Happy International Cat đ Day to all who celebrate đ đť
BTS from Lola Versus Video courtesy of @pajamasecrets
Pairing: Joel Miller x Fem!ReaderÂ
Summary: When Joel and Ellie arrive at the Jackson commune, his strong frame and intense gaze captivate you. But as the days pass, you lose hope that he might be drawn to you as well. That is, until the walls come crashing down and the truth finally reveals itself.
Word Count: 7.3k [slow burn]
A/N: I put a lot of love and time into this one. It's my longest fic so far but it didn't feel hard, which I like to believe is a good thing. Hope it resonates, hope you feel the feels and the yearning between these twoâlet me know! Hope you're well.
A breeze follows Tommy as he saunters in through the doors of the Tipsy Bison, the soft click of his boot heels echoing off the wood with each easy step. The cowboy hat on his head casts a shadow over his eyes until he takes it off, his dark hair cascading down over his ears. Thereâs a small smile playing on his lips that makes you narrow your eyes.
Cleaning the bartop suddenly loses its appeal, but you donât stop, only slow down. The fresh, tangy scent of lemongrass continues to waft up from the motion.    Â
âWe close early on Sundayâs, officer,â you tease as he climbs onto a stool.Â
He frowns as he sets his hat aside. âI donât look like a cop, do I?â You shrug, and he chuckles as his gaze roves over to the pool room. âNate back there? Yo, Nate!âÂ
âEvening, Tom,â the older man calls back as he polishes a cue ball.Â
âJoelâs made it into town.â Thereâs no overt emotion in the way he shares the news, but you can see that itâs all in his eyes as he waits for you to react. Â
âJoel, Joel? As in your brother?â He nods, still in disbelief himself. âOh my gosh, thatâs amazing, Tommyâright? What the heck.â He used to talk about him all the time.Â
His exhale makes way for a shaky smile, âI know. Made it in not too long ago with a young girl heâs looking after,â he tells you, voice thick with a mix of emotions. âHeâs outside. Wanted to come in and see if youâd let us grab a drink.â He runs a hand through his hair. âKnow itâs late. Promise Iâll make up for the trouble.â He knows itâs no trouble. Not when it comes to him.Â
He turns around, barstool squeaking, and waves Joel in through the window.Â
You move to start working on their whiskies. âMake it up by letting me be the babyâs godmother?â The glasses clink as you set them onto the bar and begin pouring the caramel colored liquid, smirking when you meet his gaze.
Tommy isnât completely opposed to the idea. Youâd been in Jackson since the beginning, a friend to him and Maria in every sense of the word. Arguably family. âIf you can manage not to tick me off until the little one gets here.â Despite his words, his eyes are fond.Â
The door creaks open, and Joel strides in, scanning the room. There are pictures on the walls of American icons and landmarks, and old Polaroids of commune members. Thereâs a guarded confidence to the way he walks, an intensity.Â
Tommy quickly leans in and whispers, âHe means well. Itâs been a long day.âÂ
Joel takes a seat beside his brother and acknowledges you with a curt nod, tugging on the collar of his shirt. Â
âWelcome to Jackson,â you greet, introducing yourself afterwards.
âJoel,â he says, taking you in with a steady gaze.Â
âTommyâs told me a lot about you.â You push their glasses closer to them in an encouragement to start drinking.
Joel takes his first sip and fights back a reflexive grimace. Itâs been a while, but it's good. Good enough to make him feel pleasantly warm as it glides down. Tommy drinks off his brotherâs lead, and you realize just how alike they look. Joelâs hair is a little shorter and accented with streaks of gray, but they both have those same dark, telling eyes.Â
They fall into light conversation, but itâs clearly not what they'd talk about if they were alone. Thatâs when you sense the distance. The slight edge to the space between them. Itâs why Tommy resorts to drawing you in, the two of you ripping off each other as Joel listens, fine with not having to speak until this whole little ordeal was winding to an end. However, he does sit up a little straighter whenever you laugh. You pour them more whiskey when their glasses get empty.    Â
Eventually, the remaining light outside fades away. Tommy hisses at the sight, standing. âI gotta get home to Maria,â he says, stretching his back. Joel moves to get up too, until, âAt least finish off this glass, man. Youâve earned it.â Tommy squeezes his brotherâs shoulder. He means it genuinely, at least. âIâll catch up with you tomorrow, Joel. Thanks again for this,â he tells you.Â
âBye, sheriff,â you call after him. Tommy scoffs. Â
Joel realizes just how quiet it is when you move aside to tinker with a bison trinket sitting on the counter, unsure of what to say with Tommy gone. He knows you can see him looking at you. âSo, are you here by yourself?â he finally asks.Â
A playful smile tugs at your lips. âThatâs not a creepy question at all,â you tease, quickly gathering that he doesnât find the implication funny. âUncle Nate?â you call.Â
âBusy!â Â
You raise your brows at Joel. âNot alone.â
Nate was chosen family. The man taught you everything you know about shooting, fishing, and survival even though you gave him a hard time for it when you were younger. He was also the founder of the Tipsy Bison. He only came into the bar on the weekends when he wasn't on patrol. His time in the military all those years ago made it hard to step away from a life of service.Â
âWe were cleaning when Tommy came in,â you tell Joel. He takes in that information wordlessly.Â
âYou arenât much for talking, are you?â Joel takes a sip from his glass. âNothing wrong with that. Must mean you donât miss much. Really observant.â When he doesnât respond, you smile shyly, realizing he probably just wanted to relax after a long day. âGuess I wonât stand here and talk your ears off.âÂ
The floor creaks as you disappear into the recreation room with Nate, rounding the corner. Joel exhales, shoulders dropping from being drawn up. He almost misses your company.Â
Nate sits hunched over a word search puzzle, using the pool table as if it's a normal desk. He doesnât look up at you, even when you give an affectionate tug to his curly gray ponytail. It was something youâd been doing since the days you both were out on your own and had to stay quiet all the time. Back when there was no safety, no security, no commune.Â
âOuch,â he drones, unphased.Â
âAre you gonna come out and meet Tommy's brother?â you ask, low so Joel canât hear. âI feel like you guys have a lot in common: brooding and grumpy.â Pride flutters in your chest when the manâs lips twitch.Â
âIâll meet him⌠eventually. Gotta finish this puzzle.â You realize thereâs a small hourglasses going, the sand swiftly filling the bottom portion. âThere ya areâserendipity.â He circles the letters.Â
Word searches were something he recently started doing. When you have a past as extensive as his, itâs always chasing after you in one way or another. Especially in those quiet moments that sneak up on you. He claimed that seeking out words from amid an ordered chaos keeps the racing thoughts at bay whenever they come rushing in.Â
Joel is finished by the time you join him again, and you realize heâd waited instead of calling out. Already standing, ready to go.Â
âAnything else I can get you?âÂ
He shakes his head. âI appreciate your hospitality.âÂ
Joel turns to leave but you keep talking, âSo I reckon Tommy already squared you away with a house and a tour of the town?âÂ
He stops. âIâm across the street from him. Gettinâ the tour tomorrow.â Â
âThatâs great, Iâm really glad you found us.â You sound so genuine that thereâs a flutter in his gut. âWeâre a pretty crazy bunch, but I think youâre gonna like it here.âÂ
âHope so.â Those are the words he leaves you with.
