Mummy Dust - Papa Copia đ Australia, Sydney 2023
there's just something about 40s bucky man
Bucky x pregnant!readerÂ
What happens when a time travel mission ends up with a version of Bucky from the 40â˛s standing on the time travel platform.Â
Warnings: FLUFFFFF, sweet charming 40â˛s Bucky, time travel, teensiest bit of angst.Â
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âBuck, are you sure about thisâ You shuffled nervously by the platform Bucky was standing on, his latest mission requiring him to travel through a time portal. It wasnât something he hadnât done before but time travel was still tricky and the last thing you wanted was something happening to Bucky.Â
Especially now.Â
âIâll be fine dollâ Bucky assured you, holding onto a device Tony had made to gather information, the time stamp on the portal set to 1943. All he had to do was locate the coordinates he was given, scan a few documents and return to the present. Ever since you found out you were pregnant, Bucky pulled himself out of high risk missions but this seemed easy enough and he was the only one familiar with the location. âPromise Iâll come right back to you in just a few seconds babygirlâÂ
Keep reading
Bucky Barnes in the new Thunderbolts Special Look.
more bucky brain rot
Bucky Barnes x Reader
18+ ONLY.
Summary: I had this slutty little thought about Bucky's leg over your shoulder while you suck his dick...so here's a quick drabble about it.
A/N: This is my first attempt at writing something short and sweet. I see other authors do it all the time and it's not something I'm 100% comfortable with yet. I still spent way too much time on this, edited it, and had to force myself to cut it short. But I hope with practice, I can get more drabbles like this out!
Warnings: subby Bucky, blowjob, mention of prostate massage, Bucky being insecure
I'm imaging your evening starts with Bucky being nervous about an event you both have to attend. And once there, some asshole agent makes a snide comment about Bucky and his arm in front of a lot of people. Despite how much he tries, Bucky can't let it go. He spends the rest of the evening spiraling, desperately wanting to escape the room. So when you finally get home, you notice immediately that he's not okay...
"Buck?" You called to him from the bathroom doorway, and the look on his face when he turned to you made you frown. Â
The stress and anxiety manifested in the form of a red flush over his chest and neck. His eyes were far away.Â
"What can I do, babe?" You quickly joined his side, touching his cheek gently.Â
He sighed and nuzzled against your hand. "I'm okay," he mumbled. "Just need to clear my head."Â
"Come on," you led him back to the bedroom, gently guiding him to the bed. "Let me help."Â
Bucky started to protest, but you kissed his neck delicately while you began to work on the knots in his shoulders. He shut up quickly, letting you help.Â
You knew how these massages usually endedâwith Bucky between your legs for hours if you let him. But you were determined to flip the scriptâtake care of him this time. He could be a pillow princess for onceâŚmaybe he would discover how good it felt to let go.Â
You pushed Bucky's shoulder, laying him back on the mountain of pillows piled on the bed.Â
"Let meâ" Bucky started.Â
You shushed him gently and kissed his lips. "No, let me." You kissed both his eyelids, tasting the lone tear Bucky had let slip. The taste of it broke your heart. You kissed his cheeks and his nose before finding his lips again. "Let me show you how beautiful you are, baby. So fucking perfect."Â
Your lips moved to kiss the dimple in his chin and then made a path across his strong jaw and down his neck.Â
Bucky swallowed hard; this was not how he had expected the rest of his evening to go. After spending hours being mortified, he had just wanted to come home and hide. Maybe crawl under the comforter with his headphones until he could forget everything. But you were having none of it. Your hands gently slid under his shirt, and he tensed.Â
"Shhh, it's okay, baby. Do you want me to stop?"Â
Bucky bit his lip; it didn't make sense. He had moved past being ashamed of his body with you. He hadn't been anxious to shed his clothes in front of you in months. It wasn't fair that one asshole could change that and put that pit of anxiety and fear back in his belly.Â
"Don't stop," he finally whispered because no one was going to take you from him.Â
You slowly pulled his shirt over his head, and your lips went to work, touching every inch of his bruised and scarred skin. With each kiss you gave, he felt a little more like himself. No one had been so gentle with him, not before you. By the time your lips finished trailing down his vibranium arm, the evening's events were far from his mind. And when you wrapped your lips around two of his metal fingers, all thoughts flew out of his head completely.Â
"Doll," he groaned, "can I taste you?"Â
You shook your head. "After I'm done taking care of you, lay back down."Â
Bucky hadn't even realized he had sat up in an attempt to get closer to you. He listened and flopped down against the pillows as you unbuttoned his slacks. You took your time, but Bucky didn't mind. Every touch, every kiss, every swipe of your warm tongue was a blessing to him. You hadn't even taken his cock out yet, but he didn't care. He would gladly live suspended in this euphoria, basking in your attention forever.Â
For once, he let his mind go blank, focusing only on the pleasure you were giving him, on the whispered praise you gave against his skin. He didn't notice you had completely undressed him until suddenly something wet and warm was wrapped around his cock. He squeezed his eyes shut and groaned quietly.Â
Your hands moved over his thighs and lifted his knees, so his feet were planted on the bed. But he didn't use the leverage to thrust. He let you remain in control, focusing on the way your movements were controlled and slow, but your lips remained tight, tongue never missing a swipe over his sensitive head.Â
Your hands massaged the backs of his thick thighs, and Bucky was only vaguely aware of you slowly pushing his left leg up and over your shoulder. Before he realized what you had done, your shoulder pushed into the back of his thigh, lifting his leg higher as you took his cock deeper into your throat.Â
"Oh fuck!" Bucky snapped out of his trance, his hand flying to the back of your head and his heel digging into your back.Â
You moaned around him, and he hissed as pleasure shot through every nerve ending in his body. Even then, he realized his leg was over your shoulder and attempted to put it back on the bed. But you gently slapped his thigh, pulling your mouth off his cock.Â
"I said, let me take care of you, pretty baby."Â
You looked at him with heavy lust-filled eyes, and all Bucky could do was whimper as he nodded his agreement.Â
You grinned big before quickly hoisting his other leg up over your shoulder.Â
"Oh fuck me," Bucky whispered.Â
"That's the plan," you kept eye contact with him while you ran your tongue up and down his cock before sliding it back into your throat.Â
Bucky squeezed his eyes shut; he swore he was even deeper than before. "Ohâ" his words were lost in a deep groan as your finger started stimulating his prostate.Â
His head dropped back, his back arched, and his hands scrambled for purchase in the sheets. He knew he must be quite the picture, mouth dropped open in a silent scream, his legs starting to shake as his heels dug into your back. His cock throbbed, and he couldn't help but start thrusting in your mouth. All his anxieties were long gone; the only thing he could focus on was the consistent throbbing in the head of his cock, and the slick tightness of your throat every time he slid down it.Â
When he came, white-hot pleasure coursing through him, you swallowed every drop. Your throat contracting around him prolonged his orgasm until he was teetering between pleasure in pain. He could have stayed in limbo foreverâhead emptyâonly youâbut you slowly pulled your mouth off him and placed his legs back on the bed.Â
You gently pushed his hair out of his face as you cuddled against his heaving chest. "See, you should let me take care of you more often."Â
Bucky nodded, finally gathering himself enough to pull you closer to him. "Thank youâyou didn't have toâ"
"I wanted to, pretty baby. I love you."
Bucky pulled you up to his lips, searing his love for you on every inch of skin he could reach.
perhaps some will disagree, but i think the world got worse when we changed the colour of the night
can someone let me know what happens at the ritual today i can't handle obsessively checking tumblr every four minutes
ahhhh i know, i know i'm trying to keep it â¨interesting⨠i was so excited to post i haven't even edited yet, i'm getting ahead of myself
series masterlist
tuesday, march 13th, 1:06am;
The three girls lay slumped over one another on the squishy brown sofa that lives in the family room. Laughter erupts down the halls of the home, filling the space with the lovely noise that had become a stranger to the property. Their bellies are full with their mother's stew (and nearly a whole bag of twizzler's candy split between the three as the evening progressed) and bodies warm beneath the shared stitched quilt.
Kennedy had arrived home from work in a frenzy that evening, shoving open the poor front door with a shout, "Is it true?" she asked her father, who sat unsuspecting at the breakfast nook with the paper pulled open and a beer.
"Is what true?" He had asked, peering up at her from the length of his nose.
"(Y/n)'s home? The teacher across the hall had mentioned on our lunch break that she'd heard a rumor. I didn't have time to call home and confirm it!"
"Well," The old man chuckled coyly, "Go see for yourself, why don't you?"
With that, the girl gasped, bounding up the steps two at a time, black kitten heels left strewn across the landing.
Joyously, Ella had proposed a celebration in the form of a sleepover, or rather, an all-nighter slumped together on the family couch. Just like old times.
The old tv drones on incessantly, a VHS tape of The Little Mermaid set to a low volume, the grain in the picture distorted ever so slightly. It's blue glow illuminates the wallpapered walls and results in a ghastly, iridescent hue on the girls faces. Their parents had long since retired to bed, leaving the sisters to their shenanigans. An old scrapbook sits on (Y/n)'s lap, Ella's head on her right shoulder and Kennedy's arm wrapped around her left bicep endearingly. They take turns flipping the laminated pages, giggling at their old baby photos and cooing at the particularly adorable ones.
There are polaroids of (Y/n) as a toddler, before the other girls were born. A blue sand bucket is perched on her little head like a fashionable hat, and the sunset in the background casts gold reflections on the waves. In the following photo, three year old (Y/n) holds baby Kennedy, of course assisted by Dad. In his younger age he is almost a completely different person, aged bleakly at the hands of the Island.
The marred cover of the book holds memories the girls don't even remember, the figment of their childhood experiences a distant dream in the back of their mind.
Ella flips the next page, revealing (Y/n) and her big patterned book bag on her way to the first day of kindergarten. Her polka dotted sundress flowing at her calves and a lunch box at her side. A big grin decorated her face and her eyes twinkle in excitement. Next to her stands a similarly posed little boy, with dark brown hair and those salient blue eyes.
"It's little Bucky!" Kennedy exclaims, "Did you see him today, (Y/n)?"
"Oh, she saw him all right." Ella pokes, nudging the oldest with her shoulder.
(Y/n) groans, "Honestly!" she scolds, "Would you knock it off? Yes, I saw him. He came by to drop off wood with Dad today."
Kennedy hums, "He helps out a lot, it's nice to have him around. You know, his Mum passed while he was away in Afghanistan two years ago."
"What?" (Y/n)'s face screws up a little with the news, "That's awful. I didn't even know he joined the service, when did that happen?"
"Yeah, after high school he enlisted and left for a while." Kennedy nods, "He doesn't talk about it though, so I wouldn't ask. He - uh, he lost a lot those couple of years, to say the least."
"So it's just him and Rebecca all alone in that house then?" (Y/n) asks, she feels her heart cry out sympathetically at the thought.
When they were in middle school together, years before she had left the island, the siblings had lost their father in a freak boating accident. The poor man had been overworking himself and had drifted asleep on deck, out alone on his small gill-netting boat at dusk. Despite having been the most experienced fisherman on the island, he had crashed into the rocks and capsized, leaving the harbor patrol to find his body in the early hours of the morning after Mrs. Barnes called to ask about her husband. For the first time in eleven years of walking to school together, James didn't meet (Y/n) at the end of her driveway that morning. When he didn't arrive late to school either, (Y/n) had begun to worry. As soon as the bells dismissed her final class she had rushed out of the building to the Barnes' small cottage home just a few blocks away. She remembers the cop car sitting in the driveway and the front door ajar, she remembers the wailing of Mrs. Barnes as she crossed the threshold of the entrance and James sitting stiffly at the head of his dining room table, his eyes staring blankly at the wall. James never ever cried in front of anyone, but as he locked his gaze on hers she felt the dam snap and watched helplessly as the tears streamed from his eyes like a waterfall. She remembers the day before when Bucky begged his father to take him along that night to check the lobster traps. Selfishly, she couldn't bear to think what she had done if Bucky had met the same fate as his father. And to know now that the boy had now lost both of his parents hurts her heart in a way indescribable.
Kennedy sighs, "Yeah, she was sent out to foster care in Portland for a while before Bucky became her legal guardian. She's like - what, Ella? Your age?"
Ella thinks for a moment, "Sixteen, maybe. She's a year younger. We have some of the same classes though."
"I feel so horrible for not reaching out to him." (Y/n) sighs, throwing her hands up, "I don't even have a good excuse! I'm downright terrible. I can't believe no one told me she passed."
"You'll make it up to him. He's never been one to hold grudges, you know." Kennedy says, "I think we assumed you knew and didn't want to talk about it."
It's true. She remembers many trivial arguments on the playground, whether it be with her or another child. Bucky has always been loyal and fiercely protective of the people he loves - protective of himself even - but he's also forgiving. However, it's not being forgiven that (Y/n) is worried about. Deep down she knows Bucky would forgive her for anything. No, what she's really afraid of is if the time apart has changed the two of them beyond recognition. She worries that even if she tries, she won't be able to repair the friendship they had when they were kids. There's so much to say, so much to tell each other about and (Y/n) doesn't even know where to start. How is she meant to pick up where they left off?
Because the truth is, they aren't kids anymore. That's the hardest pill to swallow. They won't be running off to the shore barefooted with their bikes discarded in the dunes, holding hands and soft touches will no longer be innocent - maybe not even natural - no more folded notes passed silently during class, no more forts built in the woods with his mother's linen sheets and mossy branches. It'll be like navigating uncharted territory, except it's not uncharted, just lost. Forgotten.
It isn't long before the two younger sisters succumb to their sleepiness, (Y/n) left awake listening to the soft ticking of the grandfather clock in the entryway. It's always been there, passed down through her family for generations and she hopes to any god that will listen that her parents won't give it to her next. There's been many several nights she has lied right here on this couch tormented by the rhythmic tick of its incessant song. Though hypnotic it's never been successful at lulling her to sleep, instead it's talent lies in keeping her awake, trapped in the advancing reminder that time doesn't stop.
Time is inevitable. It's always passing, spending, wasting, reminding you of what you've lost. She only wishes it would stop for a moment, so she may be able to catch her breath.
(Y/n) hadn't realized she had fallen asleep until she wakes up the next morning. The sound of eggs sizzling on the cast iron pan in the next room over is what tickles her awake. She hears her father mutter something about the coffee being burnt and her sister rattles around in the silverware drawer looking for a particular knife. She's alone on the couch now, the quilt pulled up and tucked around her body tightly. (Y/n) rises slowly, collecting her pillows and placing them back neatly on the couch before rubbing her eyes of sleep.
"Good morning, sleeping beauty." Chimes Ella's teasing voice as (Y/n) rounds the corner into the kitchen, the youngest not even sparing her a glance up from her bowl of cereal, only a coy smirk. Beside her sits a small baby blue backpack with a plethora of sailor knot keychains tightened around the zippers.
"School today?" (Y/n) asks after greeting the rest of her family. Her mother hands her a mug of hot coffee, the perfect amount of cream swirling around in the porcelain.
"Yeah. Kennedy and I leave at the same time, she said she'd drive me today 'cuz of the rain."
(Y/n) hums in response, taking a sip of her coffee.
"What are you up to today, hun?" Her mother asks softly, plating the food from the stove for everyone.
"I don't know, I guess I'll just hang out around the barn. Did you guys feed the horses yet?"
"No, that's my next step. But be my guest if you beat me to it, everything's listed in the little notebook in the grain room." Her father responds, "The fence is finished too, so you can turn them out after they eat. I got some work to do around town today."
(Y/n) takes a seat at the table as her mother places down the food for everyone. "I'll take care of it today, Dad." She responds.
Kennedy bounds down the steps and takes a seat next to her, her hair done up in a stylish bun and a black pencil skirt adorning her legs. It was almost strange to see her so done up, she was so grown up now and even though she was only a few years younger than (Y/n) it still felt bizarre to see her so . . . adultish. How fast time has gone. It seemed only yesterday she was still playing dress up with her sisters in pretty, pink, princess dresses and plastic heels. Now she was off to her dream job in real heels and a whole wardrobe of business casuals.
"So, (Y/n), am I allowed to tell people you're staying with us when they ask? Or is it like . . . a secret?" Kennedy asks as she takes a bite of her bacon.
"As if the whole island doesn't already know," Her mother interjects, rolling her eyes, "You know how everyone gossips around here, there's not a single thing you don't hear about. Everyone already knew by dinner time yesterday, guaranteed." She laughs.
"It's true. I'll be here for a while anyway, no point in trying to hide it."
"Well, you know, the town fair is only a few weeks away. I'm sure everyone will be too busy worrying about their booths and the competitions then to cause too much trouble." Ella remarks.
"They mean no harm girls, you know that. We're all just a little bored, gotta have something to talk about around here." Dad says as he gets up and washes his plate. "You two need to get going or you're gonna be late."
"Crap! I'll start the car." Kennedy replies, handing off her dish and kissing her mother on the cheek, "Thanks for breakfast. See you, (Y/n)."
Ella shovels the last of her eggs into her mouth before doing the same, rushing out to the driveway in her sister's wake.
"If you're staying for a while did you want me to fix up my extra truck?" Her father asks, turning over his shoulder to look at her. "Buck and I can work on it, just needs a few parts."
"It's no big deal, Dad, I wouldn't want you guys to overwork yourselves. You have so much on your plate already, I'll make due without a car for a bit."
"Alright well, you let me know if you change your mind."Â
After breakfast (Y/n) goes up to her room to fish out some clothes and takes a quick shower to freshen up. She pulls on a pair of worn jeans and her emerald green rain jacket before descending down and out to the barn. The horses nicker at her instantaneously as she flips up the lock and slides open the thick barn door. Though there are eight stalls, the barn only holds five horses currently. There was a time when her mother made decent money training and selling working horses and holding riding lessons for the local kids, and back then there was never an empty stall. Now times have changed, the business has diminished and there's no longer the money for her mother to pour into their horses. She still teaches a few of the kids nearby, and it's just enough to support the existing horses but it's not the same.
(Y/n) greets the horses one by one and unlocks the door to the grain room at the end of the aisle. The black notebook sits upon a stack of vet paperwork and other various items, she flips open the cover and locates the page with the feeding schedule. The grain buckets sit in a neat stack against the wall, (Y/n) arranges them on the floor and begins to scoop the correct amount of grain into each one, topping them off with the required supplements and powders.
Each bucket is labeled, a thick piece of silver duct tape attached to each bucket with the names written in sharpie marker. She delivers each meal to the horses and tidies up the grain room while she waits for them to eat. After a few moments pass, she flips her hood over her head and halters Hera, leading her out to the paddocks for turn out. The rain patters on the rigid fabric of her rain jacket as she takes each horse one by one out of their stall and to the gate. When that task is complete she focuses on cleaning the stalls and starts to head inside when's she's finished. She had to admit, as silly as it sounded she missed the barn chores. There's a sort of strange gratification in mucking the stalls and cleaning everything up, the sweet smell of hay and musk of the horses surrounding her.
(Y/n) pulls open the door to leave the tack room and shuts it behind her, turning to lock it closed as well. As she spins around soundlessly, she's met with a solid wall striking her in the chest. Or rather, not a wall, but a person she realizes as she looks up with a surprised gasp.
"Shit, I'm sorry! I didn't even hear you." (Y/n) pulls back, removing her hands from Bucky's strong chest where she had braced herself. His right arm comes up to rub the back of his neck sheepishly, a greeting smile creeping to his lips.
"No, no that's my bad, I snuck up on ya'. Your mom said you were in here."
He's wearing another baseball hat, this one a navy blue that went well with his eyes, and a thick gray sweatshirt under a carhart jacket, both hoods are pulled over his head. His clothes are wet and (Y/n) becomes suddenly aware of the surging rain outside and the thick grey clouds rolling into the horizon through the sky from the half opened barn door. He towers over her figure almost comically, never before had she felt so small.
"Remember when I used to be able to look down at you." (Y/n) blurts out. She almost regrets the sudden, random statement until Bucky begins to laugh, his eyes squinting and his crows feet imprinting on his face.
"I was never that short." He huffs, "We were like the same height from age eight until like - I don't know, the summer you visited when we were sixteen?"
"Mmm, no, I was definitely taller," (Y/n) retorts. Bucky begins to open his mouth to disagree, brows furrowed. "Don't worry, you're huge now. You could fight a black bear." She grins, delivering a teasing punch to his shoulder.
"I do not want to fight a black bear."
(Y/n) huffs a laugh, she spins to turn the light off in the aisle and grabs her water bottle off the hay bale stack. "What are you doing here, anyway?"
"I came to drop off a few packages of fish for your parents. Whenever I work on the boats I get a share of whatever we catch so I split it with your folks. Figured it's the least I can do."
"Well, it seems like you do a lot around here. They're grateful to have you." (Y/n) responds. He looks away from her shyly, as if being thanked made him feel uncomfortable. "So what, do you do everything around the island? Fishing, fixing fences, working at the harbor . . . You sound busy."
"Yeah, I like it that way." He nods, "I work as a deck hand some days, I go out on the boats with Dad's old friends to fish and sell at the markets. I do all kinds of weird jobs around here, sometimes I work at the lumberyard and I help around where I can."
"You're like, the Island's handyman."
Bucky chuckles at that. "Yeah, guess so. But what about you, what were you up to all these years?"
"Oh," (Y/n) wasn't prepared for that question. She's not too great at talking about herself, "Well, after high school I went to the University of California, for Fine Arts. Graduated and got my own studio, ran a small gallery and just spent my time painting and such. Made some good money and decided it was time to come home. It was great while it lasted though."
"Why would you ever come back here?" Bucky teases, but she knows he really begs the question.
She thinks for a moment before answering with a shrug, "I guess I just missed home."
Bucky nods like he understands, "You see cool things out there?" he asks.
"Yeah." She sighs, "Wish I coulda shown you. Maybe one day you can come back with me and I'll show you around."
"I'd like that. And I'd love to see your art sometime, too. Can't even imagine how good you must be now."
"I did make a name for myself out there. It was . . . gratifying to say the least."
"You should open a gallery downtown, and host art nights. There's so many vacancies now I'm sure you'd get a good deal on a retail space."
"You know, that's actually not a bad idea." (Y/n) agrees thoughtfully. A modest little building to display her work and other local artists, hold little art classes for the community, bring in a little money. Maybe it's something she'll have to keep in mind if she's planning on staying for a while.
Bucky slips his hands in his pockets, nodding towards his truck at the end of the road.
"I gotta get going, I have some errands to run before I pick Beccs up from school. I'll see you around right?"
"Absolutely." (Y/n) nods. As the two turn around and start to walk out the barn together, she stops, grabbing hold of the fabric of Bucky's jacket.
"Hey," She starts, looking down at her shoes and shifting her weight on one foot before looking back up to his face. "I'm really sorry, for not keeping in contact. You didn't deserve that." She says, trying to keep her voice from wavering.
"It's okay, doll. I'm sorry too. I'm sorry for what I said before you left, it was unfair of me."
A lump almost forms in her throat as she thinks back to their last meeting when they were young. She has to swallow it back into her stomach where the energy flutters uncomfortably. "Can we just agree to put it behind us?" She asks, offering a small smile and a gentle squeeze of her hand on the back of his arm.
"I'd like that." He complies. "Let's forget about it. We were stupid kids, we have all the time to make up for it now."
As they step off the concrete platform of the barn's floor and onto the slick dirt path, the sludge of the sticky brown mud squelches under (Y/n)'s boots. It's in an instant that the ground is being pulled out from under her like a carpet and she's sent straight into the mud with a comically loud splat.
"Shit, (Y/n)! You good?" Bucky calls alarmingly. He's holding his hands out to help her up but before she can even comprehend her position he's falling too.
He manages to catch himself on his hands and knees, unlike (Y/n) who can feel the wetness creep through her jeans from her bottom all the way down the back of her thighs.
Bucky let's out a boyish laugh coming from the depths of his chest, "Careful, doll. It's slippery." He grins.
(Y/n) can't hold back her own laugh, letting her pained chuckle overtake her until she's just as loud as Bucky.
They're all smiles and pink blush as they pick each other up off the ground, the rain drenching their skin and clothes covered in mud now.
"God, I'm sorry. We look like idiots."
"We are idiots." (Y/n) corrects, "Come inside, there's gotta be something for you to change into. I'm sure you don't wanna run your errands like that. Or even get into your truck like that."
Bucky shrugs but follows her into the house anyway. They discard their shoes on the front porch and (Y/n) calls to her mother to let her know they are coming in.
She leads him upstairs and hands him a towel from the linen closet adjoining the bathroom and knocks on her mothers bedroom door. She opens it confused, raising her eyebrow at the pair's appearance. Bucky waves a hand in greeting.
"Does Dad have a pair of jeans that might fit Bucky? We slipped in the mud."
Her mother laughs, "You two are always a mess. Reminds me of old times. Give me a second."
She returns with a pair of dark wash jeans, a small hole down the seam in the side.
"These should do the trick. Let me know if you need anything else, hun." She says sweetly, before retiring back to her room.
Bucky changes in the bathroom while (Y/n) waits and then they switch. An awkward goodbye is shared in the hallway, the two not really wanting to depart. Bucky goes back downstairs and out the front door, stopping to wave at her once more at the top of the landing.
written 5/17/23
i am 100000% obsessed with this and need part two more than i need air
Best friends since middle school, you tell Eddie everything, which is why he's so surprised to find out you've been keeping a secret âyouâre hearing a voice whenever you're home alone. Heâs always had a thing for the fantastical but he can't believe in ghosts, and the longer you insist on it, the more worried he becomes. This would be bad enough if Eddie didnât have a secret too, and it threatens to change everything between you. [22k]Â
fem!reader, best friends to lovers slow-burn, mutual pining, eddie is infatuated with you, idiots in love, paranormal activity/au, heavy hurt/comfort, angst, fluff and affection, wayne is uncle of the year every year, ghost-hunting
cw assumed auditory hallucinations, talk of mental health, surrounding worry and circumstances, mentioned mental illness stigma, recreational drug use mention, prescription drugs, grief
my endless gratitude and thank yous to @h-ness1944 and @mrcylvsu for their sensitivity beta reads and for answering my questions so many moons ago, I'm very, very thankful for all that hard work, and all the time and energy you both spent!
ËĘâĄÉË
Eddie's desk fan is on the fritz. It twists back and forth with a weak metallic clicking sound that promises eventual electrocution but for now provides momentary relief. Even the nights have been hell lately. No matter how many windows he and Wayne open, the air at home stays thick with humidity.Â
Sweat shines on his brow and collar. He refuses to tie his hair back, and each hour it grows more and more uncomfortable.Â
"Are you sure you don't wanna come and lie up here?" he asks, shifting reluctantly to peer over the side of the bed.Â
You're laying on the floor of his room, just as sweaty but half as unhappy. You've abandoned a book to your left, having declared the weather too much to concentrate through.Â
"Our body heat will mingle."Â
"The fan is really helping," he argues lightly. "If you die on my floor Wayne won't ever let it go. Just come up here."Â
You mumble something he doesn't hear and pull your shirt from your chest. You attempt to fan yourself with the thin, clinging fabric. It doesn't work, but it does expose the soft hill of your abdomen to his guilty eyes. His mouth dries up.Â
"It's getting late," he says. He's not trying to get rid of you, promise, but now he's thinking about your body heat mingling and why it wouldn't be such a bad thing, and he doesn't want to. "I'll drive you home, yeah?"Â
"In a minute," you agree, looking as if you have no intention of moving.Â
You turn your face to the side, eyes closed, lashes skimming the delicate skin of your under eye. Eddie sits up and rakes his greasy hair away from his face. He'll drop you home, take a cold shower for purely heat related reasons, and hopefully sleep through the night. It's a very unlikely outcome, but a man can dream.Â
"Come on. We'll roll the windows down and go really fast."Â
"Eddie," you chastise.Â
"Moderately fast."Â
His sleeveless tank top gets caught as he leans down to try and flick you. Eddie can only ever forgive his fourteen year old self for maiming perfectly good vintage in times like these. A completely unnecessary culling of an entire wardrobe's worth of sleeves, but when the weather gets bad for a few heady weeks every summer, he remembers the reasoning behind it.Â
He's stripped of all his clunky jewellery for now, adorned only in the dark ink of his multiplying tattoos. His most recent addition is an artist's rendition of the Eye of Sauron, blinking up at him from beneath his volley of bats. Still sick, he thinks to himself smugly.Â
You've pulled yourself into a sitting position with your arms crossed over the bed, your hand stretched out to touch his plaid pyjama bottoms. You're in a nearly matching pair; when Eddie called you to hang out earlier you'd turned him down, citing a reluctance to change. He'd promised to pick you up in his own pyjamas, and you've been lying on his floor since then.
You're the laziest kids this side of the Wabash river, Wayne'd said, looking over your limp bodies with a smile.Â
The other side, too, Eddie popped back. Will you put those chicken wings in the oven for us, please?
Eddie's not a monster, the wings were pre-prepared. Any other day he'd correct his uncle, say, hey, we haven't been kids for years, but the heat makes him feel gross and sometimes you just want your dad to make you dinner. (Sometimes Eddie's just lazy, also.)
"Eds?" you murmur.Â
He lets his hands fall away from his hair where he'd been scratching mindlessly and turns to you. He's lethargic, feels like he's turning his head through molasses. "What, sweetheart?"Â
Years of being friends lends an easy affection. His pet names are purely platonic. Or they used to be. Either way, you aren't perturbed.
"Can I sleep over?"Â
He usually says yes to that question immediately. But again, the thought of your sweaty body curled into his with your hands breaching a friendly gap to curl over his waist like they tend to do fills his stomach with dread.Â
His little crush is making him a bad friend, he decides. He will always, first and foremost, be your friend.Â
"Of course you can." He rubs his mouth. Feigning casualness. "How come?"Â
You peel out of your fatigue and get on your knees. The extra height is all you need to finally grab his legs, smiling sheepishly. Eddie won't judge you for almost anything and you know that, so it's gotta be outlandish.Â
"I thinkâŚ" You tap his kneecap. "Okay, laugh at me if you need to, but I'm pretty sure my house is haunted."Â
"Like, by a ghost?"Â
"What else?" you ask, laughing good-naturedly.
"Why do you think it's haunted, superstar?"Â
You drop your face onto his thigh, giving him a disjointed hug. He hugs you back for as long as the heat will allow it, a handful of stolen seconds with his hand over your back.
"I swear, sometimes, I can hear someone talking."
