brb, about 2 go find a rich ceo to marry just so i can have super cute bachelorette and bride accessories đ©
Nadja Auermann, Christy Turlington, Claudia Schiffer, Cindy Crawford & Stephanie Seymour for Gianni Versace, 1994 - Ph. Richard Avedon
ART X TASHI X PATRICK X F!READER
part 1 part 2 part 3 part 4
it is here yall, no smut but a surprising amount of straight sexual tension, iâll make it gayer in the next one dw
you canât believe youâre here. fuck. fuck. you changed too, back into tennis gear. fuck. the stars twinkle above like little spectators, a clear night in new york city. like fate was watching. they had reserved a court before even asking you, cocky as ever. you had all driven there together. you sat in the back, like mommy and daddy were taking you to a dance recital. this whole thing was ridiculous, and positively beneath you. and yet here you are, separated by a net from the man youâd thought in your naivety you would marry one day. you each stretched, rackets on the ground a ways away. every time you saw them in the corner of your eye you tensed, thinking about what was to come.
when you beat art, you wouldnât fuck him. thatâs something you were certain of, because it would make it so much more embarrassing for them. pimping yourself, your husband out is one thing, trying to and failing is much more humiliating. you thought about it, briefly on the car ride. what it would feel like after all these years. how good it would feel to make tashi squirm. and she would squirm. so help you god she would squirm. and art too. while he was inside you and clinging to you and more vulnerable than heâs ever been, you would tell him all about tashi and patrickâs little raundevouz, their little secret excursion. you would hear his heart break beneath you, feel his world crumble. you smiled to yourself in the backseat. art gave you up, tossed you out like a used tissue the second he could wriggle his way into the amazing tashi duncanâs life. and where was he now? coming second place, being cheated on, being whored out. and where was tashi? still seething over college, still hating you. you couldnât judge her so violently, you were uncomfortably similar. except you can play, and she has art for a husband. it seems you can have love or tennis, and never both. tashi seems to have neither. in a roundabout way you pity her. in a more direct way you think she got what was fucking coming to her.
but no. you couldnât fuck him, because that would hurt infinitely more. if tashi had come to town and avoided you, that would have angered you five times more than whatever this is. no. you werenât sleeping with him. no way no how. nuh uh. dick is dick and you can get dick from anywhere. if the night before told you anything, historical dick will always do you wrong. so there. not sleeping with art. or tashi. or whatever.
tashi watches you stretch. your muscle fibres flex and protrude, a threat. if you beat art, she thinks youâre going to try to refuse the reward. or you at least plan to. youâre so fucking proud. everything is beneath you, everything, you canât be pleased by anything. art is perfect, in every way, and yet you sneer and turn your nose up at her perfectly fine man. she wants to see it. she wants art to fuck you so bad it makes her angry. she wants him to be rough, and mean, she wants him to hold you down and make you cry. she watches the body that dominates the court, the face that haunts her dreams. she wants you to fucking submit. she wants your tennis body to become a cocksleeve and nothing more, and she wants art to do it. art would like it too. she knows he would. he doesnât speak about you. he avoids you like the plague. something is left. maybe because of how you ended, in one clean silent chop the day of tashiâs accident, that he feels thereâs something unfinished. she thinks he wants you. and heâs gonna get you and destroy any dignity that might remain. heâs gonna pound you like he owns you, because really he does, and tashi is gonna watch and sheâs gonna laugh.
if you lose, sheâll watch her husband destroy you at tennis. and that will be just as freeing.
your gaze shifts from man on court to woman in stands, woman to man. they both have this serene look on their faces. not a care in the world. art should be worried. youâre going to thrash him. presuming this was still somewhat about tennis and he had any pride left at all, he was in for a rude awakening. second in that open. hm. you were gonna hang his sorry pathetic cuck ass out to dry and then you were gonna leave him wanting.
artâs certain he can win. tashi gave him comprehensive coaching in your style, your weaknesses and your strengths. truth is, youâre impressive, but art is a man. he could over power you, smash you into the dirt with sheer brute force. heâs certain he could beat you. but will he? tashi was unclear. this was of course entirely for her benefit, so which would she prefer? art had a feeling that your prize wasnât only there to make you want to play. the prize didnât seem to entice you at all, which bruised whatever remained of his ego. so should he win, or lose? what would please tashi more, seeing you beaten, or seeing you beneath something she owned? maybe they were the same.
you were both fully stretched and watered, and had began the stroll to pick up your rackets in synchronicity. his eyes raked over your face, and for the first time in all of this he considered what he wanted. he wouldâve wanted to leave you alone. to respect you. but that couldnât have happened. tashi needs closure. sleeping with you would be strange. you werenât the same person he left in college, he wasnât naive enough to forget that. before it all fell apart, when he was your tentative boyfriend, there were nights he locked away, too tender to be thought of by a married man. nights at his lake house, nights in your dorm, mornings when he would wake up covered in you and it was so still and calm that he had thought maybe it was still night, and you forgot to turn the light off. those nights, bolted into the safe for lost things in his mind, now drifted free. your soft skin and its smell, the weight of your body on top of his, your strawberry balm kisses. when you would dash away before sex to âfreshen upâ, and heâd smell his dormâs cheap fruity hand soap when his nose pressed into your clit, when you opened your arm pit. youâd stopped drinking because he wouldnât sleep with you drunk. youâd cry sometimes when he held you, when you were on top of him or when he was curved over your body so tightly everything touched. youâd cry. because no one had ever been this nice to you. and he would kiss them away, right from your under eye, licking them as they drooped of the edge of your chin. you never said i love you. never got that far. but he felt it from you. he knew you did. you had. he could tell in the way you listened to him. any tiny thing, any tiny little thing you logged away and remembered about him. if he told you once that he liked your hair half up half down, that was your hair for the next year. if he told you he liked your hands, rings and bracelets would scatter all across your dorm to be thrown on at his arrival. superficial things like that, but you listened so hard. you tried so hard. in those nights, you were like putty in his hands. he couldâve moulded you into anything. so receptive, so soft and wet and gentle. when he was inside you, when he was milked by your suckling, loving heat, he felt more at peace than he had in his whole life. it felt like you were the only two people left in the world, by Godâs perfect design. you would take anything he gave to you, and because of that he was sweet and perfect to you. he was a dream man because you deserved a dream man. he truly adored you. but he wasnât yours. and when those loving nights and sleepy mornings ended, it was tashi that returned to his mind. tashi. and she was so different from you. she was dangerous and painful and she made him itch. it was like getting high from a wasp sting, like he was addicted to the hurt. he didnât want what was easy, what was simple and good and hearty. he wanted her. and it all worked out how it was supposed to, because tashi was his wife and she loved him and needed him and you were a tennis star. but, taking everything into account, it could never be how it was with you ever again. because you didnât trust him anymore. he watched as you scooped up your racket, doing the same. you looked so concentrated. so angry. he wondered if you always felt angry. it probably helped you play better.
did he want to sleep with you again? that was the real question. well, if you would let him, he would. he wanted to. he never stopped adoring you, he realises now you hate him. you never did anything to make him stop. never pullled the plug, just walked away. the passivity of it made you slip away into the back of his mind, and for so long he didnât realise you never left. he wanted to know how you changed. he wants to know how youâre different, and selfishly, he wants you to forgive him. if he was close enough to you you would know how sorry he was. if he could touch your skin one final time, and know whatever hurt he had caused you hadnât stopped it being soft, then he could let go of you for real.
