that one by mistake—ignore the highlighter. I had a system. Kind of.”
You blink at him, watching his ears start to go red. “…You okay?”
“Oh, yeah,” he says, waving one hand too fast, almost drops everything again. “I’m fine, sweetheart. Just, you know. Monday.”
He flashes you the smile again, crooked, a little boyish, like he still isn’t sure if he belongs here even after all this time. That’s always been the thing about Clark. He doesn’t posture. Doesn’t strut. He’s got this open-face sincerity, like the world is still worth showing up for, even when it kicks you in the ribs.
And you’ve seen him work. He’s brilliant. Way too observant to be as clumsy as he pretends to be. But it’s charming. In that small-town, too-tall-for-his-own-good, mutters-puns-when-he’s-nervous kind of way.
You like him. That’s… not the problem. The problem is….He turns to walk past you, misjudges the distance, and thunks his thigh into the sharp edge of your desk with a grunt.
You flinch. “You good?”
“Yep.” He winces, but manages a thumbs-up. “Just, uh… recalibrating my ankles.”
Then he’s gone, retreating to the safe, familiar walls of his cubicle, still muttering to himself. Something about rechecking source notes and whether anyone notices when hyperlinks are one shade too blue.
You’re left staring at the cup. At the note.
You run your thumb over the y again, the way it loops low and curls back. There’s something oddly familiar about the penmanship. Not perfect. Neat, but casual. Like whoever wrote it didn’t plan to stop writing once they started. Like they meant it.
You don’t say it aloud, not even to yourself, but the truth is whispering at the edge of your brain.
It looks like his. It feels like his. But no. That would be— Clark Kent is thoughtful, sure. He’s the kind of guy who remembers how you like your takeout and always lets you borrow his chargers. He holds elevators and never interrupts, and he stays late when you need someone to double-check your interview transcript even though it’s technically not his beat.
He’s the kind of guy who brings you a jacket during late-night stakeouts without asking. He’s the kind of guy who makes you laugh without trying. But he couldn’t be the secret admirer.
…Could he?
You glance toward his cubicle. You can’t see him, but you can feel him there. The way his presence always lingers, somehow warmer than everyone else’s. Quieter.
You tuck the note into the back pocket of your notebook.
Just in case.
-
You forget about the note by lunch.
Mostly.
The newsroom doesn’t really give you space to linger in your thoughts. Phones ringing, printers jamming, interns darting between desks like caffeinated ghosts. It’s chaos, always is, and you thrive in it. But even as you’re skimming through edits and fixing a headline Jimmy typo’d into a minor war crime, part of your brain keeps circling back to that one y.
By the time you head back from a sandwich run with mustard on your sleeve and a half-dozen emails on your phone, there’s another cup on your desk. Same order. No receipt. No name.
But this time, the note reads:
“The line you cut in paragraph six was my favorite. About hope not being the same thing as naivety.”
You freeze mid-step, bag still dangling from one hand.
You hadn’t published that line. You wrote it. Typed it, then stared at it for twenty minutes before deleting it. You thought it was too sentimental, too soft for the piece. You didn’t want to seem like you were editorializing. And yet… it had meant something. You’d loved that line.
And someone else had read it. Which means…
Your eyes flick up. Around.
The bullpen looks the same as always: fluorescent lights buzzing, keys clacking, the faint scent of stale coffee and fast food. Jimmy’s arguing with someone about lens filters. Lois is deep in a phone call, gesturing with a pen like she might stab whoever’s on the other end.
And then Clark. Sitting at his desk, halfway behind the divider. Fiddling with his glasses like they won’t sit quite right on the bridge of his nose. He glances up at you and smiles. Soft. A little crooked. Familiar in a way that does something deeply unhelpful to your chest.
You stare for a second too long.
He blinks. Looks down quickly. Reaches for his pen, drops it, fumbles, curses under his breath. You see the top of his ears turning red.
Something inside you shifts. The notes are sweet, yes. But this is specific. This is someone who read your draft. Someone who noticed the cut line.
You never shared it outside your initial file. Not even with Lois. You almost didn’t send it to copy at all. So… who the hell could’ve read it? How could they have seen it?
You return to your chair slowly, like it might help the pieces click into place. Your eyes catch the handwriting again.
The loops. The slight leftward tilt.
Clark does have neat handwriting. You’ve seen his notebook, all tidy bullet points and overly polite margin notes.
You tuck this note into your drawer. Next to the other one.
You don’t say anything.
-
Later that afternoon, the newsroom’s background noise crescendos into something louder. Lois and Dan from editorial locked in another philosophical brawl about media framing. You’re not part of the fight, but apparently your latest piece is.
“It’s fluffy,” Dan says, waving the printed article like it personally offended him. “It doesn’t do anything. What’s the point of it, other than making people feel things?”
You open your mouth, just barely, ready to defend yourself even though it’s exhausting. You don’t get the chance. Clark beats you to it.
“I think it was insightful, actually,” he says from across the bullpen, voice louder than usual. “And emotionally resonant.”
The silence is sharp. Dan arches a brow. “Listen, Kent. No one asked you.”
Clark straightens his tie. “Well, maybe they should.”
Now everyone’s looking. Lois leans back in her chair, visibly suppressing a smile. Dan scoffs and mutters something about sentimentality being a plague.
You just stare at Clark. He meets your eyes, then seems to realize what he’s done and looks at his notebook like it’s suddenly the most fascinating object in the known universe.
Your heart does something inconvenient. Because now you’re wondering if it is him. Not just because he defended you, or because he could have somehow read the line that didn’t make it to print, but because of the way he did it. The way his voice shook just a little. The way he looked furious on your behalf.
Clark is soft, yes. Awkward, often. But there’s something sharp underneath it. A quiet kind of intensity that only shows up when it matters. Like someone who’s spent a long time listening, and even longer choosing his moments.
You make a show of checking your notes. Pretending like your stomach didn’t just flip. You don’t look at him again. But you feel him looking.
-
The office after midnight doesn’t feel like the same building. The lights buzz quieter. The chairs stop squeaking. There’s an eerie sort of calm that settles once the rush hour of deadlines has passed and only the ghosts and last-minute layout edits remain.
Clark is two desks away, sleeves rolled up, tie finally abandoned and flung haphazardly over the back of his chair. He’s squinting at the screen like he’s trying to will the copy into formatting itself.
You’re just as tired, though slightly less heroic-looking about it. Somewhere behind you, the printer groans. A rogue page slides off the tray and flutters to the floor like it’s giving up on life.
Clark gets up to grab it before you can.
“You’re going to hurt yourself,” you say as he crouches to retrieve it. “Or fall asleep with your face on the carpet and get stuck there forever.”
He offers a smile, crooked and half-asleep. “I’ve survived worse. Once fell asleep in a compost pile back in high school.”
You pause. “Why?”
“There was a dare,” he says, deadpan. “And a cow. The rest is classified, sweetheart.”
You snort before you can stop it.
It’s late. You’re punchy. The kind of tired that makes everything a little funnier, a little looser around the edges. He sits back down, stretching long limbs with a groan, and you let the quiet settle again.
“You know Clark, sometimes I feel invisible here.” You don’t mean to say it. It just slips out, quiet and rough from somewhere behind your ribcage.
Clark looks up instantly.
You keep staring at your screen. “It’s all bylines and deadlines, and then the story prints and nobody remembers who wrote it. Doesn’t matter if it’s good or not. No one sees you.” You tap the corner of your spacebar absently. “Feels like yelling into a tunnel most days.”
You expect him to say something vague. Supportive. A standard “no, you’re great!” brush-off. But when you finally glance over, Clark is staring at you with his brow furrowed like someone just insulted his mom.
“That’s ridiculous,” he mutters. “You’re one of the most important voices in the room.” The words are firm. Not flustered. Not dorky. Certain. It disarms you a little.
You blink. “Clark…”
“No. I mean it, sweetheart," he says, almost stubborn. “You make people care. Even when they don’t want to. That’s rare.”
He looks down at his coffee like maybe it betrayed him by going cold too fast. You don’t say anything. But that ache in your chest eases, just a little.
-
The next morning, you’re halfway through your walk to work when you find it.
Tucked into the side pocket of your coat, the one you only use for receipts and empty gum wrappers. Folded carefully. Familiar ink.
“Even whispers echo when they’re true.”
You stop walking. Stand there frozen on the corner outside a coffee shop as cars blur past and someone curses at a cab a few feet away. You read the note twice, then a third time.
It’s simple. No flourish. No name. Just words, quiet, certain, and meant for you.
You don’t know why it lands the way it does. Maybe because it doesn’t try to dismiss how you feel. It just… reframes it. You may feel invisible, small, unheard, but this person is saying: that doesn’t make your truth meaningless. You matter, even if it feels like no one’s listening.
You fold the note gently, like it might tear. You don’t tuck this one into your notebook. You keep it in your coat pocket. All day.
Like armor.
-
By midafternoon, the bullpen’s usual noise has shapeshifted into something louder, one of those half-serious, half-combative newsroom debates that always starts in one cubicle and ends up consuming half the floor.
This time, it’s the great Superman Property Damage Discourse, sparked, unsurprisingly, by Lois Lane slapping a freshly printed article onto her desk like it insulted her directly.
“He destroyed the entire north side of the building,” she says, exasperated, as if she’s already had this argument with the universe and lost.
You don’t look up right away. You’re knee-deep in notes for your community housing series and trying to keep your lunch from leaking onto your desk. But the words still hit.
“To stop a tanker explosion,” you point out without much heat, eyes still scanning your page. “There were twenty-seven people inside.”
“My point,” Lois says, crossing her arms, “is that someone has to pay for all that glass.”
“Pretty sure it’s the insurance companies,” you mutter.
Lois raises a brow at you, but doesn’t push it. She’s used to you playing devil’s advocate. Usually it’s just for fun. She doesn’t know this one’s starting to feel a little personal.
And then Clark walks in. He’s balancing two coffee cups and what looks like a roll of blueprints tucked under one arm, sleeves rolled up and tie already loose like the day’s been longer than it should’ve been. His hair’s a mess, wind-tousled and curling near the back of his neck, and he’s got that familiar expression on, half-focused, half-apologetic, like he’s perpetually arriving a few seconds after he meant to.
He slows as he approaches, catches the tail end of Lois’s rant, and hesitates. Just a second. Just long enough for something behind his glasses to tighten. Then, without warning or warm-up, he steps in like a man walking into traffic.
“He’s doing his best, okay?” he blurts. “He can’t help the building fell. There was a fireball.”
The bullpen quiets a beat. Just enough for the words to settle and sting. Lois doesn’t even look up from her monitor. “You sound like a fanboy.”
“I just,” Clark huffs. “He’s trying to protect people. That’s not… easy.”
He lifts his hand to gesture, but his elbow clips the corner of his desk and sends his coffee tipping. The paper cup wobbles, then crashes onto the floor in a slosh of brown across your loose notes.
“Clark!” You shove back in your chair, startled.
“Sorry—sorry—hang on,” he lunges for a stack of printer paper, overcorrects, and knocks over another folder in the process. Its contents scatter like leaves in the wind. He flails to grab what he can, muttering apologies the whole time.
The tension breaks, not because of what he said, but because of the way he said it. Because he’s suddenly in a mess of his own making, trying to mop it up with a handful of flyers and an empty paper towel roll, red-faced and flustered.
You can’t help it. You smile. Just a little.
Lois glances sideways at the scene, then turns to you, tone dry as dust. “Well. He’s… passionate.”
You arch a brow. “That’s one word for it.”
She doesn’t notice the way your eyes linger on him. She doesn’t see the shift in your chest when you watch him drop to one knee, scooping up wet files with shaking hands, his jaw tight. Not from embarrassment, but from something quieter. Fiercer.
Because Clark hadn’t just jumped to Superman’s defense.
He’d meant it.
Like someone who knows what it feels like to try and still fall short. Like someone who’s carried the weight of people’s expectations. Like someone who’s watched something burn and had to live with the cost of saving it.
You know it’s ridiculous. You know it’s a stretch. But still… your breath catches.
He steadies the last folder against his desk, rubs the back of his neck, and looks up, right at you. Your eyes meet for a second too long.
You offer him a look that says it’s okay. He returns one that says thanks. And then the moment passes. You turn back to your screen, heart pounding for reasons you won’t name. And Clark returns to quietly drying his desk with a half-crumpled press release.
You don’t say anything. But you’re not watching him by accident anymore.
-
You’ve read the latest note a dozen times.
“Sometimes I wish I could just be honest with you. But I can’t—not yet.”
There’s no flourish. No compliment. Just rawness, stripped of any careful metaphor or charm. It’s still anonymous, but the voice… it feels closer now. Less like a mystery, more like someone standing just out of sight.