That's⌠scarier than he imagined. "Shit, I thought you were gonna say a coat fell off the hanger, or the light in your bathroom started flickering again."Â
"It has," you admit, your mouth pressed to his thigh. "But it's just the bulb."Â
He pushes you off of him, your voice sending vibrations through places he'd prefer it didn't, and you fall back with a half-hearted stab at melodrama.Â
"Oof," you say, straight-faced.Â
"You really think it's a ghost?" he asks.Â
"No. I don't know. I won't believe in ghosts until I see one, and I haven't seen one, but if it were a ghost, this is the type of behaviour I'd expect from it. So I guess I do. Does that make sense?"Â
"Sure." He doesn't know. "What does it say?"Â
"Here's the bit where you won't believe me."Â
You smile at him from your spot on the floor. Your hand curls out, like a tight budded flower coming to bloom.Â
"She asks about you," you say quietly. "It's pretty much all she says."Â
"Who?"Â
"The ghost."Â
"She's a she?"Â
"Sounds kind of like one."Â
"Come sit up here with me."Â
Eddie knows his voice has gone hard and weird, but he can't help it. He understands that he doesn't understand anything, that the world is large and works in mysterious ways, but he wouldn't forgive himself if he took this lightly. You sound so convinced â it makes him feel ill.Â
Because Eddie doesn't believe in ghosts.Â
You climb up onto the bed in front of him and he doesn't take your hand. He should. You wonât meet his eyes, a sign that you're slightly embarrassed. It's not what he meant to do.Â
"What does she say?â he probes.
You go teasing and shiny, a glimmer in your eye. "I know you don't believe me, Eddie."Â
"Who says I don't believe you? I just need you to explain."Â
"She saysâŚ" You laugh. "Okay, she says stuff like, 'Eddie is okay?'"Â
Eddie stares at you.Â
"I was going to tell youâ"Â
"When?" he demands.Â
"I'm telling you right now!"Â
"How long have you been hearing voices?"Â
You climb up on knees to wrap your arms around his head. "You think I'm delusional," you say, a loving murmur in his ear.Â
He grabs your waist. Unsurprisingly, hugging you doesn't make him nearly as electric as he'd worried. It feels the same as it always has, like hugging his best friend. Loving the smell of your hair is new, but everything else stays the same.Â
"I don't think youâre delusional, I don't, I justâ if I told you the same thing."Â
You pull away, and his hand comes to rest atop the curve of your hip. "I'd believe you," you say.Â
"I believe that you believe there's someone talking to you about me. Uh⌠if it is a ghost haunting your house, why's she talking about me?"Â
You take his hands off of your waist, squeezing his fingers together in your palms. "Don't know. I tried asking but she never answers, and last nightâŚ"Â
Eddie stands up.
"Where are you going?"Â
"We gotta let Wayne know you're staying and he's about to fall asleep, and I want a cigarette, and you need something to drink."Â
"I don't want a beer."Â
"No," he says. When he says to drink, he really means something cold to sip on. He's hoping to grab you back from⌠whatever it is you're going. "Soda, apple juice, drink what you want."Â
He fiddles with the drawstrings on his pants, waiting for you to join him at the doorway. You stay sitting on his bed. He doesn't know what your face means.Â
"Hey, you still have to tell me about it. I want to know, swear to god. We have all night." He holds out his hand. Wiggles his fingers at you. "I'll let you paint my nails again too, like a real girls night."Â
That grabs your attention. You slide off of the bed and take his hand, shrieking as he yanks you ten miles an hour down the skinny hallway and into the living room. Wayne's got the sofa bed out already, his padded roll-up mattress laid out over the springs and a sheet stretched corner to corner.Â
"Hey, kids," he says, fluffing one of his pillows. He chucks it at the top of the mattress. "Home time?"Â
"Can I stay over, Mr. Munson?" you ask.Â
Wayne rolls his eyes. You once spent eight days here with no breaks sometime in the summer of 1987 and he hadn't batted an eye. Eddie made sure it was truly alright with Wayne, of course, and you'd done your share of housework. Point is, both Munson's find your asking to stay unnecessary.Â
"I'll make pancakes in the morning," you add.Â
"Oh, in that case." Wayne throws his blanket out over the bed and sits on top of it. "By all means, kid, stay over. Tell your guardian."Â
"Can't. In Santa Barbara."Â
"Ah, then I have to insist you stay," he says, laying down with a huff.Â
Eddie passes him the TV remote. "She's a big girl, Wayne." You're well past the age of parental supervision.Â
Wayne answers with a grumbling sound that means, hey, you can keep talking to me but there's no guarantee I'll answer.Â
"I won't be annoying, promise," you say.Â
Wayne grunts again.Â
"That's old man talk for I know you won't," Eddie translates.Â
You nod, glad to have permission, and meander into the kitchen. "Can Iâ"Â
"Yes!" Eddie and Wayne call simultaneously.Â
Wayne laughs to himself in that pleased gruff way he's good at and tucks his arms behind his head. He's wearing one of Eddie's t-shirts. They've been the same size since Eddie was seventeen, something both Munson's utilise when laundry day is approaching but not quite upon them.Â
"Lighter?"Â
Wayne scrunches his eyes in displeasure. "By the sink."
"Thanks." For some reason, Eddie doesn't leave. He stays standing by the TV, listening to the voice of a late-night talk show chuckle through a joke about some scandal.Â
When Eddie was younger, he'd get into bed beside Wayne and watch TV until his eyes hurt. Too young to have stopped needing comfort and too old to know how to ask for it, he'd drift down the snug hallway into the living room and Wayne would usually be asleep or almost there. Eddie would stand by the TV hesitantly, and if he was sleeping Wayne must've been able to feel it, a new parents instinct or something, because he'd soon wake, and if he wasn't he'd look at Eddie like he'd been waiting for him. Like Eddie was running late.Â
His teenage years were almost solely defined by bad dreams and TV with Wayne. On the good nights, Eddie would go back to bed. On the bad nights, heartache would swallow him whole. Well, almost whole. His cheek would rest on Wayne's shoulder as the night went on. Miraculous and ordinary at once. That's the only bit of him that didn't hurt.Â
Pain emaciates the good from his memory, but it can't erase the comfort of watching TV with someone who loved him when they didn't have to.Â
Wayne pretends to chop Eddie in the stomach. Eddie laughs and dodges out of his path.Â
"Gotta be faster than that," Eddie taunts.Â
"Don't chain smoke," Wayne says.Â
"We won't be up long." Eddie's lying. He can't imagine that either of you will be getting an early night tonight considering the nature of your confession. What he means is, you won't be keeping Wayne up, and Eddie won't smoke more than what's wise.Â
Wayne hums.Â
You're in the kitchen screwing the lid back on a gallon of apple juice, your cup a quarter filled. You're like that. Won't ever take more than you need.
"One for me?" he asks.Â
"I figured now all your taste buds are dead, you wouldn't want any."Â
"Ha-ha," he says. The kitchen is unusually clean. "Shit, stop cleaning my house. Good god."Â
You pull one of his jackets off of the seat of one of the kitchen table's chairs and shake it out. "So I can sleep here, eat here, but cleaning is where you draw the line. I like it."Â
Eddie grabs the lighter from beside the sink in one hand and your wrist in the other, pulling you away from the table before you can start organising their mail and through the back door.Â
It's still sticky-hot out and the steps are warm to the touch as the two of you sit down hip to hip. He pulls the stiff pack of cigarettes from his pants pocket and hands them to you. Your hand is already waiting. You peel off the plastic and tap the pack against your chest. You like doing it, arguing that it makes you feel like you're Chelsea Marino in Glory Days, all dark smiles and indulgent self-loathing.Â
You open the pack, tug out a lone cigarette, and pass it to him.Â
"You're like a pez dispenser," Eddie says, putting the butt of the cigarette between his lips.
"You little freak."Â
He laughs and almost drops his cig. Wayne's heavy zippo struggles to light, low on gas.Â
"Loser can't even light a cigarette."Â
"Who put two dimes in you?" he asks, thrilled by your negging.Â
He takes a sharp inhale as the end of the cigarette finally lights, the heat tickling his throat until it burns the way he needs it to.Â
"Somebody must've," you say.Â
"Reckon we can tip you upside down and get something to eat?" he asks through an exhale of smoke, tapping ash into the small egg cup to his left that's been serving as an ashtray for as long as he's been smoking. It used to be yellow. Every now and again he washes it and sees the old chicken paint underneath. "Too late for cooking."Â
"Are you hungry?" you ask genuinely. "I told you we should've had more than just wings."
"It was too hot to eat hot stuff. It's still too hot. Tomorrow, we should go to Bradley's and get stuff for sandwiches."Â
Eddie waits for your answer. "I'm sick of PB and J, Eds," or "Yes! And a pitcher for sweet tea, my captain." You don't say anything, your face turned up to the sky and your eyes closed, soaking in the heat.Â
He has half a mind to go get a spray bottle and douse you before you collapse.Â
"What's going on with you?" he asks.Â
"I'm just thinking."Â
"Think out loud. Don't be fucking selfish."Â
"I'm not sure you wanna hear it."Â
He puts his cigarette in the eggcup ashtray half-smoked, ribbons of white curling up into the shimmering summer heat. Any other time he'd lounge back and let the nicotine course through his system, a momentary relief against the winding tightness that comes with being so hot, and so worried about you.Â
"If I ask you how you've been feeling lately, could you answer me?" he asks. "Without assuming I don't believe you. Don't get mad, just tell me."Â
You drop your shoulder against his. "I feel fine, I think. You know me, Iâ I worry too much, and work is overwhelming. If you took me to a doctor, he'd probably prescribe me ambien and a week in a dark room, but. I really don't think I'm making this up."Â
"I don't think you'd know," he says. Isn't that the deal? If you're having a hallucination of some kind, it would likely sound and feel real enough to trick you in some capacity.
"Trust me," you say. Your hair brushes against the top of his damp arm. He can't smell good, but you don't say a thing about it.
"I do." Eddie turns his head to take another drag. He blows the smoke as far from you as he can manage. "Tell me about last night," he says, eyes on the weather worn plating of the trailer. "What happened?"Â
If you're not messing with him, your ghost has been talking to you for a while now. Something happened last night to scare you in a way you hadn't been before.
He fights his rising nausea with a final drag on his cigarette. You stop leaning on him, hands back in your lap as you tell the story.Â
"I was listening to the stereo real loud while I did laundry. I don't know if I was trying to, you know, block it out if she started talking, I'm not stupid, Iâ I know it could be all in my head. I don't think it is, but I'm not stupid. I went down to the basement to swap the load out in the dryer, and while I was down thereâŚ"Â
You look like you don't know how to explain it. Eddie bites his cheek.Â
"She wrote me something," you say finally. "In my notebook, the one you got me for Christmas. She said hello."Â
"I could've written it," he says. "I don't remember, maybe I left you a message in it knowing you'd find it."Â
"Did you come in and take it off the shelf, too?" you ask gently. "Eddie, I know your handwriting. I'm not making this up."
He sighs, rubs his face with both hands, the smell of smoke and salt ingrained in the lines of his palms. He gives himself a long five seconds scrubbing at his stubbly jaw and wishing it was colder, then he shoots up onto his feet and pulls open the door.Â
"Early night," he says decisively. "If you're still sure there's a ghost in the morning, I'll come over. See if she'll talk to me too. How does that sound?"Â
You hold your hand out. Eddie takes it, hoisting you up.
"It sounds like you need a better strategy for getting girls to go to bed with you."Â
"It's working, isn't it?"Â
"Loser."Â
âÂ
You wake up to Eddie tapping your shoulder.Â
"Come on, sweetheart," he says quietly, his voice rough as hewn stone. "I made you pancakes."Â
It's as if you're submerged at the bottom of a shallow pool. Sound and heat and sunlight reach you, but it's dull. It takes you a second to understand what Eddie's saying, and why his thumb is rubbing into your shoulder.Â
"Come on," he says again, "'fore they get cold."Â
You blink. Blink blink blink. Your throat hurts and you have a bad taste in your mouth. Your eyes feel like somebody flicked sand at you while you slept, gritty and dry. You kick the thin blanket away from you, a long day of writhing in the heat yesterday having turned you to sludge, your limbs limp and uncooperative.Â
Eddie's frowning at you when you look up.Â
"Want me to get you a rag?" he asks.Â
"No, I'll wash my face." Your words string together like toffee melted between them and hardened again while you weren't looking. "Oh," you murmur, wincing as you set your feet on the ground. "My back really hurts. Did you push me out of bed last night?"Â
"You slept like a log. Same position all night." He reaches for you, but his hand wavers. He must change his mind.Â
Eddie leaves the door wide open as he leaves. The radio is on, and a song he secretly loves but won't admit to wars with the sound of sizzling oil. If you strain, you can hear him humming. You get closer and dip into the bathroom, the door open so you can listen to Eddie sing the chorus.Â
Dance with me, I want to be your partner, can't you see? The music is just starting.Â
He doesn't sing well, really. It's a light, high-pitched rendition. He isn't trying. He feels comfortable enough around you to be unapologetically mediocre, and it's somehow sweeter than if he had a voice like Larry Hoppen.Â
You wash your face with handfuls of cold water, your lips tasting of salt as it drips down your nose to your neck, rogue rivulets of run-off seeping into your rolled sleeves.Â
The heat broke overnight. A light rain patters soundlessly against the windows, and the back door has been propped open in the kitchen to let in the smell of fresh churned earth. Petrichor.Â
You pat your tacky face dry. Eddie turns to the sound, and you nod at Wayne's empty seat.
"Where's your uncle?" you ask.Â
"He wanted to get epoxy and a fresh roll of duct tape in case we spring another leak. The rain was pretty bad last night, I think he's worried it'll rot the ceiling. I don't know. Don't worry, I made him something first."Â
You sit down and let Eddie serve you a stack of pancakes. The ones on the very top are piping hot. You slather them in butter and maple syrup as he sits down next to you, a plate of his own in hand.Â
"How's your back?" he asks. He's being too soft with you.Â
"I saw a ghost, Eds, I'm not dying." You slice down the pancakes with the side of your fork, attempting to act unbothered. "Worst case scenario, I'm schizophrenic."
Eddie sits down in the chair next to yours. It's a small table but there's ample room. His proximity is a choice. "Worst case scenario, you're being targeted by an evil demon, but schizophrenia could also be really bad," he says. "S'why I'm worried."Â
"Eddie." You put down your fork, swallowing a half-chewed mouthful roughly. "Hey. If it's my head, I'll go to the doctor and I'll let them take care of it and everything will be fine." You have no way of knowing if what you're saying is true. Mental illness isn't easy. You're just saying what you think he needs to hear without outright lying. "I'll take the meds and you'll be there for me. But I'm fine. And you're being weird."Â
"You're trying to piss me off."Â
A little. Pissed is better than anxious. You'd rather give him something to glare at than a reason to twist himself into knots. "You're easily riled," you jest.Â
His eyebrows rise. He eats his pancakes and you your own, the wrinkled knees of your pyjamas rubbing against one another as he jigs his leg along to the song on the radio. The rain starts to worsen, fat droplets slapping the screen door like the thwack of a bullet. From your seat, you can see the sky dark with grey clouds, the sun a long forgotten foe. The humidity has been cut in half, which is to say bad but not unbearable. Last night, if you'd been awake to feel it, the rain would've been warm in your palm. Getting up to close the door now, you nudge the ajar screen wide with your foot, letting some of the rain lash your arms and face.Â
You sigh at the chilly coldness of each blessed drop.Â
"Heatwave from hell is finally over."
"Thank fuck for that. Let's hope it's miserably cold for weeks," Eddie says.
It's mid September âsummer has said goodbye with one last fierce kiss. By October, you'll be wrapping yourselves up in throw blankets on the couch on the porch, or hiding inside with Wayne's special pasta (buttered noodles and green pesto for the 'brave') watching slashers on Eddie's blurry TV. The humidity will be nothing but a gross memory.Â
You wash your plates and Eddie lets you shower first. You have your own shampoo in the corner, and a rose scented body wash Eddie buys but doesn't use (but it isn't for you, idiot, why would he buy you something so expensive? He got it by mistake). You could draw the cracks in their shower tiles with your eyes closed, and the condensation that clings to the cold water pipe, that's how many times you've been in here. You finish quickly, dry quicker, and pull fresh clothes over your still-clammy skin.Â
You tap Eddie in. He's somehow even faster than you were, and you swap places in his room. While he's changing, you dry the bathroom walls with a towel as soon as he's out, knowing the small room has a propensity for dampness.Â
"Stop cleaning my fucking house," he says when you traipse back into his room, his head hanging upside down as he towel dries his curls.Â
You forgo your usual explanations and tell the truth. "I know you're perfectly capable. I like helping, that's all."Â
"I know. Ugh, you suck. Do you have any deodorant?"Â
You grin and pull your deodorant out of your bag, a new-ish stick of Teen Spirit. Eddie sees it and sighs, obviously unprepared to smell like Pink Crush for the rest of the day. "I have like, half an inch left of Caribbean Cool. Coconut?" you offer.Â
He goes with the coconut scent. The wall of privacy between you has eroded to a scrap of paper after so long living in each other's laps, but you feel guilty for looking at him, the shifting muscle beneath the skin of his arms and chest stealing your focus. If Eddie were to see you without your shirt, you doubt he'd find himself anywhere near as distracted. He'd look if you let him because that's the way he is, unaffected by simple intimacies, but when you tell him to face the door it doesnât aggrieve him. Most of the time heâs already averted his eyes.Â
"Gotta add that to the list of shit we need. Have you seen my shoes?"Â
"Your white sneakers are in the hallway. One of your converse is under the bed, but it's hard to say about the other." You swallow a sudden lump. "Are we going shirtless?"Â
Eddie does not go shirtless. He pulls a shirt on that thankfully has sleeves, and then a zip up hoodie under his leather jacket. You didn't think to bring a coat yourself due to the extreme baking temperature of the day before. You're lucky you had clean clothes here, considering you hadn't intended to spend the night. Or, not lucky, loved. One of the Munsonâs has washed what youâve left behind.
You have a momentary lapse as Eddie puts his shoes on, trekking into the bathroom to look in the mirror. It's no secret that you aren't pretty. You can make a good effort, and you keep it classy, stay clean, but you aren't pretty, not by your own opinion.Â
Eddie knows everything about you (nearly). He knows you don't think much of yourself. And a younger version of him had comforted you as earnestly as an awkward teenage boy could manage, but these days he goes for the root of the problem. He still tells you that you're pretty occasionally, or rather, "Looking good, babe," but not today.Â
"Hey." Eddie looks you up and down. "What's wrong?"Â
"I look stupid." You glance at your legs. Why does everything look so weird on you?
He hooks his arm through yours and starts to drag you down the hallway to the front door, sideways like two crabs. "No."Â
"Yeah, I do, and people are gonna think I do, too."Â
"Who cares what other people think?" And there's grown-up Eddie's rhetoric, Who gives a fuck what other people think?Â
"Me," you say.Â
You understand exactly what it is he's trying to do: free you from the anxiety of overthinking. It doesn't work as often as you wish it would, but he gives it a good go.Â
"No, you don't. We don't care what other people think because it doesn't affect us." He doesn't make light, exactly, but his eyes are bright and his smile is sweet as he opens the front door and gestures for you to go down first. Rain and wind are quick to kiss at your naked arms.Â
"What if they all think I'm some sort of slob?"Â
"Then they'd be wrong. It's okay for people to be wrong about us. That's their problem." More familiar argument. It actually does make you feel better, despite hearing it a hundred times before. "People are wrong all the time."Â
Eddie follows you down the first step and turns away to lock the door.Â
"Like you and my ghost," you say, trying to steer the conversation from your moment of weakness and into happy territory again. "You don't think she's real."Â
"Baby, I'd love it if you proved me wrong with that one." He jogs down the rest of the steps, knowing itâll give you a conniption, the wet metal a death trap waiting to happen. âGo! Get in the van!â
You scramble across the grass and the curved pathway to the drive where the van is parked and yank open the passenger door with all your strength. The handle is notorious for sticking shut. When nothing happens, Eddie curses up a storm as he clambers into the driver's seat and over the console to force it open, giving it a good old-fashioned kick from the inside. It flies into your waiting hands and you rush up the step into the front of the van away from the rain thatâs growing heavier and heavier by the hour.Â
âWell, glad I didnât waste time letting it dry,â Eddie says, wringing his hair out over his lap. It only drips two or three drops, but itâs funny all the same. The top of his head shines like a dark halo. âAbout the ghost. Do you really believe in them?â
âYou asked me last nightââ
âI know, but last night you said you wouldnât believe in one unless you saw it, and then proceeded to talk about it like it was real.â
âIâm agnostic about ghosts.â
âOh, yeah?â he asks. He sticks the key in the ignition and turns it until the engine groans to life. The van was old when he got it. Now itâs super old.Â
âNo. Whatâs agnostic mean?â you ask.Â
âWeâll buy a dictionary.â
âI kind of believe in ghosts. I believe in my ghost. If I ever see one, Iâll believe in all the ghosts. Shit, I sound stupid.â
âNo, you donâtâ you donât! Itâs okay to not know, I wasnât trying to interrogate you about your personal beliefs.â He is a very responsible driver these days. He keeps his eyes on the road. His hand, however, strays to your arm. âYouâre not stupid, superstar.â
âDonât,â you plead. Superstar is a nickname that stuck despite your vehement disagreement with its origin and further usage. âIt makes you sound like an old dad and Iâm the son who just got benched at little league. Again.â
You stand as much as your seatbelt will allow and dig out the purse from the butt pocket of your jeans. âIâll get gas.â
âWay too personal for our relationship.â
Bad, overused joke.Â
Eddie doesnât want you to pay for gas, the same way he doesnât want you paying for takeout or birthday presents. He hates âhandoutsâ âit took you a while to convince him that gas money isnât a handout, itâs you trying to keep things fair. You know how it feels to need the money and not want to ask for it, so you put him in a position where he never has to ask.Â
Things are easier now. Youâre not in high school anymore. Work doesnât pay as well as you want it to, but itâs enough to get by, especially while youâre living in your childhood home with only partial bills to pay. Eddie isnât hurting for money either. Thatâs something to be grateful for.Â
Eddie pulls into the gas station. He wonât let you pump while the wind is whipping, but you sprint into the gas station and trawl the fridge for the biggest drinks, sticking two cans of iced tea under your arm. The cold immediately eats into your naked skin. You jog to the counter to pay.Â
âPump two, please,â you say, putting your cans down.
âTwelve dollars.â
You frown. Eddie only put ten dollars on the pump. Well, deducting your two cans of iced tea at 99 cents each, ten dollars and two cents. What an asshole.
You hold out a twenty dollar bill with a smile, and look out the window as you wait for your change. The rain is too heavy to see him, but you imagine Eddie drumming the wheel of the van with both hands. You shiver out a thanks as your change hits your palm, dropping it into your purse with your best receipts. Thereâs one for bowling (a triple defeat, Eddie a secret master), one for two whole frozen cheesecakes youâd eaten in bed a month ago with double-sized dessert spoons, a couple for Hawk theatre; Back to the Future II, Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, Ghostbusters II (â89 was a great year for sequels). All your best memories printed on thermal paper.Â
âHoly shit Iâm so cold,â you squeak, prying open the door without the aid of Eddieâs kick.Â
âYouâre soaked, you fool. You want to go home first for a sweater?â
You close the door behind you and drop the iced tea into the console, grimacing at the great clang they make. Your seatbelt snaps into place around your soft middle, and without ceremony youâre back on the road for your original mission.Â
âNo sweaters, Bradleyâs. Stupid to double back.â You look at him from the corner of your eye. âI think we should get frozen pizza and extra toppings to put on them. And fries, obviously, and dessert.â The ghost wonât care. Probably.Â
âYou forgot the side salad.â
âForgot,â you say, laughing. âWhy yes I did.â
âDessert,â Eddie says, his turn now to make some decisions. âI want a slurpee real bad right now, so Iâm thinking we buy a bag of ice for your food processor and get some syrup.â
âWe could go get slurpees,â you say encouragingly. If thatâs what he wants, why not?
âWe have shit to do,â he says, smiling so much his dimples peek out. âGhosts to convene with, notebooks to analyse. Feasts to prepare.â He looks deeply speculative. You assume heâs thinking about the maybe-ghost, but he says, âWhy are we getting frozen pizza? They have those pre-packaged ones now that are basically fresh.â
âThey taste the same.â
âLiar, the bottom of the frozen ones go soggy and the cheese burns on the crust. You know that Iâm right, donât give me dish.â
âArenât you always?â
Eddie has a horrible tendency to be right about things. Maybe that's why you hadn't told him about the ghost for so long, because you'd wanted to handle it yourself without his explanatory assurances. Youâre the worrier and heâs the one who always sets it straight.
What if I make a fool of myself? you've asked him once.
Iâll make one of myself, too.Â
What if they fire me?Â
Weâll get you a new job with me cleaning up after idiots.
What if it never goes away?
It will.Â
What if body snatchers get us while weâre sleeping?
That one made him smile. The fondest upturn of a pretty mouth, not an expression you often see. Then they get us, heâd said, whispering across the pillows, face only partially visible in the struggling light of the TV. Itâll be awesome. Me and you. No brains, no worries. Just lettuce heads forever.Â
You watch him beating along to a song you arenât privy to against the wheel. He hadnât seemed to mind the idea of losing his mind with you back then. He doesnât believe you now, but thatâs because he hasnât heard her voice. The whistling wind warping itself into coherent syllables. Reaching for you, a dark slice of sound.Â
Eddie⌠has⌠a secretâŚ
You look at your lap, tamping down a shudder at the sensation of ice riding your spine.Â
Donât we all?
â
Eddie feels youâve been overly relaxed about the situation at hand. He doesnât want to back you into a box and declare a health crisis, but heâs been thinking up possible illnesses while you weigh the pros and cons of pizza toppings in case he has to take you to see someone. Heâs not sure how gas lines work but heâs sure a quick phone call to the Munson landline could clear it up for him. Perhaps the most effective test of all for carbon monoxide poisoning would be to subject himself to the same circumstances. Heâll spend a few days at home with you and see how he feels afterward. If push comes to shove heâll light a match and see what catches.Â
On the inside, Eddieâs panicking about your mental health and, admittedly, the slim reality of a supernatural presence. On the outside, heâs playing along with your unconcerned dinner plans and aimless chatter. If you want to pretend that today is the same as any other day, he's prepared to let you. He wonât do the same, but he wonât discourage you, either.Â
You cut through one of the home aisles toward the front of the store with a heavy basket on your elbow, Eddie hot on your heels. He grabs a pocket dictionary from the display to his left and hurries to keep up with you.Â
Youâre shivering. âI really didnât think it would rain,â you say.Â
Eddie looks past the registers to the glass doors at the front of the store where rain pelts with a force bordering on stormy weather. If it gets much worse than this, he'll insist you both go back to Munson headquarters and hunker up to wait it out.Â
âThe weather,â Eddie mumbles, unlike himself. âAre we expecting a storm? Maybe we should grab a cart and get some basics. Crate of water.â
âOkay, we can do that. Are you worried?â
âKind of.â
He meets your eyes. He loves your eyes. He knows you donât. You're not insecure in a way he feels he can fix âif he can fix any of it. Itâs like you dissociate, for lack of a better word, from the things you canât love. You donât look in the mirror, wonât let him take photographs of you. You donât say it. You call yourself stupid, weird, silly. Never ugly.Â
But he knows.Â
And now this whole ghost business. Eddie needs to think of something he can say to you that will inspire a better level of honesty going forward.Â
âHow long have you been speaking to the ghost?â he asks.Â
You grin at a conveniently abandoned shopping cart at the end of the aisle and slide toward it on squealing shoes. You look around broadly for an owner, and when they donât appear you place your basket in the stomach of it. The only thing remaining from whoever used it beforehand is a small tray of four cupcakes.Â
âFour. One for you, three for me,â you say, ignoring his question with a smug giggle.Â
Eddie loves you in a way not many people can love someone else, the kind of love that takes years of patience and acceptance and sweetness to take root, kind of love you only feel after seeing someone at their best, worst, and weirdest â memories come thick and fast whenever he thinks about the sheer years youâve spent together, seeds of affection long germinated and rearing to grow. You, throwing up behind a Dennyâs with sick in your hair, crying so hard you couldnât catch your breath, and when you could, asking him if he wouldnât mind buying you a new t-shirt to wear in the car as though you were some dastardly imposition, and not his sick best friend. You, on top of the world, surrounded by people who loved you with a birthday cake in front of you, eyes brighter than the blinking flames of each dripping candle. You, in pyjamas too tight, too loose, old or brand new with your hair up, down, washed, and greasy, your lips chapped, bruised then healed, parted against one of his pillows as you slept, as you yawned, as you laughed, talked. No matter what youâre wearing, saying or doing, you, in his bed, completely at home.Â
Eddie has a thousand images of you in his head and they all fight to play again, like a VHS on constant rewind, or a movie with duplicated film, double, triple exposed. Before even an inkling of a crush had ever come around, he loved you. That's why it doesnât really matter that he canât kiss you. He canât imagine loving you more than this.Â
Sometimes, sometimes⌠you put your leg over his and your thigh spreads out across the top of his, and he has to beg himself not to want to touch you. He wonders if youâd mind. Eddie thinks about asking so often it turns into its own fantasy. He knows what cadence his voice would take, the exact grit and warmth, his hand waiting on your knee and aching to inch downward.Â
You pull him from his sickly introspection with a poke. Your fingernail dents his shirt precisely atop a small beauty mark. He doesnât know if you know what youâre doing, if youâve seen his naked chest enough times to realise that thereâs a mole right there an inch shy of his belly button, if youâd ever looked at him in so much detail.Â
âTransmission incoming,â you say, your fingers flattening over his abdomen, your palm hovering apart. Like the pole of an opposite magnet, it refuses to connect. âChirp. Houston, weâve been attempting to connect with Astronaut Munson. He is unresponsive. Let us know when you make contact again.â You smile at him ruefully. âDamn moon keeps dropping signal.â
âSorry⌠Astronaut Munson? Do they call astronauts astronauts? I thought it was commander.â
âI donât know, Eddie, I havenât brushed up on NASA related job titles lately.â Your deadpan wanes, replaced with a genuine concern. âAre you okay? You really did get lost.â
âIâm just thinking about, you knowâ Your ghost,â he lies. The ghost should be his highest concern, and for the most part it is, but heâd let his attention get pulled along by other things.
Thatâs the thing about love. It feels much more important in the moment than anything else, even when it shouldnât.Â
âYouâre super worried about the ghost.â
âIt is an uber worrying ghost.â
ââCause she talks?â you ask.
âWell, yeah. Most of the time you just get, like, blurs on night vision cameras or the general malignant presence of the thing. Not words.â Not questions concerning your best friend.Â
âCasper talks and heâs gorgeous,â you say. âA true sweetheart.â
âDoesnât Casper have to protect Lucy from his evil ghost uncles?â
âWho the fuck is Lucy?â
âThe girl. Lucy and Johnny.â
âBonnie?â
âOh. That sounds right. But her name doesnât matter,â Eddie insists. âMy point was that the bad ghosts outweigh the good three to one. Thatâs more than half, you realise.â
âHis name is Casper the Friendly Ghost,â you say, shrugging. Eddie hopes you know where it is in the store youâre going to. He hasnât looked away from your face for the last twenty minutes. âItâs in the name.â
âBut your ghost isnât Casper,â Eddie says.
