If it’s okay to ask, are you open to Omorashi and/or Omocute requests?
If not, that’s perfectly fine, I get it’s not for everyone, I just wanted to check.
Honestly, didn't even know what that meant, but after a quick Google... Yeahhhhhh. I'm not writing piss stuff, sorry lmao. No shame, but uhhh... I just can't do that 💀 I am totally willing to do other things, though! Within reason, obviously.
If you're willing do you mind doing that last prompt you did (the one with Mahiru and Kaede, also fuck that Hina guy wtf) but with Kyoko, Celeste and Toko? I really enjoy subby readers and my gay heart is screaming ♥️
A/N: Absolutely! I tried to make it more subby, I hope this is what you wanted :} Also, yeah, I agree. That guy was super fucking weird. Hopefully, it won't be a problem anymore, though.
Kyoko:
- The Talk Comes First: Kyoko doesn’t act without knowing the full picture. She’ll sit beside (Y/N), voice calm and soothing, hands gently folded in her lap. “Are you sure you’re ready?” she’ll ask- not to test her, but to assure her she’s not going anywhere if she’s not. The detective always makes sure the emotional groundwork is solid before taking any step forward.
- Subtle Nervousness: She seems composed, but the truth is in the little things: how her fingers linger longer than usual, how she hesitates before speaking, how her eyes flick to (Y/N)’s lips then away again. It’s not fear- it’s hope. Quiet, careful hope that (Y/N) will want this just as much as she does.
- Soft, Private Setting: Kyoko prepares everything in advance: the room is clean, the sheets are freshly changed, the lights are low and warm. Maybe there’s a playlist in the background- instrumental, minimal vocals. She creates an atmosphere that wraps around (Y/N) like a protective spell.
- Guided Reassurance: She reads (Y/N)’s every reaction like she’s solving a case. If her breath catches or her fingers twitch, she slows. “Is this okay?” she murmurs. “We stop the moment you say so.” There is no judgment in her voice, only care.
- Uncharacteristically Soft Words: When the walls fall, they fall completely. “You’re beautiful,” she whispers against (Y/N)’s skin. “I’ve never trusted anyone this much.” Her words are rare gems, only shared when they matter most- raw and real in a way that Kyoko doesn’t allow herself to be often.
- Taking Her Time: She savors every kiss, every brush of skin. Her touches are slow, almost reverent, like she's memorizing the love of her life. She’s not rushing to an end- she’s exploring, mapping, learning. Her pace says ‘you matter to me’.
- Detective Instincts… for Love: If (Y/N) tenses, if her voice falters, if her expression shifts even slightly- she knows. She adjusts instantly. “We don’t have to go further. We can just be here.” Kyoko is attentive in a way that feels like she’s holding your soul in her hands.
- She Makes It About (Y/N): This isn’t about her. Kyoko pays attention to (Y/N)’s sighs, her shivers, her breath. She adapts to what she needs, and finds joy in giving her pleasure- not just physically, but emotionally. She’s endlessly patient, giving without asking for anything back.
- Detective-Level Focus: The way (Y/N)’s back arches? Noted. The little gasp when she kisses a certain spot? Locked in. She pieces it together like evidence, each detail helping her uncover exactly how to make her unravel.
- Hands First, Always Controlled: Kyoko’s fingers are her most precise tools- slender, confident, and deliberate. Even with gloves, she’s devastatingly effective. She doesn’t rush, she doesn’t falter. “I want to feel you come undone for me,” she murmurs, and she does.
- Kisses Between Commands: While her fingers do the work, her mouth follows: trailing kisses down (Y/N)’s neck, teeth nipping her collarbone, lips warm and firm. Her voice is low: “Don’t run. Let it happen.” She grounds her with both command and comfort.
- If She Uses Her Mouth… (Y/N)’s Doomed: Kyoko between her thighs is a study in devotion. She licks with purpose, pressure, and slow-building heat. Her hands keeps (Y/N) open, her eyes locked on hers. Every look says, ‘don’t look away from me’. And (Y/N) can't.
- She Talks (Y/N) Through It: “You’re close.” “That’s it, stay with me.” “I want you to let go.” Her voice alone is enough to push her over. She speaks in that even, warm tone (Y/N) trusts more than anything.
- Body Language Queen: When (Y/N) starts trembling, she grounds her. “Breathe. I’ve got you,” she whispers, and she does. She’s right there, adjusting her pace, never leaving her to ride it out alone. She breaks her down just to hold her through it.
- Finishing: When (Y/N) finally falls apart, she catches every piece. Shes in her arms before she can even think. “You did so well,” she murmurs against her temple. “I’m here. I’ve got you.” Her embrace is firm, warm, and unshakable.
- Gentle Aftercare: Warm water, soft clothes, slow fingers brushing through (Y/N)’s hair- Kyoko takes care of her like it’s second nature. Not for show, not for reward, but because (Y/N)’s hers, and that means everything. She wipes her down, tucks her into bed, kisses her wrist or her knuckles. The silence is not awkward- it’s safe. It’s filled with everything she can’t say aloud yet.
- Protective Instincts: She doesn’t move far. Her arm stays around (Y/N)’s waist, her forehead rests against hers, and she whispers, “I’m proud of you.” Even in sleep, she keeps her close, like she’s guarding something precious.
- And Later, When (Y/N)’s Ready: Kyoko brings it up again, gently. “How did that feel for you?” she asks, genuinely curious. She’s not looking for praise- she’s looking to learn, to understand, to grow. “Tell me everything. I want to know you.”
- A New Level of Bond: Afterwards, something in her softens permanently. She reaches for (Y/N)’s hand more in public, touches her back when she’s nervous, sits a little closer when she’s quiet. Her gestures stay small but deeply meaningful.
Celeste:
- Velvet Patience: Celeste is unnervingly calm, even in the most delicate situations. Her voice is a steady lull, her touch a whisper. She picks up on every nervous glance, every stuttered breath, and treats it not as hesitation- but as precious vulnerability to be cherished, not rushed.
- Curated Intimacy: Every moment is an event to Celeste. She crafts the room like a stage deep crimson sheets, flickering candlelight, the warm scent of roses and cinnamon tea. It's a soft fantasy she’s prepared just for (Y/N)- a world where tension melts away.
- Gentle Consent: Before anything begins, she cups (Y/N)’s cheek and asks, “Are you certain, my dear?” Her tone is so gentle, it borders on reverent. Consent, to her, is sacred. One “stop,” and she’ll halt without hesitation, offering warmth and cuddles instead.
- Experience Without Arrogance: Though she’s clearly confident and well-versed, Celeste never flaunts it. She leads with grace, not dominance. Her touches are exploratory, not possessive. She lets (Y/N) guide the pace, only stepping in to soothe or steady with tender encouragement.
- Laughter in Lace: If things go clumsy, she doesn’t blink. She just smiles, maybe chuckles, and says something like, “Perfection is dull, darling. I much prefer sincerity.” It eases the moment, makes (Y/N) feel seen and safe.
- Emotional First, Physical Second: For Celeste, intimacy without emotional resonance is meaningless. She watches (Y/N)’s face more than anything, whispering things like, “You’re doing beautifully,” or, “You have no idea how radiant you are when you trust me.”
- Slow, Intentional Control: Celeste doesn’t rush pleasure. She draws it out like a skilled gambler playing the long game. Her voice drops, sultry and steady: “Relax, mon amour. I know exactly how to make you tremble.” She plays (Y/N) like a prized deck of cards- every shuffle intentional.
- Bare Devotion: She begins with her hands- every movement is slow, studied, circular. One hand soothes while the other teases. If (Y/N) starts to shake, she holds her steady, whispering praise like silk over skin.
- Sweet Words, Wicked Edges: Celeste’s mouth is poetic even in passion. “You’re already this wet? How delightful…” Her tone stays elegant, teasing, yet never crude. She relishes how (Y/N) blushes, coaxing out gasps with every breathy murmur.
- Worship with Her Mouth: Between (Y/N)’s thighs, Celeste becomes reverent- like a queen worshiping a goddess. She alternates pressure and tempo with the finesse of a maestro. Occasionally, she pauses just to listen to the whimper she elicits, then resumes with a devilish glint in her eyes.
- Gentle Restraint: When things peak, Celeste adds pressure with a steady hand on (Y/N)’s hips. If she tries to squirm away or close her legs, Celeste parts them again, whispering, “No hiding, mon trésor. Let me see all of you.”
- Intuitive as a Card Shark: She reads (Y/N)’s reactions like a pro- breath catches, legs tense, voice cracks. Her every move is adjusted in response, keeping (Y/N) right at the edge until she knows- now. Only then does she let her fall.
- Hidden Softness: Only (Y/N) sees her like this- bare-voiced and slightly trembling when she says, “Thank you… for trusting me with something so precious.” It’s the rare crack in her otherwise theatrical façade, and it makes (Y/N) fall even harder.
- That First Finish- Her True Victory: The moment (Y/N) comes undone, Celeste doesn’t let go immediately. She eases her down slowly, lips softening, drawing out every last tremble. Her reward isn’t the climax itself- it’s the broken, blissful trust in (Y/N)’s voice afterward.
- Post-Climax Bliss: Afterward, Celeste is all silk and silence. She brings tea, tucks (Y/N) into bed, and curls around her like a shield. Her parting whisper? “You did beautifully… I hope I was unforgettable.” (Y/N) clings to her, dazed, and Celeste’s smile lingers in the dark.
- Aftercare Royalty: She doesn’t just do aftercare- she elevates it. Warm tea, gentle cleaning, luxurious sleepwear, and the softest embrace. (Y/N) gets to lie on her chest, feeling her fingertips move slowly through her hair as she whispers, “You are safe. You are adored.”
Toko (plus Jack):
- Nervous to the Core: The moment intimacy even approaches the conversation, Toko’s stammering like her life depends on it. “I-I-I- this is m-m-moving so fast! W-We haven’t even talked about lighting conditions!!”
- Hopeless Romantic: Her ideal “first time” is something out of a tragic Victorian novel- faint candlelight, whispered poetry, trembling confessions. She would kill for rose petals.
- Check-in Queen: “A-Are you okay? Did that hurt? I-I can stop- no really, just say the word!!” She checks in every ten seconds, desperate to get things “right.”
- Overheats Instantly: Compliment her? She short-circuits. “You’re so gentle, Toko.” - Cue wide-eyed stare, open mouth, and total emotional collapse.
- Tactile Panic, But Devotion: Touching (Y/N)? Terrifying. But she still does it, hands shaking, because she wants to. She takes her time, watching her reactions like she's memorizing scripture.
- Sacred Kisses: Every kiss is given with shaking lips and reverence. Like she’s afraid she’ll break the moment if she breathes too hard.
- Miracle Complex: When (Y/N) moans? She looks like she’s seen God. “I-I did that? You… because of me?” It's part pride, part panic, part euphoria. “I n-never thought anyone would… want me… Like that.”
- Taking the Stage-: When things get too intense for Toko- sneeze, slice, cackle- Jack’s on deck with that wild grin- “Well helloooo, lover~”
- Confidence on Fire: Where Toko panics, Jack thrives. She's flirty, bold, and loves teasing (Y/N) just to watch her squirm. Even so, shes weirdly considerate? She knows when to reel it in. If (Y/N)’s nervous, she dials it back (still grinning, of course). “Don’t cry on me now, babe. You’re doing sooo good~”
- Romance, But Make It Unhinged: Kisses (Y/N)’s knuckles while whispering, “You're the only one who makes me wanna play nice.” And she means it.
- Tongue Game- Dangerous: She’s filthy. Loud, wet, teasing- moaning like she’s the one getting off from tasting (Y/N). “Damn, sweetheart, you taste like sin~”
- Edge Queen: She loves dragging it out, edging until (Y/N)’s thighs tremble and she’s breathless. All while praising and taunting in equal measure.
- Orgasm Hunter: When she knows (Y/N)’s close, she gets feral. Eyes wild, tongue relentless, chasing her climax like it’s prey.
- Takes Care Afterwards (Sorta): Gently kisses (Y/N)s thighs, helps her clean up… while making a very inappropriate joke. “Can’t break my toy on the first playdate~”
- Balance of Soft and Savage: Toko builds the emotional intensity, Jack brings the fire. (Y/N) learns which version she wants depending on her mood. Toko starts it, slow and shaky. Jack finishes it, wild and ruthless. Tag-team of the century.
- Loving Navigation: (Y/N) learns how to hold Toko through the panic and keep Jack from going full menace. It's a labor of love- beautiful, weird, messy. Despite all the madness, both parts of Toko genuinely want to love and worship (Y/N)… they just express it very differently.
you write for helluva boss?
Yes, I do, @ultimategraffitiguy. I added it to my last of fandoms :}
A lot of these are unfinished, but I do plan on finishing them eventually. As soon as I do, I'll post them on here, and my insta!
A/N: I am trying to work on my multi-part fic's, now that I'm mostly caught up with all my requests. I missed writing for Silcooooooo.
Summary: (Y/N) is led through Silco’s factory- alive with shimmer, but hollow with grief. Silco remains tender, pretending nothing’s changed, even as he parades Vander, weak and broken, as a symbol of failed ideals. When Silco offers Vander shimmer in exchange for loyalty, Vander refuses, desperate to protect the children. In a private chamber, (Y/N) finally breaks, confessing she searched for Silco for years. Their reunion is intimate but laced with sorrow. When Vi and the others storm the factory, everything spirals. Silco unleashes his shimmer-mutated monster, and (Y/N), bound by enchanted chains, is forced to watch the chaos unfold. Powder’s bomb kills Mylo and Claggor, devastating (Y/N), who Silco tries- and fails- to console. Vander ends saving Vi, transformed by shimmer into a final act of defiance. Afterward, (Y/N) and Silco find Powder, shattered. (Y/N) cradles her and later, she claims the name “Jinx,” offering unconditional love. Back at The Last Drop, (Y/N) remains shackled but tenderly cares for Jinx. Silco releases her chains, but (Y/N) doesn’t retaliate. Her only focus is Jinx- her “little firecracker”- the last thing worth protecting.
The factory loomed like a carcass on the edge of the Undercity- cold, rusted steel and flickering lights illuminating a world that wasn’t quite dead.
It should’ve been abandoned.
It wasn’t.
Inside, the place was alive with movement- gears turning, people working, machines thundering deep within the structure’s bones. And all of it was for him.
Silco.
He kept his hand wrapped gently around (Y/N)’s as he led her forward, step by step, like they were just walking home. Like none of this had changed.
But her eyes were fixed on the floor. On the trail of oil and soot and blood leading them deeper in.
Her mind buzzed like static- empty and deafening at once. Everything she thought she understood had collapsed in a matter of hours. Grief curled around the edges of her thoughts like smoke, choking out the edges of her reality.
Silco’s thumb brushed along the back of her hand, slow and deliberate. The same way he used to, late at night, when they lay in bed and the world was quiet.
It made her heart ache.
How could she still miss it?
How could that part of her still want to melt into his touch, even now?
“This place is a little crude, I’ll admit,” Silco said, his voice low as they crossed a metal walkway above the factory floor. “The base violence necessary for change... but we both know Topside won’t listen to anything else.”
She didn’t respond. Couldn’t.
Nearby, the man- creature- that had dragged Vander through the streets was deteriorating. No longer monstrous. Just sick. Slumped over the rail, vomiting some viscous, purple substance into the depths.
Another man approached, grabbing Vander roughly and throwing him against the side of the walkway with a clang.
(Y/N) flinched slightly, but Silco’s hand tightened gently around hers, guiding her to a stop.
Vander groaned, coughing, blood splattering the steel beneath him.
And for the first time, he looked up.
Straight at her.
Eyes full of pain- not from the injuries. From her.
(Y/N) didn’t return the look.
She was still watching Silco, eyes wide, almost in a trance, like she was trying to match the man before her to the boy she had once loved.
It wasn’t until Vander spoke that she snapped out of it- his voice ragged, cutting through the fog in her head.
“Even with your monsters,” he rasped, “You won’t win a war against Piltover.”
Silco exhaled a low hum. “I don’t have to. I just need to scare them.”
He turned slightly, reaching out to her again- fingers brushing softly behind her ear, tucking a stray strand of hair away like he used to.
“Piltover won’t dare set foot in the Underground again,” he murmured.
The former monster gagged and groaned again, the sludge he threw up hissing against metal.
Vander didn’t spare him a glance.
“You’ll get people killed,” Vander said, his voice heavy with grief and fury. “For what? Pride?”
Silco’s jaw tightened.
“For respect,” he snapped, turning fully now. “Opportunity. Everything they’ve denied us.”
He released (Y/N)’s hand finally and stepped forward, crouching down to Vander’s level. He stared at him like a blade about to be unsheathed.
Vander glared, breath ragged. “You had my respect. The Lanes’ respect. (Y/N)’s.” He nodded toward her. “But that was never enough for you.”
That struck something.
Silco’s calm shattered in an instant as he stood, pacing a step back with fury rising behind his eyes.
“We shared a vision, Vander. All of us.” His voice rose. “A dream of freedom. Not just for the Lanes, but for the entire Underground. United. One people.”
He turned to (Y/N) then- voice softer, filled with weight.
“The nation of Zaun.”
Then back to Vander, venom lacing each word.
“Do you even remember? I trusted you… and you betrayed me.”
(Y/N)’s eyes finally took in all of him- his ruined cheek, his sunken features, the warped skin trailing from his jaw to the edge of his glowing eye.
The scar where the toxic water had seeped into his skin.
The proof of how far he’d been willing to go.
And how much further he’d fallen to crawl back.
Vander’s breath rattled in his chest as he leaned against the steel railing, blood still wet on his lips. The anger in his eyes had softened into something heavier- regret, shame.
“…What I did to you,” he said, voice low, almost too quiet to hear, “I’ve never forgiven myself.”
He looked up at Silco- truly looked at him.
“You were my brother.”
Silco didn’t respond right away. He stared down at him for a long moment before his gaze slid toward (Y/N), and the edges of his expression flickered with something harder to name.
“No,” he murmured. “You still don’t understand.”
He turned to them both now- his voice rising slightly, almost reverent, almost haunted.
“Can you imagine what it’s like… when your blood mixes with the filth? When the river toxins eat through your nerves, strip away everything soft, everything human?”
He stepped closer to Vander again, looming now, his voice low and trembling- not with weakness, but with conviction.
“Oh, I hated you for what you’d done. Every breath I clawed in was filled with hate. But hate burns fast. And when it fades, it leaves room… for understanding.”
His eyes bore into Vander.
“The only way to defeat a superior enemy… is to stop at nothing. To become what they fear.”
He tilted his head.
“I hated you, Vander. But I still respected you. Until you made peace with them. Until you played lapdog to the people who tried to crush us. After everything we suffered.”
Vander’s jaw clenched, but his voice was tired. “I had no choice.”
“Perhaps,” Silco echoed with a hum. “But now… now you do.”
He reached into his coat, retrieving a small vial- glass, delicate, and filled with a swirling, violet liquid that shimmered even in the dim light.
He knelt again, holding it out between them so both Vander and (Y/N) could see.
“Shimmer.” His voice was soft, full of dark promise. “This is power. This is what they fear.”
He glanced up at (Y/N), then down at Vander.
“We can finally realize our dream. Together... Brother.”
Vander looked from the vial… to Silco… and finally up at (Y/N).
She didn’t say a word. She couldn’t. Her heart beat hollow in her chest, her thoughts knotted beyond reason.