Someone with hands that tremble when they pass you a coffee. Someone who knows how your voice sounds when you’re frustrated. Someone who once told you, very softly, that your words matter.
You start thinking about Clark again. And once the thought roots, it’s impossible to pull it free.
-
You test him. It’s petty, maybe. Pointless, probably. But you do it anyway. That afternoon, you’re both holed up near the copy desk, reviewing your latest layout. Clark’s seated beside you, sleeves pushed up, his pen tapping lightly against the margin of your column draft. His knee keeps bumping yours under the desk, and every time, he apologizes with a shy smile that doesn’t quite meet your eyes.
You’re running on too little sleep and too many thoughts. So you try it. “You ever hear that phrase? ‘Even whispers echo when they’re true’?”
He looks up from the page. Blinks behind his smudged glasses. “Uh… sure. I mean, not in everyday conversation, but yeah. Sounds poetic.”
You tilt your head, eyes narrowing just slightly. “I read it recently,” you say, like you’re thinking aloud. “Can’t stop turning it over. I don’t know, it stuck with me.”
He stares at you for a beat too long. Then clears his throat and drops his gaze, pen suddenly very busy again. “Yeah. It’s… it’s a good line.”
“You don’t think it’s a little dramatic?”
“No,” he says too quickly. “I mean, it’s true. Sometimes the quietest things are the ones worth listening to.”
You nod, pretending to go back to your edits. But his pen taps a little faster. The corner of his mouth twitches. He’s trying to look neutral, maybe even confused. But Clark Kent couldn’t lie his way out of a grocery list.
And if he did write it, that means he knows you’re testing him.
You don’t call him on it.
Not yet.
-
Later that evening, he helps you file your story. Technically, Clark’s already done for the day. He could’ve clocked out an hour ago, could’ve gone home and slipped into his flannel pajamas and vanished into whatever quiet life he keeps outside these walls. But instead, he lingers.
His jacket is folded neatly over the back of your chair, sleeves still warm from his arms. His glasses sit low on his nose, catching the screen’s glow, one smudge blooming near the top corner where he’s pushed them up too many times with the side of his thumb.
He leans over the desk beside you, one palm braced flat against the surface, the other gently scrolling through your draft. His frame takes up too much space in that warm, grounding way. Shoulder brushing yours occasionally, breath warm at your temple when he leans in to squint at a sentence.
You’re quiet, but not for lack of things to say. It’s the way he’s reading carefully, like every word deserves to be held. There’s no red pen. No quick fixes. Just soft soundless reverence, like your work is already whole and he’s just lucky to witness it.
And his hands.
God, his hands.
You try not to look, but they’re impossible to ignore. Big and capable, yes, but gentle in the way he uses them, fingers skimming the edge of the printout like the paper might bruise, thumb stroking over the corner where the page curls, slow and absentminded. The pads of his fingers are slightly ink-stained, callused just at the tips. He smells faintly like cheap soap and newsroom toner and something you can’t name but have already begun to crave.
You wonder, just for a moment, what it would be like to feel those hands touch you with purpose instead of hesitation. Without the paper buffer. Without the quiet restraint.
He leans a little closer. You can feel the press of his shirt sleeve against your arm now, soft cotton against skin. “Looks perfect to me,” he murmurs.
It’s not the words. It’s the way he says them, like he’s not just talking about the story. You swallow, pulse jumping. You wonder if he hears it. You wonder if he feels it.
His eyes flick to yours for just a second. Something hangs in the air, fragile yet charged. Then the phone rings down the hall, and the spell breaks like steam off hot glass. He steps back. You exhale like you’ve been holding your breath for three paragraphs.
You don’t look at him as he grabs his jacket. You just nod and whisper, “Thanks.”
And he just smiles, soft and private, like a secret passed from his mouth to your chest.
-
You don’t go home right away. You sit at your desk long after Clark and the rest of the bullpen has emptied out, coat draped over your shoulders like a blanket, fingers toying with the folded edge of the note in your lap.
“Sometimes I wish I could just be honest with you. But I can’t—not yet.”
You’ve read it enough times to have it memorized. Still, your eyes trace the handwriting again. Careful lettering, no signature, just that quiet ache bleeding between the lines.
It’s the first one that feels more than just flirtation. This one hurts a little. So you do something you haven’t done before.
You pull a post-it from the stack beside your monitor, scribble down one sentence, no flourish, no punctuation.
“Then tell me in person.”
You slide it beneath your stapler before you leave. A deliberate offering. You don’t know how he’s been getting the others to you—if it’s during your lunch break or when you’re in the print room or bent over in the archives. But somehow, he knows.
So this time, you let him find something waiting.
And when you finally shrug on your coat and step into the elevator, the empty quiet of the newsroom echoes behind you like a held breath.
-
The next morning, there’s no reply. Not on your desk. Not slipped into your coat pocket. Not scribbled in the margin of your planner or tucked beneath your coffee cup. Just silence.
You try not to feel disappointed. You try not to spiral. Maybe he’s waiting. Maybe he’s scared. Maybe you’re wrong and it’s not who you think. But your chest feels hollow all the same—like something almost happened and didn’t.
So that night, you write again. Your hands shake more than they should for something so simple. A sticky note. A few words. But this one names it.
“One chance. One sunset. Centennial Park. Bench by the lion statue. Tomorrow.”
You stare at the words a long time before setting it down. This one’s not a joke. Not a dare. Not a flirtation scribbled in passing. This is an invitation. A door left open.
You slide it under your stapler the same way you’ve received every one of his notes, unassuming, tucked in plain sight. If he wants to find it, he will. You’ve stopped questioning how he does it. Maybe it’s timing. Maybe it’s instinct. Maybe it’s something else entirely.
But you know he’ll see it.
You pack up slowly. Shoulders tight. Bag heavier than usual. The newsroom is quiet at this hour, just the low hum of the overhead fluorescents and the soft, endless churn of printers in the back. You turn off your monitor, loop your coat over your arm, and make your way to the elevator.
Halfway there, something makes you stop. You glance back. Clark is still at his desk.
You hadn’t heard him return. You hadn’t even noticed the light at his station flick back on. But there he is, elbows on the desk, hands folded in front of him, eyes already lifted.
Watching you.
His face is unreadable, but his gaze lingers longer than it should. Soft. Searching. Almost caught. You feel the air shift. Not a word is exchanged. Just that one look.
Then the elevator dings. You turn away before you can lose your nerve.
And Clark? He doesn’t look down. Not until the doors slide shut in front of your face.
-
You tell yourself it doesn’t matter. You tell yourself it was probably nothing. A game. A passing flirtation. Maybe Jimmy, playing an elaborate prank he’ll one day claim was performance art.
But still, you dress carefully.
You pull out that one sweater that always makes you feel like the best version of yourself, and you smooth your collar twice before you leave. You wear lip balm that smells faintly like vanilla and leave the office ten minutes early just in case traffic is worse than expected. Just in case he’s early.
You get there first. The bench is colder than you remember. Stone weathered and a little damp from last night’s rain. Your coffee steams in your hands, and for a while, that’s enough to keep you warm.
The sky begins to soften around the edges. First blush pink, then golden orange, then the faintest sweep of violet, like a bruise blooming across the clouds. You watch the city skyline fade into silhouettes. The sun drips lower behind the glass towers, catching the river in a moment of molten reflection. It’s beautiful.
It’s also empty.
You wait. A couple strolls past, fingers laced, talking softly like they’ve been in love for years. A jogger nods as they pass, earbuds in, a scruffy golden retriever trotting faithfully beside them. The dog looks up at you like it knows something, like it sees something.
The wind kicks up. You pull your coat tighter. You tell yourself to give it five more minutes. Then five more.
And then—nothing. No footsteps. No note. No him.
Your coffee goes cold between your palms. The stone starts to seep into your bones. And somewhere deep in your chest, something you hadn’t even dared name… wilts.
Eventually, you stand. Walk home with your coat buttoned all the way up, even though it’s not that cold. You don’t cry.
You just go quiet.
-
The next morning, the bullpen hums with the usual Monday static. Phones ringing. Keys clacking. Perry’s voice barking something about a missed quote from the sanitation board. Jimmy’s camera shutter clicking in staccato bursts behind you. The Daily Planet in full swing, ordinary chaos wrapped in coffee breath and fluorescent lighting.
You move through it on autopilot. Your smile is small, tight around the edges. You’ve become a master of folding disappointment into your posture. Chin lifted, eyes clear, mouth curved just enough to seem fine.
“Guess the secret admirer thing was just a prank after all.” You drop your bag beside your desk, shuffle through the morning copy logs, and say it lightly. Offhand. Like a joke. “Should’ve known better.” You make sure your voice carries just far enough. Not loud, but not a whisper. Casual. A throwaway comment designed to sound unaffected. And then you laugh. It’s short. Hollow. It dies in your throat before it even fully escapes.
Lois glances up from her monitor, eyes narrowing faintly behind dark lashes. She doesn’t laugh with you. She doesn’t smile. She just watches you for a beat too long. Not with judgment. Not even pity. Just… knowing. But she says nothing. And neither do you.
What you don’t see is the hallway, just twenty feet away, where Clark Kent stands frozen in place. He’d just walked in late, coat slung over one arm, takeout coffee in the other. He had stopped just inside the threshold to adjust his glasses. He’d meant to offer you a second coffee, the one he bought on impulse after circling the block too many times.
And then he heard it. Your voice. “Guess the secret admirer thing was just a prank after all.” And then your laugh. That awful, paper-thin laugh.
He goes still. Like someone pulled the oxygen from the room. His hand tightens around the coffee cup until the lid creaks. The other arm drops slack at his side, coat nearly slipping from his grasp. His jaw tenses. Shoulders stiffen beneath his white button-down, and for one awful second, he forgets how to breathe.
Because you sound like someone trying not to care. And it cuts deeper than he expects. Because he’d meant to come. Because he tried. Because he was so close.
But none of that matters now. All you know is that he didn’t show up. And now you think the whole thing was a joke. A stupid, secret game. His game. And he can’t even explain—not without tearing everything open.
He stares down the corridor, eyes fixed on the edge of your desk, on the shape of your shoulders turned slightly away. He watches as you pick up your coffee and blow gently across the lid like it might chase the bitterness from your chest.
You don’t turn around. You don’t see the way he stands there—gutted, unmoving, undone. The cup trembles in his hand. He turns away before it spills.
-
That night, you go back to the office. You tell yourself it’s for the deadline. A follow-up piece on the housing committee. Edits on the west-side zoning profile. Anything to fill the time between sunset and sleep—because if you sleep, you’ll just dream of that bench.
The newsroom is quiet now. All overhead lights dimmed except for the halo of your desk lamp and the soft thrum of a copy machine left cycling in the corner.
You drop your bag with a sigh. Stretch your shoulders. Slide your desk drawer open without thinking. And find it. A note. No envelope. No tape. No ceremony. Just a single sheet of cream stationery folded in thirds. Familiar handwriting. Neat loops. Unshaking.
You unfold it slowly.
“I’m sorry. I wanted to be there. I can’t explain why I couldn’t—
But it wasn’t a joke. It was never a joke. Please believe that.”
The words hit like a breath you didn’t know you were holding. Then they blur. You read it again. Then again. But the ache in your chest doesn’t settle. Because how do you believe someone who won’t show their face? How do you believe someone who keeps slipping between your fingers?
You hold the note to your chest. Close your eyes. You want to believe him. God, you want to. But you don’t know how anymore.
-
What you couldn’t know is this: Clark Kent was already running. He’d been on his way, coat flapping behind him, tie unspooling in the wind, breath fogging as he dashed through traffic, one hand wrapped tight around a note he planned to deliver in person for the first time. He’d rehearsed it. Practiced what he’d say. Built up to it with every beat of a terrified heart.
He saw the park lights up ahead. Saw the lion statue. Saw the shape of a figure sitting alone on that bench.
And then the air split open. The sky went green. A fifth-dimensional imp, not even from this universe, tore through Metropolis like a child flipping pages in a pop-up book. Reality folded. Buildings bent sideways. Streetlamps started singing jazz standards.
Clark barely had time to take a deep breath before he vanished into smoke and flame, spinning upward in a blur of red and blue. Somewhere across town, Superman joined Guy Gardner, Hawk Girl, Mr. Terrific, and Metamorpho in trying to contain the chaos before the city unmade itself entirely.
He never got the chance to reach the bench. He never got the chance to say anything. The note stayed in his pocket until it was soaked with rain and streaked with ash. Until it was too late.
-
It’s supposed to be routine. You’re only there to cover a zoning dispute. A boring, mid-week council press event that’s been rescheduled three times already. The air is heavy with heat and bureaucracy. You and your photographer barely make it past the front barricades before the scene spirals into chaos.
First it’s the downed power lines sparking in rapid bursts as something hits the utility pole two blocks down. Then a car screeches over the median. Then someone starts screaming.