âyou two ready?â tashi called from where she lounged in the seating area.
you flipped the racket round in your hold a few times, and nodded. art nodded too.
âalright. first to
this was it. you were going to beat that man into the ground and you were going to laugh in tashiâs face and you were going to remain unfucked. partially unfucked. god, in this rush you had forgotten that just the night before patrick had smiled at you, and for a glorious hour you had lost your mind. it didnât bear thinking about. you wondered what he was doing tonight. probably laid up with some sorry girl in that fucking motel room. what a simple life failures lead. you eat, you fuck, you shit, you die. when youâre actually worth something everything is struggle.
art was undecided. he held a little fluorescent ball in his hand, putting it into the neck of the racket. his eyes darted in the dark to his beautiful wife. he raised his eyebrowqa millimetre. tashiâs head flicked side to side, incrementally left to right, shaking no. throw the match. this wasnât about tennis anymore. it had never been about tennis. he knew that now.
restless you leaned from knee to knee, crouched, flaunting your mobility, eyes never leaving tashi duncan. he looked back to you, and when he met your eye a shiver ran down his spine. heâs gonna touch you again tonight.
he paused a few more seconds. and then he served, a big sweeping motion, a thunk over his head. you were put into play.
what was it tashi had said? something really pretentious. you remembered hearing about it, something she had said to the threesome lackeys. it was passed down in bits like chinese whispers, but youâd heard the thesis of it. tennis was like fucking. like making love. like a beautiful dance where souls intertwine and total nirvana is reached and blah blah blah. at the time youâd thought that it was the biggest load of drivel youâd ever heard, and that if that was how she really felt then sheâd never amount to shit, at least not in tennis.
but now, on this moonlit court, a dozen feet away from tennis star art donaldson, a dozen more away from star coach tashi duncan, you think maybe she was right all along. because you are fucking the shit out of art. he canât seem to get a single fucking point. if this was a relationship, itâs fucking abusive. small grunts emanate from him, wimpy and down trodden sounds like a kicked dog. you get halfway through the match before realising whatâs really going on.
the sound of the ball cracking from racket to racket is ear splitting, but the sound of your celebration every time you sink a point is louder to art. more distinctive and more memorable. you pump your fist at your side, and almost hiss, yes, and you walk around in a little circle, as if unable to contain your excitement. in all the match footage tashi had him watch, you never celebrated unless you won the match. he almost felt himself smile, but forced it away. he couldnât let you know your joy was under his control, that he was allowing it.
but he wasnât subtle. point after point after point, and art never withered. his spine was straight, not beaten wavy with defeat like it was supposed to be. once or twice the ball passed right by his racket, he didnât even lift it. he got a few points, it wasnât forty love. but he didnât sweat. grunted before he even lost the point, before he even began to hit the ball. his arms were loose. they flung one way and another. was he even trying to hit the ball? you were grunting, you were sweating. you were fucking trying. you respected tashi and art enough, if not as people, then as competitors, to fucking try. all this bullshit about fucking, and you were still willing to try and win because despite everything, you still felt you had something to prove. didnât they? what was this if not proving something? what more could it possibly be? art was smiling. beaten into the dirt and smiling. this was fucked. your turn to serve. you hold the ball in your hand, and seethe. you donât move. your head tilts incrementally. you stare art down, half to determine the degree of fuckery, and half just to make him squirm. until his eyes flick to tashi. guidance please, master? his big loping puppy dog eyes scream.
fucking pathetic.
your racket clatters to the ground, ear splitting in the dark and quiet. tashi grinds her teeth, fingers drumming the seat, and almost calls out. almost barks at you to keep playing. but she doesnât. because for some reason, youâre stalking towards the net. she can see the moonlight bounce off your closely shaven legs. the springing of your pony tail wafts towards her a paralysing chill, and she remains in her seat, silent.
your shoes grind as you stop on the astroturf, gripping the net with one hand, beckoning art with the other hand. he looks at you, up and down, eye brow quirked up. his lips pout involuntarily, and the bottomless well of tenderness you have for this silly, silly man pours fourth once again, doing nothing to stave off your anger.
âyou tryna fuck me or something?â
art recoiled slightly. his eyes dashed to tashi.
âwhat do you mean?â his voice was thin. he wanted you to be quieter.
âplay like you mean it or get off the court.â
you turn on your heel as soon as you spit the words, tearing at the dirt red asphalt. but then you stop. art never does anything you want him to. you know from experience. he needs an ulterior motive. you flick the sweat off your slick forehead with the slick back of your hand, and turn to art, savage smile pulling uncontrollably at your lips.
art remained where you left him by the net, stunned. what a violent, vulgar woman you had grown into. the creature he knew, that swallow, that doe, would never have spoken to him like that. jaded. vicious. you were changed. you were mangled. even that look on your heavenly face sent chills ricochetting up his spine, across his ribs. he visibly twitched as you returned to the netside.
âart, did tashi tell you about atlanta.â
you let the end of that word flick, like a feather in the wind. ta.
art blinked.
âatlanta? we were just there.â
you grasped the net and leaned forward. all was hush, even new york waited for you to continue. no car alarms, no distant drunken hollering. it was just you and art and festering contempt. and tashi, off the side, craning to hear a word and hearing her heart beat instead.
âyou wanna know who else was there?â
you bit your lip, gleeful. art took a step closer to grip the net, to lean over.
âwho? what are you talking about?â
âpatrick.â
slowly, like a fall through quicksand, art realised. art screwed up his face, looked at his shoes, and then slowly, and right before your eyes, he found out who his wife really was. face fallen, eyes wide and focused on you, you only nodding. now that it was in front of him it seemed to obvious.
âwhat does that mean?â
but he knew what it meant.
âit means, i saw him yesterday. he said he saw you. well, not you. your other half. she didnât tell you? he said it was a quite vigorous discussion.â
âstop it.â
that sickly satisfied smirk slipped off your face like leftovers into trash, leaving only the fire that never left.
âmake me.â
neither of you looked away, rarely blinked, both fumed. art thought he could best you, thought you wouldnât notice, thought you would just accept his bullshit and roll over. but art didnât know his wife like you did. and now he would play you like he hated you, and you could beat him at his best. also, he most likely wouldnât want to have sex regardless of the outcome, so it was win-win in truth.
arts thoughts were not so controlled, nor as proud or positive. the limpness of his arms, the rise and fall of his chest, it all spurred on a horrible sinking feeling, as if along with his world he too was crumbling. he had thought nothing when she left for a walk after the finale. nothing whatsoever. but it was then she had stolen away, like a criminal. a secret dirty rendezvous. forbidden, tantalising, stomach churning. art got second place that day. was that why? was she punishing him? why had you done this to him? patrick. patrick. of all people. patrick. each flash of his smiling face in the void of arts mind was like a gunshot, a flash breaking through the void. how could one person be this cruel? and why did it have to be you? why were you changed? why couldnât you be the same, why couldnât you love him still? he needed someone that loved him and you were right in front of him, dead. dead to love. dead to connection. you were a creature, but you were no doe. you were a wounded sulking beast. you would beat down or maul anything wilfully ignorant enough to cross your path. but he needed you to love him. if not tashi, you. despite tashi, you.
watching his crumble had a strange effect on you. he swayed, and looked all around like he was blind. you felt bad. the animal softness you kept for him in your soul churned inside you. you felt guilty. but he should know. he deserved to know. maybe not in that way. but in a way.
