A couple of things I'd like to share:
I changed my username! I was previously known as daredevils-toe, but no longer.
Asks/requests are open! Please check my pinned post for guidelines.
Started writing it today. 𫥠I have about 3-4 parts planned and there's just so much angst omg.
Thinking about cowboy!schlatt. May need to let the brain worms take over and write it.
To add onto this, I was thinking about maybe doing it in first person and make it sort of diary-esque? And I might purposely put the chapters out of chronological order. So one chapter may take place in September 2021 and the next in November 2019 idk.
Hear me out.
I want to write a Schlatt fic in which the chapters are out of order (each takes place at a different point in time). The MC and Schlatt are sort of in this situationship. It takes years for them to finally realize their true feelings for each other. (Sort of inspired by One Day except there's no sad ending because I don't like sad endings.)
I hope this made sense. I can't wait to start writing it. đ
Alice makes vlogs with her twin brother, Mason, and their best friend, Astra.
Alice has tattoos littering her arms and is constantly at the gym. Youâll find her in a crop top, biker shorts, and her AirPods in. Outside of the gym, she loves a good bomber or leather jacket on top of a tank top. Her go-to pair of shoes is her beat-up pair of Doc Martens.
Alice who gets thirsted over online by her fans. She tries not to let it get to her head, but she canât help it. She knows sheâs hot.
Alice who lives in LA despite absolutely hating it there. She only moved there because Mason and Astra wanted to. She would much rather be living in their old midwestern hometown.
Alice who pretends not to care, but always notices when somethingâs off. She doesnât flinch if someone yells, but will completely unravel if someone she loves cries.
Alice who, despite her rough exterior, is genuinely one of the nicest people you will ever meet. She can be sarcastically mean to you in one moment and then super sweet the next.
Alice who loves driving at night with the windows down and music loud enough to drown out her brain. She has exactly one playlist for lifting, one for crying, and one for when she feels like the hottest person alive.
Playlist!
Divider: enchanthings-a
Iâd let him
Pairing: Jschlatt (Jay) x fem!reader
Word count: 2k
Warnings: Southern Gothic setting, suggestive themes, longing, age-appropriate obsession, minor religious guilt, emotionally charged romantic tension, kissing, not entirely innocent thoughts, suggestive content, TWINK SCHLATT!!!
Summary: Youâve always watched him from afar. Jay, the loud-mouthed boy with bruised knuckles and a laugh that makes you feel dizzy. Youâre sweet, or at least you were, before he looked at you like that. Now you canât stop thinking about him. And worse, heâs finally started noticing you back.
A/N: Hope this ruins you in the softest, most Southern gothic Ethel Cain way possible. đ fr though I love this song with schlatt and this plot/setting just screams twink schlatt to me okay- like all of the skinny trashy boys I had a crush on in high school who smoked way too much weed
You saw him for the first time the summer you turned eighteen, when the heat came in thick and slow like molasses, and the pavement outside the gas station bubbled under your sneakers. You were elbow-deep in freezer burn, rearranging popsicles behind the counter, when the bell above the door rang and your world tilted just a little.
He walked in like he owned the place, all long limbs and loud voice, laughing at something one of his friends said. God, that laugh. Big and brash, like the kind of boy who didnât apologize for anything.
He was wearing a cut-off tee with a band you didnât know and a backwards hat that barely contained the curls at the back of his neck. You watched from behind the freezer glass, pretending to look busy as he strutted past the aisle of honey buns and beef jerky, jaw chewing absentmindedly on a toothpick like it had done something to offend him.
He didnât look at you. Not then.
But you looked at him.
And you kept looking.
âž»
Jay wasnât the kind of boy you brought home.
He was the kind you watched from across the parking lot while pretending to count scratch-offs. The kind of boy your mama warned you about when she told you to keep your legs closed and your eyes down.
But you couldnât help it.
He was loud and messy and wild in a way this place wasnât. The kind of boy whoâd get in a fistfight for fun and then kiss you in the fallout. He wore his meanness like cologne and spat sunflower seeds at your feet without saying sorry.
You didnât know him. Not really.
But you wanted to.
