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#because yet again paracosm memory curses
nexus-nebulae · 20 days
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it feels very strange sometimes how strongly paracosm affects the system as a whole
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ineloqueent · 4 years
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Hello! I would like to ask for fluff with Joe since you haven’t written for him yet. How about Joe dating/flirting with someone way more quiet and shy than him? A shy! Reader
here’s some fluffy joe for you! i’ve made y/n into a bit of a bookworm, because i’m a bit of one myself, oops. hope you enjoy :)
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Joe had been the first person in your life to understand that being shy wasn’t mutually exclusive with not wanting to be spoken to, that you were human, and craved connection as much as anybody else.
You’d first encountered him at the local hybrid cafe-bookshop, Paracosm. Perhaps that was why you’d been a little more at ease than usual, that day; you knew the place. Paracosm was your favourite haunt, filled with the familiar comforts of tea and yellowed pages, the glittering light bulbs that hung from the ceiling like little planets and kept the atmosphere of the cafe cosy, even on the coldest of days.
Or perhaps it’d been the look of kindliness about him, the slight ginger tint to his hair, the snow dusting his eyelashes, the way he’d shivered and shared a laugh at his own expense with the barista. It was a beautiful quality, to be able to laugh at oneself.
Or maybe it was none of those things at all, and instead simply that he’d smiled at you when he had accidentally made eye contact with you, instead of hurriedly looking away, as most people— including you— did.
“I should’ve worn a warmer jacket, I think,” he said conversationally, and with a start, you realised he’d been talking to you.
Your first thought was why? Why was he speaking to you?
You were sitting by the door, yes, in the spot where you normally did, because the way the bookshelves were positioned by the table ensured that no draft would sweep over you, but just because you were closest to him… Was that why he had directed his remark to you, in polite resolve of the mistake he’d make in looking at you earlier? Or was he speaking to you because he wanted to speak to you?
No, of course not.
But he was still smiling at you, almost expectantly, as though he thought you would reply.
“Wrong day to wear a thin jacket,” you said, and your tonelessness could have been mistaken for hostility. You cursed yourself inwardly; it wasn’t hostility, it was nerves. Admittedly, the man was attractive, and as you already struggled with small talk in the company of people you knew, talking to this auburn-haired stranger turned your words more nonsensical than normal.
But he laughed again, lightly, easily. He had an easiness about him, a simplicity that boasted earnesty and depth, both wit and charm. “You’re right,” he said, simply. “But you look like the clever sort.”
You blinked at him. “What’s that supposed to mean?” you said.
The memory of a smile remained on his face as he told the barista, “A latte for me,” glanced in your direction, then added, “and another hot chocolate for the lady, please.”
Your expression turned further puzzled, and the man said to you, “Mind if I sit down?”
He’d said it so kindly, as though he genuinely cared that you would not be bothered by him taking the seat across from you.
“No,” you managed, “sit down.”
He pulled out the chair and sat down, made as though to take off his coat, then changed his mind, instead wrapping it more tightly around himself.
“You’re reading Shakespeare,” he said.
“Sorry?”
“You’re reading Shakespeare,” he repeated, and you glanced down at your book.
You were reading Shakespeare, but as to why that was relevant, you couldn’t guess.
“And?”
He shrugged. “Call me simple-minded, but if you’re reading Shakespeare for fun, you have to be some kind of smart. You can’t read between the lines if you’re not smart, and most of Shakespeare is between the lines, not in them.”
Pulling your book closer to you, you challenged shyly, “How do you know I’m reading for fun?”
You noticed, as you leveled your gaze on him, that his eyes were a lovely brown, the kind of colour one might wish to sink into, merely to fathom a whisper of the warmth that lay within them. “You were smiling at the book when I came in.”
He’d noticed you even before you’d seen him.
How often did that happen?
The answer was never. You were one to shrink into the corner, preferring to deflect most attention, and careful observation was your greatest asset in this world of loud-talkers and scatter-brained thinkers. You imagined that nothing about you drew the eye.
But you’d drawn his.
A flush touched your cheeks. “That’s embarrassing,” you muttered. You were only half-joking.
