I Was Supposed To Be Doing Real Work Today And Instead This Happened. She's Going To Climb Him Like A
I was supposed to be doing real work today and instead this happened. She's going to climb him like a tree
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More Posts from Venusswhite
Hello! May I request an angsty toji fic where reader finds out she's pregnant (post megumi) and she knows toji doesn't want anymore children so she just kinda leaves with little to no explanation? Maybe just a small note saying things aren't working out. It's up to you if it will be a hurt/comfort. Idk you don't have to do this request I don't want to overload you! I seriously love your writing. The way you right the character just warms my heart. I especially love ur hiding an Injury fic it was SO SO SO GOOD. đ©¶đ€đ€
âpromiseâ
toji fushiguro x reader
Synopsis: see above
to sum it up: you think itâs better to run away than to be the one to get hurt
WC: 5,668
Warning(s): angst, suggestive themes, yelling, pregnancy, mentions of abortion
You stare down at the plastic tube clutched in your trembling hands in awe, eyes blown with shocked grief as you peer closer to get a better look, as though those two bright pink lines could have been a trick of your vision.
Unfortunately, however, your vision remains just as crystal clear as it always has been. As you stand in your cramped apartment bathroom, illuminated by a flickering fluorescent gaze shining down from above, horror befalls you.
Youâre pregnant.
You should have known sooner when you began feeling queasy every morning, taking trips to either your or Tojiâs toilet to hurl out the contents of whatever swam inside your stomach. You always tried to be silent if Toji was around, for he slept like a dog that could not be woken even if a meteor struck earth, and you had been remarkably exhausted. You arenât even sure if there is a word to describe how sluggish your entire mind and body had been feeling, but you wanted to rule out the very obvious answer to your problems before exploring it.
You begin to panic, your heart pounding in your ears and throat and every inch of your body you could feel the pulse, eyes blurry over the positive test. Youâre conflicted. You donât know how to feel. On the one hand, you would have been jumping for joy to learn that you are starting a new life with your boyfriend, to step into a new chapter of your lives and to provide his children with another sibling.
But hell, the celebration is far too naive and implausible to be had. The sage eyed man has told you time and time again that he does not wish to have anymore kids, that the ones he has are enough and he is not equipped financially or mentally to care for another brat. In honor of those wishes, youâre on the pill, and consequently, Toji has taken the opportunity to plow his load inside of you time after time after time.
And you really, truly should have known that with Tojiâs uniquely abled body, what was meant to serve as a barrier and a means of contraception did not work.
You feel like throwing up. What would Toji say? What would he do? What are you supposed to do? Should you tell him, fill him in on whatâs going on to risk rejection and abandonment, a nasty habit that Toji had to work to rid himself of when he met you? Would he even care? Would he listen?
You know Toji to be a very tough man, despite the softened interior he attempts to hide in othersâ company that is only displayed for you and for his kids. If he has always been adamant about one thing, itâs been to never have kids again, to focus on where he fucked up before and to pour his attention into the little family heâs grown, the one that he has now.
His voice echoes through your head like the gong of a church bell striking upon the earâs of a sinner.
âHell, I already got my hands full tryna get Megumi through his teenage years. What the hell is another child gonna do for us?â
âThat shitâs fuckinâ expensive. Not to mention, Iâd have to baby proof the house again. Thatâs another expense.â
âIf I was capable of givinâ you yâer own, I would, doll. But I ainât cut out for it. You know that.â
You donât even know why he would stress the matter so often. You suppose heâs caught the way your eyes linger on a mother tossing their giggling baby up and down into the air, innocent pools of joy beaming down at her each time it reaches the air and lands in her secure hold. Or maybe heâs seen the way you care so deeply for Tojiâs kids as though they are your own, despite telling you when you first got involved with each other that he did not expect you to step into their lives in anyway - and yet, you have done that and more. You know how the kids must struggle each day with the trauma of losing their mother so early on, and you never wanted them to think that you were trying to step in as her replacement, but you love them so clearly, as much as you love the man who created them.
Which leads you to your next concern. How would the kids react?
Itâs one thing for you, as their fatherâs girlfriend, to wander into their lives and help navigate them their teenage hood alongside the dark haired man, but to introduce an entire other child only leaves a sour taste in your mouth.
They may be crushed. They me turn to hate you, to despise how you have contaminated the life they have worked so hard to rebuild after numerous tragedies. And would Toji agree with them? Would he turn his nose up to you, that scowl of his melting over his harsh features as he shuns you just as he shunned every other woman who came after his wife and before you. Would he leave you? Would he kick you out of the world that has become your own because you failed to live up to your promise, though it technically isnât your fault that you are pregnant now but it feels as though it is?
You can not stand the thought, of the man you love turning his once loving gaze stone upon the sight of you, of him pushing you further away, permanently, in the same manner that he tried to when he realized that he was falling in love with you, of watching Megumi and Tsumiki turn their backs to you as though the past four years of your lives had never happened, banning you from their acceptance forever more.
Tears well in your gaze, interfering with your vision. This can not be happening, you think to yourself, everything has been going so well, and now this? This is going to ruin your relationship with Toji for good. Even if you were not in a committed relationship with him, you assume that the idea of any woman getting impregnated by Toji would have been thrown away. You would be thrown away, just like all the others who gave Toji their bodies but not their hearts.
Not the way you have.
Your heart clenches thinking of just how much you love Toji and the kids, of how you would be willing to lay down your own life for the sake of them as Toji swears that he would for you all in return. Even so, despite the commitment to you that a man who swore never to be committed to accustomed, this would be going too far.
âŠYouâre not even sure if he would love you anymore.
Now that youâre pregnant with his child, a child he never meant to have with you, you assume you will mean nothing to him any longer. In his eyes, you will simply become the slut that he took a chance on by a whim, carrying something he would never call his own. You believe the old Toji will resurface, the one who claimed not to care, the one who shoved women out of his bedroom before the sun rose in the sky, the one who often failed to remember to pick his kids up from school, the one who would no longer meet you at eye level but look down upon you, frown upon you for being so clumsy.
