hi đ©” could you write how you hc abby's sexuality and why? what are the details in the game you noticed that support your hc? i love to think of abby as either pan or les, i feel like both could be her. but i feel very sad thinking she's straight :(. maybe someone like you explaining why they think abby is sapphic and using her personality to support your hc will help me out! kind regards :)
Donât be sad about her potentially being straight!! Sheâs not explicitly stated as anything, so all headcanons are welcome and equally valid. My personal opinion is that Abby is pansexual or unlabeled, but regardless, queer. She strikes me as someone who doesnât lead with labels or make her identity a point of definitionâmore of a âI love who I loveâ kind of person. She seems like someone who would fall for people who make her feel safe and seen. She lost her father young. She never had a maternal model. She grew up in a militant environment where vulnerability was dangerous. That means her emotional connection to others, especially romantic onesâis probably built slowly, from trust and shared experience, rather than immediate spark or gendered attraction. Sheâs not someone whoâs chasing âthe ideaâ of a partner, sheâs someone who responds to the actual person in front of her. That also makes her more open to falling for people across gender lines, without needing to categorize it. That leads me to believe her sexuality isnât rigid, and certainly not defined by gender.
Sheâs not shown being attracted to women, but the absence of that doesnât mean anything. The game doesnât give us any hints that sheâs been romantically or sexually involved with a woman, but thatâs probably because her story is hyper focused on revenge, grief, and survival. Romantic or sexual tension outside of Owen doesnât really enter the picture, even in subtle ways. Her world is narrow and purpose driven. But she never really says anything heteronormative or dismissive about queer identity either. Through her emotional bonds we see that she connects deeply with people regardless of gender. She forms emotional trust slowly but completely. Sheâs drawn to connection and shared values. Her attraction and trust are built through shared experience. She doesnât label herself, ever, and I think she wouldnât feel the need to unless it became relevant. She has the emotional openness and grounded practicality of someone who loves people, not categories.
Her relationship with femininity, identity, and emotional expression is deeply shaped by both her trauma and her personality. Abby doesnât perform femininity in a socially conventional wayânot because sheâs rejecting it, but because it was never central to her identity. Because sheâs deeply disconnected from the âexpectedâ version of traditional femininity; makeup, dresses, dainty behavior, emotional expressiveness on demand, sheâs free from typical gendered expectations. Instead of trying to mold herself into it, she leans further into strength, practicality, and stoicismâwhich many queer women do when they grow up without a roadmap for softness that includes them. Since she didnât have a mother to model that femininity, she was probably never taught or encouraged to engage with gender roles or a girlier side of herself. That left her with space to become someone shaped more by function, purpose, and self sufficiency than aesthetics or gendered performance. She made her own path, and it led her toward strength. That kind of emotional detachment from traditional markers of femininity often coincides with queernessânot because masc presenting women are automatically queer, but because a lack of socialized attachment to gender roles often opens the door for questioning everything those roles are connected to, including attraction and identity. Abby doesnât feel like someone who needs to define herself by how sheâs perceived. She just is.
The Owen relationship was real, but complicated. Abby and Owen were in love, and yes, thereâs genuine chemistry and affection there. But thereâs also a deep emotional misalignment, especially as time goes on. Owen becomes more idealistic, passive, and emotionally confused, while Abby doubles down on discipline, action, and keeping herself mentally resilient. Some people interpret the tension in their relationship as a sign Abby was never really attracted to himâjust going through the motions out of obligation or comphet. But I disagree. I think she genuinely loved him, was physically attracted to him, and cared deeply. The boat scene (awkwardness aside) is reciprocated by her and it seemed like she wanted that connection in the moment. However, love â compatibility. She loved Owen, but she outgrew him. I think that says more about Abbyâs growth and trauma, not a reflection of her sexual orientation.
Could she be a lesbian experiencing comphet? Sure, itâs not impossible, I personally just didnât read her that way, even as someone who has struggled with comphet themselves. Abby doesnât show signs of resenting or disassociating from her relationship with Owen (in my opinion) just the circumstances surrounding their entanglement. Sheâs not passive in it, and she initiates physical and emotional intimacy. That doesnât feel like compulsory heterosexuality, it feels like a real (but flawed) relationship that she outgrew, and possibly even a trauma bond. As badly as I want to see her with a woman, she could very well meet another man, fall for him and have a healthy relationship. That being said if they did make her a lesbian in part 3 (if we ever get it) Iâd be ecstatic!