Vander’s eyes turned back to Silco.
“Look at what you’ve done,” he whispered. “Benzo. These kids…”
He shook his head slowly. “In fighting Topside… you’d sacrifice everything that we are. It’s not the way. Can’t you see that? If it has to be me, then fine. Kill me. But please… spare the Lanes.”
Silco’s eyes narrowed, sharp and burning.
“You’d die for the cause,” he spat, “but you won’t fight for one?”
Vander gave a breathy laugh, shaking his head. “I’m just… not that man anymore.”
Silco’s lips curled- not in amusement, but disappointment.
“I’ll show you what you really are,” he muttered.
Then, without another glance at his old friend, he turned and walked toward (Y/N) again.
Her breath caught when he reached for her. He took her hand gently- fingers warm, familiar, haunting... And like something out of a long-forgotten dream, he laced his fingers through hers and led her away down the walkway.
Past the shimmer.
Past the scars.
The room they entered was dim, lit only by flickering industrial lights high in the rafters, casting long shadows against the grimy walls. Vander grunted, still dazed but regaining strength, just in time to be dragged inside by two of Silco’s men. He struggled weakly, but they forced him into a heavy chair bolted to the floor.
Without a word, the men bound his wrists to the armrests with reinforced chains- tight, unforgiving.
(Y/N) watched it all.
She didn’t move.
She just… watched, her heart twisted in knots, as Vander met her gaze with something between understanding and heartbreak. She gave him one last lingering look- long, pained- but didn’t pull away when Silco’s hand gently guided her from the room.
He led her up a flight of grated stairs, each step echoing with the weight of history between them.
At the top of the factory was a room- an old office overlooking the chaos below. Large, reinforced windows gave a full view of the operation, of Vander strapped below, of the quiet power Silco now commanded.
Inside, it was just the two of them.
(Y/N) stood awkwardly at first, eyes scanning the space like she might find an anchor.
She didn’t.
Silco motioned to one of the chairs before his desk. “Sit.”
She did.
He pulled the other chair closer, sitting directly in front of her, his eyes searching her face. He didn’t speak. Not yet. Not while the silence still held its weight.
They sat like that for a while- just breathing, listening to the distant hum of machinery, the ghost of bloodshed still heavy on both of them.
Then (Y/N) spoke.
Her voice cracked.
“I… I looked for you…”
Silco’s jaw twitched.
“For years, I looked,” she whispered, broken and small. “I searched every body on the bridge. Dug through rumors. Lies. Begged for information… anything that would lead me to you.”
She inhaled sharply, her hands shaking.
And then- gently- she reached forward, taking his hand into hers, lifting it slowly, reverently, pressing his palm to her cheek.
As soon as she felt his skin on hers, she nearly sobbed.
Her breath hitched, her face crumpling with the weight of every year she’d spent missing him. She hadn’t let anyone this close since he vanished. Hadn’t let herself feel this deeply. Not with Vander. Not with anyone. Only the children had been allowed into that tender part of her.
But this- this was different.
This was him.
And she’d missed him so much.
Silco stood slowly.
Then, wordlessly, he reached for her- his touch uncharacteristically gentle as he pulled her to her feet, even as she trembled beneath his hands.
She nearly collapsed into him.
But he caught her.
His arms wrapped tight around her small frame, pulling her flush to his chest as she nuzzled into the crook of his neck, her sobs muffled against his collar. She breathed him in like she was afraid it might be the last time.
He still smelled like he always had- warm, sharp, a little like smoke... But now there was something else. Something chemical. Acrid. Lingering under the surface.
It clung to his coat, to his skin.
Shimmer.
She didn’t ask. Not yet. She just held him tighter, her fingers curling into the back of his coat... And Silco closed his eyes.
For the first time in years…
He held her like he’d never let go.
Silco held her until the shaking dulled, until the sobs faded into shallow, trembling breaths. He cupped her face afterward, thumbs brushing away the tears left behind on her cheeks, movements tender in a way that almost didn’t fit the man he'd become.
But then his gaze drifted past her- eyes narrowing toward the window that overlooked the catwalk.
He stilled.
(Y/N) turned, heart clenching.
Outside, darting shapes blurred through the shadows.
Mylo… Claggor. Vi.
Her heart dropped.
She spun back to Silco, panic in her eyes. “Sil- Silco, please- don’t hurt them. Please, don’t kill them. I- They’re just kids. I raised them. I love them. I-”
He leaned down, his hand slipping behind her neck. His lips pressed softly to her forehead.
“Calm down…” he murmured. “I can’t promise anything… I think you’ve figured that out by now.”
Her heart cracked again.
“But,” he added, gently taking her hand, “I will do all I can… Just for you.”
Her breath hitched- part fear, part relief, part dread.
He led her from the office, down toward the walkways that twisted like veins through the heart of the factory. His hand never left hers.
A whistle cut through the air behind them.
Footsteps answered.
Sevika fell in beside them, lifting an eyebrow at the sight of (Y/N) before letting out a sharp sigh and shaking her head.
“Of course,” she muttered.
Another man appeared, stepping forward.
He held chains.
(Y/N)’s stomach turned cold.
She pulled her hand from Silco’s, taking a step back- heart hammering.
Silco’s hand caught her chin gently, tilting her face toward him. His expression was unreadable.
“I have to take precautions,” he said softly. “You understand, don’t you?”
She didn’t have time to answer.
The man with the chains moved in quickly, wrapping them around her wrists and upper arms. As soon as the metal touched her skin, she felt it- pain, sudden and sharp, as the runes engraved in the chain flared to life, cutting off her magic.
Her breath stuttered. Her knees buckled slightly.
He made these… for her.
The realization made her blood run cold.
She struggled on instinct, fire rising in her throat- but Sevika grabbed her from behind, locking an arm around her shoulders to drag her forward.
Silco walked ahead of them all, his voice smooth as he approached the group below.
“Welcome.”
The children turned sharply.
Mylo tensed. Claggor instinctively stepped in front of Powder. Vi’s fists clenched at her sides.
And then they saw her.
Sevika dragged (Y/N) into the open, the chains glowing faintly against her skin.
Their eyes locked with hers.
And (Y/N)’s heart shattered.
Fear. Sadness. Betrayal.
Vi’s voice broke through the silence, small and shaking.
“M-Mom…?”
(Y/N) choked on the lump in her throat, pulling against the chains- only to cry out softly when the runes sparked again.
“I’m okay…” she managed, voice soft and shaking. “Focus on them, alright? Focus on each other.”
She tried to smile, tried to soothe them like she always did.
But her hands were bound. Her power was locked down. And she was being dragged by the man she’d once loved more than anything in the world.
Silco stopped beside her, reaching out to brush her hair back with a tenderness that made her flinch.
“Have you heard the rumor?” he asked the kids, voice light, casual- cruel.
“Vander the coward fled town, left his children behind…”
He paused, eyes glittering with venom.
“…And he was never seen again.”
(Y/N) sucked in a sharp breath, biting her lip to keep from sobbing.
And Vi- her face slowly twisted from fear into rage.
But (Y/N)… she could barely look at them.
Not like this.
Vi didn’t hesitate.
The second she saw (Y/N) like that- bound, chained, magic suppressed- something in her snapped.
“Claggor,” she barked, voice firm. “Find another way out of here.”
Claggor gave a quick nod, already moving, slipping back into the room Vander was in to search for an exit route.
Vander, still slumped in his restraints, his voice raw with emotion, rasped, “You don’t have to do this-”
“Yes, I do,” Vi cut him off, tone solid. Final.
And then one of Silco’s men stepped forward.
A mountain of a man. Thick arms, heavy boots, a massive knife in hand.
The second he approached Vi, (Y/N) instinctively lunged forward- pure panic in her eyes. “No!” she screamed, heart thundering as she tried to reach Vi, tried to protect her babies.
Sevika’s grip tightened around her waist, holding her firm.
(Y/N) fought against the chains anyway, gritting her teeth through the pain, trying to claw her way free.
“Let me go!”
But Sevika didn’t budge.
Vander’s voice broke, more desperate now. “Vi!”
The girl stood tall, squared her shoulders, clenched her fists.
And met the man head-on.
She glanced once- only once- back at Silco, then dropped into a fighting stance, steady and sure.
The man lunged.
He brought the knife down hard, but Vi lifted her arms- Vander’s gauntlets catching the blade with a clang that rang through the entire factory.
The force vibrated down her arms- but she held firm.
Then she struck.
One brutal, upward punch.
Crack.
The man’s head snapped back, blood flying from his mouth along with a tooth. His body flew backwards, crashing to the walkway with a heavy thud.
Out cold.
Silco’s eyes widened just slightly. Not fear. Not quite. But... surprise. He said nothing- just lifted a hand and gave a sharp signal.
Sevika responded immediately, yanking (Y/N) back by the chains, dragging her a step away as more of Silco’s men stepped forward.
(Y/N)’s eyes never left Vi.
Even as she was pulled back, she watched her girl fight.
One after another, they came.
And one by one, Vi dropped them.
A punch to the gut. A backhanded swing to the jaw. A full-force slam that sent one man tumbling off the side of the catwalk, screaming as he fell.
If the situation weren’t so dire, (Y/N) would’ve been bursting with pride.
Even through the fear, through the chains biting into her skin, she felt it rise like warmth in her chest.
Her baby girl was holding her own.
Then… only Sevika remained.
She stepped forward, cracking her knuckles, clearly ready to jump in.
But Silco raised his hand- calm, measured.
“Hold.”
Sevika paused, eyes narrowing. But she obeyed.
Still gripping (Y/N) tightly, keeping her locked in place, but she didn’t move to fight.
Silco stepped forward slowly, watching Vi with a calculating eye.
This wasn’t over.
Not yet.
Silco’s expression was unreadable as his eyes shifted toward the sickly man lingering nearby- the one who had once torn through Enforcers like paper, and now barely looked human at all. Gaunt, twitching, with veins of violet threading beneath his skin.
“Ready to rise to the surface?” Silco asked, his voice deceptively soft.
The man’s eyes flicked to the small, glowing vial in Silco’s hand- a pulsing purple liquid that shimmered with unnatural energy. His gaze grew desperate, wild. He snatched it the second it was offered, uncorking it and downing the contents like it was the only thing keeping him alive.
And then- he screamed.
The transformation was immediate, violent. His spine arched, bones cracking, limbs lengthening, skin distorting. Purple fluid spilled from the corners of his mouth as his body twisted into something monstrous. The shriek that followed rattled the steel beams of the factory.
(Y/N)’s blood ran cold.
“No- no!” she shouted, yanking against the chains as hard as she could. Sevika held her firm, but her grip trembled slightly under the struggle. “Silco!”
Vi didn’t hesitate- she lunged in to strike the creature before it fully stabilized, gauntlets swinging.
But the monster was faster.
It caught her by the throat, lifting her effortlessly off the ground.
“No!” (Y/N) thrashed harder, desperation clawing through her throat. She looked at Silco, eyes wild. “You said you wouldn’t kill them!”
Silco’s jaw clenched. His face flickered with something- guilt, maybe. Regret.
“I said I’d try,” he said quietly.
It wasn’t enough.
Vander roared over the chaos, his voice raw. “Silco! Let her go! This is between you and me!”
Silco’s eyes darkened. His voice was flat- cold. “You had your chance.”
And the monster threw Vi.
She crashed hard into a nearby wall, grunting as she slid across the floor. One of the gauntlets skidded free, clattering loudly across the steel.
(Y/N)’s scream cracked out of her, her knees buckling as she fought harder.
Vi coughed, gasping, barely able to pull herself up. The monster advanced, step by heavy step, dripping shimmer and fury with every movement.
She crawled.
Clawed toward the others.
(Y/N), Vander, Mylo, and Claggor all shouted her name, voices overlapping in a desperate crescendo.
And then- Vi reached the door. With a trembling hand, she slammed it shut- and locked it. The bolt echoed like thunder.
The monster crashed into the other side, but the door held.
Inside, silence reigned for a moment. A breath of reprieve. Of safety.
(Y/N) collapsed to her knees in Sevika’s grip, a sob tearing loose from her throat.
Vi was safe.
For now.
Tears ran down her cheeks as she whispered, “Thank the Gods…”
But her eyes never left Silco.
And her heart had never hurt more.
The creature outside the sealed door snarled and slammed its fists against the metal, again and again. The walkway shook with the force of it, rattling bolts and echoing through the factory like thunder.
Sevika kept her grip on (Y/N), who was breathing hard, her cheeks damp with tears, her arms still trembling from the aftermath.
Silco stood nearby, unmoving- expression unreadable, eyes fixed on the blocked doorway.
(Y/N)’s voice cracked through the din, soft, pleading. “Please… Please, Silco… don’t do this…”
She turned her face toward him, eyes wide, broken. “Let the kids go. Please.”
There was a silence between them.
And then he looked at her.
His gaze softened- just slightly- as he sighed quietly.
“…Fine,” he said after a pause. “Once we get them all gathered again, I’ll let the children go.” His tone stayed firm. “But only the children.”
(Y/N)’s breath hitched, her body sagging in Sevika’s arms as if the tension had suddenly drained all at once. A strangled sob slipped past her lips.
And then- click.
A small sound. Metal ticking softly against the walkway.
(Y/N)’s eyes widened in an instant. “What..?”
Her gaze darted toward the source- a monkey. Small, mechanical, familiar. It shuffled forward, toy-like limbs moving with mechanical innocence.
She recognized it immediately.
Powder’s.
The monkey sat still for a beat, and then-
BOOM.
The explosion ripped through the walkway in a blinding blast of heat and sound.
Silco lunged, pulling (Y/N) into his arms and wrapping himself tightly around her, shielding her body with his own. Sevika threw herself in front of them both- arms outstretched.
The force hit them like a wave.
Smoke. Shrapnel. Flames.
When (Y/N) came to, her ears were ringing. Her limbs heavy.
She blinked hard, vision swimming- and realized Silco was still holding her, arms wrapped tight. Sevika lay sprawled across the walkway ahead of them, unmoving.
Her left arm… was gone.
(Y/N) cried out in horror and pushed away from Silco, slipping from his grip. The chains slowed her, made her stumble, but she didn’t stop.
She crawled, dragging herself across the scorched walkway toward the room where the kids had been.
“No, no, no-” she whispered over and over.
The devastation was unreal.
Pieces of the railing hung loose, sparks flying from destroyed panels.
And in the back of the room-
Claggor.
Still. Lifeless.
Mylo- bloodied, crushed under debris, unmoving.
She fell to her knees in the middle of the walkway, her hands bound, unable to even hold them. She just stared through fresh, silent tears, sobbing until her voice cracked.
Behind her, Silco slowly emerged from the smoke. He stepped around Sevika’s body- limping slightly- and moved to (Y/N)’s side.
He knelt, wordless, placing a hesitant hand on her shoulder.
She shrugged it off.
He didn’t try again.
But when her body gave out, she collapsed against him anyway, no fight left in her. Her sobs echoed against the steel.
From inside the room, Violet’s screams and cires rang out. High, panicked, broken.
(Y/N) closed her eyes and shook her head, lips trembling. “It wasn’t supposed to be like this.”
Then-
Movement.
Vander stumbled from the room, face battered, holding onto the wall for balance. His eyes flicked from (Y/N) to the remaining men around them- and the monster, who was still alive, still looming.
He roared and charged.
Fists flew.
He threw punches with the strength of desperation, slamming into the beast again and again. The creature responded in kind, and the two clashed like titans- blows echoing through the factory.
Then-
The creature landed a blow, sending Vander crashing down onto the walkway.
He groaned, tried to stand-
And from beside (Y/N), Silco rose to his feet. Slowly... Deliberately.
(Y/N) watched, dazed. She didn’t move. Didn’t speak.
Just watched.
Silco stepped up behind Vander- silent as a shadow.
And then… The blade.
In the back.
Vander choked, his body jerking forward. He turned, gasping, and grabbed Silco by the throat.
Silco- eyes fierce, lips curled into something almost mournful- stabbed him again.
Lower.
Vander’s grip weakened. He sagged forward, collapsing against Silco’s chest. The two of them locked eyes, breath labored and pained.
“…I knew you still had it in you,” Silco whispered.
And then he shoved him.
Vander’s body tumbled over the edge- into the boxes of shimmer bwloe, where spilled chemicals, shattered shimmer vials, and fire burned like hell itself.
Everything went quiet.
Except for (Y/N)’s trembling breath, and the sound of Vi sobbing somewhere in the dark.
Silco's steps were measured, calm despite the blood on his hands and the tremor still rolling through the floor beneath them. He approached the shimmer-mutated creature with purpose, voice sharp but steady.
“...Find the girl.”
The monster obeyed, stomping toward the ruined room. Its heavy limbs dragged it forward into the wreckage-strewn room where Violet had been trapped with Mylo and Claggor's fallen bodies.
Vi panicked as the creature loomed over her, its breath huffing like steam, arms rising to grab her-
BOOM.
A massive crashing sound rang through the factory, making the entire structure lurch violently.
(Y/N) stumbled.
The walkway groaned beneath their feet.
And then- a low growl.
Primal. Familiar.
Silco stepped in front of (Y/N) instantly, his arm thrown out to shield her, body still tense from the last fight.
Another figure emerged through the smoke and shadow.
Twisted. Unnatural.
A different kind of monster.
It grabbed Silco’s beast by the throat before anyone could react- crushing, choking- and with a violent twist, snapped its neck like it was nothing more than paper. The limp body was thrown aside, crashing into a wall and slumping into the rubble.
Silco’s jaw tensed as his eyes widened.
He stepped forward and forced (Y/N) up, gripping her arm, steadying her.
She didn’t speak- didn’t move beyond what he guided.
Her eyes were locked on the new creature.
Its eyes met hers- burning, tinged with shimmer.
“...Vander,” she whispered, barely audible.
He had survived.
He had used the shimmer.
And he had changed.
Silco realized it too, the horror evident in the way he slowly stepped back, pulling (Y/N) with him, his body subtly shifting into defense again. Vander snarled- deep and guttural- his distorted voice still capable of forming one clear word:
“Silco.”
(Y/N) tensed as Silco’s grip tightened around her hand.
The building shuddered again- more violently now. Pipes groaned, embers danced across the floor. The fire had spread.
Vander’s monstrous form looked between Silco and the collapsed room behind him- where Violet’s sobs could still faintly be heard.
And then, with a roar, he turned and ran, barreling back through the corridor.
(Y/N) and Silco watched as he scooped up Violet and charged through the broken wall just as the room collapsed around them. The building behind them erupted into flame, collapsing in on itself as embers roared toward the sky.
They stood in silence.
Silco gently tugged (Y/N) forward, guiding her out of the ruin. She didn’t resist, her legs moving on instinct alone. Her face was hollow, her eyes empty. The world around her felt far away.
But she heard it.
Faint, echoing through the smoke:
Vi's screams.
Powder’s cries.
They walked until the sounds grew louder- closer.
Then, voices. Muffled at first.
Powder’s, frantic. “Violet?! Please! Come back! Vi!”
That- that- snapped something in (Y/N).
She yanked free of Silco’s grip, her chains rattling as she stumbled forward.
“Powder!” she gasped.
She ran, her feet carrying her through the scorched earth, eyes scanning desperately- until she saw her.
Powder.
Kneeling in the ash. Shoulders shaking. Her arms wrapped tightly around herself.
“Vi!” she sobbed. “She left me! I didn’t mean to- I didn’t mean to-!”
