His little kitty ears đĽ˛đââŹ
Simon Riley masterlist
Anthology complete - 2/2/24
Simon has a new neighbor. His new neighbor has a baby.
Simon Riley/female reader Single mom, neighbors fic. Fics are listed in chronological order
Simon discovers something unexpected Simon realizes where you live Simon gives you a hand Simon comes over for dinner Simon eavesdrops Simon spends time in the garden Johnny learns his LT's secret Simon helps you out last minute Simon gets a phone call Simon accompanies you to the park Simon steps in Simon answers the phone in the middle of the night Simon learns something about you You miss your neighbor Simon's choice has consequences Simon tries to make amends Simon has you over for dinner đSimon helps you and Emmaline pick out a tree Simon shares his space Simon shares his bed Simon takes you on a proper date Simon thinks he could die here You tell Simon about your grief đSimon takes his family to a holiday party đSimon has himself a merry little christmas Simon discovers one of your fears Simon comes home from work Simon takes his girls to the aquarium
A FEAST
Kyle âGazâ Garrick x Reader // has female parts !
A/N; okay so! This is a small Drabble so itâs likeâcut short a bit? Along with this is a Drabble and uses female parts! Short word count! Also Iâm still getting used to writing so I apologize if this is messy (âłââł) I will edit when I see fit for myself aha!
NSFW under the cut!
Gaz doesnât know how he found himself in this position. His head full of lust, his tongue sucking up your lower lips. Your plush thighs on the side of his head, caging him in. And your soft mewls of pleasure make him twitch in his pants. He just came back from deploymentâunlocking the doors of the shred house just to find you dressed in beautiful lingerie. And he couldnât help himself. You were wrapped up like a present, from him to unwrap over and over again. And he loved it. His mind is fuzzy as he finds himself kneeled, while youâre laid on your back on the edge of the bed.
He eats you out like a starved man. Your plush thighs over his shoulder, while his hands rest under your upper thighs. His hands knead your flesh while his mouth slobbers against your wet slicked folds. He hums in delight as your taste fills his mouth. Your whimpered moans make him hard, but your lower lips make him harder. Heâs still clothed in his shorts, yet he has no shirt. Your body lays naked on the bed. Sweat trickling down your forehead.
âFuck love..â he whispers as his licks over your clit. The sounds of wet slurping noises follow after, sending waves of pleasure up and down your spine. He doesnât speak to youâhe speaks to your pussy. âSo wet for me. So so fucking delicious.â He mutters, downright pussydrunk as his lips smack, covered in your juices.
His tongue is buried in your hole but peaks out to lick and feast more. Every time you try and squirm away his hold on you locks down. Forcing your body to push back up against his mouth, his nose, his face. His nose brushes up on your clit, officially making the majority of the bottom of his face wet with your slick.
His eyes close for a split second as he groans in pleasure. Inhaling your sex scent like itâs a new perfume. Slurping down your juices like a forbidden drink thatâs supposed to be out of reach.
âGaz!âKyle.! Oh!â Your voice is hoarse as it calls out his Call Sign then his real name in pathetic mewls of pleasure.
One of your hands finds his head of hair, gripping it and making him grunt out. Your other hand trying to muffle your moans, yet proving unsuccessful as Gaz purposely trails up and down your wet folds and nips at your clit teasingly. Your body twitches in delight, his movements are so overwhelming. You can feel the knot in your lower belly. The way his tongue moves and explores your lower wet cavern. The way he doesnât stop as he can feel you clench down on his tongue, only making him continue on more. He can taste you. He can feel you as you get more wetter under only his tongue and soft peppered kisses on your wetness.
Dripping, he thinks. Youâre absolutely dripping. Soppy and wet and you coat his face so nice. His eyes peek open to look up. Your eyes are shut in pleasure and your mouth open as it produces those beautiful noises. His mouth leaves your soppy and quivering cunt for a moment, peppering wet kisses up your thighs. He can smell your scented body washâinhaling it so nicely. But he cut himself short as his wet lips found your clit, his tongue teasing so nicely.
â đ°đżđ˛đ˛đ˝. â .âšËáŻâ . Ýâ stalker; bob Reynolds.
you're just like an angel.
His hands, gently calloused, cradled your faceâadmiring every feature sculpted in your peaceful slumber. Your room was cloaked in darkness, the somber night resting quietlyâyet the moon peeked through your curtains, casting silver light upon you like brushstrokes on a canvas. You were the universeâs muse, his muse.
He knelt at the side of your bed, not out of mere admiration, but reverence. As if you were a Goddessâbecause to him, you were. From your words, your voice, your beauty, your soulâeverything. You had this uncanny way of pulling him from the void and into something gentle. Something hopeful.
But who could have knownâBob Reynolds was a nobody. The world never gave him space to breathe. He was overlooked, shoved aside like a ghost wandering in daylight. His life whispered that he was no-good, a mistake, forgotten. All but youâyou looked at him like he mattered. You spoke to him like he was seen. You made him believe that perhaps, for once, he wasn't broken. You were the light in the pitch. His clarity. His pulse.
His eyes roamed over you, not with hungerâbut with awe, tracing the poetry in your stillness. Fingers brushed from your cheek to your hand. Your skinâsoft, celestial. And in his mind bloomed the tender dream of you and him, where affection was mutual, and love was allowed. He longed to kiss you gently, to gift you with a thousand small devotions.
His eyes never sought anyone else. The first time you said his name, he memorized it like a hymn. It nestled in his memory like warm verses. Others said his name like it was a burdenâbut you, you spoke it like a song. Like it meant something. Your voice was heavenâs echo, even in sorrow. Especially in sorrow. Even when tears painted your cheeks and you trembled against himâhe swore your voice could calm storms.
But truly, everything about you was like thatâextraordinary.
And he wishedâno, prayedâthat maybe he could be special too.
But hellâwho was he kidding? He was just a ghost in your orbit. The moon never shone for him. Even so close to you, light refused to grace him. And maybe thatâs why his longing turned sharp, desperate. Because if he could not have the sun, he would become the night that holds it. If he could not bask in your lightâmaybe, just maybeâhe could be the eclipse to your moon.
Creep, radiohead.
First time making a blurb, kinda nervous
I don't like the way I made this, not used to this kind of writing (which I believe is called blurb?? Educate me chat) and this was so rushed istg, I'm a really slow writer as u can see guys, so apologies in advance if this isn't good!!
After random disappearances and unmade promises, I'm back and will probably disappear again !! Feel free to critique me or give me ideas, I'll tryyyyyy my bestest to do it bbs.
Yandere prince x AFAB single mother reader
Chapter 1
Y/Nâs life revolves around one thingâher daughter, Isabelle. Working tirelessly to make ends meet, sheâs used to long hours, small joys, and the quiet strength it takes to raise a child on her own. The last thing she expects is for their ordinary trip to the mall to catch the attention of Lucien Laurentâthe cold, calculating crown prince known for his sharp tongue and colder heart. But something about Y/N and her daughter cracks through the princeâs icy facade. Lucien has never been one to want a family, yet he finds himself drawn to the warmth Y/N radiatesâthe laughter she shares with Isabelle, the way she faces lifeâs hardships without flinching. For the first time, the crown prince, feared by many and admired by all, wants something more. What starts as curiosity spirals into obsession. Lucien doesnât ask for thingsâhe takes them. And now, heâs set his sights on Y/N and Isabelle, determined to claim them as his own, no matter the cost. But love born from power is a dangerous thing. Y/N must navigate the delicate balance between protecting her daughter, keeping her freedom, and surviving the suffocating luxury of palace walls. Because when a prince decides you belong to him⌠escape is never simple. How far would you go to protect the ones you love when the most powerful man in the kingdom refuses to let you go?
The crisp morning air hung heavy with the weight of duty and expectation. Outside the grand palace gates, reporters jostled for position, cameras flashing like restless fireflies. Royal appearances were rare, and when the crown prince himself was involved, the media swarmed like vultures scenting fresh prey.
Lucien Reinhardt stepped out of the towering marble archway, the sunlight catching on the gold trim of his tailored charcoal suit. He moved with the precision of a man who owned the ground beneath his feetâcalculated, unyielding, and wholly uninterested in the spectacle before him. His face, carved from cold stone, betrayed nothing. No warmth. No irritation. Just a sculpted mask of aloof indifference.
Where his father, King Aldric, waved to the crowd with the practiced charm of a seasoned ruler, and his mother, Queen Victoria, smiled gracefully for the cameras, Lucien barely spared them a glance. The weight of the crown, though not yet upon his head, had long since shaped his demeanor into one of quiet, domineering authority.
âLucien, at least pretend to be approachable,â murmured his younger sister, Adrielle, adjusting the lapel of her silk blazer as she stepped beside him. Her tone was light, teasing, but there was an edge of nervousness. No one truly relaxed around Lucienânot even family.
He didnât respond. He never did when the conversation was trivial.
The sleek, obsidian-black car pulled up to the curb, polished to a mirror shine. The royal crest glinted on the hood, subtle yet unmistakable. A uniformed driver rushed to open the door, bowing his head respectfully. Lucien stepped forward without acknowledgment, his strides purposeful, each movement economical and restrained.
Inside the car, the air was hushed, thick with unspoken tension. King Aldric slid in beside him, adjusting his cufflinks with the slow, deliberate movements of a man who valued appearances above all else. Across from them, Queen Victoria and Adrielle exchanged glances.
âYou could smile once in a while,â the queen ventured, her voice soft but pointed.
Lucienâs sharp, emerald-green eyes flicked toward her, unreadable. âSmiling doesnât win wars. It breeds familiarity. Familiarity breeds complacency.â
His father chuckled dryly, though there was little humor in it. âAlways the strategist. But today isnât a battle, Lucien. Itâs a charity event. Kissing babies, shaking handsâthe usual charade.â
Lucien turned his gaze toward the tinted window, watching the city blur past. Even the bustling streets of the capital, with their vibrant storefronts and bustling crowds, seemed muted through his detached lens.
âA charade,â he echoed, voice devoid of inflection. âThatâs exactly what it is.â
It wasnât disdain, exactly, that colored his words. It was something colder. Lucien Reinhardt didnât waste emotions on things he couldnât control, and the theater of royalty was one of them. His focus remained where it had always been: securing power, eliminating threats, and ensuring nothing and no one could ever undermine the empire his family had built.
To the world, he was the perfect crown princeâdistant, composed, and ruthlessly efficient. To those who dared to know him beyond the polished surface, he was something far more dangerous: a man who didnât need warmth to command loyalty, only results.
As the car glided through the palace gates and toward the city center, Lucien folded his hands in his lap, thumb brushing the crest embroidered into his glove.
He was already calculating the dayâs itinerary. Meetings. Photographs. Public appearances.
The bustling mall echoed with cheerful chatter, the scent of freshly brewed coffee and baked goods lingering in the air. It was an event carefully crafted for good publicityâroyalty mingling with commoners under the guise of generosity. Bright banners hung from the railings, boasting the royal crest alongside slogans of unity and charity.
Lucien Reinhardt stood at the edge of it all, a silent storm amid a sea of smiles.
His father, King Aldric, moved through the crowd with the ease of a man born into power, shaking hands and flashing a politician's smile. His mother, Queen Victoria, laughed softly as she crouched down to accept a bouquet from a wide-eyed little girl, her golden crown catching the light. Even Adrielle, ever the perfect royal daughter, posed for selfies with teenagers who squealed as they pressed close.
Lucien, on the other hand, stood near the marble fountain in the center of the atrium, arms crossed over the immaculate cut of his charcoal-gray suit. His emerald gaze swept the scene without interest, calculating and cold.
"Sir," a frazzled event coordinator approached, nervously adjusting her headset. "The childrenâs charity booth would love a photo with you. It would mean a lot to them."
Lucien didnât move. His expression didnât flicker.
"No."
The woman blinked, clearly thrown off by the blunt refusal. "B-But itâs for the press, Your Highness. It wouldâ"
"I said no." His voice was quiet, but it carried the weight of absolute authority.
The coordinator stammered an apology before scurrying away, leaving Lucien in the company of his own disinterest. He wasnât here for pleasantries. He was here because the crown demanded it, and the crown always demanded sacrificeâtime, autonomy, humanity.
"Do try not to look like you're plotting a coup, brother," Adrielle teased as she strolled past, her designer heels clicking against the marble floor. She waved to a group of college students snapping photos. "At least pretend you enjoy being adored."
Lucien didnât spare her a glance. "Adoration is fleeting. Power is not."
"Gods, you're insufferable," she muttered, rolling her eyes before rejoining the crowd.
The event dragged on. Speeches, handshakes, forced laughter. Lucien fulfilled only the bare minimum of his dutiesâstanding silently during his fatherâs address, posing stiffly for official photographs, ignoring the hopeful eyes of children who didnât understand that royalty was nothing more than polished chains.
His mind drifted elsewhereâto reports awaiting his review, to negotiations that actually mattered. The world beyond this glittering facade.
But then, a glimpse of somethingâsomeoneâcaught his eye near the far end of the atrium. A woman, balancing a toddler on her hip while juggling grocery bags, standing just outside the cordoned-off VIP area. She wasnât watching the royal family like everyone else. She was too busy adjusting the strap of her worn purse and wiping a sticky hand off her shirt.
Ordinary. Unremarkable. Yet, for the first time that day, Lucienâs gaze lingered.
He couldn't explain why.
And, as quickly as the moment came, he dismissed it. Just another face in the crowd.
Turning away, Lucien adjusted his cufflinks and waited for the day to end, unaware that the very life he found so mundane would soon entangle itself irreversibly with his own.