Abby is often misreadâby both in world characters and players, as âtoo masculine,â âmanly,â or even âunnatural.â That dissonance between how she looks and how the world interprets it could deeply resonate for a lot of queer people who donât fit binary beauty standards. But Abby doesnât apologize for her strength. She owns it. And that quiet defiance is queer as hell. She clearly knows that others see her body and think she looks âtoo masculineâ or âunattractive,â but she never apologizes for it. She chooses function over appearance, strength over daintinessânot to perform, but because thatâs who she is. She has self assurance in spite of being misunderstood by others and refuses to shrink herself to meet their standards.
Abbyâs strength isnât just for survivalâitâs a core part of her self concept. Fitness isnât just part of her job. Itâs how she processes life. She builds her body with intention, as a form of control, agency, and emotional regulation. That kind of deliberate relationship with oneâs body might mirror experiences, particularly for masc-leaning queer women or nonbinary peopleâwho use physicality as both a shield and a sense of self in a world that doesnât always see them clearly. Her muscles arenât accidental. Theyâre a statement. Theyâre her armor, but also her identity. I do think Abbyâs relationship with fitness, strength, and her body can be viewed as queer, even if itâs not exclusively so. In the context of the WLF, being strong is practical. Itâs survival. It makes sense that she would train hard regardless of her identity, especially given her role. Itâs not explicitly gay that sheâs jacked and likes working out. But what those choices mean emotionally, and how they contrast with heteronormative expectations is. The way she uses her body as a vessel of identity, control, and love? That can absolutely be read through a queer lensâand meaningfully so.
How Abby interacts with Lev is so important. The way she immediately accepts Levâno hesitation, no confusion, no need to ask questions, is incredibly telling. That kind of instinctive affirmation doesnât just scream ally, it suggests lived empathy. She leads with respect, action, and emotional intelligence, especially when someone is vulnerable. And in Levâs case, she never misgenders him, she defends him immediately, even against her own people. She doesnât act like heâs âdifferent.â She just includes him. This doesnât automatically mean Abby is queer herself, of courseâbut when you combine this with everything else, it does start to look like someone who may have a personal understanding of what it means to feel different, unlabeled, or quietly shunnedâand who maybe recognizes something familiar in Levâs journey, even if they never talk about it directly. It feels like a silent kind of solidarity, even without any explicit confirmation.
This is subjective, but even her energy itself doesnât seem completely straight. She feels queer coded in the way she carries herself. Not just because sheâs muscular or rejects feminine norms (that alone isnât a marker of queerness), but because she moves through the world in a way that doesnât seem gendered. Sheâs not very verbally expressive, but she uses physicality as a languageâtraining, protecting others, touching carefully, fighting hard. That embodiment of love, grief and control through action is a deeply somatic and queer way to navigate the world, especially when words donât feel safe or available. Abby feels deeply, but she doesnât always name or process her feelings in real time. That could mean her understanding of her own sexuality might not even be clearly labeled, even to herself. She might not ever stop and ask herself because her emotional compass doesnât run on theoretical self definition. It runs on who makes her feel safe, connected, alive. Itâs fluid.
All of this builds a strong case for Abby being queer in essence and practice, even if sheâs never labeled that way in canon. So while itâs totally valid for someone to read her as straight, gay, bi, pan, or questioning, my take is that sheâs pan or unlabeled queer, with a deep capacity for connection that transcends gender. It just hasnât been fully explored yet because her story arc was focused on trauma, redemption, and survivalânot identity.
i hope that answers your question, sorry it took me a minute to get back to you. if you read this far thanks for stopping by! đ€
the way so many of you guys act like abby is some mean ass dominating, degrading butch is crazy to me. did you play the game or just see a strong woman and assumeâŠ? she is repeatedly shown to be considerate, polite, gentle and caring. her anger filled grief is not her actual personality and i wish you guys would take the time to unpack that. idk if youâre just projecting your own fantasies onto her or what but wow
"There's no way Abby looks like this. Totally unrealistic."
Beyond the functional aspect of her survival training, her daily life is a rigorous workout that mimics a lot of what youâd see in strength training. Combine intense physical activity with a nutritious diet and Abbyâs discipline (and trauma responses)âvoila. Youâve got yourself one badass military woman.
We're not even considering her genetics, which can pack a serious punch, too.