You’re still trying to piece it together when the crowd surges, someone shouts about a gun. People scatter. A window shatters across the street. A chunk of concrete falls from the sky like a thrown brick.
Your feet move before your brain catches up. You hit the pavement just as something explodes behind you. A jolt rings through your bones, sharp and high and metallic. Dust clouds the air. There’s shouting, then screaming, and your ears go fuzzy for one split second.
And then he lands.
Superman.
Cape whipping behind him like it’s caught in its own storm, boots cracking against the sidewalk as he drops down between the wreckage and the people still trying to flee. He moves like nothing you’ve ever seen.
Not just fast—but impossible. His body a blur of motion, heat, and purpose. He rips a crumpled lamppost off a trapped woman like it weighs nothing. Hurls it aside and crouches low beside her, voice firm but gentle as he checks her pulse, her leg, her name.
You’re frozen where you crouch, half behind a parking meter, hand pressed to your chest like it can keep your heart from tearing loose.
And then be turns. Looks straight at you. His expression shifts. Just for a moment. Just for you. He steps forward, dust streaking his suit, eyes dark with something you don’t have time to name. He reaches you in three strides, body angled between you and the chaos, hand raised in warning before you can speak.
“Stay here, sweetheart. Please.”
Your stomach drops. Not at the danger. Not at the sound of buildings groaning in the distance or the flash of gunmetal tucked into a stranger’s hand.
It’s him. That word. That voice. The exact way of saying it like it’s muscle memory. Like he’s said it a thousand times before.
Like Clark says it.
It stuns you more than the explosion did.
You blink up at him, speechless, heart stuttering behind your ribs as he holds your gaze just a second longer than he should. His brow furrows. Then he’s gone into the fray, into the fire, into the part of the story where your pen can’t follow.
You don’t remember standing. You don’t remember how you get back to the press line, only that your legs shake and your palms burn and every time you try to replay what just happened, your brain gets stuck on one word.
Sweetheart.
You’ve heard it before, dozens of times. Always soft. Always accidental. Always from behind thick glasses and a crooked tie and a mouth still chewing the edge of a muffin while he scrolls through zoning reports.
Clark says it when he forgets you’re not his to claim. Clark says it when you’re both the last ones in the office and he thinks you’re asleep at your desk. Clark says it like a secret. Like a slip.
And Superman just said it exactly the same way. Same tone. Same warmth. Same quiet ache beneath it.
But that’s not possible. Because Superman is, well, Superman. Bold. Dazzling. Fire-forged. He walks like he owns the sky. He speaks like a storm made flesh. He radiates power and perfection.
And Clark? Clark is all flannel and stammering jokes and soft eyes behind big frames. He’s gentle. A little clumsy. His swagger is borrowed from farm porches and storybooks. He’s sweet in a way Superman couldn’t possibly be.
Couldn’t… Right? You chalk it up to coincidence. You have to.
…Sort of.
-
You don’t sleep well the night after the incident. You keep replaying it, frame by impossible frame. The gunshot, the smoke, the sky splitting in half. The crack of his landing, the rush of wind off his cape. The weight of his body between you and danger. And then that voice.
“Stay here, sweetheart. Please.”
You flinch every time it echoes in your head. Every time your brain folds it over the countless memories you have of Clark saying it in passing, like it was nothing. Like it meant nothing.
But it means something now.
You come into the office the next day wired and quiet, adrenaline still burning faintly at the edges of your skin. You aren’t sure what to say, or to whom, so you say nothing. You stare too long at your coffee. You snap at a printer jam. You forget your lunch in the breakroom fridge.
Clark notices. He hovers by your desk that morning, a second coffee in hand, one of those specialty orders from that corner place he knows you like but always pretends he doesn’t remember.
“Rough day?” he asks gently. His tone is careful. Soft. As if you’re a glass already rattling on the edge of the shelf.
You don’t look up. “It’s fine.”
He hesitates. Then sets the coffee down beside your elbow, just far enough that you have to choose whether or not to reach for it. “I heard about the power line thing,” he adds. “You okay?”
“I said I’m fine, Clark.”
You hate the way his face flickers at that. Hurt, barely masked. He pushes his glasses up and nods like he deserves it. Like he’s been expecting it. He doesn’t press. He just walks away.
-
You find yourself whispering to Lois over takeout later that afternoon, half a conversation muttered between bites of noodles and the hum of flickering overheads.
“He called me sweetheart.”
She raises an eyebrow. “Clark?”
“No. Superman.”
Her chewing slows.
You keep your eyes on the edge of your desk. “That’s… weird, right?”
Lois makes a sound, somewhere between a scoff and a laugh. “He’s a superhero. They charm every pretty girl they pull out of a burning building.”
You poke at your noodles. “Still. It felt…”
“Weird?” she teases again, nudging her knee against yours.
You shrug like it doesn’t matter. Like it hasn’t been clawing at the back of your brain for three days straight. Lois doesn’t press. Just watches you for a second longer than necessary. Then she moves on, launching into a tirade about Perry’s passive-aggressive post-it notes and the fact that someone keeps stealing her pens.
But the damage is already done. Because you start thinking maybe you’ve just been projecting. Maybe you want your secret admirer to be Clark so badly that your brain’s rewriting reality, latching onto any voice, any phrase, any fleeting resemblance and assigning it meaning.
Sweetheart.
It’s a common word. It doesn’t mean anything. Maybe Superman says it to everyone. Maybe he has a whole roster of soft pet names for dazed civilians. Maybe you’re the delusional one, sitting here wondering if your awkward, sweet, left-footed coworker moonlights as a god.
The idea is so absurd it actually makes you laugh. Quietly. Bitterly. Right into your carton of lo mein. You tell yourself to let it go. But you don’t.
You can’t. Because somewhere deep down, it doesn’t feel absurd at all. It feels… close. Like you’re brushing against the edge of something true. And if you get just a little closer?
You might fall right through it.
-
Clark pulls back after that. Subtly. Slowly. Like he’s dimming himself on purpose. He’s still there—still kind, still thoughtful, still Clark. But the rhythm changes.
The coffees stop appearing on your desk each morning. No more sticky notes with half-legible puns or awkward smiley faces. No more jokes under his breath during staff meetings. No more warm glances across the bullpen when you’re stuck late and your screen is giving you a headache.
His chair now sits just a little farther from yours in the layout room. Not enough to be obvious. Just enough to feel. You notice it the way you notice when the air shifts before a storm. Quiet. Inevitable.
Even his messages change. Once, his texts used to come with too many exclamation marks and a tendency to type out haha when he was nervous. Now they’re brief. Punctuated. Polite.
“Got your quote. Sending now.”
“Perry said we’re cleared for page A3.”
“Hope your meeting went okay.”
You reread them more than you should. Not because of what they say, but because of what they don’t. It feels like being ghosted by someone who still waves to you across the room.
You try to talk yourself down. Maybe he’s just busy. Maybe he’s stressed. Maybe you’ve been projecting. Maybe it’s not your admirer’s handwriting that matches his. Maybe it’s not his voice that slipped out of Superman’s mouth like a secret.
Maybe, maybe, maybe.
But the space he used to fill next to you… feels like a light that’s been quietly turned off. And you are the one still blinking against the dark.
And yet, one afternoon, someone in the bullpen makes a snide remark about your latest piece. You don’t even catch the beginning, just the tail end of it, lazy and smug.
“—basically just fluff, right? She’s been coasting lately.”
You’re about to ignore it. You’re tired. Too tired. And what’s the point in arguing with someone who thinks nuance is a liability?
But then Clark speaks. Not from beside you, but from across the room. You’re not even sure how he could have possibly heard the guy talking across all the hustle and bustle of the bullpen. But his voice cuts through the noise like someone snapping a ruler against a desk.
“I just think her work actually matters, okay?”
Silence follows. Not because of the volume. He wasn’t loud. Just certain. Unflinching. Like he’d been holding it in. The words hang in the air, charged and too real.
Clark looks immediately horrified with himself. He goes red. Not a faint flush, but crimson. Mouth parting like he wants to take it back but doesn’t know how. He tries to recover, to smooth it over, but nothing comes. Just a flustered shake of his head and a noise that might’ve been his name.
The other reporter stares. “…Okay, man. Chill.”
Clark mumbles something about grabbing a file from archives and practically stumbles for the hallway, papers clenched awkwardly in one hand like a shield.
You don’t follow. You just… sit there. Staring at the space he left behind. Because that moment, those words, it wasn’t just instinct. It wasn’t just kindness. It was him.
The way he said it. The emotion in it. The rhythm of it. It felt like the notes. Like the quiet encouragements tucked into the margins of your day. Like someone watching, quietly, gently, hoping you’ll see yourself the way they do.
You think about the phrases he’s used before.
“The line you cut in paragraph six was my favorite. About hope not being the same thing as naivety.”
“Even whispers echo when they’re true.”
And now:
“Her work actually matters.”
All said like they were true, not convenient. All said like they were about you.
You start to notice more after that. The way Clark compliments your writing, always specific. Never lazy. The way his eyes crinkle when he’s proud of something you said, even when he doesn’t speak up. The way he turns the thermostat up exactly two degrees every time you bring your sweater into work. The way he walks a half-step behind you when you both leave late at night.
It’s not a confession. Not yet. But it’s a pattern. And once you start seeing it?
You can’t stop.
-
It’s a quiet afternoon in the bullpen. The kind where the overhead lights hum just loud enough to notice and everything smells like stale coffee and highlighter ink.
Clark’s sprawled in front of his monitor, sleeves rolled to his elbows, brow furrowed with the kind of intensity he usually saves for city zoning laws and double-checked citations. You’re helping him sort through quotes, most of which came from a reluctant press secretary and one very talkative dog walker who may or may not be a credible witness.
“Can you check the time stamp on the third transcript?” he asks, not looking up from his notes. “I think I messed it up when I formatted.”
You nod, flipping through the stack of papers he passed you earlier. That’s when you see it. Folded beneath the top printout, half-tucked into the margin of a city planning spreadsheet, is a different kind of note. A loose sheet, scribbled across in black ink. Not typed, but written. Slanted lines. A few false starts crossed out.
At first, you think it’s a headline draft. A brainstorm. But the longer you stare, the more it reads like… something else.
“The city is loud today. Not just noise, but motion. Memory. The way people hum when they think no one’s listening.”
“I can’t stop watching her move through it like she belongs to it. Like it belongs to her.”
You freeze. Your eyes track down the page slowly, like touching something sacred.
The letters are familiar. The lowercase y curls the same way as the one on your very first note, the one that came with your coffee. The ink is the same soft black, slightly smudged in the corners, like whoever wrote it holds the pen too tight when they’re thinking. The paper is the same notepad stock he’s used before. The same faint red line down the margin.
You don’t mean to do it, but your fingers curl around the page. Your chest goes tight. Because it’s not just similar.
It’s exact.
You hear him coming before you see him—those long, careful strides and the faint jangle of the lanyard he keeps forgetting to take off.
You tuck the paper into your notebook. Quick. Smooth. Automatic.
“Hey, sorry,” he says, rounding the corner with two mugs of tea and a slightly sheepish smile. “Printer’s jammed again. I may have made it worse.”
You nod. Too fast. You can’t quite make your voice work yet. Clark hands you your tea, just the way you like it, no comment, and sits across from you like nothing’s wrong. Like your whole world hasn’t tilted six degrees to the left.
He launches into a ramble about column widths and quote placement, about whether a serif font looks more “established” than sans serif.
You don’t hear a word of it. You just… watch him. The way he gestures too big with his hands. The way his glasses slip down his nose mid-sentence and he doesn’t bother to fix them until they’re practically falling off. The way his voice drops a little when he’s thinking hard, low and warm and utterly unselfconscious.
He has no idea you know. No idea what you just found.
You murmur something about needing to catch a meeting and excuse yourself early. He nods. Worries at his bottom lip like he’s debating whether to walk you out. Decides against it.
“Thanks for the help,” he says quietly, as you shoulder your bag. “Seriously. I couldn’t’ve done this draft without you.”
You give him a look you don’t quite know how to name. Something between thank you and I see you.
Then you go.
-
That night, you sit on your bedroom floor with the drawer open. Every note. Every folded scrap. Every secret tucked under your stapler or slid into your sleeve or left beside your coffee cup. You line them up in rows. You flatten them with careful hands. And you compare. One by one.
The loops. The lines. The uneven spacing. The curl of the r. The hush in every sentence, like he was writing them with his heart too close to the surface.
There’s no room for doubt anymore. It’s him. It’s been him this whole time.
Clark Kent.
And somehow, somehow, he’s still never said your name aloud when he writes about you. Not once. But every letter reads like a whisper of it. Like a promise waiting to be spoken.
-
The office is quiet by the time you find the nerve.