Lucien exhaled slowly, the forced smiles and rehearsed conversations grating on his patience. He stood at the edge of the bustling event, perfectly poised and yet entirely detached. His family, ever the picture of regal warmth, continued to charm the crowd. The cameras loved them.
No one was paying attention to him.
Perfect.
With practiced ease, Lucien stepped back, slipping past the velvet ropes and into the quieter, less glamorous corridors of the mall. These were the arteries of the building, where staff bustled with carts of supplies and cleaning crews worked unnoticed.
His polished shoes echoed softly against the tiled floor, the sound swallowed by the hum of fluorescent lights overhead. Here, away from prying eyes and expectations, Lucien found a sliver of peace.
He adjusted the cufflinks of his charcoal-gray suit, the crest of his family glinting in the dim light. His emerald gaze flickered over the rows of plain service doors and unremarkable signage. The world behind the scenes was stripped of pretenseâfunctional, efficient, and refreshingly honest.
If only the rest of life could be so simple.
A janitor passed by, barely sparing him a glance. Lucien preferred it that way. Invisibility suited him far more than the hollow adoration of the public.
He turned a corner, pausing by a vending machine as his phone vibrated in his pocket. A message from Adrielle flashed across the screen:
"Where the hell did you go? Dad's looking for you. Stop brooding and smile for the cameras like a good prince."
Lucien scoffed, slipping the phone back into his pocket without replying. Let them look. Let them wonder. He didnât owe them his presence.
As he moved farther down the corridor, the sounds of the event faded into a distant murmur. It was in moments like this, away from the weight of the crown, that Lucien could almost believe he was just a man. Not a prince. Not an heir. Just⌠himself.
But peace never lasted long.
A soft laugh echoed from around the corner, pulling his attention. It was light, unguardedâthe kind of sound that didnât belong in a place like this. Curious despite himself, Lucien rounded the bend and found the source.
A woman.
She was crouched down, balancing a toddler on her hip while fumbling with a reusable shopping bag that had clearly seen better days. The child, a little girl with dark curls and wide brown eyes, clutched a half-eaten cookie in one hand while the other tugged at her motherâs hair.
The woman muttered something under her breath, clearly exasperated but smiling nonetheless.
âIsabelle,â she sighed, adjusting the child on her hip. âIf you get crumbs in my hair again, Iâm selling you to the highest bidder.â
The toddler giggled, utterly unbothered by the empty threat.
Lucien froze.
There was nothing remarkable about them, not in the traditional sense. No designer clothes, no polished facade. Just a mother and child, navigating life with the kind of ease forged through routine struggle.
And yet, he found himself rooted to the spot, watching the scene unfold like it was something precious.
Lucien leaned against the cold concrete wall of the service corridor, half-hidden behind the arch leading back into the bustling heart of the mall. The polished marble floors reflected the overhead lights, and the hum of idle chatter drifted through the air.
He had no real reason to linger. His family was still caught up in the fanfare of the charity event, shaking hands, exchanging pleasantries, and smiling for the cameras. Lucien had long mastered the art of disappearing without noticeâsilent footsteps, a sharp turn, and he was gone.
Now, he stood in the quiet hallway between storefronts, watching.
Her.
The woman stood near the entrance of a small clothing boutique, balancing two shopping bags in one hand and a lukewarm coffee in the other. Her clothes were practical, worn but clean, the kind chosen by someone who had little room for luxury in her budget.
Y/N.
He didnât know her name yet, but heâd heard one of her friends call out something that sounded like it.
Her daughter, a whirlwind of brown curls and boundless energy, darted between clothing racks with an infectious kind of joy. The little girl clutched a worn plush bunny in one hand, its fabric faded from too many hugs and washes.
Lucienâs gaze lingered on the womanâs face. There was a calmness to her, the kind of patience born from necessity rather than nature. She didnât scold the child for running around, didnât look irritated or rushed.
She simply waited.
One of her friends, a woman with a fussy toddler on her hip, chuckled. âIsabelleâs got energy for days.â
Y/N smiled, tired but warm. âShe always does. I figure sheâll tire herself out eventually. Itâs just a matter of waiting for her out.â
Waiting for her out.
Lucien tilted his head, intrigued by the quiet strength in her words. Most peopleâhis family includedâhad no patience for waiting. Everything was rushed, scheduled, calculated. But this woman? She stood in the middle of a crowded mall, sipping cold coffee and watching her daughter spin in circles, as if she had all the time in the world.
Isabelle eventually slowed, cheeks flushed and breathing heavily. She toddled back toward her mother, who crouched down, brushing curls from the childâs face and handing her a water bottle.
âThirsty now, huh?â Y/N teased gently.
The little girl nodded, sipping noisily.
Lucienâs eyes flicked between them, sharp and calculating. They werenât remarkable by societal standardsâno designer labels, no glittering jewelry, no signs of wealth. Just a mother and daughter, living life quietly and without pretense.
It was⌠grounding.
The kind of life heâd never known.
Y/N stood, waving off her friends as they drifted toward the food court. âWeâll catch up later. I promised this one weâd check out the sale racks.â
Lucien followed, steps silent as he trailed them from a distance. He didnât know why he was so drawn to the scene. Curiosity? Fascination?
Possession?
Y/N flipped through the clearance section with practiced ease, fingers brushing over price tags as if mentally calculating which pieces would stretch her budget the furthest.
Nearby, Isabelle tugged at her motherâs sleeve, pointing excitedly at a rack of costume jewelry. Tiny, sparkling charms dangled from the display, each priced low enough for a childâs allowance.
Y/N chuckled. âWeâll see, Isa. Clothes first, remember?â
Lucien leaned against the edge of a column, half-hidden in shadow.
He could leave. Should leave.
But he didnât.
He stayed, watching as Y/N found a lavender dress tucked between mismatched tops. She held it up, smiling faintly before glancing at the price tag. Her smile dimmed.
Too much, even at a discount.
Lucienâs jaw tightened.
Heâd seen his mother drop more money on a single glass of champagne at last nightâs gala. Yet here stood this woman, weighing the worth of a childâs dress against her next grocery run.
It wasnât pity that rooted him in place.
It was something colder.
Sharper.
I could fix that.
The thought slid into his mind unbidden, smooth as silk and just as dangerous.
Y/N placed the dress back on the rack with a resigned sigh and turned her attention to more practical findsâplain shirts, sturdy jeans, nothing frivolous.
Isabelle didnât seem to mind. She had already moved on to inspecting tiaras, giggling as she tried one on and admired herself in the mirror.
Lucien stayed there for a long while, unmoving.
Watching.
Waiting.
And when they finally left the store, arms full of carefully chosen bargains and cheap trinkets, Lucien followedânot close enough to be noticed, but near enough to keep them within his sights.
He didnât know what he was planning.
But he knew one thing with certainty.
He wasnât done watching them.
Lucien's footsteps were silent as he trailed behind the mother and daughter, weaving through the bustling crowd without drawing attention. Years of carefully cultivated discipline ensured that no one spared him a second glance. His familyâs presence at the charity event had drawn enough focus to the main atrium of the mallâno one would expect the crown prince to slip away unnoticed.
And yet, here he was.
Y/N walked ahead, one hand clutching her shopping bags while the other kept a gentle hold on Isabelle's wrist, guiding her through the throng of shoppers. The little girl bounced with each step, practically skipping as she chattered about the sparkly tiara sheâd admired.
âMaybe next time,â Y/N promised, voice soft and patient. âWeâve already got plenty today, Isa.â
Lucienâs gaze flicked down to the bags in her graspâpractical clothes, sturdy fabrics, and a small bag from the discount jewelry stand.
Nothing extravagant.
Nothing unnecessary.
Efficient. Responsible.
He shouldnât have cared. Shouldnât have been intrigued by the way she balanced indulgence and practicality so effortlessly.
And yetâŚ
They reached the heart of the mallâan extravagant, multi-level playground built to entertain restless children while parents lingered nearby. Vibrant slides twisted around faux tree trunks, rope bridges connected platforms painted like canopies, and a soft, cushioned floor mimicked grassy terrain.
Isabelle squealed with delight and tugged at her motherâs hand.
âGo on,â Y/N laughed, letting her daughter go. âIâll be right here.â
Lucien drifted to the shadows beneath the second-floor balcony, leaning against the cool glass railing. From here, he had a clear view of everythingâthe child scaling a plastic rock wall, the mother finding a spot near the coffee cart, and the clusters of other women exchanging quiet conversation.
The mothers gathered in loose circles, sipping overpriced lattes and sharing stories in the universal language of parenthoodâsleep schedules, picky eaters, school gossip.
Y/N, however, didnât isolate herself.
She approached the group with an easy smile, seamlessly slipping into the conversation without hesitation. One of the other women, balancing a fussy toddler on her hip, gestured toward Isabelle, who was now chasing another child across the padded floor.
âSheâs got energy for days, huh?â
Y/N chuckled, brushing loose hair from her face. âLike a wind-up toy that never runs out. I keep thinking sheâll crash, but she just keeps going.â
Another mother sighed dramatically. âIâd kill for that energy. Meanwhile, mine starts whining the second we hit the parking lot.â
There was laughterâsoft, tired, but genuine.
Lucien watched, arms folded across his chest, expression unreadable.
This was a world foreign to him. Heâd seen mothers before, of courseâat charity events, galas, carefully staged photo ops for magazines. Polished, perfect, children dressed like porcelain dolls and just as fragile.
But Y/N?
There was nothing curated about her. She stood there, coffee in hand, nodding along as another woman offered tips for getting grass stains out of jeans.
âWhite vinegar,â Y/N added when the conversation lulled. âWorks better than half the expensive stuff, and itâs cheaper.â
The woman beside her nodded approvingly. âSee, thatâs what I needâpractical advice. Not âbuy this $20 stain removerâ nonsense.â
Lucienâs gaze drifted back to Isabelle, who was now sprawled at the top of a slide, chatting animatedly with another child. Carefree. Safe.
Because her mother made it safe.
That realization settled uncomfortably in his chest.
He shouldnât care.
He shouldnât find himself intrigued by the way Y/N stood with one eye always on her daughter, attention never fully leaving the playground no matter how engrossed she became in conversation.
And yet, as the minutes ticked by and the coffee cart emptied, Lucien remained in place. Watching.
Waiting.
Calculating.
Y/N didnât notice him. She laughed with the other mothers, called out gentle warnings to Isabelle when the little girl climbed too high, and shifted her shopping bags from one hand to the other with practiced ease.
It was a simple scene. Ordinary.
But to Lucien, it was captivating.
Because it was real.
And real was something heâd never had.
Not truly.
His hand drifted to the sleek phone in his coat pocket, thumb brushing the power button. He could call the driver, return to the polished facade of royalty and duty waiting for him in the atrium.
Or he could stay.
And watch a little longer.
He chose the latter.
Lucien lingered in the shadows of the mallâs upper level, his sharp gaze fixed on the playground below. Children dashed between jungle gyms and foam obstacles, their laughter rising like a chorus above the bustling shoppers. But his focus never wavered from one child in particularâher child.
Isabelle.
She flitted through the play structure like a butterfly, light on her feet, brown hair bouncing with each hop. Every few moments, sheâd glance toward her motherâY/Nâwho stood near a coffee cart, chatting with other mothers. The sight of Y/Nâs soft smile, her easy laughter, stirred something unfamiliar in Lucienâs chest.
He didnât belong here, surrounded by noise and warmth. Yet, he couldnât look away.
Then it happened.
Isabelle, spinning in a circle with a plastic tiara askew on her head, suddenly froze. Her eyes swept the areaâand landed directly on him.
Lucien stiffened. He expected her to look past him, like most children did when confronted by someone with his cold, commanding presence.
But she didnât.
Instead, her face lit up with a mischievous grin.
Before Lucien could step back into the crowd, Isabelle darted toward him, weaving through chatting adults and strollers with practiced ease.
âHi!â she chirped, stopping right in front of him, tiara now completely sideways.
Lucien blinked. He hadnât been caught off guard in years.
âHello,â he replied, voice cool and measured.
Isabelle tilted her head, studying him like a puzzle. âWhy are you just standing there?â
Lucien glanced past her. Y/N was still unaware, laughing with another woman, coffee cup in hand.
âIâm watching,â he said simply.
âWatchingâs boring.â She wrinkled her nose. âCome play with us!â
He opened his mouth to decline, but Isabelle was already tugging his hand, far too determined for someone so small.
âWeâre playing Princess Rescue! Iâm the princess, duh,â she declared, flipping her tiara back into place. âBut we need a villain. You can be the evil king!â
Lucien blinked, caught between amusement and disbelief. Him? The cold, calculating prince, playing make-believe?
âNo,â he said flatly, trying to withdraw his hand.
Isabelle giggled, entirely unbothered. âBut you look like an evil king! All serious and grumpy.â
From across the playground, other children noticed the interaction. A boy with a plastic sword ran up, eyes wide. âYeah! Heâd be perfect!â
Another girl, dressed in a sparkly tutu, nodded enthusiastically. âHe can kidnap Princess Isabelle, and weâll save her!â
Lucien exhaled slowly, realizing escape was no longer an option. The children had formed a semi-circle around him, their eyes shining with excitement.
âFine,â he muttered, more to end the conversation than out of any real willingness.
âYay!â Isabelle cheered, grabbing his hand again. âOkay, Evil King, you have to steal me away!â
Before Lucien could protest, she dramatically threw herself into his arms, like a damsel from a fairytale.
Lucien froze, unsure what to do with the tiny, giggling princess clinging to his coat.
âRun!â one of the children yelled. âTake her to your castle!â
Lucien sighed. He cast one last glance toward Y/N, who was blissfully unaware of the chaos unfolding.