(Y/N) froze a few steps away.
Her heart shattered all over again.
Powder was curled up so small, so broken.
Tears spilled from (Y/N)’s eyes as she slowly stepped closer.
Powder looked up.
And launched into her.
“Mama-!”
(Y/N) caught her instinctively, knees hitting the ground as she wrapped her arms around the girl- holding her so tightly, like she could piece her back together if she just held on hard enough.
Silco reached them seconds later, catching both of them as they toppled into his legs. He knelt behind them, arms wrapping around them both- sheltering them from what little of the world was left.
(Y/N) glanced around, confused, still dazed and trying to keep her sobbing to a minimum. “Where… Where did Vi go..?”
Powder cried into (Y/N)’s shoulder. “She left me. She’s… Not my sister anymore…”
(Y/N) stroked her hair, sobbing silently, her throat too raw for words.
Silco’s voice was low, gentle- soothing in a way she hadn’t heard in years.
“It’s okay…” he whispered. “We’ll show them.”
His hand brushed through Powder’s hair… then over (Y/N)’s.
“We’ll show them all.”
And in that hollow quiet, surrounded by ash and ruin, (Y/N) clung to Powder.
And Silco clung to them both.
And for better or worse…
This was what remained.
The chains still bound her wrists, biting into her skin, heavy with runes that pulsed faintly against her magic. But (Y/N) didn't care. She held onto Powder as best she could, arms wrapped tight despite the limits, despite the pain. The girl was clinging just as hard- shaking, sobbing, burying her face into (Y/N)’s neck.
They stayed like that for a long while. Just breathing. Just surviving.
Eventually, Silco shifted beside them, his voice low, yet steady.
“Come on,” he said, gently.
He reached down, wrapping an arm around (Y/N)’s shoulders to help her rise. She trembled as she stood, her limbs aching, the chains dragging against her legs. Powder still clung to her, and with no small effort, (Y/N) shifted the girl up into her arms.
It hurt. It was heavy. Her body screamed in protest.
But she carried her anyway.
Silco kept close at her side, his hand never leaving her back as he slowly led them out of the ruins.
Behind them, a few of his surviving men regrouped near what was left of the factory. The fire still burned high in the distance, lighting the skyline like a grim beacon.
Silco glanced over his shoulder, voice firm as he spoke to them.
“Gather everything that’s left. Anything not lost in the blast- documents, weapons, shimmer... all of it.” His eyes narrowed slightly. “We’re done here. We take the bar now.”
There was no discussion.
The men moved quickly.
And Silco turned back to (Y/N), his voice quieter now, meant only for her and Jinx.
“We’ll start again,” he said, more to himself than anyone. “From the ashes.”
As the three of them walked off into the night- (Y/N) carrying Powder, Silco walking protectively at their side- the echoes of everything they’d lost still clung to their heels.
One they got to The Last Drop, Powder sat small and trembling on the bar, legs drawn up, ash smudged across her cheeks and under her eyes like a warpaint she never asked for. (Y/N) moved on instinct- her hands steady despite the shaking in her bones. She soaked the cloth in warm water and gently wiped away the soot, the blood, the smoke. Each stroke soft and methodical.
“There we go, Powpow…” she whispered, voice quiet, mother-soft. “I’ve got you.”
Powder flinched at the name, her lip wobbling. “Jinx…”
(Y/N)’s hands froze, just for a moment.
Powder didn’t look up. Her voice cracked as she repeated it. “I’m a jinx… That’s what I should be called…”
(Y/N) didn’t argue. Didn’t correct her. She just resumed cleaning, her touch never wavering.
“…Okay…” she said softly. “Either way... I’ve got you...”
From the far side of the bar, Silco watched. Silent. Still.
His eyes tracked the chains at (Y/N)’s wrists- the way they pulled at her skin every time she moved to tend to Powder.
He stepped forward slowly, fingers brushing the edge of a small brass key in his coat pocket. When he spoke, his voice was cautious. Careful.
“(Y/N)…?”
She glanced over her shoulder, eyes sharp and cold beneath her exhaustion. She looked like she hadn’t fully come down from the chaos. Like a thread pulled too tight.
Silco held up the key.
“Can I trust you still?”
She scoffed, the sound dry, brittle. “I think that’s my question, Silco.”
He let out a quiet hum. Not a laugh. Not quite.
“I suppose it is.”
He walked closer, holding the key between two fingers. “This is for your chains. If I know you won’t turn on me… I’ll undo them.”
Powder’s- no, Jinx’s- eyes widened as she noticed the chains for the first time. “You’re- You’re chained-?” she gasped, reaching for (Y/N)’s wrists.
(Y/N) didn’t look away from Silco, but her expression softened as Powder pleaded, “L-Let her go… please?”
Silco didn’t move yet.
(Y/N) took a deep breath.
“I won’t attack you,” she said finally, her voice low, calm, resolute. “If that’s what you’re asking.” Her jaw clenched. “Undo them.”
Silco studied her for a moment longer- long enough for the weight of the moment to settle between them.
Then, slowly, he stepped forward… and slid the key into the lock.
The moment the chains hit the floor with a clatter, the magic surged.
Golden marks bloomed like ink across (Y/N)’s skin, glowing softly as they curled up her arms, pulsing with life and power that had been kept caged for far too long. Her eyes lit with the same glow- bright, wild, beautiful- before it all flickered, then faded, like the last flare of a dying star.
She didn’t flinch.
Didn’t revel in the return of her freedom.
She just exhaled quietly… and turned right back to Jinx.
There was no rage. No revenge. Just… care.
She dipped the cloth again, gently cleaning around the girl’s forehead where soot clung to her hairline. Her voice was soft, steady again.
“Almost done, sweetheart…”
Jinx stayed quiet, sniffling now and again, her fingers gripping the edge of the bar tightly.
Silco didn’t speak. He simply watched her- this girl who once burned like fire, now bent over the broken remnants of a child she swore to protect. There was something reverent in the way he looked at her, something unreadable in the way his fingers twitched at his side but never reached out.
(Y/N) gave no further reaction to her magic’s return.
No questions.
No celebration.
She just tucked a lock of Jinx’s hair behind her ear and whispered, “There we go, little firecracker…”
Because for now, she’d take care of her.
And she’d call her by something warm.
Something safe.
Until the world made room for her again.
Summary: (Y/N) reveals her long-hidden magic to Silco, who, instead of reacting with fear, warns her of the danger if others find out. As they return to their hideout, she struggles with whether to tell Vander and Felicia. Silco advises secrecy, reminding her that once shared, it’s no longer just hers. Before she can decide, an unexpected visitor arrives- Vander and Felicia, worried about her disappearance. Their concern turns to frustration, prompting (Y/N) to make a choice. She reveals her magic, summoning a flicker of golden light. Stunned, Felicia reacts with shock and exasperation, while Vander, though concerned, reassures her that she’s still one of them. Despite their initial frustration, they accept her, and the tension eases.
(Y/N)’s hand was still in Silco’s as he helped her up, steady despite the grime and damp clinging to her skin. For a second, she just stood there, forcing herself to breathe, to push down the tremors in her limbs.
She had to decide.
She could tell him.
The thought sent a sick kind of fear curling in her gut. For years, she had fought to keep it hidden. She had watched her mother waste away under the weight of survival, all while whispering the same warning over and over: Never let them see. Never let them know.
But Silco had seen something. Maybe he didn’t know exactly what, but she could feel his eyes on her, sharp and calculating even as they started walking back toward Vander and Felicia.
If she told him now, if she trusted him, would he keep it?
Or would he look at her like she was something other?
"You're quiet," Silco muttered as they weaved through the labyrinth of rusted pipes and narrow alleys. "Not like you."
(Y/N) huffed, pulling her cloak tighter around her shoulders. "Almost got caught by enforcers. Guess I’m not in a talking mood."
Silco gave her a sidelong glance. "You weren’t just running from them."
Her throat went dry.
She kept her expression even, but she could feel him watching her. The way he always did when he was picking someone apart, digging beneath the surface until he found the weak spot.
She should lie.
She should.
Instead, she stopped walking.
Silco took a few steps before realizing she wasn’t following. He turned, brow furrowing as she clenched and unclenched her fists at her sides.
"(Y/N)," he said, slower now, careful.
Her chest ached. Say nothing. Swallow it down. Keep it buried.
But she was tired of swallowing it down.
"I have to tell you something," she blurted before she could stop herself.
Silco’s expression didn’t change, but she saw the way he straightened slightly, the way his hands twitched as if bracing for a fight. "Alright," he said, voice measured.
(Y/N)’s heart slammed against her ribs. This was it.
She glanced around, making sure no one was nearby, then took a slow breath.
Her fingers twitched.
And then, with a hesitant, controlled motion, she let the smallest flicker of golden light spark between them.
The glow barely lasted a second, just a tiny crackle of warmth between her fingertips, like the dying ember of a flame.
But Silco saw.
His whole body went rigid.
The silence between them stretched, thick and suffocating.
(Y/N) clenched her jaw, forcing herself to meet his gaze. If he ran- if he flinched- she would bolt and never look back.
But Silco didn’t flinch.
He just stared, something unreadable flickering behind his sharp, dark eyes.
"You’ve been hiding that this whole time," he said at last, his voice disturbingly calm.
(Y/N) swallowed hard. "Yeah."
A long, tense pause.
Then-
"Smart," he murmured.
She blinked. "What?"
Silco tilted his head, watching her like he was seeing something new, something dangerous. "If people knew, you’d be dead."
She exhaled sharply, some part of her unraveling at the words. "I know."
Silco’s gaze didn’t waver. "Does Vander know?"
She shook her head. "Just you."
His lips twitched slightly, not quite a smirk, but something close. "And you trust me with it?"
"Wouldn't have shown you if I didn’t."
Silco was quiet for a moment, eyes flickering with something she couldn’t quite name. Then, to her surprise, he let out a short breath of laughter.
"Well, shit," he muttered, rubbing a hand down his face. "That explains a lot."
(Y/N) frowned. "You’re… not freaking out?"
He looked at her, something sharp in his expression. "Oh, I am," he admitted. "But not because of what you can do." His voice lowered. "Because if the wrong people see, we won’t just be running from Enforcers next time."
(Y/N)’s stomach twisted.
Silco sighed and ran a hand through his dark hair. "Vander and Felicia are still looking for you. We need to go back before they start tearing up the whole damn city."
She hesitated. "And… you’re not going to tell them?"
Silco met her eyes, something dangerous curling at the edges of his smirk. "Your secret, your choice."
(Y/N) felt her chest tighten.
She had always expected fear. Hatred…
But Silco…
Silco just looked at her like she was a puzzle he had finally solved.
Like she was someone important.
Something powerful.
"Come on," he said, turning back toward the hideout. "Wouldn’t want Vander to cry over you."
(Y/N) snorted despite herself. "Yeah, right."
She followed him.
And for the first time in years, she wasn’t running.
The walk back was quieter than (Y/N) expected.
Silco didn’t push her to talk. He didn’t ask questions, didn’t prod at the weight sitting heavy on her chest. He just kept walking, hands tucked into his pockets, his sharp eyes flicking toward her every so often like he was keeping tally of her breaths, making sure she didn’t disappear again.
She should have felt relieved.
Instead, her stomach twisted tighter with every step.
She had told Silco.
The words still rattled in her skull, the image of that tiny spark of magic dancing between her fingers burned into her mind. For years, she had kept it buried so deep it felt like a second skin, an instinct as natural as breathing. But now-
Now, he knew.
And soon, she’d have to decide if Vander and Felicia would too.
The old hideout came into view- a crumbling, half-abandoned space wedged between rusted pipes and makeshift walls of scrap metal. It wasn’t much, just a shelter against the chaos of the Undercity, but it was theirs. A place where they could breathe, even if the air was thick with smog and secrets.
Silco pushed open the creaky door and stepped inside, the dim glow of a stolen lantern casting shadows across the room. (Y/N) hesitated in the doorway, her fingers tightening around the frayed edge of her cloak.
"You coming in, or you planning to stand there all night?" Silco asked, throwing himself onto one of the old crates they used as seats.
She rolled her eyes but stepped inside, kicking the door shut behind her.
The space was eerily quiet without Vander’s gruff voice or Felicia’s sharp, teasing remarks. Their absence made the place feel hollow, like a ribcage missing its heart.
(Y/N) paced.
Sat down.
Got back up again.
Silco watched her, an amused tilt to his expression. "You’re overthinking."
"Shut up," she muttered, dragging a hand through her hair.
Silco didn’t argue. Just leaned back, stretching his legs out in front of him. "You don’t have to tell them," he said after a beat.
(Y/N) froze mid-step. "What?"
"You heard me." He tilted his head, studying her with that sharp, calculating gaze. "It’s your secret. No one else’s."
Her throat tightened. "But if they find out later-"
"They’ll be pissed," Silco finished bluntly. "But that’s a problem for later, isn’t it?"
(Y/N) clenched her jaw. She hated that he was right.
She should tell them. They were family- or as close to it as anyone could get in the Lanes. Vander, with his stupid protective instincts and his too-big heart. Felicia, who could cut with words as easily as with a blade, but always made sure they had food, even if it meant going hungry herself.
She trusted them.
Didn’t she?
"Would you?" she asked suddenly, turning to face Silco.
He raised a brow. "Would I what?"
"Tell them. If you were me."
Silco considered that for a moment, his expression unreadable. Then, he smirked, lazy and sharp. "I would take it to my grave."
(Y/N) groaned, flopping onto a crate beside him. "That’s so helpful, thanks."
Silco shrugged. "I’m just saying. People don’t react well to things they don’t understand. You already know that."
She did.
Gods, she did.
Her fingers curled into her palms.
"Vander’s not like that," she murmured, more to herself than to him.
Silco hummed. "Maybe. Maybe not." He tapped his fingers against his knee. "But once you tell someone a secret, it’s not just yours anymore."
The words settled deep in her ribs, heavy and true.
She hated that.
The handle of the door rattled before she could respond. Silco had locked it when they came inside…
Both of them stiffened.
(Y/N)’s breath caught as she shot a look at Silco. His expression shifted instantly, the easy amusement fading into something sharp and ready.
Then-
"Oi, you in there?"
Vander’s voice, rough and edged with something tight- worry.
(Y/N) exhaled, her pulse still hammering in her throat.
Silco smirked, rolling his eyes. "Took them long enough."
Felicia’s voice cut in, laced with irritation. "If she’s not in there, I swear, I’m-"
(Y/N) pulled the door open before she could finish.
Vander and Felicia stood on the threshold, their expressions a mix of frustration, relief, and exhaustion.
Felicia’s narrowed eyes swept over her. "You little shit-"
(Y/N) barely had time to brace before Felicia yanked her into a tight, bone-crushing hug.
"You scared us," she muttered into (Y/N)’s shoulder, her grip fierce, like she was making sure she was real.
(Y/N) swallowed against the lump in her throat. "Sorry," she mumbled.
Vander crossed his arms, his gaze flicking between her and Silco. "What happened?"
The question lingered in the air, waiting.
(Y/N) felt Silco’s presence beside her, silent but steady.
This was it.
Tell them. Keep it secret. Trust them. Keep them safe.
Her fingers twitched.
She took a breath-
And made her choice.
(Y/N) stepped aside, letting Vander and Felicia into the hideout. Her stomach churned as she shut the door behind them, sealing herself in with the weight of what she was about to do.
Felicia flopped onto a crate with a dramatic sigh, arms crossed tightly over her chest. "Do you have any idea how much time we wasted looking for your ass?" she grumbled. "Vander was ready to bust down half the city."
Vander didn’t deny it. He just gave (Y/N) a long, searching look before sitting down himself. "You alright?"
That was Vander. Not scolding her. Not demanding an explanation right away. Just… asking.
(Y/N) swallowed, nodding stiffly. She wasn’t alright, not really. But she was here. And she had made her choice.
Silco leaned against the wall, arms crossed, watching but not interfering. It was her secret to tell. He’d already said as much.
(Y/N) clenched her hands into fists, then forced herself to relax. Just do it. Before you lose your nerve.
"I need to tell you something," she said, voice tight. "And before I do, I just- I need you to listen. Just listen. Don’t freak out."
Felicia narrowed her eyes. "That’s a terrible way to start a conversation."
Vander frowned. "(Y/N), what’s going on?"
(Y/N) took a deep breath, before raising her hands, steady despite the tremor in her fingers.
A spark of golden light flickered to life. Small, hesitant, barely enough to illuminate the dim space. It crackled like embers, dancing across her fingertips, warm and alive.
The room felt too quiet.
Felicia stiffened. Vander’s eyes widened, his lips parting slightly, but he said nothing.
(Y/N) forced herself to meet their gazes.
"I have magic," she said, barely above a whisper. "I’ve always had it. I just- I never told you because I couldn’t. Because it’s dangerous. Because-" Her throat tightened. "Because I was scared."
The silence stretched.
Felicia blinked. "What the fuck?"
Vander exhaled sharply, rubbing a hand down his face. "Shit."
(Y/N)’s stomach plummeted.
Felicia stood, staring at her like she was seeing her for the first time. "Magic," she repeated, slower this time, like she was still trying to process it. "You’re telling me you’ve had magic this whole time?"
(Y/N) nodded, bracing for the worst. For them to pull away. For them to tell her she wasn’t one of them.
Vander sighed heavily, but his expression wasn’t anger. Just… concern. "How long?"
"Since before I came here," she admitted. "Since I was born."
Felicia let out a sharp breath, raking a hand through her hair. "I don’t- shit, (Y/N), do you know what could’ve happened if someone else found out?"
"Yes," She snapped, frustration bubbling over. "Of course I know. Why do you think I kept it secret?"
Felicia opened her mouth, then shut it again, jaw tightening.
Vander rubbed his temples. "And Silco knew?"
(Y/N) hesitated, but Silco answered for her, his voice calm. "She told me first."
Felicia turned on him, eyes flashing. "And you didn’t think to tell us?"
Silco shrugged, utterly unbothered. "Not my secret."
Felicia made a strangled noise, but Vander put a hand on her shoulder before she could start yelling properly.
"Alright," Vander said, his voice steady in the way that made people listen. "Alright. We… we’ll figure this out." He looked at (Y/N) again, his gaze softer this time. "But you should’ve told us sooner."
(Y/N) swallowed hard. "I know."
Vander sighed, then did something she didn’t expect.
He reached out and put a hand on her head, ruffling her hair the way he always did when he was trying to be reassuring.
"We’re not gonna turn on you, (Y/N)," he said, quiet but firm. "You’re still one of us."
Her throat tightened painfully.
Felicia groaned, throwing herself back onto the crate with a dramatic flop. "Gods, I hate that I’m not mad at you."
(Y/N) let out a breath that was half a laugh, half relief. "Yeah?"
Felicia shot her a glare. "Yeah. Asshole."
Silco smirked from his spot against the wall. "That went better than expected."
...Felicia flipped him off...
A/N: Hi everybody! This is the last part of my Young Silco fic :} Im am already writing a sequel, and I am excited to keep this story going. I hope you all like it!
pt.1
Summary: (Y/N) helps build a fragile life alongside Silco, Vander, Felicia, and Connol, raising Violet and Powder as their found family. After a violent encounter with Enforcers leaves everyone shaken, tensions escalate between Silco and Vander, leading to a planned uprising at the bridge. (Y/N) chooses to stay behind to protect the girls. The revolution ends in disaster- Felicia and Connol are killed, Silco vanishes, and (Y/N) is left to carry the girls to safety. Vander returns alone, claiming Silco abandoned them, but (Y/N) doesn’t believe it. She searches- finds no body, no trace- and quietly holds onto hope. Years pass. Violet and Powder grow. New kids join their family. The Last Drop becomes a haven, and (Y/N) stays at its heart- scarred but steady, protecting what remains. Silco’s name fades from conversation, but not from memory. She never truly lets him go.