Your eyes stay trained on his back as he makes his way towards the door, stride the same as when he first arrived. Perhaps a little looser. Before he exits the bar, his eyes catch a glimpse of one of the decorative license plates secured to the wall: Austin, Texas.Â
Shortly after he makes it outside, his heart rate ticks up in that impending way he wishes wasnât so familiar, breath catching in his throat as if heâd forgotten how to breathe. Thereâs no escaping the panic as it sets in, surging through him. A few staggering steps allow him to brace a hand on a wooden directory board.Â
You see it all from inside. At first, you think heâs trying to read the sign, but then he hunches over more and grips his chest. Without thinking, you jog towards the doors.Â
âJoel?â You call once youâve broken outside.Â
Itâs a cool spring night, a crescent moon shares its pale glow from above. Most of Jackson is already tucked away inside or at least halfway there. But in this sliver of time, it feels like itâs just the two of you outside. Joel doesnât let on that heâd heard you, but the moment youâre close enough, you recognize whatâs going on. You press your palm to his back to let him know youâre there. That heâs still here.Â
âConcentrate on your breathing. In and out, just like that,â you encourage, settling on rubbing his back in measured passes. Then you go quiet on the off chance he needs that.Â
In your newfound silence, Joel is forced to focus on the shaky breaths rising from his lungs. Thatâs when he accepts heâs not in control. Not in the grand scheme of things. Thereâs a whole big fallen world just outside the gates of this haven. A world that had taken people he loved and was cruel enough to let him be the one who lived to tell the tale. The heat that rises to his cheeks is made up of frustration more than distress, crackling like pop. Like coals.Â
The ground takes on a vignette as he stares at it, his vision briefly closes in. You never withdraw your touch.Â
When his breaths eventually begin to steady, you remember how to breathe yourself. With a tired exhale, he straightens back up to his full height, and you take a few small steps away. Maybe this wasnât new, but a fact of life for the man whoâd rode into Jackson in an air of mystery and a young girl by his side. Maybe he never wanted you to get a glimpse at this side of him. If he feels that way, he doesnât make it obvious. He almost looks appreciative that youâd bothered enough to care.Â
âSorry to scare you,â he rasps, not meeting your gaze even though he can feel it. You want to tell him that there isnât much that scares you anymore. At least thatâs what you like to believe. âIâm usually alone.âÂ
Except, tonight, he wasnât. And maybe that wasnât such a terrible thing.Â
â˘â˘â˘
Howdy Stranger
This is Jackson Hole
The last of the Old WestÂ
Joel reads the painted wooden sign as Tommy and Maria show him and Ellie around. There are people everywhere. Children playing outside, adults fluttering in and out of shops. All while the Teton mountains loom and watch over it all with their snow-capped peaks. He looks over at the girl when she nudges his arm, pointing to a Calico lounging on a porch. Despite her beaming smile, all he offers is a low hum.Â
It was hard to be in the now when his thoughts were split between the past and future. Up until Jackson, there was no such thing as stability, and he couldnât help but think about the day that the rug would be pulled from beneath the commune as well. Ellieâs smile fades when she notices the harsh squint of his face. He kicks himself for it.  Â
âCat hater,â she mumbles under her breath.
Joel grunts and directs his attention back to his brother.Â
When the tour comes to an inevitable end, Ellie sings Jacksonâs praises after Tommy and Maria go their separate ways with a promise to reconnect later that day. He lets her talk as they make their way back to their new house, idly agreeing every once in a while. A few curious eyes fall on them as they walk, but Joel doesnât pay them any mind.Â
âDude, are you even listening to me?â Ellie stops walking to give him a flat look.Â
âI hear you,â he insists. âBeen hearing you for the past ten minutes.â
Thereâs no snark in his tone, but Ellie still feels the slight sting of offense. âWell, sorry for being excited about having a nice place to live for once. Itâs not like I was born into hell or anythingâI mean the Boston QZ.â Sarcasm drips from her voice as she starts walking again, faster so it looks like theyâre not together.
Joel swallows down guilt like itâs just another pill. His legs are long, so it doesnât take much to catch back up with her.