You know Toji is the one who did this, but this still feels like it is your doing. Like somehow, you trapped him and he now has no choice but to break free from the steel cage you have barred around him with your conception.
Your fingers clutch over the plastic, your eyes scrunching closed to release a fresh set of tears that cascade over your cheeks and onto the test. You can feel yourself mourning your relationship already, you can feel it slipping through your fingers, see it fading in the distance until it becomes nothing but a bittersweet memory that you can not determine as reality or a figment of your imagination any longer.
You tilt your head, bringing the test to your forehead as you think, grieve, cry. You mull over your options; you could hide this from Toji, get an abortion and never think of it again or you could tell Toji and lose him forever.
You open your bleary eyes, lashes decked with dewy tears, as another idea dawns upon you. You could leave, leave before Toji and the kids have a chance to leave you.
Itâs a cruel thought, you think, especially abandoning those children without any proper explanation for them, but what else are you meant to do? Youâd be doing them all a favor if anything by taking your leave without them having to be plagued by the knowledge of your unplanned pregnancy, of what they may view as a scheme to destroy their family in your new babyâs wake.
The thought kills you to even entertain. You had promised those kids that you werenât going anywhere, that youâd stay with them for as long as they allowed you⊠but this is different. This is not what any of you had in your cards, how you believed your futures to go. Toji wants simplicity at home while he works through chaos through his occupation. He wants security, warmth, safety for you, Megumi, Tsumiki, and no one else. He would never welcome another child. You believe heâd be caught dead before approving of your pregnancy.
And therefore, you know what you have to do.
After taking a few more tests to ensure that the readings are accurate, which they are, you pledge to walk away. You pledge to leave the only man youâve ever truly loved, the strongest family youâve known, and the slim possibility that despite Tojiâs wishes, he may accept you.
But you donât want to take that chance and risk the humiliation and unplanned heartbreak. Youâd much rather take matters into your own hands, and plan the shattering of your soul yourself.
You donât sleep all night, for youâre too busy drafting about twenty different letters to Toji. Crumpled loosleaf paper litters the floor beside your bed as you try to think of how to best write down everything you want to say. You go through pages and pages until you are finally satisfied with the result, and the next morning, you slip the envelope into his mail slot and prepare to pack your life away.
It is late Sunday morning when Toji rises from his slumber. The first thing he does is lean over the sheets and drape his arm toward his nightstand to read your daily good morning text - only he finds there isnât one. With pinched brows, he takes his phone to unlock it and visit your contact. Nothing.
The time reads 12:35 pm. Normally, youâre up and at it or even banging down his door by then to wake him. Maybe youâre just sleeping in?
He goes to give your cell a call, but nothing. Not only that, but your phone is also on do not disturb mode. His gut immediately swells with the suspicion that something is wrong. The dark haired assassin supposes heâs going to pay you a visit this afternoon as soon as he checks on the kids to ensure that they are alright.
His bedroom door opens with a creak, and he calls out to the teens gruffly through a yawn. When they donât respond, heâs truly growing concerned.
He rounds the corner to prepare to head for their rooms when he finds Tsumiki and Megumi at the dining table. His brows furrow, his pace slowing as he takes in their faces. Tsumikiâs lips are pressed together tightly and the muscles in her face are scrunched as though she is about to cry, while Megumi stares ahead with empty eyes and a hardened exterior.
Toji frowns with quirked brows, approaching his kids. âWhatâs wrong with you two?â
His brunette daughter looks up at him with glassy eyes and wrinkled chin, lashes fluttering while Megumi does not bother to look at his father. Instead, he brings Tojiâs attention to a torn envelope and a thick packet of papers pressed beneath the sixteen year oldâs palm. Wordlessly, Megumi slides it toward him, brows slanting.
Toji, perplexed, looks between the papers and his childrenâs troubled faces. What is this letter? Overdue taxes? An eviction notice? That canât be possible, because you had ensured that Toji and the kidsâ place was secure long ago.
He crunches the papers in his hands and picks them up to read. The first thing that catches his eye is your scribbling handwriting, and the following words that send his heart plummeting to his ass:
This isnât working out.
Toji whips his head up, baffled, and when he meets Megumiâs gaze again, his eyes are ablaze with resentment.
âWhat the hell did you do?â he growls.
The green eyed man is not even thinking before heâs dialing Shiuâs number, asking him to watch the kids for the next hour or so, and running out of the apartment after throwing rather unconvincing words of assurance over his shoulder to his kids, who are still with disbelief - Tsumiki with devastation and Megumi with rage, for surely his father pushed you away.
Toji does not bother finding a ride, electing to run to your place which is only a few blocks away. You two were just discussing moving in with one another, combining households, and this is what you spring onto him? Not even for him to stumble across first, but his kids who look up to you and love you like their own mother?
Oh, heâs fuming, a rush of emotions taking over his mind as it fuels his speed. The letter you wrote is still crunched in his fist, whipping through the air as he makes his way to you.
Dear Toji,
This is not working out.
But before you rampage and get angry with me, please let me explain. Let me explain how much I love you, how much those kids mean to me, and how every day I wake up I want to be greeted by all of your smiling faces. For the rest of time, forever. You are undoubtedly the only man for me, and I truly believe that. I know you may think Iâm bullshitting because of how the beginning of this letter contradicts what im saying now, but itâs true. I have never loved another person the way I love you, and while it scared me at first when you were so stubborn and full of anger that you misdirected onto me, I stayed and I waited and I helped you and Iâve loved you through every single moment, ever week, every month, and every year. You brought purpose back into my life, and I can picture you scoffing because youâd say the same, but I mean it. You, Tsumiki, and Megumi are the best things that have ever happened to me. I love you all so much.
But in this case, that love is not enough.
I hate to be doing this to you, to the kids, but I have no other choice. Things arenât going the way they used to, and itâs not your fault but mine. Iâm the reason. And it is tearing me apart to know that and simultaneously know what I have to do in order to keep you and the kids happy. Stable. I wish I could explain to you more why I am doing this, but I canât. Not just because I am dying to picture you reading this, but because I truly can not say. I do not want to ruin you guysâ image of me. While I think thatâs a selfish thing to say because who knows how me leaving is going to hurt you all, you would not understand even if you knew the reason behind this.