The Last Drop was alive with its usual rhythm- voices echoing off brick walls, the low clink of glass, laughter that rang too loud. But the second (Y/N) stepped inside, saying her hello’s, the mood shifted. Not all at once. Just enough to make the air feel different.
Felicia noticed quick. Her head snapped up from where she sat, Violet balanced on her hip. Her smile dropped like a stone. Her eyes narrowed at the sight of blood, the tension in (Y/N)’s shoulders, the way she clutched her bag like it was stitched to her ribs.
“Oh, god…” she breathed, already half on her feet. “Vander-”
Connol moved before she could finish, steadying Violet as Felicia stood. Vander looked up from where he was drying a glass behind the bar, brows drawing tight. He didn’t speak yet.
But Silco didn’t wait for anyone.
His stool scraped back sharply. The half-full glass he’d been nursing tipped and spilled across the bar, forgotten. He was across the room in seconds- quicker than anyone had ever seen him move when it wasn’t life or death.
His hands were on her before she could get another word out. One arm caught her around the waist, steadying her. The other came to her chin, tilting it gently, his fingers cool and trembling. His jaw clenched. Eyes scanned every mark on her face- the cut at her lip, the bruising along her cheekbone, the scraped edge of her brow.
“Who did this?” he asked, voice low and tight, almost quiet enough to miss. Almost.
She winced when his fingers brushed a sore spot, but she didn’t flinch away. Just looked up at him through lashes heavy with exhaustion, a ghost of a smile on her lips. It didn’t land.
“Enforcers,” she muttered. “Just a patrol.”
His expression darkened. He didn’t tighten his grip, but the air around him seemed to shift- an unspoken pressure that made the room hold its breath.
“They searched me,” she added, hoarse. “Didn’t find anything. They just… wanted to make a point.”
His thumb brushed a streak of blood from the corner of her mouth. His hand lingered there, and something flickered in his expression- hurt, maybe.
“You let them?” he rasped.
“I didn’t fight,” she whispered. “If I had… I might’ve hurt them. I didn’t trust myself not to lose control, even… If I can control it more now, than before...”
Silco closed his eyes, jaw tight with restraint.
Behind them, Vander stepped out from behind the bar. “Get her upstairs,” he said, voice low. “We’ll talk after.”
Felicia was already moving again, clutching Violet like a tether. Her face was a storm.
“I’m fine,” (Y/N) tried to say, barely above a whisper.
“No, you’re not,” Silco muttered. He slipped the edge of her cloak back over her shoulders, tightening it around her with careful hands. “Come on.”
He didn’t give her the chance to argue. With an arm secure around her waist, he guided her toward the stairs. His steps were sharp, shoulders taut with silent fury. Not a word was spoken as the door clicked shut behind them.
The quiet in the room was thick- not awkward, just heavy.
Silco didn’t ask her to sit. He simply steered her gently to the bed, helped her lower herself with careful hands, and moved across the room in a blur of precise motion. The tin basin. The pitcher. A cloth. A bottle of disinfectant- stings like hell, but it kept you alive.
He knelt in front of her and tilted her face toward the light. The cloth was warm. Gentle. He wiped the blood away with a steady hand.
She flinched when it passed over the split in her lip. “Sorry,” he murmured, almost too quietly.
“You’re better than they were,” she said, voice barely audible.
His jaw ticked, but he didn’t answer. He reached for the bottle, soaked a clean cloth, and pressed it carefully to her temple. It burned.
She hissed, eyes watering.
“Hold still.”
It wasn’t sharp. Just soft enough to keep her grounded.
He worked in silence. Cleaning every mark. Every bruise. Every scrape. His focus never wavered, but she could see the tension behind it- the way his brows knit together, the way he breathed through his nose like it was the only way to stay calm.
When he reached her hands, he stopped. Just for a moment.
They were torn up. Raw. Stone and dirt ground into her palms, her knuckles purpled from impact.
His thumbs hovered there, then moved with excruciating care, picking away the debris, soaking the cloth again and again. He didn’t speak until the worst of it was done.
“... You should have fought back.” he whispered, voice rough.
“I didn’t want to hurt anyone,” she said. “Not again.”
He said nothing. Just reached for the gauze. Wrapped her hands with the same precision, knotting them tight enough to protect, not tight enough to sting.
When he finished, he lifted her hand to his lips. A kiss to her knuckles, light as air.
“You should’ve called for me,” he said, finally.
Her throat caught. “I didn’t know if you were nearby.”
“I don’t care,” he said, sharper now. “I would’ve burned the streets down to get to you.”
His eyes met hers. They burned- not with blame. But with something colder. Sharper.
“I’ll find them,” he said. “And when I do-”
“Silco.” Her voice was small, but it cut clean through the tension. “I’m okay. You got me. That’s what matters.”
He looked at her for a long moment. Then his shoulders eased, just barely. He brought her hands to his lips again, eyes closed.
“You shouldn’t have to live like this,” he murmured.
“I want this,” she said, forehead pressing gently to his. “I want you.”
That was all it took to make the rage inside him quiet- at least for now.
He held her. Close. Like he could block out the world just by keeping her there.
No more words passed between them for a while. Just the sound of breath, the warmth of quiet touch. She sat on the edge of the bed, hands bandaged, shoulders sagging under the weight of everything she hadn’t said. Silco crouched in front of her still, hands never straying far.
Eventually, Silco helped her up with the same care he’d shown before. Arm around her waist. Not holding her up- just holding her steady.
They moved down the stairs together. Every creak felt too loud. The hum of the bar had returned, but the energy was different. Tense. Quiet.
Felicia still sat in her usual booth, Violet asleep in her arms, a worn blanket draped across them both. Connol was beside her, quiet and still. His eyes found (Y/N) the moment she appeared.
Vander was behind the bar again. Arms crossed. Watching. Measuring. Counting bruises.
Felicia’s eyes widened when she saw her. Relief flooded her face, but it didn’t erase the lingering anger.
“You’re alright,” she said. Like she needed to say it out loud to believe it. “Really alright?”
“I’m fine,” (Y/N) said, voice steadier now. “Just a little beat up.”
Vander exhaled through his nose and turned for a clean glass. “Sit,” he said, gruff but not unkind. “Drink something warm. You’ll feel it more in an hour.”
(Y/N) gave a tired smile. Let Silco guide her to the booth across from Felicia and Connol. She didn’t lean on him. But she didn’t let go either.
Silco didn’t leave her side. He slid into the booth like he belonged there, quiet and sure, his arm settling along the backrest, fingers grazing her shoulder. He didn’t say a word, but his presence was grounding- anchored, solid.
Felicia leaned forward, eyes narrowed as she took in the bruises on (Y/N)’s face. “If I ever see those bastards near here again…” Her voice was tight, sharp.
“Fel,” Connol said softly, placing a steadying hand on her knee.
She didn’t look at him. “No. I mean it. We can’t just keep letting them do this.”
Silco’s jaw tightened, a muscle jumping in his cheek. Still, he stayed silent. Not here. Not yet. Not when the eyes of the bar had already turned toward them. The murmur of conversation had slowed, dulled. Now, even those who tried to act like they weren’t listening… were.
The atmosphere thickened. Simmering tension pooled in the corners of the room- quiet, heavy, waiting for a spark.
Vander stepped in, a steaming mug in his hand. He set it gently in front of (Y/N), then stepped back, arms folding across his chest.
“We take care of our own,” he said. His voice was low, but it carried. “Always have.”
(Y/N) curled her fingers around the mug. Her eyes stayed down, watching steam rise in slow spirals.
Silco’s hand moved to her back, palm warm through the fabric. His thumb pressed slow, steady circles between her shoulder blades. Grounding. Gentle.
The bar’s rhythm resumed in cautious pieces- clinks of glass, low conversation, chairs scraping against wood- but something had shifted. A quiet understanding passed between the walls. One of theirs had been hurt. Again. And the Undercity remembers.
Behind the bar, Vander didn’t move much. But his posture spoke volumes. Hands braced against the counter, shoulders tight with barely restrained fury. He wasn’t pouring drinks. The bottle beside him sat forgotten.
His eyes hadn’t left (Y/N) since she walked in- since he’d seen the bruises blooming across her skin, the blood drying at the corner of her mouth. The way she winced when she shifted. What haunted him most wasn’t the damage.
It was that she hadn’t even fought back.
She hadn’t used magic, hadn’t lashed out, hadn’t screamed. She was just walking. And they jumped her like she was nothing.
His fingers curled into fists. The wood beneath his palms creaked under the strain.
Silco noticed. Of course he did. He always noticed. But he didn’t speak. His attention stayed on her, thumb still tracing circles.
Felicia broke the silence with a venomous whisper. “This city’s rotting from the top down.”
Connol said nothing. His jaw was clenched, hand resting protectively atop Violet’s blanket, as if shielding his newborn daughter from the world.
Vander’s voice, when it came, was quiet- but sharp as a blade. “She didn’t even raise a hand.” His gaze was distant, as though staring through the bar. “Didn’t say a word. Just walked. And they still thought they could beat her bloody.”
His fists trembled on the counter. “That’s the kind of peace they’re offering.”
Silco’s eyes flicked toward him. “Starting to see it, are you?”
Vander didn’t answer. But the silence said enough.
His shoulders sagged slightly, breath shuddering out. “I’ve spent half my life pulling people back from the edge. Telling them to wait. To think. To survive instead of strike.” He looked at (Y/N) then, something pained and heavy flickering behind his eyes. “But what do we do when there’s no fight left to stop? When we keep our heads down, and they still come for us?”
(Y/N) looked up. Her voice was quiet, raw. “I didn’t fight because I didn’t want to hurt anyone. Not because I was scared.”
Her gaze dropped again. “Didn’t matter. They just wanted someone to hurt.”
The weight of her words hung in the air. No one had an answer.
Vander ran a hand across his jaw, slow. “This city’s gonna crack,” he muttered. Then, barely audible- “And I don’t know if I can stop it this time.”
The weight in the room pressed against her skin, heavier than the bruises blooming beneath it. (Y/N) stared down into the mug. Herbal. Faintly sweet. Something Vander probably mixed together himself- pain relief, maybe. Or just something warm to hold. Something that made you feel less hollow.
She took a careful sip. The heat stung against her split lip.
The others were still talking. Still shifting around her like a gathering storm. Silco hadn’t moved. His hand stayed firm against her back. Steady. Present.
But even that comfort felt distant. Sharpened by the silence in her chest.
She didn’t want their fury.
Didn’t want Felicia’s wild-eyed rage, or Vander’s coiled grief. She didn’t want Connol’s quiet worry, or Silco’s unreadable stillness.
She just wanted them to stop looking at her like this was something new.
It wasn’t.
Pain had followed her since childhood- persistent, predictable, a shadow stitched into her every step. There was always someone bigger. Someone crueler. Someone who needed to remind her she didn’t belong.
This wasn’t new. It was just more of the same.
She didn’t want pity. Or promises. Or rage that would burn everything down.
She wanted peace.
She took another sip of her drink, hands trembling slightly, and said nothing.
Silco leaned in, voice low against her ear. “Do you want to go upstairs?”
She didn’t answer right away.
But eventually, she nodded.
He rose first, then reached for her gently, helping her stand without a word. He didn’t hold her- just offered the support, and let her decide how much she needed.
They didn’t look back as they left.
The climb upstairs was slow- not just from pain, though it still lingered with every step- but from the weight in her chest. A hollow sort of gravity.
She didn’t speak. Didn’t lean on him. Just walked.
Silco didn’t press. He kept close. Always within reach. But didn’t touch her unless she faltered. He walked with a kind of quiet restraint, as if every instinct told him to pull her in- but he knew she needed space more than shelter.
The door closed behind them with a soft click.
Inside, the room welcomed them in silence. Dim neon light filtered through worn curtains. The scent of the day- dust from the mines, candle wax, and faint smoke- still clung to the air.
(Y/N) didn’t stop moving. She crossed to the window, cloak slipping from her shoulders and falling where it may.
She didn’t pick it up.
She sank into the window seat, flicked her fingers, and summoned a small flame.
It sparked, sputtered. Her hand trembled.
She clenched her jaw, tried again.
This time, the fire steadied. She lit the cigarette between her lips and leaned back, exhaling smoke toward the cracked pane. The breeze drew it out slowly, like breath finally let go.
Silco stood near the door, watching.
She looked hollow.
Not broken. Not weak. Just… dimmed. Like the fire in her chest had drawn back behind old walls. Her hands trembled around the cigarette. Blood dried like rust along her bandages.
She didn’t try to hide it.
She didn’t say a word.
Silco stepped forward- slowly, deliberately- and knelt beside her, one arm resting on the windowsill. He tilted his head, studying her profile, but didn’t speak right away.
“Talk to me,” he said at last, his voice low, nearly lost beneath the hum of the Undercity outside.
(Y/N) didn’t answer. She kept her gaze fixed on the distant glow bleeding through the cracked glass- the Undercity’s fractured light, flickering like something half-remembered. Smoke curled from the cigarette between her fingers. Her silence stretched, brittle.
“I’m just tired,” she said finally. “Tired of pretending it doesn’t hurt.”
Silco swallowed, jaw tensing. She wasn’t talking about the bruises. Not really.
She drew in another breath of smoke, slower this time. “People always look at me like I’m strong. Like I can take it.” Her voice wavered, then steadied. “And I can. But it’s starting to feel like that’s the only reason I’m still here.”
Her eyes dropped to her bandaged hands, and her voice cracked.
“To take it.”
He didn’t speak. Just reached out, fingers brushing hers as he gently took the cigarette from her grip. She let it go without a word. He crushed the ember into the ashtray, then stood, pulling her carefully to her feet.
She blinked up at him, caught off guard- but didn’t pull away when he wrapped his arms around her. Not tightly. Not to shield or protect. Just close. Like he was anchoring her, grounding her in something real.
“You’re not here just to endure,” he murmured into her hair. “Not to me.”
Her hands gripped the front of his shirt before she could even think of it, her face pressing into the warmth of his chest. His heartbeat, steady beneath her ear, became the only rhythm she could hold onto. The scent of smoke and iron clung to him, familiar, oddly soothing.
Silco said nothing more. He just held her, patient and still, while her body trembled quietly in his arms.
She tried to breathe. Not cry. Not break. But it was hard. The bruises on her ribs and hands still throbbed beneath her skin, but the worst pain lived deeper- in the place that never got the chance to heal.
Her voice, when it came, was almost too quiet to hear.
“I wish it was different.”
His arms tightened, just slightly.
“I know.”
“I wish I didn’t have this magic,” she whispered. “Wish I didn’t have to hide it. Didn’t have to be afraid of it. I wish I could fight back without making things worse. I wish we weren’t always hunted. Like prey in our own streets. I just…”
Her breath hitched. “I just want to live like normal people.”
Silco didn’t respond right away. His thumb moved slowly over her back, quiet and steady.
“Normal’s a lie,” he said eventually, his voice rough. “But freedom? That’s worth everything.”
She gave a shaky exhale, her cheek brushing the warm skin above his collarbone. Her eyes were heavy now.
“Feels like we’ll never have it.”
“We will.” His voice shifted- firmer now. Not idealistic. Certain. “Not tomorrow. Not soon. But one day. I’ll make sure of it.”
She didn’t argue. She didn’t have the strength.
Instead, she let herself lean into him, her body slowly releasing the tension it had carried all day. Her heartbeat slowed, syncing with his. If she couldn’t have peace, at least she had this. Him. The quiet safety of his arms.
The exhaustion caught up all at once. Her breath warmed the hollow of his neck as her grip loosened- not from retreat, but from surrender.
Without a word, Silco shifted, guiding her toward the bed. She didn’t resist. Just followed, limbs heavy with the weight of it all.
They slipped under the thin blanket, the only light coming from the dim Undercity glow through the window. She curled into him instinctively, her head on his chest, her hand tucked between them like she was trying to keep something safe.
Silco wrapped his arms around her, pulling her close until there was no space left between them. His legs tangled with hers, and he rested his chin gently on the top of her head.
It wasn’t the first time they’d fallen asleep like this. But something about tonight felt heavier. Closer.
Not just comfort. Not just need.
Recognition.
He didn’t say it, but she felt it in every breath, every touch, every heartbeat: I see you. I won’t let go.
Her body softened in his arms. Her breathing slowed.
Still scarred. Still whole. Still his.
And in the faint hum of Zaun’s restless night, they drifted off. Two souls bound together in the dark, held fast by something stronger than all the things trying to break them.
Time passed.
Not all at once. Quietly. Gradually.
The bruises faded- from her skin, then from her routine. Her hands healed. The ache in her chest took longer. But even that began to dull- softened by warmth, by routine, by Silco’s constant, quiet presence.
And Violet grew.
From a bundle of soft blankets and curious eyes to a sharp, babbling toddler who could clear a room with a single shriek and charm it again with a crooked grin. She toddled through the bar on unsteady legs, fearless. Felicia stayed one step behind. Connol three steps ahead, trying to catch every fall.
She became The Last Drop’s heartbeat. Even the roughest regulars melted when she approached with sticky hands and wide eyes. No one said no- not even Silco, who would scowl as she climbed into his lap, then let her stay anyway, a hand gently steadying her back.
(Y/N) began working fewer shifts in the mines. At first, it was just a few missed mornings. Then it became habit. She helped Vander behind the bar, swept the floors, restocked the shelves. Quiet work. Grounding work.
She said it was to help out. But they all knew better.
It was the Enforcers. She was avoiding them. Avoiding herself, maybe. The edge of what she could do- what she might do, if pushed too far.
Vander never asked questions. Just passed her a towel and a crate to lift.
And Silco?
He didn’t say much. But he was always near.
She felt it in the way his hand brushed hers when he passed a bottle. The way he leaned in close when the bar was loud, voice low, a flicker of humor in his eyes. How he watched her, always. Not possessive- present.
The world didn’t get easier. But it got smaller. Closer.
The city still tried to claw peace from their hands- but they held onto it anyway. Nights at The Last Drop had quieted. Less yelling now. Fewer brawls breaking out in dark corners. The fire hadn’t gone out, but it burned lower, steadier, like the amber light spilling across the bar’s worn wood.
The Undercity hadn’t changed. It was still raw. Still scarred. But something beneath it had settled.
Maybe it was Violet, growing fast and fierce, commanding a room with just a look- Felicia’s look- while perched on a hip and sucking juice from a chipped cup. Maybe it was the way Vander and Silco had finally stopped talking past each other.
They hadn’t always seen eye to eye. Too many nights had ended with slammed doors and clenched jaws- Silco all edge and conviction, Vander slow-burning with old weight and weary patience. But something had shifted. Not just in the room, but between them.
(Y/N) saw it first.
The way they leaned closer during late-night talks, voices low as the bar emptied out. Vander no longer shutting Silco down the second Piltover came up. Silco, surprisingly, actually listening- pausing, considering. Like he’d finally realized not every battle needed to be waged in fire.
Maybe it was understanding. Or maybe it was, again, Violet.
She’d changed everything.
