Arranged Marriage Au Reader Where Her Postpartum Depression Is So Bad. Where She Barley Picks At Her
arranged marriage au reader where her postpartum depression is so bad. where she barley picks at her plate, and when the doctors check in on her , they scold her for not keeping healthy for the baby to feed off her. and it’s to the point where rafe has to leave a trip early bc it’s so bad
You know I'll come || Rafe Cameron x fem!reader



A/n: incase you didn't read it before, make sure you read my important notice!!!
Warnings: ppd, angst, mention of fainting
Word count: 2,114
MASTERLIST (forced marriage au masterlist)

divider by @h-aewo
“Y/n, you can’t keep doing this to yourself,” James said with a sympathetic sigh, his gaze fixed on the monitor while you sat on the lounge, your eyes glazed over as you stared blankly at the coffee table. The room was eerily quiet, save for the soft hum of the monitor and the occasional rustle of Anita’s movements as she adjusted the blanket draped over your lap.
“This is the third time you’ve passed out this week. You were lucky Anita was there to catch you before you could have seriously injured yourself.” James exchanged a concerned look with Anita, who stood close by with a worried expression. The gentle, almost maternal way Anita fussed over you spoke volumes about her deep concern.
“You must eat. Your body needs proper nourishment, not just for yourself but for Leo as well.” At the mention of your son, your eyes flickered up from the table, the name ‘Leo’ momentarily pulling you from your daze. “Where is he?” you asked, your voice barely more than a whisper as you attempted to sit up, only to be gently restrained by James.
“Leo is asleep,” Anita said softly, her tone soothing. She moved closer, her hand resting lightly on your shoulder as if to offer reassurance. James continued, his voice gentle but insistent, “Rafe has been informed of your condition and has decided to come home early. He’ll be arriving tomorrow morning.”
Your eyes widened in surprise, the confusion evident on your face. “Rafe isn’t supposed to be here until Friday,” you said, your voice tinged with disbelief as you tried to process the unexpected news. “Rafe is aware of how unwell you are right now. He deemed it necessary to return home early,” James explained, his tone gentle but firm.
Your mouth parted in a silent response, the weight of the news settling heavily on your shoulders. James continued gently, “But for now, you should rest. Take these, they’ll help you sleep.” He extended a small container of medicine towards you. With a grateful nod, you accepted the tablets, feeling their cool, smooth surface against your fingertips.
You placed them in your mouth and swallowed, the slight bitterness leaving a fleeting aftertaste. As the medicine began to take effect, James and Anita exchanged a look of quiet concern. The room felt heavy with the unspoken tension of your fragile state, and the soft rustling of the blanket seemed to amplify the stillness. You leaned back, letting the exhaustion overtake you, the weight of the day’s events and Rafe’s imminent arrival already beginning to blur into the dim haze of impending sleep.
~
"Mr. Cameron, there’s news from Mr. Berkeley concerning your wife," Kate’s voice broke the quiet atmosphere of the plane as she approached Rafe, her iPad in hand. She hesitated for a moment, gauging his mood, knowing that any news related to you could quickly shift his temper. Rafe looked up from his laptop, his sharp eyes narrowing slightly, already bracing for the worst.
"What’s happened now?" His tone was clipped, the edge in his voice betraying the unease that simmered beneath his composed exterior. Kate took a breath, her fingers gripping the iPad a little tighter. "Mrs. Cameron fainted for the third time this week while walking down the stairs—" Before she could finish, Rafe’s expression darkened, his voice cutting through the tension like a blade.
"Is she injured? Is Leo okay?" His words, though direct, held an unmistakable undertone of worry that he barely managed to suppress. Kate glanced up from her iPad, her eyes meeting his with cautious reassurance. "No, sir. Y/n isn’t injured, and Leo wasn’t with her at the time." A small, almost imperceptible sigh escaped Rafe as he leaned back in his seat, his hand moving to rub his temples.
The initial wave of panic subsided, but the underlying concern remained, gnawing at him. He closed his laptop with a resounding thud, the noise loud in the otherwise still cabin. "And this is because she isn’t eating well?" he asked, his voice flat but laced with frustration. "Yes, sir. Mr. Berkeley mentioned that Y/n has been struggling to finish her meals," Kate explained, her tone professional yet careful, aware of how delicate the situation had become.
Rafe scoffed, shaking his head in exasperation. "Of course she is," he muttered under his breath, his frustration bubbling to the surface. He stood abruptly, the tension in his body clear as his jaw tightened, hands flexing at his sides. The weight of responsibility, of having to constantly manage his wife’s well-being, pressed down on him. The sound of the plane’s engine hummed softly in the background, creating a quiet that felt too heavy, too filled with thoughts he didn’t want to dwell on.
His thoughts raced, caught between his commitments and the deepening worry that had taken root. Rafe’s decision was swift. "Tell Anthony to turn this plane around. We’re going back to Kildare." Kate blinked, momentarily taken aback by the sharpness of his command. "But, sir—" she began, her voice hesitant. "Did you not hear what I said?" Rafe snapped, his tone cold and commanding now. His patience, already thin, was gone. "Tell him to turn this plane around. Now." His blue eyes, usually so controlled, flashed with intensity as he stared her down.
Kate swallowed hard, nodding quickly before turning on her heel and making her way to the cockpit without another word. The weight of his anger, his concern for you, and the complicated web of their marriage hung in the air even after she left. Rafe stood there for a moment, alone in the silence. His fists clenched as he stared out the window at the endless expanse of sky, his mind already filled with thoughts of what awaited him back home.
~
"Where is she?" Rafe's voice echoed sharply through the grand foyer as he shrugged off his blazer, his tone tense but controlled. Anita, always efficient and poised, was quick to take his suitcase from his hand. "She’s currently asleep on the sofa. Mr. Berkeley just left a couple of minutes ago," Anita informed him, her voice soft, trying to keep the atmosphere calm.
Rafe nodded, his expression tight as they walked deeper into the house, the weight of the past week’s events evident in his stride. "How is she?" he asked, his voice dropping to a quieter, almost hesitant tone. His usual composure was cracking, revealing the concern he so rarely let show. Anita glanced up at him, catching the rare flicker of vulnerability in his face.
A small, knowing smile tugged at her lips, sensing the subtle change in his demeanor. "She’s doing better. She ate a full meal last night and this morning," she replied, her words laced with reassurance. Rafe’s shoulders visibly relaxed at the news, though only slightly. "Good," he murmured, more to himself than to her.
As they reached the living room, the soft flicker of the TV caught his attention. The sound of cartoon characters filled the room, a stark contrast to the heavy emotions swirling inside him. Rounding the corner of the sofa, his eyes landed on you—fast asleep, curled up with the blanket tucked around you. Your exhaustion was evident, your face peaceful but pale.
However, Leo was wide awake, his small hands reaching out as he lay nestled beside you. Rafe's heart softened at the sight of his son, so innocent and oblivious to the storm brewing around him. Gently, Rafe scooped Leo up into his arms, cradling him with a tenderness that few ever saw. He pressed a kiss to Leo’s cheek, the gesture instinctive, as if grounding himself in the quiet moment.
Without a word, he turned off the TV, silencing the cartoons as the room fell into a soft hush. For a moment, Rafe stood there, holding Leo, his eyes drifting back to you, wondering how things had reached this point—his life so far from what he’d imagined, and yet, here he was, tethered to this quiet moment with you and Leo, torn between frustration, duty, and something he wasn’t ready to admit.
Rafe gently pulled the blanket further up your body, his fingers brushing the soft fabric as he ensured you were as comfortable as possible. For a moment, he lingered, his gaze softening as he watched you sleep, the rise and fall of your chest steady and peaceful. There was a quiet vulnerability about you now that tugged at something deep inside him—a feeling he didn’t often allow himself to dwell on.
With a quiet sigh, he turned away, careful not to wake you. As he walked toward the door, he called out, “Anita?” Anita appeared almost instantly, her usual calm and attentive presence filling the room. “Yes, Mr. Cameron?” she asked, her voice respectful but warm. “Have the chef prepare Y/n’s favourite meals,” he instructed, his tone firm yet carrying an unspoken urgency. “I want her to be eating properly, no excuses.”
His gaze flicked back to you for a second, as though making sure you were still resting soundly. Anita nodded, understanding the weight behind his words. “Of course, sir. I’ll take care of it immediately.” Satisfied, Rafe adjusted Leo in his arms, holding him close as he glanced back at you one last time before stepping out of the room. “Leo and I will be outside by the pool,” he added, his voice a little quieter now, as if the tension from earlier had begun to ebb slightly.