Desks are abandoned, chairs turned at angles, the windows dark with city glow. Outside, Metropolis hums in its usual low thrum, sirens and neon and distant jazz from a rooftop bar, but here, in the bullpen, it’s just the steady tick of the wall clock and the slow, careful steps you take toward his desk.
Clark doesn’t hear you at first. He’s bent over a red pen and a half-finished draft, glasses low on his nose, the curve of his back hunched the way it always is when he’s lost in edits. His tie is loosened. His sleeves are pushed up. There’s a smear of ink on his thumb. He looks soft in the way people do when they think no one’s watching.
You speak before you lose your nerve. “Why didn’t you just tell me?”
Clark startles. Not dramatically, just a sharp breath and a too-quick motion to sit upright, like a kid caught doodling in the margins. “I-what?”
You don’t let your voice shake. “That it was you. The notes. The park. All of it.”
He stares at you. Then down at his desk. Then back again. His mouth opens like it wants to offer a lie, but nothing comes out. Just silence. His fingers twitch toward the edge of the desk and stop there, curling into his palm.
“I…” he tries again, softer now, “I didn’t think you knew.”
“I didn’t.” Your voice is gentle. But not easy. “Not at first. Not really. But then I saw that list on your desk and… I went home and checked the handwriting.”
He winces. “I knew I left that out somewhere.”
You cross your arms, not out of anger, but more like self-protection. “You could’ve told me. At any point. I asked you.”
“I know.” He swallows hard. “I know. I wanted to. I… tried.”
You watch him. Wait.
And then he says it. Not loud. Not dramatic. Just the truth, raw and shaky and so Clark it nearly breaks you. “Because if I told you it was me… you might look at me different. Or worse… The same.”
You don’t know what to say to that. Not right away. Your heart clenches. Because it’s so him to assume your affection could only live in the mystery. That the truth of him, soft, clumsy, brilliant, real, would somehow undo the magic.
“Clark…” you start, but your voice slips.
He rubs the back of his neck. “I’m just the guy who spills coffee on his own notes and forgets to refill the paper tray. You’re… you. You write like you’re on fire. You walk into a room and it listens. I didn’t think someone like you would ever want someone like me.”
You stare at him. Really stare. At the flushed cheeks. The nervous hands. The boyish smile he’s trying to bury under self-deprecation. And then you say it. “I saved every note.”
He blinks.
You keep going. “I read them when I felt invisible. When I thought no one gave a damn what I was doing here. They mattered.”
Clark’s breath catches. He opens his mouth. Closes it again. He takes a slow step forward, tentative. Like he’s afraid to break the spell. His eyes search yours, and for a moment—for a second so still it might as well last an hour—he leans in. Not close enough to kiss you. But almost. His hand brushes yours. He stops. The air is heavy between you, buzzing with something fragile and enormous. But it isn’t enough. Not yet.
You draw in a breath, quiet but steady. “Why didn’t you meet me?”
Clark goes still. You can see it happen—the way the question lands. The way he folds in on himself just slightly, like the truth is too heavy to hold upright.
“I…” He tries, but the word doesn’t land. His jaw flexes. His eyes drop to the floor, then back up. He wants to tell you. He almost does. But he can’t. Not without unraveling everything. Not without unraveling himself.
“I wanted to,” he says finally, voice rough at the edges. “More than anything.”
“But?” you press, gently.
He just looks at you and says nothing. You nod, slowly. The silence says enough. Your chest aches, not in a sharp, bitter way. In the dull, familiar way of something you already suspected being confirmed.
You glance down at where your hand still brushes his, then look back at him, really taking him in. “I wish you’d told me,” you whisper. “I sat there thinking it was a joke. That I made it all up. That I was stupid for believing in any of it.”
“I know,” he murmurs. “And I’m sorry.”
Your throat tightens. You swallow past it. “I just… I need time. To process. To think.”
Clark’s eyes flicker, hope and heartbreak all tangled up in one look. “Of course,” he says immediately. “Take whatever you need. I mean it.”
A beat passes before you say the part that makes his breath catch. “I’m happy it was you.”
He freezes.
You offer the smallest smile. “I wanted it to be you.”
And for the first time in minutes, something in his shoulders unknots. There’s a shift. Gentle. Quiet. His hand lingers near yours again, knuckles brushing. He doesn’t lean in. Doesn’t push.
But God, he wants to. And maybe… maybe you do too. The moment stretches, unspoken and warm and not quite ready to be anything more.
You both stay like that, close, but not touching. Breathing the same charged air. Then he laughs under his breath. Nervous. Boyish.
“I’m probably gonna trip over something the second you walk away.”
You smile back. “Just recalibrate your ankles.”
He huffs out a laugh, head ducking. “I deserved that.”
You start to turn away. Just a little. But his voice stops you again, quiet, sincere, something earnest catching in it. “I’m really glad it was me, too.”
And your heart flutters all over again.
-
Lois is perched on the edge of your desk, a paper takeout box balanced on her knee, chopsticks waving in lazy circles while you pick at your own dinner with a little too much focus.
You haven’t told her everything. Not the everything everything. Not the way your heart nearly cracked open when Clark looked at you like you were made of starlight and library books. Not how close he got before pulling back. Not how you pulled back too, even though your whole body ached to close the distance.
But you have told her about the notes. About the mystery. About the strange tenderness of it all, how it wrapped around your days like a string you didn’t know you were following until it tugged. And Lois? Lois has been unusually quiet about it. Until now.
“I’m setting you up,” she says between bites, like she’s discussing filing taxes.
You blink. “What?”
“A date. Just one. Guy from the Features desk at the Tribune. You’ll like him. He’s taller than you, decent jawline, wears socks that match. He’s got strong opinions about punctuation, which I figure is basically foreplay for you.”
You stare at her. “You don’t even believe in setups.”
“I don’t,” she agrees. “But you’ve been spiraling in circles for weeks, and at this point, I either push you toward a date or stage an intervention with PowerPoint slides.”
You laugh despite yourself. “You have PowerPoint slides?”
“Of course not,” she scoffs. “I have a Google Doc.”
You roll your eyes. “Lois…”
“Listen,” she says, gentler now. “I know you’re in deep with whoever this guy is. And if it is Clark… well. I can see why.”
Your stomach flips.
“But maybe stepping outside of the Planet for two hours wouldn’t kill you. Let someone else flirt with you for once. Let yourself figure out what you actually want.”
You press your lips together. Look down at your barely-touched food.
“You don’t have to fall for him,” she adds, softly. “Just let yourself be seen.”
You exhale through your nose. “He better be cute.”
“Oh, he is. Total sweater vest energy.”
You snort. “So your type.”
“Exactly,” she lifts her takeout carton in a mock toast. “To emotionally compromised coworkers and their tragic love lives.”
You clink your chopsticks against hers like it’s the saddest champagne flute in the world. And later, when you’re getting ready, you still feel the weight of Clark’s almost-kiss behind your ribs. But you go anyway. Because Lois is right. You need to know what it is you’re choosing. Even if, deep down, you already do.
-
The date isn’t bad. That’s the most frustrating part. He’s nice. Polished in that media school kind of way—crisp shirt, clean shave, a practiced smile that belongs on a campaign poster. He compliments your bylines and talks about his dream of running an independent magazine one day. He orders the good whiskey and laughs at your jokes.
But it’s the wrong laugh. Off by a beat. The rhythm’s not right.
When he leans in, you don’t. When he talks, your thoughts drift. To mismatched socks and printer toner smudges. To how someone else always remembers your coffee order. To how someone else listens, not to respond, but to see.
You realize it halfway through the second drink. You’re thinking about Clark again.
The softness of him. The steadiness. The way he over-apologizes in texts but never hesitates when someone challenges your work. The way his voice tilts a little higher when he’s nervous. The way his laugh never lands in the right place, but somehow makes the whole room feel warmer.
You pull your coat tighter when you leave the restaurant, cheeks stinging from the wind and the slow unraveling of a night that should’ve meant something. It doesn’t. Not in the way that matters.
So you walk. You tell yourself you’re just passing by the Daily Planet. That maybe you left your notes there. That it’s just a habit, stopping in this late. But when you scan your ID badge and push through the heavy glass doors, you already know the truth. You’re hoping he’s still here.
And he is.
The bullpen is almost entirely dark, save for a single desk lamp casting gold across the layout section. He’s hunched over it, tie loosened, sleeves rolled up, shirt rumpled like he’s been pacing, thinking, rewriting. His glasses are folded beside him on the desk. His hair’s a mess, fingers clearly run through it too many times.
He rubs at his eyes with the heel of his palm, breathing out hard through his nose. You don’t say anything. You just… watch. It hits you in one perfect, unshakable moment. The slope of his shoulders. The cut of his jaw. The furrow in his brow when he’s thinking too hard.
He looks like Superman.
No glasses. No slouch. No excuses. But more than that—he looks like Clark. Like the man who learned your coffee order. Like the one who saves all his best edits for last so he can tell you in person how good your writing is. The one who panicked when you got too close to the truth, but couldn’t stop leaving notes anyway.
And when he finally lifts his head and sees you standing there, still in your coat, fingers tight around your notebook, you watch something shift in his expression. A flicker of surprise. Panic. Bare, open emotion. Because you’re seeing him without the glasses.
“Couldn’t sleep,” you murmur. “Thought I’d grab my notes.”
He smiles, slow and unsure. “You… left them by the scanner.”
You nod, like that matters. Like you came here for paper and not for him. Then you walk over, slow and deliberate, and retrieve your notes from the edge of the scanner beside him. He swallows hard, watching you.
Then clears his throat. “So… how was the date?”
You pause. “Fine,” you say. “He was nice. Funny. Smart.”
Clark nods, but you’re not finished.
“But when he laughed, it was the wrong rhythm. And when he spoke, I didn’t lean in.”
You meet his eyes, clear blue, unhidden now. “I made up my mind halfway through the second drink.” His lips part. Barely. You move to the edge of his desk and set your notebook down. Then, carefully, slowly, you pull out the chair beside his and sit. The air between you goes molten.
Clark leans in a little, eyes flicking to your mouth, then back to your eyes. One hand moves down, like he’s going to say something, but instead, he reaches for the leg of your chair, fingers curling around it. And pulls you toward him. The scrape of wood against tile echoes, loud and deliberate. Your thighs knock his. Your breath stutters.
He’s so close now you can feel the heat rolling off him. The weight of his gaze. Your heart hammers in your chest. And lower.
“Clark,” but you don’t finish because he meets you halfway. The kiss is fire and breath and years of want pressed between two mouths. His hands come up, one to your jaw, the other to the back of your head, and tilt your face just so. Fingers tangle in your hair, anchoring you to him like he’s afraid you might vanish.
You moan into his mouth. Soft. Surprised. He groans back. Rougher. You reach for his shirt blindly, fists curling in the cotton as he pulls you fully into his lap, into the chair with him, your legs straddling his thighs. His hands don’t know where to land. Your waist. Your thighs. Your face again.
“You’re it,” he whispers against your mouth. “You’ve always been it.”
You know he means it. Because you’ve seen it. In every note. Every glance. Every moment he looked at you like you were already his. And now, with your bodies tangled, mouths tasting each other, breathing the same heat, you finally believe it.
You don’t say it yet. But the way you kiss him again says it for you. You’re his. You always have been.
His hands roam, but never rush. Your fingers are tangled in his shirt, your knees pressing to either side of his hips, and you feel him, all of him, underneath you, solid and steady and shaking just slightly. The chair creaks with every breath you share. His mouth is still on yours, slow now, like he’s memorizing the shape of you. Like he’s afraid if he goes too fast, you’ll disappear again.
When he finally pulls back, just enough to breathe, it’s with a soft, reverent exhale. His nose brushes yours. “You’re really here,” he murmurs, voice hoarse. “God, you’re really here.”
You blink at him, your hands sliding to either side of his jaw, thumbs brushing the high flush of his cheeks. He looks so open. Like you’ve peeled back every layer of him with just a kiss. And maybe you have.
His lips find the edge of your jaw next, slow and aching. A kiss. Then another, just beneath your ear. Then one lower, along the soft skin of your neck. Each press of his mouth feels like a confession. Like something that was buried too long, finally given air.
“You don’t know,” he whispers. “You don’t know what it’s been like, watching you and not getting to,” Another kiss, right beneath your cheekbone. “I used to rehearse things I’d say to you, and then I’d get to work and you’d smile and I’d forget how to talk.”
A laugh huffs out of you, but it melts fast when he leans in again, his breath fanning warm across your skin. “I didn’t think I’d ever get this close. I didn’t think I’d get to touch you like this.”
You shift in his lap, chest brushing his, and his hands squeeze your waist gently like he’s grounding himself. His mouth finds your temple. Your cheek. The corner of your mouth again.
