Such a cute chapter đ«
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Synopsis: Bradleyâs twenty-two years old and not where heâs supposed to be. Heâs supposed to be out of the academy by now. Instead, heâs retaking his senior year of college and praying to god that he gets into flight school. Mavâs gone, his momâs gone. Heâs mad at the world. Then, a hook up at a Halloween party changes his future even more than he could have imagined.
Warnings: accidental pregnancy, references to abortion in a few chapters, angst, will be fluff eventually, will be smut so 18+, enemies to lovers kinda thing, kind of a filler )):
âŠ
Back and forth, back again. White socks padding along the floor, his eyes following you like heâs in the crowd at a tennis match. Bradley watches in silence. Heâs sitting back against the wall behind his bed, since he doesnât have a headboard, arms folded over his chest.
Asking about the future has clearly triggered some kind of meltdown, and at this point, he knows better than to intervene. Instead, he grabs the baseball on his bedside table and tosses it upwards, catching it again.
Each time it lands in his palm, you turn. Pacing from one side of his room to the other, ranting about the logistics of his question. Itâs been around fifteen minutes now, Bradleyâs sitting in his boxers and a t-shirt, paying less and less attention.
Youâve moved on to the second phase of your rant now. Phase one was about you and him â barely knowing each other, not even liking one another. That kind of thing. He had tried disagreeing, but youâre better at rationalizing than he is.
This is more about the financial side of things.
âI have money.â Bradley shrugs his shoulders calmly, the ball bounces off of the ceiling and ricochets â he leans off of the bed and catches it. Without looking back at you, he continues to toss it up and catch it again. You stare at him.
The boy sitting on the cheap mattress, tossing up a baseball he had taken from this yearâs freshman orientation. The father of your child.
You scoff incredulously. Beige walls, plain navy sheets and football banners on the walls. Like this is the kind of home youâd like to raise your child in. âReal money. Babies arenât cheap, and Iâll be working â do you know how much daycare costs?â
âI have real money.â
You inhale sharply. Everythingâs hitting you all at once. You had been putting off this conversation for a reason and now youâre freaking out. Youâve got less than twenty weeks to get your shit together. Stopping by the door, you prop your weight up against it and breathe out hard.
âReal real money, Bradley â I barely even have a credit score, thereâs no way weâre getting approved for an apartment.â
âMy credit score is good and Iâve got money from the house.â He shrugs again, spinning the ball around in his hand and tossing it up. Too hard, once again. It bounces from the ceiling and ricochets. You catch the ball.
He looks up at you, finding you staring at him now. He raises his eyebrows.
âHouse?â
âYeah, my parentsâ house.â Bradley replies, settling down and tucking his arm behind his head now that youâre squeezing his only source of entertainment so hard that heâs somewhat concerned you might crush it. He was certain he had mentioned this to you before. âI inherited it after my Mom died.â
The house, the two life insurance policies. There had to be some kind of upside to losing both of his parents before he had turned twenty. You stand by his door, dumbfounded.
âIâm sorry⊠so, you own a house?â You squeak out.
He shrugs his shoulders again, glancing down at the baseball in your hands and sighing. âYeah, itâs by the base in Norfolk. My dad was stationed there for a bit in the eighties. I was going to sell it, but my cousinâs staying there. He pays me rent.â
You take a small step towards him. He runs his fingers through his curls, tilting his head, smiling softly. Those stupid, big brown eyes stare into yours. He lifts his hand and reaches out for you.
âIâve got this,â He nods, curling his fingers for you to come closer. You swallow softly as you step towards him. He sits up and swings his legs over the edge of the bed, parting his thighs. You step between his legs. Bradley rests his hands on your hips.
He leans forwards, pressing his lips gently to your stomach over your sweater. âWeâve got this. Youâve been saying it since the beginning.â
You soften slightly, pushing your fingers through his auburn curls. He looks up at you, lips quirked up into a smile. Suddenly, his brows furrow.
âWait, so â when I offered you money in December⊠what did you think I meant?â He frowns slightly, stroking his hands along your sides. Thinking back to it, you shrug.
âA couple hundred, I donât know. You were being a dick.â
He chuckles and pulls you forwards so that youâre perched on his knee. His perpetually warm skin pressing flush against yours. He wraps his arms around you and nods his head. âIâm sorry.â
Bradley has successfully bypassed your first two protests to moving in together, leaving you to sit and think about your options now. Graduation is two months away, the babyâll be here a few months after that.
You look at Bradley, trailing your fingers through his curls tenderly as you think about your future with him.
Sitting, rolling, crawling. Experiencing all of that with your son, taking him to the park and to the pool â all while Bradleyâs a couple of hundred miles away, on his own.
Could you do this without Bradley? â Probably. Itâs just that youâre starting to question whether you want to anymore. This morning, you had a boyfriend â not Bradley. Now youâre sitting here discussing moving in with him.
âBut my job is going to be here.â You say quietly, frowning at him.
He nods his head. âI thought about that. There are offices near Pensacola, itâll just be a case of calling them up and asking to switch. Which, your dadâll be able to organise for you.â
âDid you forget that he kind of disowned me?â
Bradley shakes his head, âNo, I remembered, but he spoke about how proud he was of you for getting that grad scheme at a couple of events, itâs on google. People would probably ask questions if you suddenly dropped out of it, right? â Itâll be easier for you to work if weâre together, so itâs in his best interests to make a phone call.â
Once again, he renders you silent. This is not the same idiot youâve been putting up with for the past few months. He skims his hand along your thigh and shrugs his shoulders.
âSo, yes?â
Your lips quirk softly at the edges, that thundering beat in your chest finally slowing. He grins, leaning forwards and pressing his lips to yours. He knows that his parents would be proud of him, using his money for this.
It beats blowing it on alcohol and new cars. Heâs happy with his bronco and cheap beer. He knows heâd be even happier getting to see his son grow every day.
âWhereâs all this coming from?â You murmur softly, pulling back and trailing your fingertips back down his arm.
Jake makes it home a little after 9am the next morning, his head pounding as he tries to close the door as quietly as possible. He stumbles forwards into the kitchen, needing water urgently before he blacks out. Eyes closed, he turns on the sink and sticks his head under the stream of water, mouth wide open.
A soft giggle to his left draws his attention. He lifts his head and squints. Youâre sitting on Bradleyâs lap at the table, both of you looking over the top of a laptop at Jake. He stares at the two of you, blank-faced.
âMorning, sunshine.â Bradley teases playfully. You laugh softly and nudge your elbow into his ribs. He kisses your jaw tenderly, wrapping his arms around your middle.
If Jake didnât feel sick before, staring at the two of you is certainly getting him there.
âWhat are you two so chirpy about?â He mumbles tiredly.
You open your mouth to answer. Youâve been awake half of the night, figuring out how to delicately break this to Jake. Heâs not going to take it well, and you know you need to approach this with some sensitivity.
âWeâre moving in together.â Bradley answers, smiling.
You close your mouth quickly as Jakeâs gaze turns towards you. The look on your face tells him that itâs true, and thatâs as much as he cares to hear. He closes his eyes and takes a deep breath.
Thereâs something about knowing that thereâs nothing he can do to intervene that really just makes his hangover that little bit worse. Knowing that his little sister is planning to move to the other side of the country, with a baby and that idiot â and thereâs nothing he can do about it.
He turns away from you both, shaking his head as he leaves the kitchen without a word. Bradley scoffs, shaking his head and turning his attention back to the apartment listings.
Itâs three days before Jake speaks to either of you again. The only thing that gets him to cave is hearing you crying in Bradleyâs room. Heâs halfway up the stairs, stopping in his tracks. The walls here are paper thin, he can hear the bass in Bradleyâs voice as he murmurs to you, trying to get you to calm down.
He finds himself equal parts angry and confused with you. Jake understands that youâre scared of doing this alone, but heâll never understand how you can give Bradley so many chances. He has hurt you time and time again, and Jake canât stand the thought of him not being there to protect you.
You flinch as the door to Bradleyâs room swings open. Jake second-guesses it as the doorâs halfway opening, relieved to find that youâre both fully dressed once itâs fully open. He folds his arms over his chest. Bradley sits up, unwrapping his arms from around you.
You whimper softly, trying to stop the stream of tears as you push yourself to the edge of the bed.
âPensacola.â Itâs all that Jake manages to say. Bradleyâs brows furrow in confusion, he nods slowly at your brother. Jake exhales. âFine. Iâll come too.â
âExcuse me?â Bradley scoffs. Itâs not exactly what he had in mind â you, him, your son⊠and Jake.
âFlight school, canât be that hard if theyâll let you in.â Jake replies. You sit up and wipe at your cheeks, sniffling softly. Bradley turns his head towards you, then back towards Jake. You push yourself up and throw yourself at his chest, wrapping your arms around your big brother. Bradleyâs lips quirk amusedly.
It might not have been what he had planned, but then again â none of this is. Leaving his future in the hands of Seresinâs hasnât worked out badly for him before, and he knows that youâll like having Jake nearby. But Jakeâs got another thing coming if he thinks heâll be a better pilot.
âŠ
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Pairing: Jeon Wonwoo x f!reader
Genre: ATLA au, enemies(?) to lovers, forbidden romance, royalty au
General Warnings: violence (bending fights), injuries (mentions of broken bones, burns, blood, bruises), alcohol consumption, mentions of prostitutionSmut Warnings: multiple smut scenes, fingering, dry humping, slight exhibitionism, oral sex (f & m receiving), unprotected sex, handjob, hair pulling, marking, virgin!reader, wonwoo has a tiny bit of a corruption kink
Length: ~16.4k | Fic Length: ~64k
Credits: banner: @caelesjjk and @shadowkoo | betas: @tomodachiii @miniseokminnies @gyuswhore @haologram and @wqnwoos
Note: part 2 is here! pls reblog and lmk what you think. also! the poem mentioned near the end. part 3 will be up friday because wednesday is reserved for a very special bday fic for one of my favorite people.
summary: Wonwoo is the best fire bender in Capitol City. Or he is. But a water bender he's never seen before changes everything.
| Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 |
m.list
This blog is intended for 18+ only! Minors/blank blogs will be blocked.
Wonwooâs first day as your personal guard was a case study in public humiliation.
Your grandmother sat high on her dais in the council debate hall with you seated on a slightly lower platform at her side, stiff as a board. The meeting had already taken hours. Councilmen and nobles argued back and forth across the aisle, every topic of debate hammered into the ground for them to ultimately agree to the same terms the proposed at the beginning of the discussion. It was a waste of time and energy to argue superfluous details but it kept them content which was a priceless luxury. Better to let men yell their silly insults across the debate chamber than across the battlefield.
Their raucous chatter served another purpose: preventing you from falling asleep. When that stopped working, your nails stung into your palms and you pinched your thighs, hands hidden beneath the sleeves of your gown.
Wonwoo moved into the servantâs quarters of your apartment last night and you hadnât slept a wink, tossing and turning all night. Heâd arrived and disappeared into his new room without so much as a glance in your direction. It shouldnât have confused you as much as it did. Nothing could ever happen but it didnât stop the tension from thundering through the entire suite; knowing you fantasized about having him in your room only for him to actually be there.Â
Then that morning when you rose, servants and lady's maids fluttering about to prepare you for the day, you felt his judgment even though he never vocalized it; a heavy weight around your neck. Face hot, you shoved the new found shame down as far as you could and tried to ignore it.
The burden didnât lighten as he followed a pace behind you throughout the day, to every appointment and lesson. He watched in somber silence as the royal jeweler presented fine gems set into crowns, necklaces, and rings. He stared at his shoes while your seamstress pinned and unpinned in a new dress. And now, he hovered somewhere behind you in the very meeting you wished would end.
âAnd now our last order of business,â Chancellor Dak started, scanning the long document before him. âLord Belaor, you have the floor.â
Lord Belaor rose from his seat at the end of the chamber and approached the wide center aisle. The billowed sleeves of his robes resembled a peacock. He was dramatic as ever, demanding full attention for whatever gripe possessed him.
âAs we all know, it is customary that the 25th birthday of an heir to the United Islandsâ throne is a matter of great significance. ItââÂ
ââIt signifies that this heir is eligible to assume the throneâ,â Chancellor Dak finished. âOf course we are aware of this Lord Belaor, but Princess Y/N and Her Majesty agreed she would delay her ascension until she felt comfortable assuming the throne. This has been long discussed.â
Murmurs of agreement whispered across the chamber, nobles and councilmen rolling their eyes.