You can find nearly any type of sustainable food source at the stadiumâfish, meat, cheese, eggs, milk, beans, rice, fruits, vegetables, you name it. She has access to calorie dense, protein-rich foods every day. And that's before taking into account the balanced, resourceful meals the cooks could create to maximize the food supply using various recipes.
I'd bore you with the approximate specifics of Abbyâs dietary needs for muscle maintenance, but itâs way more fun to explore the game's world instead.
I highly recommend it, even. Thereâs so much to take in.
Yeah, it's kinda subtle in places, but many parts are really in your face.
An example of this? Isaac doesn't sweat losing a hatchery to the Seraphites. Heâs confident the wild salmon theyâre fishing will keep them covered. You just can't make that call when your soldiers are starving, in my opinion.
I don't want to randomly assume that most men who hate Abby are super salty about women who are more muscular than them, but... based on some of the reviews and gameplay reactions, holy guacamole.
"It's not about her being muscular!" Yeah, okay.
(Proceeds to mock her physical appearance forever.)
The fragile male ego is poppin', man.
Abby thinks dudes like this need to stop skipping leg day and grow a pair. đ
manny setting you and abby up on a blind date, even though youâre âjust friendsâ đâč àŁȘ Ë
ââââââ
âYou owe me,â Manny said, tossing a towel at Abby as she finished a set.
âFor what?â She chuckled, catching it midair. She was trying to drown him out and finish her workout, but he was making it damn near impossible.
âThat patrol I covered for you last week? Come on. One drink. One dinner. I set you up with someone cool. Trust me.â Manny grinned, leaning up against the barbell rack.
âI hate when you say that,â she muttered, wiping her face, rolling her eyes as she glared back up at him.
Manny clutched a hand over his heart. âSheâs smart, funny, not annoying. Youâll actually like her.â
Abby raised an eyebrow, unconvinced. âAnd whatâs the catch?â
âNo catch.â He held up his hands. âJust⊠be at the mess hall tonight. Eighteen hundred. I promise youâll be glad you went.â
She sighed, shaking her head. âItâs gonna suck. I donât wanna waste my time.â
âCome on, hermana. If itâs awful, I owe you a week of patrol coverage.â Manny replied, unfazed as he reached out to shake Abbyâs shoulders.
Abby sighed, pressing the towel against the back of her neck, trying not to smile. âManny. You say that like your word means anything. If itâs awful, Iâll lock you in the supply closet myself.â
âYouâll thank me later,â he said with a wink, finally walking away and leaving Abby to finish her routine.
ââ .âŠ
I sat on the edge of my bed, unlacing my boots, when a knock hit the door. I opened it to find Manny already leaning on the doorframe with a ridiculous grin.
âNo,â I said immediately.
âOh yes. Youâre going out tonight.â
I squinted at him, raising an eyebrow. âWhat kind of âoutâ?â
âBlind date,â he said. âBefore you say noâtheyâre solid. Bit serious, but big heart. Strong as hell.â He shrugged. âI figured thatâd be your type.â
I hesitated, wary. âWhatâs the catch?â
âThereâs no catch. Just dinner in the mess at eighteen hundred. You need to get out more.â He smiled, poking me in the ribs.
âIs this some kind of prank or somethingâŠ?â I groaned, rubbing my forehead.
âDo I look like a man who plays pranks?â
âYes, actually you do. Because you are.â I respond smugly, pushing him out of the doorway.
He snorted, turning away. âJust go. Please.â
ââ .âŠ
The mess hall space within the stadium had once been a cafeteria, now dressed up with mismatched linens and strings of warm lights that someone (Manny) had hung with care. It wasnât fancy, but he tried. Like everything else weâd built here.
I sat at the table first, my knee bouncing restlessly with barely contained anxiety. I hadnât asked for this. Manny had cornered me this morning, and then again during rounds, spun something about âsomeone thoughtful, serious, into books,â and Iâd caved out of equal parts curiosity and peer pressure.
Abby walked in two minutes late, her hair swept back into a quick braid, and a clean shirt on. I did a double take, standing up from the table. She immediately stopped in her tracks when she saw me. We both stood there for a second. Confused. Suspicious.
ââŠHey,â I said slowly, stepping closer, a bit cautious.
âHey,â Abby echoed, her brow furrowing.
âWait. Are you here forâŠ?â I looked around the room slowly.
âNo way.â Abby let out a low laugh, running a hand down her face. âManny?â
âYeah. Manny said I had a date.â
We stared at each other for a moment, then both broke out into a fit of soft laughter, something easy and fond settling between us.
