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texts with the bnha guys; fem! reader (aged up) characters included: katsuki bakugou, izuku midoriya, shoto todoroki, tenya iida, eijirou kirishima, denki kaminari, hitoshi shinsou.
! they send you a pic
warnings: sfw, slightly suggestive, all the pics are from pinterest
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Is it just me or everyone imagine their fav characters that they are obsessing over in real life???
Like I'll be at work and then I imagine that bitch sitting next to me, talking to me and admiring me while I FUCKING KNOW THAT I HAVENT KISSED A MALE SPECIES IN MY ENTIRE LIFE
I don't know if that's sign of a fucking mental problem or what but I swear if I'm even Slightly upset or tired of my life i WILL open tumblr and start imagining them or talking to them (aka my wall. It be sitting there like the fuck gurl im not your man)
Lane from Heaven's secret: requiem. Romance club game.
So weâre all in agreement itâs fucking HER right? Like he loved her before and is just waiting to see if her memory comes back? I donât even know all I know is CAIN is causing me PAIN
Batfam finding out Tim has a partner they didn't know? I'm talking like a year at most. đ He wasn't even trying to keep them in the dark, it just never came up(his words) and his partner, hilariously I imagine, gets along w damian well.
wc: 0.8 K summary: Batfam finds out Tim has a partner warnings: none, no y/n used a/n: have fun reading it, I tried my best to make it entertaining and not cringe at the same time. enjoy!!
Laying in Timâs arms after a stressful week always felt like heaven. It was safe and soft, wrapped up in his familiar scent and getting to hug and squeeze him as much as you want. Usually, you donât worry about some of his family members walking in on you two cuddling up on his bed, and neither did you today. It was as normal as ever. However, when you heard some sounds from downstairs you tensed up. Tim soothed you by rubbing your back and whispering some reassurance to you. Internally, Tim was panicking.
Nothing ever is happening around the Manor, so why would something be happening now? Bruce should be in the batcave or somewhere else, Alfred is minding his business and there shouldnât be anyone else in the house⊠unless someone decided to pay a surprise visit.
»Hey, Timmy!«
The door swings open and his eldest brother appears in the doorframe, making you tense again and freeze in your partners arms. Dick also freezes and realises that this is a private moment he just interrupted. A private and intimate moment between his younger brother and, most likely his partner.
He straightens up and clears his throat, still standing in the doorframe for some reason.
»Uh, Tim? I⊠I should get going, huh?«
An almost awkward chuckle leaves Dick before he quickly closes the door with a slam and makes his way downstairs in a new speed record.
All you can hear is a yell from outside and the heavy footsteps of his brother. Itâs muffled but you can still hear it from Timâs room.
And a moments later, there are more sounds and more yells, and screams errup from outside the room.
Embarrassed, you sit up and lean off of Tim, looking both confused and slightly scared.
»Was this your brother?«
»You are about to meet the rest of them.«
He mutters back and also sits up with a sigh. You watch him run his hand through his hand tiredly, assuming this will get more chaotic than it already is.
»Is this your date?!«
The door literally slams open again with more force this time and there stands a blonde haired girl, excitement and curiousity written all over her face and body language.
Tim cringes beside you, his ears growing increasingly more red.
»Thatâs⊠my partner.«
He admits and rubs the back of his neck, revealing your relationship with him. The jaw of the girl goes slack and she runs away to probably collect the rest of the siblings.
Moments later, the room is packed with all his siblings and they are too curious for their own good. Some teasing questions drop but also more personal questions aimed at you. You try your best to answer them all and wonât let anyone get left out on accident.
The most asked question was probably, »Since when are you two even together?« and, »Why didnât you tell me?!« aimed at Tim.
He really tried to step in and explain it all calmly, but they didnât let him. It was amusing, seeing them interrupting each other and talking over each other some times, as well as straight up ignorimg Tim and only focusing on you. All of his siblings are pretty unique in their own way, everyone seems to be alike but also completely different at the same time.
One sticked out in particular and it was the youngest of them all. Damian, you soon found out after Tim insulted him for asking an annoying question.
He seems to be chill. Genuinely.
Even when it seems like he and Tim have a rocky relationship, he doesnât seem to be all that bad. Just a little teasing, but thatâs it.
The visits from now on where a little more entertaining. Every time you entered the manor, someone else than Tim greeted you. Once it was Alfred, then it was Stephanie, before Damian seemed to be the regular person who greets you when you step inside.
Surprisingly for Tim, you two get along pretty well. Tim has a theory that Damian is pretending to be all nice and friendly with you just to piss him off even more. It would make sense, but you donât believe in it.
»I am telling you, he does it on purpose! He is never friendly to anyone else except Alfred. Hell, he can get hissy with him too, sometimes!«
»Yeah, I donât believe you. He seems like a normal kid to me.«
You shrug casually and it makes Tim even more exhausted. Just⊠why does it have to be Damian? You could be besties with Dick or even Jason, but Damian is just another level of disrespect.
»Just say you donât love me anymore...«
Tim grumbles back after a moment and turns away from you on the bed, his back facing you now.
»Waitâ no, I didnât mean it like thatâ «
a/n: In short, I think he would be offended at first and just even more annoyed than before around the Batfamily,but it'll settle eventually. Slowly, but eventually.
âMASTERLIST
# âHOLD UP, POSE!â ââ .⊠( model!reader x batboys s/o kinda requested ËâĄË )
a/n: so sorry for the break and how i traumatized half of you guys with my rant (if I suffer you gonna do too && letâs move on now ) and itâs lowkeyy funny ngl but omgg, Iâm finally back though soo yeah but Iâm finally taking requests again for a bit too so about that yeah and also make sure to go vote on the poll, weâre at 600+ votes already for my 1k event!! Tags: (batboys x model!reader)
© dollishmehrayan â ( all rights reserved to me. These works cannot be reposted, translated, or modified. Thank you for understanding dollies! )
DICK GRAYSON ââ .âŠ
Your biggest fan, no contest. He has a folder on his phone labeled âMy Gorgeous Girlâ filled with all your magazine covers, runway shots, and candid photos heâs sneakily taken of you (even the ones where youâre eating pizza in sweats).
Loves to drop the fact that youâre a model into conversations. Someone says something even remotely related, and Dick is like, âOh, that reminds me of the time yn walked for Valentino. She looked stunning. Anyway, howâs your dog?â
Flirty but lowkey jealous. Heâs all smiles at your shoots, but if a photographer or fellow model gets a little too friendly, heâll sidle up behind you, wrap an arm around your waist, and casually go, âHey, babe, everything good here?â
Runs your fan page in secret. He denies it every time, but you know itâs him posting like archive photos of you? with captions like, âTruly the most breathtaking woman alive.â
Always hypes you up. Youâre stressing before a runway show? Heâs holding your hands, looking you dead in the eyes, and saying, âYouâre going to kill it, just like always. Theyâre not ready for you.â
JASON TODD ââ .âŠ
Pretends not to care, but heâs secretly obsessed. Youâll catch him flipping through your magazines with a bored expression, but the dog-eared pages of all your spreads say otherwise.
Gets grumpy when he has to share you with the world. âDo you really have to fly to Milan again? Canât they get someone else to wear the fancy coat?â But heâs the first one to text you after your show with a âYou looked amazing. Miss you, though.â
Always lurking at your events. He doesnât do red carpets, but youâll spot him in the back of the after-party, leaning against a wall with a drink in hand, watching you like youâre the only person in the room.
Jealous but funny about it. If a male model gets paired with you for a shoot, Jason will grumble, âYou know I could wear that suit better, right?â
Says he doesnât care about fashion but definitely critiques it. âThey put you in that? Really? Thatâs what they think is high fashion?â (Meanwhile, he still owns a leather jacket heâs had since he was 17.)
TIM DRAKE ââ .âŠ
The low-key proud boyfriend. Tim doesnât brag about you⊠unless someone else brings it up. Then itâs a full PowerPoint presentation: âOh, you didnât know she walked the Paris Fashion Week finale? Let me show you.â, âitâs not that serious Tim.â
Forgets how famous you are sometimes. Heâs so focused on his work that when he accompanies you to an event, heâs always surprised when people scream your name. âWow, theyâre⊠really excited to see you, huh?â
Pretends to be chill but panics at your shoots. If youâre wearing something too revealing, Timâs sitting in the corner like, âDoes she really need to wear that? I mean, itâs fashion, I guess, but stillâŠâ
Shows up to all your shows with coffee. He knows your schedule can be brutal, so he always has your favorite drink ready and a warm smile. âLong day, huh? Here, youâve earned this.â
Accidentally goes viral as your boyfriend. Someone snaps a picture of him holding your bag while youâre doing a fitting, and now heâs trending as âhot modelâs mystery man.â Or âDrake Spotted With L/N?â
DAMIAN WAYNE ââ .âŠ
Thinks modeling is beneath you. Not because he doesnât support you, but because he genuinely thinks youâre too good for it. âTt. Why waste your time parading around in someone elseâs designs when you could rule the world instead?â
Still shows up to your shows like a proud dad. He wonât admit it, but heâs ridiculously proud of you. Heâll sit front row, arms crossed, looking annoyed until you walk out. Then his face softens, and he claps (but only once).
Hates everyone in the industry. Photographers, stylists, agentsâhe side-eyes them all. âDo they have to touch you so much?â
Quietly supportive in his own way. You come home exhausted, and heâs already brewed your favorite tea and laid out your comfiest pajamas. âYou should rest. Youâve worked hard enough today.â
Keeps all your clippings. You find a scrapbook in his study filled with your covers, tear sheets, and event photos. When you ask him about it, he just mutters, âI didnât want them getting lost.â And even keeps some fan letters that you keep or lost along the way.
BRUCE WAYNE ââ .âŠ
Thinks itâs âadorable.â Bruce canât help but chuckle whenever you mention your modeling career. âYou really enjoy this, donât you?â But heâs not teasing he genuinely admires how passionate you are.
Surprisingly knowledgeable about fashion. He knows every major designer, can spot couture from a mile away, and will occasionally surprise you by saying things like, âThatâs Galliano, isnât it? From the â06 collection?â
Makes every event feel like a power couple moment. When you walk a red carpet together, itâs like the world collectively gasps. He keeps his hand on your back, whispers sweet nothings, and makes sure youâre the center of attention.
Defends your career to anyone who dares question it. Someone makes a snide remark about modeling being âshallow,â and Bruce immediately shuts them down with, âActually, itâs an incredibly demanding profession that requires both discipline and skill. You should try it sometime.â
Buys your agency. Youâre stressed about a bad contract or a difficult agent? Suddenly, Wayne Enterprises owns the company, and Bruce is like, âProblem solved. You can thank me later.â
featuring. Ekko x fem!reader
wc. 15k
synopsis. Born from house Arvino, one of the richest and influential families of piltover. You had it all from luxurious gifts, fancy meals, a magnificent bedroom and much more. You're parents gave you everything you asked for. However still never satisfied you. You're mind always looked at the injustice and suffering zaun was going through. That's when you first met ekko, the firelights' leader. Not very happy to have a pilty messing stuff up.
trope. "enemies to lovers"
warnings. slow burn, cursing, blood, drugs, kissing, death!, suggestive, kinda grinding against each other (clothed tho), angst
requested. by anon
a/n. it's more like enemies to friends to lovers (sorry) let me know if thereâs any mistakes so i may fix it.
Darkness. An oppressive, suffocating void that seemed to stretch endlessly. You floated in its cold embrace, weightless yet crushingly burdened by the weight of your own thoughts. Memories flickered like dying embers, elusive and fragmentary. You could barely recall where you had been, what had happened, or how you had ended up here. The edges of recollection teased you: Ekkoâs voice, steady and warm, calling your name. The heavy press of bodies at the Last Drop, the tang of alcohol mingling with smoke. Then a sharp, searing sting in your neckâand the world spiraling into oblivion. Now, you were adrift, lost in a sea of disjointed images and emotions.
Your mind was an unrelenting storm, twisting and turning with fears and insecurities you thought you had buried long ago. The sound of Margotâs cruel laughter cut through the fog like a blade, her words threading through your subconscious like venom. âHe doesnât care about you,â her voice echoed, dark and mocking. âYouâre nothing to him.â You wanted to fight against it, but the darkness clung to you, invasive, as it dragged you deeper. Somewhere, faint and distant, there were voices that were sharp and unfamiliar. They seemed to be arguing, but the words were muffled.
âSheâs worth more alive,â one voice said, cutting through the haze like a knife, dragging you closer to consciousness.
âThough, Dead might be less trouble,â another replied, cold and indifferent, a tone that sent a shiver of dread down your spine.
The words clawed at the edges of your awareness, snapping you back toward the surface of reality. Your body felt heavy, impossibly sluggish, but you fought against the pull of unconsciousness with everything you had. It was as if your mind and body were at war, one was desperate to wake up and the other held captive by a paralyzing weight. Slowly, agonizingly, your eyes fluttered open, and the harsh glare of a fluorescent light stabbed into your vision.
The room around you was cold and unforgiving, bathed in the sterile glow of artificial lighting that illuminated every inch of its metallic surfaces. The air was damp, heavy with the scent of rust and oil, and beneath it all lingered something acrid and chemical, clinging to your nostrils like a warning. The faint hum of machinery thrummed in the background, a low, ominous noise that seemed to vibrate through your very bones. You tried to move, but your arms were pinned to the cold metal chair beneath you, thick leather straps biting into your wrists. A matching set bound your ankles, and as you tested the restraints, they didnât budge an inch.
A spike of panic shot through you as the reality of your situation set in. Your breath came faster, shallow and uneven, as your eyes darted around the room. The Chem Barons loomed before you, seated around an oval table at the far end of the room. The glow from the monitors lining the walls illuminated their faces, casting their expressions in stark relief. Each face was a mask of greed, malice, and twisted amusement, their eyes gleaming with predatory intent as they spoke about you as though you werenât even there.
âSheâs valuable,â one of them said, his voice carrying a sickening undertone of satisfaction. âAlive, sheâs worth a fortune to topside. Theyâll pay anything to get their hands on her.â
âDead might be easier to deal with,â another replied, leaning back in his chair with a shrug. âStill worth a decent haul. Less risk of her escaping, too.â
Your stomach churned as their words sank in. You were a prize to them, nothing more than a commodity to be traded for wealth and power. Every instinct screamed at you to fight, to get out, but the restraints held firm no matter how hard you pulled. Your breathing quickened as you struggled, the leather cutting into your skin, and the faint taste of blood rose in your throat.
âAh, youâre awake.â The smooth, taunting voice cut through the air like a blade, and your gaze snapped to the woman standing at the table. Margot. Her presence was magnetic in the worst way, her movements deliberate and calculated as she leaned casually against the table, arms crossed over her chest. Her lips curled into a smirk, her eyes alight with cruel amusement as she studied you, like a predator toying with its prey.
âWell, well,â she said, pushing off the table and taking a slow step toward you. âThe perfect little topsider, all tied up and helpless. Not so high and mighty now, are we?â
You glared at her, refusing to give her the satisfaction of a response, but the corner of her mouth twitched, as if she were amused by your defiance. She began to circle you, her heels clicking against the floor with each measured step, her presence oppressive and suffocating.
âDo you know where your little hero is right now?â she asked, her voice dripping with mockery. âOut there, playing the savior for Zaun. Thatâs his priority, isnât it? Always has been. Zaun this. Zaun that.â
It seemed like the world around you shifted, like a bad dream slowly releasing its hold on you. And there it was, the overwhelming effects of the shimmer. Oh the pounding in your head, twisting of your thoughts, and voices echoing in your ears. Then it began to fade. It felt like dragging yourself out of quicksand, every inch a battle as clarity tried to surface through the chaos. Your breath came in shallow gasps, chest heaving as the purple haze in your vision began to lift.
Dim lights suffocated the room, illuminated by the faint flicker of old industrial lights dangling above. The Chem Barons lounged around the oval table, their laughter low and cruel as they watched your struggle with detached amusement. The factory scent in the air, mingled with the acrid sting of chemicals you didnât want to identify.
Margot leaned casually against the table, twirling the now-empty syringe between her fingers with an air of smug satisfaction. Her lips curled into a grin that sent a wave of anger through you, though your body was too weak to act on it.
âLooks like youâre finally coming down,â she remarked, her tone almost conversational. âIâll admit, I was worried for a moment there. Wouldâve been a shame if youâd overdosed before we made use of you.â
You glared at her through the haze of exhaustion, your teeth clenched as you struggled to steady your breathing. âGo to hell,â you rasped, your voice hoarse and raw.
Margot chuckled, pushing off the table to approach you. âFeisty, even now. I like that,â she said, crouching in front of you so that her face was level with yours. Her eyes gleamed with twisted delight as she reached out, gripping your chin tightly between her fingers to force you to look at her.
âYouâve got spirit, Iâll give you that,â she murmured, her voice low and almost admiring. âBut spirit wonât save you. Youâre nothing more than a bargaining chip now.â
You jerked your head away from her grasp, the movement sharp despite the lingering weakness in your body. Margot let out an amused laugh as she stood, crossing her arms over her chest.
âHereâs the deal, sweetheart,â she began, her tone turning more like one of a businessmanâs. âWe hand you over to topside. You get to enjoy whatever punishment theyâve got waiting for you, and we get our prize money. Itâs a win-win, really.â The other Chem Barons murmured their approval, the greed in their voices unmistakable.
