Welcome to the world of “Being in love with a person who doesn’t exist in real life but you pretend they do anyway because you’re obsessed” ✧˖*°࿐
You and Simon aren’t together. Never have been. Never talked about it, never even thought about it.
You just click. You always have. It started as a mission thing—paired up for some op because Price figured you worked well together, and then it just… stuck. You got each other in ways that didn’t need explaining. You liked the same things, moved the same way, anticipated each other’s actions before they happened. You didn’t have to tell him what you needed in the field, and he never had to ask you to cover him. It was easy. Comfortable. The kind of thing that felt natural before you even noticed it happening.
And then it bled into everything else. Eating together. Training together. Sitting next to each other on long flights, in debriefs, in the rare downtime you got between missions. It was never planned, never discussed. Just a thing that happened, like muscle memory. If you were in a room, Simon was there too, and if he wasn’t, he was on his way.
The others noticed, of course. Soap especially. He was the loudest about it, but even Gaz had taken to shooting you both pointed looks when you showed up somewhere at the same time, or when you answered Simon’s half-formed thoughts like you knew what he was going to say before he said it.
Which, honestly, you usually did.
It all comes to a head one evening, the lot of you gathered in one of the common rooms, half-done with the day but not quite ready to call it a night. You and Simon are on the couch, shoulder to shoulder, idly watching something on the TV while Soap, sitting across from you both, groans into his hands.
“You two make me sick.”
You blink at him. “We’re literally just sitting here.”
“That’s the problem!” Soap gestures wildly. “You do everything together. You finish each other’s bloody sentences. You know what the other is thinking. And you’re just—what? Friends?” He scoffs. “Aye, and I’m the Queen of England.”
Simon leans back, tilting his head slightly. “Don’t think you’ve got the legs for a crown, mate.”
Gaz snorts. Price, watching from his spot near the door, only shakes his head like he’s seen this conversation play out a hundred times before. (He has.)
Soap ignores them, pointing a finger between you and Simon like he’s solving some grand mystery. “There’s only one thing you haven’t done,” he declares. “You just need to kiss. That’s it. Only thing missing.”
Silence.
You turn your head. Simon is already looking at you.
There’s nothing in his expression that gives anything away—no smirk, no challenge, no humor in his eyes. He’s just watching you, waiting. And then, with a tiny shrug, he leans in and kisses you.
It’s short, unhurried. Just a press of his lips against yours, like it’s the most natural thing in the world. When he pulls back, his eyes are still on you, searching.
You don’t react. Not outwardly, anyway. You can feel Soap’s disbelief burning into the side of your face, hear the noise he makes—the strangled mix between a gasp and an outraged protest—but you don’t acknowledge it. Instead, you look back at Simon, forcing yourself to stay still even as your heart does something stupid in your chest.
Because, sure, maybe this was just to mess with Soap. Maybe it meant nothing. Maybe it was a joke.
But it didn’t feel like one.
Simon smirks and leans back, turning his attention back to the TV like nothing happened. “Happy now?”
Soap looks like he’s reconsidering every life decision that led him to this moment. “What the fuck?”
—
Later, when Simon walks you back to your room, he’s quieter than usual. His hands are in his pockets, his head tilted down slightly like he’s working through something in his mind.
“I wasn’t trying to make things weird,” he says after a beat. “Didn’t mean—well, didn’t want you to think it was—”
He stops, exhales sharply through his nose. “Just don’t want you to be mad.”
You glance at him. “I’m not mad.”
He nods, but his mouth pulls into something uncertain, like he doesn’t believe you. “Good. That’s—good.”
You reach your door and turn to face him fully. He’s still looking at you, his usual easy confidence nowhere to be found. And it’s funny, really, how the thought of kissing you in front of everyone hadn’t made him hesitate, but now? Now, he’s hesitating. Now, he’s thinking too hard about it. About you.
So before he can say anything else, you push up onto your toes and kiss him.
It’s quick, barely a breath between you before you pull back, but the impact is immediate. Simon’s lips part slightly, his brows drawing together like he can’t quite process what just happened.
You step back, hand on your door handle, and give him a small nod. “Goodnight, Simon.”
Then you slip inside, shutting the door behind you, leaving him standing there in the hallway, staring at the empty space where you just were.
And for once, Simon doesn’t have a single thing to say.
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@daydreamerwoah @ghostslollipop @kylies-love-letter
“To attract attractive people, you must be attractive. To attract powerful people, you must be powerful. To attract committed people, you must be committed. Instead of going to work on them, you go to work on yourself. If you become, you can attract.”
— Jim Rohn
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Captain America: Brave New World
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It looks like someone chiseled and carved this book.
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No man will ever love me the way the fictional man in my head loves me.