âNo. My ghost isnât Casper, but she hasnât tried to kill me. She would have written something threatening in my notebook or knocked all the books off of my shelf if she were evil.â
Eddie frowns. Youâve steered him around the store like youâve never been here before, changing your mind after turns to go down the opposite aisle, murmuring about bottled water. He reaches for your hand on the shopping cart rail and canât resist squeezing it as he pulls it away.Â
âI got it,â he says.Â
He swears that your expression flickers. Worry breaking through the closed shutters of your blasĂŠ.Â
Youâre not so chatty as you follow him toward the back of Bradleyâs where they keep the big jugs of water. He grabs one, thinks back to the bad weather and grabs another. Itâs unlikely that youâll need them, but Eddie would rather be safe than sorry. âDo you have a lamp?â he asks. âAn oil lamp? Or a flashlight?â
âI have a flashlight,â you confirm. âIs it really so bad? Uh, I donât wanna ask again, but Iâ maybe I couldââÂ
Eddie wants to pull your face into his chest. He thinks about it. Would he have hugged you like that a year ago, before the butterflies and the late nights daring to think of the dough of your thighs or the column of your throat when you tip your head back? He mightâve. It would mean something different, but he mightâve.Â
He throws an arm around your shoulder and gives you a good shake. âWhat is wrong with you? If it gets any worse, youâre staying with me. Iâm only asking about a flashlight in case we have one of those worst case scenarios and get stuck in your haunted house. I refuse to die like the jocks in a b-rated horror.â
âThe jocks or the whore? Isnât it the girl who sleeps around that gets murdered in the dark?â you ask.Â
âSuper unfair. I sleep around, do I deserve to die?â he asks, dropping his arm.Â
You mime stabbing him in the gut. Everyone's so violent.Â
Eddie is amazingly unharmed as he gets you to the register. You try to fight him on whoâs paying, but youâre an idiot who insisted on getting gas. Itâs the leverage he needs to win. Out of Bradleyâs and back into the rain with grocery bags double bagged, you run for the van and thrust the spoils of your shopping trip in the passenger seat footwell. Eddie opens the side door to lug the water jugs inside and you take the cart back to the front of the store against his wishes.
He waits for you to be in arms reach and gets back in the van. Youâre soaked to the bone. Heâs cold in three layers, so you must be freezing. He shrugs off his sopping wet leather jacket and then the zip hoodie underneath, draping the zip hoodie over your lap and chest and then rushing to put his leather jacket on again.
âThank you, good sir,â you laugh.
Heâs already fiddling with the air conditioning. Heat bursts from the left vent but not the right, leaving you in a cold bubble. âShit, Iâm sorry, the right ventâs still busted. Olâ Beauville keeps letting us down.â
âDonât hate on the Beauville!â you scold through chattering teeth.Â
âYou're dying,â he says. âHold on, Iâm gonna do ninety.â
âDo not speed!âÂ
You get to the road outside of your place without any hydroplaning. You live on a regular American street in a two-story semi-detached house not too far from Hawkins High school with your guardian, who isnât home very often. It has three bedrooms, one bathroom, and a lot of white walls. You often lament that the house doesnât really feel like your own, and punctuate with a giddy laugh he doesnât understand but adores nonetheless.Â
Eddie parks his van on the long gravel driveway as close to the house as he can get it and ushers you inside with your keys. Youâre cold enough to listen without complaint.Â
He puts the groceries in the kitchen on the countertops and kicks off his shoes, intending on putting them away when heâs sure you arenât in any danger of hypothermia. He kicks off his shoes by the door, locks it tight, and starts up the carpeted stairs to your room.Â
Heâs not surprised to find you half-naked, but overfamiliar, affectionate friendship doesnât necessarily mean you like being seen. He averts his gaze from your naked legs and tries desperately to think about anything but underwear. The more he tries not to think about them, the worse it gets.Â
âHey,â he says, covering his eyes so you know he isnât perving, âour horror flick just got dirty.â
âYikes,â you say. âDonât look.â
âIâm not, Iâm not. You couldâve closed the door. You know, spare me a guilty conscience.â Then, because he just canât help himself, âWhen did you start wearing fancy panties?â
âFuck off, Eddie,â you laugh.Â
âDo I have to make the switch to tighty whities?â
âOur underwear choices do not concern one another.â You trek toward him. He peeks through two spread fingers and finds you thankfully reclothed in dry sweatpants and a sweater soft with age. âI thought tighty whities hurt yourââ You raise your eyebrows.Â
He regrets being honest with you when you were teenagers. A little secrecy might help repaint him in your mind as less of a huge loser. You could possibly find him attractive if you weren't privy to the numerous embarrassments that make up his life, he thinks.Â
He chokes on his own tongue and dies right there in your bedroom. âWhy do you remember shit like that?â
âSame reason you keep a heat pack in your room in case I get all crampy,â you say.
You give him one of your sick smiles âyou have to know what youâre doing, you have toâ and drape your arms over his shoulders, nearly knocking him down with the sudden addition of your weight. He, stunned, plants a foot behind himself so you donât both trip and fall on your asses.Â
The plane of your back beckons beneath your sweater. What heâd give to slip a hand under the hem to explore the ridge of your shoulder blade with his fingertips.Â
A quiet ensues. Your hug turns from a joking attempt to push him around a bit to a real one. He steel-arms your waist, tightening them around you three times in quick succession, nose buried in your hair to steal a deep breath.Â
âThis where the ghost talks to you?â he asks, looking over your head into the chaos of your room. Itâs not dirty, but it isnât tidy, either.Â
You sigh too much like a moan for his sanity and stand up tall, your hands trailing down his chest unthinkingly as you follow his gaze. âYeah. I donât know if weâll hear her over the rain. It has to be really quiet.â
âWhat are you doing? Experiments?â he asks. He sounds as distracted by it all as he feels.Â
âNo. Something I noticed, is all.â
âI donât get why you didnât tell me the first time it happened,â he confesses, voice dropping to a murmur.Â
âUm⌠remember senior year, you kept missing class because you had all those doctors appointments?â You smile sheepishly. ââNâ you didnât tell me about it until after you knew you were okay?â
During his first senior year, Eddie found a small cyst in his arm. Small compared to other cysts, large in his arm. He worried it was malicious, or rather Wayne worried and Eddie didnât know what he thought about it until after theyâd cut it out. It had been a thankfully speedy affair in a doctors office they couldnât afford. Eddie didnât tell you about it until heâd been all stitched up and tested â he tried, but then he would imagine the look on your face when he did, and it made him feel like his intestines had learned to jump rope.Â
He still remembers when he finally told you, the split second between, âa tumour,â and âbut itâs not cancer.â The relief on your face. The shock of upset tears it caused.Â
âI guess I was trying to be good to you,â you say, shrugging and starting down the stairs.
Eddie follows. âIf something like that happened again to me, god forbid,â âhe dips into a melodramatic voice, scared of the sombre mood thatâs descendedâ âI wouldnât keep it to myself. Iâd make it your problem instantly.âÂ
Every now and then, Wayne will lean over the back of Eddieâs chair at the breakfast table and grab an arm, feeling for a tiny bump that hasnât come back. Youâd done the same in your own way: you wrote âcheck for lesions :Dâ on a piece of paper and taped it to his bedroom doorway. It fell off ages ago, but he occasionally gets dĂŠjĂ vu as he leaves the room. And as he walks down the hallway, heâll roll up his sleeve and check that there's nothing there.
Eddie didnât tell you senior year. A lingering abandonment issue, maybe, âcause Dad didnât stay when things got hard, who cares? He doesnât think about that shit anymore. Figures the mark it left was enough. But these days, heâd tell you if he found a lump in his arm, or a ghost in his room. Your scribbled note made sure of that.Â
"Are you listening to me?" he asks.Â
"You'd make it my problem," you provide. "Tell me something I don't know."Â
He grabs you by the shoulders at the bottom of the stairs and blows into your ear.Â
With the lights on and the radio at a low volume, the rain outside doesn't seem nearly as imposing. The kitchen is small with a long strip light above that gives the room a near clinical white cast, the countertops shining clean, not a plate in the sink. It's evident how much time you don't spend here. No photos on the fridge, no salt or pepper shakers on the table. Where Eddie and Wayne have their insane mug collection made up of states and hours and way too much money in some cases, you have four black coffee mugs in a tower stack by the seldom used machine. Where they have a corkboard of photographs, Polaroids and printouts from Walmart off of rinky-dink digital cameras, you have one photo on the wall, a professionally done portrait of you from the day you graduated and Eddie, unfortunately, did not.Â
Eddie's grad pictures are much less robotic. Too much eyeliner but just enough you, he has his arm thrown over your shoulders in the back of a grungy restaurant, his smile blisteringly bright. He might as well have written 'Thank Fuck' across his forehead. There's another one of him and Hellfire Club at the time, blurry with the flash making him pale as snow. You and Wayne had been trying to make the camera focus, twin scowls on your faces. Eddie's expression was one of pure joy.Â
He tried to make up for your shitty grad pics by celebrating your first job with a pack of Polaroids. You'd looked adorably strange in the uniform, so young but so done with his shit, eighteen and exhausted. He keeps one in his room in the bottom of the box with all his rings and chains. If you ever found it, he'd think about drowning himself.Â
Your appointment with a ghost waits until after dinner. You pull your frozen pizzas out of their boxes and put them in the oven (you don't preheat, which Eddie thinks is a questionable choice, but he'd help you get away with murder). While they defrost and start to cook, you slice and dice your extra toppings on the wooden chopping board beside the stovetop. He stands there with his hands washed and nothing to do. Just watches you cut up jalapeĂąos for him and thinks about how he's going to take care of you if the ghost doesn't speak up. Does he tell your guardian? You're an adult. All your healthcare would be private and confidential. Could he tell Wayne? Would that be a betrayal?Â
"Check the pizzas?" You scrape the seeds out of a jalapeĂąo, eyes pinched in concentration.Â
Eddie doesn't know if he can eat. You aren't as out of it as you were at the store, but you aren't fully present. A song you love plays on the radio and it's like you don't hear it.Â
He pulls the pizzas from the oven. He makes a smiley face out of pepperoni and jalapeĂąos, earning half as big a smile as he thought he would from you in response.Â
Together, you clean the small mess you made. The pizzas brown. When they're done you take them out, cut them up, plate them, and carry them up to your room on a tray with a two litre bottle of sprite and two plastic cups. Eddie changes into a pair of his pyjama pants that you keep at the bottom of your dresser before he sits on your bed, wide-eyed when he sees how many slices you've managed in his absence.Â
"Nobody's gonna take it away from you," he teases lightly.Â
"Can't be too careful 'round you," you say, dropping a crust onto his plate. It's his favourite part.Â
"Thought you wanted fries?"Â
"And I thought you wanted a side salad."Â
"I wanted snow cone syrup," he says, shrugging.Â
He considers offering to go make you some fries anyway, but he takes a big bite of pizza and it tastes so good he forgets about it. Eddie doesn't know nothing about nothing, but if he had a say, he'd make it so that he and you could spend the rest of your lives doing this, meaningless jabbering over greasy food. It's not a good idea âyou need vegetables that aren't on pizza, and fresh grains, and who knows what else to stay healthyâ but Eddie's never claimed he had them. He wants this.Â
He gets it most of the time, but he's selfish. He wants it every night. He loves Wayne but he wants to come home to you, or to have you come home to him, in a space that you decorated, a life that you made. He wants a dog and a pet fish and, in five years or ten or never, a baby if it's what you want too. A front door lined with three pairs of shoes.Â
He also wants a limousine that takes him from place to place and a room full of thousand dollar guitars. A man can dream.Â
The first port of call for any dream is making sure you're okay. Let the ghostly stakeout begin.Â
Sated and sick at once, Eddie puts your empty tray on the dresser and goes to turn on the TV. "She won't talk if the TV's on," you interrupt.
"Ugh. Any chance she likes the stereo?"Â
You slouch down where you'd been sitting and shake your head. Your jaw goes soft, eyes softer when you smile. "It's not all bad. She doesn't care how loud you turn a page."Â
Eddie can't be with you every second of the day, the same way you can't be with him. There are shifts to take, shifts to cover, dungeons to pilfer and dragons to slay. You have your job, your other friends (none as handsome as he is), your hobbies. How often are you home alone, talking to ghosts?Â
He stands by your bookshelf, eyes skipping over the titles in slight disinterest.Â
"Hey," he asks, "where's your notebook? I wanna see her handwriting."Â
"I left it on the top shelf."Â
Eddie stares. There are a few other notebooks and sketchbooks aligned here, but not the one you'd described.Â
"You sure?" he asks.Â
"I left it right there,â you say with a yawn.
Eddie looks at you from over his shoulder. Youâre tired. He figures he can see the notebook later, and offer you some remedial comfort now. Anything to wipe the frown off of your face.Â
He grabs a book off of your shelf at random and cracks it open. You love being read to. You'd beg and beg him growing up, and he'd almost always oblige.Â
"Can I read aloud, or does she hate that too?" he asks, turning away from your shelf.Â
"I've never tried it."Â
"I'll do it quietly?"Â
"Sure," you say, a tired but pleased smile on your lips. "I've read that one before."Â
"Should I get a different one?"Â
"No, it's good. It's the one I told you about with the demons who eat stars."Â
"The dirty one?" he asks, dropping like a stone near the top of your bed, the blankets under his hip warm from the residual heat of the pizza plates.
"It's not dirty. There's one scene toward the end where they get handsy, no graphic detail."
"And by no graphic detail, you meanâŚ"Â
"No graphic detail," you repeat. It's awful how funny you find each other.Â
"Not even, like⌠hand stuff?"Â
"Do you want there to be hand stuff?"Â
"With the demons?"Â
You devolve into giggles, the kind that start slow and thicken into a giddy sort of breathlessness, your head supported by the headboard. Eddie looks up at you in awe.
"I could be into that," Eddie furthers, stretching your laughter as long as it will go. "Are they the kind that look like people but with extra arms or wings or something?"Â
"You'd like that, huh? Extra arms?"Â
"I wouldn't be opposed to extra arms."
"Gross," you cheer through another wave of laughter. "I don't wanna think about it."Â
Eddie looks to the book's first page and tamps down a grimace. You don't wanna think about him in that sort of position.Â
Eddie, excluding any extra appendages, thinks of you like that more than he should. Never when you're near, not if he can help it, but at night when the hot shower water beating down against his back can be shaped into the vague sensation of a body behind him, he thinks of your chest. Your hands. Or in the early mornings, when he's writhed into a contortionistâs ball and the streaking sunlight through the curtains is kissing his abdomen, he imagines it's your leg thrown across his hip, with your face turned into his chest.Â
Fuck, it kills him, because he knows what the real thing feels like. He's had you clinging to his waist on colder nights, and he's been under your hands. Tipsy, free with your touches, he's felt the breadth of your palms cupping his cheeks.Â
You're pretty, you'd told him, as you love to tell him when you've been drinking, but you need a haircut.Â
He never would've let you kiss him in that state, but he kids himself into thinking you wanted to. It was only booze doing what booze does.Â
"Read to me, serf," you demand.Â
Eddie clears his throat.Â
"The enemy is close," Eddie reads, "and the lane is overrun. Sympathy for the second kind had felt natural to Mellissa once, but now that she sees the sharp angling of their shoulders in the dawn light, she aches with hatredâŚ"
The novel isn't bad. It isn't Eddie's favourite; the tone falls flat, and the main character's actions aren't fed by any particular emotion. Its first arc is formulaic, and soon the hero's forced to answer the call. You evidently find his rehashing tedious, as your head tips toward his head, and you wriggle your way down to his shoulder amicably.Â
"Don't fall asleep," he says.Â
"It's your whispering."Â
"I don't want to disturb the ghost."Â
"Okay." You start to pick at your nails, little scratches against the cuticle. "I won't fall asleep."Â
âÂ
Your snores aren't gentle. You're a human being and Eddie doesn't expect you to breathe like a princess, but the wheeze is concerning.Â
He waits for you to settle down, easing your head onto the pillow. Your airway clears, and your snoring quietens to the same ambient level as the rain hitting the window outside. He feels your head for a temperature carefully. Back of his hand, fingers curled in so his ring can't startle you, he tries to gauge if you're running a fever.Â
It isn't normal for you to cat nap in the middle of the day, but the sun is occluded by dark clouds and the rain blots out what's left, leaving the bedroom in darkness, and you'd been warm and fed and Eddie had been doing something monotonous. It makes sense that you'd drifted off. Eddie wishes he felt tired too, so he could slide down under the sheets with you and curl a hand around your wrist.Â
He lies on his back, arms crossed over his chest, straining his ears for the sound of a voice.Â
I swear, sometimes, I can hear someone talking.
You have a vent in your room, and perhaps a couple of late nights after your shifts had you mistaking a groaning foundation or the wind for a whisper. That's a thing, right? People hear something in the wind. Fatigue has your mind playing tricks on you. Eddie should go to the library and see if they have anything to do with sleep deprivation.Â
It's no fun listening for ghosts. Eddie's shoulders and upper back begin to feel tense. The feeling travels lower, a snaking ache that wraps around each vertebrae. Even his tailbone hurts.Â
He shifts onto his side and stares at your closed eyes. He blows a breath at you to watch your lashes flutter like tufts of grass in the breeze.Â
Your breaths are like a metronome. He syncs his to yours for kicks, just listening. When you're both asleep, does your breath sync on its own? How do your bodies react to each other? Eddie has woken up to your arms around him or your body halfway across the bed, leg falling out from under the covers. You're irregular, where he has a tendency to grab at you while he's knocked out. He doesn't wrap his arms around you so much as hold you in his hands. His fingers curl in the hem of your t-shirts or bracelet your bicep. If he falls asleep with an arm above your head, he'll occasionally wake to find his hand at the top of it, your hair mussed.Â
He must be stroking it in his sleep.Â
Or maybe you're frizzy.Â
No shame in frizziness. Eddie's frizzy more often than not. Curly hair is hard to take care of and he has a lot of it. God knows it was worse before he started seeing that hairdresser in the city who makes magic happen with her thinning shears.Â
Your lips part.Â
Thunder cracks outside.Â
Eddie lifts his head to look out of the window in surprise. Summer days have come to pass and sunset comes earlier in the day, fractals of light bouncing between the violent rain. In an hour or two, it will be pitch black outside.Â
He should call Wayne and see what's happening. How he is, and if he thinks Eddie should come home and bring you, too.Â
Eddie clambers off of the bed, careful not to wake you. He slides across your hardwood floor and takes the empty dinner tray with him down the spongy carpeting of your stairs, back to hardwood in the hallway, and finally onto the freezing cold linoleum of your kitchen.Â
He locates the source of chill quickly. The window in front of the sink has unlatched. It's the thing you call him over for most; when you want to hang out you go to Eddie's, when the window won't close Eddie comes here.Â
His shirt hikes as he leans against the sink, his abdomen pressed to the cold countertop as he yanks the window and twists the handle the wrong way, goosebumps climbing his arms. It groans in resistance, but Eddie knows from experience that itâll stay closed for a while.Â
He takes the liberty of turning your thermostat up as he waits for Wayne to answer the phone, coiled cord pulled taut.
Wayne isn't too bothered by the weather, "It's not a hurricane. A storm, sureâ you'll be fine. But by all means, come home if you're scared."
"I'm not scared, jerk, I'm concerned."Â
He winds the cord around his arm, leaning in when Wayne's voice is hard to hear like it'll make a difference.Â
"...might go out," Wayne's saying, "call me, or call around Roger's⌠get back to⌠warm."Â
"Where the fuck are you? I can't hear a thing you're saying."Â
"Don't cuss at me. I'm with Roger, that's why I said to call Roger if I don't answer, he has that new pool tableâŚ" Anything Wayne says after that is garbled, like he has a hand pressed over his mouth. Â
âI thought Roger had a broken leg?â Eddie says. âHowâs he getting around?â
âHe hops. I left money in the bread bin for you, did you see it?â
âNo, I didnât see it. Wayne, weâve talked about this before, Iâm working. I appreciate it, I do, but I donât need you giving me money.â
Whatever Wayne says at first gets eaten by static. Eddie doesnât know if itâs your phone or the Munsonâs. He doesnât need to hear what Wayneâs saying to get the general gist of it. ââŚwater bill..â
This again? Eddie paid the water bill. He thought heâd be allowed to do that, considering he uses the majority of the water, but itâs been a great point of contention between them.
âIâm sorry!â he says. âIf I knew it would bother you so bad I wouldnât have done it. But I donât want it back, Iâm not a kid anymore, half the time you donât let me pay for groceriesââ
âThis might shock you, son, but Iâve been paying for you to eat for a decade. I ever complained? No, âcause itâs my job, and I donât want you thinking anyâŚâ the words scratch out. Eddie guesses what heâs saying.Â
The broken phone is starting to irritate him.Â
He holds in his argument. Call it respect, love, whatever you want. âIâm not saying that! Listen,â âEddie laughs to himself, words wrought with it like bubblesâ âyouâre senile.â
âYou weaselââ The phone gives up. Whooshing air is all Eddie hears.Â
"I can't deal with this. I love you, I'll see you tomorrow, okay?" Eddie asks, rubbing the space between his eyebrows.Â
"Yeah, love you too, kid. Eddieâ"Â
He doesn't catch the end of Wayne's sentence. The line goes dead. He pulls the shiny receiver from his ear and frowns at it.Â
Wayne was probably just telling Roger and the guys what Eddie was up to. Or what he thinks Eddie's up to, at least. Eddie told him via note that you wanted help rearranging your bedroom furniture. A small lie, but he didn't want to expose you to any outward judgement until he's sure himself what's going on.Â
Eddie hangs the phone on the hook. He grabs your plates, throwing the meagre leftovers in the trash and dumping the plates in the sink. He turns on the hot faucet and grabs a sponge and the dish soap and gets to work cleaning. It takes him all of five minutes, and he's oh so smug about being a decent person that he doesn't notice the chill.Â
He dries the plates and puts them in the cabinet across the room with his back to the sink. The dishes clatter together loudly, like a gunshot in the silence. He winces internally and tries to be gentler closing the cabinet door.
The hum of the kitchen light catches his attention. He looks up, unsurprised to find a bug crawling inside of the plastic covering that shields the long bulb. A moth, Eddie thinks, it's fuzz silhouetted in shadow. He doesn't really like moths, but he also doesn't wanna watch one die.Â
The rain seems worse when he turns off the light. Your kitchen faces out into the backyard, and through the night Eddie can see the house that's behind yours with its porch lights on. It turns the rain to quicksilver, and provides just enough illumination for Eddie to look up at the kitchen light and know what he's doing.Â
He drags a chair to the middle of the room and steps onto it. It's disturbingly slippery. Thankfully, Eddie doesn't plan on doing any acrobatics. He reaches up to the warm plastic light covering and feels along for the ridges to pry it off. One ridge clicks off, and another. He leans precariously toward the other side and feels for the third and forth ridge when thunder rumbles outside, and somewhere in the distance lightning flashes.Â
Eddie flinches but doesn't fall. "Fuck," he mumbles. Pussy.Â
The plastic falls into his hands and Eddie climbs off of the chair as quickly as he can. It's too hot to handle, banging against the kitchen table as he chucks it down. He'd turned off the light thinking the plastic would cool down fast, and heâd been proven very wrong.
"Shit," he mumbles some more. Your neighbour's porch light turns off, leaving him in total darkness.Â
Eddieâs hand aches from his mild burn. It's like whenever he has to wash the frying pan at home, he forgets that while cold water might cool the pan itself, the slim piece of metal that connects the dish to the handle stays hot. He's burned himself so many times on that fuckerâÂ
Lightning flashes again.Â
There's someone standing in your yard.Â
The second he notices the figure, it lunges left.
Eddie stands frozen on the spot, unsure if he should approach the window to get a better look, or if he should move backward and away from the potential harm.Â
He takes a step forward. Mind in a numb state of thoughtlessness, he walks to your sink and stands there silently, looking into the grass and trees for any hint of irregular movement.Â
Tree branches rail in the wind and rain. Eddie leans further forward.Â
A third flash of lighting comes, and it must have struck close by, as the light it gives off is long and bright. He gets a clear look at the yard and the image of his own reflection in the glass. No dark figure in the tall grass toward the fence, no heinous murderer trying the back door.Â
Itâs dark again. Eddie puts a hand over the racing pulse of his heart. Fuck, he thinks. Iâm seeing things. Heâs on edge âcause of your fucking ghost, and itâs not your fault but he wonders if maybe loving you is making him tired. He regrets it as soon as he thinks it, what does that even mean? Heâs loved you for years. It has never felt like a chore. But⌠tired. Heâs tired. Pining for someone you already have, just not in the way that you want, is exhausting. Itâs not your fault and it doesnât change the fact that heâs exhausted. Today has been a long day.Â
He scrubs his eyes with his palms until they burn and lifts his head.Â
Thereâs a girl on the other side of the glass.Â
Eddie startles, startles again when he realises sheâs not on the other side at all, sheâs behind him, outfitted in white like an apparition, like an angel. Sheâs inside the house, ten feet away in the doorway.Â
His neck cracks with the force of his turn.Â
âSorry,â you say, taking a step back into the hall. âI thought you heard me.â
âOh, shit.âÂ
Youâve turned the light on in the hall. Eddie turns back to the window and sees your reflection again, no angels and no apparitions. Youâre just a girl.Â
He half turns and gets stuck like that, hand braced against his eyes, torso pitching forward. âShit,â he mutters.Â
âAre you okay?â
Eddie laughs. âYou surprised me. Iâm fine,â he assures you, though he takes his time standing at full height. How can such a small scare feel like a marathon? âCreep, who fucking does that?â
âYou were totally spaced, dude, donât blame me,â you say, holding your hands up in mock surrender.Â
âI do blame you. I hope you feel blamed. Fucking fuck, that got me.â
âI wasnât being quiet. I yelled. You didnât hear me?â
He canât stop the dubiety that warps his face. âNo? Whatâs your definition of yelling? âEddie?ââ he imitates you, tossing his own name into the dark kitchen. âUnbelievable.â
âWhat were you looking at?â you ask, nodding at the window.Â
âLightning.â
âThat why youâre in the dark? Or have I interrupted something?â
ââM moonlighting as a serial killer.â He grins at you. âGot me.â
You lean against the wall next to the light switch and turn it on, exposing the chair shy of his leg and the plastic cover from your light on the table.
âWhat theââ
âIâm doing a good deed. Or, I was. There was a moth at one point."Â
You help Eddie clip the light back into place. He climbs back on the chair and you hug his legs to make sure he doesnât fall either way, arms encircling his thighs and your face pressed comfortably to his stomach. Your cheek flush with the naked stretch of his stomach, his shirt hiked up as he struggles to finish what he started, he explains the moth, who, for lack of an escape, has probably found a home in your curtains or your coat rack. You laugh at his softness.
Back upstairs, you wonât let him read to you again, and the ghost monitoring continues on. Eventually, you both get bored and turn on the TV. Eddie forgets his fright, you forget your haunted house, and the night ends. You fall asleep against his shoulder, drool leaking from the corner of your mouth. He pushes you gently down into your pillow, and goes to brush his teeth with a snort.Â
Eddie wakes in the morning with a crick in his neck. He feels better, having slept. All his monstrous yearning has fizzled out overnight, and heâs glad to find that the damp circle of dribble under your cheek isnât cute, itâs gross. (Okay, itâs a little cute. Heâs only human.)Â
The window brags an end to the extreme weather. Rain nor shine reaches through your drapes; the morning looks mundane. He kicks your shin âby accidentâ and waits for you to rouse, keeping a safe distance. He doesnât wanna get his morning breath all over you. That would be inhumane.Â
âOuch,â you croak.
âIt wasnât that hard.â His voice is as rough as yours.Â
âNot your kick,â you moan. âMy throat.â
âYouâve been drooling again.â
You cover your face sluggishly and your pinky must feel the wet spot staining your pillow.Â
âItâs embarrassing.â You dig your heels in at the bottom of the bed and pull your head off of the pillow so you can grab it and throw it out of view. Once itâs bashed against your mirror with a concerning glass sound, you pull the blankets over your face and sigh. âIâll be here forever, if you need me.â
âCould be worse,â he says lightly. âImagine waking up with a stiffy.â
âDid youâ?â you ask, like youâre terrified to know but couldnât not inquire.Â
âNo, but I have. You know I have.â
âTrue. That is⌠unfortunately awkward.â
ââXactly. Donât feel weird about your spit.â
You donât feel as bad as you pretend. Sure, itâs embarrassing. So is puking in your lap at the movies, or ripping your pants climbing over the fence into the woods by Forest Hills, or getting fired after two weeks from the Palace Arcade because the manager didnât like your âgeneral demeanour and/or presenceâ, all of which heâs done and youâve been a witness to. He thinks you might be impervious to humiliation as long as youâre together.Â
Eddie pulls the blankets over his head, pleased that the morning light reaches you even here. Youâre curled on your side underneath them, bleary eyes meeting his from across the small stretch of mattress. You hadnât touched him once while you slept.Â
âI donât remember falling asleep,â you say quietly.Â
âWe watched Poltergeist. You fell asleep with twenty minutes left.â
âCan you blame me? Snore.â
âYou wanted to watch it.â
âItâs the only movie I own that has a ghost.â
You share a silent look. Eddie tries to keep a straight face and ultimately fails, his laugh roaring. You join in, half reluctant and half delirious in your fatigue. Your sleep-swollen eyes close like you canât keep them open anymore.Â
He stays under the sheets stealing looks at you for as long as he can, despite the building, smothering warmth. The day passes with much of the same.Â
â
When you first started working at Leaven, Eddie called you a traitor. He said youâd made it impossible for him to show his face in Bradleyâs. Heâd been joking â the prices at Leaven are ridiculous, and completely out of the average joeâs budget. Bradleyâs remains your go to for everything. Heâs come around these days â he likes the fancy soups and admits Leavenâs has the best fresh fruit.
Despite the rich old women who frequent and make your workdays⌠less than ideal, you like working at Leaven. Your days consist almost exclusively of stacking shelves, but occasionally they chuck you on checkout and you get to sit in a padded chair for ten hours. Youâre basically living the American dream.Â
Working here has introduced a special brand of monotony to your life. Itâs very, very quiet, and thatâs how you like it. But thereâs something to be said for noise, for Eddie and Wayneâs noise specifically. You like going there after work to shock your body back into the real world. Hereâs sound. Hereâs life. Hereâs love.Â
Youâre scanning a bag of âholisticâ lemons when you notice Eddie lingering toward the front of the store a mere twenty feet away. You donât wave at him, lest your customer think they arenât the sparkling apple of your eye and report you to the manager, but you nod jerkily, hoping he takes it for âI see youâ. He smiles and points his thumb toward the storeâs cafe.
