When are you gonna do a night to remember? I love that ficđđ
It was on my mind this week but I want to get another chapter of high and dry out before I work on anything for ANTR đ«¶ and tysm that means a lotđ
A Night To Remember | ch. 3
j. laurens x reader
Warnings: swearing, some sexual jokes, not proofread, google translate Spanish cus yah
Wc: 2.8k
After the fiasco in the hotel room, John takes you to his favorite restaurant in Washington D.C., where you have a heartfelt conversation you didnât know you could.
A/n: heeyyyy Iâve been having a rough time lately w/ my social life, so please be patient w me, but I will try to get chapters out! ty for your support đ
âSurely this is a mistake,â he scoffed. âThey had to have given us the wrong key or something.â
âI can talk to them and ask if theyâll move us to another room,â you frowned. âIâm sorry, I thought when I booked it, it would have two beds. I can always take the couch if they donâtââ
âNo, no, itâs okay. Letâs just talk to them and ask if we can switch rooms.â He sighed, pushing forward and sitting on the edge of the bed while you went to the phone.
You dialed the number to the front and waited for someone to pick up, concern still etched in your eyebrows. Were you that careless to not check what kind of room you booked? It was literally your entire job to sort these things out, and you couldnât do that right? âGood lord, Y/n, get it together.â
âHello? Yes, um, I think thereâs been a mistake in our rooming situation. We have a single bed when I intended to book two,â you put your hand on your hip, glancing at John who was staring out the window from his spot.
âIâm sorry, weâre completely booked for the night. This is the only available room we have,â the front desk attendant spoke, âif youâd like me to refer you to my manager, I canââ
âItâs okay, thereâs no need for that. Sorry for the trouble,â you sighed in defeat, hanging up.
âWell?â He raised an expectant eyebrow.
âWeâll just have to make this work. They donât have any other rooms available. Iâll just sleep on the floor, John, itâs no big deal really.â
âYouâre not sleeping on the floor,â he growled, standing up. âThis bed is perfectly big enough for both of us. Besides, who wouldnât want to sleep with me?â
You grimaced. âWhen you say it like thatâŠâ
He scoffed, shaking his head. A smile grew on his face despite that, and you shared a laugh. The sound of his laughter still felt so foreign to you.
âI promise Iâm not as bad as everyone seems to think I am,â he said, grabbing his wallet and phone. He slipped you a spare room card and put one in his wallet.
âWhat? As a person or in bed?â You asked, tucking the room card into your pocket.
The moment the words left your lips, you slapped a hand over your mouth. Embarrassment infected your face, neck, and ears, turning everything hot. You did not just say that to your boss.
His eyebrows shot up in surprise, and a wide grin spread on his face.
âAs a person,â he responded. âTrust me sweetheart, anyone whoâs ever been in bed with me has nothing bad to say.â
You blinked, wondering how the use of âsweetheartâ made you so much warmer even after the humility of making an accidental sex-comment to your boss. âI see youâre incredibly humble, too.â
He chuckled, taking a tiny step closer, âYouâd feel the same way, babe.â He winked, and in that moment, something shifted between you. As a reaction, your eyes blew wide and he rendered you speechless.
A tense, awkward silence filled the room. He mustâve sensed he crossed a line, because he backed up, turning to the door.
âLetâs go get food now. Iâm starved,â he said.
You let out a pathetic squeak in agreement, following him out the door. The walk to the elevator was silent. You were still horrified from what you said to him, and the fact that he responded saying youâd understand, too, if youâŠwell. Itâs a difficult thing to think about. All it did was make you wish more and more that he werenât your boss, and instead someone you got the pleasure to know as a person.
He called another uber, and in the meantime, you lounged in the main area of the hotel. It was bustling with peopleâmen in suits, families wearing souvenir shirts that were definitely overpriced, groups of teenagers all wearing the same shirt that read the name of a middle school. You picked at some of the lint on your sweatshirt.
John cleared his throat. âThe place weâre going to,â he started, âwas where I used to go with Hamilton, Lafayette, and Mulligan when we were broke and ambitious. The restaurant is a little shady, but the food is incredible.â
You cocked your head to the side, looking at him with curiosity. He continued speaking, fiddling with his thumbs, which was something you never saw him do.
âItâs a burrito place, I hope thatâs okay with you,â he adds.
âPerfectly fine,â you nod. He hums in content, his eyes lingering on yours a moment too long.
âYouâll love it, then. Iâve been dying to have their barbacoa the second I left D.C. for New York.â He stopped fidgeting.
âI thought you grew up in South Carolina?â
âI did,â he confirmed, âbut I moved to D.C. shortly after my nineteenth birthday. Thatâs when I met Hamilton. I was out drinking with Hercules and Lafayetteâillegally, might I addâand he showed up with Aaron Burr. We clicked like that,â he snapped his fingers for effect, âand we welcomed him into our group. Those were some of the best years of my life, messing around with Alex and them.â
A soft smile was on his face as he looked at the floor, reminiscing about the past. You studied him while he was deep in thought. He seemed truly joyful when talking about his closest friends. It made you wonder what he was like around them. Maybe youâd find out one day, if you ever got to meet Hamilton, that is.
His phone chimed, and he stood. âOur ride is here.â
â
âThis place hasnât changed one bit,â he muttered, holding the door open like a gentleman.
It was shitty in the most endearing way possible. The air smelt of freshly grilled meats and vegetables, and there was a light chatter from the two other people there. Despite the low turnout, the kitchen was bustling with noise of food being seared, followed by a healthy smoke that steamed from it.
His hand hovered on your lower back as he walked you to the front. You scanned the menu, most of it being in Spanish, which was a minor setback considering you didnât speak any Spanish.
âWhatâre you getting?â He asked, glancing down at you.
âI donât knowâwhatever youâre getting, I guess. I trust you have good taste,â you shrugged. He hummed, stepping to the cashier to order.
âÂżPuedo conseguir dos burritos de barbacoa con frijoles pintos, arroz integral y un pedido de guacamole? Y tambiĂ©n dos bebidas, por favor.â He swiftly pulled out a card to pay.
You gaped at him in shock. He never once mentioned he was fluent in Spanish. Ever. When the transaction was over, he stepped back and led you to a table fit for two.
ââŠI didnât know you could speak Spanish,â you commented.
âDid I fail to mention that? Hm. Weird,â he hummed, sliding into the wooden chair. âItâs nice I can still surprise you. Sometimes I feel like you know more about me than I know about myself.â
Your eyebrows furrow the tiniest amount. âHow so?â
âWell, for starters, youâre the only assistant Iâve had whoâs memorized my coffee order. And you coincidentally drink the same kind of coffee that I do. Youâre pretty attentive.â
Heat rose to your cheeks at the mention of the coffee incident. He noticed that you conditioned yourself to chug the same caffeine that he does.
âAnd youâre a bit of a perfectionist. Everything I ask of you gets done immediately, and itâs exactly how I instructed you to do it. Sometimes itâs like you already know what Iâm gonna say before I say it. You just read my mind, I suppose,â he rested his chin in his hands, and something about this was intimate. Domestic. Nice.
The realization that he brought you to his spot when he was younger triggered something in you. He trusted you enough to show you somewhere personal, and tell the story that went with it. Now he sat before you, reading into your personality as if you had known eachother since birth. And when did he first figure out youâre a perfectionist?
You cleared your throat, snapping out of it when you realized he ceased talking. âI can assure you thereâs a lot I have to learn. Iâve learnt more about you from this trip than I have in my two years of working for you.â
He cocked his head to the side. Why did he, of all people, have to be so cute?
âReally? Oh, I guess with the whole airplane thingâŠâ he backtracked. âYâknow, you never told me who was making those jokes. About you being a bad writerâwhich is absolutely untrue, but the way.â
You inhaled sharply, thinking back to all the times youâve walked in with two coffees in your hand, and your coworkers immediately snickering. The worst people about it were a group of girls that seemed to have banded together, straying anyone who wasn't a total bitch away from their group. Think Mean Girls cliques. Theyâre beautiful and probably capable of writing, but pretty is as pretty does. Part of you felt like they were jealous of you. It was obvious that they all had huge crushes on Laurens. Youâd overheard them talking about how he has the ânicest ass in the office.â Whatever they said was out of jealousy, you reminded yourself.
But it was every time you encountered them that they would make a snide comment. Itâs taken a lot of restraint to not claw at them. Somehow, women know exactly where to strike. They know exactly what peopleâs insecurities are, and with you, they pinpointed it and went for the throat.
It provoked feelings you didn't want to address.
Forcing down the scream you wanted to let out and the closing of your throat, you met his eyes again, and he looked concerned. It wasnât how he usually looked at you. Then again, you werenât entirely sure what the usual was since embarking on this trip. It has completely shifted the mood in your relationship with him.
âJust a few girls,â you replied. He deadpanned, giving you a look as if to say âreally? Thatâs all youâre gonna say?â And yes, that is all you would say.
âIs it Pamâs little friend group?â
You tried to hide the way your eyes widened. How did he guess that so quickly?
âIâhow did you know?â
A scowl formed on his face and he rolled his eyes. âPlease. Theyâre all over me every time I walk by. They think theyâre slick with it, too, but they ainât.â He scoffed.
You blinked in surprise. He knew about that. âSoâŠdo you just like, know everything?â
His face twisted into confusion before he burst out laughing. The familiar feeling of embarrassment bubbled up to your neck again. God, could you say something normal for once? Talk about the weather, or the latest baseball game, or maybe ducks? Scratch thatâhe doesnât look like a duck kind of guy. Maybe dogs?
âAround the office, yes. I just choose to ignore majority of it. I donât have time for that gossipy bullshit, yâknow? Thereâs work to be done, and I focus on getting it done.â He leaned back against his chair, the sides of his eyes crinkled with amusement. You found this display of him way nicer than you should.
It struck you to remember some words from an earlier conversation. He said heâs not as bad as everyone thinks he is, to which you responded by asking if he meant in bed or as a person. Very smart decision. Anyway, moving on.
âYou said earlier that youâre not as bad as everyone thinks,â you say. âWhat did you really mean by that?â
He smiles, tapping his nose, âattentive.â A long sigh leaves him, and you could tell he was preparing for a heart to heart.
