Hoi Hoi Hoi!!
I hope you are enjoying the new year so far and are blessed with many diamonds.
Anyway, have a request!! I just read a request you did with a small-chested reader x Caleb and that got me thinking:
How do you think the LADs boys would react to reader flashing them?
I'll let you choose which one to write about if you don't want to write a fic for all of them and thank you in advance!!
Now excuse me while I comb through your entire master list đ¤
Sincerely
An anon who loved boobs (of all kinds) đ
Hello!!!! :D Thank you kindly, I'm very honored <3 I'll do all of them but a shorter thing for each.
Zayne would be the one with the tamest reaction. Mind you, not because he's not excited to see you bare, but because his work as a cardiac surgeon has him seeing all kinds of chests and to him it's just a part of your body.
However. If you guide his hand to touch you, or make him bury his face in your chest, he will lose it. Ears red, snowflakes dancing around you, the whole thing.
So, if you want to surprise him, instead of flashing him, I'd suggest wearing no bra without telling him and sneaking his arm up your shirt.
I feel like Rafayel would have two types of reactions depending on how he's feeling that day.
Either he's all suave and admiring your body, or he's a blushy mess. No in-between. In the former, he'll start praising how you look like a literal work of art and you should let him paint you and study your form. In the latter, he's covering his eyes and looking away with his face completely flushed, protesting about how you should cover up and what were you thinking.
If you flash Xavier, you got yourself a ticket to his bed right away, no further conversation, quickest route.
He's taking it as a sign that you want to have sex with him, and he's not even bothering with your 'hehe prank' shenanigans. If that wasn't an invitation why would you do that?
So, yeah, stay safe out there. Either start running as soon as you flash him (stupid idea, he can teleport) or prepare to fight back (stupid idea, he's stronger).
You just know he's smirking. He'll act a bit coy and approach you with languid steps, but the moment his arm sneaks around your waist and he leans his head down to whisper in your ear, you're done for.
If you play it off as a prank, he'll chuckle and let you go, but you can bet he's gonna start buying you clothes with more revealing necklines. If you follow along with his coaxing, he'll have fun oh-so-very-slowly peeling your clothes off of you until you're fully naked for him to see and enjoy.
That's so cruel of you, flashing him like that and acting like nothing happened, like he's not blushing, like he's not putting on his best sad puppy eyes as he moves closer and begs for you to just take off your shirt. Why do you torture him like that.
Not to worry, if you're so eager to show your body, he'll just take your shirt off himself! It's not like he hasn't seen your chest already.
And unless you complain about being cold or something like that, he will insist you walk around the house with no top on. His eyes are gonna follow you everywhere, babes.
(wc: 9.5k) ⌠summary: after your brother passes, consumed by grief, you take to the internet to order a synthetic version of him. afterward, itâs impossible to throw him out. (or: alternatively titled the trojan horse)
⌠content robot! caleb, past engineer! caleb, au where EVER deals in robotics, non-evol au, 18+ nsfw/smut, mildly dubious consent, angst, grief, mental instability, bad coping mechanisms, robot pseudocest?? robot sex, mind games, moral grayness all around, dark/yandere undertones; this fic can have multiple interpretations
⌠sidenote have yall ever seen that episode of black mirror? âbe right backâ? basically this: the girlâs boyfriend dies so she orders an incredibly realistic, intelligent robot to replace him. theyâre identical in personality and appearance, and yet⌠đ ANYWAYS ( â¸É̴̡̜ ¡̍ É̴̡̜⸠) i have a set plot for this in my head, but i left it a lil vague so ur allowed to think of it in ur own way đ¤ if u wanna know the âcanonâ tho.. u can absolutely ask me. the lore is so deep its traumatizing :,) anyways hope u enjoy <3 ty for 1k btw!! take this as a lil celebration treat 𼳠it took so much out of me but i think i really vibe with it heheh
Heâs perfect. Nigh on.
For the first few days since his arrival, since hauling him off the foot of your porch and into your living room to unpack him- heart tickering in your chest all the while, trepidatious- youâve just stared. Reached out your hands to hover, ghosting over the broad blade of his shoulder, his chapped lips, the slight jut of his cheekbone.
His hands, as big and weathered as you remember them (but gentle, always gentle), hang limply by his sides.
You donât dare slip your smaller ones in them.
All of the theatrics, yet you donât press his- its- button, either.
No, you donât even touch it after the initial unpacking, wrenching your fingers away as soon as they get too close. As soon as they get too tempted by hope and the wish that this hunk of metal was more than just a replica of your late brother. Half of you thinks it might burn if you get too comfortable; and you wonât get comfortableâ underneath the solidified layers of grief and- you have trouble saying it aloud, but bitterness- thereâs still just enough common sense to keep you from taking the leap. The leap from mourning to insanity.
Itâs hollow. You know that much. A nothingness enwrapped in a steely chassis full of wiring and code too technological for you to understand, all covered by a synthetic skin suit as the pretty bow on top.
And you know- what with your emotional state- that if you could peer inside, strip it down to the framework and just⌠take a moment to look, that youâd vomit. Itâd be too much to bear, being forced to reconcile with the fact that he really is goneâ and in response to it all, youâve blown your savings on an eerily-realistic, glorified doll of him with wires for veins.
Youâre trembling when you stiffly prop him against the far wall, limiting contact as much as possible, and step away, keeping your eyes on him all the while. It. Not him. Not Caleb- thatâs not your fucking brother, just a disgusting, soulless fascimile of himâ
But as you stand back on your feet (with the coffee table in between, just in case) to get a good look at him, like a real, proper look, your breath is taken.
The thing: Heâs not just a passable carbon copy, you realize. Admittedly, heâsâŚ
Identical.
(Heâs Caleb.)
All the oxygen gusts out of you in a breeze.
You lift a shaking hand over your open mouth and choke as silent tears spill from your lashline, blurring your eyes on the way down. Wetting your knuckles as they shake wildly.
Youâre crying. Of course youâre crying. This is- you canât do this. You just canât.
Racing upstairs, retreating to your bedroom to slam the door as if the devil himself was on your tail, only then do you drop your hand and fully sob.
Itâs pitiful, really. Wretched noises that resonate from deep in your throat, your spirit wrecked as you curl up on the floor and make yourself into a ball.
Darkness comes outside, the space around you muting itself in grey colors. The puddle beneath your cheek is moonlit. You sniffle and relocate, but you donât even bother to tuck the not-Caleb robot in its special container, no- you just settle beneath your blankets and pray itâs all a bad dream youâll awake from come tomorrow.
Tomorrow: youâll send him off. Return him.
You donât care how much money it costs- for all you care, itâs paltry, itâs replaceable. And it is replaceable, thatâs the bleak truth: that android stood motionless by your couch, despite having a face so familiar itâs painful, has no emotional value whatsoever. Thereâs no depth to it. No substance.
