Can u pls write a Sebastian x reader where even she is a driver and they take turns taking each other on hot laps and reader has more titles than seb so she teases him that she is the better driver
★ thx for the request, it was super fun to write. sorry if its too short. ★ Sebastian Vettel x FemaleDriver!Reader
There were rare moments when Seb and you would talk about racing. probably you two talked more about the carrots growing in your garden than about the championship. In your intimacy, you two rarely felt like racers since in privacy you were just a couple talking about books, their garden, politics without differentiating themselves too much from other couples (just a few championships on your shoulders).
However, today was different. The night before you and Seb had fallen asleep in your hotel room while watching your previous championships, making your egos sky high as soon as the day began. Competitiveness was the main theme; who brushed their teeth the fastest (it was you), who made the best coffee (Seb according to your colleagues), and the competitions continued to increase until it got to the critical point that really mattered. Races. You started by warming up the tires, slow and Seb looked at you in the rearview mirror. He advanced first. And when his first lap was about to end, you started up.
His first number was good but you knew he was going to improve as the track was still cold. Your first lap was not your best and you could not overcome him, you slightly hit the steering wheel. Imagining Seb's cocky smile only made you feel more ambitious to beat him. Feeling the pressure of speed in your body could not match the tingles of happiness that invaded your body when you beat his record. It was almost an hour in which you were outdoing each other and when you finished the sun was setting. The tips of your lips lifted when you saw him take off his helmet. Both of your hair was wet with sweat and Seb pressed his lips together when he saw you approaching. You had won the last lap by almost a second of difference with him and although he was annoyed, deep down he enjoyed seeing you win.
You pulled your racing suits down to your waists and drank water as you tried to pull yourselves together. You looked sideways at Seb and he was already looking at you, your cheeks turned pink but you quickly recovered your normal state.
“Seb I know you tried hard today” you paused to smile “but I think at the end of the day, I'm better.”
The silence after your statement was broken by your partner's laughter.
“Don't laugh, it's true,” you exclaimed as you pushed him, “I won today, not only in the race but also in everything else!”.
Suddenly, Seb became serious and slid his hand around your waist, your throat went dry and the heat on your face returned.
“You're right liebling, you're better” Seb left a kiss on your cheek and as soon as he moved away from your skin he added “However, you can never beat me at...Flirting with you”.
Seb's smile dominated your head but when the meaning of his words came to your understanding, you pushed him back. But you couldn't deny it, it was true. Seb always made you feel nervous. That was love.
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✯ pairing: Sebastian Vettel x Ex! Reader ✯
✯ content warnings: none✯
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Seb and her didn’t part on the best terms. The breakup had been tense, marked by unspoken words and lingering hurt. She’d moved forward, focusing on her career, he did the same, but some connections never fully disappeared.
Recently, she’d undergone a surgical procedure, something personal she’d chosen to keep private. Only her family and closest friends were in the loop. Yet, somehow, Sebastian had found out through a mutual friend.
The operation had gone smoothly, and now she was resting in her recovery room. Her family and a few friends had been with her all afternoon, their quiet conversation filling the space. She was sitting up, sipping some water and trying to distract herself with their chatter, when there was a knock on the door.
Her best friend opened it, and there he was—Sebastian. He stepped inside with a small bouquet of various flowers in hand, his expression steady but thoughtful.
“Hey,” he said gently, his eyes scanning her for signs of discomfort.
Her family exchanged a few glances before politely excusing themselves to give them some privacy. Seb approached slowly, setting the flowers on the table beside her.
“You didn’t have to come,” she said, though her voice carried no resentment.
“I know,” he replied, sitting in the chair beside her. “I just… I wanted to see for myself that you’re okay.”
She studied him, his calm demeanor making the moment feel less like an intrusion and more like a quiet reunion. “How did you even know?”
“Emma told me,” he admitted, leaning forward slightly. “I wasn’t going to bother you, but… I figured it couldn’t hurt to stop by.”
She nodded, not knowing what to say. He was the last person she would expect, yet for some reason she felt pleased about him caring about her enough to come.
“So… How are you feeling?” he asked, breaking the almost uncomfortable silence that had been settling.
“I’m feeling fine,” she admitted, as she did not feel any extraordinary discomfort after the surgery, “you guys act as if I’ve been through war,” she joked, hoping to make the moment less awkward.
His lips tugged into a half-smile at her attempt to lighten the mood. It was a classic move of hers, this bantering, and it was both endearing and annoying at the same time. “Oh, you know we worry about you,” he teased back.
Sebastian glanced at the flowers he'd brought, then back at her. His voice lowered a bit. “Seriously, though, are you in pain?”
“I’m fine, Seb,” she repeated with almost playful exasperation.
Sebastian nodded, his expression warm but attentive. “Okay, okay,” he conceded, smiling. Then, as if on instinct, his hand reached out, brushing hers gently.
It was such a natural gesture—Seb had always been tactile, a comforting presence for anyone who needed it. But this felt different, even if he hadn’t meant it to be. His thumb brushed over her knuckles, and she froze for a moment, the familiarity of his touch stirring something in her chest she wasn’t ready to unpack.
Seb adjusted his position in the chair, as if trying to find the right words. “It’s a nice hospital,” he remarked, glancing around the room. “Bright, not too clinical. It suits you.”
She raised an eyebrow, a smirk tugging at the corner of her lips. “Are you seriously complimenting the decor right now?”
He chuckled, the sound low and warm. “Maybe. Just trying to make conversation.”
His thumb lingered against her skin for a second too long, and she swallowed, suddenly hyperaware of how close he was despite the chair between them. “Seb, you didn’t have to do this,” she said, her voice quieter now. “You’ve got your own life—things to focus on.”
He tilted his head, his expression softening further. “I’m not here because I have to be. I’m here because I care,” he said simply. “That doesn’t just disappear.”
Her heart gave a painful twist at his words. His words always had that effect, no matter how much time had passed or what they were or weren’t. “You always did have a way with words,” she murmured, trying to deflect the emotions creeping in.
He smiled faintly, his hand still resting over hers. “And you always did have a way of avoiding them,” he replied.
A quiet laugh escaped her lips, and for a moment, the tension eased. “Touché,” she said, her voice lighter.
They sat there for a beat, the sound of distant footsteps in the hallway filling the silence. It wasn’t the awkward tension of earlier—it felt… familiar. Comfortable in a way she hadn’t expected.
Seb’s fingers gave hers a gentle squeeze before he leaned back slightly, as if he could sense she needed space. “Well, for what it’s worth, I’m glad you’re okay,” he said, his voice steady but soft.
“Thanks,” she said, her lips curving into a small, genuine smile. “And thanks for the flowers. They’re beautiful.”
“I figured you deserved something nice,” he said, leaning back in his chair but still watching her closely. “Even if you think we’re all overreacting.”
“Maybe just a little,” she admitted, a teasing spark in her eyes.
“Hey, give me a break,” he said, holding up his hands in mock surrender. “I had to make sure you weren’t scaring the nurses with your stubbornness.”
She rolled her eyes but laughed, the sound soft but genuine. “Still as dramatic as ever, I see.”
“Only for you,” he quipped, and for a moment, the weight of the past seemed lighter between them.
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✯ authors note: English is not my first language, and I hope you liked it <3
I can easily imagine Anakin learning sewing to make clothes to his partner
tyy to all the people who send me their request im writing them! slow but im writing! please have in consideration that english is not my first language so sometimes I write my fics in spanish and then I rewrite in english BUT TY SO MUCH FOR THE REQUESTS
Pairing: Max Verstappen x Reader
Summary: After one too many drinks, a protective Max arrives right when you need him most.
1.7k words / Masterlist
It was nearly 2am when Max’s phone buzzed on his nightstand, dragging him from the edges of sleep. The faint light from his screen illuminated the dark room, and he reached for it with a groggy hand, squinting at the text that appeared.
“She’s drunk. Like realllly drunk. Can you come get her?”
Max sat up, his heart already sinking. The message was from one of your friends, someone whose name he only half-remembered from the countless times they’d insisted they’d “watch out for you.” Max knew better by now. He sighed, ranking a hand through his messy hair, before throwing the blanket off and quickly pulling on a hoodie and jeans.
The drive to the club was quiet, but Max’s mind wasn’t. He hated these nights. It wasn’t just the thought of you being drunk and vulnerable; it was the idea that you were so carefree and beautiful, and people always noticed. Too many times Max had seen guys try to get too close, their smiles too slick and intentions too obvious.
When he finally pulled up outside the club he saw you almost immediately. His grip on the steering wheel tightened.
You were leaning against a lamp post near the curb swaying slightly in your heels, a dazed smile on your face as a man hovered beside you. Max’s chest tightened at the sight. The guy was too close, his body angled toward yours as he spoke animatedly, gesturing with his hands. You laughed softly at whatever he said, your voice carrying over the low thrum of the music spilling from the club’s entrance.
Max killed the engine and climbed out, his jaw set. His strides were purposeful, closing the distance between you in seconds.
“Maxie!” you squealed the moment you spotted him, your arms flinging open in delight.
“You’re here!” you exclaimed, throwing your arms around his torso and nearly toppling yourself over in the process.
The guy looked over at Max, not at all intimidated, but Max didn’t care. His jaw tightened, his fists clenching by his sides as he stepped closer.
“You good?” Max asks you, his voice a little rougher than usual.
The man gave Max a once-over, clearly sizing him up. “She seems fine to me,” he said, his tone too casual for Max’s liking.
Max’s eyes narrow, the jealousy coursing through him now unmistakable. He took a step closer to you, brushing his hand lightly against your shoulder. “Oh because you know her so well, right?” he asked the guy, voice clipped.
With a taunting smirk, the guy raised his hands in mock surrender. “She was just telling me about her night. She looked like she needed some company.”
Max wasn’t having it, he stands tall, his body blocking your view of the man now. “Right, I don’t think you understand,” Max replied dryly, placing a firm hand on your waist. “I’m her boyfriend, she's mine. Thanks for your concern, but I’ll take it from here.”
The man’s lips twitched, as though he wanted to argue, but something in Max’s gaze seemed to convince him otherwise. With a tight nod, he muttered a quick, “Whatever man,” and walked off into the crowd.
As the guy disappeared, Max’s frustration didn’t completely fade, but he focused right back on you. Guiding you towards his car, hand never leaving your side. You leaned into him, your cheek resting against his shoulder the alcohol making your limbs feel heavy.
You looked up at him, your face slightly flushed, your eyes half-lidded. “You okay?” you asked quietly.
Max’s lips press together tightly, trying to ignore the flare of jealousy still lingering. “I’m fine,” he said, even though he’s anything but. "Just... I want you to be safe, alright?"
You nod, though your head wobbles slightly. "I know... just wanted to have fun."
Max exhaled slowly, his tension only easing slightly as he turned to you. You were beaming up at him, clearly oblivious to the small confrontation that had just unfolded.
“I get it,” he said softly, his hand steadying you at your waist. “But where are your friends?”
“They’re inside,” you mumbled, waving a hand vaguely toward the club entrance. “Or somewhere. I don’t know. I came out to get some air.”
Max sighed, scanning the area for any sign of your group. Just then a few of your friends emerged from the club giggling.
“Max!” One of them called her tone far too cheery. “She’s all yours.”
Max’s brows furrowed, his frustration bubbling over. “Why did you let her get this drunk?” he snapped. “Anything could’ve happened to her out here!”
Your friend blinked, her smile faltering. “She’s a big girl Max. Besides, we knew you’d come.”
“That’s not the point,” Max said, his voice sharp. "You should’ve made sure she was safe.”
Your friends exchanged glances mumbling something, he exhaled heavily running a hand through his hair. “Look, I’m glad you've all had fun, but next time just… watch out for her yeah? She’s very important to me.” He gazed down at you.
Your friends exchanged glances, some looking sheepish, others visibly annoyed at his tone.