When your arms are numb from another twenty minutes of scanning and typing in coupon codes for people who donât need coupons, you shut down your register and lock it all tight. You take your lunch break early, and thankfully thereâs nobody in the cafe to yell at you for being unprofessional.Â
You waltz over to Eddie sitting at the back next to the huge glass windows and prop your lunch bag against the coke bottle heâs opened. âHello, handsome,â you say.Â
âHey, beautiful.â
âYou want half of a turkey sandwich?â
He beams at you, kicking your chair out so you can sit. âNooo, I brought you a hot dog.â
âOh, gross. Give it to me right now.â
You know he made it at home before heâs even pulled the foil wrapped package from his bag. Eddie makes the best hot dogs ever. Fancy brioche buns, caramelised onions and a mixture of sauces on the world's worst meat. They make you queasy and they might be one of your favourite foods. You open it, delighting in its retained heat.Â
His wrist is shiny. You put your hotdog down to grab his arm and bring it closer to your face. Heâs wearing a simple tennis chain with black gems like a rich girl. âWhat is this?â you murmur, pleased to see him wearing something nice.Â
âYou like that? It was thirty four dollars from a magazine.â
 âI love it. Whatâs the occasion?â
âMy momâs birthday.â He fishes his own hotdog from his bag and slaps it down in front of yours. You take a huge bite, and canât answer him when he asks, âIs that really weird, buying myself something when itâs a day about her?â
You steal a swig of his coke and wince the entire time. âSorry.â You cough. âNo, thatâs not weird, Eddie. Wanting to buy yourself something nice is a good way of dealing with a shitty day. A day that makes you feel shitty,â you amend.Â
âMaybe I shouldâve got her a big bouquet of flowers or something.â
âYou can still get her flowers.â
âYeah.â
You take another bite of your hot dog and slip away to get a bottle of water from the cafe. You feel like an asshole for not hugging him. When you return Eddieâs already polished off his hot dog, and has moved onto one half of your turkey sandwich.Â
âAre you gonna be weird about it if I hug you?â you ask him genuinely.Â
âNo.â He puts down the sandwich. âI donât know. Maybe. I want one, though.â
You wipe your hands in a napkin showfully before approaching his chair. You slide a knee next to his thigh and wrap your arms around his head, a hand between his shoulder blades and the other pulling his face to your chest. You have to slouch. It's not entirely comfortable but it doesn't feel awkward, so you take the win.Â
"I'm sorry, Eddie," you say quietly. You think about kissing his head.Â
"Me too."Â
There's a moment in there where you feel a nasty emotion brewing, sadness and much worse. You know that the gutted pain aching through you right now is nothing compared to what Eddie feels. That loss.Â
It must feel so, so heavy.Â
You pet his neck affectionately. Your nose dips into his hair, the tip touching his scalp. Your hands come up, like trying to hold water as it trickles between your fingers, Eddie's slipping. You grapple to keep him with you.Â
"I love you," you say honestly. He's your best friend.
Eddie pats your back. "I love you too, loser."Â
"You're my best friend."Â
I would fucking think so, he'd say.Â
"You're mine," he says.Â
You smile and give him a good squeeze. When you pull away he doesn't look as odd as he had, relaxing against the hard-backed wood of the cafe chair as he tucks his hair behind his ear. He holds your gaze without any weight to it. You sit in your own uncomfortable chair and lean forward to compensate for the space between you, like two slanting trees in the wind, parallel but untouching.
"It's a really nice bracelet," you say.Â
"She'd like it, I think."Â
You don't know anything about Eddie's mom. She isn't someone he's ever been able to talk about with you. You can't remember the photographs you'd seen once upon a time, but you remember having the distinct thought that Eddie looked more like her than his dad or his uncle Wayne. She'd been beautiful, and her life couldn't be more starkly mourned.Â
"I'm sure she would. It's pretty."Â
His mouth wobbles. You're horrified for a moment, thinking he might burst into tears, but it's laughter he's chasing, and his little giggle is like a beam of sunlight. "Sorry," he says. Laughter doesn't seem like a good enough word to describe the sounds he's making, such understated, small curls of sound. Fleeting, golden. "She would've liked you, too. She would've loved you."Â
"That's a good thing?" you check, cautious that he might be on the precipice of a nervous breakdown.Â
"Yeah, that's a good thing. Is it ever bad? To be loved?" he asks.
He's teasing, but it feels like he's asking you something else. Â
"You could be a stalker, with that logic."Â
And there you go, ruining a moment with a shitty joke because you're too much of a coward to ask questions when you don't know the answer.Â
Eddie grabs his coke, tipping his head back as he says, "Who says I'm not a stalker already?"Â
Funny how the subtext of a conversation can contain magnitudes for one party and not the other. You worry you're in love with your best friend. He sips at coke and threatens perversion.Â
"You're definitely a stalker. You couldn't wait a couple hours to see me tonight?"Â
"I didn't realise I would be seeing you tonight," Eddie says, lifting his brows.Â
"Oh. I asked, didn't I?"Â
Eddie shakes his head. "Are you sure? I don't remember you asking, babe, I'm supposed to go play at Gareth's."Â
Babe is his funniest pet name, in your opinion. It doesn't suit you, or him, but it feels good anyhow. Like you're a babe, supermodel pretty for TV or magazine spreads, long legs and not a single wrinkle that isn't marring the paper itself.Â
"Bummer for me," you say lightly. "What are you doing, Dio tributes again?"Â
"Don't say tributes like that, like we're out sacrificing goats in studded jackets."Â
"That's a good image." You laugh. "That's funny."Â
"I don't know. He wanted to try something he wrote. Invited Jeff and Jamison. Band's back together."Â
"I'll get out my t-shirts."Â
You have all the corny classics; I'm with the band; I'm with the guitarist; a Corroded Coffin faux tour shirt, different Hawkins locations written in typeset sharpie on the back. When you made it, Eddie had been wearing the t-shirt and the ink leaked through. He had 'Lover's Lake, Nov 18' between his shoulder blades and 'The Hideout, May 22' over his tailbone for a week. By day three the words had become illegible but you'd known them anyway, in the same way you knew the dots between the letters H and I were freckles rather than ink spots. You've always looked at him more than you should.Â
"I could cancel."Â
You and Eddie experience the natural ups and downs of friendship, or rather the ebb and flow. You know you come back together eventually if you get too far apart, and there hasn't been a time since you met him where you were worried about the permanence of your relationship. You're human, and you get insecure about it anyway, but then he says stuff like that and you're confronted with how close you are. He puts you first. He has other friends, other healthy friendships and a life outside of you, but you still get to be a huge and important part of the majority, and that is more than enough. (It should be more than enough. Some days it is.)Â
"Now why would you do a thing like that?" you ask, sarcastic but soft. "You know they sound shit without you."Â
"I don't like knowing you're alone."Â
"I'm not lonely," you say. Truth or lie.Â
"That's not what I said." Eddie's eyes narrow.
"It's stupid to worry about me, I always lock the doors. I lock the windows, even the ones upstairs. I don't think I'm gonna fall victim to a home invasion anytime soon."Â
"I don't think many people think they're gonna be in home invasions until their homes actually get invaded. And it's not really what I'm worried about."Â
"Do you ever think that we worry too much?"Â
"Yes. We worry constantly. It's, like, our parasitic relationship with each other."Â
"Like a tapeworm," you agree solemnly.Â
"Exactly. I'm your tapeworm. And I'm worried about you."
"Can tapeworms worry?" you ask.Â
Eddie kicks you mildly. "I don't know? I don't think tapeworms have a level of consciousness beyond what's needed for them to survive. They probably think about eating and parasitizing and that's it. Don't make me ask, please."Â
You take a pull of your drink to prolong the inevitable. "Ask about what?"
"Your ghost."Â
"Ah."
Eddie waits.Â
You sigh again. "Look, I don't even know if she is a ghost, I probably just imagined it."Â
He pulls himself forward and there's the weight you'd be waiting for, sternness marked into his face one feature at a time. "Liar."Â
"What?"Â
"You're lying. You don't think you imagined it." He looks you up and down. âYou think I don't know when you're lying?"Â
"I'm not lying," you lie.Â
"You are. I know you are," he says, smiling despite the point he's making. "I know what you look like when you do."Â
"What do I look like?"Â
"I can't tell you, you might change it, and then I won't know when I'm supposed to look out for you 'cause you never tell me anything."Â
"I don't want to talk about the ghost."Â
"Why not?"Â
"Because you don't believe me," you say too loudly.Â
Eddie reaches across the table but doesn't touch your hand. He puts his palm down and leans ever forward, says, "Hey, I do."Â
"No, you don't, you think there's something happening to me."Â
"What would you think, if it were me?" he asks, frustration seeping in. "Try and see it from how I'm seeing it."Â
"If it were you'd I'd believe you because you needed me to."Â
You cringe at yourself and veer back into your chair, shoving your hands between your thighs and clamping your legs closed. Your fingers turn numb.Â
Eddie doesn't look shocked, exactly. Surprised that you're talking to him unkindly, sure, and concerned.Â
This whole situation is ill-fated, you know that. What good can come of a ghost? Hooks from the past. "I never should have told you," you say quietly.Â
"Did you tell me?" Eddie asks, speaking with an anger that forms each word like a cut, clean and hurting. "You won't tell me anything. You tell me she talks to you, that she asks you about me. But you won't say what she says, exactly, and you have nothing to show for it. Your notebook conveniently disappeared. I canât hear her."
He thinks you're making it up.Â
Fuck. He thinks you're making it up. Eddie thinks you're lying to him, and while it hurts like a sharp kick to the solar plexus, a flooring, winding pain, it's the embarrassment that has tears glowing along your last line. If he really believes you'd make something up like this for attention, what does he think of you? That you're some silly leech clinging to him through bad lies? That you're bored? That this is a game you're playing with him?Â
Your heart beats hard enough that you can feel it in your chest. Your hands shake with anger and hurt at once, your leg bouncing under the table in an attempt to keep the rush of it at bay. You look at Eddie with your lips parted, trying to say what you mean and not what you feel. You want to say something scathing, and you don't want to be cruel, and these are two facts existing at the same time.Â
Eddie has other ideas. He sees your eyes turn glassy, he must, because his anger drains and he turns sorry and soft. It reminds you of a different moment like a film cell played overtop, of a younger, remorseful him. The expression he makes when he's just popped you in the mouth wrestling, or burned behind your ear with the hair iron. An accident.Â
"I'm sorry," he says. Sheepish, gentle, sincere, embarrassed, too many threads of emotion to summarise with one word. "Sweetheart, I'm sorry. Don't cry."Â
"Fuck off," you mumble, looking down at your bouncing leg. You push your hand against it, forcing it to lay still.Â
"I didn't mean it."Â
"Stop, Eddie."Â
"I'm just hurt you're not telling me everything and I'm acting like an asshole 'cause I'm a big baby," he says, two shades from frantic.Â
A tear rolls down your cheek. You thought for sure you'd escaped them, but it had already welled, and with nowhere to go it races down your cheek. You paw at it and hope he won't see it.Â
He does.Â
Eddie's chair screeches across the floor as he stands up. You know he'll hug you before he's touched you. Same way you know he's freaking out on the inside, allergic to girl tears. Â
His hands take to your shoulders, hesitating there, and one slides behind your neck so his forearm presses against both shoulder blades. His lips ghost warmly over your forehead as he leans in. His other hand meanders, braceleting the top of your arm and running downward before swiftly changing paths to flatten out against the small of your back.Â
"I'm sorry," he mumbles, rubbing your back.
His tender hug exacerbates the hurt, like an exsanguination. You cry as quietly as you can manage and Eddie feels it under his hands, the two of you condensed at the back of an empty room. You forget where you are, what you're wearing, what you've been fighting about. What he said. You realise how badly you'd needed him to comfort you lately, and hate yourself for giving in.
He shushes you so quietly you think you might have imagined it.Â
Or maybe it was your ghost.Â
"I'm sorry," he says, his breath kissing your scalp. "I'm a dick."Â
"It's fine," you say. You despise yourself for how weak you sound.Â
"It's not fine."Â
"I wanted to stay because it's getting worse," you tell him. You don't mean to.Â
"Okay. Okay. Then you'll stay. It's no biggie."Â
"It's worse," you say, turning your face into his chest.Â
You're shaking hard. Eddie can't make it stop no matter how tightly he holds you.Â
"I'm sorry," he says again.Â
He doesn't have to be. If he was acting out, fine. If he does or doesn't believe you, fine. You don't need him to see ghosts, or apologise that he can't.Â
"I just didn't want to do it by myself," you confess, at the very pit of pathetic. You hope he won't hear. Your growing panic about the ghost is a secret you hadnât meant to tell.
Eddie pulls away. He looks down at you, and if he wanted to he could kiss you, his lips are that close, but he widens the distance. He takes your face into his hands, calluses rough against your tacky cheeks.Â
"You think I'm gonna let you? I know I'm fucking it up royally right now, I know I'm an asshole, but I'm not fucking going anywhere, okay? Don't worry. Don't worry about it." He drops his hands to your shoulders. "I'm your parasite, right? Do you know how hard it is to get rid of a parasite? Sometimes they have to pull them out, and they're excruciatingly long, it's a process you don't wanna go throughâ"Â
You laugh wetly. Eddie promptly stops talking about parasites.Â
"Forgive me?" he asks.Â
You nod on automatic. Of course you do.Â
"I swear she's real," you say, rubbing your forehead with the meat of your thumb. You think sheâs real, but the truth is that you just donât know. You amend quickly, "I swear I'm not lying. I am hearing someone⌠even if she's not real."Â
Eddie frowns. "I know. I believe you."Â
That's when the real trouble begins.
â
Eddie wants to hold your hand desperately. You're wearing your nicest dress, split hem sewn with infinite care, and your dress shoes with the tiny heels. He doesn't get to see you like this very often, and he wishes it were a better occasion.Â
You've had your hair down at the hair stylists in the city, you're wearing concealer. You've done everything you can to look presentable. You look beautiful. He hopes you know that, at least.Â
You heave a sigh. You're as anxious as Eddie is to get this over with.Â
âYou remember Hawk?â he asks you.Â
âJack 'Hawk'?â you ask.Â
âYeah, Hawk.â
âHeâd come around for green?â you ask.Â
âYeah, thatâs the one. Alright. So, when you were on vacation last summer, Hawk knocked on the door, I answered. Iâm straight, right? Havenât sold anything in years, no plans on selling again. But Jack barrels up the steps and starts going on like I promised him something. I said, dude, I don't deal anymore, and could you possibly shut the fuck up? Wayneâs inside making milkshakes. Blender on, couldnât hear us but Iâm sweating bullets.
âJack, fucker, starts begging.â Eddie leans into your shoulder, hushed. âHeâs saying câmon Munson, I know you got some, donât you have a personal stash? Iâm desperate.â He picks a piece of hair off of your sleeve. âI didnât, obviously, and I told him that but heâs not listening to me, heâs getting all wild-eyed and fucking wound like he needs the hard shit. Iâm just trying to get rid of him at that point, I donât know if he was tweaking but he looked like he was going to hit me and I wasnât interested in fighting.â He laughs, encouraging a smile from you. âWayneâs inside making milkshakes. Full fat with vanilla extractâ Iâm not about to take a trip to Hawkins General.â
âWhat did you do?â you ask.Â
âI said to him, even if I did you wouldnât be getting anything, asshole, and pushed him toward the steps, you know? It felt good, standing up for myself.âÂ
âAnd he left?â
âNo, he fucking hit me straight in the dick. Can you imagine that? Junk shot on my own front door.â
You gasp with giggly indignation, hanging on his every word now. Eddie knows heâs taken you out of your head, even if itâs temporary.
âHe hit you in the dick,â âyou whisper âdickâ like itâs insidious within these four wallsâ ââcause he wanted pot? You shouldâve pushed him off of the porch.â
âI wouldâve but he fucking winded me.â He starts laughing again, your giggles contagious though you try to smother them with your hand. âItâs funny now, but it wasnât funny at the time.â
âYou didnât tell me.â
âHe was five foot one. Iâve never felt that humble in my life, I told Wayne I was coming down with something and had the worst afternoon nap ever. Didnât even get my milkshake.â
âNo,â you mumble sympathetically. Your eyes widen. âEds, Iâm sorry, thatâs not funny. He assaulted youââ
Eddie waves his hand at you. âHe got in a cheap shot. I was fine. Iâll still have kids.â
You snort, âThanks for the information.â
âI got him back for it, anyway.â
He pretends like thatâs the end of that, like the story doesnât go on and he has nothing to tell you. You wait raptly for him to explain but he gloats, knowing you're hooked.Â
You elbow him.Â
âWhat?â he asks. âOh, you wanna know how I got revenge? Youâre evil.â
âLess shame and more story,â you say.Â
âAlright. Are you ready? Hereâs where it gets complicated.
âIâm at The Hideout listening to that new band that blazed through here a couple of months ago, Board Growth, or something? Theyâre incredible, the booze is cold, Iâm tipsy and Gareth owes me anyway, Iâm putting it all on his tab and he, seemingly, isnât noticing. Itâs great. Better if you hadnât been on vacation again, what the fuck, but itâs good.Â
âAnd there he is. Itâs the fucking Hawk. Heâs looking down his nose at these young girls smooth-talking them. Or, heâs trying to smooth talk them, but itâs like watching a worm flirt with a praying mantis, okay, we all know whoâs gonna lose.â Eddieâs knee rests against yours, your hand is on his thigh, heâs losing the thread of his story fast under the smell of your perfume and hair oil. âI knock back the rest of my drink, slick my hair like Iâm James Dean and, in all my drunken intelligence, decide that this is the perfect moment for me to get him back.â
âI wasnât on vacation.â
âWhat?â
âI only went once.â Youâd gone for two days with some old friends. He remembers now, and rushes to fix the story.
âWhy didnât you come, then?â he asks, flipping the script. âYouâre such a flake.â
âI donât know, I donât know when this was.â
âStop bailing on me and ruining my stories,â he says, teasing.Â
âOkay, youâre hopped up on liquid courage and about to hit Jack in the dick,â you prompt.Â
âRight! I stroll up to Hawk and heâs instantly wriggly like the worm of a guy he is, and I say, hey Hawk, howâs it hanging?Â
âMaybe heâs just that stupid or maybe he thinks Iâm putting out the olive branch but he actually starts telling me how heâs doing, and Iâm looking at these girls as if to say, can you believe this guy? I cut him off, and Iâm a loser, Iâm not half as cool as I think I am but again Iâm slightly incredibly inebriated. Iâm making bad decisions.â
âWhereâs your cafeteria bravado?â you ask.
âItâs worse than that. Imagine me at my most insufferable. I smile at the girls and I lean into Jackâs space, Iâm laughing, I feel bad about what Iâm gonna say before Iâve said it but I say it anyways. I lean right into his ear and tell him at full volume how sorry I was to hear about his recent bout of syphilis. Iâm just so glad they caught it in time, man,â he says, imitating a past self.Â
You open your mouth. âAnd,â Eddie says, jumping to finish, âso happy you could keep most of it, buddy.â
âEddieâŚâ
âIâm a bad person.â
âNo,â you mumble, hiding your smile on his shoulder, your forehead a hairâs width from his chin. Youâd laugh a storm any other day to make him feel good, whether you think heâs funny or not, but today all you can manage is a hand on his leg. âYouâre not a bad person, he deserved it⌠fucking hit youâŚâ
The story isnât true.Â
He made it up. Right here right now. He just spent five good minutes of your lives spinning an outrageously awful story with poor jokes and one glaring plot hole, for what?Â
This is hard. Making you cry, begging you to see what a doctor has to say, playing grown up in a grown ups body. Eddie thought youâd get to be kids forever. He never imagined what would come after school, and then suddenly it is after, and everythingâs an ugly boring mess except for you (and Wayne, god bless), and now youâre sick. The waiting room youâre in, the road here, the look on your face when he told you what he wanted from you. Itâs all⌠heartbreakingly monotonous.
One doctor's appointment, he whispered across pillows. Late and neither of you asleep. The sound of cicadas outside and Wayneâs deep snore a room away.Â
You nodded and closed your eyes, and you didnât say another word all night.Â
Whatâs the worth in a made up story? What good will it do? You have to see the doctor eventually. Distraction, Eddie thinks pleadingly. Relief. He just wants to give you as much relief as he can from whatâs happening with the only thing he feels he has âhis quick mouth.Â
He stares at your hand on his thigh. He wills himself to raise his own and put it on top of yours. He channels his thoughts, like this is telekinesis and not his own body, move. Move your hand, he says to himself.Â
It's a millimetre out of his pocket when they call your name.Â
You shoot up like a stalk and smile at the nurse who's come to collect you. You don't look jittery anymore, but there's a distinct doe in the headlights look about you as Eddie watches you trail down the hallway into the doctor's office. You look back at him three times, and each time is a whip.
As soon as the door closes, he bends forward in his chair and heaves a sickly sigh. His nausea has him coughing into his hand and praying he doesn't throw up here. If they want you to go somewhere today, like a pharmacy for temporary medication, or the emergency room for a CAT scan, he can't be covered in his own vomit.Â
A child babbles across the room. Eddie peeks at her through his fingers. She's pale with dark hair, much like Eddie himself, and her mom is the same. The kid's mom doesn't look like Eddie's mom besides that, but seeing her here in a hospital makes it impossible not to think of her. She's been on his mind so much lately. Her birthday is at the end of the month, and it isn't the same âshe'd been in hospital for three brutally short daysâ but you're being here is like peeling the scab off of a wound he thought healed years ago.Â
Mom was everything. She was willowy and beautiful and tough as a board. She was smart, she knew everything; how to make microwave pizza taste gourmet, how to make whistles out of blades of grass, how to make a bad day feel brand new.Â
He wished he could say that he has her every detail committed. The cruellest, most terrifying thing about the people we love is that they aren't permanent, not their life and not what they leave behind. Over time, his mom has turned from an aching spear of love to a dappling of sunlight through the branches of an old tree â scattered. Beautiful and impossible and a thousand pieces in his memory, slowly fading over time.Â
There'll come a day where Eddie can't remember her. He knows that. He knows his frame of reference for who she was will reduce down to her photographs, and the nearly empty bottle of her perfume under his bed.Â
Eddie is haunted by her absence everyday.Â
There is no corporeal apparition of her at his shoulder, no cool chill running down his spine, but he's haunted all the same. It's why he won't accept your ghost. It's why he can't. He knows what it feels like to have someone with him who isn't really here, and he won't let you suffer through the same thing. He'll protect you from this, from her.Â
Even if it means he has to take you to doctors offices an hour out of town. If he has to bargain for it, and make you cry at work, andâ and fucking drive this wedge between you, he'll do it.Â
He needs you to be okay.Â
He can't think about his mom anymore. He loves her, he misses her, but if he thinks about her too much he won't be able to stand up.Â
Eddie sits up, takes a lungful of air in, and waits. He senses you as you come back down the hall, grateful for your dry cheeks, and your small, small smile. Tiny but irrefutably there.
He stands up and holds out his hand. You don't take it, but you walk into his side so your hips are pressed together and he falls into step with you.Â
"SoâŚ" he says.Â
"She asked if I was getting enough sleep," you say, "and I told her I was. I explained everything to her like I promised I would, evenâ even⌠I told her everything. And um, she seemed very open."Â
"Yeah?"Â
"Yeah, sheâ OK." You frown.Â
"Listen, you don't have to tell me if you don't want to. I know I practically forced you to come, but it's still your life, and you can have privacy from meâ"Â
"It's not that. I just don't want to cry in here."Â
He puts his hand on your shoulder, his arm folded against your shoulder. You don't speak until you're out of the doctor's office and weaving through people as you walk toward the parking lot.Â
"She thinks I'm having auditory hallucinations. And that it could be an initial symptom of schizophrenia, or something else. She said it usually starts around my age, andâ"Â
"Hey, it's okay," he says, though internally he feels as distressed as you're beginning to look, horrified by your crumpling chin and wringing hands. "It's okay. You don't have to say it if it's going to upset you."Â
"It might not be anything," you say, shaking your head. "She said the human brain is complicated, and sometimes stuff like this just happens. She wants to, uh," âyour voice twists up very highâ "see me again after I've had some sleep to see if it's persisting."Â
Eddie nods. He's fucking glad that the doctor took you seriously, grateful for her advice and her reluctance to misdiagnose you with something. It's not as though Eddie wants you to be experiencing hallucinations. But he thinks you are, and he needs help looking after you if thatâs the case.Â
"Did she prescribe anything?" he asks.Â
"A week's worth of ambien. She didn't really want to, but I told her about, you know, you coming over to make sure I'm okay, and I know that was because of the ghâ" You bite your lip. You're shaking like a leaf. "Well, she thought it was you making sure I'm not an insomniac. Which I'm not."Â
"I'm really proud of you," he says quietly. "I know you don't want this to be happening. I get it, I promise. I don't want it either, but this is a good thing."Â
He can see you regaining some composure. You smile a little, and you offer him your prescription paper. "You know it only costs seven dollars for seven ambien?"Â
"I could get you some for free."Â
Your laugh startles him. "No, I don't think so."Â
"I'm not offering. Just saying. I know a guy."Â
"No, you knew a guy who knows a guy who could get me something ridiculous, like a percocet."Â
"I'd never give you anything like that."Â
"I know." You come to a halt. The cloudy weather paints you in shadow. "I'm sorry this is happening."Â
"You're what?" He doesn't let you answer moving to stand in front of you. "Why would you apologise for this?"Â
"Because it's my head," you say stiffly.Â
"You didn't want this to happen. Andâ and it might not be happening at all. You'll try the ambien, and you'll take care of yourself, and we'll go from there. I wasn't trying to scare you⌠I wish I could brush it off, you know? I wish I could believe that youâŚ" He takes you in. Your skirt and jacket are swaying in the cold wind. You look one sharp shove from falling over. "I get that it isn't like me, to not believe in the fantasyâ"Â
You save him from his miserable attempt at placating you.Â
"I know."Â
He licks his lips.Â
"I love you," Eddie says as he starts toward the van again. "Let's go fill your prescription, and then I'll get you whatever you want to eat."
"Boys are so weird about I love you," you say, following. The light behind your eyes makes your teasing worth it. "You say it like you chewed on it first. Struggled to get that one out, did you?"Â
It's not your best insult. Neither of you are exactly on form.Â
"Just so hard to say it to you."Â
You take what you perceive to be an insult on the chin. Only Eddie knows there's a sliver of truth in what he's said.Â
You generously let him help you into the passenger seat. He's hopeful that your mood's improved until that wretched frown worms its way across your pretty mouth once again. You wait for him to round the hood and start the van before you explain yourself.Â
"There's a support group. For anybody who's, um, hearing voices. Schizophrenics, manic depressivesâŚ"Â
"Is that something you want to go to?"Â
"I don't know. Can I be honest with you?"Â
"Yeah. Absolutely."Â
"I don't know if I believe that it isn't real. I know that's the point. The definition of hallucination is, uh⌠an experience involving the apparent perception of something not present, and so⌠it makes sense. My ghost isn't there, even if I think she is, so I must be hallucinating, but Eddie," âyou shrink in on yourselfâ "I have this feeling that won't go away."Â
He loves you. You're terrified.Â
He's already guessed what you're going to ask for.
"Can we try again? Please? I'll take the meds and I'll go to the support group, but in the meantime, could you please come back and justâ just listen. Maybe it takes a while for her to talk to someone else." You scrub your face. "Fuck. I sound fucking crazy."Â
Eddie squeezes the wheel. "Don't say that. Don't say it like you've done something wrong. You didn't do anything wrong."Â
People say crazy but they mean sick. They ridicule what they can't understand.Â
He doesn't understand, but he wants to. He says, "If you want me to, we'll try again. I'll come over."Â
You look up from your palms. He notices almost habitually that they're smaller than his. When you were young teenagers there'd been a short period of time where you'd been the taller one, with bigger hands and a bigger smile. Lately, you've seemed small.Â
"Really?" you ask hopefully.Â
"You came here 'cause I asked you to. It was hard for you." He turns his eyes to the road and turns the key until the Beauville's engine is thrumming with life. "I'd do a lot of shit for you, superstar. Like, anything. If you need me to keep trying then I will. And you'llâ"Â
"I'll keep trying too," you promise.Â
It's all he can ask for.Â
âÂ
The sky is all kinds of grey. It stretches like a sheet from one corner of your eye to the other, darker toward each limit of your vision, a gradual decay into colourlessness toward the very top where the sun fights hardest to burst through an impossible expanse of clouds. They seem thick as marshmallo, but where they begin is hard to decipher.Â
Your eyes feel sore. You imagine a hand reaching for you, hitting you, pressing its cold knuckles to each bruised eye socket to calm the raging ache behind them. You hadn't expected to feel this way. It isn't the first time you have, but to feel so intensely unreal while there's someone still with you is new. You lean your weight against the sill and let your arms swing from the open window ledge, knuckles scraping the scratchy brick of the house's exterior walls, instantly chilled by the weather.Â
A black band of birds burst across the sky somewhere leftwards. The pitch and tumble with no discernible formation. They're too far to hear. You imagine the flap of wings, their buoyed cawing, screeching to one another as they swim between pylon cables and their brothers spread wings.Â
"What kind of birds do you think they are?" Eddie asks.Â
You feel his weight settle into the ottoman beside you. You'd dragged it to the window with tired arms. You haven't felt up to anything since you got home, though Eddie's promise should've restored a little hope. He's going to keep trying to meet your ghost. You'll have to hope you don't get worse before that.Â
You know, starkly, that you aren't having auditory hallucinations. You know, starkly, that your ghost had written to you in your missing notebook.Â
But maybe that's the nature of your hallucination. A night bent over the pocket dictionary had ended as this one begins, with the crushing realisation that you cannot trust what you know. To put it plainly, you're afraid that you're mentally unwell. Terrified of how itâs going to change your life, the people in it.
Eddie's afraid too.Â
Your orange bottle of pills glares like a flame to your right where it stands waiting for you on the nightstand. Eddie's made up your bed for the two of you. He could sleep in the guest room, and he never has.Â
"I don't know," you say hoarsely. Your voice sounds as you feel, like something has its hooks in you, and it's dragging you down, downâŚÂ
"They're too big to be pigeons."Â
"They're too dark. They're crows," you guess, tracing an outlier as he skirts the crowd of his family and spirals up into the air.Â
Like a party trick, you expect him to disappear, or explode, or rocket up into the cotton clouds and out of view. He slows as he falls, and then he dives back toward the main swarm of birds as they migrate toward the horizon.Â
There's a feeling brewing in you that you don't like.Â
If you can't trust your own perception. If real isn't real. If you need someone to sit beside you and distinguish real from fake, if⌠if you're sick.Â
If you're sick, what does that mean?Â
You search for something in the air to hold onto.Â
Eddie hums softly, his hand pushing out into the static as he points toward the glowing clouds. "Sun's going down slow."Â
You raise your hand and wrap it around his. It isn't enough. You force your fingers between the gaps of his, just a little longer, thicker, solid, and lock him in. He feels real. That's the key. As far as you know, hallucinations don't carry that far. Bugs crawling over your skin and through the strands of your hair, an itch you can't scratch, a drop of rain from a concrete ceiling, the brain can recreate these things. But the exact width of Eddie's palm or the feeling of his calluses against your loveline, your lifeline, and the heartbeat that bumps against the meat of your thumb when you focus, that's impossible. That's a level of precision the human brain can't find.Â
Right?Â
Eddie curls his thumb around yours. You can feel his gaze on your cheek like a breath blown between parted lips. You turn toward him, and you catalogue every little mar or mark, every fine hair. His wrinkles, his textured jaw. The strands of a fallen curl come apart near his eye, grown out bangs kissing the highest point of his cheek.