âIt is not Princess Y/N to whom I was referring,â Lord Belaor said. âLast month, on the occasion of his twenty-fifth birthday, my nephew, Duke Tsao, became eligible to assume the throne.â
A terrible silence filled the room. Nobles and councilmen gaped like fish as what their peer suggested: treason.
âI beg your pardon?â you gasped.
Belaor turned his head not towards you, but your grandmother. âMy nephew is ready to take his place as United Islandâs rightful king.â
Your jaw clenched so tight your teeth threatened to crack. Tsao, that bumbling idiot, wasnât fit to pour water in a bucket without supervision, couldnât bend to save his life. Tsao flaunted his mistresses without shame and starved his tenants with burdensome taxes to fund his affairs. Heâd get the throne over your dead body.
âPrincess Y/N is the first in line for the throne, a direct descendent of royalty. Are you challenging the line of succession, Lord Belaor?â Lord Gaha asked. Of all the nobles, he maintained the most influence and he didnât seem sold on the idea Belaor presented.
âI am simply providing a potential consideration given that Princess Y/N is of age and yet remains unmarried. Not all of the council is completely confident she is the most suitable choice to govern our great nation with that information in mind.â
Freezing Belaor and his Spirits forsaken nephew until their hearts stopped became more and more appealing. If that didnât work then drowning was another solid option; however, itâd require far more work. Murdering a noble would be frowned upon but Lord Belaor, frozen to the far wall, bloody and bruised from your fists was a satisfying image. He probably hadnât considered that outcome before opening his mouth.
Your grandmother appraised Lord Belaor, a look you were familiar with. âWe have never required princesses to marry in order to rule our country and I will not start now.â
âOf course not, Your Majesty. But my nephew is already married with several children. His line is secured in the event something unfortunate happens. Can we say the same of our dear princess? Spirits protect her, but we must prepare for the worst possible outcomes.â
He didnât mention that six of Tsaoâs ten children were bastards with rumors of more.
âI will take your concerns under consideration, Lord Belaor. You are all dismissed.â
Chancellor Dak echoed your grandmotherâs sentiment and followed your grandmother to her private office, whispering urgently.Â
Princesses did not rush, or stomp. They did not slouch or shrug. They did not fantasize of murder no matter how righteous. But of all the things you were not allowed to do, you refused to break in front of self important nobles.
You marched through the palace, pulse hammering in your ears with each step. If you were born with your motherâs fire instead of the late kingâs water, then the palace wouldâve crumbled to cinders. But you were in control. You just needed to get to the private pavilion at the edge of the gardens and thenâ
Your attendant, Lin, struggled to match your pace. âYour Highness, you have a tsungi horn lesson withââ
âCancel it. Clear my schedule for the rest of the day.â
âBut!â Lin objected but you already turned the corner before she could attempt to argue.
Wonwoo watched you destroy the training pavilion in fury. Targets exploded like fireworks from ice blades the size of his torso. When there were none left you bent ice into the shape of what looked suspiciously similar to the noble from earlier and started destroying those as well.
He wasâŠterrified. You were not the poised princess he met at the barracks, nor the crafty opponent he met in the warehouse. This was something new. Something volatile. The leash of carefully crafted control slipped from the typhoon that waited beneath the surface. You held back all those times he watched you bend. Were all princesses trained to be so deadly?
A small part of him, a piece he didnât know existed, felt relief when the nobles revealed you were unwed. He wasnât a part of some grand betrayal. His only crime was being overly friendly with a woman above his station which shouldnât really be considered a crime. Wonwoo hadnât compromised you no more than you compromised him.Â
âAH!â you screamed and the remaining effigies shattered into a million pieces.Â
Despite the noise, no one came. This far edge of the gardens, so far from the palace that the hedges blocked the spires, seemed to be the one place not crowded with servants.Â
Wonwoo remained in agonizing solitude as you collapsed on the ground, closed your eyes, and huffed like a toddler. You looked so similar in the orange and pinks of sunset as you did in moonlight and yet nothing was the same. The eerie calm you maintained during a fight, the confident sureness youâd win, had waned into whatever he had just witnessed.
You made a disgusted noise and rose to your feet, surveying the damage. When you finally turned, you gazed at him as if you forgot he existed. âCan you go away?â
âIâm doing my job.â
âThen do you have to be so loud about it?â
âI havenât spoken to you since I got here.âÂ
Here as in the palace, simply because he hadnât known what to say last night and chose to hide in his room instead. A room larger than any he had before, even those he shared with others. It was all so new and strange. He imagined you alone in your room, just down the hall. The benign realization that he was effectively alone with you returned those horribly vivid memories; the feelings of longing.Â
Wonwoo kept his mouth shut because he wasnât sure what would come out. Another teasing jab, or something more damning. Now with witnesses in every corner and maids who liked to barge in without a care, he couldnât afford to slip.
You glided across the pavilion where there was a stack of towels and began wiping away the dirt and sweat clinging to your face. âYeah, well, I can feel you judging me.â
âIâm not judging you,â Wonwoo sputtered.Â
âYes, you are!â you argued.
Wonwoo really wanted to say he was judging those old men and their unabashed scheming. He knew Lord Tsao, or of him. Knew he wasnât fit to rule a pile of dirt let alone a kingdom; heard the stories of his tenants going hungry season after season to pay the lordâs gambling debts.Â
But Wonwoo did not say those things. He doubted fanning the flame of your ire would have much benefit other than more destruction of more unfortunate targets and heâd prefer not to become one. Besides, he really does not want to talk about politics and marriage; he wants to go back to your apartment and take a long bath and try to find the sleep that evaded him last night.
âIâm just not used to having servants do everything for me,â he said.
âTheyâre doing their jobs,â you snapped before mumbling, âWeâre all just doing our jobs.â
With the sun sinking below the line of the hedges, the pavilion cast in deep shadows.Â
âCan you at least tell them not to be so thorough? One of them offered to help me bathe last night.â
âThat's Hanâs attempt at flirting. She thinks youâre handsome.â A blip of amusement crossed your face, so brief it could have been imagination but he savors it all the same.
âGlad Iâm making a good impression,â Wonwoo said. He looked to the sky above, the stars already dappling the sky. Theyâre more visible here than in the city. âSo if youâre old enough to be queen, why arenât you?â
You deflated and Wonwoo instantly regretted the question. âAll Iâve done since I was a child was learn what it was to be queen. Iâve studied history, war strategy, tax reforms. Iâve attended council meetings since I was twelve. It is all I am, all I have been raised to do from the second I was born. And yet⊠there is so much I do not know.â
âSo you sneak out of the palace?â
âPartially,â You admitted, taking a seat on a nearby bench. âIf I told them I wanted to see the city it would take days of planning, countless staff and guards. A full royal procession. Even then Iâd only be allowed to see what's considered âproperâ which excludes pretty much everything. I wouldnât have known there were places like the Red Lanterns or the homeless encampments near the warehouses. They all pretend those issues donât exist so they can spend money on stupid parties or whatever else they want.â
âSo you want to be a queen of the people.â
âMy decisions affect those people. They are my people. Every war we enter, every tax collected, they pay for it while I sit on a throne behind ivory walls and treat them as numbers on a page. I will not let those arrogant old ass holes run my country into the ground while people suffer.â
âSuch language from a princess,â Wonwoo gasped in mock shock.
âShut up, before I freeze you to a wall.â
âHow scandalous!â
You looked genuinely thrilled at the idea of sticking him to a wall and leaving him there until morning.Â
âSo what are you going to do?â he asked.
âI am going pray there is at least one suitable man at next week's festivities and marry him. My grandmother wonât make me but I know itâs why sheâs decided to host every single dignitary, ambassador, and wealthy noble she could find. I have a stack of dossiers back in my apartment to review before bed.â
In his world, marriage was for love. Sometimes duty if there was a kid involved but mostly love. Two people choosing each other above all others, for the rest of their lives. That did not appear to be the case for royalty. Marriage was another political decision, picking someone from a catalog after ensuring they checked whatever important boxes.
âOh. ThatâsâŠa good idea.â
âYes,â you huffed like a petulant child refusing to eat their vegetables. âI canât wait to have some random spoiled prince try and boss me around my own kingdom.â
âThen donât marry a prince, I guess.â Wonwoo shrugged. âOr just make him watch your attack some targets again, heâll be too busy pissing himself to think about telling you what to do.â
âOr I could freeze him to a wall,â you said but when Wonwoo risked a look at your face all he could see was sadness and defeat.
He didnât like it. Defeat fit you like a jacket six sizes too small. Wonwoo didnât have words of comfort, what could he say? But when words failed him, he had action.
âAlright, get up. Enough moping.â
âIâm not moping!â you argued, eyes locked on his with defiance.
Good.Â
Wonwoo strode to the center of the pavilion without looking back, smiling at the click of footsteps following. âYou are and itâs freaking me out.â
âWell, Iâm so sorry to inconvenience you.â
âYouâre a bad liar, Your Highness.â
You fumed, âI told you not to call me that.â
âAnd just what are you gonna do about it?â Wonwoo tensed, already prepared for the hit of ice against his skin. It felt good. Familiar. If you were fighting him then he knew what to do instead of feeling that odd desperation to make you smile. âCome on, you can do better than that.â
Two hours later, the pavilion was covered in soot and ice. The ground was scorched in some places and flooded in others. You finally tired and called for a truce that Wonwoo eagerly agreed to. How intimidating it must have been for the princess and her personal guard to limp back to your apartment together, covered in sweat and filth.Â
Wonwoo slept like a baby.
The welcoming procession lasted hours. All manner of speeches, gifts, and presentations from the different delegations blended together into a dull thrum.Â
Cheeks sore from smiling and butt numb from your perch on your throne, you thanked Prince Bavruq for the abalone chest filled with jewels that reflected light like the sea; greens, blues, and whites projected across the throne room as sun filtered in from the large windows. They were truly beautiful. Just like the other chest of rubies and diamonds from Admiral Gyan or the ensemble of lapis carvings from Senator Maoki. Or any of the other gaudish presents serving as a means to impress you and your grandmother and soften your opinion towards one of them.Â
Perhaps you would have been impressed if your neck didnât ache from the heavy combs of silver and gemstones littering your hair.Â
Dinner was an entirely different fiasco.
A feast in the name of camaraderie served as an opportunity for all the guests to appraise and gawk at you like a prized komodo horse. It wasnât unusual or new sans for the unabashed way they all seemed to be sizing each other up as well. There had been a stand off for the seats directly across and beside you; grown men acting like children wanting first turn with their favorite toy as they shouldered one another and mumbled threats under their breath.Â
Your wine glass sat empty before the first course ever arrived.
âYour Highness, I hear you are partial to the tsungi horn. I would be honored to play for you.â A man beside you, dressed in a fine coat that clung to his broad shoulders, said. His golden eyes gleamed like a falconâs.
âThat would be lovely, Lord Char. Thank you.â You lifted your spoon once again from the full bowl of cold soup. Everyone else at the table had nearly finished but your guests insisted on keeping you occupied with conversation rather than eating.
âPrincess!â called another man across the table. âIâm not as skilled on the tsungi horn, but perhaps I could play the dramyin for you?â
âI would be delighted, Commander Raza.â
You hated the dramyin.
Someone else began speaking and the edges of your bowl frosted, ice crystals floating across the oily surface as you tried to gain composure. A servant intervened before you could follow through on the idea of throwing it at the scraggly bearded noble boasting his accomplishments in poetry. Princesses did not launch their meals at unsuspecting men.Â
Others began clearing the remaining dishes before new plates arrived with thick slices of meat covered in peppered sauce and vinegared vegetables. You were quick to take a bite before someone new could interrupt to discuss another dreadful instrument.
âWe shall make an event of it,â your grandmother clapped from the head of the table. âA night to display the unique talents of your kingdoms. My granddaughter is partial to cultural affairs.â
âWhat a lovely idea but I donât believe we have the time withââ
âNonsense! Night after next we shall have a splendid performance,â she gazed at you with a bright smile as if to say deal with it. âBut tonight, we will eat.â
You bit your tongue until dessert came. A terrible coincidence that the moon peach tarts with cream were your favorite. Maybe Han can bring some up to your room. A servant passed by, filling Lord Charâs glass. You waited with both hands tucked beneath the edge of the table for Lord Char to grab for his cup. When he did, you tugged at the blood in his veins, barely enough to make the muscles jump.
