So I'm never going to recover.
pairing: simon riley x fem!reader
word count: 8.7k
contains: 18+ SMUT MDNI, fem!reader, sex being used as a coping mechanism, heavy angst, no use of y/n, unprotected sex, established relationship, complicated grief, mentions of death, displaced aggression, marital issues, panic attacks, religious speak, mention of calories, unhealthy coping mechanisms, mention of dead relative, simon being pretty aggravating, purposeful omission of tags to avoid spoilers, & did i mention this is all angst?
author’s note: oh my god, this has been such a bitch to complete! i’ve been working on this for months in between my nasty smut fics bc this truthfully made me so sad to write, so i had to take breaks in between. there is only angst; i cannot hold your hand…you must walk alone…i’m sorry. read at your own discretion.
divider by @plum98 & for my taglist click—>here!
Simon can't move on from Johnny's death.
"Johnny's dead."
You remember the line clear as day.
In fact, you remember almost every single detail about that day.
The weather had been docile, a change from the feverish heat the day before.
The air was slightly damp.
The weatherman chimed that a promising stormcloud was brewing in the distance, which could bring a couple of inches of rain, typical of January.
Your neighbor's son came to your front door, meekly asking to retrieve his ball from your backyard.
The postman had hand-delivered your new dress, complimenting the new planters Simon built in the front yard.
Your favorite body wash that smelt of fruit ran out.
You had made pie, apple instead of your usual cherry.
You had accidentally poured too much cinnamon in the apple mixture, shooing Simon away when you finally pulled it out of the oven because it was a "bad pie."
Simon had never heard such ridiculous words.
No pie is a bad pie.
He shoveled a spoonful into his mouth as you went to answer the house phone, quietly laughing as he hissed at the hotness.
Then it happened.
"Johnny's dead," the voice on the other end of the line announced, shattering the tranquility of the moment.
They were the only words that flowed through the phone line.
The very words you had selfishly cursed for the past year.
The words that had single-handedly eroded everything you and Simon had built together.
Because that day, on every level except physical, the Simon you knew had died with Johnny.
His mind merged with the very soil Johnny lay in, leaving his physical body on the surface while his soul wandered beyond your grasp.
So out of touch, so disconnected from reality.
Simon had become a shell of a human.
He wasn't living, merely surviving—going through the motions.
It was devasting to watch the man for whom you gave your heart slowly disengage right before your eyes.
Bit by bit, piece by piece.
Until there was no more man left to see.
Just mere flesh and bones.
It was such unfamiliar territory since Simon relied on you as he relied on oxygen to breathe.
You were his sustenance, his reservoir.
An eternal flame that burned with an unyielding passion.
Now it seems he couldn't get far enough away from you.
However, it wasn't always that way.
The evolution of his disconnect hadn't been linear; it was ever-changing.
Some days, he would act just like your sweet Simon before; other days, you felt like he resented you.
Resented you for what?
You're not entirely sure.
You didn't kill Johnny.
But with how Simon reacted to your mere presence, it felt as though you might as well have.
You can still recall Simon's noticeable change, apart from his defining silence, which occurred exactly two weeks after Johnny's death.
The bitter taste of anise, accompanied by the sharp taste of mint, coated your tongue; experimenting with new cocktail recipes had become something of a hobby for you.
Kept you occupied while Simon worked in his office.
You had insisted he take some time off, some real time off.
Price wouldn't let him return to work, so he supplemented by hiding in his office all day and doing paperwork and other such tasks.
It wasn't entirely what you had in mind, but it was the best he could give you.
He would have gone truly mad without his work to drown out his thoughts.
So, you bit your tongue every morning as he trudged out of the sanctity of the warm bed you shared, leaving you alone in the silence, and headed straight to the room across from yours that had him so consumed.
It was funny, really.
You always thought that perhaps a pretty woman would eventually come around and attempt to steal your Simon from your hands, not a spare room with cream walls.
Digression aside, you selfishly enjoyed the time alone.
Simon would only speak a couple words to you daily, the silence between you growing thicker with each passing day.
You fault him none, though it was exhausting trying to help someone who despises being helped to any degree, even if they so clearly needed it.
That was why you enjoyed the alone time.
Though it could be occasionally dull.
So, finding a hobby to fill your time was not just a choice but a necessity for your sense of fulfillment.
Even if it consisted of the occasion day drinking.
You'll repent later.
Now, you just needed the burning taste of rum down your throat.
Your face sourced at the combination before you scribbled, 'absolute shit,' on a small notebook you kept to keep track of all of your combinations and rated them in excruciating detail.
Hearing his office door creak open, you shoved the notebook into your pocket.
Not because you cared if he saw, but because his office door opening earlier than ten-forty-five startled you, abruptly shifting your emotions.
You heard his heavy boots thunk against the vinyl flooring, inching ever so close to the kitchen where you stood.
Your heart quickened from anticipation, and you tried to steady your breathing, not wanting to give away your guilt.
"You eaten?" His voice is deep and strained as he stands still across the island.
You stay completely still, refusing to budge even a little. Instead, you choose to shake your head from side to side slowly.
"Can pick up pizza?" He suggests.
His presence now stirred a strange mix of emotions within you.
He would never lay a finger on you.
It was the news that had thrown everything off balance, leaving you both in a state of discomfort and awkwardness.
Johnny was dead.
And you could feel his haunt everywhere.
"Pizza's good," you say softly, pretending to adjust a tilted bottle of tequila.
An uneasy silence lingers between you for a moment, and then you finally turn to meet his gaze.
He looks…like shit.
You let out a soft sigh as you take him in fully.
He has dark circles under his eyes, tinged with shades of purple and blue.
His once bright blue eyes have lost their luster, and his lids now hang heavy and fatigued.
His hair is unkempt, and his beard is starting to grow, giving it a scraggly appearance.
"You don't look so good," you find yourself saying without much thought.
"Just tired," he mutters, swiping his car keys off the counter.
You move to stand. "You've been working like crazy," you say, gently pressing your hand into his shoulder.
He tightens at your touch.
Whole body going taut.
You try not to take it personally.
You fail.
"Yeah…I, I'll get the pizza," he murmurs, moving towards the front door.
Then he leaves without a goodbye.
You thought it was just bullshit.
What the articles said about coping with a loss.
Dealing with grief.
They all seemed like distant concepts.
But, he was so evidently disconnecting from you.
You felt your head swarm at the admission.
Simon was isolated, lost in a vast ocean of grief and despair.
And you didn't know if you were enough to reel him back in.
Three weeks later, you're cozied on your sofa, a blanket draped over your legs, the soft cushions embracing you in their cozy warmth.
The clouds, heavy with water, have transformed from soft white to an ominous smoky gray, a stark contrast to your cozy sofa and warm blanket.
You have your favorite tea in your favorite mug, a book wide open though long forgotten on the cushion next to you.
Your eyes are now captivated by a trashy British reality television show, a guilty pleasure that adds to the coziness of your setting.
Usually, Simon and you snuggle up and watch the show.
Always on the edge of your seats, eagerly anticipating the outcome.
Will the man stay on the island, sacrificing his share of the prize fund, to be with the woman he's grown close to?
Or will he choose the money over her?
It's always more enthralling with Simon.
Though, you're not sure where he is.
He didn't say where he was going when he left about half an hour ago.
And you didn't bother asking.
Maybe that makes you a lousy wife.
Or perhaps, you're just exhausted.
It feels like you're tearing your own flesh, trying to get him to answer anything.
You guessed the latter.
The television crackles to life, the sound of synthesizers and strings filling the room, creating a sense of suspense.
"Henry's decision will be…" The host's voice begins.
You find yourself sitting up, the hot cup of tea between your hands, and your eyes glued to the television.
"…revealed right after the break," the host chimes as the camera cuts to a condom commercial.
You sink into the couch with a deep sigh as you hear the front door open.
The thud of heavy boots moves into the kitchen, near earshot.
You turn to see Simon grabbing a glass and slipping it under the tap for some water.
Your teeth dig at the flesh of your cheek, your foot steadily tapping on the vinyl flooring.
He takes a deep sip of the water, sucking it between his teeth and swishing it around his mouth before he spits it back in the sink, running the water to clean out the saliva now lining the metal sink.
You'd rather be shot than deal with the taciturn.
It was egregious.
You felt awkward in your own home.
With your own husband.
"Simon," you say with nerves on your tongue.
He turns towards you, taking a proper sip of the water.
"Sit. Our favorite show is on," you chime, a warm small growing on your lips.
He shakes his head. "Not feelin' it tonight, sweetheart."
"Come on," you urge, pointing towards the television with your pointer finger. "We're about to find out if Henry is staying or leaving."
"I'm—I'm not in the mood," he mutters, only with slight annoyance.
You decide to push your luck. "Come on. Would be nice to see you."
"Stop asking," he cuts sharply, setting the full glass in the sink.
You narrow your eyes slightly. "Why are you being so mean?"
"Christ, I already said I wasn't in the God-damned mood."
Ice and venom coat his words as his hand slams into the countertop.
He didn't yell, but you wish he did.
So, you could get some type of God-damn emotion from him.
Instead, his voice was low, commanding.
A voice a lieutenant would use on his inferiors.
Not on his wife.
His eyes widen as your lips purse.
"Well then," you murmur, eyes still on his. "Guess that settles it."
He releases a shallow breath, opening his mouth before shutting it promptly.
Your eyes squint as you take a deep gulp.
But instead of being a man and apologizing, he leaves for his office like a fucking coward.
You're left there, eyes still on the spot where he stood, cheek now bleeding onto your tongue as the television announces, "...leaving the villa."
And you can't even find it in yourself to care.
It feels awkward when you finally gather enough courage to slither into the bedroom.
You had been paralyzed to the couch even a couple hours after the whole ordeal.
Not a word was breached between either of you.
He had shut himself in his office while you had become one with the couch.
What a match made in fucking heaven.
You slip into some soft pajamas, then into the bed, the heavy comforter offering you comfort.
You rest your weary head on the pillow, eyes already heavy with emotional exhaustion.