âHeyâŚKidâŚEllie.â She keeps ignoring him. âThis is new for me too, okay? Everybodyâs got a different way of processing, can we agree on that?â Itâs a fair enough proposal. He never had been forward when it came to sharing his thoughts. âWasnât trying to hurt your feelings.âÂ
âYeah, yeah,â she murmurs, deciding to take a break from her rambling for his sake. The mutual silence isnât so bad.Â
Someone he isnât expecting to see is you. Youâre wearing a backpack and ushering a line of young kids into the community center. One of the little girls stops and stretches her arms up towards you, earning a playful eyeroll before being lifted onto your hip. Joel doesnât miss the way the afternoon sunlight catches your face.Â
â˘â˘â˘
The next day, a faint thump against the door startles Ellie as she sketches in the dining room. Rather than getting up from the table, she remains still, pencil in hand and brows furrowed. Upstairs, the spray of the shower continues as Joel lets it drown out everything else. Three light knocks eventually sound, and she musters up the courage to scurry to the front.Â
She peeks out the window first, spotting you. Someone she hadnât seen around. An amused smile pulls at her lips at the way youâve seemingly wrestled the big basket youâre holding into a better grip than before.Â
When she opens the door, you let out a relieved sigh. âSpecial delivery,â you say before introducing yourself.Â
âThatâs a really pretty name,â she compliments, already warming up to you. âIâm Ellieâis all that stuff for us?â When you nod, she excitedly steps aside and ushers you in.Â
âIâm not gonna say you shouldnât have because thatâd be a lie,â she shamelessly admits. âYou can put it right over here.â You follow her into the living room and place the welcome basket on the coffee table.Â
A few of the ladies you volunteer with helped you put it together after your shift counseling for the spring break camp. There were cookies, seeds, natural soaps, feminine hygiene products, and even a knit blanket that looked particularly soft and cozy. Ellie wastes no time reaching out to run her fingers over it. A laugh bubbles up your throat when her jaw drops.Â
âThis is literally what clouds feel like.â She haphazardly pulls the blanket out the basket, wrapping it around herself like a cape. âIf Joel says anything, this was specifically included for me.âÂ
âIâm sure it wouldnât hurt to share if he asked nicely,â you reason, amused. Ellieâs nose wrinkles. âBut to be fair, we did think youâd be the one to really appreciate it.â
She smiles at being considered. âWho made it? This is, like, next level.âÂ
âA woman named Emilia,â you tell her. âShe actually made me one back when Jackson was first being built up that I still have,â you tell her, taking a seat on the couch and looking around. The evening sunlight pours in through the windows, casting golden streaks onto the floors. âNow sheâs always got a few on standby.âÂ
Ellie sits beside you, reaching out to dig through the other contents in awe. âThey told us the commune's only, like, seven years old on our tour yesterday,â she recounts. Think youâll have your blanket forever?âÂ
âForeverâs an awful long time. It might hold up,â you think aloud. Ellie nods, contemplative. âI can take you by to meet her sometime, if youâd like. Sheâs the resident seamstress, so youâll probably end up crossing paths anyways.âÂ
âWhat about you? What do you do?â she asks, giving you her full attention.Â
âI mainly help coordinate community events. Been stepping in to assist with the youth spring break camp for the last couple days, though,â you say. âAlso bartend on the nights that I feel like it. Just for fun, you know?âÂ
Ellie's face lights up. âIâve had whiskey before.â She puffs out her chest when she says it, and you play into her pride by raising an impressed brow. The first and last time you had a sip was when you snuck it from Nate as a teen. âBut thatâs really cool, though. The community stuff and all that.â You can tell by her tone that she means it. In more ways than one, youâre reminded of your younger self.Â
âJoelâs gonna join the patrol. He says Iâm too young, but thatâs just bullshit.â She says the last part lower as if heâs somewhere listening. âIâll figure out a way to make him cave.â Thereâs an air of confidence to her voice that suggests sheâs done it before. The thought warms a tiny portion of your chest.
âIâve gone out with my uncle Nate a few times. It can be a lot,â you admit. âHe just wants you safe, Nateâs the same way.âÂ
As Joel stops at the top of the staircase, freshly showered, he catches those last words. Heâd know your voice even if itâd been forever. His footsteps are quiet as he descends the stairs, but you hear him coming nevertheless. Ellieâs too busy sniffing the pine soap as you straighten up and glance his way. Joelâs eyes are as observant as you remember when they land on you, seeing into you, it seems. His damp hair is combed back in a way that makes him look more distinguished.Â
âThere you are.â You stand up with a smile. Youâd been wondering how he was doing since the panic attack.
