Description: Beau finds you in pain and sick leading to him taking care of you like no one ever has
The show went off without a hitch as everyone walked to their rooms in the hotel rather leading to you wiping your make up off finally letting your hair down before hopping in the shower winding down for the night unaware of what was heading your way within the next few minutes. It was after sitting down and watching TV when the pain hit almost like being kicked with the end of a steel toed boot right in your pelvis and not even a few seconds later that the pain turned to stabbing as you leaned over before walking to the bathroom thinking you were starting to get constipated or backed up slightly but nothing happened while whimpering when the jerking and shaking began right before you threw up in the trash can by the bed throwing up the last thing you ate after the show, you started getting scared when the pain intensified becoming unbearable while shaking in tears under the cover as soft cries echoed in the quiet room thinking something was very wrong after everything you thought before of constipation, food poisoning, and ovulation went out the window. You lost track of time not realizing that you were now softly wailing in between cries and chatters of your teeth unable to get up or stand from the pain scared to death it was a cyst or your appendix bursting when a light knock on the door sounded which you didn't hear before the next thing you knew was suddenly seeing Beau after he had used his key card to get the door to pop open after hearing one of your low pained wails and your shaky voice calling out before now as he gently ran his hand through your hair listening to you speak, "Shh hey don't cry, I won't leave and if you need to go to the hospital you say the word" he laid a spare blanket over you and tucked it and the thin comforter around you before coming back with a stomach med and a pain pill which you took with hesitation but you were in so much pain you couldn't handle it anymore as he sat beside you while you softly cried and jerked in pain. The pain pill began to kick in as your cries grew quieter and the rough jerks in your body dissipated while you laid with tears staining your face leading to him gently wiping your face with a tissue before he left only to come back with his guitar which confused you as you dozed off before he began to play the opening of Watch over you by Alter bridge which he knew was one of your favorite songs and wanted to help you relax and show he was there, "And who'll watch over you when I'm gone?" his soft voice echoed in the room as he sang softly to you not looking away from you even for a second as he played and sang watching you slowly doze off listening to his voice that always filled you with warmth but also a sense of comfort and care every time he sang no matter what the song he was singing was hearing his voice until you were asleep soundly and like a rock. "I'm here sweetpea, I won't leave you" after he finished singing he set his guitar against the wall before slowly laying down in bed next to you gently wrapping his arms around you lightly rubbing your lower stomach and pelvis to help ease the pain still within being dulled out by the pain medicine feeling how relaxed you were asleep but also how you melted in his arms as if he'd always held you to sleep which made his heart swell as he turned the lamp on the nightstand off, he stayed awake for an hour ensuring that you were asleep and relaxed before he placed soft and gentle kisses on your shoulder and temple before falling asleep with the random sitcom reruns playing on the tv at a low volume like background noise as the two of you slept until you woke up finding beau with a warm and light meal ready for you in bed leading to him holding you in his arms and rubbing your stomach and pelvis again singing softly and kissing your forehead.
I agree mostly, except Pope would NOT have an Instagram. Will would only have one because Ben set his up too but he forgets it's there. Frankie had Ben help him set one up so he can start sharing baby pictures for his demanding family. Tom would also NOT have Instagram.
Now I'm towing my car, there's a hole in the roof
My possessions are causing me suspicion
But there's no proof
In the paper today tales of war and of waste
But you turn right over to the T.V. page
Hey now, hey now, don't dream it's over
Hey now, hey now, when the world comes in
They come, they come to build a wall between us
We know they won't win
Brother's best friend (Benny Miller x Santiago "Pope" Garcia sister!reader)
Summary: What happens when you hook up with your brother's friend from the Delta Force, and you two are now connected forever?
Warnings: Mentions of s3x, kissing, pregnancy, vomit, and fluff
Side Note: Should I start taking idea requests for Garrett Hedlund characters?
ENJOY!!
â§ď˝Ľďž:* *:シďžâ§
I hadn't expected to sleep with Ben Miller. He was my older brother's, Santiago, friend from his Delta Force days.
Yet here he was, in my bedroom, tugging his pants back onto his hips from our night before.
He turned back to look at me, still shirtless, "I know we were both sober last night, but-"
I cut him off before he could finish "-But nothing..we shouldn't have done that last night..." I sat up in bed, wrapping my bed sheets around me as if it was a toga.
Ben looked at me confused, his eyebrow jerking up in surprise. "What do you mean?"
"..Look, you're Santi's friend...and I'm his sister..we were just horny and looking for a good time, nothing more."
"But sweetheart-"
"...Look..Santi would lose his shit if he found out about this..let's just leave it alone..Please.."
"...It was more than a mistake, y'know..it actually meant something to me.." Ben said, a bit hurt that I had dismissed our night together.
I looked away, not being able to face Ben. Last night did mean something to me too, but I couldn't let it get to the point of us becoming more than just friends.
"...We're just friends, Benny."
"Friends don't kiss and have sex, sober." He replied, quickly.
I knew he'd had me there, but I shrugged him off. I got up from my bed and started putting my clothes on. Once I was done, I noticed Ben simply just looking at me. And I looked down, picking up his shirt from the floor and handing it to him.
--
A couple of weeks after
--
With Pope and Ben
"So, Benny, you get laid recently?" Pope asked Ben, unaware that Ben had slept with you, recently.
Ben paused, wanting to tell Pope but not wanting to reveal that it was you "...Yeah..I have."
"So? Who was it?" Pope pressed for more information, his eyebrow raised in curiosity. "Someone I know?"
Oh, someone he knows VERY well.
"No, Pope." Ben paused "No one you know."
Pope shrugged Ben's answer off and took a sip of his beer "Are you coming to Lily's birthday party tomorrow?" Pope asked, changing the subject to Frankie's that he had with his wife, Peyton.
Ben pressed his lips together and nodded slowly. "Yeah, man. Free beer."
Pope chuckled, unaware of what was going to happen tomorrow.
--
With you
--
I'd been feeling sick lately, maybe it was the guilt and embarrassment from my night with Ben a few weeks ago.
But tomorrow, for Frankie's daughter's birthday, I knew that I would have to come face to face with him after avoiding him.
Although I'd craved his touch, I just knew things would go downwards if we actually were serious. If we broke up, Santi would have to constantly choose between the two of us, and it would just complicate things.
Ben wasn't the type of guy to "do" long term relationships.
Suddenly, I felt the need to puke.
I rushed to the bathroom and let it all out in the toilet. Jesus, this was taking a toll on me.
--
At Frankie's house
--
I arrived at the Morales's house some time around 4, Frankie opened the door and smiled.
"Y/N! Good to see you, Lily was just asking about you, she missed her godmother!" Frankie said, as Peyton walked over.
I smiled and handed the gift for Lily to Frankie before heading over to Peyton.
"Hey, where's my stupid ass brother?" I asked Peyton, Santi said he'd get here at 3:00, which was so obviously a fucking lie.
Peyton laughed "Oh, Pope forgot Lily's gift when he was about to head over here, so he had to circle around and head back to his apartment to go get it."
I laughed, what a dumb ass. "..Of course he did." I then paused, and looked around for that familiar 6'3, dirty blonde haired bimbo that I'd had sex with a couple of weeks ago, "...So, where's Ben?"
"Oh, he's carpooling with Will." Peyton responded, she clearly sensed that something had happened between me and Ben, she'd always been good at clocking things before they were revealed. "Why do you ask?"
I paused, looked around and pulled Peyton to a secluded corner "I'm going to tell you something, but you CANNOT tell anyone, not even Frankie."
Peyton looked confused, but she obliged. "Okay, I swear. What's up?"
I couldn't help but pause again, unsure how to feel. "...Me and Ben hooked up a couple of weeks ago..sober..and he told me he wanted something more, but I told him that it wouldn't work out.." I spilled, unable to contain it all any longer.
Peyton's jaw dropped, "Hon, why? That man would walk through fire just to get a glimpse of you, why'd you reject him?"
I immediately backtracked, dumbfounded by this new information "What do you mean..?"
"Ben loves you, he's been in love with you. He'd give it all up just to be with you."
"...You're lying. 'Cause there's no fucking way-"
Suddenly, the younger Miller brother approached us. I didn't even know he'd gotten here.
"Y/N." He gauged my expression, as if trying to break through to me. "Can we talk?"
I turned to look at him, unable to read his expression. "..I..Ben..can't you see that I'm in the middle of a conversation-?"
"-No need." Peyton quickly replied "We were all done, she's all yours.." She quickly walked off, leaving me alone with Ben.
I looked at him, nervously. "..What did you want to want to talk about..?"
"...Not here.." He lightly grabbed my wrist "In private."
Clearly I had no choice but to go along with it. "..Okay.."
He led me to the hallway, and turned to look at me once we were out of sight from everyone.
"Why have you been avoiding me since that night?" He practically demanded, getting straight to the point.
God damn.
"..Look, it meant nothing-"
"Bullshit. It meant something. If it didn't mean shit, we wouldn't have done it in the first place. Sober."
Fuck. The word "sober" was biting me in the as right now.
"..But you're Santi's friend...and I'm his sister-"
Ben cut me off "-So? I love you. Pope can deal with me lovin' his sister."
"But-"
Suddenly, I was cut off again. This time not by words, but by a kiss. Ben gripped onto my hips and started kissing me really hard, and I kissed back with just as much passion.
But then, I felt the need to gag. Not because of the kiss, the kiss was perfect. It was that shitty feeling in my stomach. And I quickly pushed Ben off of me, but before he could say anything, I practically ran off to the restroom.
Shutting the door, I practically threw myself onto the floor, and vomit came from my mouth into the toilet bowl. Once I was certain that I was done, I rinsed my mouth after a few minutes.
I would probably need a tic tac after this.
Maybe, just maybe, Frankie and Peyton would have medicine in the cabinet for a stomach flu.
I quickly opened the mirror cabinet and searched for medicine. All I saw was usual bathroom things, toothpaste, floss, mouth wash, tweezers-and pregnancy tests.
Maybe it wouldn't hurt to take one.
13 minutes later
I hadn't come out of the bathroom, everyone probably thought that I was taking a shit at a child's birthday party.
That's when the door opened, and I realized that I'd forgotten to lock it.
Lily, Frankie and Peyton's daughter, comes in and starts babbling, then she asks,
"Auntie y/n, what is that?" She asked, innocently.
"Oh-! This? It's...it's a marker." I said, trying to keep the innocent soul of Lily innocent.
She then snatched it from my hands and started to wave it in my face, Jesus. What 4 year old does this?
"Lily! Princessa, give it back..!" I say, as I try to gently snatch it from her.
Lily then ran out of the restroom, and I immediately jumped to my feet and went after her. "Lily! Just because it's your birthday doesn't mean that you can take things that don't belong to you!" I say, frantically.
I looked around for her, as calmly as I can. Then, I noticed Ben talking with Santi, and they both spotted me. Ben attempted to call me over, but Santi looked suspicious.
I quickly walked away from them, frantically looking for Lily. Ben and Santi walk over to me, Ben grabs my arm and tries to get me to look at him.
"Y/N-"
"No, not now." I attempt to pull away from him, but Santi stops us before we can say anything more.
"Hermanita, Benny told me about you two." My brother paused, and he looked between us. "I'm not mad, just surprised as to why you are acting like this."
Before I can reply, Lily runs into the room, and waves the pregnancy test around at me, Ben and Santi.
"Look at Auntie Y/N's magic marker!"
Dead silence.
I look back at my brother, who looks at Ben. Ready to kill him. "I'm not mad" my ass, was probably what he was thinking right now.
Suddenly, Santi swung at Benny, missing, because Frankie and Will came to hold him back.
"I said I was okay with you and her sleeping together! Not you making a baby with her!"
"Pope-" Ben attempted to explain, "You don't know the-
"Oh my God! Both of you, shut up!" I snapped at both my brother and Ben.
They both look at me, Santi glaring at me in this pissed off sibling matter, while Ben cooled off and looked ready to listen to whatever I had to say.
"..Look..I didn't even check to see if it's positive, alright?"
"Well...sweetheart, do you mind checkin'?" Ben asked, softly.
I had to tug the test away from Lily before she could run off with it again. I looked intently at the test results.
Positive.
I looked back at my brother and Ben. Then I noticed Will, Frankie and Peyton staring. "..It's positive..I'll deal with it later."
I quickly walked out of the house, unable to stay any longer. I looked back at Ben one last time, rushing out out before anyone could say anything.
Before I went home, I pulled over to some random street and called to schedule an appointment, just to make sure that the test was accurat.
All I could think about was Ben as I was on the phone, I'd gotten many texts and calls from Santi, but I ignored them, not in the mood to deal with my brother right now.
What did Ben think? Would he want me to keep the baby if I was actually pregnant? Would he stick around? Or would he tell me to get lost?
Once I got off the phone, I drove home. I got out of my car, grabbing my purse before shutting the car door.
I looked at my front porch, and saw Ben stand up from the steps.
"Ben?" I gulped a bit, unsure why he was here. Then I realized how stupid I was for not seeing his truck a bit away from mine. "What are you doing here?"
He held his cap in his hands, fidgeting with it a bit. "I came for you..and our baby."
"Look, Ben, I just scheduled an appointment right before I got here..I might not even be pregnant, so you don't have to stick around-"
"-But I want to." Ben said, cutting me off as he stared into my eyes. "Not just for our potential child, but for you too."
I couldn't believe what I was hearing, there was no way he could feel this way for me. "But what about my brother?"
Ben huffed "What about him? I talked to Pope, cleared shit up with him. He's fine with it. Why aren't you?"
Suddenly, I realized how stupid I'd been. Ben wanted me, he wanted to be with me. And I'd let my brother's possible judgement of us take over. I wanted to be with Ben. It's all I wanted. But I'd been scared.
Unintentionally, we both spoke at the same time.
"I'm sorry." I said, teary eyed.
"I love you." He stated.
I got whiplash from that, taken aback I flinched a bit. "What..?"
"Baby, what are you sorry for?" Ben then looked at me. "You heard me. I love you."
"...Ben..I'm sorry for not taking you seriously...when all you want is to be with me.." I paused and then looked back at him "...I love you too."
He then grabbed my cheeks with his hands and kissed me, I kissed him back, with the same amount of passion.
We then pulled away and I looked up at him and spoke, "I guess we'll find out if I'm actually having your kid tomorrow."
Ben smiled and kissed my forehead. "I guess we are."
A Triple Frontier fic by sxgebrvsh (formerly dxndjxrin -Tumblr)/sagebrush (ao3)
Pairing: Benny Miller x f!reader
Word Count: 20.9k.
Synopsis: In the tall mountains and sprawling ranches of his hometown, Benny finds something unexpected. SomethingâŚsomeone to lead him back to himself.
Tags/Warnings: Childhood friends/acquaintances to lovers, slow burn, Canon-typical violence, Set in Carson Valley, Nevada, Ranch hand!au, Benny is NOT a boxer in this one, rodeo mention!!, most aspects of canon remain, and they were roommates, Grief/mourning, guns, allusions to PTSD, drinking, military mention, emotional repression, brief mention of paranoia, mention of a deceased family member, cowboy Benny makes me feel insane <3
Authors Note: Please enjoy this very self-indulgent work that came from me looking at the Miller brother's and deciding that , yes, they are from Nevada. Source? I grew up there so just trust me.
This has also been posted on my Ao3 account! If you'd prefer to read it there, the link is here. Please enjoy my first ever like..full fic on Tumblr, and my first triple frontier fic! So if the formatting is off on Tumblr, I greatly apologize, still figuring it out <3. Feel free to go check out my other works here and on Ao3. If you enjoyed, this work, please let me know!
Heart divider by @cafekitsune
âThe Miller boys are cominâ homeâ
Christ help us all.
âWhen?â you answer Judith from your seat right next to her at the bar.Â
The older woman seems to stifle a chuckle as she admits, âThis Monday.â
âJesus H,â you scoff, âHow longâs it been now? Years?â
âMaybe since youâve seen them! Câmon now, those boys love their mamma, theyâve visited since they enlisted.â Judith nudges you gently with her elbow.
Sheâs right; Benny and Will did take care of their mom when they could, even while away. On one of your many Friday bar and music nights at the Basque place on Main Street, Judith, whoâs good friends with Ms. Miller, had told you someone named Frankie, who knew the Miller boys, had moved and settled over from California recently. Heâs been here about a year now with his wife and young daughter. Youâve not had the pleasure of meeting him.
Youâd kept to yourself mostly for the past few years.
Judith had been one of the few exceptions after your mom died. She was one of your momâs best friends and simply refused to leave you to care for the ranch with no guidance.
Sheâs been a godsend, you have to admit.Â
And boy, does it take a lot to admit.Â
You pull your drink a bit closer to you.Â
âWell,â Judith stresses, taking a sip of her own cider, âI heard Benâs lookinâ for work.â
Your shoulders tense. You can sense it from a mile away. âNot Will?â You try to deflect.
âNope, sounds like heâs got a gig. Might be here for a bit, but I think he travels for it,â she explains.
The silence hangs like dead weight you wish you could chuck off your shoulders.
âY/N,â Judith sighs gently; she knows you know what sheâs about to ask. Your head drops to look at your lap, suddenly finding the fraying on the inseam of your jeans way more interesting than anything else. âYou need the help.â
You open your mouth to refuse, but she beats you to it. âNo, honey, you do. Business is good for you! And thatâs great! It also means you canât do it all by yourself anymore!â
âBut you know how the Miller boys areââ
âWere, Y/N, were. Itâs been years, theyâre all grown up now. They may be troublemakers, but itâs none of the trouble that causes any actual heartbreak. If the government trusts them with guns, maybe you can trust Ben with some goddamn cattle.â
She makes a good point.Â
âJudy-â
âHis momma would appreciate it too,â she adds. Another good point.Â
You take a long sip of your drink. The condensation from the glass starts to drip down your thumb from gripping the thing too tight. It lands back on the bar with a quiet clink as the drink coats your throat with the bitter feeling that Judith is entirely right.
âIâll think about it.â
âŚ
Before you knew it, trouble was walking up the driveway to your house.
Goddamn Judith and her persuasion skills.
He looksâŚ
Well he looks fuckinâ beautiful. Tall and handsome and built like a draft horse. WhichâŚis probably exactly what youâre looking for, and definitely a far cry from the Benny you knew in high school.Â
But the shine of those blue eyes hasnât changed somehow, neither has that smile.Â
That smile could charm anyone in their right mind. Youâre already starting to pray they donât get to you.Â
And now Benjamin Miller is sitting at your dining room table, looking over an employment contract.Â
âDo I need to have my lawyer review this?â he asks, holding up the front page in the air.Â
âI mean, by all means youâre welcome to,â you tell him in sincerity.
He chuckles and shakes his head, âThat was a joke, Y/N.â
Your shoulders tense at the awkward air now in the room. âRight,â you whisper out, teeth clenched.Â
âI mean, I donât even know any lawyers,â he says with a playful shrug. This pulls a quiet chuckle from you, and for some reason Ben feels proud of himself at that.
âI guess thatâs a good sign, then,â you respond. He hums in agreement before looking back down at the contract in front of him.Â
You give him a few minutes to look it over. He asks a few questions here and there but itâs simple. Nothing he canât handle. He worked on a cousinâs ranch for a bit before enlisting. Youâre both sure heâll pick it back up again in no time.Â
âYou have a place down here yet?â you ask, the thought suddenly hitting the forefront of your brain.Â
âI was gonna figure that out eventually. Paycheck needed to come first I guess,â he pauses. That smile again. Then, his features turn softer, more sincere as he speaks, âThanks for thisâŚreally.â
Your chest tightens at his words.
As you look at him from across the table, youâre not sure heâll be trouble at all.Â
âOf course, Benny-â You watch his smile turn a little bit warmer at the nickname, you try to shake off the feeling it lights in your stomach. âItâs no problem,â you assure him.Â
Silence settles over the room as he nods at you once more. The only interruption being the quiet scratch of his pen along the dotted line.
âBen?â
âHmm?â
âI have a spare room, ifâŚif you need a place. If nothing else works out.â
Benny shrinks back in his chair, and you quickly catch the barely-there flash of hesitation in his eyes. Oh, that was way too forward of you.
âSorry, I didnât mean toââ you reach a hand out in a gesture of explanation but he stops you with one of his own.
âNo, itâs okay. I uhhâŚIâll keep it in mind.â
âŚ
âHowâs the job?â Willâs voice cracks through the speaker of Bennyâs phone.Â
âItâs uhhâŚinteresting.â Bennyâs got his phone wedged between his shoulder and his ear while he sits in his momâs old lounge chair. It threatens to fall at any moment as he ties the laces of his boots.Â
âNowâŚis the job interesting? Or the girl?â Fucking hell.