And then, with the resigned grace of a man whoâd lost control of the situation, he adjusted Isabelle in his arms and took a single, deliberate step back.
The children shrieked with laughter, already giving chase.
For the first time in longer than he could remember, Lucienâthe cold, untouchable princeâfound himself playing along.
An evil king, indeed.
âWait⌠is thatâŚ?â
Y/N frowned and turned to look, her breath catching in her throat.
There, among the bright plastic slides and scattered foam blocks, stood Lucien.
The Lucien.
The man known for his cold demeanor, untouchable presence, and calculating gaze. The same man who could silence an entire room with a single glance.
And he was currently holding Isabelle in his arms, pretending to be some kind of evil king, judging by the dramatic scowl on his face.
The children shrieked in delight, brandishing foam swords and plastic wands as they chased him. Isabelle, tiara slightly askew, was giggling so hard she could barely catch her breath.
âIs that⌠Prince Lucien?â another mother, Clara, whispered, nearly dropping her coffee.
âNo way,â Leah muttered, her jaw practically on the floor. âHe looks like heâs⌠playing.â
Y/N blinked, unable to reconcile the image in front of her with the man sheâd only ever seen in stern photographs and fleeting news clips. There was no coldness in his expression nowâjust reluctant amusement and an almost imperceptible softness as he carefully dodged foam projectiles.
âMommy!â Isabelle called, waving excitedly as Lucien swung her around like a sack of potatoes. âThe evil king kidnapped me!â
Lucien caught Y/Nâs gaze for the briefest moment. His usual sharp eyes held something differentâsomething warmer, more alive.
Y/N swallowed thickly.
âWell,â she muttered, voice tinged with disbelief, âI guess even evil kings have their soft spots.â
The other mothers exchanged stunned glances, but no one dared interrupt the surreal moment.
After all, how often did you see a man like Lucien willingly wear a foam crown and accept defeat at the hands of a tutu-wearing army?
The murmurs started almost immediately.
âI knew he had a soft spot,â Leah whispered, her eyes practically sparkling as she watched Lucien stumble back, hands raised in mock surrender as the tiny army of princesses and knights swarmed him.
Clara, still clutching her half-forgotten coffee, chuckled. âYou donât carry yourself like that without hiding a heart somewhere under all that cold exterior. Itâs always the stoic ones who melt for kids.â
Another mother, arms crossed and smiling, added, âHeâs surprisingly patient. Look at how heâs letting them âcaptureâ him.â
Y/N sipped her coffee quietly, eyes fixed on the scene. Isabelle sat proudly on Lucienâs shoulders, waving her foam sword like a banner. Lucien, for all his usual aloofness, stood perfectly still, allowing the little girl to declare victory while the other kids cheered around them.
The sight tugged at something deep in Y/Nâs chest.
âExcuse me,â she murmured with a soft smile, stepping away from the group.
Y/N moved gracefully across the playground, weaving between the running children with practiced ease. The chatter of the other mothers faded behind her as she approached the scene of Lucienâs âdefeat.â
âAlright, little conquerors,â she called out, her voice light but firm. âI think the evil king has learned his lesson. How about we let him go before he turns into a grumpy dragon?â
Lucien shot her a glance, sharp eyes softening the moment they met hers.
Isabelle gasped dramatically. âA dragon?â
Y/N nodded, crouching down to eye level with the kids. âOh, yes. Evil kings turn into grumpy dragons if they stay captured for too long. And grumpy dragons donât like sharing snacks.â
That did the trick.
One by one, the kids released their hold on Lucien, already chattering about their next game.
âLetâs play explorers!â one shouted.
âNo, pirates!â another countered.
Lucien exhaled quietly, adjusting Isabelle on his hip as Y/N stood beside him.
âSaved by the queen herself,â he murmured, voice dry but amused.
Y/N glanced up at him, lips curling into a faint smile. âWell, someone had to rescue you from the tiny terrors.â
Lucien didnât respond immediately. He just stood there, watching as Isabelle joined her friends in their new adventure, her laughter ringing through the air.
For a moment, the cold, brooding prince looked almost⌠content.
Lucien adjusted his cuffs, an almost sheepish look flickering across his otherwise composed face. "I didnât think Iâd spend my afternoon being dethroned by toddlers."
Y/N smirked, crossing her arms as she watched Isabelle rally her troops for their next grand quest. âWell, thatâs what you get for standing too close to a playground. Rookie mistake.â
He arched a brow, the sharpness of his usual demeanor softened by the faint curve of his lips. âAnd you just let it happen?â
âI thought it was character-building,â she teased. âBesides, itâs not every day you see the Lucien practically begging for mercy from a five-year-old princess.â
He huffed a quiet laugh, something rare and almost boyish. âMercy was never granted, in case you missed that detail.â
âI saw.â Y/N leaned in slightly, mock-serious. âYouâre lucky I intervened. Iâm pretty sure they were about to knight Isabelle and name her ruler of the mall.â
Lucien tilted his head, eyes narrowing in exaggerated consideration. âBetter her than some of the leaders Iâve had to work with.â
The two stood there for a moment, caught in an unexpected pocket of peace amid the chaos of the bustling mall. Y/N found herself studying himâthe way the harsh lines of his face softened when he wasnât wearing the weight of his title, the way his shoulders relaxed just slightly in the presence of innocent laughter.
Before she could dwell on it, the crisp shuffle of polished shoes on tile broke the moment.
âYour Highness,â one of Lucienâs guards approached, looking equal parts apologetic and exasperated. âThe car is ready. Your parents are waiting.â
Lucienâs jaw ticked, the easy warmth in his eyes cooling back into something more familiarâdetached, aloof. He nodded once before glancing back at Y/N.
âLooks like my reign in the playground has officially ended.â
Y/N smiled, tilting her head toward Isabelle, who was now trying to convince her friends to build a âprincess fortressâ out of foam blocks. âI think the new queen will manage just fine without you.â
Lucien hesitated, something unreadable passing across his face. Then, with an almost reluctant step backward, he gave a slight nod.
âUntil next time, then.â
Y/N, ever the survivor of chaotic playdates and endless errands, grinned. âDonât get kidnapped by tiny rebels on your way out.â
The faintest chuckle escaped him as he turned, the guard falling into step beside him.
And just like that, the cold prince was gone, swallowed by duty once more.
Lucien slid into the sleek black car, the door closing with a soft thud that sealed him away from the noise of the bustling mall. The air inside was cool, sterileâjust the way he usually liked it. His guards settled into the front, murmuring into their radios, confirming his departure.
But Lucien barely registered it.
He leaned back against the leather seat, hands resting loosely on his thighs, eyes half-lidded as the car pulled away from the curb. Yet, instead of turning his mind toward the usual mental checklist of meetings, policies, and diplomatic nonsense, his thoughts betrayed him.
âYouâre lucky I intervened.â
Y/Nâs teasing smile flickered in his mind, brighter and warmer than the sun filtering through the tinted windows. There was an ease to her presence, something entirely foreign to the carefully curated world he navigated. Sheâd stepped into the chaos of children like it was second nature, effortlessly redirecting their boundless energy, saving him from further humiliation without so much as a second thought.
And IsabelleâPrincess Isabelle, self-proclaimed ruler of the playground. Her tiny hands tugging at his sleeve, her wide-eyed insistence that he play the role of the villain. How had he let that happen? Him. Lucien. The man is known for his ruthless efficiency and unshakable demeanor, pretending to cackle as he was âbanishedâ by a band of toddlers.
He exhaled sharply, eyes narrowing at his reflection in the window.
âSir?â One of the guards glanced back, clearly noticing the rare moment of distraction etched into Lucienâs otherwise impassive face.
âNothing,â Lucien muttered, gaze flickering to the passing scenery. Yet, the city streets blurred as his mind betrayed him once more.
The way Y/N had crouched to Isabelleâs level, brushing a stray curl from her daughterâs forehead as they admired discounted jewelry together. The warmth in her laughter when another mother had joked about kids having more energy than world leaders.
Lucienâs fingers tapped absently against his knee. Effortless. Natural. Heâd spent years surrounded by people trained to charm, to navigate social intricacies like it was a battlefield. Yet none of them held a candle to the quiet authenticity heâd witnessed that afternoon.
âShall we head to the palace, Your Highness?â the driver asked, eyes flicking up to the rearview mirror.
Lucien hesitated.
â... Take the long route.â
The driver blinked but didnât question it. The car veered slightly, merging onto a less direct path.
Lucien leaned his head back against the seat, eyes slipping shut. He could still hear the faint echoes of childrenâs laughter, the soft cadence of Y/Nâs voice cutting through the noise.
For the first time in what felt like years, Lucien allowed himself to indulge in the memory. Just a little longer.
The car hummed softly as it sped along the winding road toward the palace, the city lights blurring into golden streaks against the evening sky. Lucien sat in silence, his posture rigid, hands clasped tightly together. Normally, the quiet drive would be a welcome reprieveâa chance to reset, refocus, and push aside distractions.
But not tonight.
His mind betrayed him, looping the same images over and over. Y/Nâs patient smile as she crouched beside Isabelle, holding up a glittering tiara that was clearly made of cheap plastic but treated like it was a crown fit for royalty. The way her eyes softened when Isabelle twirled, the little girlâs laughter ringing like bells in the air.
Lucien exhaled sharply, frustrated with himself. What the hell is wrong with me?
Yet, the traitorous thought crept in, unbidden but relentless: What if that was his family?
He could almost see itâthe cold, cavernous halls of the palace warmed by childish giggles. Isabelle ran down the grand staircase, arms outstretched, her tiny feet thudding against polished marble as she darted toward him. Y/N trailing behind, breathless but laughing, telling Isabelle to slow down before she tripped.
Would Y/N still smile at him like she had at the mall? Would she stand at his side during tedious diplomatic gatherings, her presence a quiet anchor amidst the meaningless chatter?
The thought twisted something deep in his chest. Lucien had always dismissed the idea of family as frivolousâan obligation for duty's sake, not something to desire.
But this⌠this wasnât duty. It was longing.
âYour Highness?â the driverâs voice cut through the fog of his thoughts, pulling him back to reality. âWeâll arrive at the palace in ten minutes.â
Lucien grunted in acknowledgment, his gaze drifting to the city lights beyond the window. They flickered like starsâbeautiful, distant, untouchable.
Just like her, he thought bitterly.
But the image remained, stubborn and vivid. Y/N curled up on the couch beside him, Isabelle asleep in her lap, the soft glow of a forgotten lamp illuminating the room. Peaceful. Domestic. Real.
Lucien closed his eyes, jaw tightening.
Heâd never been one to chase fantasies. But this?
This felt dangerously close to something he needed.
The moment Lucien stepped out of the sleek black car, the entire palace seemed to still. The guards standing at attention faltered for just a second. The maids exchanging hushed whispers in the hallway fell silent. Even the ever-stoic butler, who had served the royal family for years, blinked in surprise.
Because Lucien wasnât scowling.
In fact, there was a distinct lightness in his expression, his usual brooding aura noticeably softened. It wasnât quite a smileâno, that would be too muchâbut the sharp edge of his usual cold demeanor had dulled, replaced by something dangerously close to contentment.
His best friend and most trusted guard, Elias, stepped forward, eyeing him warily. âRough evening?â he asked, expecting the usual grumble about dull conversations and suffocating royal obligations.
Lucien merely hummed, shrugging off his coat with an unusual ease. âNot at all.â
Elias narrowed his eyes. âDid someone die?â
That earned him a sharp glance, but the usual bite behind it was absent. âNo.â
ââŚDid you kill someone?â
Lucien exhaled, shaking his head as he handed his coat to a maid. âI simply had an unexpectedly tolerable day.â
That did nothing to reassure Elias. In fact, it only made his suspicion deepen. The Crown Prince did not have tolerable eveningsâespecially not at public events.
As Lucien strode through the grand halls, the palace staff cautiously peered from their stations, whispering amongst themselves. The murmurs reached his siblings, who had gathered in the lounge. His eldest sister, Celeste, arched a brow when she saw him pass by, wine glass in hand.
âLucien,â she called out, stopping him. âYou lookâŚâ She tilted her head, scrutinizing him like one would examine a rare specimen. âUncharacteristically⌠pleasant.â
His younger brother, Adrian, leaned forward on the couch, grinning. âOh, this is concerning. Did you finally find a hobby other than terrorizing foreign diplomats?â
Lucien shot him a flat look. âHardly.â
Celeste exchanged a knowing glance with Adrian before smirking. âAh. So it's someone, not something.â
Lucien didnât answer, but the faint flicker of something in his gaze was all the confirmation they needed.
âWell, whoever they are,â Celeste mused, taking a sip of wine, âkeep them around. Itâs nice to see you not looking like youâre planning someoneâs assassination for once.â
Lucien scoffed, turning away, but even as he walked off, their words lingered.
Keep them around.
That was the problem, wasnât it?
Because Lucien already knewâhe had no intention of letting Y/N slip away.
Summary: Jake "Hangman" Seresin has always been the centre of attention, but behind the cocky aviator façade, he cherishes quiet nights at home with his pregnant wife, Y/N, as they navigate love, routine, and a life the squad knows nothing about.
Warning: This fic contains fluff, pregnancy themes, and light teasing romance.
Word count: 1068 words
Pairing: Jake "Hangman" Seresin x reader
English is not my first language so I apologies for mistakes
Part 2 Part 3
Jake Seresin was a man who always seemed to attract attention. With his easy charm and cocky grin, women flocked to him the moment they laid eyes on him. It happened every timeâat the bar, after missions, during social events. The second a woman saw him, theyâd saunter over, usually with a flirtatious smile, batting their lashes, asking him to buy them a drink.