âI hear what people say about me,â he starts. The atmosphere turns serious, despite the sound of Selena blasting from the kitchen. âI know I canât expect everyone to like me, but it is a little frustrating when I walk out of my office and everyone is staring at me like they just finished talking shit about me. Talking about how Iâm not fit to be in charge, how Iâm too mean, too strict, too this too that. They think a couple harmless whispers in the break room will shield them from my reach. But I notice the way everyone flinches when I enter a roomâincluding you.â
You hang your head, guilt panging through you. He continues, his tone taking a darker edge, âbut they forget I have the power to make or break their careers.â
A shiver ran through your spine that you hoped he missed. You took a moment to gather your thoughts before speaking, voice soft and filled with empathetic undertones.
âI know what thatâs like, and itâs the most awful feeling in the world. But youâŠyou donât actually care what they say about you, right? You know youâre more than just a boss.â
âI know,â he said, âbut as much as I donât want it to, their words cut deep. It just reminds me of my own insecurities.â
âThatâs exactly how I feel!â You let out a tiny gasp. âSorry. I shouldnât make this about me.â
âNo, no, we were talking about you before this. If anything, I turned the focus on me,â he chuckled.
You smiled, relaxing your shoulders. âItâs a relief knowing other people feel the same way I do. Iâve never really talked to anyone about thisâespecially not my bossâso this is just soâŠâ
âWeird? Yeah, itâs awkward for me, too. I havenât voiced this to anyone other than my turtle.â
Pause. Did he just say his fucking turtle.
âIâm sorry, did you say turtle?â You coughed. He laughed, making you feel all giddy and fuzzy inside.
âYep. I guess you donât know everything about me,â he smirked. You so desperately wanted to wipe that smug look off his face. âBut seriously, L/n, tell me whatâs goinâ on with Pam ând them. Iâm worried about you.â
The mood contorted and you thought about what to say. Him saying he was worried about you was not on your bingo card for this trip.
âItâs really not anything, they just make a few comments here and thereââ
âOrden para John!â
âThatâs me,â he mumbled, standing up. âWeâll continue this in a minute.â
Your eyes lingered on him while he retrieved the food. He slid a mandarin-flavored Jarritos across the table, as well as your food. He sat and immediately stuffed his face full of burrito.
âYouâre going to choke if you donât slow down,â you grimaced.
âHas whaâ she âaid,â he giggled, his words coming out a muffled mess. You rolled your eyes, trying everything in your power to not laugh at the stupidest joke known to man. Of course heâd make that kind of joke, too.
You took a generous bite of your own food, almost letting out gasp from how good it was. He wasnât wrong when he said it was the best burrito heâs ever had. It was delectable, the barbacoa was soft and flavorful, and they didnât overdo the rice, unlike Chipotle. (Fuck chipotle).
âItâs good ainât it?â He took a swig of his soda.
You nodded, letting out a muffled âoh my god, yes.â
âThatâs what Iâm talkinâ about,â he snickered, his eyes taking on a softer edge as he examined you. âYâknow, you didnât get to finish talking about Pam.â
A small frown tugged at your lips, and you swallowed. Where to even start. You didnât want it to feel like you were ratting them out, but they also kind of deserved it. They were rude and disrespectful to everyone in the office, not just you. It would be Justice for everyone who has fallen victim to Pam.
Right as you were about to speak, his phone rang. He groaned, pulling it out to silence it. But he paused when he saw who it was. His eyes lit up, and a wide grin spread on his face.
âIâm gonna go take this,â he chirped, leaving you by yourself. From where he stood outside, you could see him talking animatedly with his hands, laughing loudly and nodding eagerly. Who he was on the phone with, you didnât know. You couldnât see his screen from the way he had been sitting.
Your own phone chimed, and you checked it to see who the text was from. Unsurprisingly, it was Abby.
Abby: Howâs everything with John?
You: pretty good. Itâs been chill so far. Weâre getting food rn but heâs on the phone w someone
Abby: Anything happen between you and him yet??
You: girl no
Nothing is going to happen
Abby: ugh. Okay. Iâll manifest it anyway. Have fun at the party, tell me if anything happens.
A playful smile formed on your lips, and you shut your phone off as John walked back in, a new confidence in his stride. You raised an eyebrow at the change in his demeanor.
âFinish up eating soon, âcause we got somewhere to be after this,â he sang.
âUmm⊠where?â You asked, wiping your hands with a cheap napkin.
The bright, charming smile never left his face as he responded. âTo see my friend, Alexander Hamilton.â
High and Dry | ch. 3
thomas j. x reader
Warnings: swearing, mostly yap tbh this chapter is pretty mid
Wc: 3k
Guys I swear itâll pick up after this chapter js you wait đ
âIâd like for you to come visit,â your mother said, a smile in her tone.
âMom,â you started, stress evident in the single word, âI would love to, but with the school year just startingâŠâ you trailed off, hoping sheâd get the hint.
âYou donât have the time,â she finished. A relieved sigh escaped your lungs, and you peered in the tiny window to see Thomas still typing on his computer.
âYes. Iâm sorry, mom, Iââ
âItâs okay,â she interrupted abruptly. âYou donât have to give me an excuse. If you canât visit, then letâs leave it at that.â
A heavy, almost frustrated sigh escaped you. As much as youâd like to visit her, you werenât quite ready to face her after the years of emotional trauma she put you through. And with the reintroduction of Thomas in your life, you werenât quite sure if you would ever be ready. He was the only person you opened up to enough to let him see that side of your family. He was the only one to have met her. And she really loved him. Still does, probably, because you never told her why you stopped being friends.
She was under the impression that you grew apart due to him moving to France. You never did have the heart to tell her the real reason.
âOkay.â You frowned. âIâll call you when I get the chance.â
She hung up without saying goodbye. Instant guilt bubbled in your stomach all the way up to your chest, making you grimace bitterly. You felt like a total shithead for pushing her away, but what could you do? The state of your mental health was deteriorating, the second most stressful time of year was beginning, and enemy number one somehow found a way to wiggle back in your life.
It was too overwhelming to deal with all at once, especially since your therapy visits were slowing down to once a month rather than once every two weeks. A small, desperate part of you was convincing you that it was for your motherâs sake that you donât visit. If you went, you reasoned, what would end up happening is projection from all the fucked-up shit going on in life. As a result, she would only get worse and you would be unhappy, too. So it was best to avoid until it stopped all together.
You took a moment to regain yourself, then walked back in and wordlessly sat, ignoring the lump that formed in your throat.
â
âFirst day of teaching, how are you feeling?â Alex grinned, his hands clasped together. You shrugged.
âNervous. Excited. Kind of dreading it.â
Hamilton shook his head, a wide smile still plastered on his face. âYouâll do fine! First day is always nerve-wrecking, but Iâm always down the hall if you need anything.â
A sheepish thanks was sent his way, and you tried not to think about all the chaos that would ensue during the day. There was bound to be that one kid who causes trouble. When running into those types of students, you have to remind yourself they probably have something going on in their lives causing them to act up. Giving them a reaction would only give them a reason to continue. Best thing you can do is laugh it off and move on.
âI appreciate it, Alexander,â you said. His long hair was put up in a ponytail, and he had this ambition to him that seemed to infect the people around him. He was only a year or two your junior, yet he was so intelligent and walked like he owned the place.
âOf course. Hey, Lafayette got back with his girlfriend, just like I predicted.â He sat on the edge of your desk, changing the focus from you to drama.
âOh, good, he wonât shamelessly flirt with me anymore,â you sighed in mock relief.
âWhoâs shamelessly flirtinâ with you?â A certain southerner chimed in, walking through the door. Thomas held two coffees in his hand, one iced and one hot. His biceps strained against the white button up he wore, andâwait. Why were you staring at his arms?
âAnd now's a good time for me to leave. See you, Y/n, good luck!â Hamilton hopped off the desk, scowling at Jefferson when they crossed paths. Thomas sent back an equally distasteful glare, then turned to you with an expectant look.
âNo one anymore,â you formed your mouth into a thin line, shifting in the shitty swivel chair the school provides.
âHm. Okay.â He narrowed his eyes, scanning your appearance, taking note of the neatness in your hair and makeup. âI brought you coffee, even though you took my spot again.â
An iced latte with a distinct Starbucks logo was placed on your desk. Instantly, your eyebrows shot up in surprise. You hesitantly grabbed it, taking a sip. It was your favorite. How did he remember that you like extra caramel and extra vanilla?
âIt was open,â you shrugged, looking down at the drink. âThis isnât laced with anything, is it?â
He smirked. âHowâd you know?â
âBecause you would never bring me coffee out of the goodness of your heartâif you have one, that is,â you retorted.
His smirk grew wider, and he would rather you throw it in his face than tell you the real reason why he brought you coffee. He felt bad for you. After what happened the day before, he realized you must be going through a lot, and a tiny part of him wanted to correct his behaviors. But he would never admit that. So instead of apologizing or trying to be genuinely nice, he figured he could reach you through food. The best way to a womanâs heart is through her stomach, after all.
âI have a heart,â he protested. âTrust me, L/n, if I wanted you dead youâd be dead. But youâre still breathinâ.â
âThank you, you are such an amazing person now that youâve spared me! What would I ever do without you?â Your tone was dripping with sarcasm. He seemed to thrive in it.
âSuffer, probably,â he suggested, a slyness in his stupid smile. You hated the way that you liked how his eyes twinkled with amusement.
âRight. Because I already donât do that with you in my life.â
Instant regret the moment the words left your mouth. Why did you say that? All it would do is stir up drama and start the day off negatively.
The smile he wore faded, and for a second, guilt tugged at your heart. âAlright, I get it,â he threw his hands up in defense. âYou hate me. Donât gotta rub it in my face every time you see me, though.â
You muttered incoherent nonsense under your breath. âFeels like I have a right to,â you said. All of a sudden, keeping his gaze seemed impossible. How was it that playful teasing could turn sour so quickly?
âYou do,â he nodded, âbut youâre also gonna have to suck it up, cause youâre stuck with me the entire year.â
He was right, as much as you hated to acknowledge that. His attention lingered on you, taking in the frown that tugged at your lips, how your face had matured over the years, the way your haircut suited you perfectly. Thomas hated how you made his heart flutter. You shouldnât make him feel anything other than rage, and yet? He still became flustered at the sight of you.
âThomas, youâyou really hurt me, yâknow that?â You started, finally pulling your focus back to him. âI wouldâve done anything for you. I wouldâve lost a leg or walked through fire if you asked me to. So I think Iâm entitled to being a little bitter when youâre around.â
He stared at you, digesting what you dropped on him in silence. Slowly, he nodded, an unreadable expression twisting on his features. Right as he opened his mouth to speak, the bell rang, and the chatter of students filled the hall. He glanced up, then took a step back.
âSaved by the bell,â he murmured, looking at you one last time before exiting.