âis that true? swear to me youâre not lying.â
the night was cooling off, and the ice-lake blue of artâs eyes, the press of his lips, the sag of his shoulder made you shiver. only now did you realise how close his face was to you as he leant over the net. incrementally moving back, you swallowed.
âi swear.â
âok. ok.â
he looked down, rocked, didnât pull away.
âiâm sorry. iâm sorry.â
his cheeks filled with air, and you could hear him try to cough out the lump in his throat.
âhey, art. art.â
he wouldnât look up.
âi never wanted to know that. i wouldâve never known.â
you didnât think about this, about how ugly this all was. that was an ugly, horrible, jaded thing to do. jaded. patrick was right.
âiâm sorry.â
hands on hips, he turned around, moving away from you, racket clutched in a white fist. he just walked. and walked. it looked like he was about to leave the court when he turned around.
âyou serve.â
and you and him played. actually played for the first time all day. he was running for the god damn ball, he was slamming it so hard your wrist ached to receive it. his face was aged, he looked more wrinkled and wisened and sinister, and he played like that too, like he has a clue what was going on and what tennis was. on one hand, this pleased you. a real fucking game. someone of the tashi clan is finally speaking to you in a language you can understand, a field you can dominate. art, try as he might, still, still, still, using all his anger, wasnât beating you. this pleased you immensely.
but on the other hand, art was so angry. so fucking furious, and he was directing it at you. of course he was, youâre right there, youâre the bitch that told him his wife cheated, you get the surface of it. but he was so fucking angry. the grunts he made, the force behind his strides, the festering resentment he looked at you with, that was all bullshit. art is so bullshit.
in times gone by, tashi was the big bad in your mind, a monolith for your hatred. but this hissy fit is alerting you to another fact. art left you for her. he married her. that was his choice. but now, it blows up in his face, and he has the gall to be angry at you? to glare at you, grunt at you, spit on the moon-shaded clay and snarl at you? he comes into your life for the second time, blows it up, while you have a competition, and now heâs pissed at you for biting back? with the truth no less.
art is angry at you, but the truth is, youâre angrier. and so you wipe the floor with him.
above, tashi surveys, quietly mystified. this is the best youâve played, ever. your form is exquisite, and strong, violent but controlled. youâre not fucking around. not that you ever are, but she notes that as your tally climbs and climbs, you never get comfortable, you never let up. itâs the same measured looks, the same desire as you lick the sweat off your lips and eye-fuck her husband. whatever you spoke about got art playing good too. maybe you should come to all his tournaments. tashi is itching to know what was said, but moreover sheâs itching for the match to end, for a forfeit to be exchanged. whatever that may be.
it doesnât take long before her prayers are answered, and the verdict is art has lost. he miss your last mighty shot by a landslide, on the other side of the court when it crashes down and bounces away out of bounds, into the nothing. you have won. you won. art lets out a guttural throaty cry and throws his racket to the ground while little sweat droplets leap from him like glitter.
he laps the court angrily, and you just hold out your arms, let the cool air hug your skin. no victory cry, because your body is singing with exhaustion, hard earned exhaustion, as your chest fills with air you feel vilified, you feel your truth has been exacted. you beat tashi. tashiâs husband. you beat art. you beat tashiâs man servant into the ground. you fucking win.
âfuck. fuck. fuck. fuck,â he holds the back of his head, elbows swinging as he moves about.
âfuck is right. i win.â
âshut up.â
like the crack of a whip you turn to look at him. he is still so fucking angry. at you. you, of all people.
âwhat was that? shut up? did a loser just tell me to shut up?â
âyou know what you fucking did. you told me so i would lose concentration and throw the match.â
you were both approaching the net, seething, panting. he pointed at the floor as he spoke, with passion, like he even had a leg to stand on. maybe it was his righteous outrage that pissed you off, his self important hurting. why was he so angry at you? you didnât fuck patrick. well, not in atlanta anyway.
âi told you so you would give enough of a shit to play me for real. that was the best youâve played in year, art,â
you poke his chest, and aggression blooms within him from your point of contact like blood in water. youâre gonna make him crazy, heâs so angry. youâre still poking him.
âand guess what? i still. fucking. beat you.â
âyou shut up or ill make you shut up.â
âoh, that really got the testosterone pumping didnât it donaldson? do you think your balls are gonna drop soon, you spineless shit?â
âyou vicious little bitch. youâre this much of a cunt just because tashi was better than you in college? how pathetic can a person be?â
âshe is not fucking better than me. and you of all people should know that.â
your voice cracks. so it comes out fu-cking. but your point remains. a breath filled quiet settles and for a brief moment all either of you can do is stare at each other and realise how close youâve gotten and ache and burn and crave. his hand rests on the net, a centimetre away from yours. if you wiggled your pinky at all youâd be touching.
you watch him breath, watch his eyes trace the sweat from your chin that drips to your chest, watch him hate the fact he noticed. you watch his anger congeal. set into warm mush instead of hot liquid. you felt a heaviness in your chest as you felt yourself giving in, giving over to your anger. giving over to the hurt that fueled it.
and you kissed each other. because there was nothing else in the world to do. like opposite poles, against both of your conscious wills, you crashed into each other and kissed like biting vipers. it hurt. your fingers dug into his thinly covered shoulders, his back, dull though they were. he gripped the back of your neck, the base of your skull, pushing you forward into him, keeping you where he could have you. his other hand fisted the back of your tank, like he was holding the scruff of a bad catâs neck. trapped in his hold, you had no choice but to love him. you clawed and kissed and little noises escaped you, and all of a sudden he was 19 again and he had you. All thoughts of tashi and patrick and coming second place were vanquished, and all he could feel was the softness of your nose pressed into his cheek, the pliable flesh of your tongue and the freedom with which you enjoyed things, how much noise and honesty you were willing to give. nothing had felt so raw, so real for a long time.
your lips mushed and deformed around the other, your tongues licked like fire, you held each other until you felt you couldnât be closer. and then tashi existed again. and you pulled away.
âcongrats. our room or yours?â
SUMMARY: Amalia gets to the real reason behind Ransom's sudden visit.
Pairing: Ransom Drysdale x Black!OC; Ransom Drysdale x Amalia Wright
Warnings: Cursing, Dysfunctional Family Dynamics, Depictions of Fainting, Single Mom OC, Slightly!OC Ransom, Emotionally Stunted Individuals, Romantic Tension, Extremely Slow Burn, Angst; WC: 2134
A/N: Hey y'all. It has been over a month since the last update, so I really hope y'all are still interested! I started college so I have been trying to get situated here. Chapter two didn't do super well, but I chalked that up to a lack of Ransom (lol). Still, the responses I got were great! So please keep reading and sharing your thoughts. As always, enjoy!