“You’re so…” he breaks off. Tries again. “You’re everything.” Your pulse thrums in your throat. Clark’s hands stay respectful, but they wander, curving up your back, smoothing over your shoulders, settling at your ribs like he wants to hold you together.
“I used to write those notes late at night,” he admits against your collarbone. “Didn’t even think you’d read them at first. But you did. You kept them.”
“I kept every one,” you whisper.
His breath catches. You tilt his face back up to yours, studying him in the low, golden light. His hair’s a little messy now from your fingers. His lips pink and kiss-swollen. His chest rising and falling like he’s just run a marathon. And still, even now, he’s looking at you like he’s the one who’s lucky.
Clark kisses you again, soft, like a promise. Then a trail of them, across your cheek, your jaw, your throat. Slow enough to make your skin shiver and your hips shift instinctively against his lap. He groans quietly at that, barely audible, but doesn’t press for more. He just holds you tighter.
“I’d wait forever for you,” he murmurs into your skin. “I don’t need anything else. Just this. Just you.” You bury your face in his shoulder, overwhelmed, heart pounding like a war drum. You don’t say anything back. You just press another kiss to his throat, and feel him smile where your mouth lands.
-
The city is quieter at night—its edges softened under streetlamp glow, concrete warming beneath the fading breath of the day. There’s a breeze that tugs gently at your coat as you and Clark walk side by side, your fingers still loosely laced with his. His hand is big. Warm. Rough in the places that tell stories. Gentle in the ways that say everything else.
Neither of you speaks at first. The silence isn’t awkward. It’s thick with something tender. Like a string strung tight between your ribs and his, humming with each shared step.
When he glances down at you, his smile is small and almost shy. “I can’t believe I didn’t knock over the chair,” he says after a few blocks, voice pitched low with laughter.
You grin. “You were close. I think my thigh is bruised.”
He groans. “Don’t say that. I’ll lose sleep.”
You look at him sidelong. “You weren’t going to sleep anyway.” That earns you a pink flush down the side of his neck, and you tuck that image away for safekeeping.
Your building looms closer, brick and ivy-wrapped and familiar in the soft hush of the hour. You slow as you reach the front step, turning to face him.
“Thank you,” you murmur. You don’t mean just for the walk.
He holds your hand a beat longer. Then, without a word, he lifts it and presses his lips to your knuckles. It’s soft. Reverent.
Your breath catches in your throat. And maybe that’s what breaks the spell, maybe that’s what makes it all too much and not enough at once, because the next second, you’re reaching. Or maybe he is. It doesn’t matter. He kisses you again, this time fuller, deeper, your back brushing against the door behind you, his other hand cradling your cheek like he’s afraid you’ll vanish if he doesn’t hold you just right.
It doesn’t last long. Just long enough to taste the weight of what’s shifting between you. To feel it crest again in your chest.
When he finally pulls back, his lips hover a breath away from yours. “I’ll see you tomorrow,” he says softly.
You nod. You can’t quite say anything back yet. He gives your hand one last squeeze, then turns and disappears down the street, hands stuffed in his pockets, shoulders curved slightly inward like he’s holding in a smile he doesn’t know what to do with.
You unlock the door. Step inside. But you don’t go to bed right away. You walk to the front window instead, bare feet quiet on hardwood, heart still hammering. Through the glass, you spot him half a block away. He thinks you’re gone. Which is probably why, under the streetlight, Clark Kent jumps up and smacks the edge of a low-hanging banner like he’s testing his vertical. He catches it on the second try, swinging from it for all of two seconds before nearly tripping over his own feet.
You snort. Your hand presses against your mouth to muffle the sound. And then you smile. That kind of soft, aching smile that tugs at something deep in your chest. Because that’s him. That’s the man who writes you poems under the cover of anonymity and nearly breaks your chair kissing you in a newsroom.
That’s the one you wanted it to be. And now that it is, you don’t think your heart’s ever going to stop fluttering.
-
The bullpen is alive again. Phones ring. Keys clatter. Someone’s arguing over copy edits near the back printer, and Jimmy streaks past with a half-eaten bagel clamped between his teeth and a stack of photos fluttering behind him like confetti. It’s chaos.
But none of it touches you. The world moves at its usual speed, but everything inside you has slowed. Like someone turned the volume down on everything that isn’t him.
Your eyes find Clark without meaning to. He’s already at his desk, glasses on, shirt pressed, tie straighter than usual. He must’ve fixed it three times this morning. His sleeves are rolled to the elbow, a pen already tucked behind one ear. He’s doing that thing he does when he’s thinking, lip caught gently between his teeth, brows drawn, tapping the space bar like it owes him money.
But there’s a softness to him this morning, too. A looseness in his shoulders. A quiet sort of glow around the edges, like some part of him hasn’t fully come down from last night either. Like he’s still vibrating with the same electricity that’s still thrumming low behind your ribs.
And then he looks up. He finds you just as easily as you found him. You expect him to look away, bashful, flustered, maybe even embarrassed now that the newsroom lights are on and you’re both pretending not to be lit matches pretending not to burn.
But he doesn’t. He holds your gaze. And the quiet that opens up between you is louder than anything else in the building. The low hum of printers. The whirr of the HVAC. The hiss of steam from the office espresso machine.
You swallow hard. Then you look back at your screen like it matters. You try to focus. You really do.
Less than ten minutes later, he’s there. He approaches slow, like he’s afraid of breaking something delicate. His hand appears first, gently setting a familiar to-go cup on your desk.
“I figured you forgot yours,” he says, voice low.
You glance up at him. “I didn’t.”
A smile curls at the corner of his mouth. Soft. A little sheepish. “Oh. Well…” He shrugs. “Now you have two.”
You take the coffee anyway. Your fingers brush his as you do. He doesn’t pull away. Not this time. His hand lingers for half a second longer than it should, just enough to make your pulse jump in your wrist, and then slowly drops back to his side. The silence between you now isn’t awkward. It’s taut. Weightless. Like standing at the edge of something enormous, staring over the drop, and realizing he’s right there beside you, ready to jump too.
“Walk with me?” he asks, voice barely above the clatter around you. You nod. Because you’d follow him anywhere.
Downstairs, the building atrium hums with the low murmur of morning traffic and the soft shuffle of people cutting through the lobby on their way to bigger, faster things. But here, beneath the high, glass-paneled ceiling where sunlight pours in like gold through water, the city feels a little farther away. A little quieter. Just the two of you, caught in that hush between chaos and clarity.
Clark hands you a sugar packet without a word, and you take it, fingers brushing his again. He watches, not your hands, but your face, as you tear it open and shake it into your cup. Like memorizing the way you take your coffee might somehow tell him more than you’re ready to say aloud.
You glance at him, just in time to catch it—that look. Barely there, but soft. Full. He looks at you like he’s trying to learn you by heart.
You raise a brow. “What?”
He blinks, caught. “Nothing.”
But you’re smiling now, just a little. A private, corner-of-your-mouth kind of smile. “You look tired,” you murmur, stirring slowly.
His lips twitch. “Late night.”
“Editing from home?”
He hesitates. You watch the way his shoulders shift, the subtle catch in his breath. Then, finally, he shakes his head. “Not exactly.”
You hum. Say nothing more. The moment lingers, warm as the cup in your hand. He stands beside you, tall and still, but there’s something new in the way he holds himself, like gravity’s just a little lighter around him this morning. Like your presence pulls him into a softer orbit. There’s a beat of silence.
“You… seemed quiet last night,” he says, voice gentler now. “When you saw me.”
You glance at him from over the rim of your cup. Steam curls up between you, catching in the morning light like spun sugar. “I saw you,” you say.
He studies you. Carefully. “You sure?”
You lower your coffee. “Yeah. I’m sure.”
His brows pull together slightly, the line between them deepening. He’s trying to read you. Trying to solve an equation he’s too close to see clearly. There’s a question in his eyes, not just about last night, but about everything that came before it. The letters. The glances. The ache.
But you don’t give him the answer. Not out loud. Because what you don’t say hangs heavier than what you do. You don’t say: I’m pretty certain he’s you. You don’t say: I think my heart has known for a while now. You don’t say: I’m not afraid of what you’re hiding. Instead, you let the silence stretch between you—soft and silken, tethering you to something deeper than confession. You sip your coffee, heart steady now, eyes warm.
And when he opens his mouth again—when he leans forward like he might finally give himself away entirely, you smile. Just a soft curve of your lips. A quiet reassurance. “Don’t worry,” you say, voice low. “I liked what I saw.”
He freezes. Then flushes, color blooming high on his cheeks. His gaze drops to the floor like it’s safer there, like looking at you too long might unravel him completely, but when he glances back up, the smile on his face is small and helpless and utterly undone. A breath escapes him, barely audible, but you hear it. You feel it. Relief.
He walks you back upstairs without another word. The movement is easy. Comfortable. But his hand hovers near yours the whole time. Not quite touching. Just… there. Like gravity pulling two halves of the same secret closer.
And as you re-enter the hum of the bullpen, nothing looks different. But everything feels like it’s just about to change.
-
That night, after the city has quieted, after the neon pulse of Metropolis blurs into puddle reflections and distant sirens, the Daily Planet is almost reverent in its silence. No ringing phones. No newsroom chatter. Just the soft hum of a printer in standby mode and the creak of the elevator cables descending behind you.
You let yourself in with your keycard. The lock clicks louder than expected in the stillness. You don’t know why you’re here, really. You told yourself it was to grab the folder you forgot. To double-check something on your last draft. But the truth is quieter than that.
You were hoping he’d be here. He’s not. His desk lamp is off. His chair turned inward, as if he left in a hurry. No half-eaten sandwich or scribbled drafts left behind, just a tidied workspace and absence thick enough to feel.
You sigh, the sound swallowed whole by the vast emptiness of the bullpen. Then you see it. At your desk. Tucked half-under your keyboard like a secret trying not to be. One folded piece of paper.
No envelope this time. No clever line on the front. Just your name, handwritten in a looping scrawl you’ve come to know better than your own signature. A rhythm you’ve studied and traced in the quiet of your apartment, night after night.
You slide it free with careful fingers. Your heart stutters as you unfold it. The ink is darker this time, less tentative. The strokes more deliberate, like he knew, at last, he didn’t have to hide.
“For once I don’t have to imagine what it’s like to have your lips on mine. But I still think about it anyway.”
—C.K.
You stare at the words until the paper goes soft in your hands. Until your chest feels too full and too fragile all at once. Until the noise of your own heartbeat drowns out everything else.
Then you press the note to your chest and close your eyes. His initials burn through the paper like a touch. Not a secret admirer anymore. Not a mystery in the margins. Just him.
Clark. Your friend. Your almost. Your maybe.
You don’t need the rest of the truth. Not tonight. Not if it costs this fragile thing blooming between you, this quiet, aching sweetness. This slow, deliberate unraveling of walls and fears and the long-held breath you didn’t realize you were holding.
Whatever you’re building together, it’s happening one heartbeat at a time. One almost-confession. One note left behind in the dark. And you’d rather have this, this steady climb into something real, than rush toward the edge of revelation and risk it all crumbling.
So you tuck the note gently into your bag, where the others wait. Every word he’s given you, kept safe like a promise. You don’t know what happens next. But for the first time in weeks, maybe months, you’re not afraid of finding out.
-
You’re not official.
Not in the way people expect it. There’s no label, no group announcement, no big display. But you’re definitely something now, something solid and golden and real in the space between words.
It’s not office gossip. Not yet. But it could be. Because you linger a little too long near his desk. Because he lights up when you enter a room like it’s instinct. Because when he passes you in the bullpen, his hand brushes yours, just barely, and you both pause like the air just changed. There’s no denying it.
And then comes the hallway kiss. It’s after hours. The building is quiet, the newsroom lights dimmed to half. You’re both walking toward the elevators, your footsteps echoing against the tile.
Clark fumbles for the call button, mumbling something about how slow the system is when it’s late, and how the elevator always seems to stall on the wrong floor. You don’t answer. You just reach for his tie. A gentle tug. A silent question. He exhales, soft and shaky. Then he leans in.
The kiss is slow. Unhurried. Like you’re both tasting something that’s been simmering between you for years. His hands find your waist, yours curl into his shirt, and the elevator dings somewhere in the distance, but neither of you move.
You part only when the second ding reminds you where you are. His forehead presses to yours, warm and close. You breathe the same air. And then the doors close behind you, and he walks you out with his hand ghosting the small of your back.
-
You start learning the rhythm of Clark Kent. He talks more when he’s nervous—little rambles about traffic patterns or article formatting, or how he’s still not entirely sure he installed his dishwasher correctly. Sometimes he trails off mid-thought, like he’s remembering something urgent but can’t explain it.
