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blackwomanwriter · 1 month
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🟢 You are still a writer even when you haven't written in a while.
🟢 You are still a writer even when you feel like you aren't writing enough.
🟢 You are still a writer when you feel like your work isn't good.
🟢 You are still a writer when other people don't like your work.
🟢 You are still a writer when you aren't published.
🟢 You are still a writer when you only have works in progress.
🟢 You are still a writer if all you write is fanfiction.
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blackwomanwriter · 4 months
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blackwomanwriter · 7 months
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What really knocks me out is a book that, when you're all done reading it, you wish the author that wrote it was a terrific friend of yours and you could call him up on the phone whenever you felt like it. That doesn't happen much, though.
— J.D. Salinger. (via. luciferifilia)
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blackwomanwriter · 7 months
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I know I don’t be on here like that, but I see y’all liking and reblogging. And, I love y’all for that. I see you.
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blackwomanwriter · 7 months
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Thank you so much for reading my work and the feedback! I’m glad this gives the warm and fuzzies ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
"Mine"
Read: Part I, Part II
It's been a minute, but I finally wrote something. And of course, I had to go back to this series because there is something about Thomas Shelby. Anyways, I hope you enjoy, and let me know your favorite part. Happy Reading!
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He entered quietly like he was on a mission. Although this one was unlike the ones he had performed during the war and after. No, this mission was different. Very different. Yet, Tommy performed it with the same intensity.
Eyes narrowed on the quiet interior, clocking each entry point and exit way, like a soldier, he assessed his environment. He hadn’t been in a house this small since his childhood. Even back then, the space had felt cluttered and cramped. Too noisy to think. Too busy to breathe. The stench of his father’s hangover in the air before it disappeared altogether.
He remembered talking Arthur out of trying to find their father. A man unworthy of carrying - no, sharing his surname. Tommy tensed his jaw, moving past the memory. Instead, he raised a brow at how devastatingly clean the entire place felt. Physically tidy, but clean in a way that made the house feel empty. Unlived. Unloved. Cold. The opposite of everything he thought of her. She was warm. Tender. Inviting.
Moving to the narrow staircase, he could hear the water running. The pipes pushing the water through the house. She was here. She was alive. She was avoiding him - again.
He hiked up the stairs, stepping one foot in front of the other. Like a soldier, he kept moving. He carried on with the task before him. His mind focused on the mission.
Opening the door quietly, Tommy leaned on the door frame - taking in the sight before him. Curved hips that were fuller since he had last seen her. A waist that tempted him to wrap his arms around her. It was now that he reached in his pocket for a cigarette.
“Jesus, Tommy,” she shrieked. The click of his lighter giving him away.
She rested a hand on her heart, shuddering as she closed her eyes.
Unbothered, he traced the stick along his bottom lip before lighting it.
“What the fuck are you doing here?” She pinched the bridge of her nose, as her breath steadied.
“You haven’t been taking my calls,” he stated. Gaze unchanged. Smoke filling the air.
“I’m in mourning,” she enunciated, grabbing a towel to cover herself. She didn’t bother hiding her frustrations as she shoved past him. She was angry. He liked her angry.
At first, when she didn’t answer his call, he had briefly worried that she was sad. Tearful over the sudden death of her husband, who the police found floating in the river after a night of drinking. His death ruled accidental according to the official report. A drunken man’s blunder. An unsurprising end of life. An expected death for a man who drank as much as her late husband did.
An easy lie to believe, but she knew the truth. The greatest mistake the dead man had made was marrying Thomas Shelby’s favorite whore. It was her mistake more than his. She knew what she was doing when she said yes. The risks she was taking by marrying while Tommy was off in America. Her moment of rebellion had cost a life.
Although, they had gotten past the letter. She hadn’t returned to him. She wanted to keep her promise. To stay married. To honor what was left of her vows. She wouldn’t work for him. She wouldn’t see him. The temptation of losing herself in him made her stay away. She had already ruined the sanctity of her marriage by sleeping with him in his office. She didn’t want to continue making a mockery of the words she vowed before God and man.
She was suddenly religious, which amused Tommy. He thought it was a game, but she clung on to every word spoken by the priest. At the funeral, she remembered his words at the wedding. How he had pressed upon her the importance of repentance. Before Thomas Shelby, she had been a good girl. Never told a lie. Prayed before bed. Devout daughter. Devoted sister. An upstanding and honorable member of her community. He had changed her. Corrupted her. Loved her. Destroyed her.
“It’s been weeks,” Tommy stated coolly.
She ignored him. Her hands focused on the cream she was applying to her skin. Smooth skin. Soft skin. Skin his lips remembered. The taste imprinted on his tongue. Tommy exhaled.
His patience was wearing thin. He loved her. She loved him. He figured out how to help her keep her promise and allow him to keep his. Her husband was dead, and she was free.
“I see you’re eating again,” he quipped, trying to stir a reaction out of her. She didn’t disappoint. He ducked as the bottle of cream nearly struck his head.
“I went from being a whore to being a widow.”
“Sounds like the beginning of a book.” Tommy shrugged then ducked again. This time, she threw a shoe.
“At least I can bargain my way into heaven as a whore,” she resolved, refusing to meet his eyes.
“Is that what your priest tells you?” He brought the cigarette back to his lips for another drag.
He knew. Of course, he knew. She wondered if he was having her followed again. How else would he know about her visits to the church. Her talks with the priest.
“My greatest sin is you,” she finished her thought.
Her words were meant to be cutting, but Tommy remained unbothered. His eyes stoic, jaw set as if he was watching a horse race. He brought his cigarette to his lip, letting it dangle as he neared her. 
She stood up, ready to shove past him again, but he grabbed her forearm. Her eyes flared up at him as she tried to loosen his grip, but he remained firm.
“You want to talk about sins, ey?” He whispered against her ear. “You married a man who picked a pint over his life. A man who stowed you away in a house he couldn’t bear to live in himself, while he stayed three doors down with his brother’s wife.”
She frowned, hearing him confirm a suspicion she wouldn’t allow herself to believe. When he stopped coming home, she told herself that he was drunk at a pub or sleeping his hangover off at his mother’s house.
“A man who lost his wages betting on fights.”
So that’s where all their money had gone, she thought. Her face didn’t flinch as Tommy confirmed another truth. Her late husband was just another man who had let her down. All the words she threw at Tommy about him being a good man were lies. He was just better at hiding his wrongs.
Tommy softened his grip on her hand, as he relayed the sin that he couldn’t forgive. The sin that forced him to intervene without thinking of the consequences. “A man who was willing to sell his wife to settle his debts.”
Her eyes widened then glazed over. The shred of innocence he once found in those warm brown irises was quickly disappearing. He cursed at himself for the letter, but it wasn’t just the letter. It was the months he left her wondering if he could ever love again. It was the voice that told him to push her away. She married the man because of him.
Tommy released her hand. There was a part of him that wished he hadn’t been so honest. Her hardened eyes told him just as much. The look on her face was one he had seen before in the women who dared to love him. When his darkness eventually shadowed their light. When his world swallowed them whole.
She reached for the cigarette hanging from his mouth. Taking a long drag, she exhaled. The smoke covering Tommy’s face.
