word count: 6.5k
summary: On September 1st, 1971 you were sorted into Slytherin, putting you on the map as the first Potter to do so, and the first time James Potter turned his back on someone he claimed he loved dearly. Youâre slowly drifting away, turning the Potter twins into a sad tale, but after one deadly incident close to Christmas break, James decides to put an end to the distance he unknowingly created.Â
How can you say that you love someone you canât tell is dying?Â
cw: suicidal ideation, but hinted. scars and blood mention, nosebleed. angst, very heavy on the angst. potter!reader, fem!reader. platonic marauders and rosier twins. background jily.
a/n: sorry if this too much⊠just had this idea for a while and i needed an outlet. likes and reblogs are greatly appreciated. enjoy! xxÂ
···
You sighed, the bandage around your shoulder suffocating you to the point of tears. As much as you tried, you wanted to keep your compartment warm and toasty with the blanket over your seat and legs, but your efforts were in vain at the mere lack of human heat. The fogged window seemed an acceptable distraction as you dragged your finger around, drawing meaningless doodles as the train passed by beautiful landscapes you barely registered.Â
Something shifted on your other side, and you turned to find people walking past your compartment, pointing and whispering about you and your sad state. None of them dared to open the door, making the lump in your throat grow with each breath you took. You looked down at the cassette player in your lap, hands too shaky to change the cassette into something more cheerful.
In time, you looked up to find a pair of brown eyes staring at you with both curiosity and pity, you frowned, desperately wishing your brotherâs friends would stop pestering you. Their mere presence was a bitter reminder of your brother's abandonment, the pain you suffered seeing them fill your place, share laughter together like you both did many years ago. You looked away, luckily for you, Remus got the signal and made to move past the compartment; but to Remusâ ill luck, James followed his gaze and opened the door.
âMum said Dad wonât be able to come, but will be waiting for us at the Manor.â He murmured, his eyes pointedly trying to not stare too hard at the bandages peeking through your jumper. You nodded. âShe will meet us at the station.â
âOkay,â You said, not moving to take your headphones off, nor to look at him to meet his gaze. You feared you would cry if you looked at him, a reminder of the despair in his eyes when they brought you into the infirmary. âI knew that, you know we still write to each other, right?â
James nodded quickly, swallowing hard at your voice devoid of emotion. âYeah, just⊠Just wanted to make sure,â He paused, quickly stepping in to fully enter and close the door behind him. You finally turned your head to him with surprise. âYou alright?â
You scoffed, finally taking your headphones off your ears, âWhat do you think, James?â This time, he has no qualms about studying you completely, eyes skimming over your poor posture as a result of the accident. You couldnât help rolling your eyes, your blood boiled as you spat. âYes, Iâm fine. Will that be all, orâŠ?â
James closed his mouth and schooled his face, something desperately needing to be said. You bit your lip, your insides filling with regret but having no intention of backing away from the incoming disagreement. Something in you stirred with hope, hope that he would finally give you your place and sit with you. However, the bespectacled boy simply nodded and left the compartment.Â
You let out a breath, disbelief and disappointment in your heart as you placed the headphones back in your head. A tear slowly rolled down your cheek and you quickly cleaned it, your shaky hand almost poking your eye as you desperately tried to swallow the possible panic attack you felt looming over you. The countless letters addressed to you from your mother heavy on your satchel, most of them asking you to fix your relationship with James, the other begging you to take care of yourself, you werenât sure which ones hurt the most.Â
The moment the word Sectumsempra left Snapeâs mouth, a curse filled with magic so dark not even the boy could understand it, you almost felt bad for the relief you felt in your chest at the pain that took over your body. That morning still felt like a far away memory, a dream that shook you up so much you still recalled after you woke up; McGonagallâs surprised gasp and the students that were unfortunate enough to witness the moment your fellow housemate almost made you cut into pieces. You were brought up in a rush to the infirmary where your brother and his friends recovered from a rather violent full moon, James had almost passed out at the pure rage he felt when he was informed of the situation. You werenât proud to admit that your brother being angry on your behalf was a nice memory to die with, a redemption that came almost too late.Â
You werenât even prouder to admit to the sinking feeling in your chest when you woke up to find nothing had changed, the only remains that someone still cared about you in the form of Madam Pomfreyâs gentle touches. James hadnât stayed back to check on you, and you couldnât blame him. To that day, you couldnât fully stare at your reflection in the mirror without your eyes filling with tears, had it not been for Pandora, promoted to friend as of lately, you wouldnât have been able to even put the healing potions in your scars.Â
Just in time, three knocks came at the door, you turned, ready to yell at your brother or his friends to fuck off, but Pandoraâs gentle smile made you pause. She pointed at the seat across from you, cold and empty, and you nodded dumbly. She stepped in, arms filled with sweets from the trolley and smiled at you as she made herself comfortable in the seat.Â
âHi, how are you feeling?â
Why is everyone asking me that?, you thought bitterly. Immediately feeling regretful when Pandora presented you with a Chocolate Frog.Â
âIâm okay,â you murmured, shyly taking the sweet from her hand. She had a different color in each of her nails, you noted. âThank you.â
Her platinum white locks fell to her shoulder as she sat back, her own Chocolate Frog in her hand. She smiled at you and picked her book, and you wanted to cry tears of happiness. Comfortable silences were Pandoraâs main form of love language, you quickly learned, and you were eternally grateful for the company. You werenât sure if you had it in you to put up with your self hatred for another moment, let alone the rest of the train ride.
You looked up from your cassette case, eyes lingering a beat too long on the compartment door.Â
âHeâs two compartments over,â She said breezily, noticing the hesitance in your movements. âI passed them on my way here, he seems gutted.â
âOh, please,â You made a scoffing sound, your shaky hand struggling to take a new cassette off its box. âHe just feels bad for me, but heâs going to do absolutely nothing about it.â You poked your cheek with your tongue, satisfied when you finally got the cassette out.Â
âHave you thought that maybe,â Pandora started to say, fully closing her book now that she had your undivided attention, âmaybe⊠he thinks itâs too late? You have been a bit too cold to himâŠâ
âItâs the least he deserves,â You spat, then cleared your throat. If Pandora felt offended at your anger, she didnât show, she never did. You looked back to the window, feeling the train had noticeably slowed down. âI just⊠Iâm so tired of waiting for him, I donât⊠I donât know how to feel, I so badly wanted him to get close but now that heâs trying I donâtâŠâ To your utter horror, you felt tears prickling in the corners of your eyes. âIâm so confused.â
Pandoraâs lips curled in an empathetic smile, she reached and held your shaky hand, gently sweeping her thumb across your knuckles, you took a deep breath, trying to collect yourself as students began to empty the train.Â
âIâm sorry,â You dared to meet her heterochromic eyes.Â
She shook her head, chuckling quietly. âNo need to be sorry, keeping those feelings bottled up must be so tiring, Iâm sure.â You laughed weakly, and used your free hand to discretely clean your cheeks. âYou mightâve accepted your loneliness a long time ago, but that doesnât mean it has to be permanent, sweet girl. Evan would agree, though heâs more shy to actually say it. You got more people in your corner than you realize, only if you let themâŠâ She turned to the door, and you followed her gaze where you found James and Sirius walking past with a troubling look in their eyes. Pandora stood up, âYou need help with your trunk?â
You opened your mouth, but were interrupted by the door opening. âReady to go?â Sirius asked, and you frowned.
âI can carry it, thank you.â You smiled at Pandora, pointedly ignoring his question. She nodded, and reached to give you a quick hug, gentle and careful to not hurt you. âIâll see you next term.â
âWrite me?â She smiled, passing you a small box and you nodded, eyes in a daze as you tried to read the note. She walked to the door, and smiled at both boys. âHappy christmas.âÂ
You watched her go, shaky hand still holding the box. James frowned, and studied you for a few more seconds before Sirius, who wanted to leave the station immediately before his parents would show up to drag him and Regulus away, cleared his throat rather loudly.Â
âAre you ready to go?â He repeated, making a move to take your trunk but you swiftly picked it up. Your features a mix of anger and, if he had more time to look at you, he would also find pain. âDonât be stubborn, I can take that.â
âI can take my own trunk, Sirius. But thank you.â You spat, then turned away from both boys. âIâll meet you in the platform in a moment, let me just put everything away.â You pointed to your little cocoon, the blanket and cassette player tossed aside in your previously vacated seat. âJust remember toââ
âTo not tell Mum anything,â Finished James for you, an edge to his voice. âWe know.â
You nodded, fear settling in your chest at the prospect of your brother picking up the argument you had nights before. Him begging you to tell your parents about what happened with Snape, to prepare them for your almost deadly state, but you met him head on, not willing to back down until he dropped the matter. He had walked away mid argument, his friends staring at you both with something akin to sadness, watching the distance grow impossibly longer despite Jamesâ recent efforts to fix it. You had cried that night in Pandoraâs arms as she and her brother watched you with both sadness and regret, you, for your part, seemed blind to the fact that they had been the reason James had breached that subject with you.
The bespectacled boy nodded, and stepped out of the compartment with Sirius close behind. You took the cassette player and put the headphones back on, Billy Joelâs Piano Man a fitting soundtrack to the way you felt. You took your satchel and hurriedly put the messily folded blanket inside, made an assesment of the compartment to not leave anything behind and silently walked out of the compartment towards the platform.
You watched with a sinking feeling as your mother enthusiastically greeted James, grabbing him by his cheeks and showering him with kisses, Sirius and the rest of his friends in line to receive the same treatment. He says, Bill, I believe this is killing me, Billy Joel sang in your ears and you readily agreed, walking towards the bunch with a tiny smile and your insides filled with dread.Â
Euphemia Potterâs bright smile dimmed when she met your eyes, and noted the sadness that, evident to everyone but you, radiated off your body as you placed your headphones around your neck. She opened her mouth to speak but nothing came out, your brother and his friends watching the exchange nervously, as she practically balanced herself over you in a tight hug.
âMy lovely girl,â You were horrified to almost hear her voice breaking, the least you wanted was your mother to worry for you. âHow I missed you, oh, look at you.â
âHi, mumâŠâ You muttered, bitting your lip as she accidentally squeezed precisely around your middle, where your most painful scar was located. âMissed you too, Dad too, of course.â You patted her back awkwardly and she pulled back.
âYouâre so small, oh, my girl, please be honest with me,â She grabbed your cheeks the same way she did to James, and you successfully swallowed the lump in your throat. âHave you been eating properly? I knew that veganism nonsense simply wouldnât do.â
Her eyes studied you much like James did earlier, and you bit your lip nervously. You knew what was coming, and you wanted to take off and disappear from her searching eyes.
âIâm actually quite hungryâŠâ You said quietly, hoping it would be enough to distract her.Â
Your mother, however, couldnât be deterred. âWhat happened here?â
Unconsciously, you met Jamesâ eyes. âQuiddtich accident.â You replied quickly, the lie easily slipping past your lips. âFell off my broom, doesnât hurt, though. Iâm okay.â
âQuidditch!â She exclaimed, chuckling as she turned to James who smiled in return to avoid giving you away. âHonestly, what is it with my children and Quidditch? Canât wait to see your dadâs faceâ Speaking of! He must be driving himself mad waiting for us! Come, come! Dear, you need help with your trunk?â
âIâm okayââ You replied and she quickly turned to shepherd everyone out of the plaform.Â
âHere,â Remus walked to you, taking the handle from your shaky hand, hard to notice to the blind eye, but he knew better, he was familiar. You frowned, and he made his voice extra quiet as he spoke, âI know you can manage but youâre going to make them worse, and by the time we get to the manor everyone will notice. Itâs no problem, really.â
You stared at him, then at James who pretended to listen as Sirius and your mother fussed over Regulus, who would join you for the first time for the holidays. He gave you a tight-lipped smile and you forced yourself to look back at Remus, he smiled kindly as you nodded mutely and trailed behind the group. A comfortable silence falling between you both.