You stared at her, your chest tightening with rage. âYou really think Iâd agree to that?â you spat, your voice laced with venom.
Margot shrugged, the corner of her mouth twitching into a mocking smirk. "Oh, I don't need your agreement, darling," she replied smoothly, her voice dripping with condescension. "I was just being polite by giving you the illusion of a choice. Hey, but maybe we can work something out. Give me something useful. A secret, a connection, something, and maybe I don't have to hand you over." Her words were a sick game, a mockery of negotiation. You weren't stupid; you knew she had no intention of letting you go freely. Your anger bubbled over as you leaned forward as much as your restraints allowed, glaring daggers at her.
"I'll see you rot before I help you," you growled, the force of your words surprising even yourself.
Margot's expression darkened, and the smirk fell from her face. For a moment, there was silence, tension crackling in the air like static. Then, without warning, she lashed out, slapping you hard across the face. The sharp sting of her hand against your cheek was enough to make your head whip to the side.
"Stupid girl," she hissed, her voice low and venomous. "You think you have power here? You think you get to decide anything?" She took a step back, reaching into her pocket and pulling out another syringe.
Your stomach dropped as you saw the familiar glow of shimmer inside it, brighter and more concentrated than before.
"No-no, don't," you stammered, panic setting in as she approached.
"Don't what?" she mocked, her grin returning with a sadistic edge. "You already made your choice. Let's see if we can loosen that sharp tongue of yours."
Before you could protest further, she plunged the needle into your neck. Pain shot through your body as the shimmer flooded your veins, an uncontrollable heat spreading through your limbs. You let out a scream, your vision blurring as the drug took hold. The world tilted on its axis, the edges of reality fraying as hallucinations crept in. The Chem Barons' laughter grew distorted, their faces warping into monstrous visages. The room seemed to shrink and expand simultaneously, and the voices in your head (the ones you thought had faded) came roaring back with a vengeance.
You clawed at the arms of the chair, your nails digging into the metal as you tried to anchor yourself. Your heart pounded so loudly in your chest that it felt like it might burst, and your breathing became erratic.
Margot's voice cut through the chaos, taunting and cruel. "Look at you, squirming like a cornered animal. It's almost poetic."
Your restraints clicked open suddenly, and you stumbled forward, barely catching yourself before hitting the ground. Margot stood over you, her hands on her hips as she sneered down at your trembling form.
"We're taking you topside," she announced, her tone laced with finality.
"Dead or alive, you're worth the same. But I think I prefer you like this, completely broken and barely holding on. It'll make the handoff more entertaining."
Two of her lackeys stepped forward, gripping you under your arms and hauling you to your feet. Your legs wobbled beneath you, the shimmer wreaking havoc on your motor control. The world spun violently as they began dragging you toward the door, your head lolling as you tried and failed to stay upright. Harsh sunlight hit your face like someone slapped you as they pulled you outside. The brightness was disorienting, and you squinted against it, your head throbbing. Air, heavy with the industrial tang of Zaun, and the sounds of machinery mixed with voices. Enforcers.
Ahead, you could see the bridge leading topside, a line of Enforcers waiting at the end with rifles slung over their shoulders. The sight sent a fresh wave of panic through you, and you thrashed weakly in the Chem Barons' grip.
"Let me go," you slurred, your voice barely above a whisper.
Margot walked alongside you, her expression one of smug satisfaction. "Save your strength," she advised mockingly. "You'll need it to grovel when you're thrown at the feet of the Council."
The closer you got to the bridge, the harder your heart pounded. You were barely holding on, your mind teetering on the edge of madness as the shimmer coursed through you. The voices in your head screamed louder, with the fear and anger that threatened to drown you.
Margot leaned in close, her breath hot against your ear as she whispered "Don't worry, sweetheart. This is just the beginning." You gritted your teeth, determination flickering within you despite the haze.
The journey to Piltoverâs inner walls was a blur of pain and exhaustion. Your legs refused to hold you, the shimmer coursing through your veins wreaking havoc on your body. Every step felt like a battle, your limbs trembling as Margotâs goons dragged you forward. The bright sunlight burned your eyes, and the Piltoverâs bustling streets added to your disorientation. All of the voices of the enforcers were sharp as they spoke to Margot, thanking her and her men.
âGood work,â one of the officers said, his tone almost bored. âYour payment will be processed soon. Weâll take it from here.â
Margot smirked, her victory evident in her smug posture. She leaned close to you one last time, her voice a low whisper meant only for your ears.
âEnjoy the next chapter, darling,â she sneered. âIf you survive, maybe weâll cross paths again.â
You didnât have the strength to respond. Instead, you slumped further as the Enforcers took hold of you, their grip cold. You tried to plant your feet, to resist, but your body betrayed you. Your knees buckled, and they dragged you forward without hesitation.
Piltovers inner walls loomed ahead, their pristine white stone a stark contrast to the grime and chaos of Zaun. Everything was suffocating, the streets lined with polished brass and bustling citizens who barely glanced your way. The shimmer made it hard to focus, your vision swimming with colors and shadows that didnât belong.
By the time you reached the Council building, you were on the verge of collapse. The Enforcers hauled you through the ornate doors, their boots echoing loudly against the marble floors. Of course the air would be cold and sterile, filled with the murmur of voices and hurried footsteps as people passed by.
They led you into the grand council chamber, its circular design intimidating and imperial. The room was bathed in warm light from the massive stained-glass windows, depicting Piltoverâs history in vibrant detail. At the center was the imposing council table, its surface polished to a mirror shine, where Ambessa Medarda sat like a queen upon her throne.
Beside her were your parents. Your fatherâs expression was like stone, his cold eyes fixed straight ahead. He didnât even glance at you as the Enforcers placed you in one of the chairs facing the council. Your mother, on the other hand, was a picture of worry, her hands clasped tightly in front of her. Her eyes were wide as they took you in, darting over your disheveled appearance and the faint glow of shimmer in your irises. The moment the Enforcers stepped back, your mother rushed to your side. Her arms wrapped around you, pulling you into a hug so tight it left you breathless.
âMy sweet child,â she murmured, her voice trembling with emotion. âI was so worried about you.â
You barely had the strength to return the embrace, but her warmth was a calming sensation to your anxious nerves. She pulled back just enough to press a kiss to your forehead, her hands cupping your face as she searched your eyes.
âWhat have they done to you?â she whispered, her voice breaking. Her gaze landed on the faint pink glow in your irises, and you saw her expression shift from relief to horror. âShimmerâŠâ she breathed, her voice barely audible.
Her hands faltered for a moment before she composed herself, but the fear lingered in her eyes. She sat down next to you, her presence a small comfort despite the chaos raging within you. Your father, meanwhile, remained motionless, his gaze fixed ahead as if you werenât even there. His indifference cut deeper than you expected, and your heart sank. He doesnât care. He never has.
Ambessaâs voice rang out, commanding and unyielding, but the pounding in your head made it impossible to focus on her words. Your mother nudged you gently, her worried expression urging you to pay attention.
âListen,â she whispered softly, but her voice carried an undertone of dread.
You blinked, forcing yourself to focus on Ambessa. Her sharp eyes bore into you as she spoke, her words cutting through the haze.
âYou have become a liability,â she declared, her voice devoid of sympathy. âA danger to the order and stability of Piltover. It is the councilâs decision that you be sent to Stillwater Hold immediately.â
Your stomach dropped, the weight of her words crashing down on you like a tidal wave. Stillwater Hold, the maximum security, isolation, a prison for those too dangerous to be allowed freedom.
âNo,â you muttered, shaking your head weakly. âNo, you canâtââ
âThis is not up for debate,â Ambessa interrupted coldly, rising to her feet. Her imposing figure seemed to tower over you, her presence suffocating. âYou will be placed in isolation, cut off from all outside contact. Perhaps there, you will have time to reflect on your mistakes.â
Your motherâs hand gripped yours tightly, her knuckles white. She looked as if she wanted to speak, to protest, but no words came. Her lips pressed into a thin line, and you could see the conflict in her eyes.
Your father, however, barely reacted. He simply stood, his face betraying a flicker of surprise, but nothing more.
As Ambessa turned to leave, the Enforcers moved forward to restrain you once again. Panic clawed at your chest, your mind racing with the implications of her decree. You would be alone, cut off from everything and everyone you cared about. The thought of never seeing Ekko again made your heart ache, but then Margotâs words crept back into your mind.
He doesnât care about you. He only cares about Zaun. But did he?
You shook your head, trying to dispel the doubt, but it lingered like a shadow. The Enforcersâ hands were rough as they pulled you to your feet, and your motherâs grip slipped away.
âPlease,â you whispered, your voice cracking as you looked at her. âDonât let them do this.â
The hallway outside the council chambers was dimly lit, while there was golden glow coming from the chamberâs interior. The walls were lined with brass and marble, their polished surfaces catching faint reflections of the soldiers escorting you. Their grip was unyielding as they dragged you forward, your legs barely able to cooperate. Your body felt heavy, a dull ache spreading through your muscles, but the shimmer in your veins still faintly there. Almost like a silent threat waiting to be unleashed. Unpredictable.
Your mother walked alongside you, her hand clinging tightly to yours as if her touch alone could anchor you in this moment. Her face was pale, her eyes wide and glassy with unshed tears. Her lips trembled as she tried to speak, her voice choked by the emotions roiling within her.
âYou canât do this to them,â she pleaded to the soldiers, her words soft but desperate. âTheyâre not a dangerâtheyâre my daughter.â
The soldiers didnât respond, their expressions stoic. They marched forward with mechanical precision, their polished armor clinking faintly with each step. You glanced over your shoulder at your mother, her hand tightening around yours as if she sensed the impending separation.
âPlease,â she begged, her voice cracking. âLet meââ
Her words were cut off as the soldiers abruptly stopped, their grip on you tightening. One of them turned to her, his expression a mix of irritation and indifference.
âMaâam, please step back,â he ordered firmly.
âNo,â your mother said, her voice rising in defiance. âI wonât let you take my daughter!â
The soldierâs hand moved to pry hers away from yours, but she held on tighter, her knuckles white. Her desperation was palpable, each of her movements fueled by love and fear.
âMother,â you whispered, your voice hoarse. âItâs okayââ
However, it wasnât okay and it never would be. With being over dramatic that they would send someone to prison just for being a kind person. What kind of society was piltover, and how you couldâve been so blind.
The soldierâs patience snapped, and he moved to forcibly remove your motherâs hand from yours. The moment he yanked at her wrist, something inside you cracked. All the shimmer that had been bubbling beneath the surface roared to life, seeping in your veins. Heat spread through your body, the sensation almost euphoric.
Before you could think, your body moved on instinct. With a feral growl, you jerked free from the soldiersâ grasp. Your fists flew before you realized what you were doing, one striking the soldier nearest to you with a sickening thud. He staggered back, his helmet clattering to the ground, and you turned on the second soldier with the same ferocity. The shimmer gave you strength you didnât recognize, each movement fluid and devastating. Your fist collided with the second soldierâs chest plate, sending him stumbling backward into the marble wall with a dull clang. You could feel your heart hammering in your chest, the shimmerâs intoxicating power coursing through you. The sensation was overwhelming, your limbs felt lighter, faster, and yet there was a wildness to it all, a lack of control that frightened you even as it exhilarated you.
Turning back, you stumbled into your motherâs arms, clutching her tightly as though holding her could tether you to the world and keep the chaos at bay. Her arms wrapped around you immediately, her warmth and familiar scent grounding you.
âIâm sorry,â you whispered, your voice breaking as tears burned at your eyes. âI donât know if Iâll see you again.â
âYou will,â she said firmly, her hands gripping your face to make you look at her. Tears streaked down her cheeks, but her gaze was resolute. âIâll find a way. I swear to you.â
Her promise felt like a fragile thread in the storm raging inside you. You wanted to believe her, but every step youâd taken since leaving Zaun seemed to lead only to destruction and despair. The sound of heavy footsteps broke the moment, and you turned to see your father striding toward the chaos, his expression carved in stone. His cold eyes scanned the scene: the soldiers disarmed and you clinging to your mother. His lips twisted into a sneer of disgust.
âEnough of this display,â he snapped, his voice laced with venom. âYouâre embarrassing yourself, woman.â
Your mother flinched at his tone, her grip on you tightening as though she could shield you from his words. âTheyâre our daughter!â she shot back, her voice trembling with emotion. âHow can you stand there and act like they mean nothing to you?â
âThey donât,â your father said flatly, his gaze flicking to you as if you were a mere inconvenience. âTheyâve chosen to align themselves with filth, with criminals. Theyâve disgraced this family, and I will not tolerate it.â
His words hit you like a physical blow, and your grip on your mother faltered. The shimmer inside you pulsed violently, responding to your rising anger. You could feel it clawing at the edges of your mind, urging you to lash out, to fight back.
âI never chose this,â you spat, your voice trembling with rage. âYou abandoned me long before I ever set foot in Zaun.â
Your fatherâs eyes narrowed, and he stepped forward, pulling your mother away from you with a firm hand. She resisted, but his grip was unyielding, dragging her back as she cried out in protest.
âLet her go!â you shouted, lunging toward them, but the shimmerâs effects were waning, leaving your body weak and unsteady.
The soldiers had recovered by now, and they seized you once more, their grips like iron. You struggled, but the strength youâd felt moments ago was gone, replaced by an aching exhaustion.
âTake them away,â your father ordered coldly, his eyes never leaving yours.
âFather, pleaseââ
âYou are no child of mine,â he said, cutting you off.
His words echoed in your ears as the soldiers dragged you away, your motherâs cries fading into the distance. Your heart felt like it was shattering in your chest, each beat a reminder of how alone you were. All of the halls blurred around you as you were pulled toward your fate. The shimmerâs residual effects made the world feel surreal, the edges of your vision tinged with purple. Your thoughts spiraled, looping back to the same unbearable truth: no one was coming to save you.
And yet, somewhere deep inside, a flicker of defiance remained. The shimmer may have weakened, but it had left something behind. A burning determination not to let them break you. Never.
As you were led toward the transport that would take you to Stillwater, you clenched your fists, vowing to fight for every chance to escape, for every moment to prove them wrong. Whatever happened next, you would not give up. Not yet.
There were occasional crackle of old, sparking wires however the hideout was quiet. It shouldâve been comforting, this kind of silence, which was a rare occurrence. But it wasnât. It never would be, not with you missing.
Ekko sat hunched over his desk in the corner of the workshop, his head resting in his hands. The glow of the green light hanging above cast harsh shadows across his face, emphasizing the exhaustion etched into his features. He hadnât slept in days. He didnât have the luxury of rest, not while you were out there somewhere, alone. Or worse. Dead.
The thought of what could be happening to you tightened his chest. It wasnât like you to not come back without a word, and the reality of your disappearance had hit him like a freight train. He could still see you in his mind, sitting across the room from him with that subtle smirk you always wore when teasing him. You were always a little guarded, but he could read the warmth in your eyes when you let your guard down around him. That warmth haunted him now.
He slammed a fist down on the table, rattling a collection of discarded tools and blueprints. âDamn it,â he muttered under his breath.
The door to the hideout creaked open, and Scar stepped inside, his boots clicking softly against the floor. He didnât bother with pleasantries, he knew better than to try when Ekko was like this.
âAny word?â he asked without looking up, his voice clipped.
Scar hesitated. âNot good news.â
Ekko turned his head slightly, his eyes narrowing. âSpit it out.â
Scar exhaled, crossing his arms. âWord on the street is thereâs a bounty on their head. Big money, too. Dead or alive.â
For a moment, all he could hear was the blood pounding in his ears. He shot to his feet, his chair scraping loudly against the floor. âWhat?â His voice was a mix of disbelief and fury.
âYou heard me,â Scar said, his tone softer now. âAmbessa is the one behind it. And who else would want that good amount of money other that the chem-barons. So if I had to betâŠâ
âMargot,â Ekko growled, the name leaving a bitter taste in his mouth. He clenched his fists, his nails digging into his palms as anger surged through him.
âYeah,â Scar said. âSheâs got her hands in everything these days. If anyoneâs got the resources to snatch someone up, itâs her.â
Ekko couldnât think. He grabbed the edge of the desk and flipped it in one violent motion, sending tools, papers, and scraps of metal crashing to the floor. Scar didnât flinch. Heâd seen him lose his temper before, though never like this.
âThey took my friend!â he shouted, his voice cracking. âThey were safe, or at least I thought they were. I shouldâveââ He stopped himself, pacing back and forth like a caged animal.
âYou couldnât have known,â Scar said cautiously.
âI shouldâve kissed them when I had the chance,â Ekko muttered bitterly, his voice barely audible.
Scar raised an eyebrow, caught off guard by his admission. âWait, you meanââ
âDonât,â Ekko interrupted sharply, his jaw tightening. He didnât need his commentary, not now.
Scar sighed, running a hand through his hair. âLook, boss, I get it. You care about them. We all do. And tearing yourself apart isnât gonna bring them back. You need to focus.â
âI am focused,â Ekko snapped, his eyes blazing. âIâve been doing everything I can to find them. Iâve been working nonstop! But every second that goes by, they could beââ He couldnât bring himself to finish the sentence.
Scar stepped closer, his voice softening. âWeâll find them, Ekko.â
Ekko turned away from his second-in-command, his shoulders slumping. The weight of his responsibilities as a leader, as someone who cared about you more than he was willing to admit, was crushing him. He thought back to all the moments he couldâve told you how he felt. How he shouldâve told you. Now, he might never get the chance.