A breath you didnât know you were holding was released. You thought telling him how he hurt you, maybe even yelling or belittling him would make you feel better, but it didnât. The weight was still on your shoulders. The pain still loomed over you, haunting the back of your mind, dancing and thriving in the self-pity you felt. What you would give to stop it.
The first wave of students clamored in, and you stood, forcing a smile and a positive attitude. Next door, you heard Thomas welcoming students in, you heard him saying hello to older ones. His stupid, sweet southern drawl being the only voice you could hear over the loudness that teenagers brought in.
You loathed him for it. Or was it that you hated yourself for selectively hearing his voice above all others?
â
The day went by surprisingly fast, and you ended up having a lot of fun. Lafayette and John had the same lunch as you, so they invited you to eat with them while in the teacher workroom. Conversation flowed, inside jokes were built, and you came out of your shell for once. Naturally, you and John teased Lafayette for flirting with you during the first impressions, then three days later getting back with the girl he said he was âofficially over with.â They even noted how you seemed more talkative, more expressive once youâve eased into the friend group a little. You were just happy someone wanted to be your friend.
The students you had were all smart, and the majority of your classes worked well together. Some better than others, but what mattered is that they had fun. Of course, there were those few students that disrupted class with their friends. It was a simple fix. By the end of the day, you were exhausted, and it didnât help knowing you had a full week ahead. More lesson plans to create. More time spent working with Jefferson.
âThere she is!â An energetic Hamilton barreled through the door. He was practically bouncing off the walls from how lively he was. It astounded you how he was so cheerful after an entire day of working.
âHi, Alex.â The best you could offer was a lethargic smile. âGood day, I presume?â
âGreat day,â he corrected. âAll of my classes were perfect. Well, except one, but they were still good!â He slid atop your desk once more, his smile never faltering. âSo.â
âSo?â You raised a brow.
âHow was it?â His hands went to grip the edge of the desk.
âGood. Tiring, but I had fun. Nobody got hurt, so thatâs a win in my book. Went over the syllabus, class procedures, the works, but I didnât want the first day to be that boring, so we had them choose a song or artist that represents them. One kid said Sexyback. I still donât know how to feel about it.â
âKids never fail to disappoint me,â He chuckled.
âI know. When I read it I just started laughing. I think that one was my favorite, and the kid that wrote heâs the reincarnation of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.â You reached for the stack of notecards that students turned in, flipping through them. Honorable mention for whoever put Life in the Fast Lane.
âGood for both of them. I wish I were that confident.â
âRight? They know their worth. I gotta respect it,â you said, shoving the cards back in the turn-in box.
âHonestly,â he hummed. He contemplated his next words, fidgeting with a stray pen on your desk. âAny trouble from Jefferson?â
âNothing more than usual,â you shrugged. âHe brought me coffee this morning.â
Alexanderâs eyebrows flew up in surprise. âReally? What did he want?â
âI donât know, he never told me why he brought me it. He never asked me for anything either, so maybe he just bought an extra by accident,â you reasoned. Which it didnât add up in your mind, because how could he buy an extra that just so happened to be the exact kind of coffee you drink?
âHuh,â his eyebrows creased, âthatâs odd. One would assume he would give it to Madison before anyone elseâŠâ
Even though you didnât want it to, a knot of jealousy twisted in your stomach. âWhoâs Madison?â You asked, trying to keep your tone as level as possible.
âSomeone from the math team Jefferson is best friends with.â A tight scowl overtook his features. âMadison and I used to get along, too, until Jeffershit came around.â
It shouldnât hurt so much to hear Thomas was âbest friendsâ with some girl named Madison. Why did it hurt so much? Why did it hurt at all?
âYeah? So Thomas really does ruin everything, huh?â You laughed, trying to act as if you werenât crushed by the possibility of Thomas finding someone new.
You knew that Thomas was bad for you, that you wouldnât get along ever again, but the thought of him having someone else heâd share everything with, someone heâd laugh and have inside jokes withâŠit sucked. That was the only way you could classify it. A sick, selfish side wanted him to still be stuck on you; for him to think your name first when someone talked about close friends. But you knew better than to give in to the toxicity.
âGod, donât even get me started,â he groaned. âSeriously. Because you and I both know that once I get going, I donât stop.â
An airy laugh escaped you, and his bright, enthusiastic smile returned. Thomas was often the topic of discussion between you and Alex, mostly when you felt like talking shit about someone, but right now you wanted to do anything but think about him. It seemed like all your thoughts revolved around Thomas Jefferson. His small action of bringing you coffee, joking around with him, why his cologne smelt so good, the way his shirt hugged his musclesâby the way, when did his muscles become so defined? And why did you find yourself staring at them so often?
âAnyway, youâre starting To Kill A Mockingbird soon with your classes, right?â He asked. âItâs one of my favorites. I wish I could read it with my classes, but with them being seniors, I really canât,â he shook his head, a disappointed sigh leaving him.
âYeah, itâs my favorite too, but for now weâre just reviewing and setting up for the year. Iâm gonna try and convince Jefferson to start it next week instead of the week afterâalthough maybe I should be a little nicer for that to workâŠâ you trailed off, grimacing at the thought.
âConvince me of what?â Thomas jumped in, standing in the doorway all casual.
Alex stared at him, scrunching his nose in distaste. âThis is the second time youâve done this today, Jefferson.â
Thomas shrugged. âI heard my name. Canât blame me for beinâ curious.â
Hamilton scoffed, âgo be curious somewhere else. We donât want you here.â
âBelieve me, Hamilton, the last place I want to be is in a room with you. ând now youâve infected L/n with your idiocy. This ainât exactly the ideal environment for me.â He retorted, unamused.
âYou could resign. No oneâs forcing you to work here,â Alex suggested, smugness evident in his tone. Annoyance flickered in Thomasâs jaw.
âOkay, Alex,â you chuckled nervously, shooting him a look as if to say cut it out. âI was wondering if we could move reading Mockingbird to next week instead.â Alex seemed to have gotten the hint that you needed to be on Jeffersonâs good side in order for him to comply.
âHm. I dunno⊠you wanna tell me how smart, handsome, amazing, and charming I am?â A sly grin grew on his lips.
âIâm not gonna kiss your ass, Jefferson,â you deadpanned. So much for getting him on your side. Youâd rather die than admit those things.
âWell then, I guess weâre not movinâ it a week closer. Your loss, Y/n,â he hummed. The sudden feminine urge to throw your computer at him was overwhelming.
âOh, câmon, dâyou seriously wanna work on mindless review for two weeks?â
âI donât mind doing so,â he took some steps toward your desk. âMost of âem donât even remember the difference between a compound and complex sentence, much less how to write an essay or basic punctuation. Thisâll set âem up for a good year.â
You couldnât disagree with him. A lot of your past students did struggle with grammar for whatever reason, and maybe a couple weeks to review everything they lost due to summer wouldnât hurt. âBut they arenât stupid. Most of them are honors students, it shouldnât take two weeks to review the basics.â
âMm, youâre right,â he frowned, shifting his watch to Hamilton for a brief moment. âBut I still think we should stick with what Iâve done every year Iâve been here. My students have always had the best test scores in the district, after all.â
The not-so-humble bragging only furthered your irritation with his intransigence.
âOh, thatâs crap, Jefferson. Every other school is twice as small, and their funding is significantly less. Weâre the biggest school in this district, we dominate in sports, UIL, and scores for every subject,â Alex chimed in, crossing his arms tightly over his chest.
âUh, was anybody speakinâ to you, Hamilton?â He huffed. âI swear, you donât know when to stop talking.â
âThat is kind of true,â you mumbled. Alex elbowed your arm, giving you a pointed look.
âYouâre supposed to be on my side,â he pouted.
You gave him a sheepish smile. âIâm sorry, Iâm sorry. But to be fair, you said it yourself earlier. âOnce I get going, I donât stop.ââ Upon hearing his words echoed back to him, he groaned.
âSee? Even Y/n agrees. But unless she agrees that I am the most gorgeous, intelligent, dashingly attractive man sheâs ever metââ
âGo fuck yourself,â you interrupted, a bitter laugh escaping your chest. âWe can just stick to your plan since you want to be such an ass.â
How badly you wanted to erase the smug grin that reached his eyes. ââM not beinâ an ass, âm just beinâ a smart planner. Youâll thank me later, L/n.â
You sighed. This was gonna be a long year.
Hey, roomie! Ch. 4
thomas j. x reader
Thomas invites his friends over, and after a heated argument, Peggy suggests an emotion you didnât think plausible.
Word count: 2.6k
Warnings: some cussinâ, Lafayette being lafayette
bro why can I not write anything over 3k words wth đđ
âIâm gonna have some friends over tonight,â Thomas states, peeking his head into your room. You looked up from the book you were reading, Canât Hurt Me, and raised an eyebrow.
âUh, how many friends?â You asked.
âOnly two. Theyâre nice, I swear,â he reassures after observing the weary look on your face. You let out a small huff when he ultimately shuts the door before you can get another word in.
Things have been different since that night you helped treat his wound. Heâs been softer, more careful with his words. He would still flirt shamelessly with you, but the tone in which he did so changed. It went from just spewing out the first words that came to mind to carefully crafted compliments, each one specific to the day. Like when he pointed out how the navy blue sweater you wore matched your personality. An odd thing for him to say, but you thanked him nonetheless.
The shift was very subtle. You had to search for it to notice it (not that you were paying more attention to him or anything, haha), and when you did, you found it in almost every conversation. His hand is almost fully healed now, but heâd likely have a scar when the bandage finally comes off.
You finished your chapter and picked up your phone to check your messages. Peggy had been asking about plans for the weekend, which you still had to get back to her about.
Peggy: we still on for sunday?
You: u know it ;)
Sheâs been asking for weeks now to go shopping with her for some new clothes, and youâve been putting it off. Mostly because you donât have enough money, partially because shopping isnât really your favorite thing to do, but you know she loves it, so for this one time youâll suck it up and go with her.
An hour passes by and before you know it, Thomasâs friends occupy the living room. The distinct chatter of an unfamiliar voice wasnât suppressed from the thin walls that separated your room from the living room.
You endured it at first, but as the night progressed, they just seemed to get louder and louder. A part of you wanted to scream at them to shut up, but you knew that wasn't logical, so you settled on walking out and calmly asking them to tone it down.
When you entered, Thomas immediately lit up at the sight of you, looking ecstatic to introduce you to his friends.
âY/n! Nice of you to join us,â he laughs, pulling you towards the group before you can protest. That mightâve been the first time youâve heard him use your name.