âShut up man-â
âDonât dodge the question, Benny.â
The younger brother sighs, his hands dropping the now-tied laces. He grabs his phone from its precarious position now that he has a free hand. Heâd use the speaker, but heâs not sure if his mom is awake yet.Â
Will sits in silence on the other line, content to wait for whatever his little brother comes up with as an answer.
âJob isâŚnormal, itâs a ranch, itâs not that complicated. One of the horses does not like me, thoughâŚ.little fucker,â Benny whispers the tail end of his sentence. He and Will have never been ones to curse in their motherâs earshot.Â
Will hums at his brother, waiting for the real answer.Â
âWellâŚuhâŚSheâsâŚdifferent from how I remember her.â
âHow?âÂ
âShe used to be a lot moreâŚ,â Bennyâs thoughts peter out as he looks for the right way to describe you. As he ruminates on it, he walks down the hallway to the front entrance to the house.
Something catches his attention in his periphery.Â
Itâs a frame with two photos; him and Will, sitting tall with a cap and gown draped over them, their high schoolâs insignia stitched onto the front right side of the gown.Â
It hits him.
âDo you rememberâŚmy junior year, there was that party in the hills?â Benny starts.
âGonna need a bit more than that in terms of descriptionââ
âFuck off,â Ben whispers again. Will did always know how to strike that little sibling nerve in him. âIt was the one where that guy had that police radio? Weâd pick up and move the party over county lines to fuck with their jurisdiction rules?â
âOhâŚyeah,â Will recollects, âThat shit was smart, crazy, but smart.â
âYeah, that was her idea,â Benny scoffs with a smile, walking past the picture frames and to the closet by the front door.
He still..to this dayâŚdoes not know how you came up with that, and how it worked.
âAnd now sheâsâŚ.she handed me a contract to sign, and Iâve been working for 3 weeks and Iâve barely gotten a sentence out of her that isnât about the ranch.â
Will hums at his brotherâs words.
He can sense in Bennyâs voice that, even if he isnât explicitly asking for it, he wants advice. Bennyâs a talker. And Will knows that you barely making a peep in the face of Bennyâs many many attempts to get you to say more is driving Benny up the goddamn wall.Â
âMaybe justâŚkeep talking about the ranch? Something is bound to catch.â
âI donât know, man Iââ
âBenny, Youâll get her talkinâ,â Will assures. âIf anyone can break her back out of her shell, itâs you.âÂ
Benny sits in the silence after his brotherâs words.Â
âThanks, man.â
ââS no sweat, Benny.â
Benny finally opens the coat closet, grabbing his jacket from the inside. Heâll have to remind his mom that she doesnât need to hang his coats up when he uses the same one every day.Â
âWell,â Ben huffs as he grabs his keys from the hook, âAnything on your end? Any women to be worried about?â
âIf you count Pope talking my ear off about being in town soon, then yes,â Will chuckles.
âA match made in heaven,â Ben teases as he swings the door open. The crisp early-spring air hits his face, knocking out any sense of drowsiness that may have lingered. He hopes you have coffee for him again this morning, though. Even though he doesnât need the caffeine, it helps with the cold.Â
A chuckle from Will pulls him out of his train of thought, âThat it is, brother. Iâm sure heâll all tell us when he plans to grace our humble town with his presence.â
âCanât wait,â Benny smiles.
Will and Benny converted Frankie to this place. So far the pilot loves it, and the brothers are on a mission to get Tom and Santi here too.Â
One step at a time.
âWell, I gotta get to work.â The door shuts quietly behind Ben as he speaks, and he begins his walk down the driveway to his truck parked behind his Momâs car.
âAll good, man. Me too,â Will replies.
âTalk later?â Benny asks.Â
âWill do.â
âLove yaâ.â
âYou too.â
âŚ
âGot it?â
âWhat do I look like to you, Miller?â you ask Benny as you watch him make it to the bottom of the stairs. Youâre on your way to the same steps, a hefty cardboard box in your hands. Itâs heavy, yes, but you do your fair share of lifting around the ranch.Â
âA capable woman,â he quips back at you. Always one to keep the mood light.Â
It gets a chuckle out of you, though, as you decide to quip back, âDamn right,â with a smile.Â
Bennyâs almost ever-present smirk stretches into a smile at your words.
Heâs slowly wearing you down. Your tone is much more casual with him, you no longer act like heâs going to bite you. Yet, you still barely talk. Slowly but surely.Â
As you whisper a quiet, âThank you,â when you pass by him, Benny feels more and more secure in his decision.
Initially, at your first offer of housing, Benny had felt like a burden. Youâd already basically handed him a job on a silver platter; housing on top of that? It would be too much.Â
But then about two weeks ago, you both had been sitting on the back porch of your house, looking out at the sunset just dipping below the mountains.Â
Benny had been nursing the cup of hot cider youâd brought him.
For the cold, you had said.Â
Benny had sat there, looking at that sunset with youâŚconfused. He just couldnât seem to get you to relax around him, not fully. You always had this tension in your shoulders, you always looked like you could say something, but chose not to.
But then you would save him a cup of coffee when he got to the ranch, you had given him cider for the cold that night, a pair of old work gloves that were your dadâs.Â
He didnât get it. He got it even less so when out of nowhere youâd asked, âSo, you still with your mom?â
Benny shuffled around in his seat at the unexpected question.Â
âYeahâŚfinding a place has been uhâŚhard,â he admitted.
He loves his mother to death. That was not the problem.
Heâs just a grown-ass man. And no matter how much you love your parent, living with them as an adult for any period of time does inflict some psychological damage.
You had sat in silence, as you tended to do in conversation with Benny over the past month.
The cool spring breeze whistled through the empty spaces of the wooden porch railing. Your rocking chair squeaked along the deck as you moved. Benny heard the distant bells of the cattle ringing as they swayed along to wherever they so pleased.
It was peaceful, beautiful, warm despite the loss of the rays of sunlight behind the silhouette of the mountains.
Your voice had cut through and disturbed Bennyâs peace in a way that he had soon become so appreciative of, in a way that only you could.
âWhy donât you just take the spare room? JustâŚwe can work the rest out later, butâŚyou can just get settled.â
The voice in the back of Bennyâs psyche had immediately reared its ugly head.
Youâre taking too much already, youâre taking too much, you donât deserve it, you donât deserve it.
âItâs easy, for both of us,â you took a slow sip of your cider from a well-loved 4H mug, âItâs uhhâŚnice having you around, Benny.â
Benny felt like he had nearly choked. For a second, not even a full one, Benny saw the tension ease in your shoulders. His lips curled into a smile.
âItâs nice being around, Y/N.â
One step at a time.Â
And now heâs watching as you lift another box of his belongings out of his truck and carry it into your own house.
You donât deserve this, itâs too much, itâs too nice, itâsâ
âYou okay?â
He realizes heâs paused at the doorway, looking right at you.Â
âY-yeah,â he manages. You can see straight through him; something is bugging him, hiding right behind his eyes. So you do what you can.
âTwo more boxes and we fix up some lunch?âÂ
Benny feels like he can take a full, deep breath. How do you do that?âIâd love that,â he says softly.Â
âAlright, let me just haul this upstairs then,â you respond with ease, squinting up at him through the bright rays of sunlight that make it through the branches of the Cottonwood trees as you start walking towards the front door again.
Youâre almost past Benny when you hear a gentle call of your name. You turn to the tall man beside you. His gaze is magnetic, but nevertheless, softer than you wouldâve expected.
âThank you.â
ââF Course, Ben.â
âŚÂ
Benny almost gives himself whiplash with the force that he launches upright in bed. His heartbeat is beating at his ribcage, the muscle threatening to break loose from his chest.
Sweat drips down his forehead, heâs panting like a fucking racehorse. Bennyâs head is threatening to crack under its own internal pressure.
He has to tell himself where he is.
Even in the dark, he can see the white-painted paneling of the walls. His eyes drift over to the open window, the moonlight from the half moon pouring through it providing the only hint of illumination. He sees the cottonwood tree outside; its gentle leaves shift in the breeze as it flows through to the branches to the thin, blue curtains. The fabric ripples like water. Heâs home. Heâs not there. Heâs home. His breath starts to slow. Heâs home. The ache in his chest slowly eases. Heâs not there. Heâs home.
HeâsâŚ.in your home.Â
ItâsâŚhis home too, he has to remind himself. Itâs taking some getting used to butâŚit feels the closest to a home compared to what heâs had for the last several years.Â
The bed is so comfortable.
Too comfortable. For the first time in forever, Benny hadnât woken up with the perpetual ache in his back thatâs a given when sleeping on a cotâor Will or Santiâs couch.
And sometimes, on a night like tonight, it bothers him.
Ben has accepted that when his brain wakes him up like this, lingers on the fear and the discomfort and the now-normal abnormal that heâs been getting used to, sleep will evade him.
So, Benny swings his legs out of bed. His feet meet the cold wood of the floors. They creak as he stands. Old ass house. The manâs arms swing up above his head, reaching for the ceiling in a stretch. As his arms settle back at his sides, he tries to take a deep breath. And again. And again. He manages it half-wayâ his heart rate starts to calm, but the air doesnât reach into every crevice of his lungs. It leaves him unsatisfied, yet unsurprised.Â
Benâs feet lead him as quietly as he can manage to the door of his bedroom. His fingers wrap around the brass doorknob, and he opens the door at the precise speed he discovered would not make it squeal like a prized hog at auction.Â
He steps slowly, still a little disoriented from his sudden alertness, towards the bathroom door when his periphery catches something.
The light is still on downstairs. You never leave the lights on, something about saving on the electricity bill any way you can.Â
What the fuck are you doing awake at this hour? Time for Benny to find out, even if itâs none of his business.
His hands smooth down the wood of the railing as he descends the stairs. The light from the kitchen floods his vision as he gets closer, and then he finally spots you. Sat at the kitchen table, youâve got your computer in front of you, a mug of tea next to it, and about 3 stacks of paper surrounding you.Â
You turn your head towards him, having heard the stairs as they creaked under his weight.Â
âBenny?â He hums back at you. âWhat are you doing awake?â
âCould ask you the same thing,â he responds, notably dodging your question in replacing it with his.Â
You stifle down the urge to scoff at the obvious deflection, but you decide not to push it.
Benny walks over to the counter, and, grabbing a water glass, haphazardly fills it under the sink. Taking a sip that eases his dry throat, he shuffles over to the chair across from you and plops down into it. You squint your eyes in what Benny is pretty sure is confusion or maybe even uncertainty as he sits.Â
âWorking on my books,â you finally admit quietly, your eyes flitting back down to the spreadsheet open on your computer.Â
Benny nods in acknowledgment. Now that heâs facing you, he looks you over.
Your hair is down but unkempt, surely from your restless hands raking through it. Your shoulders are curled in, but they still remain too close to your ears with tension. The warm light from the hanging lamp above is only highlighting the dark circles settling under your eyes.
Bennyâs chest aches for just how tired you look. So heâs made his decision.Â
âIâm not great with numbers, that was always Willâs department,â Benny chuckles, leaning forward to place his elbows on the table.Â
You take your eyes off the screen in front of you once again.
âBennyâŚâ
âYes?â
âWhat are you doing?â
âKeeping you company. I wasnât sleeping anywayââ
âI really donât need you to-â you start, leaning back in your chair, your hands dropping to your side for a moment in a twinge of exasperation.
âWell, too bad,â he states, shrugging his shoulders up. Like a thorn in your side, he continues with, âWe can either sit in silence, or we can talk.â
He knows what option youâll pick.
You donât say a word, you just stare back at him blankly for a few seconds. You make a point out of turning your attention back to your work by snatching a paper from one of the stacks and placing it in front of you between you and your computer. You place your forehead onto your palm, hiding from Bennyâs strong gaze.Â
âOkay, Silence it is then,â he scoffs.Â
That doesnât last long. Not with Benny Miller.Â
âWhy donât you wanna talk to me?â he starts. His tone is earnestly curious, but with a twinge of defensiveness.
âI thought we decided on silence,â you say. You know itâs a last-ditch effort as shoving off his request for candidness from you.Â
âSee?â he scoffs again, throwing his hands up in the air in frustration, âI getâŚnothing from you. Surface level shit but nothinââŚnothing deep,â he leans forward again, his tone softening ever so slightly. The air in the room is getting thick. âI mean, hey, Iâd like to be your friend but if you wanna tell me to fuck off and just be your coworker-slash-roommate then thatâs fine, but at least put me out of my misery, sweetheart.â
The nickname strikes a chord with you. Youâre not entirely sure which one or what its pitch is conveying. Your gazes are locked, and god, his eyes are intense.
âI-...â You start to stutter out.
You donât know where to begin. You donât know how to tell him. Itâs like he has the ability to force every emotion up from your chest until it all gets lodged in your throat and you try to swallow and shove it back down, because youâve managed this long like that.
âI havenâtâŚâ you start, your heart pounding in your chest with the pressure of finding the right words to say. You shrug your shoulders as you try to explain, âI justâŚhavenât had anyone in my life likeâŚlike this,â you gesture towards him, âin a long time.â
Benny scoffs, âWhat do you mean? I saw all those boyfriends you had in high school?â
âNo like that,â you snap, âI justâŚâ you close your eyes for a moment, taking in a sharp breath before you feel like you have to reach down into the lump in your throat and pry the words from your lips yourself.Â
Why is it so fucking hard to admit?
âI didnât have anyone after my mom died. Thereâs Judy but she isnât my friend, she was my momâs; sheâs familyâŚsomeone else..not mine.â
Benny watches as your fingers on the table look like theyâre itching to fidget with something, your jaw is clenched with tension, and your voice is smallâŚsmaller than heâs ever heard from you as you say, âIâm not used to relying on someone else.â
Oh.Â
Itâs as if a light goes off in Bennyâs sleep-deprived brain, and suddenly he gets it. Heâs been there, not wanting to let people in. When you let people in, it becomes real, you carve a part of yourself and offer it up, one that you can never recover.Â
Benny had to force himself to do that when his life literally depended on it, but he remembers a time when it was only his brother who ever knew what Benny truly felt.Â
And by God, it was a rough way to live.Â
But maybeâŚBenny can be that for you.Â
He can sit with you while you work on finances, he can laugh with you on the porch as you exchange stories about your parents, he can comfort you, he can give you all that you need. He can give and give andâ
A quiet sniffle breaks his concentration. Your head is now down and you try your best to subtly swipe underneath your eyes. Benny knows you wonât want him to acknowledge it.
He finds himself with a tiny taste of regret on his tongue. He does tend to come out strong sometimes.
But his eyes meet yours again, and they donât hold obvious contempt for him. Thank god. He wants to reach over, take your hand in his and caress it in comfort.
One step at a time, Benny.
So he decides a quiet, âI know what you mean,â will do.
Your shoulders drop a centimeter or two away from your shoulders. Benny wants to savor the moment.
You sniffle once more, but your gaze stays set on him. Thereâs a glint in the (somehow still so) vibrant blue of his eyes. For the life of you, you cannot read it, but you see a storm brewing past the surface.
You obviously end up staring too long.
âYou okay?â
âYeah,â you hum quietly, the noise accompanied by a slow, hesitant nod of your head.Â
Another beat ofâŚadmittedly comfortable silence.Â
âYou know Iâm here, right?â He says, leaning further into the table. His voice is low, as if he fears youâll startle like a deer.Â
Your brows quirk, not sure if he means it.Â
âYou can rely on me?âÂ
Something blooms in your chest.
âYeah,â you find yourself saying with a soft smile. âThank you, Ben.â
He feels your warm tone wash over him, wrap him up in a blanket with a softness he hasnât felt inâŚin forever.
How do you do that?
âNo, problem sweetheart,â he smiles.
Your smile grows wider, and you let out a soft chuckle at the nickname. You drop your head as you laugh, not wanting Benny to see the tinge of heat on your cheeks.
âNow,â he says, leaning back and smacking his hands against his thighs. His back creaks as he standsâ He really needs to get you some cushions for these chairs. He manages to stand tall as his feet shuffle over to your side of the table. His arm leans over your right side and gently closes your laptop. He sees you take in a breath, about to protest, but he beats you to it.Â
âHow about you rely on the fact that Iâll take care of the chickens in the morning, you can finish this then, and get some sleep now?â
You smile wider. How does he do that?Â
âYouâYouâveââ your words are interrupted by a short yawn. You watch Benâs I told you so look that he throws you.Â
âYouâve got a deal, Miller.â
âAlright,â he smiles, the word seasoned with the hint of a twang in his voice.Â
You stand to meet him, rising as high as you can manage against his over 6-foot frame.Â
âLead the way,â he gestures his hand towards the stairs, and you start your way to them with him right behind you.Â
You make it up one, two, three stairs before you pause. Benny doesnât have time to ask why.
âYou wanna come on the rodeo cattle drive with me?â
He responds as if he was ready yesterday, âYou know it.â You exhale with a smile, satisfied with his enthusiasm, and start back up the stairs.
You both soon reach the top, and you pause, turning to him to say a soft, âGoodnight,â before you two split to go to your separate rooms. He responds with his own, âGoodnight.âÂ
But youâre halfway through your bedroom door when you turn back to him.âBen?â
âHmm?â
âWhy were you up?â
Benâs shoulder slump, not quite sure how to respond. âYou uhh..wouldnât want to know.â He decides thatâll get his point across.
Heâs right, you probably wouldnât want to know. âYou okay?â you still ask softly.Â
âYeahâŚ.yeah, I am.âÂ
For the first time in recent memory, Benny sleeps soundly.Â
âŚ
The dust is relentless, but itâs all worth it.
Itâs beautifully cold at night, despite it nearing the triple digits during the middle of the day.
Youâve been around dozens and dozens of people for 3 days and even more cattle, so the solitude of the fire in front of your tent is a welcome sight.Â
You know it wonât last long, but you donât mind. You havenât for a while now.
âYou want coffee?â a low tone asks from behind you.Â
âAt this hour?â you scoff as Benny comes into view from behind you. âI forget youâre nuts, Miller.â
âI donât know how you forget it,â Benny jokes back at you as he sits himself down in the chair next to you.Â
âTrue, thatâs my own damn fault,â you say as you watch him lean from his chair to grab a longer stick next to the fire pit. He pokes the already charred and splintered tip into the flames. Sparks and embers sizzle as he rearranges the logs. One pocket of hot coals opens up, and you feel a gush of intense heat to your face.Â
Before it becomes too much, Benny covers it up with the old black kettle.Â
âIâll take some tea though,â you say as the words come to mind.
âYou got it,â he says low under his breath.
Bennyâs frame twists to the bag behind his camping chair; he digs through its contents and twists back around with a packet of instant coffee and one of tea. He holds it up and asks, âWill this do?â
âPerfect, thanks,â you tell him as you reach your hand out to take the packet from him.Â
âSo,â Benny starts as he cracks the lid of his thermos, âhow you holdinâ up? Your knee doing okay?â
You hold back a chuckle at the motherly concern in his voice.Â
âYeah,â you smile regardless. âKnee is okay. Not sure why it was actinâ up the other day, but since we were on flatter ground today I think it helped give it a rest,â you explain, stretching out the still-slightly-sore knee in front of your chair.Â
âGood,â Benny nods, pouring his instant coffee powder into the thermos carefully balanced between his knees.
âHow about you?â
âWhat do you mean?â He says, smiling knowingly. One thing youâve learned about Benny, he loves to tease.Â
You scoff at his response, âYou know what I mean, little shit, answer the question.â
âAlright woman!â Benny feigns innocence, throwing his hands up with his words, but he finally relents. âIâm alright. Kinda missed sleeping on the groundâŚâ he says.Â
You look over to him. His eyes are trained on the flames licking at the dark above it. âReally?â you ask, wanting him to continue.Â
âIâm serious,â his eyes flit over to you. âItâsâŚitâs stupid butâŚI did it for so long that it just feelsâŚnostalgic in a way that Iâm sure is probably fucked up.â Thereâs a glint in his eyes. One he always gets when he talks about this kinda stuff. Youâre never quite able to crack it, but you try your best to manage.Â
âItâs not stupid,â you try to assure as casually as you can. You get a sense he doesnât want to make a big deal of it.Â
He just hums in response, but you know heâs thankful.Â
You catch the kettle beginning to whistle. You beat Benny to it, standing up and grabbing a towel near your chair. With your hand wrapped in the cloth, you carefully grab the hot handle and lift the kettle from the burning coals. You take a step towards Benny and he stretches out his thermos to you.Â
âAndâŚShit, I tell you what, itâs way better sleeping on the ground out here,â he starts. Youâre not entirely sure what he means, and you quirk a brow at him to get that point across as you begin filling his thermos with the boiling water. You step back to your own thermos waiting in the cup holder of your camping chair. Once yours is filled, you place the now nearly-empty kettle next to the rock border of the fire pit.