âMy dress!â you gasped.
The few people who had not been watching you like a petting zoo animal whipped around, mouths open in horror.
âYour Highness, I am so sorry! I didnât meanâŠLet me help you!â Lord Char stammered, the contents of his drink puddled across the table and your lap. He grabbed for his napkin but floundered with the realization he couldnât touch you.
âI believe you have done enough, Your Grace,â you bit out. Wine stained the front of your gown in large splotches, the blue of the fabric mixing with red to resemble a giant ugly bruise. A true shame, to destroy such fine silks. But ruining a brand new dress was worth escaping the evening. âExcuse me.â
You ignored the silent reprimand blooming on your grandmotherâs face, allowing servants to crowd you with towels as they led you from the dining room swiftly. Her ire would be dealt with later when the voices of whiny nobles no longer rattled through your ears.
Lord Char followed spouting more apologies. âPrincess Y/N, my hand slipped! I would never mean toââ
âExcuse me, Lord Char. I find myself needing to change out of my favorite gown since it is ruined.âÂ
He deflated and stepped aside as you continued on your path.
âI am fine.â You brushed away the servants once the heavy doors shut, dismissing them back to their posts. âI will be retiring early this evening.â
Bending the liquid soaking your gown into a potted plant, you continued to your room with a pair of footsteps echoing behind.
Wonwoo watched the skyline of the city glow with light from your bedroom window while youâŠdid whatever you did with your ladyâs maids in your bathroom.Â
Logically, he knew but refused to dwell on such things. He had plenty of knowledge of what you looked like naked and soaking wet, at least from the waist up. And plenty of imaginations of the rest. There was no reason to add to his suffering by ruminating the gentle splashes echoing through the door.
Or theâŠgiggling.
How many times had you looked at this same view? Watched a city you never experienced right at your feet thrum to life every night while you remained out of sight? Locked away in your tower night after night, wallowing and alone after your staff retired for the evening; imagination running wild with all sorts of activities might be taking place and wanting a slice for yourself.
And then you did just that. An incredibly foolish endeavor but his chest warmed with fond pride. He imagined what you would say if presented with that fact.
Only foolish if I was caught.Â
Wonwoo hadnât considered the trouble you went through to sneak out the palace and down into the Middle district. It was at least an hour on foot assuming you didnât encounter any delays, probably more since there was never a word of suspicious activity taking place in the Nobles Quarter. Foolish but not foolish at all.
Then he thought, how many nights had he paced the same streets just outside the palace walls, completely unaware that you were locked in this tower. That you ran straight across his path while he remained none the wiser. The night after he met you in the market, when he wandered the streets during his rounds consumed with thoughts of you; only for you to be right here.
Two people so close yet worlds apart.
After what felt like hours, your maids, Han and Sami, filed out to prepare your room, turning down the bed and stoking the dwindling fire.
Sami fed the flames another log and looked at him. âMind helping?âÂ
âIâm not a butler,â Wonwoo said but manipulated the dying flame until Sami waved him away.
Technically, Wonwoo was allowed to retire to his rooms now. Heâd swept the windows and building tops for potential threats and found none (he never did). But Han and Sami were good company despite their constant teasing. It felt good to talk to someone other than you or Mingyu.Â
âSo what did you think?â
âOf what?â
Han rolled her eyes as if he was an idiot to not understand exactly what she meant. âThe suitors.â
Wonwoo could have said a great many opinions. Lord Char smelled like a brothel and Senator Maokiâs carvings looked rather phallic to be the sea serpents and lion turtles they were meant to be. Prince Jaoâs singing made him want to jump off a building but not before pushing the man off first. Wonwoo especially didnât care for the way they leered at you like starved wolves.
But his opinions did not matter.
âIâm not a matchmaker either,â he huffed.
âMen really undervalue the fun of good gossip.â
âWhat did you think then?â he asked, arms crossed.Â
âPrince Bavruq is so dreamy,â Sami crooned.
âHeâs forty!â Han laughed.
âIâve always liked an older man. Heâs soâŠdignified.â
âThen maybe heâll take you back to the North Pole with him,â Wonwoo added. It felt good to be a part of something again. In the barracks they played games and joked every night. He didnât realize how much he missed it until now.
âA flower is only as good as its petals and my petals are too delicate to be locked away in the North Pole!â
Han snorted from across the room. âYouâre as delicate as those rocks Chancellor Kabaar gifted her.â
âNow talk about a man,â Sami swooned.
You entered the room wrapped in a thick robe. âYou are dismissed.â
Han and Sami bowed out but not before giggling again. When your face soured it only grew louder.
âSomething funny?â he asked, watching the maids leaving through the door as they cackled to themselves.
You sat on the chair next to the window â eyes on the same sights Wonwoo watched earlier â and blew out a disgruntled breath.âBesides the fact that I was doused with wine in front of a hundred people?â
âYeah, considering you did that to yourself.â
You raised an eyebrow. It was difficult to keep track of the masks you wore: a proper princess in front of others, the confident siren of the field, the force of nature from the training pavilion. They all slipped and rose so swiftly Wonwoo couldnât keep track. âYou dare suggest that I would purposefully sabotage dinner?â
âBased on past experience I can empathize with Lord Char on being made a fool at your hand.â
âSave your sympathies for someone more deserving than him. He is a terrible flirt with a gambling addiction which I supposed would be less of an issue if he ever actually won,â you said sourly.Â
At least he had a concrete reason to dislike Char besides his smell.
âSo you admit you did it on purpose?â
âOf course I did it on purpose but if you want to go rejoin them then by all means. Jao is probably performing some of those Earth Kingdom poems still.â
âAre they always so self important?â
âThey are princelings from the richest and most powerful families in the world. Usually theyâre worse.âÂ
You passed Wonwoo a tea cup, and without thought he warmed it between his palms until it was steaming before handing it back. âHard to imagine that.â
âAt my eighteenth birthday party a game of ice marbles turned into a wrestling match and they destroyed the south courtyard.â
âWell then,â he clapped. âAt least the talent show will be interesting.âÂ
Wonwoo turned to leave, the sound of your amused snort tugging at that warm place in his heart carved just for you.
If someone asked what he thought a princessâ day looked like before he came to the palace, he would have assumed it was days full of tea parties and mindless chatter. An easy life filled with nothing but comfort and luxury.
But the more time Wonwoo spent attending meetings and meals, the more he realized the palace was a viper pit covered in the finest lace and gold.
Meetings upon meetings upon meetings left his head swimming. Every conversation was layered with double meaning, from chatter on tea selection to the actual topics. It seemed like a knot that only became more tangled as he focused on unraveling it.Â
You seemed to navigate it easily though, the eerie mask of diplomacy firmly in place.Â
âAdmiral Gyan, I understand that we have trade agreements,â you said, face smooth as a pearl but your eyes gleamed like you had your boot on his throat. âHowever, it is in the best interest of both of our people to make amends to terms that predate our births.â
Gyan picked at the spread of tea cakes and snacks, ignoring you completely in favor of snagging the last sweet bun. âAll this talk of trade is rather tiresome, donât you think? Tell me Princess, what is your favorite flower?â
Wonwoo watched you shut your eyes with a deep silent breath.Â
He prepared to intervene if needed; however, the admiral deserved to be knocked around a bit. An hour long discussion and all he asked was about your favorite sweets and candies (his were cherry nut tarts and jennamite), if you preferred the summer to winter (he liked summers), and your opinion on whether the Royal Theaterâs production of Love amongst the Dragons outdid The Lost Slipper (nothing compared to The Echoes of Spirits).
Wonwoo made the mistake of implying the need for a chaperone for these meetings, considering most verged on courting rather than business, and he knew most guards waited outside the door during private meetings. Wonwoo was mortified to learn he was not only a guard but a nanny as well.Â
âTwo birds one stone,â you said as Han smoothed the creases from your robe. âI need a guard and chaperone, and most leaders do not want to talk business with too many prying ears.â
The unsaid parts were clear; Wonwoo was a servant. Wonwoo was nobody next to these men who demanded respect for simply being born to the right people. The more appointments he attended, the more his resentment boiled. It was no different then the hundreds of times he stepped aside for men of higher status in the Nobles Quarter or the barracks. He never thought much of it before, it was simply something heâd been trained to do for years. So why did it bother him now?
Each dignitaries had done quite the same as Gyan, only perhaps a touch subtler; at least their attempts at flattery were related to trade agreements. Every asinine inquiry They were eager to make up for time missed at dinner the previous night, and your absence at breakfast this morning. Every single one began their time with a high chin and starry eyes, only to leave disillusioned from your insistence to discuss policy and finance. To their knowledge you were not officially seeking marriage, they were simply hopeful for the inevitable day you did.Â
How unaware they were of how soon that day came. Wonwoo read the dossiers; scanned them for anything of consequence: questionable relations, suspicious behaviors. For security purposes, of course. But one was the same as the last. Second borns never trained to take their own crowns who liked to spend their days indulging in hunting or drinking. Or, sons of rich families with strategic influence and holdings dating back centuries. And then, there were the well off military figures with armies more loyal to them than their nation.
Admiral Gyan happened to be all three.Â
âIce lilies,â you sighed. âAs I was sayingââ
Gyan picked at some invisible lint at his sleeve. From his position against the wall, Wonwoo could see the way Gyan stared wistfully out the window instead of the papers you presented across the table. Not that Gyan could see them if he looked, his snacking left them covered in powdered sugar. Your attempt at serious political engagements turned into a place setting.Â
Wonwoo focused back on one of the paintings across the room. It wasnât his concern and yet, despite everything, heâd begun to consider you a friend, or at the very least an acquaintance; someone he felt familiar enough with to feel annoyed on their behalf. But Wonwoo didnât need much familiarity for the way these men talked down and disregarded your words to leave ash in his mouth.
âIâm allergic to ice lilies,â Gyan said pensively.
You blinked. âHow unfortunate. Again, these tradeââ
âIf your husband did not like something you preferred, what would you do?â
âNot marry a man allergic to my favorite flower.â You stiffened, realizing the error of your ways. Then you dipped your chin and whispered. âHowever, a man that helps my country would be far more valuable as a husband than a man who can tolerate myâŠfloral preference. Would you agree?â
Admiral Gyan studied for a long moment before speaking again.
The ink of the new agreements dried by that afternoon.
A long day of discussions left you irritable. It would have been different if any of the lordlings you met argued their terms on tariffs and trade, or introduced their own nationâs concerns. But no. Theyâd rather interrogate you on asinine details like your favorite teas and opinions on Earth Kingdom literature.Â
Perhaps that would be important after you officially took suitors into consideration but presently, they were invited with the intent of international diplomatic cooperation. Not eat all your food and ruin court records.
Dinner continued in the same fashion as the night before: too little eating and too much chatter. And since you couldnât get away with bowing out early again, you were forced to remain through the entire ordeal. You managed a few bites between their lengthy monologues but after the meal you left with a grumbling stomach and a thunderous headache.
Back in your apartments, you fell into deep thought while Han and Sami flurried around as they pulled away your outer layers and plucked out the jewels in your hair.Â
âAny interesting developments today? Men declaring their undying devotion?â Han asked as she untied your slippers.
âPrince Bravruq promised he would perform some water tribe dance tomorrow nightâŠshirtless.â You smiled at Samiâs reddening face. âBut other than that, thankfully, no.â
âNot even our favorite broody guard?â
âFor the last time, Wonwoo is simply doing his duty. He does not haveâŠfeelings.â
âI donât know,â Sami sang. âHe seemed upset when we asked him about all your new suitors last night. And after the council meeting? He is rather handsome when heâs all roughed up.â
âI think heâs handsome all the time,â Han said.
âEven if he did like me, nothing could come of it,â you reminded yourself.Â
âHow many stories do you know where a princess falls in love with a commoner and they live happily ever after?â
âAnd how many do the princess and commoner lose their heads?â
âYouâre always so serious. Itâs not good for your complexion.â
âWell why didnât you say that earlier?â you gasped. âThere is nothing between Wonwoo and I. We are⊠friends. Maybe. But that's it.â
Sensing the end of the conversation, they drew your bath before you waved a dismissive hand.Â
The hot water soothed away your anger from the day, softening the tense muscles of your shoulders and back. Your eyes slipped shut as you sunk further into the tub, head resting back on the rim of the tub. Events of the day replayed, your mind sorting successes and failures, what agreements remained unsigned and how to do so. And then there was the matter of courting. Your intent to marry was barely a whispered rumor amongst staff and yet these men tripped over themselves like bumbling idiots.
