fc barcelona out of context
OH MY GOD DIOS MIOS đȘđžđȘđžđȘđž
you never fail bro dafuk i wish to have ur talent omds what on earth
Pedri supporting his girlfriend who plays for Barca femeni after she gets hurt at her game?
pedri gonzalez x barçafemeni!reader
sy: after a sustained head injury, all you need is the comfort (and slight lesson) from your boyfriend to ease you back to normal.
a/n: i did this as a more realistic approach and added our current female players as teammates & i probably yapped too much for this but still (i need to make my fics longer)
â ïž i have literally only just come across a similar fic to what ive written, but genuinely ive had this in my drafts for around a week now, but still had to finish off the end. so please, there is no copyright intended as i wrote this before the other authors fic, but no communication was present & i wasnât going to scrap this all away after spending so long writing.
warnings: not really .
âhmph!â
being fouledâagain.
after being hurled to the curb by madridâs opposing player, you swiftly bounce back onto the heels of your feet.
your socks had been rolled down to yours ankles in uneven lengths, your shin pads slipping from their placed position and your jersey covered in dirt and dust.
âcâmon ref, your not gonna call that?!â aitana calls out, whilst alexiaâteam captainârushes over to complain.
vicky rushes over to you, with a disconcerting look. âÂżoye estas bien? you took a pretty nasty fall there.â (are you okay?).
âyesâyeah im fine,â you grumble hoarsely, narrowing your eyes at the madrid players on the other side of the pitch that were pointing fingers and snickering in your direction.
she gives you a pat on the back, as the ref blows the whistle. you snap your head around, and heâs holding up a yellow card.
âen serio?!â alexia protests, âall im saying is that you made a mistake!â
with a huff, the blonde struts off towards you and vicky, pushing her slidden armband higher up her arm.
âyellow card huh?â vicky says, shaking her head. putellas tuts, hollering to the remainder of your team over.
âi swear they donât even try to hide the bias, it happens every single game,â kiera argues, jogging over as they all nod in agreement.
salma shuffles in closer, encouraging a group huddle. âlook we arenât going to win this by complainingâwe need a strategy.â
âsĂ but what? theyâre brutal tonight sal,â aitana replies. âweâve tried every strategy in the book so far, and y/ns injured.â
they all glance over to you, their star striker, covered head to toe in cuts and bruises. not to mention, the amount of grassâ turf that clung to your skin was intolerable.
âiâm not injured,â you say firmly, knotting your brows in defence despite the unbearable sting creeping up your ankle.
your teammates donât look convinced, but they donât push further. the referee is already growing impatient, gesturing for the game to continue.
alexia claps her hands, âalright team, ten coraje.â
you all disburse, as you limp your way back to your position. to be honest, your ankle was throbbing and with every step it felt like your bone could crack.
everyoneâs back in their places, as the whistle blows again. your quick to sprint in impulse, but as soon as you do, you wince in pain.
âjoder,â you curse, watching as the ball slips away from you, and to the madrid forward.
your vision wavers as you try to recover, but the pain shoots up to your leg. you swiftly glance at your teammates for help, but theyâre all too focused on the game to notice.
unbeknownst to you, pedri is up in the standsâsilent and worried. heâs accompanied by ferran and gavi, who equally have the most bewildered expressions too.
âi know this story,â ferran interrupts quietly, âand it doesnât end well.â
pedri doesnât say anything, but instead his eyes are fixed on you, with your slow and painful movements. heâs noticed how sluggish youâve become since the last hit, and even though you tried to look sharper, it wasnât possible.
âshe needs to ask to get subbed off or something. this isnât doing her or the team any good.â gavi slices through the deafening silence, whoâs on the edge of his seat.
itâs true. since the whistle blew, you had lost the ball a good three times, which you could of easily intercepted or won back.
âshe wonât,â pedri finally speaks. âsheâs too stubborn for that, even if itâs breaking her.â
ây/n! get your head in the game!â hansen orders, giving you a harsh nudge. âwe canât afford to lose this game because you cant focus.â
âiâm trying okay? but my ankle justââ
âyou told us you werenât injured.â she shrugs, running over to the midfield where the hustle was.
unfortunately, she was right but you were too stubborn to confess, but besides thereâs no chance you could give up now.
you sigh, rubbing the sweat from your forehead with the back of your arm. you didnât want to admit it but you were costing them the game; after failed promises you couldnât live up to.
minutes pass by and you find yourself on your rivals side of the pitch, with the ball close to madrids net, and you find this as a perfect opportunity to shoot it into the goal.
with a sharpe exhale, you push every ounce of power you still have into a jump, as you watch the ball loft into the air.
as you jump, ready to head straight into the netâ
âso does madrids defender.
your heads collide mid-air, a stark snap ringing throughout your ears before a wave of pain explodes across your skull.
everything happens so fast. the world tilts and spins and before you know it, your plunged into darkness.
the impact sends you pelting down onto the pitch, rolling onto your side with a loud groan.
the entirety of your vision blurs, a shrill ringing noise overwhelming all of your senses that make you clutch your forehead in pain.
the refereeâfor onceâmakes a sensible decision and immediately blows the whistle as your teammates sprint their way over.
each one of them have worry painted all over their faces, trying try their best to comfort you.
âshitây/n, you shouldnât of done that,â kieraâs the first to speak, cutting through the haze. but all you can manage is a grunt in response.
âmove, move, give her space.â alexia instructs, dropping to her knees besides you.
âi donât need help,â you mutter, attempting to sit up but failing when another sneer throb shoots through your skull. âit was just a small blow.â
ânada, nada.. you need to get checked out,â vicky says firmly. she also kneels down to the floor, keeping her hand on shoulder to keep you down.
in the stands, pedri continues watching in horror, his hands curled into fists from the first second of contact.
âwhatâs going on? i canât see,â pablo nudges ferran for an answer.
âmaybe itâs because youâre too short,â ferran snorts and begins laughing. gavi scoffs theatrically, giving the man a forceful push.
pedri shoots them both daggers, clearly not amused. ânowâs not the time for jokes hermano.â
âright, sorry,â they both nod and look back to the pitch. from their view, all they can see is that your laying flat on the floor whilst the rest of barça femenĂ are surrounding you.
back on the pitch, the medics are already making their way over but your still trying to argue your case.
you sigh for the third time, âhonestly, iâm fineâi can keep playing hermana.â
âthis wonât prove that your any tougher,â aitana declares, with an innocence to her tone. âwe already know you are, stop fighting it y/n.â
your lips part in objection, until a second pulse of ache pierces through your skull, making you sway.
the medics already have cloths to your temple, thermometers down your throat and pills in their grasps. but once the thermometer beeps, the decisions made.
âthatâs it your coming off,â one announces, helping you to your feet. alexia and vicky also help you up, giving you small hugs for support.
salma gives you a kiss of encouragement to your head as your guided off, your head still heavy.
the crowd roars with fury, and you can feel the puncture of the fansâ eyes analysing every single twitch of movement you made.
. . .
the medics room is cold, eerie and in general not a place youâd like to be in. the fan above was moving slowly, almost painfully.
you were lying on the examination table, blinking slowly as you tried to adjust to the light; every sound echoed in your head like its bouncing off cave walls.
âkeep your head still please,â the doctor instructs, shining a dainty flashlight into your eyes.
you wince, groaning at the intensity. âugh do i have to?â
âyes.â he deadpans, moving to the other eye. âyouâve got a grade two concussion, and a potential ankle sprain.â
âwhat does that mean?â you ask him seriously, as your brain still hasnât caught up to speed.
âitâs nothing too dangerous. you will just require plenty of rest, and unfortunately, you will miss quite a few mââ
heâs about to continue when heâs interrupted by a loud opening burst of the door. ây/n!â
pedriâs voice makes you finally twist, as heâs at your side within seconds. his hands straightaway reach for your own, warm against your cold fingers.
âwhat the hell was that?â he demands, his brows furrowed in deep concern. âyou could of cracked your skull open and you still wanted to keep playing?â
his tone is sharp, but his touch is gentle even as they cup your face, evenly smoothing over your clammy forehead.
you blink up at him, struggling to focus.
âsince when have there been two of you amore?â you ask, completely disregarding his question.
pedriâs frown deepens. âyeah your definitely concussed.â
your smile is lazy and carefree, poking his cheek when he turns to the doctor in ambition for your medical results.
âyouâre cute when your angry,â you giggle, your mindset with him a polar opposite of before. your boyfriend doesnât answer you, so you insist.