âž»
You made a habit of knowing when heâd show up.
His truck would growl into the lot just after 7PM, rattling like it had a death wish. Youâd hear it before you saw him, bass turned up too high, the windows rolled down even though the AC worked fine.
He always parked sideways like rules didnât apply, and strolled in with two of his friends trailing behind him like bad ideas. His voice was always the loudest. Sharp, cutting, dipped in something vulgar and funny.
You kept your eyes low. Played it safe.
But you felt it.
The pull.
The ache.
The heat that bloomed somewhere just below your ribs and spread like spilled syrup when he walked too close, smelled like smoke and gasoline.
And you started dressing different.
Just a little.
Gloss on your lips. Baby tee tucked tight. A daisy clipped behind your ear.
All soft, sweet things.
Things you hoped heâd want to ruin.
âž»
One day, he looked at you.
Really looked.
You were leaning on the counter, chin in hand, flipping through a trashy tabloid when the bell jingled and Jay swaggered in alone. No friends this time. Just him and the thick heat and the sound of cicadas screaming outside.
You didnât glance up fast enough.
But when you didâ
He was already looking.
Right at you.
His eyes dragged over you, slow and lazy like he had nowhere to be. His smirk curled, and he walked right up to the counter, chewing on nothing, eyes half-lidded and cruel.
âDonât think Iâve seen you before,â he said.
You blinked. Swallowed.
âI work nights.â
âShame,â he muttered, tapping the counter with a ringed finger. âGuess Iâve been missinâ out.â
Your face burned, but your voice stayed steady. âYou want anything?â
He grinned. âYeah. Whatâs your name?â
You told him.
He said it once, trying it out. âPretty.â
You shouldâve laughed.
Instead, you stared at the way his lip curled around the word, the way he leaned forward like he was gonna say something awful, something filthy, and you wouldâve let him. You wouldâve listened to every word.
But he just winked.
Grabbed a cherry soda from the fridge and left a crumpled dollar on the counter.
No change.
No goodbye.
You watched him walk out into the heat, long and golden and made of sharp edges.
You didnât breathe for a whole minute.
âž»
You started writing about him in your journal.
Nothing serious.
Just little things.
Like the way he scratched the back of his neck when he was bored. Or how he always seemed to know when someone was watching him and looked smug about it. You wrote down the songs he played when his truck idled in the lot. You imagined what his voice would sound like in your bedroom, saying things you werenât supposed to want to hear.
You didnât love him.
You just wanted to kiss him so hard your teeth ached.
You just wanted to be his, even if only for a night.
âž»
Two weeks later, he showed up again.
This time, he leaned on the counter and said, âYou ever been out to the creek?â
You blinked. âWhat creek?â
âThe one past Millerâs farm. Little spot with the rope swing.â He smiled like he knew you wouldnât say no. âYou should come.
You didnât ask why.
You just nodded, heart jackhammering against your ribs
.
âTonight,â he said. âTen sharp. Donât be late.â
And just like that, you were his.
âž»
You told your mama you were staying at a friendâs.
Put on your shortest skirt. Slicked on lip gloss that tasted like strawberries and sin. Walked barefoot down the gravel path until his headlights found you.
He didnât say hi.
Just opened the passenger door and looked you over like heâd won something.
You climbed in, silent and sweating.
The cab smelled like sweat and spearmint and a boy who never cared what time it was.
He drove with one hand on the wheel and the other resting just a little too close to your thigh.
The radio played something low and slurred, and he tapped the beat on his knee like he didnât even notice you were staring at his hands.
You were.
You couldnât stop.
âž»
The creek was quiet.
Moonlight hit the water in soft ribbons, and the trees whispered secrets to the wind.
He cut the engine and leaned back in his seat, one arm slung lazily behind your headrest.
âYouâre quiet,â he said.
You shrugged.
âNervous?â
âNo.â
âLiar.â
You glanced at him.
His eyes glittered in the dark.
He grinned.
âYou watch me a lot,â he said.
You froze.
âWhat?â
âDonât play dumb. You think I didnât notice? Thought it was cute.â
You looked away, heat crawling up your neck.
He leaned in.