âDo we have any leads?â he asked after a long silence, his voice low.
âNothing solid,â Scar admitted. âBut Iâll keep digging. And so will the others.â
Ekko nodded, though his mind was elsewhere. If Margot had you, then time was running out. Heâd seen what the chem-barons were capable of, how they toyed with their captives before discarding them like garbage. The thought of you in their clutches made his stomach churn. He clenched his fists again, his knuckles white.
As Scar left to rally the others, Ekko sat back down amidst the chaos heâd created, staring at the mess of blueprints and tools scattered across the floor. He picked up a small gadget youâd been working on before you disappeared. It was a half-finished invention with wires sticking out at odd angles.
He turned it over in his hands, a lump forming in his throat. You were always so brilliant, so determined to make a difference in this broken city. How could he have let this happen to you?
âIâll find you,â he whispered to himself, his voice trembling. âNo matter what it takes, Iâll bring you back.â The promise felt hollow in the silence of the room, but it was all he had.
Smoky air filled around the abandoned factory that thick with decay, the scent of rust and mildew clinging to the walls like an oppressive fog. Inside, the dim light of a single hanging bulb swung precariously, casting jagged shadows across the cavernous space. Crates were scattered haphazardly, some half-opened to reveal pilfered goods and shimmer vials, their contents glowing faintly. Laughter and the clink of glasses echoed faintly, a mocking contrast to the somber silence of the buildingâs other corners.
Ekko crouched in the shadows near a crumbling brick wall, his mask concealing his expression but failing to hide the fury radiating from him. His staff was collapsed and strapped to his back, ready to be wielded at a momentâs notice. He had been tracking Margotâs operations for days, every lead bringing him closer to you. This factory, this desolate place reeking of despair, was supposed to be your last known location.
Inside, three men sat around a makeshift table fashioned from a wooden pallet and a few stacked crates. They were laughing uproariously, playing cards, and passing a bottle of cheap wine between them. Their demeanor was casual, careless. They had no reason to suspect that death itself was crouched a few feet away, waiting.
Ekkoâs fingers flexed over the edge of the wall, the faint creak of leather gloves breaking the ambient noise. The goonsâ laughter paused, one of them squinting into the shadows. âYou hear that?â he muttered, his hand hovering near his knife.
Ekko stepped into the light, his mask catching the faint glow of the overhead bulb. His posture was relaxed, almost casual, but his presence was anything but. The sight of him was enough to make the men freeze, their drunken haze evaporating in an instant.
âDonât move,â Ekko said, his voice low and cold, like the steel of a blade. He tilted his head slightly, a predatory gesture that sent shivers down their spines. âIâve got questions, and youâre going to answer them. If you try to run, you wonât get far.â
One of the men, the burliest of the three, leaned back in his chair with a forced laugh, trying to mask his unease. âQuestions, huh? You donât look like an enforcer, kid. What do you want from us?â
Ekkoâs fingers twitched, but he kept his composure. âWhere is she?â
âWho?â another man asked, feigning ignorance as he leaned forward, his greasy smile exposing yellowed teeth. âWeâve got a lot of âshesâ around here. Youâll have to be more specific.â
Ekko took a slow step forward, the sound of his boots deliberate and sharp against the concrete floor. âDonât play dumb. The girl you took. The one Margot had dragged out of Zaun. Where is she?â
The men exchanged glances, their bravado faltering under the weight of Ekkoâs presence. But it wasnât fear that made them hesitate, it was cruelty. Disgusting.
âOh,â the burly man said, a slow grin spreading across his face. âYou mean your little girlfriend. Didnât think a leader like you would be so sentimental. Whatâs it like, knowing Margotâs had her claws in her?â
Ekkoâs grip on his staff tightened, though he didnât extend it. Not yet. âSheâs not my girlfriend,â he said, his voice like gravel. â⊠Sheâs under my protection, which means youâve made a very big mistake.â
The third man, younger than the others and visibly more nervous, chuckled weakly. âMargot did more than protect her. Injected her full of shimmer. Changed her forever.â He leaned back, the chair creaking beneath him. âYou shouldâve heard her screaming. Begging for it to stop.â
Ekkoâs vision got blurred. He didnât remember crossing the room, but suddenly his hand was around the throat of the younger man, slamming him against the wall with a force that made the other two jump to their feet.
âI said sit down!â Ekko roared, his voice echoing through the factory like a thunderclap. The other two hesitated, their bravado crumbling as they realized just how dangerous this masked vigilante was. Slowly, they lowered themselves back into their seats, though their hands hovered near their weapons.
Ekko released the younger man, letting him crumple to the ground in a coughing heap. He turned his attention to the burly one, his body radiating barely contained rage.
âYou think this is funny?â Ekko asked, his voice low and menacing. âYou think I wonât rip this place apart to find her?â
âRelax, kid,â the burly man said, though his voice wavered. âYouâre not a killer. Everyone knows that.â
Ekko smirked beneath his mask, though there was no humor in it. âYouâre right. Iâm not. But I donât need to kill you to make you wish you were dead.â
With a flick of his wrist, he extended his staff and brought it down on the manâs hand with bone-shattering force. The sickening crunch was followed by a howl of pain, and the man clutched his mangled hand to his chest, tears streaming down his face.
âNow,â Ekko said, his voice icy. âWhere. Is. She?â
The younger man scrambled to his knees, babbling incoherently. âSheâsâsheâs gone! Taken to Piltover! The boss wanted to claim the prize money! Please, man, thatâs all I know!â
Ekko turned to him, his eyes burning with fury. âWhere in Piltover?â
âI donât know!â the man cried, his hands raised in surrender. âI swear, I donât know! They took her meet ambessa at the council meeting! Thatâs all we heard before they left!â
Ekko studied him for a long moment, then stepped back, his staff retracting with a metallic click. âIf I find out youâre lying,â he said coldly, âIâll be back. And you wonât like what happens next.â
He turned and disappeared into the shadows, his heart pounding in his chest. The factoryâs silence returned, but Ekkoâs mind was anything but quiet.
You were in Piltover. That much he knew. But the thought of what they might be doing to you, how far theyâd gone already, made his blood boil. He blamed himself for letting this happen, for not being there to stop it.
âIâll find you,â he muttered under his breath as he stepped out of the factory. âNo matter what it takes, Iâll bring you home.â
Shivering. The cold was the first thing you noticed. It crept into your bones and settled like a permanent ache, no matter how tightly you wrapped the thin blanket around yourself. The steel walls of your cell reflected nothing but your own hollow gaze, distorted in the warped metal like a ghost haunting itself. The dim, flickering light overhead buzzed incessantly, a monotonous drone that filled the silence.
Days bled into one another. Or were they weeks? Months? You couldnât tell anymore. Food was delivered regularly, the plates piling up untouched on the small tray by the door. Hunger gnawed at your stomach, but the idea of eating felt impossible. It reminded you of before, of when Ekko had kissed you, then left you in an agonizing limbo of uncertainty.
Back then, you had at least been free. You could wander through Zaun, trying to escape the heartache in the neon haze of the Undercity. Now, there was no escape. No Ekko. No freedom. Just you and the cold steel cage that held you prisoner.
You sat on the edge of the cot, knees pulled to your chest, your arms wrapped tightly around yourself. The shimmer coursing through your veins was a cruel reminder of what had been done to you. It pulsed like molten fire, burning and twisting your thoughts. Your body ached, muscles spasming unpredictably, leaving you weak and trembling.
The voices were the worst. They came in waves, some screaming accusations, others whispering taunts.
âHeâs forgotten you.â
âYouâre nothing but a burden.â
âThis is what you deserve.â
âShut up!â you yelled, pressing your palms to your ears. But they didnât stop. Instead, they multiplied.
âYouâll never see him again.â
âHeâs better off without you.â
âYouâre better off dead.â
Tears spilled from your eyes, hot against the cold air, as you rocked back and forth. You hated yourself for crying, for being weak, for breaking under their weight. But there was no one here to tell you otherwise. No one to hold you and say it would be okay.
You slammed the back of your head against the wall behind you, the dull thud grounding you for only a moment before the spiral began again. The sobs came harder now, wracking your body as you curled into yourself.
âLeave me alone,â you begged the voices, but they only laughed in response. And then, faintly, you heard something else.
âHey!â The voice echoed down the corridor outside your cell, distant but distinct. Your head snapped up, your breath hitching as you strained to listen.
âWhoâs there?â you croaked, your throat dry and raw from disuse.
The faint sound of footsteps grew louder, steady and purposeful. You squinted into the dim hallway, trying to make out the figure approaching the barred door.
âLeave me alone!â you cried again, shaking your head, convinced it was another hallucination. The shimmer had twisted your mind before; why would now be any different?
But the figure didnât fade. Instead, it became clearer. Taller. Familiar. The scent of machine oil and faint traces of herbs reached you before the figure did, stirring something deep in your chest. Your heart raced as the figure came closer, the flickering light catching on the unmistakable outline of his goggles, his scarf, the curve of his jaw.
âEkko?â you whispered, gripping the railing of your cot as you pulled yourself to your feet.
The figure stopped just beyond the bars, his hands curling around them as he leaned forward. âItâs me,â he said softly, his voice trembling with emotion.
âNo,â you said, shaking your head violently. âYouâre not real. Youâre justâjust another trick!â
âIâm real,â he said, his voice firmer now. âItâs me. See! Look at me.â
You stumbled forward, your legs weak and unsteady, until you reached the door. Your hands gripped the cold metal bars, your eyes searching his face for any hint of deception. But there was none.
âEkko,â you breathed, tears streaming down your cheeks.
His hand covered yours, warm and grounding. âHi,â he whispered, his voice thick with relief.
You choked on a sob, your knees buckling as you slid down to the floor. âYouâre really here?â
âIâm here,â he said, his other hand slipping through the bars to brush a stray tear from your cheek. âIn the flesh.â
You leaned into his touch, the warmth of his palm against your skin a stark contrast to the cold that had consumed you for so long. âI thoughtâŠâ You hiccupped, struggling to form the words. âI thought Iâd never see you again.â
âI thought the same,â he admitted, his voice breaking. âI wasnât going to stop until I found you.â
Your fingers tightened around his, desperate to hold onto him, to convince yourself that this wasnât just another cruel trick of your mind. âThey said⊠they said you forgot me.â
âNever,â he said fiercely, his hand gripping yours with equal intensity. âNot even for a split second.â
You buried your face against the bars, your shoulders shaking as the tears came harder. âIâm terrified, Ekko,â you whispered. âI donât know whatâs real anymore.â
âYouâre real,â he said, his forehead resting against yours through the bars. âIâm real. And Iâm getting you out of here.â
His words wrapped around you like a lifeline, anchoring you to the moment. For the first time in weeks, the voices fell silent. All you could hear was the steady beat of his heart and the unspoken vow in his gaze.
The air in Stillwater Hold was suffocating, thick with the acrid scent of damp metal and the faint tang of saltwater. The dim, flickering lights overhead buzzed like angry insects, casting ghostly shadows on the cold steel walls. Ekko stood outside your cell, gripping the large brass key in his hand, his knuckles white with tension. His mask obscured most of his face, but his eyes burned with fierce determination.
He glanced at you through the bars, his heart breaking at the sight of your frail form. You looked so much smaller than he remembered, your skin pale and your frame too thin. The shimmerâs effects were evident in the faint tremors in your hands and the shadows beneath your eyes, but there was still a spark in your gaze, a fragile but unyielding fire.
He took a steadying breath and inserted the key into the lock, his movements quick but not careless. The lock groaned in protest, a sharp metallic screech echoing in the corridor.
âHow did you get that?â you asked, your voice hoarse but laced with curiosity.
Ekkoâs lips twitched into a small smirk, though the weight of the moment kept it from fully forming. âLong story,â he said, his tone light but tinged with weariness. He didnât elaborate, and you didnât press him. You could tell from the shadows in his eyes that whatever heâd done to get here hadnât been easy.
He jiggled the key, muttering a low curse under his breath. âOf course, it has to be the trickiest damn lock in the whole place,â he murmured. You almost laughed at his frustration, the sound foreign and strange in this place of despair.
Finally, with a heavy clunk, the lock gave way, and the cell door creaked open. Before Ekko could fully process his success, you surged forward, throwing yourself into his arms with all the strength you could muster. The momentum knocked him off balance, and the two of you tumbled to the cold floor, his back hitting the ground with a dull thud.
âWhoa!â he exclaimed, the breath knocked out of him for a moment. But then his arms tightened around you instinctively, cradling you against his chest as though you might disappear if he let go.
You buried your face in the crook of his neck, your thin arms clinging to him desperately. âDonât let me go,â you choked out, your voice muffled against his shoulder.
âOf course not,â he whispered, his voice breaking as his hand slid up to cradle the back of your head. He felt how much lighter you were, how your ribs pressed against him like fragile bird bones. It was like holding a shadow of the person he remembered, and it made his chest ache with guilt and sorrow.
Your tears soaked into his scarf as you cried harder, your sobs wracking your frail body. âI thoughtâI thought Iâd never see you again,â you stammered, your words broken by hiccups. âI thought I was going to die here.â
Ekko tightened his hold on you, his jaw clenched so hard it ached. âNot a chance,â he said fiercely, his voice trembling despite his best efforts to stay strong. âYouâre not getting rid of me that easily.â
You pulled back just enough to look at him, your tear-streaked face inches from his. âI missed you so much,â you confessed, your voice barely above a whisper. âYouâre the only thing that kept me going.â
His breath hitched, and for a moment, he couldnât speak. The raw emotion in your voice cut through him like a knife, and he cursed himself for not finding you sooner. âWell no need to worry now,â he said finally, his voice low and steady. âIm never going to leave your sideâ
Your arms tightened around him as if you were afraid he might vanish. âIâm never letting you go again,â you vowed, your voice trembling but resolute.
âI wouldnât let you if you tried,â he replied softly, his lips brushing against your temple as he held you close.
As the flood of emotions began to ebb, a small, almost sheepish smile tugged at the corners of Ekkoâs mouth. âBy the way,â he said, his tone lightening just enough to catch your attention, âyour momâs got some stories.â
You blinked up at him, confused. âMy mom?â
âYeah,â he said, his eyes glinting with a mixture of amusement and exasperation. âXerah Arvino. Fancy name, by the way. Sheâs got opinions, especially about me.â
You let out a weak laugh, the sound surprising both of you. âWhat did she say?â
âOh, you know,â he said, his voice teasing. âShe mightâve mentioned how you feel about me. Called you out, really.â
Your cheeks burned, the warmth of embarrassment cutting through the cold that had settled in your body for so long. âShe didnât,â you mumbled, your voice barely audible.
âOh, she did,â he said, his smirk widening. âGuess she wanted to make sure I wasnât oblivious.â
Despite your exhaustion, you managed a small laugh. âSheâs always been⊠direct.â
âI like her,â Ekko admitted, his tone softening. âBut you, FireflyâŠâ He cupped your cheek gently, his thumb brushing away the lingering tears. âI knew. Iâve always known.â
Your heart skipped a beat at his words, the weight of them settling over you like a warm blanket. âYou did?â you asked, your voice barely above a whisper.
âHow could I not?â he replied, his voice filled with equal parts affection and disbelief. âYouâre my light in the dark. Always have been.â
The warmth of his gaze, the steadiness of his presence, filled the void inside you that had felt so bottomless. For the first time in what felt like forever, you believed you might actually be okay. You clung to him, burying your face in his chest as his hand stroked your back in soothing circles.
The inside of the air duct was surprisingly spacious, though its tight metallic walls didnât leave much room for comfort. The hum of machinery vibrated through the structure, and the faint scent of oil and rust lingered in the air. Ekkoâs hoverboard hummed softly beneath you, its energy signature blending seamlessly with the subdued mechanical symphony of Stillwater Hold.
âHold on tight,â Ekko whispered, his voice low and cautious as he steadied the hoverboard under both your weight and his. His body was warm against yours, shielding you from the cold draft in the duct. You obeyed, gripping his waist tightly, your heart racing. Not only just from the escape but from the proximity, his warmth body against your own.
The hoverboard glided smoothly, its propulsion barely making a sound as Ekko maneuvered it through twists and turns. He had memorized the map of this place with a precision that made you marvel at his resourcefulness. You couldnât help but wonder how many sleepless nights heâd spent planning this.
âAlmost there,â he said, his voice steady but his grip on the hoverboard controls firm. His tone, though calm, carried the tension of someone who knew there was no room for error.
After what felt like an eternity, the dim blue light of the exit vent came into view. Ekko slowed the board and leaned forward, pressing a hand against the vent cover. It creaked slightly, and for a moment, you both froze, your breaths held. But when no alarms blared, he pushed harder, and the vent cover fell away, clattering onto the concrete outside.
âReady?â he asked, glancing back at you.
You nodded, your heart pounding as adrenaline coursed through your veins. âLetâs go.â
With a quick adjustment, Ekko angled the hoverboard downward, the two of you sliding out of the duct and into the open air. The cold night breeze hit your face like a splash of water, a stark contrast to the stuffy air of the ducts. The stars twinkled above, unbothered by the chaos below, and for the first time in weeks, you felt the promise of freedom.