âWell,â Benny starts his explanation. âIn Afghanistan, they have these things called camel spiders. Awful fuckers the size of your fuckinâ head,â he holds his hands up to show the scale he was talking about. You shiver at the thought of an insect that big, letting out a short, audible Eugh. âIf you werenât careful, they could get into your Conex box, and let me tell you, you do not want to cuddle up with one of these things.â
âFuck, Iâll take your word for it,â you throw a hand up in disgust.Â
âWe used toââ Benny manages between his laughter, leaning back in his chair, âWe used to have a fuckinâ tally as to who had taken the most out.â
âJesus, Ben,â you shake your head, not being able to stave off his infections laughter, âA shrink would have a field day with you.â
âOh, I know.âÂ
Silence settles over you two as your laughter dies down. You try taking a sip of your tea, but lean away when you feel the steam burn your lips before they could even touch the liquid. You watch Benny take a confident sip of his coffee.
Youâre not sure where the thought comes from.Â
âCan I ask you something you donât have to answer?â
âShoot.â
âWhat made you enlist?â
Bennyâs eyes donât stray from the fire. Youâre used to him answering right away, and the delay is starting to eat at you. Just before youâre about to abort the line of conversation, Benny opens his mouth.Â
âHonestlyâŚuhh..I was chasing my big brother,â he starts, âWell, that was most of it. I think I had some grand dreams about gettinâ out of this place. I was gonna see the world, make a difference, and fight for my country,â his hand swipes across the airspace in front of him, like painting the grand vision he had as a kid in front of his face. âAnd I did get to see parts of the world, the shit parts, probably made a shit difference too, but what can I do?â
He takes another sip of coffee.
âAnd as for my brotherâŚwe wereâŚalright growing up, but being in the army with him? That was the best part. Brought us closer than anything else could, I think.â
âYou knowâŚI remember you and Will being pretty close, though?â you question, leaning in for a sip of your finally-cool-enough tea.Â
âOh, we were still close, itâs just..different now. You donât really have people shooting at you in high school to help you bond.â
His comment, seemingly offhanded for him, makes everything in you go cold. Your breath catches in your throat, your chest suddenly feeling crushed at the vision Bennyâs words invoke: him staring down the barrel of someone elseâs gun, a bullet whizzing by his ear in a near miss. You have to remind yourself to breathe.
âI mean not literally, no, but sometimes it sure did feel like it,â you attempt to bring yourself back to the conversation with the joke, knowing full well those two things could never be compared.
âOh yeah?â Bennyâs laugh comes from deep in his chest as he looks over to you.Â
âAbsolutely!â you start, relieved at Bennyâs laugh, âYou remember our prom? That one girlâŚHaileyâŚshe had the audacity to wear the same dress as me after everyone knew I had it already. And stole my date to the dance. Who does that? Shit made me mope in the corner for like an hour. Pretty traumatic if you ask me,â you shrug.Â
âSounds like you still hold a grudge after uhhhâŚhow many years?â He squints at you playfully.Â
âDonât remind me of my age, Miller,â you point at him with a teasing smile.Â
âYes Maâam,â he pivots to avoid conflict, hands up in the air. He drops them a moment later.
Then, something slips out of Bennyâs mouth. Based on his tone alone you cannot tell if it was intentional or just a slip of the tongue, but before you know it your cheeks are running hot.Â
âI thought you were so damn pretty.âÂ
What?
Did you hear him correctly? You absolutely did.
Your brain is yelling at you deflect deflect deflect and you do the first thing Benny will be receptive to.Â
âThought?â you chastise playfully.Â
âWhatâŚ.â Benny cocks an eyebrow at you. For a second, you think heâs onto you. You think Benny sees right through the casual facade youâre holding up. âYou flirting with me now?â he provokes.Â
âYou did first, callinâ me pretty!â You point at him, trying to double down on being nonchalant despite a funny feeling settling in your stomach.Â
âAlright, you caught me,â he leans back, relaxing in his chair. His frame spreads out with ease, taking up space in a way that youâve learned to admire. âI was just trying to pay you a compliment, Y/N. You can take those every once in a while, right?â
You sigh. How does he manage to do this shit with such ease? Youâve decided to tell yourself that heâs just like this with everyone.Â
âI guess I can,â you relent.Â
âGood, cause I meant it,â he reiterates.
âBennyââ you start.
âAlright alright, Iâll stop,â he chuckles. Itâs like he likes to rile you up.Â
The crackle of the fire fills the air for a moment.Â
âDo I get to meet the rest of your friends soon? You talk about them so damn much,â you chide him lightly, changing the subject. You can tell in Bennyâs face he absolutely sees through you.Â
âActually,â Benny draws out the word, âTheyâre cominâ to the rodeo.â
You sit up in your seat, scoffing. âAnd you didnât tell me?â
âWhat, you wanna meet âem?â
ââCourse I do! And I havenât seen Will in forever!âÂ
âSee this is why I didnât tell you,â he says before standing up again. He reaches back for the stick to poke and prod the logs in the fire.Â
âWhat do you mean?â
Benny keeps you waiting for his answer. He saunters over to a pile of logs a few feet away. Leaning a hand down, he grips one of the logs before turning back to the flames. They dance in the air, accepting the new fuel as Benny delicately places the log into the pit.
âI gotta keep you away from Will. Canât have him challenging my âfavorite Millerâ title,â he finally says. Â
âWell, you donât have to worry about that,â you say.
The candidness in your tone shoots straight into Bennyâs veins, warming him more than the fire ever could tonight.Â
âGood to hear,â he smiles at you again as he settles back in his chair.Â
And what a goddamn smile it is.Â
Benny can rest easy tonight, satisfied with the red tint still on your cheeks; heâs sure of it.Â
âŚ
âGod, this tastes like shit,â Benny leans away from the beer in his hand, his face contorting at the bitter taste on his tongue.
âYou ordered it, idiot.â A smack lands on Bennyâs shoulder from the man sitting next to him.Â
âYeah, missed you too, Pope,â the younger man says, still reeling from his poor choice in beverage.Â
Itâs hot as hell in Reno today. The cowboy hat sitting on Bennyâs head does wonders to keep the sun off him, but the sweat dripping down his back isnât the most pleasant thing.Â
Heâs had worse, though; he tries to remind himself of that. Canât be going soft, now.Â
Itâs hard not to feel a little soft when heâs got all his brothers around. Fish made the drive in last night, picked up Tom and Pope from the airport. Benny and Will had made the drive up to Reno to stay with the three of them that night. Benny had been hesitant to leave you, but you insisted he go have fun with his boys before you crash the party on Rodeo day.Â
âIâm sure you did, Benny,â Pope says, taking a sip of his own, obviously better tasting beer.Â
âLook at you,â Tom jokes from his spot across from Benny, pointing at his hat and button down shirt, âyouâve gone full country on us.â
âTom, Iâm from here,â Benny says dryly as he watches Fish and Will walk back towards their picnic table with what heâs hoping is a plate of something greasy and full of carbs.Â
âAlright, what did we miss?â Fish says, squinting as his eyes adjust to the light under the tent. Will settles in next to Frankie, and across from Pope and his brother.Â
They did bring carbs and grease. Thank god.Â
âNothinâ much Frankie, Just admiring the scenery,â Pope smirks.
âOh donât start,â Frankie rolls his eyes.
âYeah? You like it so much you should move here when youâre done chasing your own tail in the jungle,â Will chuckles low as he takes a sip of his own beer.
âWellâŚdonât keep your hopes up, thatâll be a while,â Santi points at Will. âBut you all know about that.â With a nod, Pope suddenly turns his attention back to their youngest sitting next to him.Â
âI was also just about to ask Benny-boy here when we get to meet his lady-friend,â Pope asks, wiggling his eyebrows at Benny.Â
âWhy do you sound so damn excited?â Benny shoves his shoulder into Popeâs.Â
âWhat do you mean?â Pope shrugs, claiming innocence. âI just wanna meet the woman whoâs been driving our poor little Benny crazy!â
âCrazyâs a little strong,â Benny tries to cover.Â
âI call bullshit,â Will says casually, and Benny suddenly feels like a kid again. That defensive itch biting at the back of his neck. But he staves it off.Â
âS-sometimes, â he admits, âbutâŚ.in a good way. She knows what sheâs about.â Bennyâs trying to keep a cool tone as he speaks.Â
âKnows what sheâs about? Sounds like sheâs got you by the balls,â Tom snickers.Â
âSo, does she?â Fish jumps in, his low, quiet tone always a contrast from Tom and Pope.Â
âDoes she what?âÂ
âHave you by the balls, either metaphoricallyâŚor literally, we donât judge,â Fish delivers, nearly deadpan if it werenât for the little glint in his eye. Everyone, even Benny, breaks out into laughter at the sincerity in Fishâs voice
âNo, no, neither,â Benny dismisses with a wave of his hand, âShe doesnât even know Iââ
âBullshit, Ben, youâll flirt with anything that moves,â Tom calls out.Â
âIf she doesnât know by now,â Will jumps in to his brotherâs defense, âItâs not for lack of trying.â
âBullshit, again,â Tom challenges, âYouâre telling me youâve been living with this woman for whatâhow many months now? And you havenât fuââ
âNo, no,â Benny cuts Tom off before his sentence gets too vulgar. âI justâŚIâm not too upset. Sheâs justâŚI donât wanna push too hard, scare her away or anything like that. Took me long enough to just get her talkinâ to me. Iâm trying a subtle approach,â he admits. The subtle approach is hard for Benny. Heâs a lot, he knows that, and he likes to take up space, but with you⌠heâs learning a balance between still being himself and not trying to scare you off.Â
âThe subtle approach?â Pope smacks Benny on the back again, astonished. âWell Iâll be damned, boys. Benny Millerâs gone soft!â
âShut up, Popeââ Benny nudges Santiagoâs hand off his shoulder, but he canât help the almost-bashful smile on his face. Willâs own smile grows wide at the scene across the table. Oh, his brotherâs got it bad.
Will understands, though, because when he sees you arrive, Benny relaxes in a way he hasnât seen before, he has a sweeter tone, heâs making sure youâve got a seat in the shade and a drink in your hand as you all sit down for the start of the rodeo.
Benny is a goner.
And Willâs curiosity may get the better of him, but heâs provided an opportune moment not even an hour later.
âAnyone want anything?â you offer, standing up from the cold metal of the grandstand bleachers. You stretch your arms up briefly, reveling in the opportunity to do so with a break in the action. Your back is starting to ache with no support, and youâre feeling a bit peckish anyway.
That andâŚBennyâs friends are nice, youâre happy to get this glimpse into the most important people in his life, but⌠you just⌠need a second.
You feel like youâre under a microscope and four former green-berets are on the other end.Â
âIâll goââ Benny shoots up from his seat so fast it almost makes Willâs balance falter just looking at him.Â
You smile softly and wave the big man in front of you off, âNo Benny, tie-down is next and I know you donât wanna miss it.â
Benny opens his mouth to protest, but Willâs hand claps him on the shoulder
âDo what the lady says, Benny. Iâll accompany her, I need a refresh anyway,â the older Miller holds up his empty cup.
Will looks at you, then nods his head towards the exit of the row in a silent request to follow him. The two of you shuffle out of the bleachers and to the main walkway. As Will reaches the bottom of the stairs out of the grandstands, you see him glance over his shoulder. His pace slows until youâre walking side by side with him.Â
âSo,â you decide to strike up conversation first, âhowâve you been? Benâs told me youâve got a place but youâve been traveling for work?â
âYeah, Iâve been uhâŚtraveling around, doing some talks for the army. I donât mind the travel obviouslyââ Will shrugs his shoulders, âbut itâs been nice having my home base be home, you know?â
âIâm sure,â you nod slowly. âYou enjoy the job?â you continue as the two of you finally duck under the large tent at the back of the food area. Its grand white lettersâ branded Jack Daniels âpromise what you two are after.Â
âItâsâŚa job,â he huffs. Something pinched in his tone tells you he doesnât feel like elaborating. You donât push it. No need to.
âWell, for what itâs worth, Iâm happy you and Benny are back here,â you offer, wondering if it can ease Willâs demeanor.Â
âMe too.â
You both pause the conversation for just a moment as you approach the bar. Will motions his head towards the woman at the kiosk, insisting you go first.Â
âIâll take a jack & coke please,â you tell her. She smiles, tapping away at the screen in front of her. You look down to your front pocket, dipping a hand to retrieve your wallet.
You hear Will ask quietly for another beer and the swipe of plastic against a card reader before you can manage to fetch your own card. Fuck, army stealth shit.Â
âYou didnât have to do that,â you assure.Â
Will sends you a smile, holds up his hand and says, âSee it as a small thank you for giving my little brother a job.â
âWill, thereâs no need toââ
âYes,â his tone is insistent, but he still manages to be soft with it. âI do need to thank you.â Will turns to the side for a moment, accepting the two drinks from the bartender, then holding yours out for your taking.Â
You take it from him and take a quick swing. You have to suppress a cringe from your face at the taste of all the whiskey sitting right on top of the drink. Taking hold of the tiny black straw in the cup, you slowly stir its contents as you start walking back out of the tent.Â
âHe likes it,â Will explains. He watches you nod slowly in agreement, but your eyes squint slightly with confusion. You know Benny likes working with you, living with you; heâs told you as such, very often in fact, so youâre not sure why Will is relaying it to you now.
He doesnât seem like the kind of man to necessarily repeat something he or anyone else already knows.Â
With his lack of a follow up question or remark, it dawns on you heâs waiting for you to respond.
âItâs uhhâŚâ you struggle with a response. Youâre not entirely sure what Will is looking for here, so you try, âItâs been nice having someone around.â
Willâs face doesnât betray him if he thinks of your response any sort of way. But his feet stop their movement, and he turns his shoulders to you. You halt in your tracks with him.Â
If he sported a different look on his face, the next question out of Willâs mouth would feel like an interrogation, but his eyes hold no malice.Â
âIs it nice that itâs someone around, or is it nice that itâs Benny?â
You feel like your chest is tightening. That familiar wad ofâŚof feeling settling in your throat again, clogging everything up. The terrifying ordeal of being truthful not only to Will, but to yourself about it all, about Benny, becomes unbelievably real.Â
Oh, get over yourself, you think.Â
Whatâs the harm in admitting that Benny has wiggled his way into your life like no one else has, like you never thought anyone could, and has taught you things, brought out a part of your old self that you thought was buried alongside your mom?
You donât know what to call it yet, but you know you canât let Benny Miller go.Â
ThenâŚthe feeling eases. The wad becomes untangled, and you feel a tension leave your body as you say quietly to Will, âItâs nice that itâs Benny. Really nice.â
Will, ever the stoic, doesnât give much away with the soft smile he sends back at you. But he doesnât leave you to worry too long.
âGood,â he brings a hand up to your shoulder to give it a gentle pat before settling there, âYou two both deserve that.â
Itâs becoming more apparent to you that Will is more elusive than his brother. Thatâs something you think youâll have to figure out with time.Â
Youâre becoming okay with that.Â
âThanks, Will,â you tell him in earnest. He gives you one more pat on the shoulder before dropping his hand back to his side.Â
ââCourse, now letâs head back âfore Benny thinks Iâm interrogating you,â Will chuckles low.
âThat wasnât an interrogation?â you joke back at him.
âOh trust me, those days are thoroughly behind me,â he assures as you two begin walking back to the grandstand.Â
âBit of a hard-ass, huh?â
âLittle bit,â Will admits.
âIs that where you got your callsign? Ironhead?âÂ
âDid Benny tell you that?â Will quirks his eyebrow at you.
âHe didââÂ
âYeah, heâs not entirely wrong, but Iâm sure the story got a bit twisted in there.â
âSure, I bet,â your sarcastic tone is accompanied by a smile. âNow,â you pause, pivoting as a thought pops into your head, âBenâs told me your callsign and the othersâ butâŚwhatâs his?â
âHe doesnât have one,â Will starts, âBennyâs justâŚBenny.â
You attempt a possible explanation. âJust too him for anything else, huh?â
Thereâs a look in Willâs eye that is gone in a split second before he says, âI see youâve caught on?â
âHard not to.â
Will hums in agreement. You nod your head at him as the two of you settle into a comfortable silence.Â
You two finally make the steps back up to the grandstands. Will pauses, letting you take the lead back up to your seats. You start moving again, but turn your head back to him for a moment.âYou should come by some time, have dinner with us when youâre in town again.â
The image is conjured in Willâs head: you and Benny, all domestic, inviting him into your warmly lit home, greeting him with a drink and a good home-cooked meal. He smiles at the thought. Benny deserves that. The kidâs gone through hell, and no matter what any of the other boys or Willâs therapist says, he will always hold himself at fault for it.Â
âYeah,â Will tells you, raising his voice slightly so you hear him over the people hollering as the next event nears. âIâd love that.âÂ
A satisfied smile settles on your face as you reach your row. The boys greet you again, standing up to make room for you to shuffle into the row. Itâs a bit of a balancing act with a drink in your hand, but you manage to make it back to your seat next to Benny.Â
âYou alright?â Benny asks you quietly.Â
God, those blue eyes are fucking killer.
âYeah,â you nod, âGot a refill, and Iâm with you, so Iâm set.â
âAlright then,â Benny mirrors your movements with his nod.Â
His hand twitches. He has to stop himself from settling it on your own free hand resting on top of your thigh.
âWhat did we miss?â Will says, interrupting Bennyâs intrusive thoughts as he settles back in his seat between Benny and Fish.Â
âWas just telling these boys I may have a job for you allââ Pope starts.Â
âWhat kinda job?â Will asks, squinting his eyes at Pope in a warning to be careful with his word choice. Pope glances over to you then back to Will.
âJust a Recce, maybe more butââ he waves his hand in dismissal, âIâll tell you more later.â
And thatâs that.Â
A strange feeling pinches at the back of your neck. You try to push it away, but the gnawing feeling of curiosity lingers.
You try to tell yourself itâs none of your business. Maybe Benny will tell you later.
Thereâs no other mention of the job the rest of the evening. But your mind has plenty of distractions, from the roar of the crowd during the final moments of bull riding, to the boys all singing a slightly intoxicated version of Take Me Home, Country Roads, joining the speakers that blast the song through the arena at the end of the event, to the way Benny shakes his jacket off at the first sight of a chill running down your spine as you all walk to the parking lot.Â
The four other men lag further behind you and Benny, Pope and Tom still singing as they get dragged along by Will and Fish.Â
âYou have a good time?â Benny asks, the low timbre of his voice cutting through the cold night air.Â
âThe best, for sure,â you look over to him, clutching his jacket a little tighter around you. âMakes me miss barrel racing. I wasnât half bad in high school.â Your shoulders come up in a shrug. The two of you slow as you reach your truck.Â
âShit,â he draws out. âI remember you were great. Could probably make the rodeo if you picked it up again.â
The flattery has heat pooling in your cheeks. He remembered. You hope under the dim lights of the parking lot, Benny cannot see it.Â
âSaw you rope that runaway steer on the drive. Looked pretty badass. You could probably make a good run yourself,â you deflect. Â
âSo thatâs what gets you goinâ, huh?â Goddammit Benny.Â
âShut up, Miller.â
âIf you say so,â he shrugs as he watches you dig your keys out of your pocket. Once you locate them, you look up to meet Bennyâs eyes. Heâs staring right back at you already, with an intense gaze that nearly knocks you back a step.
Your gut twists as you watch him open his mouth to speak.
âThanks, again,â he speaks softly.
âFor what?â
âFor all of it,â Benny admits.
Benny wants to grab a hold of you, clutch you to his chest and never fucking let go, because heâs not sure if someone like you will ever stumble into his life the way you have, the way youâve begun to consume all his thoughts, awake or asleep. He has no idea what he did in a past life to have deserved it, or if he even does deserve it. Whatever it was, it definitely wasnât in this life, but he doesnât care. He doesnât want to let go, even if youâll never be as close as he wants you to be. Having you around is enough, but god Benny wishes it would be closer.Â
Closer than you are now, closerâŚ.oh, you are closer than before.
Benny is not sure who did it, who started leaning in, who grabbed the otherâs hand first, whose breath started to blend into the otherâs. But thereâs no way in hell heâs leaning back unless you do, no way in hell heâll let this opportunity pass him by, no way in hell heâllâ
âYou ready, Benny?â Popeâs voice comes out of fucking nowhere, and as you jump and pull away, clearing your throat and bringing a hand to cover your mouth, Benny has never wanted to strangle Santiago Garcia more in his entire life than right this second.Â
Benny tries not to let out the deepest, most frustrated sigh of all time as he turns his shoulders towards his drunk friend.