âGotta admit,â he murmured, âI been watchinâ you too.â
You turned to him, lips parted, but he was already thereâmouth on yours, hands rough on your hips, kiss sweet and sharp like peach candy and bad intentions.
It wasnât gentle.
But it was good.
Too good.
And when he pulled back, eyes hooded, lips shiny, he whispered, âBeen thinkinâ âbout this.â
You didnât say a word.
Just climbed into his lap and kissed him like you were starving.
âž»
You werenât a good girl.
Not really.
You wore white dresses and said thank you and smiled at old ladies in church.
But under it all, you ached.
For him.
For something real.
And Jay?
He was real in all the worst, best ways.
He bit your bottom lip when you teased him. He pulled your hair when you got too mouthy. He kissed your neck like he was marking territory.
You let him.
You wanted him to.
âž»
You met like that every week.
Sometimes at the creek.
Sometimes behind the old laundromat where the lights flickered and the pavement smelled like bleach and burnt rubber.
Heâd press you against brick walls and tell you how pretty you looked when you blushed. Heâd call you baby and trouble and sweet thing like it meant something.
And God, it did.
To you, it meant everything.
He wasnât your boyfriend.
Not really.
But he called you his.
And when he drove you home with one hand gripping your thigh and the other curled around the wheel, you felt like you could die right then and be happy.
âž»
You never told anyone.
Not your friends. Not your mama. Not even yourself, not really.
Because to say it out loud would make it real.
And you werenât sure you could survive that.
He was your secret.
Your summer sin.
The thing you prayed about in the quiet, trembling on your knees with dirty thoughts and clean hands.
You were the girl who watched him from afar and wanted him anyway.
And now?
Now he wanted you back.
âž»
Some nights, you still lie awake and think about the way his hands felt on your waist, the way he laughed like the world was ending and he didnât care.
You think about the way he said your nameâlow, rough, reverent.
Like a prayer.
Like a promise.
Like you were something worth breaking for.
And maybe you were.
Maybe you still are.
Hear me out.
I want to write a Schlatt fic in which the chapters are out of order (each takes place at a different point in time). The MC and Schlatt are sort of in this situationship. It takes years for them to finally realize their true feelings for each other. (Sort of inspired by One Day except there's no sad ending because I don't like sad endings.)
I hope this made sense. I can't wait to start writing it. đ
I just finished a particularly long Schlatt fic on ao3. 18 chapters. 35k words.
midnight. you come and pick me up no headlights.
Summary: Nora Parker is a content creator who makes cooking videos. She meets Schlatt at a party, and he pisses her off. He agrees to do a cooking stream with her to make up for it.
Fluff - â | Angst - âź | Smut - â„
Series àłââ·
midnight. you come and pick me up, no headlights. (ao3) ââźâ„ Almost, Maybe ââź Big Bad John ââźâ„
Readers àłââ·
tattooed!reader Supercut (COMING SOON)
Dividers: thecutestgrotto
Summary: In the town of Ghostridge, Georgia, Dollie Sheppard runs a quiet saloon where nothing ever really happens. That is until Big Bad John passes through town. Heâs supposed to be a legend, a ghost story. But heâs real, heâs handsome, and nothing Dollie expected. With tensions rising, Dollie finds herself caught between the law, her past, and the man with a reputation that could ruin them both.
The Devil Went Down to Georgia â Cowboy Like Me ââź Save a Horse, Ride a Cowboy âźâ„ But Daddy I Love Him ââź
âSaying me, me, me, me, me more cowboy than you!â
âMe More Cowboy Than Youâ by The Brudi Brothers
Divider: elleisdesigning
I think I'll try to get Big Bad John finished before I start this though but I've been in such a writing slump lately it's actually crazy. Hence my inactivity. Work and school have been taking over my life.
Hear me out.
I want to write a Schlatt fic in which the chapters are out of order (each takes place at a different point in time). The MC and Schlatt are sort of in this situationship. It takes years for them to finally realize their true feelings for each other. (Sort of inspired by One Day except there's no sad ending because I don't like sad endings.)
I hope this made sense. I can't wait to start writing it. đ