But you no longer wished to think of business and wedding bells. Youâd rather indulge in more relaxing imaginations.
At first there was nothing at all, just the lap of hot water at your throat sending prickles along your flesh. The water was adorned with different oils and soaps and felt like liquid silk. It allowed your hands to glide without friction, teasing drags of fingers against your sides until your nipples tightened. You remembered what it was like when Wonwoo touched them, first his hands, then his mouth, then the satisfying sting of his teeth. The times you tried to imitate those sensations only left you wanting.
Memories of the encounters had brought little satisfaction. Recalling how it felt was nowhere near as good as it actually had been, never brought the same pleasurable ending. And yet you tortured yourself with trying.
He really was handsome. Not just in the narrow cut of his uniform that clung to his shoulders, or when he removed his outer layers to reveal what hid beneath. He was most handsome when he didnât realize you were looking. When whatever lordling tried to win your favor with overzealous compliments, Wonwoo couldnât help rolling his eyes and biting back a laugh.
Or when his brow furrowed in concentration as he worked through a particularly challenging form, muscles flexing and bunching; sweat gleaming off his skin, sticking his hair down.Â
Your hand ventured lower, a tease between your thighs, fingers soft against your clit just how he touched you. The bathroom is quiet sans your breath; miniscule sighs breaking through your lips as candles flickered around the room. Itâd do nothing to think about the field but maybe what you needed was a new fantasy.
With firmer pressure, you imagined Wonwoo walking in, finding you touching yourself and offering to help; taking advantage of the slick glide between your legs, filling that horrible emptiness with the warmth of his hand. The tub was large enough for him to join. You could plant in his lap and ride his fingers like last time or, he could sit behind you, the heat of his chest firm against your back as he left those maddening kisses against your neck again.Â
You slipped a finger in, the tight squeeze nothing next to the desperation for more. The water muffled the sound of depravity as you fucked yourself timidly, only gentle splashes betraying movement and mute whines. Your chin tipped back as your hips rose in search of more. Rocking into the heel of your hand, you bit back a moan. The Wonwoo of your fantasy dragged you out of the tub and into bed, spread you beneath him to use his mouth against your core; kissing and sucking the same place you desperately touched. He teased how badly you needed him, eyes trained on your reactions from between your legs.
âOh!â you exclaimed. Your muscles twitched again, clenching around your fingers, pretending they were his until your back arched and thenâ
The walls of the tub proved far too slippery as you thrashed into an orgasm, sinking beneath the surface unexpectedly.
You gasped for breath once surfacing again, flailing and splashing water onto the floor loudly. The bath had run cold in your mentally wandering and jolted you back to your senses. The delirious lull in your muscles fled as you kicked off from the bottom of the pool sized tub and back to your perch.Â
Wonwoo chose that moment to barge in.Â
He slammed the door open, rushing in and eyes scanning the room. âIs everything okay? I heardââ
âIâm fine!â you shouted, face heating as your voice bounced around the room. âI slipped.â
Wonwoo looked like he didnât believe it. A waterbender having trouble in the bath? Unlikely. But he accepted it without question and straightened before asking, âWhere are Han and Sami?â
Whatever warmth and longing rooted in your chest moments ago fizzled at his question. âDo you think Iâm incapable of bathing on my own?â
âNo, IâŠâ
At that moment, Wonwoo recognized your state, eyes tracing the slope of your neck down, down, down until the surface of the water obstructed his view. The bubbles from earlier had fizzled to nothing, fine as sea foam and scattered like wispy clouds. If he stepped closer then everything would be visible. You were torn between sinking deeper and rising up, revealing your bare chest for his gaze. What would he do?
There was no one to interrupt, servants gone and the day done until sunrise. Wonwoo could touch you. Youâd let him for as long as he liked, as many times as it took for that terrible clawing, demanding need to cease. You could drag him into the water and make every horrible dream and intoxicating fantasy plaguing you for weeks a reality.
But Wonwoo did nothing, simply stood there blankly, eyes trained on your throat. The warm light from dozens of candles danced over his face, flickering wildly but not revealing what was brewing beneath the surface of his glazed stare. You had an idea from the way his breath became labored and his fingers flexed but he didnât move a muscle.
And then he promptly turned on his heel and strode back towards the door.Â
âWait,â you called, startled by your own voice. What were you doing? âCan you warm this for me?â
Wonwoo stopped immediately. You watched his shoulders tense, slowly rising to his reddening ears before he responded, âYour bath?â
The candles around the room grew for a moment. But he didnât turn around, instead he looked over his shoulder and pinned you with an expectant look. You began to speak, a dismissal at the tip of your tongue, but ultimately nodded. Silently, he approached, eyes glued to your face. A jolt of heat cracked through your veins. Ears ringing, your breath grew stunted with every step that brought him closer.Â
Wonwoo loomed over you, shrugging off his uniform jacket, still maintaining eye contact as each button loosed beneath his fingers. Your own twitched in response, aching to return between your legs for him to watch. He pushed the sleeves of his undershirt up to his elbows. He only broke eye contact to perch at the edge of the tub, back facing you. His hand sunk just past his wrist beneath the surface of the water. He grazed your knee and jerked away with a splash. You bit your tongue to stop from pushing your knee against him again.
His hand bunched into a fist, heat blooming through the water until steam rose from its surface. The contrast of his skin next to your beneath the water made your mouth water as he forced out more heat.Â
As his hand rose once again, rivulets clinged to sinew and ligaments in his arm. You remembered how he looked in that field, soaked to the bone in the moonlight. The cling of his pants revealing the muscles below. Every ripple of those muscles when he moved, when he rolled into your grip on his cock.
âAnd this.â You nudged his hand with your wash rag, swallowing thickly when he accepted it. Again, Wownoo refused to look as his fingers flexed around the fabric, veins rising from the force of his grip, more of those tempting drops of water clinging to his skin. The strangest urge to suck them from his fingers rooted in your head. Steam rose from the cloth and he passed it back, hot and dripping.
âAnything else?â His hand remained floating between you. How badly you wanted to slide your fingers between his and tug until he found the arousal between your legs.
Now reach back into this tub and warm me, you thought.
âThatââ you stuttered. âThat's all. Thank you.â
Wonwoo left and the candles returned to their dim flutter.
After scrubbing your skin raw, you exited the bath. Despite your earlier fatigue, you knew there was no point in trying to sleep now. Youâd only lay awake, tempted by the idea of sneaking down the hall to Wonwooâs room and making your imaginations reality. There was no point sitting in your room, tossing and turning and itching and pining for something else. You could have slipped out your window and hid in the gardens, burn the restlessness in the training pavilion until exhaustion took over.Â
But Wonwoo would find you. You knew he would; he managed to do so repeatedly. When you refused to retire for the evening he would offer to train with you. And then it was back to square one, the same tension from the close quarters of the bathroom, except with the bloodrush of bending and memories of the last time you both fought beneath the moonlight.Â
The thick stack of papers balanced on your bed table; treaties and amendments forged during the day, signed in your own blood, sweat, and tears. Additionally reports from different advisors shuffled through the stack. If you couldnât sleep then getting work done for tomorrow was the only solution.Â
In the dining room, you rung a servant to bring leftovers from dinner you never ate. They returned with a spread of stuffed cabbage rolls, salted meats, and other dishes. Far more piled on the table than you could ever hope to eat, despite your ravenous appetite. Without the pretense of formal dining, you nibbled and read a new batch of reports from Lord Gilen about the Lower Block hospital youâd invested in since the spring. The numbers provided little distraction as you heard Wonwoo move around the apartment like a ghost.
âSorry, I thought youâd be asleep.â
âCanât.â You flashed the papers in his direction and went back to reading. You couldnât look at him. Not sitting there in a robe and nightgown, skin still warm from the bath. He could part it easily, reach inside andâ
He remained in the doorway, gaze like a heavy weight on your shoulders.Â
âEat. Itâll go to waste if you donât.â
Wonwoo hesitated but then shuffled forward and took a seat at the opposite end before piling a plate with food. Still, your eyes remained glued to another row of swirled ink that turned illegible to your distracted mind as he slurped and grunted. More horribly tempting thoughts seeded as he continued.
Appetite vanishing with your sanity, you focused on carefully sipping your cold tea and read on. Lord Gilenâs missive was long and detailed and a perfectly appropriate distraction from the fact Wonwoo hadnât put his jacket back on.Â
âWhat are you reading?â Wonwoo asked.
âReports for a hospital in the Lower Block Iâve been funding. Lord Gilen has been handling it for me.â
You continued reading. The lapse in judgment in the bathroom was just that, a mistake. You were a princess and needed to act like one; not some bumbling infatuated maiden.Â
Still, you wanted to snag the pitcher from the table and hurl it at the wall.
âA hospital in the Lower Block? Yeah, sure,â he snorted.Â
Your head snapped up. âI have the documents right here.â
âIâm telling you, there is no hospital in the Lower Block.â
âLook for yourself.â
Wonwoo scanned the pages, brows furrowed. A bit of sugar from the coconut puffs clung to his lip. You wanted to lick it off.
âI walked this street every time I went from the barracks to the warehouse. Unless he somehow demolished a condemned burnt out building and built a brand new one in its place in the time Iâve been here, then it doesnât exist.â
The poise youâd painstakingly clung to since exiting the bath dissolved. If what Wonwoo said was true then Gilen was a liar. If the hospital didnât exist then over twenty thousand gold marks were unaccounted for; twenty thousand gold marks vanished into nothing, and Lord Gilen was to blame. Lord Gilen whoâd been in court since you were a baby, a favorite advisor of your grandmotherâs, a close confidant. It was impossible.
Stacks of falsified documents with forged signatures, counterfeit invoices for materials to rebuild and train healers. Sketches and blueprints of the building. Patient records for people who didnât exist. If Gilen was embezzling the money there was a paper trail of his misdeeds a mile long.Â
But he had encouraged your investments; presented multiple projects of his own design, touting the needs of the people with zeal. Managed the entire process with assiduity and constant progress reports down to the last detail. Gilen wouldnât conspire a tangled plot like this. It only took a gentle tug at a loose end and the entire tapestry of his scheming unraveled.
And yet, Wonwoo never provided a reason not to trust him.
Whatever simpering girl youâd been in the bathroom holed up behind a hard mask of anger. âShow me.â
âWhat?â
Brushing the papers aside, you rose. âIâm going to the Lower Block and youâre going to show me.â
You didnât wait for him to follow, blinded by rage. The rest of the apartment was empty of servants as you paced the seating area.Â
You ripped the overstuffed couches to shreds.
You screamed until your throat bled.
You stood in frozen silence and did nothing but stare blankly ahead.
Stupid. Stupid. Stupid.
âIf you think Iâm going to sneak you out of the palace youâre out of your mind.â Wonwoo said as he entered the room.
You turned towards him and stared for a moment. âThen Iâll go by myself.â
âYouâre not going to the city this late at night, itâs at leastââ
You rounded on him, until you were toe to toe with a finger digging into his chest. âYou do not tell me what to do. Iâm the princess and you are my glorified nanny.â
Wonwoo glared down at your hand twisted in his shirt. You began to withdraw it, realizing your mistake, but he snatched it with a firm grip and kept it between your bodies and met your gaze.
âIâm not one of your little lordlings you can push around and make agree just because you bat your eyes. Go to the city, and I will walk out that door and tell everyone.â
It wasnât fitting for a woman of your age and rank to stomp and huff like a begrudged child but you did it anyway.
âWhy donât you just chain me to the bed and leave me until morning!â you sneered but faltered at the spark in his gaze.
âIf you give me no other choice, I will.â
Yanking your hand back, you retreated to your room. âYou are so infuriating!â
Wonwoo didnât know how you got into the city. He didnât know the passage in your office or the labyrinth beneath the gardens that lead outside the palace walls. Sneaking out your window was less convenient but no one knew the gardens better than you. If he chased, youâd lose him and he could only reveal your location by admitting he failed his one job.Â
You blew out the candles and sat in the dark for a long moment as the moon rose outside your window. Shedding your robe and nightgown, you donned the servants clothes and cloak you stole long ago then stuffed the robe and some pillows beneath the covers in the shape of a body.Â
Careful of the squeaky hinges, you cracked the window open slowly with baited breath.Â
âGoing somewhere?â Wonwoo asked from the doorway.