âY/n?â A familiar French voice echoed. Your eyes darted to the sourceâLafayette. He was someone you were well acquainted with; with him being close to Alexander and the sisters, you connected through that.
Youâve hung out before with Alexanderâs groupâJohn Laurens, Lafayette of course, Hercules Mulligan, and occasionally the sisters. You found him to be quite the charmer; he knew when to fight and when to comfort another soul, which you seriously respect.
âLafayette! I didnât know you were coming over.â There was a pleasant surprise that came with this statement. A smile curved on your lips as you moved to give him a hug. The other men, one of them who you did not yet know the name of, watched as you reunited with Lafayette.
âZis is a surprise to me too, mon ami. When he said he was rooming with Y/n I didnât realize it was you.â He pulled away from you but kept an arm on your shoulder.
âIâm sorry, how do you two know each other?â Thomas cleared his throat, his eyebrows furrowed as he glanced between you and Lafayette. More specifically to Lafâs hand placement.
âMutual friends, but weâve been hanging out more,â you reply. He nods, an indiscernible look on his face.
Your eyes caught the dark headed man who sat idly on the couch, a quiet demeanor about him. He wore a light gray Nike sweater with basic blue jeans, and a simple dog tag necklace. Despite his easily observable introvertism, he held himself with confidence. Almost like he knew he was a hard motherfucker. He had amusement in his eyes when they caught yours.
ââŠAnyway, this is James. James, this is Y/n,â Thomas said. You smiled and stuck out your hand for him to shake.
âPleasure to meet you.â James grinned politely.
âAlways nice to meet people who identify closely with Thomas,â you teased. Jefferson rolled his eyes.
âWeâve heard a lot about you, ami,â Lafayette snickers, a mischievous smile curled on his face. Thomas shoots him a look as if to tell him to quiet down, but your interest was already piqued. And Lafayette isnât one to quit talking because someone wants him to.
âOh yeah? Like what?â You raise an eyebrow and turn to Thomas.
âJust about âow pââ
ââNot important,â Thomas cuts Lafayette off, scrambling between you. âJust how fun you are to annoy.â
âAnd how smart you are,â James speaks up. Your eyebrows fly up in shock. Thomas thinks youâre smart?
âOkay, I only said that because sheâs able to keep up with me verbally,â he defends. A scowl is directed to James for betraying him. Madison puts up his hands in defense and chuckles. Thomas can keep his composure, but even you could see the frantic shift in personality.
âNot what it sounded like,â Lafayette said in a sing-song voice. You stifled a giggle, causing Thomas to direct a glare at you now.
âDonât laugh at me, sweetheart, canât you see Iâm hurtinâ here?â He groans.
âIâm sorry, Iâm sorry. I didnât know you think Iâm smart and whatever Laf was gonna say before you so rudely interrupted him.â A playful smile adorns your face.
âDonât let it get to your head,â he grumbles, averting his eyes from you.
âYou should join us,â Laf offers, diminishing any awkward silence that followed Thomasâs last comment. Thank god for outgoing people.
âOh, I donât want to intrude. I just came here to,â you pause, remembering you came here to tell them off, âget a glass of water.â
âYou wouldnât be intruding, ami! Your presence is always welcome,â he reassures, putting a gentle grip on your shoulder. Your features soften and you weigh your options. If the other two were okay with it, then maybe you would stick around for a little while, but you donât want to overstay boysâ night. âZe boys donât mind, right boys?â Lafayette turns to Thomas and James with a pout on his face.
âThomas wouldnât mind at aâow!â James starts but Thomas smacks the back of his head.
âNo, we donât mind,â Thomas says.
âWonderful! You can drink and play Wii sports with us, then,â Lafayette cheers. Thomasâs eyes flicker to the hand that stayed firmly on your shoulder, yet he remains silent.
â
It didnât take long for you to get tipsy. They kept enticing you to drink as the night progressed, and after so many rounds of Wii bowling, you needed it.
In all your time spent knowing Lafayette, he never mentioned that he is a god at sword fighting. You considered yourself pretty good at that game, but almost immediately after playing against him, he had your Mii wiped out into the water. He demolished Thomas and James as well, and eventually you ruled that game off limits because he was so cracked at it.
James, quiet as he is, somehow managed to get four hole-in-ones at golf. Maybe he practiced often, or maybe he was just fucking weird, but that man was freakishly good at golf.
Thomas was bragging earlier about how he was the âKing of Bowling.â After playing against him for a few rounds, you realized why. The strikes he managed to cultivate piled up, at one point he had a streak going. After each bowl he would rub it in your face how much better he is, to which you kindly suggested that he suck a dick.
You, on the other hand, vanquished them in power cruising and table tennis. Basically, whatever they lacked in, you came out victorious. You found yourself having more fun than you thought you would, especially since it was Thomas you were hanging out with. James wasn't bad, in fact, under any other circumstances you would consider being his friend. Lafayette was great as always, and you stuck close to him throughout the night.
After playing every possible Wii Sports Resort game, you sat in the living room just chatting.
Thomas was across from you with James next to him, and you sat leg-to-leg with Laf. He kept an arm draped around your shoulder in a friendly manner. The conversation darted from one topic to the next, but currently the main idea was college stories.
âWhat about that time you got pepper sprayed in college?â James asked Thomas, a devilish smirk on his face. You let out a gasp and Lafayette started laughing loudly.
âOkayâitâs not what it sounds like,â he addresses your signal of distress, âI was walking to a frat party and using a shortcut which happened to be through the bushes, so when I emerged she screamed and immediately pepper sprayed me.â He elucidates.
A wave of laughter swept over the group, and your stomach started hurting the more he tried to explain himself. You know he's not a bad guy and wouldnât do anything like that, but the stressed tone and look on his face was too much to not laugh at.
âDidnât she have to help you find the bathroom so you could wash your eyes?â James said through fits of giggles.
âHow else was I supposed to find it? I was blinded for fucks sake!â He groans, throwing his head back.
This recalling led Lafayette to go on about how he got beer thrown at him in a bar. âAll Iâm saying is I wasn't wrong, his political views of France were incorrect and I politely pointed that out.â His French accent seeped through his words.
You giggled, leaning into his chest as his arm tightened around you. You didnât catch the way Thomasâs jaw clenched.
âMustâve been not polite enough if you got beer thrown at you,â you said with a smug grin. He rolled his eyes playfully.
âWhat I said was not important, okay?â
âSure, sure, because youâre never in the wrong ever. Like that one time with Alex when you were playing rock paper scissors and lost butââ
âI did not lose! What is paper going to do to a rock in a real life situation, huh? Ze rock will grind up ze paper and therefore I win!â He cuts you off to loudly defend his stupidity.
âThatâs not how it works!â You laugh, pushing him playfully. James was watching this whole ordeal with amusement, a wide grin on his face.
âOkay, uh, itâs getting late guys. How about we call it a night?â Thomas chimes in, checking his phone.
âItâs only 10:32,â you reply with furrowed eyebrows. He swallows thickly, seeming like he just bit back venomous words.
âNon, non, he is right chĂ©rie. We should be leaving,â Lafayette assured you. He seemed to be picking up the hint that Thomas was not happy, and when he realized he still had his arm around you, he pulled it off. Lafayette and James stood, saying their goodbyes before leaving.
âDude. Why did you make them leave early? We were having fun,â you huff. A muscle flickered in Thomasâs jaw.
âJust âcause, okay? Donât push it, god,â he snaps. You stare at him, anger building up in your stomach, waiting to be released.
âThe fuck? What crawled up your ass?â
âJesusâcan you just accept the fact that weâre all tired and it was time for them to go? Why do you have to keep instigating shit?â He erupted. Your eyes widen in shock and your mouth hangs open until you regain composure.
âNo, youâre tired. Lafayette, James and I were fine. Great, even! Til you fucking decided that it has to end because you want it to!â You accused, pointing a finger and shoving it into his chest.
âSweetheart,â he said calmly, his voice low. The switch from shouting to stillness in his voice was violent; it scared you. Your finger dropped from his chest and you took a step back. âLetâs end it here and go to sleep. Goodnight.â
And with that, he left. He left you wondering what got him so riled up. And the way he said âsweetheartâ was cold, it didnât send that fluttery feeling into your stomach like it normally does. It was harsh. You wanted to scream at him and run in and fight him; but you didnât.
You sighed angrily and retreated to your room, fists still clenched with resentment.
â
âI donât know why heâs acting this way, Peggy. He was actually being sweet to me, but it seems like the moment I met his friends, he switched up.â You complained to your friend, hauling around the bags of clothes she bought.
âHow was he yesterday? Usually men just need some space to cool down after an argument like that,â She said. The ordeal happened Friday night, and you were shopping with Peggy on Sunday. On Saturday, he did his best to avoid you, ignoring you when in the same room and responding in short, one word answers.
âHeâs been cold. Distant. Yesterday he gave me the silent treatment,â you scoffed. âLike seriously, what is he, twelve? Since when was he incapable of having adult conversations and talking things out?â
âMaybe he doesnât know what heâs feeling. He could still be processing his thoughts, and it might be a lot for him to try and process yours, too. Let alone voice his in a convo.â She suggests.
This was another reason you love Peggy so much. She always challenged your words like a true friend would. She didnât just mindlessly agree to everything you were saying, no, she forced you to think about your words or actions and reflect. She really did make you a better person just by being in your life.
âHm. I guess that could be possible. What should I do, then?â
âGive him time. From what youâve told me, it sounds like heâs jealous, so I would just show him you donât mean anything more than friendship with Lafayette.â She expands.
âWait wait waitâwhat? Jealous?â You stutter, stopping dead in your tracks. Some people walking behind you side eyed you after you brake-checked them.
âYeah? He sounds like heâs jealous because youâre close with Lafayette. Donât you like Jefferson, anyway? Why are you so shocked?â She gives you a confused look.
âWhoa, whoa, who said anything about liking Thomas? He is not someone I am attracted to.â You furrow your eyebrows, continuing to walk with a deep frown on your face.
âIt seems like you do. You talk about him a lot, I just kinda figured you had a crush on him or something.â She shrugged.
âA crush, ha! Youâre funny.â
âIâm being serious. Every time I talk to you, you always somehow bring him up. Oh, Thomas did this, Thomas said that, yâknow? It gets to a pointâŠâ She trails off.
This genuinely came as a shock to you. It didnât ever occur that when you complain about Thomas, others might take it the wrong way and assume your attraction for him.
âI can assure you, Thomas is the last person I would ever like,â you say. That's one thing youâre certain of. Right?