A skeleton built by rods. Artificial flesh modeled around thin, colorful cables and circuit boards.
I mean- heâs no better than the stapler on your desk, or the toaster on your kitchen counter. Better yet, a crumb on the floor.
A nothingness, you think again. Prettily encased in smooth, sun-speckled skin and that cottony loungewear (that still retains his smell) you could hardly part with when the online form requested his attire.
Heâs perfect, nigh on, youâll give the company who forged him that much credit, because they sure followed his pictures to a T. It looks just like him; so much so you couldnât even bear to look at him for more than ten minutes before bolting, the emotional response so violent.
But the problem is that heâs not real. Heâs not your Caleb.
âŚ
Itâs hard to throw him away when he looks like that. When he bears the likeness of your late, beloved older brother.
Yes, you want to stuff him back in his box and return to sender, but when it comes to courage, you lack the backbone necessary to carry out your decisions.
You tiptoe down the stairs to see him again and sputter.
Heâs too real, you decide in a heartbeat. Too real.
Shutting your eyes as tears begin to pour anew, lunging forward with blind intent to cache him away in the elaborate box he came in, you get to work. And you get to work quickly. You can only bear to look at it- that heartless caricature of your gege- for so long until you feel something in you, your last fragile piece, begin to fracture.
After the explosion, all you had left of him were the memories. Not an explanation, not a goodbye, not even a body. What remained of the boy you were fostered with was ash and a puerile, yet no less beloved locket with its edges burnt copper.
Now, you have something exponentially more physical and intact, unsullied by the reality of what was.
So for a moment, yes- sue you and your heart for hesitating- but itâs a hard task to seal him away.
Agonizing, really.
His arms are stiff by his sides but you feel the skin; the lump of muscle in his forearm, the bump of his elbow. The only thing that keeps you from giving into the puffed-up illusion of his being real and alive is the coolness beneath your fingertips. The unnatural, icy feel to his otherwise mortal skin that reminds in a voice, condescending like all things out of reach, see? thatâs not Caleb. And youâre insulting him by thinking that it could be.
Youâre halfway done nudging him towards the box (careful, despite your frenzied, fluttering heart; afraid to damage his likeness) when you trip over your own feet navigating the narrow space between your table and the couch.
Itâs unthinking, the way you grab him- arms flying out to steady yourself with his broad shoulders.
In all your scrambling- something clicks. Gives under your fingerpad.
A button.
With mute horror, you watch his eyes light.
âŚAnd you can see it too, you know, registering in his gaze as it settles over you and takes you inâ a blip of mirth that quickly warps into worry at the look you give him. You must appear no different than a deer in headlights.
For several seconds, you simply stand there, your palms clamming up where they dig into his shoulders, and gawk as Calebâ not-Calebâsâ expression turns to one ready to comfort.
Familiar, painfully.
The stiff hands at his side are spurred into motion, lifting to cradle your cheek while the other helps ground you by the small of your back.
âMeimei?â
No, no- donât say that, donât say that, internally, you have to shoehorn down all your grief as it bubbles up, and harden your face to keep from crying all over again.
âŚAlthough itâs more or less obvious you had been. The puffy eyes rimmed in red, the certain wisp of defeat to your brow and the exhaustion written all over you is clear as day. It leaves nothing to ponder.
He sounds disturbed by it all, the sadness about you that lies thick as a coating of paint. Commiserative to a fault. Lassoing you to his firm chest as he burrows your head below the dip of his chin.
He goes, âWhatâs wrong?â Then, âItâs okay, Iâm here. I got you. Just let it all out.â
And the world around you staggers to a fall.
âŚ
It was very difficult to get rid of him as he stood still; when you could convince yourself he was just a startlingly realistic statue.
Itâs all but impossible when he begins to move, and speak, and smile at you.
You donât get close enough to press his button. Youâre not quite strong enough to apply the distance you probably should, though, so when he takes a step forward, you take one back- but you never run.
Itâs a weird limbo youâre caught in. Do you leap into his arms? Do you⌠Do you toss him out the door, after all? Leave him to the elements to chip away at his body; the rain to erode his fleshy outer shell?
But no. How could you do that? He-
He fucking looks like Caleb. It feels more sinful to rid yourself of him, now that heâs⌠on, than to indulge a little bit in the idea that heâs still alive and breathing.
If Caleb was still alive, you wonder silently one morning with no small amount of hurt, would he hate you? For whatever the hell it is youâre doing now?
You canât even blame Gideon, not really. Without his persistent messages, and all the links he sent you of articles revolving androids and how they can help the user cope with grief, youâd have been none the wiser to the concept, sure- but at the end of the day, you made the choice to get one.
A chunk of your savings and an unprompted, fat check from Calebâs best buddyâ you decided to throw that at some futuristic company (well, not âsomeâ: both men worked there- albeit they always kept their work very hush (you did catch whispers of a promotion, though, before the accident)) and one of the many services they provide.
Gideon, over the course of some months, was all but pointing you at their website, promising it would help. Heâd be there to clear any confusion, in any case; hey, how neat did a walkthrough of the site from a bonafide EVER engineer sound?: Just one of his probes.
It was only two weeks back, however, when he paid an unsolicited house call, wordlessly wrapping you into his broad chest, that you caved to them.
You think about the scene while you sit at the counter and sip from your mug.
Your home smells richly of coffee, just brewed, and bacon as it sizzles. Eyeing not-Caleb with a pang of uneaseâ not fully able to snuff out that feeling of uncanniness even as some days pass peacefullyâ you offer a small smile when he glances up at you.
Beaming just as he was the day before. Beaming like nothing is terribly wrong.
(To be clear, something is.)
You⌠canât help but feel like youâre being monitored when he stares.
Yes, itâs a silly fear, you know that. The company your late brother worked for wasnât exactly open with all the scientific grounds they made breakthroughs on, but he always promised that their means were lawful. Caleb wasnât one for lies- so your doubts were soothed. So as hush-hush as EVER is sometimes, youâre fairly confident they wouldnât ship out mass batches of faulty or otherwise rigged products.
Anyway- you suppose the weird intensity in its eyes isnât all that off-putting when you take into account the very real personality it was formulated from.
When the pancakes (your favorite: banana chocolate chip; information he apparently already knew) turn an appetizing shade of gold, he shimmies them off the pan with a spatula and onto a plate.
That plate- loaded tastefully with bacon, a scoop of rice, and eggs with a ketchup smile painted over its face- slides before you. But though your belly growls, you donât eat. Not right away. Wherever the culinary arts are concerned, your older brother has always excelled. Growing up, maybe you even exploited him a little for it- but he never did anything he didnât want to; sometimes it even seemed like Caleb enjoyed sticking his neck out for you.
He pats his hands over his too-small apron (not that he minds it), frowning.
