Modern Sinners AU! Preacher Boy / Sammie x Black Church Girl!Reader
A/N: Guys this is just a filler chapter so you all can know all characters the next chapters finna be🫦. My German ass needed 4 days for this😕💔 I’m working to be faster.
“Y/N, get yo’ ass in here!” Grandma hollered from the living room, already halfway standing, one hand gripped tight around Pops, the other waving like she could summon you through walls.
Dawn, still in her bonnet and fuzzy slippers, shuffled in like a sleepwalking soldier, posted up on the other side of Grandma and took her hand like it was routine.
“Where that girl at? I got a long shift ahead of me,” your Mama called out while wrestling the end of her scrub top, badge already clipped, shoes by the door.
“Don’t be hard on her, now. It’s her first time, baby,” your Daddy mumbled, voice low and easy like Sunday morning, sliding his fingers into hers as they stood side by side.
“I’m here,” you muttered, voice still thick with sleep and thoughts of Sammie lingering in the corners of your mind like smoke. Even though you try to push away any imagination that concludes him.
You stepped into the circle, palms up, heart open. The whole house held its breath as you all bowed heads and began to pray over the week, over your steps, over this brand new chapter that was just starting to bloom.
Amen passed through lips like breath and just like that, the morning was moving again your Mama grabbing her keys, Grandma fussin’ over Dawn’s hair and Pops humming an old hymn under his breath.
“C’mon, girl,” your daddy said, nodding his head toward the front door.
You followed him out, the sun shining above the trees, that early light catching the dust in the air like glitter. The ride was quiet, not awkward quiet just peaceful. His old-school Hip Hop playing low on the radio, windows cracked just enough to let the breeze sneak in.
“Got somethin’ for you,” he said as y’all pulled into the gravel lot behind his job. His truck kicked up little clouds of dirt that shimmered gold in the morning.
You raised an eyebrow, still halfway in a dream. “For me?”
He just smiled and nodded toward the back corner where an old but clean car sat shining like it was fresh out the womb. Paint new, tires black like they’d been dipped in ink, and a little bow taped crooked on the hood.
“Went ahead and fixed her up for you. Thought you might wanna drive yourself to the campus instead of waitin’ on me or your mama.”
“Don’t cry now, you gon’ mess up your face,” he teased, but his eyes were warm, proud. “She ain’t new, but she solid. Just like you.”
You threw your arms around him, holding him tight like you were seven again, not nineteen and grown. “Thank you,” you whispered.
He patted your back with that daddypat that said I got you, always.
Meanwhile, back home, Dawn was curled up on the couch in Doris’s old bedspread, watching old reruns with Pops. She was still half asleep, letting Grandma braid her hair slowly into cornrows while the house exhaled the rest of the morning quiet.
And just like that, the week began.
The car still smelled like the lemon tree air freshener Lenny stuck in the vent, windows rolled down as you cruised down the two lane road. College campus coming into view like something out a brochure folks laughing, some running late with backpacks halfway falling off, others posted up with iced coffees and opinions.
You found parking easy, took a deep breath and grabbed your tote bag, head held high even though your stomach was doing flips. First day. First class. First real step toward the future you’d been praying on since tenth grade. Social Work 1100: Intro to Human Services. Room B208.
The hallway smelled like pencil shavings and somebody’s too strong cologne, but you found your seat near the window and tucked yourself into the corner.
That’s when he walked in dark skin, dreads shoulder length and a low fade with a clean line up. He wore a big tee, cargo pants, Airforces and carried a beat up notebook like it was sacred.
“Is this seat taken?” he asked, pointing to the desk beside you.
You shook your head. “Go ahead.”
He plopped down, sighed like he’d been holding his breath all morning and then turned to you with a quick, lopsided smile. “I’m Chris, by the way. Social work major God help me.”
You laughed, some of the tightness in your chest letting go. “Y/N. Same major. Same prayer.”
“Okay, I like you already,” he said, sliding his phone face down on the desk. “You look like you you don’t play. You say ‘no’ to people, don’t you?”
You raised an eyebrow, amused. “I’m working on it.”
“Aren’t we all,” he grinned. “I got a cousin who think I’m about to fix his baby mama drama just ’cause I took one psych class. I said, sir, I’m not licensed yet call your mama.”
You snorted, trying not to be too loud, but it was impossible around him. Chris had that magnetic energy.
By the time Professor Jenkins walked in, y’all had already traded numbers, cracked jokes about the textbook price and promised to be each other’s emergency class partner.