â
Potter manor seemed to stay stuck in time, with its beautiful pillars and big stained glass windows letting in colorful rays of sunshine when the english countryside allowed it. You looked through the window at your motherâs lovely garden she devoted herself to during springtime, surely to kill time when your dad was busy at work and her children away at school, her caring nature evident in the way all the flowers grew beautifully, despite the current cold weather. You sighed, and walked away ready to face your hideous fate, your secret stash of healing potions and your scars ready to be tended to.
You stopped short in front of your bed, Pandoraâs present small in contrast to your belongings sprawled all over your bedding. It had her touch all over the decoration, even if the card claimed it was from both Rosier twins, the silver bow and colorful wrapping paper showing her peculiar taste. Your shaky hand hovered over the ribbon and gently tugged it to open the box, where you found a pretty aquamarine necklace along with a soft pair of green knitted mittens sitting neatly enveloped by tissue paper. You smiled and wasted no time to try and put the necklace around your neck, ignoring the fact that your shaky hands would make the task nearly impossible.Â
You were about to throw the necklace across the room in desperation when you heard a light knock on the door.Â
âYes?â You managed to speak out, a sob begging to leave your lips. There was silence on the other side and you briefly wondered if you imagined the whole thing. âWhat?â
âCan I come in?â Sirius said quietly, and you frowned, but replied a quiet yes before turning your back to the door. âHi,â He said as he stepped in, careful in his movements.
âHi,â You echoed quietly, looking around the room to avoid meeting his eyes.Â
Sirius stared at the necklace in your hand and the discarded box in the other, âNeed help with that?â
âIâm okay,â You followed his gaze and shook your head, knowing well it was a losing battle with the piece of jewelry. âI was just untangling it,â You said, barely believing it, and by his face, Sirius didnât seem to believe you, either.
He stepped closer to you, his movements more confident. âLet me help you,â You opened your mouth to protest, but ended up handing him the necklace, knowing it was a losing battle arguing with him, too. âStubborn thing you are, trying to put on this tiny necklace when your hands are shaking like a leaf.â He pointed as he stood behind you.
A silence followed, and you stared down at your hands, suddenly insecure in the way they trembled, another souvenir from your fellow housemateâs attack.Â
âI didnât think anyone would notice.â
âTheyâre not very noticeable,â He allowed, gently tugging your shoulders to make you face him. âBut sadly, love, I am very familiar with these kinds of things.â His grey eyes pointedly looked at the blood dots peeking through your bandages from your jumper. âI would change those before supper if I were you.â
You swallowed and nodded, âThank you. Is this why you came here? Is the food ready?â
He opened his mouth, but seemed to think better of it, and nodded his head. âYes, um⊠Mum told me she made you some of your vegan requests.â
âOh,â You frowned, and he chuckled quietly at the surprise in your face. âIâll be down in a moment⊠I have toâŠâ
âI know,â He nodded, then made to walk out the door but paused on the threshold, turning to face you once again. âYou know⊠James, heâs really trying, itâs just⊠He doesnât know how to reach out.â
A beat.Â
âWas it hard for you? To reach out to Regulus? After everything?â
He seemed to be taken aback with your question, frowning and very clearly about to tell you to mind your sodding business, but then his eyes got a very sad look that you despised. You both dreaded and hoped for his answer.
âIt was difficult, yes, but because of the way we were raised, not because there wasnât love, it was just very tangled with other things, confusion, anger and resentment⊠But the love persevered. I think⊠I think thatâs what made it bearable, that at the end of the day we loved each other despite everything.â
You nodded, visibly not satisfied with his answer. âI get that, but⊠you said it yourself, it was hard because of the way you were raised so⊠what is stopping James?â
Sirius seemed pretty close to tears himself, feeling for you and frustrated at the way James acted. Honestly not even himself could explain the way James handled everything since you both were sorted, admittedly he hadnât known him long enough back then to be confused by the evident indifference towards you, but as he grew to know you both, that confusion grew in significance. It couldnât have been the same James that offered him his home without thinking twice when he learned the hell that was Grimmauld Place, it was hard for Sirius to think that James held some resentment towards his sister for being sorted into Slytherin when he himself despised Siriusâ parents for disowning him for being a Gryffindor. You didnât seem to be particularly fond of the pureblood supremacy ideologies your house held, either; keeping to yourself and to your friends, the Rosier twins and occasionally Regulus as of lately, and the gentle way you carried yourself through the hallways. He often wondered if the Sorting Hat had made a mistake.Â
âI⊠I donât know, sweetheart,â He sighed. âIâm sorry if I overstepped, I donât think this is a conversation for me to participate in.âÂ
âItâs alright,â You nodded, once again swallowing the lump in your throat. âIâll be down in a minute.â You said before marching towards your bathroom, closing the door behind you.Â
Sirius sighed, feeling very angry at himself for the way he managed to mess it all up in a matter of seconds. A hand squeezed his shoulder and he turned his face to meet both Remus and his brotherâs sad eyes, he shrugged sadly and closed the door to your room quietly. A few seconds later, Lily walked out of her own room, immediately taking notice of the three boys sadly staring at your door and ushered them all to the dinning room, a sad look in her own eyes as she tried to ignore the knot in her stomach.Â
â
You stared blankly at a spot next to your fatherâs face as you pretended to listen to his very heated debate with James about where should the next Quidditch Cup be. The food long gone and conversations passed in a daze as you ate supper and managed to participate here and there and answer the questions directed to you. You unconsciously thumbed the precious gemstone resting in your chest, the repetitive action helped you make the shakiness in your hands less evident.Â
You sat in a wingback chair, making a cocoon of yourself as you watched your brother and his friends happily chatting away to different topics, you watched as he occasionally grabbed Lilyâs hand and kissed it, or the way he reached over his girlfriend to shove Siriusâ shoulder, mischief glistening behind his glasses. You knew you were being a killjoy, your pain almost an imposition in their delightful conversation had they noticed, if they ever did, or let them notice, you bitterly thought.Â
âOh, darling,â Suddenly you had a handkerchief shoved to your nose. You frowned, but let your motherâs hand cradle your face back. âYou almost stained your jumper,â Horrified, you noticed that your nose was bleeding, a common occurrence since the incident.Â
âSorry,â You mumbled, trying to look away from her eyes, slowly filling with worry. âDonât know what happened there. Strange.â
âGood thing your mum has good reflexes,â your dad pointed, chuckling and blissfully unaware of the sudden tension in the room. âGrowing up with you lot gave her reflexes of steel, she wouldâve been a killer Seeker.â
âLet that go, honey,â Your mum added distractly, looking into your eyes, searching for⊠what? You were not sure, but her scrutiny made you nervous. âAre you okay?â
You inhaled deeply, suddenly feeling very warm. âYes, I can take it, mumââ You made to raise your hand to take the handkerchief from her, her eyes falling on your hands.
âAre you cold?â
âWhat? No. Iâm fine.â
âBut youâre shaking.â She argued, and you found yourself slowly losing your patience at her questioning. âAre you sure youâreââ
âCan everyone stop asking me that? I said Iâm fine.â You spat, shocking everyone into silence, even yourself. âSorry, I⊠Iâm sorry. That was uncalled for, IâŠYes, Iâm alright.â
Somewhere from the floor came a scoff and you felt dread recoiling around your ribcage. You lowered the handkerchief from your face to see James dryly chuckling at you, his hazel eyes holding a fire that was only reserved for⊠Horrified, you realized he was about to tell your parents everything.Â
âJames,â You whispered, pleading with your eyes to force him to take a step back. But your brother seemed done covering for you. âPlease donât.â
âJames?â Your mother turned to him, who in return stood up from his spot on the floor, Lily reached out to pull him down again. âIs anyone going to fill me in as to whatâs gotten into you both?â
He stared hard at you, then, âShe was attacked.âÂ
And just as the words slipped past his lips, chaos ensued with your parents, neither of them expecting those words to leave Jamesâ lips. The air was sucked out of your lungs, and you reached to press the heel of your hand to your sternum, as if that would help your lungs accept the air you desperately seeked. You were not sure where you got the strength, but you marched towards him, betrayal in your eyes.Â
âYou have no right,â You sneered, meeting his stormy gaze, he looked down at you, both your bodies pulsating with unresolved anger. âYou promised!â
âI did not promise a damn thing to you. Youâre my sister, and I cannot simply sit back and watch you fade away from us, can I?â
You scoffed. âIt didnât stop you before, hasnât it?â He stepped back, as if your words alone had slapped him across his face. Your parents watched the scene with horror. âYouâre my sister, youâre a liar. You made it very clear I am very much not your sister, James. In fact, I think you made it very clear to everyone that anyone can be accepted into your fucking marauders club except me.âÂ
âWait, so this is why youâre so miffed with me? Because I didnât let you in the Marauders?â James had the nerve to laugh, and you stared at him in shock. âYou have officially lost the plot, grow up, I beg you.â
âJames!â
âNo, James,â You met him head on, storm in your eyes as you tried to find your words. âContrary to what your ego-driven mind might think, not everyone wants to be part of your glorified freak show.â You said, not at all regretting the venom in your voice. âYou left me. You⊠you donât even try, you think that just because you fought for me, breaking Snapeâs nose, everything would be forgiven?â
âLook at what he did to you!â He pointed, squirming a finger inside the neckline of your jumper, pulling down to show everyone the bandage in your shoulder. You slapped his hand away with anger, but he grabbed your hand and raised it for everyone to see. âYou can barely function with these shakes, look, you can barely put on a necklace!â
âJames, stop,â Came Remusâ stern voice from somewhere in the room.Â
At this, your glossy eyes turned to Sirius, who, until that moment, had managed to sit back calmly and not let the whole ordeal get to him. He looked away as your betrayal was evident in your eyes.
âThat wasnât for you to tell, Sirius.â You said to him quietly, anger barely contained.
âWell, I, for one, am glad he told me. You couldâve gone the entire break hiding it from us had it not been for Sirius.â
âLike hiding it is such a hard task.â You snapped. âYou barely notice my presence let alone a silly shake in my hands. I couldâve died that day and you wouldnât have noticed at all, James.â
âYou damn right couldâve bloody died! Go on, show them,â He stepped closer, and you barely registered his intention until it was too late.Â
With the help of his reflexes, you were a beat too late to stop him from lifting the hem of your jumper, exposing some of the fully healed scars in your stomach, the biggest one cutting through your navel in a nasty gash. Your mother gasped and her eyes filled with tears immediately, your father stared in shock, despair evident in his eyes. You pushed James away with all the strength you could muster, accidentally pushing your mother in the process, and pulled your jumper back down.Â
âYouâre a complete, utter, dickhead, James.â You stared at him in shock, so did everyone in the room. âFuck you, seriously, fuck you.â
âDarling,â Your mother stepped to you, but you were too mortified to even accept her hug. âHow long⊠How did thisâŠâ She seemed desperate to find the right words to say, but a sob left her lips instead. You finally allowed the tears in your eyes to trail down your cheeks. âWhy didnât you say?â
âWhat would I even say?â You said desperately in between shallow breaths, your usually calm demeanor breaking. âThat I was so depressed I riled him up so he could hurt me? That I didnât even fight back? How was I supposed to explain that, mum? Tell me,â Before you could even process it, the feelings you had bottled up for months seemed to be done being held back in your chest. You chuckled humorlessly, âHow would that conversation even go? That Iâm so miserable, though I have no reason to be, that I walked towards the one person who would surely hurt me and enjoy it? This, exactly, is why I didnât say. But here comes bloody James Potter who has to be everyoneâs fucking hero! Are you happy now, James? Is this what you wanted? You wanted me to thank you in front of everyone that you saved my honor by hurting Snape? Well, there you go. Now leave me the fuck alone.â
Had you been less blinded by your anger, you probably wouldâve waited for anyone to speak, or at least apologize for the amount of curse words you managed to say in a span of 20 seconds, but you simply exhaled deeply and stormed off towards your room, where you surely would spend the rest of your days crying away in embarrassment. Your tears fell hot and fast as you slammed the door behind you and sat on your bed, ignoring the stinging sensation in your shoulder by your harsh movements. Your hands shook impossibly harder to the point of actual pain in your joints, and pressed your face to your hands as you cried hard. Your sobs loud enough to drown the chaos from downstairs, your own doing, you thought angrily.Â
The door to your room opened, your brain was too shaken up and confused that when you opened your mouth to speak, a pained sob left your lips instead. Remusâ brows pinched with sadness as he walked to you, your disheveled hair, tear streaken cheeks and the dried trail of blood down your nose an exact mirror of your inner turmoil. He stepped closer and stretched his arms out, an open invitation in case you didnât want to be touched, but you desperately needed something or someone to ground you before you could definitely reach a full blown breakdown. A breakdown days in the making.