It took longer than expected to navigate back to your house. The ride was quiet, each of you lost in your thoughts, the weight of the escape pressing heavily on your shoulders. By the time you arrived, the familiar silhouette of the Arvino estate loomed before you, its elegant structure bathed in pale moonlight.
As you approached, panic flashed through your chest. âEkko,â you said, your voice urgent. âWhat if someone sees us?â
âThey wonât,â he assured you, his tone confident. âTrust me.â
He steered the hoverboard toward a thick cluster of vines that climbed the side of the house near your bedroom window. Landing softly on the grass, he helped you off the board and gestured toward the vines. âThink you can climb?â
You nodded, though your body was weak from weeks of confinement. His hands hovered near your waist, ready to catch you just in case you were to fall.
âIâve got you,â he said, his voice soft but steady.
With his help, you made your way up the vines, the rough texture scratching at your hands. When you finally reached the windowsill, you pushed it open and climbed inside, tumbling onto the familiar softness of your room. Ekko followed quickly, landing with a quiet grace that made you roll your eyes at his ease.
The moment your feet hit the carpet, a deep sigh of relief escaped your lips. You turned and launched yourself onto the bed, burying your face in the comfort of your pillow. The softness cradled you, and for the first time in what felt like forever, you felt safe. Kicking your feet excitedly, you let out a laugh that was equal parts relief and joy. âI canât believe we made it,â you said, your voice muffled by the pillow.
Ekko leaned against the wall, watching you with a soft smile. His arms were crossed, his frame relaxed for the first time all night. âYou look happy,â he said, his tone teasing but his eyes warm.
You turned over, sitting up on the edge of the bed, your feet dangling just above the floor. âHappy doesnât even begin to cover it,â you replied, your grin infectious. âI feel like I can breathe again.â
Ekko pushed off the wall and took a few steps toward you, his boots barely making a sound on the plush carpet. His smile remained, but there was something else in his eyes now. Love maybe?
Before you could process his movement, he leaned down, placing his hands on either side of you. The bed dipped slightly under his weight, and suddenly, he was so close you could feel the warmth radiating off him. His face was mere inches from yours, his breath brushing against your skin.
Your heart stuttered in your chest as his eyes traced your face, lingering on your lips. It was as if he was asking for permission without saying a word. âHmmâŠâ you whispered to yourself thinking about something, your voice barely audible.
He tilted his head slightly, his gaze flicking back up to meet yours. âYou okay?â he asked, his voice low, as though he was fighting to keep his composure.
You nodded, your breath catching in your throat. âYeah. I justâŠâ
âJust what?â he murmured, his lips quirking up in a small, teasing smile.
âNothing,â you said quickly, feeling heat rise to your cheeks.
But you couldnât look away, couldnât move, couldnât think beyond the way his presence seemed to fill the room. Slowly, as though giving you every chance to pull away, he leaned closer. The world seemed to fade into the background: the room, the night, the fear and chaos of your escape, until there was only him. Standing infront of you, leaning so close that you could feel him breathe.
âCan I?â he asked softly, his voice barely above a whisper.
Your lips parted, and you nodded, the motion almost imperceptible. And then his lips were on yours, gentle at first. But the moment your hand slid up to curl into his jacket, he deepened the kiss, his other hand moving to cup the side of your face. The weight of the world seemed to lift in that moment, replaced by a heat that consumed you, chased away the cold and the fear that had gripped you for so long.
Ekkoâs breath was warm against your lips, and when he closed the gap between you, it felt like the world tilted on its axis. The kiss was soft at first, an unspoken confession of everything the two of you had held back for the last few months. His hands found your waist, pulling you closer as if he needed to feel every inch of you against him to believe this was real. His lips moved with a desire that sent a shiver down your spine, his fingers gripping your hips as though he never wanted to let go. Your hands slid from his shoulders to his jawline, tracing the sharp angles of his face, grounding yourself in the reality of his handsome face.
"You're lips are so soft," he murmured against your lips, his voice low and thick with emotion.
"I could stay that about yours," you replied breathlessly letting out a small chuckle. Your forehead pressing against his as you both caught your breath.
His gaze locked onto yours, his eyes searching yours. "I don't think I'll ever get enough of this... of you," he admitted, his voice soft but passionate, as though he needed you to understand the depth of his feelings. Of how much he had felt for you ever since the two of you met.
You smiled, a shaky laugh escaping your lips. "Took you long enough to realize," you teased, though your tone was gentle, almost reverent.
His hands slid up your back, pressing you closer, and you could feel the rapid rhythm of his heartbeat through his chest. The air between you grew heavier, more charged, as the kiss became desperate. Your fingers threaded into his hair, tugging lightly, earning a low sound from him that sent a shiver racing down your spine. The need that had been simmering between you for so long now threatened to boil over, every touch and every breath. Adding to the fire between you further.
You shifted slightly, pressing yourself closer to him, and the sensation made your cheeks flush. His grip on your waist tightened in response, his other hand cupping the back of your neck as he angled your face to deepen the kiss. His movements were urgent but deliberate, like he was trying to memorize every second of this moment, every sound you made, every way your body fit against his.
Ekko's lips left yours, trailing along your jawline and down to your neck, his warm breath sending goosebumps over your skin. His fingers grazed the edge of your shirt, his touch featherlight but electrifying. "I love you," he murmured against your skin, his voice rough with restrained emotion. You tilted your head slightly, giving him better access as your hands slid down his back.
Ekko chuckled, leaning forward to press another kiss to your lips, this one slower and filled with something deeper. His hands never stopped moving, one tracing lazy circles on your back, the other brushing strands of hair from your face. This moment felt infinite, like the two of you had carved out a space that existed only for the two of you. It wasn't until the door suddenly swung open, flooding the room with light. Startled, you froze, your lips still brushing Ekko's, as you both turned to see Anya standing in the doorway. Her eyes widened as she took in the scene, and her hand flew to her mouth.
"Oh-oh my! I'm so sorry!" she stammered, her voice high-pitched with embarrassment. "I didn't mean to- I was justâ"
Before either of you could respond, she quickly turned around, flicking the light off as she shut the door behind her with a hurried, "I'll come back later!"
The room went back into the darkness, the only light coming from the moon outside. You and Ekko stared at the closed door for a second, stunned into silence. Then Ekko broke into a quiet laugh. "Well, that's one way to ruin the mood," he said, looking back at you with a teasing glint in his eyes.
You buried your face in his shoulder, groaning in embarrassment. "I am never going to hear the end of this from her," you muttered, your voice muffled.
He laughed again, the sound vibrating through you as he wrapped his arms tighter around your waist. "Hey, at least she knows you're in good hands," he joked, leaning back slightly to meet your eyes.
You rolled your eyes, but a smile tugged at your lips despite yourself. "This isn't funny, Ekko!" you protested, though your tone was far too soft to be convincing.
"Come on," he said, brushing his nose against yours. "It's a little funny."
You couldn't help but laugh then, the tension breaking as you leaned against him, your forehead resting on his. Closing your eyes, the only sound was that of the wind outside.
The early morning light filtered softly through the cracks in the curtains, painting the room in muted hues of gold and pink. The air was still, and there was peace. Ekkoâs arm draped securely around your waist as your head nestled against his chest. His warmth was a shield against the cold realities waiting just outside, and in his unconscious state, he held you as if you might disappear. The two of you had found sanctuary, one where, just for a few hours, the chaos of the world couldnât touch you. The chaos that was caused by just wanting to help others.
That illusion shattered when the door creaked open, followed by the hurried, uneven shuffle of footsteps. The sound pulled Ekko from his slumber instantly. His eyes snapped open, his instincts sharper than ever, and he propped himself up on one elbow just as Anya stumbled into the room. Her hand clutched her stomach, blood seeping through her fingers and staining her dress in it. The sight of her broke through the last remnants of your sleep, and you sat up, a chill running down your spine.
âThey⊠they took her,â Anya gasped, leaning heavily against the doorframe as she shut it behind her. Her voice was strained, trembling from pain and urgency. âAmbessa. She took your mother. They know⊠they know what she did.â
âAnya.â Ekko was on his feet in seconds, rushing to her side and steadying her before she could collapse. His voice was steady, but his eyes betrayed the panic swirling just beneath the surface. âWhat the hell happened? Youâre hurtâsit down. Let meââ
âNo!â Anya interrupted, her voice sharp despite the agony etched across her face. âThereâs no time. Theyâll come here next. You need to leave. Now.â
You stared at her, frozen in place. Her words echoed in your mind, but they felt distant, like they were coming from underwater. Your chest felt tight, your vision narrowing as her message sank in. Your mother. Taken. By Ambessa. It was too much, all of it crashing down like a wave threatening to drown you. You wanted to scream, cry, do something, but your body wouldnât cooperate. You felt yourself disassociating, retreating into the safety of numbness that you once knew because facing this reality head on was unbearable. As soon as you try to catch a break, thereâs always something ruining it. It was almost as if the universe didnât want to you be happy.
Ekkoâs voice broke through the haze. âWe canât just leave you like this!â he said, his frustration mounting as Anya winced and doubled over. He ripped a strip of cloth from his shirt and pressed it against her wound in an attempt to slow the bleeding. âAnya, stay with me. Where is she? Where did they take her?â
âI don't know,â Anya managed, her voice weakening as her knees buckled. âAmbessa⊠sheâs going to lock her away somewhere. She knows what your mother did, how she helped you.â Her gaze shifted to you, her eyes glassy but full of determination. âYou need to get out of here before they get here.â
You barely registered the words. The room around you seemed to spin, but you couldnât focus on anything. Ekko glanced over his shoulder, concern etched across his face as he noticed your vacant expression. âFirefly,â he called softly, but there was no use. Your mind was blocking him completely.
He guided Anya to sit on the edge of the bed, his hands searching for something to stem the bleeding. âWho else was taken?â he asked, his voice steady despite the urgency in his movements.
âJust her,â Anya whispered, wincing as Ekko pressed a cloth against her wound. âI tried to stop them. I swear I did.â She glanced at you then, her eyes filled with an fear that mirrored your own. âIâm sorry. I couldnât get to her.â
You heard the words, but they felt distant, like echoes in a tunnel. Your body moved on autopilot, standing and grabbing a bag, stuffing it with whatever essentials were nearby. Ekko was saying something to you, his voice low and firm, but the words seemed blurred together. It wasnât until he placed his hands on your shoulders and forced you to meet his eyes that you realized he was trying to snap you out of it.
âHey,â he said, his tone softening as he searched your face. âWeâre getting out of here. You with me?â
You nodded mechanically, though your gaze drifted past him, your focus slipping again. Ekko hesitated, his brow furrowing as he studied you, but there was no time to dig deeper. He turned back to Anya, his jaw tightening. âWeâll get her back,â he promised, though the weight of his words hung heavy in the air.
Anya sat there bleeding out with her hand holding her stomach, sadly there was too much blood. This was it for her. Your maid the one who youâve spend you entire childhood with. Playing dolls, hide and seek, how she would help you with your homework due to yours parents being busy with handling trade routes, businesses and being councilors. You thought of her as an older sister, and now she was gone. Dead. All thanks to Ambessa and your father. That worthless excuse of a father.
After everything that just happened, how were you suppose to enjoy anything. The journey back to the hideout was a blur to you, not even focusing on how you moved above everything. The streets of Piltover passed by in a haze of colors and shapes, the city slowly waking to another day. You stood behind Ekko on his hoverboard, your arms loosely wrapped around his waist, your body moving only when the board shifted beneath you. You didnât speak, didnât cry, didnât even flinch when the wind whipped against your face. The world felt muted, like you were trapped in a dream you couldnât wake from.
Ekko glanced over his shoulder at you more than once, he had a worried look on his face. He didnât say anything, every time he caught a glimpse of your glowing pink eyes and their unnatural light, it was a reminder of the shimmer coursing through your veins. He cursed under his breath, his mind racing for a way to bring you back to yourself, to pull you from the darkness that seemed to be consuming you. Slowly dragging you deeper into something he may never be able to help you get out of.
By the time you reached the hideout, the sun was fully up, casting harsh shadows across the abandoned buildings that surrounded the hideout. Ekko helped you down from the hoverboard, his hands lingering on your arms as he steadied you. You didnât resist, but you didnât acknowledge him either. He led you inside, the familiar smell filling the air, and guided you to the bed he had made for you when you first arrived.
âStay here,â he said gently, his voice barely above a whisper. âIâll be right back.â
You sank onto the bed without a word, your gaze fixed on the floor. Ekko watched you for a moment, his heart aching at the sight of you so lifeless, so unlike the fiery, vibrant person he had fallen for. He ran a hand through his hair, frustration and helplessness bubbling beneath his calm exterior.
Hours passed in silence. The hideout was quiet, the usual activity softened as the other firelights gave you and Ekko space. He stayed close by, tinkering with gadgets and pretending not to watch you out of the corner of his eye. You remained in the same spot, your hands folded in your lap, your eyes staring into the middle of the wall.
As night fell, Ekko finally broke the silence. âYou need to eat,â he said, setting a plate of food on the table near the bed.
You didnât respond, and he sighed, pulling a chair closer to sit beside you. âListen. I get it,â he said softly. âYou feel like itâs all slipping away. Like nothing you do will change whatâs happening. But sitting here, shutting downâthatâs not you. Thatâs not the fighter I know.â
His words stirred something deep within you, a faint flicker of the person you used to be. You turned to him slowly, your voice hoarse when you finally spoke. âWhat if I canât do it?â
Ekkoâs expression softened, and he reached out to take your hand in his. âYes you can,â he said with quiet conviction. âIâm with you every step of the way. We will get your mother back.â
For the first time since the morning, tears welled in your eyes, though they didnât fall. You nodded, the faintest hint of determination returning to your gaze. Ekko smiled, his grip on your hand tightening briefly before he stood. âPlease firefly. Get some rest,â he said.
When you finally lay down that night, it wasnât on the makeshift bed Ekko had made for you. You slipped under the covers of his bed, your presence wordless but clear. He hesitated for a moment before climbing in beside you, his arms wrapping protectively around you as you curled against his chest.
You were left in awe. The mural was breathtaking. Ekko had worked on it tirelessly for hours, the paintbrush an extension of his hand as he brought Anyaâs face to life on the wall of the hideout. Her eyes sparkled with the same determination you remembered, her smile gentle but firm. Behind her, he painted a swirl of warm, golden hues interspersed with fiery reds, symbolizing her unwavering courage even in the face of death. When he stepped back, covered in smudges of paint, he glanced at you with a quiet kind of sadness.
âShe deserved this,â Ekko said, his voice low. âShe gave everything to protect you. To protect whatâs left of your family.â
You nodded, unable to trust your voice. Standing before the mural, you felt the weight of her sacrifice pressing against your chest. A small, fragile part of you hoped that wherever she was now, she could see this tribute, feel the gratitude and respect that burned through your veins. The only family you had left and yourself and your mother. But how long would that last. What if she were to die, who else would you consider family? You surely wouldnât think of your father. After everything he did to you. No. It was pointless, you had no family.
Ekko turned to you after a long moment of silence, his expression hardening. âWe need to talk about rules,â he said firmly.
You looked up at him confused, as your mind left the empty void it was in. âRules?â
âYeah,â he said, stepping closer and resting his hands on your shoulders. âYouâre not to be left alone. Ever. If I canât be there, one of the Firelights will be with you. Itâs non-negotiable.â
The hardness in his tone left no room for argument, but you still tried. âEkko, I donât need a babysitterââ
âYes, you do,â he interrupted, his eyes boring into yours. âWhat happened with your mother? With Anya? That was a wake-up call. We canât afford to take risks anymore.â
You swallowed hard, his words sinking in. He was right, but the thought of being under constant watch gnawed at your independence. Still, the raw concern in his expression made it impossible to argue further. But knowing how you were, taking risks was going to hard.
âThe second rule,â Ekko continued, âis that we plan carefully before doing anything. No impulsive moves. No rushing in without a backup planâor two, or three. And if things go south, we need to be ready to evacuate the hideout.â
Your stomach twisted at the thought of leaving the hideout behind, but you knew it was a necessary precaution. Ekko wasnât just thinking about you, he was thinking about everyone who relied on him. All the children.
âI understand,â you said quietly, your fingers twitching at your sides. âIâll follow your lead.â
Ekko relaxed slightly, though his expression remained serious. âGood. Now, thereâs something I need to see.â
He motioned to the necklace you wore, the one he had given you weeks ago. You reached for it, pulling it from beneath your shirt, but your hands trembled too much to unclasp it. Wordlessly, Ekko stepped forward, his calloused fingers brushing against your neck as he worked the clasp.
There was a soft click of the necklace unlocking, making a shiver down your spine. Ekko lingered for a moment, his warm breath brushing against your temple before he pressed a gentle kiss there. His touch was grounding, pulling you out of the haze of fear and exhaustion that had consumed you.
âCome on,â he said, taking your hand and leading you back to his place. His workspace was cluttered with scraps of metal, gears, and tools, but the centerpiece was a large box that you hadnât noticed before. Ekko placed the necklace into a small slot on the box, and with a faint sound, the lid unlocked and slid open.
Inside, nestled in protective padding, was a sleek wrist device. It was compact but intricately designed, with glowing blue accents that pulsed faintly. You stared at it, unsure of what you were looking at.
âWhat is it?â you asked, glancing up at Ekko.