Monday rolled in smooth like butter on warm toast. You got through your classes, met Chris and even remembered to email that one professor back before midnight. Tuesday was light work just two classes and enough time in between to actually eat lunch and catch up on readings. You were getting the hang of this college rhythm.
By the time Wednesday came around, your head had switched gears. Afternoon sunlight poured into your room, golden and soft, and your calendar had one thing circled: youth choir practice.
You were fixing your hair in your bedroom mirror when Dawn poked her head in. She was already dressed like she had somewhere to be that wasn’t choir tight jeans, lip gloss poppin’ and a sly little smirk on her face.
“Hey,” she started, all casual, “can I use the car after you drove to practice?”
You turned, confused. “What you mean? I thought you was staying for choir?”
Dawn shrugged like it was nothing. “Yeah… no. But Daddy still got my car jacked up and I just need it for like… an hour. Promise I’ll be back before it’s over.”
You eyed her, suspicious but tired of arguing. “You better be. And don’t scratch it Daddy just gave me this thing.”
“I ain’t stupid,” she said, rolling her eyes and grabbing her bag. “Thank youuu, sissss.”
The two of you slid into the car, the evening breeze dancing through the windows. You pulled up to the church, parked on the side lot and switched seats so she could slide behind the wheel. As you hopped out and shut the door, you didn’t even see the quick check she did in the rearview or the text she sent before pulling off to see whoever she wasn’t telling the Lord about.
You took a deep breath, walked up the church steps and opened the door expecting voices, laughter, maybe a choir member or two already warming up.
You stepped in and the soft hum of piano drifted from the sanctuary. There he was.
Sammie sat at the baby grand, head tilted down and fingers gliding across the keys like the music was coming straight from his bloodstream. He hadn’t seen you yet or maybe he had and was just pretending not to.
You stood there for a second, heart thumping.
He finally looked up, slow and deliberate, mouth curving into that lazy, knowing smirk. “Look who showed up early.”
You swallowed, stepping closer. “I thought practice started at five.”
He chuckled, not missing a beat. “It does. You just couldn’t wait to see me, huh?”
You rolled your eyes, but your face burned anyway. “I came to sing, not flirt.”
“Mmhm,” he said, still playing. “You always wear that lip gloss to sing?”
You folded your arms, but your smile was giving you away. “You always come to practice alone just to be a menace?”
He let a final chord linger in the air, then stood, walking around the piano with a kind of slow, deliberate swagger that made your knees wobble a little.
“I came to get ready,” he said, eyes locked on yours. “But now you here… and suddenly I feel real inspired.”
You looked away, biting your lip just a little too hard.
“Don’t do that,” he said low, voice brushing against your neck like a prayer and a warning. “Do you know what that does to me?“
You laughed, stepping back before the air got too heavy.
“Boy,” you said, “go warm up your vocals or something.”
“I’d rather warm up with you,” he said, voice low and syrupy, like he was trying to melt into you right there between the piano chords and stained glass silence.
You gave him a look that should’ve been stern enough, warning, laced with a little holy fire but all he did was grin wider and take one slow step closer.
“Samuel…” you muttered, planting both hands against his chest, palms flat like a benediction, trying to put something, anything, between the two of you.
But space? Space wasn’t something Sammie knew and especially not when it came to you.
Before you could take another breath, he had you gently backed up against the pew. Not rough, not wild just firm enough to remind you that he was there. That he saw you. That he felt all of this, same as you.
“Don’t call me that,” he said, soft but full of warning, like he hated how your voice wrapped around his full name. Like it did something to him.
He took both of your hands in his, warm and calloused from Keyboard keys and old hymn books and he held them right in front of your chest. His thumbs brushed the back of your knuckles slow.
“You know I like it better when you say Sammie.”
You swallowed hard, throat tight. “You’re not supposed to be this close.”
He smiled again, leaned in just enough for you to feel his breath on your cheek. “Ain’t no rule sayin’ I can’t stand near a beautiful girl.”
“Ain’t no rule sayin’ I can’t swing my purse at you, either.”
That made him laugh quiet and deep, the kind that came from his belly and he leaned back just a little, still holding your hands.
“Fine Y/N,” he said, smirk tugging at the corner of his mouth. “I’ll behave.”
And he let go, just like that.
But even as he turned away to sit back down at the piano, you still felt the echo of his hands on yours and you still heard the way he said your name like it was part prayer, part problem.