Come back the kids miss youđđ
BROO I donât know what to writtteee đđ anybody got ideas PLEAS
To let everyone know:
Updates (for High and Dry & A Night to Remember) will be slow for these next couple of weeks. Summer is almost here so itll pick up then but the writers curse is hitting bc I just got harassed lol. Anyway thanks for the support from everyone! Stay safe đ«¶
Hey, roomie! Ch. 1
Thomas j. x reader
Modern au!
In which you room with the most insufferable, arrogant man crafted by the devil himself send to personally annoy you.
warnings: swearing, some sexual references, bad writing tbh (not proofread)
word count: 2.7k
Chat this is my first time using tumblr pls be nice idk what Iâm doing
âThis has to be a joke, right?â Are the first words that come out of your mouth the moment you lay eyes on your new roommate: Thomas Jefferson.
You despised him all throughout college. He was the biggest manwhore on campus, not to mention infuriatingly smart. Youâd know because he used to be your lab partner. Thatâs how you became familiar with him and his affairs with the girls in your class. After meeting him for the first time, his name just became more and more common.
Rumors of how he slept his entire way around campus, flirted with any and every girl in sight circled around. In fact, the first day of class in freshman year, he strutted his way over as if he owned the place before slipping into the chair next to you, giving you a charming smile. It didnât fool you.
âNo jokinâ round here, sweetheart,â his southern drawl seeped through his words as he opened the door wider for you to enter.
You pushed past him with a glare. âWhich room is mine?â You grumbled.
He blinked, a wide grin spreading his face. âRight this way. Unless you wanna sleep with me?â He offers with a sickening laugh. You grimace, nose scrunching in disgust.
âNo, thanks. Itâs enough that I have to live with you, I think Iâd drown myself if we had to share a bed.â
âYour loss.â He shrugged, opening the door to what will be your cave for the nextâŠhowever long. If only you had enough money to move out and find a different roommateâbut alas, you already finalized the papers before doing any research as to whom you would be spending your days with.
What a foolish mistake.
With that, he leaves you to get all settled in. He offered a helping hand, which you shot down with an I donât need your help and trudged boxes up four flights of stairs since the stupid elevator was broken down.
He watched with amusement when you staggered in, beads of sweat glistening on your forehead after the fifth box.
âYou sure you got it?â He shifted on the couch, remote in his hand.
âPositive.â You heaved the heaviest and final box into your room, taking a deep breath before getting items unpacked. After a few hours of getting set up and picturing what your life will entail, you finally finished. Your bookshelf was stocked with all your favorites, your walls were covered in posters and pictures were strung on your bulletin board. The room was small, but you turned it from an asylum to a cozy Pinterest vision board in a matter of hours.
You admired your work, flopping on your bed and letting the stress melt away from your back. The peace you felt was soon swept away when a few knocks sounded your door.
âWhat?â You groaned, and the door creaked open. Thomas popped his head in.
âI got takeout if youâre hungry. Nice room, by the way,â he comments, eyes wandering around the room before he shuts the door.
â
âSo, did you seriously not look into who youâd be rooming with?â Thomas asks, shoveling fried rice into his mouth. You shrug, taking a large bite of lo mein.
âI didnât think I would room with anyone I knew. Especially not you.â
âYou seem upset. Iâm happy weâre roommates. Are you not?â He flutters his eyelashes, to which you scoff at.
âWhat do you think?â You snap, poking your fork at some chicken. Thereâs no way heâs genuinely looking forward to the next few months, possibly years, of hell.
âI dunno, Iâd be thrilled to live with me. I think Iâm great,â he flashes his pearly whites. Your eyes were getting tired of how many death glares youâve sent him in one day.
âCongratulations on being the only person to think that,â you give a faux smile before stuffing more noodles into your mouth.
âOh, câmon, Iâm not that bad. You donât even know me!â He pouts, giving you puppy dog eyes. A loud, airy laugh escapes you.
âAfter enduring your shitty attempts at flirting in freshman year? I think I know what type of person you are plenty.â A sharp grin adorns your face as you focus your eyes on the food before you. He huffs, furrowing his eyebrows.
âIâve changed, okay?â He mumbles. âI can flirt a lot better now. I can score basically any woman ever.â He claims, which causes you to pause to laugh again.
âNo way! Any woman in her right mind would never go out with you.â
He narrows his eyes at you, a snarl creeping on his face. âIâve been with more women than you have. I donât think you have much room to talk.â
âUh, probably âcause I donât like women? Letâs use our brains here,â you mock. He rolls his eyes.
âYou know what I mean. You havenât been with more than what, two guys?â He finishes up the fried rice and moves to throw the styrofoam box away.
âYou been keeping track or something?â
He stammers, huffing and avoiding eye contact. âCourse not. Donât turn this into something itâs not.â
âWhatever you say, Thomas.â You finish up your food as well and throw out the box, crossing your arms as you move back to your room. He sighs behind you, retreating to his room as well and leaving you to your own thoughts.
He was right about you not being with very many men, and that fact hurts. Youâre 25 and still single. To be fair, he is too, but he still does get numerous women in his bed at night, and thatâs just straight up unfair. Itâs not like you werenât trying to get a boyfriend, either. A goal you have is to settle down with the man youâd deem âthe oneâ and buy a house in a small town, have a couple kids and maybe a dog. The perfect life in your (and your parents) eyes.
The men youâve met so far on dating apps havenât been the dream youâre looking for. Donât get me wrong, some of them were incredibly sweet, but not quite what you have in mind. However, you arenât a quitter, so if you have to force yourself to find love, so be it.
â
The first two weeks living with Thomas have been as chaotic as you predicted it would be. He was just as lazy as you rememberâso full of himself and cocky that he doesnât believe he has to do real work. It infuriates you.
He officially makes the list of worst roommates in the world. He doesnât clean up after himself, he lets his dishes pile up, he eats all the damn food, he blasts music too loud, and brings random women from bars home on Friday nights. And he isnât particularly quiet either in the late hours of the night while you are trying to sleep. Soon after moving in, you figured out he was a night owl while you are an early bird.
It was nice to not have to see his face first thing in the morning, but every night he was banging around, watching TV or talking loudly to his friends. When you complained to him about this, he just gave you a smirk and said âwhat are you gonna do about it?â
He knew what he was doing. You knew what he was doing. You both knew it was all on purpose. So when you would stomp around in the morning while getting ready for your runs, it was payback. Although sometimes it would bite you, like that one time a girl he brought back accidentally fell asleep after they banged, so she slipped out in the early hours of the morning. Right when you were in the kitchen lacing up your running shoes. The horrified look on her face when she asked if you were Thomasâs girlfriend was priceless. After informing her that no, you are not dating Thomas, she let out a breath of relief and expressed how bad she would feel if you were, and thank god youâre not.
When you got back from your run and lifting session at around 9 am, he was finally awake and looked like he just rolled out of bed. His hair a mess and bags under his eyes as he brewed himself coffee. You told him about the incident from earlier that morning and he just laughed, stating, âdonât be jealous itâs not you. Thereâs always other nights for us.â
That sentence alone only added to your distaste for him.
Thomas is a natural flirt; any chance he gets he says something that makes you cringe and push him away from you. Sometimes while you cooked dinner, he would come up behind you and wrap his arms around you, holding him tightly to his chest and burying his face in your neck. Of course, you fought this back and sneered at him to get the hell off of you, to which he would laugh at and tell you to relax.
It was torture.
Whatâs worse is youâre so touch starved that for a millisecond it feels comforting. Then you remember whose arms are secured around your waist.
âPeggy, I donât know how much of this I can take,â you sighed on the phone to your best friend, Peggy Schuyler. Peggy was always there for you throughout your toughest times. Sheâs seen you at your best and at your worst, and stuck with you despite everything. Sheâs loyal, and thatâs one of the things you love most about her.
âIt canât be that bad. What does he do?â She says, shuffling around on the other end.
âOh my god, heâs so inconsiderate. He rarely does his dishes, or buys groceries, and donât even get me started on the women. Itâs bad.â You complain.
âHe sounds immature,â she comments.
âHe is!â You say through gritted teeth.
âYâknow, Alex told me that he works with Thomas in their leadership group. Said heâs a real asshole to him. I donât know why they hate each other so much, but Alexander probably has a good reason to. From what Iâve heard about him todayâŠI dunno, I wouldnât want to be near him either.â She rambles.
âHe has every right to hate him. Did you know he âaccidentallyâ locked me out the other day? That asshole had such a smug look on his face when I had to ask our landlord to let me in. I didnât mean to forget my keyâit just, it slipped my mind,â you rant, growing frustrated.
That wasnât a fun day. You had left to make a quick trip to your car and it slipped your mind to bring a key to get back in. You figured that heâd be there, but when you got up there and fumbled in your pocket before realizing you were missing the key, he didnât respond to the pounding fist on the door. After calling and texting him multiple times to no reply, you growled and went downstairs to get the landlord to let you in. When you finally did, Thomas had just stepped out of the shower, wearing only sweatpants with his curly hair wet. Him being faced with your angry confrontation, he claimed he couldnât hear you in the shower. You didnât buy it.
âAre you serious? What a dick. Iâm sorry, Y/n, I really hope it gets better.â She says softly, offering her condolences. You hummed boredly.
âYeah, I doubt it will. I donât think I could ever warm up to him.â You sigh, leaning your head back on your pillow.
âJust give it time. Iâm sure youâll open up to each other eventually.â
You grimace at the thought of becoming close with Thomas Jefferson. âYeah butâŠI donât want to associate with that asshole.â You say bluntly. She barks out an airy laugh.
âHonestly? Thatâs fair. But in all seriousness, everything will work out in the end. If it hasnât worked out yet, then itâs not the end.â She casually drops this insane quote on you, rendering you speechless.
ââŠThanks. Did you just come up with that on the spot?â You asked.
âHah! No, I saw it on Pinterest. Itâs a good quote, glad I got to use it,â she chuckles to herself and you smile, shaking your head softly.
âOh! I forgot to mention, I matched with a guy on Tinder and weâre going out tomorrow night. Damn, I was so caught up in my hate for Thomas that I forgot what actually matters.â
âReally? Thatâs great! Whatâs his name?â She beams, and you grin, rambling on about Clyde, a 26-year-old from Colorado who loves dogs, has brown hair, and is super fucking hot.
After ending the call on a positive note, youâre looking forward to the next day. It had your mind racing with the possibilities of what he might be like in person. Youâve been chatting with him for a few days now, and he seemed promising. He had a good sense of humor over text which was nice and he wasnât too clingy.
You only hope heâs what your idea of him is.