Song Inspo: This Way - Khalid x H.E.R.
Masterlist / PREVIOUS CHAPTER
âAmalia!â
My eyes flutter open and it takes a moment for me to focus. My vision is blurred and my head swirls lazily. The slow pulsing of my forehead has me momentarily dazed. When my eyes finally lock on Ransomâs striking blues, I find his eyes filled with worry. Little strands of hair escape his slick, upkept style. The throbbing in my head intensifies as I struggle to sit up.Â
âHey, hey. Take it easy. You passed out for a minute there.â
Ransom stops me from moving too quickly, gently helping me up. I slowly swing my legs off the couch, holding my head in my hands. He places a hand on my back hesitantly, rubbing in small circles. I press the heels of my hands into my eyes, hoping to stop the pulsating of my skull. I barely notice as he rises from the couch, returning with an opened bottle of water. He hands it to me wordlessly. When Iâve drained half the bottle, I hold it out to him. He takes it, setting it on the coffee table in front of us.Â
I notice pillows and papers scattered on the floor along with Shilohâs toys.Â
âWhat happened here,â I ask, gesturing toward the mess on the floor.
âThey were in the way,â He replies simply.Â
I sigh, leaning back against the sofa.
For a while, I trace nonexistent patterns into the ceiling before sliding my eyes back to Ransom. He observes me pensively. I bite my lower lip, pulling at the dried skin. He looks away, resting his head in his hands. Thereâs a slight tremor in his knee as he bounces it. His breath is quicker than usual.Â
I exhale heavily through my nose. He looks back at me, hands clasped in front of him. Ransom arches an eyebrow, waiting for me to speak. I purse my lips.
âI really passed out?â
He nods.Â
âHow long was I out?â
âA couple minutes or so. Felt like fucking forever though.â
I nod at his words, training my eyes back on the ceiling. I trace a few more patterns.Â
âHow dramatic of me.â
I look back to Ransom just as an unreadable expression crosses his features. I worry, for a moment, that Iâve upset him. But suddenly he bursts out laughing. Loud, hysterical laughter that has him throwing his head back. One hand slaps his chest and the other claps my shoulder. The hand on my shoulder, however, retreats as quickly as it comes and rests atop the other on his chest. He doubles over, his voice becoming hoarse from his manic laughter.Â
I canât help the way my lips curve slightly, enjoying his amusement. Iâve always loved Ransomâs laugh. The way he puts his entire being into it to express his joy reminds me of how infrequently he feels this way. Laughter like this is rare from him, but far more frequent when weâre alone. Longing fills my bones as I observe his full-body laughter. The moment feels familiar. As if I told one of our inside jokes and heâs now losing it over how hilarious and chaotic we are. But this is different. The circumstances have changed.Â
Discomfort rises in me as I avert my eyes. Ransomâs elbows rest on his knees. He covers his face with his hands, chuckling occasionally, before sniffing and running a hand over his face. A fist to his mouth hides the smile that still lingers. Then he looks at me, resting his cheek against his fist.Â
âLeave it to you to make a joke at a time like this,â He says, laughing again.Â
His laugh is softer this time, a gentle rumble at the back of his throat. I donât respond but that doesnât phase him. He presses on.Â
âThatâs always been my favorite thing about you, Mala.â
My cheeks burn. Mala. A rush of desire burns through me as it rolls off his tongue. He says it so fondly, with such ease. As if heâd only been gone for one night and things were still the same between us. But they arenât the same. They will never be the same. I look away and cross my arms tightly across my chest, heated desire fizzling into irritation.
âYou donât get to call me that anymore. Donât make this personal.â
âWeâve passed personal, babe,â He scoffs. âLiterally. Need I remind you how you fell into my arms?â
I roll my eyes. âThat doesnât mean anything.â
âIt means you still trust me. At least a little.â
Our eyes clash as his words hang between us. I feel bare, naked under his scrutiny. Warmth filters into his gaze, softening as he observes me. His eyes drop to my lips almost imperceptibly. The caress of his gaze blazes through me, a heated path left in the wake of his roaming stare. I find myself leaning in, watching him with baited breath as his eyes finally return to mine.Â
Itâs when he leans forward that I snap back into myself.Â
Shaking my head, I stand abruptly. My head swirls as I try to balance myself. I feel off-kilter but I canât tell if itâs my headache or him. Maybe both. I press my fingers into my temple, massaging them in slow circles. Ransomâs hand comes to rest on my back.Â
âCareful,â He says. âNo need to rush.â
With my millionth eye roll of the evening, I remove myself from his touch and reach for my water. Quickly, Ransom grabs it before I can and holds it out to me. My eyes flit between him and the bottle. Turning on my heel, I head to the kitchen for a new one and ignore the exasperated sigh he lets out.
âYouâre so damned stubborn, Amalia.â
âDeal with it,â I shoot back.Â
âYeah, Iâve been dealing with it,â He mutters.Â
I pause, turning to glare at him.Â
âWanna say that a little louder, asshole?â
He clicks his teeth, running a hand over his face.Â
âIâm just saying that a little help wouldnât kill you.â
âHa! And how can you help me?â
âThereâs no harm in letting me be there for you. This has gone on long enough.â
I know what he means. I know what he wants but I wonât have it. I wonât give him what he wants. A vile, nasty urge wells up inside of me. It rears its ugly head and rises like a lion ready to feast. I narrow my eyes at him, my lip curling slightly. My fists ball at my sides as I take a deep breath to calm myself. Still, the rage demands my attention.
âMy sister will be here soon,â I say, my tone biting. âI donât need you.â
âMala--â
âDonât fucking call me that again.â
Ransom sighs heavily and rests a hand on his hip, the other pinching the bridge of his nose.Â
âI donât want to argue with you.â
âOh, but I sure as hell want to argue with you! Donât play the bigger person and stop this now!â
âSomeone fucking has to! I haven't held my son in two years,â he yells. âTwo years!â
âIt didnât seem to bother you before now!âÂ
Then, I pause. Ransom continues, his words falling on deaf ears.Â
âOf course it did--â
His words jumble together in my mind, forming a mishmash of meaningless sentiments. He hasnât seen his son. His relationship with his grandfather was ruined. He hasnât spoken to me properly for two years. He canât go on like this. He wants us back in his life. The words spiral around me.Â
His son. Canât go on. Two years. His grandfather.Â
His grandfather.Â
Then, it all clicks into place.Â
âHey, are you even listening to me?â
âI get it now. Thatâs what youâre here for.â
Ransom scowls in confusion. âWhat the fuck are you talking about?â
âArchie left half of his estate to me. Who got the other half?â
His jaw clenches as he looks away from me.Â
It feels as though a rug has been pulled out from under me. I should have expected this. I should have fuckinâ known better. But like an idiot I wanted to believe that this time could be different. But all Ransom has ever cared about is Ransom so why would this sudden occurrence be any different?