He wishes your warmth wasn't so compelling. Â
Ellie whips around to look at him. âI know you said not to open the door to strangersâwhich is practically everybody at this pointâbut sheâs really nice and brought us gifts so you canât be mad at me,â she rushes out. He clocks the blanket around her shoulders.Â
He hmphs. âThatâs how they get you.â Heâs not being serious, but Ellie frowns, trying to read through his eternal poker face. âTreats and a friendly smile.â Your lips twitch in amusement as Ellie narrows her eyes.Â
When Joel starts walking your way, she consoles herself with the fact that he would've already asked you to leave if he sensed your intentions were off. The commune wasnât filled with questionable people like that anyways. The two of them didnât have to be apprehensive of every soul they came across anymore.Â
Heâs close enough now that you can smell the cedar soap on his skin. âIâm not a stranger,â you lightly defend. âNot entirely.â You look from Ellie to Joel.Â
A wall rises in real time, shutting you out right along with the night you met. It happens in his eyes just like everything does. He hadnât mentioned you to her, and it was your mistake for believing he wouldâve at least passed on a name.Â
You swallow back a small lump in your throat that may not be entirely just. âAnyways, hopefully you guys will be able to put this stuff to use.âÂ
âOf course we will,â Ellie pipes up. âAre you leaving already?â She hadnât missed the finality that had crept into your tone.Â
You nod. âDonât wanna take up too much of your evening. I actually meant to come by sooner.âÂ
âWell, are you going to the dining hall for dinner?â Her gaze flicks to Joel. âMaybe you can come with us.âÂ
Joel knows heâs in trouble when he hears the fondness in Ellieâs voice. Itâs the same sentiment he was straining to tamper down within himself. Every time he opened his mouth or looked at you, it tried to claw its way to the forefront. The last thing he needed was another person getting close enough to see that he was a million tiny pieces being held together by the glue of whatever god was keeping him alive.Â
You decline her invitation, expressing plans to go to your uncleâs place. But you give her a rain check. When you go to leave, Joel allows his eyes to flitter down the rest of your body.Â
That wouldnât be the last he saw of you. But it was always from afar, lingering on the outskirts. Wishing there was a seamless way he could fall into your orbit without sending everything spiraling out of control.Â
You were always looking right back at him with hope in your eyes, holding space. Waiting for your world to be shaken.Â
â˘â˘â˘
Laughter, chatter, and music drown out the insects that usually take precedence at night. Weeks of planning had finally come into fruition. All of Main Street is lined with fairy lights that cast their warm glow down on the summer festival. There was no shortage of entertainment, games, and food. It was a time to let loose and relish the sweetness in the air along with that of life.Â
Nate plays his harmonica for a group of children around the bonfire, all clapping and stomping along. A smile graces your face as you walk by, waving at him. The fullness of your heart almost overrides the ache that has settled in the arches of your feet. Youâd barely sitten down since earlier that morning when preparation began. There was a sense of responsibility that came along with the orange vest you were dawned in. The pressure to assist, and guide, and answer questions wasnât all on you, but the other volunteers were better at taking breaks.Â
Tommyâs grainy voice breaks into the air through a megaphone, âThirteen-and-up three-legged races starting in five minutes, this is your last call. Grab a partner and make your way over to the east lawn,â he says. âAgain, this is the last call.â
Joel and Ellie already happen to be seated at a picnic table that gives them a perfect view of the race setup and Tommy facilitating in an orange vest of his own. Ellie had already worked through her first honey cake and was eyeing Joelâs. He pretends not to notice until she looks up at him all wide-eyed. Â
âCan Iââ he slides his plate over to her. âThanks.âÂ
âYour eyes are bigger than your stomach,â he lightly accuses, shaking his head.Â
âWhat does that even mean?â She takes a bite. âWeirdo.âÂ
Joel just grumbles and tosses a napkin her way. She wipes her mouth and keeps staring at him. Not because sheâs waiting for an answer, but because thereâs amusement sparkling in his eyes. Which happens more often now that theyâd had a couple months to settle into Jackson. A laugh was coming, she could feel it.Â
âQuit gawking at me and eat.â Thereâs a tell-tale waver in his voice.Â
âNo.â Ellie lightly kicks his shin beneath the table and thatâs what sets him off.Â
He tries to bite back a chuckle, but he gives in when it doesnât work out, shoulders shaking. Ellie starts grinning at him from across the table, and he kicks her back with the tip of his boot.Â
âHey!â She breaks into giggles and retaliates. He lets her have the little victory.Â
A small smile lingers on his face when he regains his composure. They sit in a comfortable silence as Ellie finishes the rest of her dessert, taking in the festivities around them.Â
It isnât long before a girl with dark hair approaches their table. Sheâs a ball of masked nerves. âHi,â she greets. âEllie, right?â She says it as if itâs possible for her to have forgotten. As if after they sat together at last weekâs movie night, she hadnât been thinking about her since.Â
Ellie getâs uncharacteristically squirmy. âOh. Hey, Dina.âÂ
Joel canât believe it.
Dina tucks a flyaway behind her ear. âMy old partner bailed, so I was wondering if youâd maybe wanna do the three-legged race with me. I think weâd make a better team anyways.â Then she glances at Joel. âIf you wouldnât mind me stealing her away for a bit.âÂ
âTake her,â Joel quips, making Dina laugh.Â
Warmth rushes to Ellieâs cheeks as she stands. âSure, letâs go.âÂ
The two of them jog over to get prepped for the race. Joel watches the whole while, warmth kindling in his chest at the fact that she was slowly finding her tribe. The race doesnât start for another couple minutes, and when it does, Ellie and Dina burst off into first. Itâs intense. The whole ordeal is a mess of laughter, stumbling, and flailing limbs. In the end, the duo end up placing second, crossing the finish line only to fall into a heap of giggles with their legs tied together.Â
Joel stands from the picnic table with a grunt to throw away all the empty plates. He has every intention to sit back down, but notices a few frazzled volunteers carrying mops and towels. Then his eyes rove over to the long line standing at the drink stands. Adults check their watches, children fidget. A woman in an orange vest is talking to another woman managing the stand. He doesnât realize is you until you turn away from her and beeline towards the community center, looking stressed.Â
âHey,â he calls out to a stout man wearing an apron. âDo you know whatâs going on?âÂ
Heâs surprised Joel caught on. Everyone else was carrying on as usual, carefree and unaware. âThere was a spill at the community center. You know Mr. Robertsonâs special Summer Fest punch?â he asks in a thick Brooklyn accent, Joel nods because heâd heard the rave. Apparently it was made especially for the festival. âKitchenâs flooded with it. I didnât have time to build an ark,â he jokes. Â
Joel wrestles with himself. âIâll go see if I can help.âÂ
By the time you exit the community center, gaze fixed over your shoulder, you crash into Joel. He instinctively reaches out to steady you, touch firm but gentle. âWhoa, easy there.â The low timbre of his drawl is enough to draw your mind away from all the noise. âYou alright? Here, letâs get out of the way.â You let him pull you aside by your elbow.Â