“My sin was marrying the wrong man,” she concluded.
His thumb brushed her skin, remembering when her lips pressed against his in hunger. His lip bleeding as their need took precedence. Her lip bruised from his appetite. Even when he had her, he needed more. Tracing her lip, he gently placed the cigarette between his fingers then lifted it to his mouth. The first puff was for the memory. The second was for his patience.
“No, my god doesn’t care about sins.”
“I didn’t think you believed in,” sighing, she looked up, “anything.”
Tommy closed his eyes. His patience wearing on him again. “You’re moving out of this house. You’re coming back to work, and you’re going to answer when I call.”
“Of course, Mr. Shelby,” she answered.
His jaw ticked at the use of his surname. The smoke from his cigarette creating a haze over his eyes. “Don’t start.”
“Tell me what your god thinks about whores.”
“Everyone’s a whore,” he muttered, as he moved toward the door, already thinking of his next order of business. The kiss would have to wait.
“Is that what your wife thinks?”
Tommy stopped walking. Leaning his hand on the door frame, he closed his eyes. His nose flared. His annoyance growing with her disobedience. He seemed to attract women who were determined to do the opposite of what he asked.
“She confronted me. Told me to stay away,” she admitted, and in that second, he realized why she ignored him. She was no longer his secret. He made his affection too obvious.
“I’ll take care of it,” he firmly stated, leaving no room for further questions. Yet, she continued.
“Does she follow any of the other girls or is it just me?” She asked.
He wasn’t ready to admit that there weren’t any other girls. That there hadn’t been other girls for a while. From the moment he declared his love, Tommy had made himself hers - only hers.
“You love me, but there are others,” she whispered. “I love you, but all I do is think of them. To be with you, I have to worry about them. I have to wait to be yours.”
“Is that what you’re doing then - waiting?” He asked, closing the distance between them.
Her hand dropped to her middle and Tommy’s eyes followed. He stared, then frowned before bringing his gaze back to her. “How far along?”
Her eyes softened. The grief coloring every muscle in her face. Tommy closed his eyes. She was in mourning. He understood her words clearly now. It was moments like this that made him miss Polly. She would have known.
Tommy muttered something in his Romanian tongue as he sat on the bed. He stamped his cigarette out in silent rage. There was never an end. Death seemed to find him at every turn. It hunted him. Craved him.
His hands went to her robe. Slowly, he pulled the fabric, revealing her body. A body that had prepared itself to carry his child. A body that had nourished him back to life. His fingers moved to her belly, tracing the skin there. The soft, smooth skin.
He looked up at her and saw the tears she wouldn’t shed. How long had she held them in, unable to weep. Unable to speak. Unable to fully mourn. Wrapping his arms around her middle, he pulled her in and kissed the place his hands had touched. He tried to do what she had done for him; he tried to make it okay for her to feel.
“I’m fine, Tommy. It’s better this way,” she said, her voice cold and void of any emotion.
“When?” He whispered, knowing it was his, and yet wondering how he’d missed so much in so little time.
“It doesn’t matter,” she stiffened. “It’s gone now, and I need to move on.”
She gave him a second to make peace with the reality she had lived with for weeks. Then, she moved from his touch, closing her robe as she distanced herself. Loving him was painful enough without the added grief of their lost child.
“You shouldn’t have come,” she folded her arms, avoiding his gaze.
Tommy raised a brow, staring at her before glancing around the room. It was as cold as the rest of the house - bare of any details or remnants of her. Standing up, Tommy found a new mission. He moved past her in search of anything that made the four walls more of a home.
His hands traced the metal bed frame. His fingers trailing the linen and cloth. He opened windows and tapped on wooden walls. He inspected the little furniture in the room, unsatisfied with the results.
“Tommy,” she started to say as he pushed open a wardrobe, finding it empty.
She was leaving. She planned to leave London. She planned to leave him. The thought stung in Tommy’s mind as he opened drawer after empty drawer. His anger taking center stage.
“Tommy,” her voice raised with concern.
He shoved the empty wardrobe back, watching as it crashed against the wall.
“Stop,” she yelled, as he shoved the wardrobe again and again. His grief coloring his anger. His anger coloring his grief. Her heart jumped as the wooden drawers finally cracked under the pressure. The splitting wood overshadowing her screams as the wardrobe completely fell apart.
“Tommy,” she cried, rushing to stop him from breaking the wood further. “Stop.”
“Please,” she whispered. Her plea full of a love she couldn’t deny him.
He exhaled. The sound of his heightened breath taking all the space in the room. His anger taking all the air. Tommy closed his eyes. The familiar whispers creeping in his head, telling him to put out the fire. To walk over to the other side. To let go of this life. To finally rest.
She swallowed, unsure of what to tell him, and yet, she persisted. “My sister found work outside of London. She thought it’d be good for me…”
Tommy shook his head, looking up at the ceiling.
“I wanted to tell you,” she stopped, lowering her head. There was nothing to say.
He scoffed. “Tell me.”
It felt like deja vu to hear him utter those words to her again. To hear the same command. The same request he’d asked from her when she told him about the wedding. Yet, this time, there was nothing left to say.
She stared at the back of his head. Her fingers yearning to brush his hair or wrap themselves around him. Her lips longing to kiss the nape of his neck.
Closing her eyes, she confessed. “There’s no life for me here.”
“You’re not leaving.” He pushed back, ignoring her words. “You’re mine.”
“When?” She sighed. “When am I yours, Tommy?”
He lifted his head, staring at the wall. His mind moving a mile a minute. She couldn’t leave him. His heart wouldn’t allow it. His body would protest. His hunger was contained to her. His thoughts all went back to her. How many minutes until he can think of her? How many meetings until he can dream of her? He suffered without her to be with her. Every hour he was away was an hour he promised to give to her.
He was a selfish man, who wanted what he wanted. A man who endured wars and monsters disguised as men. A cursed man. A broken man. A suffering man. A man who didn’t deserve her, and yet, he wanted her. He needed her. She was the cigarette on his lips. The pain tablets in his pocket. The shirt on his back. The razor blade on his cap. She couldn’t leave him.
“When your wife is gone? When you’re fucking other women?” Her voice continued in the background, but Tommy was half-listening. “When you’re bored? When the nightmares come? When the work is done? When am I yours?” She asked again, although there was no anger in her question.
“When you married him, you were mine. Every time you put on his fucking ring; you were mine.” His brows furrowed as he reached into his side pocket for a cigarette. “When you moved into this house, you were mine. When you had my fucking child inside of you, you were mine.” Tommy sniffed, turning to face her. “From the moment you entered my office, you belonged to me.”
She stiffened, as she traced her empty ring finger. His crassness didn’t bother her as much as his refusal to listen. He disregarded her words, only focusing on what he wanted. It was why she didn’t want to tell him about the baby. He would have stuck her in a big house that he would never visit. Given her everything except the thing she wanted, which was him. But now that nightmare wasn’t even a reality because she’d lost their child. She'd lost a piece of him.
“Is that all it takes…” she started to argue, but words were pointless. Their arguments were pointless. They had a love that was cursed from inception.