Still, it pisses me the fuck off.Â
âYour granddaddy cut you out of the will and now you want to run back to the baby mama, right?â
I throw my words like daggers, cutting deeper with each syllable. I aim to draw blood with my words. Ransom drops his placating stance, throwing his arms in frustration.Â
âHe cut me off a long time ago, dammit! This isnât about that.â
âI donât care what itâs about. I donât want shit to do with whatever the hell you and your crazy ass family got going on.â
âYeah, well, you didnât mind messing with my crazy ass family as long as Archie was helping you out.â
The words sting like a slap in the face. They fall between us, heavy and full of malice. My ears ring as though I have truly been struck. A flicker of shock crosses Ransomâs face but it's immediately hidden behind an indifferent facade. My laugh is quiet and jaded as I wrap my arms around myself, nodding slightly.Â
âThere he is,â I say quietly. âThereâs the Ransom I know.â
Ransomâs body is stone-like as his eyes roam around in an effort to avoid mine. His jaw clenches so tightly that his teeth are in danger of cracking. The way he shifts his weight awkwardly tells me all I need to know as he stews in his poorly hidden guilt. Ransom was deadass wrong for that and he knows it. I give Ransom another moment. Another chance to somehow save his ass. Ransom glances at me momentarily, taking in my piercing stare, before crossing his arms petulantly and turning away from me.
Nodding again, I cross to the front door. My shoulder brushes his as I pass by and I ignore the ripples that surge through my nerves at the sensation. Different emotions rise inside of me but I stomp them down as quickly as they emerge. Still, despite myself, I feel my eyes welling with tears. I pull the door open--
--And stop short as I find Stephania standing there prepared to knock.Â
Shiloh sleeps soundly in her arms. I glance over my shoulder quickly, hoping Ransom hasnât noticed. But, of course, he has. He approaches the door swiftly, only freezing in his tracks when I step between him and the front door. A myriad of emotions cross his features, astonishment being the most prominent.Â
Steph looks between the two of us, a similar look of bewilderment in her eyes. Wordlessly, she turns around and retreats to her car.Â
I step aside, avoiding Ransomâs eyes, and gesture to the open door.Â
âGo.â
âYou canât possibly want me to leave now,â He says incredulously. At my silence, he presses further. âAmalia, donât be fucking ridiculous!â
âI wonât let you drag him into this. Weâre done here.â
Stealing a glance at him, I look up just in time to watch his eyes grow cold. His face is hard as he glares down at me. I stand my ground against him, refusing to falter. The corner of his lips lifts into a cruel smirk. He scoffs quietly.Â
âYeah? Well, Iâm not done with you. This is far from over.â
He snatches his shoes from by the door, not bothering to put them on as he shoves past me. In a blink, heâs gone. I vaguely register the sound of his car rumbling down the road as Steph comes back with Shiloh. Her eyes are wide as she stands in the threshold, looking in the direction Ransom drove off in. She looks back at me.Â
âSoâŠwhat the hell did he want?â
She peeks into the living room with wide eyes.Â
âBetter yet, what the hell happened here?â
I take Shiloh from her, inhaling his sweet baby scent. I look at the living room behind me, taking in the mess of pillows and scattered paperwork. The mess taunts me, serving as a glaring reminder of his presence here. But when my eyes land on the stuffed bear he carelessly tossed aside earlier, I canât help the pride that swells up in my chest. My baby shifts in my arms, babbling sleepily, and my joy expands infinitely.Â
Shiloh is still here. Shiloh is still mine.Â
I give my sister a tired smile and slight shrug.Â
âNothing.â
Quietly, I turn around and head down the hallway leaving her there slack jawed. Moments later, I hear the front door slam and I know Steph is hot on my heels.
âUhm, bitch! I know you fuckinâ lyinâ!â
Banners: @maysdigitalarts
Dividers: @firefly-graphics
Title Card: me :)
Backup Blog: @thegirlonhamilton
Buy Me a Coffee!
[warnings] dark!grey!rancher!rafe x bimbo!cowgirl!reader, arranged marriage, rancher au, manipulation, size difference, future smut, little editing, READ AT YOUR OWN RISK 18+
A/N: This is an au I'm trying out where Kildare County is actually in Montana and all the pogues and kooks exist within a ranching community. Hope you enjoy!! I would really appreciate feedback, reblogs are most appreciated!
In which your dying father struck a deal with Ward Cameron, he promised the family land in exchange for your safety. But protection comes with a price, and that price is Rafe Cameron.
word count: 5k
After the funeral, you flopped down on the old leather couch in your living room, absently twirling a lock of your hair as you stared up at the cracked ceiling. Your black dress, meant for the sweltering summers, fell just below your knees. Youâd paired it with a shawl you found tucked away in your motherâs dresser, a pretty, soft thing with little patterns you didnât understand, but it smelled like her, so it felt right.
People at the funeral said you looked âso grown upâ now, which filled you with a sense of pride. They said nothing about the dirt under your nails from wandering around the yard barefoot earlier that morning or the way your mascara smeared from crying too much. No one ever took you seriously anyway.Â
The quiet of the house was deafening, pressing in at you at all sides. The lack of his presence weighed on you. Heâd built every corner of this house, your mother painted every wall, and you were grateful for the life theyâd built you. Three bedrooms, a wrap-around porch where youâd once dreamed of watching your children play in the yard as you rocked in your chair, and the old, red barn that had weathered time alongside them. You knew you couldnât lose it, but you werenât sure how to keep it either.
A loud knock at the front door made the house shake and snapped you from your daze. It was not the knock of a kind neigbor delivering a sympathy caserole, the knock was firm and authoritative. You half expected the sheriff to be behind the door but instead found yourself staring back at Ward Cameron.Â
You pushed back the curls that had fallen into your face. He stood before you, tipping his finest black cattleman hat with deliberate grace, lifting it from his head and placing it over his chest in a quiet gesture of respect. His square jawline was sharp, his striking blue eyes unflinching, and though the gray streaks in his hair hinted at age, they only added to his rugged handomenss.Â
âMiss,â he greeted you smoothly, his voice as sharp as the crease in his shirt. He looked out of place here, too clean, too polished for the worn edges of your familyâs ranch.
Your anxiety peaked, âUh, hi. Can I help you?â You gripped the handle of the door tighter than you expected.Â
âI think you know why Iâm here.â His smile didnât reach his eyes. âItâs time we talked about your fatherâs arrangements.â
Arrangements? You shifted nervously, trying to make sense of his words. You knew your dad had debts, but it wasnât like he told you all the details. You knew that a significant amount of your fatherâs debt was to Ward. It humiliated your father to lease the Cameronâs grazing rights but he only did it to keep the ranch afloat. Money and paperwork were never your thing, and your dad always said not to worry about it. âIâI donât think thereâs anything to talk about. Iâll figure out how to pay you back, okay?â
Although Ward wasnât the tallest man, most people towered over you, and as he leaned in the doorway, you knew he had your stature in mind.Â
Still, his smile was empty, âWhy donât we discuss this in your fatherâs office, hmm?âÂ
âUm, no thanks,â you said quickly, shaking your head. But before you could shut the door, his hand pushed it open with way too much ease. You stumbled back, your cheeks heating with embarrassment as he walked in like he owned the place.
âExcuse me! You canât just barge in here!â you squeaked, hurrying after him, his expensive boots, tapping against the creaking floor of your home.Â
He made his way down the downstairs hallway, barging into the room that not even your father wanted you to step in. Immediately as you stepping inside, a coldness touched you. he heavy oak desk sat like a monument to your fatherâs stubbornness, papers scattered across its surface in disarray. Just looking at it made your brain feel fuzzy. Ward moved behind it as if it were his own, his hands brushing against the chairâs worn leather.