Anita nodded again, watching as Rafe walked away, his steps quiet and measured, the sound of Leo’s soft babbling accompanying him as they made their way toward the open terrace. There, Rafe hoped the fresh air and the familiar comfort of home might bring him some clarity as he processed everything—his thoughts still tethered to you even as he tried to focus on his son.
~
Feeling a gentle hand on his shoulder, Rafe looked up, surprised to see you standing beside him. The colour had returned to your cheeks, and there was a small but genuine smile on your face. For a brief moment, relief softened his usually guarded expression. “How are you feeling?” he asked quietly, careful not to disturb Leo, who was napping peacefully on his chest.
You offered him another soft smile, walking around to sit on the lounge chair beside him. Your eyes lingered on the still waters of the pool, the calm reflection contrasting with the heaviness in the air. “I’m fine,” you replied, though your gaze remained fixed ahead. Rafe’s eyes stayed on you, his expression stern, not easily convinced by your words. “Did you eat?”
His tone was sharp, but there was an undercurrent of concern that you couldn’t ignore. You nodded slowly, though the hesitation in your movement gave away the effort it took. “I’m sorry you had to cut your trip short—” you began, wanting to apologise for the disruption, but Rafe quickly cut you off. “Don’t.” His voice was firm, leaving no room for further apologies.
He pressed a light kiss to the top of Leo’s head, his eyes briefly softening as he did so. “There’s no excuse for you to not eat,” he continued, his voice hardening again, as though the frustration he’d been holding back was finally spilling out. You looked at him, studying his side profile as he avoided your gaze.
His jaw was clenched, tension radiating from him, but it wasn’t the anger that struck you—it was the concern buried beneath it. You knew this dynamic between you, this mixture of obligation and care, was a complicated dance neither of you had perfected. Your fingers absentmindedly twisted the ring on your finger, a physical reminder of the ties that bound you both. “At least Leo is doing okay,” Rafe muttered, his voice softening as he made eye contact with you.
“That’s all that matters.” But the moment the words left his lips, he saw the shift in your expression. There was something in your eyes—an unspoken sadness, a flicker of something deeper that you kept buried. You swallowed hard, forcing down the lump in your throat. “Of course,” you replied, your voice steady despite the weight in your chest. You stood up slowly, your body feeling heavier than it had a moment ago.
“I’ll head back inside,” you murmured, already turning to leave. Rafe watched you move, the silence between you thick and uncomfortable. He opened his mouth, wanting to say something, but the words seemed to stick in his throat. Instead, he refocused on Leo’s sleeping form, his hand gently cradling his son’s small body as the feeling of missed opportunity settled heavily around him.
-
lilacucumber liked this · 4 months ago
-
wintersoldier17 liked this · 4 months ago
-
etheralpotatosnconfusion liked this · 4 months ago
-
obsessionsarenotfortheweak liked this · 4 months ago
-
bvrgna liked this · 4 months ago
-
buxkybarnez liked this · 4 months ago
-
areyouloststranger liked this · 4 months ago
-
antisocalartist05 liked this · 4 months ago
-
ba-dussys liked this · 4 months ago
-
outrunangelss liked this · 4 months ago
-
bluesundaylover liked this · 4 months ago
-
maryyyswift liked this · 4 months ago
-
busted-and-blu liked this · 4 months ago
-
camitheqt liked this · 4 months ago
-
lcmxniki liked this · 4 months ago
-
itsmesilly94 liked this · 4 months ago
-
the-mute-raven liked this · 4 months ago
-
lillyr123 liked this · 4 months ago
-
spider-bear04 liked this · 4 months ago
-
da1syvr liked this · 4 months ago
-
trentlvr liked this · 4 months ago
-
kiyonsstuff liked this · 4 months ago
-
thatmysteriousblog liked this · 4 months ago
-
user-4496 liked this · 4 months ago
-
loveeyemi liked this · 4 months ago
-
athenalovesgoodies liked this · 4 months ago
-
justgenesis19 liked this · 4 months ago
-
jpvcrz liked this · 4 months ago
-
lottiestuf liked this · 4 months ago
-
ch3rrvreds liked this · 4 months ago
-
katie07sworld liked this · 4 months ago
-
aesthicallyrg liked this · 4 months ago
-
wandalover16 liked this · 4 months ago
-
androgynousrunawayflower liked this · 4 months ago
-
goobergabs liked this · 4 months ago
-
star-gurl4life liked this · 4 months ago
-
wolfvrd liked this · 4 months ago
-
emw3223 liked this · 4 months ago
-
gabrielapatzlaff30 liked this · 4 months ago
-
avengers2fan liked this · 4 months ago
-
emmixmilaa14 liked this · 4 months ago
-
beyourselfandloveyourself liked this · 4 months ago
-
loveyourlifelol liked this · 4 months ago
-
73923 liked this · 4 months ago
-
countryclubrafe liked this · 4 months ago
-
cosmicwonderlandsworld liked this · 4 months ago
-
i90snoo liked this · 4 months ago
More Posts from Haneybunny
houndtooth [2]
[masterlist]
Ghost x f!Reader - tags: slow burn, enemies to lovers, abduction, bodyguard, forced cooperation, smut 18+ mdni - 3.9k words
![Houndtooth [2]](https://64.media.tumblr.com/9af4754c9a5f9f668dae1e9e24007044/548c0bbacdc12eb3-f3/s500x750/dc4eebf2d9d759d48a1a8aac53e55633969712c1.png)
If I cannot be loved, I must be feared.
Simon Riley doesn’t consider himself a violent man.
Practical, perhaps. Purposeful.
The life he has lived has invariably demanded a brutality from him; a sanguinary ruthlessness, one that he would never foolishly deny he has the capacity for. He had told himself, in his bitter youth, that his barbaric appetite for carnage and control was not innate. Not a sticky black disease webbed in his genetic code, inherited from his cunt of a father, or his cunt of a father before him.
No, instead, his savagery is an incidental asset. An arbitrary talent. Of course, he only uses it when it’s urgently called for, only when no other option presents itself to him.
It was only by chance that in his adolescence he stumbled into the underworld of blood sport and fight clubs, only a fluke he discovered his gift once he started pocketing mounds of cash from countless victories in splattered basements. And it's only happenstance that he found himself a career that necessitates his proficiency, that relentlessly rewards him for it – he can’t help what he's good at, after all.
So, he assures himself - not violent.
Not the kind of violent his father was, anyway. Violent in the sense of haphazard bloodshed, the kind of violence with flagrant collateral. No, Ghost has lines he won’t cross. People he won’t hurt. His fists, his blades, his bullets aren’t hurled indiscriminately; he is scrupulous in his sadism. Not a rabid cur, he doesn’t growl with pointed canines at anybody who intersects his path – he’s well trained. Meticulous. Keeps himself muzzled, tethered on a short leash.
Still, he can’t help froth at the jaws when he’s given the opportunity to play his hand, to boast his brutality. Can’t help but relish in the savage fortuities that his profession provides him, permission to lay waste to the men his mission briefs instruct him to.
Only preys on the evil, he says. Only maims the kind who deserve it.
You, standing tremulously in the open door to the bathroom, you’ll be his prey tonight.
You, as informed by his commanding officers, as described to him by his intel, will deserve it.
You, the very kind of degenerate oligarch filth he scorns so deeply, utterly undeserving of the magnitude of wealth and power you have unjustly acquired without merit - will need it.
Even if you haven’t had an acting hand in in your husband’s machine of depravity, at the very least, you’re a repugnant, iniquitous whore; happy to receive and spend mountains of blood-dripping money for a spread of your honeyed legs, apathetic to its murderous origins, uncaring who had to die to buy you that fucking negligée.
That sliver of blush pink, so sheer, so short - you might as well not be wearing it at all. A cotton-candy veil, translucent enough to allow the yellow glow emerging from behind you to carve out the shape of your silhouette; the image of a renaissance muse with the contour of your waist, the swell of your hips. The chantilly hem barely grazes the highest point of your thighs, not quite covering the fragile lace of the knickers that conceal your pernicious cunt from him.
It’s almost a sick joke.
As if you’ve been planted there as some test of his fortitude, a trial of his moral compunctions. That voluptuary sway you have on his restraint, just by standing there, with your fingers hesitantly clutching a glossy Beretta, keeping obediently it pointed to the floor; it riles him. Repulses him. Infuriates him.
The pistol makes a dull thud as it tumbles to the dense carpet, your claw still shaky as you hesitantly part your fingers to release it.
“Умная девочка,” he growls, as he flips his night-vision goggles off his eyes, clasping them to his helmet with a click. “Clever girl.”