You're panicking. There's a thumping behind your eyes.Â
"I don't know if you look right," you say.Â
"I look very right. I'm extremely handsome," he says.Â
You hold his hand out of the window, worried you'll drop it, and it'll fall.Â
If Eddie were at home tucked into his double bed a mile away, she would've talked to you by now. Your breath shortens as the meaning behind that thought solidifies.Â
She only comes when you're alone. Why do you think that is?Â
She's not real.Â
Is that how it works? Can hallucinations, auditory, visual, or otherwise, take place in the company of others? You know next to nothing. Maybe they arenât so common with loved ones standing guard.Â
You push your head out of the window again and look down at the flat, dying grass in the backyard, a yellowing carpet of bluegrass. Bluegrass is prominent because it can grow anywhere, like mould. With all the rain these past few days, the grass should've livened into a plush and solid green, like the lawns in the southern side of Hawkins where the rich people lavish in sprinklers and gardeners alike. It remains rumpled.
Eddie rubs the back of your hand. It's far from the closest you've ever been. There have been nights you spent unawares in his arms, waking with your face tucked into his neck, so embarrassed you couldn't look at him afterward. But it's the most intimate touch you've ever endured. The whorls of his fingerprint embossing itself into your hand, a quarter circle that doesn't cease. Time feels brief and unsteady.Â
Eddie must realise you're having a bad moment. He shuffles closer to you, your arms twined, his hair tickling your shoulders. It snaps you back, in a way, with its softness.Â
"Let's go to bed," he says when the sky's more charcoal than light.Â
You're cold. You follow. You latch your hand in his and he doesn't say a word, closing and locking your window with one hand, pulling the sheets of your bed back deftly for you to climb in. You slide across to the outermost side and he follows, leaning over you to pull the sheets to your chin.Â
He stays hovering there.Â
He holds very still.Â
"Everything's going to be okay," he whispers.Â
"What if it isn't?"Â
"It will be, youâŚ" he trails off. He keeps your hand in his, but he plants his elbow on the other side of you, like a lover about to share sweet nothings, his face so, so close. "You'll be okay, no matter what happens."Â
"I wish she'd told me more," you say.Â
"The doctor?" He draws a small, careful line across your cheek with his index finger. "Sweetheart, we'll find out everything there is to find."Â
"I want to know how scared I should be. Because this feels like torture."Â
"You don't have to be scared." Eddie smiles, and as far as you can tell, though you're having trouble trusting yourself, it's one of his genuine smiles. "Why do you think I'm here, huh? It's not to watch as something bad happens."Â
You lift your chin. He's too close to look at both eyes at once: you have to choose, and you can't. Your irises dance back and forth between them, shuddering in indecision.Â
"You'll look after me," you say, not a question.Â
He turns his hand, stroking down the length of your cheek with the backs of his fingers. They feel much softer than the undersides, the flat of his nails like silk. Your eyes burn as you free your hand from his, hoping he'll be kind with that one, too.Â
"I'll look after you."Â
You tuck your hands behind the trim of his waist and, knowing you shouldn't, let them feed into his shirt. You draw a shaking line through the downy soft blanketing the small of his back until your finger is skipping up the jutting bumps of his spine. It's like climbing a staircase by touch alone. You wonder if anyone else had ever done this to him, if they ever wanted to, and if he'd let them.Â
Eddie releases a breath. Warmth feathers along your skin.Â
His hand strokes down to your neck, resting at your collar. Half a second and his petting returns, the side of his thumb brushing your soft jawline tenderly.Â
He must feel you swallow. His pupils travel down the whites of his eyes like the steady descent of the setting sun.Â
"I can't," he says softly.
Can't what? you want to ask. You don't know if you should. You know the answer, but does he?
"You're not all here," he says, hand paused. He cups your cheek, holds you in place. You hadn't been moving. "But when you are, I could. I could."
"I don't know if IâŚ" you drift off. How can you explain it to him? I don't know if I'll feel better any time soon.Â
His eyes move sideways, as if the instruction for your reassurance lay somewhere in the apple of your cheek.Â
You don't want him to kiss you if it's a fixative meant to soothe your rampant nerves. You want him to kiss you for a hundred reasons, but that's not one of them. You're not sure he wants to kiss you beyond that.Â
He would, you realise. Kiss you, if he thought you wanted it badly enough. That's a lot of power to have over someone, more than you want over him, and you can't ask him to. You look away from his eyes and search upward, trembling hands and the starts of your forearms pressed to his back, hiking his shirt up one inch at a time.Â
He sits up agonisingly slowly, in the same way the sky has fallen from light to dusk; inchingly, so as to escape notice, until suddenly you can't feel the emanating heat of his chest against yours anymore, and the only light inside of your room is a yellow band sliced by the ajar door.Â
Your hands fall back. One under the sheets, one over. Eddie sits where you lay, his hands at the crook of your elbows. He gives symmetrical, superficial massages to each.Â
The life has been sapped from you, as if it were tied to the sun sunk beyond the horizon. A brutal fatigue sets in.Â
"You should take your ambien," he murmurs.Â
"Okay."Â
The eye tattooed on his arm seems to follow you as he reaches for your seven dollar bottle. He twists off the cap and shakes a single pill out for you, and you watch as the lines of his arms start to blur.Â
You take your pill, lying firmly in the middle of your pillow, and wonder if now would be an appropriate time to burst into panicked tears.
"I'll look after you," Eddie repeats after a while. Or maybe he doesn't. The weight of the day and the helping kick of your medication pulls you under. He lays down next to you carefully, his hand searching under the covers for yours.Â
And there, standing in the corner of the room, is your ghost. Real. Stunningly, terrifyingly real.Â
You canât open your mouth wide enough to warn him.
ËĘâĄÉË
end of part one! thank you so much for reading, I really hope that you enjoyed! this was my baby and such a labour of love in April and Iâm so happy now to share it :D if you have the time, please consider reblogging, it means so much to me and Iâd love to know your thoughts on the story so far <3<3
Pairing: Vanserra!Reader x Azriel
Summary: With the sharp tongue of your notorious family, you are Azriel's most tantalizing challenge yet. It only takes one small meeting before you both realize that the line between hate and desire is dangerously thin.
Warnings: lots of bickering, some IC drama, underlying sexual tension, threats, forced proximity trope, brief mentions of abuse, the sickening sense of being vulnerable and being perceived, helion not being a snitch
Word Count: 8.9k
âPart Four | Series Masterlist | Part Six
⚠✠𧡠âśâš
Azriel was many things.
It could take him years to list all of the attributes he heldâ characteristics that spanned between inherently good and inherently bad. Centuries of living had led him to creating so many different versions of himself, some more kind than others, some more wise. But none of them were weak.Â
Since the day heâd been freed from that basement, hands charred and shaky, a newfound anger burning in his chest, Azriel spent every minute ensuring he wasnât weak.
Yet, your voice persisted in his mind.Â
You are weak.Â
It wasnât physical strength you were referring to. Which, perhaps, made the statement even worse. Because deep down Azriel was troubled by the fact that you maybe were right. Maybe he was weak. Somehow, someway, you had gotten under his skinâ buried yourself somewhere deep and hidden. As much as he tried, he couldn't dig you out, couldn't stop your voice from echoing tirelessly in his mind.
A slave to your anger.
Azrielâs fists slammed into the training dummy.Â
To your impulses.
He threw another punch.
to your High Lord.
A biting feeling nagged at his battered knuckles, at the ridged scars that marred them.Â
You have always been weak.
Azriel let out a curse as a streak of pain painted his arm.Â
This was an unusual form of training for him, the bare hands and hand-to-hand combat. Usually, he practiced with a sword, with his weapons, and it was often sparring with Cassian. But Azriel needed something more todayâ needed to feel the pain in his own hands, needed something to pull him back into his body, to tie him down from floating away in his thoughts that were plagued by you.Â
His wings flared, shadows whipping around him in a frenzied dance as he remembered the look on your face, the fire in your eyes. He replayed it in his mind over and over, focused on the hurt he had sworn he glimpsed there, a flash of vulnerability that you quickly masked with your anger. He couldn't shake the image, couldn't forget the rawness of your voice as you hurled those words at him. Heâd begun to think he imagined it, that heâd somehow convinced himself that youâd shown some semblance of care.Â
Weak.Â
His self control was weak. Maybe this he could admit. Heâd been working on it these past two years, working on how to control his temper, on how to be more approachable to those who hadnât known him for centuries prior. A part of him had done it instinctively around Elain, scared to spook her like a terrified fawn in a forest. And then he began working on it for himselfâ to prove, in some sense, that he was still capable of being someone perhaps more deserving of a mate.Â
It wasnât going all too successfully, but he was working on it. At least, he was trying to. But with you, Azriel had no control. There were only three emotions he felt with you, only three reactions that his mind registered: fight, flee, or fuck. It had become too difficult to separate themâ
Azriel.
The voice echoed in his mind. He skillfully pushed it away. There was an emotion deep in his chest that didnât belong to that group of three, one that burned hot, tasted vile and sour. He felt it whenever he thought of you.Â
He threw another punch.Â
Azriel.Â
His name was spoken with a tone much deeper this time, much more firm. It shot him back into a prior memory, into one of him staring into angry violet eyes with an icy defiance. Once again, he pushed away the force in his mind. The space that the call had occupied was quickly replaced by you.Â
Rhysandâs face was etched into his memory too, a disappointed and angry look of a newly made father. Azriel didnât want to see it again, didn't want to bother pretending he felt sorry.Â
So he struck again. And again.
âAzriel.â
The voice was louder.
This time, it wasnât just in his mind. It was real, commanding, and filled with an authority that made his shadows tremble for a moment, skittering to hover above his heavy, black boots.Â
Azriel paused, chest heaving, and looked up to see Rhysand and Cassian standing at the edge of the training ring. He gave no verbal greeting, opting to straighten his back and tuck his wings into the blades of his back.Â
Rhysand raised a brow, an edge of annoyance creeping into his voice. âIâve been calling for you.â
Azriel only tossed a glance at Cassian before bringing a hand to wipe the sweat off his brow. Rhys sighed, a sound that was clipped in a sense of frustration. âWe need to talk.â
Azriel looked at his hands, taking in the bloodied knuckles and the slight tremble in his fingers. His shadows slowly snaked around his forearms and he felt a tug deep within his chest.Â
He cringed at the sensation, at the feeling that had grown to something so routine as of late.Â
He assumed it was the nagging feeling of unfinished business, that he was restless and unsettled because, in any other case, he wouldâve killed you, wouldâve done something to keep you containedâbut he couldnât. He wasnât allowed to. A beast wandering free and he was feral for you. Not that heâd ever admit it. Not even to his shadows.Â
âIâm busy,â Azriel finally said, his voice cold and final.Â
The tone of it felt so jarring that even Cassianâs eyes widened slightly in shock. From beside him, Rhysandâs jaw twitched. He stepped closer.Â
âWell then. Finish what you're doing and meet me back in my office within the hour.â
Something burned beneath Azrielâs skin. âIâm not your dog,â he snapped.
Something shifted in the air and Azriel didnât need to look over at his brothers to know he was pushing their patienceâ he could smell it, the offense that radiated off them. It should have made him sick, made him feel guilty if anything, but it didn't.
It was Cassian who replied first, a flaring anger as he stepped forward, wings extending with the movement. âAz,â he said sharply, a warning clear in his tone.
Azriel almost laughed to himself. Your voice rang in his mind again, loud and entirely too overwhelming. If he was a slave to Rhysand, what did that make Cassian? A better brother, maybe. An even better-trained dog, too.
Rhysandâs face flickered with indecision, as if he were struggling between what role he should assumeâ that of the High Lord or that of a friend. Anger flashed in his violet eyes before he pushed it back.Â
âNo, you are not,â Rhysand said, âBut you are my family and this courtâs Spymaster. And I am calling on you in regard to those two positions you hold.â
A moment of silence passed and the thickness of it prickled at Cassianâs skin. He let out a scoff, focusing his gaze on Azriel as he shifted his weight on his feet. âWhat the hell is wrong with you?â
Azriel glared at him. âNothing.â
Rhysand sighed. âFine. You donât want to leave this ring? I can work with that.â He beckoned Cassian to walk with him onto the ring, stepping closer to Azriel. âIâve set up a meeting with Beron.â
Azrielâs head snapped up. âThat is a bad idea.â
Rhysand raised his eyebrows. âYou hid a prisoner from me and risked an entire alliance. Iâm not asking for your approval.â
Azrielâs shadows wrapped coiled tighter against him.Â
âSo why are you telling me?âÂ
âBecause you will need to be in attendance,â Rhysand replied. His tone left no room for argument. âAnd I expect you to be in control. Whatever issues you have with Y/N, you will not be repeating them again.â
Azriel cringed inwardly. His brother didnât know the full extent of what had transpired. He only knew the story that Azriel had spunâ one of you threatening to end the alliance if he didnât help you with Renard, how he had claimed he couldnât stand being around you anymore and ended it on his own terms. The beautifully and carefully constructed lie Azriel had fed him so easily that it concerned him.Â
Cassian watched the tense exchange with a furrowed brow. It only took a few seconds before his restraint broke, and he let out a small growl in warning. âCauldron, Az, are you itching for a fight?â he said, âI wouldâve expected you to be ecstatic now that you're not forced to spend time with that pretentious bitch of aââ
âShut the hell up,â Azriel snapped, his head whipping up to glare at Cassian. The force of his words made Cassian step back, the frown deepening on his face. His jaw tightened as he took a step forward, as if to ready himself to strike.
Azriel quickly checked himself and took a deep breath. âThis has nothing to do with her,â he said, his voice strained but measuredâ controlled. âOf course Iâm glad to be free of that gods-forsaken arrangement.â He sent a glance Rhysandâs way, a flicker of defiance in his eyes. âIt never should have been made.â
Cassian opened his mouth, his protest painted clear in his expression, but Rhysand clapped a hand on his shoulder, silencing him before he spoke. âCass, I need a moment with Az.â
Cassian looked offended, his mouth opening and closing as he tried to form words. âWhatâbutââ
âGo,â Rhysand said firmly. Once again, his tone held no room for argument. Unlike Az, Cassian complied, but not without a head shake and a scoff.
Cassian grumbled under his breath, casting one last burning glance at Azriel before leaving the training ring. Az made a mental note that heâd have to fix that later, whatever small crack heâd just created between them. He wasn't too worried about it, but he needed to do it before the wound festered.
Once they were alone, Rhysandâs eyes bore into Azrielâs in a scrutinizing gaze. It was heavy, curious, and frustrated at the same time. It felt heavier than usual. âWhat is this really about?â
Azriel stared at him, shadows swirling around his hands. He shook his head. âNothing.â
Rhysandâs expression hardened. âAzriel. You have already kept too much from me. I have been graceful.â
A muscle tensed in the shadowsinger's jaw.
âAnd if I donât say anything? What will you do then? Command me to be honest?â Azrielâs voice was sharp. While there was a clear challenge in his tone, Rhysand recognized something else in it, something that reeked of insecurity, of a male unsettled.
Rhys narrowed his eyes and his power crackled beneath his skin. âCareful.â
They stood locked in a silent standoff, both rigid in posture and face tightened in a stare. Azrielâs mind raced as he weighed his options, desperately searching for the best route to end the conversation. He settled on a half truth.
âEris can be predictable. But Y/NÂ is not. And now we have no read on her.â
Rhysand narrowed his eyes. âAnd whose fault is that?â
Azriel snarled, but Rhysand let out a small sigh that cut through the sound. âLet me worry about that alliance. Get yourself together.â
And then he began to walk away, a picture-perfect image of calm and control.
âWhen is the meeting with Beron?â Azriel called after him.
Rhysand stopped and shrugged, a faint, almost dismissive gesture. âMaybe in two days. Or two weeks. We will see. Either wayâmy sentiment still stands.â
Azriel knew Rhysand was right; he needed to get himself together. But the disaster within him, the tangled mess of emotions and unresolved conflict, was driving him more mad that usual. Your face, your words, haunted him still, and he wondered if he would ever find a way to fix the mess you had left in your wake.
⚠✠𧡠âśâšÂ
You made your way around the library, navigating through the rows of meticulously organized shelves, each one filled with hundreds of beautifully bound books. The scent of aged parchment and faint traces of magic hung in the air and you were almost tempted to linger and explore.
You'd always craved a day in the Day Court's libraries, a time to read and run your fingers along a variety of books. It was just as beautiful as you'd imagined, and you told yourself you'd return another day and appreciate it properly.
But right now, your focus was on a different kind of discovery. Skillfully avoiding the watchful eyes of Helionâs skilled librarians and guardsâeach dressed casually yet elegantly, exuding an air of quiet powerâyou moved with purpose.
It only took you a few more minutes before you found the heavy door concealed within a niche, its ancient wood imposing against the backdrop of polished stone. With a mixture of excitement and caution, you pushed it open, revealing a dimly lit chamber tucked away from prying eyes. There were countless shelves laden with dusty volumes lining the walls of the chamber. Small tables and ornate couches were spread throughout the room with faint, glittering faelights that accompanied them.
You could only imagine the type of people Helion had housed here, the conversations that must have unfolded amidst the quiet elegance that the space seemed to hold.Â
A smile tugged at your lips as you stepped inside.Â
And then you stilled as a prickling sensation bit at the nape of your neck.
You whirled around, seizing Azrielâs arm and slamming him against the wall. Surprise flitted across his face, replaced swiftly by a calculating gaze as he reversed your maneuver with effortless grace, pinning you back against the cool stone instead.Â
Before you could offer him a few choice words, a faint shimmer of light danced through the air. The large door through which you had entered shut with a heavy thud, the surface of it shimmering faintly, as if an invisible force sealed it shut.
"No, no, no," you muttered under your breath, pushing Azriel off with enough force to make him stumble. His eyes darted across the room as you pressed your palms against the door, trying to push it open again, but it remained resolutely closed. The air around you crackled with suppressed magic.Â
"What the hell was that?" he demanded, his voice tinged with urgency.
"It's a containment spell,â you bit out, âWe're trapped.â
Some time passed in tense silence as Azriel moved methodically around the room. Your gaze followed his every move, your jaw set in a tight line as you swallowed down the insults that were itching to be thrown at him.
âCanât you make them do something useful?â you snapped, nodding towards the black smoke that buzzed around Azrielâs form. âSend them to get help or something?â
Azriel rolled his eyes and his shadows seemed to mimic the movement, circling his arms in a fit of annoyance. âThank you for that brilliant idea,â he said, tone dripping with sarcasm. âIf you havenât noticed, princess, they are shadows.â
He gestured to the sunlight flooding through the cracks of the grand door. âThey canât go out in broad daylight. And from what Iâve observed about this library, there's a lot of that. Weâre going to have to wait until sunset.â
Helionâs libraries were bathed in perpetual sunlight, with large, open windows that invited the sun's rays to flood the space. It casted a warm, golden glow over the towering shelves in a way that made the space seem dreamlike, made it seem holy. The sunlight wasnât just a feature; it was a constant presenceâ the library was filled with sunlight every hour of the day that the sun was shining.
This particular room, however, was the exception. It was windowless, the only light filtering in through the cracks of the large charmed door. The room was designed to preserve the unique and delicate books within, shielding them from the harsh sunlight that could damage their pages. You had come here specifically for this reason, to find a particular book in this carefully protected area.
âSunset?â you echoed incredulously. âItâs nine in the fucking morning, Shadowsinger. Youâre telling me I have to wait until either Helion finds us or until your little shadow dogs can finally go out and play?â
Azriel raised an eyebrow, his mouth falling into a tight line. âWell, maybe you should break into libraries at more reasonable hours of the day.â
You resisted the urge to pull a book from one of the many shelves and hurl it his way. âI wasnât breaking in,â you retorted, crossing your arms. âYou made this a break-in when you followed me and set off some strange alarms.â
Azrielâs eyes narrowed and he took a step towards you. âI didnât follow you, and I certainly didnât set off any alarms. That was all you.â
âYou didnât follow me?â you scoffed. âThen what were you doing? Brooding from afar in hopes that Iâd apologize for hurting your feelings?â
A flicker of irritation crossed his features. His jaw tightened and his eyes flashed with something close to anger. âH-hurting my feelings?â he said, his voice low, âYou think you hurt my feelings?â
âYes,â you replied, lifting your chin. âI think I bruised your ego by shoving the truth down your throat.â
âOh, please. Donât flatter yourself, â he sneered. Azriel turned on his heel and took one step away from you before he was spinning around, lifting an accusatory finger your way. âAnd I donât brood. I was surveying the area for threats, which, if I recall correctly, is my job.â
âYeah, in the Night Court,â you snapped back, âWeâre in the Day Court, genius.â
Azrielâs eyes narrowed with irritation. âThe Day Court is our ally. That means ensuring their safetyâand ours. If you werenât wandering into places you donât belong, I wouldnât need to follow you.â
You let out a bitter laugh, stepping closer to him. âSo you admit you were following me?â
Azriel stiffened as if he had barely registered the words heâd spoken. He blinked and then he strengthened himself, speaking to you in a voice that was steady and cold. âYouâre a threat that needs to be monitored.â
Something burned in your chest.Â
âIs that what you were doing every time you slept with me? Monitoring me?â
The words seemed to hit their intended target. For a moment, there was silence. Azrielâs expression hardened and he held your gaze for a beat too long before looking away.
When you realized he wasnât going to offer a verbal response, you let out a deep breath.
âI donât understand why you canât just leave me alone,â you growled through gritted teeth. âIâve done nothing besides visit an open court. Helion has no problems with me being here. And now youâve gone and trapped us because youâre an obsessive, paranoid, freak.â
He looked at you again, his eyes guarded and expression unreadable.
âThis is not my fault. This is yours. Forgive me if I didnât believe that you had innocent intentions.â
You rolled your eyes. âOf course, the all-knowing Spymaster assumes Iâm up to something sinister. Maybe I just wanted to read in peace.â
âThen why all the secrecy?â he shot back, âWhy the need to sneak into restricted sections?â
You felt a surge of frustration flickering in you like a hot flame. You curled your hands into fists, grounding yourself as your nails bit into your palm. âLike I said, I just wanted to read in peace. You donât know everything. You donât know what Iâm doing or why. So stop pretending you do.â
Azriel studied you for a long moment.Â
âOkay,â He began as he took another step towards you, shadows flickering around him like agitated serpents. âTell me exactly what you are doing here. What book are you looking to read?â
The shadows around him seemed to pulse. You held his gaze, feeling the weight of his scrutiny bearing down on you. Swallowing against the sudden dryness in your throat, you glowered at him.Â
âNone of your business,â you said, your voice low, cold, and clipped. âGet off my back.â
âNot until I know youâre not up to something.â
âParanoid bastard.â
âI have every right to be,â he said, âEspecially with you.â
âYouâre insufferable,â you shot back, feeling the heat of frustration rising within you â fast and unforgiving. It simmered at the edges of your skin. âIt must be so exhausting living in that tiresome head of yours.â
Azriel didnât respond immediately, his jaw tightening as he struggled to rein in his temper. âYou have a habit of causing trouble. Itâs my job to ensure that trouble doesnât affect my people or our allies.â
âYour people,â You scoffed, crossing your arms over your chest. You pushed away the urge to make a further comment on his choice of words. âIf you stopped treating me like an enemy, I wouldnât feel the need to act like one. Everything that I am is what you have pushed me to be.â
His eyes narrowed, and for a moment, you thought he might actually strike you. But instead, he took a deep breath as a shadow of conflict passed over his features. Before the silence between you could stretch any longer, Azriel straightened, his mask of indifference slipping back into place.Â
âWhy not just tell me what youâre doing?âÂ
Because you didnât owe him an explanation. The thought echoed resolutely in your mind. Beneath your defiance, a familiar, almost comforting, surge of resentment bubbled upâwhy should you justify your every move to him? He was nothing more than an obstacle, an irritating shadow that refused to fade.
So you said nothing, gave no reply. The silence stretched between you and each passing moment seemed to exacerbate his agitation. You observed the cracks in his usual unbothered, stoic facadeâ the clenching of his strangely battered fists, the slight twitch at the corner of his mouth. He deserved to be unsettled, you thought bitterly. His mistrust was a reflection of his own insecurities, his duty an excuse to assert dominance over you. You refused to be cowed, not by him or anyone else.
âSilence. Beautiful,â he scoffed. Azriel turned away and you reveled in the momentary victory, savoring the small triumph of making him fall into a state of unease.Â
He began to pace the room, muttering under his breathâ you could hear it only slightly, a continuous complaint about everything from the sunlight filtering through the door to the layout of the library. You stared at him, noticing how his shadows mimicked his agitation, swirling around him in a frenzy. His wings twitched with every movement.Â
His pacing became more frantic as he moved closer to the door, placing his hand on it as if trying to force it open. âThis is ridiculous,â he growled. âWeâre trapped here because of your secrecy. If you hadnât been sneaking aroundââ
He paused mid-sentence, his movements halting abruptly. As if the weight of your gaze was tangible, he turned to look at you, eyes locked onto yours with an intensity that almost made you twitch. Â
âWhat?â Azriel snapped, a strain seizing his voice. Even his shadows seemed to jump at the sound of it. âDo you finally have something to say, princess?â
You remained silent, meeting his gaze with a steady calmness that seemed to unsettle him further. After a long moment, you finally spoke, your voice cool and measured. âI just have a question.â
Azriel scowled. âAnd what would that be?â
You observed him closely, tracing every miniscule movement of his body. A wicked smirk tugged at the corners of your lips.
âWhat color collar would you like?â You asked, raising an eyebrow as if to feign impatience. You leaned forward slightly. âYou know, to go with all of your bitching and whining? Iâm thinking a sapphire blue to coordinate with your gaudy jewelry.â
Your eyes flicked down to his siphons, and as if in response, the siphons glowed angrily. Underneath them, his fists clenched tightly, his whole body seeming to vibrate with anger. If Azriel wasnât angry before, he was fuming now. The atmosphere crackled with animosity.
âShut up,â Azriel said through clenched teeth.Â
You tilted your head, a defiant glint in your eyes. âWhy should I?â
With a sudden surge of aggression, Azriel stomped towards you, his footsteps echoing in the confined space. He came to an abrupt stop just a few paces away, visibly fighting to maintain his composure. His fists clenched at his sides, shadows swirling around him like black smoke as he took a deep breath.
âUntil weâre out of this gods-forsaken room,â he said tightly, âJust shut your damned mouth and stay over here. Iâll stay on the other end, out of your way.â
You weighed your options for a moment. You gave him a nonchalant shrug. âFine. Works for me.â
Azriel shot you a final piercing glare before turning away, his back rigid with tension.Â
⚠✠𧡠âśâšÂ
You weren't sure how long had passed, but it had certainly been longer than an hour.Â
The enchantment that bound you and Azriel to this room seemed to turn every minute into an eternity. You were suffocating.Â
The weight of time pressed down on you as you scoured the shelves, determined not to let Azriel and this infuriating enchantment thwart your purpose. This restricted area of Helion's grand library was vast, filled with more books on folklore and legends than you had anticipatedâand a rather peculiar assortment of erotic 'vampire' poetry that you tried your best to ignore.
Despite your persistence, you had yet to uncover any clue as to the whereabouts of what you sought. Each book you pulled from the shelves yielded nothing but disappointment.
You sighed, turning away from yet another shelf of books when your eyes caught sight of a one that stood out amidst the worn and weathered bindings. It was a slender volume with a vibrant red leather cover, contrasting sharply with the tattered browns around it. Without fully realizing your own actions, you reached out and delicately plucked the book from its place, cradling it in your hands.
The cover felt smooth and cool to the touch, the red leather soft against your fingertips. The title was written in an elegant, swirling golden cursive. It wasn't what you had been searching forâa book of love poems wasn't going to help you find the edge you soughtâbut something about it called to you nonetheless.
You landed on one particular page. The corners were marked with a dog-eared fold, a simple act that nearly drew a smile to your lips at the thought of Erisâs disdain for such casual treatment of books. He would have scoffed, made some remark about how it marred the delicate pages and diminished their value.Â
Before the rift between him and Eris grew too wide, Lucien used to sneak into Erisâs room and borrow his books, delighting in folding the pages to mark his favorite passages. Eris would fume at the sight, scolding Lucien for disrespecting not only his belongings but the value of the books themselves. Lucien basked in the frustration and would laugh so hardâ a bright, joyous sound that echoed through the halls until Beron wearied of it.Â
Lucien stopped stealing those books soon after. He quickly learned that his place was not in his brother's roomâ it wasnât even in his own home.Â
You turned your attention back to the poem on the page before you, your heart skipping a beat as you recognized the title. Something as heavy as a stone settled in your stomach.Â
Your mother was a lot of things. She was quiet at times, yes, but it was more pensive than it was shy. She was unbelievably brilliant, to a point where it pained you to think about it, to let yourself wonder how different her life could have been had she married someone other than your father. How different her life may have been if she never had any of you.
When you were younger, she fed you her fascination of books. Besides Eris and Lucien, your other brothers never took to it as much. They much preferred sparring in rings and finding ways to appease your father. While they lived off of the praise they received like good soldiers, you lived off of the stories your mother could tell you at night.Â
It was during those quiet hours, after Beron had retired to his chambers and the River House grew still, that she would sit by your bedside and brush the hair from your face. She would whisper stories into the darkness, tales of far-off lands and brave heroes, of mythical creatures and forbidden romances. But there was one story she cherished above all others.
It was a short poem from the perspective of two lovers torn apart by war. They loved each other fiercely, but the cruel hands of fate kept them separated in life. So profound was their longing that they struck a bargain with Death himself, pledging their souls to be together for eternity in the afterlife. The poem spoke of their sacrifice, their undying devotion, and the bittersweet beauty of a love that transcended even death.
You loved it almost as much as your mother did.Â
Love was real. This you knew. But it wasnât for people in Autumn. It wasnât for people who shared your blood.Â
Your mother proved it. The way her eyes would glaze over as she recited the poem, the way sheâd talk about a love that you knew was never referring to Beron. She longed for someone that wasn't your father, someone she could never be with. And Jesmindas death only solidified the fact that love wasnât made for Vanserras.Â
You still heard her screams at night, still held the image of Lucienâs blood curling sobs.Â
Loving someone, as much as you craved it, was selfish. It was a death wishâ not only for you, but for them as well.
You read the poem again and a heavy feeling itched itself into your heartâ something like a dagger of melancholy, stirring emotions that made you feel small and weak. Your chest tightened and you gripped the book tightly, feeling a flicker of fire growing within your bones.Â
Your mothers poem was here. In a book that was so clearly loved, so clearly worn. It felt almost sacred, imbued with a history of love and loss, cherished by someone who, like you, sought solace in its verses.