âIâm not goinâ with you, idiot. Iâm gonna sleep in my own damn bed,â Benny explains, his jaw still tight with annoyance as he steps towards Pope to meet him halfway. âIâll see you tomorrow for lunch,â he pats Pope on the back.Â
âAlright, Alright, you little shit,â Pope waves Benny off with a mischievous grin on his face, âSee ya tomorrow.âÂ
Pope turns to you, nodding his head and bidding you a quick, but warm goodnight before he walks back towards Tom, Will, and Frankie.Â
Benny hears a quiet âSomethingâs got his panties in a twist!â from Pope as he joins the other 3 waiting for him. The others throw out Goodnight and Nice to meet you Y/N and See you around all at once. You wave and extend the same sentiment. You can tell everyone but Pope was at least sober enough to vibe check whatever was going on with you and Benny enough to keep their distance.
Right.
Whatever that was. You donât even know how to unpack that right now. So itâs time to put that on a shelf until you can, if you even want to.Â
You clear your throat. âYou want me to drive?â
âNah, I got it, you look tired.â
âJust what every woman wants to hear, Ben.â
âYou know thatâs notââÂ
âI know, Benny,â you reach out to squeeze the meat of his arm for just a moment. âJust bustinâ your balls. Someone has to,â you chuckle.Â
âFair enough.â
âBut really, Benny, go ahead, I trust you.â You hold the keys out for him. He takes them gently from your hand, his skin sliding against yours for just a split second, and Benny wants to savor it. Instead, he savors the smile you throw back at him as you turn around to walk to the passenger side, he savors the feeling of the soft lanyard keychain on your keys. He hops into the driver's seat of your truck, and his knees immediately knock against the wheel before he pulls the seat back. Once he settles in, he looks over to you. Youâre already nestled into the passenger seat with your seatbelt on. Your eyes are already getting droopier, your shoulders draw closer to the corner between the seat and the door.Â
âDonât fall asleep on me now, I need my copilot,â Benny jabs, his voice full of faux seriousness.Â
âY-yeah, Iâll try.â The fatigue of the heat of the day and all the excitement is catching up to you at a brutal pace.
âY/N, Iâm kidding.â God, he wants to reach out to you so badly. To hold your hand, settle his own on the warmth of your thigh as you drive home in that kind of comfortable silence heâs gotten used to with you.Â
His hands itch with the urge. He grips the steering wheel tightly instead.Â
âOkay, then Mr. Special-forces-I-can-stay-awake-through-anything,â you joke through a yawn that creeps up on you. âGet us on home, then.â
âYes Maâam,â he sends a half-assed salute to you before leaning over to buckle his own seatbelt.Â
He knows by the change in your breathing that youâre out like a light before you two even make it out of downtown.
Thank god for your affinity for deep sleep, because if you hadnât been knocked out, Benny is sure he wouldâve accidentally woken you with the slam of the passenger door as he closed it behind him. His arms were too preoccupied with you, fast asleep and bundled up in his jacket. He manages to make it up the stairs, deciding to go back for the front door after setting you down.Â
As he reaches your bed, heâs able to squat down and fling the comforter open. The fabric jostles as he sets you down into it, and heâs satisfied.Â
He stands back up, and very very carefully manages to free your feet from your boots before he kneels back down again at your side. He canât help the movement of his hand as it pushes a stray hair from your face.Â
Benny shouldâve kissed you earlier. He shouldâve said fuck-all to Pope and the others and just let them see. But for now, he settles on leaning in and placing a feather-light kiss to the top of your forehead.Â
You stir ever so slightly, but nothing breaks the deep breath of your sleep.Â
Benâs knees groan as they pick him up from the wood floor. As he stands, his eyes scan over your bedroom, dimly lit only by moonlight. He sees the pictures of you and your mom, of you with a fluffy golden retriever in your high-school cap and gown, of a beautiful sunset right here from the house.
He remembers when you took that picture. Youâd stalled in your driveway as he waited for you in his truck to go pick up more seed and some groceries.Â
Just to the right of that frame is a receipt from the main street Basque place. Heâd recognize his own shit handwriting anywhere.
You had fallen under the weather for a few days, and youâd slept in till about 10am. You never sleep in that late, but Benny didnât want to wake you. Your body needed the rest, and he could handle himself on his own.
Scrawled on the bottom empty space at the bottom of the receipt, heâd written âCaught you slackingâ today. You owe me a late start soon. Iâll start with the chickens.â
That was weeks ago, and youâd kept it.Â
His chest hurts. It aches for the way youâve brought him into your life, given him safety. Not just the safety of basic needs, like heâs so goddamn used to, but warmth and laughter and love.
Yes, love.
Thatâs why it hurts so goddamn much. And Benny isnât sure what the hell heâs supposed to do about it.Â
âŚ
Bennyâs entire body feels like itâs buzzing.Â
He has to remind himself that he does want to go on this job with Santi and the rest of the guys.
Shit, $17k doesnât just come along these days. He could use itâhell, you both could use it. And lord knows he would never let them go without him. Heâs not leaving them a man down for the job.Â
So why is he so fuckinâ nervous? Heâs been shot before, faced much worse. So whatâs the goddamn problem? WellâŚitâs you he has to talk to.
Heâs been pacing back and forth in front of the counter for who knows how long. He knows you should be home from meeting Judith any minute now.Â
What the fuck is he going to tell you?Â
âIâm going to go help Pope figure out how to rob and kill a Columbian drug lordâ doesnât really roll off the tongue.Â
He tries a few more times in his head, all with varying levels ofâŚlying by omission, because Benny knows deep down he cannot tell you. He has to shove aside the strange, but very present desire to break away from what has been instinctive for so many years.
Shove it down. Just get to the point.Â
His ears perk up at the sound of the front door unlocking. He has to hold himself back from bolting to greet you right in the entryway.
Instead, he slows his pacing and settles for leaning his back against the sink to face the entry of the kitchen.Â
âHey Benny!â He hears you call out from the front door. Bennyâs ears trace your movements from the shuffle of your boots into the entry, to the soft clunk as you take them off, to the rustle of fabric as you hang your jacket up.Â
âBenny?â Your head peeps around the corner of the wall. Your eyes perk up as you see him. âThere you are,â you greet him with a warm smile before walking further into the kitchen. âGot some leftover lamb here if you want it.â You hold up a plastic to-go bag. âHow are you?â
He just nods and mumbles an, ââm okay, yeah,â at you.Â
You set the bag down on the kitchen table as you look him over. The warm lights of the kitchen cannot hide how, despite leaning against the sink, his back is meticulously straight with tension. And his eyes, his eyes are watching you like a trained hawk as you move about the room.Â
You pause just in front of the fridge, your fingers wrapping around the door handle as you send him a concerned look. âYouâre making me nervous, everything alright?â
âYeah, yeah- JustâŚâ he pauses, the words getting stuck on his tongue. His hand comes up to the back of his neck to rub nervously at the short hair there. âGot a question for you.â
âS-sure, whatâs up?â You try to keep your tone calm and casual, but seeing him allâŚalmost timid is strange at the very least.Â
âCan I take some time off?â He decides thatâs all the information he can give you for now.Â
Thatâs it? Heâs looking like heâs going to keel over with nerves for that? Youâre almost offended, but you quell that quickly, trying to be gentle with whatever seems to be the root of whatâs bothering him.Â
âBenny, you know you donât have to ask right?â you say, dropping your hand from the fridge and taking a few steps closer to him.Â
âYeah well, you sign off on my checks, soâŚâ he tries to lighten the mood, but he canât help avoiding your eyes as you grow closer.
âOkay, fair, butâŚâ you shrug at his quite fair assumption, but try to assure him with, âJustâŚI trust you, Ben, donât worry about it. Iâll be fine for a few days. When is it?âÂ
âThursday through Monday,â he says.Â
âOh, yeah, no problem,â you wave a hand out in front of you with a gentle smile to try to get him to loosen up.
Nothing.Â
âYou need me to drop you at the airport or anything?â you try again.Â
âNah, Willâs got me,â he says. Bennyâs eyes flick from yours to his feet, to the table, to anywhere around the room, never staying in one place for too long. He crosses his arms, squeezing his own biceps to help him get through this conversation.Â
âOh,â you try not to frown at his inability to look at you even though youâre two feet in front of him. âBoys trip?â
âYeah,â he offers. Timid again. You donât like timid with him. Itâs notâŚhim. âThanks,â he says.Â
You hum quietly in response. You just stand there a moment, only a foot in front of Benny, and you feel like your feet are stuck in mud, like they cannot decide whether to give up, go to bed, and let him figure out whatever this is on his own, or to reach out to him, push further until he gives you anything to work with.Â
Itâs not your feet that move, but your hand. It slowly reaches out to his right hand, untangling it from his own arms and firmly grasping it with yours.
You realize itâs the most youâve ever touched him, at least intentionally. At least while conscious. You know he carried you to bed that night after the rodeo. You know he took good care of you, that he takes good care of you.Â
Youâre trying to do the same, even with the iron wall currently in front of you.Â
You squeeze his hand a little tighter. âYou know Iâm here, right?âÂ
He nods, and finally finally thereâs a hint of that real smile.Â
His empty hand comes up to your face, fingers lithely grasp that stray hair that always makes its way in front of your forehead. He brushes it behind your ear. Your skin feels like itâs humming, hot to the touch with the slight brush of the tip of his finger against your cheek as it moves.Â
âThatâs my line,â he whispers, his eyes filled withâŚwith affection.
There he is. Thereâs your Benny.Â
And itâs just so like him to surprise you, to stand himself up tall and engulf you into his arms in a hug. One of his hands comes up behind you to rest gently against the soft hair at the back of your head. You feel yourself melt at the barely-there pressure of his fingers on your scalp.
The embrace is so filling, so everywhere around you that you donât realize he dodged your question in the first place. Benny is grateful for it.
And he pulls you in closer. Itâs almost too much.Â
A split second later, and heâs pulling back from you. The blue of his eyes seems deeper than normal in the low light. You know thereâs something still nagging at him, a storm still brewing, but once again, he doesnât give you the opportunity to press.Â
He fully pulls away, and you miss the warmth of him.Â
His hand gently pats the side of your head one more time before whispering the softest âGoodnight,â before letting his hand drop to his side.
Bennyâs large frame slips past you, and your gaze follows him as he pads slowly out of the kitchen and up the stairs.
Benny can feel your eyes on him. And he has to fight the part of him that just wants to turn around and take you up in his arms again and justâŚnot move until the goddamn sun comes up.
But he canât do that.Â
He reminds himself itâs just a recce, just a simple âhow would you take out a drug lord in the jungleâ recce then he can come back to his beautiful little piece of life heâs carved out for himself. Back to you.Â
Itâs only a few days. Youâll be fine. Heâll be fine.Â
Just a few days.Â
âŚ
He mustâve lost his phone. He must have horrible reception. Every single flight for 5 days out of Colombia mustâve been cancelled.
Those have to be the answers. They have to be, because if theyâre notâŚBenjamin Miller is dead in a ditch in the jungle somewhere and youâll never see him again.
Itâs possible youâre just crazy, and there are 15 other entirely reasonable and logical explanations that have slipped your mind and you just skipped straight ahead to heâs dead.
But something doesnât feel right.
Something didnât feel right when Benny told you about the trip, something didnât feel right when heâd hugged you so tightly before he left and told you to âBe safe, okay? Please?â Youâve been overanalyzing his tone, trying to think if it sounded like he thought he wouldnât be back.Â
No, youâre certain something is very, horribly wrong.Â
And you need someone, anyone to think youâre not batshit crazy.
Judy was barely any help on that front. Hell, she was help in other areas; sheâd come by to help you with the extra work around the ranch in Bennyâs absence, but as far as your nerves?Â
Sheâd told you, âHeâs a big boy, heâll be okay sweetheart.â
But stillâŚevery time she said it, there was a shade in her eye, a twinge in her tone like she was trying to convince herself as well as you the more and more she said it out loud.
With each passing day, it came harder and harder to deny it. And you wish she would just fucking say it. Say the reality and the depth of the shit situation. But you know she wonât. Sheâs too much like your mother in that way.Â
So, out of desperation, you try something you know you probably shouldnât. But youâre fucking terrified, so youâre using that as your excuse.
Youâd asked Judy for Mrs. Millerâs phone number.Â
And now youâre sitting in her living room, nursing a cup of hot tea youâd insisted you didnât need but she gave to you anyway.Â
âSorry to intrude like this, I-â
She waves a hand as she passes by you to her own chair, a mug of the same tea nestled close to her chest.
âOh, stop, you arenât intruding. Itâs about time you and I chatted anyway.â She lets out a quiet groan at the creak in her joints as she sits down, settling into the chair. âI justâŚwish it were under different circumstances.â
You mumble a quiet, âMe too.âAnd thatâs all you can manage for now. You donât have it in you to dump all of your anxieties about her sons on her unprompted.
âWhen was the last time you heard from them?â she asks in a quiet voice. You know better not to misconstrue the quiet with calmness.Â
You have to muster your own voice to speak. âWill picked Ben up from our place at about 6am last Thursday. I finally got it out of them that they were going to Colombia, but they didnât tell me anything else. I got a text from Ben saying they were leaving their connection in Dallas, said reception may be spotty, thenâŚnothing.â
Ms. Miller sighs heavily, her shoulders dropping further into the lounge chair sheâs seated in.âSounds about right. They came by the night before to visit, Iâm sure you know. Just said they were taking a vacation,â she ruminates.
You canât hold back a quiet scoff in malcontent. Some fucking boys trip this is. If Benny isnât dead in a ditch somewhere, and he does make it back, you have half a mind to kill him yourself after what heâs putting his mother and you through.Â
You sense Ms. Millerâs eyes narrow in at you, sussing out the origins of your disgruntled state.
âI wishâŚMs. Millerââ
âPlease, honey, Shirley is fine,â she interrupts with a sympathetic smile.Â
âS-shirley,â you start, âI wish I could be optimistic for you. I justâŚI donât know what the hell is going on. And I know I donât have any right to worry as much as you butâŚIâm so scared.â
âHonâ,â you hear that drawl in her voice, you hear Benny in it, it makes the perpetual ache in your chest worsen. âDonât go claiminâ you donât have a right to worry, and thatâs that.â She says it in a stern, yet comforting sort of way, the way only a mother can manage. âAnd I donât expect optimism, I just...I needed you here just toâŚ.â You see the tears begin to well in her eyes. The same sting starts to itch in your own. âI just want toââ
She pauses, looking down at her lap, and then she lets out an unexpected sort of chuckle.
âYou know, when they were younger, Iâd let them roam around all the time. Itâs good for a kid, right? Makes âem tough,â she starts to recall. âWell one day âthey were 10 and 8 I thinkâ, theyâre playing up in the hills behind the house, and I whistle out in the backyard for themâŚand,â her hand comes off of her mug to flick her fingers, ânothinâ. For too long. I was frantic.â She lets out another chuckle laced with tears. âI grabbed the neighbors and called the sheriff and we looked and looked and when we found them, they were just content as could be. They werenât even lost, just playing in a fort theyâd made with pine branches, wanting to be little frontiersmen. Not a care in the world.â Her tone turns melodic towards the end, it paints the picture perfectly for you.Â
You canât help but smile at the idea of little 8 year old Bennyâ youâre sure you could find a picture of him around here somewhere on the wall â wandering the woods, following his older brother as he always does, no matter where it leads him.
âI was furious with them at first,â Shirley carries on through her sniffles. âBut the more I looked at them, the more I knew they didnât do it on purpose, that they justâŚwere off in the woods having fun, that they werenât scared, I just couldnât be that mad at âem.
âBoth my boys are free spirits in ways Iâ I only wish I could understand. And right nowâŚall I can do is believe in them, believe theyâre out there in the woods somewhere, not a care in the world, just gone too long âcause they didnât hear me whistle.â
Your emotion once stuck in your throat has moved up, tying your tongue into knots, you cannot will yourself to untie them and speak. No, instead you manage a quiet nod to her, to those blue eyes that she gifted both of her sons.
She shuffles a bit closer to you in her chair and wordlessly reaches her hand out to rest on the small coffee table between the two seats. Her palm faces up in a silent invitation.
Your hand settles into hers.
âŚ
Benny shouldâve kissed you when he had the chance.Â
His feet squelch as they hit the still-sopping earth of the forest floor. The sound is a brutal reminder of where he is, but at least itâs a slight respite from the harsh scramble of the rocks down the rest of the mountain.Â
Heâs glad he went instead of Pope; his knees donât need the impact of an extra day in this shithole.
Still, Benny is fucking tired.
He shouldâve told you how he felt when he had the chance. Because now thereâs no fucking guarantee heâll ever have another one. Itâs why heâs wading through another stream down to closer to the village, sneaking behind trees as a car passes on the road, why he volunteered on this mini-recon journey in the first place.
Benny is sick and fucking tired of not knowing what heâs getting into, sick of having other peoples choices in the moment affect his life in a way he cannot get ahead of.
Heâs not taking any more chances.
Heâll be damned if he looses his own life, his brotherâs life, in addition to Tomâs over some fucking money.Â
The soft pat of rain begins to drum against the banana leaves around him. Their tempo slowly but surely increases until Bennyâs shoes begin to get stuck in the mud of the increasingly wet earth.
Heâs beginning to hate the rain all over again. Itâs incessant beating all around him cannot pull his mind away from his mission, though. Barely anything could do that. He prays to whatever god is up there that the boat is still there. He needs to get Tom home, Pope, Fish, Will. He needs to get himself home.Â
He shouldâve kissed you when he had the chance.Â
âŚ
The chickens are acting up.Â
Their anxious clucks begin to cut through the quiet evening air, and that specific pitch stirs you quickly from sleep.
Despite the pull to stay in bed, you heave yourself up and out. You do not need another coyote getting into your chickens.Â
You rub the sleep from your eyes as quickly as you can. Your hand finds the light switch to illuminate the staircase. Thereâs another creak outside. Its distinctness has a chill running down your spine.Â
Your front driveway gate should not be creaking open.
Your feet, once they hit the wood of the first floor, instinctively carry you to your shotgun in the kitchen. Of all the things you need right now, someone breaking into your house is not fucking it. The metal of the weapon feels cool in your hands as you dislodge it from its chosen corner near the entrance to the kitchen. You grip the pump action, quickly ramming it back and forward again with a chk chk as you chamber a round.Â
Your mind buzzes with a plan of action.
Sneak out the side kitchen door, head to the front, take whatever assailant by surprise from behind and run them right off your property.Â
Benny would probably laugh at you, poke holes in your plan until the sun rises. But you donât have the luxury of that right now. You shoulder the shotgun and slowly head to the kitchen door.
The front door lock snaps.Â
Your body is turning faster than you thought possible at this time of night. Barrel of the shotgun raised, you point it at the now suddenly opening door.
âNot one more fucking step, Iâve got a gun!â you shout, not being able to see the assailant from your vantage point; the lip of the wall jutted out too far for you to do so.Â
A shadow slowly peaks out from around the wall, not yet making its way into the light of the stairway bulb.Â
âI wasnât expecting a warm welcome exactly, but I'd appreciate if you put the gun down, sweetheart.â
Youâve never been more relieved and more furious to hear that warm drawl.
âBenny?â you question. His tall shadow slowly makes its way into the illuminated kitchen door frame.Â
He looks exhausted, gaunt even.Â
For a moment, youâre not sure if heâs real. If heâs some insane hallucination your sleep-deprived brain has made in his absence.
God, heâs been gone so long youâre losing it. But the gentle whisper of your name snaps you back to reality.Â
âY/N,â he walks towards you slowly. The barrel of the gun drops as your shoulders slump in disbelief. He takes a few more steps until heâs only a few feet in front of you. His hands dip low to slowly press the barrel of the gun fully away from him.Â
You still feel like youâre seeing a ghost.
âIâm sorry I scared you.â You watch as his fingers slowly grip the shotgun and loosen it from your grasp. It thunks against the wood of the kitchen table as he reaches to place it there. âNow, letâs just go to bed.âÂ
You see it in his eyes; despite his calm tone, his eyes are pleading in their exhaustion to just lay down and sleep. His warm hand makes its way to your shoulder.Â
Thatâs it.Â
You shove his hand off of you, reeling back for a moment. âBenjamin Miller, I have half a mind to still shoot you,â you nearly hiss.
âWoah, I-â he tries to move forward, hands outstretched again to welcome you. You deny him with another step back.
âWhat the fuck happened to you? You show up like this in the middle of the night? No text, no call, just âhoney Iâm home!ââ you say in a mocking tone as your hands shoot up in astonishment at his audacity. âAre you fuckinâ kidding me?â
âHey, Iâm fine,â he tries to cover his fatigue with a nonchalant air. It only serves to rile you up even more, but his next words are the nail in the coffin. âWhy are you so worried?â
A searing jolt of shock dances up your spine. It settles at the base of your neck, then, like a coarse rope, it wraps itself around your skull until itâs so tight you think your head will crack.Â
âMiller, are you fucking delusional?â you ask, tone low but intense. Bennyâs face twists into an unreadable expression. Youâre not sure if itâs confusion, disbelief, dismissal, or something else. You feel tears start to prick at your eyelids. âThe fuck you mean why am I so worried? You go on a boys trip and then youâre missing for five fucking days? Did you hit your head?â
Fuck him if he thinks he could return to his normal calm little life. He doesnât get to go missing and come back like nothing happened. He doesnât get to smooth over the fact you thought youâd missed your chance to tell him you love him because he was dead.