By the time you are done reading this, I will be gone. Iâm going away because as long as I am not with you all, I canât stay here anymore. I am staying with my mother while I get my travel plans arranged, because I know how you worry when you do not know where I am or if im safe. I should be gone by Friday.
Please do not come see me. I have made my decision, and you will only be hurting us more by trying to stop me. I wonât be stopped.
Kiss and hug and apologize to Megumi and Tsumiki for me. I hope you find someone who fills the role of their mother, someone who knows how Megumi likes to do his homework in the silence of his room with no music or anything, completely isolated so he can focus. Someone who knows how to fix Tsumikiâs eggs properly - to add extra butter to the sides when you fry them so the edges get crispier. Someone who wonât try to feed Gumiâa demidogs because he hates when people assume they can coddle up to them upon first introduction. Someone who cares for the wholly the way I do and always will.
And you. I know how stubborn you are. I know how angry you probably are at me right now, and I will miss that about you, but please do not let that interfere with the possibility of falling in love again. Beneath the layers of grit, standoffishness, and indifference, you are a man with a big heart. For me. For your kids. For those you love and seek to protect.
You say you arenât a good man, and while that may be true to you, you are an amazing partner and youâve already become an amazing parent. Iâve seen you grow, and I am so in love with you and so proud of you. I know youâll be okay without me. It maybe take some time, but youâll adjust to whatâs best. I promise.
With all the love that could possibly be harbored in this world, you are everything to me and that is why I have to go. I wish you every happiness this planet can offer you, and I know that without me, you can begin to find joy again.
Love,
Your doll
You had believed to time this perfectly, for you know that Toji usually does not wake until one, so soon as you are finishing up packing, you are trudging down the stairs to the leasing office to inform them that you will be moving.
You push open the door to the first floor, the breeze hitting you gently, and you round the corner only to be blocked by the last person you wanted to run into during this time.
Your eyes widen as you look up, the burly figure you have grown oh so familiar with over the years heaving as though enraged, ivy eyes crowding over slim pupils as Toji glares down at you, an image of indescribable fury.
Your heart drops and your words die in your throat. âT-Toji?â you whisper, horrified of an outburst. You are rattled by fear, having been so unprepared to walk into this. You did not put it past him to chase you down. But you figured that youâd be at your parents by the time he woke. Then, you could have at least told them to tell him off at the door.
But no. Instead, here he is, six feet and then some of bulking mass as he takes quick, deep breaths that expand the entirety of his chest.
You shift. âWhat are you doing here-â
âWhat the fuck is this?â
Toji swiftly, yet aggressively, lifts the papers in his hands, now damaged by his travels and his grip, shaking it firmly with the question. You gulp, lowering your eyes.
âToji, I told you not to comeâŠâ
âDonât you fucking dare,â he swears firmly, and you jump, looking to see if anyone is around to hear you, as the two of you are standing outside your complex.
âWe shouldnât be- letâs just go inside,â you go to grab his arm, but he tears it away. He stares at you as though you have burned him, singed the heart in his chest from the inside out, and he is so unforgiving. So unforgiving before he hears directly from your mouth what this is about.
âIâm not doinâ shit until you tell me what the fuck this is, (Y/n),â he demands, his hand moving the papers about passionately with his speech, and you feel your heart hammering again. This is not how things were supposed to go. You are not supposed to be seeing him right now. âCause I refuse- I fuckinâ refuse to believe that youâre breaking up with me.â
Your eyes gloss over as you look down at your feet, unsure of what to do or how to handle this confrontation. You canât do this. You canât, itâs too much. Itâs too hard.
ââŠI am,â you mumble.
Toji steps forward, leaning down to get a peek of your face, his expression so angry that it worries you. âWhat?â
âI said⊠I am.â
âUh uh, you better say that shit with your chest if you can write a whole damn letter about it,â he growls, fucking further as you continue to turn away. âLook at me,â he barks, and you cringe.
âToji, donât yell at me!â you shout back.
âWhat else doâya want me to do, huh?â he throws his hands up. âHow else do you expect me to react to this bullshit?! Youâre leavinâ me? After everythinâ we been through, after everythinâ you and the kidsâve been through, youâre leavin? Are you fuckinâ serious?â
He takes a swift glance at the papers, the very sight sending him into a spiral, before heâs heatedly looking back down at you.
âI donât buy this shit for one second. No. Youâre not leavinâ. Not in this world, or the next.â
âI am, Toji, the quicker you accept that, the easier itâll be for everyone!â
âEasy?â he winces as though the prospect pains him. âYou call this shit easy? You call up and tryinâ to abandon me easy? You call the kids waking up to your letter and reading it at the table before I saw it easy?â
Your face falls. ââŠwhat?â
âYeah. You fuckinâ heard me,â he sneers. âMegumi and Tsumiki read this shit first. First thing in the morning, they see a letter about how the woman they love is leavinâ âem, just like their mom did, and for what?â
You close your eyes, his words stinging you as they cut through. âDonât say that.â
âWhy not? Itâs true, ainât it? Yâer leavinâ us, (Y/n), and you didnât even have the decency to say why!â
Guilt crowds you, like a blanket of darkness consuming you from overhead, and as Toji stands before you completely torn apart by your letter, you see the fear in his eyes, the sadness, the unspoken plea for you not to go.
You try your best to keep your composure as you turn away again. âI told you, I canât tell you.â
âFuck that,â he lifts the letter and tosses it to the ground with a thud. You gasp, watching it slam to the concrete pavement.
âToji!â you exclaim.
âYou think you can just leave without me cominâ to hunt you down and see your face so I can figure out what the hell is goinâ on? You must not know me at all.â
âWhy do you always have to be so aggressive about everything?!â
âOf all fuckinâ things, (Y/n), I think I got a right to be aggressive about this. You were gonna leave without sayinâ goodbye!â he tosses his arm out to the side with the exclamation, brows twisting and teeth bearing. âIs that what our relationship means tâya? You think you can just toss us aside?â
âThatâs not what Iâm doing,â you beg, a lump forming in your throat as the two of you stand face to face, arguing without a car about who will see you.
