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#traveling salesmen au
possumbreath · 11 months
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hello have you heard the good word about beloved definitely canon bisexual fiddleford mcgucket and his loving wife and boyfriend, who are also dating each other,
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ichorai · 1 year
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i was just a kid ; marc spector.
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track one of BROKEN MACHINE.
pairing ; marc spector x vigilante!gn!reader
synopsis ; khonshu wanted you dead. marc just wanted you.
words ; 6.6k
themes ; action, mild angst/fluff, vigilante au, thief au
warnings / includes ; blood/injury, cursing, mentions of human trafficking/sexual assault but not at all graphic, marc is basically chasing after reader for half the fic, we're traveling the world in this fic baby !!! khonshu being Annoying, reader doesn't know marc has DID and thinks he's crazy, a steven cameo !! and one (1) mention of spider-man and daredevil <3
main masterlist.
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NEW DELHI, INDIA.
The street market was crowded, bustling with chatty tourists, loud salesmen, and traveling vendors. The air was heavy with the sweet, saccharine smell of fresh mangoes, intertwined with the faintest trace of turmeric, ginger and garam masala from other stalls you hurriedly passed by. You would’ve given anything to stop and try some of the food, if not for the terrifying white-suited fucker hunting you down.
The bleeding cut on your cheek he’d given you from when he threw his crescent-shaped boomerang in your direction throbbed. You’d barely been able to duck away in time. At least here, in the busy street, he couldn’t risk hurting anyone else by striking you long-range. 
At least, you hoped so. You weren’t entirely sure how far this bastard was willing to go to get you. Sure, you’d made a lot of enemies in the past, but, to your recollection, you’d never met any moon-caped supers keen on taking your life before.
You were quick to duck through the tight-knit throng, panic setting in when you realized the market was thinning away—you were near the end of the street, and you no longer had the advantage of cover on your side. 
With agile steps, you sprinted into an alleyway, glancing up the side of an apartment.
Then, you began to climb. You scaled the small grooves in the bricks, expertly balancing your weight just right so you wouldn’t fall. You’d done this a million times before, with much smoother surfaces to climb—after all, that was the bare minimum required of a thief. 
You hauled yourself onto the rooftop, laying low so he wouldn’t be able to spot you from ground level. 
Only—he wasn’t on ground level.
A shadow loomed over you just as you crouched by the rusted air conditioning unit, and you had but a millisecond to roll out of the way before his foot came crashing clean through the metal.
Well, fuck me, he can fly, you wryly thought. 
“Glide!” the man behind the mask gruffed as he grabbed your arm and shoved you against the crumpled AC unit, the searing hot metal digging painfully into your skin. “I glide, I don’t fly!”
“I said that out loud?” you panted with a hoarse chuckle, before quickly twisting and kicking his knee, brandishing a sharp dagger from the utility belt loosely secured around your hips. Up close, his suit appeared to be fashioned from a multitude of bandages, not unlike the cheap mummies from old nineties halloween movies. “Sorry, would it be weird for me to ask why a toilet paper cosplayer is trying to murder me?”
The man offered you no response, only diving forward and landing a good punch to one side of your jaw, which made your vision go blurry with disorientation for a moment. 
There was no way you could best him with strength—you needed to get away from him. 
With quick, nimble fingers, you pulled two smoke bombs from your belt and threw them onto the ground. Large plumes of ashen white immediately ate up the space between you, and he was left blinded for a couple of seconds. You tugged a grenade out a moment later, pulling out the pin with your teeth before tossing it in his general direction and throwing yourself off the opposite side of the building, where you’d spotted a plastic-woven tarp over one of the stalls by the edge of the market.
You’d crashed straight through their booth, fruits and drinks spilling all over the street’s asphalt. The vendors started cussing at you in a language that was foreign to your ears, but you knew they were saying foul things nonetheless. With a groan, you pushed yourself up, ignoring the searing pain that ran down your leg and began running back into the crowd. 
The explosion on the building had blown Marc back several meters, and he cursed beneath his breath as he pushed himself back up. Just as he was about to set back off to track you down, Khonshu’s bellowing voice made him halt in his motions.
“Let them go,” the God rumbled. There was an undertone of mild disappointment that laid stagnant beneath his voice, as if he’d just lost a game rather than a target. “We have more pressing matters at hand. Ammit’s followers are stealing more souls in Cuba.”
Marc’s brow furrowed. “Let them go? You want me to go to Cuba? That’s halfway across the world! I can finish the job, they can’t have gotten too far—”
“We have more pressing matters,” he repeated himself, this time with an edge to his voice. A headache pulsed angrily through Marc’s temple. 
“Why’d you want them dead so bad? This target—that person, were they a follower of Ammit? Huh?” 
Much to his frustration, Khonshu ignored him completely, merely brushing past his avatar. “Go to Havana,” the bird-skull rumbled over his shoulder. “I’ll meet you there.”
And with that, he disappeared.
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ASTANA, KAZAKHSTAN.
A final stream of smoke fell from Elena’s lips as she pulled the cigarette away, dropping it into the floor to stub with her boot. She fixed you with a neutral expression as you made your way to her, though the unmistakable affection in her molten brown eyes gave her away. 
“Took you long enough,” she said, glancing at the large black cloak you were wearing. Her demeanor gradually shifted into one of a more somber variety. “Verdict’s been decided. The court decided not to charge—all those police that beat my friends to death… they’re walking away free of consequence. The government’s gone to shit. Everything is more expensive now—riots are breaking out over fuel prices, which means more people are getting killed. Nobody is willing to help anymore.”
You nodded grimly. “What can I do?”
There was a dark glimmer to her eyes as she squared her jaw. “You’re going to help me burn down government buildings. I don’t know how many, but… as many as it takes for them to change.”
A hint of a grin graced your lips as you regarded your past-lover with a nostalgic kind of fondness. “It’s the first time I see you in years and you’re already throwing me headfirst into war.”
She offered you a shrug and a wry smile. “Don’t kid yourself. You live for this kind of shit.”
“Yeah, I guess I do,” you hummed distantly. “Where do we start?”
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It was pandemonium. 
Everybody was yelling—the protestors, the police, the civilians watching from the sides, the sparse firemen as they tried to put out the massive, roaring flames that were greedily swallowing the government building in its entirety. You had to admit, you were rather proud of your handiwork—absentmindedly wondering if Elena would be happy with it, as well.
Before you could dwell on it any longer, a foreign hand tightly seized around your wrist and began to drag you back away from the crowd. Your gaze wildly swiveled around in confusion to the man yanking you along, noting his heavy-set furrowed brows and his frustrated scowl. With as much strength as you could muster, you dug your heels into the ground and halted his motion, pulling against him with all your might. He didn’t relent, only staring you down with dark eyes that held the warbling reflections of the fire you set behind you. 
“Who the fuck are you?!” you barked, starting to get more frantic as you fruitlessly attempted to get him to let go of you. 
And when he spoke, it finally dawned on you.
Well, fuck me. It’s that bitch that chased me down in New Delhi. Wonder why he isn’t wearing his super suit… probably not to attract attention like last time. The news was all over him.
“You’re just getting more people killed,” he husked, clearly talking about the fire you’d caused, before brandishing a dark karambit knife, one that you swore gave you a cut just by looking at it. “No wonder he wants you dead.”
Fear wove down your spinal column when the blade poked your lower stomach in warning. “I’m sending a message,” you growled in reply, lips curled over your teeth in a snarl as you bristled. “And what about you? You’re gonna fix the problem by killing me? I don’t even know you! Some hero you are—those people protesting out there? They’re better than you will ever be.”
For a moment, his pupils darted back to the rioting crowd, a flicker of uncertainty crossing his features, and you used the short-lived distraction to your advantage. You expertly kicked the knife out of his hand and landed a quick blow square in the center of his face, feeling his nose break beneath your knuckles. 
Not wanting to push your luck—you remembered how fast he was during your last encounter—you gave him one final shove, sending him sprawling into a trash can with a groan and a muffled curse.
By the time he forced himself back onto his feet a second later, you’d already disappeared into the shadows.
Fuck. Khonshu was gonna kill him.
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PODGORICA, MONTENEGRO.
Marc still wasn’t sure why Khonshu wanted you dead so badly. Then again, he wasn’t sure about anything when it came to Khonshu. 
But he knew one thing for certain—if Marc truly wanted you dead, then you would’ve been six feet under weeks ago. Which meant… he wasn’t actively trying to kill you because he didn’t actually want you dead. All the others that he’d killed for Khonshu felt like they’d deserved it—rapists, abusers, pedophiles… and though Marc didn’t know you very well, he knew you weren’t anything like the people he’d killed before.
Marc didn’t know what he was doing. 
Jaw clenched, he pulled the cap lower down his face, shoving his fists into the pockets of his jeans. He followed not too far behind you, silent as a wraith, watching as you merrily strode down the streets of Podgorica. 
Finally, when you stopped by a little coffee truck to order an iced latte, Marc stepped forward to stand beside you.
For the first minute, you idly tapped away on your phone, smiling down at the screen briefly before pocketing the device. You glanced at him, thinking nothing of the person beside you, assuming they were just another civilian—
Then you froze.
You knew that face.
After all, you’d broken that very same nose less than a week ago. Strange, it looked just fine now. 
Immediately, you hunkered down into a defensive position, backing away from him with quick steps. Then, you ran, sprinting away so quickly that Marc could’ve sworn a trail of dust kicked up beneath your feet.
The man in the coffee truck incredulously yelled out after you, followed by a string of what Marc could only assume was a creative litany of Montenegrin profanity. 
Dropping a few shillings onto the truck’s counter, Marc grabbed your coffee and ran after you, shocked at how far you’d managed to get in such a short amount of time. 
There was no denying that you were a fast runner—but as the old tale went, the quick hare would always get overly confident. You slowed down to a moderate jog when you glanced behind you, Marc nowhere in sight. With a relieved sigh, you turned the corner and slumped against a building, wiping the sweat from your brow with the back of your hand. 
Damn, you’d kill for that iced coffee right about now.
As if on cue, Marc rounded the corner, catching you by surprise. You were just ready to turn tail and run away again, but his hand shot out and held onto your wrist, not unlike he did in Astana. 
You spewed out a myriad of curses, ranging from calling him an ‘insufferable cucumber-dicked motherfucker’ to ‘smooth-brained, butt-faced swine’, wildly trying to get him to let go of you. If you weren’t violently bucking against him with all the grace of a panicked mare, he would’ve laughed at the creativity of your insults. 
“Stop, I just want to talk!” exclaimed Marc, dodging when you pushed yourself forward to try and wrap your hands around his throat. 
“Last two times I saw you, you tried to kill me!” you breathlessly spat. “Sorry if I don’t quite trust you now!”
“I’m unarmed,” he gritted out, stepping back slightly to allow you to scan your gaze over him. Though you didn’t want to admit it, you knew that if Marc really wanted to kill you, you would’ve been dead long ago. “I just want to ask you a couple things. And look—I brought your coffee!”
A low hiss fell from your lips. “I’m not answering jack shit.”
With that, you lunged forward and shoved him hard—so hard that he stumbled into the jagged brick wall behind him with an oomf. The iced latte sloshed right out of its cup and spilled all over his chest. His head struck painfully against the stone and his vision went blurry for a moment, expression faltering. 
You stepped away, watching him with cautious, narrowed eyes. 
After a long, pregnant pause, the man blinked in a dazed fashion, seeming confused. 
“What? Where am I? What’s going on?” he said, accent suddenly… British. He fixed you with a genuinely miffed gaze, appearing slightly frightened at your withering glower. 
You didn’t stay to answer his question. 
As you were turning on your heel to run away, you faintly heard him mutter to himself, “Where the bloody hell am I?”
Crazy bastard.
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VALENCIA, SPAIN.
Your knuckles were split. Blood dribbled down your fist, a mixture of yours and the man whose face you were caving in.
One of your hands was bunched into the collar of his shirt, holding him down as you rained punches on him. The sickening sound of his bones giving way with your strikes didn’t deter you, and you only snarled and hit him again as he blubbered out prayers in Spanish. Blood-flecked spittle dripped from his busted lips. 
“Who are you praying to?” you hissed, releasing his collar in favor of wrapping your hand over his throat, squeezing tight. The dull green of his eyes flashed with panic, legs flailing weakly. “The gods will not listen to the likes of you—I’ll make sure of it.”
A strangled wail erupted from him. 
And just as you were about to land another punch, you found yourself being shoved away from the man, and promptly lifted off the floor with the scruff of your shirt collar, shoving you against a wall. You began kicking and twisting blindly, cursing furiously when you saw the man you were beating up scurry onto his feet and haggardly sprint away.
Your struggling was of no avail, and you weren’t at all surprised to see the same person that’s been trying to track you down for months now. 
“What the hell do you think you’re doing?” he snarled, brows heavily furrowed and dark eyes stormy with anger. “You were about to kill that guy!”
“He deserves it,” you bit out, glaring back at him with just as much intensity. “The fucker’s been stalking a friend of mine and sexually assaulted her daughter.”
There was a beat of silence. Marc’s cross expression seemed to drain away, but he still bore a stern face as he slowly let you go. You slid down the wall and got back onto your feet with a wince. 
“Why have you been following me?” you huffed, dusting off your pants. “You think I don’t know that if you really wanted to kill me, I would be dead by now?”
Marc squared his jaw and leveled his gaze on you. “Someone… close to me wants you dead. I want to know why first—he won’t tell me.”
“Sounds like you shouldn't be all that close to him, then,” you snorted derisively. 
“Not for a lack of trying,” the man dryly replied. 
With a scoff, you stepped forward and wiped your bloody knuckles onto his shirt, leaving a damp trail of darkening crimson. “There’s way too many reasons a person would want me dead,” you whispered, one hand patting his chest. The other trailed down, down, down…
To the high-rise potted plant beside you. You grabbed a fistful of dirt.
“See, he’s not exactly what you’d call a person—”
Before Marc could finish his sentence, you chucked the dirt straight into his face. He inhaled some of the soil and doubled over, pounding on his chest as he coughed it out. With a growl, he frustratedly swiped the remaining flecks of dirt out of his eyes, blearily looking back up. And, to none of his surprise but much of his dismay, you were already gone.
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OSLO, NORWAY.
“Why aren’t they dead yet, Marc?” grumbled Khonshu in that grating, gravely tone of his. Even though the God had no eyes, Marc could still feel his stare burning straight through him. 
With a frown, Marc was quick to respond, “Because you haven’t told me why yet.”
“You’ve never needed a reason before—always blindly following my orders,” the bird-skull crooned. “What makes them so different?”
There was a bitter taste to the back of Marc’s throat. What made you so different?
“Because I don’t know if they deserve it, alright?” he retorted, crossing his arms to glare up at the tall figure. “You can’t just expect me to kill everyone who mildly inconveniences you.”
Harrumphing, Khonshu snapped back, “They are naught but an inconvenience—they are a disruption to the very balance of nature. Y/N has taken justice into their own hands, and that is a very dangerous thing for a simple mortal to do.”
Marc cast his gaze away in frustration, pacing back and forth. “But that’s exactly what you make me do.”
“Yes, because you are my avatar,” deadpanned the God. “And Y/N is not. Though, they might as well be because you are being a fool.”
He could feel one of his eyes twitch. There wasn’t ever a conversation Marc could remember where Khonshu didn’t insult him. 
“They’re doing what they think is right,” defended Marc. “They’re not hurting people just for the sake of it.”
“That is not for them to decide!” bellowed the God, which made him step back just a bit. “They have done terrible, unimaginable things in the past—though mistakes some may be—and they will continue to make them. Take a look for yourself.” With that, Khonshu swept his arm out, gesturing to the large bank across the street, large windows giving him a clear view of what was going on inside.
His heart dropped down to his stomach when he saw you. 
You were wearing a mask that covered the entirety of your features, except for your eyes and your mouth. The rest of your body was shrouded with simple, dark clothing, suitable for running. 
And, most notably, you had a gun in your hand, pointing straight at the trembling woman working behind the counter. Your mouth was moving and you gestured with lax, calm movements, despite the explicit terror written across the woman’s face.
Marc’s brow furrowed. Damn it. 
He watched as you snatched the bag of money the woman slowly slid over, and hightailed out of the bank with the gun still gripped tightly in your hand. You ran the opposite way, before disappearing down another block. Glancing over at Khonshu, only to see that he was nowhere in sight, Marc huffed out a sigh and began sprinting after you.
One downside of Oslo was that their buildings weren’t exactly the easiest to climb—which meant that you had to stick to the ground and trust your speed. 
Marc wasn’t as fast as you without his suit, that was for certain. But with his suit—he could glide. 
And so that’s how the white-caped figure dropped straight down in front of you out of seemingly nowhere, which elicited a shriek of surprise from you, nearly dropping the bag out of shock. You had pulled your mask off long ago, shoving it into the knapsack shrugged over your shoulders, along with the gun. 
This clearly wasn’t your first time doing this.
“You,” was what you incredulously breathed out, eyes wide. “You must be obsessed with me or something.”
Not in the mood to play around, Marc growled out, “Why are you doing this? Give the money back. It’s not yours.”
“Who said it was for me?” you countered, upper lip curled in contempt. You tilted your head at him, eyeing his suit with interest, before returning back to your scathing disposition. “Not that it’s any of your business, but this money’s for the small orphanage a couple miles from here. They’re barely getting by with the money the government gives them. I have a kid there I know.”
With bated breath, Marc willed the suit away, leaving him in a dark sweatshirt and a pair of woolen pants. He eyed you suspiciously, still not too sure if he should trust you.
Sensing this, you rolled your eyes and unzipped your bag. “If you don’t believe me—check my gun. It’s blank.” You fished out the small weapon and handed it over to him with the end pointed towards you so he wouldn’t think you were going to shoot him. “No bullets.”
Marc didn’t need to check it—by now he knew you were telling the truth. But he looked into the chamber anyway, finding it void of any ammunition. 
“Can I go now? We both know you’re not going to kill me. The cops will be looking,” you said, voice a bit more gentle than before. He noticed that the anger on your face had melted away, leaving only urgency and another tumultuous emotion that he couldn’t quite pinpoint.
When he offered you no response, finally relenting, you nodded once to him, a glimmer of gratitude behind your irises. And with that, you began running again, effortlessly disappearing into the shadows.
“Fool,” thundered a rumbling growl from somewhere above him. Marc looked up, but the bird-skulled God was nowhere to be found.
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COLUMBUS, OHIO.
Damn. Nothing hit harder than classic, greasy, American cheeseburgers with a side of curly fries and a milkshake. You shifted eagerly on the sticky red leather of the booths, shooting the waitress who’d handed you your food a flirtatious smirk and a ten dollar bill, which she took with an equally salacious wink.
You grinned down at your food before taking the first bite into the burger, a muffled noise of content falling from your throat.
“Am I interrupting something?” said a frustratingly familiar voice, the man sliding into the seat across from you. “It sounds like you were just about to have the greatest sex of your life—with a cheeseburger.”
You pointedly glared at him, though it lacked any true heat. After about a dozen deliberately slow chews, you finally swallowed down the food. Marc looked like he wanted to say something else, but you merely held up a finger, slurping on the paper straw of your milkshake. He pursed his lips with a mildly aggrieved look.
Finally, you tilted your head at him. 
“Is there something you want from me?” you asked him casually, reaching to the end of the table to grab a napkin and wipe at the corner of your lips. “Because I’m not in the drug business anymore, if that’s what you’re looking for. Or is it something else, hm?”
It seemed that Marc hadn’t completely thought this through. Sure, he’d planned out what he roughly wanted to say to you, but now that you were right in front of him, he found his tongue running dry. He fumbled for words, fists clenching and unclenching by his knees. 
“I don’t want to kill you. Or hurt you at all, for that matter.”
You scoffed, remembering the instances in which he’d hurt you plenty.
“I just… I want to know your side of the story. I want to know why you do what you do,” he said, a bit quieter. 