âpedrii,â you whine, pulling on the strings of his hoodie to pull him closer. âarenât you listening to me?â
he snaps out of conversation with the doctor abruptly, his face now so close to yours that you can feel the tickle of his breath. âsĂ carino, iâm listening.â
âwhat did i just say then?â you grouse, annoyed.
he hums, obviously not having the briefest idea of what you actually said. âsomething about the lights?â
âno silly, i said, youâre cute when your angry.â
pedri sighs, âthis isnât funny y/n, you could of gotten seriously hurt.â
âkind of is,â you mumble, the corner of your mouth curving into a vague smile. âyour all worked up over me.â
âyeah and earn myself a heart attack,â he lets out with a small chuckle, giving a quick peck to the tip of your nose.
his hands shift up to cradle your jaw, his thumbs brushing delicately over your cheekbones. âyou genuinely did scare the shit out of me though,â he admits, his tone softer now. âplease never do that to me again.â
âill try,â you say flatly, shrugging your shoulders.
âno you wonât try, you will.â he corrects, sweeping lost hairs from your face. âiâm never letting you do that to me again.â
âthreatening me isnât going to work pedro,â you snort airly.
âif i say that i wonât let you kiss me until you stop being so reckless, then will it work?â he counters, with a smug smirk.
your eyes widen slightly, âyou wouldnât.â
pedri tilts his head, his smile unwavering. âtry me.â
you dramatically sigh, but continue fidgeting with the strings of his hoodie. âthatâs so cruel, especially when iâm hurt.â
âcall it what you want amor,â he grins, âbut if it stops you from terrifying the hell out of me then iâll do it.â
you huff, looking away, but pedri isnât having it. he leans in, pressing a lingering kiss to your temple, right where the impact was worst. then another, softer this time. and another. his lips trail over every tender spotâyour forehead, the side of your head, down to your cheek, as if his kisses alone could erase the pain.
âpromise me that youâll be more careful,â he murmurs between kisses. âplease.â
even though you werenât fully reassured of yourself, rather you simply forget or donât entirely listen, you do owe him a favour.
for everything.
âi promise,â you whisper, voice small.
pedri still doesnât look fully convinced, but he holds you tighter anyway, his lips pressing against your hair one more timeâone final reminder that, no matter what, heâd always be there to put you back together.
Hii do u write for Marc Bernal or the Fernandez cousins (Toni and Guille)?
I love ur writing btw <3
summary:: itâs 2am after a long day and you and marc decide to go on a random road trip.
warnings:: uhhhh none?
writers note:: okay so this isnât really a req but i wanted to write for him to i took the opportunity!
the city buzzed outside, alive with distant laughter and the hum of traffic, but inside the apartment, it was warm and quiet. the kind of quiet that settled between two people who didnât need to fill the space with words. you sat curled up on the couch, wearing one of marcâs oversized sweatshirts, the sleeves swallowing your hands as you scrolled through your phone aimlessly. the clock on the wall ticked past midnight, and the space beside you felt too empty. he had texted hours ago: team dinner, i wonât be too late, but as the minutes stretched into hours, your mind began to wander.
it was after one when the front door finally creaked open. you looked up, relief washing over you as marc stepped in, hair tousled from the wind, cheeks flushed from the cold. his smile was soft, a little sheepish.
âhey,â he said, voice low. âsorry iâm late. things ran longer than i thought.â
âi figured,â you murmured, unfolding from your spot. you crossed the room and slipped your arms around his waist, holding him close. he smelled like the night air and the faint hint of his cologne, something familiar that eased the tension in your chest.
âmissed you,â marc whispered into your hair, arms tightening around you.
âmissed you too,â you replied, voice muffled against his jacket. pulling back slightly, you reached up to brush his hair out of his eyes. âyou eat? i kept some food warm.â
he shook his head. âwasnât really hungry. just wanted to come home.â
you smiled, fingers lingering against his cheek. âcome on, letâs sit. you look exhausted.â
he let you lead him to the couch, flopping down beside you with a sigh. without thinking, you pulled a blanket over both of you, tucking it around his shoulders. he leaned into you, head resting on your shoulder as your fingers found his hair, combing through the dark strands.
âthese are my favorite nights,â marc murmured, voice barely above a whisper. âjust you and me. no noise, no cameras.â
âmine too,â you said softly. the television played something neither of you was really watching, casting flickering lights across the room. outside, rain began to patter against the windows, the soft sound filling the spaces between your breaths.
a comfortable silence stretched between you until marc spoke again. âwanna do something spontaneous?â
you glanced down at him, brow raised. âlike what?â
he grinned, boyish and bright despite how tired he looked. âletâs go somewhere. right now. just get in the car and drive.â
you laughed, shaking your head. âmarc, itâs two in the morning.â
âthatâs what makes it fun,â he argued, sitting up. his eyes sparkled with excitement. âwe donât have to go far. just... get out of the city for a bit. clear our heads. what do you say?â
you hesitated, glancing toward the window where rain continued to fall in gentle waves. the idea was ridiculous, and yet, there was something irresistible about it. about him. âyouâre impossible,â you muttered.
âbut you love me,â he shot back, grinning
âunfortunately,â you teased, grabbing your keys from the counter. âfine. but youâre driving.â
âdeal.â
twenty minutes later, you were in his car, the heater blasting as you sped down near-empty streets. marc rolled the windows down despite the chill, letting the rain-scented air whip through the cabin. you leaned back, watching city lights blur into streaks of gold and red. his hand found yours on the center console, fingers intertwining naturally.
âthis is crazy,â you said over the music, wind tugging at your hair.
âthe best kind of crazy,â marc replied, glancing at you with a grin that made your heart stutter.
you drove aimlessly, laughing as marc sang (badly) to old songs, stopping at a 24-hour gas station to load up on snacks. you found yourself giggling at the absurdity of it all, standing in a fluorescent-lit aisle at three a.m., marc holding up a bag of gummy bears like it was the greatest discovery of the night.
âessentials,â he said seriously
âyouâre a menace,â you replied, tossing a bag of chips into the basket.
back in the car, you drove until the city fell away, replaced by dark roads winding through fields and trees. eventually, marc pulled over at a secluded spot overlooking a stretch of water, the surface rippling under the rain. he killed the engine, and for a moment, the world felt suspended, just the two of you in a bubble of quiet.
he got out first, grabbing the blanket from the backseat. âcome on,â he urged. you hesitated before following, shivering as the cool air bit at your skin. marc wrapped the blanket around both of you, pulling you close. your head rested against his shoulder as you looked out at the water, the sky beginning to lighten with the first hints of dawn.
âworth it?â he asked softly.
you glanced at him, taking in the messy hair, the tired but content eyes. âyeah,â you whispered. âworth it.â
he smiled, pressing a kiss to your temple. âtold you.â
the sky bloomed with colors, pinks, oranges, soft purples, reflecting off the water in shimmering waves. marc held you tighter, his warmth seeping into you, grounding you in the moment. for a while, neither of you spoke, content to watch the world wake up around you.
âthis,â he murmured after a long stretch of silence, âthis is what life should be. just... us. no schedules. no pressure. just being.â
you nodded, heart swelling with affection. âi could stay like this forever.â
he chuckled. âcareful, i might hold you to that.â
you tilted your head up to kiss him, slow and soft, the kind of kiss that spoke of quiet promises and late-night adventures. when you pulled back, his smile was lazy and content. âlove you,â he said.
âlove you more,â you replied automatically.