He makes sure you understand him when he patronises you, putting his near fluency in your language to some use – all the while, he wants you to know where he has come from. To know that he’s not another competitor nor accomplice of your machiavellian prick of a husband. That he’s a foreign arm of justice. Your retribution. Your punishment.
But he’s taken aback, when your syrupy voice glides from your nervous lips, in a language he didn’t expect you to speak.
“What do you want.”
He stalks towards you, slowly, maliciously, lowering his gun and straightening his hulking back to loom even further above and over you. You’ve seen his skull, now, the painted mask that wilfully camouflages his humanity. He can tell, relishing in the widening of your pretty eyes at the sight of it. Your reaper. Your fate.
His objective is to make you cower. To make you question his intentions. To intimidate. To threaten.
Should be easy.
With a vindictive boot he kicks your Beretta, sending it skidding noisily across the marble floor of your ensuite.
“Not a bad accent,” he grumbles at you, mocking, carnivorous eyes swilling the sight of you as he closes in. Exerts every effort to avert his sights from wandering, sinking, from your skittish countenance to the pillows of your oligarch tits, cupped behind their restraining triangles of sheer pink lace.
A disturbed crease furrows in your brow, you stumble onto your back foot as he menaces over you; you’re poised to bolt, light on your little bare feet – but he readies himself for the chase.
“Are you here for Victor?”
Your velvet tone is more austere than he would have anticipated, a cadence of hoarse impatience belying the endearing panic engraved in your features. Catlike eyes flit between his, as though mining into the windows of his mask, puncturing his irises and burrowing within. Maybe you hope to find something in there, in those pinprick black openings, now that they’ve dilated in light of your prying.
He answers with a single shake of his head, a sharp and cocksure suck of his teeth.
“Comrade’s got him already,” he gloats, deeply coarse voice resonating from his throat, an arrogant grin audible in his words while concealed by the thick knit of his balaclava.
He lets you sit with that news, expecting a tearful exhibition of some histrionic spousal grief, at the very least. But, no, you remain steadfast in your quiet courage. Unnervingly indifferent to the possibility that your husband had been coldly assassinated, a mere few feet from where you had been preening yourself in the ensuite mirror.
Fitting, he thinks, that an avaricious, gold-digging slut like you is entirely unfazed by the sudden and savage death of your malefactor husband. You’re probably glad of it; if Ghost weren’t here to terrorise you, maybe you’d be beaming with glee, knowing his exorbitant wealth would trickle down into your manicured little fingers.
But your husband isn’t dead yet, perhaps to your dismay – instead he has been wrapped up with duct tape, suffocatingly tight, and carted off by the Sergeant with a sack over his head. Probably on their way to exfil. Efficient, that Scottish sergeant. Focused.
Unlike Ghost. He likes to play with his food.
He justifies it, though, knowing a bit of terror will loosen up your lips for later. After all, they have questions for you. Demands of you. And there’s nothing like a squealing, pleading, sobbing wife to pry open the shut jaws of an obstinate prisoner – that is, after other, uglier methods fail to extract the intel he desires. He quietly hopes that it comes to that.
So he prods, head stooping down to callously address you.
“I’m here for you.”
Your cautious yet analytical glare jumps down the length of him, before you surprise him, again – tempting your fate with a temerarious retort.
“I’d sooner let you shoot me. Чертовски уродливый укол.” Fucking ugly prick.
He cocks his brow, sniffing irately as he adjusts his low ready grip on his gun; he raises it just slightly, a malignant push of its vertical barrel into your soft belly. Reminding you of its presence, its size; the length of your entire torso, from mound to forehead. Reiterating its willingness to shred your ripe flesh, your cowed bones with its lead rounds.
“Tempting.” He snarls, as gravelly as cruel.
There’s the tiniest movement in your legs, a minuscule shift in your muscles, your agitated eyes dart past him just briefly – Ghost is seasoned in the hunt. The unconscious change in your breathing pricks his ears, from heavy and quivering to shallow and pointed; a small nibble on the meat inside your lip, a fluttering of your eyelashes as you scan for an escape route. His perception is honed and inhuman, predatory vigilance akin to a stalking wolf, he can smell your next move, it oozes from you like sweat.
So when your weight shifts onto your front foot, prepared to bolt, he lets you.
It’ll tire you out, a healthy chase. It’ll terrify you, and exhilarate him.
He watches insouciantly as you dart to his left, almost condescending in his apathy, as he makes no effort to snag you, no attempt to ensnare your body and trap you with a hook of his heaving arm.
No, that would be too easy. You dash past him, elbowing him in the side of his shielded ribs as you flee.
He listens with perked ears to the sound of your bare feet pattering against the carpet, the silent whisper of your negligée brushing against the doorframe of the suite.
You’ll figure out eventually that there is nowhere for you to run. That there is nobody left to save you. Your options are extremely slim – he made very certain of that. Escape your fortress and brave the Russian midwinter, and endure the agony of your bare flesh freezing black in your pitiful excuse of a nightdress. Or, face him. Which, he concedes, in your eyes may well be a more horrific fate.
He has knowingly been keeping his intentions ambiguous. And a woman that looks like you, in a piece of fucking fabric like that, must be excruciatingly familiar with the kind of intentions most men in this position would have.
No, Ghost isn’t that barbaric, temptation notwithstanding.
He just wants you to believe that he is.
So with heavy feet, he stalks you.
Taking measured steps, he follows the trail of your sweet perfume, your vanity betraying you once again as it lingers in the air behind you, leaving a conspicuous path of jasmine and silk down the extravagant hallway.
His boots tread over the Persian runner that spans the length of the hall. Velvet. Ostentatious.
How much did that cost you?
Disdainful glares observe the hideously gaudy and indubitably priceless paintings that hang on the walls, framed by ornamental moulding, taller than him. Florid. Tasteless.
How much did you spend on those?
How many roubles did you spend on all this garish fucking décor? How many lives did all of it cost?
Can you see the blood on that avant-garde sculpture when you look at it?
Do you see the redness of that blood emulsified in the oil paint of those hideous paintings? Does it stain the wall behind them?
Do you see the coagulated mess when you remove them, to replace them with newer ones?
His jaw clenches involuntarily with the disgust that swallows him. Sucking cold air vexedly through his nose, he slings his rifle over his back, freeing his hands for the catch.
His blood, viscous and dark, thumps in his temples, prickling cold under his skin; like Pavlov’s dog, he salivates at the quiet noises that barely echo from elsewhere in the mansion, the sound of you scuttling away from him. He hears your frightened panting through the walls, soft little squeaks like a hunted mouse.
“Any luck, L.T.?”
The gruff Scottish voice emerges through the crackling speaker of his radio, dampening the thuds of his bestial heart, dispelling the blood red that encroaches his vision. If only slightly.
His thumb goes to press the talk button. He contemplates how honest he will be.
“Having some trouble.”
He makes no effort to speak quietly. He wants you to hear him advance on you. He wants you to wonder hopelessly which corner he might turn, through which door he might check.
“Don't do anything I’ll have to defend you for.”
Ghost grumbles deeply as he exhales. Soap is keenly aware that he is purposefully taking his time with you. You could only ever cause him trouble if he allowed you to, after all.
“D’you think I’m that much of a brute?” Ghost retorts, growl doused in facetiousness.
“Only when you want to be, sir.”
He jerks his head at the echo of a quiet thud, the chime of crystal glasses vibrating on impact.
Dining room.
He’s silent for too long, though. Soap follows up.
“We’re waiting for you, mate. It’s fuckin’ cold. Get a move on, will you?”
“Won’t be long, Sergeant.”
“You'll have plenty o’ time with her when we’ve got ‘er in captivity, eh?”
He hears a stifled squeal escape you, through a single wall. He’s found you. No need to answer Soap – the boy can wait.
With smug nonchalance he strolls the corner, in no rush, he steps through the flamboyant archway into your dining room, vulturous eyes squinting to scan for you in the shadows.
Banquet hall might be a more apt label for the sheer magnitude and glitz of the room, soaring ceilings bordered with ornate floral plaster, moonlight glowing through the towering windows reflecting in diamonds off the polished parquet floor. He imagines you must have hosted and overfed many of Zakhaev’s snivelling accomplices at that very teak dining table, that could easily seat sixteen.
He wonders what their Soviet maws might have snarled at you through their greedy teeth as you bent over that table to top up their chalices. He wonders which cut of your meat they would have liked. He wonders if your husband would have served you up for them if they asked. He wonders if they ever dared to.
Your shadow reveals your whereabouts, dead still and peeking across the floorboards through a second archway, in the wall to the right.
Not very good at hiding, are you?