Before you fall into sleep, you hear the same thud of his boots streaking along to the bedroom, where you catch a glimpse of him slipping something into his sock drawer.
The warm brown of the book cover in his hand catches your eye.
There was no mistaking what it read on the front: large, gold Cardo font with a cross hovering above the text.
"Holy Bible."
He shoves some loose papers overtop of the Bible and shuts the drawer, moving the flick of the light switch off.
His boots came off in a thud as he slipped off his shirt and jeans, slipping into the bed far from you.
Not a word was shared.
You should sleep, but instead, your mind is tormented by what you saw.
Had Simon prayed?
Prayed to a God he didn't even believe in.
If he hit his knees, splayed open the Holy doctrine, and prayed within the hopes that, by some miracle, he should get to see his brother again.
"Simon," you murmur lightly, regretting breaking the silence as his name leaves your tongue.
"Yeah?" He asks, back to you.
"Were you...praying?" Your question comes out fatigued.
"Ye—Yeah," he mutters skittishly.
You say nothing more.
Your weary eyes drift closed as you pull your blanket taut against your face, peacefully drifting off.
That night, you're plagued by a disturbing dream. Your teeth fall out one by one, leaving only protruding gums. A looming figure stands behind you, tightening your throat with fear.
You spring awake at 3:37 am.
You are drenched in your own perspiration, eyes lingering over to where Simon should be.
He's gone.
You should feel slightly relieved, but you only feel overwhelming dread.
Your skin crawls with a sense of unease, as if something is lurking just out of sight, watching you.
You blink, and it's March.
Two months since Johnny's passing.
You thought the time would pass achingly slow, but time has unfortunately moved forward at an exceptional pace.
It always felt like time should stop.
People should stop.
Because why do they get to carry on and lead an everyday life as if you aren't getting swallowed, eaten alive by the confines of your own home?
It's not fucking fair.
You are not only having to mourn the loss of a good friend but the loss of your own husband, who's still breathing.
It felt like some cruel joke was being played on you that you found no humor in.
But, regardless of the loss, you had to keep moving.
For yourself.
Or you'd probably drive yourself into madness, and nothing good ever came from a mad woman, or so they say anyway.
It was a Friday night, and you had decided to try a new recipe from your grandmother's cookbook.
You couldn't remember the last time you had a homecooked meal that wasn't full of M.S.G and far too many calories.
But tonight, you were about to change that.
With a simple button swipe, your groceries appeared at your front door, and you got straight into it.
The large russet potatoes were peeled and cut into chunks. They were then plopped in heavily salted boiling water and smashed along with many tablespoons of butter and cream.
Chicken thighs were seasoned and marinated for half an hour, not a minute less, before being seared on cast iron.
The asparagus and parsnips were lightly oiled before being pan-seared, and then they were sprinkled with salt, pepper, and parmesan cheese.
And before you knew it, you had transformed a handful of ingredients into a feast that was elegantly presented on some fine china you snagged from the cabinet for you and Simon.
You took a seat, admiring your hard work and savoring the delightful aroma of the chicken as it filled the room.
Hearing the same thud of the boots you had come to ignore coming from down the hall, your head shot up to see Simon with his keys in hand.
"Where are you going?" You ask, curiosity and a bit of disappointment evident in your tone.
"Out," his voice was snipped as he marched towards the front door, not sparing the dinner a glance.
You sit up with a frown. "I made dinner, Simon."
"Not hungry," he says mechanically, like he was planning on shooing away any plans you offered. "Don't wait up for me," he murmurs, shoving on his coat, moving out of the front door, and pulling it closed.
And suddenly, the optimism you had clung to like a lifeline died, wholly and truly, leaving you in a void of despair.
You sit at that comedically large dining table for what feels like ages, pushing your vegetables around with your fork until they're practically mush on your plate.
There's nowhere else to go.
You feel utterly stuck as if the weight of the disappointment has rooted you to the spot.
Your head flings to the front door, as keys get shoved into the keyhole, before the door is pushed open to reveal a flushed Simon.
"Where have you been?" Your voice is warm yet firm.
He doesn't respond, only throwing his keys the bowl and moving to the fridge to grab a cold bottle of water.
"Simon," his name comes off your tongue almost in warning.
"What?" He turns to you, face red from the cold.
"Where the fuck have you been?" You snap, the sound of your chair scraping against the floor as you stand up, adding to the tension in the room.
His eyes widen at your tone.
Your mind was ablaze with conflicting emotions.
Tongue hot with accusations.
"Were you with another woman?" You tack on, crossing your arms over your chest.
"Christ, no," he says immediately with a scoff. "Why would you even ask me that?"
You knew it was ridiculous.
He may be a fool, but he wasn't a cheater.
"I never have a God-damned clue where you go!" You step from around the table, voice rising. "You're my husband!"
"You're my wife!" He tosses the bottle of water into the sink. The plastic crinkles against the metal, as his voice rises with yours.
"Then act like it!" You yell, throwing your hands in the air.
You're both practically heaving with anger.
Seathing with so much untouched and unsaid verbiage.
The silence hangs between your two before you hurdling yourself into his arms, slamming your lips onto his with so much devotion and heat.
His hands grip your cheeks tight as his tongue slides over your teeth and any piece of flesh he can.
You pant into his mouth as his hands move to grip the backs of your thighs, quickly pulling you up to lock your legs around his waist.
He moves to place you on the dinner table, standing between your legs, and you reach out behind you, sweeping your plate full of mushy food and wine glass onto the floor to make space.
The glass shattered, and the china burst into a thousand tiny pieces with a loud crash.
Neither of you cares in the slightest.
His fingers fidget with the hem of your loose top as your lips practically turn blue from losing circulation.
It had been months since you and Simon had been intimate.
Well, since...
You didn't think you needed it during this time in mourning.
Hardly ever thought about it.
Because you two rarely exchanged words, the silence between you became a barrier.
How could you be expected to share such an intimate moment when your words seemed to fail you?
Somehow, you found yourself yearning for it, a deep-seated longing that you couldn't explain or ignore.
It felt like an insatiable desire you couldn't shake.
And when his teeth sunk into your lips, you felt the soft, erotic sting of your skin break; all bets were off.
"Simon," you mewl into his mouth. "Please."
He doesn't answer in words.
Just moves to remove his belt, tossing it to the side where the leather slaps over the broken china and mushed vegetables.
Strips himself of his jeans, boxers following suit.
His fingers move back to grip the hem of your shirt, pulling it over your head, throwing it on the table, lips moving to skim between the dip of your breast as he moves to grip on the fat of your waist.
Your hands move to thread through the back of his air, earning a deep groan from him that rumbles against your skin.
"Shouldn't be touchin' you like this," he mutters into your skin, rough hand skimming down your stomach to slide under your pajama shorts.
"Why?" Your breathing is labored as his fingers push down into your cunt, underwear sticking to the skin due to your dripping arousal.
His finger presses into you further making you release a shallow moan.
He opens his mouth to speak before promptly shutting it, hesitating for a moment before finally speaking.
"Just fuckin' yelled at ya, bug," he grits out the first part, like he's angry at himself for ever raising his voice, no matter if you did the same thing, then says your nickname warmly.
"I yelled first," your voice is sweet like honeydew as your hand moves under his chin, gently forcing his chin up so he can look you in the eyes, and he wants to kill himself even more.
You're an angel.
A fucking divine entity, a wellspring of goodwill.
He doesn't deserve you now.
He's not sure he ever has.
"Needed to hear it," he mumbles, slipping your shorts and panties off in one pull, eyes taking in your arousal-soaked cunt. "Don't deserve ya," he murmurs, with a hint of despair.
"You do," you assure, sitting up more to kiss the corners of his mouth.
He turns his head to the side, almost in guilt; you don't have time to question why before he's lining himself up with your entrance, hand coming to rest on the back of your neck for support as he slips inside you gently.
There's no rush, no urgency to get off.
His movements are slow, unrushed.
This wasn't just a quick fuck.
It felt like he was trying to get a tangible connection to you.
Just bodies melting into each other with ease and familiarity.
Your moans echo off the walls.
Fingernails digging into Simon's back through his shirt.
The barrier does nothing to meddle with your touch.
Nothing could ever diminish your touch.
He lets out a curse, baring his teeth as his fingers dig into the tender flesh on your hips.
His name comes off your sweet tongue in a plea.
You're about to fucking erupt.
Stomach on fire, skin slick.
He shoves his finger in your mouth, collecting some saliva before using that as a lubricant to stimulate your clit.
You let out a string of incoherent words as the stimulation hits you everywhere, all at once.
His head dips back as he comes inside you, eyes shutting closed.
Your breathing is ragged as you both come down from your highs.
However, when you breathe, you feel tightness in your chest.
A squeezing pain that only elongates.
"You okay?" Simon presses his hand into your shoulder.
You nod weakly. "Must have overexerted myself," you jest.
You suck in a deep breath, desperate for more air or something to suppress the pressure you feel.
Simon quips a brow, opting to move away from you to grab you some cool water. "Drink," he commands, nudging the glass to you.
The water feels like a relief flowing down your throat and is so refreshing you can feel it move through every vein in your body.
"Better?" He asks warmly.
"Better," you agree, nodding as water drips down your lip and onto your chin.
But you can't shake the feeling something is off.
It almost feels like an impending doom looming over you.
"Feel like a shower?" He taps your thigh in question.
You nod with a smile, forgetting what you were even concerned with.
You shake off the feeling of doom as you wander behind Simon to the shower.
But doom is inevitable, a fate that cannot be escaped.
The following month, April, brought fickle weather with chilly rain and bright blue skies.
Along with the fruition of tulips and daffodils came your plan.
To finally speak to Simon about Johnny.
Even just thinking his name made you feel like you were indulging in some dark code.
It felt wrong.
Even though it was far from.
You had planned to talk to him a week ago, but you chickened out at the last minute, your fear of confrontation winning over your resolve, instead opting for an awkward conversation about cats.
Safe to say he had no idea you had other objectives at play.
Just thought you were a little kooky.
He had been more receptive to conversations since your sex-capade.