That smile was back on his face again.
“I’m Joe,” he said, reaching out to shake your hand.
“Y/N,” you responded quietly, taking his hand. His skin was soft.
“Joe! Latte and a hot chocolate.”
Joe raised his eyebrows at you, then went to retrieve the drinks. Returning, he set down the hot chocolate in front of you.
“You really didn’t have to do that,” you said, avoiding his eyes.
“Oh, but I wanted to,” he winked. “Gotta make a good first impression.”
Your book was a refuge as you glanced down again, the reliable pattern of black lettering stamped into creamy paper offering you familiarity in this unfamiliar situation. You weren’t used to this… interest.
“And anyway,” he resumed, “what I meant to say was, that’s not embarrassing,” he jammed a finger in the direction of your book, “but the fact that I know how to recite the entirety of Macbeth backwards is.”
“Backwards?” you couldn’t help but laugh. “Why do you know how to recite the entirety of Macbeth backwards?”
Joe winced. “See, that’s the embarrassing bit.”
You raised your eyebrows, and with a heavy sigh, he continued.
“It was a bet. I was being stupid and thought it would be a good idea to bet my friend a hundred dollars that I could memorise any play within a week.”
“Okay, that does sound a bit embarrassing,” you conceded. “But still, why backwards?”
“I’m getting there, I’m getting there,” he said, blowing over the surface of his latte, gingerly taking a sip. He recoiled when it was still too hot, wrinkling his nose in an adorably childish manner. “Backwards, because my friend decided to teach me a lesson for being an idiot, and one-upped me that I should learn it backwards. Before I knew it, there was an entire bar-full of strangers chanting for me to do it, on pain of death if I refused.”
You laughed, finally slipping your fingers from your book, closing it gently with the bookmark inside, your attention captured by how this man told stories in such a lively way, the lilt of his voice akin to how one would narrate a fairytale.
“Go on, then,” you said, trying your hot chocolate. It was perfect, as ever. Perhaps a little more so because it hadn’t come out of your weekly budget. And because it had been paid for by a handsome stranger, one who actually wanted to talk to you. “I want to hear some backwards Macbeth.”
Joe’s eyes twinkled. “You don’t believe me, do you?”
“I do,” you answered. But you didn’t, really. And he knew it.
He narrowed his eyes.
When you didn’t flinch beneath his gaze, he began, “Despair thy charm, and let the angel whom thou still hast served. Tell thee, Macduff was from his mother’s womb untimely ripped.” Here, he changed his voice to represent the change in speaker, and you smothered a laugh in your hands at how dramatic his facial expression had become. “Thou losest labor as easy mayst thou the intrenchant air with thy keen sword impress as make me bleed. Let fall thy blade on vulnerable crests; I bear a charmèd life, which must not yield to one of woman born.”
A few more lines, and he had you utterly in stitches; you did not bother to quiet your laughter. Of course, the lines now sounded completely meaningless, but Joe’s sense of humour was as ridiculous as your own, and in deriving pleasure from the ludicrousness of a Shakespeare work read backwards, Joe was more likable to you than ever.
“I believe you, I believe you!” you cried, and his composure crumpled, a grin spreading across his face.
“Thank god,” he said eventually, when the two of you could contain yourselves. “I thought I’d have to recite all of it before you gave in.”
You shook your head, still smiling.
“I would’ve done it, though,” he said, and you felt your chest tighten at the look of earnesty in his eyes.
“You should be an actor,” you told him, and he chuckled, the warmth of the sound warming you.
“I’m glad you think so. I am an actor.”
“Oh!”
“But I’m not pretending I want to be here with you,” he said.
Something like butterflies had fluttered beneath your skin.
He’d returned to Paracosm every day after that, and though he seemed happily surprised each time he encountered you, you weren’t so foolish as to believe that your meetings were actually a coincidence.