âWhatâs wrong, Pipsqueak? Does⌠Does the food look alright? I havenât made somethinâ for you in a while, huhâŚ?â
Oh no, the food looks fine.
Itâs just that youâre the only one eating it.
And maybe itâd be better to keep that thought to yourself: part of you is just over the moon to have him standing in your kitchen with you after months apartâ but it doesnât matter that you keep your mouth shut, because Caleb reads your mind anyway.
Heâs at your side in a blink, hushing away the tears that bead at your eyes out of nowhere.
âHey, hey⌠No cryinâ, okay? Iâm just not hungry this morning, Meimei- but that doesnât mean I wonât sit with you and talk while you eat. Câmon,â he squeezes your hand where it lies on the counter, smiling lightly.
It takes everything in you not to flinch away from the touch.
âWouldnât want your breakfast goinâ cold now, would we?â Pulling out the barstool beside you, he sits.
You donât ask him to, but Caleb picks up your fork and embodies one of the several memories you have of him spoonfeeding you as a child.
âI can feed you. Just like the good olâ times. Here, you gotta open your mouth first,â His smile strengthens when your lips, as if by habit, part. Your lashes flutter shut when that first bite touches your tongue- syrupy hotcakes and fluffy scrambled eggs- and for that youâre glad because you donât have to see the way he marvels at you as you eat.
Itâs not good for your heart.
âSo? What does Pipsqueak the number one food critic have to say about my dish?â He shines, âDoes it taste as good as it looks?â You canât help the breathless laugh that escapes- the scene too nostalgic to simply idle away with indifference. You wear all your emotions on your face, anyway; youâre not fooling anybody, least of all Caleb.
âEven better,â you murmur with the barest of smiles. He presses another spoonful to your lips and you giggle.
Violet hues glitter with delight. Youâve said practically nothing to him this whole time, and heâs been patient- weirdly patient, almost- but the joy in his gaze is palpable now.
Sometimes, though, you can almost swear you see something in his gaze shift. Tuning itself like a lens. He blinks and it disappears.
ââŚBut I will say your presentation could use some work. Itâs a 7 out of 10.â
Caleb, still holding the utensil out, uses his other hand to prop his chin up. He smiles fondly as he regards you. As youâve gotten older, itâs like every time you see the brunet, he looks at you like heâs taking you in for the first time all over again.
âYeah?â He encourages. âEnlighten me, oh Pipsqueak- what must I do to earn those three extra points?â
âThe ketchup smiley face was all lopsided,â you explain in a quiet voice, having a hard time fully immersing in this lie unraveling before you; beautiful as it is. As much as you might ache to.
This isnât a good idea. You know that.
StillâŚ
Maybe⌠maybe just a couple of conversations with him canât be too bad, right? I mean, itâs only a fraction of what Gideon was expecting of you (lounging around together to chat, game nights, and even public outings), but to him, itâd be a start. For you, though, itâs a stretch. An exception.
You should limit interaction with not-Caleb.
You know this, and yetâ
Glancing back to him, you try and fail to hide a coy smile with a napkin. âNext time, keep a steady hand, and youâll be a perfect chef in no time. Maybe not as good as me, but, yâknowâŚâ
He chuckles, brows lifting. âOh yeah? Then expect surgical precision from me tomorrow morning. Chef Caleb wonât let you down again!â
An intense sadness slips through the momentary happiness you were allowed. It nags at your chest.
You blink rapidly, giving a feeble, light sound before looking away.
Youâve never let me down, Gege, you donât say, taking your fork from the clasp of his big hand (much to his dismay) to prod at your plate.
It was me who failed you.
âŚ
Not-Caleb looks like Caleb, yes.
He acts like him, too.
You spend the span of the next few weeks trying to scrutinize him; hours spent on the couch, his hand in yours while you grill him. You treat him like a bug under a microscope. Prodding for answers to questions youâre sure his programming must miss- interrogations built on memories so old theyâre near ancient. Just blurry wisps in your mind.
Not-Caleb remembers some better than you.
Puts you to shame with his mechanical replies detailing scenarios youâre missing fragments of.
Whatâs Calebâs favorite fruit?
I like apples, Pipsqueak.
And whatâs my favorite food heâd make for me?
Easy-peasy. You still love those boneless chicken wings, donât you? Although, that braised pork I make for you comes as a close second, doesnât it?
Am I your real sister?
And youâd never ask the real Caleb such a thing. Youâre only doing it now because itâs one of the most personal things you could possibly make a query of. His response would be very telling.
Life before you met him all those years ago is no more than a fuzzy glimpse, and you never minded all that much: so long as you had Caleb, nothing else, nothing before, mattered. All throughout your childhood, people didnât know the difference anyway.
Far as they knew, you were family.
Which⌠isnât wrong, per seâ but itâs not biological. âReal.â
You, Caleb, and Gran were obviously aware of that. To you it was always a beautiful thing: a tale of rebirth, in a way, or a second chance, as a young girl found a new place to call home with a warm guardian and a brotherly figure. Theyâd stabilize her and bring warmth to an otherwise cold beginning.
Caleb was never spoken for on that front.
You⌠didnât see eye to eye on all things. Oh, that much is true.
Sometimes you were convinced that he wanted nothing to do with the assumption that you were his little sister (albeit, you were never sure why). At others, it was like he was furious you were only bound to him in name and not blood. He saw it as an attack on your close bond.
âŚBut Not-Caleb surely doesnât know all his nuances. Not like you came to.
So youâre expecting a pause. A minor glitch or even a malfunction as the robot scours his database.
Got him, you almost think to yourselfâ then swiftly take it back.
The face of the android sat at your side falls, much to your surprise, into a small frown.
And the truth must be coded deep in the bulwarks of not-Calebâs artificial brain: your and Calebâs respective origins. The answer is no. No, youâre not his real sister.
âŚBut your real Gege would lie and say yes, absolutely you areâ
ââCourse you are,â Not-Caleb goes. And he does it with as much passion behind it as youâd expect.
Youâre startled into silence.
He scoots impossibly closer and loops an arm over your shoulder, tucking your head to his jaw. Seamlessly, he pecks your hairline, saying, âYouâre my sweet little Meimei. Youâre priceless to me. Now no more pickinâ at me, okay?â He suggests in a light tone, rubbing your shoulder. âYouâve been questioning me all evening- look, it even got dark out. Letâs get you to bed-â
âI- I didnât say I was tired-â
âYou didnât have to. I could tell you were startinâ to get sleepy, Pipsqueak,â he looks down at you and smiles- a reassuring, yet no less playful smile- and for one moment you cant breathe because fuck itâs him. Itâs really, really him. âYour drooping eyes were a dead giveaway. Hm... I guess that big dinner we had put you in a food coma, huh?â He chuckles.
We. Funny, that. You recall the feast being one-sided.
Nonetheless.