â
âWhere are you goinâ?â Thomas quirks an eyebrow from the living room, his legs stretched across the couch and his phone in hand. His shirt was abandoned, leaving his bare chest for the world to see. Your eyes trailed down to his defined arms and abs. You quickly snapped yourself out of it, but it didnât go unnoticed by him. You could tell from the smirk on his face.
âIâm going on a date,â you triumphed, a beaming smile on your face as you smoothed over your outfit. He scanned your appearance, pursing his lips and nodding to himself.
âHave fun, I guess,â he formed his mouth into an awkward line. You raised an eyebrow, observing the change in his demeanor. Normally heâd say something snarky, maybe hit on you, but I guess today was different. Maybe heâs not feeling it. Or better yet, maybe heâs decided to stop completely and leave you alone.
You clipped on your earring and head out the doorâdeliberately double checking you had your key with you. After driving to the restaurant you agreed to meet up at, you searched the sea of faces for Clyde. Upon spotting the handsome face youâve grown to like, your eyes lit up and you made your way over to him.
âHey,â you said humbly, sitting down across from him. He gave you a lazy grin.
âHi. You look beautiful,â he comments. You blush, and thus the night begins. It was going good at first, that is until the waitress came around and he waved her off rudely. Red flag number one.
Red flag number two came when he started bragging about how he broke his exes heart, talking on and on without letting you get a word in. By that point you had lost any attraction to him. It sucked because he seemed like he would be worth it, but youâve learned to not get your hopes up too high anymore. By the time the bill came around, you split it, and he didnât tip the waitress. Instead, he complained about how horrible the staff is since they mistook our order for someone elseâs, which they fixed immediately.
Safe to say you wonât be calling him again.
âHowâd your date go?â Thomas calls lousily from the couch where he still sat. You sighed, running a hand over your face.
âBad. He turned out to be a complete dick to the waitress.â You dropped your purse onto the counter and kicked off your heels, letting out a small sigh of relief.
He winced, inhaling sharply. âYikes. Never a good sign in a man.â
âExactly. Itâs like, if you treat them that way, you would treat me the same if I was in their position, yâknow?â
He nods, putting his phone down and watching you chug a glass of water.
âHe was almost as big of an asshole as you are.â You laughed teasingly. He immediately huffs and rolls his eyes.
âAnd here I was, thinking you were finally warming up to me.â Despite that, his lips quirk up at the edges.
âNever gonna happen.â You raise your eyebrows, giving him a toothy grin before retreating to your room. Heâs in for a rude awakening if he thinks he can win you over so easily for being attractive. This will be a long few months living with him.
oh em gee itâs Friday, HOW WAS UR AP TESTED YO
actually really good, I think I got a 5 but Iâll update yâall when scores come out đ
Always
thomas j. x reader
Modern, soulmate au
Warnings: swearing, second hand embarrassment and rushed writing
Soulmates are tied by having the song of whatever theyâre listening to written on your wrist. So what happens when you realize your soulmate is the man you deemed ignorant, annoying, and conceited?
Wc: 5.8k
Notes: Stan marsh mentioned??!
No. 1 Party Anthem â Arctic Monkeys
Thatâs what your soulmate was currently listening to. Youâd know because the words were inked on your skin. Theyâd change in a few minutes, when the song came to an end.
But thatâs how it worked with soulmates. Whatever music they were listening to would be written on your left wrist, then erase out into the next song. Sometimes youâd have the emptiness of bare skin, but your soulmate seemed to really be into music. His taste varied from all sorts of genresâcountry to rock to death metal, and the occasional Chappell Roan or Laufey thrown in there.
Any time you were bored, youâd compile his songs into a Spotify playlist titled âmy loveâ where youâd listen to his songs and dream of him. It was over fifty hours long. Maybe he listened to so much music so that whenever he met you, heâd know. You tried to do the same, but youâre the type of person to listen to the same songs on repeat until you find new ones.
You sighed, gently running your right hand over your left wrist where the words were. It was your first day of college, and you couldnât help but wonder if this was when youâd meet him.
It was colder than you predicted, so you armored up with an oversized grandpa sweater and leggings. It covered up your soulmateâs song, but you figured youâd know when you met them. People reported feeling a pull to their destined lover.
After trudging through the crowded campus and struggling to find your lecture hall, you eventually entered introduction to philosophy.
Ten minutes late.
Thankfully, the professor didnât seem to mind (or even notice you for that matter) and you humbly snagged a seat at the top row. The guy next to you gave you a nasty side eye, one-hundred percent judging you for being slightly late.
You gave him a dirty look back and tried to catch up with what Professor Marsh was saying. He seemed to be going on about the syllabus and what his teaching would entail. He yapped a little more, but you were still hung up on the fact you already managed to harbor stares from the curly haired man sitting mere inches from you.
Professor Marsh stopped to pass out a paper you werenât entirely sure what for, and encouraged the class to talk with those around you. He emphasized becoming acquainted with your neighbors because theyâre who youâll be debating on different philosophical views, and a group discussion would be necessary for your grade in this class.
Begrudgingly, you glanced at the guy next to you. He was the only person sitting near you, save for the person in front of you already in conversation.
âHello.â You said, forcing a sweet tone. His eyes held amusement as he studied you.
âSo youâre just gonna act like you didnât death stare me earlier?â When he spoke, an unexpected southern accent filled his words.
You scoffed, rolling your eyes. âAs if you didnât side eye me. Câmon, man, Iâm just trying to make friendly conversation.â
âAre you always late to your classes?â He tilts his head, a stupid smirk playing on his lips.
âIn my defense, this campus is huge and this is the first time Iâve been late to a class ever. I am a rule follower through and through.â You pledge your hand up.
âAh, okay, so youâre the biggest nerd in here. Got it.â
âWhâyou canât make impractical assumptions like that. You donât know anything about me.â You huffed, a frown spreading on your face.
His eyebrows shot up as he gave you a pointed look. âYouâre wearinâ a grandpa sweater. I donât need to know anythinâ to figure you were probably a hall monitor.â
Lucky guess, you deduced. So what if you were that good of a student that admin appointed you a hall monitor? Thatâs nothing to be ashamed of. And he was wearing an ugly magenta sweater, anyway, so he has no room to talk. Despite that, your cheeks grew warm and you squirmed uncomfortably, glancing at Professor Marsh to see when he would finally reach your row.
âGrandpa sweaters are cute,â you say, âand you seem like the type to be that loser who was always in detention, anyway.â
He gave you a bored stare. âThat the best you got? Seriously, grandpa, you gotta think quicker than that.â
âDonât call me grandpa,â you snapped. He barked out an airy laugh.
âThen tell me your name.â
âWhy should I?â You frowned deeper. âAll youâve done is belittle me the moment I stepped into class.â
âBecause I want to know who Iâm gonna be spendinâ the rest of this semester sitting by.â He deadpanned.
âWho said Iâll be sitting here tomorrow?â
âTrust me, sweetheart, youâll be sitting here. Iâm way too charming for anyone not to.â He grinned, causing an extreme eye roll on your behalf.
âHow conceited of you,â you scoffed, narrowing your eyes at him.
âIf conceited is synonymous with incredibly hot and captivating, sure.â His smirk widened, and you swore in that moment, you couldâve hurt a man. You seriously considered it, but bit those thoughts down since it was the first day.
âKeyword: if.â Your jaw tightened.
He was enjoying this way too much. The boisterous laughter and arrogant smile said so.
âSo your name?â
âUp yours, asshole.â You snarled. He didnât respond. Instead, his triumphant smirk grew wider, his whole face lit up in a beaming glow. You followed where his eyes led, which was to a presence behind you.
âIâm glad you took my advice on becoming acquaintances with your peers,â Professor Marsh said. A small stack of papers was held in his hands. You winced, glaring at the annoying stranger next to you.
âIâm sorry, Professor, heââ
âDonât apologize. Iâm sure you had a perfectly good reason to refer to your classmate as a derogatory name,â he sassed, ânext time, please refrain from calling others asshole.â
He handed the paper to you and another to the absolute dickwad sitting next to you. You watched Professor Marsh retreat to his desk, speechless from what the hell just happened.
âSo Iâm assuming I donât get to know your name?â
His grating voice brought your attention back to him. You turned sharply, a murderous intent in your eyes.
âYou.â A seething glare pierced through him. âYou got me in trouble, you motherfuââ
âAh, you canât say no-no words,â he teased, holding up a hand. God, you wanted so badly to rip that cocky smirk from him. It genuinely made your blood boil, and your hatred almost pulled you to him. Probably because it wanted you to kick the shit out of him even though he was bigger and stronger than you.
âYou are insufferable. And I hope I never have to see or converse with you ever again.â
âWell, someoneâs cranky today.â
âWell, someone needs to shut the fuck up.â You bite back in a tone equally as sarcastic, if not more.
He was about to respond when Professor Marsh started speaking again. You gratefully averted your attention back to the subject of philosophy. He droned on for a little while longer about the history of philosophy and asked somebody what the point of taking this class would be.
Before anyone could raise their hand, asshole shot his hand up eagerly. You groaned, closing your eyes slightly.
âYou, in the back,â Professor Marsh nodded. Asshole ahemed, straightening up to make his presence louder.
âShe knows the answer,â he says, pointing directly at you. Fresh sets of eyes were laid upon you, and you grew hot under all of the attention. You slumped a little in your seat and glared at asshole, observing the satisfied smile he had and the utter joy in his eyes.
âYes?â Professor Marsh waited patiently for you to respond to his question.
âUh,â you cleared your throat, âto discuss multiple points of views on questions with no right answerâŠ?â You spoke reluctantly.
The ravenette instructor nodded, âthatâs right. Mostly. Philosophy has no right answer, itâs a string of never-ending thoughts pertainingââ
âYou dick,â you whispered aggressively to Asshole. He snickered, keeping his voice low.
âI said you knew the answer, didnât I?â
âAt the risk of embarrassing me in front of everybody! Have you not had enough satisfaction from tormenting me already?!â
He gave you a lame shrug, which really did nothing for you. âGuess not.â
You couldnât wait to get out of this class already.
â
You shoved both AirPods in your ears as you walked across campus, blasting High and Dry by Radiohead. It was a week into your freshman college experience.
So far, itâs been shit.
Youâve already made an enemy with the guy in your into to philosophy class (who you still didnât know the name of), your favorite sweater got soiled from getting beer spilled on it, which was your fault for wearing a sweater to a frat party anyway, and you hadnât encountered your soulmate like you hoped.