âI offered to come speak to you, before all of this drama, but your father insisted I wait until he was gone,â Ward gestured to rickety chair that sat in front of the desk, âSit.â
You ignored him, crossing your arms in stubborness, âWhat are you talking about?â
âDo you know how much exactly your father owes me? How much youâd be taking on?â
His words, like they had certainly intended to, made you feel stupid. Your father made sure you were uninvolved in the ranchâs finances and he had just passed this week, you hadnât thought about entering his office and disturbing his things.Â
You blinked, your mouth opening and closing. âWell⊠um⊠I know he owed some money, but he didnât really tell me how much.â
âItâs more than the farm is worth, Y/N.â
The weight of his words settled heavily between you, thickening the already suffocating air in the room. You clenched your jaw, refusing to show any sign of the panic tightening in your chest. The farm, your fatherâs legacy, your motherâs dreams, was supposed to be yours to save.
âThat canât be right,â you said, though your voice wavered slightly. âMy father wouldâve told me if it was that bad.â
âWould he? Itâs nothing you shouldâve worried your pretty head about,â Ward continued, his eyes sharp and assessing, âWe parents try to protect our children. But he was too prideful. Pride doesnât pay the bills and banks donât wait forever.â
âThe bankââ
âThe bank wouldâve taken the entire property if your father hadnât already signed the land over to me.â
Your heart sunk into your stomach at Ward Cameronâs words. Your breath hitched as you stared at him, trying to process what heâd just said. You shook your head in disbelief, âHe wouldnât do that.â
The land was the only piece of your father that you had left. A hundred acres that your family and only a few ranch hands tended to.There were dwindling amounts of livestock, mounting debts, but it was your home. Humble in comparison to the Cameronâs thousands of acres but it belonged to your family. Even if you were the only one left.Â
âThis all wouldâve been easier for you if your father had explained all of this to you before. I think he was scared of you hating him.â
âI donât understand.â
Wardâs expression didnât falter. If anything, he looked almost bored with your responses, âWe came to an agreement a year after his initial diagnosis. Instead of losing it to the bank, he would sign it over to me.â
âI promised to take care of you.â Wardâs words were slow, deliberate, as if he were explaining something to a child. âYouâre unmarried, no prospects, and this place is a sinking ship. Someone was bound to take advantage of you eventually. You donât have the resources to rebuild.â
âT-take care of me?â you stammered, your face scrunching in confusion.
âYouâll come live with my family for the time being. And eventually you will marry my son, Rafe.â
Your eyes went wild, âAre you crazy?â
Wardâs expression didnât change. If anything, he looked even more smug. âThis arrangement keeps the land in the family, ensures your safety, and gives you a future. Youâre not equipped to handle this ranch on your own, Y/N. Your father knew that. Iâm offering you a way out.â
You gaped at him, your thoughts spinning too fast to make sense of anything. âI⊠I want to talk to a lawyer orâor see his will or something!â
âYouâre out of options. Itâs either this arrangement or being out on the streets. Iâm tossing you a lifeline.âÂ
 âI didnât agree to this,â you said, your voice shaking with a mixture of anger and disbelief.
âNo,â Ward admitted, standing and adjusting his cuffs. âBut your father did. And a Cameron always honors their agreements.â
You wanted to scream, to tell him to leave and take his deal with him, but the weight of your fatherâs decisions pressed down on you. The debts, the ranch, your futureâit was all tangled up in a web you couldnât escape.
âIâll give you until tomorrow to pack your things,â Ward said, placing his hat back on his head. âRafe will come by to collect you.â
He turned and walked to the door without another word, leaving you standing alone in the office. The walls seemed to close in around you, and although youâd be crying for a week, you cried again.Â
You thought that if you werenât at the house when Wardâs oldest son came to collect you, they might just give up and leave you be. Maybe youâd slip through the cracks of their plans, vanish into the quiet of the countryside. You could disappear for a little while and return in a few days. It would be rough surviving outside but you could make it on your own. Youâd packed a small bag of essentials and took Juliet, the chestnut-colored mare that had belonged to you since your fourteenth birthday.
âOkay, Jules, weâre gonna go on a little adventure,â you whispered as you fumbled with her saddle.Â
Her large, liquid-brown eyes blinked at you with trust as you led her down the south path, the one behind your familyâs ranch, overgrown from years of neglect. You left before the sun had a chance to rise. You didnât want Ward Cameron or his scary son to find you, after all.
You tried to dress for comfort. Your long jeans would keep you warm, and you layered a jean jacket over a soft white cotton shirt. Perched atop your head was your trusty white cowboy hat, its wide brim offering protection from the sun, taming your unruly curls, while keeping your face shielded.
Juliet made a snorting sound, and you patted her neck. âDonât worry, girl, weâve totally got this. Like, whatâs the worst that could happen?â You glanced back at the ranch, its dark outline fading behind the trees.Â
You mounted Juliet after deciding the direction you were going to travel in. You wanted to be much farther away by the time the sun came up. The air was cool and crisp, a reminder of the coming morning. You looked behind you although you were sure no one was following you yet.Â
The path twisted and turned. âOkay, so if we head toward the old fishing shack by the river, we can stay there for, like, a day. Nobodyâs used it in forever.â You spoke out loud, pretending that Juliet could respond. âI think itâs... that way.â
You continued down the path in the direction you remembered the fishing shack to be located. The sun rose slowly, bringing light to the dark path. The shack was tucked away on the outskirts of the ranch, sitting in the bend of the river, most of it shielded by tall grass. The water flowed gently, the sound caressing your ears, itâs hues reflecting the red in the sky.Â
A clearing sat nearby covered in wildflowers, the bright colors splashed against the muted landscape. You hadnât ventured this far out since the previous spring and were surprised to see how the flowers had held their vibrancy, defying the chill of the cooler months.Â
You hopped down from your saddle, taking Julietâs rein before you tied her to a nearby tree, allowing her room to graze. The shack was small and weathered, and you rested on a rickety cot that you had to clear of cobwebs. It felt safe. At least for now.Â
If only staying still was your strong suit. A few hours later, boredom quickly got the best of you. You could only talk to Juliet for so long and youâd failed several times to nap inside the dirty shack. The silence pressed in on you. You decided to wander out into the wild flower fields, tugging your cowboy hat low over your curls. The vibrant colors were calling to you.Â
An hour later, you held a thick bundle flowers in your arm and a crown of daisies wrapped around your hat. Before you knew it, the shack was almost out of your sight and you faced a long trek back to Juliet.Â
You didnât hear him at first.
âHell of a hiding spot.â
The deep drawl froze you in place. Slowly, you turned, heart pounding, your eyes landing on Rafe Cameron sitting tall on his horse a few yards away. His blue eyes sparkled with amusement, though the tight line of his jaw hinted at something darker.
Rafeâs quarter horse was even more intimidating. Itâs coat was midnight black, sleek and imposing. There was a wild, untamed quality to him, a fire in his eyes that mirrored Rafeâs own.