âimpossible,â he shot back, grinning.
the sun crested the horizon, bathing everything in warm, golden light. marcâs arms stayed wrapped around you as the world stretched out before you, vast and full of possibility. and in that moment, with his heartbeat steady under your palm and the future wide open, you believed that maybe, just maybe, you could stay there forever.
omg please do joão félix bf head cannons w a non famous girl
summary: youâre joao felixâs girlfriend except youâre not famous.
warnings: ACTUALLY YES THERE IS!! MAGUI MENTIONED.
writers note: ahhh anon i love this idea, evrb makes fics of the reader being famous but thatâs so unlikely!! also ignore the fact that it was so obvious that i made this on the plane and im so sorry for it taking so long!! iâve been travelling đ
êš - youâre honestly not too fond of you being all over the media, you like your privacy so joao respects that and his posts w you donât often include your face
êš - (HOWEVER!! if you want to be part of joaos socials; here is the alternative!!) ; he often is proud to show you off as his girlfriend, leading the media to love you as chelseaâs new hot wag
êš - when the media originally found out, people were skeptical, were you with him only for the money?? comparisons of you and magui appeared for some reason journalists being in maguis favour although it was never really a competition
êš - eventually, news outlets post âwho is joao felixâs new girlfriend? 10 facts about y/n that you probably didnât know aboutâ which is quite ironic considering that they thought you were a gold digger
êš - lowkey dates: for example, instead of a big dinner, heâll take
you out for late night drives
êš - since he travels a lot, whenever you guys have quiet time tg whether its chatting on the couch or playing fifa tg, he cherishes it
êš - even though you arenât famous, as soon as the media found out about you your insta followers grew insanely
êš - speaking of insta, he posts you a lot on his story, even if its just you holding his hand
Hiiiii Iâve been waiting sooo long to request from u I looooove ur writing <33
So hear me out luv a Hector Fort long fic (please make it long 8k+) where heâs a popular student and reader is like an unpopular middle class student and sheâs kinda bullied for that but Hector starts dating her cuz he loves her but all his friends and people in school start calling her a gold digger and Hector keeps defending her so one day he gifts her a necklace like an expensive one right but she needs money cuz her mom needs meds and her fam arenât doing well but somehow the popular girl in school that has a crush on Hector finds out and tells him so he thinks reader is actually with him for the money so he fights with her and break up and then later he finds out that she suffered and he regret it when he found her working 2 part time and became always absent in school and got sent to principal cuz she sleeps in class cuz sheâs tired from working and make the endings fluffy but please make it angsty like I wanna cry I wanna bawl my lil eyes and heart out (Iâm a sucker for angst I litt read sad books all the time)
If you are able to write this I thank u in advance darling <33
Have a great weekend and stay healthy and safe đ
summary:: the req.
warnings:: angst but yk that.
writers note:: this took way too long to write but tbf this got requested ages ago and iâd write like once a week but itâs lowkey fun! also thereâs a baby ref in this
w/c:: 9k
tags:: @barcapix @n0vazsq @httpsdana @paucubarsisimp @universefcb @mariejuli @nngkay
ââââââââââââââââââââââ
montserrat academy smelled like money.
not literally, but in that subtle way: clean, polished hallways that echoed too much, perfume lingering in the air even after people had left, crisp uniforms that never seemed to wrinkle, shoes that didnât scuff, phones without a single crack.
you didnât belong there. not really.
youâd gotten in on merit, a scholarship, long nights of studying, beating the odds kind of story. your mom cried when you got the acceptance email. your little brother made a paper crown and called you âgenius queenâ for a week.
but being in didnât mean being part of.
you sat alone a lot. not because you were a loner, but because lunch tables filled up fast with people who didnât look twice at you. your clothes werenât trendy, your shoes were always the same beat-up pair of sneakers, and your accent still carried bits of the neighborhood you came from.
and the others⊠they noticed.
they didnât push you or laugh in your face or throw your books across the floor like in those dramatic high school movies. no, it was quieter than that.
it was looking through you when you spoke in class. it was changing the subject when you joined the conversation. it was the way camila once complimented your thrifted bag, and everyone laughed like sheâd told a joke.
you werenât hated. just forgotten. misplaced. tolerated.
but you didnât come to be liked.
you came to escape.
from the thin walls of your apartment, where you could hear your mom coughing through the night. from the grocery lists that had more crossed-out items than bought ones. from the part-time job you worked after school and on weekends, where your uniform smelled like espresso and burnt toast.
you told yourself that montserrat academy was a ladder.
get good grades. get out. get a future.
so you kept your head down. kept your notebooks full. tuned out the whispers.
until him.
hĂ©ctor fort didnât exist in your world. not really. he was the kind of student who was the school. son of someone important. name whispered like legacy. always surrounded. always laughing. not in a loud, obnoxious way, but in that warm, boy next door in a netflix teen show kind of way.
he played football, well. people wore his number on hoodies, not because they were on the team, but because he was the team. he was in all the sports day photos. he was in the group project that won nationals. he was even in the school tour pamphlet they handed to new families.
and he was everywhere.
in the mornings, leaning against his locker. during lunch, surrounded by people who hung on his every word. after class, headphones around his neck, bouncing a ball against his knee like he couldnât sit still.
you noticed him because everyone did.
he noticed you, and that was the part you didnât understand.
it started in october.
you were sitting behind the library, your favorite spot, shaded, quiet, full of soft rustling trees and the hum of faraway conversations you didnât have to join. you liked being alone there. liked how the sun hit your notebook just right, how your soup thermos kept your hands warm.
you were rereading a chapter for literature class when footsteps crunched the leaves.
you didnât look up right away. people didnât usually come back here. but then you heard it, the unmistakable, too calm voice:
âhey.â
you looked up.
héctor.
you blinked, then instinctively checked behind you, half-expecting him to be talking to someone else.
but there was no one.
just you.
âis this spot taken?â he asked, nodding toward the patch of grass near you.
you blinked again. âuh⊠no. itâs not.â
he sat. like it was normal. like it was nothing.
you waited for the joke. for someone to pop out with a camera. you waited to wake up.
but he didnât say anything else. just pulled out a book, your book, actually. same edition, same dog-eared corner you had in yours. and opened it to where the next chapter started.
silence settled.
you told yourself not to read into it. maybe it was a coincidence. maybe he just liked the quiet too.
the next day, he was there again.
and the next.
by friday, he nodded at you like it was a routine. you didnât even question it anymore. just shifted your bag to give him space and went back to your reading.
you still didnât talk much. sometimes heâd point out a line in the book and mumble something about it being clever. sometimes youâd make a quiet joke and heâd laugh softly, like he was trying not to make it a big deal.
it wasnât flirtation. not yet.
it was something else. something slower. something quieter.
and you didnât understand it. didnât know why he was choosing this spot when he had all the tables in the courtyard waiting for him. why he started borrowing your highlighters and returning them with smiley faces drawn on the caps. why he lingered a little longer after the bell rang.
but you didnât ask.
because it felt⊠safe. and safe wasnât something you had very often.
one wednesday, he showed up with two drinks.
âoneâs for you,â he said, handing you a plastic cup with condensation beading down the sides.
you took it cautiously. âwhat is it?â
âiced cinnamon oat latte,â he said. âthe guy at your cafĂ© said itâs your usual.â
you stared at him.
he just shrugged, a little too casual. âi went there this morning. wanted to see if the pastries were as good as you always say.â
you blinked.
âyou went out of your way just toââ
âtheyâre mid, by the way,â he interrupted, sipping his own drink. âbut this? this is good.â
you smiled, small and stunned.
and he smiled back, like heâd been waiting to see it.
you didnât know what this was yet.
it wasnât a relationship. wasnât friendship, even, not quite.
but it was something. something soft. something beginning.
and even if you didnât trust it yet⊠you were starting to hope.
you didnât plan on him becoming part of your routine.
he just did.
it was subtle at first. like sunlight stretching across your bedroom floor, there before you really noticed, warm before you could name it. hĂ©ctor started showing up behind the library before you even got there. sometimes with coffee. sometimes with an apple heâd take one bite out of, then forget to finish. always with that calm sort of presence. that ease you envied.
you learned little things.
he bit the inside of his cheek when he was thinking. he had messy handwriting and made his tâs too tall. he hated when people wasted food. he played with his necklace when he was bored. he smiled with one side of his mouth first, like the other had to catch up.
and he asked questions.
soft, curious ones.
âwhat do you wanna do after this?â
you looked up from your book.
âafter school, i mean,â he added. âlike⊠life. whatâs the plan?â
you shrugged. âgo to uni. get a job. something stable. maybe sleep more than four hours a night.â
he laughed gently, but his eyes softened.
âyou donât wanna dream big?â
you looked down. fiddled with the corner of your page.
âi think surviving is dreaming big,â you murmured.
he didnât say anything right away. just nodded, slow, like he got it.
your classmates started noticing before you did.
you could feel the shift. the way peopleâs eyes followed you when you passed. the way conversations dropped to whispers when you walked into a room. it was subtle, at first. but it grew.
you werenât invisible anymore. and it didnât feel like a compliment.
camila started looking at you like you were a stray cat tracking dirt across her marble floors.
âyou and fort,â she said one day in the hallway, voice sticky sweet, âare you, like⊠a thing?â
you blinked. âweâre friends.â
she laughed like that was the funniest thing in the world.
âright. just checking.â
you didnât tell hĂ©ctor. you didnât want him to feel like he had to defend you. not when things were still⊠undefined. you didnât know what he called you when you werenât around.
but then he asked.