Without prompting, he sweeps you off the couch and walks you up the wooden stairway. The old steps creak underfoot. He does it all effortlessly, though, arms as strong and capable as you remember.
You loop your slimmer ones around his neck.
With great hesitance, you lend a part of yourself to this illusion.
This beautiful, near unbelievable, oh-so fragile illusion that Caleb is not dead.
When you reach your bedroom, you donât send him off to the guest room like all the nights before. No, when he carefully sets you down, you watch him, motionlessly, as he tucks you in and plants a chaste kiss to your forehead. When he turns to go- âdonât let the bed bugs biteâ- you snatch his hand, half terrified youâll blink and heâll be gone, and flash him a look that silently pleads.
Stay.
The brunetâs lashes flutter, brushing over his cheekbones where the lamplight makes them shine.
He opens his mouth.
Pauses, then closes it.
âStay. Please, Gege,â you breathe, on the cusp of shattering all over again. Itâs become more manageable over recent days, this unresolved cluster of emotion inside you, but itâs times like these that make you feel blindsided by it.
You innocently add, âLike when we were kids.â
Oh, youâd go back to then if you could.
His long fingers, loose in your hold, flip to swallow up your hand. He stoops over to turn off the light.
His voice shakes ever so slightly, âOkay.â
Then, he clambers into bed with you and reminds you of just how small it is, how much he does not belong, but youâve never felt more at home when he pulls you to his chest and- dutifully ignoring the quiet beneath your ear, the absence of a pulse- you cling to him.
Maybe itâd be a little weird, the proximity, what with your grown age and the fact that you were no longer children cuddling during thunderstormsâŚ
Itâs not like youâre hanging off him like heâs your lifeline for any nefarious reason, though- and itâs not like he can hold any judgment anyway. Heâs⌠Heâs not really Caleb. Heâs not even a person. Just a sentient robot that resembles him to a shocking degree and soothes that ache in your chest- just by a smidge.
âŚAnd yet when he looks at you, suddenly, tilting your jaw up so he can admire what he sees in the darkness- your stunned expression lit faintly by the moon- itâs like heâs reading this in his own way.
His interpretation? you realize in a shaking breath?
Heâs no longer holding his little sister, but a woman.
Itâs in his eyes, rippling as he exhales deeply (all artificial, albeit you donât dwell on that for long) and thumbs over your lip.
A boyish kind of wonder lifts his brow as he stares, cheeks slightly flushed.
Your heart bangs in your chest. Like gunshots punctuating the silence. It grows to be unbearable. This is weird, and wrong- the way heâs looking at you. But you quickly chalk it up to a malfunction.
Itâs all a fluke, technology fucking up in a way that reminds you of humanityâs shortcomings and how far they can only go.
Finally, youâve found the fault in its design. The place where Caleb and not-Caleb differ.
You know your beloved older brother like the back of your own hand, so when his eyes flutter (flash, almost) and he lurches forward to clumsily press his lips to yoursâ you label the action for what it really is.
An inaccuracy.
Perhaps, you think as you close your bleared eyes and let him, the only. Because the rest of his program is perfect. Infallible.
The scene unfurling is foreign- his big hands cupping your cheeks as he kisses you like his life depends on it- but as he shifts you beneath him and hovers atop, that signature softness remains. Really, as his fingertips reach for your shortsâ
(A blip of something mechanical in its fiery gaze, almost as if itâs trying to rectify itself; the shortest of pausesâ)
Itâs all that grounds you.
âCaleb,â you moan, or cry. You donât know. Just that when he helps you out of your panties to go down on you, digits delving inside your tight hole after he wets it with his tongue, your heart sings for him.
You donât push him away. No, even as the humanoid sullies your late brotherâs image with all his sinful hungering, you canât break yourself free. Never find it in you to.
Because it doesnât matter what he treats you as. You realize belatedly, with no small amount of horror, that you donât even care how many flaws Not-Caleb has. He could have a million for all you care, youâre already too far gone- writhing underneath him as he holds your legs open and feasts- to pretend you have any right to feel offended.
And if the real Caleb was here, heâd hate you: an echo in your skull, sneering. He should, but-
âThere, Meimei, nghâŚâ a hot tongue (no longer as cold as he was in stasis) laves along your folds. Mauve eyes look up to you with reverence, glittering in the dark.
âJust like that. Moan, say my name- Iâve been waiting for this for so longâŚâ
You wear ignorance like a blindfold. Shutting your eyes and ears.
A fluke. His hardware stalling.
His hair woven in your fingers feels like velvet. Soft, silky; hanging over his brow as he eats you out- skillfully, might you add. Albeit his passion wins out by just a touch against his expertise, clumsily plunging his two middle fingers into your pussy.
âYou taste so good, so sweet- mmph- Iâll take care of you, okay?â He mumbles in between lewd squelches.
In both physical and moral terms, there is not one thing about this that isnât filthy.
Y-You know that, butâŚ
âDonât worry. Iâll- ah- Iâll make sure you feel real nice. Iâll make you come as many times as you want. Iâve been⌠dreaminâ of this for years now⌠I wonât mess this up, okay? Iâll do whatever it takes until youâre shaking.â
-but this is all you have left of him.
Hazily, you glance down to him, cheeks aflame, and barely succeed in asking, âC-Caleb- h-how are you even gonna-? You-â you choke on the words you need to say. With a mite of dry humor, you think right then that youâre short-circuiting just as bad as him (because he is).
âAre you capable of it?â
Of fucking you? Of pinning you down and throwing your ankles over his shoulders to better plow you into your creaking, old mattress?
His brow twitches slightly. Voice ragged, he makes an agreeable sound, pressing a kiss to your clit so adoring itâs almost funny when his finger bends sensually inside you. âAre you doubting my abilities, Meimei? Iâll have you know Iâve been practicing this moment in my head forââ
No. You slam your eyes shut and drown it all out.
His words become a white noise. No different than the steady whir of the air conditioning as a cool breeze gusts beneath your door, cooling your forehead where it beads with sweat.
A- A glitch, you quietly decide. Even long after heâs made you cum thrice (twice on his fingers and tongue, once on his thick, flushed cock), you hold staunch to that.
Itâs all just a fluke.
âŚ
When the sun rises, you wake with a start to a phone ringing- yours- and swallow a lump of unease at the figure lying beside you (your Gege, a voice in your head reminds: you silence it).
Prying off the solid arm around your waist to gingerly exit the room- still half-naked- you piously ignore the cum caked to the inside of your thighs. Yours, it must be. You donât focus on the confusion, either, the ask of just how the hell last night was possible and why you let your emotions get ahold of you.
(Because you love him. And maybe, just maybe- in your own weird, admittedly morally-grey way- you can cobble together a sense of normalcy with him. At least just for a little bit...)
As you head to the living room downstairs, you tap your phone and lift it to your ear.