And you weren’t sure which one scared you more.
You were still catching your breath when the old wooden church doors creaked open, the clatter of shoes on tile snapping through the sanctuary like a clapback.
“Hey y’all,” Brittnay called, voice pitched and firm like she’d been born with a mic in hand and a clipboard in the other. Her natural hair was pulled up into a slick bun, edges laid like holy ground. Her eyes flicked over you quick, clipped and cool before landing on Sammie like they always did.
Malik, Terrence, Josh, Paul, Essence, Ruth and a couple other choir regulars spilled in behind her. Laughter and the soft glow of phone screens trailed them like perfume. A few nodded at you. Josh and Terrence? Yeah, they did the most.
“Hey now,” Terrence said, eyes roaming like he was reading scripture on your skin. “Didn’t know the choir was auditionin’ angels.”
You blinked once, slow. “You say that to every girl?”
Terrence let out a sharp laugh, quick and mean. Brittnay gave you the kind of side eye that could curdle communion wine. Sammie, of course, was watching from the piano, one brow lifted like he’d just found his favorite hymn.
Brittnay clapped her hands once. “Alright now, get in place.”
Voices shuffled, shoes scraped and you took your spot near the alto section. Brittnay handed you harmonies like a challenge, but you caught on easy your voice already seasoned by pews and potlucks and a mama who made you sing before you could speak.
Sammie’s hands graced the keys and Amazing Grace rose slow and sweet. His playing was deliberate, like he was coaxing the Spirit out of the strings. You let your voice fall in soft, steady. By the time y’all reached “was blind, but now I see,” even Brittnay had stopped frowning.
Redeemed followed louder, fuller. Ruth belted like she had something to prove. Malik clapped off-beat. Sammie added these bluesy runs between verses, just subtle enough that you noticed. When your voice met his melody, he smiled like he knew you would.
After the last stretch of “His child and forever I am,” Brittnay tapped her phone screen and the music stopped cold.
“I’ll drop the rehearsal vid in the group chat,” she said, already typing. “Y’all know the drill.”
Buzzes filled the room as messages came through. Choir folk grabbed bags and Bibles, hugging, joking, easing toward the door.
Terrence lingered, leaned in close. “You need a ride home or you straight?”
Before you could get your answer out, Sammie slid into the space like he’d been summoned.
“She good,” he said, dangling his keys like temptation. “I offered already.”
Terrence held up both hands. “Say less, preacher boy.”
Brittnay turned to you, smile taut. “Welcome to the choir.”
You gave her a tight nod. “Thanks.” But her voice held no warmth. Felt more like a warning than a welcome.
Some of the group still standing and talking while others went out, voices fading into the humid night air. You turned to Sammie.
“I actually got a ride,” you said, half a lie. “Dawn should be here any minute.”
You stepped out the doors, swinging your hips like you weren’t irritated as hell inside.
But the parking lot was empty. One car left.
Your phone was already in your hand, thumb moving fast.
You tapped the mic and held it close.
“Dawn Elise Whitaker. Where are you? More importantly where is my car? If I don’t hear from you in the next five minutes, I will summon Granny and you know she still got that wooden spoon from 2004. Call me back.”
“You always holler into your phone like that?”
You didn’t even need to turn. That voice? That lil smirk woven into every word? That was Sammie.
You spun around. “Dawn took my car to go God knows where, probably somewhere no Bible touches and now she’s ghostin’ me like a Pharisee in a leggings.”
Sammie laughed, deep and full, like it came from somewhere way down in his ribs.
“Well then,” he said, holding out the passenger door, “Let me be your chariot tonight, church girl.”
You looked up at the sky like maybe God would write no in the stars. But it stayed quiet and dark. And Sammie was already grinning like he knew you’d fold.
He opened the door, still with that look like he was always one second from saying something slick.
You slid into the seat. “I guess.”
Sammie climbed in behind the wheel. “Let’s get you home before you start second guessin’ this blessing.”
He winked, turned the key, and the engine came alive deep and low, just like your nerves.
And with that, the two of you slipped into the Clarksdale night, your phone still silent in your lap, your heart beating a little too loud for a simple church girl.
The ride started quiet, windows cracked just enough to let in the cicada song and the last breath of sunset. Sammie tapped the wheel with two fingers, watching the road like it had answers he’d been praying on.
You sat with your arms folded, pretending to scroll on your phone but really just waiting for a text that still hadn’t come.
He glanced over, smirk playing soft at his lips.