âdo people ever give you shit?â he said one afternoon, tossing a leaf in the air and catching it.
you paused. âwhat?â
âabout us hanging out.â
you looked at him, quiet.
he sighed. âitâs just, someone said something earlier and it pissed me off. they donât know you. they donât get it.â
âget what?â
he blinked. caught your gaze. then shrugged.
âyouâre cool,â he said simply. âyouâre real. i like being around you.â
your heart did something weird and fluttery. you hated how easily he made you want to believe him.
âwell,â you said, trying to keep your voice level, âiâm not really used to people liking me for⊠anything, so. thatâs new.â
he looked at you for a second longer than he needed to.
âtheyâre idiots if they donât.â
your shifts at the cafĂ© got longer. your manager asked you to cover weekends, and you said yes because your momâs meds werenât getting cheaper, and you didnât know how to say no to survival.
you were tired all the time. your eyes stung during lectures. your back hurt from being on your feet too long.
and one friday, héctor showed up at closing.
you didnât even look up at first, you were too busy restocking sugar packets.
âhey, stranger.â
your head jerked toward the voice.
him. in sweats. hair damp from practice. a little out of breath like heâd rushed.
âwhat are you doing here?â you asked, blinking.
âthought you might need company.â
you blinked again. âi⊠i have to mop.â
he grinned. âiâm great with mops.â
he wasnât. he nearly slipped. twice. but he stayed. made you laugh. and when you locked up at the end of the night, he walked you to the bus stop, hands in his hoodie pockets, shoulders brushing yours.
âthanks,â you said softly.
he looked at you.
âfor what?â
âshowing up.â
he didnât answer.
just nudged your hand with his, like he was asking a question without saying anything.
you let your pinky hook around his.
not quite holding hands. not quite nothing, either.
the next week, he brought you a sandwich during break.
âyou didnât eat at lunch,â he said, not even looking up from his phone.
you blinked. âhowâd youâ?â
âyou had your sad soup face,â he shrugged. âfigured you were tired of leftovers.â
you stared at the sandwich. it had your favorite cheese. the kind you only got when it was on sale.
âyou didnât have toââ
âi know,â he said, finally glancing at you. âbut i wanted to.â
and that⊠that was the beginning of the end.
because wanting you?
that was dangerous.
and you were starting to want him back.
by the time december rolled around, everything felt different.
you still woke up early. still packed your brotherâs lunch. still worked weekends, still walked to school half-asleep with a thermos in your hands and a hoodie pulled over your ears.
but something in your chest had shifted.
it was the way you checked your phone before anything else, looking for a good morning text with a dumb emoji that never matched the mood. it was the way you stopped bringing soup because héctor always showed up with something better. it was the way his hoodie lived in your backpack now, just in case you needed it.
it was the way heâd learned to say your name like it was something soft.
and the way you stopped flinching when he did.
it was slow, so slow. every step of whatever this was. like he was giving you space to run, even though you didnât want to anymore.
you hadnât called it love yet.
not out loud.
but sometimes, when he leaned his head on your shoulder behind the library, when he handed you a drink with your name spelled right and a heart beside it, when he tied your shoe without saying a word and then stood up like it was nothing, you thought, maybe.
maybe.
the first time he asked you to come over, you panicked a little.
âjust a few of us,â he said, fiddling with the ring on his finger. ânothing fancy. weâre watching the barça match. iâll save you a spot on the couch.â
you hesitated.
you knew what his friends thought of you. knew the names they didnât say to your face. knew you werenât the kind of girl they invited to anything.
but you showed up anyway.
your jeans were the only pair you owned without a hole. your hair was in its neatest braid. you brought a bag of chips that cost more than they should have, but you didnât want to come empty handed.
his house was everything you expected, clean, modern, a little too big for a family of three. his mom smiled politely, offered you juice. his friends barely looked at you.
except camila.
she smiled with teeth. leaned too close to héctor. made comments that danced on the edge of insults, just sharp enough to sting.
but hĂ©ctor didnât let you drift.
he kept his knee pressed against yours. he explained the game when you looked confused. he handed you a blanket when it got cold, and when the match ended and his friends were getting ready to leave, he pulled you aside.
âyou okay?â he asked.
you nodded. too quickly.
he watched you.
âyou donât have to pretend around me,â he said, voice low. âi notice things too.â
you bit your lip.
âiâm fine,â you said. âthey just⊠think you could do better.â
his brows pinched, jaw tightening.
âno,â he said. âthey donât get you. big difference.â
you looked up at him.
he stepped closer.
âyouâre the best part of my day,â he whispered. âthey can choke on their opinions.â
you laughed. you couldnât help it. it burst out, messy and real.
and he looked so pleased with himself.
christmas break was colder than usual.
you worked doubles. your momâs medicine ran out and insurance wouldnât cover the new one. the heating in your apartment went out for three days, and you slept in the same bed as your brother, layered in sweatshirts.
you didnât tell hĂ©ctor. he was spending the holidays in menorca with his cousins, sending you photos of the beach and dumb santa filters on his face.
you didnât want to ruin that with your problems.
he texted you the night before new yearâs.
hey. can i see you tomorrow? like⊠actually see you?
you said yes, of course.
he showed up at your building at noon, wearing that navy jacket you liked, a bag in one hand and a little grin tugging at his mouth.
you met him outside, hair still damp from your rushed shower, shoes half-tied.
âi brought snacks,â he said. âand something else.â
you raised a brow.
he held up a small velvet box.
your stomach dipped.
âdonât freak out,â he said quickly. âitâs not, like, a thing. i just saw it and thought of you. thatâs all.â
you opened it slowly.
inside was a necklace, gold, delicate, a tiny star on a fine chain. barely there, but still beautiful. something that caught the light just right.
âhĂ©ctorâŠâ
âyou donât have to wear it,â he said, rubbing the back of his neck. âi just⊠you look up at the sky so much, and it made me think of you. thatâs dumb, right?â
you shook your head.
âno. itâs not dumb.â
he reached out, slow.
âcan iâŠ?â
you nodded.
he fastened it around your neck, his fingers brushing your skin. you held your breath.
and when he stepped back to look at you, his eyes softened.
âperfect,â he said.
you didnât cry. not then.
but something shifted inside you. something quiet and seismic.
you wore the necklace every day after that.
under your uniform, tucked into your sweater at work. even to sleep. you touched it when you were anxious. let your fingers find the tiny star when you missed him.
you felt⊠seen.
loved, maybe.
but nothing good stays untouched for long.
camila noticed the necklace two days after school started again.
âcute,â she said, twisting her lip. âreal gold?â
you didnât answer.
she smirked.
âmust be nice, having a boyfriend with a black card. youâre really playing the long game, huh?â
you froze.
âwhatâs that supposed to mean?â
she shrugged. âjust saying. not everyone gets a promotion from barista to princess without putting in work.â
you walked away before your hands could shake.
you didnât tell hĂ©ctor.
again.
but you shouldâve.
because you were about to need him more than ever.
the first time he said it, i love you, it wasnât planned.
no candles, no build-up, no carefully picked moment.
it was raining. you were curled up on his bed, wearing his hoodie, socks mismatched. you were both tired, he had practice all morning, you had two shifts back to back, and your eyes kept fluttering shut during the movie playing in the background.
he turned toward you, head on his arm, eyes soft.
you didnât even notice right away. not until he said it again, this time quieter. slower. more certain.
âi love you.â
your breath caught.
he didnât rush to fill the silence. he didnât take it back or explain it away. just watched you with that look. the one that made you feel like the world wasnât spinning so fast. like maybe you could stop running and rest for a minute.
you didnât say it back right away.
you blinked, heart thudding in your chest, and whispered, âwhy?â
he smiled, small, real, almost sad.
âbecause you still show up, even when everything tries to tell you not to.â
your throat burned. your fingers curled into the fabric of his hoodie. your eyes stung.
and when you finally said it, i love you too, his shoulders dropped like heâd been holding that breath for weeks.
he didnât kiss you. not right away.
he just pulled you closer. held you like you were something breakable and sacred at the same time.
like he knew you hadnât been held like that in a long time.
after that, things got easier.
he called you more. waited outside the café when your shifts ran late. sent you dumb tiktoks and notes in your locker. sometimes he showed up at your place with dinner, stuff your mom liked, stuff your brother would actually eat.
he never made it a big deal.
never made you feel small about needing help.
never made it feel like charity.
just said, youâd do the same for me.
you fell for him a little more every time he said stuff like that.
he called you star girl sometimes. said the necklace made you look like you were born under something magic.
you rolled your eyes at him, but you never took it off.
not even once.
one night, after your shift, you both sat in his car in the parking lot. your feet were killing you, your voice was hoarse, and your eyes burned from staying open too long.
he reached over, took your hand.