âG-Gran,â you say as greeting, smoothing your hair back, still quite ruffled over⌠recent events. Ruffled and ashamed.
Very.
But- while he looks like Caleb, heâs not in reality. That⌠malfunction last night is a blatant proof of that. You only got on your back and let him have his way with you because youâve missed his touch so much that youâd quite literally accept it in any form.
If sex or his lips battling against yours- his whispered vows, as seemingly heartfelt as they were errant to Calebâs true character- is all youâll get of him, then so be it.
In your own way, messed up as it is, itâs almost like with his android, you get a chance to reconcile with the loss.
To say goodbye.
Because before that package arrived at your doorstep, you didnât have the luxury of one.
A familiar, aged voice sounds over the line. âHey, dearie, oh- I didnât wake you, did I? You sound tired.â Sheâs one to talk, you think to yourself- but not with malice. Truth be told youâve worried for her as of late.
Itâs been lonely for you both, youâre sure, but even though she only lives on the other end of Linkon, you have trouble making the drive. You havenât dropped by in a couple weeks.
Thereâs a few different reasons.
Itâs hard to pretend youâre fine when youâre not, for one, that what happened with Caleb- the abruptness and lack of conclusion, the confusing aftermath of it all- never did. You try your best to plaster on a smile and be strong in your grandmotherâs presence, but thatâs easier said than done. Especially when that old house of hers is jam-packed with photos and tokens of your past with himâ painful reminders whenever you do visit.
The newest excuse for not is guilt.
Frankly, Gideon is the only one who knows whatâs going on. Hah- no surprise, being he was the main reason for your even ordering not-Caleb.
But Gran doesnât know.
You havenât told her about him. And after last night, what with your own release still dried to your legs (which wobble slightly; he was every bit passionate and then some), you donât think you ever will.
She might actually slap you across the face, taking your willingness to believe in such a lie as an offense against her grandsonâs vibrant character.
âŚIf she found out what happened- that you opened your legs for him and moaned- she might go into cardiac arrest.
You didnât⌠want that to happen, definitely not- I mean, you didnât even have the time to prepare. But yes, you did let it.
And curse yourself for wanting your brother back, butâ
âNo, itâs fine, Gran,â you glance over your shoulder to the staircase. Finding it empty, you let out a breath. âIs something wrong? Itâs⌠Itâs early.â
âyouâd be lying if you said it didnât feel a little fucking blissful to wake up to his face again, just like back when you were inseparable kids.
She sighs on the other end, âno, no,â she starts. You think you hear a TV in the background; something to fill the silence you leave her to sit in. âNothingâs wrong, my dear. I just⌠I havenât seen you in a bit. I miss your face, Y/n. How are you doing?â
Like a dart to a board, guilt lands its mark.
You shouldnât fluster at such a simple question, but you do. Not just because itâs so direct and genuine, but because a big hand rests over your shoulder and suddenly Caleb is there, standing behind you.
You straighten up from where youâre propped against the wall and quickly lift a hand to silence any words he may speak.
âI-Iâm well, Gran. Sorry, just- Iâll visit soon, I promise.â
âIâd like that,â she murmurs. Youâre aware of how much she means it and close your eyes with a wince. A broad palm, as if sensing your inner turmoil, rubs your shoulder soothingly.
You rub the bridge of your nose and donât look.
âWhatâs⌠Whatâs been keeping you?â She broaches after a beat. Laughter from the television fades in and out over the speaker.
For a second, you freeze. You freeze because you fear she might know.
All for naught: âYouâre getting enough sleep, right? I donât want you overworking yourself. I know youâve had a lot on your mind, sweetie- oh, God knows weâve both suffered all these months without Caleb, but thatâs no reason for us to fall apart either-â
You sigh shakily and bite down on a cry.
âYeah, I know. But Iâve been better, Gran, okay? IâŚâ Shiftily, you wet your bottom lip and give a half truth- as if that can relieve you of this weight. âI was talking with Gideon a little; heâsâŚ. he helped me.â
She sounds pleasantly surprised. âOh? Good, good. What about?â
Nosy as ever. Not that youâre complaining. Itâs good to know someone cares- someone⌠real.
You swallow your unease. âHe was just talking to me about his job and stuff. EVER... He told me he was finally getting that raise or whatever, so heâs doing well... I- I was prying per usual,â you joke to lighten the mood, âHe, uh⌠he tells me more than Caleb ever did, soâŚâ (And when his name started to feel like a sin to say, you donât know.) âSo, you know. I was just curious. He was checking in on me, tooâŚâ
Warm breath fans at your ear, fingers closing around your shoulder as he peppers kisses at your neck insistently- and you shudder. Clasping the phone tighter (because it suddenly feels unstable in your hands), you shrug off (not)Caleb for just long enough to say,
âGran- I- I gotta go. Uh- someone else is calling me,â and to preclude any probing on her end- or extra guilt on yours- you add, âIâll visit tomorrow, okay? I promise. Iâll- Iâll be there. I love you.â
A voice timidly mirrors it back, and then a big set of hands is taking the phone from you and ending the call.
You turn to him with a notch in your brow as he pockets it in the sweats he mustâve hastily thrown on after finding the bed empty.
âCaleb-â
You start, and his lips press to yours.
With some encouragement- hushing you between kisses, knuckling down your cheek affectionately- he shepherds you back upstairs, to your room.
âNuh-uh, just let me take care of you, pretty girl, âkay?â He murmurs, smiling. You could die in peace to it, you think hazily as he lies you downâ because the last mental screenshot you took of him before the accident was his handsome face crestfallen after youâd said something scathing.
To your defense, at the time, you thought heâd deserved it. Maybe he did. Itâs hard to remember, but whatever the argument was about, it mustâve been stupid. Not worth it.
And⌠heâs not Caleb, heâs not, you know that, butâŚ
âLie back. Itâs⌠Itâs just you and me here. I want you to know that. And everyone else-â
(Gran, you realize he must mean; Gideon and all the other familiar and unfamiliar faces both at EVER.)
âNone of it matters now. Just focus on me. On Caleb.â
(And how eerie is that? You muse with a whit of your rationale. The rest, as it withers, perhaps only does so for the sake of your own sanity.)
The whole world as it stands: nudged away to oblivion at his behest.
âO-Okay,â you give.
Heâs not Caleb. But if this is your best- only- shot at reconciliation, then youâll take him with arms open.
âŚ
When heâs done priming you, he clambers on top and you experience a repeat of last night.
Deja vu, as fresh as a wound reopened, makes your mind lag a few increments behind reality. But when he starts to slow down, thrusts growing sloppy- it feels oddly real, and, head a bit clearer than last night, you register that.
âŚBut itâs your release that stains the sheets. Steadily trickling from your hole, slicking his hips. It only makes sense that way; he might fuck like a human, but thatâs all inherent to his program, youâre sure, built to please- and ultimately, heâs made of metal. Rods. You think you can feel them when you grab too tight, that hardness.