He always carries your groceries. All of them. No negotiation. He’ll take the heavier bags first, sling them both over one shoulder and pretend like it’s nothing. And somehow, he always forgets his own umbrella—but never forgets yours. You don’t know how many he owns, but one always appears when the clouds roll in. Like magic. Like preparation. Like he’s thought of you in every version of the day.
You don’t ask.
You just start to keep one in your own bag for him.
-
The next kiss happens on your couch.
You’ve been watching some old movie neither of you are paying attention to, his arm slung lazily across your shoulders. Your legs are tangled. His fingers are tracing idle shapes against your thigh through the fabric of your leggings.
He kisses you once, soft and slow, and then again. Longer. Like he’s memorizing the shape of your mouth. Like he might need it later.
Then his phone buzzes.
He stiffens.
You feel the change instantly—the way his body pulls back, the air between you tightens. He glances at the screen. You don’t catch the name. But you see the look in his eyes.
Regret. Apology. Something deeper.
“I-I’m so sorry,” he says, already moving. “I have to…. something came up. It’s—”
You sit up, brushing your hand against his arm. “Go,” you say softly.
“But…”
“It’s okay. Just… be safe.”
And God, the way he looks at you. Like you’ve given him something priceless. Something he didn’t know he was allowed to want.
He kisses your temple like a promise and disappears into the night.
-
It happens again. And again.
Missed dinners. Sudden goodbyes. Rainy nights where he shows up soaked, out of breath, murmuring apologies and curling into you like he doesn’t know how to be held.
You never ask. You don’t need to.
Because he always comes back.
-
One night, you’re curled into each other on your couch, your legs thrown over his, your cheek resting against his chest. The movie’s playing, forgotten. Your fingers are idly brushing the hem of his shirt where it’s ridden up. He smells like rain and ink and whatever soap he always uses that lingers on your pillow now.
Then his voice, quiet in the dark, “I don’t always know how to be… enough.”
You blink. Look up. He’s staring at the ceiling. Not quite breathing evenly. Like the words cost him something.
You reach up and cradle his face in your hands.
His eyes finally meet yours.
“You are,” you whisper. “As you are.”
You don’t say: Even if you are who I think you are.
You don’t need to. You just kiss him again. Soft. Long. Steady. Because whatever he’s carrying, you’ve already started holding part of it too.
And he lets you.
-
The night starts quiet.
Takeout boxes sit half-forgotten on the coffee table—one still open, rice going cold, soy sauce packet untouched. Your legs are draped across Clark’s lap, one foot nudged against the curve of his thigh, and his hand rests there now. Not possessively. Not deliberately.
Just… there.
It’s late. The kind of late where the whole city softens. No sirens outside. No blinking inbox. Just the low hum of the lamp on the side table and the warmth of the man beside you.
Clark’s eyes are on you. They’ve been there most of the night.
He hasn’t said much since dinner, just little smiles, quiet sounds of agreement, the occasional brush of his thumb against your ankle like a thought he forgot to speak aloud. But it’s not a bad silence. It’s dense. Full.
You shift, angling toward him slightly, and his gaze flicks to your mouth. That’s all it takes.
He leans in.
The kiss is soft at first. Familiar. A shared breath. A quiet hello in a room where no one had spoken for minutes. But then his hand curls behind your knee, guiding your leg further over his lap, and his mouth opens against yours like he’s been holding back for hours.
He kisses you like he’s starving. Like he’s spent all day wanting this, aching for the shape of you, the weight of your body in his hands. And when you moan into it, just a little, he shudders.
His hands start to move. One tracing the line of your spine, the other resting against your hip like a question he doesn’t need to ask. You answer anyway, pressing in closer, threading your fingers through his hair, sighing into the heat of his mouth.
You don’t know who climbs into whose lap first, only that you end up straddling him on the couch. Your knees on either side of his thighs. His hands gripping your waist now, fingers curling in your shirt like he doesn’t trust himself not to break it.
And then something shifts.
Not emotional—physical.
Clark stands.
He lifts you with him, effortlessly, like you don’t weigh anything at all. Not a grunt. Not a stagger. Just—up. Smooth and sure. His mouth never leaves yours.
You gasp into the kiss as he walks you backwards, steps confident and fast despite the way your arms tighten around his shoulders. Your spine meets the wall in the next second. Not hard. Just sudden.
Your heart thunders.
“Clark?”
He doesn’t answer. Just breathes against your mouth like he needs the oxygen from your lungs. Like yours is the only air that keeps him grounded.
His hips press into yours, one thigh sliding between your legs, and your back arches instinctively. His hands span your ribs now, thumbs brushing just beneath your bra. You feel the tremble in them, not from fear. From restraint.
“Clark,” you whisper again, and his forehead drops to yours.
“You okay?” he asks, voice rough and close.
You nod, breath catching. “You?”
He hesitates. Not long. But long enough to count. “Yeah. Just… feel a little off tonight.”
You pull back just enough to look at him.
He’s flushed. Eyes darker than usual. But not winded. Not breathless. Not anything like you are. His chest doesn’t even rise fast beneath your hands. Still, he smiles, like he can will the oddness away, and kisses you again. Deeper this time. Like distraction.
Like he doesn’t want to stop.
You don’t want him to either.
Not yet.
His mouth finds yours again, slower this time, more purposeful. Like he’s savoring it. Like he’s waited for this exact moment, this exact pressure of your hips against his, for longer than he’s willing to admit.
You gasp when his hands slide under your shirt, palms broad and steady, dragging upward in a path that sets every nerve on fire. He doesn’t fumble. Doesn’t rush. Just explores like he’s memorizing, not taking.
“Can I?” he murmurs against your mouth, fingers brushing the underside of your bra.
You nod, breathless. “Yes.”
He exhales, soft and reverent, and lifts your shirt over your head. It’s discarded without ceremony. Then his hands are on you again, warm, slow, mapping out the shape of you with open palms and patient awe.
“God, you’re beautiful,” he murmurs, more breath than voice. His mouth finds the edge of your jaw, trailing kisses down to the hollow beneath your ear. “I think about this… so much.”
You shudder.
His hands move again, down this time, gripping your thighs as he sinks to his knees in front of you. You barely have time to react before he’s tugging your pants down, slow and careful, mouth following the descent with lingering kisses along your hips, the dip of your pelvis, the inside of your thigh.
He looks up at you from the floor.
You nearly forget how to breathe.
“I’ve wanted to take my time with you,” he admits, voice rough and low. “Wanted to learn you slow. Learn how you taste. How you fall apart.”
And then he does.
He leans in and licks a long, deliberate stripe over the center of your underwear, still watching your face.
You whimper.
He smiles, just slightly, and does it again.
By the time he peels your underwear down and presses an open-mouthed kiss to your inner thigh, your knees are trembling.
Clark hooks one arm under your leg, lifting it over his shoulder like it’s nothing, and buries his mouth between your thighs with a groan that rattles through your whole body.
His tongue is warm and soft and maddeningly slow—circling, tasting, teasing. He doesn’t rush. Not even when your fingers knot in his hair and your hips rock forward with pure desperation.
“Clark…”
He hums against you, and the sound sends a full-body shiver up your spine.
“I’ve got you,” he whispers, lips brushing you as he speaks. “Let me.”
You do.
You let him wreck you.
He’s methodical about it—like he’s following a map only he can see. One hand holding you steady, the other splayed against your stomach, keeping you anchored while he works you open with mouth and tongue and quiet, praising murmurs.
“So sweet… that’s it, sweetheart… you taste like heaven.”
You’re already close when he slips a thick finger inside you. Then another. Slow, patient, curling exactly where you need him. His mouth never stops. His rhythm is steady. Focused. Unrelenting.
You come like that, panting, gripping his shoulders, thighs shaking around his ears as he groans and keeps going, riding it out with you until you’re trembling too hard to stand.
He rises slowly.
His lips are slick. His eyes are dark.
And you’ve never seen anyone look at you like this.
“Come here,” you whisper.
He kisses you then, deep and possessive and tasting like you. You’re the one tugging at his shirt now, unbuttoning in frantic clumsy swipes. You need him. Need him closer. Need him inside.
But when you reach for his belt, he stills your hands gently.
“Not yet,” he says, voice like thunder wrapped in velvet. “Let me take care of you first.”
You blink. “Clark, I—”
He kisses you again, soft, lingering.
“I’ve waited too long for this to rush it,” he murmurs, brushing hair from your face with the back of his knuckles. “You deserve slow.”
Then he lifts you again, like you weigh nothing, and carries you to the bed. He lays you down like you’re fragile, but the look in his eyes says he knows you’re anything but. That you’re something rare. Something he’s been aching for. His palms skim over your thighs again, slow and deliberate, before he spreads you open beneath him.
He doesn’t ask this time. Just settles between your legs like he belongs there, arms hooked under your thighs, holding you wide.
“Clark!”
“I know, sweetheart,” he murmurs, voice low and raw. “I’ve got you.”
And he does.
His mouth finds you again, warm, skilled, confident now. No hesitation, just long, wet strokes of his tongue that build on everything he already learned. And then, without warning, he slides two fingers back inside you.
You cry out, hips jolting.
He groans into you, fingers moving in tandem with his mouth, curling just right, matching every flick of his tongue, every wet press of his lips. He doesn’t stop. Doesn’t falter. He watches you the whole time, eyes dark and hungry and so in love with the way you fall apart for him.
You grip the sheets, gasping his name, over and over, until your voice breaks on a sob of pleasure.
“Clark! God, I-I can’t—”
“Yes, you can,” he breathes. “You’re almost there. Let go for me.”
You do. With a cry, with shaking thighs, with your fingers tangled in his hair and your back arching off the bed.
And he doesn’t stop.
He rides your orgasm out with slow, worshipful strokes, kissing your thighs, murmuring into your skin, “So good for me. You’re perfect. You’re everything.”
By the time he pulls back, you’re boneless, dazed and trembling, your chest heaving as he kisses his way up your stomach.
But the way he looks at you then, like he needs to be closer, tells you this isn’t over.
His hands brace on either side of your head as he leans over you. “Can I…?”
Your hips answer for you, tilting up, chasing the heat and weight of him already pressed between your thighs.
“Yes,” you whisper. “Please.”
Clark groans low in his throat as he pushes his boxers down just enough, lining himself up, his cock flushed and thick, already leaking, and you feel the weight of him between your thighs and gasp.
“God, Clark…”
“I know,” he murmurs, forehead resting against yours, hips rocking forward just barely, teasing you with the head of his cock, dragging it through the slick mess he made with his mouth and fingers. “I know, baby. Just—just let me…”
He nudges in slow.
The stretch is slow and steady, his breath catching as your body parts for him. He’s thick. Too thick, maybe, except your body wants him, takes him like it was made to.
You whimper, and his jaw clenches tight.
“You okay?”
“Y-yeah,” you breathe. “Don’t stop.”
He doesn’t. Not even for a second. Inch by inch, he sinks into you, whispering your name, kissing your temple, gripping the backs of your thighs as you wrap your legs around his waist.
“Fuck,” he hisses when he bottoms out, buried deep, balls pressed flush against you. “You feel… Jesus, you feel unbelievable.”
You’re too far gone to answer. You just cling to him, nails dragging lightly down his back, moaning into his mouth when he kisses you again.
The first few thrusts are slow. Deep. Measured. He pulls out just enough to feel you grip him on the way back in, then does it again, and again, and again.
And then something shifts.
Your body clenches around him in a way that makes his head drop to your shoulder with a groan.
“Oh my god, sweetheart, don’t do that. I’m gonna—fuck—”
He thrusts harder.
Not rough, not yet, but firmer. Hungrier. The control he started with begins to slip. You can feel it in his grip, in the sharp edge of his breath, in the tremble of the arm braced beside your head.
“Been thinkin’ about this,” he grits out, voice low and wrecked. “Every night…every goddamn night since the first note. You don’t even know what you do to me.”
You whine, rolling your hips up to meet him, and he snaps, hips slamming forward hard enough to punch the air from your lungs.
“Clark’”
“I’ve got you,” he gasps, fucking into you harder now, his voice filthy and tender all at once. “I’ve got you, baby. So fuckin’ tight…can’t stop. Don’t wanna stop.”
You’re clinging to him now, crying out with every thrust. It’s not just the way he fills you, it’s the way he worships you while he does it. The way he moans when you clench. The way he growls your name like a prayer. The way he falls apart in real time, just from the feel of you.
He grabs one of your hands, laces your fingers with his, pins it beside your head.
“You’re mine,” he grits. “You have to be mine.”
“Yes,” you gasp. “Yes, Clark, don’t stop!”
“Never,” he groans. “Never stopping. Not when you feel like this—fuck.”
You can feel him getting close, the way his rhythm starts to stutter, the broken sounds escaping his throat, the way he buries his face against your neck and pants your name like he’s desperate to take you with him.
And you’re almost there too.