âcome away with me this summer,â he said.
you blinked. âwhat?â
âsomewhere quiet. no pressure. no uniforms. just you and me and maybe the sea.â
you laughed. âand how would we afford that?â
âiâll figure it out.â
âyou say that like itâs easy.â
he looked at you, serious now. steady.
âi say it like i want you there. and when i want something, i make it happen.â
you looked away.
no one had ever made room for you like that before. not in plans. not in futures.
you squeezed his hand.
âokay,â you whispered. âjust you and me and the sea.â
he smiled, wide. like youâd given him the world.
you started dreaming again.
tiny dreams.
less tired. more time. a quiet apartment with bookshelves. a degree with your name on it. dinner that wasnât just toast or soup. a boy with brown eyes and soft hands waiting at the end of every day.
you let yourself believe you could have that.
you let yourself feel safe.
loved.
wanted.
just long enough for it to really hurt when it was taken away.
you noticed the change before it happened.
it started in the eyes. the way he looked at you.
less soft. less sure. less warm.
just for a moment, maybe two. but you felt it. deep, right between your ribs.
you brushed it off at first.
maybe he was tired. school, training, everything piling up. you told yourself you were being paranoid. that old voice in your head, the one that used to whisper they donât stay, was lying again.
but then the texts got shorter. the calls went unanswered. the lunch spot behind the library sat cold and empty for three days in a row.
and then⊠the whispering started again.
it was different this time. sharper. louder. less subtle.
someone knew.
you caught it in the hallway.
âheard she sold the necklace.â
âseriously? damn. i knew she was in it for the money.â
âpoor thingâs gotta pay rent somehow, i guess.â
your blood ran cold.
you didnât say anything. didnât ask. didnât confront.
you waited for him to bring it up.
but he didnât.
not until the fourth night you waited for him after your shift, in the freezing cold, with your fingers numb and your chest tight and your backpack too heavy.
his car pulled up late.
he didnât smile when he saw you.
you slid into the seat, heart already racing. he didnât kiss your cheek. he didnât say hey, star girl.
he just drove. quiet. stiff. hands clenched on the wheel.
you didnât ask until you were two turns away from your apartment.
âdid something happen?â
he didnât answer right away.
just exhaled. sharp. through his nose.
and thenâ
âi heard you pawned it.â
your heart dropped.
âwhat?â
âthe necklace.â
your voice cracked. âwhat are you talking about?â
âcamila saidââ
âcamila?â you cut in. âyouâre listening to camila?â
his jaw tightened. âshe showed me. a friend of hers works at the shop downtown. said you came in last week.â
your mouth went dry.
you opened it. closed it. opened it again.
because it was true. you had gone. but not to sell it. not to pawn it. you wanted to ask if they could hold it. just in case. if things got worse.
you didnât do it. you couldnât.
you still wore it. every day. tucked under your uniform. over your heart.
âi didnât sell it,â you whispered.
he didnât look at you.
âyou really think iâm using you?â your voice trembled.
âi donât know what to think right now.â
âyou think iâm a gold digger?â
he winced at the word, but didnât deny it.
you blinked, tears building fast, throat closing.
âi helped pay for my momâs medication last week,â you said, voice barely a breath. âwe ran out. the insurance wouldnât cover the new one. she was in pain, hĂ©ctor. i didnât tell you because i didnât wanna make you feel like you had to fix it. because i know youâre not a bank. youâre a person. the person iââ
your voice cracked.
ââi loved.â
his face crumpled for half a second. but he turned away. again.
âyou shouldâve told me,â he said quietly.
you laughed, a bitter, wet sound.
âand you shouldâve believed me.â
silence.
you looked out the window. hand pressed flat over your chest, where the necklace sat, cold against your skin.
âpull over,â you whispered.
âwhat?â
âpull over.â
he did.
you stepped out. shut the door before he could say anything else. started walking.
and he let you go.
you didnât cry when you got home.
you didnât cry when your mom asked if you were okay, or when your brother offered you the last piece of bread from dinner.
you cried when you got to your room. when you closed the door. when you sat on your floor, in the dark, and finally unclasped the necklace and held it in your hand.
it glowed a little in the streetlight from your window.
a gift. a promise. a lie?
you didnât know anymore.
you stopped answering his texts.
you couldnât look at him in the halls. didnât go behind the library. didnât walk past his locker.
he tried. once.
âcan we talk?â
you shook your head. didnât trust your voice.
he nodded. stepped back.
but he looked wrecked.
and you hated that part of you still wanted to run to him. still wanted him to take it back. to say he was sorry. to say i believe you.
but he didnât.
not yet.
so you stayed quiet.
and tired.
and alone.
the first night he didnât come to find you, you couldnât breathe.
he didnât text you. didnât leave a voicemail. didnât even try to look for you after school. you spent the whole night trying to tell yourself it wasnât personal. maybe he needed time. maybe he was too ashamed. maybe he just didnât know what to say.
but the silence echoed. louder than any apology. louder than anything he couldâve said.
you tried to distract yourself. books, homework, scrolling through your phone as if it could ease the ache gnawing at your chest. but nothing worked. nothing could fill the space he left behind.
you found yourself wishing youâd never said it. wishing you could take back those words, the ones that shatteredeverything. wishing that maybe, just maybe, if you had just stayed quiet, everything wouldâve been okay.
but you couldnât go back.
and in the silence, it became real. this wasnât a misunderstanding. this wasnât just a fight. this was something bigger. something that felt too heavy to carry.
the pain, his pain, stuck to your ribs. suffocated you. not from the words he said, but from the words he didnât say.
he never even tried to fix it.
the next day, he didnât try to find you. he didnât come to your locker, didnât sit beside you in class. he walked past you in the hallway, his gaze drifting somewhere else, anywhere but toward you.
it stung. the cold indifference. the way he looked like you werenât even worth a glance anymore. like you were just another girl he used to care about.
he didn't apologize. he didnât even see you.
he just, walked away.
and you hated yourself for still feeling something.
you tried to keep your distance. tried to push him out of your thoughts. out of your heart. but no matter how many times you told yourself you were better off, you couldnât shake the image of his eyes. the way they softened when they looked at you. the way heâd whispered âi love youâ like heâd meant it.
but that was before.
now, all you had were the remnants of the promises heâd made.
the necklace. the plans. the quiet moments. the love you thought you had.
and it hurt. oh god, it hurt more than you thought anything could.
you kept walking. kept working. kept pretending that it was okay, that you were okay. but every step felt like a betrayal of the love you had given him. the love youâd believed in.
that night, after another shift, you barely made it home before your mom noticed.
âyou look terrible,â she said. âhowâs your day?â
you didnât answer right away. just slid off your jacket and put it on the chair. sat down at the kitchen table.
âworkâs fine,â you said, your voice shaking despite the effort to sound normal. âitâs fine.â
but she wasnât fooled.
she sat across from you, her eyes narrowing. âyou know you can talk to me, right?â
you nodded. but the words were stuck in your throat. the words that needed to come out wouldnât.
because they werenât just about a fight.
it was about everything.
you stayed quiet. stared down at the table, where the unfinished bowl of soup from earlier sat cold.
âdoes he love you, honey?â she asked, her voice soft, gentle. like she already knew.
the question hit you like a punch to the gut. does he?
you thought you knew the answer.
you thought he did.
but now? it felt like that love had been a fragile illusion.
âi donât know,â you whispered, voice breaking. âi really thought he did, mom. i really did.â
the next day, he still didnât talk to you.
but she did.
camila. the girl who had spread the rumors. the one whoâd whispered about you being a gold digger. the one who had poisoned his mind with lies.
she smiled at you like nothing had happened. like she hadnât been the one to rip the love you had apart with her venomous words.