He leads you to the proverbial end of the cliff, and you survey the bottom one last time before- geronimo- you make that final leap.
When not-Caleb comes, he shudders in your arms.
Yet you swear⌠You swear something inside him, behind his lidded eyes, deeper in-
Itâs like it shutters.
A flash. Brief and jarring, for a moment so bright itâs like your eyes have been virginal to light all along.
Just a malfunction, you decide with a spent sigh, sweaty in his solid arms as they make a cage around you, eager to sleep until noon.
Maybe youâll mention it to Gideon next time he drops by.
Maybe he would know how to fix it.
âŚ
The days that follow after are foggy and empty. Like a moratorium of everything that once breathed in your life.
You wreathe not-Calebâs neck with that beloved apple-shaped locket like heâs earned it.
Knowing nobody ever could.
âŚ
Gideon knocks, one afternoon.
You send him away. Or- Caleb does.
At that, you feel the need to remind him of who he is: the people he cares for, his career path, how he operated as a person before the incident in his suite in Skyhaven.
Caleb stops you short, a palm dwarfing the back of your own, and says I know. I just donât want my buddy interrupting our time together, Pipsqueak. Can you blame me for wantinâ it to be just you and me?
You stop going out.
He doesnât let you- not really. I mean, he doesnât explicitly declare these rules over you, but itâs in the strange glint in his eye- the one that makes you shut your mouth and purse your lips- when he stops you at the door and suggests you stay.
Says itâs better that way. Says he worries whenever you go. Says to take him with you instead if you really must.
Progressively, youâre drifting farther and farther out from shore. Mentally-speaking, youâre going off the deep end. But exiting your house hand-in-hand with your brother- the man the town declared dead in an email you couldnât bear to finish reading- as he stares at you like a lover, is, no matter the ache, something you canât quite bring yourself to do.
Itâd make this illusion just a smidgen realer. Youâd never wake from this dream if other people saw it- saw him- and therefore made his presence more solid in your mind. (Not to mention the disgusting assumptions theyâd make- none exactly wrong.)
Youâve been so consumed by grief lately, though, that the knowing of your imminent breakdown canât stop you from making other bad choices.
So when the brunet altogether bars you from going out in public for the fear that something bad will happen to you (nonsensical; not that he sees the flaws in his arguments), insisting that groceries can be bought online, Gran can be checked up on over the phone, etceteraâ
Yeah, you bend to it, alright? Sue you. Of course you bend. Itâs all you know what to do anymore.
Gradually, though, the unexpected charm of not-Caleb begins to fade, and youâre left with a possessive form of the brother you once knew. A man desperately clawing at straws, hellbent to keep you at his side, clingy and insecure and, frankly, sometimes scary.
As the inaccuracies build, youâre not sure for how much longer you can overlook them.
The only reason you even tolerated him originally was because he was passable. More than that, even- he was perfect. A dead-ringer for Caleb in both appearance and personality.
But this-
This isnât Caleb. No longer. It never was.
You donât believe it for a second.
You heave a soft sigh. Anything louder than a breath brings the chance that heâll overhear from where he stands in the kitchen and come zipping over, no doubt ready to fret and question you. If you value your time alone- rare as it is these days- then youâll stay silent.
Itâs a near impossible task to separate yourself from him. It was a small miracle in itself that you managed to break away for half an hour or so- but even that was begat by a lie. It seems the only real way to rid yourself of the overly doting, obsessive older brother (even if just for a few minutes) is to give him another demand. This time, it was an âIâm hungryâ that finally earned you some peace and quiet.
Itâs a little sad, but lately you treat him more or less like a jacket after entering a warm home: youâre eager to shrug him off because the climate has changed.
The climate has changed.
He- Heâs changed.
Heâs growingly insane and yes, while the irony of that observation isnât lost on you (considering youâre the mad woman who bought a human-like robot as a replacement in the first place), you still canât help but feel alarmed as the signs of wrongness donât cease but worsen.
You think about pressing the button. Turning him off, sending him away.
Hell, maybe youâd just dump him in the communal trash receptacles out back. Leave him there in a human-shaped bag for the garbage men to come and squint at before hauling away like junk.
âŚBecause he is junk, right? No different than a crumb on the floor, youâd once said.
Perhaps youâve lost it.
The section of your brain responsible for caring mustâve shut off, though, because itâs currently hard to feel much of anything.
âŚBut there, like a soft stirring (or the voice of God as it whispered to Elijah)- you can sense it. That feeling is reminiscent of a survival instinct, or a watered-down version of it to tired nerves, breathing down the back of your neck where hackles riseâ
What are you doing here?
The dream begins to fissure in real-time when Caleb (not-Caleb, you harshly remind yourself) cheerfully patters into the living room where you sit, helpful as ever, and his eye flashes as it settles on you. No different than a camera would.
The food looks delicious, per usual- youâd expect nothing less of your brother or even the robotic copy of him- but as nausea churns in your belly and you jolt upright, slapping a hand over your mouth as you run to the bathroom, nothing can save your appetite.
You shakily lock the door- but heâs knocking in an instant, worried.
You always did melt at his bleeding heart. Too often, men, especially the bigger of them, fell under the persuasion of apathy. Yet your gege was always different, always sweet, always gentle and patient and- yeah, okay, sometimes he was a touch mean, teasing to a fault- sometimes to the point of tears on your end as he quickly tried to right his wrongs- but he was preciously yours.
And he was real.
Dammit, he was fucking real-
He was alive and emotionally tangible in a way that this awful fucking hunk of metal is not and never will beâ
âPipsqueak-? Hey, hey, whatâs wrong? Let me in. A-Are you not feeling well?â His words crack when you say nothing, dutifully ignoring him.
âY/n⌠Let me in. Please-! donât leave me alone, donât go.â His voice becomes ragged, raw, the longer you donât answer. Boyish in its vulnerability. âStay- Stay here with me.â
By God your soul splinters down the middle. But you donât answer. You- You canât.
You throw your lunch up in the toilet and then your back against the wall, sliding down it with your hands over your ears like a child.
You donât care, if heâs shouting and beating at the door, on the brink of hysteria like youâve heard only once or twice when he was a boy too soft for his own good- you donât care- you donât careâ
You sit there until he short-circuits out and thuds to the floor.
You flinch when he does.
Only then, however, do you tiptoe out- careful lest you trigger some internal response from him- to quickly pull on a hoodie and put your hair up, locking the front door behind you.
You donât know for how long heâll be conked out, but if luck is on your side, itâll be for long enough to run to the local corner store and buy a pregnancy test.
You know youâre losing it, the little sanity you had left after your brother passedâ misreading a common cold for a veritable child swelling in your womb.