You want to scream at him. You want to grab him by the shoulders and shake him until he sees reason. You want to hold him so tightly.Â
âIâm. Fine,â he presses one more time. Itâs like youâre trying to pry open the door that holds his true emotion on the other side. But heâs right there, doorknob firm in hand and fighting against you. âIt doesnât matter,â slips from his lips. Benny knows he shouldnât have let it. He let his grip slip for just a moment and he reaps the consequences.
âIt doesnâtâŚmatter?â you test his words in your own mouth, your chest aching so deeply at their implication. âOf course it matters, Ben. You donât think other people care? Your mom? Me?â
Some tether in Benny snaps, your words striking a nerve he hadnât touched in a long time, but has been an ever-present nuisance to him.Â
He canât speak. He cannot will himself to. His jaw is beginning to ache with how tight heâs clenched it, his hands feel unsteady and he hates it. He knows if he relaxes for just a moment, itâll all come spilling out.
So he walls himself off, his expression hardening. You watch it happen, you watch as his posture somehow gets more rigid.Â
You let out a frustrated groan through still-clenched teeth. Why canât Benny get it through his thick fucking skull? Why canât this be easy? Why canât he just tell you what happened?Â
The anger doesnât ease as hot tears spill over your lower lashes. As the first one falls, the anger twists into fatigue. Every nerve feels fried from this emotional rollercoaster of an evening.
But even then, the frustration and bitterness and tiredness cannot cloud just how grateful you are for the drawl of his voice, the smell of his leather jacket, the rise and fall of his chest.Â
âBenny, I justâŚthank god youâre home safe,â you choke out, resigning yourself to the fact that you wonât get what you want out of him. Not now. âI missed you.â
Bennyâs brows furrow. Heâs dug himself too goddamn deep and didnât put the shovel down when he shouldâve. Because itâs easy. Itâs easier to push and push and insist that itâs okay, that heâs fine.Â
His arm aches. He remembers you havenât even seen the wound yet since itâs covered by his jacket. You donât even know heâs been shot. You donât even know Tom is dead.
How the fuck is he supposed to tell you about all the bullshit and expect you to ever want to see his face again? He spends half his time wondering how he deserves to have you in his life, and this? This would be the other shoe Benny has been waiting for to drop, itâs the last domino to fall to show he doesnât fucking deserve any of it.Â
He watches your shoulders drop in defeat as you let out a sigh.Â
Benny feels like heâs trapped inside his own body as he watches you move around him. As youâre nearly past him, one of your hands comes up to his shoulder.Â
Your hesitant touch is so light, he barely even registers it.
And a moment later, itâs gone.Â
He hears the quietest âGoodnight, Ben,â as you retreat from the kitchen. The floorboards squeal as they usually do as you pad up each stair.Â
And then heâs left alone.Â
How he should be. Itâs what he deserves.
He carefully grabs the discarded shotgun from the kitchen table. His hands find the release of the chamber, snapping at it and letting the pre-loaded bullets fall into his awaiting palm. He leaves the ammunition on the table, and places the shotgun back in its corner.
As he makes his way upstairs, he freezes for a moment at the sight of your closed bedroom door.Â
He shouldâve kissed you when he had the chance.Â
Benny doesnât sleep a wink that night.Â
âŚ
Thereâs someone else here.Â
Bennyâs skin is red hot, drenched in sweat from his forehead to the small of his back. Thereâs someone trying to get in. He heard it. The twigs snapping, the distinct chk of gunmetal.Â
His blankets are rapidly thrown aside, and his hands find the Glock heâs had lying on his bedside table the past few days. His palms quickly find a home around its hilt. He immediately feels only a small, fleeting sense of relief. Fleeting.Â
You. Theyâve found him. Theyâve chased him across countries and Bennyâs fucking led them back to you.
How could he be so fucking stupid?
You. Bennyâs gotta get to you and fast. His feet bolt as quietly as they can across the hallway to your room. The gentle click of your bedroom door has you stirring.Â
Benny drops his left hand off his pistol, bringing it down to point at the floor with his right. He leans over you, placing his free hand on your shoulder. He squeezes, his heart clenching at not wanting to scare you, but he needs you awake.Â
âBenny?â you whisper, your voice coming out cracked and low with lack of use.
âY/N,â he starts to give your shoulder a little shake. âY/N, you need to get up.â
âHuh?â you question, but let his hand lure you up.Â
âPlease, please, Y/N,â Benny presses further, his tone rushed but still quiet.
âBenny, whatâs happening?â you let out, your heart rate jumping as you finally catch a glimpse of the gun in his other hand as he helps you out of bed.
Fear rushes over you like ice water, coating every inch of your nerves in alertness.
He doesnât respond to your question. He just shuffles over to your bedroom closet, his grip remaining gentle somehow on your arm as he urges you over. His hand leaves you as he opens the closet door.
âGet in,â he whispers again.
âWhat?â
His arm curls behind you, trying to herd you into the small space.
âJust,â he huffs out, his voice still urgent and hushed. âGet in the closet, hide there, and donât come out until I come get you.â
âBenny, what do you mean, why are youââ
âY/N, Listen to meââ he cuts you off as he guides you down to sit on the empty floor of the closet. Some of the bottoms of pants and dresses brush at your forehead as you sit in the dark, cold space. âDonât make a sound, donât leave, donât do anything until I come and get you. Understand?â
âBen, is there someone here? I donâtââ
âY/N,â he bites, âDo you understand?â Benny knows his voice is more intense than youâve ever heard it before. He canât get wrapped up in it. He needs you to listen to him. He needs you out of sight and safe until he knows, until heâs positive thereâs no one here.Â
Benny hates being afraid. Many man hours have been spent trying to train fear out of him, trying to harness whatâs left and turn that into focus, into completing a mission. But Benny feels the fear tearing away at him, scratching at the base of his skull and all those hours and all that training starts to decay with each second he looks at you.Â
And itâs why, as heâs on his knees in front of you, he throws one final plea, one final beg in a whisper of your name.Â
âO-okay, okay,â you relent.Â
Benny doesnât have time to feel relieved. He just nods back at you in thanks.
âDonât come out unless itâs me,â he reiterates one more time. You nod, eyes wide staring up at him swirling with confusion and fear of your own.
Benny doesnât have the time to explain. God, he wishes he did. Instead, he shoots up from his knees. His hands catch the handle of the closet door, and he slowly, carefully shuts it closed. His free hand curls back around the metal of his handgun.Â
The pads of his bare feet are nearly silent as he paces out of your room. He sweeps your bedroom door almost closed, stopping just before the latch could audibly click.
Bennyâs brain is working overtime as his eyes look forward, seeking out any type of movement while his feet place themselves meticulously on spots of the wooden stairs he knows wonât creak as horrendously. As he hits the cold wood of the first floor, he goes straight for the front door. His handgun is held up and ready in his sightline as he once again releases a hand to check the lock.
No sign of forced entry, lock is still locked.
Bennyâs fingers fidget with the metal, clicking it from unlocked to locked. Itâs locked. Itâs locked. No sign of forced entry, itâs locked. Heâs locked it himself, itâs locked.
He veers away, turning towards the living room.Â
A prick of pain echoes through his shoulder as the sharp corner of the wall digs into it; he leans into the wood as he whips around to clear the first corner of the darkened room.Â
One, clear. Turn, clear. Good.
Onto the kitchen.Â
Benny can hear his heartbeat pulsing in his ears.Â
Turn, clear. Turn, clear.
To the guest bedroom.Â
He maneuvers on instinct. Each room cleared, until heâs satisfied with every room and every locked door.Â
After clearing it all, he makes one trip to the front driveway gate. Itâs secure. He unlocks it and re-locks it himself, just for safe measure.
Once heâs inside, he does one more quick run-through of every room of the house again.Â
Only then does he finally, finally feel even an ounce of relief.
Thereâs no one here. Itâs just you and him. No Lorea, no cartel, no rogue village kids. Just you and Benny.Â
Is he fucking losing his mind?
He felt like heâd just gotten it back not so long ago. Heâd put himself back together enough, then he found you and you helped him polish it all up.Â
And now, standing in front of your bedroom door, his palm sweaty around the handgun hilt, panting as if heâd just run a marathon, Benny feels like heâs shattered again. Like heâs bundled all the broken pieces in his arms and heâs trying desperately to contain the inevitable spill.Â
If he drops it all, the other shoe will drop. Heâll lose you.Â
He shakes himself back to reality.Â
He opens your bedroom door and pads over to the closet.
âItâs me,â he says, his voice just above a whisper so he ensures you hear him. He doesnât hear a response as he kneels down on the floor and opens the closet door.
Youâre huddled up, knees to your chest and back pressed firm against the back wall of the closet.Â
Your eyes meet him the second he dares to look into them. They flit only momentarily to the gun heâs setting down beside him. Benny watches as you take in the sweat resting on his hairline, the rapid rise and fall of his chest that heâs trying to suppress, the laser-focused, piercing gaze of his eyes.Â
âItâs okay,â he starts. He wishes he could soften for you, to while away the tears he sees gathered on your lash line, but his body is still on high alert, coming down from the adrenaline of the potential threat only to rise again as he faces you.Â
âBen,â you plead in a whisper. Benny hears the croak of your voice as you continue. âWhatâs going on? Please?âÂ
âThought someone was breaking in, had to check the house.â
âAnd weâre safe?â
âYes, youâre safe.â
Your brow furrows at his word choice.Â
Benny canât linger on it. He has to say something. Anything.
âIâm sorry,â is all he manages. Benny wishes he could tell you just how sorry he is. How sorry he is for shutting you out, for even taking the job in the first place, for walking into your life and jumbling it all into a great big mess. Heâs so sorry for all of it. But the knot ties tighter in his throat, he reminds himself of all the baggage heâs trying to make sure he doesnât lose hold of.
Heâs praying that youâre able to gleam through his words that thereâs something more behind them. From the way you slowly nod your head, he thinks you do. The touch of your hand in his as he helps hoist you out of the closet is a respite Benny desperately needed. He knows it wonât last long.
Your hands are shaking in Bennyâs grasp. Youâre up on your own two feet again now, and for a moment, Benny isnât sure he should let you go, but he begrudgingly releases you. You donât seem to protest as you slowly move past him, padding over to the edge of your bed before taking a seat.
He turns around to look at you. Your shoulders slump with a tired sigh. Bennyâs own feel crushed by the weight of everything he canât say. But he canât do that to you. He canât unload it all and take you down with him.Â
But Benny manages something. He picks up his feet, walks over in front of you and before he can really think about the implications of his actions, heâs cradling the side of your face with his palm.Â
Your skin is hot from the adrenaline of being dragged out of bed, but he can see that itâs wearing off as your eyes droop further back into fatigue. But despite it, youâre staring up at him with a swirl of emotion that Benny cannot begin to unpack.
He doesnât want to think about it.Â
So again, he doesnât.
He leans down again and presses a kiss to the crown of your head.Â
He canât bear to see your reaction, so he runs.
Benny turns around, and walks right back to his bedroom, closing your door behind him.Â
âŚ
You already want to wring the neck of one Miller brother, and youâre mere moments away from adding the second to the list.Â
âPick up the phone, pick up the phone,â you whisper to yourself, your phone pressed tight against your ear. Youâre at your wits end.Â
You know heâs not at work. Youâre pretty sure heâs not with Benny.Â
Pick up, pick up.
âY/N.â You hear the deeper tone of the older Miller greet you through your phone speaker.Â
âWill,â you start, âGood to hear your voice.â Your tone is charged, you know that, but you canât help it. Everything that happened with Benny last night was just the straw that broke the camel's back. You need answers. âYou doing okay?â
He hums, dodging an actual answer to your question.
Thereâs a beat of silence over the phone. Will can figure it out, you know he already has.
âHowâs Benny?â Heâs trying a roundabout way. You can work with that.Â
âNot great. Horrible actually,â you scoff, but the flat tone you try to push canât cover the slight break in your voice.Â
Will catches it easily. Somethingâs up. âY/N,â he starts in almost a warning-like tone, âwhat happened?â
You let out a deep sigh.âLast night, he woke me up with a gun in his hand and told me to hide in the closet. He said âdonât come out until I get you,â and then just disappeared into the house. When he came back, he just said he thought someone was trying to break in, said everything was fine, when I could tell it very much was not and then he justâŚwent back to bed.â You barely hear the sigh that Will lets out. You can sense his hesitation to even speak. âWill, if youâre about to make some bullshit up, just hang up, okay? Iâm-â you huff. The irritation is building, exasperation spreading over your nerves like wildfire. âI know something happened in Columbia. You were all fucking missing for 5 days, and thats in addition to the 5 you had planned. Then Benny shows up like itâs just a regular fucking day. And now heâs waking up in the middle of night to tell me to hide? He barely fucking speaks to me, Will. Benny. Itâs like I have a stranger living in my fucking house, and youâre all tight lipped. I havenât even been able to get a hold of Frankie. I just need someone, anyone to tell me what the fuck is going on?â
The line is silent. You can hear him breathing. The longer he chooses not to speak, the more you think this is a lost cause. Maybe youâll lose Benny over this. Maybe Will, maybe all of them.
âWill-â
âWe were on a job. It went bad.âÂ
âJesus Will,â you sigh heavy into the phone, âI knew you could be vague but youâre fucking killing meââ
âTomâs dead.â
Your skin runs cold; your voice shrinks, âWhat?â
âTomâs dead,â Will reiterates with finality. You hear in his tone that he doesnât want to speak the words out loud again.Â
You feel frozen. Your mouth goes dry trying to come up with the right words to say. âW-what kind of job is it where Tom ended upâŚdead?â you hesitate, choking on your words while you try to comprehend the truth behind them.Â
âA bad one. One we shouldâve never taken.â Thereâs that conclusive tone again. Willâs voice is as steady as ever, and it almost scares you how well heâs compartmentalizing it all. But everything starts to make sense. Bennyâs paranoia and his deliberate seclusion. Your chest aches deeper than you couldâve imagined. Heâs been grieving right in front of you, and you didnât even know it.Â
âI-âŚ.Will, Iâm so sorry, I-âŚâ your words come out thin, â Wh-what can I do? For you, for Benny?â You wish you could be as steadfast as Will is capable of.Â
âJustâŚBenny wonât talk about it,â Will starts. It makes you feel a bit vindicated that youâre not the only one that Benny has been tight lipped around. âIf you can get him talking, he can start to heal. That kid is so goddam stubborn sometimes.â
âSometimes?â you huff, lightening your tone a bit even though you know itâs futile.Â
Will gives a halfhearted chuckle. Youâll take it.Â
A beat of silence passes.Â
âWill, if you need anythingââ
âNo, Iâll be fine, I-â
âWill,â you plead, interrupting him back. âCut the bullshit. If you need someone, Iâll be there,â you pause for a beat, âand once I make sure Bennyâs okay, weâll have you all for dinner, okay?â
âAlright,â Will concedes.
âGood.â
âThank you, Y/N.â
âOf course, Will.âÂ
âŚ
The harsh crack of glass against wood cuts through the soft sound of your tires on concrete, it immediately puts you on edge. As you arrive back home from dinner with Judy, you finally see the source of the noise. Benny chucks another empty beer bottle at the side of the barn.
You roll up further along the driveway, up along the side of the house where the concrete driveway gives way to dirt, electing to just abandon your truck in the middle of the dirt road. Benny only seems to notice your presence when you swing your car door shut.
âBen?â You greet him with concern dripping from your tone.Â
He doesnât turn to you. Not yet.Â
His hair is a matted mess on top of his head, his shoulders pant up and down with his heavy breathing. He leans down to pick up another empty beer bottle at his feet. He swings his arm back, getting ready to launch the poor thing at the chipped paint of the barn.Â
âBenny,â you raise your voice, sternness peaking through as it seems to whip him out of his stupor, only barely. His arm drops, the beer bottle now hanging loose in the limp arm by his side.
He still doesnât move to look at you. He uses his own broad back as one last final shield.
Youâre so tired.
You canât even imagine how he feels. Youâre almost positive heâs barely been sleeping. âPlease, Ben,â you huff. You watch his chin drop to his chest. âYou have to talk to me.â
ââM Fine,â He mumbles, finally turning towards, but only halfway. Benny has always seemed like such an open book. But as you hear that phrase slip from his lips one more time, the phrase heâs been chanting to you ever since he came back, youâre finally beginning to see the play of the century heâs managed to put on, the act that heâs perfected over a long, long time.
But heâs slipping. Heâs finally slipping; every layer underneath that varnish is tainted and burnt, and heavy. And itâs beginning to crack under its own weight.Â
Youâre not sure how much more he can take. Not sure how much longer you can take.Â
The curtains are pulled back, and Benny looksâŚscared. Like a lost child.Â
âYouâre not fine.â You hate to state the obvious, but youâre not sure what else to say.Â
He scoffs, looking away from you again. He shakes his head before, without even a spare glance, deciding to turn his feet towards the back porch. He walks right past you.Â
You catch a glimpse of the bandage on his left arm; itâs starting to make sense now, after everything Will told you.Â
He makes it one more step further, two, three, before you let the words slip out into the crisp dusk air.Â
âI know,â you say, voice shakier than you want it to be.
He stalls, but takes another step to push on. Heâs forcing your hand, forcing you to back him into a corner of his own. Thereâs no option to remain subtle anymore.Â
âI know Tomâs dead.âÂ
Bennyâs whole body freezes still as a statue. But the stillness doesnât last long. The red hot anger, noâŚpain that had been brewing in his chest, the pain that brought him to bring the bottle to his lips that night, that led his feet in front of the barn, that had tried to get rid of itself with each sharp clank of shattering glass against wood, with each brushing aside of you, was beginning to boil over in his chest. Benny doesnât know what to do about it.
He doesnât know what to do.Â
Fuck.
âBen,â you say firmly again.
Goddamn you, he thinks. You keep pushing and pushing and Benny wants to hate you for it...but, god, he could never.
âLeave it,â he attempts. Itâs futile. He tries anyway.
You sigh. Benny mourns for what heâs put you through since he got back. He hears it all with that heavy exhale into the crisp night air. âYou know I canât do that,â your voice is on the verge of cracking. âBen, justâŚtell me what happened. I want to help you, I-â
The pressure in him finally snaps, the weight comes crushing down. âLeave me be!â Bennyâs body whips around toward you as his voice bellows from deep in his chest. âJust leave me be!âÂ
You flinch at the volume of his voice. Your body feels like itâs on fire, palms beginning to sweat as you bunch them into fists. You wish you could shake him out of this. Goddamn him for being so stubborn.Â
But youâve had enough. You just about stomp up closer to him so you can make him look at you, so you can stop him from running away again. âIâve been leaving you be,â You look into his eyes. Benny wants to look away, but he canât. âYou donât think me dealing with the fucking silent treatment over the past week is me leaving you be? Me not pushing further? Me going to ask Will instead because you wonât say a goddamn word to me?â Your eyes start to well with tears daring to spill over at any moment. âAnd even he didnât elaborate, just that Tom is dead. So Iâve let you be for long enough, Benny. I can see itâs fucking killing you. Itâs fucking destroying you right before my eyes, and I canât justâŚ.watch. Tell. Me. What. Happened.â Your last sentence is firm, accented on every word like a command.Â
âThe Job went bad,â he offers vaguely, his voice trying not to crack.Â
âThatâs the same shit that Will told me,â you state plainly. The answer isnât good enough for you. Heâs hiding behind it still.Â
âYou wonât understand.â He gets defensive, hunching into himself like a cornered dog about to bite. He doesnât want to do this to you. Youâre the one thing that world hasnât tainted in his life, the one thing that hasnât been fucked up by either the army or himself, not that those two things could ever be fully separate anymore. He canât let himself ruin you.Â
So he bites.Â
âI donât have to tell you shit, alright? You couldnât handle it. You wonât fuckinâ understand it because you-- â he struggles for a moment, but sinks his teeth in further, raising his voice firmly, âYou canât fucking help me. I know you want to, but Iâm not some fuckin charity case. I donât need your help,â he lies. âYou havenât seen what Iâve seen, you donât know what I know. You live here, in your perfect little life,â even he knows the jab is low, âand you think you can crouch down to my level and say something thatâll actually mean shit, when really all youâre doing is being a condescending bitch,â youâll never talk to him again, âwho just will not get off my case! I can fucking handle it, okay!?â
You pause. Your jaw pops on the left side, and you realize youâre clenching your jaw so hard that you can actually feel your fillings. In a moment of grace, and because you notice the deep regret in his eyes hiding behind indignance, you ignore the little âbitchâ comment.Â
âBenny,â you start slowly, âdo you think youâre saving me from something? From some heavy baggage youâre packing that you think Iâll run away at the first sight of? Set the fucking cross down. Iâm not running. Let me help you.â The tears spill over. Youâre still angry at him, furious for how heâs treated you. But more than anything, your heart, your chest, your whole being aches for how he suffers so silently, how he refuses to let you share the burden.Â
âY/Nââ thereâs still anger in his voice, but the look in your eyes cuts him off. Youâre crying now. Fuck. Â
âBenny, please, I need you toâŚâ your voice fades out, emotion getting stuck in your throat. Youâre not sure what more you can say to him. This might be it. Maybe youâll really lose him over this.Â
Bennyâs not sure if anyone has ever held a mirror up to himself like this.Â
But here you are.Â
Benny is angry at himself, furious. Heâs spent days upon weeks upon years of his life telling himself that all the lacerations upon him, no matter who dealt them, were due to his own fuck-ups, his own negligence. But maybe he wonât drive you away. Maybe he doesnât have to spend the rest of his life in penitence.Â
Heâs tired, soâŚso tired.