When you look into his eyes, thereâs so many things you wish it was the appropriate time to say. Itâs been cordial between the two of you, but it always seemed like he was in a constant state of backing away, like an animal scared of giving into a primal craving. Â
There was always a reason why he couldnât stay in your presence longer than he did. He had to get back to Ellie, or turn in early for his patrol shift the next day, or some other excuse. Even during the game nights you hosted, he would always leave before his belly was full and the real fun was about to begin. When everyone was finally free of the dayâs worries and truly ready to talk, laugh, and let everything ride on the toss of a dice.Â
Heâd resigned himself to enjoying you in the little here and there, the moments in between. So much so that even Ellie had begun to notice. It was in the way he never allowed himself to lean in too close whenever you were at his side. Or never fully crawled out of his shell no matter how many times you smiled sweetly or let your fingertips brush his forearm.Â
âDoes anything hurt?â He asks more intently. As he scans you over, he notices your clothes. The lower portion of your vest and the thighs of your flared jeans are stained with a wet, dark substance.Â
âIâm fine, Joel.â You pull away from him with more force than necessary, feeling guilty for the way he swallows and takes a step back. âSorry.â You release a heavy exhale, tears welling in your eyes with a dull sting. âIâm ruining everyoneâs night.âÂ
Joel frowns. âNo youâre not. Tell me what happened.âÂ
âI was trying to transfer the extra beverage dispenser onto the wagon so I could wheel it out to the drink stand, but it slipped out of my grip,â you explain. âThe lid came off and the punch spilled everywhere.â You wipe your tears away quickly, as if theyâll stain too.Â
âAccidents happen,â Joelâs tone is steady like scripture, tenderness peeking through just enough to cling onto. âEverybodyâs fine. The world's still turning.â
Nobody had reacted in an extreme manner. There were gasps and startled jumps, but assurances came rushing in as the janitorial volunteers insisted that theyâd get everything cleaned up. Everyone in that kitchen knew that there were worse things in life than spilled juice. Sure, it was upsetting, considering the time Mr. Robertson spent and the people looking forward to drinking more, but it was a small mistake in the grand scheme of things. But when your heart is already heavy and your mind is tangled with other concerns, those little mishaps feel like the most devastating ones.Â
There was a directness about Joel, though, that eased away the guilt crawling beneath your skin. It was like he understood what screwing up truly was and this was many light years from it.Â
Dina spots Joel in the distance and points him out to Ellie. âThere he is over there.âÂ
Their smiles fall from their faces when they get closer and realize youâre crying. âHoly shit, what happened?â Ellie looks between you and Joel, worry etched onto her face.Â
âI just made a stupid mistake.â You sniffle, trying to regain your composure, not wanting to worry them. There was always something unavoidably daunting about seeing adults cry.Â
âYou girls stay here with her for a second. Iâll be right back,â Joel instructs.Â
A new song starts up by the live band thatâs playing. Itâs an instrumental rendition of Every Breath You Take. A decent crowd has gathered, nibbling on sourdough and nodding to the melody. Some people are wrapped in each otherâs arms. Joel soaks it all in as he navigates back to the racing lawn.Â
Tommy claps him on the back when he makes it and Joel returns the gesture. âYou enjoying yourself, man?â Tommy asks.Â
âYeah,â he says distractedly. âThere was a spill at the community center, so no more punch. You think you can get everybody on the same page?âÂ
âCopy that.âÂ
Tommyâs voice carries through the megaphone as Joel makes his way back to you, the announcement fading with each step.Â
âHowdy, folks. Some of you may have already heard, but in case you havenât, thereâs been a little spill and we are unfortunately all out of Mr. Robertsonâs world famous punch for the night. We apologize if you didnât get the chance to try it, but I promise weâll figure out a way to make it up to y'all. In the meantime, I heard the lemonade and ice tea ainât half bad.âÂ
His words blur into the background as Joel makes it back to you. There are a few disappointed groans, but nobody is completely devastated by the news. They keep carrying on just as he knew they would.Â
Tears no longer streak your face when Joel makes it back, Ellie and Dina seeming to have lifted your spirits a little more.Â
âDo you wanna go get cleaned up?â Joel suggests.Â
Now that youâre thinking about it, the feeling of your clothes sticking to your skin is beginning to grow uncomfortable. You take a deep breath at the thought of walking home, away from Summer Fest, all the energy, all the fun. Joel sees the disappointment on your face.Â
âI can go with you,â he offers.
â˘â˘â˘
The walk to your house is quiet, the sounds of the night's festivities now distant. The porch steps creak gently under your weight as the two of you ascend them. Joel watches as you unlock the door, but finds himself cemented as you step inside. Confusion, appreciation, frustration, and want are all amalgamated into one look directed at right his way. Without saying a word, you head further inside, leaving the door open.Â
Joelâs hands twitch at his sides like heâs a live wire wrought with energy. Bugs would fly in if he didnât do somethingâthatâs the justification he creates. Youâre halfway to the laundry room when you hear the front door shut behind him as he follows after you.Â
The living room is illuminated by dim lamplight as he walks through. A quick glance into the kitchen gives him sight of one of Ellieâs more recent drawings stuck to the refrigerator door with a smiley face magnet. It's a portrait of your face that you agreed to sit for one lazy afternoon while Joel was away on patrol.Â
The air smells like you. Understated and sweet, floral and earthen. Small plants line multiple windowsills despite how convinced you were that you couldnât keep anything alive. The whole commune would be worse off without you and heâd be the first to wilter away.Â
At the sound of a zipper and clothes brushing against skin, he stops his pursuit of you. Miles away even though youâre mere yards apart. All he has is your shadow, dancing in the dim light pooling out of the laundry room and into the hall with him. He backs himself into the cool wall and closes his eyes, Adamâs apple bobbing in his throat. Up and down and up again. An SOS in the middle of a sea when salvation was right within reach. It gets quiet after a while. No more running water, or cabinet doors, or shuffling around.Â
âYou can let me in, you know?â comes your voice, so light itâs almost nothing. Joel releases a shaky breath and opens his eyes to the sight of you, dawned in old shorts and a graphic tee. You wish he would say something, anything. Share a fraction of whatâs going on in his mind. âIâm right here, Joel.âÂ
âI know. I see you.â Thereâs a defensive edge to his voice thatâs wounded around the edges, as if heâs trying to accommodate the truth that burns within his ribcage, his stomach, beneath the entirety of his skin.Â
âSo now what?â You swallow your nerves, studying his face, his neck. âWeâre just gonna keep seeing each other for the rest of our lives and thatâs it? No knowing, no feeling, no experiencing?â You ask. âNo loving?â Â
One by one, the walls close in, until it feels like youâre standing toe to toe with nothing but words as weapons and honesty being the only way out. Itâs not a fight heâs ready for. He can trek through the harshest winters, fight off monsters and all manner of men, but heâs defenseless in front of you.