âThen tell me,â he shouts. âCause youâre not givinâ me shit to go off of!â
âI told you already, I canât,â your lips quiver.
âThen our relationship is nothing to you.â
âNo, Toji.â
âClearly it ainât, cause Iâd think itâd be worth an explanation if youâre runninâ away!â you frown and shake your head, turning to walk back into the complex when Toji cuts you off, moving in your way. âYou donât think I know you? You donât think I see it all over your face that somethinâs got you scared, and yâre takinâ off because of it? You think I donât know what that looks like, (Y/n)? I did that shit. I did it all the damn time before I met you, and hell, I tried to run then but you wouldnât let me, so what the hell makes you think Iâm gonna let you now?â
âThis is different,â you say shortly, afraid to reveal the tremble of your voice to the man before you. You keep your gaze down as you try to go around him again, but to no avail. He steps in your path. âStop!â
âI ainât stoppinâ,â he says gravely, keeping his eyes to yours though you try to avoid contact with them. âNot until you spit it out. Iâll be damned if I got another broken home cause yâre fuckinâ scared.â
âI said stop!â you try to find some bass in your voice, but against your will, it falters when you yell. Toji eyes you carefully, reaching his hand out to grip your shoulder and steady you into place.
You scoff, attempting to pull away, but itâs no use. The dark haired man is everywhere, keeping you from walking away.
âYou talk to me like the grown ass woman you are,â he tells you sternly, stepping in. âYou use that voice I know you have, and donât you ever let me catch you writinâ a letter to me about how you wanna break up instead of cominâ to talk to me. Yâunderstand?â
You exhale shakily, lips pressing together and brows curling. âI canât.â
âYâre still not tellinâ me why you think that.â
âBecause I canât, Toji. I canât tell you. Itâll- itâll fuck up everything!â you break, and Toji feels the pit in his stomach shift as he looks over your aggrieved expression, depicting the same exact things he feels.
â(Y/n),â he calls your name firmly, the sound of it on his tongue only inspiring the urge to cry more. You continue to shake your head though Toji isnât exactly speaking, and his green eyes wander you with frustrated concern. âYâscared of what Iâll do if you tell me?â
You freeze, slowly peeling your eyes to look at his, his face tense with grief. You stare at him for a moment, mouth gaping like a fish as all of your insecurities that talked you toward this ledge run through your mind once more.
âDonât look surprised,â he says. âI know you like the back of my hand, and I know that you knew Iâd be over here to stop ya.â
Your frown deepens, and this time as you look at him, you see every second of your future that you were quick to stomp dow. You see the unbridled, unfiltered love he holds for you as well as the blood curdling fear of letting you go.
âYou have to understand,â you whimper. âI know how youâll react, I- I canât do this to you. You have to let me go.â
âWhat the hell could be so horrifyinâ in that head of yours to make you think that I wonât stick with ya through hell and high water?â he grits out, searching your swollen hues of (e/c) hesitation. âYouâd do the same for me.â
âI know, but-â
âThereâs nothinâ else to say. I ainât leavinâ until you spill, and when you do, yâre cominâ with me.â
You look at him, pained. Itâs a trap, you think. If Toji only knew, heâd be running for the hills instead of trying to track you down.
âOut with it, now.â
You canât. You canât tell him. Heâll leave you, heâll reject you, heâll turn you away, heâll never let you see the kids again.
â(Y/n)!â
âIâm pregnant!â
The earth seems to freeze and time seems to slow. You scrunch your eyes, anticipating the worst to come as Toji takes in your words, his tensed expression melting slowly.
You donât open your eyes to see his reaction. You keep your head ducked and your fists closed as the white noise of nature flutters into relevance. Youâre trembling, terrified, and Toji can not move but instead proceeds to stare at you, stunned.
His words about not wanting any more kids run through your mind again as you await his response, and the suspense kills you as you do. You can feel his grip on your shoulder slacken before tightening again, and you are terrified.
Heâs going to leave you.
You are quick to step away when the sentiment arises once more, Tojiâs hand falling from you arm. âIâm sorry,â you whisper, still unable to look at him. âIâm sorry, I know that you donât want any more kids. I know, an I thought we were being careful, but- I took five tests. Theyâre all positive.â
âYouâre pregnant?â he echoes, and you still. You knew it. You knew this would happen.
âI told you, Toji,â you exhale. âI told you that I couldnât tell you, and now everythingâs a mess.â
He twitches. âHold on-â
âDonât tell me all of a sudden you want kids,â you snap. âI know how strongly you feel about it.â
âSo instead of talkinâ to me, you were gonna leave? Knocked up? That doesnât make any sense.â
âWhat other choice do I have?!â you cry. âYou donât want more kids, and if I kept it, it would only be a nuisance to you. And Megumi and Tsumiki?â
He scrunches his face. âWhat about âem?â
âHow do you think theyâd feel if the woman youâre dating after their mother died surprised them with a new baby? Theyâd be crushed!â you say shakily as salty tears well in your eyes again. âI canât overstep your boundaries. I just canât. Itâs easier for me to go.â
âAnd do what, (Y/n)? Raise a kid on your own without any help?â
âI canât bare you leaving me!â you suddenly confess, tear striking past your cheek.