âItâs a prototype,â he explained, a hint of pride in his voice. âTook me months to design, and I nearly got myself blown up more times than Iâd like to admit, but I think itâs ready now.â
Concern flickered across your face. âBlown up? Ekkoââ
He held up a hand, cutting you off. âRelax, tâs fine. Iâve tested it. No explosions, I promise.â
You frowned but nodded, trusting him despite your apprehension. âWhat does it do?â
âItâs a utility device,â he said, picking it up and fastening it around your wrist. âItâs got a tracking function, a distress signal, and a shield generator for emergencies. If anything happens, you activate this, and Iâll find you. No matter what.â
You stared down at the device, the weight of it unfamiliar but oddly comforting. âYou did all this for me?â
Ekkoâs lips quirked into a small smile. âIâd do a lot more if it meant keeping you safe.â
He reached into the box again and pulled out a compact crossbow, its design as sleek and efficient as the wrist device. You stiffened at the sight, your stomach knotting with unease.
âI⊠Iâve never even held a knife, let alone a weapon,â you admitted, your voice barely whisper.
Ekko looked at you, his expression softening. He placed the crossbow gently on the desk and turned to you, taking both your hands in his. His thumbs brushed over your knuckles, grounding you as his dark eyes searched yours.
âI know this isnât easy,â he said softly. âAnd Iâm not asking you to become a fighter overnight. But things are different now. The people who did this to your mother, to Anya. They wonât stop. We need to make sure you can protect yourself if it comes down to it.â
You glanced down at the crossbow, then back at Ekko. His words made sense, but the thought of hurting someone, even in self-defense, sent a chill down your spine. Still, the determination in his eyes was infectious. He believed in you, and for him, you would try.
âOkay,â you said, your voice firmer this time. âTeach me.â
Ekkoâs smile widened, but there was a flicker of relief in his expression as well. âWeâll start slow,â he promised, picking up the crossbow and turning it over in his hands. âItâs lightweight and compact, so itâs easy to handle. And itâs more for precision than brute force, which suits you.â
You raised an eyebrow, smirking slightly despite yourself. âSuits me? You saying Iâm weak?â
Ekko chuckled, shaking his head. âNah, just saying youâre quick. Smart. You donât need brute force when you can outthink your opponent.â
He handed you the crossbow, guiding your fingers to the proper grip. His hands were steady as they covered yours, showing you how to aim and adjust the tension on the string. You couldnât help but notice the warmth of his touch, the way his focus never wavered.
âBreathe,â he murmured, his voice low and soothing. âThatâs the key. Steady your hands, focus on your target, and breathe.â
You tried to follow his instructions, your fingers trembling slightly as you raised the crossbow. It felt strange in your hands, foreign and dangerous, but Ekkoâs presence steadied you.
After a few practice movements, Ekko took a step back, watching you with a mix of pride and caution. âYouâll get the hang of it,â he said, crossing his arms. âAnd when you do, no oneâs gonna mess with you.â
You set the crossbow down carefully, exhaling a shaky breath. âThank you,â you said, meeting his gaze. âFor everything. I donât know how Iâll ever repay you.â
Ekko shook his head, stepping closer until he was right in front of you. âYou donât have to repay me,â he said quietly. âJust promise me youâll stay alive. Thatâs all I need.â
The weight of his words hung between you, heavy with unspoken emotion. You nodded, swallowing hard. âI promise.â
Satisfied, Ekko reached out and tucked a loose strand of hair behind your ear. His touch lingered for a moment before he pulled back, gesturing to the desk. âWeâll go over more later. For now, you should relax.â
You nodded, suddenly aware of how exhausted you felt. The events of the past few days had taken their toll, and your body ached for sleep. Ekko led you to the corner of the hideout where your shared bed was now set up. You were tired for days, beyond exhaustion. Surprisingly now, you liked to sleep. Maybe, it was because of your lack of energy.
As you lay down, Ekko pulled a blanket over you, his movements careful and deliberate. He sat on the edge of the bed, watching you with an intensity that made your chest tighten.
You reached out, taking his hand in yours. âStay with me,â you whispered.
Ekko hesitated for only a moment before nodding. He kicked off his boots and slid under the blanket beside you, wrapping an arm around your waist. His warmth was comforting, and as you rested your head on his chest, you felt the steady rhythm of his heartbeat.
Zaun. The streets were always treacherous with now people lingered around. Dangerous people. You were walking back from a short supply run as the sun began to set over the horizon, the weight of the crossbow slung across your back almost forgotten as your mind wandered. Ekkoâs words about being cautious echoed in your head. Always make a plan, always think before you act. He had drilled that rule into you countless times, but none of it mattered when you turned a corner and saw the scene in front of you.
A little girl, no older than seven, was backed against a crumbling wall, her tiny frame trembling. Two men loomed over her, their gruff laughter echoing down the alley as they taunted her. She clutched a stuffed toy to her chest, her eyes wide with terror. One of the men reached for her arm, and without thinking, you moved.
Your crossbow was in your hands before you realized it, the familiar weight grounding you. The shimmer coursing through your veins dulled your hesitation, sharpening your focus. The first arrow struck the shoulder of the man closest to the girl, a sickening thud silencing his laughter as he staggered back with a howl of pain. The second arrow found the leg of the other man, sending him crumpling to the ground. You moved quickly, reloading and taking aim again, though neither man seemed eager to continue.
âGet out of here,â you growled, your voice cold and unyielding. The men scrambled to their feet, one limping heavily as they disappeared into the shadows without a backward glance.
The girl was still pressed against the wall, her tiny hands clutching her stuffed toy so tightly her knuckles were white. You knelt down in front of her, setting the crossbow aside. âHey,â you said gently, trying to soften your tone. âItâs okay now. Theyâre gone.â
Her eyes darted to the weapon lying on the ground, then back to your face. âYou⊠you hurt them that,â she whispered, her voice barely audible.
You swallowed hard, the weight of what youâd done sinking in. âI had to,â you said softly. âThey werenât going to leave you alone. Are you hurt?â
She shook her head, her grip on the toy loosening slightly. âNo. Thank you, miss lady.â
Before you could respond, the sound of footsteps behind you made you tense. You turned to see Ekko, his expression a mixture of relief and frustration. Of course, he would show up. He always did. You noticed the small device in his hand and realized with a sinking feeling that it was a tracker. He must have known the second you fired the crossbow.
âWhat the hell were you thinking?â he demanded, his voice low but firm as he approached you. âI told you to think before you act, to make a plan.â
You looked down at the girl, then back at Ekko. âShe needed help,â you said simply, your voice steady despite the guilt creeping in. âI couldnât just stand there.â
Ekko sighed, rubbing the back of his neck as he crouched beside you. His gaze softened when he looked at the girl. âHey there,â he said gently. âWhatâs your name?â
She hesitated, her eyes flickering between the two of you. âMila,â she said quietly.
âWell, Mila,â Ekko said, offering her a small smile. âYouâre safe now. No one else is going to hurt you.â
The girl nodded, her shoulders relaxing just a little. You reached out and brushed a strand of hair out of her face. âDo you have any family, Mila? Anyone we can take you to?â
Her expression darkened, and she shook her head. âMy mom⊠she died a long time ago. And my dadâŠâ She trailed off, her voice cracking. âHe left. He didnât want me.â
By hearing those words. Gosh it hit you like a punch to the gut, your breath catching in your throat. You glanced at Ekko, who was watching you carefully, his brow furrowed. He knew what you were thinking. Your father had abandoned you too, leaving you to fend for yourself in a world that was cruel and unforgiving. Milaâs pain was all too familiar to you.
You cleared your throat, trying to push the memories away. âMila,â you said softly, âwould you like to come with us? We have a safe place where you can stay.â
Her eyes widened, and for a moment, she looked like she didnât believe you. âReally?â
âReally,â Ekko said, his voice warm and reassuring. âYouâll be safe with us. I promise.â
Mila hesitated, then nodded, clutching her toy tightly. âOkay.â
You helped her to her feet, glancing at Ekko as the three of you started back toward the hideout. His expression was unreadable, but you could feel the tension radiating off him. He waited until Mila was a few steps ahead before leaning closer to you.
âWe need to talk about this later,â he murmured, his tone serious but not unkind.
âI know,â you replied, your voice barely above a whisper. âBut Iâd do it again.â
Ekko sighed but didnât argue. Instead, he reached out and gently squeezed your hand. The gesture was enough to remind you that, no matter how angry or worried he might be, he was still on your side.
When you arrived at the hideout, the Firelights greeted Mila with curiosity and kindness, their youthful energy helping to put her at ease. You showed her to a quiet corner where she could rest, and Ekko gave one of the older Firelights instructions to keep an eye on her. Then he turned to you, his expression serious.
âCome with me,â he said, leading you to his workshop. Once inside, he closed the door and leaned against the closed door, crossing his arms. âWe need to talk.â
âI know,â you said, sitting down on the edge of the workbench. âI broke the rules. I acted without thinking. But, Ekko, sheâs just a kid. I couldnât let them hurt her.â
âI get it,â he said, his voice softer now. âI do. But you canât just jump into situations like that without a plan. What if theyâd had weapons? What if theyâd hurt you?â He paused, running a hand through his hair. âI canât lose you again y'know.â
The vulnerability in his voice made your chest tighten. You stood and crossed the room, placing a hand on his arm. âYou wonât,â you said firmly. âBut I canât stand by and do nothing when someone needs help and you know that. Its not who I am.â
Ekko nodded slowly, his eyes meeting yours. âFrom now on, you need to be careful. Promise me that will you.â
âI promise,â you said, and this time, you meant it.
Ekko pulled you into a tight embrace, holding you close to his body. He really did love hugging you. Itâs not like you minded anyways, the way he hold you every time he did was endearing.
Shining bright through the sun was heavy as it seeped through the windows. Casting warm beams of light onto the small play area you and Ekko had carved out for the kids. Mila was a different child than the one you had brought in a few days ago. Her cheeks were fuller, a healthy glow replacing the pallor of malnourishment. Her hair, now free of dirt and tangles, was neatly braided in a style one of the older Firelights had taught her. She wore clean, simple clothes that fit her nicely, and the sight of her beaming smile was enough to make your heart swell. You began to love her as a little sister. One who needs to be protected from the harsh world.
You and Ekko sat cross-legged on the ground, surrounded by a mix of giggling children who were eager to show off their toys as they invent new games. Mila gravitated toward you, her tiny hands tugging at your sleeve as she laughed at something one of the kids said. Her joy was infectious, and for the first time, you felt a lightness in your chest that had been absent since everything began. One that only appeared when you would share special moments with ekko, or in the past when you would make memories with your mother and anya.
âWatch this!â Mila declared, holding up a toy dragon that one of the Firelights had carved from wood. She mimicked the sound of its roar, moving it around in exaggerated loops. The other kids burst into laughter, and so did you, unable to resist the sheer enthusiasm radiating from her.
âYouâre getting pretty good at that,â Ekko teased, leaning back on his hands as he watched her antics. âMaybe we should make you our official storyteller.â
âReally?â Milaâs eyes widened, the idea filling her with excitement. âCan I, can I?â
âOf course,â you said with a soft laugh, though your voice came out a bit sharper than you intended. Mila didnât seem to notice, but Ekko shot you a quick, concerned glance. The shimmer was still in your system, subtle but nevertheless present. It would sometimes heighten your senses, making you jittery. It was like holding a storm inside you, and no matter how hard you tried, it bled through the cracks sometimes.
Mila tugged your sleeve again, pulling your attention back to her. âWhatâs your favorite story? I can tell it to everyone!â
You hesitated, the warmth in your chest flickering. âMaybe later,â you said, your tone sharper than before. âLetâs keep it quiet for now.â
Mila frowned, her brow furrowing slightly. âBut weâre not being loudââ
âI said keep it down!â The words snapped out of you before you could stop them, your voice harsh and biting. The shimmer roared in your veins, amplifying your frustration to a level that felt almost unbearable. Mila flinched, her toy dragon slipping from her hands to the ground. The head of the dragon broke from its body, and you watched as it rolled towards your feet. The other kids fell silent, their wide eyes darting between you and the little girl.
Milaâs bottom lip quivered, her hands trembling as she reached for the dragon. âI-Iâm sorry,â she whispered, her voice barely audible. She clutched the toy to her chest and bolted from the group, tears streaming down her cheeks.
Silence. It was suffocating. The other kids stared at you, their expressions a mix of confusion and fear. Ekko was on his feet in an instant, his eyes blazing as he grabbed your arm and pulled you aside. Away from prying eyes.
âWhat the hell was that?â he hissed, keeping his voice low but firm. âSheâs a kid, and you just yelled at her like she did something awful.â
âI didnât mean to,â you said quickly, guilt clawing at your chest. âItâs the drugâitâs messing with my head. I didnât mean to scare her.â
âYou need to get it under control,â Ekko said, his tone softening but still stern. âThe poor girl looks up to you. She trusts you. You canât let the drug make you into someone she could afraid of.â
You nodded, your throat tightening as you looked in the direction Mila had run. âIâll talk to her,â you said quietly. âIâll make it right, okay?â
Ekko nodded, his hand lingering on your arm for a moment before letting go. âYouâd better,â he said, though his voice held more concern than anger. âShe needs you to be better than this.â
Taking a deep breath, you followed the faint sound of Milaâs sniffles to a secluded corner of the hideout. She was curled up on the floor, her back to the wall and her headless toy dragon clutched tightly in her arms. Her small shoulders shook with quiet sobs, and the sight made your chest ache.
âMila,â you said softly, kneeling down a few feet away from her. âIâm sorry.â
She didnât look at you, her face buried in the dragonâs wooden wings. âYou yelled at me,â she said, her voice muffled but heavy with hurt. âI didnât mean to be loudâŠâ
âI know,â you said, your voice thick with regret. âI wasnât angry at you, Mila. Iâm just⊠not feeling like myself today but hatâs not an excuse. You didnât do anything wrong, and I shouldnât have yelled. Iâm so sorry for scaring you.â
Mila peeked up at you, her tear-streaked face breaking your heart. âYou promise youâre not mad?â she asked hesitantly.
âYes i promise you that,â you said, reaching out slowly. She didnât pull away when you rested a hand on her knee. âYouâve been so brave and strong since you came here, Mila. Iâm really proud of you. And Iâm really, really sorry for making you feel like you did something wrong.â
For a moment, she didnât say anything. Then, slowly, she reached out and placed her tiny hand on top of yours. âOkay,â she said softly. âI forgive you.â
Relief flooded through you, and you pulled her into a gentle hug. She wrapped her arms around your neck, her headless toy dragon squished between you. âYouâre my favorite grown-up,â she whispered, her voice so quiet you almost didnât hear it.
You laughed softly, the sound tinged with emotion. âWell, youâre my favorite storyteller,â you said, pulling back just enough to see her face. âHow about we go back and tell the others a story? You can even make one up about a scary headless dragon.â
Milaâs eyes lit up, her earlier sadness melting away. âOkay!â she said, her smile returning in full force. âBut you have to help me make it really good.â
âDeal,â you said, standing and taking her hand. As you walked back to the play area together, you glanced over your shoulder to see Ekko watching from a distance, a small smile tugging at his lips. As you stood beside mila and the other kids, you somehow managed to glue the head back to the headless dragon. Now it wasnât headless anymore. Mila looked up at you, thanking you for fixing her dragon. A smile crept up her face. Even thought it was a small gesture of kindness after you made her cry, she thought it was a big deal. It was precious how mila would think even the smallest things were the best thing. Adorable.
You definitely knew that you still had work to do on yourself. To control your emotions and impulses but as well as being a person Mila could to look up to. However as her laughter rang out again, you felt a spark of hope that maybe, just maybe, you could be that person after all.
But was it true? The lines between reality and fiction began to converge. It all made sense as the waterfallâs thunder filled your ears. You stood motionless on the ledge, staring at the mirror-like surface of the lake below. Your reflection rippled faintly, distorted by the spray of water. You didnât see yourself as you were, but only what you feared you had become. Milaâs tear-streaked face flashed in your mind, her sobs echoing louder than the rushing water. The guilt felt unbearable, pressing against your chest like a weight you couldnât lift. Your trembling fingers brushed against the edge of the rocky ledge, the cold biting into your skin. A sob escaped your throat as tears fell freely, mingling with the mist around you. You apologizing to mila and fixing her headless dragon was all fake. Your mind imagined it. So right now mila was sad, hiding in a corner as she cried. What a horrible person i am.
âMaybe theyâd all be better off without me,â you whispered to the air, your voice trembling as it was swallowed by the roar of the falls. The words left a bitter taste in your mouth, but you couldnât stop the thoughts racing through your mind. You had tried, tried so hard to fit in, to make Zaun feel like home. Yet every mistake, every outburst reminded you that you didnât belong. The Firelights were kind, but they didnât understand you. Mila didnât deserve your anger, and Ekko didnât deserve the chaos you continued to bring into to his life. You stepped closer to the edge, the rocks shifting beneath your feet.
The world seemed to narrow as you took another step forward, your gaze fixed on the lake below. You fell silently, the cold air rushing past you before the icy water enveloped you like a second skin. The cold was shocking at first, stealing your breath, but then everything went quiet. You sank deeper, the surface growing distant as the weight of the water pressed in from all sides. The noise in your head didnât stop, though. It only grew louder, something you couldnât escape.