There will be no victory, no rising from battle with a bloodied fist or blade, or immediate relief akin to the coming of spring. The only way out is to dig within, and he already knew what resided there. It was a matter of carving it out and laying it on an altar for you to see as you did the same. Itâs not a fight at all, it's a sacrifice. All risk with probable reward.Â
âI donât want that to be all that we do.â Youâve never heard Joel speak so quietly. Itâs as if thereâs Infected lurking nearby and he doesnât want to be devoured. âThink about you too much.âÂ
âI was starting to think you didnât like me at all. Not like how I like you,â you say.Â
Joel swallows thickly, warm all over. âHow do you like me?âÂ
You push out of the laundry room doorway to step closer to him, placing a gentle hand on his chest, feeling the warmth beneath his shirt, the beating of his heart. You let it thrum against your palm until a shallow breath slips past his lips, then you move to cup his stubbled jaw, lightly brushing your thumb over his lower lip. The urge to touch you back grows so great that he finally gives in and lets both of his strong hands settle on your waist. Â
Joel can hear his heartbeat in his ears as he leans in towards you, studying your face, searching for any sign that this might be some elaborate ruse. Instead, he finds something so poignant that he doesnât have the words to define. Itâs as terrifying as it is wonderful to, for once, be unable to size up what heâs up against.Â
You close the space in between you with a softness that takes his breath away. Bared heart meeting bared heart. Joelâs lips are gentle and unhurried, every second savored and not a single one missed. You try to focus but it feels like youâre falling and flying all at once. Then his fingers dig into your waist a little harder, a silent plea to stay there with him, the warmth of his kiss, the firmness of his body as he pulls you closer.Â
Your hands find their way to the back of his neck to play with the hair curled at his nape. The kiss deepens not in urgency but a shared understanding. A promise sealed in the way your bodies fit together. And then, slowly, deliberately, Joel eases back, lips lingering on yours for a heartbeat longer until thereâs a slight space in between again. Your breaths mingle as he rests his forehead against yours, thumb stroking tender circles on your waist.Â
When you open your eyes, heâs already looking at you, wondering if you can feel that two worlds having converged into one, buzzing with a newness thatâs as beautiful as all the words youâd kept bottled inside.Â
â˘â˘â˘
It hadnât taken much. Just a hug and a few soft kisses pressed to the underside of his jaw. When Joelâs grumbling finally subsided, it made way for the soothing ripple of the river. Youâd settled along the bank and stretched out a few blankets when you first arrived. An hour seemed to pass in the matter of a few seconds, laughter, conversations and all. Now the sun creeps closer and closer to the horizon up in the ombre sky.Â
It wasnât any fault of your own that youâd asked Joel if the date could extend a little longer. Itâd been a month of getting to see him in this light, open and unguarded, generous with giving those slow, easy smiles. Willing to lay down across your lap like this when you asked sweetly enough.Â
The small mouth of a fish breaks the surface of the water as you trace along his hairline, disappearing by the time you run the pad of your finger down his nose. His lips twitch as he continues to ward off sleep. This time, thereâs no stopping a soft laugh from rising up your throat. Thatâs all it takes for his eyes to flutter open, blinking until theyâre able to focus on the soft upturn of your lips. No sooner do they avert to the sky, assessing the fleeting light.Â
âWe gotta head back now,â his voice is gruff. When he moves to sit up, you place a delicate hand on the center of his chest and he settles back down with a sigh. âCâmon, sweetheart, the sunâs setting. I donât want you out here in the dark.âÂ
Packing up and riding back to the commune meant this moment would be resigned to a memory. âA few more minutes wonât hurt,â you insist.Â
Before Jackson and before you, every second was about enduring to the next. Life was an endless onwards, onwards, onwards reverberating through his veins. Slowing down was always a risk until you showed him that sometimes lifeâs most worthwhile moments were in the stillness. Somedays that was easier to remember than others, but he sure did put in an effort.Â
âI think youâre enjoying this more than I am anyways,â you tease. The corners of his lips quirk upwards before he can stop them.Â
You continue on like that, tracing his face, occasionally glancing up at the snow-capped peaks of the mountains. Then an animal catches your attention across the way, lean and tall with short antlers protruding from its head. You suck in a breath of pleasant surprise, and Joel startles upright thinking the worst. His shoulders relax when he sees the creature. It bends its neck down to nibble at something in the grass until deciding to gallop away.Â
âJust a mule deer.â He gives you a look.Â
âI know, sorry. I get excited.â You offer an apologetic smile and he's reminded of how beautiful you look in the light of the setting sun, features aglow. He doesnât say anything, just soaks you in here and now. An airiness fills your chest.Â
He stands with a groan, extending a helping hand back down to you. When youâre steady on your feet, he takes your chin in one gentle hand and tilts your head back so he can align his lips with yours. The kiss is brief, and he follows it up with a soft peck. Â
âWill you let me take you back home now?â he questions. âEllieâs gonna have our heads if weâre late for game night. Especially when sheâs choosing the line up.âÂ
â˘â˘â˘
No heads roll that night. Plenty of dice do, while Uno cards are slapped onto the coffee table, and Jenga blocks fall. Tommy, Maria, Dina, and your uncle Nate, eventually file out of Joelâs house, leaving the three of you alone. Ellie feigns sleep on the couch as soon as itâs time for cleanup, and dozes off for real as you and Joel start taking care of everything yourselves.Â
He steps up behind you as youâre standing at the kitchen sink, snaking his arms around your middle. A curious hum rises up your throat as you lean back into him.Â
âI think somebody cheated during Jenga tonight,â he hushes against the shell of your ear, relishing the way you shiver at the warmth of his breath.