âhey,â she said sweetly, leaning against the lockers like she owned the space. âstill hanging around him? thought youâd know by now. boys like him donât stay with girls like you. they never do.â
you didnât respond. couldnât.
your stomach twisted, but you didnât give her the satisfaction of seeing you break.
you could feel her eyes on you as you walked away, but you didnât turn around. you didnât let her win.
by the time the final bell rang, the weight of the day crushed down on you. the world felt like it was closing in. your chest ached with every breath, your heart heavy, suffocating in the grief you couldnât shake.
when you got to your locker to grab your things, you found something unexpected.
a small envelope, tucked into the corner of your books.
your hands shook as you opened it. and there, inside, was a note.
it wasnât from him.
it wasnât even signed.
just words, scrawled quickly. desperate.
he's sorry. he doesnât know what to do. he needs you.
you stared at it. your vision blurred, and the sting in your chest deepened.
he needs you. but where was he? where was his apology? where was the man who promised to never leave?
he hadnât even fought for you.
and the truth cut deeper than anything else.
he was still the same. still too afraid to face the mess heâd made. too scared to fix what was broken between you.
he had let you walk away. had let her win. let her voice drown out his love for you.
you couldnât stay anymore.
not for him. not for this.
you folded the note carefully and shoved it into your bag. you walked out of the school, the weight of everything pressing on your chest, and didnât look back.
that night, after another endless shift, you found him waiting for you. he was standing at the end of the street, hands shoved deep in his pockets. eyes wide, searching.
you didnât stop.
you couldnât.
and when you walked past him, you heard his voice crack.
âi love you.â
you didnât turn around. didnât say anything. didnât stop walking.
because love wasnât enough anymore.
he didnât sleep that night. couldnât.
his phone was on his desk, buzzing with texts from friends, but he didnât care. nothing mattered except the silence between you two. thatâs all he could hear now. nothing but the deafening silence, thick with everything he hadnât said, everything he shouldâve said.
he thought about all the moments he couldâve fixed it. all the times he couldâve walked up to you and held you, apologized, and told you the truth. but no. he let his pride get in the way. let his insecurities shape his decisions. and now he was paying for it.
he sat up in his bed, staring at the wall, replaying the fight. hearing your voice break when you said, âyou think Iâm a gold digger?â like a knife to his chest. he couldnât shake it.
he thought about all the things you mustâve gone through. about your mom needing medicine. about the struggles you were fighting on your own. and he had been too selfish to see it. too blind to see that you werenât asking for anything from him except love.
the doorbell rang early in the morning, dragging him from his thoughts. he wasnât surprised when he saw his mom standing there, her arms crossed, her face full of concern.
âyou look like shit,â she said bluntly, walking in without waiting for an invitation. âwhat happened?â
âi fucked up,â he muttered, running a hand through his messy hair. âbig time.â
âwhatâd you do?â she asked, her voice softer now.
he shook his head, not sure he could explain it. not sure he could tell her that heâd messed up the best thing in his life, that heâd pushed away the only person who had ever really cared about him, really cared.
âi hurt her,â he said simply. âi hurt the one person who was real with me. and now sheâs gone.â
his mom sighed and sat down beside him. âi donât know what you want me to say, Hector. but you canât change it unless you show her you care. unless you prove that youâre willing to fight for her. words are cheap, son. youâve got to show her you mean it.â
he swallowed thickly. âbut what if she doesnât want to fight for me anymore? what if sheâs just... done with me?â
âthen youâll live with that,â she said, looking him dead in the eye. âbut youâve got to at least try. sheâs not a game you can just walk away from. sheâs a person. and youâve got to show her that you see her as that. if you love her, youâll fight for her, no matter what.â
he nodded, but the weight of the reality set in. could he fix this? or had he already ruined everything beyond repair?
the next day at school was just as empty as the night before. he walked through the halls, trying to act like everything was fine. but every glance, every whisper, reminded him of the mess heâd made. his friends were quieter around him, his old group of popular kids acting like nothing had happened. but he knew better. they werenât the ones he was fighting for.
he wasnât even sure they cared about him anymore.
and then he saw you.
you werenât looking at him. you never looked at him anymore.
you were with your friends, sitting by the lockers, talking quietly, like you didnât even notice him across the hallway. and he couldnât help but watch. watch how you smiled at them. how easy it seemed for you to laugh with them, like the last few weeks hadnât existed. like you hadnât been in love with him.
but he knew. He knew the truth, and it ate him alive.
his phone buzzed in his pocket. a text from his best friend:Â âyo, you good?â
he didnât answer.
he couldnât.
he knew if he answered, itâd be a lie. because he wasnât good. he wasnât even close to good.
he was broken. and it was all his fault.
you had to leave early that day. your mom had called, telling you she couldnât pick up her prescription, and the pharmacy wouldnât hold it any longer.
you didnât want to be there. didnât want to be anywhere near that school, near him. near the empty spaces where his words used to live.
the walk home was long. longer than it usually felt. with each step, you felt the weight of everything. everything that had happened, everything that was falling apart, and everything you had tried so hard to hold together.
and as you walked, you realized something: you missed him. you missed him so fucking much.
you hated yourself for it. because he hadnât fought for you. he hadnât cared enough to look for you. to hold you and make it right.
and yet, you were still here, still aching for him, still wondering if things could go back to the way they were before everything fell apart.
the whole situation made you sick. it made you feel small and foolish.
you needed to take a breath. you needed to move on. but every time you told yourself that, you could still feel him. feel his presence, his touch, his words, lingering like a ghost you couldnât shake.
he didnât wait long after you left.
he caught up with you on your way home. when you saw him in the distance, you stopped in your tracks, trying to pretend you didnât feel the same pang in your chest as he got closer.
he was panting, out of breath, his eyes wild like heâd been searching for you for hours.
âplease... talk to me,â he begged. âi canât just let you walk away from me. not like this.â
you swallowed hard, eyes burning. âyou already did. you walked away first.â
his hand reached for yours, but you pulled back, too hurt to let him in.
âi didnât mean it,â he said, voice raw, desperate. âplease. iâm so fucking sorry. you have no idea how much i regret listening to them. to camila... to everyone. iâve been an idiot. i was scared, okay? i didnât think someone like you would ever love someone like me. i thoughtââ
âyou thought what?â you interrupted, voice trembling. âthat i was just after your money? that i was just another girl who wanted a piece of your life?â
he winced at the accusation, guilt washing over his face.
âiâm sorry. i didnât think. i shouldâve trusted you. but i was just so scared that i wasnât good enough for you. i was scared of losing everything, and i let that fear take over. i let it make me do things iâm not proud of.â
you stood there, feeling like you were holding onto something that was slipping through your fingers.
âyou shouldnât have been scared,â you whispered. âyou shouldâve trusted me.â
he nodded, tears gathering in his eyes. âi know. i was stupid. but please... please donât walk away from me. i love you. and i canât lose you.â
for the first time in days, you met his eyes, and for the first time in days, you felt the faintest trace of something, maybe hope. maybe, just maybe, he still meant it.
but for now, it wasnât enough.
he didnât text you after that night.
you didnât text him either.
and the world stayed still for a while.
it wasnât silence the way it had been before, cold and final. this was different. quieter, softer. like the space between two people holding their breath, unsure if theyâre falling apart or falling back together.
you were tired. tired in a way that sleep couldnât fix. tired of hoping, of second-guessing, of giving and not knowing what youâd get back.
you still showed up to school. you still worked both jobs. still helped your mom with everything she needed. still carried the weight of a life no one at school ever saw.
and he noticed.
he saw the way your uniform wrinkled more now, like you didnât have time to care. he saw the dark circles under your eyes. saw the way you zoned out in class, like your body was there but your mind wasnât. he saw all of it. and it killed him.
because he knew that pain. knew he had a part in it.
and even worse, he knew you wouldnât let him help anymore.
it was a week after heâd found you on that street when you saw each other again. not just passing glances or accidental run ins. this time, it was real.
you were sitting in the back of the library, curled into a hoodie three sizes too big, your head in your arms, notebook half-filled with messy equations and tired handwriting.
you didnât hear him approach.
âyouâre gonna burn out,â he said quietly.
you looked up, blinking slowly. âalready have.â
he sat down across from you like it was the most natural thing in the world. no drama. no begging. just silence and the low hum of pages turning around you.
âiâm not here to fix anything,â he said after a beat. âi know i donât have the right. but i just wanted to sit with you. if youâll let me.â
you didnât answer right away.
you shouldâve said no. told him to leave. told him that he lost his chance.
but the truth was, you missed him. and you were tired of pretending that you didnât.
so you shrugged.