âOh my God,â Abby mumbled under her breath, shaking her head. âThat bastard.â We both laughed.
âSo weâre each otherâs blind date⊠cool.â I sighed, thinking about heading back to my dorm.
A moment passed between us. Abby rubbed the back of her neck. âYou wanna just stay? Make it dinner anyway?â
I nodded, a small smile tugging at my lips. âWeâre already here. Might as well enjoy it.â
We found a quieter table near the back, away from the louder patrol squads trading stories and jabbing each other over canned chili. The mess hall wasnât exactly candlelit, but under the dim overheads and faded posters on the wall, the space felt a little more intimate than usual.
âGuess weâre already past the awkward first impressions.â I muttered, gesturing to the chair across from me.
âGuess so,â Abby said, sitting down. âHeâs a real piece of work.â
I smiled, a little soft, a little teasing. âI wouldâve said yes if you asked me yourself, yâknow.â
Abbyâs ears turned a little pink. âMaybe I will next time.â
âNext timeâŠâ I mumbled to myself, fingers wrapped around my mug. âSo, this isnât a date.â
âDefinitely not,â Abby agreed, a little too quickly.
âJust⊠two friends being tricked by a mutual idiot.â
âExactly.â
We both smiled, but something hung in the air. Quieter than laughter, a little heavier than coincidence.
âWell, if this was a date, it wouldnât be the worst.â I said softly.
Abby looked up. âYeah?â
I smiled. âYeah.â
Abby grinned. âThen maybe Iâll pay next time. Stadium rations and all.â
Dinner was simple. Lentils, rehydrated steak, and overcooked carrots. Whatever passed as a meal these days. Abby glanced down at her plate. âLuxury...â
âDonât be a snob,â I teased, poking at my own food with a fork. âItâs got⊠protein?â I shrug.
âAnd seasoning that tastes like the floor.â Abby mumbled, her lips tightening.
I laughed softly, and Abby looked up at the sound, catching the way my eyes crinkled slightly when I smiled. The awkwardness melted fast. We already knew each otherâs tells, each otherâs quiet humor. We ate while talking about patrol rotations, about the book I had picked up from the trading post, about how one of the younger recruits had nearly shot their own foot.
âYou clean up nice, by the way,â I added, trying to be casual but sincere.
Abby glanced down at her plain black t-shirt and jeans. âThis is⊠me trying.â
âIt works.â I answered warmly, taking a bite of my carrots.
Abby watched me for a second longer than she meant to. âYou donât look too terrible either.â
I raised a brow, amused. âWow, what a charmer.â
âYeah, well. I donât usually do the whole date thing.â She responded, her voice going a bit quiet.
âNeither do I,â I said, voice softer now, a bit more honest. âBut this doesnât feel⊠weird. Not with you.â
Abby was quiet for a minute, her jaw working like she was chewing on a thought. âYeah. I was kind of relieved when I saw it was you.â
âSame,â I responded, leaning forward and nudging her boot lightly under the table. âWay better than some sweaty patrol guy.â
âOh, absolutely,â Abby huffed a laugh, finally relaxing into the conversation. âHe played us. Got you to go, got me to go, and left us here like itâs some romcom setup.â
âJokeâs on him,â I said, softly. âYouâre not bad company.â
There was a brief pause, not awkward, but full. Warm. I tilted my head slightly. âHave you ever⊠thought about it?â
Abby blinked. âThought about what?â
âMe and you,â I mumbled softly, picking at my food. âNot seriously or anything, of course. Itâs silly.â
Abbyâs throat bobbed with a quiet swallow. âMaybe. Once or twice.â
I looked down at my plate, smiling into it. Neither of us said anything for a long moment, just the clatter of trays and distant conversation around us filling the space.
Then I said, teasing again, âIf Iâd known it was you, I mightâve actually brushed my hair.â
Abby gave me a playful glance. âThatâs how it always looks.â
âShut up,â I said, laughing again.
Abby grinned. âYou look nice. Always do.â
My cheeks flushed at her compliment, and I tried to hide my smile behind my fork.
The âdateâ label faded, until it didnât. The air shifted after the shared cookie we agreed to split âbecause itâd be a waste.â Abby handed me the bigger half without thinking. I paused, looking at the cookie, then at Abby. âYou didnât even fight me on it.â
Abby shrugged. âYou like the soft center.â
There was a moment of silence. My brows softened just slightly. âYou remember that?â
âI remember a lot about you,â Abby said, quiet now, then took a sip from her tea as if to cover it.