You stiffened. âIf you must know, I was feeling a bit stifled and thought a breeze would be nice.â
âAnd the breeze gave you a chill so you got dressed?â
âIs that so difficult to believe?â
He entered your room and dragged the covers back with a quirked brow as if to say âDo you think Iâm that dumb?â
âIf you recall, Iâve done this countless times without you and never been caught.â
âThere's a line between bravery and stupidity.â
âAre you calling me stupid?â you gasped, even in the dark you could see the exhaustion on his face.
âIâm calling you heedless. You canât just run down to the Lower Block on a whim. Itâs dangerous,â Wonwoo said, voice thin. âWhere Galin says the hospital is is no place forââ
âFor a princess?â
âFor anyone to go alone. I wouldnât go there alone because I know what happens on those streets. You have no idea what youâre getting yourself into and you donât care.â
In your haste safety seemed like a minor concern. You held your own enough times and this would be no different. Wonwoo didnât seem to understand this wasnât a matter of pride, it was principal. You werenât a puppet that nobles could tug at your strings however they pleased. And if Galin, trusted and venerated Galin, was playing you a fool then there was no telling what the other, less favored, nobles did in the dark.Â
Treachery was an infection in the open wound of your trust and you needed to amputate the limb before it could spread. But not without proof.
âI am being made a fool of by my own councilman,â you started. âHe is stealing from me and thinks he can get away with it, that I would have no way of knowing because Iâm kept under lock and key here. I need to see it with my own eyes. You do not have to come with me but you cannot honestly expect me to stay here."
Wonwoo watched for a long moment then stormed out of the room without response. You feared he ran to tell someone of your plan and raced to open the window.
âIf we get caught I swearââ
You whipped around at the sound of his voice. Wonwoo strode in dressed in casual clothes similar to yours; trousers and a long sleeved tunic, a hood to conceal his face.Â
âYouâre coming with me?â
âOf course Iâm coming with you. Knowing you, youâll blast some poor drunk with a canon unprovoked and we both know how that turned out. Let's go.â
You silently led Wonwoo through a secret door in your private office, down, down, down until the walls transformed from the stone of the palace to dirt with wooden slats supporting the structure. There were no lanterns so he kept a small flame alive in his palm. He tried to keep his bearings through each twist and turn but soon failed. He figured the walk had been long enough to be far outside the palace grounds but each switch back left him more unsure.
Suddenly, the dirt floor turned into cobblestone and the walls followed soon after and then an iron ladder leading up appeared from nowhere.Â
âThis lets out beneath the crystal elephant statue in Emerald Park,â you said before climbing.
Wonwoo walked the perimeter of Emerald Park hundreds of times; circled the statue dozens of times and never realized there was a secret passage in all this time. He knew there were secrets the Nobles Quarter kept from him but not a path into the palace right under his nose.
The park was empty. Fountains bubbled and frogs croaked, the low light of gas street lamps providing enough cover to reach the southern exit towards the Middle District gates.
The shuffle of feet alerted him to a patrol up ahead. It was only another block to the gates leading into the Middle District and yet, he found himself having to crouch in an alley while a few guards walked past. You hid somewhere behind him. Truly, it was the last place he wanted to be with you after the incident in the bath.
He should have said no; refused to come anywhere near you while you were undressed. But he couldnât help it. It was as if you were a siren singing straight to his blood. When you asked him to come closer, he tried not to look beneath the surface of the water but it was in vain. Even in his peripheral he saw the slope of your breasts, the pinch of your nipples. It hadnât been better to look at your face. Your dilated pupils and flushed cheeks, bitten lips. Just like the night in the field.
It took all his willpower not to drag you from the tub, spread you on the bed, and taste you until all he heard were hoarse cries of his name; begging, praising, even a reprimand. He wanted them all and he half expected you to ask for them when he took his coat off; prepared to unbutton his trousers as well. A single glance would have told you everything, the tightness of his pants unbearable. But you asked him to heat your water and your rag and then dismissed him without another word.Â
When he heard you pattering about the dining room, he planned to ask just what game you were playing but you pretended nothing happened.Â
Now, he was hidden in the shadows of an alley with you less than a foot away and rather than worry about guards catching him, all Wonwooâs thoughts were captured by images of you pressed between his body and the wall.
The patrol passed by without suspicion. Wonwoo signaled you to follow once again. The sooner you saw the imaginary hospital in the Lower Block, the sooner heâd be free to lock himself away until sunrise.Â
As the gates came into view, you tugged Wonwooâs sleeve and directed him off the main road, through narrow side streets and more alleys until the stone wall separating the Nobles Quarter and the Middle District came into view. Here, there were no guards and Wonwoo didnât remember ever circling this area during his years of patrols. Another secret.
The wall was a foot taller than him so he hoisted you up before following. Restaurants and shops backed up to the wall on the Middle District side. This late, few were open, most windows and open doors framed employees sweeping or cleaning up the last bits of mess. None looked up from their work as you both snuck past.
Wonwooâs feet pounded against the cobblestone as he darted down the street, you behind him, footsteps echoing loudly. Physical exhaustion felt good. His lungs burned and muscles strained but it gave him something to think about other than the heat of your chest against his body when dipping into an alcove to hide from a passing group. Most of the streets this far out were still crowded with late night partiers.
âTake off your hood,â he commanded, removing his own.
âWhy?â
âBecause we look like thieves. No one will recognize you out here and itâll be easier to get through.â
Your hood came off, and Wonwoo was struck by how similar you looked to the night at the market. Hair fluffed around your face, the sheen of perspiration for the balmy night. He wanted to kiss you.
He stepped out from hiding and started down the street.Â
âIâve never been this way before,â you shared. The crowd grew thicker and forced you to remain tight to his side or risk drifting away.Â
âYou have. Down that street,â he gestured, âare the Red Lanterns.â
In all fairness, Wonwoo wouldnât have known about the seedy avenue unless he stumbled on it as a teenager. It was the first time he sawâŠmany things and heâd avoided it ever since. They were not memories he ever thought of voluntarily.Â
The crowd flowed further away from the palace, until the stacked buildings of Merchantâs Row transformed into warehouses and empty lots. The people changed too. No longer did couples of all ages and children flitter about, gone were poets and musicians and artists busking on the corners. The only light came from the waxing moon and windows, not the gas street lamps up the block.
The Lower Block was a slum.
Wonwoo kept walking as you looked around as if the street was a zoo full of exotics; eyes wide and shining in the light like coins. The streets used to be pristine, organized chaos at all hours. Guards, manufacturers, and merchants would weave between the buildings like armies of ants, raw materials pouring in from carts and goods immediately replacing them for transport. The Lower Block used to be pristine.
Now, old men crouched around overturned crates as they played cards and drank from green glass bottles; wiry kids chased stray dogs across the poorly paved street; vendors hawked fruits and vegetables more rotten than fresh, cloying the air with sickening sweetness. Uneven cobblestones hosted potholes large enough to bath in when it rained.
Luckily, no one paid much attention to a couple stumbling about like drunkards, they were all too absorbed in themselves. However, one glance and the entire charade would unravel. Your posture was straight as a razor edge, chin tipped back; as if you owned the world. You did, Wonwoo guessed. Everything â from the smallest pebble to the gigantic steamers in the western harbor â was yours.Â
Wine houses lined the street, dirty alleys wedge between. Wonwoo knew the wine houses well enough; where other fighters from the warehouse went after matches to find another conquest for the night or drink themselves numb. Heâd done both enough times to fear being recognized.
âCome here,â he commanded. You gave in easily when he hid his face in the curve of your neck. The scent of wildflowers and soap tickled his senses, and Wonwoo barely contained himself from pressing his nose more firmly beneath your jaw.
âWhat are you doing?â you murmured but didnât push him away.
âHiding.â
âWhat for?â
âNot all of us have the benefit of being anonymous.â
âYouâve been to these places?â you said. Wonwoo followed your gaze to a brothel, scantily clad women and men lounging around the wide porches, attempting to lure passersby.Â
He didnât answer.
âIs that why you said Iâd be a bad prostitute? Speaking from experience?â
âI never paid anyone,â he argued.
âItâs okay if you did,â you laughed. âNot everyone can be so lucky with women.â
Even through his frustration, Wonwoo wanted to bottle the sound of your laughter; taste it on his tongue, feel it against his lips. He wanted to push you back into the darkness of the alleyway and remind you just how lucky heâd been not so long ago. He wanted to rip his hair out because agreeing to spend more time with you tonight was a horrible idea.Â
At the next intersection, Wonwoo turned you down a narrow street. The lively crowdâs absence left a hollow silence. A handful of people milled about, shifting through the shadows like sharks. The warehouse Lord Gilen posed as a hospital stood halfway down the block. Covered in rotten boards and rusted chains, there was no trace that anyone had been near it in years.Â
You pulled away from Wonwoo as you approached the ransacked building. âYouâre sure this is it?â
âEven if I wasnât, do any buildings here look like a hospital to you?â
Your fist clenched and he stepped back slightly. Wonwoo expected tangible anger like in the training pavilion; icicles the size of a human, a flood pulled from the humid air of the night. But you stood silently, unmoving. If your anger in the pavilion was a storm, Wonwoo felt as if he was in the eye of a hurricane.Â
Hurricanes always brought wreckage.
You drew some water from a pouch at your hip, weaving it into the lock before it cracked and the chains slouched. Wonwoo didnât wait for an invitation to follow you inside.Â
There was no light inside, the windows were caked in thick dust. He lit a flame in his hand but there wasnât much to see. An empty warehouse full of garbage: broken machines, rotten newspapers, broken crates. Something rustled beneath a heap in the corner. A fat elephant rat scurried out and darted out of sight.
Again, you stood still like a statue, soaking in the realities. Silence spread into the warehouse like an ink stain.
âLet's go.â
The walk back to the palace was in thick silence; not the silence of before when Wonwoo couldnât decide if he wanted to kiss you or turn around and renounce his assignment for the sake of his sanity. It was the unnerving silence just before something went horribly wrong.Â
You kept ahead, shoulders square, head high. It wasnât the performance you gave nobles, or the wildness from when bent your element. This was a new mask Wonwoo couldnât decipher.Â
In your apartment, you walked straight to your room and Wonwoo watched as the door shut with a quiet click.
Wonwoo woke covered in sweat. Even hidden behind a curtain of dark clouds he could feel the sun just peaking above the horizon.Â
He wasnât sure what the day held but he showered and put on his uniform like every other morning. When he exited his room, maids and footmen fluttered about like every other morning, you at the center of the storm. You acted the same as every other morning as well, sipping your tea and scanning a stack of documents.
Wonwoo hovered in the hall entrance, unsure of what to do. The anger charged atmosphere of last night vanished from the sitting room though that might be due to the presence of others than anything else. Displays of emotion were reserved for private, when no one but Wonwoo paid witness. Your face was impassive in the early dawn light, completely unperturbed. Unlike other mornings, he noticed the usual jewels pinned in your hair and clinging to your throat were absent. Only a pale ribbon tied around your neck. Your dress was a modest lavender, no flashy embroidery or outlandish cuts; but it was more to do with the woman wearing it than the dress itself. He didnât know when he started paying attention to such things. But the first lesson you taught him was looks can be deceiving and you would bank on that fact.
âStop hiding in the shadows like a ghost, it's off putting,â Sami said as she strode by him.
âIâm not hiding,â Wonwoo argued. If he was hiding it was for good reason; a man never knew he stepped foot into a riptide until it was too late.
âLike a little boy afraid Koh is hiding under his bed,â she teased.
âLeave him alone, Sami,â you called from the table.Â
Sami turned and stuck her tongue out at him. This must be what it was like to have sisters.
âEverything in the Solarium is set and this,â Sami placed an envelope on the table in front of you. âHan is making copies of the records now.â
âAfter sheâs done, Mingyu is to escort her to the archives after the meeting. Make sure people see them.â
âYes, maâam.â
Finally, you looked at Wonwoo. âLetâs go.â
You glided through the palace hallways, greeting everyone who crossed your path. Again, just like every other day. The longer you pretended last night didnât bother you the more unnerved he became.