âitâs a free country.â
and he smiled. just barely. just enough to let hope breathe again.
you didnât talk much that afternoon. he watched you scribble notes. you watched him flip through a textbook he wasnât really reading. every so often, your knees would bump under the table, and neither of you pulled away.
it was stupid how natural it still felt. how easy it was to fall back into rhythm, even with all the cracks between you.
but neither of you brought up the fight.
not yet.
it was too soon. the wound was still fresh. and you both knew that healing would take more than one soft moment in the library.
still... it was a start.
later that week, he found you in the cafeteria, sitting alone, a half eaten sandwich beside your notebook. your head was resting against your hand, eyes barely open.
he didnât say anything. just slid into the seat beside you and offered his water bottle.
you took it without a word, too tired to argue, too drained to push him away again.
âyouâre not sleeping,â he said gently.
you gave him a look. âgee, wonder why.â
he looked down, ashamed. âi deserve that.â
âyou deserve worse,â you muttered, but your voice lacked the venom it once had.
he nodded. âi know.â
a pause.
and then, softly, too soft:
âi donât expect you to forgive me. not yet. maybe not ever. but i just want to show up. for you. however youâll let me.â
you stared at him for a long moment. longer than you meant to.
âyou can sit,â you said finally, nodding at the chair across from you. âbut thatâs all. donât expect anything more.â
he nodded. and he stayed.
and just like that, he became part of your orbit again.
not your boyfriend. not your enemy. just⊠there.
he started walking you to your classes, just a few steps behind, never pushing. he offered you his jacket when it rained. he kept his distance when you needed space. and sometimes, he didnât say anything at all.
but he was there.
and that meant something.
not everything. not yet. but something.
because you were still healing.
and healing doesnât happen in grand gestures or perfect apologies.
sometimes, itâs just someone showing up. again and again. until the silence doesnât feel so heavy anymore.
he knew he had no right to ask for more.
he was lucky you even let him sit beside you. lucky you didnât spit his name like poison anymore. lucky you didnât flinch when his hand brushed yours by accident.
he was still tiptoeing around your pain. still watching you fold into yourself every time the world got too loud. still noticing the little things, how you wore the same three hoodies on rotation, how you never touched the food in the cafeteria anymore, how your phone always had a message draft open but never sent.
you were hanging on by threads. and he hated that he used to be one of them, and then chose to cut himself loose.
so he didnât push. he didnât beg. he stayed in the quiet with you.
and he noticed things again. like how you never showed up to first period anymore. how youâd started asking to borrow pens because you kept forgetting your own. how your eyes glazed over in the middle of conversations, like your brain just... shut off sometimes.
he asked around, lowkey. your teachers were frustrated. your friends were worried. the front office said youâd been absent a lot.
he didnât ask why. he already knew.
he figured it out when he passed by the corner store one night, walking home after practice, and saw you inside, half asleep behind the counter, hoodie sleeves pulled over your hands, eyes barely open. it was past ten.
his heart sank.
he stood there outside the glass door for a while, just watching you ring up a womanâs groceries, nodding politely, smiling weakly. it wasnât your real smile. it was your i donât have the energy to exist smile. and he felt like shit for knowing it.
when he finally came in, the bell above the door jingled, and you didnât even look up.
âiâm clocking out soon,â you mumbled, automatically, voice tired and soft.
ânot here to shop,â he said gently.
your head jerked up like youâd been shocked. and your eyes met his. and you just blinked, like your brain was short-circuiting.
âwhy are you here,â you asked, voice flat.
âi was walking home,â he said. âand saw you.â
you didnât answer. just turned back to the register, scanned a pack of gum for a teenager with headphones in.
âdo you always work this late?â he asked quietly.
you didnât look at him. didnât need to.
âsomeone has to pay the bills.â
he nodded slowly, like the guilt in his stomach hadnât just quadrupled.
âi didnât know.â
âyou didnât ask,â you said simply.
and that hurt worse than if youâd yelled.
when your shift ended, you didnât expect him to still be there. but he was, leaning against the wall near the exit, arms crossed, eyes soft.
âyou really donât have to do this,â you muttered, walking past him.
âi know,â he said, falling into step beside you. âbut i want to.â
you sighed, too tired to argue. and so the two of you walked in silence. your backpack looked heavier than usual. maybe it was. maybe you were just too drained to hide it anymore.
he offered to carry it halfway through.
you said no.
but when your steps started to slow and you winced mid stride, he reached over and took it anyway.
you didnât stop him.
the walk to your building was quiet, but not uncomfortable. just slow. heavy. like everything between you was still being rebuilt, brick by broken brick.
he paused at your doorstep, holding the bag out to you.
âi meant it, you know,â he said.
you looked up.
âmeant what.â
âwhen i said iâd show up. no matter what.â
your fingers brushed his when you took the bag back. you didnât pull away this time.
âokay,â you whispered.
just that.
but for him, it was enough to keep going.
because maybe this wasnât the end. maybe you were still letting him in. inch by inch. breath by breath.
and if there was still space for him, no matter how small, he was gonna stay.
every time.
until you believed he meant it. until you believed you were worth it.
and maybe, just maybe, youâd let him love you again. this time without fear. without conditions. just love.
quiet, steady, and real.
you didnât mean to fall asleep at school again.
you tried. really. but your eyes had started burning halfway through third period, and your head had gotten heavy, and the warmth of the classroom mixed with the low buzz of the teacherâs voice just⊠pulled you under. you didnât even feel it happen.
you woke up to the principalâs voice.
he was standing over you, your name tight in his mouth, like heâd said it more than once. your classmates were staring. the room was too quiet. your face was warm with embarrassment, but your limbs were heavier than shame.
you mumbled an apology and tried to blink yourself back to life, but your head still felt like it was filled with fog. your teacher looked guilty. the principal looked frustrated. and you just felt small.
he asked you to come with him.
you didnât say anything. you just stood.
you sat across from him in his office, hands in your lap, hoodie sleeves tugged down past your knuckles. youâd been here before. when your absences started stacking. when your grades slipped. when someone reported that you were always nodding off, always running late, always ânot quite here.â
he didnât yell. he wasnât cruel. he just sighed.
âthis isnât sustainable,â he said gently. âyouâre clearly overwhelmed. your teachers are worried. youâve changed, and not in the way we like seeing.â
you nodded slowly, unable to argue. because it was true.
âis everything okay at home?â he asked.
you hesitated, then nodded again. even though the truth was, not really. but what could he do? what could anyone do?
âiâm just tired,â you whispered. âthatâs all.â
his frown deepened.
you left with a warning and a pass to go lie down in the nurseâs office. you didnât go. you just sat on the steps outside the building, elbows on your knees, forehead resting on your arms.
you didnât cry.
not because it didnât hurt.
but because you didnât even have the energy to.
hector found you like that.
he was supposed to be at practice. he left early. said he had a stomach ache. he didnât. he just had a feeling. a gut-wrenching, aching sort of feeling that he needed to find you.
he spotted you from across the quad, folded up into yourself, hair falling forward, body still.
his chest cracked open.
he crossed the space between you like it was instinct. like his legs moved before his brain could catch up.
he sat beside you without asking.
you didnât look up.
âi heard,â he said softly. âwhat happened.â
your voice was barely there. âdid the whole school?â
âdoesnât matter.â
you exhaled shakily, but didnât speak.
âyou wanna talk about it?â
you shook your head.
so he didnât push.
you sat like that for a while, him beside you, you folded in two, the sky slowly shifting above.
then, out of nowhere, you whispered, âiâm trying.â
he turned to you.
âi know.â
âiâm trying so hard, hector. and i just⊠iâm so tired of trying. and still getting nowhere.â
his throat tightened. âi see you. i see all of it.â
âno you donât,â you said, finally looking at him, eyes rimmed red. âno one does. they all think iâm lazy, or ungrateful, or not trying hard enough. but iâm doing everything. iâm keeping my mom alive, and iâm paying rent, and iâm working every shift they give me, and iâm still failing everything andââ
your voice cracked.
ââand i donât know what else to do.â
he didnât hesitate. he pulled you into him, arms wrapping around you like heâd wanted to since the first moment he messed up.
and you didnât fight it.
you just sank into him, into the warmth of him, into the steady heartbeat under his hoodie. and for the first time in weeks, you let yourself fall.