For a moment, Marc thought you’d just tell him to piss off. But there was a gradual shift to your features, going from obvious irritation to gentle curiosity. 
“Alright. I’ll cut you a deal,” you said, popping a curly fry into your mouth. “I tell you about my tragic backstory, and you tell me all about this… thing that’s been wanting to kill me. And before I start—I’m gonna need your name. I can’t keep mentally cataloging you as the toilet paper man.”
And for the first time since you met him all those months ago—Marc laughed. It was deep and gratingly genuine, coming from the very bottom of his chest.
“Well, first of all, it’s not toilet paper. It’s the ceremonial armor of Khonshu’s temple. And second, it’s Marc. Marc Spector.”
“Ceremonial armor of whose what now?” you balked. 
A hint of a smile graced the corner of Marc’s lips. “Khonshu—Egyptian God of the moon. I’m his avatar. He’s the one that wanted me to kill you. He called you a disruption to nature—said that you were wrongfully taking justice into your own hands.” As he spoke, the smile began to wane away, and he regarded you in a more serious light. “I want to know why he thinks that.”
You stared down at your plate of fries, stunned. An Egyptian God wanted you dead? You knew you pissed people off, but Gods too?
“And if you don’t like what you hear?” you quietly asked, lifting your gaze to meet his. “Will you drag me out of the diner and strangle me to death?”
Though you could tell he didn’t like saying it, Marc’s face was set in stone when he leveled with you. “I’ll give you a head’s start.”
Another beat of silence. You picked up another fry and popped it into your mouth. The plate slid across the table as you nudged it towards him. 
“Alright, Marc. Settle in, have some fries, order a milkshake—it’s a long story.”
And you told him everything. You told him about your childhood—rumbling stomachs, nimble thieving hands, falling off of buildings when running away from cops. You told him about your teenage years—pulling off heists, brokering deals with gangs, breaking nearly every bone in your body being reckless. You told him about your early adult years—falling in love with Elena, getting more comfortable as a vigilante, as you liked to call yourself, meeting other superheroes and helping out on occasion. Marc seemed to recognize Spider-Man and Daredevil’s names when you mentioned them in passing, his eyebrows arching up closer to his hairline. 
You told him that you now spend your days traveling around the globe helping people. 
By the time you were done spilling your entire life story, your fries and burger were cleanly polished off. 
Marc was silent for a long time, as if unsure what to say. 
“I was in love once, too,” he said in a tentative manner, gaze trained on the table. “Her name was Layla.”
“Oh, yeah?” you curiously said, sipping on the last frothy remnants of your milkshake at the bottom of the glass. “And how’d that work out for you?”
There was a sad glint to his eyes. “Not so good. We’re divorced now.” He cleared his throat before you could press him about it. “What happened with you and Elena?”
It was now your turn to stare out the window in a despondent manner. “Same as you. Except we were never married. My lifestyle was… too much for her.”
Marc nodded in understanding. “Yeah, me too.”
The two of you stared at the glossy table in silence.
“You still in love with her?”
You lifted your gaze to meet his. “I love her, yeah—I always will. I’m just not in love with her anymore.”
The man across from you hummed. There was a newfound understanding between you two—unspoken, but the both of you could feel it. 
“Do you still love Layla?”
A ghost of a smile graced his features, but it was gone just as quickly as it came. “Not in the same way I used to. But I do.”
With a final slurp of your straw, your drink glass was emptied. “Seems like we’re a lot more similar than first meets the eye, huh?” 
Marc fixed you with a loose, awkward smile. Without another word, he pulled the bill of his cap lower down his face, and slid out of the booth. It seemed that he wasn’t going to be strangling you tonight. 
You didn’t look back when he walked out of the diner, the bell hooked by the doortop tolling with his departure.
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YEKATERINBURG, RUSSIA.
The bird skull was saying something. His bony beak was moving. You could feel the vibrations of his thundering voice beneath your feet. And yet—you had no fucking clue what he was talking about.
You blinked up at the God with wide eyes. 
“Could you repeat that?” you winced out, having not picked up a single word Khonshu had said in the past three minutes. The God grumbled, and somehow glared at you despite having no eyes within his bony skull. Beside you, Marc let out a muffled snort.
“You insolent buffoon,” the bony figure snarled. “Have you not been listening?”
Despite the bristling God in front of you, you found the entire situation to be amusing. “Sorry, it’s just… your head’s really big. It’s kinda distracting. Just paraphrase yourself—I don’t need all the terms and conditions.”
Marc’s shoulders shook with silent laughter, but he immediately sobered up when Khonshu rounded his pointed beak to him, back straightening. 
“This is a gravely serious matter—!”
“You know what else is serious?” you snapped, pulling your thick woolen coat closer to your quivering body. “Catching hypothermia! Did you really have to pick Russia of all places? We couldn’t have met on a warm beach in the Caribbeans, or something?”
If Khonshu had eyelids, you were sure they would’ve been twitching with repressed agitation by now.
A deep baritone of a sigh fell from the lanky God. He leaned his weight against his crescent-tipped staff, as if willing his own patience to hold steadfast. 
“I said—” he started again, watching you cautiously, “—that I will be letting go of your past sins. But only because my avatar is so keen on you, and because you show a consistent effort to rid the world of evil. However, if you slip up so much as once, I will personally see that to an unkind descent into the afterlife. Do I make myself clear?”
“Crystal!” you harrumphed, tucking your frigid nose into the collar of your fur coat. “And I did those things to people who deserved it—which is exactly the same as what you do, you bony hypocrite! Can we go inside now?”
The God grumbled something unintelligible, though you suspected it had something to do with your impertinence, and disappeared in the blink of an eye.
“You’ll get used to him,” assured Marc, placing a hand on your back to lead you back inside. “He doesn’t get any better but—you’ll get used to it.”
“That’s reassuring,” you dryly responded, teeth beginning to chatter. As soon as the two of you started to walk back to the small little city hotel, you elbowed his side with a playful grin. “So… you’re keen on me, huh?”
Marc gave you an unimpressed look. Snowflakes danced with the wind and landed in his neatly-combed curls. “Khonshu had to believe that I liked you—the last thing he’d want is a sloppy, grieving avatar.”
“Mmh, I don’t know…” you said, tapping your finger against your chin in thought. “He’d probably like that, considering he’s one manipulative son of a bitch. Maybe he just secretly likes me and wants to keep me around.”
“Yeah,” snorted Marc. He halted in his tracks, forcing down a smile. “That, or I blackmailed him.”
Your eyes widened, frost clinging to your lashes and brows. “You blackmailed an Egyptian God?”
“Let’s just say that he’s had a sticky romance with the Egyptian Goddess of love—ironically, she’s one of the few beings that he’s genuinely terrified of. I threatened to get in contact with her avatar if he didn’t absolve you.”
You kicked at a small build-up of snow by the sidewalk, an excited gleam to your irises. “Crazy how even the Gods have petty dating drama to gossip about,” you commented, turning to him. His nose was tinted a faint shade of red from the cold, bits of white frost freckling his hair and his clothes. “Thanks for not killing me, by the way,” you added as an afterthought, fixing him with a warm smile. 
“Just keep out of trouble,” he gently reminded, mirroring your soft grin. The two of you were now standing in front of your dingy little motel—and Marc apparently had something to attend to halfway across the world in Cuba. 
So this was goodbye. 
For now, at least.
Without thinking, you leaned forward to press your cold lips against the warmth of his cheek, the tip of your nose grazing his cheekbone as you laid a hand on his shoulder. 
“Thanks,” you whispered when you pulled away slightly, breath misting into an opaque fog. Marc was regarding you with an expression that bordered on fondness, which was certainly a new look that you found yourself craving for more. “I haven’t really properly talked to anybody in ages so… this was nice. Goodbye, Marc.”
With that, you turned on your heel and headed into the hotel, grateful for the blast of warmth from the overhead heater, though you could still feel Marc’s burning stare bore holes into your back, even as you turned the corner and disappeared from his sight.
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ADDIS ABABA, ETHIOPIA.
Blood, everywhere.
Gunshots in the distance.
Snarling men rounding the corner—human traffickers.
Your dagger glinting beneath the hot Ethiopian sun.
A man screaming as you sliced his throat. 
Gurgling.
Red on your hands. On your clothes. On your shoes. 
Two successive punches—one to your stomach, and the other to your face.
Pain blooming beneath your skin.
A fist around your throat.
Squeezing. 
Choking.
Dark spots dancing about your vision.
Your nails clawing into their eyes. 
Air.
Gasping for breath. 
Wheezing.
You desperately parried away another assailant’s knife.
A song of steel against steel.
More gunshots flying every which way.
You dove behind large metal crates. 
Sand in your shoes.
Copper on your tongue.
Crashing. Yelling. Cursing.
Your fingers flexing around the hilt of your dagger.
Bated breath.
You looked around the crate.
Marc fucking Spector.
A ghost of a smile on your lips.
Your name being called out—surprise in his tone.
“Fancy seeing you here!” you shouted.
Marc’s fist curled into one of the traffickers’ collars.
“It’s been a while!” came his mildly amused reply.
A grunt. A punch. A groan of pain.
His white cape fluttered with the wind. 
“You down for a burger or something later?”
You spoke calmly, as if you weren’t currently strangling someone with a long power cord. 
The man fell limp in your hold. 
“Sure—I could go for a burger,” he called out, 
Blood trickled down your nose and grazed your lip. 
You wiped it away with the back of your hand.
The last of the traffickers was struck down with Marc’s crescent boomerang. 
A breath of relief. 
Drenched in blood (most of which was not yours), you made your way to Marc.
“You clean up nice,” he joked.
A roll of your eyes.
“Oh, shucks, Marc,” you simpered with a mischievous grin, dragging a bloody hand down his face once he retracted his mask. 
He grimaced in disgust, but didn’t push you away. 
A laugh fell from your throat, hoarse and echoing.
You looped your aching, bleeding arms with his. 
“Let’s go get that burger.”
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LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND.
“Ow—ugh, Marc, could you go any faster?” you barked through the dirty cloth wedged between your teeth, glaring up at him with watering eyes. You’d endured pain far worse than this, sure, but Marc was taking twice as long stitching you up than when you’d do it yourself. Though, admittedly, whenever you had to patch yourself up, it was a rather shoddy job and often left a much larger, gnarled scar than it would’ve, had you properly taken care of it. 
The man above you shook his head, dark curls hanging loosely over his forehead. “Stop moving and maybe it’ll hurt less,” he replied, the tip of his tongue sticking out the corner of his mouth as he worked on your stitches. “You know, just because we work together now and I heal quickly doesn’t mean you do, too.”
With a grimace, you tore the cloth from your mouth, chucking it somewhere across the small motel room to freely speak to him. “It was just a mistake,” you replied, nearly doubling over with a strained groan when he punctured the skin of your abdomen with a small needle, where the deep gash resided, one last time. “I timed myself wrong. Happens sometimes.”
Marc let his eyes roam over your exposed skin, brows divoting ever so slightly upon seeing the multiple other scars littering your body. They were memories of your past, and you weren’t ashamed of them. 
“Doesn’t look like it only happens sometimes,” he murmured, tying off his sutures and cleaning off the last bits of flaking, dried blood on your stomach before binding the open wound with thin bandages. 
“You worried about me?”
Marc didn’t spare you a response. He busied himself by putting away the medkit and tossing the discarded, bloodied clothes into the bathroom sink. When he came back to sit on the bed beside you, you had gingerly moved positions so that you were propped up against the creaking bed’s headboard. 
“How are you feeling?”
“Shitty,” you whispered. “England fucking stinks.”
Marc chuckled, a small smile curling his lips upwards, though you noticed that it didn’t quite reach his eyes. 
The two of you sat in silence for a while. 
“Thanks for stitching me up,” you told him.
“Thanks for not dying on me,” he replied. His hand sought yours and your fingers laced with his. “I know we’ve only been working together for a month by now, but I’m starting to really like you.”
With one last painful shift, you moved so that your faces were only inches away. You paused when your lips were just a hairsbreadth from his, giving him time to yank you away if need be. 
But he didn’t. 
His lips met yours with a tender sort of sadness, pouring months of frustration and anger into the embrace. A warm hand came up to cradle the back of your head, angling you closer, wary of your newly-stitched wound. 
Forehead resting against his, you gently pulled away, finding solace in the fact that he chased after your lips just a bit, before cracking his dark eyes open. 
“We shouldn’t do this,” he mumbled, gaze darting back down to your parted mouth. 
“Okay,” came your broken reply.
And despite it all, he threw all caution to the wind and kissed you again. Again, and again, and again—far into the night, until the two of you passed out on the stained sheets of the motel bed, limbs intertwined and your nose pressed against his throat, where you could hear the soft thrumming of his heartbeat. 
Unbeknownst to the two of you, Khonshu was hovering on the rooftop, finding himself rather glad that his avatar had finally found someone he could trust—even if that someone was the very bane of his existence. 
“I need a new avatar,” the God harrumphed to nobody but himself, knowing full and well that he wasn’t letting go of Marc Spector and his… counterparts any time soon. 
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Text
I’m on my awful arc uh
TMA music man au sorta
Tim and Martin are traveling “salesmen” coming to promote their fake marching band to a small town in England
Sasha and Jon are librarians being swept up in the mess of it all
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canigetuuu · 1 year
Text
that skater au gave me brain worms so. just. take whatever this is. I'm so tired.
John
started figure skating young
his dad was a genial and well respected business manager at a rink in Washington sponsored by the prestigious Skaianet Systems Inc, which brought major players like the vaulted Roxanne Lalonde to Olympic gold stardom
he's just a decent man though, trying to support his family
he brought John to the rinks sometimes and taught him to skate just for fun
however, John soon started showing a prodigious talent for it, and Dad Egbert was so so proud of him for it
John liked skating well enough at the time, and was kind of hoping that maybe if he took up skating his dad would axe the whole harlequin thing
(which he did)
(mostly)
at sixteen, after winning a few pretty impressive medals in the junior category, John was ready to call it quits and retire the professional skates
Tragically, however, it was around this time that James "Dad" Egbert, who had always been so supportive of John's skating, died very suddenly.
John grieves in a very particular way. He often gets (home)stuck in a version of denial which often looks like radical acceptance.
He is in fact actually very fucked up right now.
Vriska Serket, a young and notorious athlete turned coach who John had been working with for the last year or so at that time, pulls a Vriska, and hamfists John back into skating.
With her guidance, John becomes one of THE top US figure skaters, and at age 21 is ready for his second foray into the Olympic scene.
The winter Olympics are in less than a year, and John has taken up training in Vancouver...
Dirk
took up street hockey as a teen in his home town of Houston, Texas with his kid brother Dave, who said it was the height of irony to play a winter sport in the hottest place this side of satans tight asshole
Dave never liked it as much as Dirk did though
probably because Dave liked not fainting from heat stroke
I know, Dave is so weird
It got them out of that apartment though.
... (<- Bro silence being very loud)
Anyway
At 16, Dirk got scouted by a pale man in a suit working for a company called Abraxas, which he said was looking for young athletes to sponsor. <- very believable
That's very rude. I never lie.
And please, call me Doc Scratch.
Is it normal for traveling salesmen to have doctorates?
Oh it's not a title, though I imagine it would be very easy for me to acquire one. Haa haa, hee hee.
...
Things got very messy and horrible very quickly.
Events culminated in an extremely high profile law suit, where Dirk and many other athletes were represented by the Pyrope Firm to take down Abraxas, Doc Scratch, and his boss Lord English (H3'S SO PR3T3NTIOUS, UGH) and to free them all from their horrifying contracts
Pyrope won.
For now.
At age 18, Dirk had a scandal behind him, a kid brother to take care of beside him (the Bro silence got quieter), and a veritable mountain of legal reparations ($$$) to get him into any college he wanted.
...
dude, just go to the hockey school
I could support you better with a law degree.
After Dave had to go to the hospital due to the force of his laughing fit giving him a hernia, Dirk decided to go to the hockey school.
He joins the team there, and does well enough to get into the Big Leagues once he graduates with a combob philosophy/comp sci degree.
the Big Man. he is you
Dave, despite having a literal athlete brother, still has no idea how sports work.
And neither do I, so just assume that Dirk does really well and gets on a good team and is very normal about everything.
He is especially normal when, at age 24, he has to move to Vancouver, Canada since he got swapped to a different team and Dave doesn't come with him.
DUN DUN DUUUUUUUn
Bonus notes
Rose is John's friend who is also a figure skater. She's got a very turbulent relationship with her mother, former Olympic skater Roxanne Lalonde, which drags down her genuine love for skating with the weight of legacy.
John and Dave are internet friends who don't know each other's last names, and while John knows a lot about Dave's life, he keeps his own private.
Dirk started playing hockey not for the ironies like Dave thought but because his online friend Jake said he thought hockey players were cool, and Dirk had a crush on him.
Dirk and Jade went to the same college (she was home schooled and started college early) and took a robotics class together for two semesters. They're still friends to this day, though Jade actually is an engineer now.
Guess where she's interning.
(Psst, it's Skaianet)
Vriska stopped being a skater after a string of incidents involving two other former skaters and a lawyer, which resulted in her being banned from ever competing again. One is now in a wheelchair and the other quit the ice skating thing completely. Ghosted it, if you will. wonk.
Aradia is a roller derby skater, and she is incredibly hot. She might show up in the hypothetical actual fic i write for this au. Because I love her.
Me being me i'll probably find a way to include everybody else in this au, but for now, that's all. Ta.
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lovezhongli · 1 year
Text
Tartali / Chili Alternate Universe (AU) Fic Recs
[written in no particular order]
The Heartstone Key by bambiseelie ( E | Completed )
In a dingy, backwater bar, Childe finds himself hired to provide security for a dig site in the mountains of Aocang. A group of archaeologists led by the enigmatic Professor Zhongli claim to have discovered the ancient burial site of King Lapis. Described as cold and aloof by others, Childe learns that the beautiful, buttoned up Zhongli doesn't trust easily and rarely lets his guard down. Determined to win the Professor's trust and finally see him come undone, Childe embarks on a dangerous game.
divine deceit by acynthe ( E | Completed )
While Zhongli has always longed to travel to Fontaine, his current visit here is purely on the basis of a business-related assignment. It’s not like there’s much time to go off vacationing, anyway—not when he’s occupied with his fruitless search for the Hydro Archon, and also his relationship with an enigmatic consultant that seems to know much more than he lets on. Or: Zhongli attempts to juggle his search for the Hydro Archon alongside his attraction to a random consultant he meets in Fontaine. It’s a good thing Childe is ever so generous with his company.
an emperor's duty by oronine ( T | Oneshot )
It's known that when you find a pretty man with no mora on the streets, the three vital steps to courting are: take him home, fight him, then marry him. Tartaglia, Emperor of Snezhnaya, follows this to a tee. Except, that's just his way of doing things. Zhongli doesn't know anything.
That Time My Grandpa Made Chusky Illegal in Tevyat by Bowandtie ( M | Completed )
Zhongli is a retired widower who have door to door salesmen problem. His ex-coworker offered to lend him one of her dogs (the one with long list of rap sheet for biting human beings) There were complications.
Whiskey Kiss by OldeShoestrings ( E | Oneshot )
In which Childe is a wayward but efficient agent that always breaks the rules. He's too valuable to be dismissed despite the damage he's caused and so his superiors assign Childe with a handler to monitor him. Childe is against it at first. Until Childe finally meets the handler himself. Or Childe wants a good fight just as much as he wants to kiss his handler. Zhongli just wants more coffee and tea.
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charkyzombicorn · 6 months
Note
What’s something you really want to talk about in one of your aus
So! My weird future mech au that I started at the worst possible time has Extra Lore!
Sabo comes from a large family of black market wood salesmen (wood isn't easy to get because almost all greenhouses in space are made for food only, and wood is less essential amd more a luxury. Mining asteroids mean steel is cheaper than wood) that are hiding in a small city's worth of bunker - very pristine and elegant and high-tech, but people are hesitant to leave because gravity changes might make their travel one-way. Sabo escaped to the surface to get away from them and that's where he met Ace.