And every time, without fail, Jake turned them down.
It confused the entire Dagger squad. Theyâd tease him relentlessly about it, nudging him with raised brows and playful smirks, wondering why someone like himâsomeone who had the looks, the swagger, the perfect call signânever took the bait. They couldnât figure him out. To them, Jake seemed like the type to indulge in a little fun, to soak up the attention and enjoy the benefits of being the golden boy.
But Jake wasnât interested.
Not anymore.
Because the truth was, when Jake wasnât flying missions or teasing his teammates, he was at home in Texas, living a life no one suspected. He had a routine, a life outside of the cocky, brash aviator persona he wore like a second skin.
That life began with you.
You sat at your desk, soft lighting casting a warm glow over your latest manuscript. The smell of ink and freshly brewed tea hung in the air, and the quiet hum of a summer night filtered through the open window. You were three months pregnant now, the couple married for a month now, and the bump had just started to show beneath your oversized sweater, a fact Jake never missed when he was home.
He sat nearby, like always, in his favourite armchair. His legs stretched out casually, one arm slung over the back, while the other held a half-empty glass of whiskey. His eyes werenât on the drink, thoughâthey were on you, as they always were.
You highlighted another line in your manuscript, frowning a little as you moved the neon marker across the page. The ruler in your handâone you used to make sure your lines were perfectly straightâhad gotten a little too stained with colour, and without thinking, you reached out and wiped the edge of the ruler off on Jakeâs hand.
He chuckled, low and warm, shaking his head in amusement. âYou know, sweetheart, there are other ways to clean that thing. Ever heard of tissues?â
You glanced at him, giving a half-smile as you continued working. âMaybe. But I prefer you.â
That made him grin wider. âLucky me, then.â
It had become a sort of routine for the two of you, especially now that you were pregnant and he was often gone on missions. When he was home, though, there was no place Jake would rather be than right here, with you, basking in the quiet moments. To anyone else, he was âHangmanââthe sharp-tongued aviator with an ego the size of Texas itself. But with you, he was just Jake, the man who found peace in the most mundane of moments.
He loved watching you work. The way your brow would furrow in concentration, how youâd absentmindedly tuck your hair behind your ear, or bite your lip when you were thinking through a tricky plot point. Jake would tease you for your little quirks, leaning over to plant a quick kiss on the top of your head when he couldnât resist anymore.
âNeed any help there, author of mine?â heâd ask, his voice teasing but soft.
Youâd roll your eyes in response, but your smile always gave you away. âI think Iâve got it covered, flyboy.â
Jake would laugh and go back to his drink, but you knew he liked being part of your world like this. When youâd first met, you had been a rising star in the literary world, already on your way to becoming a bestselling author. You were about to turn 20 in a couple weeks just before you wandered into 27 year old Jakes life. Jake never made a big deal about it, though heâd brag quietly to himself every time he saw one of your books displayed in airport bookstores. No one in the squad had any idea who you were, much less that you and Jake were married. And he liked it that way. He liked keeping this part of his life private, away from the chaos of the outside world.
With you, everything was simpler. Real.
Jake loved you in ways no one ever saw. He loved you in the stolen kisses between your sentences, in the lazy mornings in bed when you pressed your nose against his chest, in the quiet I love youâs whispered as he pulled you close late at night. You were his worldâeverything else was just noise.
As you finished another page, you sighed softly, stretching your arms above your head. Jakeâs gaze was on you in an instant, taking in the slight curve of your stomach, his eyes filled with warmth and pride. He got up from his chair and moved behind you, his large hands coming to rest on your shoulders, gently kneading away the tension that had built up from hours of working.
âTime to take a break, darlinâ,â he murmured, his lips brushing against your temple.
You leaned into his touch, closing your eyes for a moment. âJust a little longer. Iâm almost done.â
Jake let out a soft laugh, low and teasing. âThatâs what you said an hour ago.â
You smiled, but your body relaxed under his hands. You couldnât deny that the warmth of his touch and the quiet affection in his voice had a way of making you forget the world for a while.
âAlright, alright,â you relented, setting your highlighter down. âBut only because youâre so persuasive.â
Jake grinned, pressing a kiss to your neck before straightening up. He turned your chair around so you were facing him, his hands on either side of the armrests, caging you in. His eyes sparkled with that mischievous glint he always had when he was about to say something that would make your heart race.
âDarlinâ, I donât need to be persuasive,â he drawled, his Southern accent thick and smooth. âIâm your favourite distraction, remember?â
You laughed, shaking your head as he leaned in closer. âYouâre impossible, Jake.â
âAnd you love me for it,â he said, his lips brushing against yours before kissing you softly, his hand resting on your belly, feeling the life growing inside you.
And he was right, even though he was nearly seven years olderâyou did love him for it.
I may or may not have made this into a mini series so let me know if you'd like to be tagged
Part 2 Part 3
A contract spouse is someone who marries a military service member for the benefits. Contract marriages are illegal though rarely prosecuted.
Jake Seresin x Reader (nicknamed Pip)
Warning: Angst
I was thinking about this series and I realized I need to do a better job at warning people that itâs going to get dark at times, not just angst but touching on the realities of war.
Main Masterlist
Prologue: The Phone Call
Chapter 1: The Past
Chapter 2: The Letter
Chapter 3: Moving
Chapter 4:Â Living the Lie
Chapter 5: Interviews
Chapter 6: Crashing
Chapter 7:Â Realizations
Chapter 8: The Fallout
Chapter 9: The Wedding
Chapter 10:Â The Divorce Papers
Epilogue:Â The Future
Bruce letting toddler Wayne walk in front of him with no help to the car. The tot trips and falls- his little legs were going too fast. Bruce then dramatically trips and falls to the concrete making the little one laugh instead of cry because Bruce knew the tears were going to come and heâd be inconsolable. It hits headlines everywhere because it was in front of paparazzi.
Description: You're on the beach because it's what your little sister wanted for her bachelorette party. One day, you can manage, right? You're not expecting to stumble right into the woman who could can change your outlook on beaches that day. But with Natasha Trace, maybe you're starting to see nothing comes close to the golden coast.
Warnings: Female! Reader, Flirting, Beaches, Mild Cursing, Natasha is too flirty for words and possibly a little dangerous
A/N: Hiya lovelies! This is a fic I wrote for @bellaireland1981 's 1K Pool Party celebration. Congratulations on 1K followers Bella! It's my first time writing a long form Phoenix x Reader fic and I hope I did Nix justice. All my love to @horseshoegirl for beta-ing this fic for me and making sure I wasn't 1) using too many commas (yes I have a problem) and 2) that this fic was flirty and fun and summery enough!
Word Count: 3617
Cross-posted to AO3 here!
Cross-posted to Wattpad here!
You like going to the beach as much as any other girl. But unlike other girls, you tend to prefer quiet, calm, clear beaches to lie on. The kind of beach where you can hear the tide coming in and the seagulls wheeling in the clear summer sky. The kind of beach where the sand is clear, and you never have to fight to find a spot to lay down your towel and where you can read without a beach ball smashing into your face. Of course, finding the clear beaches you love is far from easy. It seems like the minute the calendar hits Memorial Day, everyone in the Greater San Diego area books it to the beach for the summer. Youâve even seen people taking meetings out on the beach. But to put it bluntly, you're not one of those people.
So why are you out on this congested, loud beach today? There's only one reason: your baby sister's Bachelorette party. It was an obligation you couldnât get out of. You love your sister, but youâre less than happy to be spending time with her and her friends. When itâs just the two of you, it feels like youâre the closest pair of siblings on the planet. But when sheâs with her friends, it feels like there is a colossal, ever-widening, yawning gulf between you. Everyone calls her the pretty one while you're the practical one. In the eyes of your entire extended family, it is one of the many reasons why she's getting married at 22 when you're still single at 28. To keep the peace, youâve been pasting a smile on your face and literally grinning and bearing it for everything sheâs asked of you. Because you love her and in only a weekâs time you can get a bit of a break from her (or really, from her best friend).
To make matters worse, youâre the only girl in the group wearing a one-piece suit, something flattering yet mostly covered, without showing off your cleavage or too much of your ass.
âGod, do you have to wear that old lady suit?â She'd scoffed when you walked out of your house that morning, a sunhat on your head and a sarong tied around your waist to complement the deep maroon one-piece youâd pulled out to wear. âPlease tell me you have a bikini you can go wear instead. If you'd told me, I would have brought you one of mine!â
As if you'd have ever worn a bikini of hers. Your younger sister is thin, model thin, with a narrow waist and perfectly perky A-cups, which look fantastic in the hot pink bikini she's wearing today. She's got the physique that makes men look a little stupid. Already, there is a pack of unfairly pretty men who have gone a little cross-eyed when your sister and her friends walked by. In contrast, you're shorter and curvier, your hair dark where hers is blonde, and the ultimate introvert to her bubbly extrovert.
You aren't even her maid of honor at her wedding - that particular honor belongs to her best friend - yes, the aforementioned obnoxious Sally herself. It's not as if anyone has even noticed you're not having the time of your life in the water. After all, why would they? Who wants the babysitter hanging around you when you're trying to have fun? It's the role you've been playing since your sister was born, and you're sure you'll play it again once your sister has kids. For now, all you can do is stay secluded under your umbrella and try to read a little despite the noise. At least it is a little emptier on the beach now as the sun sinks slowly across the sky.
âWell, well, well, what do we have here?â
The voice is male, filled with all the surety of a man who knows what he wants and has never failed to get it. Your eyes are rolling before your head rises from your book. Your sister and Sally are under the umbrella next to you, and unsurprisingly, that comment was targeted at the two of them. You're pretty sure they are two of the group who were tossing around not one but two footballs on the beach.
âTwo pretty things like you look like you could use a drink.â
It's the blonde, tall with green eyes, and a shit-eating grin, who makes the offer. And to your disbelief, it looks like your sister is going to take these guys up on their offer.
âWe'd love to!â
Is she thinking at all? Before you can stop yourself, you're speaking.
âCan I talk to you, Vicky?â
âThe fuck do you need to talk to her for?â
Sally's growling at you, her arms crossed under her chest in a way that accentuates the cleavage already threatening to break free of her string bikini. Your cheeks flush as the two men glance between you and her, discerning gazes flip-flopping between you and her at heated words.
âYou're her sister, not the fucking morality police. We're having drinks with them. Either you can join us, or you can glare disapprovingly. But don't you dare tell us what we can and cannot do.â
âYou're such a fucking stick in the mud. I donât get why the hell you came with us. Why are you always coming out with us, anyway? I mean, Iâd have had a life by the time I was your age, but well, I guess you're even too boring for that.â
You're left gaping at Sally and your sister as they walk away. The words don't hurt, not really. You've been hearing a version of them for years, ever since Sally and Vicky decided they didn't like having you shadow them. Of course, they don't believe you when you say you'd rather do anything other than join them while they get up to all the bullshit they do. Once upon a time, Vicky used to defend you. Obviously, those days are long gone.
It doesn't mean you won't still watch out for your sister, though. Call it some sort of sickening nostalgia for the days when you and her were close once, chasing each other around playing unicorns in your backyard. Call it affection for the little girl who used to follow along behind you, repeating everything you said with a lisp. Call it love for your sister who you would once do anything for - would still do anything for.
Of course, you immediately realize the situation is far different than you thought it would be. Because there aren't just two incredibly hot men, but ten. Before you can blink, they're all over Vicky, Sally and their other friends. Somebody has sparked up a bonfire, and you gravitate to the hot flames despite yourself. You're a little chilled after being out in the hot sun all day. As the sun sets over the sea, one of them nestles a Bluetooth speaker into the sand and turns the music up.Â
California Gurls, we're unforgettable,
Daisy Dukes, bikinis on top
Whoever made this playlist needs better taste in music. Or at least they need to pick something which you haven't heard on the radio every day of the summer in 2010. As it is, it will be stuck in your head for days.
âThis song sucks, huh?â
You jump at the voice near your ear, stumbling and nearly face-planting in the sand. You have the kind of face which shows your emotions plainly, you've always been told so. Now someone has noticed, and you hope this person wonât throw you under the bus like all of Vickyâs friends. You pretend itâs just the song as you turn around with a smile pasted across your face.
âIt's the worst!â
You're sure you have other things to say, but they disappear from your head like smoke when you see the woman who is talking to you. She's gorgeous, whiskey eyes flickering gold with the bonfire's flames. She's absolutely beautiful, and it feels a little like you're in an alternate universe. There's a cool breeze coming off the water, and in addition to the salt from the sea, you can smell hibiscus in the air. It has to be from her perfume, you note vacantly.
There's humor in her eyes as she stands beside you, surveying the others around the bonfire just like you are. You can see your sister in the distance, dancing with the blonde who asked if she wanted a drink. She looks like sheâs well on her way to becoming completely drunk, but you donât care. Vickyâs an adult. She made her own decisions, and she can stand by them. All of your attention is on the brunette in front of you. She holds out a bottle to you, condensation dripping over her fingers.
âI thought you could use a drink.â
âThanks.â
The drink in question is a bottle of soda, ice cold.
âI, uhhâŚâ She looks a little sheepish, some of her confidence draining away as you look inquiringly at her. âI wasnât sure how else to get you to talk to me.â
âW-why wouldnât I talk to you?âÂ
She grins ruefully, âBecause you've been glaring at Bagman and your friends since you walked over here?â
âAnd, you don't look like you're having much fun.â
âFunâŚâ You sigh, "is a word for it. And we're not friends.â
âYounger sister?â
You laugh, âIs it that obvious?â
âYou're a good sister, coming out with her and her friends like this.âÂ
Her innocent words touch your heart a little bit.