âI donât know what youâre talking about.â Â
Joel noses at the back of your head. âSo you werenât the one touchinâ me during that last round?â he asks. âScratching my back, squeezing my thigh.âÂ
âIt was innocent,â you insist. âIt's a stressful game, I was just trying to ease your nerves. How was I supposed to know your hands would get all shaky?âÂ
A sudden chuckle shakes his chest, sending a ripple of warmth through you. âEase my nerves? We werenât even on the same team.â His fingers squeeze your hips in quick, gentle pulses, making you arch into him in a spell of helpless giggles. Joel evades your attempts to grab his wrists, but shows you mercy when you turn around, looking up at him through your lashes like you could do no wrong.Â
âYouâre lucky I happen to like you an awful lot.â He places both hands on the counter behind you, effectively caging you in.Â
You smooth your hands up his chest, admiring the soft lines by his eyes, the handsome bump of his nose. âI know. Iâm the luckiest person alive.âÂ
âNo, thatâs me,â Joel whispers.Â
Heâs certain of it.Â
-Â
Thank you so much for reading. Iâd love to hear your thoughts, itâs my favorite thing.
filtering down ao3 results from 14000 to 6 based on a single tag is foul. im sorry none of you are as enlightened as me ig.
CW: Â Richie being Richie, swearing. Angst and fluff. Mentions of Mikey's death and addiction.
Word Count: Â 2070
AN: Â Requested by an anonymous person!
February 22.
Itâs a tough day. Youâve been with Richie long enough nowâtwo yearsâto know what the date means. What it is the anniversary of. You came into Richieâs life after Mikey exited it, but you knew enough of your boyfriendâs best friend.Â
What a charming, larger-than-life man he was. Mikey Berzatto. Mikey Bear. Charismatic. Filled the room with his presence, his stories, his ability to make a person feel like the most important person in the world.
Also an addict. Also, probably, a narcissist.Â
So itâs a tough day for Richie. Mikeyâs suicide blew a hole in the lives of those who loved him, and Richie loved Mikey like a brother. Two years out from his death, Richie is no closer to any real closure: he misses his friend. He loves his friend. He hates his friend for what he did, all the shitty behavior before he finally made a choice that couldnât be taken back.
February 22 is the day that Richieâs feelings break loose like a storm. He rages, he goes sulky and quiet. He gets mad at Mikey, and because Mikey isnât there, he lashes out at those closest to him.
You, namely.
But you can handle it. What sort of girlfriend would you be if you didnât help him weather these hard days? Because you know, deep down, the person Richie is angriest at is himself: that he didnât see it coming, that he didnât do more to help his friend.
-----
Your first year together, Richie was snappish. He tried to start fights with you all day, and youânot understanding him completelyâwere too bewildered to rise to any bickering. Your confusion took the fire out of him, and he spent the rest of the day maudlin, full of apologies, rife with terribly negative self-talk.
This year?Â
This year, Richie is just sad.
He stays in bed past noon. He gets up around one in the afternoon, wanders out into the living room of your shared apartment, then promptly plants himself beside you on the couch.
âHow are you feeling?â you ask, soft. You glance at him, take in the red-rimmed eyes, the deep lines etched between his brows.
He answers with a grunt, a non-committal noise.
âHungry?â
Another grunt, and this one sounds sort of like a no or a nah. A beat later, though, you hear the snarl of his stomach, and you laugh softly at it.
âLet me make you something.â
That, at least, earns you a grumble, a string of unintelligible words, but he doesnât object when you stand up and make your way to the tiny kitchen.
-----
Youâre no Carmy, and youâre no Sidney. Youâre no Tina or Marcus or Ebra.
Still, you can hold your own as a home chef. You had a mother and a father who cooked, who taught you how to fry a chicken breast, how to make a simple fresh pasta, how to roast a piece of beef or pork.
So you canât do a Hamachi crudo or a lamb ragu, but you can do comfort food. Food that sticks to the ribs and warms a person from the inside out. For Richie, on this difficult day? You make him breakfast for early dinner or late lunch.Â
You slice up the brioche you got earlier in the week and find it perfectly stale for French toast. You put cinnamon and a pinch of cloves in the egg batter, fry up the slices to perfection. You fry some bacon to the crispness Richie likes; you make a pile of buttery scrambled eggs with goat cheese and chives folded in.
You finish it all off with strong coffee in the French press, which Richie used to scoff at as needlessly fussy but now canât live without.
You donât bother to plate it nicely. This isnât the Bear, and no one is going to give you a star. This is food as medicine, and you heap everything on a plate and carry itâalong with silverware and the coffeeâinto the living room.
Richie has gone horizontal as you cooked, stretched out on the couch with his face to the back, but the scent of the food makes him turn a bit and glance up at you.
âSaid I wasnât hungry.â He sounds peevish.
âJust have a bite or two.â You set the silverware down with a clink, and Richie heaves a sigh, rolls over, sits up. He doesnât quite glare at you, but itâs glare-adjacent. A slight narrowing of his eyes as he looks at you.
âDidnât have to fucking do all of this.â His voice has a rough edge, but you know him well enough to hear the faint thread of gratitude underneath all the gruffness. Richie never knows how to handle being taken care of. Heâs used to being the one taking care of others: his daughter, his ex-wife when they were still married. Mikeyâs mother, after Mikeyâs suicide.Â
Heâs the real-life version of setting himself on fire to keep others warm, so he is always surprised when someone else cares for him. Even if itâs something as ordinary as making him a comforting meal on a day when heâs too paralyzed by grief to feed himself.