Heâd never been in the Solarium and wouldnât soon return back if it could be helped. It was a spectacular enclosed glass structure on a terrace overhanging the gardens. That was not the problem. The Solarium was a greenhouse turned into a meeting room with a low table in the center surrounded by cushions, with a tier of teacakes and pitchers precariously placed. Gigantic plants with leaves the size of dinner plates crowded so thickly around the walls it was like entering a forest. Blossoms in shades of red and blue and white and yellow peppered throughout, their floral scent thickening the air like a putrid perfume. There was no wind to move the smell, it stagnated in the humidity as fountains bubbled cheerfully in the background.
âWhat are we doing here?â
You ignored the question. âCan you firebend in here?â
Wonwoo conjured a small flame in his palm but with the abundance of moisture it swiftly began to choke and flicker. âYou came to a greenhouse for what exactly?â
You started to answer but a knock at the door interrupted.
As the footman entered to announce Lord Galinâs arrival, Wonwoo moved towards the wall next to the door; his station where he oversaw your meetings time and time again. Best to play his part even if you refused to share the script you were operating from.
âLord Galin,â you smiled in greeting. Every inch of you reverted back into the meekness Wonwoo witnessed that first day in the barracks. A delicate flower, so beautiful you forgot itâs filled with poison.
âYour Highness,â the old man bowed deeply. âYou look more radiant than the last time I saw you.â
âI apologize we couldnât meet in the Azure Chamber. It flooded sometime last night.â
Whatever happened in the chamber last night, Wonwoo figured you fashioned it somehow.
âNo apologies necessary, the Solarium is just as magnificent though it is quite humid here.â
âI forget not everyone is as unbothered by it as I am.â You led Galin to the table, taking the far seat so you faced Wonwoo. He kept his gaze trained on the back of Galinâs head.
âLet us eat first and then we shall talk business, yes?â You sat and plucked a slice of pear from a serving plate. âHow are your grandsons?â
âCitree just began his tutoring. Heâs a very gifted firebender.â
You glanced at Wonwoo over the man's shoulder. âLike his grandfather.â
The puzzle pieces clicked into place in Wonwooâs head. This was where youâd confront Galin, itâs why you chose a room so humid no flame could survive or thrive in its cradle. You wanted to ensure if Galin thought to retaliate, heâd have no ability to do so. Wonwoo rested a hand on the pommel of the blade at his hip and titled his chin in understanding.
âYou flatter me, Your Highness,â Galin hummed.
You continued to chatter about all matters; Galinâs other committees, his wifeâs health, the plum orchard on his property in the East. The man talked about himself too eagerly; bumbling through long anecdotes that made Wonwooâs eyes glaze but you kept a warm smile on your face the entire time.Â
A knock interrupted and Sami entered with a new plate of desserts and a wink at Wonwoo.Â
âYour Highness, Your Grace,â she bowed and placed the treats in the center of the table. Wonwoo noticed she slipped something from her pocket into your hand.
But Galin didnât seem to notice, too entranced by the pastries placed before him. âYou remembered my favorite!â
âOf course, my Lord. My cook was worried they wouldnât come out in time but it seems she is a miracle worker.â
You did not eat and Wonwoo wondered if you had them poisoned.Â
âFickle thing, star lace. You can spend all the time and money on the best ingredients, preparing them just right, but if the cook isnât careful to see the process through then the entire thing is for naught. And then, you have hungry people who are only able to eat their disappointment.â
Wonwoo couldnât see Galinâs face but his body tensed. He wasnât sure what new role he was playing in your game. Not a chaperone and certainly not a protector. A witness? An insurance policy?Â
You continued, âAnd if those people were royals, princesses perhaps with the ability to make assassinations look like accidents, well it wouldnât be very wise of a cook to disappoint her, would it?â
âI have no ideaââ
âIâve heard recent reports of wildfires in the northern provinces. Uncommon but not exactly rare I suppose. How unfortunate would it be for one of those fires to consume the temple Citree is studying at?â
Despite sitting, it was as if you grew an inch taller with each word. Staring down your nose at Galin, Wonwoo wondered how anyone doubted that you were born to rule.
âYou wouldnât dare.â
âLord Galin,â you cooed. âIâm only speaking in hypotheticals. However, I suppose that if someone decided to steal twenty thousand gold marks from the crown and leave a trail of evidence, then Iâd be left with few options. Strip him of his title, take everything he valuesâŠreally the possibilities are only as limited as my imagination.â
âWhat do you want?â
âForty thousand gold marks and the names of any other nobles who have been cheating the crown.â
âFortâforty thousand?â he sputtered. âI havenât got forty thousand gold marks.â
âHow unfortunate. You know what Iâve got? A condemned building in the Lower Block and months of documents pretending itâs not. So find forty thousand gold marks by tomorrow evening or you will find yourself mourning your grandsons by the next day.â
So this was diplomacy. Wonwooâs skin prickled at the realization. It was as if he was witnessing a tsunami preparing to crash into land, taking everything and leaving nothing behind in its wake. Unforgiving. Ruthless. Brutal. Wonwoo softened towards Lord Galin but swiftly remembered the only reason the noble became the target of your rage were his own deeds. Galin was a thief and a liar. This was justice.
âYou havenât told Her Majesty about my deeds, have you?â
âNo. I am offering you my mercy but if you prefer to beg for hers then so be it.â
âFine, but I have no names. I donât know the other ministersâ deeds.â
Wonwoo doubted that. Where one went, the rest followed. How many other projects were nothing more than shams to line their own pockets?
âForty thousand gold marks returned to my coffers and a list of names with proof of crimes. Or is there a price too high for your familyâs safety?â
Galin tensed, hands flexing at his sides. You warned him Galin was a firebender and Wonwoo recognized the signs of his element. He stepped forward to intervene but found your eyes over the old man's shoulders, a single look and he knew you didnât need his help. The temperature in the room dropped until his breath puffed in a foggy cloud. Wonwoo didnât need to see the tea cups to know they were frozen too; the glass walls and ceilings frosted despite the harsh sun beating down outside. The fountains silenced, and the plants twisted like snakes poised to strike. Wonwoo had been terrified of you before, but now he found himself too impressed to think beyond the fact you could send an ice blade through Galinâs throat before either of them realized what happened.
âYou will sign these confessions,â you said, passing over the papers Sami slipped you earlier. âIn the case you do what is required, then no one will ever discover them. But if you donâtâŠthen Iâm sorry for your loss.â
The plants relaxed and the fountains began bubbling enthusiastically once more. Frost receded, and you sat primly, plucking a fig from the tray of fruits as if you were discussing the weather. You wore as many masks as Wonwoo had teeth and the ever shuffling nature unnerved him.
Lord Galin glowered, âI was unaware royalty resorted to blackmail these days.â
âI wonât fault you for it, you donât seem to be aware of much these days but Iâm honored to bring you up to speed.â
After signing the confessions and sealing them, you dismissed Galin, face smooth, the wave threatening to destroy everything in its path receding beneath the surface without a ripple. As if it never existed to begin with.
Galin rose to his feet, wrinkled face red as rose petals, ink staining his fingers. His mouth opened to say more but shut when you raised a brow in question. Wonwoo became a new victim to his indignation.
âFilth!â Galin spat, chest puffed. âGet out of my way!â
You didnât rise from your seat, or shout, or freeze the air again. Your voice was unnervingly calm, gaze as cold as ice. âLord Galin.â
âYes, Your Highness?â he bit without turning back.
To Wonwooâs horror, your fingers bent at a rigid angle and Galin jerked to face you like a grotesque puppet.
Bloodbending.
It didnât matter if Galin could bend or even if he had a knife hidden in his pocket. A flick of your wrist turned him into a living marionette, doomed to do whatever crossed your mind.
Wonwooâs stomach sank.Â
One hand held steady and you poured yourself a cup of tea with the other, spoon scraping the bottom of the porcelain cup when you added sugar. âIâve heard the strangest tales of people drowning on dry land in the Umber Islands. It might do well to warn your daughters of such a phenomenon. Theyâll be celebrating the festival there this year, won't they? Iâd hate for anything unfortunate to happen to them.â
Galinâs eyes widened with horror and Wonwoo knew his face must have looked the same but you remained unaffected; sipping from your cup.Â
âThank you for sharing, Your Highness.â
âYou may go,â you said, hand dropping to snag one of the pastries and pop it in your mouth with a pleased hum.
Galin scurried from the chamber and Wonwoo nearly followed.Â
Wonwoo realized, among a great many things, that your threat to Galin is on his behalf; youâd go to the same lengths to get your money back as you would to settle an insult against him. Maybe it meant nothing. Maybe itâs a drop in the bucket of your ire at the noble, at everyone, at circumstance. Maybe youâd been looking for an excuse to put Galin in his place, flex your power over him completely.Â
Wonwoo didnât need anger on his behalf.
But he also realized heâd like if you were.
In the garden, the scent of honey suckles and damp earth perfumed the air. The clipped bushes and hedges stood proud, like rows of miniature soldiers as they carved a maze towards the ornamental pond bustling with turtleducks. You sat in silence with Wonwoo, pretending to read a novel by a new poet while he actually read his own. It felt odd to have him stand at attention while you relaxed, same as when Han or Sami or Mingyu hung around waiting for some task to do when all you craved was company; more friend than servant but Wonwoo felt more something than friend.
You werenât sure what heâd think of the ruthlessness you wielded in the Solarium, and a part of you wilted at the idea that you cared so much for his opinion. Itâs what had to be done.Â
It didnât stop the sick satisfaction knowing Galin wet himself when you yanked him around by his veins.
Han and Mingyu ensured Galinâs footman witnessed them delivering the fake confession envelopes to the archives while Sami hid the real ones throughout the palace. When Galin visited the archives that night hoping to destroy evidence against, heâd realize the fool he thought you to be was a grave miscalculation. And when he sent a messenger to ensure his grandsonsâ safety, you had a spy set to follow; same with his daughters. Heâd play right into your web just as you had his but this time youâd win; it was up to Galin to define what that meant.
Wonwoo had not spoken to you since leaving the Solarium and you wondered if it had been worth it. You felt like a child playing pretend; the first trial of being queen, what it would take to keep the nobles in line. You could have turned over his confession to your grandmother and been done with the entire ordeal but you wanted to beat Galin on your own; needed to outmaneuver him without her help.
Only time would tell if you had.
Now, you sat in the gardens and tried to carry on as normal as if you didnât owe this success to your guard. You trusted him. Not just to protect you if someone should attack, Wonwoo would do that for anyone. You were sure of it. Even with Sami and Hanâs constant teasing he would protect them if needed. But it was beyond expecting him to do his duty. He gave you proof, put himself at risk of getting into trouble if you were caught together. He helped you in a way no one else ever could.
Youâd have to find a way to thank him later, when the rush of the day wore off and you didnât replay the hundreds of things you could have done differently.
You knew he wouldnât appreciate the money from Lord Galin, heâd insist it went back to the people. He liked to read, you knew that much. Maybe a book? But that didnât feel grand enough to convey the level of your gratitude. Recommend him to Aiko for a promotion? Youâd have to ask him.
There were other things you could do for him. Indulge in the urges that plagued you since you spotted him the first night at the warehouses; let him touch and taste and tease as much as he wanted; finish what started against that wall in the market and rekindled last night. Itâd be an entirely inappropriate reward but you wanted him and it was a convenient excuse to let him have you.
Wonwoo interrupted your spiral. âYouâd do it, wouldnât you?â
For a moment you thought he meant the fantasies flashing in your head. Yes. Without question. Wanna run to the gardener's shed right now? But when you looked away from your book and towards his face, something unfamiliar clouded his face. Something like awe and fear and disbelief morphed into one.
He meant Galin.
âYes.â
âIs it that easy?â
You shut your book with a snap; no point in saving the page, youâd have to start from the beginning anyway. âIt's not easy.â
Galinâs daughters had been your playmates as a child, before they married and went with their husbands. You attended Citreeâs and his brothersâ first birthdays, sent gifts for the Winter Fete every year. It was not easy but Galin made it necessary. Wonwoo didnât understand. He never would.
Rising with the intent of excusing yourself to somewhere he couldnât follow, you found one of your guests approaching.
âYour Highness,â Senator Maoki bowed. âI apologize for interrupting you but I was hoping I may accompany you on a walk through the gardens? Iâm told you know them best and Iâd be honored with a tour.âÂ
I would rather hang upside down completely naked and recite my family lineage back fifteen generations.Â
Senator Maoki was several inches shorter than you with a boyish face, baby fat firmly in place despite his age. He didnât look old enough to drink let alone wed, and he wouldnât; not to you at least. But Maoki could serve a purpose now.