He sees you flinch at the deep sound of his boot on the wooden floor, closing in on you once again. His ready hands clench into reactionary fists at the sight of you standing motionless in the grey moonlight, arms tight by your side, frozen solid like you might have already ventured out into the subzero night.
Only as he approaches you, does he see what you’re stuck on.
One of your mercenaries.
Ghost thought he had executed him, with a stealthy blade to the throat, a crude slash from jugular to jugular. A ragged incision into his windpipe to ensure his silence as his life drained out of the gaping wound.
But the prick is still alive, by the sounds of it, the unpleasant music of his wet choking; the squelching and popping of him sucking air through the hole in his throat, impeded by the flow of fizzing blood.
It seems to have alarmed you, the sight of the slaughter, sending you into trembling shock as you fail to break your sight away from the twitching corpse.
“Y-you–”
He’s uncertain if you’re addressing him, as you stutter so winsomely, that brave little show you put on for him earlier now crumbling delightfully at the recognition of your fate.
“You’re – why did you…” you stammer, before drawing in a steadying breath. “You’re a fucking animal.”
Ghost releases an ireful sigh as he lurks to stand behind you, tugging a pair of cable-tie cuffs from one of the many pockets on his thoroughly outfitted tactical vest.
With a careful spin on your heel, a floaty dance of your negligée, you face him. Glowering up at him through wet lashes, lumps of mascara stick to your cheeks like tar, flushed from your eyes by a spate of tears.
Now you’re emotional.
That convulsing, blood-drenched cadaver is real enough for you, is it?
It must be easier to compartmentalise, easier to dismiss like flicking spilt salt over your shoulder, when the bloodshed you’re responsible for is mourned miles and miles from you.
No, that carnage can never reach you, can it? Not while you’re in your fucking fortress, lazing on a velveteen chaise lounge, painting your toenails with that glossy coat of cherry red as if it were the very blood your regime spilt.
Well, here it is. The kind of brutality you’ve been sheltered from, safeguarded against, blissfully ignorant of.
You pampered bitch.
He can’t help but be disappointed you’ve given up, you’ve let him gain on you. His muscles, his bones, his teeth, were ready for a hunt, aching for the catch. His carnivorous body had primed him for a breakneck pursuit through the halls of your mansion, and he now felt viciously unsated.
He wanted to hear you shrieking, pleading to be spared, squeaking like a bitten rabbit when he finally caught you in his jaws. He wanted to be the one to stifle your squeals with his gloved hands, gargantuan weight crushing the air from your weak lungs, thwarting your attempts to flee. He wanted to relish in your squirming, fighting, kicking underneath him, and he wanted to watch the flickering light of resistance in your darting eyes be snuffed out by the futility of your escape.
Yet even as you evidently surrender, still quaking with frigid trepidation, that glimmer still glows. A stubborn little flame.
“Are they all dead?” You murmur, defeat weeping through the monotony of your dull voice, hoarse from exertion.
Ghost grants you a solitary nod, a flick of his head. “They are.”
He observes as you sip in a slow, quivering breath, not parting your wary lour from the window of his mask – still reading, still digging, still burrowing.
“Are you taking me somewhere?” You cautiously probe, your sweetly soft tone a likely effort to temper the ferocity of your hunter. “Or are you just here to hurt me?”
A gritty huff of laughter jumps from his chest, muffled by the densely knitted mask that sits over his nose.
With a languid hitherto gesture of his fingers, his head bowed from his towering shoulders, he answers you.
“Both.”
You oblige him, you clever girl. Lifting your timid hands and holding your wrists together for him, you make it easy for him to take you.
He slips the loops of stiff black plastic over each of your pristine hands, tugging the tails though the head and tightly ensnaring your wrists. His dark eyes bounce to your twisting face as you wince, the shrill zip of the teeth jerking through the pawls rings piercingly in the silence of the room – music to him, torment to you.
“Will you make it quick?”
He finds himself dissatisfied by your resignation, your stoic defeat; as though you were so disillusioned, so expectant that this fate awaited you, that you had long girded yourself for it. It deflates him, your capitulation, your impassivity – leaves him high and dry.
From a pocket on his utilitarian trousers he unveils a fabric sack; thick black cotton with a drawstring closure.
“No.” He responds dully, as he tugs the bag over your head, finally veiling your probing eyes. With gloved hands he holds you by the crux of your shoulder, thumb gripping tightly over the base of your throat. He tightens the drawstring of the sack under your jaw, constricting it around your neck. Just snug enough to be uncomfortable, to impede your swallowing, to dampen your breathing.
“Fucking pig.” You seethe through the fabric.
Grasp of you not wavering, he yanks you toward him, you stumble over your bare feet as he cranes his head so it hangs beside yours, mouth by your ear.
“Don’t make me gag you.”
He faintly makes out the sound of you scoffing in silent contempt. “You won’t.”
Standing upright, he tilts his head in bemusement. “Won’t I?”
“You want a challenge, don’t you? That’s why you let me run, isn’t it?”
He’s flummoxed for the moment, speechless, only allowing an inaudible grunt of dispute to escape him.
“Like a little fight, do you? You sick fuck?”
He’s careful in his reaction. Prudent. Controlled. Refuses to let you believe that you’ve read him like a book.
No, instead, he toys with your conjecture.
Sinister, guttural, he growls,
“Maybe I do.”
![Houndtooth [2]](https://64.media.tumblr.com/b93f25825f2c66d6d55c05a35bf78045/548c0bbacdc12eb3-9d/s500x750/d00dc0f21f8be2f762b1e956480f44b418359d69.png)
houndtooth [4]
[masterlist]
Ghost x f!Reader - tags: slow burn, enemies to lovers, abduction, bodyguard, forced cooperation, smut 18+ mdni - 2.9k words
![Houndtooth [4]](https://64.media.tumblr.com/9af4754c9a5f9f668dae1e9e24007044/4f38f704b09a1de4-60/s500x750/2fb39345cb41ba703d680d90cd5ba33cb6aba557.png)
Riley.
You rehearse your hunter’s name like gospel. Rolling it around in your mouth like hard candy. Tonguing at it, knocking the sugary rock against your teeth, letting your swelling saliva dissolve it layer by layer in the hopes you might find something in its centre.
Lieutenant Riley.
A soldier.
A man beholden to the laws of his nation. A man with a moral compass. Right?
Perhaps it is foolish to assume any man would cling to his compunctions in a world so distinct from the civility he hails from. In a world where he holds the power to order his subordinates to turn a blind eye to his urges. Where his comrades are too terrified to question him, lest they be next on his menu.
You’ve been made a witness to what power does to a man. Many times. Too many.
Like liquor, their inhibitions slough off from them once they get a taste. Once they have their fill of it. Lays bare exactly what they have dreamed to do, for as long as they have had the capacity to hunger for it.
Your hunter’s mask is thick and potently obscuring. You have no read on him, no pre-emptive classification under which you can categorise him.
But you have spent the short flight doing what you can to identify your abductors.
Your hunter. The Scotsman. The Sergeant. The Captain.
Somehow, Riley had been the only name uttered for the duration of the journey. So you give them their titles to distinguish them. Each voice a character, you imagine their faces in the black void of your obscured vision.
Few words have been spoken by the time the aircraft lands, as the deafening thunder of the rotator blades slowly quietens into a rhythmic hum. You hear a clunky metal drumming as the door of the helicopter is rolled open, frigid air once again flooding into the cabin and forcing you to shrivel.
Whatever happens next must have been pre-discussed, pre-rehearsed. Their communication has largely halted – you hear the shuffles of them unbuckling, standing, clambering around and out of the aircraft, speaking no words to one another.
It leaves you blind. More than you are already.
You consider where they might be escorting your husband. Away from you, so it seems.
The thuds of boots on steel approach you. You yelp as a firm hand grabs you by the arm, a stern grip around your bicep, though over the thick wool of the blanket that cloaks you. He gestures for you to stand with a demanding tug, though you stay obstinately seated.
“Either you walk, or I carry ye.”
The Scotsman.
Doesn’t seem like your hunter is particularly possessive of his catch, despite the designation you’ve given him.
Perhaps this one will be more legible. More susceptible. You only wish he had spoken more, offered a glimpse at his hand – so you could know what part to play for him. Which mask to don.
“Где мы?” Where are we?
Probably for the best that you let them believe you can’t speak English for as long as possible. Never know what they could let slip believing you mightn’t understand it.
Though you obey, standing as he yanks you by the arm forcefully enough to pull you upright even if you had resisted.
“As if I’d tell you that, lass,” he sneers, as though speaking to himself, throaty voice rich with condescension.
So you follow, obedient, stumbling over your feet as you’re led across what feels like a thin layer of snow atop cement, observing the faded lightshow through your hood as you attempt to determine where he might be taking you.