Felt connected to you again.
What a perfect time to ruin it all.
He's sitting at the dining table eating a sandwich.
With no pickles because he despises them.
You smile softly.
You know him so well.
Approaching him slowly, you pull out a chair adjacent to his.
"Nice weather," he says, looking out the window at the blue skies.
"It is," you hum in agreement, shifting in your seat.
"Might go for a run later." He takes a bite of a sandwich, and you chew on your cheek. "You want to come?"
"We should talk," you blurt, deciding you need to cut the cord as soon as possible before you chicken out again.
He quips a brow, sets down the sandwich, and wipes the crumbs off a rag. "About?"
You chew on your lip nervously. "Johnny."
His eyes lock to yours in an instant, and his chewing halts.
And you can feel anxiety claw up your clothes.
"You just—you seem," you try, stumbling over your words.
You knew you should have practiced more.
"We aren't having this conversation." His tone is low and carries a finality.
"It might help if you talked to me." There's desperation in your words.
"Stop," he holds up his hand like he's giving you a fucking command.
"I'm not a fucking dog," you grit. "You can't just give me a command to shut up."
"I know you're not a damn dog," he mutters, his voice a strained whisper.
"Good. Glad you could clear that up," you sit back in your chair, crossing your arms over your chest. "Since you can't clear up anything else."
You knew you shouldn't have said that the second it slipped off your tongue.
It's defensive.
You were supposed to sympathize, not defend.
He stands up abruptly. "Not taking this shit."
"What shit, Simon?" You throw your hands up in a shrug. "Your wife asking you to speak to her?" You let out a dry laugh. "That shit?"
He moves around to swipe his keys from the bowl, not uttering a word.
"Where the hell are you going?" You stand, moving over to him.
His eyes bore into your jaw clenched. "Anywhere but here."
And he was gone again.
Just leaves when times get too trying, apparently.
You stand there, your eyes brimming with tears.
What was to become of you two?
You let out an anguished yell before going to your room, hands planted firmly into the soft mattress, before letting your emotions overcome you.
You sink onto the floor, head in your hands, as you prop yourself on your elbows.
Knees becoming bare from the shitty carpet while your shirt moistens from your tears.
This—this can't be it.
What was life to be without your husband?
You'd be subject to destitution.
A life of isolation, a terrifying prospect, filled with unbearable loneliness.
Bile crawls up your throat, threatening to escape as the thoughts flood your mind.
Your heart pounded violently, threatening to crack your ribs.
You can't breathe.
Throat too tight to get any air through.
A stabbing pain erupted in your chest like it had before, but this was worse.
You clench your chest, tears spilling faster due to the physical pain.
You don't even process Simon hovering over you, hand clenching your shoulder.
Your head turns, and you see his mouth moving, eyes wide in concern, but you can't process what he's saying.
You can only focus on the crushing sensation in your chest.
His eyes are scrambling, watching you push your mouth into the mattress to release a deep, tormented groan.
You were in unbearable pain.
He wastes no time grabbing and holding you in his arms, bridal style.
You don't have it in you to scream at him.
You just sob into his chest.
This was surely going to kill you.
He grabs a stray blanket and tosses it on you quickly before swiping his keys off the counter. He then moves outside and places you in the car.
He drives in a rush, reckless.
His eyes darting over to you, curled up in a ball in the passenger seat, sobbing, hand resting over your chest.
He doesn't know what to do.
He can't crawl in your body and demand your body to be kind to you.
So, instead he brushes his hand over your wrist, attmepting to give you some comfort and he pushes the pedal further to get you to the hospital.
Desperate to heal you.
He pulls into the ER parking lot, not bothering to straighten his wheels, sprints around to your side and gently places you in his arms, all but sprinting to the ER door.
The receptionist greets you before she hears your cries and pleas.
"She, she needs help," Simon frantically says. "Please."
Nurses flood out from the large door that seperates you and Simon from the rooms.
"Sir, you'll need to wait out here," one of them says, helping you into a wheelchair and wheeling you back through the door.
"She's my fucking wife!" He shouts, though to no avail.
The door shuts in his face, shoulders dropping in defeat.
He doesn't sit, he can't.
The thought of him being comfortable while you're in agony disturbs him.
He instead stalks around the room, hands wiping across his face.
Surely, this wasn't...
Could it have worked so soon?
He grabs a trashcan, promptly puking in it at the thought.
It, it has to be a grim coincidence.
Yeah, yeah.
Has to be.
He waits in the waiting room for what feels like ages before a doctor comes in asking for a Simon Riley.
"Is she okay?" Simon searches the doctor's face.
"She's stable," the doctor says, his voice steady and reassuring. "For now."
"For now?" Simon echos the question.
"We ran some blood tests and did an ECG on her heart," the doctor reads over his papers.
"And?" Simon says impatiently.
"Does she have any familial history of heart disease in her family?" the doctor asks, scribbling on the paper.
"No, no," Simon stutters. "Why?"
"The ECG results showed that your wife has coronary heart disease," the doctor says.
Simon's eyes widen, his fear palpable. "Heart disease? What—what does this mean?"
"The arteries in her heart have become too narrow, which reduces blood flow to the heart. There are treatments available to manage the condition and improve her quality of life," the doctor reassures Simon as he sees him start to get frantic.
"Are you talking about fucking surgery?" Simon's hands move through his hair anxiously, his body tense with worry.
"Not necessarily. We can start with medication," the doctor says confidently. "A standard dose of Atorvastatin daily can help manage her cholesterol and fat levels." The doctor messily scribbles the prescription on a paper and tears it off.
"Along with some lifestyle changes to help manage her condition. If needed, we can discuss other options, like angioplasty or surgery. But first, let's see how she does with the medication." He hands over the prescription to Simon.
Simon grabs the paper, nodding his head. "Alright. Can I, can I see her?" His voice is desperate.
"Of course," the doctor nods his head reassuringly. "Follow me."
The doctor leads Simon through the hallway until he reaches your room, carefully opening the door to let Simon step through.
His stomach drops, a wave of concern washing over him, when he sees you.
Eyes swollen and red from your cries.
They hang low from your apparent exhaustion.
"Simon," you greet him with a weak smile, the familiarity in your voice comforting him.
Your voice is weak and raspy.
You look sick.
And he can't handle it.
"Hey, I'm okay," you assure, as you see him examine you, worry written on his face.
"I know you are, bug," tears brimming his eyes; he moves over to you, gripping your hand tightly. "I know you are."
To you, it felt like a source of comfort amidst the chaos.
And that's why Simon said it.
But deep down, he knew.
Nothing could undo what he had done.
No amount of praying, begging, or bargaining could change that.
He had selfishly sealed your fate.
And now, all he could do was wait.
It had been two months since your diagnosis, July.
Things had been decent in that regard.
No better, no worse.
The medication proved helpful.
It reduced the pain you get in your chest, so that was nice.
Over the two months, you persistently urged Simon to join you in counseling.
For your sake.
For the sake of your marriage.
At the beginning of July, he finally agreed, a hopeful sign after a turbulent period that had you ready to leave him.
"What are you doing?" Simon roughly asks as he follows you to your bedroom, hands anxiously running through his graying hair.
"I'm fucking leaving, Simon," your voice quakes, tears spilling down your face as you struggle to pack a duffle bag.
"Don't, don't do that," he stumbled over his words, moving over to you. "Just, just calm down," he placed his hand on your shoulder in comfort.
You shook his hand off before eyeing him. "Calm down?" You repeat his words. "You want me to calm down?"
"Yes. Please," he pleads, hand hovering on the drawer handle.
"You want me to calm down?" You repeat again, your voice dripping with anger. "Fuck you."
His eyes widen; clearly, he's taken aback.
You finish packing, wiping your tears with the back of your hand as you lean against the nightstand. "Simon, you need help," you say, grabbing your wallet. "You need to see someone. Anyone."
He exhales a sharp breath. "Fine."
Your head shoots up, eyes narrowing in disbelief. "What?"
He wipes his face with his hand frantically. "If that's what it takes," he shrugs, nodding. "I'll get the help. Just, just don't leave me, bug."
"Nice to see you again." You snap out of your daze as the therapist greets you.
"Likewise," you murmur, glancing over at Simon sitting beside you.
His leg is tapping a mile a minute.
He's nervous.
You're surprised he actually managed to get in the car and come here.
"Hello, Simon," she sticks her hand out for Simon to take. "I'm Doctor Shaw," she greets with a warm and inviting smile.
Simon takes her hand, giving her a firm shake, and nods in acknowledgment.
"Please," Dr. Shaw brings her hands up. "Follow me."
You and Simon both stand, a sense of anticipation in the air, as you follow Dr. Shaw to her office.
The office looks the same as it has since the last two times you came by yourself.
Warm and inviting.
Only some outside light spilled into the room, opting instead for a warm orange hue from a small lamp illuminating the space.
It exudes a sense of calm, wrapping you in its soothing embrace.
"Please," Dr. Shaw gestured to the couch as she sat in her chair. "Sit."
You and Simon both take a seat and you grab a pillow to hold. Simon leans timidly, his shoulders hunched and his hands fidgeting.
"So," Dr. Shaw begins, eyes moving to Simon. "Simon." His eyes flick to hers. "Talk to me about some of your hobbies."
Simon sits back on the couch, shifting uncomfortably. "Like to run, I guess," he mutters.
She nods with a smile. "Good, good. Exercise is good. It can help clear the mind," she scribbles some notes on a notepad. "Now, I would like to know more about you two and your marriage," she hums.
Simon takes a deep gulp, and now you're shifting into the cushions.
"How are we doing in that regard?" Doctor Shaw purses her lips as she fixes her pen to start taking notes.
You shift in your seat, glancing at Simon next to you. "It's been...hard," you breathe out nervously.
"Interesting," she scribbles in her notebook. "Can you tell me when you think it became difficult?"
You gulp. "Um...a couple, a couple months ago."
"Can you think of any factors that may have caused difficulties?" She tips her head back, offering you a comforting smile.
You tap your foot against the soft blue carpet, finger tapping anxiously against your thigh.