His feet move faster than he can register. His calloused fingers grab a quick hold of the soft hair on the back of your head. As quickly as heâs tilting your head up towards him, Bennyâs lips meet yours with fire.
Youâve thought about how it would feel to kiss Benny Miller more than youâd like to admit. You knew it would be intense, but god, itâs more than you ever couldâve imagined. One hand slides down to your neck, his thumb resting just along your jawline as he pushes both of you deeper and deeper into the kiss, mouths moving against each other as Bennyâs other hand wanders to take a confident hold of your waist.Â
His grip is almost too tight as he kisses you with such warmth, such fervent devotion. His kiss has made you intensely aware of every feeling in your body; the way his fingers squeeze and flex around your ribcage, the taste of cheap beer from his tongue to yours, the way your cheeks heat with want that moves over every nerve in your body.Â
You move with him. Itâs utterly overwhelming. Itâs so Benny.Â
Youâre broken out of the spell only by the drop of salty tears that land on your cheek. You gently unravel your lips from his, looking up to him.Â
Benâs face drops. He starts to pull away, chest heaving heavier and heavier as the sobs start to build up.Â
Your hands wrap around his forearm, not letting himself tray too far. Your touch is firm but loving. And you take him as he is.
Bennyâs knees give out. Heâs kneeling in front of you, broken down to his very bones by your touch. His arms weave around your hips, pulling you in closer. You donât hesitate to lean into his desperate embrace. Benny buries his head into your stomach. You feel his whole body heave, shoulders rising and dropping as he finally finally lets go.Â
One of your arms drops to his shoulder as the other opts to rub gentle circles to the nape of his neck.Â
âItâs okay, Ben. Iâm here. Itâs okay,â you whisper. Itâs a mantra Benny didnât know he needed.Â
He feels like the knots everywhere in his body have finally relaxed as he lets himself cry, his tears beginning to soak through the fabric of your shirt. Itâs a cathartic release that Benny didnât know he needed, that heâs sure he hasnât felt in years. He lets his body shake and cling to you, and Benny is finally able to put into words in his mind what you are to him.Â
âIâm so sorry,â he says into you. âIâm so sorry.â You donât know if heâs saying it to you, to Tom, to anyone or everyone in the entire world. But you accept the apology for what it is, and you hold him through it. Youâre an anchor, a solid ground for Benny to land on. He needs you in a way heâs never needed anyone else.Â
Your fingers buried in his hair, your soft skin upon his, your lips accepting his own: it all puts Benny back inside his own body where heâs felt like a stranger ever since returning from Colombia.Â
He feels like he can breathe again.
He doesnât know how he deserves this. You haul him up from the dirt after a few minutes, drag him into the house and set him down at the kitchen table.Â
Your movements are second nature as you grab your 4H mug and the mug heâs claimed as his favorite, an old handmaid one that you bought at an art show a few years ago. It fit in Bennyâs hands perfectly.Â
His hands yearn to fit around your waist again.
Time begins to slow down. He savors every single breath of his, of yours. The silence is comfortable between both of you as you finish making tea. As you sit him down on the couch in the living room and grab firewood from the little bundle next to the hearth. You settle up next to him, not too close, not too far, and rest your hand on his own.Â
As Benny stares at the flames in front of him, feels their warmth, the words start to tumble out.
âPope had been chasing this guy for years and finallyâŚhe finally had a lady on the inside,â his voice is hoarse from yelling in the cold, dry air. He takes a sip of his tea before he continues. âSo, he brought us in for consulting. $17k just to tell him the best way to break into the place and kill the guy,â he scoffed. You stay silent, worried youâll scare him off like a bird if you make a sound.
âSoâŚwe look around, the place is full of holes. Heâs got a wife and kids, but theyâd be gone for church. It left a window to sneak in, and bam. It was perfect,â he speaks slowly, having to pull the words out of himself with all the strength he can muster. But the weight releases into the warm air in the room, freeing him of it all.
The fire crackles fill the room as he pauses for a moment. âSo we did the recon, drew up a plan, and we were good. Until Pope suggested we justâŚdo it ourselves. No police, no military, no possible leaks. Just us and we take all this guys fuckinâ cash. AndâŚwe never shouldâve done it. I know that now, but I couldnât let them get into all that shit without me.Â
âIt shouldâve been easy. We were on a timetable, we were good. ButâŚTom justâŚTom stalled. Pope stalled. Stalled because of the fucking money even though weâd already grabbed enough. Then Will got shot, and it justââ
âWill got shot?â you canât help but interrupt him in shock.Â
God, both of the Millers are way too good at keeping their mouths shut.Â
âHe-heâs okay now. Itâs a miracle, though.â
Benny keeps going, he tells you about the guards, Popeâs informant, the helicopter, the village. His own gunshot wound. Tom. He lets himself sink into the comfort of your touch again.Â
Benny lets himself just be.
As he recounts the last details of the failed mission, Benny notices that you stick close to him, attentive to his every word. He almost hates to say that youâre right. He did need to get this off his chest before it ate him up inside, before it consumed him before his own eyes. His half-finished tea has gone cold in his mug, the fire has burned down to its embers, yet his hand remains in yours. Bennyâs not sure if heâll ever be able to thank you. Youâve become so..steady for him. Both of you have become unstoppable forces in each otherâs lives.Â
Bennyâs hand doesnât leave yours as he follows you up to his room. It doesnât leave as he pulls you back from turning away, before whispering, âStay, please?â
You donât leave his arms until you have to nearly pry yourself out of them the next morning. Youâre met with protest, Bennyâs deep morning voice telling you to âcome back to bed.âÂ
âThought youâd want coffee,â you whisper back.Â
He hums low, âYouâre too good to me.â He pulls you back in closer to him, back into the cocoon of blankets and pillows and Benny that youâd slept in all night. One of his arms wraps back around your waist, keeping you tight against his chest. Youâre mere inches away from his face. His other hand comes to stroke the apple of your cheek.Â
âHmm, no such thing, Benny.â
âIâm in love with you, you know that?â
And there it is, a pure, childlike joy springs from your chest, and like soft silk ribbons it wraps around every inch of your skin until tying itself in a neat, beautiful bow around your heart.Â
Somewhere deep down, you think you knew. But thisâŚitâs just so right.Â
So you take a page from Bennyâs book, shoot first and ask questions later, even if there arenât really questions that need answering.Â
You lean in, and before Benny knows it, your lips are on his.Â
Itâs not like your first kiss: rushed, needy, overflowing with words that Benny couldnât say.
Itâs slow, calm, warming like the coffee youâve made him nearly every day since heâd walked up your driveway. And what a day that was.Â
Benny can breathe. How do you do that? Heâd tried not to let any doubt he had about your feelings not eat away at him, but he wonât deny that, after last night, it had been gnawing at the back of his mine.
But no longer. Youâre his, and heâs yours. And god will Benny cherish you.Â
Heâll cherish the blush on your cheeks and the somehow shy smile on your face as you both pull away from each otherâs lips, the way you decide to drag him out of bed with you, the way he lets you.Â
Benny is settled behind you in the kitchen now. His arms wrapped around your waist and his chin resting on your shoulder. You cannot imagine it to be comfortable, the way his back is hunched over to do so, but he doesnât let up. He just watches as you pour out the freshly brewed coffee into the two mugs in front of you.Â
âHere,â you whisper as you hold his mug up. Benny reluctantly unwraps one arm from you to take the hot porcelain cup from you. He brings it up to his lips and takes a sip. Itâs not like the burn and bitter shit he used to drink, either from the mess hall or from a worn-out, probably-been-shot-at thermos in the field. No, itâs smooth, cozy. It tastes like home.Â
âAre you going to be this clingy now?â you joke, gesturing to his one arm still secure around you. He chuckles, the vibration emanating from his chest. You can feel it on your back as you lean further into him. Benny somehow squeezes you closer as he takes another sip of coffee.Â
Bennyâs home.Â
And heâll never think of leaving it again.
âSweetheart, you have no idea.âÂ
âŚ
âI got it, Benny, youâre not supposed to twist your arm like that,â you scold as you shoo him away from the pot of boiling pasta on the stove. He scoffs an, âIâm fine,â but relents, letting you lift the pot on over to the sink and pour its contents through the colander. He pivots to checking the sauce on the next burner over, stirring it around to make sure itâs all ready for serving.Â
âI see sheâs used to bossinâ you around,â Pope chuckles, pointing with his finger lifting off the beer currently cradled in his hand.Â
Will shoves his elbow lightly into Popeâs side from his seat next to him at the kitchen table, but the elder Miller brother wears a proud smile.Â
Bennyâs seeming more like himself again. So are the rest of them. The scene in front of him is proof enough that youâre to thank. You and Benny move so effortlessly around each other in the kitchen; hellâŚyou have Benjamin Miller cooking. Will never thought heâd see the day.Â
âCan we make ourselves useful?â Frankie pipes up from across the table, seeing that dinner looks about ready.Â
Will stands up from his seat, setting his beer down on the table. He leans over as he stands, tapping Frankie's forearm. âLetâs set the table, yeah?â
Frankie nods, standing as he asks, âBenny, plates?â
The younger man turns his head towards Fish.Â
âSecond cabinet on the right,â Benny points towards the destination.Â
âSilverware?â Will asks.
âThis drawer,â you respond to him, pointing towards your left.
The next few minutes are filled with the comforting chaos of Pope folding napkins, the clank of silverware as Will sets it down on the table, Frankie lining the plates up all nice, the smell of fresh bread filling the kitchen as you pop it out of the warm oven, the tang of pasta sauce as Benny sneaks you a taste before setting it all down on the table.Â
Will watches Benny place a fast kiss to your forehead before whispering âIâll grab it, you go sit.â You listen with a smile, taking your seat at the head of the table. Benny follows suit, sitting down in the seat to your right with a wine bottle in hand. Once the wine bottle is secure on the table, Bennyâs hand sneaks to your knee under the table.Â
Pope tells you all heâs transferred to a consulting job in Sacramento. Frankie tells you his daughter has gotten quite interested in rodeo, wanting to learn how to lasso. You have no problem offering some free hours to teach her. Benny explains how your one horse who didnât like him finally does (it took a lot of sweet talking and a few extra apples).Â
POV: 1st (f!Reader POV)
Rating: Mature - Blog is 18+
Summary: Benny Miller returns home to say goodbye to his dad, and learns how to carry him forward.
Word Count: 4.4k
Content/Warnings: Parental Loss, Grief, Emotional Hurt/Comfort, Adult Humor, The Millers Ruin Toy Story, Postpartum, Dad Benny, Benny Holding a Baby, Ovaries Might Explode, Domestic Fluff
A/N: Heyyyyy. I have no idea why Iâm hurting BennyâŚagain. It all began when my husband and his brothers ruined Toy Story at Thanksgiving. It made me think about a holiday with the Miller, and @musings-of-a-rose, as usual, encouraged the chaos and told me to write it down. I've also been wanting to write a story about Benny losing his dad inspired by the song "Fade In/Fade Out" by Nothing More for ages. This finally felt like the perfect way to mash all that emotional devastation together. Happy holidays? I'm not sorry.
Masterlist
Benny pushes through the front door of his parentsâ house, and Iâm right behind him. The cold Colorado air still clings to my skin as I step inside, but itâs the heaviness in the house that steals my breath. Itâs thick, unmoving, like the walls themselves are holding it.
Iâve been here over a hundred times. Holidays, barbecues, stolen weekends. But never like this. Never with dread pooling in the corners. Never with silence pressing so hard against my ribs that I can barely breathe.
âWhere is he?â Benny forces out, the desperation beneath it barely contained.
No one answers immediately. The quiet stretches, becoming its own kind of sound, one I feel in my bones. Somewhere in the back of the house, I hear the faint creak of a floorboard, the soft murmur of a voice.
Will appears in the hallway, his eyes tired and red, his face somehow older than it was when we last saw him a few days ago. âHeâs in the bedroom,â he says softly. âHeâs been asking for you.â
Before the words fully register, Benny is already moving, brushing past his brother, running up the staircase two steps at a time like heâs afraid the moment will disappear if he doesnât reach it fast enough.
A door closes behind him with a quiet click. The house goes still.
âDid we make it?â I whisper, breath trapped in my chest.
Will nods. âYeah. I thinkâŚI think heâs been holding on for Benny.â
Relief hits me so fast it almost hurts. A shaky exhale slips out of me, but it doesnât steady me. It just cracks something open. My knees feel weak with the sudden release of fear Iâve been holding since the phone call, since the airport, since Benny went silent beside me on the plane.
Will lays a steady hand between my shoulder blades, grounding me. âCome on,â he murmurs. âLetâs get you sitting before you hit the floor. Iâve had enough with hospitals for one week.â
I donât protest. I donât have the bandwidth to. My body just follows, grateful for the direction. We move toward the dining room, our footsteps suddenly too loud against the hardwood, like weâre intruding on a moment so fragile even sound feels unwelcome.
Mrs. Miller sits at the table, staring at a cup of tea thatâs long gone cold. Her shoulders are tense, her breath shallow, like sheâs been holding herself together with sheer willpower.
I cross the room quietly and lean down to kiss her cheek. âHi, Mom,â I whisper, using the name sheâs always insisted on.
Her eyes lift to mine, red and wet, but when she sees me standing there, when she realizes we made it, something in her face loosens. Not joy, not relief exactly, just a softening, like one small weight has finally shifted off her chest.
âOh, sweetheart,â she breathes, her hand squeezing mine for a second too long. âIâm so glad youâre here.â
Willâs wife, Emily, sits beside her, one hand resting gently on our mother-in-lawâs arm. We exchange solemn smiles, the kind people give when words are too clumsy, too sharp, too loud.
Will pulls out a chair for me. I sit, feeling the weight of the room press against my ribs.
For a long moment, no one speaks. The quiet lays heavy on all of us, thick, suffocating, settling into the spaces between our breaths. The house feels like itâs holding itself still, afraid to shift, afraid to break whatever fragile thread is keeping everyone together.
Mrs. Miller keeps her eyes fixed on her cold tea, her fingers trembling just slightly around the mug. Will sits rigid in his chair, staring at the table but seeing something much farther away. Somewhere deeper in the house, the heater kicks on with a dull metallic groan, a reminder that life continues even when it feels like it shouldnât.
I fold my hands in my lap to keep them from shaking. Every tick of the wall clock seems louder than the last, stretching seconds into something unsteady and sharp.
Finally, Emily lifts her gaze to me, her expression gentle, tentative, like sheâs afraid anything louder might shatter the room.
Emily clears her throat gently. âCan I get you some tea? Coffee? Water?â
âA stiff fucking drink,â Will mumbles.
I smile weakly, then shake my head. âNo, thank you.â
The refrigerator hums. The clock ticks. Someone shuffles a foot against the hardwood. All tiny sounds, each loud in its own way.
âHow was the flight?â she asks softly.
I swallow. âLong. Quiet. Benny didnât say much.â
The truth is, the silence on the plane had felt endless. He just stared out the window the whole time, jaw tight, leg bouncing, holding himself together by threads I could almost see straining. I kept waiting for him to say something, anything, but every word stayed locked behind his teeth. And all I could do was sit there beside him, pretending to read the same page of a magazine, glancing at him every few minutes, wishing there was something I could say that wouldnât break him further.
âThatâs how he gets,â Will murmurs, leaning back in his chair. âWhenever things go sideways. He shuts down until heâs standing where he needs to be.â
Mrs. Miller gives a faint, humorless smile. âJust like his father.â
I hesitate, then question, âHowâs he been?â
Mrs. Millerâs gaze drifts toward the hallway. âStronger than we expected. Stubborn as ever.â Her lips tremble. âHe insisted on sitting up when he heard Benny was on his way.â
âThat sounds right,â Will says softly. âDad would drag himself out of the grave if he thought one of us needed him.â
Mrs. Millerâs attention turns back to the hallway, but her eyes soften. âHe was always at his best when his boys were under the same roof.â She meets my eyes. âThank you for making sure Benny got here.â
I shake my head quickly. âI didnât do anything. He was already halfway out the door when we got the call. He barely even packed a bag. Just grabbed his wallet, his keys, and asked when the soonest flight would be.â
âThatâs my boy,â Mrs. Miller whispers, swiping at her eyes. âAlways running toward the people he loves.â
I swallow, voice thick. âHe justâŚhe couldnât lose any more time.â
Will nods. âNone of us can.â
Mrs. Miller looks at me then, not through me, not around me, but at me, seeing something she hadnât needed to before today.
âThank you,â she says, voice steady despite the tears. âFor loving my son the way he deserves.â
My breath stutters, catching somewhere between my ribs. Iâm not sure what to do with the weight of her gratitude. Not tonight. Not with everything trembling on the edge of breaking. I open my mouth to respond, but nothing comes out.
Will clears his throat softly. âHeâs stronger because youâre here,â he adds. âEven if he wonât say it.â
The words hit something inside me, something raw. Benny had leaned on me in ways he didnât realize, in ways he would never claim for himself. But hearing it from Will, from his familyâŚit settles differently. Heavier. Realer.
I nod, because speaking might break something open inside me.
Another long stretch of quiet settles, but this one is softer. Itâs shared, not suffocating.
I stare at the back hallway, imagining Benny sitting beside his father, talking, holding his hand, memorizing everything about him because he knows the moment is finite.
A selfish part of me aches to be there too, to hold his other hand, to anchor him through the breaking. But I know Benny needs this moment with his dad alone. This goodbye is theirs, not mine, and the only thing I can do is wait. And hope it gives him something to hold onto when the moment is gone.
No one talks. No one moves. Weâre all listening, each in our own way, for something. Footsteps, voices, a sign that the world hasnât shifted permanently in the last ten minutes.
I stare at the place mat in front of me. Just weeks ago, this very table held more food than anyone could possibly eat and glasses of mulled wine. I blink. My vision blurs.
God, it had been so alive here. So loud. So full.
The memory pulls me back without warning.
The Millersâ living room had been buzzing with holiday chaos. Decorations were draped over every available surface. A stack of presents sat under the tree. Laughter echoed off the walls like it was trying to outshine the twinkle lights.
Will cracked open another beer, leaning back with a mischievous glint in his eyes, his arm comfortably draped along the couch behind Emily.
âDid you hear Toy Story 5 is going to focus on sex toys?â he announced.
Emily choked on her drink. âWhat?!â
Mrs. Miller nearly spat out her own drink, scrambling upright as if speed alone could help her scold her son properly. âWilliam Miller! Itâs Christmas, for Christâs sake.â
I didnât even flinch. Iâd built up an immunity to Miller male nonsense years ago.
Benny laughed. âReally brings a whole new meaning to the names Buzz and Woody, doesnât it?â
Mr. Miller groaned, rubbing his temples. âItâs a wonder you two never got kicked out of Sunday school.â
âNot for lack of trying,â Benny muttered, lips twitching. I elbowed him gently, trying not to smile.
âThat cannot be true,â Mrs. Miller gasped, clutching her metaphorical pearls.
âWhich part?â Benny shot back. âUs trying to get kicked out of Sunday school or the fact Will believes everything he reads online?â
Emily nodded toward him. âHonestly, the Sunday school part checks out.â
âOh, it gets better. I heard theyâre finally going to handle Andyâs sex life while at college,â Will added.
Emily groaned dramatically. âPlease stop. Youâre ruining my childhood.â
I had my hand pressed to my mouth trying not to encourage them.
âToo late,â Benny snorted. Then, cupping his hands around his mouth like a megaphone, he yelled, âAndyâs coming!â
Emily shrieked and launched a throw pillow at him. Mrs. Miller hid her laugh behind her wine glass, shoulders shaking.