Safe to say you were completely crushed by the outcome of college. It wasnât the time-of-your-life party you imagined. No, it was full of copy paste sorority girls and frat bros who talked grossly about women. The food in the dining hall sucked, and you were too broke to afford groceries.
The only positive experience was meeting your dorm mate: Eliza Schuyler.
She was an incredibly sweet girl, and a genius, too. She had an almost mother-like quality to her which drew you in to want to know everything. Thankfully, she seemed to like you as well, and you quickly became close. Mostly because youâre living in a cramped room with little to no privacy, but thatâs besides the point.
Lucky for her, she came back on the second day, her heart pouring with excitement. She met her soulmate, a man by the name of Alexander Hamilton, in her English course. You congratulated her and ignored how you felt like the living version of Falling Behind by Laufey.
You glanced down at your wrist. Casual â Chappell Roan.
Ah, it was one of those days.
Sometimes your soulmate had episodes where he listened to nothing but sad, angsty songs about love. Mac DeMarco seemed to be a popular choice with him, and you wished you could hold him in your arms already.
The familiar family-owned coffeehouse came into view. You breathed in the scent of rich coffee and pastries, an instant hunger hitting you, and jumped into line and patiently waited your turn behind all the other caffeine deprived college kids. After placing your order and waiting at a small, two seat table, the sound of a dreaded voice broke your peace.
It took a minute to realize that voice was directed at you.
âândpa? Long time no see.â
Your breath hitched and you took out an airpod, coming face to face with Asshole himself.
âOh great, itâs you,â you grunted, setting your phone on the table. The screen turns on to flash Dreams by Fleetwood Mac, and asshole glances down at it, an immediate unreadable expression crossing his face.
He tugs a little at his left sleeve, his usual cocky demeanor dropping ever so slightly. âHappy to see you, too.â He mumbled.
You quirked an eyebrow but didnât question it. âI guess I wonât be staying much longer now that youâre here.â
âW-well, you donât have to leave âcause of me,â he stammers almost urgently. This made you pause. He wanted you to stay? âI only just got here. Wanna talk to you.â
ââŠWhy? You hate me,â a scoff escaped your lips. Genuine confusion was plastered on your face. Why is he acting all suddenly niceâwait, you know why. He just wants to find more ways to berate and argue with you as if him countering every word you speak in philosophy isnât enough.
âNow, I never said I hate you or anythinâ.â He reasons, a nervous smile hinting on his full lips.
âWeird. Iâd think after you calling me grandpa and blatantly suggesting Iâm stupid every day would give off that vibe, but I guess I was wrong.â You deadpan. His shoulders drop, and a small scowl forms on his face.
âIâm beinâ serious. I donât hate you, and I really do think we should get to know each other.â
You take a moment to stare at him, examining the sincerity on his features to the stubble he had growing to the dark curls that fell over his deep espresso eyes. âWhy?â Was all you could manage to blurt.
âBecause,â he huffs, âI just do. With us beinâ close in Stanâs class, I figured we should at least know each others names.â
âOkay, first of all, donât call him Stan you freak, and second of all, you would know my name if you cared enough to pay attention. But you always have a headphone in, so how could you be?â You batted your eyelashes, venom in your tone.
âHe doesnât care if we call him Professor Marsh or Stan! It's not weird to call college professors by their first names. Besides, itâs way easier to say Stan than Professor Marsh. And I wear headphones so my soulmateââ
âOrder for Y/n?â
The barista cut him off, her voice dominating the crowded shop before it hurriedly went back to its chattery state. You sighed, standing up and making your way over to the counter. Latte in hand, you start to move out the door, not bothering to say goodbye to Asshole.
But he didnât seem ready to say goodbye yet. He followed after you, ignoring the fact his coffee was being made and he likely wouldnât get it.
âWait! Not even a hug bye?â He jokes. You didnât laugh.
âWhy are you still talking to me?â You groan, clutching the warm liquid in your left hand.
âY/n, huh? Iâm Thomas,â he says, ignoring your question completely. You rolled your eyes, picking up the pace. His long legs easily kept up with you, however, so it didnât really do all that much.
âAwesome. Now can you leave me alone? You know my name, what else is there?â
âIâm sure thereâs a lot else to you if youâd just let us have a nice, civil conversation.â He grunted, falling into step with you.
âAnd ruin our rivalry?â You give him a sickening smile. He fights back a mocking face.
âOur rivalry is dead. This is the beginning of a friendship,â he declares. You laugh in his face.
âSure it is.â
âIâm serious! Why donât we set up a little hang out sesh, hm? Go to the library, finish up that paper Stan assigned?â He suggested.
âAgain, calling him Stan,â you sighed. âBut I suppose a little time studying in the library wouldnât hurt. I know Iâll regret this, but if itâll make you leave me the fuck alone, Iâll agree.â
âPerfect! Just give me your number and Iâll text you when,â he smiles, and for a moment it looks good on him. Then you remember itâs Thomas youâre thinking that about.
âGodâyou better not annoy me or Iâm blocking you.â
âI would never.â
â
Thomas had planned to meet you later that night around 7. The library closes at 10, so it gives you plenty of time to get the paper done. If you worked non-stop without much distraction, that is. But being with Thomas might dismantle that idea.
For the time being, you shuffled into your dorm, greeting Eliza with a smile. She was talking on the phone with Alexander. Must be nice, you thought.
To have met your soulmate already from chance.
You stayed quiet while she finished up the call, telling him she loves him. Fuck, dude, youâve been waiting your entire life to hear those words. But they were always at someone else, never directed at you.
âHey.â She grinned, setting her phone down.
âHey yourself,â you replied. The latte you were previously drinking was nearing emptiness, so you finished it off and tossed the paper cup.
âNo luck today?â She tilted her head, sitting on the edge of her crappy mattress. A small frown formed on your face.
âNah. But that annoying guy in my philosophy was at CafĂ© Serenity and somehow got me to agree to study in the library with him.â You moved to sit on the edge of your bed, facing her. âI did finally figure out his name, though. Itâs Thomas.â
âThomas Jefferson?â She asked, eyes going a little wide.
âI donât know his last name,â you shrugged, âif Thomas Jefferson is an arrogant shithead, then probably.â
âFrom what I heard he is. Alex keeps ranting about this guy named Thomas Jefferson, so if itâs the same personâŠyikes.â
You scoffed, âThatâs not at all surprising. Thomas always argues with any point I make. Itâs irritating as fuck.â
âAnd youâre going to study with him, why?â
âI donât know! He wouldnât hop off so I just agreed to make him shut up.â You slipped your hands up in defense.
It really was a stupid decision to say yes to him, even worse that you gave him your number. His confidence and stubbornness caused you to cave, although you really didnât want to. You had no desire being around him.
You may not know much, but you do know that Thomas Jefferson is an exasperating, egotistical piece of shit.
âI have to go. Washington locks the door the moment it turns ten, so lord knows if I want to get to actually learn today I have to hurry.â You rolled your eyes, sighing heavily.
Professor Washington was your English professor, a damn good one at that, but he was strict. Not in a mean way, but he did enforce school rules and a rigorous grading policy. Man would not accept work a second late or if it didnât meet the word requirements.
âOkay. Iâll be out with Alex tonight, so tell me how it goes with Jefferson,â she smiles sadly.
âI will. And make sure to use protection,â you grimaced. She laughed, telling you to knock it off and hurry to your lecture, which you did.
Thankfully, your speed walking did you good and you took your regular seat next to Aaron Burr. He was a quiet man, very respectful and polite, yet held himself with confidence. You knew youâd be friends the moment you first spoke to him about soulmates. He wasnât listening to music at that time, and when you checked your wrist it had Love Yourz by J. Cole written on it.
So that ruled him out as your soulmate.
You became friends anyway, and shared feelings of excitement on when youâd meet your soulmate and how you wondered what they were like. He said he had a feeling as to who his was, but he needs to talk to her and figure it out for sure. Said he saw a glimpse of her wrist and it had the classical music song on it. Only Burr would be the type to listen to Mozart unironically.
âHowâre you liking 1984?â He asks, referring to the book he recommended.
âItâs actually not bad. Itâs not what I expected, but I do like it so far.â You reply, giving him a light shrug. He smiles and nods, and shortly after class starts.
â
You didnât dress for the rain.
You didnât even know it would rain.
So after pulling up to the library, drenched and miserable, you beelined for the bathroom to dry everything with shitty paper towels.
All they really did was dry your face and hands. The rest of youâyour clothes, your hair, your shoesâwas soaked and uncomfortable.
Thomas texted you asking if you arrived alright, and you replied with a bitter âgive me two seconds.â After that, you inhaled sharply and walked back out. The library was pretty empty, but it was a Friday night so that wasnât unusual. Aside from the librarian and the burnt out sophomores in the corner, it was just you and Thomas.
His eyes widened when he saw you, and he stifled a laugh. An immediate distaste bubbled inside you.
âFuck off,â you growled, sitting across from him. He snickered a little more before collecting himself.
âIâm sorry, Iâm sorry. Are you okay? You must be cold,â he apologized, leaning forward on the table.
âIâm fine. I won't be staying long, considering Iâm cold and wet and really want a hot shower.â You hugged your arms over your chest in a pathetic attempt to warm up.
A genuine frown spread on his face, and he stood, shrugging off his jacket. âHere, you need it more than me.â He held out the vintage jacket to you.
You stared at it, blinking, unable to form words. Why was he being sweet? You thought he was supposed to be a self-centered asshole, just like you assumed and like Eliza told you, but he was offering you his jacket.
âIâŠthank you, but itâs okay. Iâll be fine.â You decline after a prolonged silence.
âI insist,â he replies, circling around the table and draping the jacket over your shoulders. He smiled, staring down at you with a softer intent. You glanced at his wrist to see if his soulmate was listening to anything, but it was empty. âThere. Now we can start.â
He retreats to his seat and pulls out a laptop, and you do the same. Fortunately, the laptop was safe from the rain but the rest of your bag was not. He starts up a conversation about the details of the paper, but you couldnât focus.
How could you when his jacket smells like sandalwood and vanilla? And how could you focus when you liked the feeling of his jacket being around you?
You had to force those thoughts down. Heâs not your soulmate. He probably already found his, and he was just doing this to be nice. But still, you had to ask. So you did.
âHave you found your soulmate yet?â You blurt.
A twinkle of amusement shines in his eyes, and he promptly pulls his hands off the keyboard. âNo. Have you?â
âNot yet,â you reply dryly.
âWhy do you ask?â He tilts his head, crossing his arms, and your gaze trailed to his toned biceps and forearms. Fuck, and his chest did that dip thing whereâfocus, damnit!