"Simon's friend, um, passed away in January." You choke on your words halfway through before completely finishing the sentence.
Her eyes flick to Simon. "I'm so sorry. That must have been very difficult for you, Simon."
Her voice grinds Simon's gears.
Simon is pessimistic, a cynic.
Has an excruciating time finding sincerity in anything anyone says.
This is no exception.
"Simon," she begins. "If you're willing, I would like to know more about your friend."
"Thought we were here to talk about my wife and I?" Simon's tone is dry without hesitation.
She nods lightly. "We are. It could be helpful for your wife to hear you talk about some of your feelings," she sits up in her chair.
"Did my wife tell you that?" He sits back in the chair, shoulders taut.
She quips a brow. "Tell me what, Simon?"
"That I don't share? Is that why I'm here?" He glances at you, already sinking further into the cushioning of the couch.
You don't say anything, opting to stay silent.
This was a setup.
A ploy to psychoanalyze Simon's psyche.
"You brought me so she could pick my brain," he voices plainly, pointing his finger lazily towards Dr. Shaw.
"No. I wanted you to come so we could fix our marriage," your voice is full of irritation.
"Because it's all my fault it's bad. Right?" His voice raises louder than he intended.
His eyes soften as you widen in surprise, your waterline brimming with tears.
"Shit," he exhales. "I'm, I'm sorry," he says to you with care, closing his eyes slightly as he wipes his face.
"I understand this is difficult for you," Dr. Shaw begins, voice solace. "And I want to acknowledge your discomfort. It takes courage to confront painful emotions," she shifts in her chair, leaning forward.
Simon's eyes narrow. "Spare me the shrink bullshit, doc," his voice is critical.
"It's important to express your feelings, Simon," The doctor urges, to Simon's dismay.
"Why?" He retorts coldly. "Because you won't get paid if I don't?"
Dr. Shaw sits up straighter as Simon lets out an irritated sigh.
"Look," he turns to you. "I know you think this is helpful, but it's not," he says with as much delicacy as he can muster.
"You aren't even trying," you murmur.
"Sweetheart, this is just...not for me. Never has been," he holds your hand softly. "If this helps you, keep coming. I'll pay whatever she charges, okay?" He moves to stand, pressing a soft kiss on the top of your head. "I just...I can't."
Your head flicks up to meet his as his voice cracks slightly, eyes glossed over, revealing his vulnerability.
"See you at home," he bid you goodbye, not sparing the doctor another look before stepping out of the room.
"There is no right way to grieve, and I can understand your frustration," Dr. Shaw says to you, offering a small smile. "Just be there for him when he needs you. He'll come back around," she affirms, turning to grab your receipt for the session.
"Thanks," you say meekly, hand reaching for the receipt.
"This isn't your fault," she confidently says before you step out the door.
You give only a small smile in response.
It was strange.
You and Simon had fiery love.
Two timid souls burning with such passion, desire.
A flame to a flame.
It was a love that felt like sparks igniting each other, creating a blistering and rapid heat that was impossible to ignore.
But in the end, the flames of love can burn each other out, consuming everything in their path, including the ones who ignited them.
Despite your prayers, you couldn't shake the feeling that this was your inevitable reality.
The rest of the summer and the beginning of fall blur through to September.
You were seething with anger.
The kind of anger that has you near in tears.
Simon had missed your sister's funeral, the one event that you had hoped would bring you both closer in your shared grief.
You had told him multiple times throughout the last week where and when to meet you.
He assured you he would be there for you.
He was a fucking liar.
You practically spring out of your car, parked next to his idle truck, taking heavy steps up to the house door.
The door pulls open, slamming against the house's side, making Simon awake on the couch.
The sight makes your eye twitch.
He lay dormant, several beer bottles strung across the coffee table.
And to think things were going pretty well between you two, but this was beyond belief, unforgivable.
While you were crying over your sister's casket, he was here.
Sleeping his drunkenness away.
"Don't tell me you're drunk," you ballistically say, tossing your purse onto the kitchen table with force.
"I'm not tellin' you a thing," he monotonously says like this is some joke.
"I needed you, and you were proper drunk?" Your voice rises. "I—I needed you, Simon," your voice shakes. "You gave up on me."
He says nothing, just lies there.
Your jaw ticks.
You rush over to him, forcing him to stand. "It's been—get up! It's been months, Simon!" You shout out, your voice filled with desperation. "Johnny is dead—gone," you snap out, eyes locking onto his. "He's been gone, and so have you. Except Johnny has an excuse. You don't," your chest is heaving.
Simon's eyes widen, noticeably aggravated. "I—"
"People die every day—and don't get me wrong, I am so fucking sorry, so fucking sorry, that it was Johnny—" You begin, sincerity in your voice as tears prickle down your cheeks.
"Don't—" He starts in a warning tone.
"Truly, I am. And I get it; you didn't need things from each other. But I need you. And I need to know you won't just abandon me when times get tough for you," your hands move through your hair, attempting to soothe yourself before more words flow out. "You need to grow the fuck up and talk to me like a grown-ass man and not a fucking pubescent boy!"
"Fuck, fine! Simon snaps. "It fuckin' killed me when Johnny died. I—he was my best friend, my brother. My only family. Gone." Tears spill down his cheeks as his arms flail around.
You stand silently before your tongue comes out, wiping away the salty tears coating your lips.
"Simon, I know you don't believe this, but we are family—me and you," you breathe out, trying to control your breathing.
"It broke me," he whispers solemnly. "Split me in half."
"I get that," you begin nodding your head, emotion clogging your throat. "But I need you to be whole."
"I, I can't," he stares at the floor, his hand closing into a tight fist.
"Simon. You, you can't let it fester. It's consuming your life. Our marriage." Your desperate eyes drift to him, filled with fear. "Let me help you," you beg. "I can help put you back together again."
"No. You don't understand," he lifts his head back to look at you, his eyes pleading for comprehension. "I think I'm broken beyond repair."
That was before.
It was December now.
You find yourself in the chilling hospital room, tears streaming down your face as you ponder the disintegration of your marriage with Simon.
You suffered a massive heart attack some days ago.
A complication from the heart disease.
It had weakened your heart muscle and lead to some brain damage.
The doctor said treatment options were no longer available.
So, instead of that, he switched his focus to comfort care.
Essentially, he's making it easier for you to die.
It's strange.
You know you're dying.
And you thought that death brings people together.
But you and Simon might as well be light-years apart.
You glance at Simon sitting in the chair across from you, anxiously tapping his foot.
He's nervous.
But not about you dying.
About something else entirely.
You can tell.
You can always tell.
Your eyes flick to the hospital room door, opening wide before your doctor beckons Simon to come outside with him.
Their conversation is muffled, but you catch the tail-end of it.
"It would be best to take her home. Keep her comfortable."
Now you have the confirmation.
You're going to die.
Just not sure when it will come.
You just have to sit and wait while slowly withering into oblivion.
"Hospice care can be provided to support and comfort her during this time," the doctor adds, his voice a distant echo.
A hot tear slips down your cheek, pooling onto your hospital gown.
You see Simon nodding his head along, finger resting on his chin in thought.
You want to scream.
And cry.
And punch someone.
And pray.
And move back home.
But you can't.
You feel utterly and hopelessly helpless in your own body.
Life works in a mysterious, fucked up kind of way.
It's not fair.
It's not linear.
And it's certainly not always kind.
All that's left to do is do what Simon did when Johnny died, go through the motions, the daily routine that feels like a never-ending cycle, and eventually, your physical body will leave you.
Your mind will wander far beyond anyone's grasp, yearning for a connection bond that cannot be.
MONTH ONE: January
You took up journaling.
Your hospice nurse suggested you take up the hobby.
So you did.
It wasn't as therapeutic as you thought.
It was just recounting what you ate that morning and what you planned to do the next day, the mundane details of life that seemed to stretch endlessly.
Boring, menial thoughts.
You didn't have much to say.
The only thing you thought of these days was what would happen in death.
Simon was kinder now.
Said he wanted to leave with you.
You feel guilty for having to leave him alone.
Even though you have no choice in the matter.
You hope you don't see him in the afterlife.
His life belongs here.
On the surface.
You've had some trouble walking.
Even fell in the hallway while trying to reach for a side rail Simon had installed.
You cried and pleaded for him not to help you up.
He managed to gather your heaving body in his arms and held you tight as you sobbed into his shirt about how you didn't want to die.
He didn't sleep that night.
Mind was too riddled with guilt; instead, he prayed.
With a cross to his heart, he hit his knees and closed his eyes, murmuring into the darkness to any entity who would listen.
You thought it was nice when you turned to your side to hear his hushed whispers.
He was praying for you to get better, you thought.
You didn't even realize he was praying for forgiveness for his own sins.
MONTH TWO: February
Your journal hobby has quickly dissipated as quickly as it began.
It's become harder to move.
You have to rely on Simon to do measly tasks.
It's humiliating, to say the least.
"You okay, bug?" Simon asks as the warm, sudsy sponge moves across your back, shining you clean.
"Yeah," your voice is hushed as your lips flatline. "I can do it," you assure, reaching for the sponge.
"You sure?" His eyebrow lifts. "I'm happy to—"
"Just give me the fucking sponge," you grit, ripping the sponge away from him to scrub your arm.
You find you're weaker than you thought.
You can barely hold up the light sponge to clean yourself.
Your hand sinks down into the warm bath water before you attempt to pull it up higher, over and over, until you toss the sponge over the lip of the tub.
It hits the tile, releasing water and bubbles on the floor.
Your head drops into your hands, tears mixing with the bath water.
"It's, it's really happening," you heave into your hands. "I can't even lift a fucking sponge, Simon," you say, disgust coating your words.
Simon leans forward, hand grazing your back. "I'm so sorry, bug," his voice trembles.
You turn to look at him, with red, puffy eyes and slick tears slipping down and into his beard.
"Don't apologize," you affirm with a sniffle. "You didn't do this to me."
He almost throws up but chokes down the bile to speak.
"Can I, can I finish?" He almost pleads.