In this life, he was promised to another. In the next, he would be reunited with another. In life and death, she had no place in Thomas Shelby’s life. Her love for him didn’t save their unborn child. It reminded her that their love had no place to grow. It was wilted, and no amount of money or prayer could save them.
“You’re not leaving,” Tommy declared, cornering her until she had no choice but to look up at him.  Her brown eyes sinking into him, full of a love he didn’t deserve.
“You made me a promise,” he whispered. His jaw tensing as he remembered that night in his office when he had made himself hers. When he had promised to live. To stop craving death. The gods had given him a second chance with her.
“Tommy,” she protested, but he continued.
“You gave me your word.” His lips brushed hers and her body shuddered. “You made promises to me. Promises I intend to collect.”
His hand slipped down to her robe, loosening the ties. His fingers marking a trail from her chest to her neck to her lips. “Promises you agreed to keep.”
She folded under his touch. Her head falling on his chest as she exhaled. Quick, short breaths that made Tommy pull her in closer.
“And what of your promises?” She grabbed his fingers before they could slip between her thighs.
“Hmmm,” he hummed, trying not to smirk. “Remind me again.”
Shaking her head, she moved from his hands. Her heart ached, but it would always ache whether she was with him or not. He was not wrong. It belonged to him. From the moment she entered his office, her heart had become his. Knowing he was promised to another, it still beat for him. It yearned for him. It acted without consequence.
Thou shall not commit adultery. A vow she’d broken within a month of knowing Thomas Shelby. But her heart didn’t care. It didn’t care about the commandments she broke. Her sins were plenty but her heart was full. Full of love for a man who couldn’t confess his love until she married another.
Turning away from him, she closed her robe. Her hand wanted to follow the trail he etched on her skin, but she didn’t. She could hear him lighting a cigarette. His eyes on her. His eyes undressing her. His eyes claiming her as his.
She wanted to run, but her heart wouldn’t let her. Instead, she willed herself to face him. Smoke in the air. His scent in every crevice of the cramped room. She inhaled and tried to tell him again. Her thoughts were on her lips, and yet, nothing.
Offering her his cigarette, Tommy stepped towards her. “Leaving London won’t cure you of me.”
She reached for the smoke. Grateful for the distraction. For the heat. For the vapors. For the way her lungs would expand and contract. For the cigarette they shared between them. His lips on her lips. Her lips on his.
“That priest of yours won’t help you either,” he added.
“What is the cure then?”
Tommy leaned into her. His hands on her waist, slowly moving her robe up past her knees then her thighs. “First, you have to stop running.”
“Running?” She asked, confused by his accusation.
“The wedding. The job. This house.” He counted. “And now these plans of leaving London.” His hands pushed the fabric of her robe from her skin, leaving her naked before him. “You mustn’t run.”
“And what if I do?” She questioned, not allowing her nudity to dissuade her.
Tommy brushed her cheek before taking the cigarette from her lips. “I’ll find you. Remind you of where you belong.”
“And where is it that I belong?” She asked. Her eyes gentle and pleading. 
He brought her hand to his chest, placing it where his heart lay. “Here. Right here.”
She swallowed her nerves, terrified of letting her heart speak. “Second?” She went back to his list.
“Second.” He took a drag, exhaling the smoke before he continued, “You must know, I get scared,” he admitted, and she finally understood why he’d written her that letter. Thomas Shelby was scared of loving her. The first woman he loved died in his arms because of a bullet meant for him. Love was something to fear, and he was terrified.
“Now, it’s unpleasant and it’s unkind. But when I am…”
“I’ll remind you,” she finished, “of where you belong.”
Tommy cupped her face, placing a kiss on her head. “Good.”
She closed her eyes. Her heart too fragile for Thomas Shelby’s confession. He hadn’t proposed, yet they were already exchanging vows.
“Last.” He leaned his head on hers. “And the most important.”
“Yes,” she breathlessly whispered.
Tommy’s finger traced her bottom lip before he kissed her. His lips hungry to taste her. Selfish in his desire - his consumption of her. He groaned when he felt her kiss him back. Her own need just as desperate as his. She moaned when their lips parted, disappointed by her body’s need for air.
“I promise to have you pregnant by spring.”
Her eyes lit up as she laughed for the first time in months. She chuckled, not taking him seriously. “Tommy.”
“A boy,” he declared, wrapping his arms around her middle. “He’ll have your eyes and my charm.”
She giggled, playfully hitting his chest as he picked her up and placed her on the bed. Her smile widening as she gazed at him. She was returning to herself - returning to him. Weeks of grief slowly thawing from her heart.
Tommy stamped out his cigarette before joining her with a kiss. His body on top of hers. His hands on either side of her head. His mind fixated on the softness of her skin.
“I’ll be back at work in the morning,” she whispered in between kisses.
“You won’t be working anymore.”
She pulled away from his kiss, frowning at him. “What are you on about, Tommy?”
He sighed, already knowing he was about to start another fight. “I won’t have you working with a child of mine inside of you.”
“What?”
“You’ll be carrying my son,” Tommy repeated.
Closing her eyes, she realized he was serious. Of course, he was serious. She wondered how long he’d been planning to get her pregnant again.
“I don’t deserve you,” Tommy kissed her lips. “But, I promised to give you a life worthy of everything you are.” He reminded her. “I promised to let you in my head. I promised to do more than just wait to die. I promised to live.”
She wanted to be angry with him, but he remembered. Every word. Every promise. Everything they had discussed in his office.
“I promised to keep you safe.”
“To make us safe,” she corrected.
He kissed her again. “There are no other girls,” Tommy confessed, reminding her of his other promise. Tommy Shelby was hers.
Grabbing his collar, she pulled him into a long kiss. “No more running,” she vowed.
Tommy smiled. “No more.” He pressed his lips on hers before adding, “You’re mine.”
This time, she didn’t argue, simply letting him kiss her. “Now, where were we, Mrs. Shelby?” He asked, slipping his fingers between her thighs.
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This was a long one. If you made it to the end, thank you for reading! Let me know your favorite part.
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blackwomanwriter · 9 months
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"Mine"
Read: Part I, Part II
It's been a minute, but I finally wrote something. And of course, I had to go back to this series because there is something about Thomas Shelby. Anyways, I hope you enjoy, and let me know your favorite part. Happy Reading!
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He entered quietly like he was on a mission. Although this one was unlike the ones he had performed during the war and after. No, this mission was different. Very different. Yet, Tommy performed it with the same intensity.
Eyes narrowed on the quiet interior, clocking each entry point and exit way, like a soldier, he assessed his environment. He hadn’t been in a house this small since his childhood. Even back then, the space had felt cluttered and cramped. Too noisy to think. Too busy to breathe. The stench of his father’s hangover in the air before it disappeared altogether.
He remembered talking Arthur out of trying to find their father. A man unworthy of carrying - no, sharing his surname. Tommy tensed his jaw, moving past the memory. Instead, he raised a brow at how devastatingly clean the entire place felt. Physically tidy, but clean in a way that made the house feel empty. Unlived. Unloved. Cold. The opposite of everything he thought of her. She was warm. Tender. Inviting.