Hard to talk about revolution when a toddler was dragging around a chewed-up mug, insisting it was “hers.” When her tiny feet echoed across the floorboards, scattering dust motes in the lamplight.
So when Silco spoke of the future now, he didn’t say now. He didn’t say soon.
He said eventually.
And Vander, once immovable in his pacifism, didn’t dismiss it out of hand anymore. Just nodded. Quietly. Said things like, “Maybe. Someday. When she’s old enough to run if she has to.”
(Y/N) had overheard them once- stood in the doorway, unseen, as Vander cleaned out his pipe behind the counter. Silco leaned nearby, arms folded, eyes on the wall.
“We can’t keep takin’ hits like that,” Vander muttered, jaw set. “They come down here like they own the place.”
Silco didn’t bristle. Didn’t grin. Just replied, low and even, “We won’t. Not forever.”
Vander wiped his hands on a bar towel. “I’m not about to light a fire I can’t put out.”
Silco nodded. “I’m not asking you to.”
A beat passed. Then Vander looked at him- really looked at him- and said, “But we’ll be ready when it comes.”
That was all. No shouting. No threats. Just a shared promise, spoken like a quiet oath.
Not today… Not yet. But one day.
(Y/N) stepped back from the doorway, heart heavy in that strange way- full of knowing. Not afraid. Just aware. The world would shift again. That was inevitable.
But not while Violet was still tugging on pant legs and chasing flecks of light like they were treasure. Not while mornings were still soft and slow, Silco brushing past her in the kitchen, his fingers grazing her back, his voice low and familiar.
“Let her be little,” he’d murmur. “Just a while longer.”
And Vander would nod. And they’d wait.
They’d build.
Time, as it does, slipped forward without asking.
Violet turned four. A blur of questions, fast feet, and sharper opinions. She mimicked everyone- Felicia’s sass, Vander’s sighs, even Silco’s scowls (to his quiet dismay). She perched on barstools like she owned the place. Vander even carved her a little wooden step to stand behind the bar, though she mostly used it to sneak sips from mugs when no one was looking.
And then, one morning, Felicia walked into the bar with Connol trailing nervously behind her, hands wringing.
“Well,” she announced, hands on her hips. “Looks like the baby bin wasn’t a waste after all.”
(Y/N) nearly spit out her tea. “You mocked me for keeping that thing.”
Felicia smirked, rubbing a hand over her belly. “Yeah, well. Maybe you’re good for something after all.”
Silco didn’t say much about the news of the new baby.
But he watched.
Watched Felicia move with a kind of defiant ease, even when the weight of it slowed her down. Watched (Y/N) make space again- pulling the bin out of storage, folding tiny clothes with a strange, wistful look in her eye. Watched Violet mimic it all, dragging around a spare bottle like she was training for something.
Spring came fast. And with it- so did the baby.
The bar cleared out quickly. Regulars were shooed off. Towels boiled. Water warmed. Ren showed up right on time, muttering, “You lot breed like rats in winter,” while rolling up her sleeves.
(Y/N) stayed with Felicia through the pain, Connol at her side, Vander hovering in the doorway. Silco didn’t pace this time- just stood by the window, hands behind his back, breathing like it hurt to do it wrong.
And then the cry came.
Sharp. Fragile. Real.
Everyone stilled.
Ren wrapped the baby carefully, then looked around. “Well?” she said. “Who’s first?”
Felicia, exhausted but smiling with that same smug pride, didn’t hesitate. “Give her to Silco.”
Ren raised an eyebrow. “You’re serious?”
“Vander named Violet,” Felicia said, leaning into Connol. “It’s his turn.”
Silco froze. Looked to (Y/N). She gave him the softest nod.
So he stepped forward.
Ren guided his hands under the baby’s head. He held her like she might vanish. Small and warm and impossibly new.
She was wrinkled and red and making soft, wet noises- but her hair…
Silco stared.
Fine, pale fuzz. Blue. So faint it was barely visible. But unmistakable.
“She looks like…” he started, stopped. Swallowed. “Powder.”
Felicia blinked. “You mean the color, or-?”
He didn’t look up. “I don’t know. It just fits.”
(Y/N) leaned close, gazing at the newborn. “It does,” she murmured. “It really does.”
Felicia smiled faintly. “Then Powder it is.”
The name stuck- odd, but perfectly hers.
And life moved on.
When Powder started walking (and then sprinting, and then climbing everything), Felicia and Connol got restless. The bar was safe, yes, but they needed more. The mines, for all their danger, offered steady work.
“We’re not vanishing,” Felicia promised one morning, Powder on her hip, Violet tugging on her coat. “Just a few shifts. Keep things balanced.”
Connol added quickly, “We’ll be around. Just not always underfoot.”
Vander frowned- he always did when someone went underground- but he didn’t stop them. He just nodded.
And that left them- Vander, Silco, and (Y/N)- as the keepers of the Undercity’s most chaotic duo.
Violet, sharp and loud and entirely too clever, claimed a booth as her throne and demanded pastries as taxes.
Powder… Powder was stranger. Quieter. She wandered more. Spoke to herself. Built towers out of bottle caps and knocked them over to study the fall.
And Silco, of all people, shadowed her like a silent guardian. He never said why.
But he always caught her before she fell.
It started gradually.
Silco began keeping her within his line of sight- subtle, instinctive. Even while buried in planning or half-snarled conversations with smugglers, his gaze would flicker toward her. A quiet “no” and a hand on her shoulder was enough to pull her away from dangerous corners. Sometimes, if he was deep in one of his journals, he’d lift her onto the stool beside him without a word. Powder would climb up too, wide-eyed, watching his pen move like it was casting spells.
(Y/N) noticed it first.
The way Powder drifted toward Silco, no matter how crowded the room was. The way she’d tug at his coat until he looked down, then silently lift her arms to be held. And the way Silco- sharp, precise, always in control- would let her crawl into his lap without protest, wrapping one arm around her as she fiddled with the buttons on his vest like they were treasure.
It was disarming. And a little bit adorable.
One afternoon, (Y/N) found him slumped in the back booth of The Last Drop, half-asleep. Powder was curled up against his chest, her small fingers hooked into the edge of his vest. His hand rested over her back, thumb moving slowly in quiet circles. She leaned against the doorframe, watching for a moment before breaking the silence.
“You didn’t cuddle me like that when we were little.”
Silco cracked an eye open, unimpressed and half-drowsy. “You didn’t drool in your sleep.”
(Y/N) snorted and stepped closer, brushing a strand of blue hair out of Powder’s face.
“She’s got you wrapped around her tiny, sticky fingers, y’know.”
“She’s unpredictable,” he muttered. “Like a bomb with a smile.”
“And you love it.”
He didn’t argue. Didn’t even try.
And as (Y/N) watched him shift just enough to pull the blanket a little higher over the girl in his arms, something warm and aching settled deep in her chest.
The Last Drop had always been a place of smoke and whispers- rebels meeting in corners, laughter shared over bruised knuckles and bitter liquor. But lately, the air had started to change. The whispers were louder. Plans took shape in the shadows. Smuggling routes reopened. Piltover shipments vanished, and the Enforcers never knew where to start looking.
The Undercity was stirring.
And at the center of it all stood two men: Vander, still carrying hope like a torch, and Silco, burning with something far more volatile. They didn’t agree on everything- rarely did- but they had found rhythm again, like bones remembering how to move.
(Y/N) watched from the edges.
Because she remembered what came of getting too close to that kind of fire. A sheriff dead. Ten people turned to dust. Her magic crackling out of control. The way the city looked at her afterward- not like a girl, but like a weapon that might go off again.
No one spoke of it anymore. Not Vander. Not Felicia. Not even Silco.
But she hadn’t forgotten.
So while they pushed forward- Vander meeting with people at dawn, Silco vanishing into alleyways and fixer dens- (Y/N) stayed behind.
Not because she was afraid.
Because she couldn’t let herself become that again.
So she looked after the girls.
Violet was seven now- quick-footed and fierce, with scraped knees and a sharp tongue. She climbed faster than most runners, had already started asking questions too big for her age.
Powder, at three, was quieter. Sloppy, brilliant, always tinkering. She'd pull apart broken tech just to rebuild it into something entirely new- and entirely unpredictable. More than once, Vander had flinched when her latest invention sparked to life.
(Y/N) was their constant.
She packed lunches. Cleaned up cuts. Told them stories when the nights grew long. Her rebellion wasn’t with fire and fists anymore. It was in keeping the people she loved intact while the world tried to wear them down.
One night, Silco came home late. His coat was torn at the shoulder, dried blood crusted on the sleeve. He stepped into the bar and stopped.
On the couch, (Y/N) lay curled with both girls half asleep across her- Violet stretched over her legs, Powder tucked under her arm. She looked up, eyes tired but soft.
“Don’t ask,” she said before he could speak. “They ran themselves ragged.”
Silco crossed the room and crouched beside them, his hand brushing over Powder’s hair, then Violet’s arm. His eyes, usually so guarded, flicked to (Y/N), darker than usual.
“You’re keeping them safe.”
“I have to,” she murmured.
He didn’t answer. But the thought hung there between them, heavy and unspoken.
And who’s keeping you safe?
(Y/N) didn’t need him to say it. She just reached out, brushing her fingers along his cheek, whispering- “I’m still here.” before carefully picking up the girls, and making her way up stairs.
The bar was full later that night. Shoulder to shoulder with the ones who mattered- runners, smugglers, chemists, old fighters with iron in their bones. You could feel it in the air. Something was coming.
Upstairs, (Y/N) and Felicia stood over the sleeping girls.
Violet had begged to stay up and “help with planning,” eyes shining. Powder had clung to her half-broken toy like it would anchor her. (Y/N) tucked the blanket in around them both, brushing their hair back with a hand that lingered too long.
“I don’t like this,” she said quietly as they stepped into the hall.
“I know,” Felicia replied.
Downstairs, the tension pressed against the walls like a held breath.
Vander stood tall at the center, arms crossed, jaw set. Silco was beside him, leaning slightly forward, hands clasped behind his back, speaking low.
No heat. No fight.
Just resolve.
When the time came, Vander raised a hand.
The room fell silent.
“We’ve been patient,” he said, voice clear and steady. “We’ve followed their rules. Tried to build something real in the cracks they left us.”
A few voices murmured agreement.
“But patience hasn’t bought us peace. It’s bought bruises. Blood. Fear.”
He swept the room with his gaze.
“And every time we let them walk our streets like they own ‘em, we tell our children this is all they’ll ever have.”
(Y/N) stood at the back with Felicia, arms crossed, shadows curling around her like second skin.
She didn’t speak.
She just listened.
Vander’s voice sharpened.
“So we’re taking it back. No more waiting. No more silence. If they want to walk our streets- they’re gonna have to bleed for it.”
Cheers rippled across the room, building slowly.
Then Silco stepped forward.
His voice was quiet. Precise. Cold.
“We hit them where they’ll feel it. The bridge. That’s where they hold power over us. That’s where they watch us- control us. So that’s where we remind them we’re not beneath them.”
Heads nodded. Plans took root.
And in the flickering light, (Y/N) stood still.
Watching. Remembering. Holding the weight of fire in her chest- and refusing to let it burn her again.
Vander lifted his hand to calm them. “We’ve got numbers. We know that bridge better than anyone. We fight smart. I’ll lead it.”
The bar erupted.
Chairs scraped. Bottles clinked. A half-dozen people surged forward, shouting their loyalty, their hunger for retaliation.
But not (Y/N).
She didn’t move. Not even a twitch. Her arms stayed folded across her chest, lips a thin line. Heart pounding behind her ribs like it was trying to run.
She got it. Really, she did. That righteous fury- they wore it like armor. And part of her wanted it, too. To burn hot. To burn back.
But all she could think about were two small girls asleep in the room upstairs… And the last time she’d let her magic answer violence with more of it.
Felicia stood near the wall, arms crossed, looking worn down to the bone. She glanced over, voice barely a whisper above the chaos. “You good?”
(Y/N) didn’t answer. Her eyes were locked on the center of the room. On Vander, solid as ever, holding the weight of the whole damn Undercity on his back. On Silco- quiet, sharp-eyed, unreadable.
She murmured, more to herself than anyone else, “I don’t know if this is the right way. But I think they’ve already decided.”
The meeting bled into the night, the bar slowly emptying until only low voices and the smoke of half-burned cigarettes remained. A plan had been made. A date.
Three months.
The bridge.
It still felt far.
But not far enough.
(Y/N) sat alone in the booth by the window, untouched drink in front of her, eyes distant as the Undercity’s green glow shimmered through cracked glass. Vander’s voice rumbled somewhere behind the counter. Silco’s lower, quiet, murmuring something to a smuggler near the back.
She barely heard them.
All she could think about… were the girls.
Powder would be four in two weeks. Gods. Four. She used to be a quiet bundle wrapped in a frayed blanket- Silco had held her once, stiff and unsure, like she might shatter. Now she was a walking whirlwind, inventing things from nothing but wires and junk.
And Violet- eight. A spitfire with scraped knees and fire in her veins, fierce as Felicia, stubborn as Vander. She looked at (Y/N) like she hung the stars when she helped her tie her boots or sound out long words in dog-eared books.
They weren’t hers. Not really.
But they were.
And now there was a war coming.
Not a whisper. Not a theory. A date. A choice.
She looked down at her hands. Scarred. Capable. And shaking.
Not from fear. Not exactly.
But because she knew what this path cost.
She heard a chair scrape back and looked up just as Silco approached. His coat was still draped over one shoulder, his expression unreadable, though the shadows beneath his eyes were darker than usual.
“You didn’t say anything,” he said as he slid into the booth across from her.
(Y/N) held his gaze. Steady. “Didn’t seem like there was much room for second thoughts.”
Silco tilted his head, studying her. “You don’t agree?”
“I don’t think it matters,” she said. “You’ve already decided.”
Her voice wasn’t bitter. Just tired.
Silco didn’t argue. Just leaned back, fingers tapping against the table’s edge. “You’re thinking about them.”
“Always.” Her voice softened. “Powder wants a new toolbelt for her birthday. Violet’s been asking for boots like Vander’s.”
She smiled, sad, faint. “They don’t know what’s coming.”
Silco went quiet. Long enough that the silence almost felt like an answer.
“Neither do we,” he said finally. “Not really.”
“But you’ll still go.”
“I have to.”
“I know.”
They sat there, still and silent, the weight of three months stretching out between them like a lit fuse.
Then- “Promise me something,” she said, eyes locked on his.
Silco straightened. “Anything.”
“If this falls apart,” she said, low and sure, “make sure you are safe.”
His eyes darkened- not from coldness, but something heavier. Fiercer. “I will.”
“I’ll stay behind,” she added. “With the kids. I won’t fight. Not this time. I’m not letting them wonder where I went.”
He reached across the table, his fingers brushing hers. “You won’t lose what you built,” he said quietly. “Not if I can stop it.”
She nodded, throat tight. And squeezed his hand back.
Powder’s birthday came faster than expected.
The Last Drop still hummed with the tension of what was coming. But that day… that day, she didn’t let it touch them.
She slipped out early, arms full when she returned- scraps of cloth in soft colors, sweets from the docks, a small mechanical toy she’d bartered for with a vendor who owed Felicia a favor.
Most wouldn’t notice the changes in the bar. But the ones who mattered? They would.
Ribbons of powder blue and pink, twisted with wire, hung along the stair rail. A booth had been cleared- mismatched dishes, a crooked cake Vander swore wasn’t terrible, and two paper signs marked in shaky handwriting: VIOLET and POWDER.
Violet was the first down, barefoot and wide-eyed. “Is that cake?”
“Patience, firecracker,” (Y/N) grinned, scooping her up. “Birthday girl’s not even here yet.”
Felicia followed, Powder half-asleep on her shoulder, hair sticking out like she’d wrestled a static storm. Her fist still gripped a screwdriver.
“Happy birthday, Powpow,” (Y/N) whispered, lifting her carefully.
Powder blinked. “Is that… a cake?”
“Told you!” Violet beamed.
The party was quiet, small, warm. The best kind. Powder opened her little pile of gifts- buttons, gears, a satchel just her size, and a handmade goggle strap from (Y/N) that lit up at the clasp.
“Now you look like a real inventor,” she teased, ruffling her hair.
Powder beamed and threw her arms around her neck.
Across the room, Felicia met her eyes. A look passed between them. Quiet. Thankful.
(Y/N) just nodded and held Powder tighter.
She didn’t forget Violet either- slipping her a box wrapped in old newspaper with boot laces dyed her favorite color.
“Not your birthday,” she said with a smirk, “but being a big sister’s hard work.”
Violet grinned, tackled her in a hug.
The day passed in soft bursts of joy- chalk drawings on the bar walls, Powder tinkering with her new tools, Violet staging wild games in the back room.
For just a while, nothing else existed.
No war. No countdown. Just them.
Later, when the girls were asleep upstairs- bellies full, faces sticky with frosting- Felicia pulled her into a long hug.
“You’re too good to us,” she murmured.
“You’re my family,” (Y/N) whispered back. “I’d do it all again.”
Felicia sniffed. Laughed softly. “Don’t say that too loud. Might end up with another kid.”
“God, no.”
But she laughed too.
It was Powder’s day.
And (Y/N) made sure it was a good one.
Even with the clock still ticking.
The days had started to blur. Since Powder’s birthday, time had shifted- tilted on its axis. What used to feel like months now passed in weeks. Weeks collapsed into days. Now, the revolution was close enough to taste, and (Y/N) felt every second of it like a noose pulling tighter around her throat.
She kept moving. That’s how she managed it.
She cleaned up after the girls, swept the bar floors, restocked shelves, re-fastened loose nails. She fixed Violet’s boots in the mornings, helped Powder organize her new toolbelt, double-checked the locks at night. Always busy. Always doing. Because the moment she stopped- even for a breath- something in her chest cracked open.
She avoided Silco more than she wanted to. Slipped out of the room when he came in. Kept her replies short when he asked questions, her gaze lowered, never lingering. It wasn’t anger. It wasn’t distance. She loved him- god, she loved him. But something in her gut had gone wrong. A slow, sick churn that wouldn’t leave her.
It was the same feeling she’d had before the last sheriff fell. Before every loss she hadn’t seen coming.
Everyone else seemed ready. The Undercity buzzed with tension, with quiet coordination. Weapons hidden. Escape routes mapped. Vander kept a layout of the city splayed across the back room table. Silco paced over it with sharp eyes, memorizing the paths like scripture. They were prepared. They believed.
And she wanted to believe with them.
She knew their reasons were real. She knew they were fighting for something better. But that didn’t stop the pit in her stomach from growing each time she walked past Vander bent over plans, or Silco murmuring to the others, fire catching behind his words.
At night, when the bar quieted, she sit awake in the dark listening to the soft sounds above- Powder’s breathing, Violet’s snoring- and wondered whether she’d ever hear them again once the smoke cleared.
One night, she stood at the window long after the lights were out, arms wrapped tight around herself. The city glowed that familiar, sickly green in the distance.
She didn’t hear him until he spoke.
“You’re avoiding me.”
His voice was soft. Not accusing- just... true.
(Y/N) flinched. Closed her eyes.
“I’m scared,” she admitted, barely a whisper.
Silco stepped closer, not crowding her, but close enough that she could feel the heat of him.
“Of the fight?” he asked.
She shook her head. “Of what it’s going to take.”
Silco was quiet. Then, low and sure- “It’s already taken everything. This is the only way we get it back.”