“We had it under control, Max,” one of your friends said, her tone defensive. “We weren’t going to babysit her all night.”
Max’s jaw clenched. “Being there for your friend isn’t babysitting, it’s just what you do.”
Another friend, the quieter one of the group spoke up “Okay Max. We’ll keep a better eye on her next time, promise.”
“Thank you,” he said simply, looking back down at you. Your eyes were half-closed, a lazy smile on your lips as you mumbled something unintelligible against his chest.
Max shook his head, a mix of exasperation and fondness crossing his face. “Alright,” he said to the group, his tone a little lighter now. “I’m taking her home. Get back safely.”
“We will,” the quieter friend said, giving him a small, apologetic smile.
Max turned to you with a sigh of relief. “Let’s get you home.”
Max guided you to the car, his hand never leaving your waist. You leaned into him heavily, giggling at every little thing—the way his hand steadied you, the low muttering under his breath, even the way he opened the car door for you like you were royalty.
“You’re so nice to me, Maxie,” you said, settling into the passenger seat with a content sigh.
“I’m always nice to you,” he replied, pulling the seatbelt across your body and clicking it into place.
“You are,” you agreed, your voice soft and dreamy. “You’re my favourite person, you know that?”
Max froze for a moment, sure his heart skipped a beat, before he shook his head and closed your door.
The drive home was quiet, save for your occasional hums and mumbled comments about the pretty city lights. Max glanced at you every so often, his hand gripping your thigh, your eyes fluttering shut for brief moments.
When he finally pulled into his apartment’s parking garag you stirred, blinking sleepily. Inside you clung to him like a lifeline, your arms looped around his neck as he guided you to the bathroom.
“You’re so tall,” you murmured, your head resting against his chest. “Like a tree. A strong, handsome tree.”
Max chuckled despite himself, shaking his head as he set you down on the bathroom counter. “You’re ridiculous.”
“But you like me anyway,” you said, your grin lazy and smug.
He didn’t respond, instead reaching for a makeup remover wipe from the cabinet. You watched him curiously as he carefully cupped your chin, tilting your head up to meet his gaze.
“What are you doing?” you asked.
“Taking your makeup off,” he said simply.
You stared at him, your expression unreadable, as he carefully wiped at your face. His touch was gentle, almost reverent, and he avoided your eyes, focusing instead on the task at hand.
"You take such good care of me." You whispered, reaching up to touch his hand. “You don’t have to, you know?”
“I know,” he said with a slight frown, his eyes finally meeting yours. “But I want to. You deserve it.”
“Come on, let’s get you to bed.” Max carried you to the bedroom, letting you climb him like a koala as you giggled into his shoulder. He set you down gently, pulling the covers over you before crouching beside the bed. You blinked at him sleepily, a small smile tugging at your lips.
“You’re like a knight,” you mumbled, your voice thick with drowsiness. “My very own knight in shining armour.”
Max chuckled, shaking his head. “A very tired knight,” he replied, brushing a stray hair from your face. “But you’re going to hate me in the morning if I let you go to sleep without water and something for your hangover.”
“I don’t hate you,” you slurred, blinking up at him with glassy eyes. “I could never hate you.”
His chest tightened at the sincerity in your tone, “Stay awake for just a few more minutes okay? I’ll be right back.”
You made a soft noise of protest as he stood, but you didn’t try to stop him. Max moved quietly through the apartment, grabbing a glass from the kitchen and filling it with cold water. From the bathroom he grabbed a pack of paracetamol, the domesticity of the routine bringing a faint smile to his lips.
When he returned you were still half-propped against the pillows, your eyes fluttering open at the sound of his footsteps.
“Here,” Max said, sitting on the edge of the bed. He handed you the glass and pressed two pills into your palm. “Take these and drink some water. Trust me, you’ll thank me in the morning.”
You squinted at the pills like they’d personally offended you. “Do I have to?”
“Yes,” Max replied firmly, his lips quirking upward. “No arguments.”
“Bossy,” you muttered, but you popped the pills into your mouth and swallowed them with some water. “Happy now?”
“Very.”
You handed the glass back to him, and he set it on the nightstand before leaning forward to pull the blankets higher around you.
“I’m so lucky you’re my Maxie,” you sighed.
“Sleep,” he said softly, stroking your cheek.
“Stay,” you murmured, your eyes already half-closed.
Max hesitated, his heart twisting with adoration, before nodding. “I’ll be right here.”
@ Anakin Skywalker × Female!Reader
Summary: Reader runs away from home because of her parents' mental abuse, Anakin receives her.
Warning: Mental Abuse
Tags: Comfort, Confessions, Friends to Lovers
You can also read it in AO3!
Walking along the street, it looked like the sky was about to fall, the storm was strong, and your wet clothes made it difficult to advance. Some people were running under the rain, and others hid under the roof; you walked, how fast you were able.
You were mentally tired, and even if you were freezing, it was so much better than staying in your parent's house. You knew the way to your comfort, to the person who could make you safe, and loved. At the end of the street, a little blue house highlighted among the others, your hands shaking, and your wet eyes weren't a barrier to knock on the door; at first, with a soft punch, but when no one answered, your desperation took control under your decisions. You heard the steps coming, and tried to straighten your hair; the door opened, letting you see him.
Anakin was startled, his clothes were dirty and his face was stained with dust, but you were worse off. Your wet hair, red nose and eyes worried him immediately, wrapping his arms around and pulling you inside.
“ Are you out of your mind? Don't you know how dangerous it is going out with this storm?” Anakin took off one of his clothes to cover you, his voice sounded like he was furious, you were aware that he was worried; he was always worried about you, and you also wanted to do something for him, but he never came to you to ask for a favour. His hands attempted to share some warmth, your skin was cold and the wet clothes did not help.
“I'm sorry, I didn't know where else to go'' Hearing your whisper, made Anakin understand. You didn't mean to put yourself in danger, you just wanted to escape. Anakin was aware of the problem that your parents represented, instead of being responsible for their own mistakes, they chose to responsibilize you for that. Mentally abusing you, every time they were stressed.
He lent you some clothes, they were too big for you but the fabric was soft and a faint whiff of Anakin’s perfume, which instantly made you feel safe. R2D2 was there, next to you, you posed your hand on the top of his head.
“Hi, R2” he made some happy robotic sounds causing your smile. Anakin entered the room checking if you were more calm than before, you noticed him and without stopping yourself you called him. Right away, your ears blushed.
“ Sorry, I was just… Are you feeling better now? ” It was the first time that Anakin looked like this, shy or at least that was how you saw him. He wasn't shy, he was trying to hide his anger, his frustration for not being able to protect you from your parents.
“ Yes, thank you for the clothes” you replied, settling down to get out of the bed. With a smile "Did I surprise you?”
Anakin leaned against the door frame.
“ A lot, actually. But I'm glad you came here” If you were close to him, he knew that he could protect you. “Is there something you want to eat?”
Standing up you smiled kindly, Anakin's house was beautiful, it was comfortable but most of all it had Anakin in it; however no matter how kind he is, you could not abuse his time and space.
“No, I think I should go to my house” The abuse of your parents, their words were strong, but that shouldn't mean that you should simply carry away yourself for your desires. You passed by his side. “ I will send you back these clothes, probably tomorrow after work. Sorry for annoying your evening”
“Annoying?” Anakin laughed stunned. “If I tell you I don't find you annoying, would you stay for dinner?”
You giggled nervously, his touch on your wrist and his words were a clarifying factor as to why your heart was beating so fast. You knew you were useless, that your feelings for Anakin were something that you could not allow yourself, that you should try harder for being enough.
“ Anakin, really, I'm glad but-”
“ If you’re glad, you should thank me accepting my proposing”
Anakin was asking you for something, and you couldn't handle saying no to him. You were good at cooking, so you offered to do it, but Anakin was very persistent with the idea of him cooking. You and R2D2, were not convinced as much as him, promising to keep an eye on him, the result was good, and a much tastier meal than you had thought was served.
“ What did they say this time?” Suddenly Anakin asked in the silence of the dinner, since you didn't understand, he added “I mean, your parents, what did they say? “
“ Uh, nothing, they were angry and we fought” Trying to sound like you were fine, your eyes didn't direct towards him.
“You fought…?” Anakin asked before fakely smiling. “If they are insulting, it's not a fight. Its abuse ”
Stupid, dumb bitch, useless, you're only a problem.
“ No… I don't think it's like that” you murmured trying to convince yourself. You were aware that your parents weren't the best, or even kind. You felt hurt, unfortunately they were your parents, and no matter how much pain they do to you, hating them was so much harder than anyone could imagine.
“ You don't deserve to be treated like this” Anakin affirmed with the confidence that you didn't have. Anakin grabbed your hand, gently touching it. “Not even for your parents”
His voice was sweet, giving you chills, your heart was weak.
“ Anakin, you're kind and I don't deserve-”
“ T/n don't even dare to say that, you're fantastic” Anakin breathed, he needed to ask for it “Stay this night”
You didn't pretend to misunderstand his words.
“ I like you, and I want to stay with you, I want to protect you” He added.
Maybe, there was nothing to misunderstand. He kneels down in front of you. “Ani…” you were out of breath. “ I like you too ”
OKAY I made so much mistakes, remember spanish is my first language and im just learning english.
summary : Every corner of the estate was consumed by a single, unspoken truth: Lord Jos was returning.
warnings : jos verstappen, child abuse, physical abuse, sexism.
an : thx for waiting loves! ‘25s been busy for me!
Max Verstappen prided himself on his composure.
He was a man who thrived on control, who wielded power with ease and commanded attention with the slightest inclination of his head.
Yet in the last fortnight, he had been reduced to something unrecognizable. Restless. Irritated. Unmoored.
By you.
It was your behavior that had unraveled him. So pointedly, so maddeningly deliberate.
The endless excuses, the sudden vanishing acts, the way you refused to meet his gaze when once you had met him head-on.
You had become a master of evasion, and it was driving him to distraction.
It started off with a simple question.
“Where’s your Lady?” Max asked, turning to Oscar with a box of chocolates in hand.
His fingers tightened slightly around the ribbon tied to it, his nerves betraying the confidence he usually wore so well.
He had waited weeks for the box to arrive. Painfully long weeks, during which the confectioner’s meticulous work and the rarity of the ingredients had only fueled his anticipation.
Chocolates were rare in the north, almost impossibly so.
The delicate cocoa beans were difficult to import, often ruined by the harsh weather before they could even cross the border.
Securing this batch had cost him more than he cared to admit, and not just in coin.
And now here he was, holding it awkwardly as your knight stood before him.
“She is occupied, my Lord,” Oscar said with a slight bow, his voice steady, polite, and frustratingly indifferent.
Max blinked, thrown off by the answer. “…Occupied?” he repeated, as if he’d misheard.
“Yes.” Oscar straightened, his hands resting casually on the hilt of his sword. “She has asked that her business remain private.”
Max faltered, his expression briefly betraying his confusion. “Private,” he echoed under his breath, tasting the word. He glanced down at the box in his hands, the chocolate suddenly feeling heavier than before.
For a moment, he considered the sensible option: handing it over to Oscar and letting him deliver it.
That was the proper course of action, wasn’t it? Courteous, efficient.
But that wasn’t why he’d gone to so much trouble. He hadn’t waited for weeks, chased that damned merchant, and secured a confectioner skilled enough to work with the temperamental cocoa just to have someone else deliver it.
No, he’d done all of that for the sake of seeing you.
To see the surprise and delight in your eyes when you realized what he’d brought.
To see the way your lips might curve into that rare, unguarded smile that always made the world feel a little brighter.
“Is she…” He hesitated, choosing his words carefully. “Is she well?”
Oscar’s expression didn’t so much as flicker. “She is, my Lord.”
Max exhaled softly, his chest tightening. That should have been a comfort, and yet it wasn’t.
A part of him felt a flicker of unease. Was he intruding where he wasn’t wanted? Was this foolish? The thought stung, but he brushed it aside. He wasn’t the kind of man to walk away without trying.