In this spell-protected sanctuary, amidst the hallowed halls of knowledge and ancient books, a realization hit you with a chilling clarity. You fought to regain composure, blinking away the tears that brimmed on your waterlines.Â
A soft, feather-light sensation around your wrist startled you back to the present. You looked down at your hands, watching as Azrielâs shadows flitted around you.Their touch was so gentle, so tender that it made you itch. You snapped the book shut, shoving it back into the shelf with a loud thud.Â
âIf you donât stop, I will pin you and your wings to the wall like a fucking decoration.â
Azriel let out a growl, but he refused to look your way. He didnât have the energy needed in him to properly reciprocate the threat, didnât quite care enough to be bothered by it.Â
You let out an angry breath. âCan you please control your little creatures?â
Your hand swatted at the shadows that still circled your wrists relentlessly.Â
âWhat are you talking aboutââ
Azrielâs words died in his throat as he looked at you. His body stiffened, and within seconds the shadows were dissipating from your wrists. They curled around his body, a single tendril wrapping around his ear.
Azrielâs face softened slightly, a crease forming between his furrowed eyebrows. He held your gaze for a moment. And then he was stoic once moreâ no trace that he had felt anything at all.
He said nothing and turned around sharply, a wave of agitation passing over his features as his shadows swirled around him. You frowned at the abrupt change in his demeanor and watched as he paced back and forth, his boots tapping softly against the library's polished floor. The repetitive movement was starting to get on your nerves and you opened your mouth, ready to make a biting comment to make him stop. But you hesitated. Your mouth fell closed once more.Â
Something felt deeply wrong. You couldnât place your finger on it, couldnât explain why you felt it deep in your chest, but something was wrong.Â
Azrielâs shadows, usually dark and smooth like ink in water, appeared unsettled and disjointed. They moved with an unusual haste, swirling around him with an air of desperation. It wasnât thereâ that seamless synchronization they usually held with him.Â
His hands were clasped together, fingers flexing and fidgeting, marred by various cuts and bruises. He lingered near the sunlight that poured through the door in sharp lines across the floor. He seemed almost drawn to it, yet hesitant, like a moth wary of the flame.
Perhaps it was the troubled look on Azrielâs face, or the tenderness of his shadows, or the memory of your motherâ but something inside you settled. Whatever it was, the pointed edge in your voice melted into a more rounded, concerned tone. You threw a quick glance over your shoulder at the red leather-bound book you had clutched moments ago.Â
"What's wrong with you?âÂ
Azrielâs eyes flicked towards the sunlight again, and you saw a wave of something you couldnât quite placeâfear, perhaps, or deep discomfort. His shadows recoiled slightly as if the light was pushing them back.
âNothing,â he muttered, but the word rang hollow, lacking conviction.
âBullshit,â you shot back, not unkindly. âYouâre pacing like a caged animal.â
He stiffened at your words and his movements came to a halt. Â
You knew what Azriel's past had been like, not fully, but enough.
Vanserras were talented in making it their business to know everyone else's, and you had made it your point to ensure you knew everything about one of your family's greatest enemiesâ the male standing before you now. You knew what his brothers did to him, even made pointed comments about it recently, ones you fully meant in the moment. But you had never thought deeply or long enough about it, never truly imagined a younger Azriel. Now, as you watched him pace back and forth, his wings tightly folded, his hands fidgeting near the sealed door and the sunlight, you couldn't help but see a different side of him.
Azriel had been confined to a basement, a place likely with little light and minimal freedom. Now, he was trapped here, in this room, with you. Your heart tugged with a mixture of empathy and unease, a wave of nausea rising in your throat. Before you fully comprehended what you were doing, you spoke.
âI suppose since weâre both here, I should thank you.â
Azriel spun around, caught off guard by the unexpected tone in your voiceâ one that was uncharacteristically gentle. His brows furrowed in suspicion as he stared at you, eyes narrowing slightly. âThank me?â
You nodded, swallowing back your pride as you continued, âRenard came back to Autumn. I donât know what my father did to him after, but his story was that heâd fallen into bed with a female and got lost in the pleasure â drunken bender and all.â
Azrielâs expression remained guarded, but you detected a sweep of something in his faceâ a wave of release as his tension visibly fadedâ only slightly, but enough to where his wings shifted behind him, flaring out to occupy more space.
âSo thank you,â you repeated, your eyes not leaving his. âI know it was Rhysand who influenced his mind, and I know it was you who asked him to do it.â
Azriel shrugged, a terse gesture that seemed to dismiss the weight of your gratitude. He looked away. âI donât know what youâre talking about.â
You hummed and annoyance simmered beneath your attempt at gratitude. "Fine," you said curtly, turning away to inspect the nearby bookshelves. But after a few steps, you stopped yourself and pivoted back toward him. "Actually, no. Why didnât you just kill him?â
Azrielâs eyes met yours as you continued.Â
âRenard, I mean. You could have. Probably wouldâve been easier. I assume it wouldâve saved you a lecture from your owne-'' You stopped yourself, and within the same breath, corrected the word you spoke. âRhysand.â
Azriel hung onto your hesitation, his brow raising in silent inquiry as he fixed you with a penetrating stare. He cocked his head at you. âWell, that could have gotten you killed, couldnât it have?â
You blinked and your chest tightened. âI wasnât aware you cared if I lived or died.â
âYeah, I wasnât either,â Azriel said quietly. As the words left his mouth, he stiffened and took a deep breath.
âWhat I mean to say is,â he started, his voice now strained with a different tone. âYouâre no use to me if youâre dead. It would be hard to maintain an alliance with your brother if I got you killed.â
You snorted, a smile playing on your lips as you absorbed his words âRight.â
But the smile you wore wasnât bitter. It was amused if anything, which seemed to ease Azrielâs mind enough to where he was saying your name in an attempt to gather your attention. You met his gaze.
âWhat are you really doing here?â
There was no use in hiding. You glanced at his shadows, noting their restlessness, and realized they might even help. You decided to tell him the truth. The air was still, the room still locked, but you no longer felt suffocated. Looking at him, at the hazel in his eyes, you began.
"Renard did tell us everything we needed to know," you said, your voice steady. "He doesn't know anything because Beron doesn't know anything. He's trying to find any information on how to get power. I just thought that if I could learn more about Koschei, I could figure out how to step forward."
Azriel watched you intently. Something burned in the hazel of his eyes.
You sighed, the weight of his gaze heavy on your shoulders. "I know Helion has a special interest in folklore and legends. And I know somewhere here is a very old, very special book that has the story and origins of that stupid death god."
You thought of Eris, of your mother, of how Autumn had been these past two weeks. Beron's temper had grown more volatile, his punishments more severe. Every time you closed your eyes, you saw the flash of his cruelty, felt the sting of his whip. Your stress was a living thing now, coiling around your chest, making it hard to breathe. You were exhaustedâ so exhausted that you couldnât muster the energy to be angry at Azriel as much as before, couldnât find the effort to hide your vulnerability.Â
You waited for him to say something dismissive. Instead, he simply said, "Okay.â
He glanced at his shadows. They darted out from him, spreading around the room like wisps of smoke seeking the smallest crevices. You frowned, watching as they probed the shelves and corners.Â
âTheyâll find it,â Azriel said. His tone was casual, but the burning in his eyes betrayed his focus. You held his gaze as it seared into you. You already knew that this look would be etched into your memory, that it would surface at times you wished it would not.
A clear hesitancy found its way onto your face through knitted brows. He was too quiet, too nice. It made you wary.Â
âUnless you're eager to search hundreds of books one by one?â he added, raising a brow at your silence. âIâm happy to sit back and watch your unsuccessful search resume.â
You scowled. "No. This works."
Azriel gave a small nod and resumed his pacing, though this time, it seemed more purposeful.
You watched as the shadows flitted from shelf to shelf, their dark forms moving with an eerie graceâ slipping into the gaps between books, brushing over spines, and teasing open pages.
Your mind wandered back to the poem you had read earlier, the love and sacrifice it spoke of. For some reason, your mind wandered to the shadowsinger that walked a mere few feet from you. As much as his cold exterior suggested otherwise, there were momentsâfleeting, rare momentsâwhere you saw a flicker of something more than just anger in his eyes. You wondered if Azriel understood such depths of emotion, if he had felt such love for Morriganâ if that was what blinded him into his deep loathing of you and your family.
The minutes ticked by, and you found yourself glancing at Azriel more frequently. The tension in his posture had eased, his wings now slightly unfurled as if he too felt some semblance of peace.
It was odd, being in this situation with him, and suddenly not feeling a burning, biting hatred at his presence. You were so used to that feeling of anger, that fierce, consuming rage that burned so hot it turned into desire. That you understoodâthe satisfaction that came with knowing he was hungry for you despite everything he hated about you. The push and pull, the electric tension, it had always defined your interactions.
You wanted to shred your skin because this female now, this emotional, open one, who was beginning to see Azriel as something more than a male to fuck and a dog to rile up, wasn't you. It made your skin crawl with a kind of vulnerability you had long since sworn off.Â
You forced yourself to look away, to focus on the task at hand, but the unease lingered. The minutes stretched into an eternity before Azriel spoke again, breaking the heavy silence.Â
You looked at him, noticing the shadows curling around his wrists. He was holding a book, its cover worn and ancient, and he lifted it slightly. "Here it is."
You quickly strode over, reaching for the book, but he lifted it out of your grasp. You clenched your jaw. "Give me the damned book."
He stared at you, his expression unreadable. "We can look at it together."
"Are you kidding me?" you snapped, "Are you seriously so afraid of me that you won't allow me to read a book in your presence?"
Azriel's eyes darkened slightly, but his voice remained calm. "You're not the only one seeking information about Koschei and his origins. We're on the same side about thatâunless you've forgotten."
 âFine,â you said, then added with a sarcastic edge, âIâm honestly surprised you can even read. You lack so many manners that I figured you were as slow as the rest of your kind.â
Azriel growled but handed you the book anyways, and a small smirk of satisfaction tugged at the edges of your lips. You took it from his grasp, fingers brushing against his.Â
A strange jolt of somethingârecognition, perhapsâpassed between you. You ignored it, focusing instead on the text before you. You placed the book on a nearby table, feeling Azrielâs presence behind you, his shadows hovering around the pages. You resisted the urge to swat them away, recognizing that they were probably relaying the information to him.Â
Time went by, and frustration began to mount as you found nothing new. âSo heâs deathless, has no body, is powerful, confined to a lake, and has a thing for trapping females. We know all of this,â you muttered, snapping the book shut with such force that the shadows flinched. âHeâs a powerful freak with a fetish for holding women captive.â
You glanced over your shoulder, a mocking smile on your lips. âHeâs basically an Illyrian without wings.â
Azrielâs jaw tightened as he stared at you. His eyes darkened for a moment, and then something flickered in them. He raised an eyebrow. âWe should just offer you to Koschei. One day with you and he might be tempted to kill himself just to be free of it.â
Your eyes widened as a smirk tugged at the corners of his lips. Despite sensing his expectation for your anger, you let out a laugh. Azriel blinked in surprise and his shadows stilled momentarily. He felt it again, that strange chill that ran down his back at the sound leaving your lips. His wings shuddered for a moment and he traced the movement of your mouth as it curled into a grin.Â
"That was actually kind of funny, Shadowsinger," you remarked, meeting his gaze squarely. "Who knew you had a sense of humor under all of that self-loathing and impulsivity.â
Azriel glared at you, his expression carrying his usual intensity, but there was a subtle softening in his eyes. The sharp edge that usually accompanied his gaze seemed to dull slightly, hinting at a glimmer of amusement. Under the weight of his gaze, you turned your head back towards the book in front of you, finding a place for your eyes to settle that wasnât his hazel ones. Still, the heat radiated off his bodyâ he was too close, entirely too close.
Ignoring him, you glanced towards the door and noticed the sunlight had lessened. "I believe your little creatures are safe to wander," you remarked coolly, "I think you could do us both a favor and send them to get us the hell out of here."
Azriel let out a grumble, but you observed as shadows flitted across the floor and through the cracks. Relief washed over you at the thought of soon being free from this place, away from Azriel's unsettling presence.
Yet, you could still feel him staring at you.Â
"Why go through all of this trouble?" His voice was steady, probing. "Search for a book you weren't even sure had any answers? Without my shadows, you could have spent hours going through each shelf to find it."
You gritted your teeth. "Gods, do you always ask so many questions?"
"Humor me," he replied evenly.
"I think I've done a bit too much of that recently," you retorted, a hint of exasperation coloring your tone.
You sighed, feeling his intense stare burning into your back. Turning around completely to face him, you gripped against the table, trying to control the heat rising within you. Azrielâs eyes were already on you when you found the will to look at him.Â
"You admitted it yourself a few weeks ago. You'd go to extreme lengths for your family, too.â
He raised his eyebrow slightly. âAll of this effort for that cruel brother of yours?"
Your anger flared and you felt your body tense as the ember of your powers simmered beneath your skin. But as you glanced at Azriel, his gaze unexpectedly open, you recalled your last conversation with him, how angry you were at the realization that Eris deserved better, that no one would ever let him live down his past. But here, staring at Azriel, in a space that felt so intimate, maybe you could push a new perspective even harder, force a seed of understanding.Â
Taking a breath to steady yourself, you decided to reach out beyond the walls of your blinding anger.
"The only difference between your brother and mine is that Eris wonât try to write off his actions as for the greater good. Sometimes bad things are just bad things. And we all have to do bad things to survive."
Azriel scanned your face, his gaze lingering so long that you immediately regretted saying anything. The feeling rose in your throat like bile and a simmering heat spread through your chest, a fire you almost wished would consume you.Â
âIâm sorry,â Azriel finally said, âThat you couldnât find anything. That you wasted a day here.â
His tone was so soft that you were almost tempted to believe that he meant itâ that he was being sincere. Your chest tightened. That reality was unlikely, and you quickly let your defenses kick in, looking away with a roll of your eyes.Â
"Donât mock me," you snapped.
Azriel's expression hardened as he frowned. "What?"Â
Meeting his gaze angrily, you reiterated, "I said, don't mock me. Pretending to care is cruel, even for you."
You released your grip on the table and turned to walk past him, but he reached out, grabbing your hand firmly, pulling you to him. The touch sent a chill through your arm.Â
âBy the Cauldron, must you fight me on everything?â He said through clenched teeth. âCanât you just let me say that I'm sorry?"Â
You stared at him, taking in his troubled expression, the way his eyes seemed to hold a storm of conflicting emotions. Pulling your hand from his grasp, you rubbed the spot where his touch lingered, as if trying to erase his imprint on you.
"I'm just supposed to believe that you've suddenly had a change of heart?"Â
Azriel ran a hand through his hair. "You are infuriating, you know that?"Â
"Ah yes, a supposed genuine apology followed by insult. Hypocritical as usual, Shadowsinger."Â
Exasperation flickered across Azriel's face. "If I wanted to insult you, princess, I'd do a much better job than calling you infuriating."
You held his stare, anger and suffocation swirling within you. Your hands curled into fists as Azriel's troubled gaze continued to burn into yours.
He followed the line of your neck as you swallowed, his eyes lingering on you in a way that felt too intense for the confined space. Perhaps it was the lack of his shadows, the absence of his usual watchful companions, but Azriel found himself moving closer to you despite your recoil.
"What is it about you that drives me insane?" he murmured his voice barely above a whisper.
Your brow furrowed in confusion and your stomach twisted into a knot. "What are you talking about?"
"These past two weeks," he continued, his tone tinged with something raw and unguarded. "You have not left my mind. I hear your voice, calling me weak."
You scoffed and looked away. "So I have hurt your feelings. A bit pathetic, don't you think?"Â
Azriel shook his head. "No. You didn't hurt my feelings, Y/N."
The sound of your name on his lips sent a shiver through your body and your chest tightened. His gaze flickered down to your mouth briefly before meeting your eyes again. You found yourself unable to look away.
âYou want Eris to be High Lord,â Azriel stated, âI will help you make that come to fruition.â
You stared at Azriel, momentarily stunned. His words hung in the air, mingling with the charged, suffocating atmosphere between you. The intensity of his gaze made you feel exposed, vulnerable, and yet there was a gleam of something elseâit felt like hope, buried deep beneath layers of mistrust.
"Why? You hate Eris.â
"It is one cruel leader for another. But at least this way, it will benefit my home. And then I can be free of you and work to take down Koschei."
His words sunk in slowly. He can be free of you. You tried to read his expression. Azriel extended his hand towards you, palm upturned.Â
"We seal this bargain," he said solemnly, his eyes searching yours. âNo more sneaking around and I will help you. You get what you want.â
You hesitated. But something inside youâa desperate need for a way out of this predicament, a glimmer of hope for a future where Eris could be High Lordâcompelled you to reach out. You placed your hand in his, feeling the warmth of his palm against yours.
As soon as your skin touched, a surge of energy coursed through you bothâ a burning sensation, starting from your intertwined hands and spreading outward. Azriel's eyes widened imperceptibly, and you sensed him searching for the hidden markings that sealed your pact. He found nothing on your exposed skin.Â
You withdrew your hand slowly. There was a newfound weight to the air. You opened your mouth to speak when a burst of sunlight pierced through the dimness of the room.Â
You took a large step back, gaze darting to the entrance of the room. Helion strode in with characteristic grace, his presence commanding the room effortlessly as tendrils of shadow snaked towards Azriel, winding their way up his body.
Helion's eyes swept over the scene before him. His expression gave away nothing as he observed you and Azriel. After a moment, he finally spoke.Â
"Out of all the collectables in this room, I have to say seeing you two together is the rarest thing I've set my eyes on.â
You shot a quick glance at Azriel. You offered Helion a small smile. âHelionââ
Helion lifted a hand gently. "I'm not sure I want to know," he said. His gaze settled on you. "Have you done anything I need to be wary of?"
You shook your head firmly. "No."
"Then that's all I need," Helion replied casually, his attention now turning to Azriel. "Am I correct to assume Rhysand has no idea you're here?"Â
You frowned, head turning to look at Azriel, who managed to meet your gaze briefly before looking back at the High Lord that stood before you. Azriel said nothing, opting to clench his jaw.Â
âAlright.â Helion let out a small breath, pursing his lips in thought. "I'm known to keep a secret or two.â
He did, indeed. You knew this now more than ever.
You took advantage of Helionâs presence to observe him closely, taking in his chiseled features and the graceful stature in which he stood. Despite the reputation both you and Eris had garnered, Helion had always been fair to you, not quick to judge. You wondered now if that was due to something beyond an innate sense of empathy he heldâ if he had a sense of loyalty to you because of the blood that ran in your veins.Â
"Let me escort you both out," Helion offered finally, breaking the silence that had settled between the three of you. Without waiting for a response, he turned towards the door.Â
As you walked with him, you heard a faint shuffling behind you. From the corner of your eye, you glimpsed Azriel adjusting his posture, the tail end of his movement obscured as he tucked his wings further and clasped his hands behind his back. His shadows coiled around him more tightly than usual. He fell into line behind you.Â
You felt a peculiar sensation in your chest. Instinctively, your hand rose to settle over the spot just above your heart. There was a subtle sensation of heatâ a tingling warmth that lingered beneath your touch.Â
You ignored it as Helion led you out of the library. Â
⚠✠𧡠âśâš
enemies.... to enemies to with benefits.... now to tentative allies....dare i say.... friends?
this is a lil turning point for our two cunty losers bc now their bickering is less cruel and vile and its just teasing ugh my HEART
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holy shit this just felt so. right.
⢠synopsis. in the gritty underbelly of zaun, you find yourself entangled in the life of a new pit fighter: vi, a hardened fighter who wears her pain like armour. as a medic working in the fighting pit, you are tasked with patching up her wounds after matches, and you realize that while you can heal viâs injuries, you canât mend the broken pieces of her heart that belong to someone else.
⢠contains. afab!reader, arcane!vi, feminine characteristics, angst, lesbians, lots and lots of longing, kinda enemies to lovers (but worse), nsfw, fingering, 17+ kinda explicit.
⢠word count. 15.2k+
⢠authors note. i spent the last few weeks working on this fic and i am really happy with how it turned out!! eek!! happy reading!! <3 :)
Youâve grown used to the sight of blood.
It streaks across the tiled floor in dark smears, trails on the edge of your workbench, and stains the tattered cloths shoved into the waste bin. The scent of copper lingers in the air, mingling with the faint tang of disinfectant.
Youâve made it work, though. You have to.
Your bench is lined with the tools: sutures, gauze, tape, and a half-empty bottle of antiseptic youâve been meaning to replace. You keep it organized, and meticulous because chaos out there demands control in here. The pit fighters appreciate it, and you, in their own way. Thereâs always a pep in their step when they leave your little corner, heading to the bar with fresh bandages and a story to tell.
Some linger longer than they need to, chatting while you clean up. The regulars know your rhythmâwhen to crack a joke to ease the tension or when to stay quiet and let you focus. The brawlers come to trust you, and trust is hard to come by lately.
Maybe it was because you werenât trying to punch the lights out of their eyes.
The room itself is far from perfect. Cramped, poorly lit, and barely adequate, it feels more like a storage closet someone forgot to clear out than a proper medical station. Youâve done what you can to make it your own. A few paintings hang crookedly on the wallsâcheap prints, but bright enough to cut through the gloom. Candles flicker in the corners of your desk, casting a soft glow that doesnât do much for the lighting but makes the space feel warmer, more welcoming.
The pit fighters notice. They never say much about it, but you catch the way they relax when they sit down, their shoulders loosening just slightly as the room wraps them in its quiet. Itâs your small rebellion against the harshness of Zaun, a reminder that even here, thereâs room for gentleness.
Sometimes they repay that gentleness in their own wayâa drink after a fight, a nod of thanks, or a protective presence when the streets get dangerous, walking you home. Youâve been here long enough to know that loyalty is rare in Zaun, but somehow, youâve earned it.
The fighting arena roars with life, the crowdâs cheers rumbling through the walls like distant thunder. Tonightâs fights have been loudâlouder than usual. People running around with their coloured tickets based on who they were betting on. You glance at the clock.
Thereâs been a buzz all week about a newcomer, someone fresh and untested.
Vi, they call her.
Scrappy and wild, with a chip on her shoulder and fists to match. The kind of fighter who comes in all swagger and leaves in pieces.
You havenât met her yet, but the bookiesâ chatter alone has you bracing yourself. First fights are always the worstâtoo much pride, not enough sense.
The door rattles, hard enough to make the jars on your shelf tremble and you can hear muffled shouting from the other side.
It slams open, rattling on its hinges, but you donât look up right away. Your focus is on threading a needle carefully through the gash along the side of Rykerâs jawâa nasty wound from an earlier fight. Rykerâs been coming here for years, but never with complaints. Heâs one of the good ones, fighting not just for himself but for his daughter, scraping by on the cash these matches earn him. He sits hunched over, still radiating the heat of adrenaline.
âDonât fucking shove me,â a voice grumbles from the doorway. âFuck off, Loris!â
Your attention shifts to the two figures stumbling into the room. One of themâa broad-shouldered man with a face like heâs eaten rocks for breakfastâcould easily pass for one of the fighters. But itâs the girl heâs dragging by the arm that catches your eye.
Sheâs all jagged lines and sharp edges, her messy, dark pink hair sticking up in uneven tufts. Blood drips lazily from her nose, smudging against the back of her hand when she wipes at it, and her scowl is carved so deep it feels like her only expression.
âI donât need a medic,â the girlâVi, you hear the man mutterâsnaps, yanking her arm free. âI need a drink.â
âProtocol,â He replies flatly, giving her a shove that nearly sends her sprawling.
Vi catches herself with a stumble, shooting him a glare before surveying the room with obvious disdain. Her gaze lands on you, and her lip curls faintly. âThis it? Cozy,â she mutters, her voice dripping with sarcasm.
You ignore her, focusing on the final stitch on Rykerâs jaw. âYou can take a seat,â you say evenly, nodding toward the empty couch by the far wall.
âNo thanks,â Vi shoots back, shoving her hands into her jacket pockets. She leans against the wall instead, glaring at nothing in particular.
âToo proud to sit down, blue belly?â Ryker mutters, casting a sharp glance from his seat. His voice is low, edged with a warning. âOr has the guilt of hunting your own finally caught up with you?â
âRyker,â you say softly, your tone a quiet scold. The last thing you need is a fight breaking out here.
But his words make you look at Vi more closely. Her features are familiar, in a vague, nagging way. It clicks as you take in the hard set of her shoulders, the stubborn way she holds herself, and the bruises already blooming across her cheekbone. A new batch of enforcers had swept through Zaun a few weeks back, leaving havoc and clouds of Grey in their wake. Theyâd brought their brutality, painted their violence into the walls of the city, and then disappeared like ghosts, leaving Zaun more broken than before.
Thatâs how it usually went with them.
However, you had never heard of someone from the undercity becoming an Enforcer before.
Vi scoffs, slurring her words just slightly. âI donât knowâdâyou wanna find out?â
You pause, needle halfway through a stitch, tension coiling tight in the air. âDonât,â you warn softly, already sensing where this is headed.
Ryker shifts forward on the bench, his battered knuckles flexing. âYou wanna go another round?â
Vi pushes off the wall, stepping closer. âYou wanna lose again?â she challenges, her voice low and sharp.
âThatâs enough,â you snap, moving quickly to step between them. Loris mirrors your movement, his larger frame serving as an immovable barrier.
âSit. Down,â Loris growls at Vi, his glare enough to make her hesitate. With a huff, she leans back against the wall again, though her fists remain clenched in her jacket pockets.
You shake your head and turn back to Ryker, finishing the last stitch with practiced ease. âYouâre done,â you tell him, rummaging through your cabinet and handing him a small bottle of pain meds. âKeep it clean, change the bandage twice a day, and stay out of troubleâfor your sake and your daughterâs.â
Ryker stands slowly, still throwing a glare Viâs way. But his expression softens when he looks at you. âThanks,â when he says your name, his voice is warmer than before. âYouâre too good for this place.â
You offer him a faint smile. âTake care, Ryker.â
He leaves, brushing past Vi with a grunt, and the room feels quieterâtense but quieter. You turn your attention to the newcomer, whoâs leaning against the wall, her posture relaxed but her eyes sharp, tracking your every movement.
âAlright,â you say, already washing your hands and gathering fresh supplies. âYour turn.â
Vi doesnât move from the wall. âIâm fine,â she insists, âpatch up the ones who actually need it.â
Your gaze flicks over herâthe bloody nose thatâs started to run again, the gash seeping through her sleeve, and the raw swelling on her knuckles. âSit,â you say, your voice firm.
She doesnât budge.
You meet her gaze, letting the silence stretch uncomfortably long, a quiet standoff neither of you seems willing to break. Your fingers tap once against the counter, but your glare doesnât waver. You wonât repeat yourself.
Loris, the man who dragged her in, steps forward with a roll of his eyes, giving her a nudge with his elbow. âSit down, Vi.â
She winces at the pressure on her back, her bravado faltering for just a split second. With a low grumble, she finally drops onto the bench, slouching with exaggerated indifference, her arms crossing tight over her chest.
You grab a clipboard and step closer. She watches you like youâre some kind of nuisance.
âName?â you ask, clicking your pen.
âVi,â she mutters, her eyes fixed on the far wall.
âVi what?â
âJust Vi.â
You suppress a sigh. âWhatâs your full name?â
âI said, just Vi.â
Thereâs an edge to her tone, enough to make you glance up. Her jaw is set, her expression daring you to press the issue. You donât. Instead, you scrawl it down and move on. âFine. Age?â
âOld enough to fight.â
Your pen stills mid-note, the corners of your mouth tightening as you resist the urge to roll your eyes. âOf course, you are,â you say dryly, setting the clipboard aside with a little more force than necessary. âAlright, letâs start with the obvious,â you say, gesturing at her face. âYour nose is bleeding. Tilt your head back.â
Viâs brow arches like youâve just said something funny. âI said, Iâm fine.â
âAnd I said, tilt your head back,â you reply, your voice steady but no less firm.
Her gaze sharpens, a flicker of defiance lighting in her eyes, but she tilts her head back with a dramatic huff. âHappy?â
You ignore her tone, stepping closer to inspect the injury. The faint scent of sweat and iron lingers between you, and for a moment, you notice the heat of her skin where your gloved fingers gently tilt her chin.
âDoesnât feel broken,â you mutter, reaching for a clean cloth to dab away the blood. She flinches as the fabric touches her skin, her muscles twitching under your fingers. âRelax,â you say softly. âIâm not going to hurt you.â
âCouldâve fooled me,â she mutters.
Your hand falters, just briefly. Thereâs a weight to her words, a sharpness you werenât expecting, but you push past it. âWell, I mean it,â you reply quietly.
Her silence stretches as you work, less hostile but no less charged. The closer you look, the more details you notice: the faint scars lining her skin, the inked letters etched into her cheekbone, the edge of a tattoo just barely visible beneath her collar, and the faint shine of her silver nose ring.
âJacket off,â you say, gesturing to the gash on her arm.
Her gaze snaps to yours, wary and sharp. âWhy?â
You give her a flat look. âBecause I canât stitch it through fabric.â
For a second, she doesnât move, her body tensing as if bracing for something. Then, with a muttered curse, she shrugs out of her jacket, tossing it onto the bench beside her.
Her arms are a messâold fighting hand wraps soaked with blood and dirt wrapped tightly around her forearms. You offer to replace them, but she cuts you off. âIâll do it myself.â
You let it go, focusing instead on cleaning the fresh wound. Her muscles tense every time you touch her, but she doesnât flinch again. âYou can relax, you know,â you say, trying to sound light. âIâm just trying to help.â
Vi lets out a bitter snort. âYouâre not the first to say that.â
You pause, but you donât press. Sheâs lashing out on you. Thatâs the most you can make of it.
The silence stretches again as you stitch the wound, her eyes watching you closely, unreadable. When you finally glance up, your movements stilling, she shrugs.
âWhat?â you ask, unable to help yourself.
âNothing,â she says, leaning back.
You hold her gaze for a beat longer before shaking your head and returning to your work, wrapping the freshly stitched wound with clean bandages. She stays quiet, watching until the silence becomes heavy again.
Then, without warning, she speaks, her voice quieter but cutting. âYou know, youâre wasting your time on these people. Half of them wouldnât piss on you if you were on fire.â
The words hit like a punch, sharper than anything sheâs said before. You freeze mid-motion, your fingers hovering over the bandage as you process her bluntness. Slowly, deliberately, you resume wrapping her arm, tucking the end of the bandage into place with more care than you think she deserves at that moment.
âGood thing I donât do this for their gratitude,â you reply evenly, though the edge in your voice betrays a flicker of irritation. Youâre trying not to let it get to you.
Sheâs new. Clearly, sheâs fighting off some kind of pent-up frustration. She must have anger issues or something. You wonder how many hits Ryker got on her before she knocked him out.
Her chuckle is low and humourless, more of a scoff than anything else. âRight.â
You hope he got a solid six or seven punches in.
You step back, peeling off your gloves with a deliberate snap. Thereâs a moment where you consider saying something more, but you swallow the impulse. Professionalism, you remind yourself.
âYouâre all set,â you say curtly, gathering up the soiled supplies. âIâd suggest taking tomorrow off. You know, to let the wound heal before you go back out there.â
Vi grabs her jacket, standing in a single fluid motion. She doesnât look at you when she replies, her tone casual but dismissive. âIâll live.â
You wish Ryker had broken her nose.
You shake your head, already turning back to tidy your workstation, unwilling to watch her saunter out.
Loris, standing by the door, offers you a small, almost apologetic smile. âThanks,â he says, his voice warmer than hers ever was.