Toji examines you and frowns. âWhat are yâtalkinâ about? Youâre tryinâ to leave me!â
âSo I can prevent the inevitable from happening,â you huff. âIâm okay with it. Iâve made peace with everything. Thatâs why you need to just let me go-â
âAfter everythinâ, you think Iâd throw you away because youâre pregnant with my kid?â Toji says incredulously. You falter, for you had been so sure of his reaction before. âYou think that low of me?â
âNo, but I want you to have what you want.â
âWhat I want is you, you fuckinâ idiot,â he hisses. âAll I ever wanted was you, and I canât fuckinâ believe youâre tryinâ to take that away from me.â
You furrow your brows, confused. ââŠYouâre not mad?â
âGirl, Iâm livid,â he scowls. âNot about the damn kid, but because you assumed what I would say before cominâ to me.â
âToji, you have to understand that I was trying to look out for you.â
âThereâs not lookinâ out for me or those kids or makinâ them happy if youâre gone, (Y/n),â he bites. âWho thâfuck put that idea in your head?â
You stammer, tears proceeding to flow down your face as you reel in the reality of the situation. âI⊠I just thought-â
âI donât wanna hear it.â
Before you can respond, his hand is gripping your wrist and heâs tugging you toward him into his chest. You shake when you fall into him, listening to the pace of his heart rapidly beating against your ear as he breaths quickly against you. Large palms smooth over your head and down to your waist as he holds you tightly, and you notice how desperate his grip is. Heâs holding you like heâs afraid youâll disappear, as though youâll fly away if his hold is not tight enough.
He tucks his head into your neck, fingers grasping into your shirt, and suddenly the animosity of the moment prior is gone. Youâre still trembling, leading Toji to hold you tighter to him.
âCanât believe you tried to leave,â he murmurs into your hair. âChrist, (Y/n) youâre tryinâ to gimme a heart attack. The fuck is goinâ on with you.â
âIâm sorry,â you mumble into his chest, looking off sadly. âI thought youâd be upset about it. I didnât want you to know.â
âI should know about any and every single thing thatâs goinâ on with you, yâhear me? This ainât no exception.â
A weight flutters from your shoulders as you sink into Tojiâs head, silent tears streaming for the life you almost sacrificed. âWhat are we gonna do?â
âI dunno,â he mumbles. âBut weâll figure it out. As a team. Alright?â
You nod meekly. âOkay.â
He groans, pressing himself impossibly further to you. âThat letter⊠fuck, donât do that shit. Donât fuckinâ scare me like that. Without you, I ainât shit- pregnant or not. And those kids would adore another sibling if you were bringing it into this world. Donât say that shit about them again either. They need ya. We need ya.â
âIâm sorry,â you whine again, Tojiâs hand stroking over your back soothingly.
âItâs okay,â he grumbles. âWeâll figure it out.â
Simple Math / Part Seventeen
Simple Math masterlist
Ghost/Soap/female reader - AO3 - 4K words Tags: 18+ mdni. nurse!reader. PTSD, references and descriptions of domestic violence , grooming, manipulation, pregnancy. Simon's back story. Trauma. Bun opens up a bit more. Domesticity, feelings of anxiety, self doubt. Simon is a nervous dad. Emotional confessions.
âItâs Beth.â Simon wipes the countertop, chasing little dirty fingerprints with a wet cloth, before fixing a hesitant set of eyes on yours.
âThatâs pretty⊠I like it.â Thereâs something odd about his expression, something haunted almost, a deep, dark well filled to the brim with rancid, stagnant water. You sense it immediately. âWhatâs wrong?â
He motions to the chair and slides your mug into your waiting hands. âSit.â
âSimon?â
âIt was my sister in lawâs name. My brotherâs wife.â Was. Your throat goes dry, muscles tensing.
âWas?â He pulls your fingers into his, cradled in the palm of his hand, thumb rubbing circles into your skin, over and over on a loop. A mechanism of comfort, connection. A thread stitch into the fabric between your heart and his.
âThey died, sweetheart. My family⊠I lost them.â Grief, a shared experience you know now, froths in the pit of your heart. You tremble, he holds you steady, though it should be the other way around.
âWhat⊠what happened?â He sighs, dragging your palm to his lips.
âLetâs sit down on the couch.â
He holds you as he talks, diaphragm rumbling against your ear. Youâre laid on his chest, unable to see his face, watch his expressions, but for this, you donât feel the urge to dissect each one.
Youâre content against him. Listening. Mourning.
Thereâs a swath of silence afterwards, and then he clears his throat. âSo, I was dead. Dead until I met Johnny, I think. And then everything changed.â Johnnyâs words from weeks and weeks ago make more sense, Simonâs actions and reactions rapidly gaining clarity. âWhen we found you, I saw it, the look in your eyes. It was the same one that used to haunt my motherâs.â
âYou saved her.â He burrows his face in your neck and shakes his head.
âI did what I could to piece them back together. Helped get Tommy clean and on his feet, got rid of the old man for good, but the damage⊠the way she suffered, it was irreversible. The best I could do was be there as much as often as possible.â You comb through his hair, short strands of silk like Pennyâs, and hold him close. âI promised myself, when I met Johnny, when we fell in love, Iâd do better by my own family. For him, and then by Penny. And now you. Promised I wouldnât become him.â Your heart clenches, squeezing in on itself. âViolence may have been a part of my job, but it wasnât a part of me.â His fingers dance along your spine until they reach your chin, tilting you back to meet his gaze. âDo you understand?â
âYes.â You whisper, leaning into his touch. He doesnât need to ask for your trust, he already has it.
âJohnny thinks Iâve got a bit of a savior complex now, but I want you to know⊠thatâs not what this is, bunny.â
âI know,â you clear your throat, fighting through the thick of emotion building there, accumulating in heaps, âI know that.â Â
âBut we do need to talk about him, you know that?â Darkness creeps along the wispy, dream-like cocoon the two of you built on the couch, and you push it away, try to banish it, basking in the comfort of his arms instead.
âI canât, I⊠right now it feels like Iâm in a dream where nothing hurts and nothing can scare me or hurt me, and I donât-â
âYouâre not in a dream, bunny. Thatâs your reality. This is real. Nothing can, or will, hurt you, scare you. No one will ever touch you again.â
âI need more time. Please.â Simon sighs, but doesnât push, and the two of you lay there, together, suspended in comforting silence. For another moment, your world is a dream. A safe, beautiful dream, where happy endings are real, where love stretches on for eternity, unconditional, limitless, unbreakable.
Youâre so different now, stark changes shocking to the girl you once knew, the one who doubled back on her routes to and from work, the one that walked everywhere with her hackles up. Little pieces of black rot now turned a blinding white, a brilliant beam seeking to shine on the whole of your life.