Mr. Miller shook his head, but he was laughing too, big, booming laughs that filled the room. âGod help me,â he said. âThis is what I get for teaching you both to speak.â
âWe learned from the best, Pops,â Will replies, tilting his beer in his dadâs direction with a crooked grin. âYouâre the one who taught us that hands arenât that only thing that can âreach for the sky.ââ
âLord, give me strength,â Mrs. Miller mumbles.
âThereâs more than a snake in my boot,â Benny murmurs with a teasing smirk, looking at me. He lays a hand on my knee. âWant me to poison your waterhole later?â
âNot when you ask like that, you pervert,â I laugh, playfully swatting his hand away.
Mr. Miller spread his hands dramatically. âGive me strength. Or earplugs. Iâll take either.â
Benny lets out a low laugh and hooks an arm around my waist, tugging me into his side. Warmth settles over me like a blanket as he pulls me against his chest. I crack up, my laughter spilling out and pressing into him, his own rumbling beneath my cheek.
I remember thinking⌠This is what joy feels like. Chaotic, ridiculous, loud joy.
I had no idea how quickly it would all change.
The memory shatters when the front door slams so hard the frames on the wall rattle. It feels like the whole house flinches, like even the walls recognize the sound of Bennyâs breaking heart.
Mrs. Miller meets my eyes, her expression raw and knowing. She doesnât have to speak. I already know where heâs gone, and I know he needs me there.
I rise from my seat and slip out the back door, the screen creaking softly behind me before it shuts. The cold Colorado air rushes over me, sharp, bracing, pulling me toward him.
I cross the frost-bitten yard, heading straight for the lake. My boots know the way by heart. Weâve walked this path since we were kids, always ending up in the same spot whenever life felt too big, too loud, too unfair.
Tonight, it feels bigger than ever. Louder than ever. And I wonât let him face it alone.
Benny sits on top of the old picnic table, shoulders hunched, staring across the water. The wind stirs his hair, the same way it did when he was a boy who came here to escape, to think, to just be. He looks like that boy again, lost at the edge of something he canât control. Seeing him there now, folded into himself, I can almost hear the echo of who he used to be and who heâs terrified of becoming without his father.
I climb onto the table beside him. He doesnât look at me, but he shifts just enough to let me know he feels me there, feels my presence, even if it canât reach him yet.
For a long moment, he doesnât speak. Then his breath rips out of him, sharp and angry.
âThe hospital shouldâve done more,â he snaps, voice unsteady. âThey shouldnât have just sent him home to die.â
I blink, startled, but only for a second. This grief has claws. âBenny-â
âThey gave up,â he spits, running a shaking hand through his hair. âThey just sent him home like heâs already gone.â
His voice breaks on the last word.
âNo,â I murmur gently. âThey sent him home because itâs what he wants.â
âThat doesnât make it right,â he chokes out. His fist curls, knuckles white, pulse hammering beneath his skin. âHow do we even know this is it? People survive things all the time. They get better. They prove doctors wrong.â
âBennyâŚ,â I say softly.
He shakes his head hard, rejecting every syllable.
And I know, God, I know, thereâs nothing I can say that will make this easier. No truth gentle enough to land without breaking him. He has to reach that place himself, has to make sense of whatâs happening before he can even begin to accept it. All I can do is stay beside him while the denial cracks and gives way to something heavier.
âHeâs still him,â Benny says finally, voice raw. âStill sharp. Still talking. Still Dad. And that⌠that might be the hardest part.â
âI know,â I whisper.
âHe told me⌠He said heâs always been proud of me,â Benny whispers, but the last few words wobble, betraying him. He swallows hard, blinking fast. âOf the man I became. Even when I scared the hell out of him.â He clamps his jaw, trying to steady his voice, but it still comes out cracked. âI never once let him down.â
âYou didnât,â I whisper. âYou couldnât.â
Benny drags a hand over his face, like heâs trying to wipe away a feeling that wonât go. His chest rises and falls too quickly, the cold air catching on every inhale. For a moment, he just stares at the ground, like heâs searching for solid footing that isnât there.
His breath shakes. âI told him Iâm not ready,â he continues. âThat I donât know how to do this. How to lose him.â
My heart cracks quietly. âWhat did he say?â
Benny swallows hard. âHe said⌠He said, âSonâŚyouâre not losing me.ââ His voice fractures on the last word, barely holding together. âHe said that Iâll see him again someday. Maybe not at first. But one dayâŚâ
His gaze drops to our joined hands, like the memory is too heavy to look at straight on.
âHe was so damn calm,â Benny whispers. âLike he wasnât the one lying there, like he wasnât the oneâŚâ He cuts himself off, breath shaking. âHe told me to push through the pain. To remember the good things. The loud things. The things that make life feelâŚfull.â
Heâs quiet for a moment, then adds, voice barely above a breath, âHe said, âFind the things that breathe life into you, and youâll find me right beside them. Iâll be there. Iâll always be there.ââ
The words hollow him out and hold him together all at once. A tear slips down his cheek, carving a quiet path through everything heâs trying not to show.
He drags in a breath, thin, shaking, like heâs trying to take his fatherâs words into his lungs just to keep them alive a little longer.
The words settle between us like a heartbeat. Steady. Tender. Devastating.
I reach for his hand, squeezing gently. He squeezes back like heâs drowning and Iâm the only solid thing left to hold onto.
âI donât know how to be anything like him,â Benny whispers, voice breaking. âI donât know how to fill his shoes. I donât even know where to start.â He drags a shaky breath. âBut he said being like him was never the goal. He said I was supposed to be better. That I already am. And that someday, when I have a kid of my own, Iâll understand.â
A deep ache curls through my chest. Weâve been trying for months, hoping for a miracle, and now, hearing this, I canât stop the sharp, quiet guilt that rises in me.
He wonât get to see it.
He wonât get to see Benny hold his first child, wonât get to watch him become the father he always believed he would be.
And I hate that we ran out of time before I could give that to him. Before I could give it to Benny.
But this moment is his, not mine, and I swallow the guilt down hard, burying it beneath the weight of what Benny needs right now.
He finally turns toward me, eyes shining with devastation and love. Raw, unguarded. Son and soldier and man all at once.
âIâm not ready for this,â he whispers.
I lift my hand to his cheek, brushing away a tear that immediately replaces itself. âNo one ever is,â I murmur. âBut youâre not doing this alone.â
He closes his eyes, breath trembling, like heâs standing on the edge of something too deep to measure.
âAnd Benny⌠Heâs right. Heâs not leaving you,â I whisper. âNot really. Heâll always be with you. In the things he taught you. In the way you love. In the man you already are. You carry him. You always have. You always will.â
He leans into me then, like the weight of grief finally pulls him forward instead of under. My forehead presses to his, our breaths warm in the cold night air.
The wind moves across the lake, cold and soft, rustling the trees like a breath from another world.
Somewhere in the dark, grief shifts. Not lighter. Not gentler. JustâŚshared.
And for now, thatâs enough.
Approximately One Year Later
The hospital room is soft and golden from the late-afternoon sun. Machines hum quietly, steady and gentle, a calm rhythm beneath the hush of new life.
Benny sits beside my bed, cradling a tiny, wrapped bundle. Our newborn son. His hands, usually so sure and strong, tremble as he holds the impossibly small weight against his chest. His thumb brushes the babyâs cheek like the slightest touch might break him.
âHeâs soâŚtiny,â Benny whispers, voice thick, reverent. âI didnât realize they were this small.â
I smile weakly, exhaustion pulling at my bones. âYou get used to it. At least, I hope.â
Benny doesnât look away from the baby. He studies him like heâs memorizing every detail, the soft dark hair, the wrinkled little nose, the soft rise and fall of his chest.
A shaky laugh escapes him. âHeâs got your nose,â he murmurs.
âAnd your mouth,â I tease. âHeâs going to charm his way out of everything.â
Benny huffs out a watery laugh, brushing the pad of his thumb across the babyâs lip. âHeâs perfect,â he breathes, like heâs afraid saying it too loud will break the spell. âHow is he already perfect?â
Emotion swells up, sharp and sudden. Damn hormones.
âI wish Dad could see him,â he whispers. âGod, he wouldâve loved him.â
His voice cracks on the last word.
I reach out, resting my hand over his. âHe does, Benny,â I whisper. âHe does.â
Benny closes his eyes for a moment, breathing in slowly, as though trying to pull strength from the tiny bundle in his arms. I watch him hold our son like heâs something holy, something too precious for this world. His thumb traces their babyâs cheek again, slower this time, like heâs memorizing every cell, every breath.
He looks at me then, just a flicker, a glance, but itâs enough. I see it in his eyes. The question heâs afraid to say out loud. The hope. The ache. The name.
A small smile curves at my lips. âBenny,â I whisper, âyou donât have to ask.â
His brows pull together. âWhat do you mean?â
âI know what you want to say.â My voice stays steady, even as my chest tightens. âAnd itâs okay. More than okay.â
His breath catches, eyes widening just slightly.
âI want it too,â I say softly. âI canât think of anyone more deserving.â
For a moment, he canât speak. His throat works around emotion too big for words as he looks down at our son again, like the world has tilted gently back into place.
âYouâre sure?â he whispers.
âIâve never been more sure of anything.â
Benny lets out a shaky exhale, the kind that sounds like grief and relief and love all wrapped together. He holds our son a little closer. He presses his lips to the babyâs forehead, closing his eyes as though offering a silent promise.
Thatâs when thereâs a soft knock on the door. Itâs tentative, hopeful. Too gentle to belong to anyone in a rush. For a second, I assume itâs another nurse, another doctor, one of the dozens of people whoâve been flitting in and out all day to check vitals, adjust monitors, explain things in hushed voices.
But the knock comes again, quieter this time.
We both look up.
âCome in,â I say.
The door cracks open, and Will steps into the room, his grin stretching from ear to ear. âWell?â he asks, voice rough with barely contained excitement. âAre you going to let us meet the newest Miller or what?â
Benny shifts slightly in his chair, angling the tiny bundle toward them. âYeah,â he murmurs. âCome meet our son.â
Mrs. Miller drifts forward slowly, like sheâs approaching something sacred. Her eyes never leave the baby, not once.
Will stops beside the bed, his grin already wobbling at the edges with emotion heâs trying, and failing, to hide. Emily stands just behind him, one hand on his arm, eyes shining as they flick from me to the tiny bundle in Bennyâs arms.
Mrs. Miller drifts closer, almost hovering at Bennyâs shoulder. Her hands tremble, clasped together like sheâs holding herself still. Sheâs watching her son and grandchild the way someone watches a miracle. Carefully, reverently, afraid to breathe too loudly and somehow break it. She leans in a fraction, the tears in her eyes bright and unashamed.
Will clears his throat, attempting to cut the tension, or maybe his own emotions, with humor. âIf this kidâs named Benny Jr., Iâm out,â he declares. âItâs bad enough heâs a spitting image of you.â
Emily elbows him so hard in the ribs he jerks sideways with a wince.
Benny snorts, his mouth twitching. âPlease. The world can barely handle one of me.â
Mrs. Miller lets out a watery laugh, lifting shaking fingers to her lips. Will grins again, relieved to have drawn breath and laughter back into the room, even in the smallest dose.
Benny draws a slow breath, steadying the weight of the moment. He looks down at our son, then at me. I nod, giving him an encouraging smile.
âI want you to meetâŚâ His voice falters, thickens. He clears his throat gently, swiping at the corner of his eye with the back of his hand. âI want you to meet Robert.â
Mrs. Millerâs breath catches violently, like sheâs been struck in the chest. Will blinks hard, his smile softening as recognition settles in.
Bennyâs voice drops to a whisper, reverent. âRobert Thomas Miller.â
Silence falls, not empty, but full. Full of memory, of grief, of love. Full of everything Bennyâs father ever was and everything this tiny baby could one day be.
Mrs. Miller presses her fingers to her lips, tears spilling freely. âOh, sweetheart,â she breathes. âYour father⌠he would haveâŚâ Her voice breaks, and she leans forward, touching the babyâs tiny head with trembling fingers. âHe wouldâve loved him more than anything.â
Benny blinks fast, eyes fixed on his son. âI know,â he whispers. âThatâs why⌠Thatâs why he gets his name. Dad deserves to be here. With us. With him.â
Will places a hand on Bennyâs shoulder, squeezing once, firm, steady, brotherly. âDad would be proud as hell,â he says, voice thick with emotion he doesnât bother to hide.
âThanks, man.â
I wipe at my eyes. âYou ready to be Uncle Willy?â
Will winces. âCan we not call me that?â
Benny doesnât miss a beat. âFine. Weâll go with Little Willy.â
Emily chokes on a laugh. I fold over, laughing so hard it hurts.
Mrs. Miller gasps, swatting lightly at both of them. âBoys! Not in front of the baby!â
Will lifts his hands in surrender. âHey, he started it! Itâs his kid heâs corrupting.â
Benny grins unapologetically. âAnd Iâll keep starting it. Itâs my job as your little brother.â
Mrs. Miller shakes her head, but sheâs smiling, tearful and exasperated and impossibly full of love.
Benny looks down at Little Robert â Little Bo - again. The pride on his face is quiet but so pure it almost hurts to witness.
âDad told me once,â Benny murmurs, âthat one day Iâd look down and find him.â
He looks at our son and smiles, soft and full and broken open in the most beautiful way.
âAnd I did.â
Mrs. Miller presses a hand to her mouth, tears spilling freely. Willâs shoulders drop on a breath he didnât know he was holding. Emily leans into him, her arm sliding around his waist.
And Benny⌠He looks lighter than he has in months. Not healed. Not whole. But grounded, tethered to something new, something hopeful.
I reach for his free hand, threading our fingers together. He squeezes back, firm and warm and sure.
Three generations fill the room. One gone, one living, one just beginning. Outside the window, the sun dips lower, bathing the room in soft gold. The world keeps turning. Life keeps breathing. And love⌠Love doesnât leave. It simply changes the arms it rests in.
Pairing:Â Benny Miller x f!Reader
POV:Â 1st Person (f!Reader)
Rating:Â General Audience, but my blog is 18+
Summary:Â A stranger photoshoot pairs you with the last person you expected. And maybe, just maybe, itâs exactly what you needed.
Word Count:Â 3.7K
Content/Warnings: Enemies to lovers, Sexual tension, Flirty Benny Miller, Language, Banter, f!Reader tries to resist feelings and fails spectacularly.
A/N: As usual, this is @musings-of-a-roseâs fault. She sent me a video of a stranger shoot where the couple ended up knowing each other, and it just escalated from there.
Masterlist
Iâm standing back-to-back with a stranger, the late afternoon sun warm against my skin, painting everything in a soft gold. A camera clicks around us, a sharp counterpoint to the quiet breeze lifting strands of my hair. The photographer hums thoughtfully as she adjusts her lens, stepping from side to side like sheâs circling a rare species.
âOkay,â she says, bright and encouraging. âOn three, I want you both to turn and face each other. Ready?â
I inhale slowly, steadying myself.
This is supposed to be fun. A stranger shoot. One of those trendy photo concepts where two total strangers get paired up for intimate, romantic-style shots to capture chemistry neither of them even knows they have yet.
I can do this. I can pose. I can smile. I can pretend Iâm open to the universe nudging me toward something unexpected.
Maybe today it actually will.
On the walk here, Iâd let myself daydream about what this shoot might be like. I didnât know what kind of âstrangerâ Iâd be paired with, what heâd look like, or what kind of vibe weâd fall into. But in the quiet corners of my mind, hope bloomed anyway.
Maybe Iâd meet someone kind. Or funny. Or unexpectedly magnetic. Maybe weâd have that effortless spark the photographer always hopes for.
I even imagined that clichĂŠ moment: two strangers standing too close, staring into each otherâs eyes because the camera demands it, and something shifts. Something warm. Something real. Something that feels like the beginning of a story worth remembering.
Even now, with only our backs touching, I can feel the faint warmth of him through our clothes. Itâs the softest brush of contact, almost nothing, but somehow it snags on my senses anyway, like a whisper of potential I didnât expect to notice. A flutter stirs low in my stomach. It seems ridiculous, but itâs undeniable.
âAlright,â the photographer says, bright and oblivious to the spiral happening in my head. âOneâŚtwoâŚthree.â
I turn. And every delicate, hopeful possibility I imagined detonates spectacularly in my face. Because the âstrangerâ Iâm supposed to take pictures with? Heâs not a stranger at all.
My stomach drops, my soul attempting to eject itself from my body
âWhat the hell?! Benny?!â His name comes out half-gasp, half-accusation, all disbelief, like the universe didnât just nudge me toward something unexpected. It shoved me headfirst into cosmic irony.
Benny stops mid-step, jaw tightening for a beat before his mouth curves into that grin he wears when heâs sizing up a fight he knows heâll win.
âWell, shit,â he drawls. âDidnât expect to see you today.â
His voice is deeper than I remember. Rougher. More gravel than honey. The kind of voice that sounds like early mornings, late nights, and bad decisions.
The photographer sucks in a breath. âYou two know each other?â
I bark out a laugh, sharp and incredulous. âOh, do we ever. My sister used to date his older brother.â I gesture vaguely at Benny like heâs an inconvenient piece of furniture. âThis is his annoying little brother who never learned personal space.â
âAnd she,â Benny cuts in, chin lifting, âis the gorgeous little sister who used to pretend she was too good to even look at me.â
I roll my eyes, shaking my head, trying, and failing, to keep a straight face. âPlease. I would never waste my time on you.â
He laughs, that infuriating, warm sound that makes my chest tighten. âIs that so? Yet here you are.â
I huff. âCircumstances force me. Donât get used to it.â
The photographer blinks. âThis is perfect. I love this energy.â
âTry living with it,â I mutter.
Benny chuckles, but itâs low, almost feral. âYou know you missed me.â
I lift a brow. âMissed you? Hardly. Iâd rather sprint barefoot across broken see glass than you again.â
He grins, clearly delighted. âAh. Still dramatic. Some things never change.â
And there it is. That push. That poke. That instinct he has to get under my skin until I bite.
I flatten him with a look. âAnd some things never improve.â
âOkay!â the photographer says brightly, unaware she has stepped into a war zone. âLetâs try some things and see where we end up. Benny, maybe stand behind her?â
He moves before I can protest, military-fast, no hesitation. His hand brushes my back as he steps in. Heâs solid. Too solid. All muscle and heat, the kind of presence that makes it hard to breathe, let alone think. His hands settle on my shoulders, big and warm, his grip firm enough that the weight of him sinks straight through me.
His breath is at my ear when he murmurs, âRelax.â
âDonât tell me what to do,â I shoot back.
He huffs a soft laugh. âThere she is.â Then softer, almost like heâs confessing, âI missed getting reactions out of you.â
Inside, I panic just a little. Because that admission? That tone? Danger. Absolute danger.
I narrow my eyes. âCongrats. You got one. Donât expect an encore.â
The photographer circles us, snapping away. âGreat tension. Very real.â
Oh, itâs real.
Bennyâs fingers slide to my hip when she tells him to âconnect with the pose.â His touch is firm, not at all tentative, like heâs handled a hundred more dangerous things than me.
But the worst part?
My body reacts before I can think. Heat spiraling, pulse jumping, that traitorous pull low in my stomach. Itâs impossible not to feel this way when Benny Miller is breathing against my neck like sin in human form.
He feels it. I know he does. Of course, he fucking does.
âStill get all worked up around me,â he mutters under his breath.
I force out a laugh I donât mean. âStill full of yourself,â I reply, but my voice is too breathy to land the hit.
He grins. âYou used to look at me like that back then, too.â
I turn my head and look up at him defiantly. âI never looked at you.â
âYou did.â His eyes lock on mine, daring me to deny it. âRight before you pretended to hate my guts.â
I lift my chin, stubborn, trying to hide the faint flutter in my chest. My cheeks heat, but my eyes stay sharp, refusing to look away.
âI wasnât pretending,â I say, voice a little too firm, trying to convince myself as much as him.
He gives me a once-over, slow, deliberate, entirely aware of what heâs doing. Â âSure, you werenât.â
I shift back because I have to for the shot. His hands tighten just slightly, guiding, steadying, possessive in a way that shouldnât make my heart stumble but absolutely does.
 âI wonât let you fall over if thatâs what youâre worried about.â
I snort. âYeah, well, gravity already does a good enough job. I donât need you assisting.â
He chuckles under his breath, the sound warm against my ear. âYouâre wound up like you think Iâm gonna throw you over my shoulder.â
âYou probably would,â I mutter. âLike some fucking Neanderthal.â
He hums. âOnly if you asked nicely.â
I elbow him, not hard, but enough to make him laugh again. God, that laugh. Smug. Bright. Infuriating.
The photographer tells us to face each other again. Close. Too close. Our noses almost brush.
Bennyâs gaze drops to my mouth, just for one second. But one second is enough to ruin me.
âThink you can behave?â I whisper, because anything louder might shake.