âYouâre okay,â He said as you stepped into his arms. He carefully caged you in, keeping you secure as you felt your chest shreding to pieces as you let out sob after sob. âNo one is mad at you, weâre not, I promise you, not your mum, not your dad, no one. Youâre okay.â He whispered, close to tears himself.Â
Soon, you felt a hand rubbing your back carefully, then, Lilyâs gentle voice spoke, âTake deep breaths, honey,âÂ
âI⊠I canât,â You scraped out, voice raspy and worn out. âIâŠâ
âDo it with me,â She instructed, and you pulled away from your hideaway to meet her gaze. Lily smiled sadly as she gently grabbed your hand and raised it to her own chest, where you felt her own heart beating, âFollow me, okay? You can.â
You inhaled and exhaled deeply, and she did it with you. As she busied you with breathing exercises, Remus walked to your bathroom to grab a cloth and damp it with warm water, when he walked back to your room, you seemed visibly calmer. He silently passed the cloth to Lily and sat beside you on the bed, she looked into your eyes and gently pressed it to your lips and under your nose, no-doubtedly cleaning the blood and snot off your face. None of you dared to speak, the only sound in the room the occasional hiccup leaving your lips, the fight leaving you tired and numb.
âI donât know what crossed his mind to do that,â Began Lily, pointedly keeping her voice monotone to not spark another collapse from you. âThat was veryâŠâ
âBarbaric?â Remus supplied, him not trying to keep his anger away from his tone. Lily frowned at him.Â
âUnlike him.â She said, then turned to you. âWhat he said, what he did⊠That was very cruel.â
âYeah, well⊠I seem to always bring out the cruelest parts of him.â You finally spoke, and she hushed you to not strain your voice more.Â
âI think heâs very angry at himself, and he stupidly managed to show it in the worst way possible.â Remus pointed, the fight leaving his body as he gingerly placed a loose hair behind your ear. âIt was very obvious to everyone that you were struggling but it passed right above himâŠâ
âHe didnât need to make such a spectacle of himself though, and me. We couldâve talked it, if he had asked.â
Both Remus and Lily gave you a deadpan look.Â
âOkay, maybe not at first but why is it always me the one that has to reach out? Iâm tired of embarrassing myself seeking for his attention.âÂ
âYouâre right,â The three of you looked up to find James standing at the threshold of your bedroom, a mix of feelings displayed in his face, regret being the most evident. âAnd Iâm sorry.â
Lily looked at you, and you met her green eyes. She frowned, are you sure? Her eyes asked, and you nodded, grabbing the cloth from her hand. Both stood up and walked to leave, Lily ignoring the pleading look from her boyfriend as she closed the door behind her. The room fell eerily quiet as you stared at each other, assessing your stances.Â
âIâm sorry.â
âSo youâve said,â You mumbled, looking down at the cloth in your hands.Â
âIâm sorry,â He repeated, as he walked closer, you tensed immediately and something inside his chest cracked. âI shouldnât have⊠I⊠It wasnât my place.â
You closed your eyes, succumbing to the tears forming in your eyes and brought the cloth to clean your cheeks.Â
âI told you to not say anything, James. Why didnât you listen? I⊠I donât want mum or dad to get in between our mess.â
âOur mess,â He echoed, sitting next to you on the bed when you showed no signs of backing away again. âI did make a mess of everything, didnât I?â
âIt has always been, I was just the only one willing to see it as that.â
James frowned. âThatâs not true.â He exhaled deeply, searching for your eyes. âI⊠I know I havenât been the best brother to you but, but I wouldnât say it reached a point where you feel like you canât tell me anything.âÂ
âJames,â You chuckled dryly, not even trying to argue again but to get him to see where you were coming from. âYou donât even acknowledge me back at school, you practically pretend I donât exist.â
âIâm sorry.â
âSee, you keep saying that, but I donât hear reasons why I should forgive you.âÂ
âYou shouldnât forgive me, angel. In fact, what happened downstairs is the least punishment imaginable you could throw at me.â His chest filled with hope when you chuckled wetly. âI just⊠When I saw you in that cot, bleeding out and barely conscious, I felt like a part of me was being torn away⊠I had never felt so helpless in my life, knowing you would be taken away from me that easily and that I never tried to reach out? Itâs been eating me alive, especially when you have been so calm about it, now I know why,â
You looked away, embarrassed. âI didnât mean to say that, I donât know why I said it.â
âSee, I think you did mean it. And itâs okay,â James scooted closer, his hand reached to yours in question, you placed it over his. He squeezed it four times, and you smiled despite the sadness in your heart. The mighty Potter duo, your own way of consoling each other when you were children. âJust, let me try again? Be a brother?â
âYou never stopped being my brother, James, not to me.â
âTo me neither, Iâm still your brother, even if I havenât shown it how you deserve it. But,â He paused, searching for your eyes, âPromise me that youâll stop drifting away, that youâll be in a distance where I can reach you.â
You swallowed, but nodded. âIâm sorry, too. I didnât⊠I didnât mean to have it get this bad, I just, I just wanted you to notice me.â Something inside you broke, and so did your voice. Thankfully, you were close enough for James to reach over and hug you gently. âI didnât realize you wanted to talk to me, or⊠or get closer. Iâm sorry, Iâll stay close. I promise.â You whispered, and reached out to squeeze his hand, four times.Â
âI hope you can forgive me for what happened downstairs, too⊠I donât⊠I just got so angry at myself, and⊠and you, but I shouldnât have aired your pain like that.â He spoke after a long silence, voice barely contained as he fought back his own sob, not because he didnât want to cry, but to get his feelings known. âItâs okay if it takes a while, too, I just want you to know that Iâm sorry, and I regret it⊠I do.â I regret everything I did, itâs the bit he didnât say, but you heard it clear in the pain in his voice.
You nodded, feeling satisfied with the heart to heart, âIt might take a while, but thank you.â You dropped your head on his shoulder, and closed your eyes, finally letting your body relax against your brother.Â
Your brother, who was there, willingly, hugging you. It was a nice feeling to fall asleep to, you thought as you drifted off. James looked down as your head got heavier, and noticed in your parted lips that you had fallen asleep at some point of your shared silence. He smiled, and helped you get fully into the bed, carefully placing your belongings away.Â
He made to leave, but you pulled him back, your voice heavy with sleep, âStay?â
And James, even in his drowsy state, couldnât fight back the happiness he felt in his heart. He nodded, though you couldnât see him, and laid next to you, your hands clasped together as you both drifted away holding onto each other, very much like you did once upon a time when you were little.Â
In your desk, messily thrown along with your things by James, was Pandoraâs gift, and a note in neat handwriting that said:Â
Happy christmas sweet girl. Aquamarine, your birthstone, is said to possess healing properties known to cure even the most devastating of heartbreaks and tame the most powerful oceans into tranquility and peace. It also gives the bearer hope and clarity. Love, Evan and Pandora Rosier.Â
The void state is SOOOOOOOOOOO easy once you actually realize what it is. One major reason why you aren't "succeeding" in the void state is because you *drumroll, please* put it on a pedestal. Duh, just like everything else.
One thing I've noticed is how Loablr overcomplicated the void state so much. You guys acted like you were becoming a demi-god or an ethereal being going to Jupiter from your bedroom. You think before bed when you are going to lay down and affirm for the void "Okay...whew well it's time to go to the void" Baby you ARE the void. The void state is literally just forgetting about your body until you fall asleep. đđ That's why you cant hear, or see, or feel anything because you assumed a new part of you. That's why the distraction technique works so well. It is because you were easily swayed and distracted from your body, from your physical, and now only in your head.
"So how do I enter it?" It's really up to you. Do you want to peacefully go to sleep and wake up in it? Do you want to affirm it? Do you want to do sats? Whatever YOU feel comfortable doing.
Personally, the way I entered the void was through sats. I love sats so much, and I use it for almost every single one of my manifestations. Lie down in any position you want. (I personally chose my back.) Close your eyes and feel your whole body relax. Breathe in and out until your mind goes completely blank. Then affirm. Say "I" and breathe in "Am" and Breathe out. Repeat this process until you feel symptoms (floating, falling, etc) You may see it get pitch black behind your eyes, that's when you know You're in the void. (credits to reddit I got the affirming technique from there) One major tip is to make a rule that you always wake up in the void. You could affirm throughout the day how you wake up in the void on command/every night with ease. Thank you so much for reading! Feel free to ask questions, Anons are always open <3
much to think about on a night like this...
Iâm not a Shauna hater by any extent (sheâs one of my favorites and I stand by that) but I think itâs so funny and delivers such brutally satisfying justice that in the end, in this season, she was the Antler Queen but she wasnât the teamâs queen. The teamâs queen was Natalie. When it mattered most, they put their faith in Natalie. Shauna almost got everything she ever wanted. Almost.
She was almost revered in the way Jackie once was. She took Natâs place hoping to feel adored. Instead, she became hated. She did the same thing with Melissa. She hoped to be adored, and instead Melissa wound up almost killing her. Thatâs what Shauna never understands. Itâs the glitch in her character. She can try to force people to love her all she wants, but she will never succeed. You can push and push and push, try and hold someone down with an iron fist, but in doing so you will either crush them or they will learn to loathe you and desire escape.
She held on tight to Jackie, and you know what Jackie did? She went outside to escape her and froze to death. Shauna tried so hard to keep Melissa that she went berserk and nearly killed her the moment she said enough is enough. She tried to hold Natalie down, crush her spirit and her wings and keep her complacent in the violence, but then she drove almost every girl on the team to potentially sacrifice their lives for Natalie because they couldnât continue like this. Mari died as Natalieâs sacrificial lamb. She wouldnât have done that for anyone. They had to have freedom, and Shauna had proven she was not worthy of their faith. Natalie had their faith. Natalie had their faith that she would save them. Shauna even drove her own husband and daughter away because she tried for years to keep them in an isolated little box where she could control and filter all external forces.
She tries to control people and force their love for her, again, and again, and again, and she never learns. Even in the finale she fails to recognize what sheâs done.
Because she was having fun playing the role of revered queen, but no one was having fun playing the role of servant.
â° ê° âŁ'ËË platonic yandere batfam / spider! reader ê±
â° 05. your closed-off heart.