You give him a soft nod and a gentle smile.
He grabs a fresh sponge and repeats the same process, this time being more gentle.
Like he's purposely trying to remember the feeling of your body under his hands.
It makes you feel loved again.
MONTH THREE: March
You were slowly withering away right before your own eyes.
You didn't even recognize yourself in the mirror.
Your skin has gone pale and blotchy and started mottling.
It's cold to the touch, void of any warmth.
"I'll be right back, okay?" Simon cooly says, pressing a kiss on your head.
"Where are you going?" You ask curiously.
"I told you I had to pick up Price's kid from school," he says warmly. "You don't remember?"
"Yeah. I, I remember," you nod your head, plastering a reassuring smile.
You really didn't remember.
Memory is a slippery thing these days, evading your grasp like a wisp of smoke.
The moment something touches your brain, it usually escapes within an hour.
It's a constant source of frustration, a relentless storm that rages within you.
Makes you want to throw a chair across the room.
He leaves, not even realizing the question has you spiraling.
Proding and pinching at your skull's skin to regain control of your brain.
You must look insane.
But to you, this is the only thing that makes you feel sane and in control of your body.
The feeling of inability is one of the most haunting prospects.
The hunger for control gnaws at you, a ruthless creature that refuses to be sated.
But it's slipping through your very fingers like sand.
Fast and all at once.
MONTH FOUR: April
By mid-April, your body feels hollow.
You can't do much of anything.
Though you did find some peace with your morality.
Finally, you came to terms with your reality.
And then, a spark of courage ignited, urging you to step out of the house for the first time in a while.
There was an unusual, almost compelling, need to visit Johnny's grave.
You had only done so once, but it would be nice to leave some flowers.
Your hospice nurse drives you and waits in the car as you find his grave slightly disheveled like someone had messed with it.
Maybe even crawled out of it.
You're too tired to investigate.
You sit in the soft dirt, legs crossed as the sun beats on your head.
The lull of sleep licks your brain and makes your eyes close and unclose lightly.
You yawn, stretching your arms out before the feeling of sleep becomes too strong.
You find yourself lying next to Johnny, separated only by a few feet of dirt.
You feel calm, peaceful even.
Though when your eyes shut for the last time, you don't see the bright, ethereal light you imagined.
You see nothing but darkness.
And smell brimstone.
It couldn't be.
This wasn't the heaven you were promised, a place of eternal peace and joy.
It was a cruel joke, a betrayal of the highest order.
You were supposed to be in a place of eternal love.
An incomparable beauty.
This looked more like—
"Bastard sold you out, m'afraid," a voice croaked in the darkness.
The figure was indistinct, a mere shadow in the darkness, but its presence was suffocating, a palpable sense of doom that felt all too familiar, like a nightmare you couldn't wake up from.
"Who—who are you?" You speak into the darkness, not paying much heed to what he said.
"I shall not speak my name, my dear," the voice remarks. "You shall find out soon enough," he assures, pure humor coating his tongue.
Your voice trembled with fear, barely audible in the oppressive darkness. "How—how am I here?" You managed to stammer, your terror evident.
A heinous laugh comes from the dark and shoots into your eardrum. "Your husband called upon me some time ago," he says. "He wanted his friend back, so he offered me your soul in return for him back." His voice is simple and casual as if it were ordinary.
Your heart thumps in your chest, and your lungs deflate quicker than they inflate.
"N—no. Simon...he loves me," you try to contradict. "He—he wouldn't do that," you speak into the darkness, voice tight.
"Loves his friend more," he casually says.
Your eyes widen as tears begin to pour down in a consistent stream down your face; you try to move your arms but find your arms are magically constricted to your side.
"Don't worry. We'll have fun—you and I," his tone is insidious.
Simon had bartered your life for his own selfish volition and damned you to an eternity in hell.
That—that serpent.
What kind of diabolical monster would do something so heinous.
He promised you a lifetime of love.
A baby that you would share.
A tangible tell of your love.
He was a false prophet.
When did he find time to do this deal?
Oh. Oh.
He did act skittish that night.
That—that night that you asked about him praying.
You just assumed he was praying to God to help him cope by perhaps showing some signs of Johnny.
Help him deal with the trauma in any way he could.
He was instead striking up a deal.
And it wasn't with God.
mini author’s note: do share your tearful thoughts in the comments!
”Then give white people some free advice.” ”They’re all in my books.” RIP Toni Morrison (February 18, 1931 - August 5, 2019)
chubby!reader going out to for drinks with your “friends”, watching the way men come and go from your table, flirting with your friends as they giggle and flippantly introduce you, saying you’re also single, before batting their lashes when the man’s attention falls back to them.
You’re debating on just hightailing it out of there while you still have some of your pride, snippets of the others conversations filtering in and out of your mind. “Do you see his arms?”
“Oh please look at those thighs, I bet he could lift a truck!”
“Face looks mighty comfortable.” and then an uproar of giggles as you sigh, lifting your eyes and you immediately zone in on the four men sitting opposite of you.
Oh it was time to leave, you couldn’t handle watching for adonis’s looking down at you
But as you’re collecting your things, muttering something to the girls about work early in the morning when they start whining “nooo where are you going!!”
when your waiter gently catches your elbow
“ma’am? your tab has been paid for and i have a honey bourbon shot here for you.”
Is anyone still talking about bojack horseman or are we all done with this like as a unit—
peristalsis - iii
selkie!soap x reader. depression. suicidal ideation. strangers to "lovers." cunnilingus. analingus. spitting. piv. doggy. missionary. rough sex. size kink. breeding kink. biting. mean soap. manipulative soap. smut. . Running away from life to the Scottish Hebrides, you meet a man who won't leave you alone. . Masterlist. Ao3.
previous
The ocean calls the seal to return, and you finally heed the growing chill you’ve been ignoring, as well as the complaints of your nearly-empty stomach.
Starvation is not on your list of preferred ways to end your own life, so you check the fridge Johnny said he had stocked. What you find is disconcerting—hoping for snack foods, pre-packaged conveniences, you instead find a carton of eggs, hard cheeses, condiment bottles. Milk in a jug, green herb bundles, sticks of butter, and an unopened package of bacon.
The freezer is much the same. Bags of vegetables and meats like shrimp or scallops. Frozen loaves of bread. Not even a single carton of ice cream. When the pantry also yields nothing more ready to eat—no chips, no cup ramen, no cans of soup—you give up.
There’s a hierarchy of action you’re willing to take to preserve yourself, organized around a precept of energy expenditure—eating spends less than cooking, so you focus on the former and do not practice the latter anymore.
Even though most food has lost its taste by now.
So you lay down on the couch. Sulking, maybe, but it’s the only halfway satisfying thing left to you. You angle yourself toward the shelf of books it faces in place of a TV; it’s mostly romance novels. Bright pink or blue or violet or red spines facing outward, most of them already cracked and creased down through their titles.
Did Johnny stock those for you too—emptying the shelves of a thrift book store for a woman he knew would be alone—or are they just set dressing for his dream of a honeymoon getaway?
You start thinking about the cliffs by the cove.
They’re not very tall. Maybe three stories. You would feel the impact—and it might not even work. You would lay there at the bottom, in the packed sand, broken. But alive to feel every consequence of it.
You might still die, but it would be slow. Someone could find you, and save you. Probably Johnny. You might be permanently broken—worse off than when you began.
It’s not an option.
You could have just bought a gun if you stayed home. It would have been cheaper, and faster—
Anxious energy needles at your legs and prickles along the insides of your palms; you sit up, agitated. Your stomach bubbles as the acid inside slides around with nothing to eat into. You scowl at yourself and retrieve Johnny’s jacket from the floor.
It’s colder outside than before, when you leave the cottage for the third time that day for the walk to Vatersay village. You can see it from the front door of the cottage, only about a mile away, and as you get going, you find a walking trail cutting through the machair grass leading in its direction.
The sky darkens far earlier than you expect, on the way. You hadn’t thought you were far enough north for that. Absent of city lights, the Hebridean starscape peeks through gaps in the moonlit clouds overhead, winking to life as the sun retreats around the earth’s curve. You pause—even your ennui is no match for the cosmos—looking to see if you can find the arm of the Milky Way, but the autumn sky does not seem inclined to show it to you.
By the time you reach the village outskirts, warm rectangles of yellow light are already brightening the windows against a heavy blue night. You get directions to the pub from an older man walking his dog—Last Cull, it’s called. You find it with a carved wooden sign, adorned with the silhouette of a lounging seal, hanging by the door at the front, and walk in.
Johnny said that less than a hundred people populate the island; when you walk in, at least a third of them must be here, and their collective chatter, along with the sounds of drinking glasses clinking or hitting tables, and the warble of classic rock music, all rush at you at once when you open the door, carried on a wave of orangey lamplight and the smell of hops and a burst of thick, hot air.
It’s more life—more sound—than you were remotely prepared for, and you freeze in the threshold. You stand there long enough that, worse, several heads turn to look at you—
The outsider.
You duck your head, and look at the floor as you direct yourself at an empty stool at the bar. Your purse beats against your leg with every quick step, heavy with a tourist’s excess preparation, and following eyes lance you like pins through a butterfly’s wing.
A man in a beanie and mutton chops is wiping a glass dry behind the counter; he looks at you drolly when you sit down.
“W’can I get you?” he asks, surprising you with a distinctly un-Scottish accent.
You blink several times. “Um…”
The bartender is immediately unimpressed. “Liverpool, love. You drinking or eating?”
You flush. “I’m sorry—um—both?”
He nods. He does not offer a menu. “Right.”
He disappears with the same abruptness of manner behind a swinging door, leaking greenish fluorescent kitchen light around the edges and through the circular window set up in the middle.
Whatever waves you made upon your arrival already seem to have dissipated, ineffectual in the long-term; conversation in heavy Scots flows around you, relaxed and indistinct. The pub is warm with body heat, little groups of islanders pulled in close together around pints and tankards and easy conversation.