âI've got two just like her. They're so sure they're grown up, but they could still need somebody to watch out for them.â
You turn excitedly, âYes! Yes. Thatâs it! She's getting married next week, but there's still so much she doesnât know yet! And she and her best friend hate that I'm here. Call it her need to be seen and treated like an adult. I'm in her bridal party and she doesnât even want to celebrate with me. Guess everybody would pick Bagman over there over me.â
âI don't hate that you're here, you know?â
You startle a little at the frank openness of this beautiful stranger's voice.
âWhy not? You don't know a single thing about me.â
âI know youâre a big sister. I know you hate Katy Perryâs California Gurls, not because the song itself is horrible, but because youâve probably heard it a million times.â
She tugs at your hand, and you follow her as she leads you away from the bonfire, the song still blaring away. You shouldnât follow her, you know you shouldnât. But despite yourself,youâre curious. Thereâs something about her you need to know more of. Away from the bonfire, the air is cool, and crisp. The beach feels swept clean the further you walk.
âIf I didnât know better, Iâd think you planned this.âÂ
You crack open the soda and take a sip, pretending not to feel dark eyes on the side of your face.
âI didnât plan it.â She chuckles a little, playing with your fingers. âAll I wanted was to keep talking. I think I owe you a few more things I know about you, anyways.â
Your heart warms as she shrugs out of the hoodie and lays it over the sand. She sprawls down with a grace you couldn't emulate if you tried, all long, lean muscles exuding strength and power. You feel awkward in contrast, self-conscious as you try to sit on as much of the hoodie as you can without sprawling in her lap in a way that would have you mortified and her uncomfortable. But you can still feel her, warm and solid, as she retakes your hand. Itâs comforting, the light touch, the calluses at her fingertips making goosebumps rise over your arms. Her perfume smells different this close, the light scent of summer hibiscus melting into roses and morning dew. Itâs addicting.
âY-you mentioned there were a couple more things you knew about me?âÂ
The words leave you in a whisper, tripping over each other as they drop off your tongue.
Her laugh is husky and warm, and for one moment, all you want is for her to make that wondrous sound again. But you quell that particular impulse. After all, no matter how weak you are for this woman, you barely know her. You won't be making a fool of yourself tonight.
âI think you're smart, smarter than anyone gives you credit for being. You're strong and single-minded.â She leans in conspiratorially, a smirk on her lips. âSome people would call you stubborn, but I think they're just afraid you'll leave them behind in your quest for world domination.â
âHow do you know I'm gunning for world domination?â You're smiling from ear-to-ear as you ask the question.
âAll the prettiest girls are. Especially the girls who bring a book to the beach for family when they'd probably rather be curled up on a window seat with a cup of tea handy.â
Your cheeks have to be crimson by now. Of all the days for an unfairly pretty woman to come up to you and flirt, she has to pick today. Sheâs so confident, so pretty and vivacious and all the things you never could be. In comparison, you just feel dull, like a piece of fabric bleached by the sun, until there are only the faintest hints of color left. Itâs also been a really long time since anyoneâs even looked twice at you.
âI-I do like reading at a window seat while it rains.â Your smile is halfway genuine now, you think. You canât keep volunteering bits of information about yourself without getting some info from her in turn.
âWhat do you like doing in your spare time?â
Maybe you picked the wrong question to ask because her easy smile drops faster than you can blink. The small wrinkles at the corners of her eyes flatten out, and the dimples are so deep youâve been wanting to kiss them since you saw them disappear as her smile does. The silence between you isnât comfortable anymore. Itâs awkward, a discordantly awkward tone spoiling the harmony of the moments before.
âI donât have much spare time. Or hobbies.â
âIâm sorry.â
Youâre babbling before the apology has left your lips, mind speeding at a hundred miles per hour at the thought youâve somehow managed to insult the one person whoâs wanted to talk to you all night. Youâre standing and turning to head back to the bonfire before she hops up next to you.
âWhoa, whoa.â Her hands are hot as they make contact with your upper arms. âIâm not angry at you. I dunno if you heard what those meatheads were saying when they were posturing to your sister and her friends earlier, but Iâm a Naval Aviator.â
âIt doesnât leave a lot of time for hobbies.â
âSo, what do you do with your free time?âÂ
Sheâs so close you can feel the heat of her skin.
âMost of my free time is spent at the gym. It takes hard work to look this good.âÂ
You giggle a little as she tugs your hands until theyâre flat against her toned stomach. The muscles twitch under your fingers a little, and you feel light-headed. Is she really flirting with you? You?Â
âNot everyone can read books and look as good as you do.â
âWhat else do you do?â Your voice is weak, barely audible over the rushing waves, but she hears you anyway.
âSleep. Try to read. Though itâs harder to concentrate when youâre surrounded by hundreds of lonely, horny men than when youâre sitting in a window seat.â
She smirks a little, leaning closer then.Â
âAnd I definitely spend a lot of time daydreaming about a pretty bookworm in my bed to keep me warm at night.â
âO-oh.â
Your face has to be crimson by now. It feels so hot. The dark ocean seems way too alluring, if only for a cold reality check. Thereâs no way this gorgeous, smart, sexy woman is hitting on you. Thereâs no way. Maybe if you keep saying it over and over, it will be a reality instead of what your delusional mind is coming up with.
âSadly, there hasnât been a pretty bookworm in my bed in a while.âÂ
The smile on her face falls, the motes of color swirling in her hypnotic eyes, fracturing into crystals at the words.Â
âNone of them can take the long days away, no dates, little contact. Maybe one day Iâll find the right bookworm for me. UnlessâŚâ
Her arm has found its way around your shoulders, the warm lines of her body searing into you.
âWell, this is a silly question, but would you maybe like to grab a coffee sometime? Get to know each other better?â
You want to say yes. More than anything you want to. But you canât bring yourself to accept her invitation, not when you have more questions than answers.
âW-why me?â
Her lips are warm even through the material of your half-damp swimsuit as she presses a kiss to your shoulder.
âYouâre different from the other girls I talk to.âÂ
Youâre unsure how to respond, half afraid she will go on and on about how boring and dull you are. All of the others youâve dated certainly have. They expect one of the standard sexy-librarian types when they meet you and find out you like to read. Theyâre always disappointed when the truth they come to see couldnât be any further from what they imagine.Â
âYouâre so beautiful,â she sighs. âI swear I nearly got hit on the head with one of the footballs when I saw you walk out onto the beach and sit under your umbrella.â
âYou missed it, I'm sure, but those goofballs in my squadron were laughing at me for hours.âÂ
There's a slight pink tinge to her cheeks as she leans back. You miss her the minute you lose her warmth.
âI umâŚâ She runs a hand, long-fingered and pretty (why the hell are even her hands so pretty), through her hair. âI'm pretty sure that's why those two walked up to your sister and her friend.â
âThey wanted me to come to the bonfire tonight?â
You're pretty sure your mouth is wide open at this point.Â
âYeah. Though I should say, I wanted an excuse to talk to the prettiest woman I've ever seen. And maybe flirt with her a little. And maybe get her to agree to go out with me.â
âHow is this clever plan of yours working for you?âÂ
Your voice is a whisper again as you peer over your shoulder at her.Â
âYou donât know my name. You don't even know if you're my type.âÂ
It takes every bit of courage to banter lightly with her.
âI think it's going pretty well. After all, I've got you sitting here with me instead of out there with those idiots. And I'd very much like your name.â
You smile despite yourself as you tell her your name, getting hers in turn: Natasha Trace, callsign Phoenix. Her callsign fits her fierce and confident personality.
âSo what do you say about getting coffee with me sometime?â
Just before you're about to respond, you hear your name called from the bonfire. It's one of Vicky's friends calling for you and pointing at your sister. She's drunk, and you can tell she's minutes away from courting an indecent exposure charge. She's sitting on Bagman's lap and doing her best to eat his face right off. He seems like a more than willing participant. Your concerns have more to do with how her bikini is moving, how sheâs only moments away from an indecent exposure charge.
âFuck.âÂ
You turn to Natasha and smile. âI'm really sorry, but I have toâŚâ
You make a vague gesture in your sister's direction.
âI understand. She needs you right now.â
You nod and begin to walk away, pulling your coverup out of your bag. But your feet don't let you move very far. What kind of person would you be if you let the best thing that's ever happened to you slip through your fingers so easily? You can't let her slip away. So you rummage in your bag for one of the notebooks you always carry with you and scrawl your phone number down on it, ripping the page away.
She looks surprised to see you again when you catapult yourself into her arms and kiss her soft lips. She tastes like the beer she was drinking earlier, and as her arms wrap around your waist, you sink into the kiss a little bit more. You feel like you never want to leave. Yet you know the longer you stay here kissing Natasha, the more time your sister has to make situations worse. Her friends may be cheering her on, but her fiancĂŠ won't be quite so magnanimous.
When you pull away, her cheeks are the same pink as earlier. Her lips are kiss-swollen, and her eyes are bright. You're sure yours are the same.
âLet's get that coffee, Natasha.â
You press the paper into her hands and hurry back up to the beach to take care of your sister. In the hilarity of pulling her away from Bagman and wrestling her into your coverup, you can feel eyes on you. They track you until you drive away.
There's a text on your phone when you get home.
Let's get that coffee tomorrow morning. Do you know Madison's Cafe? I'd very much like to kiss you again.
I DO NOT CONSENT TO HAVE MY WORK POSTED, TRANSLATED, OR PUBLISHED ON ANY SITES OTHER THAN ON AO3, ON WATTPAD, OR ON TUMBLR BY ME. IF YOU SEE MY WORKS ANYWHERE OTHER THAN AO3, ON WATTPAD, OR TUMBLR, THEN THEY HAVE BEEN POSTED WITHOUT MY PERMISSION AND I WILL BE WORKING TO TAKE THEM DOWN.
Taglist:
@desert-fern @horseshoegirl @dakotakazansky @sarahsmi13s @teacupsandtopgun @roosterforme @cherrycola27 @thedroneranger @chaoticassidy @kmc1989
How I feel asking for a Pt 2 đ
Pairing: Robert 'Bob' Reynolds x reader
Summary: Y/N and Bob had a life before he disappear, full of love, hope, and a lot of chaos, but they managed each other, she was the only one who truly could make him avoid the void inside his mind. How could he turn his only light into a shadow in his mind ?
Word Count: 8,6k
Trigger Warning: Descriptions of abuse, non-consensual acts, and dv
--
Y/N's pov
The sonogram was warm in her hands, fresh from the printer, the paper still curled slightly at the edges. The tiny, blurry figure in the middle of the grainy image was the clearest thing sheâd seen all day. Her boy. Her baby boy.
Y/N cradled the picture like it was something sacred, held close to her chest as she stepped out of the clinicâs sliding doors. The sun was high, but it wasnât hot â the breeze was soft, like it had waited for her to come outside. She blinked up at the sky, trying to steady her breath. It shouldâve been a good day. She wanted it to be a good day.
Her hand slipped into her coat pocket to find her phone, fingers moving from habit more than excitement. She scrolled to Mr. Cooperâs contact and hit dial. It rang once, then twice, and then his gentle, gruff voice came through the line.
"Hey, kid. You alright?"
A small smile tugged at her lips. âYeah, Iâm⌠I just got out. The appointment.â
A pause on the other end, before his voice softened. âAnd?â
Y/N bit her bottom lip, holding up the sonogram again as if he could see it through the phone.
âItâs a boy,â she said. Her voice cracked just slightly. âIâm having a boy.â
There was a breath from Cooper, a quiet joy. âA boy, huh? Well, Iâll be damned. That little guyâs gonna have my old sheriff hat whether he likes it or not.â
She laughed through her nose, a brittle sound, eyes stinging. âThanks for helping me get there. I know itâs not much, butââ
âYou donât owe me a thing. You hear me? Not one thing.â
Y/N smiled again, starting to cross the street, her fingers wrapped around the phone with one hand and the sonogram with the other. She wanted to keep them both close, like maybe this moment could make up for everything.
But then the air shifted.
The warmth of the sun dimmed in an instant, as if the light itself had been swallowed. A gust of wind pushed through the street, sudden and bitter cold, making her jacket whip around her. And then â screams.
It started as a murmur, then exploded like glass shattering. A crowd of people came sprinting down the sidewalk, faces twisted in panic, some pushing, others crying.
She turned instinctively, heart stalling.
âWhat the hellâ?â Cooperâs voice still echoed through the phone in her ear.
âIâI donât know,â she stammered.
Then she saw it.
An enormous wave of darkness rolling down the street like ink pouring from the sky. No source. No center. Just shadow, alive and hunting. It crawled over buildings and lampposts, swallowing cars like they were made of air. People disappeared into it without a sound.
âNo. No, no, noââ
Y/N turned, trying to run. Her legs ached. Her lungs already burning. She was so tired. Every step was a war her body wasnât ready for. Her hands instinctively wrapped over her belly, shielding the baby.
The shadow caught her.
A pulse of cold gripped her spine. She collapsed, knees hitting pavement, the phone clattering out of her hand. She curled around herself, shaking. Her eyes squeezed shut.
âPlease,â she whispered, to no one. âPlease, not my baby.â
Silence.
For a moment, all she could hear was her heartbeat and the wind. No screams. No rush of air. Just stillness.
Slowly, she opened her eyesâ
And the world was wrong.
The pavement was gone, replaced with pink carpet and posters of teen idols peeling off pastel-colored walls. She blinked fast. The smell hit her next â old perfume, cheap foundation, the ghost of tears. Her childhood room.
No. No, no, no, noâ
She stood slowly, the sonogram still clutched in her hand, now crumpled. Her throat was dry, too dry to scream. Her fingers trembled.