SYNOPSIS : being spidey isn't easy. being transported into an alternate universe where you're nothing but a shadow in your house, makes sneaking around a little easier... until you find yourself the apple of their eye... kind of.
note: avoidant attachment damian is canon to me okay. it's canon to me... </3 also pretty long chap idk how many words but it's a bunch
prev. â° masterlist â° next.
The sky has fallen to an ashen black by the time you've all settled down and watched a fun game show together; so different from the ones back home.
After those hours of catching upâyou've made sure to be careful with your words and not mention anything about any alternate universes. You can'tânot with that lingering stare behind you, after all.
Whether they realised your avoidance of the topic or simply didn't think to bring it upâyou were glad the rest of your friends never even hinted at it once, either.
Now you were back, sitting on the couch under a low, flickering light and cuddled up beside Johnny and Franklin.
"Franklin..." Your voice is low. Said boy is cooped up to your side, snoring softly as he drools onto you. You avert your gaze toward Sue and Reed. "How's his... mutation going? It's pretty rough being so strong so young."
Johnny glowers at the sight of Franklin so attached to your left armâeven though he's just as close, if not closer to you than his nephew is. If he were sunken any farther into you, he'd practically be in your lap.
Sue sighs, pressing her palm against her face with an exasperated look. "After that whole incident with Annihilus, his power has been developing so drastically, we aren't sure on what may occur next. He's so... he is so strong. We asked the Professor about it, and his only advice was for when we believe we cannot properly help him develop, to send him to his school."
Reed slinks his hand into his wives', gripping tightly. "But I don't think it'll come to that. Franklin... is a good kid. I don't believe he will ever lost control of himself, not like the Professor is afraid he will. Regardlessâhe's doing fine, and that was the reason we took him with us."
The mood is sunken, a little bit quieter as you rake your nails over Frankin' scalpâgently. Such a power so youngâyou remember the first time you were told this young boy was creating pocket universes under his bed at three. Two years later, and he's developed the abilities comparable to that of a god.
To be so incredible is a blessingâbut for a child like Franklin, it can feel like a curse often times. You would know, you think solemnly, palm falling over his cheek.
Ben sinks into the dented couch, leaning back with a knee crossed over his leg. He breaks the silence with ease and that lovely Yancy Street accent, "That, and we didn't wanna let Tony babysit again."
"Oh yeah," Johnny grimaces. "Last time he was left alone with Frankie, he made him a suit and he flew all the way to the Carribean!"
You slap a hand over your mouth, turning to Johnny and laughing, "I heard about that! Didn't you nearly get sunk by Namor and his Atlanteans?"
Johnny hisses and looks to the sideâthe tips of his ears alighting with a flicker. You reach up and pat out the flame, brushing his hair back as he hides his face from your view.
Judging by the smug, knowing look Sue shoots her younger brother, you assume he was pretty annoyed by your pampering.
Despite this, the mood has become lighter. You aren't worried about what may happen in the future, or what could possibly go wrong with the young child beside you.
"Don't even mention him, or any bad guyâ" Johnny slumps down, head reeking back dramatically. "I'm going stir-crazy not being able to get out and fight 'em."
Ben gives him a pointed look, "brows" furrowing, "Yer sounding less stir-crazy and more batshit mental. Ya gotta get out more."
"Tell that to him!" The blonde juts his thumb towards Reed, who simply averts his eyes. "He's the one who said we can't be seen in this unknown place."
"Yeah, it's a shame, isn't it?" You cross your arms. "While you're all resting here, I have to go out and fight crime all day. Lucky me."
Johnny raises his hands in defence, "Yeah, you are lucky. I'd kill to get out and get some action. I'm tired of being cooped up in here all day like the world doesn't need me."
"Don't go getting a big head, Johnny." Sue frowns. "This world has survived fine without you. I'm sure it'll live even without you, as well."
Johnny and Sue start to bicker in the traditional sibling fashionâshooting the other glares and mocks, all the while Reed seems to be deep in thought. (And as always, Ben is simply enjoying the scene in front of him).
"Actually..." Reed speaks upâcatching the attention of everybody in the room with ease. "Perhaps... it could be a good thing to go public. It would give us an easy way to collect materials we need if we could go out and use our powers freely."
"... Reed? You can't be seriousâ" Sue blinks in shock.
Ben slams his two rocky fists together, "Hell yeah! It's been a minute since I said my favourite lineâ"
"âIt's clobberin' time, we know." Johnny shakes his head. Ben simply shoots the matchstick a glare.
"That aside; it'll help us make that..." Reed hums, glancing at you for a moment, "That very intricate device we'd been needing to create. The last one was created by the combined nature of me, Tony, and Hankâso making it alone may provide more difficult, but absolutely not impossible. Not much tech to work with, either... this might take a while..."
Sue places a hand on her husbands shoulder, and he seems to break out of the strange mumble he reduced his voice to. "Thank you, Susan. But yesâgiven we collect the right resources and I have time to work on this, we should be able to remake it."
"That's great!" You smile, grin brightening. You could go home! You could actually go home! Not sure whenâbut soon couldn't come soon enough. "You guys can fight alongside me, and now this! This is great news!"
"Eh ... I already told you Reed was making some of that crazy tech stuff, didn't I?" Johnny shrugs, resting his head to the side. "BesidesâIt's Reed. Why wouldn't be tinkering with some weird invention?"
"... Thank you for the vote of confidence, Johnny." Reed murmurs, eyes falling to the side. "If we want to make something as intricate as... that, from scratch, we'll definitely need the most brilliant minds helping."
"Ah... yeah. Too bad Tony isn't here, huh? Hank, too. They'd be a real help." You smile sadly, looking to the side.
"Actually, [name], I'd rather like you to look over some of the teleporters with me. Give your opinion on what I should do with what I have."
"R... really?" You look up at him with sparkly eyes. "You really...?"
He nods, smiling. You bite down on the insides of your cheek to stop yourself from grinning madlyâinstead, you opt to rushing over and wrapping your arms around his neck, jumping up and down.
"Thank you! Yeah, I'd beâ" You pull back, coughing with a flushed face. "I'd be totally honoured. Yeah. UmâI promise to not get any webs on them this time!"
"I'll take your word for it," Reed chuckles. Happiness practically bursts out of your chest at the recognition from the smartest man in the world.
Perhaps you were more than you gave yourself credit forâand way more than what that family gave you credit for.
You sit back down and Franklin crawls back into your lap, snoring softly. Johnny attaches himself to your side and keeps a warm arm snug around your shoulder, smiling down at you.
The warm fuzzy feeling pools down at the bottom of your stomach and each time you laugh, you feel your heart grow fonder.
You had never felt so at home in this strange place. These fourâthese fiveâthis was your family, and you'd never feel otherwise.
Damien feels a tug in his chest. More than a tug, actuallyâit's like a rope has tied a noose around his ribs and is rattling them repeatedly.
He's biting down so hard on his lips and the inside of your cheek that blood seeps from between chapped lips. He chews them rawânot even noticing the pain.
He hadn't even realised when he pulled his katana out from its holster on his back. He hadn't realised when he gripped it so taut his knuckles turned a milky white. He hadn't even realised when his eyes zeroed in on the sight of you cuddling up with that dark-haired boy.
Allowing him close to youâclinging to your arm so pathetically and pressing his face against your stomach as if he'd done it a hundred times over and acting like you're his older sibling or something stupid like thatâ
Damian steadies his erratic breathing. Unscrunching his face, but he cannot seem to stop glaring daggers. Even when he makes eye contact with that manâReed, he believes you referred to him asâhe does not tear his sharp gaze away.
You stare so tenderly at the young boy (younger than Damian is. By a few years or so, most likely). You cradle his cheek in your hand with such love it makes your actual brother, your blood brother, feel sick to his stomach.
Raking your fingers through his hair like you'd never done with your siblings before. Holding him close like you wished to protect him from the world and all the horrors within it.
How could you possibly hope to protect this... Frankie, when you cannot even protect yourself? The scarring left from the bullet still lay on your shoulder, a ghostly reminder of how you became victim to the evil this city holds.
A reminder to Damian on how he must protect you now. As his duty.
In this cruel world, you have lost to itâand yet, you choose to coddle others? You choose to keep others safe and close to your heart, but never your family?
His heart is lit aflame with rage. His jaw is taut and clenched tightlyâfeeling his teeth grit beneath his tongue and his mind fizzle with boiling anger. He hadn't felt this irrational in so long. Not until...
He doesn't remember ever seeing you in a such a light. He doesn't remember seeing you.
But now he doesâand now, he feels so much fuming ferocity. Watching you send the softest of smiles to him and allowing him to feel your soft, untainted touch.
(A touch not tainted by years of relentless crime fightingâa silky grasp that could only be given by that kind of regularity Damian had never known).
Much earlier, he had realised you were that vigilante he met so long ago. That spider-like fiend who seemed to have those never-endingly sticky webs.
This is why you'd been skipping classes so often, and why he never saw you around. That's why he hadn't seen those pitiful eyes be directed toward his two, barely there elder brothers, after each and every violent patrol.
That is why you have become so distant. So far awayâDrake had described it. Damian didn't bother to listen because he didn't care enough to.
That doesn't matter. In the end, none of it matters. Not to him. It didn't change his image of you.
He hadn't known you long enough for it to shift in any wayânor had he ever tried to. Despite this, he is content. If this new version of you is all he will ever know, then so be it. This will be his youâthe sincerity in your touch and the love in your eyes.
(Yet, never seen toward him).
He has little time to ponder and brood. Before he knows itâthe glass door is sliding open and, on that balcony, he is no longer alone.
You hesitate for a moment before speaking. "Damian?"
He blinks. He is not used to hearing his name from your mouth in anything but a furious tone. Yet, despite thisâit is anything bur the saccharine way you told that Franklin he's your favouriteâ
"Damian. Why did you follow me?" You demand, voice more firm than your question-like tone before.
You stand before him, arms crossed under your chest and a hard expression on your face. Stern. Like a real older sibling. He had never seen you make that kind of face before.
(For whatever odd reason, he feels small again. Like lowering his head and apologising for something he had not even doneâyou've never had that sort of effect before).
... And yet, despite all he's acted like in the past; in this present moment, he doesn't know what to say to you. Very uncharacteristical.
(For that Franklin, it came so easy. Like running up to you with those stupid googly eyes was the most regular thing to him. Damian doesn't believe he will ever be able to feel as normal as that).
Fortunately, he manages to scrounge up some words to say like it was a board game. "I... happened to catch you swinging here. In that ridiculous costume and to your even more ridiculous friends."
Your brow twitches in annoyance at his words. He notices it so wholly that it strikes deep into his chest. Why are you so dissatisfied with him? Why does it make him so unfathomably upset?
"One, my costume is cool. Two, my friends aren't ridiculous. Don't talk about them like that." Your tone is upset.
All these strong emotions hit him like a freight train and suddenly he doesn't know how to speak properly. Don't look at him like that. Why are you so kind to that other child, but you are so cruel toward him? It's unfair. Absolutely unfair.
He must've been quiet longer than he realised. Clutching the bottom of his cape tight into his blood-bathed grip, practically shaking. He must look so utterly pathetic for you to offer him menial pity.
(Just like you used toâexcept now it feels like a wave crashing against the shore, covering the burning lava stones in a cool tide).
"So, you know, then?" You glance downward at Damian after pinching your temple. He breaks his eye contact with the concrete and looks back to you. "That I'm that spider hero."
...
"Yes. After seeing your school bag webbed up, it was far too obvious."
You glance downwards once more. To the strap wrapped around his shoulder, connected to your bag. He tries to shuffle it discreetly behind him, but he knows you've spotted it when a smile crawls onto your lips.