These people likely have known each other for years; seen each other grow up. Watched time etch lines across one another’s faces. You can’t really understand the words being exchanged between any of them, but the tenor is familiar. None of it is especially important to say to one another, you know—it’s the back and forth that’s the point. The sway and rock of practiced call and answer. Of knowing, when they say something, that a response will be given, even if the response is something that’s been said a thousand times before.
You run your fingers along the dented surface of the old bar. Shift in your stool. Pick at a sliver of skin coming up from one cuticle. A single drop of oil in the middle of an ocean.
The bartender returns to you from the kitchen, no food in hand. Instead, there’s a new expression on his face—a hammer aimed at your protruding nail. His eyes are narrowed; his brows are drawn together.
“You’re Soap’s tourist,” he says.
“Um,” you say, pinned under the intensity of his stare, “no?”
He rolls his eyes. “Johnny MacTavish. Everyone else calls him Soap.”
“Oh.” You cannot guess at all where this conversation might be going. “Yes?”
“He cooks for me some nights,” the bartender says. “He’s in the kitchen right now. He says dinner is on him, and he’ll bring it out soon.”
“He’s here?” you demand, jaw dropping.
“Some nights,” the man repeats. He picks his drying rag back up, and gets to work on another glass. Your association with Johnny—Soap—seems to have unlocked in him a geniality that would otherwise be inaccessible to you. “Lad was right chuffed when you rented out the croft. Hadn’t seen him that excited in ages. Wouldn’t stop talking about it for a month.”
He hasn’t offered you a drink and doesn’t seem inclined to. Still intimidated, you don’t ask.
“He told me I was his first guest,” you say, worrying at your cuticle.
“Mm-hm,” responds. Then he eyes you. “See why he was so worked up now.”
You stop your jaw from dropping for a second time, but only just—the weight of Johnny’s hand ghosts down your back, aided by his scent radiating from his jacket, released from the fibers it’s seeped into by your body heat.
“How—um, how do you know Johnny—Soap?” you ask, awkwardly.
“If he told you to call him Johnny, call him Johnny,” the man says. “Was his captain, once upon a time. Served together in the SAS. Name’s John Price.”
“Nice to meet you, Mr. Price,” you say.
He grunts. “John’s fine. He been behaving?”
“Um,” you say, entirely unsure how to answer that, when the kitchen door flings open.
“Bonnie!” Johnny exclaims, apron-clad, rosy-faced, and grinning wide.
He’s exchanged his heavy sweater for a lighter, cream-colored henley, sleeves rolled up his broad forearms. Combined with the cinch of the apron strings around his middle, it highlights and flatters the athletic build of his silhouette. The hem of his kilt flutters around his knees as he hurries over.
“Hi, Johnny,” you sigh.
He balances a steaming dish on one hand and carries some silverware wrapped in a napkin in the other. The plate tilts precariously as he directs himself at you, but the food survives as he slides it in onto the bar in front of you.
“Shoulda told me you were comin’ down, or I’d’ve had somethin’ better ready to make!” he scolds, though he’s clearly too pleased to mean it.
On top of a ceramic plate, the glaze spiderwebbed with cracks from age and constant use, three oblong triangles of fried fish rest atop checked wax paper, attended by a large stainless still cup of large wedge fries that you remember are referred to as “chips.” Beside that is a small cup of some white condiment you don’t recognize. Everything looks fresh from the fryer, as if Johnny could not wait one second to long to bring it to you.
“Oy, lad, how come I don’t get that kinda table service?” someone yells out behind you. “M’ I not pretty enough for you?”
A chorus of laughter answers the teasing. You hunch into yourself.
“Go back to your pint, Angus, ya weapon!” Johnny returns grandly. Then, to you, “Here, this is the best thing for it—”
John Price has already stepped far aside; you and he watch as Johnny retrieves a long-stemmed glass from a shelf, and then pulls a bottle of wine from a low fridge. He sets the glass beside your plate and uncorks the bottle—bicep quivering as he works the screw—and then, thumb in the punt, he pours out a stream of white wine one-handed.
“Tossers over there’ll call me mad but Sav Blanc with a fish an’ chips is pure class,” says Johnny. Then, to your horror, he sets his elbows on the counter in front of you. “Go on, have us a bite.”
You stare at him agog. His cheeks are flushed red, and you’re not sure it’s from the heat of the kitchen or—his gaze flicks to your mouth and back—something far less comforting. He stares back at you, grin unmoving—eyes bright and vibrant and too intense to hold contact with for long.
You look down at the meal again. The fish looks crunchy and thick with golden brown crust; the chips are sharp at the edges and dusted with salt and some sort of green seasoning. The smell is impossible to ignore—hot and floury and oily.
You take a chip and dip it tentatively into the white sauce. Johnny’s eyes dance with excitement as they follow the movement. When you take a bite, the bitter tang of tartar meets your tongue and mixes with the mild potato as you chew.
It is only just shy of hot enough to burn but—it’s good. It’s delicious. It’s the best thing, you realize, that you’ve tasted in you’re not sure how long.
You do your absolute utmost to prevent that from showing on your face.
“It’s good,” you say, and take another bite.
“Barry!” Johnny enthuses. “Now have a dram, go on.”
Rather than allow you to pick up the glass like a normal person, Soap lifts it in one large hand—knuckles and wrist peppered with dark hair—and brings the rim to your mouth. You have no choice but to take a sip as he tilts it toward you, or else end up dribbling white wine everywhere.
You must begrudgingly agree, as it passes across your tongue, that it pairs very well with what you’ve eaten.
You nod at him in lieu of another response; the corners of his eyes crinkle. He sets the glass down and slaps the counter with both palms, pushing himself away from it.
“Enjoy that an’ I’ll be back for ya in a mo,’” he says. With a bounce in his step, he disappears back into the kitchen.
John Price throws you another droll look. “You’re never getting rid of him now.”
When he turns away to address another patron, you scowl at his back.
Johnny comes in and out of the kitchen several times, as you pick at the food. Whatever his usual habits as the pub cook, it seems he’s in a magnanimous mood this evening, bringing orders to every table and chatting with anyone who catches his attention.
And a lot of people catch his attention. Island native or not, it seems that Johnny is everyone’s favorite boy—and it’s hard not to see why. He throws bright smiles at everyone who speaks to him, pats shoulders, trades good-natured Scottish ribbing with anyone who throws it his way. He’s familiar, it seems, with everyone he talks to—or he’s good at making it seem that way.
And the effect it has on everyone he talks to is obvious. Weathered faces, the kind that seem to rest at a permanent, severe frown, rise to beam as brightly as the sun after Johnny spends a minute or two checking in on them. Fond eyes follow him around the pub; the conversations at tables he visits keeps a lively tenor even after he leaves it.
You reach for your wineglass and drink deep.
“There we go!” Johnny exclaims, noticing.
He does not leave you neglected, of course—he keeps circling around, looking at your plate, and then at you, and filling your glass when you empty it. It strikes you as rather sweet until he starts availing himself of a mouthful every time—turning the glass so that his lips cover the marks yours have made on it.
When about half of your plate has been cleared, and Johnny is returning from delivering a tray of sandwiches to another table, he comes up behind you and leans in close, hands curling around your shoulders. Mouth brushing your ear.
“Dinner rush is almost done, bonnie,” he murmurs, butter-smooth and low as banked embers. “Then I’m all yours.”
A tremor runs up the nerves in your spine; you sit up straighter when he pulls away, the fine hairs on the back of your neck reaching toward him as if statically charged.
You catch John Price eyeing you again, expression blasé. You flush up to the roots of your hair and avoid looking at him again.
Eventually, the pub begins to vacate, somewhere close to ten in the evening. No city bar, this one, even on a Friday night. You finish three-quarters of the bottle of wine in between turning the fish and chips into mush and crumbs, finally pushing everything away from you as the last stragglers jingle the bell above the door.
Then it’s just John Price, pulling on a coat, Johnny doing dishes in the kitchen, and you, alone, sneakers hooked to a rung on the barstool.
John Price sticks his head through the swinging door. “We still doing Sunday, Soap? Or d’you have new plans?”
“Course doin’ Sunday!” Johnny yells. “Canny wait!”
“Alright. I’m leaving, lock up when you go.”
And with that, John Price gives you a cursory nod, and makes his exit.
Soon after, Johnny exits the kitchen, wiping his hands on a towel, the motions making his pectorals twitch and flex. His apron is gone, the little v of his shirt collar exposing dark, curling chest hair.
The odd pelt—you realize, from your experience this morning, that it’s a seal’s—still hangs around another plaid kilt.
Your heartbeat is hot and heavy in your ears. You stare at him, lips pressed together tightly, a tremor working its way between your shoulders.
He tilts his head toward you, eyes half-lidded. When you meet his gaze again, his smile is set at an expectant angle.
“Drive me home, Johnny,” you finally say, wine and humiliation pulsing through your veins.
He drives you home in silence, and rests his hand on your thigh the whole way there.
You don’t move it. You don’t react, either—even when his pinky flicks against the seam of your leggings, right where it lays against your pussy. He roves his spread fingers and heavy palm all across the length and breadth of your thigh, cresting down over your knee and back up again, squeezing and massaging the fat of your quad.
You don’t say anything. He does not prompt you to do so. The corner of his mouth, when you look to him at your side, catching his profile, is curled.
The silence continues when he pulls up to the cottage—even the wind is light and quiet, as you unlock the door to let the both of you in. The night sky is cobbled with clouds that pass over slowly, letting only slivers of moonlight reach the earth, so inside the croft is dark and murky.
You don’t move to switch any lights on. Nor does Johnny, following close behind you.
Out of sight, it seems your body forgets who—or what, even—is following you. He is only a presence at your back, a body taking up space, and in the darkness, with only your hindbrain to rely on, he could be anyone.
Anything.
You stop in the middle of the living room. He hovers behind you. Not quite touching—but close enough to feel the gravity of him, strong enough to pull you in.
You drop your purse on the couch, and make to shuck his jacket—his hands take hold of the shoulders, allowing you to slide out of it. The deep, even pulse of his breathing is right there at the shell of your ear.
“Bonnie,” he murmurs, husky.