Later, Ace Sabo and Luffy beat up a scientist and take his mech, and he comes back with authorities. Sabo makes a deal with them that he'll uncover his entire family if they let him and his brothers live. They agree, but then when they're arresting everyone in the business they take Sabo, too. Ace and Luffy don't know until the prison transport ship is already out of the atmosphere. Then they see an escape shuttle shoot out of the ship, and then get shot down, and Garp comes back to tell them it was Sabo.
When they're older, Luffy and Ace raid the bunker remains for mech parts and engineering guides. Luffy's actually kind of good with the stuff, it helps that Ace demands robotics textbooks for Luffy and Bogard really likes finding new journals and textbooks and guides for Ace and Luffy because he's not good with children but This he can do
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About your AU.... What about Rhyme and Reason? 👀
I think it'd be funny if they were like traveling salesmen or something- though that would still probably lead to them committed crimes tbh. I was actually planning a doodle of them but my tablets been acting up so I'll have to wait on that one
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wilfywarfy · 1 year
Note
⚔️
Hear me out-
Eric and his dad are traveling salesmen, doing their best to try and sell clothes trinkets at a local market. They're shotty at best. It's already a struggle to try and sell, but ever since the horse cart accident, they're down a few hands.
Wilford is a travelling showman (Think like a bard-esqe figure) who just so happens to need a fresh outfit after the last show ended with him being splashed with wine.
Wilford finds the salesboy to be rather adorable, with how flustered he gets. He strikes a deal with the duo that they can sell their merchandise at his shows, and that they can travel with him.
Perhaps it's about getting an extra buck... or maybe it the fact that he doesn't want to leave this cute salesman behind.
A softer AU with hints of angst. Takes place in Renaissance times. Rating scale, PG, but definitely has heavier moments.
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March/April 2023 Contest Submission #3: Living Without You, Living Alone
Words: ca. 6,300 Setting: Historical AU Lemon: no Content: n/a Song: Open Arms by Journey
Elsa readjusted the wrap draped across her shoulders for the nineteenth time in the last five minutes. Or maybe it was six minutes. In any case, she knew it was nineteen times because keeping track had been the one thing keeping her from pacing and if she started that, there would be no guarantee that it wouldn’t turn into walking back to her rented room. So Elsa fidgeted with her wrap, creating wrinkles upon wrinkles, while she waited for the train to arrive.
“Excuse me, sir,” she stopped a passing porter, “is the train from Syracuse on time?”
“Yes, ma’am. The last stop reported it left on time.” He pulled out his pocket watch. “It should be here in a few minutes.”
“Thank you.” 
He tipped his hat and continued on his way, dodging piles of trunks waiting for the train.
Mayhem from porters hustling back and forth with carts full of luggage , groups of traveling salesmen carrying large cases of sample wares talking loudly with each other, and families searching for the correct platform while weaving through the crowds, surrounded Elsa in a cloud of noise and motion. 
“Papes! Get your papes here!” A newsboy with threadbare clothes and a side bag full of newspapers limped by on a crutch. “California becomes the thirty-first state! Read all about it in the Tribune! Papes! Gets your papes here…” His shouts were swallowed up by the arrival of the train, the smooth movements of taking money and giving out newspapers never slowing.
“The six o’clock train from Syracuse is now arriving on platform eight! Please stand back!” Employees in crisp blue uniforms shouted over the squeal of brakes while motioning the crowd back.
Passengers began disembarking almost before the train came to a full stop. Elsa’s head swung side to side looking for her sister.
“Elsa!” 
If it weren’t for the column behind her, she would have fallen from the collision of Anna throwing herself at Elsa and wrapping her in a tight hug.
“Elsa.” Sniffles reached her ears and her collar dampened with tears. “I missed you so much.”
“I missed you too, Ladybug.” Arms tightened around the shaking body, tears of joy falling from her own eyes. How inadequate the word ‘missed’ felt. Aches from missing her sister had caused more than a few sleepless nights. But Elsa had endured. Belief the suffering would wipe away her sinful feelings kept her going. With a sinking heart, she realized three years of exchanging letters, hundreds of miles, and hours spent on her knees praying didn’t help. 
Elsa was still in love with her sister.
* * * * *
“Thank you, sir.” Elsa handed over several coins in payment for hauling Anna’s trunk the fifteen blocks to her apartment. 
“Thank you, ma’am.”
If he made any motion of thanks, or rudeness, Elsa didn’t notice, as she couldn’t tear her eyes away from watching Anna explore the small room, taking in the hanging prints and various knickknacks she collected over the years. The corner apartment was barely half the size of her spacious room back home, though it was large by city standards. Windows on the two outside walls let in plenty of light until the sun completely disappeared below the horizon which saved her money on candles and kerosene. Since the small table with two chairs, wardrobe, and dresser came with the room, Elsa only had to purchase the bed.
The one bed.
The one bed they’d have to share.
The one bed they’d have to share and would barely be big enough for both of them.
Elsa felt her stomach drop through the floor, mentally cursing herself for worrying about seeing Anna again and not the actual problem of her living space. It wasn’t too late to find her sister a hotel room. Money their parents sent every month sat, untouched, in the bank. That hefty sum could easily cover the expense and then some several times over.
“I love this place.” Anna plopped down on the cursed bed. “Two weeks isn’t going to be nearly enough time. You know, I don’t have any reason to go back home so soon…”
Smiles that big should be illegal. How many times had the mere chance of seeing it pushed Elsa out of her safe, little corner and into trying new things? A lot. A whole lot.
“It isn’t as big as you’re used to. I can find you a room nearby.” It may be a flimsy excuse to put some distance between them but it hadn’t been an hour and Elsa felt a nearly overwhelming need for more attention, more smiles, more laughter, just more more more. 
“No!” Smile vanished in an instant, Anna stood, looking panicked. “Please don’t send me away.”
“Of course not.” Half dozen steps and Elsa wrapped her arms around Anna. “I want you to stay but you should be comfortable, Ladybug.” Addiction was a strange thing. A month ago she had finally believed herself capable of handling being close again, one hug proved her wrong.
“Then I’m staying.” Arms that clutched her desperately relaxed and Anna snuggled into her. “When you agreed to let me visit, mother and father had to stop me from packing immediately. Something about clothes becoming musty after being packed away for two months.”
“You’re just excited to see the Fox Sisters’ show tomorrow.” Part of Elsa knew she should step back out of the embrace but it was squashed by the larger part of her that craved the closeness. Nuzzling at her neck sent a shiver through her. This was new and tested Elsa’s control almost past her limits.
“The Fox Sisters were an excuse.” More nuzzling. “This is what I was excited for.”
“You’re saying you aren’t excited?” Warnings flashed to step back immediately or suffer dire consequences. Elsa did not miss the look of disappointment as she did.
“Fine. I am excited but I wouldn’t have been upset if I never saw their show.” Anna took a step closer, erasing the little bit of space put between them. “I’m here to be with you.”
“Oh.” Desired roared through Elsa at those words said in a husky whisper. Eyes strayed down to lips so perfect, they haunted her dreams for years. “It’s late. I’ll make us supper while you unpack. I emptied the top drawer and made room in the wardrobe.” Three hesitant steps back out of the circle of temptation. Finally, she was able to take a breath not tinged with cinnamon and she missed it instantly.
“Wait, I have a gift for you.” After opening the trunk, Anna pulled out two piles of folded white cloths bound in green ribbon. “I hope you like them.” An uncharacteristic nervous smile tugging her lips when she handed them over.
“I’m sure I’ll love it.” Anything Anna gave her would be treasured. Stowed away in the drawer of her nightstand were various gifts received over the years; a rock shaped like a heart, a thin book of poetry from a local author, various colored hair ribbons worn until they started to fray, stacks of letters, Elsa even pressed and saved the flowers Anna would tuck into her hair. Treasures she’d pull out when the loneliness overwhelmed her.
“Are you going to open it or just stare?” Pink high on her cheeks, Anna motioned to the bundles.
“Right.” Saying she’d rather stare at her might not go over well and cause the rest of the visit to be uncomfortable. When the ribbon for the first stack fell away, Elsa’s eyes widened and she hurried to the table by the window, the dying light of day brighter there. “Ladybug…”
Words clogged her throat as she separated square after square. In total twenty-six embroidered handkerchiefs covered the table, each bordered with intricate white work designs, and bright splashes of colored embroidery thread created designs in the lower corner. Blue birds, tulips, butterflies, chickens, cats, roses, violets, and even their house decorated them, each bit of cloth with a different design but all had a small red ladybug included. Elsa caressed one of a cow lazily grazing in a field and decided this one would go into her nightstand drawer.
“Do you like them?”
“What?” So enthralled by the beauty of the handkerchiefs, Elsa had forgotten Anna was there.
“Do you like them?” Anna bounced on her toes.
“Of course I do. They’re amazing.” Being incredibly biased to love them didn’t stop her from seeing the amount of skill it took to make them. “You didn’t have to make them.”
“I… uhh… I actually had to.” Teal eyes dropped away.
“You did?” Why would one have to embroider handkerchiefs?
“When you moved out here, mother said that every time I missed you, I should do something productive like knitting or embroidery.” Her hands fidgeted and Elsa reached out to still them.
“Thats why you made them? You missed me?” From creating the patterns to choosing the colors to painstakingly sewing each tiny stitch, Elsa knew hours of work went into each one. And all because Anna missed her. 
“Not exactly.” Words spilled out as though saying things quickly was absolutely vital to the explanation. “I never could pick up knitting so I decided to work on my embroidery and I found I liked it a lot and last year after I finished with the table cloth father asked for me to stop since all of mother’s gowns had embellishments and so did mine and all the pillows and all six quilts in the house and every set of napkins and-“
“Ladybug, breathe,” interrupted Elsa, concerned her sister would pass out from lack of air.
“Right. I can do that.” Anna continued at a more normal speed. “Since I was asked to stop, I started making those for you.”
“You did all these in one year?” It took effort to not let her jaw hang open in an unladylike fashion. 
“Yes.”
“Did you do anything else?”
“YES.”
Elsa raised an eyebrow.
“No, really I did.”
The eyebrow stayed raised.
“Fiiine. I used most of my free time on these but I also drew patterns and taught a few neighborhood kids.” Anna blinked innocently as though everything was completely normal.
“How often did your tutor reprimand you for being distracted?” Though she’d guess being bored with the lesson had more to do with that. Her sister’s brilliant mind was usually overshadowed by her rambunctious nature.
“You said I can use the top drawer?” She didn’t even get a full step away before Elsa pulled her in for a hug.
“Thank you for the gift, Ladybug.” Foreheads pressed together, Elsa closed her eyes and enjoyed the closeness. “I really do love them.”
Sounds of passing wagons and shouts from the street were heard in the silent room. Neither moved from where they stood until growling from Anna’s stomach broke the stillness.
“While you unpack, I’ll make supper.” Elsa leaned back a little, wanting to make up for the last three years apart.
Before she even opened her mouth to respond, Anna’s eyes widened, her head whipped to the side.
Yet another reason Elsa rented this specific room from Widow Hayward, besides the location to her job, could be heard outside.
“Moo Cows?” Anna rushed to the window and peered down.
“Yes, Moo Cows.” She hoped her sister never stopped calling her favorite animal by the childish nickname.
“Elsa! There are Moo Cows next door!”
“Yes, there are.” Once she stepped next to her, Elsa peered down and watched the twenty milking cows be herded to the stable.
“But we’re in New York.” Anna watched until the last animal disappeared.
“We are.” Yup, positively worth the extra noise and stench of animals in the middle of summer. “Every morning, those living in the area line up to buy fresh milk and then the cows are taken out to graze.”
“Do you think they’ll let me say hi to them tomorrow?” 
“I already asked Mr. Bunt and he said you can even pet them.” Arms flung around her in a tight hug. “But I think he’s going to be surprised you’re twenty-two and not five.”
“I don’t care because I get to pet Moo Cows.” Lips pressed a kiss to Elsa’s cheek. “You are the best sister ever.”
“For you, I try.” Guilt nudged at her when desire flared again. Two steps back and Elsa turned towards the small kitchen that was no more than a short counter and small wood burning stove. “First, food and after you can tell me about your trip.” Physical distance let Elsa lie to herself that she wasn’t rushing headlong into ruining her life beyond all hope, and she prayed for a few more precious memories together before everything fell apart.
* * * * *
“That was amazing!” Anna’s awed tone kept Elsa from voicing her own opinion. “The Spirits answered so many questions! When that man’s dead brother answered his question about…” And off she went, bubbling over with excitement.
Try as she might, Elsa could not drum up any excitement about the Fox Sisters’ performance. It felt cheap and beyond belief. She had spent the entire forty-five minute show reliving that morning; waking up with Anna in her arms, snuggling close, how her sister refused to let either of them up until she reminded her of the ‘Moo Cows,’ the amusement in Mr. Bunt’s face at how seriously she talked with the animals while petting them, and the feel of Anna clinging to her arm, as she did now, when they walked. Their unhurried stroll down city streets in search of a midday meal took them several blocks from the theater.
“I couldn’t believe it when they turned into ducks!”
“What?” Jolted out of her thoughts, Elsa wondered what in heaven her sister was talking about. “Ducks?”
“Welcome back.” A tap on her shoulder and laughter laced Anna’s words.
“Sorry, what were you saying? About ducks?” Concentrate on what Anna said, not the feel of her pressed to her side.
“I also said they flew around the room and turned green. You responded with ‘yes, dear.’ What were you thinking about?”
Cheeks heated in embarrassment.
“You didn’t have to but thank you for coming with me.” 
Lips pressed a kiss to her warm cheek. In less than twenty-four hours she received seven kisses. Each one thrilled her and set her nerves on edge.
“I’d do anything for you, Ladybug.” Like moving hundreds of miles away from everything she knew to give her sister space to live a normal life.
“I know. Like letting me stay with you or,” here Anna stopped them and turned to face her, “going to shows you don’t want to or believe in.”
“It’s not that I don’t believe in Spiritualism, it’s just that-“
“Hello ladies.” A deep voice with a strong Irish accent broke in.
“Good afternoon, sir.” Elsa grabbed Anna’s elbow and started walking away.
“No, don be li’ tha.” The redheaded man pushed off from the building he leaned against and stepped in their path. “Hello.”
“Sir, we are late for an appointment.” Elsa tensed, ready to pull out her hat pin and, as their mother taught them, use it as a weapon to fend off the stranger. Experience showed her it would ruin the hat pin but she’d willingly sacrifice it to keep Anna safe. People walked by refusing to meet her eye.
“I canna escort you-“
“Daniel James O’Connor!” No amount of city noise could mask the anger in that feminine voice. “Leave those ladies alone!”
“Stay outta this, Siobhan.” He didn’t turn around or drop the charming smile directed at them. “Go back to your lidle restaurant.”
“Don’t make me get your mum.” Now people stopped to stare at them.
“I’m not scared of me mum,” Daniel scoffed. “I am a grown man.”
“Is tha so?”
Daniel froze at this new voice and his face went pale. “Mum?” He turned to face older woman behind him. “You should be at-“ 
Elsa worried the man would pass out when his face paled even further.
“And Gram. H-h-hi.” Eyes darted around, looking for some sort of escape from the two women glaring at him. “I-I-I was just-“
“I’m glad we ran inta you, Danny.” One of the women marched up and grabbed him by the ear.
“Ouch! Mum, why-OUCH!” A sharp tug on his ear had Daniel turning around.
The old woman with deep wrinkles and iron-colored hair came up to his other side, grabbed Daniel’s free ear, and said something Elsa couldn’t understand. 
“Ladies, I apologize for my poor behavior.” 
They didn’t have time to process the turn of events let alone accept his apology before both women were tugging him by the ears down the street.
Words tumbled from the oldest woman’s lips and the younger one nodded.
“I agree, mum. There are plenty chores at home Danny can do.”
He didn’t get a chance to protest before being hauled down an ally.
People laughed and walked on again, surely excited to share the story later that evening around the dinner table, conveniently forgetting that none of them stepped in to help.
“Are you ladies alright?” Where once the Irish accent had been thick to the point of barely being understood, it now softened, giving the woman’s words a light tinkling sound. She stood tall at somewhere near five-foot-ten with long, nearly black hair falling in waves down to her waist.
“Yes. Thank you for your help.” Hat pin no longer in danger of being ruined, Elsa relaxed her tense shoulders. 
“I think he will regret stopping us.” Anna cackled, clearly enjoying the man’s misfortune.
“Oh, I’m sure Danny already is.” Sharp green eyes moved between them, probing, looking for something. One corner of Siobhan’s mouth curled up then the other, and in moments the once serious face blossomed into a delighted expression. “Let me offer you both slices of cake at my restaurant as an apology. It just came out of the oven.”
“There’s no need to. None of that was your fault.” Cake sounded wonderful but Elsa didn’t want Siobhan to feel responsible for another’s actions.
“It’s already past midday, a plate of food also,” Siobhan ushered them two doors down where sounds of a busy restaurant spilled out every time the door opened. “I’ll tell Mrs. O’Connor that I’m adding it to Danny’s tab. She’ll make him pay.”
“In that case, lead the way…” Eyebrow furrowed, Anna looked questionably at their host who escorted them to a table against a wall. “‘Siobhan’ was it?”
“Yes, Miss Addams. There are pegs in the corner to hang your hats.” She pointed towards the front where three lady’s hats hung already. “I’ll bring you both a plate of the daily special.”Before either could say a word of thanks, Siobhan slipped through the room with expert ease.
“This place looks lively,” observed Elsa once she returned after hanging their hats. A single table out of the fifteen was empty and there wasn’t even standing space available at the crowded bar. 
“Elsa,” eyes focused on the back door leading to the kitchen. “Have you met Siobhan before?”
“Excuse me?” The question caught Elsa off guard.
“She knew our last name.” Now Anna’s gaze focused down on the table, her posture tense. “You could have told me.”
“Ladybug,” Elsa held her sister’s chilled hand and interlaced their fingers. “I’ve never met her before. It must have been a lucky guess.”
“She looked a lot like Claire,” whispered Anna sounding so incredibly sad that Elsa tightened tightened her hold. 
“I hadn’t noticed.” Honestly Elsa had not noticed the similarities between Claire Beecham and Siobhan until Anna pointed it out. A few years older than her, their neighbor had subtly made her interest known and Elsa decided to try one last time to erase her unwanted feelings. But her sister caught them during their first, and only, kiss. Four months later Elsa moved to New York.
“It’s okay. I know how much you liked Claire.” Anna’s voice shook and the smile wavered. 
“I promise, I’ve never met Siobhan before and I haven’t even thought of Miss Beecham in years.” Desperation to convince Anna gripped her. Letting her believe a close relationship between them would put a mask on Elsa’s true feelings but she couldn’t. Hide by omission, yes. Outright lie, no.
“But I found you two kissing. I know you liked her.” She looked resigned and Elsa didn’t understand why.
“Here you are ladies, two plates of the special and two slices of spiced cake.” Metal plates landed with a thud so much food was piled on. “Can I get you some tea? Beer?”
“Tea would be wonderful.” Elsa pulled her hand back. Sausages, mashed potatoes with gravy, and carrots looked delicious. The smell reminded her how hungry she was, even with her stomach in knots over Anna.
“Yes, tea please.” Even their hostess saw that Anna was upset.
“I’ll be right back.” Siobhan frowned then hurried to the bar and back with a pot and two cups. “Is there anything wro… can I get you anything else?”
“No, thank you.” Once the woman left, Elsa leaned forward and stared into her sister’s eyes. “That kiss you saw meant nothing. I was trying to forget someone else and it didn’t work. We haven’t spoken since that afternoon.”
“Oh.” She finally relaxed and a tentative smile replaced the sad look.”Do you still care for her? This person you were trying to forget?”
“We should eat while our food is hot.” Elsa focused on the plate and picked up her fork.
“Elsa? Do you still love her?”