As the days went by, you grew more comfortable in Joe’s presence, until you were relaxed enough to begin an argument with him about which of the Brontë sisters was more forward-thinking in terms of women’s rights. Unlike most of the men you’d come across in your lifetime, Joe was perfectly comfortable debating such topics, even going so far as to slag off the more conservative male classical writers of the same time period. The two of you had then pored over the difference between Oscar Wilde’s poetry and his literature, examined the metaphors of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, trawled through the conspiracy theory regarding Shakespeare and whether or not he had really authored all of his own works. The latter conversation had become so heated that other cafe patrons had begun taking their own personal sides on the matter, loudly voicing their opinions until even Paracosm’s baristas had a thing or two to add to the discussion.
“How are you so well-read, anyway?” you’d asked Joe.
“My mom forced me through all of the classics before I was ten,” he’d said with a shrug. In his nonchalance, he became all the more alluring, the humbleness a complement to his personality.
Not many days into the routine of running into you at Paracosm, Joe had asked you to go out with him, properly.
You’d nodded, “Okay.”
“Okay?” he’d laughed, nervously. “You don’t have to go out with me if you don’t want to.”
“No,” you’d shaken your head, adamant that you get your point across. “I want to go out with you, Joe.”
His face had broken into a smile. “Okay,” he’d said, making you laugh, and his smile had broadened until it reached his lovely eyes.
The first time he’d kissed you had been on that first date.
He’d taken you to see a musical, one you’d struggled to pay attention to because Joe kept looking over at you to gauge your reaction to certain parts of the show, laughing with you, smiling when you smiled.
After the show, the two of you had wandered down the boulevard, and as it had been cold, you’d used this as your excuse to hover close enough by Joe’s side that your sleeves occasionally brushed as you walked with your arms by your sides.
You’d been content to walk like that, floundering for breath when his eyes caught on yours, your heart stumbling along its usually steady course. But then, in place of sleeves, his fingers had brushed your fingers, and suddenly you wanted more, to be closer to him in this blistering cold where his touch would surely warm you.
And he slipped his hand into yours.
You could hardly breathe.
“Look,” he said quietly, pointing up at the sky.
Confused, you frowned, but it wasn’t long before you realised his meaning: snow drifted down from above, snowflakes spinning through the air like dancers. It was beautiful, light snow, not the heavy kind, the kind there’d been on the day when Joe had first stumbled into Paracosm, the kind that would warrant a panic about losing one’s way home.
The snow was beautiful, but you couldn’t take your eyes off of Joe.
He stared up at the heavens, his eyes wide with childlike wonder, and for a moment, you lost yourself in watching him, drenched in your own memories of a simpler time.
Snow glittered in his hair, on the shoulders of his coat, on his eyelashes and on his collar. The word ‘angelic’ came to mind.
“I like snow,” he murmured.
You laughed softly. “I can see that.”
He lowered his eyes until they met yours.
You remembered that he was holding your hand.
“And I like you,” he said, a smile finding its way to his lips. His eyes were homely and familiar in his face, the face you’d looked into for so many days now, gazing at him and wondering at how it was really nothing more than a coincidence that the two of you had met. What a wonderful coincidence.
“I like you too, Joe,” you whispered, your hold tightening on his hand.
He lifted his other hand to your cheek, not quite touching you, but close enough to make your breath hitch.
His own gentle exhale tickled your skin.
Tentatively, he asked, “Is it okay if I kiss you?”
“More than okay,” you murmured, already gravitating toward him.
“Okay, because I wasn’t sure, and I wanted to be sure, and I—”
You cut him off, pressing your lips to his as he hummed a soft oh against your mouth and finally, finally pulled you into his arms.
You felt him wrap his coat around you, and you leaned further into him, relishing his warmth in the coldness of the night.
When he pulled back, he combed snow from your hair with the lightest of touches, laughter in his eyes.
“You know,” he said, “you must be more well-read than I am.”
You blinked at him. “What makes you say that?”
“Well, because that was classic, cutting me off.”
You rolled your eyes at the ridiculousness of his joke.
The snow fell more thickly now, but neither of you moved. You simply stood, you with your head nestled against Joe’s chest, Joe with his coat and his arms wrapped around you. His breath ruffled your hair.
“My well-read girl,” he whispered.
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