You don’t even realize your hand is slipping until he’s gripping it again, pinned tight to the pillow, your fingers laced in his and clenched so tight it aches. The bed frame is starting to shudder beneath you now, the headboard knocking a rhythm into the wall, and Clark is gasping like he’s in pain from how good it feels.
His hips snap forward again, harder this time. Deeper. More desperate.
“Fuck…fuck. I’m sorry,” he grits, voice ragged and thick, “I’m trying to. Baby I can’t—hold back.”
You moan so loud it makes him flinch.
And then he breaks.
One second he’s pulling your name from his lungs like it’s the only word he knows and the next, he slams into you so hard the bed shifts a full inch. The lamp on the bedside table flickers. The candle flame bursts just slightly higher than before, flickering hot and fast, the wick blackening with a thin curl of smoke. It doesn’t go out. It just burns.
Clark’s back arches.
His cock drags over everything inside you in just the right way, hitting that spot again and again until you’re clutching at his shoulders, babbling nonsense against his skin.
“I can’t! I can’t… Clark!”
“You can,” he pants. “Please, please, baby, cum with me—I can feel you. I can feel it.”
Your body goes taut.
A white-hot snap of pleasure punches through your spine, and your vision blacks out at the edges. You tighten around him, clenching, pulsing, dragging him over the edge with you. And he loses it.
Clark curses, actually curses, and growls something between a moan and a sob as he slams into you one last time, spilling deep inside you. His body locks, every muscle trembling. His teeth scrape the soft skin of your throat, not biting, just grounding himself. Like if he lets go, he’ll come undone completely.
The lights flicker again.
The candle sputters once and steadies.
He breathes like a man starved. His chest heaves. But you can feel it under your hand, against your skin. His heart’s not racing.
Not like it should be.
You’re gasping. Dazed. Boneless under him. But Clark… Clark’s barely even winded. And yet his hands are trembling. Just slightly. Still laced in yours. Still holding on.
After, you lie there, chests pressed close, legs tangled, the sheets barely clinging to your hips.
Clark’s arm is slung across your waist, palm wide and warm over your belly like it belongs there. Like he doesn’t ever want to move. His nose is tucked against your temple, breath stirring your hair in soft little pulses. He keeps kissing you. Your cheek. Your jaw. The edge of your brow. He doesn’t stop, like he’s afraid this is a dream and kissing you might anchor it in place.
“Still with me?” he whispers into your skin.
You nod. Drowsy. Sated. Floating.
“Good.” His hand runs down your side in one long, reverent stroke. “Didn’t mean to… get so carried away.”
You hum. “You say that like I didn’t enjoy every second.”
He smiles against your neck. You feel the curve of it, his lips brushing the shell of your ear.
A moment passes.
Then another.
“I think you short-circuited my bedside lamp somehow.”
Clark freezes. “…Did I?”
You roll your head to look at him. “It flickered. Right as you—”
His ears turn bright red. “Maybe just… a power surge?”
You arch a brow. “Right. A romantic, orgasm-timed power surge.”
He mutters something into your shoulder that sounds vaguely like kill me now.
You grin. File it away.
Exhibit 7: Lightbulb went dim at the exact second he came. Candle flame doubled in height.
-
Later that night, long after you’ve both dozed off, you wake to find Clark still holding you. One of his hands is under your shirt, splayed low across your stomach. Protective. Possessive in the gentlest way. His body is still curled around yours like a question mark, like he’s checking for all your answers in how your breath rises and falls.
You shift just slightly and his grip tightens instinctively, like even in sleep, he can’t let go.
Exhibit 8: He doesn’t sleep like a person. Sleeps like a sentry.
-
In the morning, you wake to the scent of coffee.
Your kitchen is suspiciously spotless for someone who swears he’s clumsy. The pot is full, the mugs pre-warmed, your favorite creamer already swirled in.
Clark is flipping pancakes.
Barefoot.
Wearing one of your sleep shirts. The tight one.
You lean against the doorframe, watching him. His back muscles flex when he flips the pan one-handed.
“Morning,” he says without turning.
You blink. “How’d you know I was standing here?”
“I, uh…” He falters, then gestures at the sizzling pan. “Heard footsteps. I assumed.”
You hum.
Exhibit 9: He heard me from across the apartment, over the sound of a frying pan.
-
You’re brushing your teeth later when you spot the mirror fogged from the shower.
You reach for a towel and notice it’s already been run under warm water.
You glance at him, and he just shrugs. “Figured you’d want it not freezing.”
“Figured?” you repeat.
He leans against the doorframe, smiling. “Lucky guess.”
You don’t respond. Just kiss his cheek with toothpaste still in your mouth.
Exhibit 10: He always guesses exactly what I need. Down to the second.
-
That night, he falls asleep on your couch during movie night, head on your thigh, hand around your wrist like a lifeline.
You swear you see the movie reflected in his eyes, like the light isn’t just hitting them but moving inside them. You blink. It’s gone.
You look down at him. His lashes are impossibly long. His mouth is parted. His breathing is steady—but not quite… human. Too even. Too perfect.
Exhibit 11: His pupils did a thing. I don’t know how to describe it. But they did a thing.
-
The next day, a car splashes a wave of slush toward you both on the sidewalk.
You brace for impact.
But Clark steps in front of you, faster than you can blink. The water hits him. Not you.
You didn’t even see him move.
You narrow your eyes. He just smiles. “Reflexes.”
“Clark. Be honest. Do you secretly run marathons at night?”
He laughs. “Nope. Just really hate laundry.”
Exhibit 12: Literally teleported into the splash zone to shield me. Probably didn’t even get wet.
-
And still… you don’t say it.
You don’t ask.
Because he’s not just some blur of strength or spectacle.
He’s the man who folds your laundry while pretending it’s because he’s “bad at relaxing.” Who scribbles notes in the margins of your drafts, calling your metaphors “dangerously good.” Who kisses your forehead with a kind of reverence like you’re the one who’s unreal.
You know.
You know.
And he knows you know.
Because he’s hiding it from you. Not really.
When he stumbles over his own sentences, when his smile falters after a late return, when his jaw tenses at the sound of your name whispered too softly, you don’t see evasion. You see weight. You see care.
He’s protecting something.
And you’re trying to figure out how to tell him that you already know. That it’s okay. That you’re still here. That you love him anyway.
You haven’t said it yet, not the knowing, not the loving. But it lives just under your skin. A second heartbeat. A full body truth. You think maybe, if you just look him in the eye long enough next time, he’ll understand.
But still neither of you says it yet. Because the space between what’s said and unsaid, that’s where everything soft lives.
And you’re not ready to let it go.
-
The morning feels ordinary.
There’s a crack in the coffee pot. A printer jam. Perry yelling something about deadlines from his office. Jimmy’s camera bag spills open across your desk, and he swears he’ll fix it after his coffee, and Lois is pacing, muttering about sources.
And then the screens change.
It’s subtle at first, just a flicker. Then the feed cuts mid-commercial. Every monitor in the bullpen goes black, then red. Emergency alert. A shrill tone splits the air. Someone turns up the volume.
You look up.
And everything shifts.
The broadcast blares through the newsroom speakers, raw footage streaming in from a local news chopper.
Metropolis. Midtown. Chaos. A building half-collapsed. Smoke curling upward in a thick, unnatural spiral.
The camera jolts and then there he is.
Superman.
Thrown through a brick wall.
You feel it in your bones before your brain catches up. That’s him. That’s Clark.
He’s on his knees in the wreckage, panting, bleeding, from his temple, from his ribs, from a gash you can’t see the end of. The suit is torn. His cape is shredded. He’s never looked so human.
He tries to stand. Wobbles. Collapses.
You stop breathing.
“Is Superman going to be ok?” someone behind you murmurs.
“Jesus,” Jimmy whispers.
“He’ll be fine,” Lois says, too casually. She leans back in her chair, sipping her coffee like it’s any other news cycle. “He always is.”
You want to scream. Because that’s not a story on a screen. That’s not some distant, untouchable god.
That’s your boyfriend.
That’s the man who brought you coffee this morning with one sugar and just the right amount of cream. The man who kissed your wrist in the elevator, whose hands trembled when he whispered I want to be enough. Who holds you like you’re something holy and bruises like he’s made of skin after all.
He’s not fine. He’s bleeding.
He’s not getting up.
You freeze.
The bullpen keeps moving around you, half-aware, half-horrified, but you can’t speak. Can’t blink. Can’t breathe.
Your hands start to shake.
You grip the edge of your desk like it might anchor you to the floor, like if you let go you’ll run straight out the door, out into the chaos, toward the wreckage and the fire and the thing trying to kill him.
A part of you already has.
A hit lands on the feed, something massive slamming him into the pavement, and your knees almost buckle from the force of it. Not physically. Not really. But somewhere deep. Something inside you fractures.
You don’t know what the enemy is.
Alien, maybe. Or worse.
But it’s not the shape of the thing that terrifies you—it’s him. It’s how slow he is to get up. How much his mouth is bleeding. How his eyes are unfocused. How you’ve never seen him look like this.
You want to run.
You want to be there.
But you’re not. You’re here. In your dress pants and button-up, in your neat little office chair, with your badge clipped to your hip and your heart breaking quietly.
Because no one else knows. No one else understands what’s really at stake. No one else sees the man behind the cape.
Not like you do.
Your vision blurs.
You wipe your eyes. Pretend it’s nothing. The bullpen is too loud to hear your breath catch.
But still, your hands tremble and your heart pounds so violently it hurts.
And you cry.
Quietly.
You cry like the city might if it could feel. You cry like the sky should. You cry like someone already grieving. Like someone who knows what it means to lose him.
The footage won’t stop. Superman reels across the screen: his suit torn, the shoulder scorched through in a blackened, jagged arc. Blood smears the corner of his mouth. There’s a limp in his gait now, one he keeps trying to mask. The camera catches it anyway.
The newsroom is silent now save for the hiss of static and the low voice of the anchor describing the damage downtown.
You sit frozen at your desk, the plastic edge biting into your palms as you grip it like it might stop your body from unraveling. The taste of bile has settled at the back of your throat. Your coffee’s gone cold in its cup.
Across the bullpen, someone mutters, “Jesus. He took a hit.”
“Look at the suit,” Lois says flatly, standing by one of the screens. “He’s never looked that rough before.”
“Dude’s limping,” Jimmy adds, pushing his glasses up. “That alien thing…what even was that?”
Their words feel like background noise. Distant. Warped. You can’t seem to hear anything over the white-hot panic blistering in your chest.
You blink, your eyes burning, throat tight. You can’t just sit here and cry. Not in front of Lois and Perry and half the bullpen. But your body is trembling anyway. You clench your hands in your lap, nails digging crescent moons into your skin.
He’s hurt.
And he’s still out there.
Fighting.
Alone.
You can’t just sit here.
You shove your chair back hard enough that it scrapes against the floor. “I’m going.”
Lois turns toward you. “Going where?”
“I’m covering it. The attack. The fallout. Whatever’s left—I want to see it firsthand.”
Lois’s brow lifts. “Since when do you make reckless calls like this?”
“I don’t,” you snap, already grabbing your coat. “But I am now.”
Jimmy’s already halfway to the door. “If we’re going, I’m bringing the camera.”
Lois hesitates. Then sighs. “Hell. You two’ll get yourselves killed without me.”
You don’t wait for her to finish grabbing her phone. You’re already out the door.
-
Downtown is a war zone.
The smell of scorched concrete clings to the air. Smoke spirals in uneven plumes from the carcass of a building that must have been beautiful once. Sirens scream in every direction, red and blue lights flashing off every pane of shattered glass.
You arrive just as the dust begins to settle.
The battle is over but the wreckage tells you how bad it was.
The Justice Gang moves through the remains like figures out of a dream, tattered and bloodied, but upright.
Guy Gardner limps past, muttering curses. “Next time, I’m bringing a bigger damn ring.” Kendra Saunders, Hawkgirl, has one wing half-folded and streaked with blood. She ignores it as she checks on a paramedic’s bandages. Mr. Terrific is already coordinating with local emergency crews, directing flow with a hand to his ear. And Metamorpho—God, he looks like he’s melting and re-solidifying with every breath.
And then…
Him.
He descends from the smoke. Not in a blur. Not with a boom of sonic air. Slowly. Controlled.
But not untouched.
He lands in a crouch, shoulders tight, the line of his jaw drawn sharp with tension. His boots crunch against broken concrete. His cape is torn at one edge, flapping limply behind him.
He’s hurt.
He’s so clearly hurt.
And even through all of it, through the dirt and blood and pain, he sees you. His eyes lock onto yours in an instant. The rest of the world falls away. There’s no press. No chaos. No destruction.
Just him.
And you.
The corner of his mouth lifts, just a flicker. Not a smile. Just… recognition.
And something deeper behind it.
You know know.
And he is letting you know.