With renewed resolve, he squared his shoulders and nodded, his voice steady. “I see. Then tell her this: I humbly request a moment of her time.”
Oscar inclined his head, though something in his eyes seemed to shift slightly. Was that curiosity? Amusement? It was impossible to tell. “As you wish, my Lord. I will deliver your message.”
Max nodded again, but as the knight turned to leave, he found himself lingering, still clutching the box. His thumb ran absently over the ribbon, tracing the folds as he stared down at it.
For weeks, he’d imagined what it would be like to give this to you. To see your face when you realized what it was.
Chocolates weren’t just a gift. They were an impossibility here, a piece of warmth and sweetness in a land defined by cold and scarcity.
And they were for you, only you.
—
He’d gone to Lando next. That had been quickly proven to be a mistake. Lando, with his quicksilver grin and eyes full of mischief, was the last person to approach for a straight answer.
“My Lady?” Lando had echoed, leaning casually against the stable door, arms crossed over his chest. His grin stretched wide enough to make Max immediately regret speaking. “Ah, yes. I believe she’s occupied at the moment.”
Max narrowed his eyes. “Occupied doing what, exactly?”
“Oh, you know…” Lando’s hand flicked through the air as if the explanation were so obvious it barely needed saying. “Official lady business. I think she’s teaching the geese to curtsy this morning.”
“…The geese,” Max repeated flatly, his fingers tightening on the ribbon of the box.
“Very unruly creatures, geese,” Lando went on, his expression completely serious now, as if he were sharing a great truth. “It takes a lot of effort to get them to dip properly. I think one of them might’ve tried to bite her earlier. Terrible mess.”
Max stared at him, weighing whether it was worth the energy to argue. “Are you being serious right now?”
Lando’s grin only grew. “Do I look like the kind of man who isn’t serious?”
“Yes.”
“Well, I’m deeply wounded.” Lando placed a hand over his heart in mock offense. “But I promise you, my Lord, her time is very well spent.”
Max exhaled sharply through his nose. “Fine. I’ll wait. When she’s done with… the geese, let her know I’m here.”
“Absolutely, my Lord,” Lando said with a little bow, the picture of polite deference. But the laughter in his eyes didn’t escape Max’s notice.
—
With that failure, Max even stooped to seeking out Lily in the servants’ quarters.
He caught her coming down the hallway with a basket of linens tucked under one arm, her steps brisk and purposeful. She spotted him before he could call out, muttering something under her breath (he swore it was a curse) before plastering on a polite smile that didn’t quite reach her eyes.
“Lord Max,” she greeted, shifting the basket on her hip. “What brings you down here? A rare sight for the likes of us.”
“I need to see her,” Max said bluntly, holding up the box as if it explained everything.
Lily’s gaze flicked to the box, and for a moment, something unreadable passed over her face. Amusement? Pity? Whatever it was, it was gone in an instant, replaced by a steady, practiced neutrality. “She’s… unavailable, my Lord.”
“I’ve heard that every day this week,” Max replied, exasperation creeping into his voice. “And not one person will tell me why. Are her knights sworn to secrecy? What about her maids now?”
Lily let out a short laugh, dry and faintly resigned, as if she’d expected this conversation. “It’s not that, my Lord.”
“Then what?” he pressed, stepping closer. “If you know where she is, tell me.”
“I can’t,” she said simply, a faint smile playing at the corners of her lips.
“You mean you won’t.”
“I mean I can’t,” Lily repeated, her tone firmer now, though there was a spark of humor in her eyes. “I’ve been given strict orders, my Lord.”
Max narrowed his eyes, studying her. “You know why she’s avoiding me.”
She hesitated for the briefest of moments, a flicker of something— guilt? —crossing her face before she sighed, shifting the weight of the basket again. “I do,” she admitted quietly.
“Then tell me,” Max demanded, his tone bordering on pleading now. “Is it something I’ve done? Something I said?”
Lily shook her head, though she didn’t meet his eyes this time. “No, my Lord. It’s nothing like that.”
“Then what is it?”
She bit her lip, her gaze darting down the hall as if to ensure they weren’t overheard. “You’ll have to ask her that yourself.”
“I can’t ask her if I can’t even see her,” he snapped.
Lily’s faint smile returned, tinged with something like sympathy. “Then maybe you’ll have to be patient.”
“I’ve been patient,” Max muttered, his grip tightening on the box. “Do you have any idea what I went through to get this?” He held up the chocolates as if they were proof of his effort, his voice softening as he added, “I just… I just want to give them to her. That’s all.”
For a moment, Lily’s expression softened entirely, and she almost looked as if she might break. But then she straightened, her professional mask slipping back into place. “She’ll come around, my Lord. You’ll see her soon enough.”
“And what if she doesn’t?”
“She will,” Lily said firmly, then added with a faint chuckle, “Believe me, my Lady is stubborn, but not that stubborn.”
Max stared at her, his frustration bubbling under the surface, but he could see he wouldn’t get anything more from her. “Fine. Just… when you see her, tell her I’ve been waiting.”
Lily nodded, her smile softening once more. “I will, my Lord.”
She dipped into a quick curtsy and walked away, leaving him standing alone in the hallway with the box of chocolates weighing heavily in his hands.
—
Now, Max was no stranger to avoidance.
He knew what it meant to intimidate, to be held at arm’s length by those too timid to face him.
That was the life he led, and he accepted it without question. But you?
You were supposed to be his refuge, the one person who didn’t cower in his presence.
And yet here you were, skittering away from him as though he carried some plague, avoiding him at every turn.
It gnawed at him, an unfamiliar ache burrowing deep into his chest. By the fourth day of your nonsense, he could bear it no longer.
When he spotted you in the hallway that afternoon, halfway to the drawing room, his decision was instant.
You froze the moment your eyes met his, caught like a deer in the hunter’s sights. He could see the panic, the frantic calculations as your gaze flicked to the nearest door.
“Do not dare,” he bit out, his voice cutting through the charged silence.
You flinched, your hand hesitating mid-air as though you’d considered bolting but lacked the courage to see it through.
Max advanced, his long strides purposeful, the hem of his jacket sweeping behind him like a battle flag.
“This farce ends now,” he declared. His hands were clasped tightly behind his back, his every muscle taut as he forced himself not to reach for you. Not yet.
“My Lord, I-”
He hated that. He was Max with you. He was supposed to be only Max with you.
“No,” he snapped, his words slicing through your protest. “Not this time. You’ve spent days running from me, avoiding me as though I’m some specter haunting these halls. I will not tolerate it a moment longer.”
“I don’t know what you mean,” you whispered, your voice barely audible, trembling under the weight of his fury. “If I have somehow offended-”
“Offended me?” he interrupted, a sharp, humorless laugh escaping him. “You think this is about offense? This- this performance?”
He gestured sharply between the two of you, his frustration palpable. “This is not you. I know you, and I do not recognize the woman before me. What have I done, pray tell, to deserve this... this coldness? This game of cat and mouse?”
“Nothing!” The word tumbled from your lips, too quick, too desperate.
His eyes narrowed, his jaw tightening. “Do not lie to me,” he said, his voice like a thundercloud on the verge of breaking. “I have seen the way you pale at the sight of me, the way you vanish the moment I enter a room. Am I so intolerable to you now? So monstrous?”
“Of course not!” you exclaimed, your composure slipping. “You are not intolerable! Far from it. It’s not you at all, it’s-” You stopped abruptly, as though you’d realized you were on the brink of revealing too much.
“It’s what?” he demanded, stepping closer, his presence overwhelming. His voice dropped, low and dangerous, but his eyes burned with something raw, something unguarded. “Tell me. Speak plainly. Do not force me to claw the truth from you, piece by piece.”
“I- I cannot,” you stammered, your voice barely above a whisper.
“You will.” His gaze bore into yours, his frustration radiating from every line of his body. “You owe me that much.”
His nearness was unbearable, his scent, his presence, his intensity.
Everything about him seemed to crowd the air, leaving you breathless, cornered.
“Do you think I enjoy this?” he asked, his voice breaking through the silence like a whip. “Do you think I want to stand here, begging for answers from the one person I consider my friend? For God’s sake, just tell me.”
“I don’t know how to act around you anymore,” you whispered, the words breaking free before you could swallow them back.
Max paused, his sharp gaze flickering to you, his composure splintering into something unreadable. “I beg your pardon?”
“I don’t know how to act,” you said again, your voice trembling despite your effort to sound resolute. “Not now. Not after... not after realizing I-” You stopped yourself, frustration biting at your tongue as your courage faltered. “This is impossible. I shouldn’t have said anything.”
His brow furrowed, and his voice, low and insistent, pulled you back into the moment. “After realizing what?”
You exhaled sharply, the breath almost catching in your throat. If the truth was going to ruin everything, better to hurl it like a stone and get it over with. “After realizing I have feelings for you.” The words tumbled out too fast, harsh and unpolished, as though you were flinging them away before they could sear you further. “And now I’ve made a mess of it, haven’t I? I’ve ruined everything.”
Max froze. For once, his infuriatingly unflappable demeanor slipped, leaving him uncharacteristically wide-eyed.
“Feelings,” he echoed, as though the word itself confounded him.
“Yes, feelings,” you snapped, your voice rising despite your best efforts to contain it. “Ridiculous, inconvenient feelings for you, of all people. And now you’re going to tell me how absurd it is, and I’ll have to live with the mortification of this moment haunting me forever.”
“Absurd?” His lips quirked, and you bristled at the hint of amusement glinting in his eyes.
“Don’t you dare laugh at me, Max,” you warned, feeling your face burn.
“I’m not laughing,” he said, though his voice betrayed the faintest trace of mirth. “I’m simply... astonished.”
“Well, forgive me if I fail to see the humor in any of this!”
“You think I find this funny?” He stepped closer, the low timbre of his voice setting your nerves alight. “You, confessing something I’ve wanted to say for... weeks? You, standing here thinking I don’t-”
He broke off, and you caught the way his jaw clenched, his hand flexing at his side. His voice dropped, quieter but no less intense. “You think I went to all that trouble for chocolates because it was nothing?”
You blinked, caught off guard. “The chocolates?”
“Yes, the chocolates.” His frustration sharpened, his free hand gesturing toward an invisible point as if grasping for the right words.
“Do you know how rare they are here? How much effort it took? The merchants, the confectioner... and all for what? To watch you run from me? To feel like an idiot carrying them from one corner of the estate to the other while you slip away again?”
“I didn’t ask for them,” you said softly, though the words stung even as you spoke them.
“No,” he admitted, his voice quieter but no less fierce. “But I wanted to give them to you. For you. And now, they just... feel like a waste.”
“Max...”
“No,” he interrupted, the raw vulnerability in his voice stopping you cold. “They’re not a waste because of you. They’re a waste because you won’t let me in. Because you’ve spent days pretending I don’t matter to you when all I’ve wanted was a chance to prove how much you matter to me.”
You stared at him, your breath hitching as his words hit like a thunderclap.
“Do you think I don’t feel the same?” he asked, stepping closer, his tone both accusing and desperate. “Do you think I’ve spent all this time chasing you for nothing?”
Your voice trembled as you whispered, “You feel the same?”
“Yes,” he said simply, the weight of the word carrying everything he hadn’t been able to say. “And I thought I made it obvious.”
“Well, then I suppose I’ll have to make myself clearer.”
And before you could think, Max closed the distance, his lips capturing yours in a kiss that was both gentle and consuming. The world seemed to fall away, the weight of your unspoken feelings pouring into the space between you.
His hand slid to the back of your neck, his fingers tangling in your hair as he deepened the kiss, his urgency tempered by an almost reverent care.
Time seemed to stretch, each second filled with the warmth of him, the heady sensation of finally letting go. He tasted faintly of the cold wind outside, of something intoxicatingly familiar yet completely new.