Chatter and clinking of utensils of other patrons filled the space between them.
“Do you?”
Sometimes she really disliked Anna’s persistence.
“Yes.” Elsa refused to left her gaze and stared at the plate.
“Okay.” Several beats of silence between them passed. “Mmm! This is good.”
Elsa lifted her head, watched Anna enthusiastically tuck into her food before trying the food herself.
“It is good.” Decades of ingrained manners kept Elsa from inhaling her food, though it didn’t stop Anna from slowing down once she started.
“Did I tell you about the night that ended with Kristoff in jail for a week?” Her eyes gleamed with mischief.
“Oh my lord. What happened?” Elsa had a sneaking suspicion Anna played a part in this.
“It started off when I got my hands on a bottle of father’s whiskey…”
Stories were traded back and forth during the meal. Anna, updating her about the going-ons in Syracuse, and her, sharing stories about the two children she tutored.
“Was everything to your liking, ladies?” Siobhan stacked the empty dishes. 
“It was wonderful.” Anna shifted in her seat and looked around. 
“The facilities are through the green door.” It didn’t take a mind reader to guess what she needed.
“Thank you. Excuse me, I’ll be right back.” 
Anna wasted no time making her way across the room.
“You should tell her.” Plates were placed back down on the table and Siobhan sat in Anna’s chair.
“Tell who what?” Bewildered didn’t begin to describe her. 
“Tell Anna your feelings.” Green eyes stared unblinking into hers. “You should tell your sister you love her.”
“Of course I love her.” Elsa glanced around them, hoping no one noticed them talking. Luckily it seemed everyone else was engaged in their own lives.
“Tell Anna you’re in love with her.” No hesitation in Siobhan‘s voice, no shying away in disgust, no hate in her eyes. If anything, Elsa thought she saw hope in the other woman’s expression.
It felt like an explosion went off inside her. That feeling never even spoken out loud before was calmly uttered by a complete stranger.
“I’m not-“ At the shake of Siobhan’s head, Elsa stopped the lie on the tip of her tongue. “How did you know? Wait,” her mind raced, “how did you know her name is Anna?” From the day her sister was born, she had called her Ladybug. There were a handful of times she couldn’t use the nickname but those had been extremely rare.
Siobhan leaned back with a satisfied smile. “Ever since I was a wee babe, I’ve had The Sight. All of the women on my mother’s side do.” The lilting Irish accent grew stronger as she spoke. “Most lost it when they grew up.”
“But you never did?” Elsa didn’t know what to think. She didn’t believe in these things but she struggled to think of an alternative explanation that didn’t involve an even scarier answer.
“I didn’t. Charlatans tell you that it’s a wonderful, amazing gift but it’s not. At least, not always.” With a deep, sad sigh Siobhan continued. “Most of the time when I see something, I see sadness. Unrequited love, life changing accidents, and death. Too much death.”
Not once had Elsa considered the down side of actually having a gift like that, not with all the unbelievable people boasting in the news. 
“Every once in a while, I get to See happy things.” The once sad smile grew into a large, unrestrained one. “Knowing what to do for a babe not expected to live the night and helping them thrive. Encouraging a person to follow their ‘impossible’ dream at the exact right time. The moment when I met my husband and trying for his heart despite my friends questioning my sanity.”
Elsa stilled, not daring to breath.
“Or when I meet two strangers who could have something beautiful together.”
There it was. The one thing she wanted and feared to hear.
“I can’t. Other people will talk if we both never marry. They will be cruel to her.” Trying to deny her feelings to this woman seemed futile.
“Other people,” she scoffed, her lips twisting into a sneer. “Other people believe that because they have a bit o’money that they’re morally superior to others. Other people believe that if you have an accent,” here Siobhan motioned to her own mouth and flicked her fingers up, “you are too stupid to care about. Other people believe it’s their god-given right to own another human because of the color of their skin. Other people can go to hell.”
“Uhhh…” Elsa gaped, unable to form a single argument against the tirade. 
“Your sister deserves to know why she’s been alone for three years.” Siobhan smiled then looked behind her and stood up to gather the dirty dishes once more. “Besides, do you think you’re the only pair of ‘spinster sisters’ in the world?”  
“What?”
Siobhan laughed and walked away, weaving her way around the tables full of people.
Unseeing eyes watched her. Thoughts whirled through Elsa’s head, crashing into each other and sending her feelings into disarray.
“Elsa? Elsa!”
Someone shook her shoulder.
“Huh?” Her surroundings came back into focus. “Ladybug?”
“Are you okay?” Anna cupped her cheek. “You’re as white as a sheet.”
“I just need some air.” Standing, she hoped her sister didn’t notice the tremor in her voice. “Are you ready to leave?”
“Are you sure you’re all right?” Doubt laced Anna’s words. 
“I’m sure.” Stronger this time, Elsa was eager to leave behind those knowing eyes watching them. “Let’s fetch our hats.”
They did just that and, stopping periodically to look through shop windows, they didn’t arrive back until late.
* * * * *
Elsa stood near the hot stove brushing her damp hair. In the corner behind her, a folded partition stood where Anna washed herself using a cloth dipped into a large basin of hot water. Two kerosine lamps lit the room brightly, the sun having gone down long ago. Curtains pulled close across the windows kept anyone on the street from peering in but still she tightened the sash on her robe.
“I feel so much better.” Anna stepped out in her night clothes, toweling her wet hair.
“I’m sorry there isn’t a tub in here. It’s the Lewis’ family night for it.” With seven kids, they got the tub to themselves two nights a week while she and the other eight tenants shared nights.
“Again, it’s okay. I’m clean and that all that matters.” Robe now on, Anna joined her by the stove.
“Turn around and I’ll brush your hair.” Hours after talking with Siobhan, Elsa’s mind refused to settle down. Back and forth, to confess or not, her thoughts went. Back and forth. Back and forth until she didn’t know up from down. A few more minutes away from that concerned expression would settle her nerves. 
“Mmmmm,” Anna groaned. Voice husky with pleasure she spoke. “That feels wonderful.”
Any calmness Elsa had from the familiar act immediately flew out the window and drowned itself in the fountain down the street. Concentrating on her breathing help steady her long enough to finish drying Anna’s hair.
“There. All done.” Even with her mind screaming to step back and escape, Elsa stayed where she stood, hands to the side and heart racing.
“Thank you.” Turning to face Elsa, Anna leaned in and placed a kiss on her cheek.
Words dried on her tongue. ‘Tell her’ repeated in her mind over and over, echoing louder than the heartbeat in her ears.
“Elsa?”
‘Tell her.’
“Elsa, what’s wrong?”
‘Tell her.’
“Come on, you’re scaring me.”
That broke the loop. When she saw tears filling scared eyes Elsa pulled her sister in for a hug. 
“Nothing’s wrong.” Just like the day before, tears dampened her neck.
“Don’t lie.”
“I’m not lying.” Elsa let them to the bed and sat down. She used her sleeve to dry Anna’s eyes. “I’ve just had a lot on my mind.”
“Is it something you can tell me about?” Watery eyes studied her, ready to listen with her full attention.
‘Tell her.’
“I don’t know. Maybe?” She had planned to say no. She had planned to deflect. She had planned to stay quiet forever.
“You know you can tell me anything.” Anna took her hand, thumb stroking over and over her knuckles. “I promise to listen.”
“I know you will.”
A memory from when she was fifteen came back to Elsa. The two of them arguing bitterly over something long forgotten, her stomping out of the house into the freezing cold weather, snow laying inches thick over the ground but she refused to go back inside for her coat, instead sat on the porch swing and shivered. Seconds later Anna, still looking furious, stepped out dressed warmly and thrust out her own coat and scarf into Elsa’s arms and sat beside her. They stayed like that for a while, stewing in anger until she turned to Anna and asked if she wanted some tea. 
All their arguments had been like that. Even if it took days to reconcile, they would check on each other periodically then go back to their respective corners. Elsa’s mind drifted to the handkerchief with the little cow in the corner tucked safely away in her nightstand.
“I love you.”
“I love you, too.” Anna responded immediately.
Elsa laughed. Of course her sister wouldn’t know she meant it differently this time. They said ‘I love you’ constantly. She brought Anna’s hand up to her cheek and nuzzled into it.
“I love you.” Elsa injected all of her love into her voice and all of her desire into her eyes, and hoped beyond hope Anna understood. 
“Okay.” Head tilted in confusion for a few long, endless moments. “OH.” Eyes widened when realization dawned. 
“Yeah, oh.” What else was there to say now? Elsa refused to say anything that might sway Anna’s response one way or another.
Lips descended on hers in a brief, sudden kiss. “I love you, too.” Another tentative kiss, full of hope and yearning.
Surprise and shock stilled Elsa at first. Then they were really kissing, a crush of lips, entwining of tongues, desperate nips, and satisfied groans. 
“I love you,” Elsa repeated, joy infused in every syllable.
“I love you, too.” Another kiss. “I really love you.” Anna grinned against the next kiss.
The rest of night was lost to the press of lips against lips.
* * * * 
Shouting from the street nudged Elsa awake. She lay there, eyes closed, just listening to the sounds from outside and remembering the night before. Nothing beyond kisses were exchanged due to them both being exhausted from the busy day. But what a night it had been. Even if they spent a lifetime only kissing, she’d die happy and satisfied. Elsa finally opened her eyes and looked beside her.
The bed was empty and touching the cold mattress indicated it had been that way for a while. 
Elsa bolted upright and looked around the room. No Anna in sight, even her bag by the door was gone. She told herself not to panic, her sister might have just stepped out to grab food for breakfast. Chiming of the mantel clock. Ten in the morning. Her heart sank but she kept believing Anna would be back any second.
Ten-thirty, Elsa finished dressing and getting ready for the day.
Eleven, Elsa finally stopped trying to read after realizing she had been on the same page the whole time.
Eleven-thirty, Elsa brewed a pot of tea to settle her stomach.
Noon, Elsa sat staring at her ice cold cup of tea and was thankful she hadn’t tried to eat anything.
As the clock ticked towards twelve-thirty, she finally let herself admit Anna had left. Daylight must have shed an unflattering light on the night before and set her careening out of the apartment. In a week or so a letter would come asking her to send the trunk with everything in it back. She might even ask for her gift back. Hopefully, after a few years, Anna could forgive her. Perhaps it would be best to move again, away from the memories of last night. California was now a state and big enough to hide in. A letter of recommendation from the Bennett’s would surely land her a position quickly. If not, she knew how to clean floors and dust.
Ticking of the clock grew louder in the empty room. 
One o’clock chimed and Elsa struggled not to be sick. 
Curse Siobhan’s words and false hope. The one time Elsa let her guard down led to this. One good punch to the nose before she left town sounded satisfying. Until then, getting drunk until she forgot her own name would have to do and the bottle of sherry in the cabinet was just a few steps away. If she had the energy to stand, which she didn’t.
“Elsa, I’m back!” The door swung open and Anna bounded in. “Sorry I’m late but there was a mishap with a printing and Mrs. Griffin had to take care of that before our appointment. But then everything went wonderfully. I can’t wait to tell you all about it!”
“Anna?” Did she fall asleep at the table? Hopefully god will grant her a wish to never wake up and spend all of eternity in this moment.
Rushing of feet to her side barely registered. Anna’s worried frown came into view. “Elsa, you don’t look well. Are you sick? Do I need to get a doctor? I’ll get a doctor. Where is the doctor? Don’t worry, I’ll find one right away.”
“No,” barely able to croak that out, Elsa clutched onto her dress, stopping her sister from rushing out. “You’re back?” No, don’t question this. Anna might leave again or she’ll wake up.
“Of course I’m back. Why wouldn’t I be?” Fingers caressed her cheek, wiping away tears Elsa didn’t know were falling.
“I woke and you were gone. You l-left.” Sobs shook her trembling frame. Arms wrapped around Elsa and held her close. “You were gone and-and I was alone. I thought you weren’t coming b-back.”
“Sshhh. Of course I was going to come back. Didn’t you read my note?” Rocking gently, Anna rubbed her back soothingly. 
“Note?”
“On your nightstand. I’ll go get it.” Anna leaned back to step away.
“NO!” Fear shook Elsa. If this really was Anna here in her arms, she had no plans of letting her go anytime soon.
“I’m not going anywhere. I promise.” Hands resumed rubbing her back and twisted to look at the bed. “Shit. It’s not there. It must have fallen.”
Elsa nodded, hardly able to breath past the lump in her throat.
“It said that I had an appointment at ten-thirty with Griffins Publishing on Lexington Street and that I’d be right back.” Anna tilted Elsa’s chin up. “It said I love you.”
“It did? You do?”
“It did and I do. Of course I do.” Their kisses the night before were tentative as they explored and learned each other. This was filled with love and promise. “I love you very much.” Anna slipped across Elsa’s lap, opened the bag on the table, and pulled out a leather folio filled with papers. 
“What’s that, Ladybug?” Elsa leaned her head against Anna’s; nerves finally settling down at the weight on her lap.
“Last month, Griffins Publishing put out an advertisement in the paper for a job in their archives. Someone to handle copper plates, keep them organized and safe, and to create a detailed organization of everything stored. Mrs. Griffin told me that their last employee didn’t do anything put the plates on random shelves in all his six years of employment and they’re hiring four people to get the warehouse into serviceable shape.” Anna paused and opened the folio, revealing beautifully colored embroidery patterns. 
Deer, irises, meadows, constellations, and even fantasy creatures like dragons and mermaids, filled every turned page. They all took Elsa’s breath away.
“They were also looking for patterns. Their monthly subscribers can’t get enough of them so they want to put out a quarterly magazine dedicated to new and exciting patterns. She hired me in the spot and wants first pick of my patterns.” Smug was a well deserved look on her.
“You have a job?” Hope beat in her chest.
“Yes.”
“You want to stay?”
“I hated being apart.” Kisses trailed down Elsa’s jaw to her ear. “You can’t get rid of me now.”
That sounded perfect to her.
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possumbreath · 1 year
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based on that one meme. you know the one
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auroralightsthesky · 2 years
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HBO War 1920s AU prompts
So usually I do a list that’s anywhere between 30-50 prompts but something told me to stop at 20 for this. So here we go guys, here’s the list for 1920s AU. 
1.      “We’re bootleggers, not traveling salesmen”
2.      “When I said open bar, I didn’t mean drink everything in sight”
3.      Flappers
4.      Making gin in an old bathtub
5.      The Cotton Club
6.      “We’re musicians, we’re supposed to be bad”
7.      The Untouchables
8.      Brew and screw
9.      “Needs more whiskey”
10.   “May I have this dance?”
11.   “We run this club”
12.   Silent films
13.   Chicago AU
14.   Great Gatsby AU
15.   Hiding the speakeasy from the cops
16.   “Hey! We made the papers!”
17.   “You keep a pistol in your boot?”
18.   “It’s on the house guys”
19.   Muckrakers
20.   Paris holds the key to your heart
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dammit-stark · 5 years
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( why do I want to write an avengers office!au )
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starryskyspectacle · 2 years
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So
I started thinking about something, what if after Spamton's downfall the Addisons start trying to rebel against their programming that's meant to keep them advertising? What if after seeing what he's become they start taking fate into their own hands instead of continuing to be controlled by deals and their code as sales ads?
I'd like to think the first member to rebel would be the blue addison, then orange and yellow join in, and finally pink reluctantly joins.
I'll call this the Strike AU as they are effectively on some sort of strike from their previous positions as salesmen
They team up with Spamton and maybe travel or something together. Idk
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chanluster · 4 years
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business proposals | {m}
oneshot | ceo! au | 10.9k words
“It was about time you addressed the cat and mouse game you and your boss have been playing for a time.”
s u m m a r y > > clashing heads with your annoyingly attractive boss was your everyday activity, but when a new, beautiful client comes in for the day you find yourself getting jealous. mr. lee, catching on, uses it to his absolute advantage, causing you to end up in a situation you did not think would end well. fortunately for you, with the way your dark-minded ceo’s mind worked, despite the hiccups in the middle, it ended just perfectly.
w a r n i n g s > > ceo! minho, secretary! reader, you get so annoyed at him all the time, he annoys you all the time, constant teasing, a fuckload of swearing, soooo much (kinda shit) sexual tension, flirtation back and FORTH, titles of endearment, minho is such a fucking dom, reader is a fucking BRAT, making out, fingering, oral (m. and f. receiving) you try to give him blueballs, unprotected sex (stay safe homies!!), semi-public sex (i mean they do it in his office so like), multiple orgasms, y’all be arguing during it all too HELP, minho has a sir kink sjsjskke, minho is so AGGRESSIVE HOLY SHIT, SO MUCH degradation, use of gags? (i mean he uses his tie so) basically you are 100% minho’s bitch by the end period!!
a u t h o r ’ s  n o t e > > hello horny fia is back again with a minho oneshot because she can not control herself!!!1!1! thank you @hyuckworld​ for so much inspo and helping me out omfg the tie thing still on my mind !1!1! anyway this is inspired by minho’s soribada look cause he mf SERVED! and i hope y’all enjoy !
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YOUR SMILE WAS MORE LIKE A FLASH OF TEETH.
“For the last time,” you seethed, trying your very best to contain your bubbling temper, “You cannot see him if you don’t have an appointment.”
The woman before you, a striking image of curls and curves, fitted red dress, white blazer, and Louboutins elevating her height, knifed you with finely-lined eyes. “But I don’t need an appointment! Mr. Lee said so himself I could arrive at his office when I wished to speak with him!”
You pursed your lips. Of course Mr. Fucking Lee said so.
“Well, there’s nothing I can do about it, Miss Kim.” You turned to your computer, opening up the list of clients intended to meet your boss this afternoon. Sure enough, this woman’s name was not accompanied with the others. Once again, he had said some pretty words, but had not reminded you of them so you could write it down for official backing.
You could not help typing a little furiously. It was like he was trying to make your life harder.
“I demand to see him!” Miss Kim exclaimed, raising her voice so the other employees, who were scattered before you at their desks, working away, paused, witnessing the commotion. “I did not travel from another city to be rejected!”
“Ma’am,” you guttered, hands on the telephone, ready to call security, when the misty, glass-like door beside you swung upon.
A firm, sultry voice resonated in the room.
“What is the meaning of this noise?”
Out stepped the one man you were hoping would stay seated in his office.
You turned around in your seat, looking up at the suited figure of Lee Minho — CEO of the corporation you worked under, and the mastermind behind the technological revolution in your city.
He certainly looked the part: black suit unbuttoned with his tie hanging, white shirt contrasting the colours. His trousers hugged his thighs a little too tightly for your own good, designer branded shoes adorning his feet. His dark brown locks were cascading over his forehead, and his calculating eyes assessed the room, finding the reason for such noise behind his doors.
His gaze settled on the woman. “Ah, Miss Kim!” He declared, a known dazzling smile upon his lips. “It’s good you’ve arrived.”
“Of course I would come,” she said, darting her glare back to you. “This little assistant of yours was ready to throw me out of the building.”
A slight tilt of his head. “Oh, really?”
Then, his eyes descended on you, seated before him, and you noticed something already stirring behind them. “And why was this ‘little assistant of mine’ booting you out of here?”
You pointed to your computer. “She’s not on your list of appointments for today.”
“So?” A glance at the woman. “When a pretty lady asks to see me, you oblige her, understand?”
Seething, you lock your hands together. “Then what is the point of the list when you won’t follow it?”
You nearly gasped in anger when you caught slight mischief in his eyes. “Keeping you on your toes, ____.”
“As always,” you hissed, returning his malicious smirk with a scowl.
He only chuckled at your lack of amusement, turning to the woman once more. “Miss Kim,” he addressed her, opening the door, gesturing for her to enter. “Come inside.”
“Thank you, Mr. Lee,” she simpered out, widening her sharp grin at you before going inside his office.
The man stood, regarding you for a minute. You glanced at him, frown still there. “Yes?”
“I am not to be disturbed,” he said, gaze a little too intense for your liking. “Is that understood?”