You listen carefully to the echoes of your combined footsteps, as you move through a door, down a hallway, turn a corner, then another.
Until you are suddenly made to stop with a sharp tug.
Follows the shuffle of a fist in a pocket. The jingle of keys. The crackle of a key in a lock. The turn of a doorknob. The creak of hinges.
“In.”
He barks at you, shoving you impatiently into whatever room he has brought you to, you trip over your feet before you steady yourself.
The heavy door shuts behind you. The click of the lock follows.
Within, the air is dense, lukewarm, sticky. Reeks of bleach and pinesol. It only barely disguises the lingering stench of rotting meat.
Fuck.
Your fleeting hope that you had been left alone in the cell was cast side by the heavy breathing of your escort, the thunder of his boots as he approaches you from behind. His hasty fingers hook over the thick blanket at the back of your neck, yanking it from you with selfish ease despite how desperately your claws hook to keep it.
His breathy chuckle follows your exposure. Teasing and hoggish.
You weave your fingers between themselves, wrists aching under the ligatures of your plastic cuffs, pulled so tight that they plug the vessels that might send warm blood to the tips of your fingers.
“Un-fuckin’-real.”
He murmurs it lowly, to himself, amidst the busy shuffle marching around you – then follows the clamber of objects on a surface, the shrill snap of a pistol’s slide being pulled back, the clank of it being dumped on a counter.
Your thawing lungs draw in a slow and shuddering breath, gathering the nerve to speak once again. Maybe he’ll take pity. Maybe he’ll feel shame, if you remind him that you’re alive and aware, not a blinded mannequin.
“Что ты делаешь?” What are you doing?
A snicker.
No answer.
You listen to the shriek of what sounds like a piece of furniture being dragged carelessly over the vinyl floor.
Hands grab at you, a manipulative jerk by the shoulders, manhandled as you’re pulled down into what you realise is a chair – steel, sharply cold on the bare skin of your thighs.
You hear him lower beside you. His warm breathing on your knee. A sharp inhale is sucked into your chest and held there.
The jingle of a chain. The cold of metal around your ankle. The zip of a cuff being closed.
Fuck.
Though, despite your terror, a repugnant relief rinses you. You’re not being bent over a table. Not yet, at least.
You feel his fingers at your neck. Loosening the tie of your hood. You shrink as it’s then abruptly torn from the top of your head, instantly blinded by the viciously bright glare of the overhead fluorescents. You tuck your head into your shoulder on instinct to shield your eyes from their onslaught.
A satisfied grunt from the Scotsman. You peek, eventually, as your vision readjusts to the brightness; to see him lean back in a chair opposite you. Perhaps a foot lies between your knees.
Far younger than his grumbling voice had made him seem. A short and dishevelled mohawk runs along the ridge of his skull, a dense stubble coats his jaw. He unzips the white-and-grey camouflage jacket he wears, revealing a black fleece underneath, he arrogantly adjusts himself in his seat as if seeking comfort.
“Christ,” he mumbles, piercing grey eyes observing, analysing you. “Gaz was right, weren’t he?”
Glancing around the room, you hastily take the moment to absorb your enclosure. Off-white walls. Linoleum flooring, speckled teal. A table to your right. A drain in the floor between your feet.
Fuck.
You seal your lips shut. Running your tongue along the back of your teeth. Waiting for him to play his hand.
His sharp stare is invasive, needles in your skin as it shamelessly follows the curves of your body, lingers on your breasts as if you can’t feel the attention he gives them.
“Mia.”
Enunciated with vitriol, excessive emphasis on each vowel as though evaluating the way your alias feels as it travels along his tongue. Seems like their research on you wasn’t as in depth as you would have expected, for what you assume to be a military operation.
They don’t have your birth name. Which, you hope, must mean they know very little else.
“Mia Zakhaev. That’s a hell of a surname to have in a place like this, eh?”
You swallow. Stay silent.
“You do realise that, right? Y’know what that name means?”
Stay silent.
“’Course you do.”
Silent.
“Because you know it’s his fault you’re here, don’t you.”
It seems he has no real questions for you. Or, at least, is choosing to waste time by badgering you with empty interrogation.
“Чего ты хочешь от меня?” What do you want from me?
Your question only serves to amuse him. Tugs a smirk in the corner of his mouth.
“Did he make you wear that, huh?”
As you’d guessed. Just wants to heckle you, wants to provoke you.
“He’s got good taste, I’ll g’him that.”
You return to your initial strategy. Silence.
“But you don’t, clearly. You married him.”
“Do you know where he gets his money from, Mia?”
“Do you?”
“Did he ever tell you about it?”
“Huh?”
“What he does? What he’s done?”
“You’d think he’d clue you in, if he loved you, eh?”
“Do you think he loves you, Mia?”
“Hm?”
“Doesn’t seem like it.”
“Not enough to protect you from all this, eh?”
You sweat. You shake. His barrage is sorely effective, however juvenile. He pokes at the right wounds. The unhealed ones.
“Конечно, он любит меня.” Of course he loves me.
He chuckles. Clearly doesn’t believe you.
Do you even believe it?
Your heart skips a beat as the door to the room blasts open, the metallic cry of its rusting hinges makes you jump. Your glare shoots above your interrogator to whoever stands in the doorframe.
He lumbers into the room.
Calmly shuts the door behind him.
Your hunter.
You wonder if he can see how you shrivel in his presence. How your eyes widen at the sight of his painted skull, beady brown eyes glaring down at you through its holes, painted black. If he can hear your heartrate doubling. Your breaths quickening.
“She’s quiet,” the Scotsman remarks.
“Not for long,” the hunter gloats. Takes a second to examine you. “Should’ve cuffed both her ankles.”
Scotsman scoffs. “Yeah?”
“Mh,” he grunts. “She’ll present herself like a cat in heat if it means she might get her way.”
You feel your lips curl in revulsion, your brows furrow into a deep scowl as you glare up from underneath them.
“Wouldn’t you, sweetheart?”
Disgusting asshole. That’s probably exactly what he wants. The bile of disdain rises quickly in your throat. You can’t keep it in.
“Fuck you.”
The growl crawls through your teeth, rolling from your tongue before you had the sense to swallow it.
Surprise plasters itself in the expression of the Scotsman. “Ah – she speaks English.”
Riley crosses his arms.
“’Course she does.”
![Houndtooth [4]](https://64.media.tumblr.com/33ce03c51443d46cf05bc8d8fbc915fa/4f38f704b09a1de4-31/s500x750/4ec33a957b572ba61558461d8891d3e12ac3043f.png)
Soap had the sense to leave the room without Ghost having to order him to.
He has an unspoken claim on your torment. Your fate has been marked as his to decide.
His team are cognisant of his particular hatred for puppet masters, so he calls them – the pigs in their mansions, the orchestrators of war, the profiteers of indiscriminate suffering. The breed of extortionate creatures that needn’t get their hoofs dirty, when they can tug at the strings of those under their heel.
The same creatures that exploited his strength in those underground fighting rings. That tossed money at him when he bloodied his knuckles, when he won his brawls, when he butchered his opponents. That withheld his lifeline when he lost. That punished him viciously when he failed.
His team mightn’t understand his inclination towards you, particularly over your husband – the real warlord. He could hardly endeavour to explain it if they ever were to ask.
But, you, you were the fucking posterchild of that very species.
Infuriated him even more than the operative puppeteers, the perpetrators of those crimes, like your snivelling husband. No, you were just a spectator.
And spectate you do, little rabbit, as Johnny steps past and around him, rapping his shoulder in what could just as likely be either warning or encouragement. He locks the door on his way out.
Look how much you wilt in the light.
You had been so confident in the shadows. Flitting about in the darkness as if you might escape him there. As if it weren’t his domain.
Now, you look small. Shaky. Shuddering on your chair with your blue hands bound together, elbows at your side, holding your knees closed as if it might keep him out.
You wince as he edges closer, the dull thud of his boot on the linoleum reverberating in the hollow room.
Look at you.
Those doe-eyes beseeching him like it might weaken his resolve. Like it might dampen the flame of his contempt.
As he encroaches he spots that resilience, still. The glimmer of it reflects in your stare, by turn frightened and daring. It’s as if you’re challenging him.
“What do you want?” Your voice is hoarse. Cadence is severe. You try so hard to be fearless.
“That depends.”
Your expression doesn’t shift from its tearful stone; though you swallow, it betrays you. “On what.”
“On what you can tell me.”
He watches you shuffle in your seat, your thighs sticking to the cold steel beneath them, you suck your teeth. “What do you want to know.”