Gritting his teethâyet this time he does not feel that same blaring anger as beforeâhe decides that hiding it was useless and opts to shove it into your arms roughly, before he can even think.
"The leather is crumpled. You need a new bag," He says, matter-of-factly. You grasp onto the leather with wide eyes; gaze shifting from it to him.
"... I know. It's been like this..." You aren't exactly sure on how long, exactlyâbut you're sure it's been... "For a while. I'm used to it."
Damian pauses, eyes narrowed and lips turned down into a sneer. He's practically offering, and yet you still deny? You pretend everything is fine and you are strong.
...
You lean down the slightest. "... Still. Thanks for considering me."
You almost can't believe you're thanking this younger brother for the bare minimumâbut from what you've seen, that bare minimum isn't seen much in your household. (Especially towards you).
Despite this... you have always had a soft spot for kids. You ruffle his dark hair and he practically squawks, slapping your hands away like it burnt.
He recoils back, hissing, "Who do you think you are?! Don't patronise me!"
You chuckle and move back, brushing off your hands. He watches that action like a hawk. "... Are you going to tell them?"
"TT. About your little side hobby playing dress up?"
You want to point out how he does the exact same thing. But you don't, because you know it will lead to nothing good.
Damian sneers, turning his head to the side, "I don't care for what you do in your spare time. As long as I do not have to be there to save you every time."
"Fair enough. This can be our little secret, then." You nod. "... You can go now. I'm just going to suit up and sneak back in."
"Is that what you have been doing for the past several weeks?"
"Guilty as charged," you shrug, pressing on the necklace pendant sitting comfortably between your collarbones. "If nobody notices, then I don't think it's that big of a deal. I meanâ"
He watches in fascination as the minuscule robots crawl over your body and form into the familiar Spidey suit.
You tuck your hair in as the mask forms. "âMost of them are barely home to begin with, and it's not like Bruce has spare time to be worrying about this."
... "Don't you mean father?"
You stare at him weird. "What?"
"You called father Bruce." His eyes narrow furthur.
"Oh. Right." You must've become accustomed to not saying father. Uncle Ben was the only father you'd ever had, and it wasn't like you were going around calling him that, since you knowâhe was your uncle. "Yeah. That's what I meant."
Damien doesn't reply this time. He throws on the hood of his costume, turning his back toward your costumed form.
You walk back inside into the dimly-lit room, engulfing those people in warm hugs you'd never spared any of them before.
He leaps off the roof and swings away into the night, face unreadable; mind consumed with little crime and more thoughts of you.
Perhaps he was... wrong about you. Less helpless, but still just as weak. And a lot more confusing. Unfair. So much confliction.
Though, he feels his chest beat strangely warm when he tousles his hair back to its regular style.
Swinging in through the window in your room and with one click on your necklace, you land flat on your heels.
Peering around, you hum at your empty, dark room and change into a pair of pyjamas.
It's been a day or two since you'd eaten here. Usually you'd go around as Spidey and picking up some takeout as you swing back home, or go to Harry's house for some dinner (since Norman had taken a strong, un-evil liking to you in this world).
But today, you'd been too wrapped up to even think about dinner. You'd missed the familiarity of Sue's warm cooking but you hadn't even thought to ask while you were there. Damn.
It's way too late to go out and get something now. Crap. You really got ahead of yourself, didn't you?
You put on your pair of fuzzy slippers, and swing open your door. It's late, so most of them should be out on patrol.
You'll probably only run into Alfred, at best. You can live with those kinds of odds.
You walk down the stairway and towards the kitchen (it took you a bitâlearning the ropes of this place was harder than it looked). Your steps sluggishly drawl across the floor as you yawn.
Being Spidey sure was tiring. Post-patrol naps were always the highlight of your week, but you could never do it on an empty stomach.
As quietly as possible, you begin to rummage around in the larger-than-life fridge. Fruit, condiments, almost all ingredients than actual food.
You groan. You hate rich people. Aunt May always used to just buy a bunch of pre-cooked meals whenever she was awayâyou'd become so accustomed to it.
Maybe there were leftovers? ... Do rich people even keep leftovers? You slouch down at the thought.
You open a few drawers just to find a pile of spinach of all things. Then fruity flavoured drinks. Some more vegetables. Lots of vegetables. A child's waking nightmare.
"There's a pack of pizza pockets in the third drawer in the second row."
You barely even react, hand already inching for the drawer. You open it, and find it. You hum.
Your sense acts up when you hear footsteps approachingâyou glance over your shoulder to see a man you have not previously met before, but have seen.
That blob of redâthat figure you saw before everything went black and when a bullet was lodged in your shoulder. It was him.
A white tuft of hair in the middle of his forehead and a jaded expression. A red helmet under his arm and a pizza pocket in the other hand.
It was undoubtedly him.
"Jason..." You try your hardest to not make it sound like a question.
His expression remains unchanged. "[name]. You... your shoulder is all healed up already."
You glance at your exposed shoulder. There is barely any visibly sign of a wound ever being there. Perks to a healing factorâwell, you heal. Downsides to a healing factorâpeople start asking questions.
"It didn't hit me too deep... and Bruce got me the best hospital stuff, too." You put the pizza pockets on a plate then stuff it into the microwave. The beep resounds in the quiet as you lean back on the counter. "Guess I got lucky."
"Didn't feel so lucky when you were bleeding out in my arms, did you?" His eyes narrow and you think you may have said the wrong thing. "What the hell were you even doing out at that hour? What the fuck were you thinking?"
Oh, I was just dropped in from another universe and switched places with Wayne-ie here. No biggie.
Yeah, no way in any of the layers in hell. Facing Galactus head on feels like a safer task than telling him that. You shake your head, trying to formulate a proper excuse.
"I was hanging out with my friends. Lost track of time."
His eyes widen at your sheer audacity to say thatâthen, his brows furrow and he steps forward, "Don't give me that shit. You never go out past ten. Bruce won't let you. We drilled it into your head you'd die out there. And lookâyou nearly did. Don't you dare sit here and lie to me, [name], because I swear to Godâ"
Your jaw clenches and you have to hold your hands behind your bodyâpressed against hard graniteâto stop yourself from pushing him back.
You hiss, low and tense, "What do you know? You'd never stay long enough to find out."
You remember flipping through that diary. The words getting scratchier and the paper getting more crumpled as you went on.
"You'd never stayed longer than a few days. You'd never even looked at me even then."
As you became older, you became hateful.
"You could see Dick. You could hate Tim. And despite everything, you could bring yourself to like him. You even tolerated Damian."
But you also became sad. Increasingly so. So miserable, trapped in that newborn skin you'd never truly seemed to break out of.
"I didn't care that you killed people. I didn't care that you never stayed for long. I didn't care that you hated Bruce."
So lost, so desperate for that touch you'd received so long ago; you never really grown up, had you?
"I didn't care that you'd never stay for him. For Dick. For any of the others."
So bitter. It's no wonder you'd never talked to them. It's no wonderâ
"But damn it, Jasonâ"
"I really thought that you could've stayed for me."
âthat he's staring at you in such horror.
None of this came from your heart. This entire speech was scripted on a piece of paperâby a version of you who felt so much pain and hate for those who abandoned you so easily.
But... looking at his expression nowâyou think it's something he needed to hear. Something that couldn't be left unsaid any longer. All the feelings pent up in them (in you, one could say) and the words they were to afraid to speak aloud. The words you were not afraid to say.
His lips parted, eyes wide as he doesn't reply. How can he? What could he ever, possibly say?
That he was doing this for your own good? That he never wanted you to see the man he had become? To never want to sully that image of that older brother who played tag with you when you were younger?
How does he tell you about the bullet he put through the skull of the Penguin goons with smoking guns he'd found minutes after he saw you bleeding out in a dirty alleyway? He couldn't possibly tell you about that.
How could he ever tell you that this was all for youâwhen you were hurting so badly?
(Hurting without him? Had you missed him all these years, so terribly? The thought brings some sort of twisted satisfaction. Sick reassurance. That, despite everything, you still loved him).
How could Jason Todd ever show you that he cares without destroying everything he was before? The answer was simple to himâhe can't. He thought you knew. He thoughtâ
...
Now, everything doesn't feel so simple. His sunken eyes search all over your face in frantic motions. Your eyes are so blank, and you don't even look to be feeling anything.
Are you tired? Of this? Of him? Just what did that bullet do to you?
The beeping of the microwave catches both of your attention before he has a chance to say something he will likely regret.
You turn your head to the side, and slip away from where he had cornered you against the granite. "Pizza pocket's done."
You glance his way, and he feels pathetic. Absolutley, spectacularly pathetic. "... Want some?"
You sit in incredibly uncomfortable silence, chewing on the food. At least it was good. Familiar.
Clearly there was a lot to discuss between the both of you. ... Jason and this other you, at least.
(Or was it you, the one who was shot? You could never truly tell).
There's so much to say, so little time. Jason could never stay, and definitely not around you. All these yearsâthis world's you thought he hated them. Despised them.
Now, his expression feels like the complete opposite. Longing.
You shove the rest of the pizza pocket into your mouth, wiping off the stray greasy cheese off the corners of your lips.
"I meant what I said earlier." You clarify, as if he needed it. "And I don't appreciate you only getting on my ass after all this time, only when something bad happens. You don't get to do that. That's not how this works."
You gesture between the two of you and his heart feels like its been stabbed with the sharpest of knives.
Then, it twists.
You were always his favourite. The sweetest. The little kid he'd once held so dearly and near his heart. Until that heart stopped and turned into the deepest black, poisoned and compromised.
How could he ever risk poisoning you, too?
He wanted to keep you safe, and somewhere, somehowâhe came to the conclusion that the only way you'd br safe is if you were away from him. Kept at a distance. Staying at arm's length.
Now, he isn't sure he was ever thinking of how safe you'd be. Not when he'd seen you, light-headed and bleeding. Not when you were practically dying in his arms and he couldn't do shit except kill those stupid fucking goons; because what is he good for if not revenge?
"I miss the old days," you say. But there's a distinct lack of emotion in your voice. As if it wasn't even you who was saying this. "But to hang onto them foreverâwhen will we ever move on?"
...
He doesn't know. He doesn't think he can. Those are the only memories he has of you. Of himself.
Jason pinches the bridge of his nose, suddenly feeling his heart pound and stomach feeling sick. This sort of uncanny, soul-consuming feelingâit only ever happened whenever he would look at you.
Eyes blurry and vision failing him, he wants to go. To run. But at the same time, he wants to keep you close. Make sure nothing will ever happen again. Make sure you never feel that pain again.
His head is going to split. He doesn't know what to do.
Fuck. Fuck, fuck, fuck. His hands sink into his hair, and his jaw is clenched impossibly tight.
"I just..." His voice is quieter than he wanted it to be. Shakier. Almost timid. He feels like a boy again. That same child you'd stare at so reverently. He doesn't know when he was beginning to forget that. "I just wanted to keep you safe. That's all I ever wanted."
You're almost tired of this. Pissed off. Is that all they say? Is that really all they say to tell you why they'd kept you so far away? The distance was all-consuming. You'd noticed it in the first week you lived here. You couldn't even begin to imagine that kind of "love" all your life.
"Then, you were doing it all wrong." You say, simply. It sounds like you know. Like you have experience. Like a wise old wizard who'd "seen it all before". "I'm not incapable (truly, you are not) and my life is my own. Keeping me safe isn't trying to keep everything the same, like it is as it was."
He lifts his head from his hands when your chair pushes behind you, screeching across wooden boards.
"I'm sorry you had to find me like that. But... you don't get it. You don't know..." You swallow. "You don't know enough about me now to judge whether I need protecting or not. You never did."