When he finally pulled back, his forehead rested against yours, his breath mingling with your own. His eyes searched yours, still stormy with emotion but softened now by something quieter, more certain.
He whispered, “perhaps I should have said something sooner.”
“You think?” you shot back, and to your dismay, he chuckled, a warm, rich sound that melted some of the tension twisting in your chest.
“Darling,” he murmured, and the tenderness in his voice sent a shiver down your spine, “you never had to wonder.”
“Well, I did,” you managed, your voice cracking slightly.
“I see that now,” he said with a sigh, his gaze steady and unwavering as he reached for your hand. His fingers slipped around yours with a deliberate tenderness, his thumb brushing lightly over your knuckles. The touch was so soft, so impossibly gentle, that it made your chest ache.
“I’m glad you told me,” he murmured, his voice was warm as if sharing a secret shared only between the two of you. “And I’m glad you like me. Because I…” He hesitated, his eyes flickering with something unspoken, something heavy. “I would’ve settled.”
The word hung in the air, brittle and raw, and you blinked, confused. “Settled?”
He nodded, his lips pressing into a faint, rueful smile. “For being friends,” he clarified, his voice steady but tinged with quiet resignation. “I would have accepted just having you in my life in some way, even if it wasn’t the way I wanted. Even if it meant being civil and… arranged.”
“Arranged,” you echoed, your voice barely above a whisper.
“Yes,” he said, his gaze holding yours as if trying to convey the depth of his words. “I would’ve gone through with it, our marriage, without ever asking for more. I would’ve smiled at the formalities, kept my distance, played the role. Anything to keep you near, even if it meant pretending.”
Your breath caught, a lump rising in your throat. “That’s… That’s horrible, Max. Why would you do that to yourself?”
“Because it’s you,” he said simply, his tone soft but unwavering. “Because the thought of losing you entirely… I couldn’t bear it. I thought I’d rather have something small, something manageable, than risk everything and scare you away.”
“Scare me away?” you repeated, shaking your head in disbelief. “Do you honestly think so little of me?”
“No,” he said quickly, his grip on your hand tightening, as though anchoring himself to you. “Never. But I know how you are. You get this look, like the world’s closing in on you, and you start pulling away before anyone can get too close, and I thought… I thought if I pushed too hard, I’d be next.”
You stared at him, your heart twisting at the vulnerability etched into his features. “You were afraid of me?”
“Not afraid of you,” he said, his voice dipping low, the honesty in it startling. “Afraid of losing you.”
The confession hung between you, fragile but unbreakable, and for a moment, neither of you spoke. Finally, you managed, “And you thought being stuck in a loveless, arranged marriage was better than just telling me?”
His smile returned, softer this time, almost self-deprecating. “When you put it like that, it does sound ridiculous. But at the time, it felt safer. Less terrifying than this.”
“This,” you repeated, your voice catching. “What we’re doing right now?”
“Yes,” he admitted, his thumb tracing lazy circles over your skin. “This. Being honest. Saying how I feel. It’s terrifying because it matters. Because you matter.”
You felt your resolve waver, your frustration dissolving under the weight of his words. “Max, you’re an idiot,” you said, your voice trembling despite your attempt at firmness.
“I won’t argue with that,” he said, his smile growing. “But I’m your idiot now, if you’ll have me.”
The warmth in his gaze, the sheer tenderness in his touch, was almost too much to bear. “You’re thanking me,” you said softly, shaking your head. “For liking you?”
“I am,” he said, his voice unwavering. “Because you didn’t have to. You could’ve walked away. You could’ve held back. But you didn’t. And now… Now we have this. Something real. Something worth holding onto.”
Your heart pounded, your breath shallow as you stared at him. “And what if I told you I didn’t want to settle either?”
His smile widened, the corners of his eyes crinkling as he stepped closer. “Then I’d tell you that you’re stuck with me now,” he said, his voice a soft promise.
“I suppose there are worse things,” you said, though your smile betrayed the fullness of your heart.
“Far worse,” he agreed, leaning in just enough that his breath brushed against your cheek. “But I’ll spend the rest of my life convincing you that I’m the best thing you’ve ever settled for.”
—-
The next morning, you were seated by the window in your chambers, the soft light casting a warm glow over the room. A knock at the door drew your attention.
“Come in,” you called, setting your book aside.
When the door opened, there stood Max. His gaze softened when it found you, and in his hands was a box tied neatly with a crimson ribbon.
“Are those the chocolates?” you asked, a knowing smile already tugging at your lips.
He stepped closer, his own lips curving faintly. “They are.”
You rose to meet him, your eyes flicking to the box as he handed it over. The weight of it was solid in your hands, the ribbon silk-smooth beneath your fingers.
You carefully untied the bow, the lid lifting to reveal an array of glossy, artfully crafted chocolates nestled in their compartments.
The rich aroma of cocoa and spices drifted upward, and your breath caught. “They’re beautiful,” you murmured, glancing up at him. “Thank you, Max. Truly.”
“You haven’t even tasted one yet,” he said, though his tone was soft, pleased.
“Oh, I will.” You picked one delicately, its intricate design almost too lovely to disturb. Almost.
You took a small bite, and the flavor bloomed on your tongue, silky and sweet with just the right hint of bitterness. A quiet sigh of delight escaped you.
Max’s expression softened further, as though your enjoyment was worth all the trouble he’d endured.
“These are incredible,” you said, savoring the last bit. Then you arched a brow at him, a teasing glint in your eye. “But you said yesterday that these were difficult to get. What aren’t you telling me?”
He exhaled, leaning against the edge of your desk, his arms crossing casually. “Do you really want to hear the whole story?”
“Yes,” you said firmly, picking another chocolate and holding it up like evidence. “If you went to that much effort, I want to know every detail. I want to appreciate them properly.”
Max chuckled, shaking his head, but there was something tender in his gaze as he began. “It started with a merchant passing through the capital. Word had it that he’d secured a shipment of cocoa that are.. let’s just say, coveted by certain circles.”
“Certain circles?” you asked, biting into the chocolate and letting the flavor coat your tongue.
“Dukes and duchesses, mostly,” he said wryly. “The merchant wasn’t even planning to stop here. His route was direct, and his stock was all but spoken for.”
“And yet, somehow, here they are,” you said, gesturing to the box. “How did you manage that?”
Max tilted his head, his smile faintly crooked. “It took some convincing.”
“Convincing?” you pressed, smiling despite yourself.
“And a fair bit of chasing,” he admitted, a rueful edge to his tone. “The merchant refused my first offer, so I had to send word ahead to intercept him at the border. When that didn’t work, I had one of my men track him to the next town and… negotiate.”
You blinked, mid-bite. “Negotiate? Max.”
He spread his hands. “It wasn’t as dire as it sounds. But it took a considerable amount of effort, and an even more considerable sum.”
Your heart softened, and you set the chocolate down, looking at him with earnest warmth. “You did all of that… just for me?”
His gaze met yours, steady and open. “Of course I did. You deserve nothing less.”
Your chest tightened, an ache blooming behind your ribs. Not unpleasant, but something overwhelming in its intensity. You smiled, the edges of it trembling slightly. “Max, I don’t know what to say.”
“You don’t have to say anything,” he murmured, his voice low, intimate. “Just tell me they were worth it.”
You picked up another chocolate, holding it between your fingers as you studied him. “Oh, they’re worth it,” you said, your voice soft. “But you didn’t have to go to such lengths.”
His eyes softened further, and he took a step closer, until he was just within arm’s reach. “For you, I’d go to greater ones.”
The sincerity in his tone made you pause, your breath hitching. Slowly, you took a bite of the chocolate, savoring its richness as you held his gaze.
“Well,” you said after a moment, your voice quieter but no less warm, “then I’ll savor these all the more. Thank you, Max. Truly.”
He gave a faint smile, his gaze lingering on you. “You’re worth it,” he said again, almost too softly for you to hear.
—
A few days later found the two of you nestled in one of the estate’s sitting rooms, the kind of quiet, secluded spot that felt made for winter afternoons, tucked in a corner, heavy drapes drawn against the chill, and the only light coming from the soft flicker of a fire.
You were curled up on the settee, your legs tucked beneath you, a woolen blanket draped over your shoulders, and a book resting against your knees.
Max sat nearby in an armchair, his posture lazy, his boots propped on a low table, a mug of tea in hand. The fire crackled, the kind of sound that settled deep into the bones.
“You know,” he began, breaking the quiet, “there’s not a single good reason for ‘pookie’ to exist in the English language.”
You didn’t look up from your book, though a smirk tugged at your lips. “I take it you’ve given this some serious thought.”
“Too much thought,” he confirmed, setting his tea down with a resolute air. “I’m just saying, there are standards. Imagine you calling me that in public.”
“What’s wrong with pookie? It’s cute.”
“It’s infantilizing,” he countered, his voice dripping with mock horror. “Do you want me to lose all credibility? Imagine you waltzing into the ballroom, calling me ‘pookie’ in front of Lord Leclerc. He already hates me.”
You smirked behind the edge of your book. “Maybe it’d soften him up. Who could hate someone called pookie?”
“Everyone,” he deadpanned, leaning forward as though the conversation had suddenly taken on life-or-death stakes. “And do you know what happens when dukes hate you? Wars. Wars happen.”
You snorted, the sound more unbecoming than you intended. “Oh yes, the annals of history are full of noblemen going to battle over ill-advised pet names.”
He arched a brow. “Don’t laugh. You’d be the first casualty. Imagine the gossip: ‘Her Lady, tragically felled by her husband’s indignity.’”
You laughed, the sound light and teasing. “Oh, come on. I think society would be more than entertained by your reaction. Honestly, it’d be a great conversation starter.”
Max’s face twisted in mock horror. "I’ll have you know that there’s such a thing as dignity. Standards. Not ‘pookie.’" He gave you an exaggerated shudder. "If you ever said that in public, I'd die on the spot."
“You’d be fine,” you said, grinning. “I think you'd survive. Just barely."
“Not a chance,” he muttered, clearly still distraught over the possibility. He shifted in his chair, sitting up straighter now, his hands running over his trousers as if wiping away the very thought of the word. “I’m serious about this, you know. There have to be some boundaries. What would you say if I called you something equally ridiculous?”
You tilted your head, intrigued. “Like what?”
Max paused, giving you that look, the one where he thought he had you cornered. “‘Sweet cheeks,’ perhaps.”
You snorted before you could stop yourself. “That’s an actual crime,” you said, grinning widely. “Sweet cheeks is... beyond reprehensible.”
He chuckled, satisfied with his small victory, but he wasn’t done. "Or, maybe... how about ‘cuddlekins’?” He dragged out the last syllable, drawing out the ridiculousness for full effect.
Your eyes widened in mock horror. "You can’t be serious. I’m telling you, that would ruin me.” You leaned forward, bracing your elbows on your knees as you regarded him with exaggerated concern. “I might actually have to divorce you.”
Max grinned smugly, clearly relishing the reaction. “See? I knew you’d understand.” He leaned back, stretching his legs out in front of him. “That’s why we need to establish clear boundaries. For your sake, as well as mine.”
You rolled your eyes dramatically. “Fine, Mr. Standards,” you said, leaning back into the settee, settling the blanket over you more comfortably. “But what would you allow, then? What’s dignified enough for you, Your Majesty?”
He thought about it for a moment, tapping his finger against his chin in mock consideration. “Something classic. Elegant. ‘Darling,’ for instance.” He paused, a mischievous glint in his eyes. “Or ‘love.’ I suppose I could even accept ‘angel,’ if you’re feeling sentimental.”
“Angel?” you repeated, arching an eyebrow. “You want me to call you that? You’re nearly insufferable already, I can’t imagine what would happen if I started.”
“Angel is timeless,” he insisted, leaning forward with a dramatic flourish. “You’d be lucky to use it.”
You snorted in disbelief. “Timeless? You’re not a saint, Max.”
He raised an eyebrow, clearly unbothered. “Still, I’d wear it better than ‘pookie,’ don’t you think?”