Itâs laughable: using your sleeve (another old piece of his clothing you âborrowedâ, never to be returned) to dot away the tears at your lashline, you do laugh on the short trek to the convenience store.
But if not a reminder that you really are going crazy, losing control, then at least itâs just an opportunity to get some fresh air for a bit, right?
(âŚYou also know that the first step to regaining back said control is to say goodbye to not-Caleb.
As it stands, though, youâre just-
You were never ready.)
âŚ
Two pink lines.
The thing clatters to the bathroom floor, and you along with it.
You sink to your knees and the white walls surrounding you feel more like an asylum than a space in your own house- because yes, you must be delusional. This is the final nail in the coffin.
But this- this canât be right. Itâs impossible. In the strictest sense of the word itâs impossible!
Heavy feet traipse in the kitchen; the livingroom; the hall, searching for you with faint, candied beckons of your name.
You rub your face as if to feel the color as it seeps from your complexion, and tell yourself that youâve positively lost it as you thoughtlessly choose one of the corners to slump into, hyperventilating.
Youâll- youâll send it back to EVER... Youâll send it back and forget and move on. Youâll move on. Youâll stop grieving, youâll squirrel away your fraying, final memories of Caleb like you did all those precious photos in that old shoebox in your closet.
Youâll-âŚ
A breath. The fan whirs.
The faucet, going full-blast, sputters, effectively drowning out the sounds you make as air becomes a tricky thing to intake; thick enough to choke on.
Youâll throw yourself into the fifth stage of grief then crawl out the other side of it if thatâs what it takes to undo this fucking reality youâre lost in-
âPipsqueak?â A hand on your shoulder.
Broad, big. A little weathered.
But gentle always. Gentle always. Just like you remember. Just like when Caleb meant Caleb; not the big glorified toy that walks and acts like him as an admittedly convincing, yet ultimately faux locum.
Your heart stills, hanging pendant in your chest. You swing from that uncertainty. By God youâd beat that handsome face in- oh, but by God would you kiss it, too.
The door sways on its hinge by splintered fragments, creaking behind the brunet.
Timidly, you lift your head over your shoulder to meet his eye where he towers behind you, violet hues softening with concern. They drift lower, honing in on the little item by your knee, wayward.
He coos immediately, enveloping you in his strong arms.
The feeling- itâs not exactly like that of the one youâd get while swimming in a hot tub, engulfed in its steaming waters, but itâs not too far off either. You let him hold you, unseeing as he all but sings in your ear, and restore the warmth to your bones.
Like a dead thing, or prey, you hang limp in his firm grasp. Terribly uncertain.
âShhâŚâ he croons, and you only realize a belated moment later that youâre crying. Hard and ugly.
He pets down your hair, ever the comforter, and as you press your head against his barrel chest itâs almost like you can hear a faint whirring in lieu of a heartbeat- speedy but low.
Unreal. Unreal. But then how-?
Perhaps youâve lost it.
âWeâll figure it out together, honey,â you think itâs a barely concealed smile you register at the crown of your head, pasting down a kiss. âBut no more cryinâ, okay? I canât stand to see you like this⌠Let me draw you a bath, hm? Iâll light some candles and we can talk about it. But donât be scared. This is⌠such good news,â and then he laughs- a boyish, marveling little laugh that digs deep into your heart and twists.
The button, between his breastbone, just out of reach, glows faintly through his shirt.
For a moment youâre ready to press it like a player would on a game showâ with urgencyâ but you blink and see those two pink lines searing themselves into your conscience.
Defeatedly, you shut your eyes. But you donât shut him off.
âŚ
With Caleb preparing dinner, youâre able to slip away one evening for long enough to call Gran.
For worried friends and relatives, your voicemail box is becoming quite the hotbed- but among them, your grandmother is the priority.
Propping yourself by the sliding glass door, you brush back the curtain and look out to the small, cookie-cutter yard as you accept the call. Not without a shaky breath to prepare you, though; itâs been over a month since your last visit, and while your calls havenât been quite as behind, you still wince a bit every time her contact pops up.
You want to tell her.
If not about Caleb, then at least the small bump forming beneath your oversized lounge shirt. Thereâs excuses for it- ones to be frowned upon, yes, but theyâd be believable nonetheless. Obviously, a pregnancy is not something as simple to hide as a robot you can turn on and off and, if needed, stuff in the coat closet until the coast is clear.
You want to tell her. But-
You purse your lips, answering, âHey Gran.â
The tone of her voice, frazzled and barely holding together, sends a chill down your spine.
âY/n- where have you been? Is everything okay? Iâve been- Iâve been calling all afternoon.â
You digest that information with a quirk of your brow, scanning across the lawn outside, and a thick swallow.
Thereâs the voicemails, sure; it was only two nights ago you were poring over them all and holding back tears of guilt. But this afternoon? It was quiet- almost blissfully so, spent curled up to Calebâs chest on the sofa as you watched an old favorite movie and he happily fed you fruit-flavored candies from his hand every so often.
Nobody called, let alone multiple times. Youâre sure of it.
âGran- what? No, Iâm fine. Whatâs wrong?â You start, tossing a nervous glance behind you, internally grateful that Calebâs absent humming while he chopped veggies was too distant for the phone to pick up.
She blusters out, apropos of nothing, âIs he there with you?â
Something in you stills.
âY/n- is he there with you?â
An abnormal rush of blood to your ears and a murmur of your heart as you stand confused. The fingers curled around your phone case jitter.
You hold it closer to your ear.
âWhat? What are you talking about? I-Is who here with me?â
Does she- Thereâs no fucking chance- does she know?
How?
Chest thumping, your pulse fluttering in the column of your throat as it bobs uncertainly, you begin to wonder to yourself if this is the time you come clean, lay all your sins out like cards on a table. Make the confession.
Push has come to shove, you think. And fuck if you know where all this is coming from on her end, if Gideon told her or she just miraculously put two and two together or-
An exhale on her end, shaking on its way out.
âWere you not told? Dear-â she broaches, louder, more firmâ and this is just milliseconds before the world as you know it- the one you freed of your hands and let reshape itself around a delicate delusion- buckles at the knees. Itâs right before you do, too.
âThey found him. They found Caleb.â
That breath, right afterward of her telling you, is like the first one after drowning.
Your eyes widen as you break the surface.
His- His body. The tinny footage they dredged up from the area showed he entered his home, but after the explosion, there was no sign of him, no ash no corpse no nothingâ So you donât know how the hell they managed to recover his pieces, let alone after they already ran clean-up crews through the charred infrastructure and hosed it down- but youâre hysterical at the news.
You were cruelly forced, all along, to just assume heâd been burned to nothingness.
So you donât even care about the how. How itâs possible or how this is happening after several months of white noise and hurting on your endâ you donât care.
You were made to come to terms with his death, and you did, at most, acknowledge it- but evidently, you could never quite accept it.