Images of your mother flickered in your mind, her smile fading like a dream you couldnât quite hold onto. Anyaâs laughter echoed, only to be drowned out by the sharp voice of your father. Youâre not good enough. You never will be. The words clung to you like chains, dragging you deeper into the lake. You thought of Piltover and how it had abandoned you. Whereas with Zaun, you were nothing more than an outsider. Even here, even with Ekko, you felt like a burden. The water cradled you, its silence deceptive as your body floated aimlessly. You closed your eyes, hoping for darkness, for peace, but it didnât come. Nothing was ever easy for you.
Instead, the world exploded in sound, a loud splash followed by muffled movements cutting through the water. You opened your eyes to see a figure diving toward you, moving with urgency. Ekko. His form was unmistakable even through the distorted water. He was always saving you after you do something stupid. How long would this last? When would it be the last time that he would save you?
His arms wrapped around you, pulling you upward with a strength you couldnât resist. You felt the rush of cold air as he broke the surface, his grip on you tightened as he dragged you to the shore. His breaths came heavy, his movements frantic as he laid you down on the damp grass.
âWhat the hell were you thinking?â he demanded, his voice a mix of anger and desperation. He crouched over you, his hands gripping your shoulders as his eyes searched your face. âDo you even understand what you just did?â
You turned your head away, unable to meet his gaze. âIâI didnât mean for you to find me,â you said weakly, your voice trembling. âI just⊠I couldnât take it anymore. Iâm tired of feeling like this.â
âThatâs not an excuse!â His voice cracked, his frustration palpable. âYou donât get to just give up! And leave me like that.â He paused, taking a shaky breath before softening his tone. âDamn it.â
A small voice broke the tense silence. âWhy did you do it?â Mila stood a few feet away, her eyes wide and tearful as she clutched her arms tightly. âDid I do something wrong? Was it because of me?â
Your chest tightened, the guilt suffocating as you shook your head. âNo, Mila. No. It wasnât your fault,â you said, your voice barely above a whisper. âI was wrong. I let my anger get the best of me, and I hurt you. Iâm so sorry.â
Mila hesitated, her small hands twisting nervously in front of her. âYou said you cared about me. But then you yelled⊠I thoughtâŠâ Her words trailed off, her voice breaking.
Ekko placed a hand on her shoulder, his expression softening. âItâs not your fault, Mila,â he said gently. âSometimes grown-ups do stupid things when theyâre hurting. But that doesnât mean we stop caring. Youâve gotta trust me on that.â He glanced at you pointedly, his meaning clear.
You sat up slowly, your body trembling from the cold. âIâm sorry,â you repeated, this time to both of them. âI was selfish, and I wasnât thinking about what it would do to you. I never wanted to hurt either of you.â
Mila stepped closer, hesitating before reaching out to touch your hand. âAre you gonna be okay now?â she asked softly, her voice still uncertain.
You nodded, tears threatening to fall down your face as you squeezed her hand gently. âIâll try to be. I promise.â
Ekko sighed, his shoulders relaxing slightly as he helped you to your feet. âWe need to find something to help you with this,â he said firmly. âI need the old you back. I want my firefly back.â
There was no way that a cure for shimmer exists in Zaun. And even if it did, even if someone had it, they wouldnât give it up that easily. Not without a fight. Maybe you had to deal with your new life, the one were you were unstable and unpredictable. How can someone love a person like this. How can someone do deserving of something better like ekko deserve a person like you?
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# âSUDDENLY I SEE, THIS IS WHAT I WANNA BEâ ââ .⊠( batboys w a zoologist/someone whoâs very passionate about animals!reader âౚৠ)
dollish note âౚà§: okay so this was a request by anon (here) and alsoo Iâve been like kinda gone as like much as I said Iâd be back in march I thought that my days like have this gap in them where I can write for you guys so I thought why not entertain + carry my life yk? Anywayss enjoy ! <3 tags: (batboys x fem!reader)
© dollishmehrayan â ( all rights reserved to me. These works cannot be reposted, translated, or modified. Thank you for understanding dollies! )
DICK GRAYSON ââ .âŠ
The Supportive Golden Retriever Boyfriendâą
Dick absolutely adores how passionate you are about animals. He finds it so endearing that you can go on a 20-minute tangent about why capybaras are the ultimate chill kings of the animal world literally (we love a supportive king đȘ)
Heâll sit there, chin propped in his hand, watching you with literal heart eyes as you explain fun animal facts. "Did you know that sea otters hold hands while they sleep so they donât drift apart??â, he just responds with: "Babe, thatâs literally us."
When you take him to the zoo, heâs your number-one cheerleader. Heâs the guy hyping you up when you go full National Geographic mode. "Damn, look at my girl go! Bet the zookeepers are taking notes."
But also⊠chaos. You tell him about a random animal, and the next day, you get a text:
Dick: Babe, can we get a capybara?
You: No???
Dick: I already named him Carl. (Bad at name giving)
100% buys you animal plushies. You say you love red pandas? Boom. Heâs bringing you a giant red panda plush the size of a toddler.
If he catches you watching animal documentaries at 2 AM, he will absolutely join in. You both end up getting emotionally attached to some random meerkat family.
JASON TODD ââ .âŠ
The âPretends Not To Care But Absolutely Doesâ Boyfriend
At first, he acts like itâs no big deal. You start talking about octopus intelligence, and heâs like, âYeah, cool.â But then heâs actually listening.
Youâll randomly hear him drop animal facts he learned from you in casual conversation. "Did you know crows can recognize human faces?" And then he just walks away like he didnât just absorb your entire personality.
You try to take him to the zoo. He acts reluctant. "Babe, Iâm too old for this." But the second he sees the wolves? Yeah, heâs standing there for 20 minutes, fully invested.
Secretly loves big cats. If a tiger so much as looks at him, heâs like, âYeah, thatâs my guy, he fw me.â
Jason will 100% fake annoyance when you go on animal rants, but heâd never actually tell you to stop. Heâll just shake his head, smirking. "Babe, youâre literally an unpaid Discovery Channel host."
But if anyone ELSE tries to make fun of your animal obsession? Oh, heâs fighting them. "What, you donât think learning about the mating habits of penguins isnât interesting? You go right out the door before I drag you to it.â
TIM DRAKE ââ .âŠ
The âActually, This Is Fascinatingâ Nerd Boyfriend
Tim is so invested in your knowledge. He treats every animal fact you tell him like itâs groundbreaking news.
"Wait, wait, explain how ants communicate again?" You blink. "Tim, Iâve told you this three times." "Yeah, but I need to visualize it properly."
Will absolutely go down research rabbit holes just so he can talk to you about animals on your level. You wake up to a text at 3 AM:
Tim: So technically, a shrimp can punch as fast as a bullet?
You think heâs tired when you take him to the zoo? Nope. Heâs taking notes. He will challenge the tour guide with additional facts.
If youâre working on any zoology projects, heâs your biggest supporter. Need funding for animal conservation? Heâs pulling Wayne Enterprises money and some drake money too.
One time, you found him watching bird videos for fun. When you called him out, he just said, "They're cool, okay?"
DAMIAN WAYNE ââ .âŠ
The âOf Course, My Belovedâ Boyfriend
Listen. This is his dream relationship. Animals? Passion for them? Youâre his soulmate LOCKEDDD INNNNN.
Will literally test you. "What do you know about Tibetan mastiffs?" If you pass? Immediate respect. If you donât? "Tt. I will educate you."
You and him are unstoppable in animal debates. No one dares question your combined knowledge. Someone tries to say "cats donât have feelings"? You and Damian tag-team destroy them.
You 100% have âwho loves animals moreâ competitions. "I saved a hawk yesterday." "Tt. I rehabilitated a stray cat." "I named a baby goat after you." "...Beloved."
Dates? Animal sanctuaries. Zoos. Wildlife reserves. This man is taking you on the most eco-friendly, animal-filled dates ever.
One time, you found him talking to a cow. You swear it understood him. (Batcow ofc đââïž)
BRUCE WAYNE ââ .âŠ
Very thoughtful husband
Secretly impressed by your knowledge. You caught him actually listening when you explained how dolphins have names for each other.
Would 100% fund a wildlife conservation project just because youâre passionate about it.
(Fuck this man fr I donât have ideas for himđ„Č)
in which neither of you take a⊠soft approach, to announcing your secret relationship
todoroki didnât expect for it to go the way it did. it was a normal training day when suddenly he turned only to see you straight on your back, air knocked out of you from the move bakugo had just pulled on you. he lost his shit.
suddenly there he was, right next to you as bakugo found himself as a human ice cube. he gently pulled you up and dusted you off.
âyou okay, love?â he gently placed his hand on your cheek.
âshoto, while i appreciate the gesture,â you slowly pushed his hand down, âweâre in training and itâs bound to happen. you canât ice anyone just because theyâre doing their assignment.â
âi know, but i dont care. youâre my girlfriend nobody has the right.â he simply shrugged.
a few gasps were heard, they turned their heads to find an unintended audience. the entire class.
âyouâre together?!â everyone yelled.
âHALF AND HALF BASTARD!â
âĄÌ
bakugo wasnât exactly discrete, especially when it was agreed you guys werenât going to hide it anymore. it was a nice sunday morning when he came down,
only to see you wearing his favorite shirt and sweatpants that had been missing for days.
there you sat next to mina and tsu, they took took notice of the shirt but decided not to say anything.
that was until mina couldnât hold it anymore, âarenât those bakugos clothes?â you looked down, taking notice that you forgot to change before coming down, âuhhh-â
âyeah, arenât those my fucking clothes?â you heard from behind you. you jumped up and darted for an escape, only to be grabbed by the hips and pinned to his front.
âyou know iâve been looking for my shit for days now, right?â he whispered in your ear.
you wordlessly shook your head, words gone and heart beating a million times a second. he knew exactly how to get a rise out of you.
your cheeks flushed as he turned you around to face him, before he could see your face you quickly shoved your face in his chest.
he chuckled, âyouâre so fucking lucky youâre pretty.â
âEEEEKKKK!â they both looked over to see mina and both squads starring at them with wide eyes, âYOU GUYS ARE DATING?!â
âĄÌ
sero would do it in a funny way, youâd be arguing about some stupid shit in the common room. you, mina, and jirou would be ripping their asses for doing some dumb shit.
the girls were too heated to even realize you were yelling at sero, except for kaminari and kirishima.
they looked at you both strangely, which caught the attention of the girls. and shortly enough it was only you yelling at sero.
âyouâre so fucking dumb! i swear you give me a headache every single goddamn day, yet i-â you were soon cut off by lips touching yours gently, all anger seemed to diminish and your brain went fuzzy.
when you both pulled away his hands still remained on your face, âyâknow youâre so pretty when youâre angry?
âoh my god?!â
âĄÌ
denki would find it fun to mess with everyone, heâd go on and on about this mystery girlfriend.
âsheâs soooo prettyâ
âi want her so bad right nowâ
âshe thinks iâm funnyâ
âguys where should i take her for dinner?â he whispered, hoping not to attract your attention from the girls.
âSHUT THE FUCK UP DUNCE FACE WE KNOW SHES NOT REAL!â bakugo screamed, getting everyoneâs attention.
âYES SHE IS!â denki yelled back.
âTHEN WHO WHOM?â he paused, âHM?â
âme.â
everyone snapped their head towards you, full of shock.
you lazily walked over to him and wrapped your arms around his neck from behind, laying a small kiss on his cheek.
âWHAT?!â
âĄÌ
kirishima would do it completely on accident while admirning you.
everyone was stuck on their own task of the day, beating their opponents ass.
you specifically were never one to back down, something kirishima absolutely adored about you. you were a hardass and stubborn as a mule, sometimes biting him in the ass.
you were now going up against mina, and odds werenât in her favor, bless her soul. you were a tough girl. and as of right now you had her in a chokehold on the ground.
kirishima stood there in awe.
not because his friend was getting her ass beat, but because his girlfriend was so, manly.
âdamn, thatâs my girlfriend.â
everyone snapped their heads to him,
âwhat.â
âĄÌ
midoryia wasnât very sneaky about it in the first place.
so when the class woke up one sunday and found you two cuddling on the couch after a failed movie night, it really was no surprise.
instead of being abrupt and waking you guys up (like bakugo offered) they layer a blanket on the top of you two. nicely and gently.
âtheyâre a cute couple.â tsu commented.
âoh for sure,â sato started, âtheyâre both hard working and very very sweet.â
âthis is unacceptable on school property though-â
a joint âshut up iidaâ ensued.
đŹđźđŠđŠđđ«đČ: you're less than pleased to be marrying the arrogant noble your parents arranged for you. On the day of your wedding, you cross paths with a pirate who seems keen on ruining your big day, and you couldn't be more thrilled.
đ©đđąđ«đąđ§đ : luffy x fem!reader
đ°đšđ«đ đđšđźđ§đ: 8k
đđšđ§đđđ§đ: minor alabasta spoilers, arranged marriage, I kind of went ham on the descriptions and readers backstory in general, violence, mother issues
đ/đ§: *arises from where i fell off the face of the earth and throws down an offering* greetings.
âRespectfullyâŠâ You took a moment to compose yourself, sipping from your teacup and raising your eyes to settle on your soon-to-be husband. âYou are the scum of the earth, Mr. Toleson.â
Mr. Toleson, quite used to this, only rolled his eyes and moved to pour you more tea. âPray tell me what I have done to receive such contempt, Miss?â
That question could not easily be answered. Did your contempt stem from your lack of choice, or from Mr. Tolesonâs less than agreeable disposition? Or perhaps from societyâs overall decision that whatever may happen, you should sit still and be merry. Who cares if your marriage is loveless and your life unfulfilled?
You dropped another sugar cube in your tea and stirred it around. Maybe it was everything all at once. And Mr. Tolesonâs⊠superiority in age didnât help matters either. The rickety man just reached his late fifties, his hair reaching a color not yet gray, but most definitely not the brown of his youth. Youâd seen pictures. He was a handsome boy twenty years ago, when you were but a lemon-shaped babe in the womb.
âI had plans,â you answer at last. âPlans that do not include you.â
His eyes twinkled like the idea was preposterous, his mustaches curling with his lips. Mr. Toleson gazed at you like a child, only discomforting you even further about the idea of sharing a marriage bed. âWhat plans, Miss?â
âIt doesnât matter,â you snapped back. âIâm going to be chained to you all my life. Even after you die, which I assume will be soon given the state of you, Iâll be forced into widowhood. I look awful in black, you know, and pretending to grieve would do nothing for my mental stateâoh, where are you going?â
Mr. Toleson had thrown down his napkin, face hot and brows screwed together. He peered down his nose at your poor attempt at hiding a smile. âWhen youâre my wife,â he said, tone even and dark, gaze even more so. âYouâll do well to learn manners, Miss.â
There was a threat in there somewhere, for certain, and you wouldnât give him the satisfaction of a response. Mr. Toleson huffed out his too-small nose and spun on his heel, barking at a poor attendant to fix the tableâs preposterous flower arrangement.
You gave the young boy a sorry look and stood to leave when a sharp voice filtered in from the next room.Â
âMr. Toleson! Where are you goingâ?â Your motherâs shrill tone cut short, a growl of your name soon to follow.
âShit.â You whirled on the attendant boy with a pointed finger. He froze, eyes wide as several petals fell loose onto the table. âPlease,â you hissed, pressing your palms together. âYpu must help me.â
The boy dropped the flowers back into the vase, splashing a bit of water. With a single nod, he beelined for the window, unlatching it and swinging it open. You rushed over, his hands pushing you outside. âThis is the only way out, my lady.â
âIâll fallâwait!â You were swinging your legs over the sill before you realized what you were doing. Heart pattering in your chest, you cast him a look, but he was already shutting the window and drawing the curtains behind you. âOh, dear.â
Down below, about twenty feet down and beyond the hedged yard, were the streets of the city, carts pulled by mules and passersby tracking dirt and mud and other materials across the dirt roads. You glanced around the outer wall of Mr. Tolesonâs house. A trellis ran down the side just one window away, which you could use to climb down to then jump into the hedges. Stealing a breath, you began to inch along the window sill, setting a delicate foot on the wide declarative trim running from each window to the next. When it didnât crumble beneath your foot, you went on, barely breathing as you clung flush to the wall.
Reaching the window, precariously making a step up to the next sill, you nearly tipped backward when you caught your motherâs back through the window. Feet slipping, you scurried down the trellis, losing your grip every few seconds and clinging to the wall. Eventually, you touched the earth, dusting off your dress as you faced the garden wall. Ivy ran all along it, but youâd done enough exploring whilst avoiding Mr. Tolesonâs advances to know that a gate hid behind the green. It led right into a damp, drippy alleyway. You cringed down at your custom-made shoes, costing a fortune for certain. Sacrifices had to be made, and today, your shoes paid the price.Â
Your wedding was a day away, and with it the end of your happiness. Not that anyone cared about your happiness those days. Expelling a sigh, you wandered the streets till nightfall, returning to the grand house in the dead of night.
Your mother paced the entry hall when you stepped inside, the tall door booming shut behind you. Her eyes were on you like a hawk, her words sharp knives. âWhere have you been?â
âUptown,â you drawled, tossing your now dirtied shoes across the carpet. âDowntown. Midtown. Where havenât I been is the real question.â
She looked close to exploding, cheeks inflated and lips pinched together. âYou embarrassed meâYou embarrassed Mr. Toleson!â
Waving an absent hand, âI couldnât care less, woman. Now let me be before I drop dead of melancholy.â
A stiff utterance of your name struck the air, the impact on your back fleeting as you swept upstairs. Again and again, she cried your name till it sounded more like a beg than an order, and it halfway made you desire to face her. But facing your mother and having her see you had long been a futile task.Â
Her voice struck your back until you reached the top of the stairs and darted down the hall, whipping open your bedroom door and slamming it back behind you. Swiftly locking it, you clawed at your chest, skin constricting and choking you out. That woman⊠your mother could never understand.