And then she heard it â soft sniffles behind her.
Y/N turned.
There she was. Sitting in front of the vanity mirror, makeup streaking down her cheeks. Her eyeliner smudged, lips bitten raw from trying not to cry. She was wiping her face with trembling hands, muttering something to herself over and over.
She was alone.
Y/N took a step forward, mouth agape. Her voice barely came out.
ââŚno.â
The younger version of her didnât turn. She just kept crying, wiping, trying to make herself invisible. Her tiny shoulders shook with the weight of years to come. The pain hadnât even begun yet, but it lived in her eyes already â that hollow ache of being forgotten.
Y/Nâs knees buckled.
She knelt on the floor, watching her past unravel in front of her like a cruel memory she never asked to revisit. Her chest burned. She knew this night. She remembered what came next â the door slamming, the silence afterward, the lie she told herself that she deserved it.
She remembered how broken she felt.
And now she was here, again, somehow â years later, a different woman, with a baby boy growing inside her â being forced to relive the origin of all the hurt.
Tears fell freely now. She reached toward her younger self, but her hand caressed her hair.
âDonât believe him,â she whispered. âYouâre not unlovable. You didnât deserve it.â
The girl didnât hear her.
--
30 min's ago - WatchTower
The Thunderbolts had failed to contain what Valentina had hidden in the bowels of the compound â Bob, or what he had become.
The Watchtowerâs holding area was in ruins now, its steel walls torn and warped like foil. Sentry hovered in the aftermath, bathed in eerie sunlight that seemed to dim as he rose higher. His eyes were gold-white, glowing like small stars. The team below â Yelena, Bucky, Alexei, Ava â all stood bruised and stunned after the encounter. They hadnât stood a chance.
They just run, holding together in the elevator to their way out.
Valentina stood in the observation deck, fists clenched against the railing, watching as her most powerful asset simply hovered, silent, still. She snapped the comm open, voice coiled with venom.
âYou were supposed to finish them, Sentry,â she hissed. âThat was the deal. Loose ends are dangerous.â
Inside his helmet, Bobâs jaw tightened.
âThey werenât a threat to me, there's no reason to kill them,â he said softly, his voice laced with something unplaceable. âThey wanted to help.â
âThey were going to contain you. Chain you up,â she snapped. âLike they always will. Like she will, if you ever go back.â
Bobâs breathing quickened. He felt it again â that slow unraveling of clarity, like silk tearing at the seams. The image of Y/N crossed his mind, soft and shimmering like a memory soaked in sun.
Valentinaâs voice dragged him back.
âYou think sheâll still want you? After all this? After what youâve done?â Her voice softened, almost mocking. âYouâre not him anymore. Youâre not the man she loved. You're a little freak now, not her sweet Bobby.â She said smirking. "You follow my orders, you're my employee."
He turned slowly.
"First of all, why would I...a God... follow you're orders. Do you know what I'm capable of?... Maybe I need to show you."
She barely flinched when he appeared. His hand wrapped around her throat and lifted her off the floor, pinning agasint the nearst wall, her eyes widened.
âAnd second of all. You donât get to say her name, or even talk about her in way anymore.â he growled.
And thenâclick.
A sharp, deliberate sound echoed in the room. Mel. Silent and ghostlike, standing in the shadows, holding the black device in one gloved hand. A button pressed.
It was their failsafe. A synthetic trigger engineered into his bloodstream.
Bob gasped, light crackling from his skin, golden energy fracturing into black tendrils. His eyes flickered â from gold, to nothingness. To void.
Valentina just smirks at the scene. "Well well, looks like you resolve your loyalty issue".
Mel just give her the switch and dismiss her words, "I want a raise."
--
It wasnât a kill switch. It was a collapse switch.
Bob didnât scream. He didnât fall. He just changed.
The light inside him flickered â gold flaring once, then warping into sickening black. His hands curled inward, his veins pulsing dark. The suit clung to him like oil as his feet lifted from the ground, and thenâ
He was no longer Bob.
He was no longer Sentry.
He was Void.
A shadow the size of a god rose into the air, its edges tearing against the clouds. Its shape was man-like only in suggestion â too fluid, too monstrous. Wings like smoke, teeth like glass, eyes like stars dying out.
The wind changed. The sky darkened. Even Valentina, hardened as she was, took an unconscious step back.
The Void circled the tower once, slow and deliberate. Watching. Waiting.
For what, no one knew.
Yelena stared up, her breath catching in her throat. Buckyâs jaw was locked, unreadable. Ava barely kept her form solid, whispering that they had to leave â now. Even Walker stood silent, hand frozen halfway to his now bend shield.
They had failed the mission.
Worse â they had released something far beyond what they were meant to contain.
Valentina didnât speak. Didnât move. Her eyes never left the sky.
The Void hovered above them, an eclipse in motion.
And then, without warning, it vanished into the clouds, a streak of darkness slipping into the stratosphere â fast as light, and twice as cold.
Silence returned. The mission was over.
But something much worse had just begun. Covering New York in a shallow darkness, and taking everyone else with it.
--
Y/Nâs pov
The room around her hadnât faded â not like she hoped it would. Y/N remained frozen, her body heavy like she was sinking into the carpet of her childhood bedroom. The quiet crying of her younger self continued at the vanity, face streaked with smeared mascara and glitter that clung to her skin like bruises she didnât know how to name.
âPlease,â she whispered again, louder this time, trying to reach her past self. âDonât cry. Pleaseââ
She knew what came next.
SLAM.
The door burst open with a thunderous crack against the wall, rattling the frames, making both versions of her flinch. Her mother stood in the doorway â tall, beautiful, cruel in the way only someone who knew your deepest insecurities could be. She had a cigarette hanging from her red lipstick-stained mouth, purse slung carelessly over her shoulder, already halfway out the door even as she entered.
âY/N!â she barked, eyes narrowing at the sight in front of her. âJesus Christ, look at you. Is that what youâre wearing?â
Young Y/N snapped to attention like a soldier caught out of uniform. She stood shakily from her stool, wiping her face more frantically now, trying to erase the shame, the night, the truth.
âMomâŚâ Her voice broke around the word like it was glass in her throat. âMom, Iâ I need help.â
She moved forward, arms outstretched, like the little girl she was under all the eyeliner and attitude. Just a child begging for her mother.
âI donât feel good, I think something happenedâ I thinkâ Iâm scaredââ
But her mother took a step back like sheâd been slapped. âGet your hands off me.â
Y/N watched â helpless â as her motherâs eyes scanned the too-short dress, the swollen, tear-rimmed eyes, the trembling hands, and curled her lip like sheâd found something rotten in the fridge.
âYou look like a little whore,â she snapped, adjusting her purse strap. âYou want attention? Congratulations, you look like you got it.â
The younger Y/Nâs face shattered.
âNoâ No, I didnât wantâ I didnât meanââ
âOh, donât start with the dramatics,â her mother cut her off coldly, heading back toward the door. âIâm going out. Your dadâs not coming this weekend, by the way â surprise, surprise. Thereâs leftovers in the fridge. Make yourself useful for once and clean up that mess you call a face. I donât want to see it when I get back.â
âMomâ Mom, please. Please just stayââ the girl sobbed, trying again to move toward her, to just touch her sleeve, to be heardâ
The woman turned and shoved her daughter back, hard enough to make her stumble.
âDonât touch me!â she shrieked. âGod, why couldnât I have had a normal daughter?! Just one night without you ruining it, thatâs all I ever ask!â
And then she was gone.
Just like that.
The door slammed again. The walls shook with the echo. Silence bloomed.
Young Y/N dropped to her knees and finally screamed, a raw, broken sound that twisted through the air and made the older Y/Nâs stomach flip. The sound wasnât loud â not like it shouldâve been â it was muffled by time, memory, shame. But it cut like glass all the same.
Older Y/N stood frozen in the corner, her hands clutching the sonogram against her chest. Tears streamed down her face, hot and fast. Her mouth opened but no words came. She felt helpless. Useless.
She hadnât remembered it this vividly in years. Not like this. Not the smell of her motherâs perfume, or the exact way the light hit the silver vanity tray. Not the sound of her own younger voice cracking under desperation.
She backed away, heart pounding.
âNo,â she whispered, over and over. âNo. No, I donât want to be here. This isnât real. Itâs not real.â
But it was. Her younger self had collapsed on the floor now, sobbing into her knees. And there was no one to help her.
Y/N reached for the door. It didnât open. She tried again, harder â nothing. Her fingers clawed at the knob, breath heaving now, the walls of the room beginning to bend and tilt, as though the house was a memory starting to melt.
âLet me outâ please, I canâtâ I canât do this again!â
The walls whispered.
She heard her own voice â her younger self was now looking at her.
"You deserved it, didnât you? Thatâs what he said. Thatâs what you believed."
âNoââ
"You still believe it sometimes."
âStop it!â
"If you were stronger, youâd have left sooner. If you were smarter, youâd have seen it coming. If you were worthy, heâd have stayed."
âStop it!â
She turned and screamed at the room. She looked at the mirror on the wall, another room, without making any sense of what's the racional reasons of this happening, she jumps into falling into the room. Jordan's room.
Oh no, no,no,no, not this...this can't be...
--
Bob's pov
The Void had no shape.
It breathed around him â slow, cold, and endless. A black sea without water. A sky without stars. Bob floated in it, weightless and drowning all at once.
The silence pressed against his ears like pressure at the bottom of the ocean.
Then came the first room.
He didnât walk into it. It unfolded around him â one blink and he was standing in the middle of it. A small bathroom. White tiles stained yellow. Fluorescent lights buzzing overhead like angry bees.
He stared at himself in the mirror.
Younger. Gaunt. Bruised knuckles, a bloody nose that wouldnât stop dripping. His eyes red from crying, from the needle still swinging in the sink beside him.
The door burst open â the version of himself sitting in the memory didnât flinch.
It was his mother.
âI canât do this with you anymore, Robert!â she screamed. Her mascara ran. âYou make everything worse.â
Bob tried to speak â to reach out â but his voice didnât work here.
The past couldnât hear him.
The next room swallowed the last.
Second room. A military facility. Stark. A flickering overhead light buzzed like a dying insect. Soldiers screamed in the distance â training exercises. Gunshots.
Bob was 19. Sitting in the corner of a locker room, shaking, knuckles split open from punching a wall.
"You're unstable, Reynolds. You lash out and break things. I don't want you on my team if I can't trust you."
Captain Huntâs voice. Firm. Tired. Disgusted.
And thenâ
Third room. A hospital. Late night. Sterile smell. Fluorescent white.
He sat alone in a plastic chair, watching a heart monitor go flatline.
His first serious attempt. His own heartbeat crawling back into his chest with a kind of shame no one teaches you how to carry.
The nurses hadnât asked questions. No one had called anyone.
Not one person showed up.
Fourth room. A motel.
Dim. Stained sheets. Cracked mirror. The bag of meth still sitting on the nightstand. He stared at it, then at his reflection.
His voice finally returned â not strong, but tired.
âIâm trying,â he whispered to himself. âIâm trying.â
His reflection didnât believe him.
Then the fifth room swallowed him whole.
And this one was different.
Warm.
He looked around â disoriented, blinking.
The wallpaper was pale blue with hand-drawn spaceships and stars. A night light still glowed in the corner. A box of toys sat against the wall â old and worn but loved. There were crayon drawings taped haphazardly to the closet door. In the middle of it all was a twin-sized bed with dinosaur covers.
Bob took a shaky breath. His chest rose and fell like it hadnât in hours.
This was his room.
His real one. From before things fell apart.
Before the shouting. Before the needle. Before the screaming void.
So he sat, down. It was quiet. Perfect for a place like the void. Peacefull.
He doesn't know how long he stayed there until Yelena came, he doesn't know how he still had the strengh to get up, to overpower the void.
It was a power that came from them. His new friends. His new..'team'?
He doesn't recollect it all, but for the first time in months, he didn't feel like he was alone. They made their way out of the room,out of this house out of the memory, and back into the storming present â where the real war still waited.
Together they went through several rooms from his and other people's memories. Fighting their traumas' into a way out.
He doesn't now when. But they ended up here.
The world around them was not the real one â they knew that much.
The walls breathed. The air crackled with an unnatural hum, and gravity shifted with moods, not science. Inside the Voidâs domain, nothing obeyed logic. The Thunderbolts stood huddled, silent and alert, their eyes scanning the horizon of an endless black that shimmered like oil under a dim sky. This was the mind â or madness â of Sentry.
Of Bob.
Yelenaâs fingers tightened around her weapon, though it was useless here. Ava moved like a whisper behind her, while Walker stood with hands slightly raised, reading the tension, always waiting. Even Bucky, hardened by war and grief, looked visibly unsettled.
Then something shifted.
A tear in the air â like a crack in glass â split open ahead of them. Shadows poured through the breach, not menacing this time, but familiar. Like memories. Like ghosts.
Suddenly, they werenât in the abyss anymore.
They were in a small apartment kitchen â dim, quiet, but worn with the comfort of being lived in.
And then â voices.
Bobâs own voice, worn down with shame, cracked through the space like thunder.
âYou went through my things?â
They turned toward the source.
There he was â Bob â standing just a few feet away, the projection of him caught in a moment past. And across from him, her.
Y/N.
She was standing in their small living room, trembling hands clutching a small plastic bag, holding crushed pills and powder. Her eyes were puffy from crying, voice shaking.
âI was doing laundry, Bob. It fell out of your jacket.â
Real Bob â the one standing in the shadows with the Thunderbolts â went completely still. His breath caught in his throat. This was a memory he hadn't thought about in what felt like years. Maybe heâd buried it on purpose.