She didn’t argue. Just turned her gaze back to the window, watching the city pulse.
“I just want them safe,” she murmured. “That’s all I care about now.”
He nodded once. “Then stay with them. No matter what.”
She turned finally, looked at him fully for the first time in days.
“You’ll come back?”
There was a pause. A long one. Then-
“…I’ll try.”
Not a promise. Just a truth.
It had to be enough.
…Dawn came too fast…
The Undercity held its breath beneath the pale, grey light, every alley and window draped in anxious silence. No birds. No whistles. No drunken laughter. Just boots, gear, metal. War at the door.
Inside The Last Drop, the air felt frozen in place. Violet and Powder sat on the stairs, wide-eyed and quiet. Not babies anymore. They understood enough.
(Y/N) knelt in front of them, steadying her voice even though her hands trembled.
“Just another day,” she whispered. “That’s all. You’re staying with me, doors locked, windows tight. We stay quiet, okay?”
Violet nodded slowly. “Is something bad happening?”
(Y/N) smoothed her hair and kissed her brow. “No. Not to you.”
Then came the footsteps.
Silco. Vander. Felicia. Connol. Benzo. Others, too. Armed, armored, resolved.
(Y/N) stood and moved to Felicia first, hugging her tight. “Watch Connol’s back.”
“Always,” Felicia murmured.
She hugged Connol and Benzo, firm and quick. Then Vander- no words, just a shared embrace, the kind that said everything without needing to speak.
And then Silco.
He stood still, but the moment she reached for him, his arms wrapped around her in an instant. No hesitation. It was the kind of embrace that tried to memorize- her scent, her warmth, the way her magic thrummed just beneath her skin.
She pulled back just enough to look at him, then leaned in, kissing him deep and desperate, her fingers curled in his coat, the other at his jaw. When she broke the kiss, her lips ghosted his ear.
“You better fucking come back.”
His breath hitched. Just a little. Then he rested his forehead against hers.
“I will,” he whispered. “If only so you don’t burn the city down looking for me.”
She huffed a shaky laugh. Didn’t let go until she had to.
And then- like that- they were gone.
She locked the door behind them with trembling fingers and turned back to the girls. Wrapped her arms around them and held on.
Outside, the Undercity marched to war.
Inside, she kept the light on…
The silence was wrong.
It wasn’t peaceful. It was bracing. Even the air held still, like the city was exhaling for the last time.
(Y/N) did everything she could to distract the girls. Old books. Chalk drawings. Gentle songs hummed through clenched teeth. But her hands kept shaking.
And she knew.
Then- the pounding. A heavy, urgent fist at the door.
She ran. Unlocked it.
Benzo stood there, blood on his shirt, breathing ragged, eyes wide with horror.
“They knew,” he gasped. “They were waiting- we walked right into it- too many-”
She didn’t wait to hear the rest.
“Stay with the girls,” she ordered, already pulling on her coat.
“Auntie-!” Violet cried.
“Don’t follow me,” (Y/N) barked. “Stay with Benzo.”
She was gone before they could answer.
Smoke painted the sky as she ran- choking, black smoke that billowed across rooftops. The closer she got to the bridge, the thicker it became.
She arrived to chaos.
Screams. Steel. Bodies. Blood slicking the cobblestones. Enforcers everywhere. Zaunites, too- some fighting, some fallen.
No time to think.
Magic surged to her hands, golden light cracking from her fingers. She fought like she was made for it. Threw herself over downed allies, cast fire toward enemies, keeping them at bay.
Then she saw him- Vander, bloodied and using his gauntlets to fight with every muscle. She cut her way to him. No words. Just movement. Two parts of the same storm.
And then-
“Auntie!!”
The voice cut through everything. High. Familiar. Too close.
She turned, eyes wide.
Violet stood just beyond the fight, Powder clinging to her side.
“Benzo let them leave?” she breathed, fury flashing hot.
She darted to them.
“Where are they?!” Violet sobbed. “Where’s Mama? Dad?!”
(Y/N) looked to Vander.
His eyes dropped- just once- toward a heap of rubble nearby.
And she knew.
She followed his gaze.
Felicia lay crumpled, blood on her temple, Connol’s hand still wrapped around hers. Still. Silent.
Gone.
Violet froze. Shaking.
And everything inside (Y/N) shattered.
Violet threw out an arm, shielding Powders eyes with her fingers. “Don’t look,” she whispered, her voice breaking. Her hands trembled.
(Y/N) was there in an instant, scooping them both into her arms and holding them tight- tighter than she’d ever held anything. Powder buried her face against her collar, breath hitching with quiet sobs. Violet clung to her shirt like it was the only thing keeping her upright. (Y/N)’s knees nearly gave beneath her, but she didn’t fall. Not yet. She took a shaky step back from the wreckage, her eyes stinging, her lungs burning. She couldn’t cry. Not here. Not now.
She held her girls.
Then Vander was beside her, silent for a moment, his hand landing heavy on her back.
“Take them,” he said, his voice raw, thinned by smoke and grief. “Please. Get them home. Somewhere safe.”
She looked at him- just once- and nodded. No argument. No questions. Just turned and carried them away.
One on each hip. Powder crying soft against her neck. Violet stiff and silent, arms locked around her like a vise. The walk back to The Last Drop felt endless. Every step rang in her bones.
She slammed the door shut behind them, bolted it, barred it. Dropped to her knees with both girls still wrapped in her arms. Held them like the world was trying to take them from her.
But in the back of her mind-
Silco.
She hadn’t seen him. Not once.
And the thought of him- alone, somewhere in the smoke, maybe bleeding, maybe worse- was already beginning to split her down the middle.
Vander didn’t return until long after nightfall.
His footsteps dragged through the rear hall like dead weight. His coat was half-burned, his hands red and raw, crusted with blood. The door creaked shut behind him, too final. Like a war had ended, but no one had won.
(Y/N) was on the floor by the hearth, sleeves rolled, hands trembling as she dabbed soot from Powder’s cheek. Violet sat close, arms around her knees, eyes fixed on the door.
Vander stood there, silent.
She looked up at him, heart already sinking. “…Well?”
He didn’t answer right away. Just stared at her. Through her. Like he hadn’t left the bridge at all.
“I couldn’t find him,” he said finally. The words scraped out of him. “He’s gone.”
Her chest tightened.
Vander’s expression twisted. “He disappeared. Coward.”
She flinched.
“He let it all fall apart.” He began to pace- restless, agitated, jaw clenched so tight it looked like it hurt. “I trusted him. And he ran.”
(Y/N)’s hand froze, cloth paused at Powder’s temple. That didn’t sound like Silco. Not the Silco she knew. But she could see it- the rage in Vander’s eyes, the betrayal coiled beneath his skin.
Now wasn’t the time to argue. The smoke was still clinging to them all.
So she said nothing. Just nodded once. Quiet. Then turned back to the girls.
Powder sniffled. Violet leaned closer, a protective arm around her sister’s shoulders.
(Y/N) dipped the cloth again, wiped the soot away gently, one streak at a time. As if she could clean the night from their skin. As if it would undo any of it.
Vander sank into a nearby chair with a heavy groan and didn’t say another word.
The silence that followed didn’t feel like peace. It felt like a wound.
Silco’s name wasn’t spoken again.
Not by Vander. Not by Benzo. Not even by the few who survived and had once stood beside him.
But (Y/N) searched.
She helped move bodies from the bridge- limbs stiff, clothes torn, faces she’d known. She found Connol’s body. Felicia’s. Wrapped them herself. But Silco wasn’t there.
She checked every face, every coat. Her hands shook with each one she turned over. Hoping. Dreading.
He wasn’t dead. Not there. Not anywhere.
He was just- gone.
And somehow, that was worse.
Then, one night-
She was settling the girls into bed. Powder was half-asleep in her lap, Violet rubbing at her eyes and pretending not to yawn.
A slam. The front door.
She flinched, head snapping toward the stairs.
Vander. Soaked through. Water dripped from his hair, his boots. He didn’t say a word. Didn’t even look at her. Just stormed through, fists clenched, leaving muddy footprints in his wake.
She watched him disappear into the back, heart thudding.
She didn’t ask. Not yet.
But something in her chest sparked. A small flame. One that hadn’t burned in a long time.
Weeks passed. Then months… Years…
Life reassembled itself in jagged pieces.
Violet grew louder, bolder, angrier. Powder withdrew into wires and gears, her grief funneled into creation.
Mylo came crashing into their lives a year later- mouthy, reckless, impossible to ignore. Vi challenged him before she even learned his name. Claggor followed soon after, calm and steady, the quiet gravity that kept the chaos from flying apart. And Ekko, sharp and fast, found a home with Benzo. He and Powder bickered constantly, but they always came back to each other.
The family grew. And (Y/N) stayed. Because someone had to.
The Last Drop softened. Fewer fights. More meals. It became a place worth protecting.
But the ache didn’t go.
Silco’s absence lingered in the corners. In the shadowed streets. In the quiet before sleep.
She never stopped loving him. She tried to. But she didn’t.
She stopped asking Vander. The look in his eyes when she did- the guilt, the anger- was enough.
So she let it go.
Or tried to.
The Undercity healed, if slowly. Vander swore off war, true to his word. The bridge remained, scarred and quiet. A marker of what had been lost.
Violet turned sixteen. All fire and fury, taller now, stronger. Protective to a fault.
Powder turned twelve. Brilliant. Strange. Her inventions more creative, even if most didn’t work, her mind was faster than ever. Her little fort in the kids room was a workshop of ideas no one else could follow.
And (Y/N) was still there.
Still waiting.
Still loving someone who might’ve died on a bridge or walked away from everything.
This was their world. Fragile. Messy. Real.
But somehow- it was still theirs.
Hello my friend! I have a good funny story request idea that you may like to do! Well I wanted to see you could do a headcanon/ story on the Demon Slayer Au x female!reader where they had a small argument with each other then the reader screams out how there aren’t very funny or loving because there either too serious, sad, rude, airhead or nice which shocks the Demon Slayer character. Then they decide to play a prank on the reader to prove them wrong ( it can be any type of prank from making them food with something their allergic to plus funny ingredients, trying to scare them, dress up in something silly, pretending to have amnesia and etc). But when their prank is over instead of getting a laugh or apologize; the reader would either get hurt/hospitalized (physically or emotionally), angry, cry, annoyed and even threaten to leave them ( is also joking as well) which causes them to feel guilty, like a jerk or beg for forgiveness?!!~ (It’s up to you whether or not they forgive them or not!)🤭😅❤️🔥✨
A/N: Of course, @lelewright1234! I made ths one a oneshot, since the other two you requested are headcanons :}
Tanjiro:
The morning sun crept through the paper-paneled windows, the scent of freshly baked bread lingered in the air. Laughter echoed faintly down the hallway as Zenitsu teased Inosuke, and Nezuko hummed while tending to the garden.
But in the center of the house, things weren’t quite so peaceful.
“I’m just saying, Tanjiro,” (Y/N) huffed, crossing her arms as she stood in the kitchen doorway, “you don’t always have to be so perfect all the time.”
Tanjiro blinked, confused, ladle still in hand from making soup. “Perfect? I don’t think I’m-”
“You are!” (Y/N) cut in, voice rising in frustration. “You’re too kind, too polite, too... I don’t know, nice! You’re never mad, never sarcastic, never playful- how do you expect people to relax around you when you’re always one step away from offering a moral lesson?”
The kitchen went silent, save for the gentle bubbling of miso soup.
Tanjiro's eyebrows furrowed. “But… I’m just trying to keep the peace. I like being kind to the people I care about. Especially you.”
(Y/N)’s throat tightened, but she forged on. “I know you care, but it’s like... you never joke with me. You don’t tease, you don’t play around. Sometimes it feels like you're scared to just be real.”
Then she added- too loudly and too emotionally- “You’re not even that funny or loving, honestly!”
As soon as the words left her mouth, she regretted it. Tanjiro’s eyes flickered with something quiet and deep- not anger, but woundedness.
“…I see,” he said softly.
“No- wait, I didn’t mean-” (Y/N) began, but Tanjiro simply nodded, setting the ladle down with a calm gentleness that somehow felt heavier than a slammed door.
That Afternoon, (Y/N) looked around for Tanjiro, but… She couldnt find him, anywhere.
“...He hasn’t said anything to you?” (Y/N) asked Nezuko in a hushed voice as she watered the bonsai plants. Nezuko gave a tiny shake of her head and shrugged.
(Y/N) sighed, heart heavy. The argument had been stupid. She hadn’t meant to accuse him of being unloving- she just wanted to see a messier, funnier side of him. To know he could be silly or imperfect around her.
Just once.
And it seemed, maybe, Tanjiro had taken that challenge to heart… Even so, she kept looking.
“Hey… Inosuke, where’s Tanjiro?” (Y/N) asked, glancing around the dinner table as she sat down. Zenitsu paused with a mouthful of rice halfway to his lips.
“Oh, didn’t you hear?” Zenitsu said, chewing. “He hit his head earlier- fell on a wet step outside.”
(Y/N)’s eyes widened. “What?!”
“Yeah,” Inosuke chimed in, grinning. “And now he doesn’t remember anything. Doesn’t even know who you are.”
(Y/N) bolted from the table, heartbeat pounding.
She found him sitting on the porch, a serene smile on his face, moonlight painting his skin. He turned to them with wide eyes- gentle, unfamiliar.
“Oh. Hello. Are you a friend of the family?”
(Y/N) stopped in her tracks. “…Tanjiro?”
He tilted his head. “I was told that’s my name. You’re… (Y/N), right?”
Her heart twisted. “You don’t remember me?”
Tanjiro smiled sweetly, with not a hint of recognition. “Sorry.”
Days later, the amnesia act continued.
Tanjiro asked the same innocent questions over and over: where they had met, what they meant to each other, what her favorite color was. (Y/N) answered every time with a trembling voice and a forced smile. On the third night, she cried herself to sleep.
Zenitsu started looking guilty. Inosuke avoided her eyes.
By the fourth day, (Y/N) broke.
She stood up from their shared porch bench, voice shaky. “Alright, Tanjiro. You win.”
Tanjiro blinked. “Win what?”
“You’re funny. You’re playful. You got me, okay? Real good prank. Hilarious,” she said, voice cracking. “Except I guess I was wrong when I called you too nice. Because no one that kind would do this to someone they love.”
She turned away, rubbing at her eyes furiously.
“I’m leaving tomorrow. Maybe not forever- but definitely long enough to figure out how I let myself fall for someone who thinks this is funny.”
Her voice dropped, half-joking, half-dead serious:
“…Hope it’s worth it.”
She didn’t wait for a response. She walked inside, quietly shutting the door behind them.
Late that same night, there was a soft knock on her door.
(Y/N) rolled over, wiping dried tears from her cheek. “Go away.”
“It’s me,” Tanjiro’s voice said. And it was his voice- not the stranger from the porch, but the one she knew. Warm, guilt-ridden, real.
The door creaked open. He stepped in, candle in hand, and shut the door behind him.
“I’m sorry,” he whispered. “I thought... maybe if I showed you I could be playful, you'd laugh. And we could make up. I didn’t think it would hurt you like this.”
(Y/N) stayed quiet.
He sank to his knees beside the futon. “I missed you. Even when I was pretending not to know you- I missed the real us. Every time you looked sad, or forced a smile, it made my stomach twist.”
(Y/N)’s voice was soft. “Then why didn’t you stop?”
“I was afraid you wouldn’t forgive me,” he admitted.
There was silence between them.
Finally, (Y/N) sighed. “You’re a dummy, Tanjiro Kamado.”
His lips twitched. “I am.”
“And a bad actor.”
“I know.”
“And I still love you.”
His breath caught. Then he leaned forward, resting his forehead against hers, eyes closed. “I love you too. Always. Even when I’m too nice. Even when I mess up.”
(Y/N) snorted. “You’re allowed to mess up, Tanjiro. Just… not like that again.”
He nodded solemnly. “No more fake amnesia.”
“Good.”
A beat of silence.
“…Unless I need an excuse to get out of helping Inosuke with his… Nature stuff,” he added hopefully.
(Y/N) laughed, smacking his arm.
And just like that, the tension cracked- and love slipped in, soft and sure.
The next morning, Zenitsu glanced up from his tea as (Y/N) entered the kitchen with Tanjiro behind her, arms wrapped around her waist, chin resting on her shoulder.
“…So, did he get his memory back?” Zenitsu asked innocently.
(Y/N) grinned. “Nope. Still thinks he’s hilarious.”
Tanjiro just laughed and kissed her cheek.
Inosuke:
The forest was still, too still for (Y/N)’s liking.
The soft chirps of crickets were the only sounds keeping her company as her walked along the dirt path, surrounded by towering trees and the dim glow of moonlight. The mission was over, the demon slain, and the village safe again. But (Y/N)’s shoulders remained tense- because the most exhausting part of the evening wasn’t the battle.
It was Inosuke.
“Could you please not charge in next time without a plan?” (Y/N) asked, for what felt like the fifth time that day, her arms crossed tight across her chest.
Inosuke grunted in response, leaping over a rock and puffing out his chest like a peacock. “I didn’t need a plan! I WON! HAHA!” he declared, full of pride, his boar mask swinging from one hand. “You’re just mad ‘cause you didn’t get the final hit!”
(Y/N) rolled her eyes so hard it almost gave her a headache. “I’m mad because you almost got your head bitten off, you idiot!”
He turned toward her, that wild, half-mischievous, half-oblivious look on his face. “Then you would’ve been the one crying, huh? All like, ‘Oh nooo, my big strong wild man got himself eaten- waaah!’”
“I’d be crying of relief because I’d finally have some peace and quiet!”
That shut him up- if only for a moment. But when (Y/N) saw him frowning in confusion rather than embarrassment, something inside her snapped.
“You’re-!” she shouted, fists clenching. “You’re not even loving! You’re just... some wild airhead who acts like a rabid raccoon on a sugar rush!”
“HUH?! I’m totally loving!! I let you sleep on my arm that one time, didn’t I?!”
“That’s because you passed out mid-conversation!”
“Well... still counts!”
“No, it doesn’t!”
(Y/N) turned around and stomped off down the trail, fuming, ignoring the way the leaves crunched under her boots. Inosuke stayed back for a second, scratching his head, visibly baffled.
He’d seen her mad before, but never like this.
“Hmph. She thinks I’m not loving?” he muttered to himself, then suddenly smirked. “I’ll show ‘er loving. I’ll love ‘er so much, she’ll scream.”
Inosuke had a plan. A brilliant, perfect plan.
It involved a dead deer skull he’d found earlier, some long branches, a cloak soaked in dark mud, and his natural ability to hide in trees like a very aggressive bird.
He waited until (Y/N) had cooled off and was sitting at their shared campsite, fanning the flames of the small fire with a quiet pout still on her face.
Then- BAM!
A bloodcurdling shriek echoed from the treetops as something monstrous launched from the shadows. Mud, bone, and antlers flashed. (Y/N) screamed and scrambled back, drawing her blade by instinct. Her heart nearly leapt out of her chest.
Then-
The “creature” tripped over a root and faceplanted in front of her.
“HAHA! GOTCHA!” Inosuke leapt up, flinging off the deer skull and mud-caked cloak with a triumphant grin. “See?? Bet your heart’s racing! That’s love, baby!”
(Y/N) just stared at him. No laughter. No playful push. Just silence... and slowly rising anger.
She stood stiffly, brushing leaves and dirt off her clothes with trembling hands.