... You're right. He never did. He still doesn't. Jason never watched you grow up. He never got the chance to see you go through your awkward teen years. Get your first boyfriend. Scare the shit out of him. He didn't get to hang out with you and get ice-cream after school.
He never got the chance to do anything of these things. Not with you. Never with the one most dear to him, and his small, dark heart.
But that could change. Starting now, he could change. He would. He could. He will. For you.
He stares, eyes blankening. Then, they fill with something dark. A nervous shiver runs down your spine and your sense starts tingling in the back of your mind.
He speaks, low and steady. The shakiness is gone and you're not sure what went on in his headâbut he sounds so sure now. So certain.
"Then, I will."
It's not a threat or a claimâbut a withheld promise. The heaviness of it weighs down on you, and you aren't sure whether you should feel safe or scared.
He gets out of his chair and walks over to you. Unconsciously, you hold your breath, blood running cold as he stalks closer. That huge imposing frame that (probably) used to hold some semblance of comfort toward you; now terrified you to the bone.
His big hand rests atop your head, and ruffles your hair. "Starting now, I'll get to know you again. Then, everything can go back to normal."
... Did he even listen to a word you said?
He sends you a smile as he leaves the top of your head a tangled mess, slipping on his helmet and walking away.
You're left alone, heart pumping wildly in your chest and your brain throbbing with that buzz. Every sense and nerve on full alertâyou sink down into that chair and pull your knees to your chest.
You think you may have bitten off a bit more than you can chew.
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summary: the italian sun shines on you and oliver's summer idyll, but the month of august trickles away rapidlyâ what will happen when it reaches an end? â· IVY'S POETRY DEPARTMENT EVENT: « will you love me in december as you do in may? »
F1 MASTERLIST | OB87 MASTERLIST
pairing: oliver bearman x f!reader
wc: 5.2k
cw: summer romance, bittersweet, fluff, hopeful ending, reader has an anxiety disorder, use of y/n, oliver has an injury for plot purposes
note: requested here! first time writing for ollie so i'm kinda nervous, hope i did him justice! also there's not near enough fics of the '25 rookies it's scandalous
â« like real people do - hozier, august - taylor swift, let it happen - gracie abram
THE LASTING WEIGHT on your shoulders was something you became accustomed to. It settled there long ago. The quickened breaths, the sharp sting behind your eyes almost comforting in its regularity. The clatter of your pen dropping to the floor during another restless study session and the ache in your ribcage as you fought for hopeless takes of serrated air no longer startled you. Your newly-appointed therapist told you, scribbling away on her notepadâ âMaybe you need fresh air, time away from university.â As if sunlight could smooth out the tension etched into your bones.
That was what the seaside house was meant to be.
It wasnât a cottage per se. Just a weather-worn brick-walled home tucked near the Italian coast, kissed by salt and sun and blue shutters faded to memory, ivy hugging the balcony tenderly. You rented it with the help of your parents, who insisted that you go on this trip, but the silence you were standing in was yours alone. You, twenty years old, burnt out, along with a diary you promised your therapist youâll write in every day, from the soft, sunlit beginnings of May to the cold end of August.
The house in itself was as isolated as it could get, perched above the sea along eroded rocks and concealed from the nearest town and its tourists. It stood alone, in all likeness to you, waiting for inhabitation. The only hint of human life you noticed, as you mindlessly sipped your iced tea from the back doorway, sun warming your knees, was the distant outline of another house, a few kilometers down the coast. Far enough that itâd take a good ten-minute walk to reach it, but close enough so that you could discern the silhouette of a tall man standing in its overgrown backyard.
You didnât linger much on it. He was but the ghost of civilizationâ a shadow at the edge of your retreat you werenât ready to let back in. This was the time to center on your thoughts, peel back the numbness eating at your heart, and relearn yourself. You stepped back inside, glass empty, and didnât think about him again.
At least, not then.
The month of May passed slowly, honey dripping down the rim of a jar. You mostly stayed in your little alcove of the world, letting the days stretch out in silence. Mornings were slowâ toast with jam, milk coffee, the dog-eared pages of half-read books sitting on the sunlounger outside. You wrote in your diary about it, about how youâd paint your nails one day and chip them off the next, or how on other days youâd lie out on the balcony, the crash of the waves lulling you in and out of sleep. You watched the ivy grow and the sky change. For a while, it was nice, soft, and still.
But solitude, even chosen, eventually turns sharp at the edges. By the third week, the silence wasnât so romantic: you started counting the hours between meals, pacing the kitchen tiles barefoot, and you reread your own diary entries even if you hadnât spoken aloud in days. The stillness you once craved had started to feel like a trapâ yet the worst of it was yourself: thoughts of precious hours you were wasting away instead of sitting at the desk of your dorm room haunted your boredom, similar to a ghost.
Which is why, now and then, when the breeze shifted just right, you found your gaze drifting down a few centimeters down the coast, toward the other house, and the man you suspected might still be there.
To the unknowing eye, youâre sure it could have looked unsettling, but truthfully, you didnât have anything else to do but to observe. He was a welcoming presence, something that didnât make you feel so secluded. Some days, the man would tinker with a bike for hours until the sun bled orange. Other times, heâd vanish with a towel slung over his shoulders and goggles in his hand, not returning until dusk. Occasionally, heâd mirror you, barefoot in the garden, basking in the sun. And sometimesâonly sometimesâyou swore he tilted his head upwards and caught your eyes. On those days, you always turned away first, slipped back inside, and retreated for the night.
Your personal game of people-watching stretched for a week or two before you spoke for the first time.
You spent the afternoon on a small, sheltered beach just a few minutes away from your house. The dry air had nipped at your skin just enough for it to become uncomfortable after a few hours, and the sun-turnedâfrom warm to punishingâhad your cheeks tight with the start of a sunburn. You packed up as the sky began to blush with the first hints of sunset, already fantasizing about the cool shade of your living room and the steady hum of the fan. It would have been glorious.
Would have, if you hadnât locked yourself out.
You jiggled the handle once, twice, but nothing. Your towel slipped from your arms, and you cursed under your breath, pressing your forehead to the wooden door. Saltwater still clung to your skin, your hair stuck to the back of your neck, and the stupid key was sitting smugly on the kitchen counter inside.
A posh, British accent spoke from behind you. âDo you need some help?â
You turned, confused about the origin of the sudden voice, and there he was. The man from the neighboring house.
It was unmistakably himâ there was just something about the tousled mess of brown, semi-curls falling in front of his face, the soft eyes crinkled at the corners with barely contained amusement. His skin, darkened by the sweep of summer, looked like it had soaked up every hour of its beginnings. There was familiarity in the delicate shape of him and the easy way he stood, towering over you. The towel in his hand was the same deep navy youâd seen slung over his shoulder days before. His gazeâsharp, steady, curiousâfelt exactly like it had when youâd caught him looking up at you.
âI, uh⊠I might?â You stumbled on your words as you answered.
He chuckled, leaning slightly against the fence in front of your house. âLocked yourself out?â
âI wish I could say no,â you nodded, making a noise somewhere between a whine and a laugh.
The man, who looked increasingly more boyish the more steps he took toward you, gripped the door handle. He twisted it a few times before kicking the bottom of the wooden plank and, before your stunned expression, it snapped open. He looked at you with a proud smile. âDonât worry, people who rent this house usually donât know about this trick.â
Your eyebrows shot up. âDoes that mean you come here often?â
Mortification crashed over you along with realizationâ you threw an accidental pick-up line at a complete stranger. A stranger who, objectively speaking, was very cute, yes, but still a stranger. You opened your mouth, already halfway through a flustered attempt to walk it back. âWaitâ I didnât mean that likeâ I wasnât trying toââ
He let out a surprised, wheezy laugh. âNo, no- youâre fine,â he said, grinning now. âI come here every summer, actually. Iâm in the house further down the coast.â He seemed to catch the flicker of recognition in your eyes and gave you a knowing smile. âMy nameâs Oliver, by the way.â
âIâm Y/N,â you replied. âI⊠I think Iâve seen you around. Sometimes.â
Oliverâs traits softened, and you could see the playful interest behind the darkness of his irises. âYeah.â His voice dipped slightly. âI think I saw you, too.â
Both of you stood there with the hesitant awkwardness usually reserved for teenagersâ which, to be fair, you werenât far from. He couldnât have been older than you, early twenties at most. The silence stretched until he announced he had to go, something about needing to work on his bike. You had to abstain to say I know.Â
Yet, before he could disappear completely around the corner, Oliver paused. He looked back over his shoulder. âIf you ever want company, itâs just me down there. Come by whenever.â You didnât have to add that you were alone as well. In a strangely comforting sort of way, it looked like he knew.
And it didnât take you long to take him up on his offer.
It started when your trips to the beach began to alignâ first by coincidence, but then by something more deliberate. You came to realize that you and Oliver had claimed the same forgotten stretch of land where the sea kissed the rocks, and you drifted toward each other like its tide. At first, it was just run-ins: you, stretched out on your towels, half-asleep due to the sizzling heat; Oliver, standing over you, droplets of salt water falling from his hair onto your flushed cheeks. âWhat are you doing here?â youâd ask, squinting up at him.
âI like running,â heâd say with a shrug, before his characteristic, mischievous smile reached his lips once again. âAnd a dip after a run keeps me motivated.â
Oliver started sticking around. Heâd keep the last of his water bottle to rinse the sand off your feet, sharing watermelon heâd always accidentally cut a little extra from. He would walk you home, and youâd lead him with slow, lazy steps, to drag the moment longer. Your laughter would echo against the rock and sea walls paving the way to your house, and heâd talk about little thingsâthe birds and the heatâthen about bigger things, how the ocean seems to always stay the same but feels different every year, for example. Youâd match him, word for word, stories unfurling like waves, and miss him when heâd continue his way without you.
It wasnât long before the space between your houses stopped mattering. One afternoon turned into an invitation to see the inside of his cluttered living room, and that was it. The next week, Oliver was sitting on your ivy-covered balcony, sipping homemade iced tea with your legs draped over his. Eventually, your days began to blurâ his shirt left on the back of your chair, your books forgotten on his windowsill. You stopped counting whose house you were in until it became the house you were in together.
The month of May slipped into June in tentative brushes of the hand and peals of laughter lost to the warm air of summer nights. Oliver had become Ollie by the fifteenthâthe nickname fell off your lips naturallyâand you spent most, if not all, of your days in each otherâs presence. The rhythm between you was almost domestic: youâd wake up and see his bare back at work in the kitchen along with the scent of coffee and discarded pans, or how you now knew his schedule by heart. Heâd spend most of his Wednesdays and Fridays fixing up the old bike heâd found rusting in the garage, and he was partial to running on Saturdays. Swimming, however, was reserved for when you were with him. Any day. Every day, if he could have it.
By the time Ollie finished repairing the bike, the first month of summer was waning. One golden morning, with grease all over his fingers, he turned to you and asked if you wanted to visit the nearby townâ a trip made easier now that the bike worked. To your own surprise, you said yes.
The town had become another stepping stone in whatever you and Ollie were building. The days spent weaving through the local market were your favorites, brushing past stalls of sun-ripened fruits and handmade trinkets, among which you both stumbled through clumsy Italian that vendors gently poke fun at you for. Youâd mangle a greeting, and Ollie would butcher a question about apricots, and still, theyâd smile like they knew what you were saying. You chuckled and asked him what the point of living in Modena was if he didnât speak Italian. âMy familyâs still British, you know,â he answered. It only made you laugh harder, a sound he seemed to chase.