Itâs a dream.
One you wonât easily surrender.
âI was really young.â It comes during a lapse in conversation, practically a blurt, an interruption pushing heat to your cheeks. Expelled from your mind, your body without choice, cracks appearing in the preservation that youâve so defiantly clung to. You have to tell them, eventually. You have to break it all apart, let them see. Johnnyâs mouth opens, and Simonâs hand darts to his wrist faster than a snake could strike, a clear signal. Donât speak. âObviously now, looking back on it, I realize I was groomed, or I guess, easily influenced. He was older, and I graduated early, started college early. I was in my second year when I turned eighteen. My mom,â the lump in your throat nearly chokes you until you swallow it down, âmy mom busted her ass for me. I went to college on scholarships and her hard work.â Metal clanks against ceramic, forks settling on the edges of plates. âAnyway, everyone always thought I was a know-it-all and pretty awkward. We werenât officially like, together right away but it was pretty serious from the day I met him. Eventually⊠he started to change me. Change my goals. He even manipulated my career path.â
âWhat did you go to school for?â Simon asks casually, head tilted.
âBioscience. I wanted to be a doctor, so I thought it would transition well for med school. Thought I could become a surgeon.â You were a girl then; you know that now. NaĂŻve, misguided by a hand that sought to control you, not love you as you hoped. Itâs embarrassing, baring this, showing these broken bits and pieces to them, shattered shards of a mirror never glued back together.
âWhat happened?â
âHe did.â Johnny squeezes your hand. âMade it to pre-med but ended up leaving and starting a nursing program instead. Itâs what he wanted, and by then, I couldnât say no.â
âBut ye didnae want it, to be a nurse.â
âNo. I didnât. I love my job now, of course, and Iâm happy in it, but originally, I wanted something else. He tricked me, in all honesty. Showed me something that wasnât real, reeled me in, and then revealed his true colors.â You shudder. âThe first time⊠the first time it happened, I shook it off, forgave him. I-â the memory is still so strong, it stuns you. The blood from your busted lip is fresh on your tongue, sting on the side of your face turning to a blooming ache.
âBunny?â Johnnyâs grip moves to your elbow, strong, but not too tight. An anchor. You shake your head.
âSorry.â
âYeâre alright, ye can stop if-â
âNo, I⊠I want to share these things with you. It feels like Iâm supposed to, like you should know me⊠like this.â
âWe already know you, sweetheart. Donât push yourself.â Simonâs tone is serious, and you nod.
âItâs embarrassing, looking back on it and realizing how bad it was, how bad I let it get. How I let him cut me off from everyone, change my career, squash me like a bug.â You laugh, but itâs empty.
âYe did nothinâ wrong,â Johnnyâs lips press together, muscles in his jaw straining, âwas never yer fault.â You donât answer, just trace the woodgrain of the table, texture moving beneath your fingers. The conversation is draining you, leeching light away like a horizon swallowing the last of the sun.
âHeâs rich. Like, fuck you money rich. Rich like make problems go away rich, and his jobâŠâ your head shakes again. Itâs the most youâve ever said, heavy buried secrets finally dug up, resurrected, the truth trembles through your bones. âHe has resources. Has chased me across the globe more than once. My only saving grace is that when he has to work, he has to work, and itâs usually for long chunks of time.â
âI know youâve said youâre not really sure, but did he ever tell you what his job entails?â
âHeâs in the military. Some sort of security work, department of defense, or something. He never really talked about it.â Johnny shifts in his seat, antsy, and you shrug. âHe kept that part of his life very, very private. There was even a room in the house that was always locked.â Your head is heavy, lead upon your shoulders, and Johnny tucks his arm around you, pulling you into his chest.
âI know this is hard bun, but yeâre so brave for us. Lettinâ us know ye this way. Iâm proud of ye.â He murmurs, lips to your forehead, and you fully relax, wrapping around his middle.
âIâm tired.â You whisper, eyes closing, and he rubs your back.
âLetâs get ye to bed then.â
âYour child is too big for me to carry!â You announce, hand on your hip, little backpack straps looped around your arm. Simon closes the door behind you, chuckling, and Penny plops onto the floor. She goes to a nursery day program now a few days a week, something that was a contentious subject in the house for far too long, opinions and arguments ping ponging over your head until the decision was finally made.
âItâs not safe.â
âYe cannae keep âer locked up here forever, love.â
âWhy not?â Simon bounced Penny against his chest, unimpressed look on both their faces, so alike you almost busted out laughing.
âBecause sheâs a child. She needs to be wâother children, not just us.â Johnny brings his free hand to his lips, squeezing Simonâs wrist. âI know yeâre scared.â Simonâs not the only one whoâs scared, you thought. Phillip lurked at the edge of your mind, worry that he might find Penny plagued you, even though they both assured that wasnât their main concern.
âSheâs too little.â
âSimon. We agreed on this,â Johnny gives him a sharp look, âdo yer research, find the best one. Ye know this needs to happen, for her. She needs to make friends, learn how to interact with kids her own age. Ye know this.â
âFine.â
âShe cannae be, not mâwee lamb.â
âShe is.â You rub your shoulder. âSheesh.â Pennyâs stomach gurgles at your feet, and Simon grimaces.
âThereâs a bug goinâ around the kids, teacher told me today.â
âNot surprising. Nurseries are little petri dishes.â You straighten your back, rolling your shoulder, and wince.
âHurts?â Simonâs thumb digs into the soft spot there, and your lashes flutter.
âMaybe ye need a hot bath,â Johnny suggests, and Simon ushers the two of you up the stairs.
âIâve got Pen. Go relax.â
âThis is nice.â Johnny soaps your back, lavender and vanilla steam swirling around in the bathroom as you lean against him, his chest to your back.
âAye.â The cloth drags across your chest, teasing your nipples, and you revel in his touch, soaking in every second he gives you, the brush of his cheek against yours, his lips on your neck. âLike havinâ ye all to myself sometimes.â You blink.