Once, you hoped maybe she could. Your oldest servant, a frail woman whoâd been serving your mother for a decade, told you that your mother went through the same unfortunate situation as you. She walked an aisle leading to shackles, just as you would at tomorrowâs soon-coming dusk. But time had turned that woman cold, making her hellbent on sentencing you to the same fate.
Eyes scanning the room, you gave a shaken sigh. Tomorrow you would be forced into a similar room, but that one you would share with Mr. Toleson. Your skin crawled. âAt least he only wants my money. He cares for nothing else.â
You slipped into bed, unsure of the next good sleep youâd receive.
àȘ â âŽ
Up with the sun, you dressed quickly and slipped out of the house, careful not to make a sound as you exited onto the street. There was ample time between sunrise and the ceremony, each second passing with a daunting swiftness. Soon, the morning bells rang throughout the city, signaling that noon had fallen.Â
You stared up at the sky as the chimes fell silent, chest constricting. This walk around the city had done nothing to quell your distress. In anything, it made it worse; people on the street beamed and congratulated you on sight, offering you flowers and well-wishes. You received them all with practiced kindness, even as doom lurked behind you.
âJust a few more hours,â you mumbled, taking refuge in a damp alley. âI can visit the old pond⊠perhaps the frogs will be out.â
Nodding, you slipped back out with a ducked chin, walking quickly through the crowds until so little as three people were around and the the stone streets faded into soft dirt paths underfoot. Through sparse trees and lonely wood, you made your way to the duckpond on the outskirts of the city. Not a soul around; perfect.
You plopped yourself on the ground and hugged your knees to your chest, oblivious to the dust curling around you. Maybe, if you stayed right there all day, no one would find you. You could sit through the whole ceremonyâthrough the whole year, till weeds crawled up your limbs and rocks were surfaced by the winds. Youâd become part of this pond when the rain fills it beyond the banks, dissolving into an urban legend of what happens to heartbroken young women.
You smiled for the first time in many weeks. That fate sounded as lovely as anything.
The reverie broke as voices crept up behind you. Peeking over your shoulder, you spotted two entities: the first being the constable, and the second farther behind him. This group of people was more like a gaggle, or perhaps a rabble, their boisterous tones causing the constable to cast them a glare.
You jumped to your feet before he could face forward again and darted toward to big oak tree you used to climb in your youth, skidding to a halt right behind it. The constable was good friends with your fiance and would surely escort you back home the instant he saw you.Â
âAre you sure we can fish here?â
âIâm sure no oneâs told us we canât.â
âSanji!â
One of the voices, presumably the one called Sanji, laughed in reply while their counterpart grumbled under their breath. Part of you felt the need to jump out and warn them against it, because surely the constable would be quick to apprehend them. But then he would also surely apprehend you.
âSirs,â the gruff voice of the constable barked, right on cue. âFishing in this pond is strictly prohibited. Itâs for viewing only by law.â
The one called Sanji clicked his tongue. âIs there some sort of sign we missed? Because thereâs no warning stopping us.â
Oh, dear. âIâm here to stop you. Now please, put away your tack and gear.â There were a few indignant huffs, but no rustling of a confrontation. Good, goodâŠÂ
âRight. Now, have either of you gentlemen spotted a young woman about?â The constable proceeded to give your exact description, spiking a panic within you. The search party had already begun. âNo? Drat. Perhaps Iâm at the wrong pond⊠Good day to youâŠâ
You remained behind the tree for five long minutes, listening to the constableâs steps fade away and the conversation between the two men go on. Peeking out, you saw a tall skinny blond and a man with dark skin at the pondâs edge, fishing of all things.
Puffing your cheeks, you stepped out with crossed arms. âHe told you it's not allowed!â
Their heads swiveled around, eyes wide and startled. The blond was the first to recover, his hold on the fishing rod slackening as an easy smile slid across his face. âMy, my, what kind of nymph are you?â
Your cheeks warmed as his eyes scanned you up and down. âThe angry kind.â
The other man quirked a brow, quicker than the other. âWas that guy looking for you?â
Alarms went off in your mind. âNever mind that, just donât fish in my pond.â
âWhatever you say~â
âSanji!âÂ
Satisfied, you trudged off, letting their bickering be drowned out gradually. With the knowledge that the whole city now knew to look out for you, probably thinking the aloof noble girl just lost track of time, you took the long way around, slinking through dirty alcoves you once called your kingdom some years ago.Â
This whole city was your empire, in your mind. You and the other young girls and boys traipsed about without a care, creating your own world only the lot of you could see. You, of course, were high empress of all alleyways.
Growing up like this meant your mighty empire was toppled. All your old friends had new lives now, time ticking by with mundane tasks and masks to keep up. Many of them would attend your wedding, but they might as well be strangers now. Such was the way of your city. You get old and you lose your life.Â
A subtle burn welled up behind your eyes as you rounded a dark corner and found the old crates youâd formed into a palace, untouched and frozen in time as the curling alleys of the city grew dusty from neglect. You stopped short at the sight, quickly snapping back to reality and darting away, running as fast as you could to get away. Left and right, you were reminded of how expansive these alleys really were, and how easy it was to get lost in them.
Not that you would ever get lost; youâd cling to your memories as long as possible. You knew this place like the back of your hand, so it was a surprise when instead of a dead end, you turned to find a long alley leading out to the market. The scent of the bakerâs stall and sweet rolls being sold wafted down to you, providing a momentary calmâbefore that laugh broke it all down.
Creeping back around the corner, you waited for the laugh to stop, peering around to find that you werenât alone. Near the mouth of the alley, a boy stood clutching his chest, laughter fading even as he glanced out onto the street. For just three whole seconds, you swore he was something out of a novel.
Pretty face scarred on one side, but it didnât make him any less to look at. Hair windswept despite the stillness, clothes ratty in some places and newly stitched up in others. Whoever he was, youâd never seen him before, so where exactly did he come from?
âHey.â You blinked widely, realizing quite too late that youâd been caught. Locked in severe eye contact, you ever so slowly retreated back around the corner, flattening yourself against the wall. Maybe if you didnât breathe, heâd think he hallucinated and walk away.
âHey,â that boy said again, closer now. âWhatâre you doing?â
You didnât make a sound, flush against the wall as if trying to disappear even when his face appeared in your peripheral. He blinked, waiting for you to do something. âWhyâre you being so weird?â
âI, wellâŠâ You glanced around, anywhere but his face. âI was taking a walk.â You tensed up, held your breath, and blurted, âI donât talk to strangers!â
You stared hard at the ground, hoping that heâd think you were crazy and walk away, but then the boy laughed at you. Gasping softly, you raised your head and gazed at him softly, lips parted slightly. Nobody had ever laughed at you before, at least not to your face like this boy, heaving as his chuckles faded.Â
âYouâre talking to me anyway.â He had you there. His eyes glinted despite the sun being obscured by the tall buildings.Â
âIâŠâ
He thrust out his hand suddenly. âIâm Luffy.â His hand, his face. His hand, his face. Your eyes darted back and forth until you finally settled on his hand. Dirty, that was the first thing you noticed, and then the callouses. Youâd only seen hands like that on a sailor.Â
You blinked back up at his face, locking in on his eyes. Sailors werenât to be trusted. They took young girlsâ hearts, along with something more personal, and set back off to sea. Thatâs what your mother said, but you had a feeling your mother had never seen someone like Luffy before. Youâd never seen anyone like Luffy, so bright he couldâve been the sun itself. You took his hand quickly, shaking it firmly, and introduced yourself.Â
Luffy chuckled. âNow Iâm not a stranger.â
You couldnât help but crack a grin. âI suppose not. Do you sail?â
âHowâd you know?â Luffy tilted his head, leaning back on his heels, and you forgot how to speak. Luffy wasnât too bad to look at. He was unlike any of the handsome boys youâd seen in court, sure, but that didnât matter. Perhaps it endeared you more. Luffy, whoever he was, was different from everything you knew.
âYou hands, I suppose. Theyâre like a sailorsâ.â
His laugh was odd, like a shi-shi-shi sound, prompting a stifled snort out of you as well. âYep! Iâm a pirate!â
Instantly, your whole face dropped, frozen in place. âOh⊠thatâs⊠something.â
Pirates were very different from regular sailors. They stole and pillaged and plundered and did many other terrible deeds. Your great-grandfather had been killed by a pirate⊠but youâd never known him. Itâs all hearsay. Besides, Luffy didnât look like he would ever think of maiming you. He looked like your next good friend, even if just for now.Â
âYour crew is here, then?â you asked, moving to sit atop a set of crates along the wall. Luffy jumped as he followed, plopping in the dirt in front of you instead.Â
âMhmm. Theyâre⊠somewhere.â He snickered. âWe just left Alabasta, yâknow.â
You leaned forward to gawk at him. âSo you saw what happened? With Crocodile? It was crazy.â
Again with that strange laugh of his. âYep. Iâm the one who beat his ass into the ground!â
âYouâhuh?â Tilting your head, his smile infected you, tugging at your lips. âSo, youâre the savior of Alabasta? Not that marine?â
You sat in awe as he told you everything, going so far back that you learned exactly how he met Princess Vivi. By the end of an hour, you were on the edge of your seat, knees snug against your chest as Luffy described it all in grand detail.Â
âWow⊠that sounds amazing. Not the part where you nearly drowned in sand, but you know.â Resting your chin on your knees, âYou must feel so⊠free out there.â
Luffy nodded quickly, eyes unfocused for a moment, staring at the unseen. âYeah. Itâs amazing.â
Your smile grew dim and melancholy. The bells of evening rang in the distance. âThank you for telling me your story, Luffy. You didnât have to do that.â
He shrugged one shoulder, his expression one you could only call cute. âYou wanted to know⊠whatâre you so sad for?â
You hummed, startled. âIâm not sad.â
âAre too,â he said, eyes narrowed. âSo what is it?â
For some time, you didnât say another word. Luffy stood now, hands planted on either side of yours knees as he stared right at you. It wasnât threatening or seductive, simply curious in a way youâd never witnessed. Like he truly wanted to know. And so, you told him.
âIâm getting married. Today.â You shut your eyes and grimaced. âAnd I donât want to, but I have no choice.â
âSo⊠donât?â
You reeled back. âDid you not hear me? I have to.â Luffy only tilted his head as you scoffed at the sky. âMy only choice is to comply with the path set before me. If I stray too far⊠I canât stray too far.â
You hardly realized how angry youâd gotten till Luffyâs finger poked at your forehead once, twice, three times. You blinked slowly. âWhat?â
âI donât really get it,â he said. âBut you seem pretty sure.â He was right in your face, oblivious to the fluster rising in your face. And then he smiled a beaming smile. âHey, why donât youââ
âThere you are!â A coil formed in the pit of your stomach, eyes slowly drifting to the mouth of the alley. The constable stalked toward you looking as relieved as he was pissed off. âYour motherâs been sending everyone out for you, miss. Have you lost your mind?â
âSorry, sir,â you mumbled, ignoring how Luffy stared at you all perplexed-like. âIâll⊠I was looking for some flowers for the parlor. Didnât find a patch in bloom. Iâll head back now.â
The constable stepped forth, not yet noticing Luffy. He began to loom over you, and only when Luffy inched closer to your side did the constableâs gaze flicker to him. Disgust was the only word to describe how the constable looked at Luffy. âLet me escort you home, miss. Wouldnât want you to lose your way again.â
You looked between the two of them nervously. âOf course, sir.â You stood from the crate and moved to follow the constable, hoping beyond hope Luffy would forget the entire ordeal, for his sake. The constable was going to forget all about your new friend, if only Luffy stayed quiet.
âHey.â You tightened every muscle in your body. âWhoâs she marrying anyway?â
The constable jerked to a stop, his deepset brow furrowing.
âOnly the most powerful man around,â the constable replied very carefully, very calculated. He sized the boy up. âSheâs very lucky to be marrying Mr. Toleson.â
âLetâs go, sir,â you insisted, daring to hook your arm through the constableâs and nearly drag him away. He dug his feet in. âIntroduce me to your friend, miss.â
âHeâsâheâs not my friend,â you blurted, eyes glued to the ground. âSir, let us go. Iâve made us late enough. I have to prepareââ
Luffy took a daring step forward. âYou shouldnât have to marry someone if you donât want to.â
The constable gritted is teeth, hand closing around your arm. âWhat would you know about what she wants?â
âLetâs goââ
âShe doesnât like this Tole guy,â Luffy persisted. Your eyes pleaded with him, but he wasnât looking at you, sight set on the tall man beside you. âSo she shouldnât marry him. Tole-y can find someone who actually likes him if heâs so desperateââ
âShut. Up.â Dangerous. Your tone was dangerous, wide glare moreso. Luffy silently eyed you, looking right through to your soul. âGoodbye. We have to go. Places to be. Come, Constable.â
Halfway turned, the constable kept one eye on your friend, feet slowly following after youâwhen Luffy reached out, grabbed your shoulder, and tried to tug you to his side. You whipped around to smack him, but your palm swiped at air.Â
Luffy stood five feet back, his arm stretched beyond comprehension and latched onto your shoulder.
âWhat theâŠâ Head foggy, you barely registered the click of a gun till it rose in your peripheral. Everything went by far too quickly, and suddenly you stared down the head of the constableâs pistol, gasping like you hadnât a clue how youâd got there.Â
âGet out of here, Luffy,â you ordered, not taking your stare off the constable. âI wonât say it again.â
He was gone when you finally chanced a look over your shoulder. The constable swiftly took your arm in a vice and led you onto the street, holstering his gun and muttering, âStreet rats have no place here.â
âSea dog,â you corrected absently, quite out of your own head. âHeâs a pirate, so, sea dog.â
As if that would cease his endless muttering.
You were shut inside your house and shuffled away to a sunny parlor, tended to by maids youâd known since birth, their chattering unable to draw you out of your stupor as they powdered your face and tightened a corset round your waist till the room started spinning.Â
Meanwhile, a pirate boy returned to his friends, not sparing their newly caught fish a second glance as he asked Robin if sheâd heard anything about a wedding in the city. The archeologist grinned as if she knew precisely what had transpired in that alley, though she couldnât possibly have.
At any rate, the notorious Straw Hat pirates now prepared to act on their captainâs whim, not one of them questioning when he said his ânew friendâ was in trouble.
àȘ â âŽ
The carriage ride to the chapel was so you bumpy you were half convinced the driver did it on purpose. You sat wobbling from side to side, eyes glazed over, and you let your mind drift awayâyou became a specter, wandering blindly till you blinked, and you stood in a sunny side-room, waiting to be fetched for the altar.
Your arms like gooseskin, you peered into a spotless mirror despondently. Your hair was done up prettily, face caked in different powders and creams. The sickening scent of rose perfume surrounded on all sides. The dress fit nicely, not too tight, not too loose. Perfect. Not a thing was out of place.
It all set in at once; by the end of the hour youâd be Mrs. Toleman. Your mother would receive all the benefits, all the praise. Sheâd smile and really mean it. Your husband would be free from bankruptcy, your familyâs massive inheritance given to him the moment you say, âI do.â Youâd stand on his arm the rest of his life, the perfect ornament, so quiet and dull.Â
An older woman fussed over the tears dotting your lashes, roughly swatting them away with her handkerchief, chastising you for such childishness.Â
âIf my daughter were in your position,â she said after nearly gauging your eye. âSheâd be ecstatic.â
You gazed quite darkly. âYour daughter was in my position,â you whispered, causing her to freeze putting away her handkerchief. âIâm sure you recall her escaping to the circus very clearly.â
A sharp gasp. A drawn hand. Your mother stepped into the room, flustered beyond compare, and the maid resigned to fume quietly. You wished she would slap you. Perhaps the strike would redden your face so much that the whole thing was called off.Â
âWell,â your mother exasperated, eyes raking down your form. âI hope youâre ready. Look pleasant.â
She weaved an arm through yours as a bouquet of lilies was shoved in your hands. A sneeze crawled up your nose and died as you held your breath, for the next moment you faced two long and full rows of people youâd never met and would never see again.Â
Despite the petals and music and lovely weather, it felt very much like a funeral march. The empty faces of the guests chilled you to the bone, not one of them sparing even a grin. A few checked their watches. One boy tugged on a young girlâs pigtail, and the girl was swatted for disturbing the peace. A ginger girl fought with a green-haired male in one of the farther pews. Against the far wall a blonde caterer absently smoked a cigarette. Somewhere, a bird sounded like it was dying, crooning a sad song.
This damn city. These damn people. Youâd die here, physically, spiritually, and mentally so. White hot panic welled up within you, but it was far too late to even think of darting for the door; you stood before your groom, gazing blankly into his chest.
You felt as if you were dying, a life so short flashing before your eyes as your hands were taken into the clammy grasp of Mr. Toleson. He wore no smile, no warmth upon his face. Only cold indifference. You hoped you looked the same, lest he spy your terror.Â
The officiator droaned on meaningless words, warbled by your dazed mind. Only when your hands were squeezed harshly did you refocus, blinking widely.