But he straightens a second later, lifting his chin, slotting the mask back into place like a practiced motion. He squares his shoulders, winces barely perceptible, and turns to face the press.
Lois is already stepping forward, questions in hand. “Superman. What can you tell us about the enemy?”
His voice is steady, but you can hear it now. The strain. The breath that doesn’t quite come easy. The syllables that drag like they’re fighting his tongue. “It wasn’t local,” he says. “Some kind of dimensional breach. We had help closing it.”
Jimmy’s camera clicks. Kendra coughs into her hand.
You’re not writing.
You’re just watching.
Watching the soot along his cheekbone. The split in his lip. The way he shifts his weight to favor one side. The way the “s” in “justice” drags like it hurts to say.
He looks tired.
But more than that…he looks like Clark.
And it’s never been more obvious than right now, standing under broken sky, trying to pretend like nothing’s changed.
You want to run to him. You want to hold him up.
But you stay rooted.
When the questions start to slow and the press begins murmuring among themselves, he glances over. Just at you.
“Are you okay?” he asks, barely audible.
You nod. “Are you?”
He hesitates. Then says, “Getting there.”
It’s not a performance. Not for them. Just for you.
You nod again. The look you share says more than anything else could.
I know.
I’m not leaving.
You don’t have to say it.
When he flies away, slower this time, one hand brushing briefly against his ribs, it’s not dramatic. There’s no sonic boom. No heat trail. Just wind and distance.
Lois exhales. “He looked rough.”
Jimmy nods. “Still hot, though.”
You say nothing. You just stare up at the empty sky. And press your shaking hand over your heart.
-
You fake calm.
You smile when Jimmy slaps your shoulder and says something about getting the footage up by morning. You nod through Lois’s sharp-eyed stare and mutter something about your deadline, your byline, your blood sugar, anything to get her to stop watching you like she knows what you’re not saying.
But the second you’re alone?
You run. It’s not a sprint, not really. Just that jittery, full-body urgency, the kind that makes your hands shake and your legs move faster than your thoughts can follow. You don’t remember the trip home. Just the chaos of your own pulse, the way your chest won’t stop aching.
You replay the scene again and again in your mind: his landing, the blood on his lip, the flicker of pain when he looked at you. That not-quite smile. That nearly imperceptible tremble.
You’d never wanted to hold someone more in your life.
And when you reach your door, keys fumbling, heart still hammering? He’s already there.
You pause halfway through the doorway.
He’s standing in your living room, like he’s been waiting hours. He’s not in the suit. No cape. No crest. Just a plain black T-shirt and flannel pajama pants, his hair still damp like he just showered.
He looks like Clark. Except… tonight you know there’s no difference.
“Hi,” he says quietly. His voice is soft. Familiar. “I didn’t mean to startle you.”
You blink. “Did you break through my patio door?”
He winces. “Yes. Sort of.”
You lift a brow. “You owe me a new lock.”
“It doesn’t work like that.” He says with a roll of his eyes.
A silence stretches between you. It’s not tense. Not angry. Just full of everything neither of you said earlier.
He takes a step toward you, then stops. “How long have you known?”
You drop your keys in the bowl by the door and toe off your shoes before answering. “Since the lamp. And the candle,” you say. “But… mostly tonight.”
He nods like that hurts. Like he wishes he could’ve done better. Like he wishes he could’ve told you in some perfect, movie-moment way.
“I didn’t want you to find out like that,” he says quietly.
You walk to the couch and sit, your limbs finally catching up to the adrenaline crash still sweeping through you. “I’m glad I found out at all.”
That’s what makes him move. He sinks down beside you, hands on his knees. You can see it in his profile, the exhaustion, the regret, the weight he’s been carrying for so long. You’re not sure he’s ever looked more human.
“I’ve been hiding so long,” he says, voice barely above a whisper. “I forgot how to be seen. And with you… I didn’t want to lie. But I didn’t want to lose it either. I didn’t want to lose you.”
Your throat tightens. “You won’t,” you say. And you mean it.
His head turns then, slowly, eyes meeting yours like he’s trying to memorize your face from this distance. You don’t look away.
When he kisses you, it’s not careful. It’s not shy. It’s like something breaks open inside him softly. The dam finally giving way.
His hands cradle your face like you’re something he’s terrified to shatter but needs to feel. His mouth is hot and open, reverent, desperate in the way it deepens. He kisses like he’s anchoring himself to the earth through your lips. Like everything in him is still shaking from battle and you’re the only thing that still feels real.
You reach for him. Thread your fingers into his hair. Pull him closer.
It builds like a slow swell, hands tangling, breathing harder, heat coiling low in your stomach. He pushes you back gently against the cushions, his body moving over yours with careful precision. Not to pin. Just to hold.
You feel it in every motion: the restraint. The effort. He could crush steel and he’s using that strength to cradle your ribs.
He undresses you with reverence. His fingers tremble when they touch your bare skin. Not from hesitation, but because he’s finally allowed to want. To have. To be seen.
You undress him too. That soft black T-shirt comes off first. Then the flannel. His chest is mottled with bruises, a dark one blooming across his side where that alien creature must’ve hit him. Your fingertips trace the edge of it.
He exhales, shaky. But he doesn’t stop you.
You’re straddling his lap before you realize it, chest to chest, foreheads pressed together.
“Are you scared?” he whispers.
Your thumb brushes his cheek. “Never of you.”
He kisses you again. Slow this time. More control, but more depth too. His hands glide down your back and settle at your hips, thumbs pressing into your skin like he needs the reminder that you’re here. That you chose this.
The rest unfolds like prayer. The way he touches yo, thorough, patient, hungry, it’s worship. Every gasp you make pulls a soft, broken sound from his throat. Every arch of your back makes his eyes flutter shut like he’s overwhelmed by the sight of you. The way he moves inside you is deep and aching and full of something larger than either of you.
Not rough. But desperate. Raw. True.
And even when he falters, when his hands grip too tight or the air warms just a little too fast, you hold his face and whisper, “I know. It’s okay. I want all of you.” And he gives it. All of him. Until the only thing either of you can do is fall apart. Together.
Later, when you’re curled up on the couch in a tangle of limbs and quiet breathing, he rests his forehead against your temple.
The city buzzes somewhere far away.
He whispers into your skin: “Next time… don’t let me fly off like that.”
Your smile is soft, tired. “Next time, come straight to me.”
He nods, eyes already fluttering shut.
And finally, for the first time since this began, you both sleep without secrets between you.
-
You wake to sunlight. Not loud, not harsh—just soft beams slipping through the blinds, spilling across the floor, warming the space where your bare shoulder meets the sheets. You blink slowly, the weight of sleep still thick behind your eyes, and shift just slightly in the tangle of limbs wrapped around you. He doesn’t stir. Not even a little.
Clark is still curled around you like the night never ended, his chest at your back, legs tangled with yours, one arm snug around your waist and the other folded up against your ribs, fingers resting over your heart like he’s guarding it in his sleep.
You don’t move. You can’t. Because it’s perfect. You let your cheek rest against his arm, warm and solid beneath you, and you just listen to the steady rhythm of his heart, to the rise and fall of his breathing, to the way the silence doesn’t feel empty anymore. You don’t know if you’ve ever felt more grounded than you do right now, held like this. It isn’t the cape. It isn’t the flight. It isn’t the power that quiets the noise in your chest.
It’s him. Just Clark. And for once, you don’t need anything else.
He stumbles into the kitchen half an hour later in your robe. Your actual, honest-to-god, fuzzy gray robe. It’s oversized on you, which means it fits him like a second skin, belt tied loose at the hips, collar gaping just enough to make you lose your train of thought. His hair is a mess, sticking up in soft black tufts. His glasses are nowhere to be found. He scratches the back of his neck, blinking at the cabinets like he’s not entirely sure how kitchens work.
You lean against the counter with your arms folded, watching him with open amusement. “You own too much flannel.”
Clark glances over, eyes squinting against the light. “I’ll have you know, that robe is a Metropolis winter essential.”
“You’re bulletproof.”
“I get cold emotionally.”
You snort. “You’re such a menace in the morning.”
“And yet,” he says, opening the fridge and retrieving eggs with the careful precision of someone who’s clearly trying not to break them with super strength, “you let me stay.”
You grin. “You’re lucky you’re cute.”
He burns the first pancake. Which is honestly impressive, considering you weren’t even sure it was physically possible for someone with super speed and heat vision to ruin breakfast. But he flips it too fast, like way too fast, and the thing launches halfway across the skillet before folding in on itself and sizzling dramatically.
You raise an eyebrow. Clark stares down at the pancake like it betrayed him. “I didn’t account for surface tension.”
“Did you just say ‘surface tension’ while making pancakes?”
“I’m a complex man,” he says solemnly.
You lean over and pluck a piece of fruit from the cutting board he forgot he was slicing. “You’re a menace and a dork.”
He pouts. Full, actual pout. Then shuffles over and kisses your shoulder. “I’ll get better with practice.”
You roll your eyes. But your skin’s still buzzing where his lips brushed it.
Later, you sit on the counter while he stands between your knees, coffee in one hand, the other resting warm on your thigh. It’s quiet. Not awkward or forced, just soft. Full of little glances and sips and contented silence. There’s no fear in him now. No carefully placed pauses. No skirting around things. He just… is. Clark Kent. The boy who spilled coffee on your notes three times. The man who kept writing to you in secret even when you didn’t see him.
“You’re not what I expected,” you say, fingers brushing his arm.
He lifts an eyebrow. “Oh?”
“I don’t know. I guess I thought Superman would be… shinier. Less flannel. More invincible.”
“Are you saying I’m not shiny enough for you?”
“I’m saying you’re better.”
He blinks. And then, just like that, he smiles. Not the bashful one. Not the public one. The real one. Small and warm and honest. The kind of smile you only give someone when you feel safe. And maybe that’s what this is now. Safety. Not the absence of danger, but the presence of someone who will always come back.
His communicator buzzes from somewhere in the bedroom. Clark lets out the most exhausted groan you’ve ever heard and buries his face in your shoulder like it’ll make the world go away.
“You have to go?” you ask gently, threading your fingers through his hair.
“Soon.”
“You’ll come back?”
He lifts his head. Meets your eyes. “Every time.”
You kiss him then, slow and deep and familiar now. The kind of kiss that tastes like mornings and memory and maybe something closer to forever. He kisses you back like he already misses you. And when he finally pulls away and disappears into the sky outside your window. less streak of light, more quiet parting, you just stand there for a moment. Barefoot. Wrapped in your robe. Heart full.
You’re about to start cleaning up the kitchen when you see it. A post-it note, stuck to the fridge. Just a small square of yellow. Written in the same handwriting you could spot anywhere now.
“You always look soft in the mornings. I like seeing you like this.”
—C.K.
You read it three times. Then you smile. You walk to the cabinet above the sink, open the door, and stick it right next to all the others. The secret ones. The old ones. The ones that helped you feel seen before you even knew whose eyes were watching.
And now you know. Now you see him too.
All of him.
And you wouldn’t trade it for anything.
-
tags: @eeveedream m @anxiousscribbling @pancake-05 @borhapparker @dreammiiee @benbarnesprettygurl @insidethegardenwall @butterflies-on-my-ashes s @maplesyrizzup @rockwoodchevy @jasontoddswhitestreak @loganficsonly @overwintering-soldier @hits-different-cause-its-you @eclipsedplanet @wordacadabra @itzmeme e @cecesilver @crisis-unaverted-recs @indigoyoons @chili4prez @thetruthisintheirdreams @ethanhoewke (<— it wouldn’t let me tag some blogs I’m so sorry!!)
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. . . taking care of big bad colonel caleb after he comes home from work all pent up and frustrated
. . . omg dat ass??? it deserves to be smacked !
. . . he just can't get enough of your tits ! he has to put his mouth on ’em even when you're on top of him
. . . cuddling but he just can't help but get hard ! so you give his dick a lil bit of attention, after all you both are so cozy with each other
. . . when he told you to sit on his face and put your whole body weight on him and you actually do it
. . . poor guy misses his pipsqueak so much that he ends up humping your pillow
. . . during his first time he's scared to put it in so he ends up fucking your thighs and you can't help but moan at the feel of his tip gliding through your folds
. . . yes, sit on it, like a chair, he doesn't care if he can breathe, as long as your scent fills his lungs he's happy to die like this
. . . giving him a backkk massage but oh, did he expect that?
. . . your everyday morning routine with him and god, you both love it so much
. . . he trusts you so much that he let's you tie him up and blindfold him ! you got him wrapped around your fingers and now mouth too
. . . he can cum just by looking at you ! look at him jerking himself off to you pleasuring yourself as he cums all over your body
. . . “biggggg strech" and it's just him splitting you open with his huge cock
. . . just the birthday boy enjoying his birthday meal on the couch