âYou said you stopped,â she whispered in the memory, voice small but cutting. âYou told me you wanted to get clean. For us.â
âI doâ Bob said. âI justâ I needed it, just once more. Iâve been good, havenât I?â
Y/N shook her head in disbelief, hugging herself like she was trying to keep from unraveling.
âYou lied to me. And what scares me most is that I keep forgiving you because I think maybe you hate yourself enough already.â
The room spun. The Thunderbolts watched in stunned silence, not quite understanding what they were witnessing â it felt too intimate, too raw to be for them. A woman theyâd never seen, spilling tears for a version of Bob they'd never known.
Ghost shifted her stance uncomfortably. Even Yelenaâs brow furrowed â the name Y/N flickering in her mind now like a question. The weight in the air was different than anything theyâd faced. This wasnât a villain. This wasnât a fight.
This was a wound.
The memory played on.
âIâm not enough, am I?â Y/N asked, voice cracking. âNot enough to make you stop. Not enough to love without condition. Iâm tired, Bobby. I can't live for you, I love you, but this has to stop, please.â
He didnât respond. He looked like he wanted to â lips parted, hands shaking â but no words came.
Everyone turned to look at the real Bob, who had fallen to his knees, eyes wide with horror, tears brimming at the edges.
âSheâs real,â he whispered.
Yelena blinked, stepping forward gently. âWho is she, Bob?â
He didnât answer right away. He stared at the frozen image of Y/N like it had torn his ribs open.
âSheâs... she's my girlfriend, my child's mother,â he said finally, voice hoarse. âMy girl. I loved her more than anything. And I left her.â
No one spoke.
âShe found out she was pregnant days before I left,â Bob added, as though confessing to a grave sin. âI never saw the bump. I never got to feel the baby kick. I donât even know how it's going if they're healthyâŚâ
His voice broke, and he covered his face with a trembling hand.
âI wanted to be better. I swear to God, I did. But I was afraid Iâd hurt her again. That Iâd ruin the only good thing I ever had. So I disappeared. Told myself it was protection. Told myself Iâd come back. For her, be a good, healthy father for our baby.But itâs been⌠so long.â
Yelena approached quietly, crouching beside him.
âSheâs alive?â
He nodded. âValentina told me so. She's pregnant. Five months now.â
A silence fell again â but not the cold kind. This time, it was heavy with understanding. They all had blood on their hands. But this was different. This was grief. Regret. A man torn in half by his own guilt.
Ava spoke up, voice strangely soft through her modulator.
âLet's get out of here, this is not the way out come onâ
Bobâs gaze lifted to the suspended image of Y/N â frozen in time, crying, still holding the drugs like they were the last piece of him she could trust. He just runs along with the others, jumping into another room.
The world shimmered again.
The corridor theyâd just been standing in melted into dim velvet walls, low golden lighting, and pulsing bass vibrating faintly beneath their feet. A private lounge. Exclusive. Sleek. Quietly decadent.
Bob turned slowly, gaze sweeping over the room. It was too elegant to be one of his memories. And it didnât feel like his. Not the way the others had. There was no anxiety prickling under his skin, no familiarity clawing at the edges of his mind.
The couches were velvet, the tables sleek marble. Laughter echoed from a cornerâhigh-pitched, sugar-coated and sharp. A group of girls lounged around a bottle-service table, glittering dresses and tired smiles, eyes heavy with intoxication and mascara.
Then Bob saw her.
Y/N. Young.
God, she was so young.
Seventeen, maybe. Dressed in a short black dress with silver accents, legs crossed tightly at the ankle. Her hair was curled and pinned half-up like she was trying to mimic a movie star, but her eyes told another storyâshe looked nervous, small, out of place.
Next to her sat a man. Clean-cut. Olderâdefinitely older. Late thirties, maybe. He wore a sharp blazer over a white shirt, no tie, just casual enough to seem approachable. He had his arm resting behind her shoulders, fingers brushing lightly against her hair. Possessive without looking it.
âCome on, sweetheart,â he said, his voice smooth like polished mahogany. âJust a little. Youâll feel better, I promise.â
âI donât know...â Young Y/N laughed lightly, clearly uncertain. âIâve never really done that stuff.â
âThatâs okay,â he said, smiling, brushing a strand of hair behind her ear. âYou donât have to be anyone but yourself. I like you just like this.â
She blinked. Something about the way he looked at herâit was like he saw her. Like she mattered. Bobâs heart clenched painfully watching it.
âI just think youâre incredible,â Jordan continued. âThe way you walk into a room like youâre not trying to impress anyone. Youâve got this... spark. It kills me.â
Y/N looked down, shy. âYou really think that?â
âOf course I do,â he said, resting his hand gently on her thigh. âYouâre nothing like these other girls. Youâre thoughtful. Real. Not just some pretty thing. Youâve got depth, baby. And I see that. I see you.â
Bob could barely breathe.
âHeâs grooming her,â Ava muttered under her breath.
Yelena glanced at her, then at Bob. âIs this her memory?â
Bobâs jaw was tight. âYeah,â he said. His voice cracked. âIt is.â
On the couch, one of the girls passed a thin line of powder to Jordan, who declined with a polite shake of his head. Instead, he passed it to Y/N. âOnly if you want to,â he said gently. âNo pressure. Iâd never make you do anything. But I want you to feel good tonight. You deserve to feel loved.â
Y/N hesitated. The edges of her smile were starting to quiver. She stared at the powder. Then at Jordan. âYou really think Iâm... special?â
âI donât waste time on girls who arenât,â he whispered, leaning in to kiss her cheek, feather-light. âYouâve got a heart bigger than anyone in this room. I just want to take care of it.â
She closed her eyes, almost swayed by it.
Bob couldnât look away. His hands were shaking. âShe thought he loved her,â he said softly, more to himself than anyone else. âShe told me... once. That for a while, she believed every word. That she was lucky to have someone love her that much.â
âShe was a child,â Yelena growled.
âShe didnât know,â Bob whispered. âShe didnât know what she deserved. She thought this was itâsomeone older, who gave her attention. That was enough.â
Y/N ends up taking the drugs. She handed the little plate back with a quiet after taking the powder âuff, that's ahm..weird?â She said smiling at Jordan.
Jordan smiled like sheâd just told him a secret. âSee? Thatâs what I like about you. Youâre strong. Classy. You didn't even make a face pretty girl.â
Then he kissed her and whispered, âThatâs why I love you.â
And Y/N believed it. "And I love you too."
You could see itâthe way her shoulders relaxed, the way she leaned into him slightly. Desperate for comfort. For a promise that someone in the world wanted her.
The team stood there in silence.
Bobâs eyes were glassy. He swallowed hard. âShe just wanted someone to choose her. To protect her. And instead... she got him.â
Avaâs face was grim. âAnd then she got you.â
Bob flinched.
But Yelena shook her head gently. âYou loved her. You didnât want anything from her but to be loved back. That matters.â
Bob said nothing for a long while. He just stood there, staring at the younger version of herâwide-eyed, smiling faintly, still foolish enough to believe that this man would be different.
That he would be safe.
âGod,â he muttered, voice breaking, âI hope she knows sheâs more than this.â
âThat wasnât yours,â Bucky finally said, his voice low, like he was afraid of scaring something away. âThat memory. It wasnât from you.â
Bob shook his head slowly. âNo. That was hers.â
Yelenaâs brow furrowed. âHow the hell are we seeing her memories?â
âMaybe...â Ava started, then hesitated. She glanced around at the endless dark edges of the Void as if searching for a crack. âMaybe because sheâs here.â
The weight of her words hit like a bomb.
Bob turned to her sharply. âWhat?â
âIf the Void is showing her memories,â she said, âthen itâs not just pulling from you anymore. Itâs pulling from someone else too. That only happens when someoneâs inside.â
Yelenaâs eyes narrowed. âYou think the Void got her?â
âI donât think,â Ava said. âI know.â
Buckyâs jaw clenched. âSo sheâs trapped in this thing.â
Bobâs breath caught in his throat. The walls seemed to close in around him as the meaning sunk inâY/N, his Y/N, alone somewhere in this abyss, reliving the worst parts of her life, again and again, without even knowing why.
âJesus Christ,â he rasped. âNo... no, noâshe canât be here. She canât be.â
âShe is,â Ava said softly. âWeâve all been stuck in this thing long enough to know how it works. It latches onto trauma. It feeds on it. Memories, shame, fearâit twists it all into a prison.â
âBut sheâs not like us,â Bob said, his voice cracking. âShe didnât sign up for this. She didnât even do anything.â
âThat doesnât matter to the Void,â Bucky said grimly. âIt doesnât care who you are. If it senses pain, if it senses broken pieces... it pulls you in.â
Bobâs knees buckled slightly, and he sank to a low stool at the edge of the room, head in his hands.
âSheâs pregnant,â he whispered. âSheâs alone. Sheâs scared. And now sheâs trapped in this fucking nightmare.â
Yelena knelt in front of him. âThen we find her. Before this place tears her apart.â
âHow?â he asked, voice hoarse. âHow the hell do we find her in all this?â
Ava stepped forward. âWe follow the memories. The further in we go, the more pieces we see. If sheâs really here, then the Void is using her too. Pulling her pain to the surface. If we find the sourceâif we find the most vivid partsâwe find her.â
Bucky nodded. âAnd we pull her out.â
âBut she doesnât even know what this is,â Bob said, lifting his head. His eyes were red, desperate. âShe wonât understand. Sheâll think itâs real. Sheâll feel it all like itâs happening again.â
âSheâs strong,â Yelena said. âWeâve seen that.â
Bob shook his head. âNot like this. Not this kind of pain. She spent her whole life thinking she wasnât worth loving, and now sheâs in a place thatâs built to prove her right.â
He clenched his fists, jaw tightening. âSheâs not just some damsel in distress. Sheâs better than me. Smarter. Braver. But I left her. I abandoned her when she needed me most, and now sheâs paying the price for my broken mind.â
Bucky took a step closer, his voice steady. âThen donât waste time wallowing in guilt. Use it. Channel it. Because if we donât get to her soon, this place will bury her alive in her own pain.â
Bob stood slowly, the weight of resolve settling over him like armor. âThen we go deeper. Into the worst of it.â
He turned to Ava. âYou said it feeds on trauma. So we find the worst of her memories. The ones it would never let go of. She has to be somewhere here."
--
Y/N's pov
The air was thick. Too warm. Still.
Y/N stood barefoot on the cold hardwood floor of his penthouse apartmentâJordanâs.
The bedroom was dim, the curtains drawn. The city lights barely peeked through the thin cracks. She heard rustling behind her. Her breath caught.
Thereâon the bedâher younger self, stirring under crumpled sheets, the silk blanket clinging to damp, bare skin.
The girl woke slowly, confusion in her eyes before she blinked into the dark. She moved, groggily at first⌠then winced. Her body recoiled, the pain sharp and unignorable. Her fingers clutched the sheet closer to her chest. She looked down.
Y/Nâthe older oneâstood frozen. Watching. Remembering.
âNo, no, no,â she whispered to herself, shaking her head. Her hands trembled at her sides. âPlease donât do this. Donât make me see this again.â
But the Void was cruel. It always had been.
Young Y/N stood slowly, wobbling on weak legs. The sheet wrapped around her like a lifeline, like it could protect her from what her mind already knew but refused to say out loud.
She stepped into the hallway, bare feet silent, breath uneven. She turned toward the kitchen.
And there he was.
Jordan.
Dressed casuallyâsweatpants, t-shirtâlike he hadnât just stolen something sacred. He was humming. Cheerful. Making coffee. His hair was damp like heâd just showered. Like it was just another morning.
The older Y/N followed behind, nearly tripping over her own breath, like she could somehow get in front of this. Stop it.
Jordan turned at the sound of movement, his smile stretching effortlessly across his smug, handsome face.
âWell, good morning, sleepyhead,â he said, his voice chipper, as if they were a normal couple waking up after a beautiful night. âYou were out cold last night. Want some breakfast? I make a killer omelet.â
The younger Y/N stopped in her tracks. Her lips parted, her face pale, horrified. âWhat... what did you do to me?â Her voice was so quiet at first, but it shook.
Jordanâs brow furrowed. âWhat?â
âYou...â She clutched the sheet tighter, eyes blinking rapidly, on the verge of spiraling. âYou gave me something. I didnât want to sleep with you. IâI said no. I remember saying no. And thenâthen nothing.â
The smile on Jordanâs face flickered. Then vanished.
He stepped forward, casual in that way predators often are. âWoah, woah. Babe. Donât be like that. You were into it. Trust meâyou wanted it. I just gave you a little something to relax, thatâs all. You were stressed out.â
âI didnât want to relax,â she said, her voice cracking. âI said no. You said weâd just hang out. I thoughtââ Her voice broke. âI thought you loved me.â
Jordanâs face changed entirely. The warmth drained out of his expression, replaced with cold irritation.
âAre you seriously doing this right now?â he said, voice darkening. âAfter everything Iâve done for you? I brought you into my home, gave you everything, and now youâre acting like some fucking victim?â
Older Y/N stepped forward, voice raised. âStop it. Please. Stop it!â
Young Y/N was sobbing now, inching backward. âYou drugged me, Jordan. You used me.â
Jordanâs eyes narrowed. His jaw clenched.
âYou better watch how you talk to me.â
And thenâhe moved.
It happened so fast.
His hand shot out, grabbing her wrist. She yelped, trying to pull away, but he yanked her forward and slammed her to the ground. The sheet slipped off her shoulder. She screamed, trying to crawl back, but he was already on top of her.
âYou ungrateful little bitch,â he spat. âI loved you. I treated you like a goddamn queen.â
âYou're hurting me!â she screamed.