You never discussed the reason that brought you both to this isolated part of the Italian coast. It never came up, the questions drifted in the peripheryâ hinted at in the pauses between conversation, but never spoke out loud. It was a silent agreement: you didnât ask, and neither did he.
But there was one evening, on the crumbling stone wall nearing the edge of town. Your legs were swinging gently over the dropâ the cicadas had begun to quiet, the last smear of strawberry gelato clung to your fingertips, and the world was exhaling into night. Somewhere below, a dog barked once and fell quiet. That was when Ollie asked. âSo⊠what brought you here?â
You didnât answer right away. You wiped your fingers on a napkin that smelled faintly of lemon, tossing and turning the way you could shape your response in your head. âUni,â you said finally. âOr⊠me, I guess. Everything just got really loud, and I could barely think about anything else. I stopped sleeping, I stopped eating⊠setting myself up for failure before I even started, basically.â
Ollie nodded, yet no pity or needless apologies fell off his tongue. âMy therapist sent me there to remember how to be a person again,â you added to his silence.
âWhat about you?â You quickly asked, hasty to get the attention off.
He looked at you, mouth agape in a desire to say something, but ultimately deciding against it. Long seconds passed before the British spoke again. âI race professionally, right now Iâm in Formula One.â One look at your face was enough for him to understand you didnât know anything about motorsports. He continued with a crooked smile. âI, uh⊠I crashed back in March. Nothing huge, but enough to knock me out for the season, apparently. The doctors told me to rest and take it easy.â
You glanced over, catching the way his profile softened in the lamplight. You had noticed his grimace after long days spent walking around, the painful stretches in his living room when he thought you were still deep in slumber. You never brought it up.
âNo one tells you how hard that part isââ Ollie continued. âThe not-doing-anything part. I figured Iâd go somewhere familiar to make it better, you know?â
Taking your mind off an obsession, when you made it a part of yourself so integral youâre unable to define yourself outside of it, can feel similar to the tearing of a limbâ itâs something you carry around, an itch you canât scratch because your fingernails will start digging for blood. Itâs something you knew all too well, it was the reason for your presence on this stone wall.
âWell,â you murmured. âI think youâre going to get into your car next season and show them all the talent theyâd missed.â
Ollie huffed a laugh. âThanks for believing in me, but the car isnât evenââ
âYou worked on your bike. You can work on a car.â
âItâs not even remotely the same thing.â
âTomato, tomato.â
He laughed, curls catching the breeze, nudging his knees with yours. âThen youâre going to make every teacher regret putting you in this state when you go back.â
âThatâd be assuming they care.â You rolled your eyes with nothing but fondness. âYouâre too nice for the ruthless world of university, Ollie.â
The realization came as gently as the brush of his fingers above yours: you hadnât thought about it at all. The tint of your skin had darkened, moles and sun-born freckles dusted your shoulders, your voice had picked up hoarser inflections from laughing, salt stuck to you like a robe, and you hadnât noticed the oppressing heaviness of your shoulder ever since you ran into Ollie. You noticed, though, with a pleasant warmness swirling in your chest, that it seemed to have vanished. You couldnât recall the last time you felt like the air around you wasnât enough for your lungs.
In that moment, as the sky bruised deep violet and you could still taste the faint hint of strawberry on your tongue, it didnât really matter what had broken you both to get there. You were here now, and that was what mattered.
The bike ride back to your house was spent in a sleep-induced haze. Your arms were loosely wrapped around Ollieâs middle, and he was pedaling slowly, not in a rush to get anywhere else but to you. When you reached the front door, you didnât ask. He just followed you inside, barefoot and spent, and slept in the spare twin bed across from yours. The window stayed open all night. You could hear the sea mixing with his breathing. For the first time in a while, sleep came easy.
June made way for July, arriving in harsh, blinding sunlight, and days that stretched lazily into midnight. With it came a quiet shift, the startling and fluttering understanding that you might want to kiss Oliver Bearman.
It wasnât in theory, in some hypothetical sunset-glazed movie scene. You wanted to kiss the real him, your Ollie, the one on the stone wall: the boy who stole your sandals to water your neglected garden, the one who wrangled in catastrophic Italian with a vendor for a pack of cherries you craved, the same one who read aloud from whatever your liking had set upon to make fun of it, only to keep reading when you werenât paying attention.
In the delicate dance of almosts that blossomed over the month of July, you allowed yourself to think he might want to kiss you, too.
The first time it happened, you were both locked out of his houseâ for a change. A tragic incident involving a missing key and a dinner reservation you were already late for had left you standing outside, your arms crossed, and his sheepish grin doing nothing to help the situation. Ollie suggested the bedroom window. You, naturally, thought he was joking. He wasnât.
Youâd both ended up clambering through the fragile wooden frame like teenagers sneaking in past curfew, laughing so hard your ribs hurt. It was stupid, and maybe a little childish, but it was part of why it always felt so easy with Ollie. When it was your turn to hop off the ledge, he helped you, hands steady around your waist. His hands lingered there a moment too long and as laughter died down, leaving you breathless and dazed, something pulled you closer ever so slightly. Never close enough to break, however.
There was a second time, when Ollie brushed a stray strand of hair after youâd both ran from a summer shower and the touch warmed your forehead for hours. A third, when you fell asleep over each other in the garden during a heat-drenched day and you woke up with his fingers tracing lazy patterns on your arm. There was a fourth, a fifth, an amalgamation of disarming instances during which your breath hitched in anticipation of what never seemed to come. When he caught you watching him, and never looked away.
The day you kissed him, you found yourself in a predicament you never thought would happen to you. Ollie had just leapt off the cliff.
There was no hesitation or second thoughts in the clean arc his body sliced through the air. The splash below was clean, and right when you thought heâd never find the surface again, his voice echoed upward, bright and breathless as he laughed. âCome on!â he shouted, waving at you. âItâs not even that high!â
You stood at the edge, toes curled against the rock, and you could only disagree with the brown-haired boy the way the water spiraled beneath you. âYouâre insane. This is suicide.â
âOh, youâre the one who climbed up there!â
âI climbed up to watch, not die!â you yelled back, heart hammering. âAlso, arenât you injured? Should you even be jumping off cliffs?!â
He shrugged. âThe waterâs deep enough.â
You glared, which only seemed to egg him on. âCome onnnn,â he complained. âYou said you wanted to feel like a real person again, right? Nothing realer than that!â
Even in the lighthearted argument, you had to see the truth in what Ollie said. You had come to this quiet corner of the world to shake something loose inside of you, to try and find the pieces of yourself you misplaced among the tangy taste of tangerines and the soft mornings. This was the summer you were supposed to stop clenching your fists around fear, and to get rid of the anxious feeling lodged in your throat. Your heart had beaten loudly and unapologetically until now, what was slowing it down except for yourself?
So you took a breath. Two. Then a few steps back.
And jumped.
The fall was sharp, dizzying, and the scream that escaped your lungs was nothing short of horrified. Yet, laughter was wedged between the hiccups of it, and you broke the cold surface with a disbelieving gasp. Ollie was already swimming toward youâ his eyes wide in wonder, and his hands reaching for your figure. âYou did it!â
âI actually did it,â you sputtered.
Ollieâs hands found the dip of your waist under the water, steadying you against him. There were seconds of silence, filled with the splash of waves and your all too loud breathing. That was when his eyes dipped to your lips.
You hadnât come there to find something as unreachable as love, and you especially hadnât expected to fall for someone like Ollie, but somehow he had folded himself into your days and the smallest gaps of youâ a placeholder until you could fill them yourself, you imagined. Still, you couldnât envisage a version of your months without him, his voice, or the steadiness of the soul that comes with the brush of his fingers.
I jumped off a cliff, you thought. I can kiss Oliver Bearman.
So you did.
You surged forward before you could talk yourself out of it, arms slipping around his shoulders as your mouth crashed onto his in impatience. He stilled for only a secondâ more than enough to make you doubt your actions. But he kissed you back. Just as eager, the smile he put into it charmingly familiar. You could taste sea salt on his tongue, his sun-warmed lips moving hungrily against you, breathing your air and taking it away in the slow rocking of the waves.
You didnât want it to end, but the lack of oxygen pulled you apart. Ollieâs forehead bumped against yours. âI was waiting for you to do that,â he murmured, dropping another quick kiss to your lips.
âThen you couldâve done it sooner!â You punched his shoulder with a laugh.
âI donât know, I like it when you take the lead.â
You rolled your eyes, heat climbing up your neck, and dunked him into the water. You didnât resist when he pulled you under.
The transition from July to August slipped from your attention, seawater between your fingersâ impossible to hold onto but clung to your skin all the same. You barely noticed the days shifting; they blurred into one another with a sleepy sentimentality, each marked by rituals you and Oliver had grown to create. Mornings bled into slow breakfast where heâd sneak a bite of your toast before making his own, and youâd pretend to be mad about it even though you always saved the corner piece for him anyways.
There were afternoons spent with your ankles tangled together in the back gardens. He kept a bottle of your fragranced sunscreen in his bag. You knew what music to play when you both cooked dinner with the door open to let the cooler air of the evening sift through the kitchen. It wasnât dramatic, nor was it sickeningly romantic. It simply came as a natural progression, an obvious evolution in the most beautiful senseâ like something that could last, if you let it.
You kissed more often, now, much to both of your delight. At first, it was shy, quick, smiling kisses stolen between absentminded conversations. The further you got used to it, the slower they became: curious, confident, eager to know more about each other in a way you couldnât quite grasp before. Your hands knew each otherâs mapped faces and bodies, your mouth recognized the otherâs rhythm. Once, you kissed Ollie with your knees still scraped from a hike heâd convinced you to go to. Once, he kissed you beneath the pouring rain, soaked and giggling like children.
There were times you stayed over, and times he did the same, and it would just happen with no clear decision. Ollie would just end up asleep beside you, together beneath the light coversâ somehow, even in deep slumber, his hands would always find yours, his breathing even and warm against your neck and lulling you to sleep.
You thought that maybe you had gotten too brave during your stay, enough to turn your cautiousness foolish, because you caught yourself believing this wouldnât end. That it didnât have to. August had felt achingly saccharine, it made you wonder where all that sweetness would go when it ended.
The last weeks trickled like sand in an hourglass in front of your eyes. The weight of each moment slipped past you, yet you tried nothing to catch them. Itâs what hurt the most: you had all taken it for granted, you let yourself believe time could stretch forever for the sole reason it felt right. It wasnât the truth, because the truth was in the dates printed in your calendar and the unread emails from your university. The suitcase under your bed, you carefully avoided.
Another year will start again soon. The patterns you persisted in peeling offâstress, anxiety, the pressure to perform until exhaustion and still look perfectâwould be ready to claw their way back beneath your skin, circling you. Ollie knew it as well.
Neither of you said it out loud, yet the end was coming whether or not the words spilled out. It hovered just out of reach, a promise of winter in the chill of the end of summer. Youâd catch him staring at the sea a little longer than usual, or watching you tie your hair up before journaling, memorizing the motion. You stopped taking pictures, and he stopped making plans for tomorrow. You still laughed, still kissed, and gripped the hours as if they werenât running out. There was a grace to the silenceâ a fragile kind of pretending which somewhat felt like mercy.
But try as you might, pretending can never last long.
The sky was painted deep shades of violet and rust, cicadas humming low in the nature around the steps of the back porch you and Ollie were curled upon. His hand was brushing absent circles on your ankle, head resting between your thighs as your fingers curled in his locks. A pot of pasta was cooling in the kitchen. It should have been a perfect night.
You stared at the horizon, then at your chipped nail polish tangled in his hair. You donât know what pushed you to ask, what made tonight different. The only thing you knew is that it would have happened nonetheless. âWhat happens when this ends?â It came out as something similar to a whisper.