You made sure to match his stare. “Yes, sir.”
And you could have sworn his lips twitched upward when he turned to his office, entering after the woman.
When the door slid shut, you let out a shuddering breath.
Why in hell were you holding your breath?
“God,” you muttered, furiously typing away on your computer, noticing another presence approaching you. “He’s going to be the death of me.”
“Do not tell me you’re talking about Mr. Lee here.”
You looked up, and rolled your eyes to find Kim Seungmin, one of the salesmen for the firm, standing before you, files in hand and a knowing smile on his lips. “I am, as a matter of fact,” you said. “And how much I want to kill him.”
The man gave you a look. “Now see, I don’t think ‘kill’ was the word I thought you’d use.”
“Oh yeah?” You crossed your arms. “Then what word do you think I’d use?”
“I don’t know, like…” his adorable smile was so unlike his words. “Kiss? Fuck even?”
You let out a harsh gasp, nearly whacking his arm with your scattered files. “Oh my God!”
“You can’t deny it, ____!” Seungmin pointed to the door. “You have a massive crush on him!”
“How can you even say that!” you demanded, pulling you near him so the others around you did not hear. “I hate that cocky bastard.”
Your friend clicked his tongue at your statement. “Then can you please explain to me why you both got enough sexual tension to suffocate the entire building?”
“We do not,” you refused instantly, picking up your mug of coffee. “You’re mistaking my bloodlust with just lust.”
“Can you at least stop pretending to me that you don’t want to suck his dick?”
Nearly choking on your coffee, you struggled it down, sending a sharp glare. “I don’t!” you raised your chin. “I bet it’s tiny anyway. Wouldn't have anything for me to suck on.”
Now that, of all the things you said that afternoon, was a complete, full blown, almost offensive, lie.
Not that you’ve caught a glimpse at the package which settled between Lee Minho’s legs. Well, you had, to your own shame, and were burning at the clothed sight, proving your little claim extremely incorrect. Your boss, devastatingly, had something substantial going for him.
Seungmin’s little laugh had you dropping down to reality. “You were thinking about his cock just now, weren’t you?”
Cheeks burning, you waved him off, groaning as you went back to your computer. Minho’s appointments looked oh so interesting. “Fuck off, Min.”
His laughter only deepened as he stepped away. “There’s no hope for you, girl. You keep daydreaming about that.”
If it weren’t for the people around you, you would have happily sent him away with a middle finger, but figured you should hang onto any scrap of professionalism left in you. The only thing you could do now was write up the new appointments for next week. Or perhaps play some Solitaire.
Anything to stop you thinking about him.
You twisted your lips into a scowl.
This was so unbelievable. Lee Minho was the greatest, most notorious asshole you knew of, yet here you were, like an absolute moron, pondering over him as if he was a lost love. All the time, when it was in meetings, or just bumping each other in the office breakroom, he managed to piss you off without effort, watching you enraged with a disgustingly ravishing smile on his revoltingly beautiful face. It was so, goddamn unfair, that he could rile you up so easily when all you could do was make him more amused.
To hell with him and his fine ass, you thought as you closed all tabs, opening up Solitaire.
Just as you thought you found a moment’s peace in this building, you heard the phone ring drastically loud, stopping you from completing a full set of one deck. Already irritated, you tried to suppress it as you picked up the handset, pressing it to your ear. “Minho and Company?”
The voice that greeted your ears made it incredibly hard to reign in your irritation. “Have you finished the list?”
“No,” was your clipped reply. You focused on the game, matching the cards to the deck of hearts.
“And when will this list finish?”
“I’m a busy woman, you know,” you drawled, aggressively clicking on your mouse. “You give me so much work it’s hard to keep up.”
“Oh, really?” Fuck him, you could hear the taunting in his voice. “So you don’t spend all day playing those stupid Windows games on your work computer?”
Your anger paused, eyes widening. The lack of response had the man cackling through the phone. “I bet you’re on that same card game you always play when you’re trying to avoid my tasks. What was the name again?”
“I can assure you, sir, I am not playing Solitaire.” You then sucked in an agitated breath at your mistake.
“Ah, that’s right.” You hated how you could hear the smirk playing on his lips. “Playing Solitaire and ignoring my work.”
Were you mistaken, or had his voice descended an octave? With the way you bit your lip, you knew you were caught anyway. “I’ll get the list done.”
“Mmm,” he got out, the low baritone still there. “And address me properly when you talk to me.”
Oh my God. “I’ll get the damned list done, sir.”
A small pause. “Good girl.”
And the line cut off.
Your hand nearly went limp holding the phone.
Good girl.
“Shut the fuck up,” you muttered, slamming the handset back in its place, feeling yourself heat up a frightening rate. “Cocky prick.”
All those curses towards him, and yet your cheeks still burned.
You did not cease your profanity — this time aiming more towards your own self.
Dear Lord. You really were in for it this time.
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MINHO AND MISS KIM WERE STILL IN THAT ROOM BY THE TIME YOU HAD TO LEAVE THE OFFICE.
You decided to stay a little longer, finishing up the last of the tasks he’d assigned to you, and an hour later, when Seungmin passed your desk to exit the building, he darted his eyes to his boss’ door and wiggled his brows your way.
“Shut up,” you snapped at him, earning a cheeky smile.
“I wonder what they’re doing in there,” he thought out loud, propping a hand on your table.
You typed away, trying to dismiss the worst assumptions in your mind. “I don’t particularly care.”
Seungmin, damn him, could see right through you. “Then why are you still here? Pretending that I didn’t catch you with your ear to the door hours before?”
Unfortunately, he wasn’t lying. About three hours into the meeting, you became so restless you tried to listen in on what exactly was going on. It sounded so bizarre, when Minho had to sit in hours-long meetings every other day, but him alone in his office with that girl didn’t settle well with you.
“Oh, jealousy!” Seungmin chanted, pointing at your face. “Is that you I see before me?”
“Go away!” you waved him off, glowering at him. “I’m not jealous of some girl I saw today. Her and Minho can do whatever they want.”
“Whatever you say, ____,” he said, but the knowing smile lingered, aggravating you even more. “Good night.”
“Good night, Min,” you muttered, waiting for the man to turn out of the building before swinging in your chair.
The door welcomed you still.
You bit the inside of your cheek. Now see, you should not be letting your mind wander. Especially in situations which included your boss, another girl, and closed doors. Your gut twisted at the thought, and you were surprised at such a reaction.
What if Seungmin was right?
“No!” you whispered furiously to yourself, turning back to your computer. “Not jealous, just curious.”
Yes, that’s right. Just interested to know what the fuck they’re talking so long for.
“Oh God,” you breathed out, pressing your legs together. Maybe your friend was right. “Shit.”
Suddenly, you got up from your seat, picking up any scrap of paper and hurrying to the door. Pressing your ear to the misted glass, fingers clasping the metal handle. You could hear soft murmurs, a little laughter, but other than that, you failed to hear anything coherent.
This brought you even more agitation upon you. Doing something wrong, and it wasn’t even going as planned. This is what happened when you let yourself feel something.
Oh, no. Now you even admitted it to yourself that you had felt something for the asshole. If he ever heard of this, you would probably have to quit this job.
You pressed harder on the handle, never been more frustrated in your life than you were at that time. You were pathetic. Utterly disgraceful, but you could not help when you could not deny that Lee Minho-
You could not finish the thought.
Not when your hand slid on the handle too hard, swinging open the door. You let out a shrill screech as you stumbled inside the office, papers leaving your hands.
The conversation ceased, and you did not need to see them to know their eyes were on you.
Minho’s honey voice filled the room.
“What is this intrusion?”
You looked up, and felt your heart stop.
There he was, sitting leaned back at his plush executive chair, spinning a pen between his fingers. His brown locks were now raked back, a few strays cascading on the side of his forehead. His blazer was off, hung on his chair, and his shirt was tight on his hard chest.
Steadying yourself, but not your butterflies inside, you also saw Miss Kim hovering over him, showing him a few documents with her head a little close to his. She glanced up at you, and her face soured.
Minho snapped his fingers, shaking you out of your staring. “I asked you a question, ____.”
You wanted to snap at him, but reigned it in. “Sorry, but…”
But what? Not like you came in here with a plan.
Your eyes slid down to fallen files on the floor. “I needed to discuss...a proposal!”
Kneeling down, you picked up the scattered pieces of paper, on your feet in an instant. “Yes. A business proposal I needed to talk about.”
The man was not stupid; he saw right through your feeble excuse, with the impish gleam in his gaze. “Is that so?”
“What else would it be?” you pressed, masking your growing nerves with your irked frown.
His lips began to curve. You both stared each other down, refusing to back away. Miss Kim cleared her throat, even more angered by you now receiving his full attention.
“Shall I continue or…?” she carried off, completely deprived of his regard. Only when you glanced at her did his smile waver, raising the file.
He kept his eyes on you. “We can review this later,” he said to Miss Kim. He then addressed you. “And this time I’ll have an actual meeting planned. Happy,  ____?”
You couldn’t suppress a scoff, not gone unnoticed yet unaddressed, as the woman took the files from him. She sent him a dazzling smile. “I will see you later, Mr. Lee.”
He returned it with a nod, watching her stroll past you, and out of the office. You watched the door close itself, sensing the silence more now the two of you were alone.
The quiet stretched on for longer before a hard sigh had you facing your boss once again.
“Beautiful, isn’t she,” he began, observing you from his rather messy desk.
That little comment of his pissed you right off. “The prettiest, in my opinion,” you crowed, gripping onto the files harder.
You then caught the shit-eating grin upon his face, and marred your face in a frown, causing him to splutter into laughter.
“Stop laughing,” you spat, but that only made him more breathless. “Oh, I’m leaving!”
“No you’re not,” he rasped out, finally calming down.  He raised a hand across the chair before his desk. “You’re going to sit down and tell me of the proposals.”
A retort was on your tongue when you stopped, taking in his order. “Proposals?”
He cocked his head slightly, stray hairs tumbling with the action. “You said when you burst into my office that-”
He halted himself, everything falling into place.
When he focused on you this time, your stomach coiled at the way his smirk lit up his face. “Are you telling me you pretended to have appointments so you’d have that woman out of my room?”
The lack of response on his question had the man chortling. “My, my. Why so jealous, doll?” He gripped onto the arms of his chair, leaving the seat. “If you wanted me alone all you had to do was ask.”
Taking a step away from the desk, his fingers drummed on the table. “I wouldn’t have insisted on making an appointment either.”
A last surge of courage passed through you, especially from his words. “And what would you have done?” you got out.
The drumming paused, more from surprise at your question.
His piercing stare positively flared. “I don’t think you’d be able to handle it,” he guttered.
I don’t think you’d be able to handle it.
You didn’t know why that enraged you so much.
The cat and mouse game, once again being deflated by his words, leaving you disappointed. Why should you accept defeat this time?
You made sure he heard your thoughts.
“God, you really are a fucking prick!”
A pause. “Why would that be?” He took a step towards you, sharp brows furrowing.
“You…” staring at him, you screwed your face up in anger. “Toying with me all this time, yet doing nothing about it!”
That fine eyebrow was raised, but you carried on, refusing to let him speak. “Every single day, without fail, we see each other, bicker back and forth, and for what? Me all frustrated and you just enjoying it?”
You made sure you knifed your boss with a glare. “You just say words and leave. That’s all you can do.”
There was an eerie stillness after that — a slight shift in Minho’s demeanour, as his eyes narrowed, darkened at your claim. His hands, in his pockets before, slid out, and you saw they were fisted tightly.
“What did you say?”
“You heard me perfectly, sir,” you spat, that damned word he made sure you said every time . “You’re all bark and no bite.
“You’re a fucking coward.”
There it was.
The allegation against him. The words you’ve been wanting to say for so long, because you let yourself feel something for this man, and fuck, if he did not do anything about it you would quit this job here and now.
His next words were a mere whisper. They did not possess a hint of softness.
“Do you really think that?”
Another step.
Veins, slight before, we’re now more visible on his hands, trailing all the way up to the edge of the rolled up sleeves. When you caught his gaze, you nearly gasped at the pure, carnal fire that blazed within.
“Calling me a coward.”
Before you knew it, the man thundered towards you, and those veiny hands gripped your waist, pulling you to him in an iron grip. A small hiss escaped you at the sudden restraint.
“Don’t you dare call me a fucking coward again.”
His breath fanned your mouth, you mere inches from him. You made sure you kept your ground till the very end. Wherever that led you.
“Or what?” Your hands slid up to his shoulders. “Not like you would do anything. As per usual.”
And as the heavy silence reigned on the both of you, you had a little realisation.
Those words might have just been your undoing.
Because the second they left your tongue, Lee Minho growled fiercely before colliding his lips against yours.
His mouth snatched the very breath from you, an instant whine trying to escape yet refused by his lips, capturing yours and taking you with the strength of a wild beast. You nearly fell backwards from the pure momentum but were saved by his hands on you, branding their place on your skin.
The most surprising part was how you kissed him back with the same anger. The same rage which simmered the very first day you argued with him, and vowed to make his life a living hell, just like how he made yours unbearable during work. He captured your lower lip and began sucking on the flesh, and an obscenely loud moan escaped you at the contact.
The bastard was good. He was so, fucking good.
Just when you thought he’d go deeper, he pulled away, a thin bridge of saliva connecting the both of yours lips.
The trail broke when he took a step back, settling himself on his seat. That glistening mouth curved into a feline smirk, thumb stroking his lower lip.
“Still a coward, doll?”
You nearly collapsed without his hold. He took notice of your position, and scoffed at your weakness. “Looks like you took up the role instead.”
“How is that,” you rasped out, breath still uneven.  “When you’re the one who stopped to sit down?”
Taking a step before him, your knees brushed against his own. “Looks like grandpa needs a rest.”
The comment had Minho’s eyes set ablaze. “You fucking—”
His hands reached out, tugging you upon him as he stayed seated. Your legs kneeled on either side of him, straddling him as you wrapped your arms around his neck, willingly accepting his lips. They worked so hypnotically with yours that you did not realise them opening your mouth completely, with his tongue sliding inside. He explored everywhere, finding your own tongue and swirling it along with his, ruining any chance of you suppressing your groaning at his actions.
Perhaps Minho took notice of your stubbornness, because his hands landed on your thighs, fingers tracing the hem of your skirt. You let the groan free as he hitched the fabric higher, higher, higher, removing himself from your lips and descending down, pouncing on a particular patch of skin on your neck.
“Already so—” he sucked hard on your neck, revelling in your whines, “—already so loud when I’ve only just kissed you?”
“Fuck you,” you breathed out, digging his nails into his shirt. He cackled at your response, sinking his teeth and creating the first bruise of the evening.
“I’m gonna have to teach you some manners,” he whispered onto your skin, raising your skirt high enough that your intricate lacing of your lingerie, black as the night, began to show. Minho practically salivated at the image; you knew from the raging lining beneath his trousers.
“All talk,” you merely said, despite the uneven breathing. “All talk and no action.”
His thumbs pressed into your thighs, ceasing your words with a little whine. It had the man capturing your lips again, pulling you down with his hands on your legs, closing any distance between you two, needing to have you all over him. Your lips swelled, bruised by the rough handling of your boss’ mouth, ravaging you in ways you didn’t dare dream of. His fingers, trailing up your skin once again, curled under the waistband of your underwear.
Your heart hammered in your chest at his touch. He was being too slow, too damn slow while you dripped with the beginning of arousal, making you a shuddering mess.
Lee Minho was about to slide the lace down when a shrill call flooded the room.
Both of you stopped dead in your tracks. The man whirled to the origins of the sound, coming from his wide open laptop — a notification for joining a meeting call popped up on the screen, automatically picking up in about five seconds.
Your boss nearly had a heart attack.
With quick thinking, Minho pried you off him, practically dumping you upon the floor with a slight groan. His hands gathered you under the table, pressing a finger to your lips with a stern look before disappearing up on his desk.
You let out a deliberately loud scoff just before he accepted the call, fingers swiping down to pinch you for calling out. You could not see his face, only from the navel down, sat right before you, caging you with his legs.
“Ah, Mr. Lee!”
A gasp almost escaped you, but remembered his glare and actually stopped. One make out session and you already obeyed him like a servant.
Over your dead body.
Your boss’ low growl had you widening your eyes. “What do you want, Chan?”
The hazy answer revealed his employee’s concern. “Mr. Lee, are you okay?” You heard him say through the laptop speaker.
You saw Minho’s leg start bouncing rapidly, and although you could not see his expression, you knew that he was, most definitely, pissed off. “I’m perfect. Fantastic even. Now what do you want?”
You were ready to sit still, wait through the meeting as Chan’s uncertain voice spoke of some specific business deals that needed to be confirmed, few details that needed to be checked over. However, the way your arousal still dripped, ever so slowly, was a weight, reminding you of the activities occurring mere moments before. You didn’t even bother to pull your skirt down.
It was settled. You needed this problem of yours solved now, or never.
Fortunately for you, your solution was presented to you, right before your eyes, and right between Minho’s legs.
His cock still stood, erect against the lining of his trousers.
You gulped at the sight. The bastard was mean, flaunting it all before you, knowing you would have thrust it straight in your mouth if you hadn’t been interrupted.
A spark ignited within you. Why should it stop you now?
Oh God. Why were you suddenly becoming so bold? Was it you, being so turned on that you needed your needs met without wait? Whatever the reason, you found nothing to argue against it.
If Minho was playing games with you, then you would play along with him.
Hands stretching on the floor, you crawled towards him, settling yourself between the space his legs created. Kneeling slightly, your fingers extended towards the zipper on his trousers, prying it down.
The man stilled under your touch.
Head protruding from the edge of the table, you spied Minho’s eyes, ever so carefully darting down to you, his mouth parting slightly under the cover of his hand. He hummed at Chan’s words, but you knew his interest was rooted only to you and your daring fingers.
When you unzipped his trousers, ready to peel them down, his other hand, out of the sight of the laptop, caught your wrist. His grip dug into your skin, stopping you in your tracks.
You looked up at him, making sure you expose your desperation in your eyes. His own widened, only for a second before dragging them back on the screen. A smirk curved onto your lips, knowing he was so affected by your mere actions. How you dared to toy with your boss.
The pout-like expression paid off, when the grip on your wrist loosened. Hurriedly your hands went to the waistband of his trousers, pulling the fabric down, and you had to commend Minho’s ability to look so calm when you were practically drooling at the sight that welcomed you.
You did not even bother to pull the pants right down, stopping just under his knees as you admired his finely sculpted thighs. It was no secret that your boss worked out everyday after he was done with meetings, and every time you caught evidence of his toils you wished you didn’t inwardly moan at the sight. His taut muscle stretched all the way up to his underwear, slightly soiled at the tip of his dick, outlined against the fabric.
Minho glanced down for a second at his antics, and when he looked back at the laptop again there was a ghost of a smirk on his lips.
“Chan, hurry and finish this up,” he jeered.
This was enough signal to start peeling his boxers down too.
Your eyes nearly popped out of your sockets when you saw his cock spring free, curving proudly with its tip inches from his abdomen. The top glistened with the pre-cum, trailing down the length.
Oh dear God.
Your index, on instinct, reached out, cutting the white trail as you journeyed up the shaft. Minho’s low, barely audible growl had you shivering.
“Mr. Lee, you don’t look so well,” you heard the hazy worry of your coworker. You couldn’t help the giggle, and Minho’s side glare had you grinning.
He was not the one in control at the moment.
“I said I’m fine, Chan,” he snapped, and when you swiped up the remaining pre-cum on the head his dick twitched, a choked breath escaping. “Perfectly fine!”
“Uh, okay, then, this won’t take much longer…”
You, on the other hand, were just getting started.
Fingers, first stroking up the shaft, now wrapped around his cock, and with your heart in your throat you began a slow rhythm of sliding your hand up and down. Glancing up, you caught the colour of his face draining, using every ounce of his strength not to groan out loud.