âDoes it bother you? When weâre not all together?â
âNo. Ye have a relationship witâ me, and witâ Simon, and we have a relationship all together. No one is the same. I like it.â
âMe too.â You settle again, loose and tender in the bath, soaped hands running up and down your back, kneading your shoulders, releasing the tension coiled in your bones. You groan.
âFeel good then?â
âYeah.â He presses a hand over your heart with a deep breath, before he takes another.
And then one more.
âWhatâs wro-â
âI love ye bun. Wholly. Think âve loved ye since the day I opened my eyes to ye leaning over the bed in hospital.â You turn, twisting to face him, and he dabs your nose with his thumb. âI dinnae have any expectations of ye, or yer feelings, but I had to be honest. I had to tell ye.â The confession fights its way forward, begging to be let out, to be freed.
Tell him. Tell him the truth. Tell him you love them, that theyâre your light, that theyâve chased the darkness away and replaced it with the sun.
You canât.
Instead, you rest your forehead against his, syncing your breathing, sharing the moment, holding onto him so tight in case he slips away.
âI canât say it.â You whisper, and he nods. âBut that doesnât mean⊠it doesnât mean itâs not there. Iâm just⊠I donât know if Iâm ready.â
âAnâ thatâs okay. Iâll wait, Iâll wait for ye as long as ye need.â Thereâs no pressure, no demands, just Johnny and his arms, his understanding and patience, his love.
You blink back tears and crash your lips to his. âThank you.â
Your stomach is what wakes you. Â
Something it in is burning, tossing bile around, the sensation strong enough your lips curl, and you try to draw a deep breath through your nose.
You wriggle, trying to pull free from where youâre tangled up in Simon and Johnny, carefully and slow, hoping to avoid waking them though you know even in their dreams, they sleep with one eye open.
 Still, you manage to make it to the bathroom before feet are padding across the carpet on your heels.
You sink to your knees in front of the toilet, stomach bubbling, sending the scorching remnants of dinner up your throat.
The door clicks open. âNo, get out. I donât want you to see-â you gag again, tap turning on at the sink, a cold washcloth folding over your neck.
âShhh,â Simon murmurs, rubbing your back, âget it all out.â
âOh god,â another wave swells, and your muscles tense, body expelling bits of bile and not much else.
âThatâs the way, good girl.â
âThis is gross.â You gasp. âYou should go back to bed.â
âIâve seen way worse than you puking, sweetheart.â
âShe alright?â Johnny half yells from the bedroom and you groan. The guilt of him having to maneuver himself out of bed, still not one hundred percent healthy, still not back to full strength, draws a shiver from your spine.
âIâm fine, donât come in here!â Your stomach pitches, fingers tightening against your thighs, but nothing comes up, again and again, until everything settles and youâre breathing deeply, steady, back straight.
âLetâs get you some water.â Thereâs no point in arguing with him. Heâs going to do what he wants to do when it comes to taking care of you, you know that now. Itâs painfully clear as he tries to help you drink from the glass, and then puts toothpaste on your toothbrush.
âIâm fine.â You assure weakly, but he only watches you, concerned.
âThink itâs the nursery bug?â
âProbably.â You sag, energy drained completely, and he steadies you, cupping your cheek. His touch is cool, and you lean into it, savoring the reprieve it brings against your throbbing temples.
âWant to go back to bed?â
âWhat if I throw up again?â He presses a kiss to your forehead.
âIâll jusâ clean it up.â
âCan I ask you a question?â You glance up at the timid mouse of a nurse, brand new, fingers clutched around a tablet like sheâs drowning and itâs her life vest.
âWhatâs up?â
âCan you⊠can you look at these orders for me?â She looks terrified, and it tells you everything you need to know. Sheâs probably caught a mistake.
Baby nurses begin their careers in a delicate position. Theyâre overwhelmed, fresh off a whirlwind of orientation, overloaded with policy and procedure, and depending on their preceptor, either somewhat prepared or completely lost. Pitting a baby nurse against a provider, even a first-year resident, is like sending a lamb in to confront a lion. The result is usually tears.
She hands you the tablet and you spot it immediately. Incorrect dosage.
âGood catch.â You reassure, coaxing a small smile, and she nods.
âWhat do I do?â
âWe go find the provider and clarify the dosage.â Youâre not going to leave it up to her, alone, hang her out to dry and probably get run over by whatever moron ordered it in the first place, who happens to be-
Marshall.
Your eyes couldnât roll any harder. âThe pharmacy is also very on top of seeing errors like this, but itâs good youâve noticed too, for the patient and yourself. Liability for things like this can be very tricky.â She nods again, trailing behind you, brand new squeaky sneakers echoing your own steps.
You canât stop the sigh that escapes you when you find him, leaned up against a wall, arms crossed, smirking, cocking his head at your companion. âWhatâs up?â
âCan you take a look at this for me?â You purposefully zoom in on the meds tab, practically painting a bullseye around his error. He scoffs, defensive immediately, dismissive, before he takes a closer look, jaw clenched.
âThatâs my mistake.â You blink. Marshall rarely ever takes responsibility so gracefully. Your eyebrow lifts.
âCare to fix it?â
âOf course.â His agreement is punctuated with a smile, though itâs off kilter.
âYou can go,â you nod to the nurse, âgood job.â Her eyes dart between you and Marshall, and without another word, scampers off.
âSheâs new?â His usual interest in new nurses is less enthusiastic than ever.
You hate Marshall. Heâs a scumbag. But heâs also been your coworker since day one, and you canât help yourself. âWhatâs up with you?â Â
âWhat do you mean?â
âYouâve never owned up to a mistake that quickly, and you didnât even make some smart-ass remark. Or berate her. Or give me an attitude.â He winces.
âItâs nothing.â But it doesnât seem like nothing. It seems like something is wrong, like heâs sad, or depressed, and try as you might, your bleeding heart canât walk away.
âWhatâs wrong.â You phrase a statement, a demand, instead of a question, and he blows a frustrated breath.
âItâs⊠Iâm seeing someone.â Your eyes go wide.