You tilted your head, considering. “I suppose I could live with ‘angel’.. for now. But you’re pushing it.”
Max grinned like a cat who’d just gotten away with murder. "Good. And in return, I will grant you the honor of calling me..." He paused dramatically. "Max.”
You blinked at him, genuinely surprised. “That’s it? Just ‘Max’?”
He shrugged nonchalantly, though the corners of his mouth betrayed him. “It’s a classic. And besides, it has a certain charm when you say it like that.” He leaned back into his chair, an air of contentment settling over him.
You studied him for a moment, then let out a breath you hadn’t realized you were holding. There was something about the moment, about the soft way he spoke, the way his eyes had a lightness to it, that made you feel oddly warm.
"Fine,” you said, glancing back at your book but unable to suppress a smile. “But I’ll say it right now: if you ever call me anything that’s even remotely ridiculous in public, you’re going to wish you hadn’t.”
—
The evening had started as so many did. A quiet, comfortable sort of intimacy.
The snow outside beat against the windows, the sound muffled by thick velvet curtains, while the firelight flickered across the room, painting everything in soft, golden hues.
Max lounged in his chair, one arm draped over the back lazily, his other hand swirling the last of the wine in his glass. It was the kind of night that begged for diversion.
That was when he spotted it: the chessboard, tucked onto the corner of the bookshelf, its wooden box worn smooth with use. He stood and wandered over, plucking it from its place as though the idea had been waiting there all along.
“You play?” he asked, holding it up as though it were some sort of hidden treasure.
You glanced up from your seat, where you had been flipping idly through a book, the corners of your lips lifting into a subtle smile. “On occasion.”
He arched a brow at the casual way you said it, like you hadn’t just issued a challenge in the simplest of phrases.
“On occasion,” he repeated, setting the board on the low table between you. “That sounds suspiciously like the prelude to a trouncing.”
Your smile widened slightly, and you leaned forward to help him set up the pieces. “If you’re worried about losing, Max, you can always put it back on the shelf.”
His bark of laughter was low, rich, and thoroughly amused. “You know, if I didn’t know better, I’d say you were trying to provoke me.”
“Would it work?”
“It already has.”
With that, the pieces were set, the game begun.
At first, Max played as if this were nothing more than a pleasant diversion, his moves deliberate but far from calculated.
He leaned back in his chair, tossing out playful commentary, fully expecting this to be an easy, lighthearted way to pass the time.
But then you struck.
In just a few moves, you had dismantled his initial strategy, if it could even be called that, with a precision that made him pause.
Max’s hand hovered over his next piece, his gaze flicking between you and the board as though he’d missed some vital clue.
“Was that… intentional?” he asked, a faint crease forming between his brows.
You lifted your eyes to meet his, feigning innocence, though the sparkle in your gaze gave you away. “Was what intentional?”
“That.” He gestured vaguely at the board, his tone dripping with mock disbelief. “The part where you just… destroyed my plan.”
You tilted your head, your expression betraying just the faintest hint of smugness. “Max, you had no plan.”
He blinked, then laughed, the sound rich and warm. “Oh, so you’re one of those players.”
“One of those players?”
“The ones who think they’re too clever by half.”
“Think?” you repeated, your tone as smooth as silk.
Max chuckled again, shaking his head as he moved his knight forward. “Alright, let’s see how clever you really are.”
The first game ended quickly, too quickly for Max’s liking. He stared at the board in disbelief as you leaned back in your chair, the faintest hint of triumph in your smile.
“Was that too fast for you?” you asked, the light teasing in your tone making him huff a laugh.
“Too fast? No. Humbling? Absolutely.”
The second game started with Max clearly trying harder, his movements slower, more deliberate.
He studied the board with an intensity you hadn’t expected, his fingers tapping against the arm of his chair as he weighed his options. You almost pitied him. Almost.
“Don’t hold back on my account,” you said after a particularly defensive move on his part.
He smirked, leaning forward slightly as he moved his bishop into position. “I don’t intend to.”
It didn’t matter. Ten minutes later, you had him cornered again.
“Is this what you do for fun?” Max asked, his voice somewhere between impressed and exasperated as he surveyed the wreckage of his pieces. “Humiliate unsuspecting opponents?”
You laughed softly, the sound warm and full of mirth. “Only when they insist on playing against me.”
By the third game, Max had abandoned any pretense of casual competition. He leaned forward in his chair, elbows on his knees, as he stared at the board like a general planning a campaign. His focus was admirable, though ultimately futile.
“You’ve done this before,” he said eventually, his tone a mix of suspicion and amusement.
You tilted your head, your fingers lightly tapping the edge of your rook. “Played chess?”
“No. Watched someone’s pride unravel in real time.”
You couldn’t help the laugh that bubbled up at that, and for a moment, the tension of the game melted into something softer. The warmth of the fire, the rhythm of your banter.
It all wrapped around the two of you like a cocoon, shutting out the world beyond the storm.
“You’re a good sport,” you said after a moment, moving your queen with practiced ease.
Max glanced up at you, his smile slow and genuine.
“Checkmate,” you said softly, the word slipping out like a secret.
He stared at the board for a long moment before laughing, shaking his head as he leaned back in his chair. “I should be annoyed,” he said, his tone wry, “but somehow, I’m not.”
“Why’s that?”
“Because,” Max said, his gaze lingering on you in a way that made the air feel just a little warmer, “I’ve decided I enjoy losing to you.”
—
Max leaned against the doorway of your bedroom, his arms folded casually, though there was a slight tension in his posture.
His eyes flicked briefly toward the threshold he was careful not to cross.
No matter how much you reassured him or how much he’d relaxed around you, he still wouldn’t set foot inside your room.
Some etiquette rules seemed etched into his very bones.
“You might want to come to the aviary,” he said, his voice calm but carrying a faint edge.
You paused, glancing up from your writing desk. The way he lingered in the doorway, shifting his weight ever so slightly, caught your attention. “What’s going on?”
Max cleared his throat and gave a slight shrug, trying too hard to seem nonchalant. “Your father’s falcon,” he said after a beat. “It’s here. With a letter.”
You straightened, intrigued. “Father’s falcon?”
“That’s what I said.” He hesitated, one hand brushing through his hair. “You’ll see. It’s waiting for you. And... watching me.”
That last part made you grin, and you rose to follow him. Max wasn’t usually nervous, but the slight unease in his tone piqued your curiosity.
The two of you walked through the twisting corridors of the estate, the sound of your footsteps mingling with the faint hum of the household settling for the day.
When you reached the aviary, the warm, earthy scent of hay, cedar, and feathers greeted you like an old friend.
Inside, the room was alive with sound, the soft rustle of wings, the gentle coos of doves nestled in the rafters, and the occasional bright trill of a songbird darting through the shafts of sunlight streaming through the tall, arched windows.
At the center of it all, perched on the wooden stand in the heart of the room, was the peregrine falcon.
The bird’s eyes followed your entrance immediately, but it was Max it seemed to focus on the most, as though sizing him up. Max stopped a few paces from the perch, his hands slipping into his pockets as if to hide any sudden movements.
“Your father’s falcon,” he said again, his tone wry. “Does it always glare like that?”
“It doesn’t glare,” you said, though you had to admit the falcon’s gaze was as intense as ever. “It’s just assessing you.”
“Sure it is,” Max muttered, shifting slightly. “If it decides I’m a threat, how fast does it usually go for the face?”
You laughed softly, shaking your head. “It won’t attack you. Not unless you try to touch it.”
“Believe me, that’s not happening.”
Ignoring him, you stepped forward, extending your arm toward the bird. The falcon’s head tilted slightly, its keen eyes locking onto yours.
Then, with a sharp trill, it launched itself from the perch. Its wings barely made a sound as it landed gracefully on your forearm, its talons light against the leather bracer you wore.
“There you are,” you murmured, stroking its sleek head with gentle fingers.
The falcon made a soft, almost affectionate chirp and leaned into your touch, brushing its beak against your cheek in greeting.
“Of course,” Max said dryly, watching from a safe distance. “It loves you.”
“It trusts me.” You glanced at him with a smirk. “Which is more than I can say for you.”
The falcon’s sharp gaze flicked to Max again, and he raised his hands defensively. “I’m not arguing. It’s fine. We’re fine.”
You laughed under your breath, turning your attention to the small roll of parchment tied to the falcon’s leg. The wax seal, bearing your family’s crest, was unmistakable.
Breaking the seal, you unrolled the thick parchment, your eyes scanning the familiar script.
The falcon shifted on your arm, leaning slightly against your shoulder as though it, too, was eager to hear the news.
My clever one,
I’ll be arriving a few days before the winter feast, sooner than I’d planned. I hope you've been well and that House Verstappen has treated you well.
It’s been far too long since I’ve seen you. I look forward to our reunion.
With affection,
Father
Your heart skipped a beat as you read the letter, the familiar handwriting drawing a warm smile across your face.
“He’s coming back,” you murmured, excitement bubbling in your voice. “Before the festival!”
Max tilted his head, a faint smile tugging at the corner of his lips as he took in your excitement. “Good news for once. You’ve been missing him.”
“Of course I have,” you replied quickly, feeling a flush rise to your cheeks.
A soft chirp reminded you of the falcon perched patiently at your shoulder, its sharp eyes watching your every move. It nudged its beak against your cheek, urging you to action.
“All right, all right,” you murmured with a chuckle, reaching up to stroke the bird’s sleek feathers. “I’ll send him a reply. You’re more impatient than I am.”
“Should I give you two some privacy?” Max leaned against the wooden beam as you walked to the small table in the corner of the aviary.
You shot him a playful glare. “The falcon’s far better company than you some days.”
“Harsh,” Max muttered with mock indignation, though his smile lingered.
Grabbing a strip of parchment, you quickly penned a short response, your hand steady despite your racing thoughts. The falcon ruffled its wings and tilted its head, watching you with the sharp attentiveness of a messenger that knew its job.
When you finished, you sealed the note and turned back to the falcon. “Here we go,” you said softly, tying the parchment to its leg with practiced ease. “Make sure he gets this, all right?”
The falcon chirped again, nudging your hand once more before spreading its powerful wings.
“You spoil that bird,” Max commented.
You ignored him, lifting your arm and watching the falcon take off in a flurry of feathers, vanishing through the open beams of the aviary.
—
"Lord Jos Verstappen is coming home."
The announcement echoed through the halls like the tolling of a funeral bell, heavy and foreboding. The once peaceful estate stirred to life, not with joy, but with a frantic, fearful energy.
Servants darted through the corridors, their faces pale and tense as they adjusted garlands that now felt like mockery against the gloom. Silver was polished until hands trembled, every blemish scoured away with desperation.
Knights inspected their armor with grim focus, their fingers twitching over hilts and clasps as though preparing for battle rather than ceremony.
Even the preparations for the winter feast, grand and excessive as always, now carried a frantic edge, as if the abundance might shield them from his scrutiny.
Cooks whispered curses under their breath, their knives slicing meat with fevered precision. The clatter of pots and the hiss of roasting fires seemed louder, sharper, grating against the silence that lay beneath.
The estate itself seemed to darken, its stately elegance cast in shadow by the weight of his impending arrival.
Red banners bearing the Verstappen crest unfurled from the towers like blood dripping onto the pale winter sky. They flapped in the wind with a mournful sound, their bold colors stark against the growing chill.
—
The heavy oak doors groaned open, and the room was instantly swallowed by silence. The grand dining hall, usually alive with movement and murmured activity, now felt cavernous, the echoes of footsteps hollow against the stone.
Jos entered, his presence dominating the space even before he spoke. His boots struck the floor with deliberate precision, the sound like a hammer driving nails into a coffin.
His cloak of black wolf fur swept behind him, its edges brushing the ground, and the lifeless eyes of the beast stared out like a warning. His face was a cold mask of sharp lines and quiet menace, and his gaze moved across the room before landing on Max.