You savoured the harsh tick in his jaw, quickening your pace and watched the man lose his cool, nerves in his neck protruding. Oh God, he was on the edge of his patience. It only encouraged your risky behaviour, dick hardening even more beneath your touch.
Still, there was no vocal outcry, to your irritation. You wanted to embarrass him during his meeting. Make him shut that laptop and moan out what he’s feeling. With these goals in mind, you cupped the base, and snuck a little closer, your face mere inches from his cock.
Taking one last peek at his paled face, you brought out your tongue and slid it along the head.
A soft groan emitted from your boss.
Chan’s monologuing of events paused, but the look on Minho’s face had him hurriedly continuing, while you progressed on, lapping up the remaining pre-cum you couldn’t catch with your index. You were never fond of the taste, but you took it in anyway, just to see the bastard’s mouth part in a way which had you almost leaking too.
Done with the soft, kitty licks, you hung on to your courage as you opened your mouth a little wider, taking in the head with your lips. Your hands stay wrapped around his cock as you, slowly, so slowly, went down, taking in inch by inch.
Minho’s fist smacked against the desk.
“Mr. Lee—”
“Ask me again, and you’re fired,” your boss guttered, hips sliding forward to push his cock further into your mouth. You nearly gagged at the action, but take it all in, obliging him because then you created a pattern of bobbing your head. Up and down, going easy, relaxed at first, you were sure Lee Minho was going to bring down his office.
But he didn’t.
And all because of that fucking meeting.
Suddenly angered, you did not bother fastening your pace, ready to give him blue balls for not reacting to your touches. Your mouth was back on top, lips still wrapped around the head, when you looked up at your boss through your lashes.
He stared down at you. Widened his eyes at the sight of you still enveloping his cock with your mouth, your gaze revealing the irritation of his lack of response.
Oh, he’ll give you something to work with.
His hand immediately when to the back of your head, stopping you from leaving as the other hand grabbed at the laptop screen.
Chan knew exactly what he was about to do. “Mr. Lee, I still have one more thing—”
You did not hear anymore, hearing the sharp SNAP! of the laptop shutting.
The silence returned, but did not stay for long as, gradually, Minho looked down at you, properly this time, and offered you such a lust-filled stare you were glad you did not leave your place upon his cock.
“Did you really think, doll,” he whispered, running his fingers through your hair, “That I was going to let you leave me? Just like that?”
You did not answer back — obviously, because your mouth was a little occupied, but you raised your brows at him, hands tightening at his base. He let out a shuddered breath, chuckling.
“Still a brat, hmm? At least you’re not talking back.”
He tugged harder at your locks. “If this was the way to shut you up, I would have done it a long time ago.”
Although your cheeks burned, you made sure to shut him up when you started your flow once again, closing your eyes as you went up and down on him.
Only this time, you had a little assistance.
Minho’s groaning roamed the room, like sweet music to your ears as you gradually fastened, working his dick with your hands too. Instinctively, the man bucked his hips into you, needing to have all of his inches in your mouth, needing to release all that pent up frustration that you created for him.
He said as much.
“Look at you,” he rasped up at you, curling away flyaways from your face as you worked on him. “Taking all of my cock…ah, all of my cock in your pretty little mouth.”
His filth was encouragement, and as you were sucking harder you could tell he was getting near. Pride washed over you, as your one of your hands reached out to play with his balls, earning a harsh moan from his lips.
“Ah—keep going, doll,” he rasped, his hips straying from a solid rhythm, knowing he’s going to let go soon if you kept up at this rate. “Doing so well.”
Perhaps these pieces of praise had you looking up, making sure he was watching as you hollowed your cheeks, taking him all in fully, a slight curve to your lips.
The absolute sin in the image of you kneeling before him, with his full length in you, had him crying out. He could not control the release that shot into your throat, pouring down and making you gag at its suddenness. Still, you took it all in, accepted the cum instead of spitting it out.
When he was finished, slightly heaving, his eyes danced at you slowly swallowing it down, a challenge in the quirk of your brow. Sweat beaded down at your forehead, but knowing you had Minho moaning over your skill was something to take pride in.
Lapping up the remaining cum, you swiped it off with the back of your hand. “Nice meeting, sir?”
The man could only laugh at your comment, so normal despite the situation. ”Adequate,” he drawled, pulling his boxers and trousers up as he cleaned off his dick. “But there’s still much to discuss.”
He wheeled his chair back, arms wrapping around you to free you from under the desk. You were glad of his help, for your legs were near-buckling. He noticed this too, for a smirk began to play on his lips.
Leaving you for a just a moment, he turned to his desk. He threw all his work off the top, paper and stationary flying from the table and scattering onto the floor. His laptop was thrusted at the ends of the table, unable to be a distraction.
“Hey, your papers will be all messed up,” you started, but he surprised you with a heart-searing kiss, making you almost collapse. You let his tongue slide inside instantly, hands gripping harder onto your hips as he tasted his release on your tongue, and when he roughly tugged on your lower lip, you gasped lightly at the harsh treatment.
He backed you further, the back of your upper thighs hitting his desk, and when he left your lips, his dark gaze had you weakened.
“I don’t really give a fuck about the papers right now, doll.”
You would have leaked out your arousal there and then. “Minho—”
“Did I tell you to call me Minho?” He demanded, fingers digging into your hips. Dazed, you tilted your head, only wanting his tongue down your throat again.
Catching the expression, he shook his head. “I’ll let you off today because you’re being a good little bitch this time.”
Dear God, you hated how you loved being called that.
His tongue working on your neck had you whimpering. “It’s sir to you, understand?”
You already had a counterpoint to piss him off with, but the animalistic threat in his eyes had you gulping. “Yes sir.”
The title had him going hard all over again. He teethed another hickey onto your skin, finding solace in the crook of your neck.
“Don’t think I’ve forgotten you all wet for me before, doll,” he whispered, hands sliding down, gripping the hem of your skirt. He hurriedly hitched it upwards, bunching it at your hips.
His fingers skimmed over your thighs before feeling the soft silk of your black lingerie, a familiar sight. “Ah, see?” His sole index traced over the front, dipping the fabric in your slit, already staining with your arousal. “All wet, just for me.”
“Stop it,” you whined, hands on his shoulders. “Stop teasing.”
“Since when do you order me around, ____?” He crowed, palming your clothed cunt, completely ignoring your demands. A ragged breath escaped you at the friction, so pleasurably wonderful you feared what would happen to you when he plays with you without the thin layer.
His attitude, however, still pissed you right off.
“I’ll be dried up by the time you start,” you seethed at him, nails digging into his shoulders. Provoking him was your only option, to get him to stop beating around and rail you on his desk.
“I don’t think so, doll,” he purred, other hand playing with the bands of your panties. You were about to snap when he hooked a finger over the hem of the lace and slid the underwear right down, just above your knee, and your breathing hitched as you found his gaze rooted to your now exposed cunt, already glistening from your arousal.
Minho’s mouth was practically salivating.
Despite the nerves growing in your belly, you still snapped him out of his mind drooling. “Are you going to just keep staring? Because that isn’t going to make me cum.”
His eyes slid to you, and shit, you could tell how much he wanted to beat your ass for your useless commentary. “Don’t make me shut you up again.”
“Talk, talk, talk,” you provoked, grabbing hold of his black tie.
A primal growl emitted from his throat, and when his fingers began skimming over the surface, you let out a whimper. “Oh, so my little doll wants to cum all over my fingers, then?” he muttered, eyes gleaming with an indecipherable goal.
His dirty words, along with him playing over your folds, had your stomach all knotted up. It was this tight feeling which had you breathing out, “Yes sir.”
The title at the end which had him slipping the first finger inside of you.
The feeling of his index sliding inside had you moaning much too loud for an action so small. Minho thoroughly enjoyed your reaction, finger almost fully inside when he palmed your core as well, already had you halfway there to your own undoing.
When his finger was up to the knuckle, his other hand found refuge in your locks, leaving open-mouthed kisses along your throat. He began to slowly pull out, creating the same gradual rhythm you had when your mouth was on his cock before. When only the pad of his finger was inside, he thrust back in, making you whine at the rush.
If that was not enough, a second finger joined in on his labour, stretching your walls and you hissed at the snugness of his digits in your cunt, continuing that pattern which had you crying out from pure ecstasy. Damn the bastard, but he was so good at making you helpless.
A deep feeling settled in your gut, and you knew if he kept up at this, you were going to cum all over him. “I-I’m close,” you got out, wrapping your hand around the tie further, pulling him even closer.
Minho, satisfied with creating a painting of lovebites upon your neck, locked your gaze with his. You were surprised to find sinister mischief in his eyes. “My babydoll is going to cum, now?” he questioned, further puzzled to hear softness in his usual fire-like voice. You nodded desperately, praying that he finger-fucks you after this calm. All you desired now was sweet release.
Which was why you cried out in protest when he slipped his fingers out entirely.
Your lust-hazed eyes looked at him, all wide. “Wh-what?”
The arousal-stained fingers gripped your thigh, a small yelp escaping you. The man’s other hand gripped your chain, making sure you don’t break his carnal stare. “You don’t get to cum unless I say so.”
You nearly sobbed as you felt your orgasm start to fade. You knifed him with a glare, pulling him a hair’s breadth from you with the tie. “What the fuck is up with that, sir?”
His grip on your chin tightened. “Don’t argue back, doll.”
The two digits were pushed inside you once again, and still, damn your senses, your breathing hitched. “If I see release on my fingers, I’ll fuck the orgasm up, understand?”
Although the nerves were back, you wished looks could kill when you stared at him. So he’s going to keep toying with you, then?
Well. Two could play that game.
You convinced him with a timid smile, wrapping your hand around his tie all the way. “As you say, sir.”
Delighted at your response, he struck up that hypnotic flow of his fingers, slowly pumping inside of you. Of course, you relished the way he worked within you, knowing he was waiting for the final cry when he hit a specific spot, but you had to show him your place.
Instead of moaning down the office, like you wished you would, your stubbornness silenced you completely.
Even when Minho fastened his pace, making it incredibly hard for you to stay rigid, you gave him a taste of his own medicine, not a single whine escaping you, just the way he stayed angrily quiet in the meeting. His tie was your only source of venting out your frustration, pulling on it so harshly you wondered how the man’s neck hadn’t given in yet.
A strange sense of hysteria bubbled within you when your boss noticed your silence. Snarling, he dug deeper, and when he hit your g-spot, your eyes nearly burst out of your sockets.
“Being a fucking brat again?” he retorted, fingers playing with the spot until finally, a soft whine came free of your tongue. “Trying to mock me?”
You took in a ragged breath, hair a mess, courtesy of his hand. You glared and glared, but still, you refused to say anything. Refused to say a word, and when you saw his mouth twist into a scowl you savoured his anger.
He ripped his hand from your tie, loosening it from his neck. He straightened it out, every action fuelled with aggression. It made your whole body crawl with excitement.
You parted your mouth to piss him off even more when you suddenly felt a mouthful of silk, completely stopping you. Trying to whine, the tie knotted behind your head, and Minho pulled so hard it nearly stopped your blood circulation.
“Didn’t want to moan, huh?” he guttered, tying up a pretty knot beneath your locks. “Tried to be smart, did you?
The tie wedged inside your mouth stopped you from answering back, Minho taking great satisfaction in your broken mumbling. “Oh, so you wanna talk now?” he mocked, slowly descending, until his face was at level with your cunt. He looked up, and the sight had you shutting up immediately. “No, we’ll play your little game.”
His eyes resembled a demon’s. “One fucking word from you and you’ll be sorry,” he warned, hands, now on your thighs, squeezing the muscle. The anger was so cold you only nodded erratically, fingers gripping the edge of the table.
Spreading your legs a slight, he closed the distance, tongue opening the seams and licking the surface.
You could not help the stifled moan which worked its way out the gag.
Retracting at your reaction, he glanced up, fingers digging into your skin. “Shut your fucking mouth,” he growled, trailing down your inner thigh. That command alone had you in near tears.
He didn’t wait for your incoherable answer as he dived right back in, tongue now licking your clit in a way which had you seeing stars, along with the added assault of his two digits pumping your core. He immediately found your sweet spot and curled his fingers, knowing you would melt right on his face.
Because the gag worked wonders in ceasing your words, you had to vent out your release through gripping Minho’s hair, pushing further, begging him to just let you cum all over his face. The man was a mean prick, though, and wouldn’t ever give you that satisfaction.
His fingers increased their tempo, in and out, and your orgasm was right on the edge, threatening to wash over you if he didn’t stop. You whined as much as you could this time, praying he understood what you meant, and not just you provoking him further.
You tried to curse yourself at how pathetic you were in that state, but you were honestly so fucked out you didn’t particularly care. All you wanted now was for Minho to ruin you.
The man, taking notice of your cries, paused his licking, fingers still at their thrusting. His eyes still up at your ravaged state, and you nearly undid yourself at the pure pride that shone in his gaze. “Does my little brat wanna cum all over my face?” he cooed darkly, and you could not nod fast enough, earning a husky chuckle from him.
“Will you talk back?” God, an even faster shake of your head, eyes glistening. “You better fucking not.” he sighed, blowing on your cunt which had you wailing into the silk. “Well, since the gag’s still on…”
He offered you a small grin, enough to drive you insane.
“Go on then, you fucking slut. Cum on my face.”
His mouth was upon your cunt in seconds, just in time for you crying out into the tie-gag as you released your orgasm, creating a mess of him as you spilled yourself onto his tongue, his chin, everywhere, barely avoiding the office floor. Minho slowed his pumping inside, eventually ceasing as he took in your release, pulling away.
You caught the slight spillage scattered on his chin, and he slid his tongue down, looking up at you with feline amusement. “All that bitching, and you still cummed,” he mused, soothing your throbbing with his fingers. “Still gonna call me a coward?”
He stood, his clothed hard on rubbing against your folds, and you knew you that despite the orgasm, you needed more. His mere fingers, however heavenly, were not enough.
His one hand cupped your head while the other tugged on the gag, pulling it down from your mouth. You coughed lightly at the freedom, desire swirling in your features still. “I…” you started, but your throat still hurt. “I…”
“Use you words, doll,” he ordered, unravelling the knot on his tie behind you. “God knows you use them too well.”
“F-fuck...you,” you rasped out, causing him to raise a brow.
“Still got attitude?” He traced his thumb over your cheek. “Despite you whining like a little bitch to let you cum?”
His hands left your face, sliding to your thighs as he gripped onto them, having you sit on the desk. He then moved down further, tossing your lingerie before wrapping your legs around his waist.
Leaning in, his chuckle tickled your lips. “Guess I’m gonna have to fuck the brat out of you.”
That alone would have had you moaning if Minho didn’t shut you up with a rough kiss, fingers sloppily unbuttoning your shirt. He sucked on your tongue, failing to take the shirt off, and with a harsh groan ripped the parting, buttons popping to the floor. He peeled the attire off you, dumping it with your panties, and when he pulled away, he took in your intricately laced bra, and his malice was replaced with pure, unadulterated lust.
“God, I’m going to ruin you, doll.”
You answered with capturing his mouth, nibbling on his bottom lip, his clothed boner creating friction against your inner thighs. His hands ravaged all over your exposed skin, while your own returned the favour, unbuttoning his shirt and taking it off. You ran your fingers up his abdomen, the granite solidity having you rolling your hips against him. Smiling against your lips, you felt his hands descend, gripping at the underside of your thighs before he lifted you up.
You gasped lightly, wrapping your hands around his neck as Minho, while leaving a trail of kisses down your neck, collarbone, tongue sliding along, turned around, your back to the full view of the nightlife of the city, revealed through floor length windows of his office all around. Walking towards it, he backed you up against the glass, the cold sending shivers down your spine. That, and Minho leaving core-shaking kisses upon your skin, as he began to unhook your bra strap, tearing the lingerie off you.
“Minho!” you exclaimed, when he planted his lips upon your bare breast, sole finger playing with the other. Hearing his name had him grinding against you, making you whimper.
He went up, erratic breathing entering your ears. “It’s sir to you,” he snapped, before diving back in on your breast, licking over your nipple so thoroughly that you felt that overgrowing need to release once again. Again, with the teasing, the playing, when all you needed was his cock to fill you right up.
“Sir, p-please,” you begged, your legs locked tightly behind him.
“Please what, doll?” he hissed onto your skin, one hand tracing your throat.
One more thrust of his hips and your eyes pricked with tears. “P-please fuck me, sir,” the knots in your belly growing.
“Finally,” he breathed out, thumbing your neck, softly compared to the hard on you were practically sitting on. “You’re not being a little bitch.”
One hand still clasped around his neck, you brought the other down to his trousers. Looking up at him, he almost softened.
“Now you’re asking permission?” he cooed, straying from your breasts. “Being a good girl for me?”
You never had an idea on how much that affected you. “Don’t push it,” you countered, a tired smirk still playing on your lips.
“Go on, doll,” he said, hitching you higher on the glass, moistening with the sweat beading down your back. “But I like you better when you beg.”
“Let’s see if you-ah!” you were cut off when you pulled his trousers down, and his cock tried to burst from his stained underwear, rubbing against your cunt much too deliciously. “Fuck me hard enough.”
“Stop running your mouth and pull my boxers off,” he ordered, and this you willingly obliged, careful of your leg-lock as you peeled them down to his knees, he getting them clean off. When his cock sprung free, you were salivating at the sight, angry red and ready to have it inside of you.
When he caught your blatant staring, he snapped his fingers. “Careful, or you’ll start cumming without my permission.”
Your widened eyes darted to him, and your lack of response had him actually laughing. “Already forgotten your words?” he mocked, fingers gripping your chin. “My babydoll is getting dumb staring at my cock.”
“Please, sir,” you murmured, locking your hands behind his neck. “P-please fuck me.”
Minho let out a pleasured sigh at your pleading. “As you wish, ____.”
Pressing his forehead against yours, he clasped his cock, directing the tip to your entrance, already staining the surface with its pre-cum. His other hand gripped onto your hip, steadying you against the glass, now slightly misted.
“Ready?” he asked, surprised to hear a little softness as he caressed your hip with his thumb.
You nodded against his forehead, parting your mouth. “Yes, sir.”
A little scoff escaped him. “Good girl.”
That was all he needed before he began the final descent.
His cock slid inside, and your breathing turned irregular as your walls stretched slightly at the intrusion. He went further and further, moving ever so slowly to let you adjust. Lord knows you needed to, when his dick was so big.
“O-oh my God—” you stumbled out, feeling as if the man had filled you right up to your gut when he was finished. You kept deathly still, fearing you might shatter if you even moved the wrong way.
“It’s okay, doll,” he reassured you, hand leaving his cock and settling upon your other hip. “Whenever you’re set.”
“I’m good,” you said, more scared that you would cum right onto his dick if he tried to move inside you. “Stop worrying and...and fuck me already.”
His thumbs pressed harder on your sides, a pleasured sting ringing. “Now I won’t regret it if you can’t walk after this.”
A ragged scoff escaped you. “We’ll see about that-”
Well, you really couldn’t when Minho began to pull out.
Your mockery was cut off with a shrill cry, hold tightening on him as his cock slowly slid out. The gradual process was so pleasurable you had to hold onto him for dear life, or you knew you would collapse onto the office floor. The man made sure that never happened, grip on your sides never slipping, pressing you against the warming glass.
“I’ve only just started,” he drawled breathlessly, still relishing how loud you were being despite him merely beginning. “Has my babydoll never been fucked before?”
You had, but never had anyone made you so weakened by a simple pull out. In fact, your sexual life was average at best, but you telling him that he would, by far, be the biggest mistake. He’s already got an ego the size of his cock - you were not going to inflate it any larger.
“H-have been,” you gasped out. “B-better even.”
That false claim had him knitting his brows in anger. He thrusted his dick right back in, and another whine choked out of you.
“Liar,” he spat, filling you right to the brim. “Lying to me when my cock’s inside you.”
God, the rage that filled his veins was pure ecstasy in your mind. Good, you thought, making sure you chuckled at him. Provoke him till he breaks you.