For a moment he considers his first question. How much he wants to toy with you.
“Where’s the factory.” He asks gruffly, stepping forward, taking hold of the seat opposite by its back and jerking it towards you. Closing the distance.
“What?” You query, clearly panicked, eyes cautiously following him.
“You heard me.”
Your defiant scowl falters. “I – I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
He shifts forward, resting his elbows on his knees, glare burrowing. “Bullshit.”
“I don’t – I don’t know what that is.”
He licks his teeth, impatience burgeoning, swelling in his stomach like nausea.
“D’you know what this room is for?”
He closes in. Looms above you. Stands so close to you that your shoulder brushes his hip. Finds himself grinning as your worried eyes shoot to the drain between your pedicured feet.
His hand jumps to your neck, takes a sudden hold of your jaw like he owns your head. Tilts it back on the hinge of your spine so that you are made to look up at him. He feels the thunder of your racing pulse under his thumb.
“I can guess.” Just a whimper. Not so brave now, are you?
“Can you?”
He feels your throat swell under his grip as you suck down a wavering breath. “Tort... interrogation.”
He nods. “Clever girl.”
Your eyes flit between his, glittering like gemstones under the bars of the fluorescent lights above him. You are a pretty thing, Christ, he can’t deny himself that.
You blink eagerly at him. “You don’t need to hurt me.”
“Don’t I?”
“No,” you breathe, shaking your head as much as he allows it to. “I’ll – I’ll tell you what I know. But if you want, intel, on my husband’s work – I – he – he never told me anything about it. I don’t know anything.”
He draws in an ireful breath, slow, ragged. “That’s a real shame, Mia.”
“But–” You hesitate, your pulse quickens under his thumb. His gaze betrays him, landing on your lips as they part so slightly, your wet tongue catching a glint of the glowing lights above. “…I know what else you want.”
You provocative little cunt.
He knew you’d play this card. He had done his best to prepare himself, to fortify himself against it; and yet, it fails him. You’re too fucking good at it. Did you make your lips pinker on purpose?
Though, perhaps, he has himself to blame. Inflated your ego by stealing glances at the body you’ve decorated with that fucking lace.
His jaw clenches inadvertently, grinding his teeth as though imagining your throat between his canines. His silence only fuels you. He chastises himself. Fuck.
“I can – we can help each other.”
He hesitates before releasing you. The temptation to tighten his fingers is a strong one. His grip lowers to your throat inadvertently, your gullet rolls under his hand as you swallow.
But he forces himself to let go, dropping your head like it’s heavy.
“That’s not going to work on me.” He grumbles.
And as though he had deflated you, the fawning mask of sycophantic servitude you had donned to beguile him slips abruptly from your face. Leaves your countenance dour, detached, defeated, as you break your gaze from him and stare daggers into the empty chair across from you.
“Then I’ve got nothing to offer you.”
Gone is the sweet coquetry in your tone. Instead you speak monotonously, oozing spite.
Ghost sniffs frustratedly as he steps away from you, returning to his chair, he takes a casual seat.
“That how you got your husband, eh?” He goads, voice dripping with derision. “Offer up your cunt for his wallet?”
He watches as you chew on the inside of your cheek. Tearful eyes red and vengeful. He’s right, isn’t he?
“Huh,” he contemplates aloud, cocky in his correct assessment. “So you’re not an oligarch, are you? You’re a fuckin’ hooker.”
He leans forward once again, propped up by his elbows on his knees, he interlocks his fingers as he glowers at you, hoping to hook your eyes on his.
“Tricked him into marrying you, eh? Sold yourself to him?”
You meet his eye, finally, though he finds himself doubting whether he had hooked yours, or you his. There’s a sincerity in your stare, a pain that tugs at your lips, like he had jabbed at an open wound.
“You’re a soldier,” you murmur, a croak.
“I am.”
Your lour is cold.
“Then we’ve both sold our bodies, Riley.” You seethe. “Only in different ways.”
![Houndtooth [4]](https://64.media.tumblr.com/b93f25825f2c66d6d55c05a35bf78045/4f38f704b09a1de4-e5/s500x750/2b3220a8b60f0b54df4360747d4570b5e84864eb.png)
the eros project ➳ kim taehyung AU

summary | You didn’t expect to actually fall for someone in a reality dating show. Then Kim Taehyung came along and you had to battle between your feelings and what this show was actually about.
warnings | realty star! Taehyung, reality star!Y/n, pining, make out, exhibitionism, pool sex (oral m), SMUT insecure Taehyung, jealousy, a little of Jungkook, angry sex, face sitting, deep throat, safe sex, rough sex, doggy, missionary
“Welcome to a new world of Love and Desire where we strive in providing you the rawest form of intimacy in an authentic environment. Our goal is to see if you can find your perfect match while still living a normal life. Here at Erotes Headquarters we wish you the best luck to all you singles!”
Weiterlesen
houndtooth [7]
[masterlist]
Ghost x f!Reader - tags: slow burn, enemies to lovers, abduction, bodyguard, forced cooperation, smut 18+ mdni - 3.9k words
![Houndtooth [7]](https://64.media.tumblr.com/9af4754c9a5f9f668dae1e9e24007044/0fa35e7a03ddac1a-60/s500x750/6e5540ca582c63c1488748a8c8a53af4e7c2e28f.png)
The air of your cell is thick and savoury like soup. You choke on it, every breath, drowning in it – filling your lungs with its foul warmth and barely slaking your battered body’s need for oxygen.
The sore minutes following your husband’s execution had blurred into incomprehensible smoke. Fleeting. Suffocating. Obfuscating.
You are lost. Uncertain whether or not you are grieving. And if you’re not, whether you should be.
His words were each a bullet, each meticulously calculated to injure you where it would hurt you most. Almost perfectly crafted to ensure your captors lose any semblance of pity or reverence they held for you – so that they might lose whatever restraint they’ve been attempting to maintain. So that they may do to you whatever they have been itching to do. Their exploitation justified. Because you’re just a whore.
But in your desperation to comfort your own distraught mind, you argue with yourself. Your own devil’s advocate.
Perhaps it was a game. Could have been a bluff.
He must have loved you, right? After years of serving him, of acting your part, of loving him the way he wanted you to.
He had to have loved you. You had always dreamed someone would.
No matter the case, the outcome is the same. There’s no way back. Whatever nightmare you’re stuck in will only, only, get worse. Regardless of which pack of wolves you are left to, your fate remains inescapable. You’ll be used. Consumed. Digested. Shit back out.
The Captain had ferried you to a new cell – the one you now sat in, atop a makeshift bed with a squealing steel frame. He had carried you like a child, an arm under your knees and an arm under your neck, he let your head fall on his chest despite your fading effort to stay skittish and defensive. His charity disingenuous. White knight he is.
But you’re weak. Exhausted. Delirious.
You sit in dead silence, knees tucked up tightly to your chin, body only partially dry after your water torture.
The Captain stands in front of you. Hands magisterially on his hips, he pouts under his beard. Wrestling with how best to interact with you, like you’re an animal in an exhibit. Careful not to scare you off, but frightened you’d bite if he gets too close.
“There were no bullets in the gun, by the way,” he says gruffly, voice hoarse like he’s gargling gravel. “I wasn’t going to kill you. It was a… a bluff.”
You say nothing. Give him nothing. You glower at him from under your brow, hoping he leaves so you can finally lie down and cry like a hurt little girl.
“Can I get you something? Water?”
You say nothing.
“Look. We’re – we’re not going to hurt you. But I need you to answer some questions, alright?” He insists. “We need to know about who your husband worked with. I’m guessing he must have called them his colleagues, eh?”
Give him nothing.
“Do you know a Vladimir? Makarov?”
That name, you know. You know it well. You know it like an apple knows teeth. Like a deer knows an arrow. Like a carcass knows a knife.
Less so a colleague and more a rival. Two lions fighting for the same throne. Vladimir hated your husband so viciously it wouldn’t surprise you if he had orchestrated this entire series of events just to be rid of him.
But the enmity between he and your husband isn’t what strikes icy shards of terror through your chest. Isn’t what churns your stomach and pushes dark bile up your throat.
You swallow.
“Mh. Looks like you do know him,” he grunts, crossing his arms over his broad chest, rocking on his boots. “Can you tell me about him?”
He persists in his questioning, despite your sealed lips. You know that talking might help you. That spilling your vague knowledge like water from a faucet might ingratiate you. Might earn your freedom.
But what freedom awaits you?
If these soldiers cast you back to your blood-soaked estate, or your petit trianon – as a traitor of your husband, a scorned widow – you will simply be bait. Raw meat to lure bears. Honey to lure wasps. There is nowhere you could possibly hide to evade them, no scheme to outsmart them.