“Max,” Jos said, his voice low and gravelly, yet it carried with ease, filling every corner of the room. “You look like a boy playing lord. Tell me. Do you believe you’ve done well?”
Max stood abruptly, his chair scraping against the floor. His posture was stiff, his hands braced against the table as though steadying himself. “Yes, Father. Everything is as you instructed.”
Jos tilted his head, his expression devoid of approval or interest. Instead, his piercing gaze shifted to you.
You were seated beside Max, your hands clasped tightly in your lap to hide the trembling.
His eyes swept over you and your stomach twisted under the weight of his scrutiny.
“So,” Jos said, his tone slow, deliberate, and heavy with disdain. “This is the Southern girl?”
He didn’t wait for an answer, his lip curling into a faint sneer. “I was told you were of good stock. That you would bring beauty and grace to this family. But standing here now...” He let the sentence dangle, his silence cutting deeper than any insult.
You forced yourself to meet his gaze, but it felt like staring into a predator’s eyes. Your heart hammered in your chest, and the blood rushed to your face, burning with a mix of anger and humiliation.
Jos stepped closer, his movements slow and measured. He leaned down slightly, as if to examine you more closely, his eyes narrowing.
“Tell me,” he said, his voice quieter now but no less cruel, “were they lying? Or do Southerners simply have lower standards for what they call... adequate?”
The words hit like a blow, and you fought to keep your composure. You felt your throat tighten, your nails digging into your palms.
“Father,” Max said, his voice steady but strained.
Jos turned his head sharply toward his son, his eyes flashing with impatience. “Did I say you could speak?” He scoffed. “You’d do well to learn the value of silence, child. Or did my absence made you bold?”
Max swallowed hard but said nothing, his hands gripping the edge of the table so tightly his knuckles turned white.
Jos straightened, his focus returning to you. “Listen carefully,” he said, his voice a low growl. “I care little for who you are, where you come from, or what you think you’re worth. Your purpose here is simple: to provide strong heirs for this family. That is all. If you can manage even that.”
His gaze swept over you once more, his expression one of disdainful dismissal. “I suspect even that might be a challenge.”
The room was unbearably quiet, the tension pressing down like a physical weight. You felt your breath hitch, your humiliation raw and visible.
Jos’s cold smile was fleeting. “Weakness will not be tolerated. Not from you, and not from him.”
His gaze flicked back to Max. “If she fails, you know what must be done. I expect no hesitation.”
Max’s hand slipped under the table, finding yours. His fingers curled around yours, firm but not comforting. It was a gesture meant to steady you, but it felt like an apology more than anything else.
Jos turned his back on both of you, walking slowly to the head of the table. He took his seat, motioning for the servants to bring the first course, though their presence felt like little more than ghosts at the edges of your vision.
The meal passed in tense silence. Jos ate methodically, his eyes occasionally flicking to you and Max, though he offered no further words.
His presence alone was enough to fill the room with an oppressive weight.
When the plates were cleared and the servants retreated, Jos spoke one last time, his voice sharp and deliberate. “Do not embarrass this family,” he said, looking between the two of you. “My patience is not limitless, and my tolerance for failure even less so.”
He rose from the table, his chair scraping softly against the stone. Without another glance, he strode toward the doors, his cloak billowing behind him.
The grand dining hall was empty now, save for the two of you. The chandeliers above flickered with the last glow of half-melted candles, casting long shadows across the sprawling mahogany table.
Plates of untouched food sat cold on the tablecloth, embroidered with gold, while the remnants of the night’s cruelty lingered in the air like the bitter scent of spilled wine.
You sat stiffly, your trembling hands gripping the edge of your chair.
The fabric of your gown, a pale blue that had once made you feel lovely, now felt heavy and suffocating, like chains wrapped around your body.
Across from you, Max leaned forward slightly, his elbows on his knees, his black coat rumpled, his tie loosened as though the weight of the evening had crushed him.
His lips parted, a small breath escaping, but no words came. His gaze flitted to your face, then dropped to his lap as he rubbed the back of his neck with trembling fingers.
“Don’t,” you said, your voice cold, barely above a whisper. Your hands tightened on the chair, the sharp edge biting into your palms. “Don’t ask me if I’m alright. Don’t insult me like that.”
His head jerked up, his brow furrowing. His mouth opened again, but nothing emerged. He looked lost, childlike, almost, as though he couldn’t fathom where to begin.
“Do you know what it feels like,” you continued, your voice rising, cracking, “to sit there and have every shred of your dignity ripped away, while the man you thought loved you just… watches?”
Max flinched. His knee bounced nervously under the table, but he still said nothing. His eyes, glassy with regret, darted back to yours as though searching for something, anything, to cling to.
You shoved your chair back with a screech, the sound echoing in the cavernous room.
Rising to your feet, you gripped the edge of the table to steady yourself. “Your father humiliated me tonight. He dragged my name through the mud in front of all those people, and you- you just sat there.”
“I wanted to stop him,” he murmured finally, his voice rough. He stood too, but hesitated, his hand hovering over the back of his chair as though afraid to move closer.
“Wanted to?” you repeated, the words tasting bitter on your tongue.
You rounded the table, your skirts brushing against the polished floor, your heels clicking with every step. “Wanted to? What use is wanting when you didn’t do a damned thing, Max?”
His fingers curled into fists at his sides. He stepped back as you approached, the candlelight catching the sharp line of his jaw, his collar undone like a man too weary to even maintain propriety. “I froze,” he said finally, the words forced, raw. “I-”
You stopped short, staring at him, your chest heaving.
The anger burning in your veins was the only thing keeping the tears at bay. “You froze?” you repeated, incredulous. “That’s your excuse?”
He pressed a hand to his face, dragging it down in frustration.
His coat shifted with the motion, revealing the slightly wrinkled fabric beneath, proof of how tightly he’d been gripping his knees under the table earlier. “I didn’t know what to do,” he said, his voice low, shaking.
Your laugh was hollow, bitter, as you took another step closer. The train of your gown caught on the edge of a chair, but you yanked it free without breaking stride. “You didn’t know what to do?” you spat. “You could’ve told him to stop. You could’ve said, ‘She is mine, and you will not speak to her that way.’ You could’ve done something, Max. Anything.”
His hands reached out instinctively, but you recoiled, stepping back so sharply your gown swished around your ankles. His face crumpled as his arms fell back to his sides.
“I’m sorry,” he whispered, his voice barely audible over the crackle of the dying fire in the hearth.
“Sorry?” you repeated, your voice trembling now, raw and unsteady. “You think that’s enough? You think ‘sorry’ is going to erase the fact that you left me there, alone, while he tore me apart?”
“I didn’t mean to-”
“Don’t,” you snapped, holding up a trembling hand to stop him. “Don’t you dare make excuses. You didn’t stop him because you’re afraid of him. Admit it, Max. You’re afraid.”
He didn’t deny it. His gaze dropped to the floor, his chest rising and falling with shallow breaths.
Your voice cracked as you took a step back, your arms wrapping around yourself as though you could hold the shattered pieces of your heart together.
“Promise me,” you said softly, each word trembling. “Promise me you won’t let him do that to me again.”
Max’s head snapped up, his eyes wide, pleading. “I…”
“Promise me,” you repeated, louder this time, your desperation cutting through the air like a blade.
“I-” His voice broke. He reached for you again, but this time you swatted his hand away, your tears blurring the edges of his face. “I can’t,” he whispered, the words breaking you more than anything else.
The breath left your lungs in a sharp, painful exhale. You staggered back, your gaze searching his face for some shred of hope, but all you found was his shame.
“Then don’t you dare call me your love anymore,” you said, your voice trembling, a single tear slipping down your cheek. “Don’t you dare.”
He froze, his hand still half-extended toward you. His lips parted, but no sound came.
Without another word, you turned sharply on your heel, the fabric of your gown rustling like thunder in the silence.
Max’s voice broke behind you, a desperate plea you couldn’t bear to hear.
“Please..”
“Don’t,” you said, your voice breaking. “Don’t follow me, Max.”
His face crumpled as you walked away, the echo of your heels fading into the dark corners of the hall.
—-
The days following the dinner were marked by an aching, suffocating silence.
You didn’t speak to Max. Didn't even look at him.
Not because you didn’t cross paths, but because you couldn’t. The words caught in your throat every time you tried, tangled up in a way you just couldn’t seem to untangle.
It felt too raw, too heavy.
His silence that night, the way he’d just sat there while his father shredded you down to nothing, still stung like an open wound. It was the kind of pain that didn’t just hurt in the moment. It lingered, nestled in your chest, weighing you down in ways you hadn’t expected.
And Max didn’t push.
He didn’t try to force his way into your grief, didn’t demand your forgiveness or plead for you to move past it.
If anything, he seemed determined to let you set the pace, to give you whatever space you needed even if it meant keeping himself at arm’s length.
You still crossed paths, of course. There was no avoiding it entirely.
You still went on your daily walks through the gardens, wandering paths lined with neatly trimmed hedges and blooming flowers.
You still spent time in the library, the two of you occupying the same space while surrounded by the soft rustle of pages and the faint scent of old parchment.
But now the silence between you was no longer comforting. It wasn’t the easy, companionable quiet you’d once cherished, the kind that felt like the two of you could sit together without the need for constant words.
Sometimes, when you were sitting together, you caught him out of the corner of your eye.
Watching you, his face drawn and tired, his eyes filled with something you couldn’t quite name. Regret, maybe. Or guilt. Or some terrible mix of both.
And sometimes, when you walked side by side in the garden, you’d see his hand twitch, as though he were reaching out for yours instinctively.
It was a habit of his, something he’d always done without thinking. A casual, familiar gesture that had once brought you comfort.
But now, when his fingers brushed the air between you, he’d stop short. You’d watch as his hand clenched into a fist at his side, as though he were physically restraining himself.
There was nothing casual about it anymore. No thoughtless familiarity, no ease.
It wasn’t as though he wasn’t trying.
You could see it in the small, hesitant ways he tried to bridge the distance between you—the way he lingered in the same room longer than he needed to, the way his eyes softened whenever they met yours, as though silently asking if it was safe to come closer.
But you weren’t ready. Not yet.
Every time he looked at you like that, every time you caught the faintest trace of hope in his expression, the memory of that night came rushing back like a tidal wave.
So you stayed quiet, kept your distance even as you occupied the same spaces.
And Max didn’t say anything, didn’t press or push.
He just stayed there, hovering at the edges of your life like a shadow, silent and waiting. Waiting for you to decide if there was anything left to salvage.
—
“You should just talk to him,” Lily said softly, breaking the silence as she poured tea into the delicate china cup in front of you.
You looked up sharply, your fingers tightening around the edge of the table. “And why, exactly, should I?”
Lily didn’t look at you right away. She finished pouring, carefully setting the teapot down. “Because you look like you’re holding your breath every time he’s near you.”
Your frown deepened. “What’s that supposed to mean?”
She raised an eyebrow, her gaze steady. “It means you’re walking around like this thing between you is strangling you. Like it’s taken up every inch of space in your chest and there’s no room left for air.”
You felt your cheeks flush, the sting of her observation cutting sharper than you wanted to admit.
You glanced down at the steam rising from your tea, your voice barely above a whisper. “I don’t see why I should be the one to talk to him. He’s the one who...” You trailed off, your throat tightening, the memory of that night still raw and aching.
“I’m not saying you need to forgive him. You don’t have to. Not now, not ever, if that’s what you decide. But this silence? It’s not helping either of you. Maybe it’s time to say something. For your sake, if nothing else.”
You hesitated, your fingers brushing over the rim of your cup as you avoided her gaze. “I wouldn’t even know where to start,” you admitted, your voice trembling with the weight of the truth.
“It doesn’t have to be perfect,” she said, her tone patient, gentle. “It doesn’t have to fix everything. But maybe it’s worth letting him know how you feel. Letting yourself breathe again.”