“H-he was so much-argh!” you just couldn’t get a word out when he began to pull out once more, Minho now attacking your neck with his lips, bruised patches of your skin as he started up a painfully delightful rhythm of pushing and pulling his cock into you.
“Go on, you fucking brat,” he snarled onto your throat, licking up the column. “Try and tell me there was anyone better.”
You were on to tell him, gloat breathlessly that there were all these obviously real people who had fucked you into oblivion, but when his fingers began to prod at your clit those lies were replaced with thundering mewls, nails digging into his back.
Fastening his pace, you rolled your eyes back, head hitting the glass. Minho, watching you, slammed his hips forward, hitching you upward with the sheer force of his cock and snapping you out of your haze, making you look at him.
“I asked you something, doll,” he demanded with rich sarcasm, fingers never stopping on your clit, nearly taking you over the edge. When the head of his dick hit a certain spot, deep into your core, you couldn’t even control the slight drool which trailed down your spit-slick lips.
Minho’s dark laughter only had the knots tightening in your belly. “Awww, my babydoll’s so fucked out she can’t even speak?” his mouth curled into a smirk. “Only a useless set of holes for me to toy with, aren’t you?”
You thought you said something, hopefully something to shut him up, but when your orgasm was right at the tip of your cunt you knew it was as the bastard said - useless.
As you predicted, Minho quickened his fingers on your bud. “Worthless fucking bitch,” he mocked mercilessly, practically branding you against the glass. With the sheer anger he fucked you with, you were scared the windows would crack. You wouldn’t put it past him.
“C-close, sir,” you finally got out, managed to formulate the only words you needed at that moment. Your boss, at this, only increased his pace of his erratic thrusts, practically decimating your cunt with his cock. You had a feeling among the lust-filled haze of your mind that he, too, was getting close, with the way his flow turned sloppy.
“And…” he took in a sharp breath. “And what about it?”
Oh, you knew what his last game was. Permission from him, pleading to let you spill your arousal all over his cock.
In any normal circumstance, you would have laughed at their face. Made sure they never asked something so atrocious.
Lee Minho, however, was another case entirely. Not when he was your lifeline, the only one in the universe who could save you from this impending doom. Even though he was the bastard who brought it down on you in the first place.
So you did what possibly no human being could ever ask of you.
You pleaded.
Practically begged to let you feel sweet release.
“Can I…” another soft cry left your lips. “F-fuck, please...can I cum?”
Minho imprisoned you with his gaze. Locks sticking to his forehead, mouth parted in desire, and pupils dilated, you still found him so utterly beautiful, despite the wilderness beneath. Found him even more so when he finally decided to show you some mercy.
“Go on, babydoll. Cum for me.”
You didn’t need to be told twice.
Your vision nearly blacked out when you obliged, orgasm spilling out from the tight spaces between your walls and his cock, dribbling down your legs and dripping onto the office carpet. The sight of your spillage had Minho finishing off his own thrusts, releasing an earth-shattering cry as he barrelled his own release into you, ropes of cum spilling out of your cunt, joining your mess on the floor.
A slight peaceful stillness settled over the office, save for the both of you, breathing as if you had been underwater this whole time. Minho’s cock was still inside you, snug around your moistened walls. Slowly, he pulled it out, hanging limp from use, and your cunt felt hollow, emptier than it has ever felt before.
You unlocked your legs from his waist, immediately regretting the action when they gave out under you. Collapsing onto Minho, you were instantly met with his arms, holding you up.
“Careful,” he muttered, leading you to his chair, settling you down on the plush leather. He pulled his boxers up, along with his trousers, finding your own attire on the floor and placing it on your lap.
Smiling lazily, you started adorning your rather dirtied attire. “A good business proposal, no?” you mused, referring to your terrible excuse at the beginning of the evening.
Remembering, he chuckled, putting on his shirt. “I never bought that anyway, doll,” he merely said, buttoning to the top. “I knew you were jealous.”
Cheeks burning, you mumbled a little shut up, earning yourself a grin from the man. Finding your own shirt useless from Minho ripping it open, you said so to the man. “Look what you’ve done to my top”
He only spared it a glance before grabbing his tie, stained with your saliva. “Look what you’ve done to my tie.”
“That was your own fault,” you remarked, hoping your blazer would cover your front up. “You put the gag on me, prick.”
“Feeling brave already?” Minho purred, already putting you on a familiar edge. “Thought I’d fucked the brat out of you by now.”
Oh, he really did. He truly made you his little bitch not moments ago, and perhaps that would be rooted in you for the future.
But of course, you’re not going to tell him that.
You stood up from his chair, slipping into your heels. His eyes watched you as you walked to the door, opening it wide.
You looked back, catching something akin to wonder in his gaze.
“It’s going to take a little more than that, sir,” you declared, and left the room, closing the door behind you.
And as you prepared to leave the building, Lee Minho stayed rooted in his office, feeling his insides go wild all over.
It’s going to take a little more than that, sir.
Oh, God.
The man scoffed.
“Fucking brat.”
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“I DEMAND TO BE LET IN!”
Once again, you rolled your eyes at Miss Kim, who was now adorned in magenta, long boots tapping against the marble floor.
“Mr. Lee is busy, Miss Kim,” you told her for the umpteenth time, refusing to believe that one seemingly intelligent woman, who had her own business, could be so thick-headed. “If you would just sit down—”
“You don’t tell me what to do,” she snapped, pointing an acrylic-painted finger at you. “I am a special client of Mr. Lee’s, and don’t need an appointment.”
You let out a sharp breath through your nose. It had not even been two days before she was back at the office, demanding Minho’s presence for the continuation of her meeting before you interrupted them.
A small smile caught onto your lips. Thank God you did.
“Hey!”
You perked up, brows instantly furrowing. “Miss Kim, just like the last time, I cannot help you. I can only give you entrance inside if you have an official appointment.”
Letting out a harsh laugh, she shook her head, wiggling the same finger at you. “Miss whatever your name is, I don’t like to have my time wasted, and you certainly are wasting my time. If I say I want to see Mr. Lee then you better damn well let me see Mr. Lee!”
Your mouth nearly opened to snap back at her when the glass door beside you swung open, and out stepped the CEO himself, who possessed the same irritation on his face as you did as he leaned his figure against the doorway.
“What is this constant racket?” he complained to no one in particular, and when his eyes fell upon his unofficial client he stopped. “Oh, good afternoon Miss Kim.”
“Mr. Lee, your little assistant is being difficult once again,” the woman declared, glaring at you. “She did this the last time I was here, and even when you let me in she’s doing the same thing again.”
“Oh, really now?” Minho got out. He turned to you, his dashing face exposing slight amusement at the claim. “Is that so, ____?”
You fought the urge to smirk at him. “She does not have an appointment,” you explained, spinning your pencil to avoid his searing gaze. “You told me only to let the people who’ve made appointments enter your office.”
Minho grinned for you. “That I did,” he confessed, eyes sliding to Miss Kim, whose smug smile faltered. “I’m sorry, but I’m afraid the rules must be followed.”
The woman’s arrogance faded completely when the words left his mouth, finding herself defeated. “I see,” she said, still souring at the sight of you. “Well, I’ll phone up tomorrow morning.”
“You do that, Miss Kim,” he agreed, and watched as the woman turned on her heel, grumpily exiting the building.
The man found your eyes, and you saw them dance with mischief. You already felt your heartbeat pick up the pace when he walked over to you, planting his hands on your desk. “I need you inside the office, doll.”
Oh my God. “Whatever for, sir?” you asked innocently, trying to focus on your round of Solitaire, stark on the computer screen.
The table creaked underneath his fists at the title. “Let’s say it’s a…” he leaned in a little, careful of his employees beyond the hallway. His voice conveyed a slight husky tone. “A business proposal.”
Shivers crawled down your spine. Fuck him. Fuck him for bringing up your shitty excuse of two days ago. “I hate you,” you whispered harshly to him, despite the nerves.
His eyes never left you. “We’ll see about that when we start the meeting, doll.”
He stood straighter, opening his office door. “Now are you coming in?”
You studied the open door, the hidden opportunity that laid beyond. When you caught the growing lust in his gaze, you pressed your thighs together.
Standing up, you hurried to the doorway, earning chuckling from your boss. “Shut up, asshole,” you hissed, entering the fated office. Seeing the desk already had your cheeks burning.
“It’s sir to you, brat,” he only said, hands already on you as he closed the door.
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teruthecreator · 2 years
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So in the human AU I imagine that the equivalent of recruiting darkners to go live in PlayerTown would be Kris, Susie and Ralsei recruiting people for the community center?? If that's the case, i think recruiting the equivalent to the secret bosses would be very fun. i imagine the gang comes across this old clown that's apparently an old friend of Seam's and tell him to go work in the community center. He works as the resident jester that gets into a lot of hijinks. I cant even imagine what spamton be like. The gang meets this weird little salesman and he gives dubious advice about how to take spade king down. Sorry for the long ask lol
yeah something like that! i imagine recruitment would be more like getting people to care abt this place and so it starts to see an increase of visitors, volunteers, and the like. which means the building gets repaired, more things become functioning and available, and the community grows stronger. i imagine castle city was once abt the size of hometown and then had some industries (like the auto industry coughcoughSPAMTONBIGSHOTAUTOScoughcough) make factories there which increased the population and grew the town to a small city. but there's still like a core group of residents who remember when the place was a lot smaller and tight-knit, which is why the community center becomes so important. if they lose the community center, they lose the last testament to this city's origin and the vibrant community it once held. that's what ralsei believes, at least.
i Do think it's incredibly hilarious for a bunch of teenagers to hire weird old men to work here tho. i think the secret boss battles would be more like just convincing a very weird man to bring his weirdness to this one place. but it's just Incredibly hard to convince them. jevil works in a traveling circus, so the difficulty there is getting ahold of him before the troupe leaves town. but then he'd be around for the carnival that queen throws!! and with spamton he's just a bit of a deadbeat?? idk. weird little man. he works as traveling salesman (even tho traveling salesmen aren't even a thing anymore) and also at an auto shop. but once you "recruit" him he volunteers at the community center and manages the lost and found!!!
(and by "manage" i mean "attempts to sell you the random crap people leave around the community center")
but i do think they'd also hold some kind of mysterious knowledge bc obvs that's their intrigue in the game. they're meta-bending goofballs who flew too close to the sun. idk i've been toying with the idea that there's this normal world but then every night when kris goes to sleep they have dreams abt the Real dark world, including everyone other than them being monsters. and it's rlly confusing and they don't know Why it keeps happening. but maybe these weird old men know abt it???? hmmmmmmmmm interesting interesting interesting....
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kazenoshun · 3 years
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The 8 O’Clock Song: A Coco fanfic
Summary: Coco AU -  It's been 10 years since Imelda Rivera was abandoned by her no-good husband and she banished music from her life. She's content to keep away from music for the rest of her life, but a chance encounter during a trip to Mexico City may turn that resolution on its head.
A/N:  I have made an attempt to include some Spanish (mostly names) in this fic to mimic the style of the film, but I make no claim to being fluent in the language, so if you spot any problems, please let me know and I'll do my best to fix them.
Also,  I'd like to thank @faceheightknifefight​ and another friend (who does not have a Tumblr account) for their help in editing this fic. They're awesome!
FF.net, AO3, DA
The streets of Mexico City were full of noise, smoke, and far too many people, and Imelda Rivera could hardly wait to get home to her family in small, quiet Santa Cecilia. She’d never been fond of the big city. If she’d had her way, she would already be on the train back home, arriving in time to wish her daughter, Coco, goodnight before bed, and no doubt scold her twin brothers, Oscar and Felipe for some mishap or other. Unfortunately, she hadn’t gotten her way all day.
She’d gotten up before dawn to catch a train to the city, in order to view a new shipment of leather, place her order, and discuss the possibility of buying a new machine for the shop. She was against the idea herself, but her brothers were convinced it would improve the quality, and quantity, of Rivera shoes so she’d agreed to at least gather some information. The salesman she’d met had yammered on long enough to make Imelda seriously consider not purchasing the new machine out of sheer spite. His poorly disguised distaste for women in the shoemaking profession had merely been the final nail in the coffin. Having thoroughly wasted her morning and the better part of her afternoon, she finally arrived at the tanner’s only to learn that the shipment of leather had been delayed and wouldn’t be available until the following morning. Had such a day occurred when Imelda was just beginning her career in shoemaking, she might have broken down crying. Which wasn’t to say that she didn’t want to cry now, but she hadn’t allowed herself the luxury of weeping over her problems since she started, and she wasn’t about to begin now.
If she could survive Coco’s childhood as a single parent, she could survive one day of setbacks.
Still, she did allow herself a small huff and a frown as she entered La Caléndula, the sleepy little restaurant the innkeeper had recommended for dinner. Not terribly charming of her, she knew, but she didn’t particularly care to be charming right now - especially knowing many men tended to view charm as an invitation. All she wanted was to order her dinner, eat, and return to the inn to close out her terrible day.
The man behind the bar was an older gentleman with more gray than black in his hair, in the few places it still grew, and a moustache that seemed to cover the entire lower half of his face. He took her order with quiet efficiency, and, after hearing he’d been recommended by the innkeeper, directed her to a small table in the corner where she would be able to eat in peace.
Imelda let out a sigh as she sank into her chair and off her feet. Between the salesman who couldn’t be bothered to offer a chair during his presentation, and walking what seemed to be half-way across the city to the tanner, her feet ached. She wore good shoes, of course. She’d made them herself. But even the best shoes couldn’t alway prevent the sort of ache that accompanied a day on one’s feet. As the ache in her feet faded, she found herself thinking of home and family. They would be sitting down to dinner themselves by now, possibly cooked by one of the twins, but more likely by Coco. The girl would be 14 soon, only a year away from her quinceañera, and was growing more self-sufficient by the day.
Needing something to take her mind off her long day, Imelda turned her thoughts to potential birthday gifts for Coco, a far more palatable idea than lost orders or snobby salesmen. A new pair of shoes was a given, of course, but perhaps it was time Coco had a new dress as well. She’d nearly outgrown her last Sunday dress. Should the new dress be pink, though? Or perhaps blue? Imelda could turn the unintended stay in the city into a chance to look for fabric and findings. Yes, that would be most productive, and save her a second trip. She would start looking in the morning.
Her concentration was broken by the sound of someone tuning a guitar.
Imelda’s eyes snapped open, though she wasn’t sure when she’d closed them, and she glared at the table with enough ferocity she almost felt it should crack under the pressure. Of course someone would be playing music here. It was a perfectly terrible ending to her perfectly terrible day. She ground her teeth and clenched her hands into fists to override the childish urge to stick her fingers in her ears. She had some dignity, after all.
It had been nearly 10 years. Nearly 10 years she’d gone since banning music from her life. 10 years of being laughed at, of enduring the mariachi following her around the market betting on who would get her to break, of scolding Coco again and again each time she caught her daughter singing or dancing. 10 long years of hating him, her no-good bum of a husband who’d left her alone with a child to raise and never come back. He’d chosen music over them, over her, so she would let him have it all.
Her eyes sought out the source of the sound unbidden, whether from morbid curiosity or to know who to avoid when she left, she wasn’t sure. When the server arrived with her food, she would pay and leave. She hated wasting money, but she couldn’t stand to listen to the guitar even one minute longer than she had to. There was a small stage along the wall opposite the bar, but it was empty. The night’s performer must have been preparing off-stage. The other restaurant patrons were unfazed by the guitar as they enjoyed their food and drinks, several of them conversing quietly together. All of them ignorant of the burning fury inside Imelda. The guitar tuning morphed into a proper song, a very familiar song, but the stage remained empty.
Imelda nearly sprang from her seat and marched out the door; good manners and fact she hadn’t paid yet aside, she didn’t want to stay and hear the song butchered like it always was. Like the mariachi back home always did, even though they knew the way it was supposed to be played, the way it had been played before he allowed it to be butchered after walking out of their lives. She redoubled her efforts to spot the musician, determined to stay as far away as possible when she left, only to freeze when she finally spotted him.
Him, her no-good husband, Héctor, sitting on a stool in the corner across hers holding a banged-up guitar in his arms, playing Poco Loco with a blank look on his face.
The plate of food being set down in front of her startled her badly enough that she jumped.
“Perdón, señora,” the server -not the bartender, but maybe his son? She didn’t have the focus to puzzle it out- said. He followed where she had been staring and grinned. “I see you’ve spotted José.”
“José?” She could only parrot the name, too shocked to turn and look again. Perhaps she’d been mistaken and the man only looked similar to Héctor from a distance. It had been a very long time since she last saw him, after all.
The server nodded. “That’s what we all call him around here, since no one knows his proper name, not even him.”
Imelda couldn’t even parrot this time as she relented and looked again. It was definitely Héctor over there, although she couldn’t recall ever seeing his face so empty. He wasn’t even smiling.
“He comes in here and plays from time to time,” the server continued, oblivious. “Doesn’t bother anyone, and the music’s good, so Tío lets him do it and even pays him a little if sales are up.”
Imelda finally found her voice. “How… Why doesn’t he know his own name?” The Héctor she’d known, or at least thought she’d known, had a ridiculously good memory and was always using it to his advantage.
The server sighed and leaned against the empty chair on the other side of the table. “I couldn’t tell you exactly what caused it, but José doesn’t remember anything from his past, or where he’s from. Whatever happened couldn’t have been pretty, though. A couple of drunks found him, back before I started working for Tío, somewhere around 10 years ago. Someone had tried to bury him in a shallow grave just outside of town. The drunks took him to the hospital, but I guess it took a while before he woke up. And when he did, he couldn’t remember a thing. Not his name, not his age, not even where he grew up.”
Imelda opened her mouth and closed it again. None of what the server was saying made sense.
“Tío says he thinks there must’ve been a fight. He says one of the doctors at the hospital thinks José was poisoned. And José didn’t have any travel papers or identification on him when the drunks found him, but he still had money in his pocket. I heard the police found a suitcase dumped in a ditch, but all the stuff inside was trashed and there was no name on the case.” The server sighed and shook his head. “I just want to know who would get into a fight with José. The man’s harmless.” He sniggered. “Well, unless you mention the song.”
Imelda turned back to the server and made a face. “The song?” This really was all too much to take in at once, and she was almost convinced she’d fallen asleep into a dream except for her aching feet still anchoring her firmly to reality.
The server nodded. “Sí. You know that fellow, Ernesto de la Cruz, who’s been making waves in music?”
Far better than I want to, Imelda thought. It had been Ernesto who had set out on the stupid tour with Héctor, and then returned nearly a year later to tell her she’d been abandoned. She tried to recall when Ernesto said they’d split, and found she couldn’t help but wonder if Ernesto had told her the complete truth. He’d been against her marriage to Héctor from the beginning, after all.
“Well,” the server continued, once again oblivious to Imelda’s inner turmoil. “If you so much as mention de la Cruz’s biggest hit--” he dropped his voice to a whisper “--Remember Me, in José’s hearing, he goes absolutely mad. Old señor Víctor had to hold him back from mauling a musician who dared suggest playing it. Didn’t play it, mind you, just suggested playing, and José went nuts. Señor Víctor’s practically a bear, and he was struggling to hold onto José that night. But, if you don’t mention the song, José’s the gentlest soul you’ll ever meet.”
That, at least, was more in line with the Héctor Imelda remembered.
The sound of Poco Loco continued to drift about the restaurant, and Imelda couldn’t decide if she wanted to scream or cry. “Nearly 10 years and he hasn’t been able to remember anything?” she finally asked. She did her best to keep her voice even.
The server shrugged, looking at her uneasily. “Nothing specific,” he said carefully. “Occasionally he’ll say or do something to make you think he almost had a memory, but then it’ll be gone before he can latch onto it. There’s definitely something there, but it’s almost like-- like he’d stuck on the other side of the door. A few vague ideas get through, his issue with the song, for one. He’ll drink anything you put in front of him, unless it’s tequíla. Put tequíla in front of him and he starts getting all antsy and saying he needs to go home. I asked where home was once, thought he might’ve remembered something. I swear he looked like he was about to cry, then he just kept saying he didn’t know, over and over, until he left for the night.”