I looked down at the cookie, then broke off a piece and passed it to Abby. âSplit the soft center, then.â
Our fingers brushed. Abbyâs jaw flexed slightly, a muscle twitching.
âThis still isnât a date,â I murmured, my eyes flickering up to hers.
âNope,â Abby said, eyes on her hand.
ââ .âŠ
We slipped out of the mess hall and into the open walkway, the stadium quiet in the way it only ever was after curfew, when most had gone to their bunks and the air was left to echo through the old corridors. The moonlight slanted through the upper windows, casting soft pools of light that guided our way. Abby walked a little slower than usual. The air between us felt different. The denial a little thinner. Glances a little longer.
âYou didnât have to walk me back,â I said, hands in my pockets, voice gentle.
Abby shrugged one shoulder. âFigured I should, since Iâm such a great date and all.â
I smiled faintly. âOh, so it was a date?â
Abby smirked but didnât meet my eyes. âI donât know. You tell me.â
We reached the hallway that led to my room. I paused outside my door, looking up at Abby. Her gaze softened a little in the low light. âI had a good time,â I said quietly.
Abby nodded. âMe too.â
For a second, it felt like neither of us knew whether to linger or say goodnight. My hand hovered over the door handle, but I didnât turn it yet. Abby glanced down, eyes flicking briefly to my lips, then back up.
I gave a soft, teasing smile. âGoodnight, Abby.â
Abbyâs voice was lower than usual when she replied. ââNight.â
But she didnât go right away. She leaned in, barely brushing her shoulder against mine.
âMeet me in the greenhouse tomorrow afternoon?â She asked.
I nodded, just once, eyes soft. Abbyâs smile returned, quiet and sure. I slipped into my room, closing the door with a quiet click.
Abby stood there for a few seconds longer than she meant to, hand curling and uncurling at her side. Then she turned and walked away.
Inside my room, I leaned against the back of the door and let out a slow breath. My heart was still thudding. Not hard, just steady, like it was trying to tell me something. I crossed the room to my bed and sat on the edge, absently untying my boots. The bracelet on my wristâ a rough one Iâd braided weeks ago, caught the light. I tugged it off and held it loosely in my hands, thinking.
Outside, Abbyâs boots echoed softly as she walked. She wasnât headed straight to her room, not yet. She took a detour, climbing the narrow stairs that led to the rooftop, where the wind hit harder, cleaner. She braced her forearms on the railing and looked out over the dim lights below.
She thought about the way you had smiled tonight, less guarded, more present. She thought about the warmth of your laugh, the way their boots had bumped under the table and neither of them had pulled away. She thought about what you had asked â if sheâd ever thought about them. Abby stared out into the dark, muttering to herself. âMore than once.â
ââ .âŠ
The greenhouse was tucked away on the far end of the stadium, lit by golden strips of late afternoon sun through weathered glass. The scent of damp earth lingered, the soft buzz of insects in the corners barely noticeable over the creak of the old door as I stepped inside.
Abby was already there, crouched near a planter box, inspecting a cluster of overgrown tomatoes. She looked up when I entered, face unreadable at first, then softening in that way I had started to recognize as being just for me.
âYou found it,â Abby said, straightening.
I smiled and closed the door behind me. âYouâre not as hard to find as you think you are.â
Abby gave a small chuckle and leaned back against the wooden frame of the planter, arms folded. I came to stand beside her, letting the silence settle for a moment. Out here, away from everything, it was easier to breathe. âDidnât know you liked plants,â I said.
âYeah, my dad used to have a greenhouse,â Abby replied, glancing at me. âItâs quiet. No one comes out here much.â
I nodded. âExcept when they want to disappear.â We stood there for a minute. Then another. And when Abby tilted her head to look at me, something shifted.
âAbout last nightâŠâ Abby started, voice a little rough around the edges.