Moving to the narrow staircase, he could hear the water running. The pipes pushing the water through the house. She was here. She was alive. She was avoiding him - again.
He hiked up the stairs, stepping one foot in front of the other. Like a soldier, he kept moving. He carried on with the task before him. His mind focused on the mission.
Opening the door quietly, Tommy leaned on the door frame - taking in the sight before him. Curved hips that were fuller since he had last seen her. A waist that tempted him to wrap his arms around her. It was now that he reached in his pocket for a cigarette.
“Jesus, Tommy,” she shrieked. The click of his lighter giving him away.
She rested a hand on her heart, shuddering as she closed her eyes.
Unbothered, he traced the stick along his bottom lip before lighting it.
“What the fuck are you doing here?” She pinched the bridge of her nose, as her breath steadied.
“You haven’t been taking my calls,” he stated. Gaze unchanged. Smoke filling the air.
“I’m in mourning,” she enunciated, grabbing a towel to cover herself. She didn’t bother hiding her frustrations as she shoved past him. She was angry. He liked her angry.
At first, when she didn’t answer his call, he had briefly worried that she was sad. Tearful over the sudden death of her husband, who the police found floating in the river after a night of drinking. His death ruled accidental according to the official report. A drunken man’s blunder. An unsurprising end of life. An expected death for a man who drank as much as her late husband did.
An easy lie to believe, but she knew the truth. The greatest mistake the dead man had made was marrying Thomas Shelby’s favorite whore. It was her mistake more than his. She knew what she was doing when she said yes. The risks she was taking by marrying while Tommy was off in America. Her moment of rebellion had cost a life.
Although, they had gotten past the letter. She hadn’t returned to him. She wanted to keep her promise. To stay married. To honor what was left of her vows. She wouldn’t work for him. She wouldn’t see him. The temptation of losing herself in him made her stay away. She had already ruined the sanctity of her marriage by sleeping with him in his office. She didn’t want to continue making a mockery of the words she vowed before God and man.
She was suddenly religious, which amused Tommy. He thought it was a game, but she clung on to every word spoken by the priest. At the funeral, she remembered his words at the wedding. How he had pressed upon her the importance of repentance. Before Thomas Shelby, she had been a good girl. Never told a lie. Prayed before bed. Devout daughter. Devoted sister. An upstanding and honorable member of her community. He had changed her. Corrupted her. Loved her. Destroyed her.
“It’s been weeks,” Tommy stated coolly.
She ignored him. Her hands focused on the cream she was applying to her skin. Smooth skin. Soft skin. Skin his lips remembered. The taste imprinted on his tongue. Tommy exhaled.
His patience was wearing thin. He loved her. She loved him. He figured out how to help her keep her promise and allow him to keep his. Her husband was dead, and she was free.
“I see you’re eating again,” he quipped, trying to stir a reaction out of her. She didn’t disappoint. He ducked as the bottle of cream nearly struck his head.
“I went from being a whore to being a widow.”
“Sounds like the beginning of a book.” Tommy shrugged then ducked again. This time, she threw a shoe.
“At least I can bargain my way into heaven as a whore,” she resolved, refusing to meet his eyes.
“Is that what your priest tells you?” He brought the cigarette back to his lips for another drag.
He knew. Of course, he knew. She wondered if he was having her followed again. How else would he know about her visits to the church. Her talks with the priest.
“My greatest sin is you,” she finished her thought.
Her words were meant to be cutting, but Tommy remained unbothered. His eyes stoic, jaw set as if he was watching a horse race. He brought his cigarette to his lip, letting it dangle as he neared her. 
She stood up, ready to shove past him again, but he grabbed her forearm. Her eyes flared up at him as she tried to loosen his grip, but he remained firm.
“You want to talk about sins, ey?” He whispered against her ear. “You married a man who picked a pint over his life. A man who stowed you away in a house he couldn’t bear to live in himself, while he stayed three doors down with his brother’s wife.”
She frowned, hearing him confirm a suspicion she wouldn’t allow herself to believe. When he stopped coming home, she told herself that he was drunk at a pub or sleeping his hangover off at his mother’s house.
“A man who lost his wages betting on fights.”
So that’s where all their money had gone, she thought. Her face didn’t flinch as Tommy confirmed another truth. Her late husband was just another man who had let her down. All the words she threw at Tommy about him being a good man were lies. He was just better at hiding his wrongs.
Tommy softened his grip on her hand, as he relayed the sin that he couldn’t forgive. The sin that forced him to intervene without thinking of the consequences. “A man who was willing to sell his wife to settle his debts.”
Her eyes widened then glazed over. The shred of innocence he once found in those warm brown irises was quickly disappearing. He cursed at himself for the letter, but it wasn’t just the letter. It was the months he left her wondering if he could ever love again. It was the voice that told him to push her away. She married the man because of him.
Tommy released her hand. There was a part of him that wished he hadn’t been so honest. Her hardened eyes told him just as much. The look on her face was one he had seen before in the women who dared to love him. When his darkness eventually shadowed their light. When his world swallowed them whole.
She reached for the cigarette hanging from his mouth. Taking a long drag, she exhaled. The smoke covering Tommy’s face.
“My sin was marrying the wrong man,” she concluded.
His thumb brushed her skin, remembering when her lips pressed against his in hunger. His lip bleeding as their need took precedence. Her lip bruised from his appetite. Even when he had her, he needed more. Tracing her lip, he gently placed the cigarette between his fingers then lifted it to his mouth. The first puff was for the memory. The second was for his patience.
“No, my god doesn’t care about sins.”
“I didn’t think you believed in,” sighing, she looked up, “anything.”
Tommy closed his eyes. His patience wearing on him again. “You’re moving out of this house. You’re coming back to work, and you’re going to answer when I call.”
“Of course, Mr. Shelby,” she answered.
His jaw ticked at the use of his surname. The smoke from his cigarette creating a haze over his eyes. “Don’t start.”
“Tell me what your god thinks about whores.”
“Everyone’s a whore,” he muttered, as he moved toward the door, already thinking of his next order of business. The kiss would have to wait.
“Is that what your wife thinks?”
Tommy stopped walking. Leaning his hand on the door frame, he closed his eyes. His nose flared. His annoyance growing with her disobedience. He seemed to attract women who were determined to do the opposite of what he asked.
“She confronted me. Told me to stay away,” she admitted, and in that second, he realized why she ignored him. She was no longer his secret. He made his affection too obvious.
“I’ll take care of it,” he firmly stated, leaving no room for further questions. Yet, she continued.
“Does she follow any of the other girls or is it just me?” She asked.
He wasn’t ready to admit that there weren’t any other girls. That there hadn’t been other girls for a while. From the moment he declared his love, Tommy had made himself hers - only hers.
“You love me, but there are others,” she whispered. “I love you, but all I do is think of them. To be with you, I have to worry about them. I have to wait to be yours.”
“Is that what you’re doing then - waiting?” He asked, closing the distance between them.
Her hand dropped to her middle and Tommy’s eyes followed. He stared, then frowned before bringing his gaze back to her. “How far along?”
Her eyes softened. The grief coloring every muscle in her face. Tommy closed his eyes. She was in mourning. He understood her words clearly now. It was moments like this that made him miss Polly. She would have known.