“You...” she began, voice shaking. “You scared the absolute hell out of me, Inosuke!”
He blinked, grin faltering. “Well, yeah! That was the point! It’s funny, right? Right?”
“You think traumatizing me is funny?!” she snapped, backing away a few steps. “You know what? I’m done. I’m so done. I’m going to pack up my things and leave. You can marry that deer skull and live happily ever after with your mud cloak.”
“Wait- WHAAAT?!”
“I hope you and Mrs. Deer Bone have a great life together.”
Inosuke looked genuinely terrified now. “No no no, wait, wait- (Y/N)! Come on! It was just a joke! You’re not really leaving, are you?!”
(Y/N) turned dramatically, starting to walk away.
Inosuke scrambled after them, dropping to his knees. “Okay, I’m sorry!! Please don’t go! You can punch me in the face! Kick me in the ribs! Stab me in the arm! Wait, no, not the arm, I need that- BUT STILL!! I’M SORRY!!”
(Y/N) stopped.
She turned, arms crossed again, raising a brow. “So now you’re saying sorry?”
“YES! I mean... yeah! I didn’t mean to make you mad, I just...” he fidgeted, looking anywhere but at her. “I thought if I could make you scream and laugh and forget being mad at me, then you’d know I care. But... I guess that wasn’t the smartest way.”
(Y/N) exhaled, finally letting her shoulders drop.
“I was never actually going to leave, you dumb boar,” she said softly. “But gods, Inosuke... you’ve got to learn how to show you care without nearly giving me a heart attack.”
He stood, slowly padding forward with his head low.
“Then... how do I show you?” he asked, for once not shouting or charging. Just curious. Soft.
(Y/N) walked over and gently took his hand, still stained with mud.
“This. Talking. Listening. Just be with me. Not hiding in trees trying to traumatize me.”
“...But trees are so cool, though-”
“Inosuke-”
“Okay! Okay! No more tree-jumping monsters!” He grinned sheepishly. “...Unless you want one.”
(Y/N) snorted, pulling him into a hug. “You’re impossible.”
His arms wrapped around her tightly, face pressed into her shoulder. “Yeah... but I’m your impossible.”
Zenitsu:
The sun filtered gently through the cracks in the wooden shutters, bathing the room in golden light. The safe house was unusually quiet this afternoon- Tanjiro and Inosuke were off training, Nezuko was napping peacefully in her box, and that left just Zenitsu and (Y/N) to occupy the space.
And that… was not going well.
“You always run away!” (Y/N)’s voice cut through the silence, sharp and frustrated.
Zenitsu flinched as if she'd thrown something at him. “I don’t always run away! I-I just... use tactical retreat when necessary!”
“Tactical retreat? You screamed and climbed on my head, Zenitsu!”
“That demon was horrifying!” Zenitsu wailed, gripping his own hair. “It had four arms and teeth where its eyes should be!”
“And I had to take care of it while you were shaking like a leaf behind a bush!” (Y/N) crossed her arms, exasperated. “I’m not saying you’re not brave when it counts, but when you act like this all the time- it doesn’t exactly scream ‘loving and protective boyfriend,’ Zenitsu!”
The words hit him like a slap, his wide amber eyes growing misty. “You don’t think I’m loving?”
(Y/N) sighed, rubbing her forehead. “Zenitsu... I love you. But you’re such a scaredy cat sometimes! And it hurts because I feel like I can’t depend on you unless you’re unconscious and lightning-charged.”
Zenitsu stood there, stunned, lower lip wobbling.
(Y/N) groaned. “I need to go cool off.” She stormed out of the room, sliding the door shut a bit too hard.
Later that day, Zenitsu paced in the hallway with his hands behind his back, muttering to himself.
“Scaredy cat... scaredy cat... I’ll show her scaredy cat... I’m going to prove I can be fun and loving. I’ll do something bold! Something dramatic! Something... memorable!”
It was then that he spotted a costume closet one of the Kakushi used for festivals. His eyes gleamed with mischief. An idea bloomed in his head, outrageous and ridiculous- and perfect.
Later, when (Y/N) returned from a walk, calmer now. Her fingers trailed along the hallway walls, the air carrying the scent of tea and clean wood. She was already planning what to say when she saw Zenitsu again- something like “I’m sorry for being harsh,” or “I know you’re trying.”
But then-
“RAWR!”
A creature leapt from behind a sliding door, arms flailing and covered in bright, ridiculous fabrics. Zenitsu had somehow forced himself into a lion onesie, complete with fuzzy tail and painted whiskers. He charged with a roar that sounded like a cat having a coughing fit.
(Y/N) screamed- not in amusement, but in raw, startled panic.
She tripped over a rock, fell hard on her side, and rolled a bit before groaning in pain.
Zenitsu dropped the fake roar instantly. “(Y/N)!!” He scrambled over in his fuzzy lion getup, paw-gloves flailing. “Oh no oh no oh no-! I didn’t mean to scare you like that!”
(Y/N) sat up, wincing. Her arm was scraped, her knee had caught the worst of the fall, and a forming bruise throbbed under her robes.
“I was trying to make you laugh! I thought-! I just wanted to prove I could be brave and... fun and... romantic and-!” Zenitsu’s bottom lip trembled again, eyes glassy. “I didn’t mean to hurt you…”
(Y/N) blinked at him- at the giant lion suit, the silly little ears, the dumb tail, and his completely crumpled expression.
“I should leave,” she said solemnly.
Zenitsu let out a strangled noise. “NO! Don’t go! Please- I’m sorry- I’ll throw the suit away- I’ll be serious- I’ll go punch a demon in the face right now- I-”
“I meant leave you, not the house,” (Y/N) interrupted, deadpan.
Zenitsu looked like a kicked puppy.
“I’m joking, you ridiculous fuzzy idiot.”
Zenitsu blinked.
Then (Y/N) chuckled softly. “You really thought dressing up like that would make me laugh?”
He nodded sheepishly. “I wanted to be a brave lion boyfriend.”
(Y/N) shook her head, wincing again as she moved. “You’re lucky I love you.”
Zenitsu moved to help her up, all dramatics gone now, just soft and apologetic. “You... do still love me, right?”
She leaned heavily against him, hand resting on his fuzzy chest. “Of course I do. Even if you’re a bit of a coward, even if you’re dramatic... You always try. And that means a lot.”
Zenitsu flushed a deep scarlet, holding her tighter than the lion suit allowed. “I promise I’ll do better. I’ll be there next time- no matter how scary it is.”
(Y/N) smiled against his shoulder. “Just don’t dress like a circus act again, and we’ll be fine.”
“Deal.”
Later that night, Zenitsu sat by the futon, gently dabbing at (Y/N)’s scraped knee with some ointment.
“You’re lucky Tanjiro isn’t here. He’d be so disappointed in me.”
“He would lecture you about safety and emotional responsibility,” (Y/N) mused.
Zenitsu winced dramatically. “Ugh, even worse than fighting a demon.”
(Y/N) reached out and pulled him into bed beside her, sighing contentedly.
“I guess I do have a pretty loving boyfriend,” she mumbled sleepily. “Even if he’s a ridiculous coward.”
Zenitsu blushed as he pulled the blanket over both of them.
“...I love you too, you bruised-up gremlin.”
“Goodnight, lion boy.”
“...Rawr.”
Nezuko:
The sky was pale and overcast when the argument began. Spring usually meant new life, blooming trees, and bright sun filtering through clouds. But today? The wind was a little too sharp, and the air carried a tension that matched the sudden silence in the Kamado household.
"You always act like everything's perfect, Nezuko," (Y/N) snapped, turning away from the young demon-turned-human, arms crossed. "Like nothing ever bothers you. Like... you're always calm. Always sweet. Always too good to be real."
Nezuko stood still, mouth slightly open. Her soft pink eyes blinked once, then twice, hurt flickering across them like a candle guttering in the wind.
"But I am real," she said softly.
"Yeah, and I love you- I do. But sometimes I feel like... you’re not really here. Like you don’t feel the way I do. You’re so perfect all the time that I feel like I’m the only one who's ever angry or jealous or scared. And I hate that! I hate how you never screw up, how you never mess up, never yell- never even sweat under pressure. I hate that I’m the messy one in this-"
(Y/N)'s voice cracked, and she sucked in a breath.
"...I feel like I’m the only one trying sometimes."
Nezuko's lips parted, but no sound came out. Her fingers clenched at her sides, a dozen replies dying in her throat. She didn’t want to cry- not in front of (Y/N), who was already trembling from the weight of their confession.
"I’m not very loving," (Y/N) added bitterly. "Not like you. Because you're... you’re too perfect."
And just like that, she turned and stormed out onto the porch, leaving Nezuko alone in the kitchen, her heart quietly shattering beneath her ribs.
Later that night, Nezuko sat curled up on the tatami mat, frowning into a bowl of ingredients. She didn’t cry- crying wouldn’t fix it. But she was bothered. Maybe she hadn’t realized how distant she'd felt to (Y/N) lately. Maybe her quiet nature- once a comfort- was starting to feel like a wall.
"Too perfect, huh?" she whispered to herself.
A mischievous glint entered her eyes.
"Well... maybe I should show her I’m not that perfect."
She cracked her knuckles, glancing at the small box of dango flour and the recipe for (Y/N)'s favorite sweet- matcha mochi. But this time... she had a special ingredient in mind.
Nezuko grinned as she reached for the spice shelf.
"Wasabi... just a little prank."
The next afternoon, she presented the mochi like it was a peace offering. Green, soft, dusted with rice flour. Perfectly handmade.
(Y/N) was still a little raw from the fight, curled on the edge of the porch with her arms around her knees, watching clouds pass overhead.
"...I made you something," Nezuko said gently, nudging the plate into her view.
(Y/N) looked up, hesitant. "Mochi?"
Nezuko nodded innocently. "Your favorite. Matcha. With extra love."
There was a beat of silence. Then (Y/N) gave a small, lopsided smile. "You’re trying to bribe me with sweets, huh?"
"...Maybe."
She took one without much thought, bit in- and immediately froze.
Nezuko tried not to laugh too soon, but she saw her eyes widen comically and a sputter leave her lips.
"W-What the hell is in this?" (Y/N) gagged. "Is this... is this wasabi?!"
Nezuko burst out laughing, holding her sides. "Got you!"
"You little-" (Y/N) laughed too at first, nervously, wiping her tongue. "Nezuuuko!"
But then she stopped.
And blinked.
Nezuko’s laughter faltered.
"...You okay?"
(Y/N)’s face turned a little red- no, splotchy. She reached toward her throat.
"Shit."
She stood quickly, stumbling. "Nezuko- I-I'm- I'm allergic to wasabi-"
Her eyes went wide in horror.
"What?!"
Nezuko grabbed herinstantly, guiding her back inside. "Why didn’t you tell me?!"
"You’re not supposed to put prank spices in my favorite food!" she croaked, wheezing as she dug into her bag for her emergency medication.
It wasn’t a severe allergy- thankfully. Just enough to make her tongue swell, her face puff slightly, and breathing get mildly tight. But it was enough to scare the hell out of Nezuko.
As she downed the medicine and slumped back into a seated position, fanning her mouth with her hand, she gave Nezuko a sharp side-eye.
"That was evil, Kamado. I’m breaking up with you. I’m going to go find a quiet, boring farmer girl who can cook without trying to kill me."
"...No you're not." Nezuko’s voice cracked, her hands trembling as she tried to steady the cup of water for (Y/N).
"You don’t know that," (Y/N) teased weakly, though she were already leaning into her.
Nezuko placed the cup down, then sat beside her, face pale and tight with guilt.
"...I was trying to be funny. Trying to prove I wasn’t perfect. That I do mess up. But I didn’t want this."
(Y/N) chuckled, still half-wheezing. "Well, you definitely proved it."
Nezuko dropped her face into her hands. "I’m sorry. So, so sorry. I didn’t think- I didn’t even ask-"
(Y/N) leaned into her, resting her head against her shoulder, breath finally starting to come easier.
"I forgive you."
Nezuko looked up slowly, shocked.
(Y/N) gave her a small, crooked grin. "...You were trying to reach me. That’s what matters. Even if you nearly poisoned me doing it."
She let out a weak giggle.
Nezuko blinked a few times, and suddenly threw her arms around them, burying her face in her shoulder.
"You scared me..." she whispered.
"You scared me, too."
Silence fell between them for a moment, but it was warmer now. Closer.
"...Can I still cook for you?" Nezuko murmured after a while.
(Y/N) groaned dramatically. "Only if you promise never to go near wasabi again."
She nodded solemnly. "Deal."
"Also... maybe let’s both stop pretending. You don’t have to be perfect. And I don’t have to be the mess. We’re allowed to meet halfway."
Nezuko smiled into her neck.
"I love you, imperfections and all."
(Y/N) smirked. "Good. ‘Cause this relationship is definitely messy now."
Nezuko giggled, and for the first time that day, (Y/N) genuinely laughed with her.
Genya:
They were in the middle of a quiet clearing, sun filtering through the treetops above them. The scent of pine and moss lingered in the warm breeze, and for a moment, it felt like the world had paused. No demons, no missions, just stillness.
Except… not really.
“You know, you never joke around,” (Y/N) muttered, crouched over the small fire pit she was trying to light. “Always so serious. It's like you’re afraid your face will crack if you smile too hard.”
Genya, sharpening his blade nearby, tensed visibly. “What the hell does that even mean?”
(Y/N) blew at an ember from within the fire and glanced at him. “It means you're not very… loving. You’re all ‘training’ this and ‘focus’ that, but never ‘Hey, (Y/N), I care about you’ or even ‘you look cute today.’ You’re like a really buff rock with a grudge.”
That got him. His eyes flicked up, brows furrowed deep.
“That's not fair,” he muttered. “Just 'cause I don’t say stuff like that doesn't mean I don't care.”
(Y/N) stood up now, hands on her hips. “Then show it once in a while, Genya. I'm not asking for poetry. Just… affection. A little fun. You’re always acting like smiling is illegal.”
Genya stood, jaw clenched, flustered and defensive. “I ain’t unloving! Just ‘cause I ain’t goofy doesn’t mean I don’t-”
But (Y/N) had already walked away, huffing, “Whatever.”
The argument settled into an awkward silence between them for the rest of the evening. But Genya couldn’t get her words out of his head. Too serious. Not loving. That stung. He wasn’t like his brother, sure, but he wasn’t heartless.
So... he got an idea. A stupid idea.
The next morning, (Y/N) woke up to an empty camp. She stretched and yawned, only to find a strange trail of bloodied feathers and ripped fabric leading into the forest. Her heart dropped.
"Genya?!" she called, already grabbing her weapon.
No answer.
Panic rising, she followed the trail- only for a blur to come rushing out of the bushes with a loud screech.
"DEMON!!" she screamed, drawing her blade-
-and immediately tripping over a random stick that was on the ground.
She went down hard, rolling down a small slope, crashing into a fallen log with a sickening crack.
"SHIT- (Y/N)!" Genya's voice cut through the trees as he dropped the silly makeshift costume of torn fabric and fake teeth.
He practically leapt down after her, heart hammering in his throat. (Y/N) groaned, clutching her ankle, which was visibly twisted. Her arm was scraped raw and bleeding, and there were bruises forming fast.
“You absolute jackass,” she hissed, eyes watering from pain and rage. “What the hell kind of prank is that?! I could’ve broken my neck!”
“I-I didn’t think you’d actually fall- shit, I didn’t mean-”
“Oh, don’t give me that face,” she snapped, trying and failing to sit up without wincing. “This was totally uncalled for.”
Genya hovered, guilt flooding every inch of his body. His hand shook as he touched her arm gently.
“I was just… I was tryin’ to show you I could be fun. That I ain’t too serious. I thought… if I could scare you a little, you’d laugh at it after. I was tryin’ to be less stiff for once.”
(Y/N) glared at him, then muttered, “Well, congrats. You broke me instead. Maybe I should leave your ass after all. Find a Hashira with a sense of humor.”
That hit him harder than any demon ever had. His expression crumbled.
“…You don’t mean that,” he said quietly.
She looked at him for a long moment… and then sighed, a small smirk forming despite her pain. “Of course I don’t. Dumbass.”
Genya blinked.
“…Wait, so… you’re not actually leaving?”
“No, Genya,” she said softly. “You’re lucky I love you. Just maybe… stick to jokes that don’t involve fake demon attacks next time?”
He exhaled with a laugh- relieved, guilty, and embarrassed all at once.
“Yeah. Yeah, I get it. I really messed up.”
“You really did.”
He crouched beside her, lifting her injured arm gently and pulling out a small jar of salve. “Let me patch you up. And I’ll carry you back. I owe you.”
(Y/N) leaned into his side a little, her voice softer now. “You know… that was kinda loving. In a Genya sort of way.”
“…Yeah?”
“Yeah. Just don’t do it again, or I’ll punch you.”
He chuckled quietly, resting his forehead against hers for a moment. “Deal.”
Later that night, after she was fully bandaged and resting on a pile of blankets near the fire, he came over with something behind his back.
“…What’s that?” she asked suspiciously.
He revealed a crude bouquet of wildflowers, tied together with some thread. “I… uh… picked these. Earlier. Before the dumb prank. Just didn’t know how to give ‘em to you.”
(Y/N)’s lips twitched into a crooked smile. “You’re seriously trying the soft-boy act now?”
He shrugged, ears turning red. “Just shut up and take the damn flowers.”
And she did- with a smirk, a kiss to his cheek, and a mumbled, “You’re still a dumbass, but you’re my dumbass.”
Hello my friend, I hope that you are having a good day! 😊 Well, For my first request, I wanted to see if you could do a headcanon with Demon Slayer AU x short black!reader (Short meaning like 5’2 in height and who’s ended up in Japan but has Trinidad and Tobago Caribbean roots/culture which includes the accent,food and of course Soca Carnival) who they date, want to marry and have children with in the future? ( You can choose how many kids each of them should have!)🐦🔥🌺🏝️🍹
A/N: Absolutely, @lelewright1234! I want to make it known, though- I am Indonesian-American. So, white and Asian. I did my best, though, with some research! If there is anything that is wrong, or inaccurate, please tell me! It's purely from me being ignorant. I did five characters to start with, if you want a part two, just request it and I'll start working on it :}
Tanjiro:
- The first time Tanjiro hears (Y/N)’s accent, he’s absolutely stunned: His eyes widen, he blinks a few times, and stammers, “Wh-what? Say that again?” Her voice is melodic to him, like music- rhythmic, warm, and full of life. Even when he doesn’t understand the slang, he’s enchanted by the way she speaks.
- Tanjiro becomes obsessed with (Y/N)’s cooking- deeply: The man had never tasted pelau, bake and shark, or curry chicken before… but now? He begs for them constantly. He’s always right beside her in the kitchen, apron on and eyes sparkling. “Okay, so I flip the roti- wait, why is it sticking- oh no, I messed it up again!”
- (Y/N)’s Music: When she hums soca music while cleaning, the first time, Tanjiro freezes mid-sweep. “What is this magical, energetic sound?! Why does it make me want to dance and fight demons at the same time??” Now, that music means good vibes, her, and home.
- Ever the gentleman: Tanjiro always leans down slightly to speak with (Y/N) since she’s only 5’2”- even if she insists it’s unnecessary. “Sorry!” he’d laugh, “You’re just so cute down there, I can’t help it!”