âWho?â Please donât say a nurse, please donât say a nurse, please-
âAnna. From radiology.â
âOh my god. The cupcake girl?â Anna was a fan favorite. Not only was she kind, but she was also quick with her reads, and baked cupcakes for the entire floor almost once a month. As far as radiologists go, she was better than most.
âYeah.â
âOkayâŠâ
âI really like her but⊠sheâs always been aware of my reputation and is trying to take it slow. Too slow.â You could lecture him with a million reasons why sheâs in the right, but it doesnât seem like heâs got the resolve to handle it.
âWhat do you mean?â
âSheâs dragging her feet. Doesnât want to hang out more than once a week, rarely stays the night. Iâve been to her place a handful of times, but thatâs it.â
âHow long has it been?â
âTwo months.â You laugh.
âThatâs it?â
âItâs a long time for me!â You hold your hands up in surrender.
âOkay, okay, but seriously. Two months is no time at all. Have you discussed the⊠reluctance with her?â He seems uneasy, and for the first time, youâre not sure if you enjoy watching him squirm.
âYeah. She says sheâs happy, but isnât trying to jump into anything,â his air quotes carry a whiff of the condescending asshole you know too well. This conversation couldnât be timelier, and you think back to what you told Johnny the other night.
âJust because sheâs taking it slow doesnât mean her feelings for you arenât there. You have to respect that. If sheâs still putting up with you after two months, Iâd bet sheâs just being cautious. Getting hurt sucks.â He nods thoughtfully. âGive her the time sheâs asking for, and donât give up.â
Donât give up.
The sentiment twists a knife lodged deep in your heart. Is that what will happen to you? Will they give up? Get tired of waiting for you to spill all your secrets, get tired of waiting for you to take the final step? To tell them you love them?
Get tired of waiting for you to let them use your real name?
âI didnât expect her, didnât expect to feel this way.â The mask comes down, revealing a hopelessly lovesick heart, the depth of it shining in his eyes.
âI donât think anyone ever does expect it. Thatâs the surprising thing about love, I guess.â You sway, a palm pressed to the wall as your hand flattens over your stomach.
âYou alright?â Marshallâs voice is far away as you breathe through your nose, trying to fend off the nausea tightening your throat.
âSorry, Iâve been a bit under the weather. Think Iâve got a bug or something.â Your stomach roils in warning, and you barely grit out an apology before dashing away.
Just in time to toss your breakfast up in the toilet.
âIâm fine.â
âI heard you in the toilet. You didnât sound fine, and you shouldnât be working if youâre sick.â Your manager shakes her head like sheâs disappointed, and you glare. You both know if you had called this morning talking about a stomach bug, she would have told you to suck it up unless you were actively vomiting.
âLook around. Do you see an excess of nurses on the floor?â
âWeâll manage. Or call someone in.â You shake your head.
âWeâre already way past policy ratios.â You bite your tongue when safe nearly slips out, not wanting to piss her off. Thatâs the unionâs job.
âAt least go sit down or something. Take a break. Come back in twenty minutes and let me know how you feel.â
Your closet is cozy, and for once during the day, unoccupied. The nausea has subsided, for now, and you shoot a text to the guys, asking about Penny. If you feel like this, you canât imagine how she feels.
You curl up and imagine youâre home instead, maybe in bed with a sleeve of crackers and some soda, warm chest at your back, a hand stroking over your hip. Maybe youâd have some soup, maybe the three of you would watch a movie after Pen went down for bed. You start to drift in the domestic fantasy, sleeping curling itself like a blanket over your shoulders, until youâre startled by the vibration of your phone, foot kicking forward in a jolt against a shelf.
A box falls to the floor.
HCG strips.
You stare at it for a long time, numbers and dates and weeks mashing together, calculations getting lost in the fray.
Youâre notâŠ
No.
Ridiculous. Not even possible. Youâre on the pill. Religiously.
You have the nursery bug that Pen brought home. Get a grip.
StillâŠ
You use the fifth-floor bathroom, one of the only single occupant toilets in the whole damn hospital, nausea now coming from a completely different source.
The timer on your phone is incredibly slow, or maybe itâs just time itself, the world turning in slow motion, every second elongated into turbulent silence, too many thoughts, too many feelings, too much of everything to tell where one ends and the other begins.
Fear.
Anxiety.
Panic.
Sadness.
Grief.
Itâs grief that is the strongest. Grief for something that Phillip stole, mourning for something that was once so close, so real, and then gone in an instant.
If you close your eyes, you can still feel his boot in your stomach. The press of a steel toe, jammed beneath your ribs, wild, deranged eyes staring down at you in a rage.
But-
Buried so, so far beneath the crushing weight of it all, there is a bright little pocket of sunshine. A small little sliver of light, beams of hope stretching for the sky, warmth spilling over until your hands tremble with the conflict warring inside you.
Nothing has changed, but everything could.
The timer goes off with a shrill chime, and you lean over the sink to where the small strip sits on top of a cup.
A bold pink line.
And then another, more faint, but certainly there. A simple equation, one plus one equals two. Simple math.
Tangible. Present.
Pregnant.
Quando essas pessoas perceberem que se imaginar sendo estrupada NĂO Ă© SAUDĂVEL a cabeça delas vai explodir. Elas nĂŁo aceitam que isso Ă© doentio e que elas precisam de ajuda psicolĂłgica URGENTEMENTE. VĂO PROCURAR AJUDA PORQUE ESSA PORRA NĂO Ă SAUDĂVEL.
(escrevendo em minha lingua materna, pois nĂŁo consigo me expressar direito em inglĂȘs âđ»
what is it with the cod fandom and rape
genuinely dont think ive ever seen as much non-con and just blatantly labelling characters as rapists as often as i do in the cod tags
hello?? whats hot abt being violated?? pls enlighten me
TF141 (oversimplified)
"141 x reader" *excludes gaz* PLS I'M SO TIRED OF Y'ALL FORGETTING THAT GAZ EXISTS AND THAT KĂNIG ISN'T A MEMBER OF TF141 FOR THE LOVE OF GOD STOP REPLACING GAZ WITH KĂNIG IT'S PISSING ME OFF