Tommy muttered something in his Romanian tongue as he sat on the bed. He stamped his cigarette out in silent rage. There was never an end. Death seemed to find him at every turn. It hunted him. Craved him.
His hands went to her robe. Slowly, he pulled the fabric, revealing her body. A body that had prepared itself to carry his child. A body that had nourished him back to life. His fingers moved to her belly, tracing the skin there. The soft, smooth skin.
He looked up at her and saw the tears she wouldn’t shed. How long had she held them in, unable to weep. Unable to speak. Unable to fully mourn. Wrapping his arms around her middle, he pulled her in and kissed the place his hands had touched. He tried to do what she had done for him; he tried to make it okay for her to feel.
“I’m fine, Tommy. It’s better this way,” she said, her voice cold and void of any emotion.
“When?” He whispered, knowing it was his, and yet wondering how he’d missed so much in so little time.
“It doesn’t matter,” she stiffened. “It’s gone now, and I need to move on.”
She gave him a second to make peace with the reality she had lived with for weeks. Then, she moved from his touch, closing her robe as she distanced herself. Loving him was painful enough without the added grief of their lost child.
“You shouldn’t have come,” she folded her arms, avoiding his gaze.
Tommy raised a brow, staring at her before glancing around the room. It was as cold as the rest of the house - bare of any details or remnants of her. Standing up, Tommy found a new mission. He moved past her in search of anything that made the four walls more of a home.
His hands traced the metal bed frame. His fingers trailing the linen and cloth. He opened windows and tapped on wooden walls. He inspected the little furniture in the room, unsatisfied with the results.
“Tommy,” she started to say as he pushed open a wardrobe, finding it empty.
She was leaving. She planned to leave London. She planned to leave him. The thought stung in Tommy’s mind as he opened drawer after empty drawer. His anger taking center stage.
“Tommy,” her voice raised with concern.
He shoved the empty wardrobe back, watching as it crashed against the wall.
“Stop,” she yelled, as he shoved the wardrobe again and again. His grief coloring his anger. His anger coloring his grief. Her heart jumped as the wooden drawers finally cracked under the pressure. The splitting wood overshadowing her screams as the wardrobe completely fell apart.
“Tommy,” she cried, rushing to stop him from breaking the wood further. “Stop.”
“Please,” she whispered. Her plea full of a love she couldn’t deny him.
He exhaled. The sound of his heightened breath taking all the space in the room. His anger taking all the air. Tommy closed his eyes. The familiar whispers creeping in his head, telling him to put out the fire. To walk over to the other side. To let go of this life. To finally rest.
She swallowed, unsure of what to tell him, and yet, she persisted. “My sister found work outside of London. She thought it’d be good for me…”
Tommy shook his head, looking up at the ceiling.
“I wanted to tell you,” she stopped, lowering her head. There was nothing to say.
He scoffed. “Tell me.”
It felt like deja vu to hear him utter those words to her again. To hear the same command. The same request he’d asked from her when she told him about the wedding. Yet, this time, there was nothing left to say.
She stared at the back of his head. Her fingers yearning to brush his hair or wrap themselves around him. Her lips longing to kiss the nape of his neck.
Closing her eyes, she confessed. “There’s no life for me here.”
“You’re not leaving.” He pushed back, ignoring her words. “You’re mine.”
“When?” She sighed. “When am I yours, Tommy?”
He lifted his head, staring at the wall. His mind moving a mile a minute. She couldn’t leave him. His heart wouldn’t allow it. His body would protest. His hunger was contained to her. His thoughts all went back to her. How many minutes until he can think of her? How many meetings until he can dream of her? He suffered without her to be with her. Every hour he was away was an hour he promised to give to her.
He was a selfish man, who wanted what he wanted. A man who endured wars and monsters disguised as men. A cursed man. A broken man. A suffering man. A man who didn’t deserve her, and yet, he wanted her. He needed her. She was the cigarette on his lips. The pain tablets in his pocket. The shirt on his back. The razor blade on his cap. She couldn’t leave him.
“When your wife is gone? When you’re fucking other women?” Her voice continued in the background, but Tommy was half-listening. “When you’re bored? When the nightmares come? When the work is done? When am I yours?” She asked again, although there was no anger in her question.
“When you married him, you were mine. Every time you put on his fucking ring; you were mine.” His brows furrowed as he reached into his side pocket for a cigarette. “When you moved into this house, you were mine. When you had my fucking child inside of you, you were mine.” Tommy sniffed, turning to face her. “From the moment you entered my office, you belonged to me.”
She stiffened, as she traced her empty ring finger. His crassness didn’t bother her as much as his refusal to listen. He disregarded her words, only focusing on what he wanted. It was why she didn’t want to tell him about the baby. He would have stuck her in a big house that he would never visit. Given her everything except the thing she wanted, which was him. But now that nightmare wasn’t even a reality because she’d lost their child. She'd lost a piece of him.
“Is that all it takes…” she started to argue, but words were pointless. Their arguments were pointless. They had a love that was cursed from inception.
In this life, he was promised to another. In the next, he would be reunited with another. In life and death, she had no place in Thomas Shelby’s life. Her love for him didn’t save their unborn child. It reminded her that their love had no place to grow. It was wilted, and no amount of money or prayer could save them.
“You’re not leaving,” Tommy declared, cornering her until she had no choice but to look up at him.  Her brown eyes sinking into him, full of a love he didn’t deserve.
“You made me a promise,” he whispered. His jaw tensing as he remembered that night in his office when he had made himself hers. When he had promised to live. To stop craving death. The gods had given him a second chance with her.
“Tommy,” she protested, but he continued.
“You gave me your word.” His lips brushed hers and her body shuddered. “You made promises to me. Promises I intend to collect.”
His hand slipped down to her robe, loosening the ties. His fingers marking a trail from her chest to her neck to her lips. “Promises you agreed to keep.”
She folded under his touch. Her head falling on his chest as she exhaled. Quick, short breaths that made Tommy pull her in closer.
“And what of your promises?” She grabbed his fingers before they could slip between her thighs.
“Hmmm,” he hummed, trying not to smirk. “Remind me again.”
Shaking her head, she moved from his hands. Her heart ached, but it would always ache whether she was with him or not. He was not wrong. It belonged to him. From the moment she entered his office, her heart had become his. Knowing he was promised to another, it still beat for him. It yearned for him. It acted without consequence.
Thou shall not commit adultery. A vow she’d broken within a month of knowing Thomas Shelby. But her heart didn’t care. It didn’t care about the commandments she broke. Her sins were plenty but her heart was full. Full of love for a man who couldn’t confess his love until she married another.
Turning away from him, she closed her robe. Her hand wanted to follow the trail he etched on her skin, but she didn’t. She could hear him lighting a cigarette. His eyes on her. His eyes undressing her. His eyes claiming her as his.
She wanted to run, but her heart wouldn’t let her. Instead, she willed herself to face him. Smoke in the air. His scent in every crevice of the cramped room. She inhaled and tried to tell him again. Her thoughts were on her lips, and yet, nothing.