âI⊠I was justâŠâ You stepped back without thinking, the urge to drop your bouquet and bolt creeping up. Youâd seen Wardâs son from across a room before, but no one had ever bothered to introduce you. Still, you knew enough from the whispers and rumors. He was wild, always getting into trouble with the Kildare County police, and everyone said he was gonna take over his dadâs power and influence one day.Â
He was older than you remembered, more rugged, and definitely more muscular. His black button-up shirt clung to broad shoulder and his sleeves rolled up to reveal sculpted arms. A baseball cap sat atop his head, the bill slightly bent, with the Cameron Ranch sigil stitched on the frontâan emblem of a stallion rearing. His light brown hair peeked from beneath it, slightly tousled.Â
âYouâve been wandering around all morning. Half the townâs already seen you,â Rafe leaned forward slightly, eyeing you curiously, âIf you were gonna run, thought youâd go a little bit farther.â You gained the courage to finish your sentence, âI wasnât running âŠor hiding. And you canât tell Mr. Cameron that.â
âWhy do you think he sent me?â He smiled devishly, âIâm the one you gotta worry about, darlinâ.âÂ
Your lips parted in shock and Rafe watched you take another step back. His jaw clicked before he swiftly hopped down from his horse. His heavy boots hit the dirt with a thud that seemed to echo, and you couldnât help but notice the sheer size of him. Though he wasnât much older than you, it was clear he towered over you, his presence demanding attention in a way that made your knees feel weak.
âIâm not coming with you,â You stated with all the strength you could muster, âItâs not right. You canât make me.â
He stared back at you. Where Ward was bored by conversation with you, something about your Wardâs made Rafeâs eyes fiery, âAnd I guess youâll make your living by what ⊠selling flower crowns?âÂ
Your eyebrows furrowed. You hadnât considered that an option. In fact, you hadnât dwelled long enough on what you would do once Ward gave up on this arranged marriage nor did you have any idea of how to make the ranch profitable again. The idea seemed wrong. Flowers werenât the key, were they?Â
âIâm kidding,â Rafe spoke again after a moment of watching you reflect, âThatâs a bad fucking idea. You knowâŠI think your father mightâve been right about one thing in his life. You do need someone to look after you.âÂ
âYou donât know me,â You looked away, your face heating up with embarrassment, âAnd I donât want to go with you.âÂ
A yelp escaped your lips as he started to close the distance between you, his long strides closing the gap in a matter of seconds. His smirk widened at your reaction, and quickly, you dropped your bouquet and made a run for the fishing shack. Rough hands easily snatched you up by your waist, lifting your feet off the ground, and making your head spin, âYouâre real cute, darlinâ,â Rafe drawled, hardly breakin a sweat as he dragged you back towards his horse. His grip on your waist was firm, unrelenting, and no matter how much you kicked or squirmed, it didnât matter. He only hoisted you higher.Â
Heavy boots crunched against the dirt. You could hear your breathing and the sharp pounding of your heart in your ears. You lost your hat and subsequently your flower crown in the struggle. Scared that you might spook Rafeâs horse, you found yourself succumbing to his force, letting him lift you onto the saddle.Â
âPlease, let me down,â You whispered, tears beginning to fall. Rafe was next, hoisting himself onto the black stallion, squeezing himself behind you. You were pressed against him so much that you could feel the flexing of the muscles of his stomach. An arm wrapped tightly around your waist.Â
Rafe shushed you, and surprisingly, you felt him settle your hat back on your head. You hadnât even seen him pick it up. You were never supposed to ride without a hat, thatâs what your father had taught you. You barely had time to process it before he urged the horse forward, the powerful animal's hooves pounding the earth beneath you as Rafe held you tightly, âM-My horse, Juliet!â You remembered, panicked, âI wonât go without her, Rafe!â
âI didnât forget your horse,â He spoke calmer than you expected, though his tone still had an edge to it, âSheâll follow. Unlike you, she seems to have a decent amount of common sense.âÂ
He kicked the horse into a gallop, the powerful animal responding instantly, the sound of its hooves hitting the ground like thunder in the otherwise still air. The wind whipped through your hair, stinging your face. You gripped the saddle tightly, to anchor yourself, despite knowing that Rafeâs grip was strong enough to keep you from flying.Â
This wasnât the escape you wanted. Not even close.Â
Sure, heâd heard the rumors that you were a little âŠdaft. And maybe that was true in some ways, but you were more than he had anticipated. He followed you, watched as you handled the horse with ease, and found himself intrigued. Your confusion, innocence, even your stubbornness drew him in like a moth to a flame.Â
The last thing Rafe wanted was a wife. He resisted the way his father felt like he could stll make decisions for him. Rafe was losing with this arrangement. Your fatherâs hundred acres was nothing in comparison to what he family already had and would acquire. But perhaps his father had seen exactly what Rafe was seeing now. You were raw, so unpolished, and that meant you could be shaped.Â
Once you were under the Cameronâs roof, Rafe had the power to do whatever he wanted.Â
Proving himself to Ward was a constant battle, every choice scrutinized, every misstep noted. To run the ranch one day, Rafe needed to show he could manage it all, the land, business, and now a wife. Building a home and keeping you in line was just another test.
That morning, Rafe had never expected to chase after you on horseback. He had arrived in his truck, scouring the house for any sign of you, only to realize you were already gone. In frustration, he called John B., one of the Cameron ranch hands, and sent him to bring Trigger, his horse, to the Y/L/N ranch.
When you both returned, John B. was already there, waiting. Thunder cracked above, a sunny morning turning into a dreary afternoon. Rafe barked orders to ensure Juliet and Trigger were both stabled at the Cameronâs ranch.
He lifted you down from the saddle, his grip firm on your wrists before you could bolt. It only took a second for him to realize the urgency in your voice as you spoke, trying to talk to John B., who was already taking Juliet and Triggerâs reins. âShe gets nervous when sheâs in new places. She doesnât like to be rushed,â Rafe overheard, catching the panic in your tone.
âYes, maâam. Donât worry, Iâll take it slow with her,â John B. assured her although Rafe only glared at the worker, jaw tight.Â
âCome on,â Rafe pulled your arm, âWeâre leaving.â
Your small hands grabbed where heâd wrapped his hands around your arm. You dug your boots into the gravel in front of the house, âWait, I donât have everything. I-I need to grab some things,â Rafeâs gripped only tightened as his irritation grew.Â
âYou shouldâve thought about that before you made me chase after you,â He took one more look at your teary-face before he snapped. Taking you home shouldâve taken thirty minutes, not four hours. Without warning, he scooped you up over his shoulder, ignoring the surprised gasp you let out.Â
Your legs kicked in the air, âHey! Please put me down!â Rafe didnât spare your house on John B. a second glance as he trudged over to his dark, blue truck. Please, that made Rafe brow furrow. Rafe took the opportunity to cop a feel, of course, he had to know exactly what he was working with. You were his future wife, after all, âRafe! I donât like being upside down!âÂ
âScream all the way there for all I fucking care,â He muttered under his breath, his voice cold as he finally reached the truck and tossed you into the passenger seat.