You smoothed a hand down your skirt. âThat would be lovely.â
He trailed behind as you swept towards the arch leading back to the palace; a short tour through the more impressive parts of the garden, then you could hide away in your room until night came.
âIâve been trying to introduce myself but your schedule is so packed, Your Highness,â Maoki huffed.
âLots to do when running a country.â
âItâll be grand when you're married,â Maoki said. âthen you won't have to worry about such things.â
You stopped abruptly. âI beg your pardon?â
âI mean to say,â Maoki stammered, âyouâll be busy raising your children so your husband would naturally step in as king.â
âThe man I marry would be Prince Consort, not King.âÂ
âOf course, Your Majesty.â Maoki must have sensed your discontent and scrambled to change the subject. He looked over his shoulder and turned back to say, âDoes he follow you everywhere?â
You continued down the pebbled pathway, flowers exploding in the greenery like vibrant fireworks, Maoki and Wonwoo on your heels. âHeâs my guard, itâs his duty to protect me.â
âI could protect you, Your Highness.â
You couldnât protect a block of ice in the South Pole.
Maoki puffed up his chest but looked more like an baby otter penguin than something intimidating. There was a noise behind you that sounded suspiciously like a snort. At least Wonwoo found him entertaining.
âIâm sure youâre very capable,â you dipped your chin to the orange blossoms, their sweet scent offsetting the sour taste of that lie.Â
âIâve never understood womenâs affinity for flowers. Theyâre just silly flowers.â
You drew back to full height, your chin an inch or so higher than the top of Maokiâs hair. âThese flowers will become fruit that will feed everyone at the palace. That hardly seems silly to me.â
His eyes rolled. âI guess but not all flowers turn into something useful.â
âSo you only see value in things that may be of use to you.â
âNo! I mean, yes, but I wouldnâtââ
âSome thingsâ only use is the comfort they bring by having them near.â Like Wonwoo. The realization jumped at you like a bolt of lightning in broad daylight; you shove it away before thinking too much of it. âDid you not have a favorite toy or blanket as a child?â
âI had a rock.â Maoki declared proudly.
âAâŠrock?âÂ
âMy favorite rock, come Iâll show you.â
Maoki trudged past, leaving you and Wonwoo alone for a moment. When you look up at him heâs smiling; an amused twist on his lip like he too canât believe Maoki cuddled with a rock as a child.Â
That comfort you described crept up, the warmth in your chest, the knots in your muscles loosening. All by just standing there with him as the birds chirped and the breeze rustled the leaves and swirled the scent of fresh rain and the blooms. You knew the want he brought with him; the urge to touch and be touched, to be pressed into the wall and drag him against you. But this was different. A new urge to stand in silence, knowing Wonwoo stood only a few inches away, and enjoy the gardens in soft silence; share looks you both understood without speaking; laugh at nothing and everything and look to see if he was laughing too.Â
âYour Highness?â Maoki called.
âComing.â
Next to the fountain, Maoki held a stone the size of a fist. âA good rock is a lot like a woman. Some may be unassuming from the outside, but, if you take the time to look at what's within, it can dazzle. Look.â He cracked the stone open and the inside glittered in the afternoon light like a thousand stars captured together.
âThatâs beautiful.â If you didnât have hundreds of things that sparkled then you might have been more sincere in your compliments. You might have bitten your tongue. âDoes your rock do anything?â
Maoki frowned. âNo, Your Highness. Itâs meant to be admired for simply existing, a thing of great beauty and great value that lasts far longer than flowers.â
âBut it doesnât smell as nice as flowers,â you sniffed.
âNo, I think flowers might have the advantage there,â he joked back. âShall we walk some more?â
Walking the gardens is nice even if youâve traced the same paths so many times there are permanent footsteps to follow. Itâs the time of year the grass is as soft as feathers and you wish to toss away your shoes and to feel it beneath your feet; you would if Maoki wasnât there and it was just Wonwoo.
Another fountain came into view; water trickling down the many tiers in thick sheets to the basin where turtleducks paddled across the surface and fish swam just beneath. Maoki led you around the edge and the turtleducks and fish followed close, expecting the treats you frequently spoiled them with. You focused on ignoring whatever Maoki rambles about, thinking through meetings and to do lists.Â
Thatâs when something crashed into the water behind you.
âWhaââ you gasped.Â
Wonwoo sat in the fountain, soaked from head to toe, the fabric of his uniform dark and clinging like a second skin. His eyes blazed, trained on Maoki. âI tripped.â
âYou should go change, Captain Jeon. Wouldnât want you dripping all over the gardens.â Maoki straightened, back rigid as if he was sizing up Wonwoo. A ridiculous sight; like a puppy sizing up a wolf.
The birds no longer sang, and the wind held its breath.
âAre you alright?â you asked, extending a hand.
Wonwoo ignored it, rising to his feet. âIâm fine, Your Highness.âÂ
The correction is on the tip of your tongue but you bite it back. The last person needing to witness your familiarity with him was Maoki, the horrible gossip. You wanted to laugh; you would have if Wonwoo didnât look so vicious and Maokiâs face didnât burn red with fear.Â
You tried not to stare as he tugged off his soaked coat, revealing the fabric of his undershirt nearly translucent from the water. Tried as did, you failed spectacularly. What was a woman to do when a man as handsome and defined as Wonwoo stood in front of her practically naked from the waist up? It wasnât fair to expect anything other than gawking and imaginations.
You could have bent the water from his uniform and left him perfectly dry, continuing your walk with the senator as if nothing happened. You could have turned around and left Wonwoo standing there to dry his uniform with his own body heat. Of the many things you could have done, you decided to leave Maoki to his rocks and give yourself privacy before you scandalized the rose bushes.
âI think Iâll retire with Captain Jeon, I must prepare for tonight's festivities anyway,â you said.Â
âBut, Your Highness!â
You turned on your heel, a soaking wet bodyguard following behind. What you didnât see was Maoki and Wonwoo sneering at one another but you guessed as much. You hid your satisfied smile in your sleeve.
Wonwoo soaked in the tub for what felt like hours but knew the sun barely began to set when he returned to his room. You had been whisked into your room by Han and Sami for last minute alterations with the Royal Seamstress and he was clearly not invited by the door slamming in his face. Fair enough, he didnât need to see you naked. Not after what happened in the bath.
He didnât have many possessions in his room: a few books, his clothes, a framed picture of his family. Itâs why he noticed someone left something on the unused desk in the corner so quickly.
A pristine copy of The Pearls of Drak sat on his desk; not the one ruined by the fountain or more specifically Maiko. The pages were aged and the cover softened, but far nicer than the one Wonwoo owned.Â
He brought his books from the barracks with the assumption heâd have a little free time, not realizing heâd need to ration their entertainment. Wonwoo had nothing but time these days. Mornings started late, and you seemed to prefer ending the evening early â at least publicly. He couldnât sleep well knowing you were just down the hall, or the nights he heard you pacing in the sitting room.
There was another book beneath it. Poems of Stars. The title had faded to the point it was nearly illegible, the leather cover worn to the point it thinned around the edge. Many of the pages were nicked or ripped at the corners, and as he flipped through he found stains from tea cups and smudged ink, the spine creased and broken that it laid flat on almost any page.
He never read it before but someone clearly loved it, poured over the text over and over again. As excited as he was about the books, his heart squeezed at the orange blossom, petals dried and browned, pressed between the pages.Â
Some thingsâ only use is the comfort they bring by having them nearâŠ
He knew they were both from you. Were these gifts or loans? Wonwoo needed to ask. The poems were well loved and he doubted you part with it but the fact you left it to him at all, even only temporarily, made him flush.
One second you were asking him to heat the bath you sat in, the next threatening nobles on his behalf, and now you gifted him something you held dearly. Wonwoo couldnât begin to think what any of it meant.
The idea of you in his room made him nervous, seeing the few things that belonged to him in the space that certainly wasnât his own. What did you think of it? Of him? How little he had in comparison to you?Â
Maybe if he had the money to study heâd be at a university and not in the palace; and if he was at university then heâd never be guard, and if he had that kind of money heâd never have stumbled into the warehouse that one night to fight and lose. Heâd never have gone back to fight and win. Never would have fought and lost against you, never would have found you again in that field.Â
There was no point in obsessing over what ifs or hypotheticals. But if Wonwoo had, then he supposed if none of this happened, heâd never have a book with a silly flower with no use at all other than the comfort that it came from you.
He dressed and left his room, entering the hive of the main apartment buzzing much like the morning. You were tucked away in your room, out of sight but not for long.
You came out in pink silks, so pale they looked white, and the jewels absent from this morning were back in place, woven intricately through your hair.
Wonwoo found comfort in the fact he wasnât required to speak, he had no idea what would have come out of his mouth if he did. You didnât seem in the mood to talk either. After this morning he couldn't blame you.
Rows of chairs filled the Grand Room, a makeshift stage at the front for each man to present his talent. Most of the seats were already full but two upfront were left empty for you and the Queen.Â
Servants wove through the clusters of nobles and dignitaries with trays of lemonade and wine, others with plates of cookies.Â
Wonwoo stationed himself against the wall at the side of the room, a clear view of you and the performances from the shadows. He didnât want to miss the bumbling fools embarrassing themselves; it was too good an opportunity to pass up.Â
It started innocently enough. Lord Char played a ballad on tsungi horn; Admiral Gyan recited a long winded ode from Poems of Laghima and ended up making up the latter half after he clearly forgot the words; Commander Razaâs dramyin performance was loud and off beat, impressive given he performed solo. Maoki turned a rock into a turtleduck figurine which was almost realistic if the turtleduckâs body had been flattened but its head enlarged.
You accepted it with a tight smile and a small dip of your chin. Someone else would have thought it modest but Wonwoo caught the shake in your shoulders, and the clench of your jaw.
More followed with less than impressive routines: hoop rolling, card tricks, and slight of hand that wouldnât impress a toddler. Polite claps filled the hall after each stint.Â
The entire time Wonwoo cut glances at your face, waiting for flashes of amusement or confusion to match his own. Admiral Gyan danced on clunky feet without music and you hid a smile in a glass of wine, a private smile you look at Wonwoo to share and heâs happy for the shadows because heâs gnawing on his lip to keep from reciprocating. Prince Jao sang, loudly and off key, the look that passed between you and Wonwoo nearly ended with you both in tears of laughter.
Then, Prince Bavruqâs turn came around.
Sami would be disappointed to miss the man shirtless, chest obviously oiled. You peaked back at Wonwoo with an arched brow as if to say âSeriously?â
Bavruq flexed and stretched through different tumbles, commanding the water from two large barrels rolled in for his performance. Wonwoo watched with admiration. Obviously the man was a skilled bender but he couldnât help thinking you were better. Bavruq dropped into a low stance, two arches of water spiraling overhead, and your head tilted in interest. In the light of the candle chandeliers, the water glittered much like the stone Maoki presented in the garden.Â
Your eyelids dropped, head tilted in thought. If he didnât know better then itâd appear you were enamored with Bavruq but Wonwoo saw the challenge. You were sizing Bavruq up, like a predator assessed potential prey. If it came to it, Wonwoo bet on you.
Bavruq froze the water in a spectacular arch, bowing for applause. You clapped politely and Bavruq left the stage. The dread of Samiâs comments later tonight started to root in Wonwooâs stomach.
âWonderful!â the Queen turned towards you, her next exclamation echoing through the hall. âYou are all so impressive, I donât know how you will choose a husband.â
Your eyes widened as you floundered. Wonwoo couldnât believe it himself but he knew this was the plan from the start; however, the Queen clearly desired to speed the entire thing along. All the men that just performed swooped to surround you like moths to a flame, you sneered something to your grandmother before looking at Wonwoo with pleading eyes.
It wasnât his place to intervene, even if you wanted him to, even if he wanted to. Standing on the sidelines, Wonwoo watched you navigate the viper pit as your grandmother smiled boldly.
Another hour passed before the swarm dissipated. Your smile remained fixed the entire time but Wonwoo noticed the strain in your cheeks, the dull glaze cast over your eyes, the clench of your jaw. When you were finally able to get away, he followed you back to your suite ten paces behind like he always did.