“You always walk like that after choir practice?”
You looked up, brows furrowed. “Walk like what?”
He leaned back, hand resting at twelve on the wheel, voice a little lower than before. “Like you was floatin’. Swingin’ your hips like you ain’t know half them boys was ’bout to break they neck watchin’.”
Your mouth fell open. “Excuse me?”
He grinned. “I saw Terrence. Lookin’ at you like you was communion and he ain’t ate all week. And that whole ‘you need a ride’ line? Nah. He wasn’t talkin’ ‘bout cars.”
You side-eyed him. “You jealous?”
He didn’t answer right away, just let the engine hum and the night fold around the car like velvet. Then—
“Would it be wrong if I said yeah?”
You looked at him. Really looked at him. The soft curve of his jaw, the gold chain catching a glint of streetlight, the way his hands gripped the wheel like it was a steering wheel and a prayer all at once.
He caught your stare and smiled. “You be lookin’ at me like that, church girl, I might crash this car on purpose.”
You snorted and turned away, heat rising in your cheeks. “You so full of yourself.”
“I’m full of a lotta things,” he said, voice dipping playful. “But mainly just thinkin’ ’bout you.”
Another silence passed, this one more weighted, like something holy and unspoken was sitting between you both.
He cleared his throat. “What’s your favorite Bible story?”
You blinked. “Wait?! what?”
He shrugged. “I’m serious. You got a favorite? Don’t act like you ain’t grown up around the Word.”
You stared at him, thrown. “I mean… yeah. Ruth, probably.”
That made his smile falter just a little. He looked at you different then softer, like your answer unlocked a door he wasn’t ready to open yet.
“Ruth,” he repeated. “Yeah. That makes sense.”
You raised a brow. “What’s that supposed to mean?”
He smirked, gaze back on the road. “You loyal. You strong. Got that kind of beauty that don’t ask for attention but still gets it anyway.”
You didn’t even have time to respond before his phone lit up on the dash, screen flashing Brittnay and connecting automatically to the car’s Bluetooth.
He hit the answer button and gave you a quick “Shhh,” finger pressed to his lips.
“Hey Sammie,” her voice came through the speakers sharp and sweet like sugar with lemon juice. “I meant to ask before you left can you get that girl’s number? The new one. Y/N?”
Your eyes widened. Sammie glanced at you, trying not to laugh.
“I wanna add her to the choir group chat,” Brittnay continued, tone going flatter now. “Since apparently she’s in now.”
You leaned closer to the speaker, lips twisted. Since apparently?
Sammie coughed into his fist. “Yeah, I’ll get it to you.”
“Mhm,” Brittnay said. “Well. Night.”
The line cut off, the silence loud.
You raised a brow. “She said that like she didn’t ask me to come and like I snuck in through the back door.”
Sammie chuckled. “That’s just Brittnay. She don’t like when new folks catch the spotlight without askin’ her first.”
“Well tell her I didn’t ask for it.”
“I won’t tell her anything,” he said, while the camera to a stop because of the red light. “You tell her next Sunday with that voice of yours.”
He met your gaze and didn’t look away.
“You really jealous?” you asked again, quieter this time.
His lips twitched. “I’m not used to sharin’ what I want.”
You bit your lip, heartbeat steady and loud in your ears. Before you could answer your phone lit up in your hand.
You were only ten minutes from home, the street signs startin’ to look familiar and the sky deepenin’ into that Southern blue black.
You picked up with a sharp inhale, ready to fuss.
Before you could get a word out, her voice came fast and panicked, like she’d been rehearsing it on the ride over.
“Wait don’t go inside yet! Please, Y/N, I need you to meet me at the old corner store. You know, the one near Mr. Lee’s barbershop? I’m pulling up now. I can’t go in alone Granny already think I’m halfway goin’ to hell.”
You sighed and looked at Sammie, who raised his brows at your expression.
“I know, I know,” she whispered. “I’m sorry, okay? Just help me out. I promise I’ll explain everything tomorrow.”
You held the phone away from your ear for a beat, then brought it back. “You better be there when I pull up.”
She hung up before you could argue.
Sammie smirked. “That your Pharisee again?”
You gave him a look. “Yes that’s her.”
“Mhmm,” he said, flipping the turn signal like he already knew where to go. “She gon’ owe you for this one.”
As the car turned down the familiar road toward the corner store, he tapped the steering wheel. “Since I’m still playin’ chauffeur, you might as well gimme your number.”