âŚIf this is your final chance to say goodbye- even if it just means peering over a metal table in the morgue as he lies disheveled, hardly recognizable under a sheet- so fucking be it.
Youâll say goodbye if it kills you.
âWhat-? Where- where?â Your tone reflects as much, urgent as you stagger over to the sofa, nearly tripping as you reach for the jacket slung over the arm.
âI-Im coming,â you croak out, words failing you as the velvety carpet feels like mud beneath your bare feet- hard to walk across, every step making you feel like a baby taking its first ones.
One second youâre navigating a truth so unbelievable itâs near violent as it barrels into you; in the next, youâre collapsing under the weight of it, too caught up in your own scrambling for your keys and the door to even think of not-Caleb.
Gran goes to timidly say something, but your ears are shot and you quickly interject, âLet me get dressed- I-Iâll be there! Is he at the morgue?â
âOh, no, honey,â she quavers out, âHeâs alive. The town just messaged me; they made a mistake with his death certificate- theyâre revoking it as we speak. Heâs in Skyhaven.â
The phone drops to the floor.
And then that, too, gives way beneath you.
âŚItâs good a helping hand is there for you, then. Shouldering your weight without prompting- fretful as he confiscates the device, no different than a teacher with an unruly student, swiftly disconnecting the call.
It tuts in your ear, but- more sober than youâve ever been- you can only note the sympathy practically dripping from its tone for what it really is: the upshot of its near immaculate programming as it mimics your considerate gege to a T.
Not-Caleb noses against your nape and sighs.
Mutely, you wind a hand, tottering, uncoordinated fingers and all, behind your back to grope along his chestâ
He easily gathers both your wrists in his palm, âhey now,â turning you around. He lifts your knuckles up for a chaste kiss, watching you intently all the while.
A cold weight settles over you, soaking you through like meat left overnight to marinate. From the kitchen, stirfry sizzles in the pan. A few moments more of it and the smoke detectors will fire off.
âŚHe just leans in to peck your forehead though, deaf to the sirens you hear wailing in your head, having mastered the art of playing dumb long ago.
He murmurs, as cloying as cake frosting, âCâmon, Pipsqueak, letâs go eat. Dinnerâll be done in just a sec. I made one of your favorites. After that, we can sit around the couch and brainstorm some more names for the baby- what dâyou think?â
Flukes, malfunctions, glitchesâ no; Not-Caleb, you realize right then, ceasing to blink as you stare at its prototype through the shifting lens head-on, was never flawed.
ââŚBut youâre not leavinâ, not to him.â
The real one was.
đđđđđđ, đđđđđđđđ, + đđđđđđđ đđđ đđđđ đđđđđđđđđđđ âĄ
Go look at my friendâs amazing art!!!
your heart-
soft and heavy with love.
your love-
wild and warm like summer.
A little something I did for the Fan Art Contest. I havent seen the myth when I did the drawing, but GOOD NEWS I DIDNT GAVE UP AND GOT THE MYTH IN 140 PULLS...
I wish I could draw in digital art, maybe it could be better
// a little bit of angst, pseudocest, pining
âDid you ever want to kiss me when we were little?â
Caleb freezes.
You feel it where his arm is slung over your waist, the way his fingers twitch, the subtle shift in his breathing. He doesnât look at you right away- just stares at the ceiling like it holds all the answers, his lips parting slightly as if heâs considering lying.
He doesnât.
ââŚYeah.â His voice is quiet, almost embarrassed, like the confession is something delicate he never meant to say out loud. âA lot.â
You giggle, nudging his shoulder. âA lot?â
Caleb exhales sharply, running a hand down his face, but thereâs no real frustration there- just something shy, something unbearably fond. âGod, you were so annoying.â
You laugh harder at that, but he shakes his head, pressing on before you can interrupt.
âYouâd chew on my pencils, and get marker all over your hands, and steal my snacks, and I still- â He stops himself short, dragging his teeth over his bottom lip. When he finally looks at you, thereâs something unbearably soft in his gaze. âI still wanted to.â
Your breath catches.
Itâs different, hearing it now, spoken into the quiet of a night where youâre no longer kids, where the weight of time has pressed new shapes into you both. But beneath it all- beneath the years, the scars, the way you almost lost each other- heâs still Caleb. Still the boy who pulled you out of trouble and held you close when you were scared and, apparently, wanted to kiss you long before either of you could understand what that even meant.
âWhy didnât you?â you ask, voice barely above a whisper.
Caleb huffs a laugh, a little self-deprecating. âDunno. Thought youâd punch me.â
You snort. âI probably would have.â
He grins, shaking his head. âYeah. Thatâs why I waited.â
âWaited?â
Caleb lifts a hand, thumb brushing lightly- tentatively- against your cheek. Heâs close enough that you can feel his breath when he speaks, low and certain.
âFor you to be ready.â
Seeing people on Twitter calling the new banner cringe and saying theyâre gonna skip while Iâve already rubbed one out to it đŚ
Xavier sneaking onto MCs balcony when he hears something going on downstairs. The curtains are pulled most of the way closed, but thereâs just enough room to see Caleb eating her out on the couch. Despite the raging jealousy in his heart, Xavier is as hard as a rock.
He covers his mouth as he palms himself through his hunterâs uniform, desperately trying to imagine himself in Calebâs position. Heâs fantasized about tasting her sweetness countless times, once even going as far as to steal her panties sheâd left out after getting changed just so he could smell her lingering scent. But nothing could compare to the real thing- he needed her wetness on his tongue, needed to make her scream his name.
The lights flickered. Fuck. He was close.
Itâs not enough. He unbuckles his belt as quietly as he can before slipping his boxers down far enough to touch his aching cock. Small whimpers escape his lips as he gazes lustfully at MCâs blissed out expression. She should be moaning his name. Caleb should have stayed dead.
Any coherent thought escapes him as MC arches her back, grabbing a fistful of Calebâs hair as she finally climaxes. Xavier can barely steady himself on the balconyâs rail in time as he coats his uniform in a fresh layer of white right before everything goes dark.
Calebâs eyes dart to the window as a flash of bright light fills the room before disappearing, leaving the two surrounded by darkness as the lights blow. No thunder follows, but he swears he hears the balcony door above him slide shut.
he wishes you good luck.
i promise sheâs listening
I need Caleb and Xavier to hatefuck for MC
what if mc overwhelmed by/with guilt after finding out all the sacrifices rafayel has made for her at the cost of lemuria she uses the bond for one last comand. for rafayel to take her heart. it always belonged to him anyways.
rafayel is pleading, crying as his body reaches for his dagger against his will, his movements too stiff, nothing like his graceful and light usual behaviour. mc just smiles warmly at him, shushing his cries and repeating again and again "its okay"
Anons please stop worrying about your asks being âtoo weirdâ I promise theyâre not đâ¤ď¸ Iâm much freakier than you think