Clearing his throat, the officiator shuffled uncomfortably. âDo you take this man to be your husband?â
Were you at this bit already? Heart thundering, you didnât dare to look at Mr. Toleson, panicked gaze flickering to the now bated audience. Every eye stared at you, boring into you fiercely, only worsening your condition.Â
âIâŠâ
Mr. Toleson gripped you tightly, painfully. He gritted out just for you to hear, âYou what? We havenât got all dayâŠâ
âIâIâŠâ A gulping breath. A flash of red ribbon and straw. Cutting your eyes across the room, you settled on a boy near the back of the pews, a grin emblazoned on his face. He caught your eye and held it fast. You hardly believed your eyes, yet understood in an instant.
âMiss,â said the officiator.
Luffy tilted his head, as if asking are we doing this? You chanced a flicker of a smile.Â
You ripped your hands from Mr. Tolesonâs sweaty grip, eyes wide and childish smile inching across your face as the room filled with sharp gasps. Gaze flickering up to Mr. Tolesonâs aghast expression, you lurched back three, four, five steps till your heel met the edge of the raised platform. A hand settled on the small of your back as you slipped to the floor. The caterer planted his feet beside you, face grim as he gritted down on his cigarette.Â
âAre you alright?â he muttered. You gave a quick nod.
The point of no return had come, and youâd taken the path once blocked by a landslide, the path youâd dismissed entirely just an hour ago. Your mother gasped your name, a hissed out word, drawing your gaze quickly. She was deathly pale, like she was about to be sick. No sympathy of yours rose to meet her, none at all, and the freedom of two words boomed from your chest.Â
âI donât!â
Silence. You heaved in a breath of air, and no one said a word. Like time had stood still.
Then a litheful, frightening laughter ripped through the church and everything sped up all at once. Mr. Tolesonâs face rivaled the ripest of tomatoes.Â
âWhy⊠youâŠâ He hadnât so much as taken a step when the caterer whirled around and kicked him right in the chest. Only when he blew his hair out of his face and stomped out his cigarette, looking like heâd done this twelve hundred times before, that you started to think he wasnât a caterer at all.Â
âIâve seen you before,â you thought aloud. Chaos erupted all around, guests rising from their chairs in a panic, and you just couldnât put your finger on it. âOh! You were at the pond!â
Sanji, that was his name. He dodged a punch from one of the quicker groomsmen, an easy smile on his face. He faced you then, hands shoved in his pockets. âThatâs your priority, love?â
You flushed, whether from the tease or endearment, you didnât know. âWellââ
âYou!â your motherâs shrill voice cut the air. You turned just in time to catch her pouncing at you, her hand clawing for your arm. Her nails barely got close to scratching you when a hand branched out of her chest and drove her back by a vice around her neck. Somebody screamed as guests began a mad rush to escape the inevitable fight; everyone had the same guessâpirates.
Youâd never been so happy, even with the disembodied hand issue.
Mr. Toleson rose to his feet, nursing his chest, his eyes aflame. He whirled in the groomsmen. âDonât just stand there!â
The men broke out of their daze. The constable shook himself out of his shock as several other burly men of the town shouted angrily. You inched backward as dozens of eyes settled on you, heart quickening, when that ginger girl from before rushed up with a bow staff and gave several men severe head trauma. The green haired man drew three swords out of nowhere. That other man from the pond jumped over a pew, a slingshot in hand. And a tall, graceful woman stared down your petrified mother.Â
Only those willing to put up a fight were left, leaving only the rougher men of the town and the pirates of your friend Luffy.Â
Sanji flung an attacker off his back and sent the guy flying your way, wiping the smile from your face as you yelped and dodged. You scurried off to the side, nearly tripping head over heels in your dress, having to hike up your skirts as you twirled in and out of the swiftly rising rabble.
Luffyâs marksman remained unscathed at his vantage point, lining up a shot and letting it fly. You gasped delightfully when the constable was nailed right in the forehead and hit the floor unconscious. From your place flush against the wall, you beamed at the destruction.
Pews turned to splinters under the power of the swordsman. Refreshments scattered across the floor as the ginger was thrown into a table and jumped back up again. Flowers fluttered around as the raven haired woman used some kind of magic to extend her reach. And Luffyâhe laughed through it all. People jumped at him with fists and clubs, yet he threw them all off like it was nothing. Perhaps to him it was.
You stifled another smile behind your hands. The people of your town were absolutely demolished by these pirates. These glorious, heroic pirates you would be thanking for the rest of your lifeâ
âYou did this.â In an instant your wrists were captured by your ex-fiancee. âWitch. Whereâd you get the money to pay them, huh?â
âLet go,â you bit back, jerking away only for his hold to tighten, prepared for your escape this time.Â
He yanked you closer. âAfter everything Iâve done for your familyââÂ
You spat in his eyes and kneed his crotch, watching satisfied as he crumbled to the floor. âFamily my ass.â
You darted into the chaos without another word. Men lay unconscious every few steps, their bloody and bruised faces staring up at you. You tripped over someoneâs leg, growled sharply, and took hold of your skirts. One by one you ripped off the layers of tulle, leaving you in your knee-length bloomers, dress reduced to the lacy bodice and shreds of fabric at your hips. Finally you yanked your heels off, hopping on one foot and then the other.Â
Right as you were about to drop your left shoe, the man of honor, some guy called Henry, made for you swiftly. Gasping, you gripped the toe of the heel and clubbed him over the head.
Someone grabbed your shoulder a second later. You shrieked and dropped to the ground, slipping out of the grip and rolling to the side. The swordsman appeared suddenly and cut the man down in one move. The body dropped beside you. You blinked, gasped, and let a delayed scream flee your lips. The swordsman reached to grab your wrist and hoisted you to your feet. âYou okay?â
âY-you killed him!â you cried.
âRelax,â he rolled his eyes. âI hit him with the hilt.â
Sure enough, the man only had a gash on his temple and some head trauma most likely. The swordsman looked you up and down briefly. âWatch out for the ero-cook lookinâ like that.â
You hardly cared if you looked indecent. âWhereâs Luffy?â
He didn't get to answerâa laugh you quickly grew to recognize had you whipping around, eyes peeled.Â
His profile shone in the evening light bleeding from the windows. He stood with his head thrown back and eyes tightly shut, a blinding smile on his face. Transfixed, you wondered, not for the last time, if he was more than human.
When his laughter died down Luffy held his fists close to his chest and looked around as if searching for another fight, his gaze finding you. Your heart skipped, but his smile dropped deathly fast. You didnât have the chance to wonder before his fist zipped a hair's breadth away from your cheek. You hit the ground instantly, head ducked between your knees. You might have remained there forever, wondering just what possessed him, if you were stupid for trusting him, overwhelmed by something akin to heartbreakâwhen two sandaled feet entered your sight.
âHey,â he said, giving you deja vu. âWhatâre you doinâ on the floor?â
Eyes wider chest heaving, you sprang to your feet and got nose to nose with him. Luffy merely blinked widely, unfazed. âWhatâs wrong with you!? First, you help me, then you try to hit me! WhyâDonât touch me!âÂ
He gripped your shoulders and spun you around in one fluid motion. All your sputtering got caught in your throat. Two feet away Mr. Toleson lay flat on his back with the worst bloody nose youâd ever seen.Â
One. TwoâŠ
You couldnât help it; you laughed. Ugly laughed. Louder and more all-consuming than you ever had before. You tried to choke on it, only making the sound sizzle into harsh snickers.Â
Luffy felt like he was in a trance, watching you dazedly as he broke into his own fit of laughter.
âGah!â Your mother bolted for the door, throwing a fretful glance over her shoulder. She paused, wove around a man limping for the exit, and dragged Mr. Toleson to his feet. Coughing, your would-be fiancĂ©e set his grim sights on Luffy. Your mother tugged him with her, more forceful now. âCome. She isnât worth your life.â
Really, it shouldnât have bothered you. Sheâd never done anything for you, yetâher words struck you oddly, fiercely. They were gone before you recovered. You glanced around at a loss as Luffy stood a strong pillar in your peripheral. Your eyes darted to meet him as the final pieces of your world crumbled to dust, and you found nothing but cool assurance; you sighed out a breath youâd been holding since you were ten.Â
âGood riddance,â you choked. Luffyâs lips ticked up in a smile. The figures of his friends came into focus as they gathered around in the wreckage of the church. Emotion tingled in every corner of your body. âThank you, all of you. Iâm⊠forever in your debt.â
That wasnât all you wished to express by far. Youâd been thinking it the whole while, perhaps even from the first moment you learned he was a pirate. The request teetered precariously on the tip of your tongue when the caterer cut you off.
âNo need, madam,â he said with a flourish of his wrist. âAlways a pleasure to assist.â
His eyes took you in gratefully, and he was quick to wipe away the small bit of blood leaving his nose. You grinned, almost grimacing, and gave an awkward laugh. âOf courseâŠâ Luffyâs shoulder brushed your own, drawing your gaze to him. His bright eyes had you wanting to reach up and brush his messy hair out of his face. Somehow, you refrained. âJust what kind of pirates are you? I didnât think your lot were in the business of wedding crashing.â
Luffy shrugged his shoulders, barely smiling as he replied, âI like you.â
You choked on nothing. âWellâthatâsâindeed.â
The silence of the room, only some harsh breaths breaking it, had you questioning what came next. Your adrenaline crashed all at once as your eyes got heavy and your shoulders sagged all at once. You rubbed at your eyes and suppressed a yawn, shivering as a breeze drifted by.Â
The ginger girl noticed the change at once, moving to your side despite her own exhaustion. âLetâs get you cleaned up. That canât be comfortable.â
For some reason, you didnât jerk away from her touch, so gentle and kind as she took your arm. âYeah. Uhm, I can go to my servantsâ quarters. They wonât say anythingâŠâ
The girl scoffed, catching your eye. âNo way. Youâre going to our ship.â She blanched a second later, backtracking. âIf thatâs okay with you.â
You watched for any sign of falsehood, and found none at all. You shook your head quickly. âNo, thatâs fine. Can we go now?â
The girlâNami, you later learnedâgiggled and swiftly ushered you out of the wreckage and into the sun. You gave a soft laugh of your own, still very reserved yet filled with the tentativeness of someone realizing that everything would be okay.Â
And Luffy watched you leave, his lips tugging upwards subconsciously. He stood solidly as each of his friends followed after you, till only Robin remained. She had her arms crossed, head tilted low and eyes scrutinizing. She took in Luffyâs stance, his twitchy fingers, his eyes transfixed on empty space. All usual features on her friend; it was his dopey grin that gave it all away.
âCaptain,â Robin spoke. âEverything all right?â
âYeah,â Luffy nodded. He didnât even stutter, his reply instant. âWhy?â
She nearly chuckled, holding back if only to humor him. She nudged his shoulder with her own to spur him into motion, and the pair walked slowly into the streets.Â
âWhat do you know about your new friend?â she asked as they passed under a bakery sign squeaky as it swung with the wind.Â
He paused. âSheâs fancy⊠and unhappy.â Luffy kicked a pebble and watched it skip all the way to the end of the sloped path. âVery unhappy. Sheâll be happier with us.â
Robinâs heart went tender as she looked away, hiding a smirk. âHave you told her that?â
Catching her eye, Luffy smiled. âShe knows.â
They caught up enough to spy the others as Usopp and Nami had their arms around your shoulders, bickering absently whilst you snickered quietly between them. Robin nodded, for who was she to argue? Besides, maybe you did. The smile on your face may have betrayed just that.
àȘ â âŽ
You still heard the boisterous laughter of your new friends even as you swept away from the galley, heart beating a little too fast to be comfortable. They were amazing, sure, but overwhelming at best. All you needed was a moment and you could return unnoticed to the good food and warm company. As soon as you got some air.
You instinctively reached to pick up a skirt as you rose the stairs to the deck, only to grab at air, look down, and grin at the sight of Namiâs brown trousers.Â
The cool night breeze hit you like a wall the moment you stepped outside, shooting shivers down your spine. The saltiness of the sea clung to your skin and clumped in your hair, filling your nose with every deep breath of air.Â
The deck felt odd against your bare feet, grating against your skin just enough to make you wary of splinters despite the apparent fine craftsmanship of the wood. You leaned into the ship rail and gazed down upon the rolling waters. A soft and steady kussshhh kussshhh greeted you, a gentle sea spray kissing your cheeks.
So far, the sea was far greater than youâd ever conceived. Freedom rippled in every gust of wind billowing in the sails; the waves sang songs of grandauer; the stars winked secrets you couldnât hear but felt in the creak of your bones. The music of the world had finally included you in its symphony, and you would never go back.Â
Never.
You heard him before you saw him, his bumbling, careless steps thumping against the deck. Luffy came up out of the belly of the ship, gazed around once, and settled his sights on you. You met eyes and simply existed; he smiled first; you returned a grin. Luffy approached with all the familiarity he shouldnât have given you in such a short time.Â
âYou disappeared,â he said too loudly, threatening to break the perfect silence settled around you.Â
âI did,â you whispered back. After pursing your lips, you turned back to the sea and waited, assuming he would take the hint. It took two seconds longer than you anticipated, but Luffyâs shoulder soon bumped against your own.Â
When he spoke again, he was softer, âHow do you feel?â
You sucked in a lunfull of cold air and laughed it out. âFree. I didnât think Iâd ever feel like that again.â
He nodded, because he wanted to say so many things but at the same time had no clue what to say at all. Luffy had never experienced this before, being at a loss for words; all evening heâd dwelled in this confusion that only grew every time you smiled and he lost his breath. What was so different about you that all his words felt terribly redundant?Â
âWow.â He turned his head quickly, blinking at you. You were already looking right at him.Â
âHuh?â
You shook your head, shy smile dripping in tease. âYouâre quiet. I didnât take you as someone to just dwell like this.â
How many minutes had passed? Luffy wasnât sure, but you looked content, so he didnât really care. His eyes danced all over your face, puzzlement laid in his brow. You tilted your head and began to worry about the cloudy look on his face.
âCan I ask you something?â you said. Luffy gave a wordless nod, still looking so lost. You wanted to touch him, the realization setting in suddenly, hand itching to grip his arm. âWhy did you help me? You didnât have to.â Crossing your arms, you turned to watch the curling white foam ripple off the ship. âIt certainly made things harder for you. They might tell the Navy, and I can imagine thatâs plain hell.â
âThey wonât catch us,â he scoffed, catching your eye. âAnd like I said, I like you.â
Your lips pursed before you let slip a chuckle, face far too warm for your liking. He probably didnât know what he was saying. âRight. How could I forget. Is that all?â
âYouâre⊠funny.â
âOh yeah?â
âYeah. Real funny. Odd. Makes me feel funny.â He said it with such nonchalance you wondered if he was joking, but the longer you stood and stared at your feet the more aware you were of his presence at your side. Finally, you lifted your head, finding him staring out to sea. He was one to talk about being odd. You hardly understood what was so odd about you; you felt fairly normal if you said so yourselfâbut that wasnât exactly the point.Â
Because Luffy was confused after all, just like he looked to be. The conflicted boy never strayed far from your shoulder, his hand brushing yours every few seconds. You hardly knew himâyou didnât know himâyet you couldnât deny the overwhelming trust clawing its way into your heart.Â
So, really, there wasnât much more debate on whether you should ask.Â
âLet me stay.â âJoin my crew.â
The pair of you whipped your heads around suddenly. Eyes wide, you smiled, bursting into laughter with him, leaning into his side so he was half holding you up, your forehead hitting his chestâyou missed hugs, sighing deeply as his warm hands brushed your skin andâ
Cold rushed up your spine. You jerked away, an apology on your lips, when Luffy grunted and reeled you back in. You hit his chest with a thump as his arms wrapped around you three times. Eyes wide, body stiff, his deep breathing enveloped you till all you heard was in and out, in and out, that steady yet unsure rhythm.Â
âIâd like to join your crew,â you said after a while.Â
He focused on the space ahead of him, hold loosening bit by bit. âIâd like you to stay.â
You pulled away, and this time he let you. âSomehow, I feel Iâm making a grave mistake.â He tilted his head all puppy-like, so you reveled in his puzzlement. Spinning out of his arms you faced the sea again. âYouâll most likely get me killed, Captain.â
Luffy blinked rapidly, heart thuding at the sly grin planted on your profile. Captain. He liked that. He always did, but now especiallyâwhen it came from you.Â
âI wonât let that happen,â he said with such casualty. He stepped into your line of sight. âYou do want to stay, donât you?â
As if you had a choice, you mused. Even if you didnât, it wouldnât change a thing in your eyes. You smiled softly at him, a spark of wild excitement in your eyes. âMore than anything.â
It started small, only a grin until it grew too wide to remain shut, his teeth shining seconds later. His eyes squinted, head thrown back, and you swore his laugh echoed to the very depths of the sea, encircling your whole being.
He fascinated you, filling you with this sense of freedom youâd never known before. Luffy was larger than life, and you stood there to witness his existence. Somehow, even then, you understood the gravity of who he would become.Â
What an odd pair the two of you made. Him so unrestrained and you so properâthough surely the longer you spent with him the less true that became. Neither of you really cared either way; you found the other wildly fascinating, and in that moment on the deck as he blinded you with his smile, thatâs really all that mattered.
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