Imelda felt some small part of her heart that she’d been ignoring for years clench in her chest. “That sounds terrible,” she managed. She tried to imagine what it would be like, if she somehow forgot home, forgot Coco, except for the faintest ideas. It wasn’t a pleasant thought.
The server nodded. “Tio and I didn’t see him again for three days. He came back covered in dirt. Apparently, he went out to the place the drunks found him and partially buried himself to try and bring back memories. It didn’t work. Tio let him clean up in the guest room upstairs, and made him stay here a few days to recover. I got yelled at for getting him into that state to begin with.”
“Ay! Diego! Stop pestering the lady,” the bartender, who’d come out from behind the bar, called.
Diego grinned and stood up straight, nodding to Imelda. “Perdón again, señora, for chatting your ear off. It’s been a while since we’ve had a new-comer so sympathetic to José’s plight.” He pulled out a handkerchief and offered it to her.
Imelda looked at him, confused.
“You’re weeping, señora,” Diego told her gently. He placed the kerchief on the table and walked away.
Imelda sat, unmoving, for a long minute, until the last notes of Poco Loco faded away and a new song started. Slowly, she raised a hand to her face and wiped half-heartedly at the tears that were indeed flowing down her cheeks. It’s shock, she thought, feeling oddly detached from her body. Shock was the only explanation she could think of for why she was still in her seat and not half-way back to the inn. Shock, and the fact she hadn’t paid yet. She’d been too distracted to pay before Diego walked away. Shaking herself, she grabbed her glass of water and took a gulp, trying to shift her brain back into motion but only succeeding in sending herself into a coughing fit when the last of it went down wrong. She fished her own kerchief out of her pocket and pressed it to her mouth to muffle the coughs and try to curb the tears now streaming down her face as she fought to breathe.
When she could breathe again, and had wiped her face clean, she stared down at her plate. She felt… empty. She’d always assumed her rage would be explosive if she ever saw Héctor again. And she’d certainly been furious when she first spotted him, ready to march out of the restaurant without even acknowledging his presence. But now…
It was as though listening to Diego’s tale had drained the rage right out of her. She couldn’t say she was happy, per se, or even sad. More than anything, she was confused. And hungry, her growling stomach reminded her. The food she’d ordered smelled delicious, and she wasn’t in the habit of letting good food go to waste. Besides, leaving without eating would gain her exactly the attention she would rather avoid. With that thought in mind, Imelda made herself begin to eat.
The food was undoubtedly good, but she barely tasted it. It felt like such a strange thing, that she’d banned music for so long and yet it quickly faded to the back of her awareness. If she closed her eyes, she could almost pretend she was at a bar back home a decade prior, waiting for Héctor to finish for the evening so they could return to their little house together.
Perhaps it was because, for the first time in a very long time, the songs were being played as she’d known them - no gaudy embellishments or implied wink and nudge from the musician. Just a simple, sincere guitar. Although Héctor wasn’t singing along, which was a bit odd, but she could only puzzle out one thing at a time.
Héctor’s letters had stopped five months or so after he left. At first she’d thought he’d absentmindedly forgotten to send the next letter, which happened on occasion. Then she’d guessed it had been lost in the mail, it wouldn’t have been the first time. But when one, and then two months passed with no word, she started to worry that something had happened. If she’d been on her own, she would have gone searching for him. But Coco had been not-quite four, and needed food and a roof over her head, so Imelda had stayed put and started to learn how to make shoes.
It had been another five months before she ran into Ernesto in the plaza and demanded to know where her husband was.
Ernesto had handed her a letter and Héctor’s wedding ring, said they’d been left behind when he and Héctor split several months prior, and left her standing there gaping in the middle of the plaza. All he’d told her about Héctor’s whereabouts was that he’d headed north to try and make a name for himself. He’d vanished into the crowd before she could ask anything else and hadn’t reappeared in Santa Cecilia since.
In the present, Imelda allowed herself another glance in Héctor’s direction.
His hair was even more unkempt than usual, and peppered with gray. Prematurely, she mused, as he was a year younger than her and only 31. He looked darker than she remembered, as though he’d somehow managed to find a way to stay out under the sun even more than he had in their youth. A multitude of lines and creases stretched across his face, and his eyes… Imelda had to close her own eyes and look away.
His eyes were the same warm brown they’d always been, but they seemed unnaturally empty of life. As though Héctor were no more than an oversized puppet.
His clothes -from what she had seen, she couldn’t look at those eyes again just yet- were starting to fray. He wasn’t wearing the suit she’d made him. Rather, a plain shirt and trousers that were too short for him, with a jacket that was starting to come apart at the shoulders. And he’d worn a hole through the side of his left shoe. He certainly didn’t look like a man who’d set out to find his fortune.
She couldn’t help but wonder at the timeline she was presented with. Between what Ernesto had told her years ago, and Diego’s account just now, it couldn’t have been more than a couple months from Héctor and Ernesto splitting to Héctor being found in a grave. But why he’d been back in the city so soon, when Ernesto had been so insistent that he’d traveled north, was something she couldn’t puzzle out.
And then there was Diego’s account of Héctor’s reaction to Remember Me. Ironically, perhaps, it was the only song of his she hadn’t heard before he left. She’d only ever caught snatches of the song from Coco’s room after her daughter was in bed. Ernesto had claimed that Héctor sold him his guitar and songs before heading north. If Coco knew Remember Me, then it was undoubtedly written by Héctor, not Ernesto, but why would that matter if the song had been sold?
On the other side of the restaurant, Héctor hit a sour note, and stopped in the middle of his song to glare at the offending string.
Imelda snorted as she watched. The guitar she’d given him was rarely out of tune. He likely wouldn’t have any issues now if he hadn’t sold it.
She froze with her fork half-way to her mouth, suddenly wishing she could slap herself for not thinking of that sooner.
If Héctor had gone north to seek fame, why had he sold Ernesto the guitar and all of his songs? Surely he would have needed songs to play, and something to play them on? Even if he decided the memories associated with the guitar were too much, he would have to be a fool to sell it without getting a replacement, doubly so to sell all his songs when he was just starting out. She could understand, on a practical level, selling the songs connected to her, to Coco, if he truly wanted to leave them behind. But that still left at least half his repertoire, full of songs she knew would have easily caught on with the right crowd- had caught on with Ernesto playing them.
The dinner she’d just eaten settled like a stone in her gut. Héctor’s letters had grown shorter the longer he was on the road, true, but the cutoff had been abrupt. There’d been mentions of fights with Ernesto, though he never went into detail. The early letters were often accompanied by songs and poems, but the last several had lacked those. Imelda swallowed uncomfortably and glanced at Héctor yet again- now back to playing, having fixed the issue with his strings. Something didn’t add up right, but the only one present who could tell her more didn’t remember enough to explain.
“Oh dear.” Diego was back, gesturing nervously at her plate. “Is something wrong with your dinner, señora?”
Imelda forced a smile on her face. “No. I’m afraid I just recalled something I really would rather have not remembered. The food was delicious.” Even so, she couldn’t make herself eat another bite.
Diego grinned, apparently reassured. “I see. I shall hope that you forget again very soon.” he glanced toward Héctor and his grin grew. “You’re in for a treat, señora. He hasn’t wandered off yet, and it’s nearly eight o’clock.”
Imelda felt as though she’d somehow missed part of the conversation. Then again, that seemed to be happening a lot this evening. “What happens at eight?”
Diego winked at her. “You’ll have to wait and see.” he wandered off again.
Imelda slumped in her seat, leaning her head in her hands and rubbing her temples. She really didn’t need more puzzles right now. The restaurant, she noticed, was growing quieter. The clink of dishes and bottles fading as other patrons turned toward Héctor’s corner. In the distance, she heard a bell begin to toll the hour.
Héctor stopped in the middle of his song, his eyes somehow more lively and more distant than before.
Imelda found herself leaning forward as the audience seemed to hold their collective breath.
Héctor closed his eyes and began to play. The opening notes were soft and gentle, not unlike the beginning of the song he’d written to propose to Imelda, although not that exact song either. Then he began to sing. “Remember me, though I have to say goodbye. Remember me, don’t let it make you cry…”
It was the same song Diego had said drove Héctor to fury, but not played the way Ernesto played it. The simple notes and gentle words reminded Imelda more of- of Coco, and the song she still sang to herself each night before bed.
“My song!” Coco had cried as a little girl, when Imelda tried to make her stop singing each night. “Papá said it’s my song!”
Hearing music, any music, tore at Imelda’s heart by then, but the anger and fear on her daughter’s face when told she had to stop was even worse. Imelda hadn’t slept that night, merely cried in her room until dawn and cursed Héctor for leaving. She hadn’t told Coco to stop again. Instead, she’d pretended not to hear the little voice each night. Coco, for her part, had confined her singing to that one song, sung quietly, alone in her room from then on. She almost always sang it at the same time.
Across the room, Héctor had opened his eyes to stare at a spot on the floor that looked no different from the rest. Except that, if Imelda thought back, it was roughly the same place Coco’s bed would have been were he back home singing her to sleep. She surely would have sung alone.
“...Know that I’m with you the only way that I can be.” Héctor’s voice caught on the words. “Until you’re in my arms again, remember me.” His eyes closed once more as the final notes faded into a silence that hung in the air. A moment later, he blinked, shook himself, and returned to his earlier playing. The restaurant patrons similarly returned to their conversations.
Imelda sat at her table, feeling a bit underwhelmed by the lack of response for Héctor’s performance. It felt like such a momentous thing -that he would sing a duet with his daughter, despite the distance between them and the fact that he supposedly had no memory of her- that surely deserved a round of applause at the very least. And yet, looking around the restaurant, it was as if the performance had never happened at all. Feeling more than a little light-headed, Imelda gathered up her glass and mostly cleaned plate, and made her way to the bar to pay.
“Was everything to your satisfaction?” the bartender asked.
Imelda nodded. “It was very good, thank you.” She handed over a fistfull of bills and coins, and waited for him to count out her change. While she waited, she glanced at Héctor. He still hadn’t noticed her. “Does he play here often?” she asked, nodding in Héctor’s direction.
The bartender sighed. “Often enough.” He handed over her change. “I used to figure he’d disappear one day. Thought it would mean he finally remembered where his home was, or someone came and found him. But after this many years, I’m not sure anymore that’ll happen. He’s a nice fellow, mild-mannered and all. Brings in extra business when he’s here.”
“Does-” Imelda paused, not quite certain she should ask “-does he play that song most nights?”
The bartender fixed her with a hard look. “Sí, he does. Try not to get any ideas, though.”
Imelda blinked at him, confused. Between him and Diego, confusing her was turning into a family trait.
He must have realized she didn’t know what he was talking about, because he continued. “We’ve had mariachi come through before who took his playing as an invitation to join in. Or they question him about it after the fact. He always ends up angry or confused. I know Diego thinks it’s sweet that he sings the same song every night, I can barely stand to hear it myself.” He sighed again, fixing his gaze on Héctor. “That man’s trapped in his own mind, and nothing any of us have done has helped. That song, that’s the closest he gets to breaking out. Hearing it each night is like hearing a cry for help you can’t answer.” Another patron at the bar waved for his attention. “Perdón, señora. Enjoy your evening.” Then he was gone, leaving Imelda with her thoughts.
She looked at Héctor one last time, still playing his guitar, and left the restaurant. She needed time to think, to try and sort out the truth from the lies, and the fresh air would help clear her mind. Or so she hoped.
Héctor’s music followed her back to the inn, continuing uninvited in her head long after she was out of hearing range. She doubted she’d get much rest. But then, she hadn’t slept much after he disappeared, either. Perhaps it was fitting that she stay up half the night after seeing him again. She dressed for sleep, put out the light, and lay in the bed staring at the ceiling. And she thought, and thought, and thought some more.
And when the dawn finally broke, she realized she had neither slept, nor puzzled out the answers to her questions.
Her husband had left on his trip 10 years ago, writing almost daily. His letters had grown shorter and less energetic as time went by, before cutting off abruptly several months into the tour. Some months later, nearly a year after leaving, his friend and partner, Ernesto, had returned to tell her she’d been abandoned. And somewhere in there, a group of drunks had found Héctor buried in a shallow grave on the brink of death.
Try as she might, Imelda couldn’t make all the pieces line up and fit together properly, there were simply too many gaps.
Ernesto might be able to fill in those gaps, were she to track him down and convince him to answer her questions. But that would take longer than she wanted, and she doubted he would answer her willingly, or truthfully. She’d known he was a liar when they were young, twisting or exaggerating tales so that they worked in his favor. Looking back, that was something she should have remembered that day in the plaza. And besides his lying nature, the gaps in the story were forming too easily into a theory she didn’t dare acknowledge just yet, but which she knew could take the man from hateful to dangerous.
No, Ernesto would not do for a source of answers, so she would have to look to Héctor. The bartender had said that attempts had been made to bring Héctor’s memories back, but nothing had worked. Then again, none of them had known Héctor before the memory loss; Imelda had grown up with him. She’d married him, lived with him, had a child with him. If she couldn’t spark his memories; well, that wasn’t worth dwelling on, she told herself as she dressed for the day. She would deal with that problem if it arose.
The city streets weren’t empty when she left her room in the inn, although they were far less crowded than they had been the day before.
Imelda kept her head high and her steps sure as she made her way back toward La Caléndula. The bartender would likely have questions for her before he would be willing to tell her where she might find Héctor. But she would swallow her pride and answer them truthfully, otherwise she didn’t know where she should even begin. When the bar came into view, however, she realized she wouldn’t need to ask.
Héctor sat on the step leading onto the porch of the restaurant, head tipped forward, and wearing a ratty straw hat that covered his face such that she couldn’t tell if he was awake or asleep. His battered guitar was on the ground next to him, the neck tipped against his knees and held loosely in one hand. He looked like he had been sitting there all night. The restaurant door opened, and Imelda found herself ducking into a deep doorway. She wasn’t sure she wanted a witness to her potential failure.
Diego stepped out onto the porch, covering a yawn and holding a bucket and rag with one hand. He gently nudged Héctor, then walked to the windows and began wiping them down.
Imelda watched as Héctor stirred, reaching his arms above his head and stretching in a way she knew made his spine pop. He’d startled her doing that the first morning after their wedding, but it had become endearingly familiar over time. She waited a few more minutes, watching Diego try to strike up a conversation and Héctor murmuring half-replies while she debated whether or not to come back later. She could always stop in at the tanner’s first, to see if that shipment of leather had arrived yet, and come back once Diego was gone and Héctor was alone once more. Except she couldn’t be sure Héctor wouldn’t leave before she returned.
Taking a deep breath, she paused -to see that her braids were still properly in place and not because she was scared- and stepped from the doorway.
“Buenos días, señora,” Diego called when she drew near.
Imelda didn’t answer him, her eyes locked on Héctor. He looked up, and she felt her heart race in her chest. Her breath seemed caught in her throat, and her stomach was doing all sorts of interesting acrobatics. She felt, rather absurdly, like she had when she told him she was pregnant with Coco- as though her world had tipped on its axis and she hadn’t quite righted herself yet.
She hadn’t actually planned this far ahead. She’d been so preoccupied with looking for him that she hadn’t realized until now that she had no idea what to say. She swallowed, but her mouth remained dry.
Héctor hadn’t looked away.
Imelda took a breath. “Héctor-” her voice came out like a squeak. She cleared her throat and tried again. “Héctor-” that was better, and she had his attention now “-do you know who I am?”
His face remained blank, and for a long, terrifying moment, she was afraid it wouldn’t work, that his memories were too far gone to ever recall. Then, almost painfully slowly, his expression changed. He scrunched his brows together and pursed his mouth the same way he had so many times before when trying to pull a song into being. And his eyes never left her face.
Imelda stayed standing before him with her hands clasped at her waist, vaguely aware of Diego calling for his tío. Her palms were sweaty, and she was gripping her hands so tightly she knew without looking her knuckles had gone white. But she didn’t dare move, she almost didn’t dare blink.
Héctor shifted on the step, knocking his hat off when he tangled his fingers in his hair and pressed the heels of his hands to his temples. The look on his face was quickly giving way from confusion to a combination of distress and pain; and Imelda was suddenly afraid she might have sent him into a state of panic if his memories failed to return.
“Hush,” she tried to comfort him, cautiously kneeling down and reaching to cover his hands with her own. “It’s okay. Take your time.”
The backs of his hands were dry against her sweaty palms, and quite warm. And his hair felt more brittle than she remembered.
He squeezed his eyes shut, and swayed back and forth, the world around them forgotten as his inner battle played across his face. Imelda rubbed gentle circles against his wrists, racking her brain for some way to calm him down. She’d grown quite skilled at handling crises in the past decade, raising her daughter as a single parent. But this wasn’t the sort of crisis she’d ever had to face before. Slowly, she became aware of Héctor humming to himself, a nervous, breathy sound that she soon recognized. The song he’d written to propose to her. It was quieter, more serious that Poco Loco, and undeniably hers. She didn’t recall him playing it the night before. Her voice was rusty as she joined him, humming instead of singing because the hurt she’d felt since he left was still there. She’d sworn off music when Ernesto told her she was abandoned, leaving it all for Héctor if he loved it so much more than her. But if it was the way to bring him back, then she could make an exception.
They reached the end of the song and started over from the beginning, Héctor’s voice growing stronger, and Imelda more sure of the notes. She leaned her forehead against his and closed her eyes, focusing only on the sound of their voices blending together, sometimes the same, sometimes harmonizing.
“Imelda.”
His voice was so soft she almost didn’t realize he’d spoken. She drew back and opened her eyes.
Héctor was looking at her again with a fragile sort of hope in his eyes. “Imelda?” he said, his voice louder but shaking.
“Shh, I’m here,” she whispered, brushing away a tear that had begun to form in the corner of his eye. “I’m here.”
“Imelda,” he said again, this time sounding more sure of himself. He broke into a grin murmuring her name over and over. “Imelda, you’re Imelda. I remember. Imelda, I remember-” The words died in his throat, his happy grin sinking into a wide-eyed horror. “I forgot, Imelda,” he gasped. “I forgot you! How- I forgot Coco!” His voice broke on their daughter’s name. “No- How- I forgot!”
He’d begun to tremble, and all Imelda could think to do was pull him towards her. He came easily, practically collapsing into her arms as he continued to babble. “I’m sorry. I’m so, so sorry! I promised to be home in six months and I forgot! I-I was planning to come home. I’m sorry! I’m so sorry!”
Imelda was caught in an awkward half-crouch while he clung to her, but she pushed the discomfort aside and brought one hand up to cradle his head, and gently ran the other up and down his spine. His face was buried against her shoulder, her dress growing wet with tears. He was still shaking, too, and he felt much too thin now that she was holding him. “Shh,” she murmured again, stroking his hair. “Shh. I’m here. It’s going to be alright.”
It was, perhaps, a foolish promise. There were still so many questions to be asked. Diego and the bartender were both standing a short distance away with matching expressions of concern, and she was sure they would want to know why it had taken so long for her to find Héctor, and why she hadn’t gone to him the night before. There would be letters to write to Coco and the twins. Letters saying who she had found, and explaining that she would be delayed coming home. She had no intention to leave Mexico City until she understood what had happened to Héctor to lock his memories away for so long.
But her most burning question had been answered. He’d wanted to come home. He’d planned to come home, and been prevented. Coco was right; he’d never abandoned them. It was enough, for now, to build on. She couldn’t say exactly what would happen in the long run. If they’d ever be able to return to even a semblance of what had been, or if their relationship would be forever broken. But they could worry about that later.
“I’m sorry,” Héctor whispered again. “I’m sorry for forgetting.”
Imelda hugged him tighter. “You’ve remembered now,” she countered.
“Sí,” Héctor agreed after a long silence. “I remember.”
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