You manage a smile back, but itâs shallow, worn. The door swings shut behind them, leaving you alone in the cramped room. The exasperation settles in like a weight, not heavy but persistent.
For a moment, you stand there in silence, staring at the supplies on your counter. You shake your head again, this time at yourself.
What the fuck is her problem?
You know you shouldnât be surprised when Vi stumbles into the medic room again the very next day. The fights at Antisâs brawling ring are infamous for their relentless schedule, especially on weekends when the bets come pouring in before sundown. Itâs barely dusk now, but the underground buzz is already unmistakableâthe muffled cheers and jeers vibrating through the walls.
Vi comes alone this timeâor at least she leaves Loris waiting outside the door. You catch a brief glimpse of him through the crack in the door, leaning against the wall with a drink at his lips, shaking his head like this is just another day for him.
The door slams shut as Vi shoulders her way in, her boots heavy against the floor. Sheâs holding one hand against her face, blood dripping sluggishly through her fingers and trailing down her arm.
You have to bite back a smile at the sight.
Sheâs ditched her jacket, and the sleeveless collared top sheâs wearing looks like itâs seen more fights than she hasâworn thin, patched up in places, and stained with a lifetime of blood and sweat. Her hand wraps are shredded and still filthy, hanging loosely around her forearms. The gash on her arm has reopened, the stitches torn apart as if they were never there to begin with.
You take all of this in within seconds, and something tightens in your chestâa mix of frustration and satisfaction. âYou canât fight back-to-back nights,â you say, your voice sharper than intended as you grab your gloves and a fresh set of supplies.
Vi grunts, brushing past you to sit on the bench. âI can do what I want,â she snaps, her words muffled by her hand still pressed to her face. Her defiance is unshaken, but the tremble in her shoulders gives her away. Sheâs hurting.
Now you start to feel bad. But just a little bit.
Youâve seen this beforeânew fighters crashing into the medic room with the same mix of bruised pride and bloodied skin. They fight like thereâs no tomorrow, each punch is thrown carrying something more than just adrenaline. Some fight for money, some for escape, and others just because they donât know how to stop. Thereâs always a reason. You canât help but wonder whatâor whoâVi is fighting for.
With a quiet exhale, you turn to the counter and grab your supplies. The clatter of tools fills the silence as you steel yourself for the inevitable pushback. âLet me guess,â you say, glancing over your shoulder at her. âAntis needed someone to keep the bets high, and you couldnât say no.â
Vi drops her hand from her face, and for the first time, you see the full extent of the damage. A deep bruise blooms across the bridge of her nose, nearly swollen shut in one eye, while blood smears across her mouth and drips down her jaw.
She glares at you through the mess, her voice sharp. âItâs none of your business.â
âNo,â you admit, stepping closer and gesturing for her to tilt her head back. âBut Iâm the one who has to patch you up. So humour me.â
She scoffs but tilts her head back, letting you inspect the damage. Up close, the bruise looks worseâangry and dark, already spreading across her pale skin. Her nose isnât broken (unfortunately), but itâs close, and the blood smeared across her upper lip makes her look like itâs been bitten off. You grab a clean cloth and start wiping the blood away. Your movements are brisk but careful, and she winces slightly as you press the cloth to her skin. Still, she doesnât pull away, just sits there stiff and unyielding.
âYouâre going to tear open the stitches every time you fight like this,â you mutter, reaching for the antiseptic. âYouâve gotta take it easy. I know how these guys fight out thereââ
âI donât need your pity,â she cuts in, her voice sharp enough to cut glass.
âNot pity,â you reply, keeping your tone even. âJust words of advice.â
âI donât need that either,â she snaps, her jaw tightening as you dab antiseptic on the wound. âJust patch me up so I can go. Iâm only here because Antis wonât clear me for my pay otherwise.â
âYeah, itâs protocol,â you say, capping the bottle and setting it down beside you.
âItâs stupid.â
âIt was my idea.â
Her head jerks slightly, her eyes flicking toward you for a beat. Thereâs something almost vulnerable in her expression before she quickly looks away. She doesnât answer right away, her gaze fixed firmly on the far wall. When she finally speaks, her voice is quieter, almost bitter. â...Still stupid.â
You smile faintly as you reach for fresh bandages. âYeah, well, stupid or not, itâs keeping people alive. Even stubborn ones like you.â
Stubborn is definitely a nicer word than what you really want to say.
She doesnât respond, and the silence stretches between you as you unwrap the old bandage around her arm. Her fingers twitch against her thigh, like sheâs itching to leave, but she stays seated, her posture rigid. You canât tell if itâs pride or exhaustion keeping her thereâor maybe both.
For the rest of the session, Vi is quieter than usual. Her sharp retorts are replaced by a heavy silence that seems to weigh down the air in the room. Outside, the muffled roars of the crowd echo through the thin walls.
As you work to clean and re-stitch her arm, you glance at her every so often, noting the way her jaw tightens and her fingers tap restlessly against her thigh. Itâs like sheâs bracing for a blow that might never come, her body constantly coiled, ready to spring.
You take a step back, pulling off your gloves with a snap. âYouâre good to go,â you say, your voice softer now. âBut you need rest.â
She snorts, grabbing her jacket off the bench without looking at you. âCanât rest. Iâm on a winning streak.â
You arch a brow. âYouâve only been here two days. I wouldnât count that as a streak.â
âDonât really care what you think.â
âYou should. Youâre sleep-deprived, by the way. Your eyes barely focus. Get more sleep. And you need to drink more water.â
Vi huffs a dry, sarcastic laugh, âSure, doc. Whatever you say.â
You want to argue, but sheâs already out the door, leaving behind only the faint scent of iron and the lingering weight of words left unsaid. Loris nods at you through the open door as she stalks past him, his gaze flicking back to you briefly.
The door swings shut behind them, leaving you alone with the distant hum of the crowd and the bloodstained bench. For a long moment, you just stand there, staring at the scraps of torn bandages scattered on the floor, the mess she left behind.
Itâs not long after that you learn her name is Violet.
The knowledge of it nearly makes you laugh.
Violets. Youâve never actually seen them, but a friend of yours, a painter, once gifted you a piece featuring soft, delicate purple blooms. It hangs over your bedside table, a rare touch of beauty in an otherwise bleak city. You like to imagine those flowers are violets, though youâre not entirely sure. Flowers arenât exactly a common sight in Zaun.
The irony of her name strikes you every time you think about it. Violet. Thereâs nothing soft or delicate about herânot the way she fights, nor the way she speaks to you.
She didnât tell you her name herself, of course. That would require her to speak more than three sentences in your direction, which feels like an impossible feat. No, funnily enough, it was Loris who let it slip, though you suspect he knew exactly what he was doing. It wasnât much of a âslipâ rather than straight-up telling you her name.
It happened a night at a bar near your work. Youâd gone with some friends, seeking a much-needed reprieve. The bartender, a friend of yours, had slipped you a couple of free drinks, and in a haze of warmth and exhaustion, you noticed Loris at the bar. He looked out of place, all gruffness and silence amid the lively chatter, so you invited him to join your table.
Several drinks in, your curiosity got the better of you. You leaned closer to him, your voice barely cutting through the music and chatter as you asked him about his pink-haired friend.
Loris wasnât much of a talker, you realized. Heâd spur out a few words or two, maybe a grunt or nod.
Loris made a face, his usual stoic front slipping just enough to reveal a flicker of amusement. He leaned in, his breath heavy with the scent of cheap beer, and gave a rare grin. âSleeping,â he said simply, before adding, almost as an afterthought, âHer nameâs Violet, by the way.â
Violet. You didnât expect that, and it mustâve shown on your face because Loris chuckled softly.
It doesnât take long for her name to start climbing the ranks at Antisâs. Fighters and spectators alike talk about her with equal parts fear and admiration. âAntisâs money-maker,â they call her, and itâs not hard to see why. When word spread about the unbeatable pink-haired girl, business began booming. Crowds flooded in, the promise of blood and spectacle drawing them like moths to a flame.
At first, she was just another new fighter, opening matches against scrappy, overconfident rookies. But that changed quickly. Within weeks, she was headlining brawls, her name alone enough to pack the stands. She didnât just winâshe dominated, often taking on two, three, even four opponents in a single night. And you? You kept count. You had to.
She tore through supplies faster than you could restock them. Bandages, antiseptics, medsâall of it consumed at an alarming rate. Youâve patched her up more times than you can count. But what stands out most isnât just the state of her after a fightâitâs what she leaves behind.
Her opponents donât come to you for minor injuries. No, they stumble in half-broken, their faces smashed and unrecognizable. Each night growing worse for wear. She fights with a ruthlessness youâve rarely seen, a fury that feels almost personal. You canât help but wonder what drives her. Is she trying to make a point?
Sheâs changing, turning into something the crowd craves. Her old, worn clothes have been replacedâblack jeans, already ripped at the knees, and a sleeveless black tank that clings to her frame. Sheâs losing pieces of herself, or maybe just hiding them.
You still can't believe that there's a girl named Violet out there beating the shit out of people for money.
One day, you accidentally walk into her in Antisâs office. Youâre here to drop off some invoices for medical supplies, your mind preoccupied with balancing the clinicâs dwindling stock against the rising demand. But when you open the door, you find Vi and Antis inside, deep in conversation.
Antis looks up first, his sharp eyes narrowing at your intrusion. âYouâre early,â he grunts, though thereâs no real annoyance in his tone. If anything, he seems amused. âPerfect timing. We were just talking about her look. What do you think?â
Vi shifts uncomfortably, her arms crossed over her chest. She doesnât meet your gaze, her expression unreadable. You glance between them, caught off guard. âHer⌠look?â
Antis gestures to Vi with a sweep of his hand, his grin wolfish. âYeah. Gotta sell the whole package, yâknow? The crowd loves her, but theyâll eat up a good aesthetic, too. Weâre thinking something that screams âunbeatable.â Right, Vi?â
Viâs jaw tightens, and for a brief moment, you think she might snap at Antis. But she doesnât. Instead, her gaze flicks to you, like sheâs waiting for somethingâyour reaction, maybe, though you canât figure out why it matters.
You clear your throat, hoping your voice doesnât betray you. âShe doesnât need to change anything. Sheâs already pretty... unforgettable.â
Antisâs booming laugh fills the room, but you barely hear it. Your focus is locked on her. Something flickers in her eyesâa fleeting softness, vulnerability, gratitude, maybe?âbefore she schools her expression and looks away. You tell yourself itâs nothing, just a trick of the dim light.
A few days later, she shows up in the medic room again. But this time, it's differentâsheâs not limping in, not dripping with sweat or covered in bruises. Sheâs just there, standing in the doorway, leaning against the frame with a casual air that catches you off guard. Her knuckles brush the doorframe absentmindedly as if sheâs unsure whether to knock or let herself in.
âDo you need something?â you ask, glancing up from where youâre restocking the shelves. âAre you hurt?â
She shrugs, pushing off the door and stepping inside. âNo, just⌠itâs quiet in here.â
Your brows knit together. Quiet?
She didnât seem like the kind of person to seek out quiet, especially not in a place like this. âYou came all the way here because itâs quiet?â
âYeah,â she says simply, her tone flat, like itâs the most obvious thing in the world. She grabs the chair from your desk, spins it around, and sits backward on it, resting her arms over the backrest. âProblem?â
âNo... itâs justâŚâ You trail off, unsure how to articulate the strangeness of it. Instead, you turn back to organizing supplies, aware of her eyes on you. âNever mind.â
These visits became more frequent whenever she didnât fight. And she even stays back for a bit after you patch her up. Sometimes she speaks, but more often than not, she doesnâtâsimply sitting in that chair, letting the distant noise of the arena, the cheers and shouts, fade into the background. Sheâll stare at the walls or absentmindedly tap her fingers against the chairâs edge, lost in thought, but thereâs a serenity about her, an unfamiliar stillness that you start to recognize.
She never tells you what brings her inâif something is weighing on her mind or if itâs just a need to escape the chaos. And you donât ask. Instead, you begin to anticipate her visits, a strange comfort taking root in the space between you.
The conversations are sparse, but you begin to notice the small things: the way her body relaxes when she settles into the old couch, the weight lifting from her shoulders as she stretches out, the way sheâll let herself drift off into a light sleep. Itâs almost like youâre giving her a moment of rest she didnât know she needed.
Vi strides in, her steps heavier than usual, and tosses a small, overstuffed bag of coins onto your desk. You recognize it immediatelyâone of the payout sacks Antis gives to the fighters, filled with their share of the betting pool. This one looks heavier than most, jingling with an unmistakable weight as it lands right on top of your paperwork. You pause, your pen hovering midair, and stare at it.
Her grin spreads as she catches the look on your faceâwide-eyed and mildly incredulous. âDonât worry, itâs not for you,â she teases, her tone light and mocking.
You roll your eyes, setting the pen down with an exaggerated sigh. âThis from your fight last night?â
Vi nods, her grin twisting into something sharper, a little more wicked. âSome of my best work,â she replies, her voice carrying the faintest edge of pride.
You tilt your head, raising an eyebrow as your gaze sharpens on her face. âI donât know,â you counter dryly. âHe broke your nose, and the whole side of your face is swollen. Doesnât sound like your best to me.â
Standing up, you step closer, brows knitting together in concern as you get a better look at the mess of bruises sheâs sporting. Without thinking, your hands lift, reaching toward her face to assess the damage.
Vi flinches. Itâs quick, almost imperceptible, but enough to make you hesitate. Your hands hover in the air, faltering. âSorry,â you murmur, your voice soft.
She coughs awkwardly, shifting her weight. âNo, uhâno. Itâs fine,â she says, a little too fast.
This time, when you move again, she doesnât flinch. She lets you gently brush your fingers over the swollen, splotchy skin along her cheekbone and jaw, and you feel the heat radiating off the inflamed area. Your touch is careful, clinical, but you canât help wincing at the sight. âYouâre kidding yourself if you call this your best work, Viâ you mutter. âDid you even ice this like I told you?â
Her eyes roll so hard youâre almost worried sheâll sprain something. She grabs your wristânot roughly, but enough to lower your handâand shrugs. âYou shouldâve seen the other guy.â
You give her a deadpan look. âI did.â
Her smirk returns, a little more genuine now, though she doesnât say anything. Instead, she sits on the edge of your desk and starts digging absently through the bag of coins, her fingers brushing over the shiny hexes and cogs. She doesnât pull anything out, just lets her hand linger there.
âI brought you food,â she says suddenly, her voice casual.
You blink, momentarily thrown. âFood?â
She lifts a greasy paper bag into your line of sight, and you realize you hadnât even noticed it when she walked in. âYeah, you know. The stuff you eat when youâre hungry.â
âOkay, asshole,â you mutter, but the corner of your mouth quirks up despite yourself.
She shrugs, feigning nonchalance. âGot it for Loris and I, but heâs, uh⌠busy. Doing... someone else.â Her tone is flat, like she couldnât care less, but thereâs a flicker of something thereâan edge of amusement, maybe. âSo, more for us.â
You watch her for a second. You like to think that you can see right through her sometimes, that you can read her, but as usual, sheâs an enigma. Thereâs something in the way she said us that makes your chest feel a little lighter, but you donât let it show. âThanks,â you say simply.
âWell, donât get used to it,â she shoots back. There is kindness she tries to hide, though itâs written all over her expression.
She settles onto the old medical bench, pulling out boxes of food from the bag. You wince internally at the sight, thinking about the number of people whoâve bled, puked, and worse on that very bench. Just hours ago, Vi had been sitting there herself, nose snapped out of place, grinning through bloody teeth and swollen lips and teary eyes. Now, sheâs perched there like itâs nothing, tearing into her meal with that same reckless ease she carries into every fight.
âIs this where Iâm supposed to remind you how unsanitary this is?â
She shrugs mid-bite, unbothered.
You donât bother arguing. Instead, you take the box she pushes toward you and settle in. The two of you eat in silence.
The days begin to blur into one another as Viâs visits grow more casual. At first, you barely tolerated herâa pit fighter like so many others, bruised and bloody and reckless, shuffling into your medic room with the same bravado they all wore like armour. But somewhere along the way, you start to realize you actually donât hate her company.
And as Vi continues her rise with pit fighting, you realize you also like to take care of her afterwards, even if it is your job or not. Each fight ends quicker than the last, her victories coming faster and fiercer. With every knockout, her confidence bloomsâbold, intoxicating.
Youâve always been able to tell why people fight. Some thrive on the violence, seeking it out like a drug, their eyes lit with a manic fire that never seems to dim. Others do it out of desperation: to keep a roof overhead, food on the table, some semblance of stability in their lives.
At first, you were certain Vi belonged in the first category. The way she took punches, how she barely flinched when you patched her upâshe didnât just endure the pain. She absorbed it. Relished it. She wore her scars like trophies, and it almost seemed like she was chasing something more with every bruise and break.
But then you started noticing other things. How her clothes, once old and frayed, began to look newer. The leather jacket she bought just last week, the new earrings glinting against her skin, the sturdy boots sheâs traded her worn ones for. Loris mentioned she moved out of his apartment recently and got her own place, though most of her money seemed to go toward booze.
You realize that fighting for Vi isnât just about survival or enjoyment. Itâs an outletâa way to lose herself in the chaos and the violence, to drown out whatever it is she doesnât want to face.
One night, you do something youâve never done before: you buy a ticket to one of her fights. Youâve seen enough carnage in the medicâs room to last a lifetime, but something about Vi pulls you in, like gravity. The crowd is as raucous as everâcheers, boos, the metallic clang of Antisâs bell marking the start and end of each match. You donât join in the noise. You just watch, feeling out of place among the spectators who are here for the bloodlust.
And then Vi steps into the ring.
Itâs the first time youâve seen her fight, and itâs nothing like you imagined. Youâd seen the aftermathâthe blood, the bruises, the broken bonesâbut witnessing her in action is something else entirely. Sheâs skilled, fast, brutally efficient, her punches calculated yet devastating.
The man sheâs up against is nearly twice her size, but it doesnât matter. She ducks under his swing with ease, her fist connecting with his jaw in a single, bone-crunching motion that sends him sprawling. The fight is over in less than a minute, and the crowd roars its approval.
Your eyes linger on her, unable to look away. Her back is to you, sweat gleaming on her exposed skin, highlighting the intricate tattoo that snakes across her shoulders. When she turns, she seems to know exactly where you are, her gaze locking onto yours even in the chaos of the crowd.
Your breath catches. The rise and fall of her chest, the bead of sweat tracing down her neck, the raw, undeniable power in her every movementâitâs overwhelming.
Something stirs deep inside you, hot and wanting.
You leave before her second fight starts, slipping through the crowd and into the tunnels. The line waiting for you in the medic room feels endless, yet the blur of bruised faces and bloody wounds canât distract you. Viâs image lingersâsweat on her skin, her breath heavy after the fight, and the way her eyes found yours in the crowd.
You never bring it up, and Vi doesnât either.
But something changes.
That night, as you treat her wounds again, it feels different. Sheâs quieter than usual, her usual cocky smile missing. You notice how her eyes linger on your hands as you work, following the glide of your fingers over her skin.
Your gloves feel thinner tonight, or maybe itâs just your imagination. Youâre hyperaware of every small movementâhow her skin feels warm under your touch, the sharp contrast of the calluses on her knuckles against your palm when you steady her hand to examine it.
She doesnât flinch when you press a damp cloth to the gash on her temple. Normally, sheâd tease you, mutter something about your bedside manner, or complain about the sting even though the both of you know she can take it. Instead, she just watches you, her gaze unwavering.
Itâs almost unbearable.
Sweat, blood, and alcohol. That is what she smells like. Thick and hanging on your tongue like smog.
âYouâre awfully quiet tonight,â you finally say, your voice softer than you intended.
Viâs lips quirk, but itâs a faint ghost of her usual grin. âJust tired, I guess.â
Itâs a lie, and you both know it.
You focus on cleaning the cut, trying to steady your hand. But her closeness throws you off. Sheâs sitting on the edge of the cot, her knees brushing against your thighs whenever she shifts. The room feels smaller.
âAlmost done,â you murmur, though it feels like youâre saying it more to yourself than her.
Vi tilts her head slightly, giving you better access, and the movement draws your attention to the curve of her jaw. Thereâs a bead of sweat lingering there, catching the dim light, and you have to force yourself to look away.
âTake your time,â she says.
Your fingers pause for just a second before you continue cleaning the wound. Her words hang in the air, charged and heavy, and you wonder if she knows how theyâve started to affect you. You reach for the bandages, your hands brushing against her skin again. Her breath hitchesâjust barelyâbut itâs enough for you to notice.
âThere,â you say, pulling back slightly. âDone.â
But your hands linger for a moment too long, your fingers still ghosting over her cheek. Youâre not sure if itâs you or her that doesnât pull away first.
Viâs eyes are on you again, darker now, and the air between you crackles with something unspoken. You donât know if itâs the proximity, the adrenaline still lingering from her fight, or the way her lips part slightly like sheâs about to say somethingâbut you canât take it anymore.
âI should clean up,â you say abruptly, turning away to gather the used bandages and cloths.
For a moment, she doesnât move, and you think she might say something to stop you. But then you hear the rustle of her leather jacket as she stands, the creak of the cot as her weight leaves it.
âThanks,â she says.
You glance over your shoulder, just in time to see her slip through the door. She doesnât look back.
Her visits dwindle after that night. Fewer and fewer until she stops coming altogether. She starts fighting nights back to back, ignoring protocol and refusing to see you after each one.
You try to shake it off.
To ignore it until you can't.
And then you visit her one day.
Itâs not in the medic room or the fighting ring. Itâs at her door, and itâs jarring, her address scribbled on a small piece of paper that Loris gave you.
You canât tell if Antis is pushing Vi to fight more or if Vi willingly puts herself through it every day. She is always in rotation, more so than any other fighter. Itâs gotten to the point where people are betting on how long Vi could remain undefeated.
You hate how you immediately perk up when her door opens.
âWhat are you doing here?â she asks, her voice low and guarded.
Her hair is black, dripping wet and staining her pale shoulders with inky streaks. The change startles you, but whatâs more disarming is the sight of her like thisâstripped-down, raw. Bandages are wrapped haphazardly around her chest, serving as an impromptu shirt. Her arms, usually hidden beneath gauze and gloves, are bare, revealing the countless scars that crisscross her skin. You can kind of see where her tattoos start and end. You think theyâre beautiful.
You open your mouth, but the words donât come. Why are you here? For some reason, you hadnât thought much about it before knocking. Now, standing here in her doorway, it feels like a mistake.
Youâre not really friends.
âUh,â you stammer, fumbling for an answer. Your gaze keeps straying to her hair, the stark black making it look longer, heavier. The pigment stains her hairline, dripping in uneven streaks along her temple. You notice how the damp strands cling to her neck, how the water pools in the hollow of her collarbone. It feels intrusive to look, but you canât help it.
Sheâs staring at you, her shock quickly shifting to irritation. âYou gonna stand there all day, or what?â
âIâyour hair,â you blurt out. âItâs⌠different.â
She scoffs, brushing past you as if youâre not worth the effort of a proper reply. The door swings open wider, an unspoken invitationâor maybe just a lack of concern if you follow. You hesitate, then step inside.
Her apartment is small and dim, almost claustrophobic. The air is stale and thick with a faint tang of alcohol. The small bed in the corner is unmade, the sheets rumpled and half-pushed onto the floor. A punching bag hangs in the center of the room, its surface worn and cracked from overuse. Thereâs a stack of clothes shoved into the corner, and a few empty bottles litter the floor near the bed.
But itâs the quiet that hits you the hardest. Itâs so different from the loud, chaotic energy she carries at the ring or the silence in the medic room. Here, everything feels muted, almost sad.
âYou dye it yourself?â you ask, trying to fill the awkward silence as she settles onto the edge of the bed.
She glances at you, the bottle in her hand tipping slightly. âYeah.â
âAntis didnât make you do it?â
Vi snorts a small, humourless sound. âNo. He suggested green.â
You try to picture her with green hair and fail. âWhy black?â
âNeeded a change,â she says simply, taking a swig from the bottle. The way she winces as she swallows tells you itâs not her first drink tonight. âWhy are you here?â
The bluntness of the question knocks you off balance. For a moment, you forget. Then the weight of the box in your hands reminds you. âOh, uh, I brought you some new hand wrappings. I saw them at the store and thought you could use them since yours are... shit. Yours are shit.â
Her eyes snap up to yours, something unreadable flickering in them before she looks away. âThanks.â
âItâs no problem,â you reply, though your voice feels stiff and awkward. You shift your weight, unsure whether to stay or leave. Her gaze returns to you, steady but unreadable, and you feel the strange urge to say somethingâsomething meaningful.
âYou... you okay, Vi?â you ask softly, not even sure why the words come out. You immediately want to take it back.
âWhy wouldnât I be?â
You look at her, really look at her. Not in the way you do at work, but right now, as a friend(?), guest(?) in her space. The dark circles under her eyes, the tension in her shoulders, the way she grips the bottle of cheap beer as if itâs the only thing keeping her upright. She looks⌠tired. Beaten down, in a way youâve never seen before.
âI donât know,â you admit, your voice quieter now, careful. âI guess you just⌠you havenât come by in a while. It looks like you need a good patch up again, no? Donât worry, I wonât charge.â
The words sound too casual, too light like youâre trying to make a jokeâand you are, but you can see the way her face stiffens after you say it. The faint bruises on her face, the bandages on her arms and hands, theyâre a clear sign of how badly sheâs been pushing herselfâsheâs been taking supplies from you without checking in, and youâve noticed. You know she hasnât gotten her pay yet. You havenât had the chance to clear her for it since she stopped coming by after fights. Itâs a faint sore spot between you both, an unspoken thing she wonât acknowledge, but you know sheâs not getting the care she needs.
For a moment, her face hardens, and you wonder if youâve crossed a line, if sheâs going to snap at you. Instead, she just stares at you, her jaw tight, her eyes narrowing like sheâs trying to figure out what your angle is.
You feel her gaze like a weight pressing down on you, making your skin itch.
Then, she exhales slowly, the tension in her posture easing just a fraction.
âIâm fine,â she says finally, though the words lack conviction. She shifts, setting the bottle down on the floor. âYou done?â
Youâre about to say something elseâmaybe ask again, maybe push for moreâbut then you realize itâs not your place. You step back, suddenly feeling like an intruder. âYeah.â
You place the box of hand wraps on the counter, but your hands feel clumsy as you do. You want to say something more, something comforting, but the words stick in your throat. âGood luck tonight, Vi.â
She doesnât respond right away. You turn to leave, your feet dragging slightly, unsure if you should even be leaving at all. It feels like thereâs something more to say.
Just as you reach the door, her voice stops you. Itâs softer than you expect, quieter, almost hesitant.
âThanks.â
As you walk down the hallway, the ache in your chest lingers, a nebulous knot of worry, pity, and something else you canât quite pin down. It tightens with each step, and you wonder, not for the first time, what weight Vi carries with herâand why it feels like itâs starting to settle on you too.
You shake it off, reminding yourself that you're not working this weekend. A rare luxury. Vi doesnât need to know, and honestly, you doubt sheâd even care. If anything, sheâd probably be glad to be rid of you for a few more days.
Thatâs what you tell yourself.
The next time youâre sitting in your cramped little medical room, fussing over how some of the things on your desk are now out of place, the door creaks open just a sliver. You pause, mid-motion, and glance at the shadow shifting on the other side. When whoever it is spots you, the door swings wide with an almost violent energy, smacking against the wall behind it.
âHey,â Vi stumbles inside, the loud thud of her boots and the echoing cheers from the fighting pit outside spilling into the room with her.
You stand abruptly, the chair scraping back against the floor as you take her in. âVi?â
It takes you a second to recognize her. The black hair throws you off again, though the pink is already creeping back into the ends, the dye washing out like itâs given up trying to keep up with her. Paint smears her faceâthick streaks running from her eyes down to her chin like some warped battle mask. Sheâs gripping a large bottle in one hand, cradling it as if itâs precious, her knuckles stained red.
Her smirk is crooked, her words slurred. âWonât believe it,â she drawls, letting herself fall unceremoniously onto the old, battered couch in the corner. The springs squeak loudly in protest, and she almost knocks over one of your carefully hung paintings. âHey.â
You frown, stepping closer. âAre you drunk?â
Her smirk widens, playful and defiant. âNo.â
âNo?â
âI just won,â she says, like that explains everything. âAgain. Beat that big guyâmetal jaw. You know the one. Knocked it clean off.â
Sheâs grinning like she just told a funny joke, but you donât laugh. Fighters donât go into the pit drunk, at least not that youâve ever seen. They also donât win, which is why Antis is strict about that; drunk fighters are bad fighters, and bad donât bring in any moneyâheâll kick anyone out who even smells like shimmer, let alone someone stumbling around with a bottle of booze.
You move closer cautiously, studying her.
She sits up straighter as you approach, her hair falling messily across her face. You catch a glint of her blue eyes through the strandsâsharp, even with the haze of alcohol dulling the rest of her. Her gaze flickers down to her bloodied knuckles, and so does yoursâred seeps through the white of her hand wraps, staining them in uneven patches.
She murmurs something, but itâs too soft to catch.
âWhat?â
âYou werenât here.â
Her words surprise you.
âYeah,â you say, unsure how else to respond.
âFour days.â
âI know.â
âWhy not?â
You hesitate, caught between wanting to downplay your absence and knowing sheâll see through it. âIâve been busy. I have a life outside this place, you know that, right?â
âRight,â she mutters, though thereâs something bitter in the way she says it.
She leans forward, resting her elbows on her knees, her fingers gripping the bottle loosely. She stares ahead, her face unreadable, and for a moment, the room feels impossibly quiet despite the muffled roar of the crowd outside. Youâre counting the seconds until someone from the pit shows up looking worse for wear, but she just sits there, unmoving.
Finally, she speaks. âLoris and I are going out for drinks at the bar next door.â
âMore of them?â
She scoffs, but thereâs a faint smile playing on her lips. âFuck off. I was gonna invite you.â
âYou want me there?â
âSure,â she shrugs, leaning back against the couch. âSince you and Loris are so close.â
You roll your eyes, grabbing a plastic bag and filling it with ice. âOh, yeah. Best friends. I thought you knew.â
She grins at that, her expression lazy but amused as you press the makeshift ice pack to her cheek. She winces, hissing under her breath, but doesnât pull away. The familiarity of the moment settles between you, a rhythm you hadnât realized you missed. You didnât know how much you liked being around her, with all her flaws and quirks, until it was gone.
When she stands to leave, thereâs a lightness to her movements. She pauses at the door, glancing back over her shoulder.
âBut youâre coming, right?â she asks, her voice softer, less guarded.
You nod, tugging absently at the rings on your fingers. âYeah. Iâll stop by after I finish up here.â
Her smile catches you off guard. Itâs not the smirk or grin youâre used toâitâs warmer, something youâve never seen before. âGood.â
And then sheâs gone, leaving you alone in the stillness of the room. The ache in your chest hasnât gone away, but it feels different now, lighter somehow, settling into the pit of your stomach like a flutter of butterflies.