“I’m,” you say, “I’m going to use the bathroom.”
A pause. Then—“Alright,” he purrs.
You escape.
In the mirror above the sink, you look yourself in the eye. What you see is nothing you haven’t seen before—pitiable, needy, pathetic—and it’s nothing you have any desire to confront now. If you think too hard about it—if you ask yourself what you should be asking—there will be no coming back from it.
He’s been dangling this in front of you this whole time. It’s no fault of yours for taking it. This once, you aren’t to blame for what happens next. This once.
You run the cold tap over a washcloth and dab cool water across your face and down your neck. It does little to regulate the heat flushing through you.
If you don’t go out there now, he might leave.
You throw the cloth into the sink basin and open the door.
And Johnny is there, standing right there in front of it, leaning casually against the opposite wall—
Completely naked.
You stop dead.
Gray moonlight falls across his body in a thin haze. The bulky, sculpted planes of it roll with dense muscle and dark hair, which is thick and curly across rounded pectorals and joins in a broad stream down his abdomen. Twisting into a nest at his groin, they cushion a long, wide cock, uncut, half-hard—
That jumps at your appearance.
He meets your eyes. They are silvery and sharp, even in the gloam. Drags his gaze down—leveling it with your tightening nipples. Then he reaches to his side and twists the doorknob to the bedroom.
It swings open. Empty bed in the doorframe.
His cock jumps again. A diamond-drop of moisture beads at the tip.
“Go on,” he murmurs.
You walk in, barely aware of your own footsteps. His bare feet cross the floor behind you, and then the door shuts again.
He does not say another word as he approaches you; you do not turn to face him. You stand as if restrained in place as large, warm hands skim the dip of your waist, slope easily down your hips and up again; he pinches the hem of your sweater and lifts. You raise your arms, lost in the fugue of your pounding heart; he brings it over your head, and tosses it to the side.
Rough hands smoothing over your bare skin, almost like sweeping away dust. He unhooks your bra with startling dexterity—fingers slide beneath the straps and loosen them down your shoulders. Hands dipping down your chest, edging under and replacing the cups around your breasts.
His thumbs press your nipples in, circle around them; you gasp, flinch back against him, and feel his cock, fully erect, nestle in the cleft of your ass. He huffs a laugh into your hair.
His hands return to your waist, and they slide down, pressed open against your sides, as Johnny goes to his knees behind you. He grasps the waistbands of both panties and leggings and—face centimeters away from the globe of one ass cheek—pulls both down in one smooth, soft sweep.
It feels like being skinned. Your heart beats a hammer in the arteries against your throat. You nearly lose your balance, tilting when you lift one foot out of your clothes, before one of Soap’s hands return to your waist to give you ballast. Holding you up like it’s nothing. He squeezes the meat of your hip tenderly, massages the give of it with the tips of his fingers, skin warm and rough against yours.
The moment you’d first caught sight of Johnny in the airport, he’d slotted cleanly into a certain taxon of manhood; one need only to examine his morphology briefly—the mohawk, the muscles, stubborn refusal to cover his knees even as winter fast approaches—to understand that his is the lifestyle of the fast-living. He leers. He gropes. He runs down what he sets his eyes on whether his prey likes it or not.
An organism with cheap pleasure on its mind, and nothing more. Johnny’s bull-focused intentions had stunk acrid and obvious the moment they’d fallen upon you—aimed, you thought unceremoniously, between your legs and nowhere else.
So why, as his hands drag up the backs of your thighs, is he touching you so tenderly? Teasing you open, rather than prising you apart. Touching you as if he’s in no hurry to do anything else.
It feels like an insult. It feels like mercy you didn’t ask for. Without thinking, without knowing you’re going to do it—you slap his hand away.
“Is this going to take all night, or are you going to get around to fucking me sometime soon?” you snap, galled.
An indrawn breath. His or yours, you’re not entirely sure.
Then he rises up, shoves a hand hard between your shoulder blades, and you topple forward onto the bed, flailing, landing face-first, as Johnny knees up behind you.
“So that’s how you want it, then,” he says. Nonchalant. “Aye, I can do that. Come here.”
You don’t have time to scramble away before rough hands grab your hips and yank them back, pulling you up onto your knees, and with no more preamble Johnny shoves his face into your naked pussy from behind. Immediately hot and star-bright; thumbs hook into your outer folds to spread you open moments before his tongue burns a stripe from clit to perineum, no slow build, no warm-up, before he starts eating you out like he’s starving.
You shriek from the sudden contact, hips jerking, but his hold is iron, and the more you resist the more he tightens his grasp, fingertips digging down near to bone. He licks at your folds, at the dips between them, as if he’s pulling swipes of you away on every taste bud, imprecise, mouthing your cleft as if he means to swallow it whole.
When you reach back with one hand to grab his hair—to hold him where he is or shove him away, you’re not sure—he releases one hip and shackles your wrist in his fingers, bending your arm at the elbow and pinning it to your lower back.
“You asked for it,” he growls against you, “and now you’re gettin’ it,” another dig of his tongue around your entrance, “so don’ fuckin’ complain.”
He pulls away and abruptly spits on your asshole before diving back in. With the thumb of the same hand around your wrist, he smears it around, dipping just inside at the same time his tongue breaches your cunt; you feel teeth press against your perineum for a breathless moment before he lets up, and then he prods your clitoris with little jabbing licks, forcing his way up under the hood that fails to protect it from his onslaught.
You have a free hand—you reach back to slap at him again. The theory of insanity proves true; one wrist joins the other, and Johnny uses his own weight to move you as he likes, arms curled over your hips, rocking your entire body against his mouth, lips smacking against you as he alternates between licking up the slick that abruptly starts welling around your entrance and sucking your labia between his teeth.
He grunts and snarls after every brief surfacing for air, every time his tongue touches you again, as if every new taste of you in his mouth is better than the last. His hands tighten into vices around your wrists as he buries in deeper, groaning, shoving his face against you so hard it thrusts your hips forward, which he greedily drags back, and then he flutters his tongue against your clit as if to punish you for his own forcefulness.
“Johnny—” you cry, “Johnny, slow down, slow down—!”
A climax swells within you before you have any time to prepare for it, a closeout curling in so fast that it hits you before you can brace. Johnny thumbs your ass again and suctions his lips closed around your clitoris, tearing a scream from your throat, ripping your orgasm even further out of you as you suddenly, violently convulse.
It jerks you in his grasp, as if whipping you, and then, as fast as it came at you, it recedes; you sag, dizzy and gulping air, but Johnny’s mouth opens around your pussy again as if nothing happened, tongue and lips losing none of their frantic voracity.
“Johnny,” you whimper, “Johnny, I came, you can stop—”
“Don’t give half a shite, am no’ done,” he snarls, accent thicker than you’ve heard it before.
Your breath shudders out of you as he runs the edges of his teeth up your folds, and then, briefly, the flat of his tongue circles your asshole, before dipping back down into the heat of your cunt. He catches your clit again in a quick succession of sucking kisses, loud and wet and pulling at it so hard that tugs at nerves all the way down your legs, spasming through your calves.
Your breath thins in your lungs, escaping you in high, reedy whines, and finally, he pulls his mouth away—only to replace it with his hand. He transfers your crossed wrists into one grasp, wedging all four fingers between the split of your cleft and shaking it vigorously, like a dog might with a small animal clamped in its jaws. He follows this with several rapid slaps against flesh that is already screaming with overstimulation—
And then the head of something hot and hard parts you, circling to find its target, and with as little preamble as he began Johnny shoves his fat, rock-hard cock into you, all the way to the base in one harsh thrust.
It shoves the air from your lungs in one go, leaves you no room to breathe in before he grabs your wrists again, like reins, pulls halfway out, and rams back in again, setting a brutal pace, his thighs slamming against the fat of your ass at a rapid staccato that shakes the old bedframe on its creaky legs.
He barely pulls out as he fucks you this way, thrusting short and hard, your face crushed against the bedsheets as he uses your arms to pull you back against him to meet every thrust. The fattest part of his cock catches your g-spot over and over, bright and hot as iron pulled from a fire, and you can’t even get enough breath in your lungs to do more than whimper every time his hips meet yours.
“This is wha’ she fuckin’ needed, hen, aye?” Johnny snarls. “Hissin’ an’ spittin’ like a stray cat, didnae know wha’s good fer it, jus’ needed a big cock in ‘er wet cunt, didnae she?”
A long, shaky moan is the only response you can give. Fast, fast and hard—he bucks against you wildly, violently, sending shockwaves up your body that jounce your breast and ripple across your blazing cheeks. Your mouth hangs open at a loose angle—if you try to close your teeth, you might accidentally bite into your tongue—
He releases your wrists, and your arms fall hard to the bedspread. Then he bends over your back, planting his hands in the spaces over your shoulders, making a cage with his his body. It changes the angle of his thrusts, lets him force his way in even deeper, kissing the head of your cervix. You climb your hands up the bedspread, claw at his wrists with your nails, but you might as well be a curl of wind trying to knock over a pillar of stone.
“You can bitch an’ whine all you wan’ at me, bonnie,” he says, a nasty thread in his tone, “but I know mean pussy just needs some pettin’ to make it nice again, don’ I, now?”
You try to struggle under him, search for some sort of purchase in the sheets beneath you, and for a moment you think he’s making space to let you; his weight retreats as you rise to all fours, but then one solid, beefy arm closes around your neck in a chokehold. He brings the both of you up, settling you over the cradle of his thighs as he sits back on his heels, clamping your back against his chest.
His free hand snakes down between your thighs, finding your clitoris again with rough, abrading calluses. A hard, grinding roll of his hips, upward and forward, pushes it up into his touch, like the crest of a wave, but gravity gives you no escape on the downwell; he pushes and pulls you as he likes, heel of his hand digging hard into the sensitive edge of your mons.
You scrabble with your hands for something to hold onto—you find the brackets of his wide thighs, wiry with dark hair, and dig your nails into hard, tensed muscle. He only laughs in your ear, speeds the rhythm of his hips, pinches your clitoris between his fingers and drags it around.