You shook your head, the familiar swell of anger and hurt rising in your chest. “Why should I be the one to fix this? He’s the one who stood there and let his father humiliate me. He didn’t say a word, Lily. Not one word.”
Her face softened with something like understanding, and for a moment, she didn’t respond. Then she said quietly, “I know. And you’re right. He should have spoken up. He should have done more. But...” She hesitated, searching for the right words. “Have you seen him lately?”
Your brows furrowed as you finally looked up at her. “What do you mean?”
“I mean, he looks awful,” Lily said bluntly. “Like he hasn’t slept in days. He’s walking around with this... this look on his face, like he’s dragging the weight of the world behind him. It’s... it’s hard to watch, honestly.”
You frowned, your heart twisting at the image her words conjured. Max, hollow-eyed and exhausted, carrying his guilt like a shroud. It wasn’t what you’d wanted. You hadn’t wanted to break him. You just wanted him to understand how much he’d hurt you.
Lily tilted her head, studying you. “I’m not saying you owe him anything. You don’t. But maybe... maybe talking to him wouldn’t just be for his sake. Maybe it would help you too.”
The ache in your chest deepened, a knot of emotions too tangled to unravel.
You weren’t sure if you were ready.
You weren’t sure if you’d ever be ready.
You swallowed hard, the words catching in your throat. “I’ll think about it,” you said finally, your voice barely above a whisper.
Lily gave you a small, encouraging smile. “That’s all I’m saying. Just think about it.”
—
“Oh, for heaven’s sake, just forgive him already, my lady,” Lando groaned dramatically, his boots scuffing the floor as he limped into the hall with a hand pressed to his ribs and the most pitiful expression you’d ever seen.
You blinked, startled, your gaze darting between his grimace and the faint scrape of steel from outside the window. “Forgive him? What are you talking about?”
Lando paused just long enough to throw you a deeply offended look before collapsing onto a nearby chair as if the journey from the training yard to the hall had nearly killed him. “What am I talking about? Oh, only the fact that your fiancé is trying to murder me. That’s all.”
Your brow furrowed as you glanced at Oscar, who had followed Lando inside.
The knight stood by the door, leaning against the frame with his arms crossed, his expression calm but tinged with faint amusement.
“What happened?” you asked, turning back to Lando, who was now slumped over the arm of the chair like a man on his deathbed.
“What happened? He happened!” Lando shot upright, jabbing a finger toward the courtyard. “Your darling betrothed has gone completely mad. I swear, he’s been possessed by some spirit of vengeance. He’s brutal- relentless! My body wasn’t built for this kind of abuse, my lady. I’m delicate.”
Oscar snorted, shaking his head. “Delicate isn’t the word I’d use.”
Lando’s mouth dropped open, scandalized. “Excuse me? This is coming from the man who sat back and watched me get beaten within an inch of my life?”
He turned to you, eyes wide and beseeching. “Do you see what I’m dealing with? First, your fiancé tries to cut me in half, and now your knight mocks my pain. I’m surrounded by cruelty!”
You fought back a smile, though the corners of your mouth betrayed you. “I think you’re exaggerating.”
“Exaggerating?” Lando looked positively aghast, clutching his chest as though you’d stabbed him. “You think I’m exaggerating? He disarmed me within minutes, then made me pick up the sword and do it all over again- six times! At one point, I was fairly certain I’d lost the ability to breathe. Do you know what he said to me? ‘You’re improving.’ Improving! My ribs say otherwise!”
Oscar’s lips twitched, though he didn’t quite smile. “You’re still standing, aren’t you?”
“Barely,” Lando huffed. He stood gingerly, clutching his back as though the act of rising from the chair had aged him twenty years. “I’ll have you know I’m going straight to the healer. And after that, I’m taking the longest bath of my life. If anyone needs me, I’ll be in the tub, rethinking every decision that led me to this moment.”
With that, he hobbled toward the stairs, muttering under his breath about sadists and swordsmen who didn’t know the meaning of mercy.
You turned back to Oscar, who had remained silent through most of Lando’s theatrics. He was still standing by the door, his gaze distant now, fixed somewhere beyond the frost-covered window panes.
“He’s still out there, you know,” he said finally, his tone dry.
“What?”
Oscar tilted his head toward the courtyard. “Your fiancé. He hasn’t stopped. He’s still training.”
You moved closer to the window, peering out into the dusky evening. Sure enough, there he was, a dark figure against the pale, frostbitten ground.
His sword moved in deliberate, measured arcs, each swing cutting through the biting wind like it was nothing. His breath hung in the air in sharp clouds, but he didn’t falter.
“Why?” you murmured, your brow furrowing as you turned to Oscar. “It’s freezing out there.”
Oscar’s expression didn’t change, but there was something in his eyes. “He’s not the type to stop. Cold doesn’t bother him, not when he’s like this.”
“Like what?”
Oscar hesitated, his usual bluntness faltering for just a moment. “Like a man trying to outrun his own thoughts.”
You glanced back at your fiancé, your chest tightening as you watched him swing the sword again and again, each movement precise and controlled, like he was fighting an invisible enemy.
Oscar shifted, his voice quieter now. “Look, my lady... I’m not going to tell you what to do. It’s not my place to ask for forgiveness on his behalf. That’s something he’ll have to earn himself.”
You turned to him, surprised by the sudden change in his tone.
Gone was the sharp, pragmatic knight you knew. In his place was something softer, almost hesitant.
“But,” he continued, meeting your gaze, “as a man, I am asking you to give him a chance. Not because he deserves it. But because I’ve seen men like him before. Men who don’t know how to say what they mean.”
His words settled heavily between you, the quiet crackle of the fire the only sound in the room.
“I’m not saying he’s perfect,” Oscar added, his voice even softer now. “But I think he’s trying. And sometimes, that’s worth something.”
—
The snow fell in sheets, each flake biting at Max’s skin like shards of ice. It blanketed the courtyard, piling high in thick drifts that glowed faintly under the dull gray of the moon.
The wind howled, tearing through the frozen night, cutting past the thin fabric of his sweat-soaked tunic and carving into his flesh like jagged teeth.
Max’s breath rose in ragged bursts, visible in the frigid air, each exhale trembling with effort. His hands, stiff and raw, clutched the hilt of his sword with a grip so tight his knuckles felt as though they might split.
The steel was freezing, an unyielding weight that seemed to fuse with his palm. His fingers, reddened and cracked, struggled to keep hold, but he didn’t dare let go.
He swung again. The blade hissed through the icy air before colliding with the splintered wood of the practice post.
The impact sent a jolt up his arms, rattling his shoulders, his teeth.
Pain flared in his joints, spreading through his already screaming muscles, but he ignored it. His body ached, his knuckles bled, but it still wasn’t enough. It never was.
Snow clung to his damp hair, melting into icy rivulets that dripped down his temples, his neck. He hadn’t bothered with gloves. Or a cloak.
The cold was a blessing. A punishment. It numbed the ache of his hands, the burn in his shoulders, and dulled the deeper pain lodged in his chest.
The wind picked up, sharp and merciless, whipping across his exposed skin.
He welcomed it, leaning into the sting as though the air might tear him apart, cleanse him of the memories gnawing at his mind. He swung again, harder this time, the motion wild, unbalanced.
The blade struck the post with a sickening crack, splinters flying as the impact jarred his entire body.
He stumbled, breath hitching as exhaustion clawed at him. His arms felt like lead, his legs trembling under the weight of his own battered frame.
Every inch of him throbbed, the dull, relentless pain seeping into his bones. His body, older than it should have been at twenty-three, protested with every movement.
His hands were aged before their time, the calluses and scars a map of years spent holding a sword when he should have been a boy.
Still, he didn’t stop. He couldn’t. If he stopped, the silence would creep in. If he stopped, the memories would return.
He pivoted, his breath a broken rasp as he swung again. The sword felt heavier with every motion, its hilt biting into the tender, split skin of his palm.
The wind roared, scattering snow into his eyes, but he barely blinked. His focus was razor-sharp, pinned on the shattered remains of the post as though destroying it might somehow quiet the storm inside him.
But it didn’t.
The memories came anyway, vicious and unrelenting.
Nine years old. Kneeling on frozen stone, the cold seeping through his skin as he counted the seconds between lashes. The whip cracked, the sound sharp and unforgiving, and his father’s voice followed, low and calm.
“Hold still, boy. A soldier doesn’t flinch. If you move again, we start over.”
He could still feel the sting of the leather against his back, the burn that lingered long after the blows stopped.
He remembered biting the inside of his cheek until he tasted blood, his small body shaking with the effort to stay still. He hadn’t cried, not until his father had left the room, the echo of the slammed door ringing in his ears.
Fourteen. Standing rigid as Jos’s words sliced into him, sharper than any blade. “You’ll never be a man. You’ll never be strong enough. If you can’t endure this, how do you expect to survive out there?”
Max swung again, the blade whistling through the freezing air, his breath coming in sharp, uneven bursts.
His vision swam, his balance faltering as his strength began to wane, but he refused to stop. He couldn’t stop.
Because if he did, he’d hear his father’s voice again. He’d see your face.
The memory hit him like a blow, the sound of your voice echoing in his mind. Raw. Shattered. The way you’d looked at him.
Wide-eyed. Disbelieving. Like you didn’t know who he was anymore.
The sword slipped from his hands, falling to the snow with a muted thud. His chest heaved, his lungs burning as he struggled to catch his breath. He stood there, trembling, the snow swirling around him in a blinding haze.
The frost clung to his lashes, melting into cold trails that streaked down his cheeks.
He clenched his fists at his sides, his nails biting into his palms as a fresh wave of pain rippled through him. He welcomed it, needed it, but it still wasn’t enough.
The memory of your face refused to leave him.
You’d been standing in the hall, your gaze darting between him and Jos as though you couldn’t believe what you were seeing. Max could still hear the venom in his father’s voice, the cruel, cutting words that had torn into you like claws.
And he’d done nothing.
He’d stood there, frozen, his body locked in place as his father’s fury spilled out. He’d wanted to move, wanted to speak, to defend you, but he hadn’t.
Because when Jos turned his gaze on him, sharp and filled with that same disgust Max had seen since he was a boy, all his courage had turned to ash in-
“What are you doing out here?”
Max flinched at the sound of your voice, the syllables cutting through his thoughts.
He didn’t turn to face you, his broad back stiff against the wind. “Training,” he said after a long pause, the word rasping out of him, half-choked with exhaustion.
“Training?” you repeated, stepping closer. The frost crunched beneath your boots, your breath clouding in the cold air. “It’s freezing, Max. You shouldn’t-”
“I know,” he interrupted, his voice low, hollow. His hands moved behind his back, fingers curling into fists as though he could hide them, but even from this distance, you could see the raw, bloody skin.
“Max,” you whispered, horror prickling at the edges of your voice. “Your hands-”
“They’re fine,” he said quickly, his tone sharper than he intended. He winced at himself, sucking in a shaky breath. “I’ve had worse.”
“That’s not the point,” you said, stepping closer, the hem of your cloak brushing against the frost-laden grass. “What are you trying to do to yourself? It’s the middle of the night, you’re bleeding, and it’s so cold you can barely breathe.”
“I’m used to it,” he muttered, his eyes fixed on the ground as though it could swallow him whole.
“Are you?” you challenged, your voice cutting sharper now.
He didn’t answer, the silence between you heavy and brittle. The moonlight cast a silvery glow over his hunched figure, illuminating the tension coiled in his frame.
You exhaled slowly, your breath visible in the icy air. “You’re going to get sick.”
“I’ll go inside later,” he said, his tone dull, lifeless. “You should go ahead first.”
“Max-”
“I told you,” he said, spinning to face you, his voice raw and fraying at the edges. His eyes met yours, and for the first time, you saw the depths of his anguish.
The shadows, the guilt, the broken pieces he couldn’t seem to hide. “I will settle. As long as I have you in my life, even if you hate me for the rest of it, I’ll settle for that silence. I’ll take it. I’ll endure it.”