You’d be better off dead.
“When was the last time you saw him?”
“Did he come to your estate a lot? Did he travel with your husband?”
“Have you ever spoken to him?”
“Does he know you?”
“Could he help you?”
“Where is he?”
He leans forward, props himself up with his palms on his knees. His blue eyes are piercing, discerning. “Do you know where he is?” He insists, “Mia. I’m trying to help you.”
You say nothing.
He is quick to grow frustrated, grunting like a bear and standing upright, he rubs his temples in exasperation as if you’ve given him a headache.
“You don’t want to talk to me. Okay.”
Give him nothing.
“Who will you talk to? Anyone?” He presses, tapping his boot in impatience. “Do you want to talk to the Lieutenant?”
You say nothing – but some shift in your expression must have said something for you. You’re not sure if it was the widening of your eyes, the softening of your brows, the loosening of your shoulders – but he spotted it. And nodded slowly. Knowingly.
“Alright, love. I’ll go get him. Then you’ll talk to him, eh?”
![Houndtooth [7]](https://64.media.tumblr.com/33ce03c51443d46cf05bc8d8fbc915fa/0fa35e7a03ddac1a-c6/s500x750/d0647216f3811c83797d112d47d519a3809ef25e.png)
“Simon,” came the gruff bark of Price’s familiar voice. Irate.
Ghost sat on a bench in the empty mess hall, under a flickering fluorescent bar. Bouncing his knee, leaning his elbows on the table in front of him, he pinches a cheap Russian cigarette and holds it between his teeth.
Tastes like shit. Does the job.
“What,” he grunts, swivelling on the bench so that he faces out towards the approaching Captain. “Did she kick y’in the head, too?”
Price only frowns, confused and plainly irritated, he comes to a stop before him and crosses his arms. “No,” he puzzles. “She kicked you, eh? That’ll learn you.”
Leaning back indolently, Ghost tugs the base of his balaclava back over his mouth, tucking it under his jaw. Squishes the butt into the plastic surface of the table behind him. “Not me.”
“Mh,” the Captain acquiesces. “She does seem to like you.”
Ghost only scoffs, not quite a laugh, but carries the same disbelieving amusement. “Right,” he chuffs, “for killing her husband?”
“Possibly,” Price shrugs derisively, “beats me.”
“Has she said anything?”
He shakes his head. “Nothing. Like talking to a brick wall,” the Captain complains. “A pretty little brick wall.”
Ghost rolls his eyes, turning his head to look at the open door to the hall. He rubs his brow vexedly with his thumb. And you chide me, you hypocritical prick.
“She’ll talk to you,” Price insists.
“Why the fuck would she talk to me?” Ghost retorts. “I waterboarded her.”
“I asked her.”
“What, and she requested me?”
Price tilts his head, a lazy shrug. “Not in so many words.”
“Right. So you’re full of shit.”
“Jesus, Simon. Don’t make me order you,” Price sneers, “No clue why she’s interested in you, but, you never know with women like that, eh?”
His stomach churns at Price’s insinuation. Must have taken your cunt husband’s ramblings at face value. Rookie error for a captain.
Ghost bounces his knee in annoyance. “Just let her sleep, for fuck’s sake. She’s probably delirious.”
“Exactly,” Price nods. “She’ll be nice and compliant, eh? Open to persuasion.”
He's right. Ghost is playing dumb. He’s very familiar with the game, so fluent in the art of exploitation that he could do it with his eyes closed. Beaten, defeated, worn down to a quivering mess is when you’ll be most susceptible to influence. The most pliable.
Letting you sleep, allowing you to recover your strength as you cocoon yourself in your shell is a surefire way to ensure you never utter another word. He can’t let your fear bubble into spite, into anger, into vengeance. He must kick you when you’re down.
But – he's tired. He’s already fucking sick of it. Sick of being confused by his own repulsion. Sick of his pathetic eyes raking over your body despite his efforts to restrain it. Sick of your eyes looking through him like you know him better than himself.
“Too delirious to give us anything useful,” Ghost clarifies, through teeth.
“I don’t give a shit about whatever vapid rumours she has about Zakhaev. It’s pretty clear she knows nothing about his enterprise.”
“Then why the fuck do you want me to keep interrogating her?”
“I don’t want you to interrogate her, Simon,” Price badgers, “I want you to convince her.”
Ghost frowns, crosses his arms testily.
“Convince her to what?”
~
Ghost hears the squeaking of your shoddy bed as he brutishly unlocks and opens the door to your cell.
You had been lying on your side, curled up like a foetus on the mattress – but the second you are disturbed, you sit yourself upright. Alert. Frightened. Skittish. Stare at him like a cornered cat.
Looks like you’ve been crying. Eyes red and swollen, cheeks glistening with the afterglow of your tears. Your lips part just slightly as your weary eyes land on him, as though a rush of air just escaped your lungs. He shuts the door behind him, stands in the middle of your small cell with crossed arms.
He mines his thoughts for words to say. Finds them turning to ash on his tongue.
“Sorry about your husband,” he says, eventually, tone more facetious than he had intended.
He sees the cinder flickering in those sparkling little eyes, your chest rises as you inhale in preparation for your retort. “How can you – how can you say sorry for killing–”
“Not for killing him,” he clarifies with a grunt. “Sorry that you married him.”
That leaves you quiet. You look sour, because he’s right.
“Was he always like that?” He persists, feels the snake of spite rising to his throat, needlessly adding an air of mocking derision to his words. “Did–”
“Why are you here,” you snap to cut him off. Your cadence needle sharp, so starkly at odds to the sweetness of your earlier pleading. Nothing left to beg for, he supposes.
Ghost draws in an impatient breath. He doesn’t want to be here either. “Boss said you’d talk to me.”
“I don’t want to talk to you,” you grumble, voice wavering. Pouting at him. Cute.
He sucks his teeth. “Right,” he scoffs. “Yet you’re talkin’ to me, aren’t you?”
You fall quiet again, pulling your knees up to your chest, you clutch your bare feet with agitated fingers. “He’s nicer than you,” you mutter scornfully.
“I bet,” he agrees dully. “But you won’t talk to him.”
“Don’t trust him.”
“Oh?” He queries cynically, “so you trust me?”
You seem to think for a pointed moment before you speak. Wet stare lands on him, scans from boots to head, evaluating.
“You do what you say you will,” you bitterly admit, and he can see it pains you to say so.
Christ.
You trust him? Or, rather, whatever tentative hopeful dependence that you are forced to rely on in a predicament as dire as yours. Still. He squirms at the thought that you’ve decided he’s the best you’ve got. You’ll be sorely disappointed.
Won’t you?
“Have you got more questions for me,” You ask flatly, breaking the off-putting silence.
The defeat in your voice is like nails on a chalkboard. He’d rather you be hysterical, tearful and delirious, overwhelmed with grief but a still riddled with a desperation to survive.
Instead you’re merely hushed and trembling. Perhaps you’re in shock. Perhaps you’ve got a plan. But, what he is most fearful of, is the likelihood you’ve given up. No desire to fight for whatever life might await you now that your husband is out of the picture.
Detrimental to their entire operation, yes. They have no leverage to use against you if you have no interest in staying alive.
More than that, though, he needs you to keep fighting him. To berate and antagonise and kick and scream. All of his adversaries would viciously resist him and that would justify Ghost’s brutality. When his blistering hatred for you was at its peak, not ten hours ago, he could justify hurting you as badly as he wanted to.
Now what?
How can he bring himself brutalise you when you look at him like that? Teary-eyed, shaking in either cold or panic - but giving him no resistance? No talk-back, no threats, no ploys to escape?
How can he hurt you any further?
He can tell you just want to sleep. Your lids are heavy and swollen despite how hard you try to keep your eyes open and vigilant. Poor thing.
Ghost shakes his head, stepping towards a steel chair that sits propped against the wall. He lifts it with ease, twisting it in the air and putting it down in front of your bed – sits in it casually, leans back. Thighs spread and fingers interwoven in his lap, he bounces his knee as he chews on his response.
“If you’ve got information we can use, sure.”
You sigh deeply and slowly, picking at the cherry-red polish on your toenail with a ferocity that appears to him like self-flagellation. “I don’t know what information I have. Let alone whether it’s useful.”
“’Alright,” he huffs, takes a minute to think of the question. “Said you’re from Nottingham, yeah? How’d you meet him?”
A crease forms in your brow as your dubious eyes jump around his face, searching for an intention. You won’t find one. He doesn’t know what it was.
“How is that useful information,” you seethe.
He shrugs indifferently. “Need details.”