Offering her his cigarette, Tommy stepped towards her. “Leaving London won’t cure you of me.”
She reached for the smoke. Grateful for the distraction. For the heat. For the vapors. For the way her lungs would expand and contract. For the cigarette they shared between them. His lips on her lips. Her lips on his.
“That priest of yours won’t help you either,” he added.
“What is the cure then?”
Tommy leaned into her. His hands on her waist, slowly moving her robe up past her knees then her thighs. “First, you have to stop running.”
“Running?” She asked, confused by his accusation.
“The wedding. The job. This house.” He counted. “And now these plans of leaving London.” His hands pushed the fabric of her robe from her skin, leaving her naked before him. “You mustn’t run.”
“And what if I do?” She questioned, not allowing her nudity to dissuade her.
Tommy brushed her cheek before taking the cigarette from her lips. “I’ll find you. Remind you of where you belong.”
“And where is it that I belong?” She asked. Her eyes gentle and pleading. 
He brought her hand to his chest, placing it where his heart lay. “Here. Right here.”
She swallowed her nerves, terrified of letting her heart speak. “Second?” She went back to his list.
“Second.” He took a drag, exhaling the smoke before he continued, “You must know, I get scared,” he admitted, and she finally understood why he’d written her that letter. Thomas Shelby was scared of loving her. The first woman he loved died in his arms because of a bullet meant for him. Love was something to fear, and he was terrified.
“Now, it’s unpleasant and it’s unkind. But when I am…”
“I’ll remind you,” she finished, “of where you belong.”
Tommy cupped her face, placing a kiss on her head. “Good.”
She closed her eyes. Her heart too fragile for Thomas Shelby’s confession. He hadn’t proposed, yet they were already exchanging vows.
“Last.” He leaned his head on hers. “And the most important.”
“Yes,” she breathlessly whispered.
Tommy’s finger traced her bottom lip before he kissed her. His lips hungry to taste her. Selfish in his desire - his consumption of her. He groaned when he felt her kiss him back. Her own need just as desperate as his. She moaned when their lips parted, disappointed by her body’s need for air.
“I promise to have you pregnant by spring.”
Her eyes lit up as she laughed for the first time in months. She chuckled, not taking him seriously. “Tommy.”
“A boy,” he declared, wrapping his arms around her middle. “He’ll have your eyes and my charm.”
She giggled, playfully hitting his chest as he picked her up and placed her on the bed. Her smile widening as she gazed at him. She was returning to herself - returning to him. Weeks of grief slowly thawing from her heart.
Tommy stamped out his cigarette before joining her with a kiss. His body on top of hers. His hands on either side of her head. His mind fixated on the softness of her skin.
“I’ll be back at work in the morning,” she whispered in between kisses.
“You won’t be working anymore.”
She pulled away from his kiss, frowning at him. “What are you on about, Tommy?”
He sighed, already knowing he was about to start another fight. “I won’t have you working with a child of mine inside of you.”
“What?”
“You’ll be carrying my son,” Tommy repeated.
Closing her eyes, she realized he was serious. Of course, he was serious. She wondered how long he’d been planning to get her pregnant again.
“I don’t deserve you,” Tommy kissed her lips. “But, I promised to give you a life worthy of everything you are.” He reminded her. “I promised to let you in my head. I promised to do more than just wait to die. I promised to live.”
She wanted to be angry with him, but he remembered. Every word. Every promise. Everything they had discussed in his office.
“I promised to keep you safe.”
“To make us safe,” she corrected.
He kissed her again. “There are no other girls,” Tommy confessed, reminding her of his other promise. Tommy Shelby was hers.
Grabbing his collar, she pulled him into a long kiss. “No more running,” she vowed.
Tommy smiled. “No more.” He pressed his lips on hers before adding, “You’re mine.”
This time, she didn’t argue, simply letting him kiss her. “Now, where were we, Mrs. Shelby?” He asked, slipping his fingers between her thighs.
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This was a long one. If you made it to the end, thank you for reading! Let me know your favorite part.
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blackwomanwriter · 11 months
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I want to write something with the “my property” line that Thomas Shelby says….
Whew, Cillian Murphy…the man you are (the actor you are)
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blackwomanwriter · 1 year
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Should I do another Thomas Shelby fic?
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blackwomanwriter · 1 year
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blackwomanwriter · 2 years
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Arabic poetry is so beautifully yet painfully romantic. I mean, They asked “do you love her to death?” I said “speak of her over my grave and watch how she brings me back to life” and “Because my love for you is higher than words, I’ve decided to fall silent” and “It is not enough to say love in Arabic, you must say ‘be the thing that buries me’” could have Jane Austen crying and shaking.
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blackwomanwriter · 2 years
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I wish all writers who haven’t been able to write in a long time bc of depression a very I love u and I promise u will write again
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blackwomanwriter · 2 years
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My goal in this lifeline is to write someone’s favorite book. I want to write the book that you gush over and ramble about to strangers. I want to write the book that you highlight paragraphs and mark chapters to go back and read on a bad day. The book you recite and daydream about. The book that inspires your next tattoo or changes how you move through life. The book you reread like it’s the first time even though you know the ending. I want to write a book that makes someone realize they are not alone in this world. I want to write a book…
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blackwomanwriter · 2 years
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Your writing will always feel awkward to you, because you wrote it.
Your plot twists will always feel predictable, because you created them.
Your stories will always feel a bit boring to you, because you read them a million times.
They won't feel like that for your reader.
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blackwomanwriter · 2 years
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shoutout to slow creators!
i know it can be disheartening to work so slowly when it seems like everyone around you works so fast and churns out great content left and right. i know it's easy to get frustrated with yourself for having to spend so much time on one thing and sometimes it's hard to stay motivated long enough to finish. but the things you make are so good, and taking lot of time on something isn't a bad thing. creation can be a very painstaking process, but the amount of love and care and effort and attention you pour into your work bleeds through. people can feel it. they appreciate it. they see how hard you try and they see how your thoughtful approach to creation affects the quality of the end product. speed is definitely a skill you can develop and chances are as you practice more and get more comfortable with things, you'll be able to work faster. but no matter what, the things you make are worth waiting for. keep creating! you are wonderful!
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blackwomanwriter · 2 years
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For all my aspiring writers!
I hope you don't mind me asking but how did you get your agent?
This was my process of getting an agent, but it's not the definitive way!
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1: Finish your manuscript!
To query you need a finished, POLISHED manuscript. And by polished I mean as close to perfect as you can get it. The first time I ever sent out query letters I fell victim to sending my manuscript off too early when it was little more than a second draft. The agents who were kind enough to reply told me that I needed to revise heavily and polish it further. I took their advice and set aside a few months to edit it from top to bottom. I put out a post on Tumblr asking for beta readers and they helped clean up my manuscript and point out errors that my eyes have become used to seeing and skimmed over.
2. Make a list of literary agents!
I researched a list of one hundred agents that represented my genre and age and added them to a spreadsheet. The way I found them was through searching the #MSWL tag on Twitter with a few keywords relating to my book (YA fantasy, witches, magic) and writing them down. It's best to put effort into this and to make sure they aren't fake agents or scams. This is a great video on the topic of agents to avoid.