-----
As you had guessed not hungry wasnât true. Once Richie gets a few bites into him, his appetite awakens and the plate is cleaned of crumbs in an appallingly short amount of time.
âGood?â you ask, and he mumbles a sheepish âthanks,â so you clear away the empty dishes, take them to the kitchen, rinse them off.
When you return to the couch, though, Richie is sitting up straight and gazing right at you. He waits until you meet his eye, and then he says, slowly and deliberately, âthank you.â
âYouâre welcome.â
He clears his throat, seems embarrassed by himself. So much of his bluster and cockiness is an act, a smokescreen. Richie is often insecure, chagrined by his own behavior, and you can guess that heâs berating himself for being curt with you earlier. For dozing in bed for so long when the two of you have so few days together.
âReally didnât have to do all that though, sweetheart,â he starts, and you wave him off. You sit beside him, and he lifts his arm automatically, the gesture for you to tuck yourself against him, but you shake your head. You settle against the corner of the couch, then pat your lap invitingly.
âCâmon, Jerimovich,â you tell him. âLet me scratch your head.â
Your first impression of Richie is the most lasting one, even two years in. He puts you in mind of a shelter dogâkicked and mistreated in some prior life, yearning for affection, baring his teeth at the thought of being kicked again.Â
And like a dog, the man loves to be petted. Itâs not necessarily sexual; itâs the simple fact of human touch, the feel-good chemicals that release in his busy brain when you skate your fingertips over his bare skin, when you press your own body against his, when you scratch your nails over his scalp.
Which is what you do now. You let Richie settle in your lap. He tucks one arm underneath him, but he wraps the other over your thighs. Once heâs situated, you justâŚpet him. Scratch his head. Sometimes you press your fingertips in the small muscles that go tense and bunched at the base of his skull, but mostly you just pet him. Let the repetitive motion lull him, and you feel him relax against you little by little.
âDo you want to talk about it?â you ask after a long stretch of silence. The T.V. is on, some true crime cop show, but itâs muted. The only sounds are those of city living: faint doors opening in the hallway of your apartment building, traffic in the street, the occasional gust of wind against the window.
âNo.â
A beat, and then you ask him to tell you a story about Mikey. It makes Richie sigh, and he starts with the well-worn story about Bill Murray, but you interrupt him.
âNo, tell me a story from when you were kids,â you clarify. âTell me about Baby Mikey, and make sure thereâs lots of Baby Richie.â
He chuckles against you, and it sounds warm. Genuine. Heâs never said it, and youâve never asked, but you can guess that it helps him somehow, when you ask for Richie stories in the guise of Mikey stories. How you gently try to frame him as the main character in his own life instead of Michael Berzattoâs side-kick and sometimes-stooge.Â
Now, Richie tells you a story from his high school days, and itâs his own story, and Mikey is just a supporting character, but an important oneâa supporting character before the crush of adulthood, before Papa Berzatto took off and left Mikey as the man of the house. Before the Beef as it skidded into bankruptcy, before the arson attempts and shell games with Uncâs money, before the pills and the dealing out of the alley, before whatever darkness in Mikey swallowed him up and put him on that bridge with a gun two years ago to the day.
It's a funny story, some prank on some stodgy old teacher, and Richie chuckles as he tells it. You can hear his own darkness bleed out of his voice, can hear him remembering the good olâ days instead of wallowing in the bad ones. You can hear him remembering his friend who was more like a brotherâremembering him in all his bright promise and not as he left.
The story ends, and then you hear it: a weak sniffle. You lay your palm over the curve of his skull, hold him, and think that a cry might do him good. Richie holds so much in; tears might be healthy, might help him grieve Mikey in a more healthy wayâ
âI know it, you know,â he says against your lap, his voice thick with unshed tears.Â
âKnow what, baby?â You wonder at what revelation he is going to share with you, what understanding in his own psychology or Mikeyâs has come to him.
âI fucking know I donât deserve you,â he replies, and it surprises you. You gape wordlessly above him. It wasnât what you were expecting him to say.
âAll this shit,â he explains. âMy lifeâs a fucking mess, and every year, I fall into this black hole and you have to pull me out.â
You smile down at where heâs settled in your lap, and you feel a wave of love for him wash through you. Your boyfriend, Richard Lawrence Jerimovich. Rough around the edges and then some, but underneath all that trauma and hurt lies the biggest heart youâve ever seen. A heart of gold. A man who wants desperately to belong, to be loved, to be needed.
âYouâre putting a lot of weight on have to,â you tell him. âI donât have to. I want to.â
He shakes his head. âShouldnât fucking have to or want to.â
âItâs just life, Richie. It beats us up. Whatâs the point if we donât take care of each other when weâre feeling a little more beat up than usual?â
âYou take care of me more than I take care of you.â
You scoff, and you resume scratching his head. Dragging your nails through his short hair. âBullshit.â
âYou do.â
âYou keeping score on me, Jerimovich?â
He grumbles at that. âYouâre not keeping score?â
âIn love? Never.â
As usual, the mention of love makes him squirm. Makes him uncomfortable. Heâs perfectly fine saying it to you, says I love you easily and without a bit of hesitation. Hearing it said back to him, though? Thatâs entirely different.
You say it as much as you can. You let him squirm and be uncomfortable and you let each mention of your love for him chip away at those rough edges a little more, revealing more of that big heart of gold.
âI love you,â you tell him, and sure enough, he squirms again.
So you say it again and again, over and over, until he finally surrenders to it, sighs and nestles himself in your lap, and he mutters it back to you as he allows you to comfort him, to take care of him. To love him.
fâ them all good.
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