You huff as though reluctant, looking at your feet. “I met him in Berlin.”
He stays silent, and when your stare quickly jumps to him for approval, he gestures with his brutish hand to elaborate. Unsatisfactory answer.
Your gaze returns to your toes. Focusing as you scrape the glossy red paint with your fingernails, leaving specks that look like dried blood on the dirty mattress.
“I was a dancer. Um – he came into the club I danced in, with some other men. All in expensive suits. Rich men like that are cheap. Usually never spend a thing. Still want a piece.”
A stripper. Not what Ghost would have guessed. But he can picture it, all the same. And he does. Pictures you spinning on a slippery pole, peeling off a lacy bra, slender little hands stroking over your buttery body as you present yourself to dogs like meat.
He grounds himself with a clearing of his throat. “S’that right.”
“Mhm,” you answer distastefully. “Was always the working boys that spoiled us. Wanted to spend what little money they had just to please. Just because they could. Men in suits, they want what they pay for. And they pay next to nothing because that’s what we’re worth to them.”
“And Zakhaev…?”
You draw in a slow breath. “Victor was different.”
That’s it? C’mon, love. His silence an insistence to continue. And you do.
“I dunno,” you sniff, he sees your eyes swell red. “I guess he saw something valuable in me.”
He chastises himself for his interest. Why the fuck does he care how a whore comes across a man like Zakhaev? Billionaire wants a trophy wife, so he buys one. It should be no surprise at all.
“So he bought you, eh?” Ghost asks harshly, and your wet and angry stare shoots daggers at him in response.
But you relent. Maybe he’s right. Your gaze returns to your toes and wipe your nose with the back of your hand.
“He gave me fifty-thousand euros for a private dance.”
Fucking hell.
Can’t even fathom spending that much money on anything. But when he looks at you… if he had that kind of money, maybe he’d do the same.
Nearly smacks himself at the thought.
“Generous,” he says instead, disdain on his tongue.
“He was sweet,” you continue, voice wavering as you visibly swallow the urge to cry. “He – he said he could save me. Would take me to his nice house and protect me. Said he’d treat me like a goddess.”
Ghost snorts spitefully. “Did he?”
You scowl at him. “Yes, he did.”
A knife of guilt plunges through his sternum, a truly unfamiliar sting.
Did you love him?
He cannot fathom that you could have. Not after that repulsive tirade, so unbearable to hear he felt compelled to execute him just to make it stop. He thought he had done you a favour. Still mostly believes he has.
“Didn’t sound like it,” Ghost remarks derisively.
You chew your lip. “It’s your fault he snapped,” you murmur, under breath. Doesn’t sound like you believe what you’re saying. “He was – he was good to me.”
He sniffs, licks his teeth. “You had bruises.”
“Fucking ‘course I have bruises, you tortured me.” You hiss.
Shakes his head. “Before,” he ripostes. “You had bruises on your collarbone. On your thighs. From him, eh?”
You bite down on your tongue, he sees your eyes well. Must have prodded a sore spot.
“What is this? What do you want me to say? Do you want me to tell you he beat me so you feel better about murdering him?”
That sparks his anger.
“You think that would make me feel better?” He barks, “I feel fucking fantastic. Shooting that cunt is the best thing I’ve done all week.”
“You’re sick,” you breathe.
“I’m sick? Do you know what your fuckin’ husband did? Do you know what he was?”
“He was a businessman,” you utter, unconvincingly.
“He was a mass-fucking-murderer. He started a war. You wanna know what the body count for that is?”
You fall quiet. Shivering and tearful. But you listen.
“Your husband was busy building bombs. Chemical weapons. Busy selling explosives to fucking terrorist militias in the middle east. Paid for the bombings in London last year. I’m fuckin’ proud that I shot him, whether or not he beat you.”
You’re ghostly. Blood drained completely from your apple cheeks. Your mouth opens to sip a trembling breath, and your tears begin their cascade.
“I didn’t know,” you whimper.
“’Course you didn’t,” he chides doubtfully.
You heave in a whining sob, tears dripping off your chin as you plunge your face against your knees. Was that your last straw, little thing?
“I didn’t,” you stutter, snivelling. “I – I knew he… he was an arms dealer. Just an arms dealer.”
He’s nauseated at the sight of you sobbing so sorely. Finds himself wondering you look like when you smile.
“He was a warlord.”
You sob, dropping your knees open so you sit cross-legged, Ghost’s eyes shoot between your legs. Get a fucking grip. Watching you cry and still stealing his glances? Can’t help it. You cry too pretty.
You move the focus of your self-mutilation from your toes to your fingernails, picking off the lacquer. You sniffle quietly for a minute, and he lets you. What else can he say to you? He’s not much interested in comforting you.
But there’s an ache, sharp and yet nebulous. The acknowledgement that you didn’t know the extent of your husband’s evil. That he likely kept it hidden from you. Or you, hidden from it. That your torture was fruitless and extraneous. Cruelty for the sake of it.
“What happens now,” you ask, near-whisper.
Ghost leans forward, propping his elbows on his knees, lets his hands hang nonchalantly. “Still got one use for you.”
Your stare lands on him carefully. You breathe as though preparing yourself, a tear lands in the corner of your parted lips. You uncross your legs, hanging them slowly off the edge of the bed, hands turn to fists on your knees.
“I thought you weren’t interested,” you squeak.
Ghost’s jaw clenches inadvertently, biting down on nothing. Knows what you’re implying. Do you think he’s here to rape you? Here to unwrap you, to tear off that tissue that barely conceals the prize?
His glower is probably serving as evidence. Boring into you with a hunger beyond his control. Jesus. Control yourself.
He could do it. Fulfil your suggestion, accept your offers. Play the role of the lecherous hound you believe him to be.
You’d let him.
You’d lie face down on that bed for him. You’d let him hitch up your hips, presenting your soft pussy for him to take. You’d let him rake down those pathetic pink knickers. You’d let him spit on his fingers and push them into you, to prepare you for the incursion of his spiteful cock. He’d curl and drive them deep, he’d make sure your pussy releases a spate of its sweet liquor just for him.
You’d probably whine sweetly – in pain, at first, as he penetrates you, as your cunt stretches to fit him. But those muffled whimpers into the mattress would evolve into cries of shameful rapture, poignantly humiliated by how good it feels when he fucks you. He’d fuck you slowly. Deeply. He’d make sure the blunt head of his cock rams into that aching spot that makes you squeal.
He’d coat his thumb in your syrup, he’d press the pad of it against your puckered hole. He’d listen to your cloying noises as he pushes it, popping past your tight, clenching entrance, easing it in until he’s knuckle deep. He’d feel his cock rutting in and out of you, through the thin fleshy wall between your holes. He’d feel it cinch so tightly around his thumb, pulsing in rhythm with the abashing orgasm that he fucks out of you. He’d threaten to pump you full of his come, and when you only mewl wetly in response, no dispute, fucked drunk; he’d oblige you.
He’d let you think he’s finished. He’d give you a moment to breathe, as he pulls out of you, as his hot come drips from you, coating your thighs. Your pussy would look too pretty drenched in a concoction of your fluids and his, twitching still in the aftershock.
So he’d flip you, hoist up your soft body by the hips as he sucks your cunt into his mouth. He’d eat another orgasm out of you, voracious and messy, he’d swallow it, and continue; just to feel you writhe in dispute of the overstimulation, just to listen to the squeals of contest that squeak from your wet throat.
He’d leave you choking, panting for air, as he allows you to recover. He’d let you sleep, and he’d know that you’d dream of him.
You fucking animal.
Pulled back to reality by a shivering sigh from your chest - he’s repulsed by himself. Reels in self-loathing as his cock jolts behind his trousers, swelling in anticipation of a crime he won’t commit.
His peers have chastised him for being a beast. An uncaring monster. The kind of animal that would fuck you while you cry, that would take pride in making it hurt.
They’re wrong.
You simply look at him, pupils stretched wide and dark, glassy with worry. Your cunt might be pulsing in between the thighs you hold together so tightly, readying itself for him, preparing for the worst.
No, little rabbit, he wouldn’t do that to you. Not unless you beg him for it.
So he leans back in his seat, feigning disinterest, hoping you don’t notice the turgid heat that radiates from him.
“Not that, sweetheart,” he sighs hoarsely. “We’ve got a more important use for you.”
![Houndtooth [7]](https://64.media.tumblr.com/b93f25825f2c66d6d55c05a35bf78045/0fa35e7a03ddac1a-5e/s500x750/7c863e2279b9b7017d14ec333a994d94ed2c0d3c.png)
here's your tag bestie: @rafaelacallinybbay