I shook my head gently. âWe donât have to talk about it.â
âNo, IâŠâ Abby paused. âI liked it. More than I thought I would.â
My heart thudded, hard. I took a step closer, close enough that our arms brushed. âYou mean the steak or the part where we almost had a date?â
Abby exhaled a laugh through her nose. âBoth.â
We turned to face each other more fully now, my gaze lingering on Abbyâs mouth, then flicking up to meet her eyes. âI think,â I said slowly, âwe might be bad at pretending weâre just friends.â
Abbyâs voice dropped to a near whisper. âI think you might be right.â
Neither of us moved, but the air between us felt electric. Then, carefully, almost like testing gravity, I reached out and laced my pinky through Abbyâs. Not a full handhold. Just a small touch. Abby looked down at our joined fingers, then back at me, and gave a single, subtle nod.
âOkay,â Abby said, her voice softer than I had ever heard it.
âOkay,â I echoed, my thumb brushing lightly over the back of Abbyâs hand.
ââ .âŠ
We left the greenhouse as the sun dipped behind the far edge of the stadium, casting long shadows and staining the clouds with streaks of orange and violet. The walk back wasnât long, but we stretched it out without saying so. Steps slow, close, unhurried.
âYouâre quiet,â I said eventually, my tone light, coaxing.
âIâm just⊠thinking,â Abby replied. âTrying not to mess this up.â
I looked over at her. âThereâs nothing to mess up yet.â
Abby glanced back, the corner of her mouth twitching up. âYet?â
I grinned. âI mean, unless youâre planning on vanishing into the barracks and avoiding me all week.â
âNo,â Abby said quickly, too quickly. She scratched the back of her neck. âIâm not. I liked being with you today.â
My expression softened. âMe too.â
We reached the hallway that split off toward the living quarters, quiet except for the hum of generators and the occasional far off clang. Abby slowed near my door, lingering as if uncertain whether to say goodnight or something else.
I leaned against the wall beside it, looking up at her. âYouâre really not gonna kiss me yet?â
Abby blinked, clearly caught off guard. âI⊠didnât want to rush you.â
âThatâs considerate,â I said, voice low and playful. âBut next time, donât overthink it so hard.â
Abby stepped a little closer, close enough that I could smell the faintest trace of pine soap and sweat on her collar. Her voice was quieter now, almost hesitant. âNext time?â
I reached out and brushed a speck of dirt off her sleeve. âMhm. Iâm not going anywhere.â
For a second, it looked like Abby might lean in. Her gaze lingered, jaw tightening just slightly. But instead, she gave a quiet breath of a laugh and pulled back, eyes warm. âGoodnight.â
I smiled, pushing the door open behind me. âGoodnight, Abby.â
The door clicked softly shut, and I stood still for a heartbeat. Then two. Then three.
The quiet hum of the hallway just outside my door buzzed in my ears, my pulse louder than it shouldâve been. I stared at the handle, lips parted, heart thudding.
To hell with it.
I yanked the door back open and jogged barefoot into the corridor, scanning until I saw Abbyâs back, just a few paces down, slow moving, like maybe she wasnât quite ready to leave either.
âAbby,â I called softly.
She turned.
She didnât have time to say anything before I was in front of her, reaching up, fingers curling into the collar of her jacket, eyes searching hers for half a second. Just enough time for hesitation to flicker. Then none at all. I leaned up and kissed her.
It wasnât polished, but it was warm and certain. The kind of kiss that carried the quiet weight of something that had been building for a long time. Abby froze just for a second, startled, then softened beneath it. Her hands hovered at my waist, then settled there, careful, steady.
We didnât pull apart quickly. It was slow, a soft press, a breath, then another. I stayed close enough that my forehead nearly rested against Abbyâs. âI didnât want to overthink it either,â I murmured.
Abby looked at me like the world had shifted a little. Like maybe everything would taste different tomorrow. âYou didnât,â she said quietly. âYou got it just right.â
I smiled, slow and sheepish. âSo⊠goodnight again?â
Abby nodded, brushing a loose curl from my cheek. âYeah. Goodnight.â
This time, I didnât turn away immediately. I lingered a second more, memorizing the feel of Abbyâs hands still warm on my waist, before slipping back toward my door.
And this time, Abby didnât take another step until she heard the door shut again.
lesbians should be allowed to get eachother pregnant. for scientific and babytrapping purposes. please. it's 2025, we need to make it happen.
abby anderson they could never make me hate you
sooo why did no one ever tell me the name abigail literally means âmy fathers joyâ?
iâm actually gonna go bawl my eyes out now! oh jerry and abby my shaylas đ
ugh i kinda love leah, i wish she had screentime
Leah on patrol for supplies
"i don't have a type!" i say, adding another big, buff woman to the collection of women i like
abby anderson and abby coded characters