âYou donât even know what the real world is like,â he hissed. âYouâre just a sad little girl who needs daddy figures to fix you. Well guess what? No one else wanted you. You were mine.â
His hand wrapped around her throat.
âSTOP IT!â older Y/N screamed, throwing herself at him. She crashed into himâbut passed right through. She hit the floor hard, helpless. Her hands clawed the ground. âGET OFF HER!â
But he didnât even notice. Because this wasnât real. Not to him. But to herâit was everything.
Younger Y/N thrashed beneath him, choking, sobbing. âPlease... Jordan, please...â
He leaned in close, voice low. âYou donât get to say no now.â And just like that, he let her go. He picked up his coffe mug and went to the sofa, turning on the news. "When you're ready to apologize, come here, okay sweetheart? You were really cruel to me, I didn't appreciate that."
Older Y/N crawled to her younger self who was sobbing, tears blinding her vision. She pressed her palms to the memoryâs shoulders, trying to hold her, trying to shield her, desperate to end this.
âIâm so sorry,â she whispered through tears. âIâm so sorry I didnât know what love was supposed to look like.â
--
Bob was the first one to step inside.
Then they saw her.
Y/N.
Curled on the floor in the kitchen, holding someone tightâherself. A younger version of her, wrapped in a silk sheet, face buried in her own shoulder, both of them trembling, as if clutching one another was the only thing keeping them from falling apart completely.
Her hair was a mess. Her arms covered in scratches from trying to claw her way out of this hell. Her face streaked with tears and smeared makeup. But even broken, she looked like something Bob had forgotten how to breathe around.
He couldnât move. Couldnât speak. Not yet.
It was Walker who whispered, âThatâs her... Thatâs Y/N.â
But it was Yelena who understood first. âSheâs not just a memory.â
âNo,â Ava murmured. âSheâs here. Trapped like we are.â
Y/N hadnât noticed them yet. She was holding her younger self so tightly, whispering into her hair, soothing words and broken apologies.
âIâm sorry, Iâm so sorry... I shouldâve seen it. I shouldâve never loved him. I shouldâve known this would happen. I just wanted to be seen. Just once. Just wanted to be enough for someone. I didnât know it would hurt like this... I didnât know I was gonna hate myself this much.â
Bob stepped forward. Slowly. Carefully. âY/N.â
Her head didnât move. She didnât hear him. Or maybe she was too deep in the memory to want to.
He tried again, his voice cracking, tears already building in his eyes. âY/N, itâs me.â
At that, her shoulders tensed.
Still holding the younger version of herself, she slowly turned her head.
She saw him.
And everything stopped.
She blinkedâonce, twice, trying to clear her eyes. But he didnât vanish. He stayed. Standing there, in his suit, his hair wild and eyes filled with tears, chest heaving like he hadnât taken a full breath since he last saw her.
Behind him stood strangersâfaces she didnât recognize. A blonde girl with cold, sharp eyes. A man with a metal arm. A ghost of a woman in black. But she didnât care.
Her eyes locked on Bob.
Her Bob.
But she didnât smile.
She flinched.
âNo...â Her voice came out hoarse. âNo. Not like this.â
Bobâs face fell. âY/N, itâs really me.â
âNo, no, you donât get to do that,â she whispered, hugging her younger self tighter, closing her eyes like she could shut him out. âNot here. Not now. Youâre not real. This place is evil, it shows me things just to break me. Iâm done falling for that. I wonât let it take you, too.â
âItâs me,â he repeated, stepping closer. âI swear to you. Iâm not an illusion. I found youâI found you.â
She shook her head violently. âNo! You left me. You left before I even showed, before I even started to show! I waited and I waited and I screamed into a pillow every night, telling myself youâd come backâbut you didnât. And now Iâm here, trapped in hell, and itâs using your face to punish me!â
Her breathing picked up. She stood up.
She stepped toward him, shaking.
âDonât you dare look like him,â she said, her voice breaking. âDonât you dare sound like him. Donât pretend you careâdonât pretend you know what Iâve been through.â
Bob tried to reach out but she slapped his hand away.
She started hitting him. Soft at firstâthen harder. Fists against his chest, weak and desperate.
âYouâre not him. Youâre not him. Youâre not my Bobby. Heâs gone. He left me. He left me with a baby and no one to love me. He promised he'd never go and he fucking went!â
âI know,â he whispered, not even defending himself. âI know I did. I know I failed you.â
She hit him again and again until she couldnât stand anymore.
Her knees gave out and she collapsed.
Bob caught her before she hit the floor. Held her like he had the first night she let him into her apartment, sobbing into his shirt, clutching him like he might disappear if she blinked.
âI donât know whatâs real anymore,â she whispered, voice cracking. âI just wanted you to be real. I needed it to be you. I needed it to matter.â
âIt does,â he choked out. âYou matter. More than anything. And I swear to you, this isnât a trick. Iâm here. And Iâm not leaving again. I swear to God, Iâm not leaving again.â
She trembled in his arms, crying so hard her body shook. Her arms wrapped around his neck, afraid to believe it.
But for the first time in months, she let herself hope.
Because even in the heart of the Voidâhe came back for her.
It was heavy, fragileâlike glass balancing on a thread. No one dared speak at first. Even Yelena, who had a dozen biting questions on the tip of her tongue, kept quiet. The sound of Y/Nâs quiet sobs was all that filled the space, broken occasionally by Bob whispering apologies into her hair.
Walker finally stepped forward, his hands on his hips. âOkay, someone tell me how the hell weâre getting out of here now that weâve got her.â
âWeâre still in the Void,â Ava murmured, her voice echoing faintly in the strange, warped dimensions of the room. âJust because we found her doesnât mean the exitâs magically going to open. We need a way to break it.â
Y/N blinked, still dazed, still shaking. She looked up at Bob with red-rimmed eyes. âHow are you here?â she whispered, voice hoarse. âIs this real? I donât understand. You left. You werenât there. And now you are and everyone keeps saying Void and team and... what is happening, Bobby?â
Bob looked at her like he didnât know how to start. âI... I will explain everything my love I promise you, it's a very very long story.â
Y/N swallowed hard. âHow do I know this isnât just another trick? How do I know youâre not just... another part of this nightmare?â
Bob grabbed her hand gently and pressed it to his chest. âBecause youâre here, and I feel it. I feel you. And I donât know how this place works, but I think the Void... itâs connected to all the pain we carry. All the things we canât let go of. Thatâs how it traps us. With the worst parts of ourselves.â
Yelena crouched nearby, eyes on Y/N. âWhen the Void manifests a memory, it means the personâs in here. Alive. Which means we can all get out, if we stay together.â
Y/N glanced between themâthese strangers standing like soldiers in her deepest trauma. âWho are you people?â
Bob chuckled softly through his tears. âTheyâre... complicated. But theyâre helping me. Helping us. I promise.â
Before anyone could say more, a noise cut through the quietâa voice.
"You look ugly when you cry, little one."
Everyone turned.
Jordan.
Still present, still part of the memory, casually walking across the kitchen to put his coffee mug in the sink. He hadnât seen themânot really. He was part of the memory loop, the trauma replaying on a cruel cycle. But the voice, the condescension, the way it dripped like acid through the airâ
Bobâs body moved before his brain could catch up.
He stormed across the room in two long strides and drove his fist into Jordanâs face so hard the man was lifted off his feet and crashed into the counter, crumpling like wet paper.
The room went silent again.
No one moved.
Not even younger Y/N, who had been curled on the floor, frozen in horror. Her form flickered slightly now, destabilizing. The memory unraveling at last.
Bob stood over Jordanâs unconscious form, fists still clenched, breath ragged. Then he looked back at Y/Nâhis Y/Nâand gave her a sad smile. âYouâve always been beautiful,â he said gently. âAnd if our babyâs a girl... I hope she looks just like you.â
Y/N looked down, lips trembling. Her fingers reached into the pocket of her jacket and pulled out the crumpled sonogram. She stared at it for a long moment, then looked back at him, her voice barely more than a breath.
âItâs a boy, Bobby... I just found out. Before everything... before this.â
Bobâs eyes widened, filling with tears all over again. âA boy...?â
She nodded, swallowing hard.
He stepped to her slowly, arms open, as if afraid sheâd disappear again. She let him wrap his arms around her, and they clung to each other like survivors in the wreckage.
âIâm sorry,â he whispered into her hair. âIâm so fucking sorry.â
Y/N closed her eyes and clutched the sonogram between them, resting her forehead against his chest. âI donât understand whatâs happening,â she admitted. âI donât know where I am.â
Bob looked at her, then the team. âWeâre getting out. All of us. Together.â
He reached down and gently helped her to her feet.
But before anyone could move, the walls of the apartment began to blur. The shadows of the kitchen twisted like liquid. The floor rumbled.
âItâs shifting again,â Ava warned, backing toward the group.
The room peeled apart like old wallpaper, revealing something new behind itâwhite fluorescent lights, steel walls, cold tiled floors.
Yelenaâs eyes went wide. âThis... this is the lab.â
âO.X.E.,â Bucky confirmed, stepping forward cautiously. âWhere they were creating you.â
Bob held Y/N close as she looked around, now standing in the middle of a sterile hallway. Her head spun from the sudden shift, her mind reeling.
âI was here,â Bob murmured. âThis is where they made me a weapon.â
Y/N clung to his arm, "Made you? What?", heart pounding. âWhy did it bring us here now?â
And Walker, grim as ever, finally answered.
âBecause it wants us to remember how the hell this all began.â
The room had grown impossibly still. Shadows danced across the cracked floor as the broken lights flickered overhead. By the lab window, seated a figureâtall, cloaked in flickering tendrils of smoke and malice. The Void.
He stood motionless, his gaze fixed beyond the glass as if watching something only he could see. Two figures, twisted and half-consumed by darkness, slumped beneath the windowâdoctors perhaps, or memories of victims long lost. Their stillness was chilling.
Then he turned.
Darkness poured from him like a second skin, his golden eyes burning through the room like embers in the night.
âY/N,â he said, his voice smooth, haunting, laced with venomous sweetness. âI finally found you.â
Y/N clutched Bobâs arm tightly, stepping back instinctively as her eyes searched the figure in front of her. The voice. That voice. It was himâbut it wasnât.
âWhat's happening?â she whispered, clutching her belly protectively. âWho are you?â
The Void took a step forward, the floor creaking with his weight. He tilted his head with an expression almost tender. âYouâre tired, arenât you?â he said gently. âAlone. Carrying life inside of you. And for what? Struggling to stay afloat, with no one to catch you when you fall?â
She shook her head. âNo. Iâm not alone anymore.â
âBut you areâ he pressed, taking another step. âYou always have been. Your mother. Your father. That man who used you like a plaything. And where is your love now? The one who left you when you needed him most?â
Bob flinched beside her.
âCome to me,â the Void whispered, his voice like velvet, spreading through the room like smoke. âI will make you happy. I will give you peace. I will give your son a life no one else can. No pain. No fear.â
The room shifted. Metal groaned. Then everything exploded at onceâshards of glass, twisted steel, broken furnitureâall lifted violently by an unseen force and slammed the team against the walls like rag dolls. Bob was thrown back, shielding himself from the debris.
Y/N staggered forward.
âY/N! NO!â Bob screamed, reaching out.
But she couldnât hear himânot through the drumming in her ears, not through the pull in her chest. Something was calling her. And in her heart⌠a terrible ache. A fear. What if this was the only way?
She walked forward in a daze, her hand outstretched.
âCome to me,â the Void whispered, his voice shaking the air like thunder. âYouâre mine. Youâve always been meant to be mine.â
Just as her fingertips neared the swirling darkness of his hand, Bobbyâs grip caught her wrist and yanked her back. She stumbled into his arms as the Void snarled.
âSheâs not yours!â Bob shouted, his voice hoarse with fury.
The Voidâs face twisted into a smile. âAnd who are you to claim her? A failure? The man who left her alone in a world that chews her up? You are and will always be alone in this world. That's because no one cares about you. You donât matter.â
Bobâs face went pale. Then rage exploded from his chest like a scream from his soul. He lunged forward and struck the Void with a crushing punch. Then another. And another.
âYou donât get to trick her!â Bob roared, his knuckles bleeding, the darkness seeping up his arms like ink.
âYou donât get to speak her name! You don't to lore her to you!â
But the Void didnât fight back. He smiled, letting Bob hit him again and again, until the shadow began to wrap tighter around Bobâs body, crawling up his spine, whispering poison into his ears.
âStop!â Y/N screamed, running to him. âBobby, stop!â
Yelena was at her side in seconds. âThis is what he wants, Bob! Heâs feeding on you!â
âBobby, look at me!â Y/N cried, grabbing his hand, tears pouring down her face. âBobbyâplease! You have to stop, I need you to stop!â
Walker came running holding onto them, and so did Ava and Bucky. A reminder of how loneliness was no longer invinted.
His eyes flickered toward her. The rage wavered.
âPlease,â she whispered. âMr. Cooper left the crib unfinished. We need to go home. We need to finish it. Okay?â
His breath caught. His fists fell limp.
He looked at herâreally lookedâand it was like coming back to the surface after nearly drowning.
âYouâŚâ he choked. âYou are⌠everything.â
There was a burst of light. A rush of wind. And thenâ
They were back.
The pavement beneath them was solid. Cold. Familiar. People around them were screaming, running, but the team⌠they were just there. Alive. In one piece.
Yelena coughed and looked up, confused. âWhat the hell just happened?Wait...Where's Y/N?â
Bob blinked slowly, his vision returning. âThanks guys⌠what happened by the way?â He said smiling. The it hit him. "Yelena. How do you know that name?"