“Told ya, bonnie,” he gloats, taking the lobe briefly between his lips, “she wants it—” and he pushes his cock in deep, shaking his hips “—bad as he does.”
He reaches further inward and splits his fingers around his own girth, pressing upward—as if he intends to shove them in too, and choking for air as you are you think deliriously that they might just slip in, no resistance, aided by the wetness free-flowing now around him, dripping in long streams down the inside of your thighs.
Inescable—no matter what you do, it’s nothing to him. You thrash against him, whining through gritted teeth in frustration, but he only moves with you, anticipating every direction you might blindly throw yourself in to get away. You cry out in wordless fury, slapping whatever parts of him you can reach, but it doesn’t matter. There is no purchase for you anywhere, nothing you can use to grab back any sort of control.
He’s too big. Too strong. You finally begin to comprehend it in a way that had been impossible before. Looking at him from a few paces, Johnny is easy to take in; easy to summarize and dismiss when you can see the whole of him at once.
But now, at your back—he feels vast. Enormous. An undulating wall of a hard body flexing against you, mooring you to it, all heat and sweat and sharp, animalistic grunting as it pistons into you from behind. The hand manipulating your clit is wide enough to cover your pussy entirely; the pillar of his body doesn’t so much as shudder as you struggle, instinct overriding desire as you try to escape the lightning-streaks of pleasure he carelessly sends through you.
You are too primed from your earlier climax to possibly last, and Johnny seems to feel it—you flutter and clutch around him, the sensation almost painful, but when both your hands fly to the one between your legs he only increases the pressure.
“You gonna come again, bonnie?” he sneers into your ear. “Jus’ tiring yourself out, poor baby. Fightin’ it so hard, an’ it’s gonna happen anyway.”
It does—he starts slapping your pussy again, right above where his cock stretches you to your limit, quick and sharp, and you break with ragged scream, arms flailing out uselessly, nails finding his forearm around your throat.
“Johnny—” you cry out, “Johnny!”
“Fuck,” he groans in your ear, “steamin’ Jesus, fuck—”
Suddenly he pushes you away from him, and you flail again as you land face-first into the pillows. His cock slips out of you entirely, even as you’re still clenching around your orgasm, but you have no time to react, either to mourn it or be relieved, because Johnny grabs you by the thighs, flips you over in one motion, and drives back in again before it ends.
“Fuck, bonnie, so good, fuck, do it again—”
He throws your legs open, leaving your calves to shake in the air as he fucks you faster. You nearly fold in half under the force of his thrusts, knees hovering nearer and nearer to your ears. Each slap of his hips against yours ricochets up your body, and, with nowhere else to go, back down—you ring like a bell, shaking all the way into your marrow.
“Soap,” you whine, “Soap, it—I—I can’t—”
Suddenly he grabs your face in his hand, so tightly he squeezes your cheeks together, pushing out your lips, and he lurches forward to get in your face. Fury blazes from him.
“I told you,” he snarls, “to call me Johnny.”
It shocks you so much that freeze up, going completely blank. The dark, sharp lines of his brows arch dangerously over flashing eyes.
He shakes your face. “Say it.”
“J—” you slur, unable to shape it in your lips properly, “Johnny.”
His nostrils flare wide. Fury is replaced by triumph. “Good fucking girl.”
He slams his mouth against yours.
The first time he’s kissed you, and he gives you no chance to participate in it. He purses your lips with the pressure of his hand to meld with his, opening your jaw wide enough to thrust his tongue behind your teeth. The force of it presses your head back into the pillow. It’s an attack; it’s an onslaught. And—if the grunts and groans Johnny makes in his throat as he does what he likes with your mouth are any indication—
It’s what he’s really wanted this whole time.
Everything else, he’s enjoyed. But this—his mouth on yours, lips moving together, saliva pooling and seeping between the seams—is the prize he’s aimed for all along.
It touches something inside of you. Something tiny and ugly. A thing that you’ve wrapped up in nacreous layers of shame and guilt, lodged in your soft tissues, and tried to forget about.
It sends your arms to wrap around Johnny’s neck, fingers digging into the shifting muscles of his shoulders. You close your thighs around his waist, crossing your ankles, and roll yourself up into every meeting of his hips with yours.
He moans, higher, and drops his full weight over you. His belly meets yours; his chest crushes your breasts under his. He uses the full brunt of his weight to rut into you, crashing his hips against you, stealing the breath from your lungs—
It’s an old trick you’ve learned from small experience, inhaling when you feel the rush coming—as if climax blooms in the lungs rather than the clitoral head, and filling your alveoli gives it no place to expand. It’s useful to prolong satisfaction, to stave off the end.
Johnny does not give you opportunity try. The only thing he allows you to occupy your mouth with is his, and as hypoxia thins out your bloodstream—as you begin to struggle for air—you go rigid with your third climax beneath him.
However long it lasts, you don’t know. It freezes you in place, in time. It wrenches your head back, arching your spine, tears one long, broken cry from your throat.
“Fuck yes,” Johnny gasps, feeling you clamp down so hard around him it seems you may never release him. He moves to bury his face in your throat. “Fuck yes, fuck yes, fuck—yes—”
His tempo falters, signaling the end—
Realization—“Wait!” you find some presence of mind to cry out—“a condom! We didn’t use—”
“It’s got a’go somewhere hen, an’ I’m no’ wastin’ it on yer belly,” he snarls, “just—just—yes—fuck—”
Then his teeth come down on your neck, hard, as his hips beat against yours, and then he buries himself to the root with one final, full-body thrust. He shakes his hips flush against yours as he groans long and loud, cock pulsing inside you, wet heat flooding you in jets, so full that it spills back out to drip down between you.
He pants hard into your shoulder. Your own breath labors, vision swimming.
A cloud covers the moon outside. Johnny makes no move to pull away from you—instead his arms wedge beneath you, banding around your back, and he rolls you both to your sides. You feel him kissing the sting his teeth left on your neck, as you lay there together, sweat cooling on your naked bodies.
Eventually, he pulls back enough to look at you. You have no time to arrange your expression, no idea even what you might want to present to him; whatever he sees on your face makes him smile, crinkling the corners of his eyes.
“There’s my bonnie,” he murmurs, and the next kiss he gives you is soft and very sweet.
Your lips rise to meet his without you thinking about it.
He strokes your back very gently. Sooner than yours, his breathing evens out. Even as he softens inside of you, he keeps his hips against yours.
“Johnny,” you whisper.
“I know,” he says. “I know. Just a little while longer. Can you do that for me? Aye, you can, I know it.”
You should say something about spermicide. Plan B. But the look in his eyes is so soft, so content, that you put it away for later. You just hold his gaze as he looks at you like you’re everything that could ever make him happy.
He kisses you again. Soon, the heaving of your chest abates. Exhaustion pours through you in one drenching wave; you turn your head to yawn.
“Go to sleep, bonnie,” Johnny croons, pressing his fingers into the soft part of your lower back. “I’ll clean us up, aye? You just sleep.”
You don’t have the energy to fight anymore. Soon, you’re slipping away—you’re aware for long enough to feel it when he finally pulls away from you, when he runs a warm washcloth between your legs, and then when he slides back into bed beside you and pulls up the covers.
Then you’re gone.
Sometime after midnight, you half-wake.
The moon has moved far enough across the sky that its light floods the bedroom through its one window, casting everything in silver. Your eyes open slowly, blurred with sleep; Johnny is still beside you.
He’s sitting up against the headboard; eye-level with you is his waist, covered by the thin bedsheet. You draw your eyes up his body slowly—there, his navel, dark hair curling around it. There, his chest, full pectorals rising and falling slowly with calm, even breath.
When you reach his face, you find him looking down at you, corners of his mouth curled. You meet his eyes—
The moon reflects in them. Disks of shifting light in both pupils.
Some part of you, buried in your hindbrain, shouts with alarm. It’s far away, cottoned with sleep. Muffled enough by the soreness of three full-body orgasms to be ignored.
Johnny reaches out and drags the back of one finger along the wounded part of your neck. Touch feather-light.
“Why are you here?” he asks.
Vaguely, you remember that you’ve answered this question before, but that doesn’t feel consequential. Any part of you that could protest is still lost to sleep.
As is any ability to dissemble. The truth—the thing you attempted to abandon, that has followed you regardless—slips out.
“Nobody wants me,” you whisper.
So quiet you fear he won’t hear you, and ask you to repeat it.
But Johnny tilts his head. The curl of his mouth softens to something almost kind.
It doesn’t quite get there, because a gleam of satisfaction that you cannot name colors his shining gaze.
“I want you,” he murmurs.
His broad hand covers the crown of your head, and he strokes your hair. The tide of sleep comes back in, and you know nothing more.
chapter 4 early access
having thots about the unstoppable invincible force aspect of masc!jordan….. trying to close your legs when it gets to much but their hands are like iron clamps on your thighs……………. holding both your wrists in a vice like grip as they coax you through your third orgasm of the night….. 😗🫢
had to sit on this one for a bit because it quite actually made me gaze into space with a thousand yard stare. t- the thought of jordan using their powers of invincibility in their masc!form to keep you in place.... wow. okay. alright.
its literally like irons bars wrapped around your thighs, though they feel as warm and soft as their skin always is, unable to move even a centimeter. just forced to keep your legs spread and open as their tongue works between your legs, bullying orgasm after orgasm from your spent little cunt. just the thought that you literally have to take it, can't move away, cant push them away, and of course you could end it, you have a safeword, but that's not the point, you like it. you like feeling trapped and forced still as jordan pulls what they want from your body, even when it feels like you can't give anymore.
just crying and sobbing and gripping the sheets as you try, try, to push at their shoulders, just a little, whine that its too much, its too much j, you cant take it anymore they've made you cum so much it hurts. but they dont move and they dont stop. just push your thighs even wider apart, so the folds of your pussy split and your clit is raw and exposed and puffy and they just look up at you with those dark eyes that say 'im not done.' as they seal their lips around it and suck.
MDNI 21 // she // black // arcane // cod // this is where I keep my junk,
172 posts