3. Write your synopsis and query letter!
These too need to be polished to perfection as these are what convince the agent whether they should read your book or pass it. You'll need a synopsis (no more than two pages and including spoilers), a pitch/blurb (a shorter, snappier version of the synopsis; about a paragraph), sample pages (generally 50 pages or first 3 chapters), and your credentials/bio (if you've ever published before, relevant degrees, social media numbers, etc.). Make sure to personalize your query letter for each agent, specifying why you're submitting to them and why you think they'd be a good fit for your book.
4. Test out a batch of five or ten agents!
Send out this query letter to 5-10 agents and wait for the response. If you receive form rejections or no responses then it may be a sign you need to edit your query letter. Add them to your spreadsheet and their response.
5. Send out another batch until you start receiving some requests!
You know your query letter is working when you start receiving requests, either full manuscript or partials. This is incredibly exciting and is a good sign you're on the right path. Send your full or partial to agents who have requested it and now comes the agonizing process of waiting for their answer.
6. Success! An agent has offered you representation!
Freak out a bit! Jump up and down! And then get back to work. Arrange a meeting with them via phone or Zoom to discuss their offer, ask to see their boilerplate (a standard contract), and contact all the other agents who you've submitted to and tell them you've received an offer. It's the polite thing to do as they might withdraw and pass or even offer you a counter offer! If you have more than one offer, you have the task of comparing and contrasting, and deciding which agent fits best with your work and will represent it the best.
7. Make your final decision and celebrate!
When all was settled and I had made my decision, I got to release a public statement on my Twitter that I was now represented. Then I cracked open a small cheap bottle of champagne from the supermarket since I'd never had it before (tbh didn't enjoy it that much but success made it bearable).
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blackwomanwriter · 2 years
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“Promises”
Read part one: “Tell Me”
Thank you so much for the love on this story. It took me a second to figure out part two, but I hope you enjoy! 
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She left. 
The thought circled in Tommy’s mind from evening to morn. It gnawed at him. At dinner. At breakfast. At lunch. In his office. In his home. In his car. During meetings. During phone calls. During sex. She left. He’d given her one week to be angry with him. To ignore him. To do what she needed to do to be okay about things. He accepted her resignation. He even forgave her for the wedding. The ring. The man. 
She was right. It wasn’t fair of him to leave the letter on his desk for her to find. He took responsibility for his error, and burned it. As for the contents within the letter, Tommy didn’t see a need to discuss his business. His emotions - however complicated and conflicted they may be - were his to sort out, bury, and forget. Usually, he found a woman to distract him, but lately that wasn’t enough. Without the drinking, he had to live with his own thoughts. That’s why he started writing. To work through what he wouldn’t say to her.
Most men - most people - never found true love. They settled or were too terrified to go for the real thing. But, he had found it. He’d found real love. Before it was taken away from him, he’d experienced it. He knew what it felt like. That’s why every time that familiar feeling crept in his chest, he buried it. He wasn’t afraid of death because love was waiting for him on the otherside. Before her, he welcomed the inevitable; he longed for it. He tried on occasion to befriend death himself, but now, he struggled. Living was becoming as enticing as passing on.
No one was lucky enough to experience true love twice. The universe would be cruel to give it to him again. After all this time, finding love wasn’t supposed to be an option. That was the deal he’d accepted. He’d made peace with it. He’d lost too much already to risk losing again. This wasn’t supposed to happen, but then, there was her. 
It was selfish of him to make her fall in love with him. It was selfish of him to use her for his healing. It was selfish of him to claim her as his, but he was a selfish man. A selfish man who wanted her back. One week had turned into two weeks. And two weeks was now becoming two months. He was well accustomed to making the women in his life angry. Yelling he could manage, being ignored was a nuisance. A nuisance that forced him to take matters into his own hands. 
Tommy took his glasses off, placing them on a stack of papers on his desk. He stood up, letting his shoulders relax and his head fall back. A smile was forming on his lips as he thought of her stubbornness. Two months. He was as annoyed as he was proud. She managed to pull off a wedding, and she stood her ground against him. He was impressed. A woman after his own heart. 
Taking a cigarette from his pocket, Tommy moved to the armchair. He used a match to light the stick as his eyes focused on his office door. No matter how many times it happened, there was still nothing quite like a well-thought out plan. People thought he was smart, clever, but the only difference between him and anyone else is that he was better at reading people. The war had given him that. He understood the two emotions that governed people best - fear and love. Control one or the other, and the world is yours. All he had to do now was wait. 
He filled the room with smoke. His eyes never leaving the door. No matter how long it took, he would wait. He would become a patient man. His plan demanded it. Every second was accounted for, including this moment. It was past six now. He didn’t have to glance at his pocket watch to know; it was almost time. Straightening his shoulders, Tommy lit another cigarette. He heard her before he saw her. Her walk was light. Before him, she’d been a maid for a council man that despised noise of any kind. She didn’t bang doors - always holding the handle until it clicked. She was as gentle with a door as she was with a heart. 
When she entered his office, he finally pulled out his pocket watch. Seven on the dot. 
Placing her hands on her hips, she groaned and started pacing. Every so often, she stopped, glaring at him before continuing. He acted indifferent, but Tommy was rather pleased with himself. She was here. His eyes undressed her, taking note of all her subtle changes. Two months was a long time to go without. He’d made due, but nothing was as satisfying. His eyes stopped at her chest, admiring and remembering.
“Jesus.” Realizing where his eyes were planted, she folded her arms over her chest, staring up at the ceiling. “You really haven’t changed.” 
Shaking her head, she finally sat down in the armchair opposite him. If looks could kill, he’d be dead already. The intensity in her eyes told him he was in trouble, and there was nothing he wanted more. There was nothing he liked better. Trouble suited him. 
Tommy lifted the cigarette to his lips. His eyes trained on her. In her anger, he realized that he liked her like this. He liked the way her veins popped and her nostrils flared. He liked the way her jaw tensed and relaxed. He liked the way her chest rose and fell. He liked when she was soft and tender under him, but seeing her like this awakened something else within him. It brought back that familiar feeling to his chest. 
“You bought a textile factory.” 
He took a long drag. “She speaks.” 
“Why would Thomas Shelby be interested in textiles?” 
“It’s a lucrative business.” 
“Women’s textiles.” 
Tommy shrugged. “We needed to diversify our portfolio.”  
Rolling her eyes, she stood up again, muttering curses as she paced around the room. Buying the company she worked for was the opposite of letting go. It went against their agreement. It went against his word to her. Two months ago, he agreed to let her leave. After the letter, she made it clear that she was done. She walked away from him, but she should have known that it had been too easy. 
Tommy took his carton of cigarettes and placed it on the table between them. Staring at his offer, she shook her head. “Fine.” She raised her hands up. “I’ll quit. I’ll find another job.” She turned to leave, but he wasn’t finished. 
“How’s your husband?” Tommy exhaled, the smoke creating a cloud around him. “I hear he loves to close out a pub.” 
“There are a million women in the world - a million women in London.” She moved away from the door to face him. 
“Whiskey, is it?” 