You canât wipe the smile off your face even if you tried.
Your night stretches on, each task blending into the next. Stitches to pull, bruises to ice, concussions to monitor. This is your rhythmâcalm, focused, efficient. You donât dwell on the blood staining your gloves or the bruised faces looking back at you. Usually, thereâs a detachment, a quiet understanding between you and the fighters. You help them, and they leave.
But tonight feels different. The weight of the work presses a little heavier, the hours crawling by as the thought of Viâs smile keeps replaying in your head. You remind yourself to focus, to get through the line of battered fighters who rely on you, but every second drags, making your usual rhythm feel offbeat.
Itâs not just Viâs smileâitâs the invitation, her softer tone, the way she paused at the door like your answer mattered more than usual. You donât let yourself overthink it, but you do catch yourself checking the time more often than youâd like.
When the last fighter leaves, mumbling a tired thank-you, you exhale in relief. The medic room is quiet now, the faint smell of antiseptic lingering in the air. You pack your supplies, stuffing gloves, gauze, and a few stray pins into your cabinets. The bathroom across the hall catches your eye as you pass, and for once, you pause.
The bathroom is dimly lit, the bulb above buzzing faintly as it flickers. The mirror is cracked in one corner, the surface smudged and grimy, but it still reflects more of you than youâre ready to see. Your sleeves are stained, and your hands are scrubbed raw but not clean enough. The uneven greenish light only makes you look worse, casting harsh shadows on your face.
You roll your sleeves up and run water into the sink, trying to scrub the splotches from your clothes. The waterâs cold and your hands ache from the effort, but it feels worth itâlike a small chance to put your best self forward. You straighten your shirt, brush off your jacket, and fix your hair as best as you can.
Itâs not enough.
Itâll never be enough for a bar full of fighters, let alone for her. You think about going home to change, but itâs already late, and the idea of missing her is ridiculously unbearable.
Clutching your jacket tightly, you step into the downpour outside. The rain pelts against your skin, soaking through your boots as you jog the few steps to the bar. The hum of voices reaches you before the neon glow of the sign above the door does.
Inside, the place is alive.
Most of the crowd from the arena spills into the corners of the bar, still riding the high of the nightâs fights. Tables are crammed with victorious fighters and their friends and sponsors, their voices rising above the heavy bassline of a song playing in the background. The air is thick with the smell of sweat, beer, and the faint tang of spilled liquor.
The dim lighting casts a warm, golden hue over the room, softening the rough edges of the crowd. People laugh, shout, and toast to victories. Some are already slumped over the bar, lost in exhaustion or celebration.
Your eyes scan the room, searching for her. Instead, you spot Loris firstâhis brick-like frame standing out even among the chaos. Heâs leaning casually against the bar, arms crossed, but his face lights up when he sees you.
He waves you over, and you weave through the crowd, dodging dancing bodies and familiar faces who call out greetings as you pass. Your heart beats faster, a mix of nerves and anticipation, as you approach.
âYou made it,â Loris says, his grin wide and genuine.
You huff, brushing a damp strand of hair out of your face, but you canât fight the smile tugging at your lips. âHi.â
Loris gives you a nod, his usual gruffness softened just a bit for you. He calls the bartender over, jerking his chin toward you to signal itâs your turn to order.
You glance at the menu briefly, though you already know what you want. After placing your order, the two of you settle into a quiet rhythm. Loris doesnât seem like the type to fill silence for the sake of it, and you donât mind. Thereâs a strange comfort in his presence.
You find yourself scanning the crowd without thinking, your eyes searching for pink hair at first, a flash of brightness that would stand out even in a place like this. Then you remember her hair is black now. Your eyes adjust, searching instead for the sleek leather of her jacket or the familiar glint of its spikes catching the dim, shifting light.
The bartender sets your drink down in front of you with a solid thud, breaking your focus. Your heart skips a beat, and you reach for the glass more out of reflex than thirst. The cool edge of it presses against your palm, grounding you.
âHappy youâre here.â
Lorisâs voice cuts through the noise, low but steady. You look up at him, caught off guard. His eyes remain fixed on his drink, but thereâs a weight to his words that makes your chest tighten.
âMaybe itâll keep Vi from doing something stupid,â he adds after a beat, his tone rough but not unkind.
Your eyebrows knit together as you bring your glass to your lips. The liquor burns on the way down, but itâs nothing compared to the unease settling in your stomach. âWhat do you mean?â
Loris hesitates, his fingers drumming against the counter as he considers his words. When he finally speaks, his voice is quieter, almost reluctant. âShe gets into fights sometimes.â
Your stomach sinks further. âHere?â
âOnly happened twice,â he says quickly like itâs supposed to make you feel better.
âOh.â You set your drink down, your fingers lingering on the glass. âWhy?â
Loris exhales through his nose, his shoulders shifting as if the question itself is a burden. âDunno. She wonât talk about it.â
You blink, caught off guard. âShe doesnât seemâŚâ You trail off, unsure how to finish that sentence.
âLike a drunk?â he finishes for you. âSheâs good at hiding it, most of the time. But sheâs been drinking more. Gets worse when sheâs stressed.â
You bite your lip, your fingers tightening around your glass. âStressed about what? Fighting?â
He shakes his head, never answering. âSheâs stubborn as shit, you know that. But somethingâs been eating at her, and I donât think she knows how to deal with it.â
The words hang between you as the clamour of the bar continues around you. You glance down at your drink, the amber liquid catching the dim light, and take another sip. It doesnât burn as much this time, but it doesnât settle the knot in your stomach, either.
âI can keep an eye on her,â you say quietly, more to yourself than Loris. âSheâs not supposed to be in the pit intoxicated anyway.â
He nods, a faint hint of gratitude flickering in his eyes. âSheâs lucky to have you.â
The comment catches you off guard, and you look at him sharply, but heâs already turning back to his drink. You swallow, your cheeks warming for reasons that have nothing to do with the alcohol.
You look away.
And then you spot her.
Vi pushes her way through the crowd, a storm parting the sea of bodies on the dance floor. Her scowl deepens as she brushes off someoneâs outstretched hand, her movements sharp, purposeful. The smudged paint on her cheeksâlikely streaked from the rainâgives her the appearance of someone worn down by more than just the weather. Faint lines trace across her face like tears.
Your eyes trail to her arms, bare and flexing slightly as she adjusts the leather jacket slung over her shoulder. The spikes catch the dim, flashing lights of the bar, their edges softened by the haze of the room. In her other hand, she grips a glass of something amber and strong.
Your heart jumps, and you realize youâve been staring when her gaze lifts to you. For a moment, she pauses in her tracks and just looks at you, her eyes scanning your face as if confirming youâre really here. Then, she grinsâa slow, crooked thing that tugs at her lips and sends your pulse hammering in your chest.
The smile is lazy but unmistakably pleased.
She changes course, heading straight for you.
She doesnât look drunkânot like beforeâbut the memory of her swaying slightly in your medic room comes rushing back. You donât miss the way her drink is already nearly empty, or how smoothly she downs the last of it before setting the glass on the bar with a clink.
When she reaches you, the faint scent of rain and leather clings to her, mingling with the sharper tang of alcohol.
âHey,â Vi says, your name rolling off her tongue in that low, slightly rough voice of hers, and she leans against the counter next to you.
âHey,â you grin, trying to keep your voice light even as your pulse races and Loris laughs at you. âYou seem surprised to see me.â
âNot surprised,â she replies quickly, her eyes flicking to yours and then away, her smirk faltering for just a second. âJust⌠glad.â
The simplicity of her words sends your thoughts scattering, but before you can respond, she tilts her head toward your glass. âWhatâre you drinking?â
You lift it slightly, letting the dim light catch the remaining liquid. Vi eyes it for a moment, nodding in approval. âGood choice. Finish it.â
You blink, âWhat?â
She nudges your elbow lightly, a teasing smile tugging at the corner of her lips. âCome on. Youâre here to have fun, right? Finish your drink, and Iâll show you what that looks like.â
Her tone is playful, almost teasing, but thereâs an edge of sincerity beneath it. You hesitate, then take a longer sip, her expectant gaze making it impossible not to comply. The drink burns a little less this time, and when you place the empty glass down, sheâs already holding out her hand.
âCome with me,â she says, and itâs not really a question.
Her fingers are warm when they curl around yours, her grip firm and steady as she leads you toward the heart of the bar. The crowd thickens as you move closer to the dance floor, the music pounding louder with every step. The bass thrums through the floor, climbing up your legs and settling in your chest, and the swirl of bodies around you becomes a blur of movement and heat.
Vi doesnât let go of your hand, even as she turns back to glance at you, a faint smile pulling at her lips. For the first time in a while, thereâs a lightness in her expression, a spark of something youâve missed seeing.
Her usual confidence is there, but itâs softened, almost shy. You follow her lead, feeling awkward at first, but her laughâlow and huskyâeases some of your nerves.
The two of you move together amidst the shifting pulse of the dance floor, the heat of the crowd wrapping around you like a living thing. Youâre acutely aware of every brush of her fingers against yours, the subtle way her body angles toward you as if sheâs drawn to your orbit.
Youâre staring at her, looking at the few freckles on her cheeks you can still see under the smudged paint, at the pink ends of her dark hair, at the way her leather jacket has found itself back on her shoulders, muscular arms hiding inside the sleeves.
You think youâre a little obsessed with her.
The question forms on your lips before you can stop it. âWhy did you stop coming by?â
Your voice is soft, barely carrying over the music, but itâs enough. Her gaze sharpens as she hears you, a flicker of something unreadable crossing her face.
âI like taking care of you, Vi.â
For a moment, she freezes. Then, almost imperceptibly, she steps closer. Her hand slides to your waist, the calluses on her fingers warm against the thin fabric of your clothes. She doesnât answerânot with words. Instead, she tilts her head slightly, her thumb brushing against your jaw, coaxing you to look at her.
Her eyes search yours, hesitating just long enough for you to realize whatâs about to happen. Her breath, warm and faintly tinged with alcohol, fans across your lips, and a shiver runs down your spine.
And then she kisses you.
Itâs quick at first, almost testing the watersâa soft brush of her lips against yours that leaves your breath caught somewhere between your heart and throat.
You pull away from her, face burning, when you notice her eyes are still closed, only to flutter open questioningly. Bright, piercing blue meets yours, and for a moment, you see panic flare in her expression.
âFuck,â she mutters, running a hand through her rain-damp hair. âFuck, Iâm sorryâI shouldnât haveââ
âNo.â The word comes out instinctively, you cannot get rid of that stupid smile on your face. âNo, donât apologize.â
Your fingers find their way to the lapels of her jacket. Her face scrunches up, caught somewhere between hope and disbelief, but youâre not looking at her eyes anymore. Youâre focused on her lips, on the faint scar cutting across the corner of her mouth.
You tug her closer.
You kiss her back.
She exhales sharply against your lips, the sound half a gasp, half a groan, as her hands come up to cradle your face and the nape of your neck. Itâs as if something inside her has snapped, all her restraint slipping away as she pours herself into you.
The world around you dissolvesâthe music, the crowd, the cacophony of Zaunâs nightlife fading into a muted hum. Itâs just her, her warmth and her touch, her breath mingling with yours as she holds you like youâre the only thing anchoring her to the moment.
Her lips move against yours with a fervour that borders on desperation, her hands mapping out the curve of your waist, the small of your back, your hips, and your ass with her eyes closed. Sheâs eager to have you close, to feel you.
You respond in kind, your hands sliding up her abs, your fingers tangling in her hair, tugging slightly as her groan vibrates against your mouth.
The sound she emits makes your head spin. Viâs warmth is all-consuming. A tangle of heat and want that leaves you both breathless by the time she finally pulls back, her forehead resting against yours.
âI need toââ she starts, her voice hoarse and trembling. She glances around, as if suddenly aware of where you are. âLetâs go somewhere. Outside.â
She doesnât wait for a response, her hand finding yours again as she guides you through the crowd. You barely register the shift in the air until youâre stepping into the rain-soaked streets of Zaun.
The alley she leads you into is dimly lit, the flicker of a neon sign casting faint, wavering light against the wet pavement. The rain is light but steady, cool droplets clinging to your skin as she turns to you, her chest rising and falling like sheâs been running.
Her gaze is intense, unwavering, as she steps closer, crowding you against the brick wall. âYouâre making me crazy,â she murmurs, her voice low and rough. Her hand cups your jaw, her thumb tracing a slow, deliberate path along your cheekbone.
âI could say the same,â you admit.
And then sheâs kissing you again, this time with a fervour that leaves no room for hesitation.
Itâs embarrassing how fast you tangle together after this, melding together into a pathetic heap out on the sidewalk for god and everyone in this podunk city to see. This time, you note with a ticklish glee settling in your stomach, your lips moving in tandem. They slit against each other with ease.
The rain seeps into your clothes, cold against your skin, but Viâs touch is fire. Her hands are everywhere, rough and sure as they explore your body, pulling you closer, as if afraid youâll slip away.
You thread your fingers through her hair, pulling her to you, matching her passion with your own softness. She groans into your mouth, the sound vibrating through you, and you take the opportunity to deepen the kiss, your tongue brushing against hers in a slow, deliberate caress.
Her grip tightens on your hips, fingers digging into damp fabric as she presses you harder against the wall. The rain patters around you, mingling with the sound of your ragged breaths, the occasional distant noise of the bar fading into irrelevance. She parts your thighs with one of her own and places a steadying hand right next to your face. She takes you in, wholly and completely and you let her.Â
The rain beats down relentlessly, plastering your clothes to your skin, but you barely notice it. Not when Vi is kissing you like thisâlike sheâs trying to consume you like sheâs been starving for this. Her body is warm, her lips are hot, insistent, and messy against yours, her teeth occasionally graze your lower lip in a way that sends shocks through your entire body.
Breathy moans expel from your mouth in tandem with curses as her leg creates delicious friction against the lace of your underwear.Â
âVi,â you manage, though it comes out as more of a broken whine, breathless and desperate.
Her name on your lips pulls a moan from her, low and guttural, and the sound is enough to make your knees weaken. You think you might collapse if she werenât holding you so tightly.
Your head spins. You feel like youâre dissolving, every nerve alight as you lose yourself in her touch. Your lungs burn, screaming for air, but you canât pull away. You donât want to. Instead, you cling to her, fingers tugging in her hair.
Itâs overwhelmingâher heat, her strength, her desperation. Sheâs chaos and want, all Violet and nothing else, and youâre caught in her pull, like a leaf tossed about in a gale. It terrifies you, the way she consumes your thoughts, your senses. It feels like being set aflame, every kiss, every touch fanning the fire until youâre sure youâll burn to ashes.
Her hands slide lower, shoving into the back pockets of your pants, and she grips you firmly, guiding your hips to rock against her. The movement is deliberate, slow at first, but the friction makes you whimper, a sound that seems to drive her further. Vi pulls you closer, dragging your body against hers in a way that makes you shudder.
Your breaths come in sharp, uneven gasps, each one punctuated by her low moans. You donât think youâve ever felt like thisâuntethered, your body moving on instinct as you grind down against her leg. Her hold on you tightens, fingers digging into you, her strength reminds you of all the noses sheâs broken, all the wounds you had to tend to because of her. The thought makes you dizzy, makes you crave her more.
Viâs hips roll up into you, meeting your movements with a messy rhythm that leaves you trembling. The heat pooling in your stomach builds steadily, like a fire that refuses to be sated, even under the torrent of rain.
You let your hands wander, sliding up the hard planes of her stomach, your fingers tracing the ridges of muscle through her soaked bandages. Youâre struck by how solid she feels, how strong, and it makes your chest tighten with something you canât quite name. When your palm presses lower, cupping her over her pants, she keensâa quiet, needy sound that has you aching to hear it again.
Oh, you want her to do that again, youâre going to make her do that again.
Her grip on your hips becomes almost bruising, her breath coming faster as she sighs into your mouth. âFuck,â she mutters, the word a rough exhale that sends a shiver down your spine. And then, barely audible, she mumbles, âCait.â
You falter, the word barely registering over the storm and your own pounding heartbeat. Itâs unfamiliar and foreign, and it sticks in your mind like a splinter.
Her lips are on yours again, insistent and wild, her teeth catching your bottom lip as her hands slide up under your shirt. Her fingertips are warm despite the rain, leaving trails of fire along your skin as she pushes the wet fabric higher. You shudder under her touch, goosebumps rising in her wake, your body arching instinctively toward her.
Your mind is a tangle of emotions and half-formed thoughts. Youâre hyper-aware of everythingâof the rain soaking through your clothes, the way her breath mingles with yours, the quiet groans she canât seem to hold back.
She moves with purpose, her lips finding the sensitive skin along your jaw, then lower, trailing hot, open-mouthed kisses down your neck. Each touch sends a fresh wave of heat through you, making it harder to think, to breathe.
Your fingers are clumsily slipping into her underwear and then youâre there, fingers brushing right against her clitâsheâs so wet that your fingers brush right through her folds, gliding like silk.
âVi,â you whisper again.
Her answering hum vibrates against your skin, and she pulls back just enough to meet your gaze. Her eyes are half-lidded, the blue of them dark and turbulent, like the sea during a storm.
You lean in, pressing your lips to the sensitive spot just below her jaw. Itâs a place you know well, one youâve touched countless times in the dim light of your medicâs room, dabbing at bruises and wiping away blood. Each time, sheâd jerk away ever so slightly. Now, you press your lips there with the same precision, but the sense is wholly different.
She shifts beneath your touch, her breath hitching as your mouth moves deliberately along her neck. The breathy moans she leaves by your ear fuel you, spurring you on as you focus on the rhythm of her breathing, the way her body responds to you.
âGood,â she mutters, her voice rough and uneven. âFuck, feels so good.â
Her hand moves beneath your shirt, her palm rough and calloused against the softness of your skin, digging under your bra. She cups your breast, her thumb brushing over your nipple, and the sensation sends a jolt through you, sharp and electric. Her other hand tangles in your hair, tugging just hard enough to make your scalp tingle.
It aches, but youâre smiling, even as the rain continues to pour, soaking through your clothes and plastering your hair to your face. You sneak a glance at her, and the sight nearly undoes you. Her eyes are squeezed shut, her dark lashes clumped together with rain and dark, smudged makeup against pale, bruised skin. Her lips are parted, searching for somethingâyour lips, your skin, something to kiss.
You donât make her wait. She bites at your neck, teeth grazing your skin, and you gasp, your hand instinctively moving to her hair. You tug, and the sound she makesâa guttural, desperate moanâsends heat pooling low in your stomach.
She mutters your name, her voice soft yet filled with a hunger that shakes you to your core. Thereâs a plea disguised in her tone, a silent plea to give her everything, to let her take all you have to offer.
And you will. Youâll give her everything. Your time, your care, your thoughts and prayers, every piece of yourself. Your leg, an arm, the air you breathe, and the food you make. Youâd give her your heart, too, if only sheâd take it.
Her body trembles against yours, her chest heaving as her breath comes in sharp, shallow bursts. You canât tell if itâs from the cold rain seeping into your bones or from the way your fingers move against her. You trace light circles over her clit, teasing, testing, and the way she reactsâhips jerking, her hands clutching at you desperatelyâyou think she wants your warmth, and you hope that is what she chases after.
When you slip a finger inside, she gasps, her voice breaking into soft, fractured sounds that make your chest ache. It takes a few tries, careful adjustments to find the spot that makes her fall apart, but when you do, itâs like a floodgate opens. Her moans grow louder, more desperate, her body tensing beneath your touch as she winds tighter, tighterâ
âCaitâŚâ The same name from before slips from her lips like a whisper at first, so faint you almost miss it.
Then she says it again, her voice catching on the syllable, and your world tilts.
âCait⌠CaitâŚâ she chants, the name tumbling from her lips in fervent prayer, each utterance cutting through the haze that had clouded your mind.
It tastes bitter. Bitter like the alcohol still lingering on her breath. Bitter like the realization sinking into your chest.
You freeze, suddenly sober.
Your hands falter, and Vi doesnât seem to notice at first, still panting, still trembling, her forehead pressed against yours. The furrow in her brow deepens when you pull back, untangling yourself from her arms.
âWhatâ? Whyâd you stop?â Her voice is hoarse and confused, the desperation still thick in her tone.
âWhoâs Cait?â The words leave your mouth before you can stop them.
âWhat?â
Vi blinks, her face a mask of confusion before her expression shifts. Guilt flashes in her eyesâraw and unguarded. Itâs a look youâve seen before, maybe once or twice.
âYou keep calling me âCait.ââ You canât meet her gaze as you say it. Your chest tightens, your throat burns, and suddenly, the space between the two of you feels suffocating.
You reach for her hand still under your shirt, running your thumb over her split knuckles. Itâs a gesture that feels too tender now, and you pull her hand away from you, stepping aside to put distance between your bodies.
âI donât knowâŚâ Your voice cracks as you say it, your mind grasping for anything to make sense of this moment.
âShit. Shit.â Vi curses under her breath, running a hand through her wet hair. âIâm sorry. I didnât mean toâI didnâtâCaitâs just⌠someone I used to know, alright?â
The rain pours harder, the chill sinking into your bones as you cross your arms tightly against your chest. You glance down the alley, to where the streetlights cast faint glows on the wet pavement. Anywhere but her face.
âUm⌠I think I need to go,â you mumble.
âYou just got here.â Her voice is low and unsure, and it makes you stutter for a moment. She takes a step toward you, one hand lifting as though to touch you, but she freezes mid-motion, her fingers curling into a fist.
âI know.â You force the words out. âBut itâs been a long day.â You take a step back, and then another.
âPlease.â Her voice cracks on the word. âDonât leave.â
You pause, your breath hitching at the desperation in her tone. It tugs at something in your chest, something that still wants to turn around, to reach for her and say everything is fine. But itâs not fine. Not anymore.
âViâŚâ Her name feels raw on your tongue. âYouâre drunk. I shouldnât have⌠Iâm sorry.â
âNo.â She cuts you off, the panic in her voice sharp enough to pierce through the rain. âNo, donât say that. Iâm not drunkââ
âYou are.â
Her words are rushed, and frantic, like sheâs trying to convince herself as much as you. You shake your head, stepping back again, the cold of the brick wall scraping against your palm as you steady yourself.
âYouâre clearly not in the right state of mind right now,â you say, your tone firmer this time. It feels like a lie, like a mask youâre slipping on to hide the crack forming in your resolve. âIâll see you tomorrow, alright? Just⌠rest easy. You fight early tomorrow.â
She exhales sharply, a sound halfway between a sob and a growl, her hands clenching at her sides. âFuck. Fuck!â The frustration explodes out of her as her fist slams into the brick wall beside her, the dull thud reverberating in the air.
The sound makes you flinch, your shoulders stiffening as you start walking away. Her voice chases after you, raw and broken, but you canât bring yourself to turn back.
Your lips burn where her mouth had been, a phantom heat that refuses to fade despite the freezing rain. You wipe your hands against the damp fabric of your pants, but the scent of her lingersâsmoke, leather, and something wholly hers. It clings to you like a ghost.
The sunlight catches you off guard the next morning. It filters in through the grimy window of the medic room, cutting golden beams through the usual haze of smog. The light feels almost intrusive, prying into the shadows youâve grown accustomed to.
You glance at the old clock on the wall, your eyes heavy from lack of sleep. Last night replays in your mind like a broken recordâViâs voice, raw and regretful, the taste of her still lingering on your lips, and that name, Cait, slipping like a shard of glass between your ribs.
Outside, the faint hum of Zaun waking up filters through the walls. Fighters pass by the door, their voices carrying muffled excitement or hushed murmurs about Viâs loss.
âSheâs never been this off her game,â someone says as they pass. âWonder whatâs eating her.â
You tighten your grip on the bandage roll in your hand, trying to ignore the way your stomach clenches.
The sunlight persists, illuminating every imperfection in the roomâthe cracks in the walls, the scuff marks on the floor, the faint stains on the counter. Itâs the first time youâve seen this much light down here, and yet it only seems to highlight everything you want to forget.
You try to focus on your work, lining up supplies that donât need organizing, folding bandages that donât need folding. You think about how Viâs presence, chaotic as it was, had somehow made this job bearable. Her grins, her dry wit, the way she sat in that chair like it was her throneâit had all made this dim room feel a little less oppressive.
But today, the chair stays empty.
Word of her loss had swept through the Pit hours ago. Even the ones who bet against herâout of spite or fearâseemed shocked. Youâd caught snippets of conversations, whispers about how Vi had gone down hard, how her opponentâs hit had landed with a sickening crack that echoed through the arena.
Ryker confirmed the details when he came in, his voice low as he described the sound her body made hitting the floor. The image had stuck with you, sharp and unrelenting, as you waited.
You expected her to show up the way she always didâbleeding but defiant, swaggering in with that cocky grin, already downplaying her injuries. But as the hours stretched into evening, the worry settled deeper.
Maybe sheâd gone straight to the bar again, skipping protocol out of spite. You wanted to believe it, even if it wasnât fair. If anyone had the right to be upset, it should be you.
You paced the cramped room, the sound of your boots scraping against the floor the only thing keeping you grounded. You told yourself you didnât careâit wasnât your job to chase after fighters who wouldnât take care of themselves. But deep down, it stung.
The thought of her turning back to old habitsâof her brushing you aside like you never matteredâsettled in your chest like a bruise you couldnât rub out.
And then the door creaks open.
Vi steps inside, her silhouette framed by the soft, golden light spilling through the window behind her. She hesitates in the doorway, a shadow of her usual self. Her confident swagger is gone, replaced by a tired, battered figure. The black paint streaked across her shoulders has smeared into her skin, blending with dried blood and sweat. Her leather jacket hangs heavily from her hands, and her makeshift top is damp, torn in places, and caked with dirt.
Her face tells the rest of the story. A swollen eye, a nose bent at an angle that makes you wince just looking at it, and a constellation of bruises across her cheekbone and jaw. Blood has dried in crusty patches along her hairline and temples, merging with the remnants of the black paint she hadnât bothered to wash off.
She lingers there, gripping the edges of the doorframe like sheâs bracing herself for rejection. Youâre about to speak when her gaze finds yours, cutting through the silence like a knife.
âHey,â she says, her voice scratchy and low.
You exhale a breath you didnât realize you were holding, willing your tone to stay steady. âTook you long enough,â you say lightly, turning toward the counter to grab the salve and bandages.
When you glance back, the ghost of a smirk flickers on her lips, but it vanishes just as quickly. She steps further inside, lowering herself into the chair with a muted groan. Thereâs no quip this time, no offhand joke. She just sits there, shoulders sagging, staring at her bloodied hands like they belong to someone else.
You pull on your gloves, the snap of latex breaking the silence. âWhat happened?â
Her shrug is stiff, âGuess I wasnât fast enough.â
Thereâs an edge to her voice, sharp and bitter. Itâs self-directed, steeped in frustration, and it takes you by surprise. You soak a cloth in antiseptic and step closer, gently dabbing at a jagged cut above her eyebrow. She flinches but doesnât pull away.
âWhy didnât you come sooner?â you ask, your tone soft but firm.
Her jaw tightens, and her hands curl into fists on her lap. âDidnât think youâd want to see me.â
You pause mid-motion, your hand hovering just above her skin. Her words feel like a slap, and youâre not sure if the sting comes from the accusation. âI still like to take care of you,â you say quietly.
Vi scoffs, the sound is humourless and tired. âThatâs your job.â
âYeah, but,â you counter, meeting her gaze head-on. âI like doing it.â
The confession hangs in the air, heavy and unspoken between you. Her shoulders tense as she processes your words, her eyes darting away like she canât bear to look at you.
You try to focus on cleaning her wounds, âYou shouldâve come earlier. You shouldnât do this to yourself.â
âWhy not? Seems to be what Iâm good at.â
Her words strike a chord, a pang of hurt and anger swirling in your chest. You step back, giving her space as you set the cloth down. The sunlight streaming through the window catches on her hair, painting her in a halo of gold. She looks almost ethereal, and it breaks your heart, because you know she doesnât see it.
âViâŚâ You hesitate, unsure of what to say.
She looks up then, her eye searching your face. Her voice cracks when she speaks. âI donât get it. Iâm a jerk, right? Always have been to fucking everyone, even Loris and my sister and I... I mean, Iâve been a dick to you since day one. Why donât you just⌠let me fuck myself up?â
âIâve thought about it,â you admit, a hint of teasing laced in your voice. âBut then Iâd be a pretty shitty medic, wouldnât I?â
Her lips twitch upward again, but it doesnât quite stick. âIâm sorry,â she says, her voice so quiet you almost miss it. âFor everything.â
You nod, not trusting yourself to speak.
âI didnât mean toâŚâ She trails off, her gaze dropping to the floor. âI didnât mean to hurt you.â
The sincerity in her voice twists the knife deeper, but it doesnât change the truth. âItâs okay,â you manage.
âNo, itâs not.â She finally looks at you, her blue eyes clouded with something you couldnât quite place. Regret? Shame? âI⌠You deserve better than that. Better than me.â
Her words hit like a punch to the gut. You swallowed hard, forcing a small smile. âYouâre being dramatic. Iâm fine, really.â
Vi shook her head, leaning back against the chair. âYouâre not. Youâre just too good to say it.â
Her eyes flick up to meet yours, and for a moment, it feels like the world has stopped spinning. You can see the pain in her expression, the regret and the sorrow, but thereâs something else, tooâa longing that mirrors your own.
But itâs not enough.
You step back, and the distance between you feels like miles. âYou should rest. I gotta fix your nose.â
Vi nods, leaning back in the chair. The sunlight catches on her bruises, highlighting every mark, every scar. She looks like a warrior, battle-worn and beautiful, and you know youâll never forget this image of her.
As you work in silence, you canât help but wonder what it wouldâve been like if things were differentâif whoever Cait was didnât haunt her, if she could see you the way you see her.
But deep down, you know the answer.
Sheâll never be yours.
But youâll always be hers.
When you finish, Vi hesitates for a moment longer than you expect, her movements slow and deliberate, as though she doesnât know where to go next or what to do. She stands, and the way her shoulders rise, like sheâs summoning whatâs left of her strength, makes your heart ache.
âThanks,â she says.
âOf course. Itâs what Iâm here for.â
As the words leave you, they feel hollow. You want to reach for more, to say something else, to make her understand. You want to scream, to tell her that you could be enough for her if sheâd just let you. You could make her believe that sheâs worth more than the pain sheâs carrying. But instead, all you do is smile. Itâs soft, strained, and bittersweet.
She doesnât meet your eye as she turns toward the door. You watch her move, each step deliberate, like sheâs carrying an invisible weight. For a fleeting moment, itâs as if sheâs pulling the room with her, dragging everything back into the shadows.
And then, sheâs gone.
The door clicks softly behind her, leaving the room eerily silent. You sit back in your chair, the quiet pressing in around you like a heavy fog. The warmth from the light seems to linger, but it doesnât reach you anymore.
You sit back in your chair, staring at the empty space. The room feels colder and quieter, and you realize that, no matter how much you wish otherwise, sheâll always carry pieces of someone else with her.
FUCKKKKKKKKKKKK
Behind the scenes of âIâm Dying Up Hereâ