He grinned, leaning into that tease he wore like a second skin. “Well, one you gon’ need a ride again. And two Brittnay want it. Remember.”
“Right,” you said slowly, typing it into his phone when he handed it over. “Only for the choir.”
He looked at you sideways. “Unless you want me to use it for somethin’ else.”
You snatched your hand back, heat pricklin’ up your neck. “Drive the car, Samuel.”
“Don’t call me that,” he muttered, still smiling.
By the time y’all pulled up, Dawn was leaning against the side of the store, hoodie up, like she wasn’t out here actin’ a whole fool just thirty minutes ago.
She scurried over to your side, knocking on the window. “Unlock it!”
You did, barely rolling your eyes before stepping out.
She grabbed your hand quick. “Okay. We was at the church a little late, right? That’s what happened.”
“You’re lucky I love you,” you muttered.
“I know,” she whispered back. “You the realest.”
Before y’all started walking, you turned back to Sammie, who hadn’t pulled off yet.
“Thanks for the ride,” you said, voice softer now.
He leaned over the wheel, one arm draped lazy but his eyes locked with yours. “Anytime, Ruth.”
Your breath hitched just a little.
Dawn looked between the two of you, confused and amused. “Y’all flirting or quoting scripture?”
And Sammie? He just laughed, like he had all the time in the world to keep teasing you until you gave in.
By the time y’all reached the house, the porch light was still on and the living room window glowed warm behind the lace curtains. Inside, the air was still, thick with that kind of silence that don’t mean peace just waiting.
You and Dawn stepped through the front door like two kids fresh from trouble. Not even five seconds in and you froze, Pops was sittin’ in his favorite chair, Bible closed on the side table, glasses perched low on his nose. Doris sat straight on the couch, arms crossed, face carved in stone.
Both of them looking dead at y’all.
“Evenin’,” Pops said, slow.
You swallowed. “Evenin’, Pops.”
Dawn’s voice cracked a little. “Evenin’, Granny…”
Doris didn’t even blink. “Mmhm. Y’all smell like outside.”
You and Dawn exchanged a glance like that would help, but it only made you more suspicious.
“We were at practice,” you offered.
“Late, huh?” Doris cocked her head, still lookin’ at Dawn.
“Yeah,” Dawn said too quick. “Real late. The choir uh, we recorded stuff and, uh, Brittnay wanted to run a second round—”
“Baby,” Doris cut in smooth. “Don’t lie with your whole chest if your socks tell a different story. You done scuffed up your shoes runnin’ through gravel and your neck still got perfume from somebody else’s bathroom.”
Dawn blinked like she forgot how to use her mouth.
You coughed into your hand, stifling a laugh, but Doris turned to you next.
“You went to practice, Y/N?”
Doris squinted, then sighed. “Alright. Go on. Get ready for sleep. Your mama gon’ want to hear how choir’s goin’ in the mornin’.”
You booked it down the hall, still hearing Pops mumble, “You too grown to be actin’ so foolish,” as Dawn shuffled into her seat for the interrogation of the year.
By the time you shut your door, you went straight to the shower and got ready for bed.
Your bonnet was tied and your oversized tee hit just above the knees as you curled into bed, the hum of the ceiling fan lulling you into stillness. You had barely flipped your phone over when the screen lit up.
Unknown Number You make it home alright, church girl?
You smiled, thumb already flying before your brain could catch up.
You I made it. Barely. Dawn almost got me grounded at my big age.
Sammie. Coulda been worse. I coulda drove you straight into temptation.
You rolled your eyes but couldn’t stop the grin stretching wide across your face.
You You already did. Now I gotta pray twice before bed.
Three little dots danced before his reply dropped.
Sammie I like a girl who knows her way to the altar. But I also like a girl who pays her chauffeur. You got some gas money, miss ma’am?
You stared at the message, laughing into your pillow.
You I’ll cashapp you $5. That cover it?
Sammie Mm. Nah. I don’t take cash.
Sammie A kiss. Just one. Payment in full.
Your breath caught a little. Fingers paused mid type. This boy had no business texting like this while you were tucked under your grandmother’s roof.
You You tryna go to hell, Samuel?
Sammie Only if you drivin’.
You threw your phone across the bed and squealed into your pillow, heart knockin’ around your chest like it was trying to break free.
You stared up at the ceiling for a long beat before whispering out loud to no one, “Lord… why he gotta be like this?”
Sammie Sleep good, choir girl. Don’t forget to pray. Twice.
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