âiâm so sorry,â he whispered into your hair. âfor every second you had to feel alone.â
you didnât say anything.
but your fingers curled into the fabric of his sleeve like you didnât want to let go.
he didnât leave your side after that.
not for a second.
he helped you with your homework that night. sat beside you on the floor of your living room while your mom rested in the next room. he watched you write your essays, helped quiz you for math, brought you coffee even though you told him not to.
he didnât care.
he was there.
he texted you in the morning to make sure you woke up. met you outside your first class with breakfast in a paper bag. walked you to work after school. waited outside until your shift ended.
you kept telling him you didnât need saving.
he kept telling you he wasnât trying to save you. he just wanted to love you right this time.
and little by little, piece by piece, you started to believe him.
because love doesnât always come in grand gestures or perfect words.
sometimes it shows up late, with shaking hands and tired hearts.
sometimes itâs soft and quiet and steady.
sometimes, itâs him, carrying your backpack without asking, walking you home in the rain, whispering that heâs proud of you when you finish your homework even though your eyes wonât stay open.
sometimes, love is just showing up.
and this time, he was here to stay.
joao felix getting w neymars ex is the weirdest link up ever?? bro iâd never expect joao to b w sm1 that neymar got with in 2014.. as long as heâs happy!! gabriella lenzi, you better not be the new magui
summary:: being gavis girlfriend always comes with surprises, but itâs different this time because itâs his first valentines with you.
warnings:: uhm none!
writers note:: iâm so sorry this came the next day but iâve lowkey been busy asf yesterday and i also had to write part 3 of the fic! anyways uhm thatâs all i have to say
tags:: @barcapix @n0vazsq @httpsdana @paucubarsisimp
valentineâs day wasnât something gavi thought too much about. sure, his teammates joked about their plans, the romantic dinners, the extravagant gifts, but for him, it was just another day, until this year.
this year was different. this year, he had you.
you werenât flashy about valentineâs day either, which made planning a surprise for you even harder. he knew youâd insist that you didnât need anything, that just spending time together was enough. but gavi wanted to do something special, just this once.
so here he was, pacing back and forth in his apartment, double checking everything. the candles were lit, casting a warm glow over the room. the dinner, well, it was mostly takeout from your favorite place, but heâd set the table himself. and on the couch sat the small, neatly wrapped box that had him more nervous than any game heâd ever played.
the sound of your key in the lock made his heart race.
âgavi?â your voice was soft, questioning.
âin here,â he called out, trying to sound casual.
when you stepped inside, your eyes immediately took in the scene, the dim lighting, the food on the table, the nervous way gavi rubbed the back of his neck. a slow smile spread across your lips.
âyou did all this?â
âyeah,â he admitted, watching your reaction carefully. âi just⊠i know you said you didnât need anything, but i wanted to. you know, for you.â
your heart melted at his sincerity. stepping closer, you wrapped your arms around him, feeling the tension leave his body as he hugged you back.
âi love it,â you whispered against his chest.
dinner passed with laughter and easy conversation, the comfort of each otherâs company better than any five star restaurant. afterward, gavi hesitated for a moment before handing you the small box.
âopen it,â he urged.
inside was a simple gold bracelet, delicate yet strong, just like the way he saw you.
âgavi,â you breathed, running your fingers over the smooth surface. âitâs beautiful.â
âthereâs something on the inside,â he said, suddenly shy.
turning it over, you read the small engraving: âsiempre contigoâ always with you.
tears pricked at your eyes, and when you looked up, gavi was already searching your face for a reaction. you didnât say anything, you just kissed him, soft and slow, pouring every unspoken word into it.
when you finally pulled away, he grinned. âso⊠does that mean you like it?â
you laughed, wiping at your eyes. âi love it. i love you.â
and as he pulled you into his arms again, gavi decided that maybe valentineâs day wasnât so bad after all.
Losing my mind 'cause lifeâs a mess and I canât catch up on the masterpieces my queens have been posting
kenan yildiz fic?đ«¶đŒ part 2 of the recent mbyy
summary:: your boyfriend is so distant to the point youâre convinced he doesnât care
warnings:: NO HAPPY ENDING.
writers note:: iâm sorry for disappearing but mocks are the death of me! anyways sorry this took so long đđ.
tags:: @barcapix @n0vazsq @httpsdana @paucubarsisimp ; lmk if u wanna be added!
You wish he would just say it.
That he doesnât care. That this never meant anything. That you could leave and he wouldnât even blink.
Because maybe then it wouldnât hurt so much.
Instead, Kenan just stands there, hands in his pockets, watching you with that same unreadable expression. Like he knows what youâre thinking. Like he knows youâre trying to convince yourself that walking away is the right thing to do.
Maybe it is.
âI canât keep doing this,â you say, voice quieter than you want it to be.
Kenan exhales, running a hand through his hair. âSo donât.â
Your stomach twists. Thatâs it? No argument, no apologies, just those two words, thrown out like they donât matter. Like you donât matter.
You shake your head, forcing a bitter laugh. âYou make it look so easy.â
His jaw clenches, but he doesnât say anything.
And maybe thatâs the real problem.
Because youâve spent so much time trying to read between the lines, waiting for something, anything, to prove that he feels this the way you do. But all you ever get is silence.
You take a shaky breath. âI changed for you, you know. Cut off pieces of myself just to fit into whatever space you had left.â
Kenan flinches. Itâs subtle, barely there, but you catch it.
For the first time, you wonder if maybe he does care. If maybe this is hard for him, too. But even if it is, itâs not enough.
It never is.
So you force yourself to step back, ignoring the way your chest aches. âI wonât do it anymore.â
He stays quiet.
And this time, you donât wait for an answer. You turn and leave, without looking back.
why is the cause of my sufferings a literal cat. this thing is a curse.
summary:: you and your boyfriend sneak into the abandoned end of winter wonderland and you come across this alleged fortune teller who ends up making you two do side quests.
warnings:: none?
writers note:: this concept was honestly really old bc it was originally made in bangladesh when i visited an abandoned theme park so canât lie bc i found the draft version in my notes app so i just fixed it up fast asf but yea hope yall like it bc i found it funny. joao is giving cave diver in this so i wouldnât be surprised if he willingly went into the nutty putty cave by choice?
tags:: @barcapix @n0vazsq @httpsdana @paucubarsisimp ; lmk if u wanna be added!
âare you sure this place isnât haunted?' you asked, eyeing the flickering carnival sign overhead.
'only one way to find out,' joĂŁo grinned, pulling you forward. the fairgrounds were technically closed, but a gate left half open practically invited mischief. and you, against better judgment, followed him in.
'if a clown jumps out, iâm drop kicking it,' you muttered.
'noted,' he laughed, leading you past rusted rides and empty food stalls. the air smelled faintly of popcorn and nostalgia, tinged with just enough creepiness to keep you on edge.
then you saw it: an old fortune-telling booth with faded gold lettering; madame lulu sees all.
'nope,' you said immediately.
'oh, yes,â joĂŁo countered, already slipping inside. 'come on, whereâs your sense of adventure?'
'buried under common sense,' you grumbled but followed anyway.
inside, it was dark, save for a single flickering bulb overhead. a mechanical fortune teller doll stared blankly from behind the glass. joĂŁo inserted a coin, and the machine whirred to life, spitting out a card.
he read it aloud: 'seek whatâs lost, find whatâs true. beneath the dragonâs gaze, waits a clue.â
you stared. '...is this a scavenger hunt?'
'looks like it,' he beamed. 'letâs go!'
'joĂŁo..â
but he was already out the door, dragging you along. beneath the dragonâs gaze turned out to be an old carousel with a dragon-shaped ride. underneath it? a tiny tin box with another clue.
'who set this up?â you whispered.
'ghosts with a sense of humor,' he shrugged.
the hunt led you across the fairgrounds, through funhouse mirrors that distorted joĂŁoâs grin into something terrifying (ânightmare fuel,â youâd said, laughing), past a cotton candy stand where he tried to steal an old, hardened puff ('thatâs a fossil, not foodâ), and finally, to the ferris wheel.
'this has final boss vibes,' you said, eyeing the rusted structure.
'only one way up,' he smirked. 'race you.'
'you cheat..â but he was already climbing into a cart, pulling you in after him.
at the top, the city stretched out beneath you, lights twinkling in the distance. joĂŁo pulled out the final clue card, reading it quietly. 'sometimes, what you seek isnât hidden; itâs been beside you all along.â
'corny,' you teased, though your heart did a weird little flip.
he looked at you, smile softer now. 'yeah... but kind of true.'
you glanced away, the view suddenly not as distracting as the warmth of his gaze. 'so, what was the treasure?'
'guess we found it,' he murmured.
and maybe you had. maybe it was the laughter, the chase, the stolen glances. or maybe, just maybe, it was him.
'next time,' you said, breaking the moment with a grin, 'weâre doing something less dramatic.'
'no promises,' he winked.