“Women,” she yelled. “Women - married women even - who would love to fuck Thomas Shelby.” 
“When did he stop coming home?” 
She sighed, closing her eyes. “You promised to let me go.” 
Standing, Tommy stubbed his cigarette on the ash tray. He took a step towards her, treading carefully as her eyes opened to look at him. For a second, he could see the love then the fear before she hid herself from him and returned to anger. That was new, he noted. She never used to be anything but herself around him. She never used to hide her emotions. From the start, she was open. That’s what made it easy for him. 
Tommy took his last step, standing close enough to kiss her. His body towered over her, but her anger radiated. Her eyes bore into him, daring him to try anything. Daring him to give her a reason to unleash her wrath. And despite her anger, Tommy was satisfied. He preferred the yelling. He was brought up on it. From his mother to his aunt to his sisters to his wife, he was good at being yelled at. His brothers used to say that he had the face for it. 
She was frustrated with him, but he had her attention - all of her attention. And that’s what Tommy wanted, so he stood there and endured. As the silence settled around them, Tommy waited patiently. He found new things to like about her. If he wasn’t in trouble before, he was now. He was feeling things that he shouldn’t have been feeling. 
Her eyes softened as her fingers touched his cheek. She became soft before him - open and willing. “What are you doing, Tommy?” She pleaded. “You’ve got a lovely wife. Beautiful kids. A life that most men can only imagine.” He turned his face away from her, but she tilted his jaw, forcing him to look at her. “Why are you punishing yourself with matters of the heart?” She repeated his words from the bloody letter. He should have burnt it the moment he wrote it. “Fuck your women. Make your money, but let me go. Yeah?” She nodded her head, hoping that for once, he listened. “I know you still don’t agree with it, but me getting married…” 
“He’s not a good man.” 
She slapped him hard. Her palm connecting with his jaw. The softness of her fingers turning to rage. The betrayal written on her face as she realized her vulnerability was part of the game for him. “You don’t get to lecture me about good men.” She turned her back to him, walking to the waiting armchair. If he’d just kept his mouth shout. Tommy massaged his jaw, regretting his comment for creating the distance between them again. He was almost winning her over. His ego just wouldn’t allow him to listen to her justifications. 
“You’re all the same, aren’t you?” Her hands were shaking as she reached for a cigarette. The adrenaline from her anger still coursing through her body. It took her three tries to finally light the stick, but she did. And when she brought it to her lips, her hands were steady again. “Your empty promises. Your vices. You take what you want and then you leave.” 
Running his hands through his hair, Tommy sat down opposite her. He lit his cigarette and leaned back. When he felt the heat in his lungs, he finally released. They stared at each other, sitting at a stalemate. Tommy rolled his cigarette between his fingers as she glared at him. He hadn’t just missed her body. He’d missed her presence - her silence. She was as comfortable with it as him. Some nights, they spent the entire evening in silence, staring at each other. She didn’t need his words to understand him, and maybe, that’s what scared him the most. It wasn’t just the feeling in his chest. It was all the things he didn’t need to say. It was why he’d accidentally left the letter for her to find.
“So, how did you do it?” 
Tommy ran his thumb against his bottom lip. 
“Did you provide the women or supply him with the booze?” 
Laying his head back, he took a long drag. 
“No, that’s not the Shelby way, is it?” She scoffed. “You prefer to give a man the rope to hang himself.” She took a labored breath. The exhaustion evident in her sigh. “I’m not divorcing him. I made promises. Promises to myself. Promises that have nothing to do with you, Thomas Shelby. Promises that I would like to keep.” 
“You stopped babysitting,” he uttered, slowly opening his eyes, watching as her hand instinctively touched her right ear. “You work double shifts to pay the bills because your husband drinks the money away.” He leaned forward stamping his cigarette out on the ashtray. “He hasn’t touched you since the wedding because he gets piss drunk every night. I pay the barmaids double to make sure of that. The rest is all him. If you want to know why he doesn’t come home anymore, ask him.”
“You’re watching us.” 
“You’ve also been losing weight in all my favorite places.” Tommy pointed at her chest. “You’ve lost a full cup since the wedding.” 
Covering her face with her hands, she muttered a string of curses. “Just fuck off, Tommy.” 
“I made promises too.”
She laughed. Her hands fell to her chest as a cackle erupted from her chest. “Promises,” she repeated. “Do you remember when you promised to let me go. When you promised not to interfere in my affairs.” His jaw ticked as he stood up, but that emboldened her. She wasn’t the same woman that had left him two months ago. “You promised to leave me alone.”
Moving to the table, Tommy sat across from her, closing the distance between them. “I’ve changed me mind.” 
Her lip quivered. Her frustration with him growing. “You’ve changed your mind?” 
Tommy leaned closer. His fingers brushing her hand as he reached for her cigarette. It was one touch, but the electricity between them. It was still there. She quickly pulled her hand away, but he saw the recognition in her eyes. Tommy opened his mouth, letting the smoke escape. “I made promises to myself about you.” She turned her head away. “Promises that I intend to keep.” 
She was still angry, but it was time for them to make up. “Now, I’m not a good man. I’m a selfish man. A man who doesn’t want to share you.” He waited for her eyes to meet his. “Truth is you deserve better. You deserve better than me. Better than him.” 
“I shouldn’t have come back here.” She shook her head. 
“I get it. After that letter, you needed to marry him. You thought that was what I wanted. That it would solve everything.” Tommy purposely let his leg fall, so that his knee touched hers. He waited, and when she didn’t move away from him, he continued. “It’s hard to love a man who craves dying more than living.” 
“I can’t do this with you, Tommy.” She stood up, trying to move away from him, but he reached for her. And when she stilled, his hands dropped to her thighs. She felt lighter, but she also felt like his. He let his hands roam before he kissed her there. When she didn’t stop him, he moved his fingers to her hips. 
“You can’t eat because you’re unhappy,” he noted, kissing her hips before moving his hands to her waist. Tommy looked up, finding her watching him. She was terrified and heartbroken. Her anger giving way to the truth. 
“I can’t eat because I’m scared,” she corrected. Her hands moved his hair from his face; fingers resting on his sunken eyes. “You can’t sleep.”
“I’m not going to leave you.” 
“That letter, Tommy.” 
“I know what it sounded like.” He stood up, holding her face in his hands. Her head lowered, but he raised her chin and brushed her cheek. “But, I was wrong.” Her eyes widened, realizing what he was admitting. The war he was fighting within himself had ended the moment she walked into his office. Whether this was a trick or not, Thomas Shelby wasn’t going to miss his second chance. Screw the universe and the gods above, he made his own way. And so, he pulled her into his arms and kissed her. Death would just have to continue waiting on him. 
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Thank you so much for reading! What was your favorite part?
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blackwomanwriter · 2 years
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Just wanted to say that I am in love with “Tell Me”, it’s all I can think about lately. Love the way its written and the plot. I wish there was more parts to it! BUT NEVERTHELESS IM IN LOVE!!! ❤️❤️❤️
Thank you so much! ❤️❤️❤️ My favorite part of writing on here is the genuine love and feedback, so thank you. I wasn’t planning on it, but maybe, I should write a part two. 👀
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