Ollieâs fingers paused. He looked up at you, turning around completely, and there was nothing but expectancy in his dark irises.
âI was wondering when one of us would ask,â he answered, voice low.
You breathed out through your nose. No matter the number of times it happened to you, you never succeeded in hiding the tremor in your hands correctly. âI donât want to keep pretending itâs not happening. Iâm leaving because of uni. Youâre leaving because of racing. Weâve both known that since the beginning.â
Ollie nodded. âYeah.â
âI justââ You paused, trying to find the thin breath you were holding onto. âI donât know what happens next.â You looked at the crescent moons your nails had drawn on the inside of your palms. âIâm going back to school. Thereâs going to be deadlines and all-nighters and the pressure, andâ itâs going to be hard to breathe. I donât know how long itâs going to take before I⊠I slip again.â
Your voice cracked. âYou never saw me like that, Ollie. You were lucky enough to get the version of me that wasnât drowning, and Iâ I donât know if youâd still want me if you did.â The confession came quiet and vulnerable, but you couldnât linger on it when you had so many things to say and so little time. âAnd youâll be racing again. Youâll have a whole world that doesnât include this place, or me. I donât expect you to hold space for me when everything changes.â
You were offering him a bright exit sign, the sole opportunity to be honest and to bring the sunset-colored haze youâd been navigating this relationship with down as softly as he could. There was no promise your heart would be spared the shock, but there was also no need to put it on display if it was the case.
Ollie stared at you for agonizing seconds. The traits of his face, the same you could trace with closed eyes, shifted into something different. It wasnât fear, nor was it sadness, but a gentler thing that looked like something close to a quiet resolve. He took your hands into his, detaching each fingernail digging into your palm.
âI donât know what happens either,â he admits, slowly, âand Iâm not going to pretend I know what itâs going to look like. I just know I thought about itâabout youâa lot. AndâŠâ His thumb brushed over your knuckles. âListen, I donât need you to be okay all the time. I care about your stupid overthinking, the spirals, the bad habits that drive you crazy. All of it. That stuffâs not going to scare me off. I want you, not just the half of it I met this summer.â
âIâll be racing, yeah,â he added with a small smile tugging at the corner of his mouth. âBut Iâve got time. I can make it.â
Ollie leaned in, just a little closer but enough so you could feel the warmth of his breath along the shape of your lips. âI donât know what youâll be like in December, but I want to find out.â
It broke the pressure behind your ribs, only for the burn to rise behind your eyes instead. There was a need in his voice that you hadnât expected, or maybe was it its intensity. Ollie wasnât asking you to be better, he was just asking you to stay.
âI want to find out,â he repeated, quieter, in the shape of a promise.
You tried to blink back the tears forming on your lashes, failing miserably. âOkay,â you whispered. Your voice gave up in the middle. âOkay.â
Ollie kissed you tenderly and unhurried, a gentle, wordless reassurance in the movement of his mouth against yours in which you sank, a ship in a storm. Summer was ending, yes, but the world wouldnât be. This could still be something, and maybe it would.
You couldnât guess what December would bring, and you didnât know who youâd be when the skies turned grey and the noise returned. Yet, you hoped.
And for now, hoping was enough.
©LVRCLERC 2025 â do not copy, steal, post somewhere else or translate my work without my permission.
Seniors at Vassar College, 1895
Hi!!
I would like to ask for a chapter inspired by afterglow where enzo and the reader fight, because she was jealous of him with his ex, or any other girl, and their relationship was a secret because he wanted therefore the reader thinks he's cheating on her and that shw was secret bc it would be easier to cheat on her.
Â·Ë àŒ pairing: enzo x fem!reader
Â·Ë àŒ summary: with enzo wanting to keep your relationship a secret, you couldnât help but to think other things after seeing malenaâs comments on enzoâs posts.
Â·Ë àŒ warnings: angst(with happy ending), secret relationship, jealousy, cussing, crying, overthinking, mentions of cheating(assumption).
Â·Ë àŒ note: I decided to mix these two requests since theyâre almost similar. also NO HATE towards malena, this is just part of the plot.
There always had to be something. Something wandering in your mind that would make you overthink, always having you on the edge. And even more, if you had a secret relationship with a man that everyone wanted to be with. While you couldn't even hug, kiss, or appreciate him in public.
Relationships in secret can cause fights, trust issues, anything.
âÂĄCuantas veces te tengo que decir que entre Malena y yo no hay nada!â Enzoâs voice hollered through the hallway of your house.
Enzo and you had been bickering back and forth about what had been going on between his comment section with Malena. So many comments, she would comment more on your boyfriendâs post than hers, you would think, with the jealousy that would poison your mind. You had given him the silence treatment but it all fell apart when he continued to ask you what was going on with you.
âAy, por Dios, Enzo.â You pinched the bridge of your nose with a furrow. âSe ve que le gustas a la hija deââ You eliminate your words not wanting to go far with them. Your fists balled with a sigh.
âÂĄNo digas estupideces! ÂĄElla estĂĄ con MatĂas, carajo!â There was rage in his voice, veins popping on his forehead, if it was possible to pop it with a pin, it would.
The room was hot, with the amount of screaming between the two. You were lucky all the windows were closed, if not the neighbors wouldâve gotten a sound of it. No matter how much you tried to control the anger it would grow and grow, and with it, the tears that you felt were gonna come soon. The tears of anger and frustration.
âNo tenemos nada.â Enzoâs words are repeated, once more. In a way to leave it evident.
âNo te creo.â There was a small smile where all you could see was the corners of your lips raised. A sarcastic smile. âÂżNo crees que no vi un vĂdeo de ti con ella despuĂ©s de Los Goya?â You dared, by getting closer to him and pointing him in the chest.
âEstĂĄbamos charlando.â He gritted through his teeth.
It was devastating that you couldnât trust your boyfriend. The idea of him cheating would boil your blood, and break you at the same time into millions. The feeling of a tornado inside of you that would quickly get out and take over everything in the relationship, you were afraid of that. As much as the problem was the both of you having the relation a secret, you would blame yourself for it, for exploding.
âCrĂ©eme nena.â Enzoâs hands tried to reach for you, but you drove him away not wanting to have him near you.
âYa te dije, no te puedo creer.â You looked him in the eyes. Anger is full on them. âComo me pides que te crea si tenemos la relaciĂłn en secreto ÂżAh?â
âSabes que yo querĂa mantenerla los primeros meses por tĂș bien.â His anger was rising again.
His body figure walked towards you making you walk backwards, but the roles were switched after you started to speakâ
âNo me jodas, de seguro se te hace mĂĄs fĂĄcil mantenerla en secreto para poder irte con otra chica.â Oh, your words were pushing it. With the anger that was blinding you, you werenât calculating your words.
âÂżMe estĂĄs jodiendo verdad? ÂżTe estĂĄs escuchando? ÂĄMe estĂĄs acusando sobre algo que no es!â His finger went towards his ears in a motion.
âTendrĂa lĂłgica, Enzo.â You whisper swallowing the lump. âSoy un secreto, Âżes mĂĄs fĂĄcil asĂ no?â You gift him a dead smirk, with the tears that were forming in the corners of your eyes.
âNena, no llores por favor.â He decided to pay no attention to your previous comments and focused on the tears that were running down your cheeks.
âNo, Enzo.â You decided to leave the sentimental aside and wipe the tears. âSerĂĄ mejor que te vallas.â
You turned around to walk towards the entrance of your house, not even bothering to turn around to see if Enzo followed. You knew he was because you could feel his atmosphere behind you.
âNenaââ He called, but you didnât stop. âÂĄNena! ÂĄDejame explicarte por favor!â Still no stopping.
The door swung open and you made a motion with your hand âVete.â Enzo looked between you and the door, if you thought he would leave without fixing this, you were so wrong.
With his hand, he slammed the door closed making you furrow your brows in anger and ready to protest, but his short words left you silent. âTe sentas.â He points towards the couch.
You knew Enzo, nothing that you would do would make him alter his decision of not leaving. So the better answer was for you to walk over towards that couch, and sit even if you huffed in anger. The silence cried loud in the room, an uncomfortable silence that you didnât know how to get rid of. By this time your anger was cooling off and you didnât know how to apologize, but you wanted to. You guessed you were simply afraid of saying it.
And deep inside, you knew, that Enzo wasnât cheating on you, but the games the mind would play and have you second thinking was what was burning you, and with you, Enzo, and the relationship.
Your body flinched at the contact of Enzoâs fingertips touching your knee, it brought you out of your zone, paying attention to how Enzo kneeled in front of you.
You didnât realize what you said, not until you did, still being in the zone. âÂżMe amas todavĂa?â
Enzoâs eyes were glued on you, hands still on your knees, but they traveled to your face to hold you. âNo hay ningĂșn dĂa en que mi amor por vos no crezca.â
Some sniffles came from you. The tears began falling onto your cheeks but Enzoâs thumbs were doing the favor of wiping them away. Your voice hurt when you spoke. âPerdĂłn por dudar de ti. Es queâ se me hace difĂcil, no te puedo tocar, besar, o tan siquiera salir a tomar un estupido cafe y al ver que otra chica al reĂr posa sus manos sobre tus hombros o se ve muy juntita a ti me hace pensar que tal ves puedas estar con ella a escondidas, o como con los comentarios de Malena. Los celos hacen olvidarme que tĂș no eres asĂ.â
âLo se.â He gifted you a smile. He didnât want to say much right now, he wanted you to let it out, let you speak how you felt.
But you felt rued, you didn't deserve someone like Enzo. No matter how much you would fuck up or say the most hurtful things, he knew you wouldnât mean it. Because he knew you.
âPerdĂłn por todo esto, por todo lo que dije. Y perdĂłname si te lastime, por favor. Todo esto es solo es en mi cabeza.â You took his hands off your cheeks and wrapped them in yours.
âNo pasa nada, bonita. PerdĂłname vos a mĂ, por querer mantener la relaciĂłn en secreto. PensĂ© que te estaba haciendo un bien y solo resultĂł haciĂ©ndote un mal.â He kept his eyes down on your interlocked hands. âPero ya no mĂĄs, no te pienso ocultar mĂĄs. Me di cuenta que no importa cuanto trate de protegerte siempre va a pasar algo. Pero por lo menos estarĂ© yo ahĂ para poder ayudarte, y que sepas vos que lo que digan no es verdad.â
The first smile after hours, finally grows on your face. The toxin was finally being replaced with the medicine that Enzo would give you, happiness.
âÂżEn serio?â Your voice was soft, barely hearable.
âSĂ.â Enzo smiled with a soft squeeze from his hands. âEs muy cobarde de mi parte ocultar a una persona tan maravillosa como vos, chiquita.â He took his hand back to your cheek, placing a few strands of hair behind your ear.
âÂżTe puedo pedir algo?â Your breath fell hot onto his hand that was close to your lips.
âLo que sea.â A nod was delivered to you after his words.
âDime que todavĂa eres mĂo, y que vamos a estar bien.â Your eyes were glistening, and they had a soft look compared to the previous sore ones.
Enzo got closer to you smiling before he spoke, âSoy tuyo, y vamos a estar bien. Sea lo que sea, pase lo que pase.â He kisses your knuckles, with the other hand that is still holding yours, not sure if you are ready at the moment for a peck. He didnât want to push the limit.
You felt better knowing Enzo and you would finally make your relationship public. It was exciting at first, having a secret. Having the secret rendezvous, not telling anyone where the both of you would head to. Of course, with time it became a tad exhausting for you, but you would never tell Enzo anything.
So yeah, you were excited to finally make it public, and so was Enzo. Finally able to see everything, together.