Rafe sped off moments after he pressed start engine on the vehicle. You went quiet and he hoped to be alone with his thoughts, soothed by the soft pitter patter of rain on his windshield. Fifteen minutes down the road, he heard your breath hitch. He looked over to see you were staring straight head, eyes wide and wet with tears. Smudged mascara beneath your eyes. Your chest rose and fell rapidly and you clutched your hands tightly in your lap. Your lips were shaking, moving as if you were whispering something to yourself.Â
Your legs began to jitter, restless, and Rafe looked away. He managed to tune out your obvious panic for nearly an entire minute. He had a rare feeling. One he didnât fully understanding. The angel on his shoulder was telling him to reach out, to try and comfort you. He thought about what Wheezie might think if this was the disheveled state he brought his future wife to meet her in. He let out a quiet sigh, knowing it was only going to get worse as the reality of your situation set in.
âHey,â He spoke without that sharp edge, channeling a voice he might use with his youngest sister, âI didnât mean youâd never get your things. We can come back, when youâre more settled âŠAnd Iâll send someone to get all your keepsakes. Okay?âÂ
âOkay, okay, okay,â You repeated though your voice sounded empty, âOkay.â
He thought those would be the magic words but you hadnât even turned to look at him. You were doing the same thing, shaking like a leaf, barely taking in enough breath, âFuck,â Rafe cursed. He pulled over to the side of the road with a sharp jerk, the gravel crunching under the tires as the truck slowed to a stop. Without thinking, he shifted into park and turned to you.
Rafe needed to be more deliberate in his actions. He had eyes on him, his entire immediate family, and he wouldnât have them thinking he couldnât handle you.Â
He tried to calm you, squeezed your hand, told you to breathe over and over again. Nothing. You were spiraling, letting your thoughts consume you. Rafe had been too rough. It was all too much too fast for you. He wanted to mold you, not break you.Â
He leaned in, taking your face in his hands, and pressing his lips to yours. You went frantic but he only deepened the kiss. He held your hand and slowly felt your tension lesson. He entwined his fingers in yours and slowly felt you move your own lips against his. You tasted like cherries, dark red, and perfectly ripe. His hands moved to the back of your neck, his fingers pressing lightly, urging you to focus, to let go of the panic.
He pulled away only when you stopped your heaving.Â
âYouâre okay,â he murmured, his voice low and steady. âYouâre okay now. Breathe with me.â
He waited for you to come back to him, cradling you there. You had no one left, Rafe realized in that moment, the truth settling heavily in his chest. And maybe that was why he couldnât bring himself to be cruel.Â
No, taking care of you wasnât just an obligation, it was an important responsibility. One heâd shoulder completely. Whether you liked it or not, Rafe would make sure of it.
Rafe Cameron tasted like whiskey, with a faint hint of mint that lingered now even as you stood in the foyer of your new home, Tannyhill Ranch. The white house was sprawling and pristine, situated amidst of sea of green fields. Windows sparkled even in the storm that was coming down, and although the roofâs shingles were weathered, it was hard to believe the property had been there for more than a century.Â
Workers, chefs and maids, bustled by but no one spared you or Rafe a glance despite the dry tears on your face and disheveled appearance.Â
The interior was grand, the hardwoods polished until they shined, and the ceilings were higher than the ones at church. Everything screamed old money. You felt a hand on the small of your back, guiding you through the grand entrance hall and then up one side of a grand staircase. Portraits line the walls, serious faces, Camerons and previous owners of the estate.Â
Their eyes watched you, âRafe, where are we going?â You asked him quietly.Â
âTo your room,â He spoke low and firm. There hadnât been any rough grabbing of your limbs or unwanted rides on Rafeâs shoulder since your kiss in the car. You hadnât fully let you guard down but you preferred when Rafe was calm, and so you remained calm too, âYou can settle in.â
Rafe led you down the upstairs hallway, stopping at one of at least six bedroom doors, and pushing it open. The room was breathtaking, a four-poster bed draaped in white linens, oak furniture, blue-white toile patterns, and large windows that overlooked the property. It was beautiful, yes, but none of this belonged to you.Â
Your fingers absentmidnely traced the fabric of the bedâs comforter before you got a grip, turning around to say something in protest, âDonât look at me like that,â Rafe interrupted, hands tucking into the front of jeans as if to give off a non-chalant appearance. The position emphasized the silvery belt buckle that sat on the middle of his waist.Â
âI donât want to live here,â You spoke softly, your voice still weak from all the crying.Â
âI know,â Rafe continued, sounding exactly like his father, âYour father did though. You still love your Daddy, donât you?âÂ
Rafeâs words made you think. Really think. Of course you loved your father. He was a smart man and he always did right by you and your Mother. However, deep down, this all still felt wrong. You stood there, caught between the beauty of the room and the unease of what you felt.
You nodded, âButââ
âBut this is what he wanted, darlinâ,â Rafe spoke in a way that carried a sense of finality. Rafe stepped closer and suddenly his body was a brick wall keeping you from leaving the room. His lips pulled into a smirk and he leaned down to speak in your ear, his breath fanning over your cheeks. Whiskey and mint, âYou always did what your Daddy said, right?âÂ
âYes,â You answered too honestly for your own good.Â
âNow youâll do what I say. Thatâs how it works. A young lady belongs to her father, and one day, after she grows up, she belongs to her husband,â He straightened up and you blinked your big eyes up at him. Slowly, your eyes traveled down to his lips, âYouâll thank me, one day.âÂ
Gently, he tucked a finger beneath your chin, lifting it even higher. You held your head exactly in the place he placed it, making something flicker in Rafeâs eyes. A heat bloomed in your core. You could only think about that kiss, your first one, despite the fact that he was one of the men completely ruining your life.Â
âYou ever seen someone break a wild horse?âÂ
His question caught you off guard, and your brows furrowed slightly as you searched his face for meaning. The smirk on his lips deepened, and his hand dropped from your chin.
âTakes patience. Takes strength. Takes knowing exactly when to push and when to pull back. But eventually, the horse figures out whoâs in charge.â His blue eyes darkened, the intensity of his gaze pinning you in place, âOut on the ranch, when we get a wild one. Itâs my favorite thing to do. Watch emâ go from fighting you to starting to trust you. Really, thereâs no point in fighting. The oneâs who donât submit, we donât keep emâ around. Theyâre dangerous.â
âOh,â You managed to say, shifting uncomfortably, âThat sounds ⊠hard.âÂ
Rafe chuckled in response, âHard? Yeah, especially if you donât know what youâre doing.â
You opened your mouth to respond, but before you could, Rafeâs smirk returned, sharper now, his eyes narrowing slightly.
âYou want me to kiss you again. I can tell.â
His words sent you stammering immediately, âNo!âÂ
âTell you what,â Rafe interrupted smoothly, ignoring your denial as if it hadnât even registered. âIf you settle in, get all dolled up for dinnerâŠâ His voice dripped with false generosity. âIâll give you another one.â
You stared, dumbfounded and frozen until the young rancher casually turned and walked out of the room. Your fists clenched at your sides as a storm of emotions swirled inside you, anger and fear. One emotion simmered quietly beneath the surface, unwelcome and disorienting. Anticipation.
Reblog and let me know your thoughts to be added to the taglist!
mariacarla boscono @ roberto cavalli s/s 2003