Your heart twisted painfully, the cold biting sharper now as the weight of his words fell between you. “So that’s it?” you said, your voice trembling. “You’re not even going to try?”
His shoulders sagged, his breath hitching as he shook his head. “Do I even deserve to?”
Your chest tightened, and you took another step forward, your voice rising with the desperation clawing at your throat. “It’s not about deserving, Max. It’s about trying. About fighting for the people you care about, no matter how hard it is.”
“I’ve grown soft,” he murmured, the words barely audible as he turned away from you. His hands twitched at his sides, trembling as though they carried the weight of his shame. “If I had stood up to him- if I had spoken out—my father would’ve dragged me to the dungeons. I haven’t been there in years, and still… the memory-”
His voice cracked, and he ran a hand through his hair, pulling at the strands like he wanted to rip the thoughts from his skull.
“Max,” you said, your voice softening despite the anger still simmering in your chest. “What are you talking about?”
He swallowed hard, his throat bobbing as he fought to keep his composure. “I was afraid,” he whispered, the admission like a knife slicing through the air. “That’s why I froze. That’s why I didn’t defend you. I was afraid, and I hate myself for it. I hate that I let him humiliate you. I hate that I let you sit there, waiting for me to speak, and I didn’t. I couldn’t.”
Max exhaled. “And I’m sorry. I would let him whip me a thousand times if it meant you’d look at me with softness again.”
The world seemed to stop. Your stomach dropped, your blood turning to ice. “What?” you whispered, the word barely audible over the pounding of your heart. “What do you mean, whip you?”
Max’s silence was unbearable, the way his head bowed under the weight of his words. It was as if speaking them had drained the fight from him. But then, slowly, he sank to his knees before you, his hands trembling as they moved to rest in his lap.
“Do it,” he whispered hoarsely, his voice raw with desperation. “If it will make you forgive me- if it will make things right- hurt me. However you like. I deserve it.” His head hung low, his body tense, as though bracing for some cruel blow. “I betrayed you. I don’t deserve your forgiveness, but if pain is what it takes-”
“Stop,” you said, your voice sharp, horrified. The sight of him kneeling before you, offering himself up like some sacrificial lamb, sent a fresh wave of nausea rolling through you. “Max, get up. Please.”
He didn’t move. If anything, he seemed to fold further into himself, his hands curling into fists against his thighs. “I can take it,” he insisted, his voice barely above a whisper. “I’ve taken worse. I’ll take it for you.”
“No,” you choked out, the word trembling on your lips. You crouched before him, your hands hovering uselessly in the air, unsure whether to reach for him or pull away. “Max, this isn’t- this isn’t how this works. I don’t want to hurt you.”
He flinched, as if your words themselves were a blow. “But I hurt you,” he said, his voice breaking. “I stood there and let him- let him say those things to you, and I did nothing. I froze. And now I’m here, training, trying to- trying to make sure it doesn’t happen again. But it’s not enough, is it?” He raised his head then, his eyes wet, his expression pleading. “So tell me what to do. Tell me how to fix it. Tell me how to be better.”
Your throat tightened, a lump rising that you couldn’t swallow down. “Max,” you said softly, your voice trembling. “This… this isn’t the answer. You don’t have to punish yourself to be forgiven. You don’t have to prove your worth to me like this.”
He blinked, his expression caught somewhere between disbelief and anguish. “Then what do I do?” he whispered. “I don’t know how else to-”
“You don’t have to do anything,” you interrupted, your voice firm despite the tears stinging your eyes. “You’re not your father. You don’t have to fight like he did. And you don’t have to hurt like this- not to earn love, not to earn forgiveness.”
For a moment, Max simply stared at you, his lips parted, as if your words were a foreign language he couldn’t quite comprehend.
Slowly, you reached out, your fingers brushing against his cheek. His breath hitched, and he froze beneath your touch, like he didn’t believe it was real.
“You deserve kindness, Max,” you said, your voice breaking on the last word. “Even from yourself.”
His shoulders shook, his head dropping forward until his forehead rested against your hand
And for the first time in what felt like an eternity, he let himself cry.
—
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— tambien lo puedes leer en ao3 <3
Kylo era, sin lugar a dudas, una persona con dificultades para expresarse. Ya sea física o verbalmente, el siempre vacilaba antes de mostrar su afecto. No tenía muy en claro si eran las consecuencias por la fría relación que tuvo con su madre o por sus enseñanzas como soldado, pero no cabia duda que su corazón se atibio con la llegada de Naeva.
Kylo quien se levantaba antes que el Sol saliera, quien extendia las expediciones para estar lejos de casa, y quien odiaba los dulces, ahora se encontraba en las tardes de la mañana comiendo masitas dulces junto alguno de los tantos tes que le gustaban a Naeva. El Sol de la mañana entibiaba la habitación, el aroma al dulce cerezo que crecía a las afueras del castillo lo hacía querer volver a dormirse. Lastimosamente, volverse a dormir atrasaría la expedición a la que Kylo debía asistir.
—Kylo, puedes irte sin preocuparte, sabes que sé cuidarme—Naeva quien siempre estaba tranquila y tenía confianza en sus propia habilidades, no tardaba en darse cuenta que parte de la responsabilidad de su pareja era irse y acompañar a sus tropas. Sin embargo Kylo, había resultado un problema en las últimas salidas, no podía quedarse tranquilo.
—Prométeme que no vas a salir si no estás acompañada—los mechones oscuros caían sobre la cara de su pareja sin llegar a cubrir su expresión de preocupación, el pecho de la joven se enterneció al darse cuenta y lo prometió dejando un beso de la mejilla de su esposo, quien simplemente perdio la mirada con sus orejas rojas.
Para Kylo, mostrar su preocupación, era su forma de amar.
what to we think about priest charles who falls in love with reader (who is a fake novice) and he passes all the time trying to contain himself from kissing her
last night I was watching esperanza mia (an argentinian show) and the plot is so good for a fic
Summary: Everyone feels intimidated by your coldness, except Anakin. Who feels enchanted by everything you are.
Tags: Shy! Reader, Jedi! Reader, Reader is actually nice.
You can translate it in AO3
No podías evitar mirarlo, Anakin Skywalker era bastante impresionante para tu criterio. Habiendo terminado la misión que les habían asignado, volvieron a la base con su equipo claramente satisfechos y aliviados. Y aunque tu cara no lo demostraba, tú también lo estabas. La misión fue más simple de lo que habías imaginado, recuperar terreno conquistado por los Separatistas rara vez resultaba ser una tarea fácil; sin embargo, las habilidades de Anakin y su padawan, Ahsoka Tano superaron tus expectativas. Claro que muchos chismeaban sobre las habilidades del Jedi, y también mucho habías escuchado en los pasillos, su trabajo era claro y admirabas su manera espontánea de actuar. Reprimiste el sentimiento de envidia que creció en tu pecho volviendo tu vista al frente en cuanto pusieron un pie en la base. Seguida por tu equipo te paraste al escuchar la voz de uno de los soldados.
“Nosotros iremos por un descanso, ¿está bien?”, el clon principal preguntó haciendo que te des la vuelta.
—Claro, descansen—cediste. Los clones asintieron yéndose. Fue ahí cuando Anakin bajó con su equipo, exclamando que podían ir a descansar. Lo miraste brevemente antes de desviar la mirada—Hiciste un buen trabajo, Skywalker.
Él sonrió, poniendo su mano en su cuello.
—No hace falta ser tan profesional, ¿Vas a descansar?—el pelo del Jedi estaba desordenado, sin embargo seguía viéndose atractivo.
—No, probablemente asista a otra misión—juntando las manos por delante, te sentiste confundida ante las cejas fruncidas del jedi—¿Algo está mal, Skywalker?
—Bueno… No creo que sea bueno haces repetidas misiones sin tiempo de descanso—Anakin contestó ladeando la cabeza, no agregaste nada sintiendo sorpresa por sus palabras, desde que la guerra había comenzado tu descanso era inexistente en tu calendario—Yo tengo un descanso de tres días, ¿porque no me acompaña?
Retrocediste medio paso, con la mandíbula ligeramente suelta se recompuso rápidamente, aceptando sin seguridad en su decisión. En realidad, varios de los maestros se aliviaron al escuchar tu pedido de descanso, parece que ya tenían en mente obligarte a descansar si no reconocias tus límites.
Anakin y tú volvieron al Templo, cada uno volviendo a su habitación; no te habías sentido particularmente cansada, sin embargo cuando apoyaste tu espalda en el colchón pensando que no ibas a poder dormir por el sol entrando en la ventana, caíste dormida inmediatamente.
De tu sueño profundo fuiste despertada por unos golpes en la puerta, te paraste desorientada por la desaparición de la luz y como pasó que dormiste tanto.
—¿t/n?—la voz detrás de la puerta lo empeoró, abriéndola acomodaste tu visión con la poca iluminación que había en el pasillo.
—¿Skywalker? ¿Qué haces aquí? ¿Qué hora es?—frotandote los ojos las preguntas salieron sin parar.
—Tranquila, no pensé que seguías dormida—Anakin se rió—Es tarde, casi medianoche.
Tus ojos se enfocaron en sus expresiones, buscando cualquier signo de que estuviera mintiendo, sin embargo no la encontraste y te costó creer que hubieras dormido doce horas seguidas.
—¿Sucedió algo? ¿Hay una nueva misión en la que me requieran?
Anakin no contestó por un segundo, fijando su mirada en ti, luego se rió despreocupadamente sosteniéndose la frente.
—Vaya que eres una adicta al trabajo—se acercó—No pasó nada, simplemente mi maestro me dijo que no te vio en la cena de hoy así que pensé que ahora tendrías hambre.
Si, si tenías hambre, lo notaste apenas te incorporaste de la cama.
—¿A esta hora?—bajaste la mirada ocultando tu sonrisa—Por algo hay horarios en el templo, Jedi Skywalker. Incluso los padawan saben que si piden comida a medianoche, los cocineros los tirarán por la primera ventana disponible.
Estabas por cerrar la puerta, cuando Anakin te detuvo con sus ojos encontrándose.
—¿Quién dijo que íbamos a comer en el Templo?
Fue asi como terminaste en un restaurante fuera de la parte central de Coruscant, siendo un lugar colorido y bien concurrido a pesar de la hora. No conocías nada del menú, así que dejaste que Anakin eligiera por ti, el lugar era desconocido pero resultaba ser cómodo.
—Te prometo que te gustará, es picante pero tampoco es tan fuerte—Anakin sonrió apoyando su codo en la mesa, los platos de comida caliente se posaban frente a ustedes y con vacilación probaste la comida. El sabor se extendió rápidamente por tu lengua, diferente a cualquier otra cosa que hayas podido comer en el Templo. Anakin apretó los labios ocultando una sonrisa antes de morder—¿Siempre trabajas tanto?
Paraste de comer apoyando el tenedor.
—Claro, hay muchas cosas que hacer—suspiraste—Prefiero terminar las misiones rápido para poder empezar la siguiente, los Separatistas ganan terreno a un alto rendimiento, no podemos permitirlos avanzar.
—Sin embargo no eres la única Jedi que puede hacer esos trabajos—se inclinó sobre la mesa, sus ojos celestes te penetraron—Si quieres rendir mejor, deberías descansar. Es necesario, además si te sientes sola, siempre podríamos pasar los descansos aquí si te gusta.
Las palabras se fueron de tu boca, calentando tu cuello y un corazón latiente.
—...La mayoría de personas me encuentra intimidante, tú lo sabes.
Anakin rió.
—Puedo ver eso, pero lo que sea que encuentren intimidante, yo lo encuentro encantador.
Avergonzada, y terriblemente preocupada por la velocidad con la que tu pecho latía, te paraste de la mesa. Skywalker estaba desmoronando las paredes a tu alrededor, y una pregunta se poso en tu cabeza, ¿era solo admiración lo que sentías por él?