He leans in, just enough that the world tilts. âNot a chance.â
I swallow hard. I try to step back, to reclaim even an inch of space, but my hand betrays me. My fingers curl tighter in his shirt instead of letting go. Itâs instinct. Itâs nothing.
Itâs everything.
And Bennyâs whole expression changes, a slow realization washing over him like he just solved the puzzle I didnât want him to see.
Thatâs when he says it, voice soft but steady. âLook, if you want me to back off, say so.â
Heâs giving me an out. But the problem is⌠Iâm still holding onto him. And he definitely felt the way I shivered when he touched me. Which means he already knows my answer.
The silence between us crackles. The photographer snaps photos like sheâs capturing lightning.
A dark smile spreads across his face. âYeah. Thatâs what I thought.â
Reality slams back into me like a bucket of cold water. I force a laugh. âYou never could shut up, could you?â
âYou never could ignore me.â
The photographer beams. âPerfect! Whatever youâre doing, keep doing it.â
Oh, Iâm doing absolutely nothing. And somehow this is still turning into the most dangerous situation Iâve ever been in. Because Benny, with his grit, his heat, his soldier-worn confidence, has never been more impossible to hate.
Or easier to want.
âAlright. Letâs get a little closer,â the photographer finally calls
Of course itâs âcloser.â A fresh bolt of panic flickers through me. We do not need to get any closer. Weâre already close enough that I can feel my sanity peeling away like wet wallpaper.
My heart kicks up hard, thudding loud in my ears, my brain sprinting in circle. I paste on a tight smile that feels more like a grimace. âPerfect,â I mutter under my breath. âWhy not. Letâs all just get physically closer today.â
Benny bites back a grin. He hears the panic, sees the flush creeping up my neck, reads me like he always, annoyingly can.
âYou okay?â he murmurs, leaning in just slightly.
I nearly combust on the spot. Internally, Iâm a full-on wildfire. Externally, I manage a stiff, âPeachy.â
He chuckles, a low, warm sound that does not help.
âBenny, bring your hands to the sides of her neck, gentle, and look right into her eyes.â
Benny doesnât move at first. Not because heâs hesitant, but because heâs enjoying this. I can tell by the slow curl of his mouth, the one that always made me want to shove him into a lake.
Then, he steps closer. Closer than the photographer probably meant. His hands rise, warm and broad, and when his fingertips touch the sides of my neck, every muscle in my body locks up. Not in fear. Not in discomfort. Itâs just⌠too much.
Heat rolls off him, tangible and overwhelming. God, he smells amazing. Dark and spicy, with just the faintest hint of sun-warmed leather and sweat lingering underneath. The scent hits harder than it should, setting my pulse off kilter before he even speaks.
âGentle,â he repeats softly, voice dipped in gravel. âNot the usual request I get, but okay.â
His thumbs rest just under my jaw, barely there, but the contact is electric. He lowers his gaze to mine, and suddenly weâre eye to eye. Breath to breath. Heat to heat. His pupils blow wide. Mine probably do too.
âJesus,â he murmurs, almost laughing. âWhy are you glaring at me like youâre gonna swing?â
âIâm not glaring,â I manage, though my voice is embarrassingly soft.
He gives a quiet, smug little laugh. âIf looks could kill, Iâd be in the ground.â
I try to roll my eyes. I really do. But with his hands on my neck, warm, careful, a little possessive, I canât look anywhere but at him.
The photographerâs voice floats in, distant and thrilled. âPerfect. Donât move. That chemistry is incredible.â
Chemistry? No. Absolutely not. Chemistry with Benny Miller is against the laws of the universe. Whatever this is, it doesnât count.
I swallow, and Bennyâs hands shift just slightly with the motion, and his breath stutters like he felt it everywhere. His voice drops lower, only for me.
âYou okay?â
No. Hell no. Not even close. But I nod anyway.
His mouth curves, slow and knowing, because he can feel the charge between us even if Iâm busy trying to smother it with a throw blanket and denial. Without breaking eye contact, his fingers slide half an inch higher, brushing the hinge of my jaw.
My knees nearly give out.
âFuck,â he murmurs, voice right at my ear. âYouâre tight. Need a massage?â
I grit my teeth, fighting a shiver that betrays me. âIâm fine. Not that youâd know how to help.â
He hums, amused, letting his hand linger just a second longer on my jaw. âOh, I know exactly how to help.â
âDonât flatter yourself.â
He just smiles, of course he does, like he can see right through me.
âYou can trust me, you know.â
Trust him? Absolutely not. Because trusting him is how you start feeling things youâre not supposed to feel. Things like⌠wanting him closer. Wanting him to touch you. Wanting him to keep looking at you like youâre the only person in the world.
My pulse jumps anyway. My stomach twists. Every nerve screams donât fall for him.
I scoff. âWhy does trusting you feel like the most dangerous thing Iâve ever done?â
He gives the most devilish smile Iâve ever seen. âBecause it is.â
The photographer circles us, laughing like weâre adorable, not on the brink of spontaneous combustion. âBeautiful. Now, I want you to put a hand on his shoulder while you bring your foreheads together.
My pulse jumps. Right. Sure. No big deal. Just⌠get even closer to Benny Miller, whose hands are still on my neck like he owns gravity.
I lift my hand slowly and set it on his shoulder. Heâs solid beneath my palm, heat radiating through the cotton of his shirt. His muscles tighten under my touch, just barely, but enough that I feel it.
His brows lift, a soft, wicked glint sparking in his eyes.
âCareful,â he murmurs, low enough only I hear. âTouch me like that and people might think you actually like me.â
âShut up,â I whisper back, but the words have no teeth. Not when my fingers are curling against him like they have a mind of their own.
He exhales a quiet laugh, warm and knowing. âMaybe thatâs the problem,â he murmurs, voice low enough to rattle in my chest. âYou like me.â
My breath stutters. Heat floods my face. I do not like Benny. Except my body isnât listening to me at all.
âI would like to step on your balls,â I utter through gritted teeth.
âOoh. Kinky,â Benny replies. âI like that.â He dares to give me a wink.Â
Heat flashes up my neck so fast itâs practically homicidal. God, Iâm going to kill this man. Or fuck him. Possibly both in rapid succession.
Slowly, deliberately, he leans in. Our foreheads brush, just a featherlight tease, and then settle firmly against each other, like heâs staking a claim he has no right to make.
My breath catches in my throat. The world dissolves into white noise, the rustle of leaves, the faint hum of traffic, the distant shutter clicking. Everything blurs except the heat of him pressed against me and the way his thumbs sweep gently along the sides of my neck like heâs unconsciously memorizing me.
His eyes flutter half-shut, so close I can see the tiny sunbursts in the blue of his irises.
âYouâre still tense,â he whispers.
âYouâre still annoying,â I whisper back.
âFunny,â he says. âYour pulse doesnât agree.â
My cheeks flame. I try to step forward but Bennyâs grip tightens, not trapping, just steady.
âHold still,â he murmurs. âYouâre gonna mess up the shot.â
âYouâre messing up the shot.â
âIâm improving the shot.â
He shifts his forehead against mine, just a fraction, and the movement sends a shiver straight down my spine.
âYouâre trembling,â he whispers.
âIâm not.â
Fuck, I am.
âSure,â he says softly, almost tender. âWhatever you say.â
The photographer gasps, not because of our banter, but because the pose is exactly what she wanted. âPerfect! Donât move. Thatâs magic.â
Magic. Yeah. Thatâs one word for this. The other is âdangerous.â
âOkay,â the photographer says, sounding a little breathless herself. âLast pose⌠if you two are comfortable with it.â
I arch a brow. âComfortable with what?â
She hesitates, checking the lighting. âA kiss.â
My heart stops.
Benny goes still behind his smirk, the kind of stillness that feels like the moment before a strike.
âYou want us toâŚ?â I ask.
âJust if it feels natural,â she says quickly. âIf not, something close, intimate, almost-but-not-quite. Whatever youâre okay with.â
Natural. Natural? Nothing about what Iâm feeling right now is natural. My heart is hammering in my chest. My stomach is twisting in a mix of nerves and anticipation. The faint brush of him against my back, the warmth radiating through his jacket, the way his hand lingers on my shoulder just a fraction longer than necessary. None of this feels natural.
Except it fucking does.
My pulse spikes. My palms are suddenly clammy. I can feel the electricity in the tiny space between us, the unspoken dare in the way his gaze lingers on me, even though I havenât even turned yet.
I blink, trying to summon something resembling composure.
Bennyâs eyes lock on mine, and itâs over. The air shifts, heavy and electric.
âYou okay with this?â he asks softly, quiet, real. No teasing this time.
That throws me. Benny asking permission? Like heâs trying not to spook me. Like this matters.
My pulse spikes. My chest feels too tight to breathe. My brain short-circuits between donât and please, yes.
I can feel the heat of his body behind me, solid and unyielding, the faint brush of his hands on my shoulders, and it makes every nerve in my body fire at once.
My throat is too tight to speak, so I nod. Barely.
And the moment my nod lands, I feel it. The weight of anticipation, the magnetic pull, the tiny, terrifying thrill that maybe, just maybe, Iâm already in way over my head.
A thumb brushes against my ear. Itâs barely a touch, more a curious sweep of skin over skin, but it short-circuits me. My breath stumbles. My hand tightens on his shoulder before I can stop it.
Benny freezes, like he felt the way that one little touch rippled through me.
Slowly, so slowly itâs almost cruel, his thumb drags back, tracing the delicate curve where my ear meets my jaw. A place he should not know to touch. A place my sisterâs ex-boyfriendâs annoying little brother doesnât have any business discovering.
My eyes flutter shut on instinct.
He exhales, quiet and shaky, the warm breath ghosting over my lips from inches away.
âSorry,â he whispers, though he absolutely isnât. âDidnât mean toâŚâ
âYes, you did,â I breathe back.
His forehead presses harder against mine, like heâs anchoring himself⌠or me. His voice dips low, deeper than before, threaded with something I donât want to name yet.
âMaybe I did,â he admits.
His thumb skims the shell of my ear again, softer, slower, deliberate this time. Itâs intimate in a way that knocks the wind out of me more than any embrace or camera pose ever could.
The photographer makes a delighted little sound. âOh, thatâs gorgeous. Donât move.â
As if I could. As if he would let me.
Bennyâs other hand tightens ever so gently on my neck, steadying me when my knees wobble, just the slightest tremor, but enough that he notices. He always notices.
âYouâre still trembling,â he murmurs, but this time his voice isnât teasing. Itâs warm. Focused. Dangerously soft.
I swallow, and the movement drags his thumb across my jaw. Every nerve ending I have lights up.
âBennyâŚâ
He lifts his forehead from mine just enough that our noses brush, breath mingling in a slow, torturous pull toward something neither of us is supposed to want.
His gaze drops to my mouth.
âTell me to stop,â he whispers.
I canât⌠and he knows it.
He leans in, then kisses me. Slow at first, testing, giving me every chance to pull away. But I donât. My fingers curl into the front of his shirt, dragging him closer, and thatâs all the permission he needs.
The kiss deepens, heat and hunger snapping through the space between us like a fuse finally hitting its charge. His mouth moves against mine with a barely contained longing that makes my knees go weak. He kisses like he fights. Intense, deliberate, all-in.
The photographer is whispering something ecstatic behind her camera, but the world has narrowed to the press of Bennyâs hands, the heat of his body, the way he groans softly when I kiss him back harder.
When we finally break apart, our breaths mix, uneven and hot.
Bennyâs eyes are wild, blown wide, fixed on my mouth. His voice comes out low, wrecked.
âFuck. You have no idea how long Iâve wanted to do that.â
I try to speak. Nothing comes out.
The photographer slowly lowers her camera. âUhâŚthat wasâŚincredible. You twoâŚwow. I think thatâs a wrap.â
I blink, like Iâm waking up. Bennyâs hands fall away, but the ghost of them stays, heat lingering where his thumbs rested like they belonged there.
For a second, neither of us moves.
Then he steps back, giving me space instead of taking it. That might be the most surprising thing heâs done all day.
âWowâŚ,â he says quietly, rubbing the back of his neck. âI didnât expect that to feel soâŚright.â
I huff a breath, shaking my head. âDonât read into it.â
He smiles. Not smug. Not teasing. JustâŚhopeful. âToo late.â
He turns, half a step away, like heâs doing the brave thing by walking back instead of forward.
I donât let him.
Before my brain can interfere, I reach out and grab the front of his shirt, fingers curling into the fabric like itâs the only solid thing left in the world. The motion pulls him back toward me, close enough that I can feel his breath hitch.
Benny freezes. I donât give him time to ask. I step in and press my mouth to his. Itâs quick at first, impulsive, messy with nerves, then slower, surer, when he exhales against me like heâs been holding that breath for years. His hands come up, not claiming, just steadying me, palms warm at my waist.
When we part, our foreheads rest together again, both of us breathing hard.
âWell,â he murmurs, voice rough, âguess I finally got the gorgeous sister to look at me.â
I laugh softly, still close enough to feel his smile. âGuess the annoying little brother grew up.â
Maybe this shoot wasnât about strangers at all.
Maybe it was about finally seeing each other⌠without pretending we didnât want to.
Background info: Don is interested in the moody cheerleader (reader) that feels like no one understands who she truly is.
Warnings: Mentions of emotional abuse from Don's father, Kissing and mild language
Side note: The timeline is in the late 1980's, like in the 2004 Friday night lights movie, so forgive me if my historical details aren't accurate đ
Y/L/N-your last name
â§ď˝Ľďž:* *:シďžâ§
Odessa Texas, 1988
I'm not a huge fan of being a cheerleader, but it's really all about looking good on my college application that truly matters to me. Although I've made friends with the rest of the cheer squad, they all are shallow and act as if they have the perfect life.
Luckily, every day I come to this school, is just one less day I have to come back.
Odessa relies too much on the Permian high school football team, but if anyone dares to mention it, you're clearly crazy.
I walk into my English class, although it's a subject that I have a good grade in, almost all of the jocks and cheerleaders are in the class. It's usually loud, spitballs being spat at each other from the football guys. All of this was happening while Ms. Randall was trying to speak about whatever the hell she was assigning us.
My eyes then land on Don Billingsely.
Although he's got a dad that is such a hard ass when it comes to football, he's not as good as the other players.
He parties and sleeps with any girl he sees at a party that is willing to give him attention.
I sit in my seat and try to get working on the assignment. Ms. Randall, the English teacher then asks,
"Ms. Y/L/N," she then looks at Don, "Would you please describe Mr. Billingsely in one word?"
I'm a bit shocked by this question. But, I continue, not really giving a shit about anyone's feelings right now
"Joke." I then look back at my work and continue on with it, like nothing happened.
I heard someone, most likely one of the football players mumble something about me being a moody bitch. Oh well.
After class, when I was heading outside to my car, Don approached me.
"Y/L/N!"
I turned around, a bit surprised and annoyed to see someone trying to stop me from going home. "What?"
"What the hell was that back in there? That was a bitch move." He huffed.
I rolled my eyes, "Boo hoo. Someone doesn't like you for once. Life is totally over."
He scoffed, I'll admit it, he was kinda cute, but he was still just some reckless guy who is hot-tempered. "..I..that's-"
"True? Get over it." I started walking to my car again.
"Y'know, for a cheerleader, you're not cheery at all."
I snapped back at him, annoyed, "And for a football player, you can't even hold on to the ball."
That was a low blow, I knew it. I'd seen the way his dad got pissed at him for fumbling the ball the other day while we were practicing our cheers and the team was practicing, and Don kept messing up. I kinda felt for him, but he'd pushed me over the edge when I was already pissed off.
"..Why are you like this all the time?" He asked, somehow calm,very different and irregular from his usual outbursts.
His question caught me off guard. "None of your damn business." I practically spat before I walked off.
A couple of weeks later (after the game)
Permian had lost the game to Dallas-Carter. The whole town was disappointed. No one really said anything at school for a week about it.
I knew that team was torn up about it, hell, even I felt bad. I judged them all a bit too hard. They were really just people trying to live up to the expectations of this town, and it wasn't fair to them.
Ms. Randall assigned us a partner project, where we had to pair up with someone randomly from a draw.
"Okay, the right side of the class, write your name on that tiny piece of paper I have given you and put it in this jar. The left side will pick a name from the jar and that will be your partner for this mini assignment."
I looked up, damn, I was on the left side. Oh well, I was really hoping that it was one of my friends that was on the right that I would draw from the jar.
But, apparently the universe had a totally different plan.
I stuck my hand in the jar and pulled out a random piece of paper.
Ms Randall then asked everyone on the left to share who they'd gotten, it was my turn. And I opened the piece of paper to see Don's name written on there.
"..Don." I mumbled, there was a bit of an awkward silence before Ms. Randall started giving us instructions.
I could feel Don's eyes on me after I read out his name, I turned to face him as well, and he quickly looked away.
"Okay, you all have four tasks to do. You will all go around the school and get to know each other. 1. You will find out your deepest fear. 2. Tell your partner where you want to be in 10 years. 3. Tell your partner what your favorite song is. And 4. Tell your partner a secret."
Jeez. I knew this would end badly.
Don had no choice but to pair up with me, and we started heading for the door and walking around campus, unsure where to start.
"Soo...what's your deepest fear, Billingsely?" I asked, trying to make this less awkward than it already was.
"...Oh, now you're nervous." He said, a little annoyed.
"Sorry...about calling you a joke...that was a bit of a bitch move."
He gave me this look, that said he didn't really accept my apology.
"I really am sorry...I was just..in a mood."
"You're always in a mood, Y/L/N..." He mumbled.
"..Sorry." I pause and take a deep breath "I guess..I guess I just don't know how to cope with the fact that I hate it here."
"Is that your secret for the assignment?"
"..I mean..not really just for the assignment..It sucks but it's true."
"..But..You're a freaking cheerleader?"
I let out a bit of a snort at that "..Like you said..I'm not cheery." Then, I looked back at him. "I really am only on the cheer squad 'cause I looks good on any potential applications..and my parents urged me to do something in high school."
He laughed a bit at that, "Should I share mine now?"
I laughed a bit too, "You don't really have a choice. It's for the assignment."
"Okay...I want football to be apart of my life, not be my whole life.."
I nod, "Understandable...Is it because of your dad?"
His face tightens a bit at the mention of his dad. "..Yeah..kinda...I'll just never live up to him, and he hates that."
My heart aches for him. "..I get it..." I immediately try to change the subject. "..Anyways..what about your biggest fear?..I'll go first to soften the blow, my biggest fear is everyone leaving.."
His face changes, as if he understands. "...Mine is not making it.."
"What do you mean "not making it?" I ask.
"..I mean not doing good in life 'n shit...being stuck in the past like my dad."
I nod. "..I'm sorry..that fucking sucks."
He shook his head "Let's move on.."
"It was "where do you see yourself in 10 years" bullshit, right?" I ask.
"..Yeah, something like that."
"..Sooo..where do you see yourself in 10 years, Don?"
Don looked at me and gave me one of his boyish grins "You called me Don."
I roll my eyes "That's your name, isn't it?"
He laughed a bit "Anyways...I see myself doing well..with kids and a golden retriever or some shit.."
"At 28?"
"Yeah, why not?"
"...Nothin'...Just, that's so forward. It's hard to imagine you as a dad." I say, shrugging a bit.
Don shook his head and laughed "Okay, Y/N, where do you see yourself in 10 years if you're so high and mighty?"
"...I don't know...maybe travelling, or something. With Rob Lowe or Matt Dillon of course."
He laughed at that "What? No Tom Cruise?"
I laughed a bit after he said that. "..I gotta share some of the greaser, I'm already hogging up two of them."
Don smirked "Greedy ass."
I shake my head "Fuck off, if you understood, you'd hog up Rob Lowe and Matt Dillion too."
He continues to laugh at me, and looking at him, he has such a perfect laugh. But I don't let myself get too comfortable.
"..Anyways..we missed one..." I paused "...Honestly, we should've started with the favorite song one first."
Don shrugged that off, smiling as he spoke "But if we started with the easiest one first, we wouldn't have had that amazing conversation just now."
I blush, unable to control it. "..Oh well..what's your favorite song?"
He stops and think for a second, contemplating what he should say. "..It's "Wish you were here."
My eyebrows raise, surprised that that's his song. It wasn't what I had been expecting. "Didn't take you as a Pink Floyd fan."
He shrugged nonchalantly, trying to contain a smile. "What's yours?"
"Crimson and Clover..the one by Joan Jett & the Blackhearts."
Don grins at that, and he responds "It suits you."
"Why?"
"Well..You're so moody all the time...and Joan Jett & the Blackhearts fits that persona you have."
I try to contain the smile that attempts to grow on my face, but before I can say anything, the bell rings.
We both head our separate ways, I go with the cheer squad for lunch, and he goes with some of his friends from the football team.
As I'm standing around with my friends, I look to my right and see Don Billingsley staring back at me. And that's when I knew it wasn't over between us.