Back in your apartment, you dismissed Wonwoo and others with a wave of your hand, locking yourself in your room without a word.Â
In his own room, try as he might, sleep evaded him. Every time he came close Maokiâs sniveling face flashed in his mind, or the panicked look on your face in the crowd of hungry suitors. Or the way you looked at him in the garden, like there was a joke just for you two.Â
He couldnât sleep and he refused to call the kitchens for tea to help so Wonwoo decided to read. He read The Pearls of Drak enough to recite the entire thing in his sleep so he grabbed the new book and flipped through the pages until his eyes caught on âThe Belle Dame.â
I met a lady in the meads, Full beautifulâa spiritâs child, Her hair was long, her foot was light, And her eyes were wild.Â
Well that certainly sounded familary.
Wonwoo scoured page after page of the poem. How the man yearned for a woman he couldnât have, enchanted by her to the point of despair. Wonwooâs chest ached as he read on, hoping for some happy ending. And then the poem ended; no happiness, no peace. The man woke up on the hillside â alone â wandering in ruins forever looking for the woman he loved who will never be found.Â
Wonwoo read over and over again, obsessed in his own way, trying to work out a new angle, some way to spin the story into one heâd be satisfied with. But finding that ending proved as easy as finding sleep. After the tenth time, Wonwoo snapped the book closed and shoved it beneath his bed.
He didnât sleep very well. Every time he verged just on the seam of sleep, a pair of wild eyes stared back at him.
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lee jeno x fem!reader (idol AU)
IMAGINE: you keep your relationship as private as possible
âą he comes to pick you up every chance he gets when you have closing shift.
âą you only do home dates, mostly at yours.
âą lots of movie nights and take away dinners.
âą cuddles are your night routine fr.
âą "you're so warm and soft"
âą during comeback season you don't hangout as much and he suffers the lack of your touch.
âą "i miss you so much i think i'm gonna die" "you won't die, baby"
âą shower sex is his thing. he loves it for some reason.
âą "your skin is something else, i swear"
âą he LOVES watching you getting ready in the morning, he knows your skin-care steps by heart.
âą "you're very creepy, just there staring at me" "i'm very in love with you"
âą a lot of skin-ship, he loves to touch and caress you.
âą you're his comfort place.
âą he doesn't speak a lot when you hangout but when he does, his deep and lazy voice never fails to turn you on.
âą he's very good at using his hands and his tongue.
âą when you complain about him going to the gym instead of spending time with you, he records himself doing some exercise and send you the video. you shut your mouth immediately.
âą "you're the sexiest thing i ever saw in my life, istg" "(.ââĄâ)"
Jereâs girlfriend watching him almost drown in a hotel pool:
Proofs that Pedro Pascal and Y/n Y/l/n are dating (part 2)
I think I could do this every week, like a series, I like the idea! But actually doing it, is something different, especially because I tend to lose it at some point and forget to publish or I donât have time đ€·đ»ââïž also, if you have any ideas for those, because I am already running out of them but I like doing them.. so, Iâm open! And for the last pic, I feel like he would do this face like a shocked face but funny, I donât really know how to explain it đ
1) 12.04.2023, 3:57pm
A fan posted a video on Instagram. First we could see a woman, laughing with another person, another woman we assume. They were in a car. We can hear off camera âis that him?â, the other woman says yes, then turns the camera. Next to her car, there he was, Pedro. They were actually at a red light. He was driving. He did not see the women next to him yet. In the video, we could see another person next to him, but we donât know who (yet). Then this person moves their position, lightly turning to the left, thatâs when we see that it is actually Y/n Y/l/n, and thatâs when she notices the woman filming them. At that moment, we could see that Pedro leaned a little towards y/n, but she pointed to the ladies before he could go further, which made him turn. He waved at them, but were quickly interrupted by a car honking at them. The light turned green. The video shows the car leaving. One woman said âwhat was he doing?â The other said âwas he about to kiss her?â, then the video ends.
2) 14.04.2023, around 4pm
Pedro and y/n were seen leaving the gym together. Walking next to each other they were laughing a lot. Y/n was wearing a yellow sports bra and a dark grey short, holding a water bottle. Pedro was in shorts too and wearing his famous yellow lakers shirt, his shorts were also grey. They surprisingly had matching outfits.
3) 15.04.2023, 2:36am
Y/n posted a video on her story. She was in a club. The video started with her in a crowd, dancing. Next to her was a friend, coming to kiss her cheek for the video. Right behind y/n, a familiar face, Pedro Pascal. He absolutely did not see that y/n was making a video and was enjoying himself, dancing a little but mostly drinking his cocktail. Then y/n turned towards Pedro and said âsay hi!â. As he didnât hear her, he screamed âwhat?â Then looked at her phone. She came very close to him, whispering the same sentence to his ear. Then he came closer to the phone, looked straight at the camera, and said hi, and waved. âWho is it for?â He asked her. âIâm posting it on Instagram!â They looked at each other. He was giving her a look that said âthat is not a good ideaâ and she gave him a look that said âI know but Iâll do it anywayâ, then the video stopped as they were laughing.
4) 17.04.2023, 10am (ish)
Pedro and y/n were seeing grocery shopping together. Some fans posted pictures during the day, with the two of them together (and the fan of course). One fan stated that they saw Pedro kiss y/nâs forehead but there were no pictures nor videos.
5) 19.04.2023, 6:13pm
Pedro posted a video on his Instagram story. First we could see him, and we could see he was in a car, but not driving. Then, he turned the camera to his legs, and we could see a hand on his thigh. He moved the camera towards the driver, and it was y/n, looking ahead. When she saw that he was filming, she took her hand away, and put it in front of her mouth, pretending to be shocked. Then she smiled, her eyes switching from the road to the phone. Then Pedro turned the camera back to his face, making a weird shocking face before laughing. We could hear y/n laughing too. Then the video ended. Y/n reposted it on her story later too, adding : âgot to give attention to my passenger princessâ
This is so cute đ«
in which jake is your roommate and ruins all your dates. accidentally. accidentally, right?đ» 18+ only!
Jake Seresin isnât an ideal roommate. He sings in the shower at 5 a.m., he canât load a dishwasher to save his lifeâseriously, who puts mugs on the bottomâand he has a habit of walking around shirtless that is beginning to interfere with your love life.
Of course, heâs got a lot of good qualities. Heâs a surprisingly good cook, with a recipe for chicken and dumplings youâre pretty sure is the best thing youâve ever eaten. Heâs also got that Navy-mandated tidiness, so the apartment you share is always vacuumed and dusted. And he has a habit of walking around shirtless, which, as appealing as it is for your eyes, isâŠ
Yepp. Starting to mess with your love life.
Because guys see Jake making a smoothie in the kitchen or getting back from a run or literally doing anything and decide they have to have some stupid pissing contest with your roommate, who remains, you think, entirely oblivious to how threatened he makes the men you bring home. Because why would he see them as a threat, right? Heâs so far out of your league that your dates have nothing to worry about. Jake Seresin could pull any girl he ever wanted so why would he want you?
Youâre almost grateful heâs deployedâdespite your usual worry for his safetyâwhen you bring a new guy home from the bar. No Jake means no weird energy and maybe a chance to actually let a relationship get off its feet.
Until he comes out of the bathroom and youâre smiling at your phone because Jake sent you a text, a photo of the two of you at the beach from last year. One of those iPhone memories that apparently made him think of you.
This came up on my phone yesterday. Miss you, sweetheart. Donât burn the place down. Oh and Iâm safe in case you couldnât tell.
Your date isnât thrilled to see the photo, even though he asks to. Tells you it looks like youâre a coupleâas ifâand that Jake seems really comfortable touching youâheâs just a touchy person.
The night ends with some mediocre sex and, despite his words to the otherwise, your date never calls you back.
You try not to blame Jake, but itâs hard not to see him as the root of all your woes in love. And if youâre not mad at him, youâll have to analyze why heâs accidentally ruining every date youâre on and maybe youâll have to admit that itâs because none of these guys actually measure up to Jake.
Youâd have to have the startling realization that you are hopelessly in love with your roommate.
So when Jake comes back a few weeks later maybe youâre cold. Maybe youâre quiet. Maybe youâre keeping to yourself and maybe you tell him to fuck off when he keeps asking what he did wrong.
You move to storm out of the apartment and itâs all very dramatic, but Jake stops you with a hand grasped firmly around your wrist. Itâs not rough, but determined, and he pulls you gently closer to him, his green eyes burning with confusion under furrowed brows.
âWhat was that?â His skin is sun-kissed and he canât tell you where he was deployed but you know it was somewhere warm from the way the few freckles that dot his nose are more prominent than usual.
âFuck. Off.â
Jake blinks, undeterred. And then he stares at you, gaze so focused you feel like youâre a target in one of his stupid training exercises. You want to shy away, but when his other hand comes up to wipe away the tears you hadnât realized weâre gathering in your eyes it all comes out. All your weird and messy feelings that will certainly ruin everything and make it so you need to find another place to live.
But when youâre done talking, Jake just frowns. He pulls you impossibly closer and rests his chin atop your head. âIâm sorry, sweets,â he mutters, âBut Iâm glad I scared those guys off.â He doesnât add that he was totally doing it on purpose as often as he couldâthings are still too fragile for that. One day heâll tell you. And on that day, heâll receive a face full of chocolate cake as punishment.
But for today, he just lets you sniffle in his arms, holds you close as you put a wet spot down the front of his t-shirt. âTheyâre not good enough for you,â he continues, âI just helped them realize that sooner rather than later.â
âJake,â you complain, âYou canât keep doing that. I needâŠI want to find someone.â
His frown deepens and he places his hands on your waist, tapping your hips lightly to warn you that heâs going to pick you up. Carrying you into your bedroom, he sighs. âFine. Iâll stop, if you give this guy I know a shot.â
âIâm listening.â
âHeâs Navy,â Jake continues, âAnd heâs got a killer body.â
âDefinitely listening,â you laugh, but try to ignore the pang of hurt that is Jake setting you up with one of his friends.
Jake rolls his eyes and takes a spot beside you on your bed. âHeâs a great pilot, some say the best. And heâs a gentleman, Texas-raised so he knows his way around a kitchen.â
Oh. Oh.
âJakeâŠâ
He holds up a hand, not willing to be interrupted. âAnd heâs shit at loading the dishwasher, sweets, but I know heâd be willing to learn.â
I love the spectator sport AU and the hurt and comfort! Can you write Joel having a nightmare? Maybe the reader comforts him?
pairing: joel miller x reader (pairing from the soccer parents AU)
summary: joel has a nightmare, you comfort him.
warnings: nightmare, hurt/comfort, domestic fluff
word count: around 400
authorâs note: i wrote this in a few minutes on my phone. i cannot be held liable for any grammatical errors.
iâm also taking more drabble requests!
Being a mother, youâd woken up to all sorts of strange things in the middle of the night. Whether it was Chloe shaking your shoulder because she had a nightmare and didnât want to be alone, or the absolutely lovely sound of your baby wailing through the night. Despite your extensive knowledge of strange wake-up calls, this one was definitely a first.
Fingernails dug into your skin, causing you to wake up with a yelp. A cold dread washed over you for a second, your sleepy brain thinking that maybe there was a deranged home invader whose preferred method of invasion was scratching their victims awake.
The reality was far less scaryâfor you, at least. As your eyes adjusted to the dark room, you recognized the fingers gripping you extraordinarily tight as your partnerâs. You slowly became a bit more awake, and realized that Joel was shaking just the slightest bit, and that perspiration beaded at his hairline.
âJoel,â you whispered, removing his tight grip from your shoulder. After quietly saying his name, all you got in response was an unintelligible murmur.
âJoel,â you repeated, this time slightly louder, but still aware of the fact that your children were sleeping in the next rooms over.
At this utterance of his name, he stirred slightly more, but was very clearly still asleep, and still grappling with whatever strange thing was happening in his dream that had him sweating and gripping onto you like you were going to slip from his fingers.
You set your hand on his shoulder, gently shaking him while saying his name one more time, this time with a sense of urgency and concern. That somehow managed to be enough to finally wake the man in bed with you up, and Joel gasped as he awoke.
âJoel,â you said softly, hovering over the man. âAre you alright?â
He looked up at you wordlessly, blinking a few times before pulling you into a rib-crushing hug.
âI thought I lost you,â he mumbled into your shoulder.
âOh baby,â you cooed, playing with the hairs at the back of his head as he tightly embraced you. âIâm not going anywhere.â
POV: Your camera roll but youâre dating Pedro Pascal (part 2)
He is everything to me. Everyone says: "thank you Amy"
amydorkingphotography
when a guy has a cartoon face i guess i canât help myself