âI was just wondering. Youâve never said anything about her, soâŠâ you shrugged.
He nodded, scanning your features. âWell, do you want to talk about her? You seem interested.â
âWhat kind of music does she like?â You ask, causing him to look down at his left wrist.
âRight now sheâs not listening to anything,â he starts, âbut sheâs really been obsessed with Radiohead lately. Itâs weird, but whenever I see a new song, I add it to a playlist so I can listen to it.â His eyes crinkle into a grin.
âNo way, I do that too! Itâs not weird.â Despite every urge telling you not to get comfortable with him, you do. A wide smile spreads on your face and you perk up a little.
âReally? Whatâs he like?â He pulls out his phone, probably to show you the playlist. You retrieve yours as well, scrolling until you found it.
âHe listens to so much. Itâs actually insane. Nothing right now, I guess,â you frown slightly at the emptiness on your arm.
âMy soulmate listens to the same four songs on repeat, I swear. Then when she gets tired of it, she moves on to the next.â He rolls his eyes fondly, scooting his phone across the table for you to see.
Shit, this playlist had like, every song you listened to.
ââŠShe has good taste,â you reluctantly speak, eyebrows furrowing. Thereâs no wayâŠhe canât be. Right?
You turn your phone over to him, and he scrolls a little, eyes widening with each song. Then, a grin overtakes him.
âI have a lot in common with him.â He said.
âDo you?â You mumble in almost a trance-like state.
âMhm.â He hums, voice low as he starts again. âMaybe we oughta check to be sure we ainât each others soulmates.â A deep laugh escapes him, and a breathy one leaves you.
â..Yeah, we should.â You pull out your AirPods, as does he, and you put on Vienna by Billy Joel. He puts in his right airpod and scrolls until he clicks on a song.
Reluctantly, dreadfully, and anxiously, you check your left wrist.
Always by Daniel Caesar.
He checks his then shows you it. Sure enough, it says Vienna on it.
âHoly fuck,â you murmur, showing him your wrist as well. âYouâre my soulmate.â
âI knew it,â his grin grew wider.
An almost instantaneous bitter rage overcame you. âWhat do you mean you knew it? How long have you known?â
âRelax,â he motions his hands for you to calm down, âI had a gut feeling this morning but I wasnât sure. This is great! Iâve waitedââ
âNo, itâs not,â you interrupt, abruptly standing.
âWhat?â His face fell. Literally, you watched the excitement dissolve into confusion then hurt.
âIt canât be you.â
The words left you before you could process what you were saying. Shit, you didnât want to say that. You didnât want to watch his heart visibly break. How could you just deny your soulmate like that? He was supposed to be yours from the start. You were literally meant to be together, since the moment you came into this world.
It was supposed to be you and him. And yet here you stood, telling him no.
âWhat do you mean?â His voice cracks, barely above a whisper. He looks like he just got hit by a truck, like he got stabbed repeatedly in the heart.
âI should go,â you mutter, grabbing your bag and shoving the laptop in it. Tears pricked in your eyes, and you blinked them back. You needed time to process this, to come to terms with the fact that this man you absolutely despised was who youâre expected to spend the rest of your life with.
âWait, Y/n, please,â he calls, rushing to pack up his belongings before chasing after you.
You ignore his pleads and step back into the storm, shielding your bag from the rainwater. He follows after you, shouting out your name, but you trudged through the rain. Eventually, he sighed, dropped his stuff, then sprinted to catch up.
You gasped when his hand met your arm, swiveling you to face him.
âThomas! Whatâre youââ
He cuts you off by smashing his lips to yours. You let out a muffled gasp before your instincts kick in, and you find yourself kissing back.
And now you feel it.
The pull.
What other people described when they met their soulmate for the first time. The immediate attraction that theyâre supposed to feel, yet somehow, you didnât feel it upon interacting with him. But nowâŠnow you feel it.
Full force desire. Want.
His hands moved down to your lower back and waist, dragging you closer to him. Rain trickled down from the top of your head to cover every inch of you and Thomas, and yet, it felt like it was only you and him in the world. Nothing else seemed to matter except the heightened awareness of the fact you were pressed against your soulmate. It was bliss.
Then the bliss was over.
âThomasâŠâ you whispered, pushing off of him.
âY/n,â he whispered back, his tone low and it made you feel all sorts of things.
âI need time,â you say. He nods, one hand caressing your jaw as he backs up. He didnât seem mad, instead he seemed at peace with your decision.
âIâll be waitinâ for you. Whenever youâre ready, sweetheart, Iâll always be waiting for you.â
â
âEliza, I know who my soulmate is.â You blurted, voice desperate as you paced around the tiny dorm. You knew she was hanging with Alex tonight, and you didnât plan on needing to call her, but this was an emergency.
âWhat?! Thatâs amazing! Who is it?â You can hear her perk up. Alex asks her to put you on speaker, which she does so. Alexander briefly says hello and congratulates you before asking who as well.
âSo, funny story actually,â you start, a nervous laugh escaping you. âItâs Thomas.â
âWhat.â Both Alex and Eliza say, equal amounts of distaste in their voices.
âI know, I knowâI wasnât particularly thrilled either. But heâs not a bad guy,â you defend.
âWow. I am so, so sorry, Y/n. Are you okay?â Alex sounds, and you roll your eyes. Only you were allowed to talk shit about Jefferson. He was your soulmate, after all.
âIâm fine,â you bite, âI just need to process it all.â
âOf course, girl, Iâll be back later tonight and we can talk about it more,â Eliza said. Her words were comforting and you thanked her before promptly hanging up.
So. What to do now other than reflect on the past 24 hours.
Thomas Jefferson, the man who called you a hall monitor and proceeded to insult your sweater, the man who got you in trouble on the first day, the man you swore to humiliate and destroy, ended up being your soulmate. Karma has a way of getting you, doesnât it?
You checked your wrist. Watching Him Fade Away, Mac DeMarco. Okay, so he is not okay. Got it. You really need to think faster and make it up to him, because you know that even with his cool and collected, cocky exterior, he was still a person with a heart that you probably just shattered. You checked your phone for the millionth time that night, not at all because youâre anticipating if he was texting you, but to your dismay there was no new notifications.
So you sighed, grabbed your shower caddy and clothes to change into, and headed for the communal bathrooms. Not before realizing you were still in his jacket. It hurt you to have to take it off, but you did so anyway and neatly laid it on your bed.
After a lukewarm shower in a shitty locker room, you changed into pajamas and returned to your room, immediately flopping on your bed.
Still no new notifications. And still sad, slow songs listed on your wrist.
The door swung open, Eliza tumbling in. âIâm here! Iâm here, tell me everything,â she rushed to your side.
You sat up, jaw slacked open, then started speaking. Slowly, hesitantly, then you picked up the pace and told her everything. The jacket, the realization, the kiss. Every little detail from the curve of his jaw to the glimmer in his eyes when he said âI knew it.â
âHe said he would wait for me, Eliza, he said heâd wait for me.â At that point, tears you didnât want in your eyes formed anyway. Hell, you didnât even know why you were crying. Maybe because you know youâre so fucked up for rejecting your soulmate.
âAs much as Alex and I dislike Jefferson, heâs still your soulmate. And you still need to at least give him an explanation as to why you needed time. Get some sleep tonight, and tomorrow youâll feel better. I promise, love,â she smiled softly, pulling you in for a comforting hug.
In the week-and-a-half that youâve known her, sheâs been one of the most supportive friends youâve ever had. Granted, one of the only friends since youâve always struggled with socialization, but she didnât seem to mind your slip ups or awkward silences.
âI got so lucky that youâre my roommate,â you mutter into her shoulder, tightening your grip. She squeezes you reassuringly.
âI could say the same for you. Now, get some rest,â she pulls off, standing up and retreating to her side of the room.
There was one last thing you had to do, though. You grabbed your phone from the side table, pulling up Thomasâs contact. You had him saved as Thomas (asshole), and since thatâs not exactly appropriate for your soulmate's contact, you changed it to Thomas<3.
You: can we meet tmr at cafe serenity? 9 am?
Thomas<3: Iâll be there.
After that was taken care of, you comply with Elizaâs request and go to sleep, Thomasâs jacket lying next to you.
â
Thomas arrived earlier to the coffee shop than planned.
By the time you arrived, he was already sat in a little corner booth, staring out the window. A cup was snugly in his hands, and there was a latte across from him. You sank into the seat, his face instantly lighting up when he saw you.
âHi,â you say awkwardly, inwardly cursing at yourself for not knowing what else to say.
âHey,â he smiled warmly, as if nothing was wrong.
âHowâd you know I like lattes?â You picked up the cup in front of you, taking a sip. Your order wasn't exactly complicated, but it was still sweet how he went ahead and ordered for you, somehow knowing what youâd like.
âI saw it on your cup last time.â He shrugged, taking a drink of plain black coffee.
âAwh, thank you. Damn, now I really feel bad for last night,â you chuckle in a pathetic attempt to lighten the mood.
âI know Iâm not who you expected or even wanted. But I am yours and I am determined to prove that to you,â he brings his voice down, reaching across the table and putting a hand on yours.
Your heart skipped a beat. âThomas, you are who I want. No, youâre not what I expected, youâre a million times better. You challenge me and still want to be with me despite my flawsâThomas, you are perfect and I am so, so sorry for saying what I said yesterday. I was shocked, but thatâs no excuse. I really want to make things work between us, even though weâve had a bitter past.â You finish your rant and he smiles real wide.
âIâm so glad itâs you.â
You couldnât stop the grin that spread on your face, and you leaned across the table and met in the middle for a short, sweet kiss.
âHey! Keep the PDA to a minimum, you damn kids!â The old lady behind the counter scolded you, and you broke apart in fits of giggles. He stringed his pinky with yours and tugged you out of the establishment, leading you to wherever felt right.
â
A heavy arm hung loosely around your waist, and the soft snores coming from Thomas awoke you. Your eyes fluttered open and you came face to face with the man youâve come to love.
Eliza was with Alex, so you invited Thomas to spend the night and ended up cuddling in each other's arms. You smiled, careful not to wake him, and shuffled so you were back in his embrace.
This, you decided, was peace. This is what was meant for you.
Genuine question here, how do you feel about Steve Lacy (if you listen to him ofc)
I listen to a few of his songs, I think heâs pretty good. Not my fav but still fire đ„
Ready for the next update đŒ
Iâm working on it đ Iâm really struggling with this chapter idk why, but Iâm almost done âŒïžâŒïž
artist âą writer (she/her) âthe world is cruel, therefore I wonât be.â choose kindness
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