- Protective doesn’t even cover it: If anyone dares make fun of (Y/N)’s height or culture, Tanjiro remains sweet- but his glare? Cold as ice. It’s the kind of look that shuts an entire room up. “Speak with respect. Or don’t speak at all.”
- He’s a nickname machine: From “Tiny Tempest,” to “My Lil Firecracker,” to “Sunshine,” or simply a tender “(Y/N)-chan,” he always has something sweet on his lips when it comes to her.
- They balance each other perfectly: (Y/N) brings boldness, rhythm, and color into his world- while he offers peace, patience, and grounding. Together, they’re a heart-shaped hurricane of love.
- When Tanjiro proposes, it’s intimate and heart-melting: No grand show- just pure emotion. He might write to (Y/N)’s family back home to ask for their blessing, or maybe even learn to play a steelpan to perform a song. He could propose during Carnival, surrounded by joy and music, whispering, “You’ve brought so much light and color into my life. I want to dance through every day with you- through sunshine and storm. Will you marry me?”
- He’s all in for a culturally blended wedding: Traditional Japanese elements meet vibrant Trini culture. Yes, he wears the feathers. Yes, he’s bashful. But he does it with the softest smile, all for her.
- As a father? Tanjiro is dad of the year: Warm, affectionate, and involved. He teaches their kids sword forms, calligraphy, and compassion. (Y/N) teaches them how to cook Caribbean dishes, to limbo, and to live like joy is a celebration. “You are strong, kind, and beautiful,” he tells them. “From your mother, you carry music in your soul. From me, you carry strength and love. Never forget that.”
- Carnival becomes a yearly tradition for the whole family: The first time he joins (Y/N)’s family in Trinidad, Tanjiro is overwhelmed- in the best way. Their children race around in glittering costumes, she glows in feathers and color, and Tanjiro just stands there, heart bursting, whispering, “This… this is home.”
Inosuke:
- First Impressions & Height Obsession: The first thing Inosuke noticed was (Y/N)’s height- or lack thereof. “OI! WHY IS SHE SO TINY?!” he’d shout, poking the top of her head like she was some strange woodland creature. But the moment she scolded him with that sharp, melodic accent, he froze. Eyes wide. Brain malfunctioning. He’d never heard anyone sound like that before- and something in him loved it. From that moment on, he started listening to her more than he ever admitted.
- Food is Love: (Y/N) introduced him to Caribbean food, and it ruined every bland meal that came after. Inosuke devoured curry chicken, red beans, fried plantains, pelau, and especially roti like a man starved. “WHAT’S THIS? ROTI?? I WANT ROTI EVERY DAY, WOMAN!!” he’d shout with a satisfied grin. He boasted to the entire Corps that only he got to eat her cooking. It was sacred. No one else was allowed.
- Culture Shock (But He’s Thriving): Soca music confused him at first. “WHY’S IT SO GOOD?!” he’d demand, as if the music offended him. But soon enough, he was obsessed. Couldn’t get enough. He’d hum it during training sessions, during patrols- he even hummed it in battle.
- Carnival Chaos: (Y/N) took him to Carnival once, and he thought he was stepping into a war zone. “THIS IS THE BEST FIGHT PARTY EVER!!” he roared, covered in glitter and feathers. “It’s a celebration, not a brawl,” she had tried to explain- but by then he was whining his hips, downing rum, and dancing like he’d been born on to do it. She laughed so hard, she cried.
- Mutual Respect & Affection: Inosuke was fiercely protective of her, but never controlling. He loved how fiery she was- whether they were sparring, dancing, or teasing each other. He saw her as unstoppable, and he adored that.
- Constant Flexing: He never shut up about (Y/N). “MY WOMAN COULD BEAT YOU IN A FIGHT AND STILL MAKE A BETTER CURRY THAN YOUR MOM.” He'd randomly scream, “I’M GONNA MARRY HER!!” even if she wasn’t there. Zenitsu rolls his eyes “Dude, she’s not even here-” “I KNOW. SHE’LL FEEL IT.”
- Marriage… Inosuke Style: He didn’t really understand traditional proposals, so one day he just declared: “WE’RE MARRIED NOW.” “We are NOT- where’s the ring?!” “I CAN GET YOU A ROCK FROM THE FOREST.” Eventually, with some guidance, he pulled together a proper proposal. He placed a shiny ring inside a coconut shell lined with flowers. “It looks like you,” he said. (Y/N) melted.
- The Wedding: Their wedding was a chaotic, glorious fusion of both of their cultures. Steel pan music rang out, the food was a rainbow of flavor, and the dancing was vibrant and wild. Inosuke wore his haori- with added feathers, of course- and went absolutely feral on the dance floor. Tanjiro cried. Zenitsu fainted. Tengen declared it the party of the year.
- Kids, Kids, Kids: “I WANT FIVE,” he blurted out one day, unprompted. (Y/N) nearly choked. They ended up raising a wild little gang- Inosuke trained them like baby boars. Tree climbing, bug hunting, sword swinging. She balanced that chaos with rhythm, affection, culture, and soca music. She taught them how to cook, how to speak proper Trini slang, and how to carry themselves with fire.
- Family Vibes: All of their kids had a little lilt in their voices, and Inosuke was obsessed. He bragged constantly, “YOUR MOTHER ONCE MADE CURRY BEFORE STABBING A DEMON. THE CURRY TASTED BETTER BECAUSE OF IT.”
- Jealous Husband Energy: Sometimes the kids clung to (Y/N) a little too much for his liking. “OI! SHE’S MY WIFE FIRST!!” She’d just smile, kiss his cheek, and whisper, “Don’t worry, you’re still my big baby.”
Zenitsu:
- First Impressions and The Accent That Changed His Life: Zenitsu fell hard the moment he heard (Y/N) speak. Her accent hit his ears like a thunderclap wrapped in silk, and he turned beet red on the spot. “M-Marry me!!” came out before he even asked her name. Flustered and starstruck, he started babbling about angels and destiny. Tanjiro had to physically hold him back to stop him from proposing on the spot.
- The Way to His Heart: (Y/N)’s cooking became his favorite form of magic. The first time she made pelau, he shed actual tears. His soul ascended after one bite of bake and shark. And don’t even get him started on callaloo. After tasting her food, he’d clutch his chest dramatically and proclaim, “This has healing properties… my bones feel younger!” He always tried to help in the kitchen, but usually ended up snacking on half the ingredients. “I’m sorry! It smells too good! Are you using love as a seasoning?!”
- Culture Shock (and Awe): The first time he heard soca, Zenitsu looked like he’d been struck by lightning. “It’s so intense!!” he screamed- before learning to dance to it with full chaotic commitment. “I’m trying to whine for you, babe!!” he’d cry while flailing wildly. Carnival was even more intense. At first, he thought it was a battlefield, then a blessing. “ARE WE UNDER ATTACK OR IS THIS… THE BEST PARTY EVER?!”
- Dazzled at Carnival: The first time he saw (Y/N) in Carnival attire, his jaw hit the floor. His soul left his body. From that moment on, he walked beside her like a bodyguard on royal duty. “STEP ASIDE! THIS IS MY GIRLFR- I MEAN FUTURE WIFE!!” He refused to let go of her hand, even while hiding behind her during the loudest parts. After the parade, glitter on his cheeks and hands still clasped in hers, he fell asleep mumbling, “I wanna do this every year… with you.”
- Forever Starts Early: Zenitsu talked about marriage way too early- but he meant every word. “What kinds of have engagement customs do you have? Should I bring mangoes? Do I ask a grandparent? I want to do it right!” He dreamed of a wedding that fused both their worlds. Kimonos and Carnival feathers, sakura petals raining on soca dancers, sushi and curry goat side by side. “I want our kids to eat roti and mochi. To dance like you and train like me. I want that life with you.”
- Soft-Dad Supreme: He cried when the baby kicked. Cried when they said papa. Cried when they sneezed. Every milestone felt like a divine experience. He proudly tried to teach them Thunder Breathing, though they leaned more into music and dance- just like their mama. “You must whine at Carnival and meditate under the stars. That’s your birthright!”
- Compliments Hit Different: (Y/N)’s accent was a weapon of emotional destruction. One soft “Good job, Zen” and he was emotionally spinning through the air. The first time she told him she loved him, he went completely silent for ten minutes, just… stared at a tree. Later, he tried to write her a poem but cried halfway through every draft. “You’re fire and storm and sun and… and I’m lucky I even get to stand next to you.”
- He Adores (Y/N) Completely: Zenitsu adored everything about her- her strength, her rhythm, her voice, her culture. He genuinely believed she was a miracle in human form, and loving her made him braver than he ever thought possible. “You make me feel like lightning can be soft… like I’m more than just fear. I love you. I choose you.”
Nezuko:
- First Impressions: Even before she could speak, Nezuko was drawn to (Y/N). It wasn’t just the kindness- it was the energy. She moved with rhythm in her step, laughed like the world wasn’t burning, and wore sunshine like perfume. Nezuko hadn’t seen sunlight in years... until she met her. Barely 5'2, yet her presence filled every room. And Nezuko watched, enchanted.
- Food and Comfort: The first time (Y/N) introduced Nezuko to her cooking- doubles, bake and shark, pelau- Nezuko was visibly shaken (in the best way). Words weren’t necessary; the tug on the sleeve and the pointed finger at the pot said it all, “More, please.” She always saved the last bite for Nezuko, and Nezuko always offered it right back.
- Music and Moonlight: One night, (Y/N) hummed soft Soca beneath the moonlight. Nezuko tilted her head, curious, then began to sway. Gently, she took Nezuko’s hands and guided her into the rhythm, fireflies glowing around them like tiny Carnival lights. At first, Nezuko mimicked her moves- but soon, she was dancing beside her like she’d been doing it her whole life.
- The Accent: Nezuko adored (Y/N)’s accent. Even after regaining her voice, she would listen like each word was a melody. Whenever she used Trini slang, Nezuko would pout in confusion, then burst into laughter with her. Sometimes, she’d try to mimic the phrases- badly. But that only made her laugh harder.
- Physical Affection: Nezuko was a cuddler through and through. With (Y/N) being so small, she often wrapped herself around her like a protective vine. Her favorite place was curled into her chest, listening to soft lullabies while fingers played gently through her hair. After nightmares, her voice was the only thing that could soothe Nezuko back to sleep.
- In Battle: (Y/N) had the charisma and quick wit- Nezuko was the shield and the fire. If anyone dared threaten her, Nezuko didn’t hesitate. No words, just fangs, flames, and unyielding fury. After every fight, she was the first to check on Nezuko. And though Nezuko always insisted she was fine, one gentle “sweet girl” would have her melting into her arms.
- Dreams and Futures: Nezuko’s dream was simple. Peace, a garden, and a home where she was safe. She pictured kissing (Y/N)’s hands in the open, no fear, no muzzle- just freedom. In her quiet moments, she imagined them walking hand-in-hand on beaches. One Carnival, she was gifted a small ring made of seashells. She cried. She wore it like it was made of diamonds.
- Motherhood: Nezuko wanted children- not from duty, but from love. When she looked at (Y/N), she saw a future full of joy. She imagined barefoot little ones laughing with their mother’s vibrant spirit and growing strong with her Kamado heart. She’d teach them to make onigiri, while their mother taught them to wind their waist to Bunji Garlin. She let them paint her nails, sticker her face- each one worn with pride. Together, they’d raise them on calypso lullabies, warmth, and wild joy.
- All She Wants Is (Y/N): Nezuko never needed riches or recognition. All she wanted was her- a life where love was louder than fear, where two cultures danced and bloomed into something whole. A home filled with music, sun-warmed skin, soft words, and love that echoed through time.
Genya:
- First Impressions: Genya didn’t know what hit him when he first met (Y/N). She was short- barely reaching his chest- but her presence filled the room like sunlight. When she locked eyes with a demon twice her size and said, “Don’t worry, I’ll go handle it,” before body-slamming the creature into the dirt, he was stunned. She was powerful, radiant, and her voice? Hypnotic. From the moment she spoke, he was completely captivated.
- Trying to Keep His Distance (and Failing): He told himself (Y/N) would never go for someone like him- too bright, too bold, too far out of his league. But she kept choosing him. Sitting next to him during breaks. Calling him “pretty boy.” Offering him food from her plate. Slowly, all the defenses he’d built began to crumble. She didn’t just see him- she wanted him. And that meant everything.
- The Soca Incident: On a rest day, (Y/N) tugged him up and started dancin while softly singing. He froze- eyes wide, cheeks red- while she danced like rhythm lived in her bones. He didn’t move that time, but the memory stayed etched in his brain. That moment? It haunted him- in the best way.
- PDA and Soft Affection: Genya had never known casual affection. It always felt foreign. But with (Y/N)? She kissed his forehead like it was the most natural thing in the world. Held his face and called him “my handsome warrior.” Every time, he melted a little more. Eventually, he started leaning into it- hungry for the gentle kind of love she gave so freely.
- Obsessed With (Y/N)’s Accent: He loved her accent. Completely obsessed. When he was alone, he’d mimic her phrases under his breath. The first time she caught him doing it, he panicked. “I wasn’t making fun of you! I- I just like how you talk, okay?!” From then on, it became their little joke… and his quiet comfort.
- Food Is His Love Language (Well, (Y/N)’s): The first time she made him pelau, he swore he saw heaven. Roti? Devoured. She warned him about the pepper sauce- he ignored her. Instantly regretted it. Still cried his way through the heat, sweat and tears mixing as he mumbled, “It’s so good…”
- Homesick Days: On the rare days homesickness crept in, (Y/N) would talk about home- about Carnival, the sea breeze, the music, the smell of spices in the air. He didn’t always understand, but he listened. Held her close. Asked questions. And when she smiled again, he’d hum the soca songs she loved, hoping it made her feel a little closer to home.
- Quiet Proposal, Loud Love: He didn’t need a grand gesture. Just (Y/N). One night during a festival, while fireworks lit the sky, he slipped a ring onto her finger with a trembling hand. When she turned to him, he was already looking at her like she was the only thing that mattered. No speech. Just, “You’re my home. Stay?”
- Visiting Trinidad and Tobago: He went home with (Y/N). Tried his best to speak patois- fumbled it, of course- but she giggled every time, gently correcting him. Carnival overwhelmed him at first, but she dressed him up in glitter and feathers, and he followed her into the crowd. Nervous, dazzled… and completely in love.
- The Softest, Most Anxious Dad: The first time he held their child, he sobbed. Couldn’t stop. He was consumed with protecting them- checking their breath, their warmth, their blanket. But when (Y/N) danced around the room holding the baby to a soca beat, he stood there in awe. Then he joined- awkward, stumbling, but smiling wider than ever.
- Culture Keeper: He learned every recipe (Y/N) offered- pelau, callaloo, bake, macaroni pie. Not just for her, but for their children. So they’d know where they came from. Every time she leaned over his shoulder and said, “You're getting it, babe,” he lit up with pride.
- Raising Strong, Joyful Kids: Together, they raised children rooted in both worlds- (Y/N)’s vibrant culture and his quiet strength. Their kids danced to soca, sparred with wooden swords, and laughed with wild joy. Watching them, Genya saw everything he’d ever hoped for- two hearts' love blooming into something unforgettable.
Can you do separate peko, Mikan and tenko with male!reader who is depressed and scared of males due to his past abuse of stepfather?
A/N: Yes, I absolutely can! You didn't specify what kind of writing you wanted, so I just made oneshots for each of them :}
Peko:
The first time Peko noticed him, it wasn’t because of something loud or dramatic.
It was because he wasn’t loud.
(Y/N) sat alone in the corner of the classroom, always a little too still, a little too tense. His eyes rarely met anyone’s directly, and when they did, they flinched away like they'd touched something too hot.
Peko understood silence. She understood stillness. But this wasn’t the silence of focus or discipline. This was a silence built from fear.
She didn’t approach him right away. Observation came naturally to her. She watched how he gripped the sleeves of his uniform during conversations. How he edged closer to the wall when a male classmate got too close. How his breathing would subtly hitch anytime a voice raised near him- even in laughter.
It wasn’t hard to piece together.
What she didn’t expect was how he looked at her.
Not with fear. Not with pity. But almost... curious. Like he couldn’t understand why someone like her- stern and composed- was the only one he didn’t shy away from.
They shared the same routine. Arrive early. Leave late. Avoid the crowd. So one day, when they passed in the hallway, and he flinched from someone else’s raised hand when going in for a highfive with another student, Peko made a choice.
She stopped.
“You’re hurt,” she said bluntly, her tone flat but not unkind. “You mask it well. But I see it.”
(Y/N)’s eyes widened, lips parting as if to protest, but nothing came out.
“I won’t ask what happened,” she continued, her voice steady. “But I’d like to offer... company. You don’t need to speak. I’ll simply sit.”
His throat bobbed. It was too much and not enough, all at once. He nodded.
That was how it started.
They began sharing quiet moments behind the school. No words, just the rustle of wind and the occasional time Peko pulled out her covered sword as she practiced her forms nearby. She never moved too fast, never startled him. The wood covering her blade slicing through the air with purpose, but her movements were deliberate- never violent, never chaotic.
(Y/N) started bringing a book. Sometimes he read. Sometimes he just listened to her breathe.
He trusted her long before he realized he did.
One afternoon, weeks into this fragile ritual, Peko put her sword down and sat beside him. Not close enough to touch- but closer than usual.
“I was trained to kill,” she said softly, her eyes fixed on the horizon. “But I don’t want to be feared.”
(Y/N) looked at her. Really looked. Her eyes were steady, but there was something buried deep- something vulnerable.
“I’m not afraid of you,” he whispered.
She turned to him. The softest flicker of something like relief crossed her face.
“You don’t flinch when I move,” she said.
“You don’t raise your voice,” he replied. “You don’t... look at me like I’m broken.”
“You’re not broken,” she said without hesitation. “You survived something that tried to destroy you. That takes strength.”
His breath caught. No one had ever said that before. Not like that. Not without expectation.
Peko looked down. “I don’t understand emotions well. But... I want to protect what’s important to me. You’ve become important.”
His heart stuttered.
He didn’t know what to say. But maybe he didn’t need to.
Because for the first time in a long while, he didn’t feel like he had to hide.
And Peko, the girl who had only ever known her blade, sat quietly beside him- offering a different kind of shield.
After a while, they both stood, going off in their separate directions, like any other day.
The next day, around the end of the school day, (Y/N) was making his way to his loacker to gather all of his things.
The hallway was nearly empty, that sort of eerie quiet where footsteps echo too loudly. (Y/N) had stayed behind, as usual, hoping the other students would clear out so he wouldn’t have to squeeze through a crowd. But he hadn’t realized one of the seniors- Riku, loud and full of something bitter- was waiting around the corner.
“Hey,” Riku said, stepping into his path.
(Y/N) froze.
He recognized that voice. Recognized the way his tone coiled beneath fake friendliness. He backed up a step.
“Relax, man. Just wanna talk,” Riku smirked, inching closer. “You’re always glued to that sword-girl. Pretty sure she’s not into shy little losers.”
(Y/N)’s throat tightened. His breath came shallow. Riku moved fast- too fast- blocking his path with an arm against the lockers.
Something snapped behind his eyes. He wasn’t seeing the hallway anymore. He was seeing him. The stepfather who slammed doors. Who raised fists. Who spat words like nails. His body went rigid. Breath caught.
But then-
A voice, sharp and cold as steel, “Back away from him.”
Riku turned. “What the hell-?”
Peko stood at the end of the hall, eyes narrowed at Riku. She wasn’t holding it in an offensive stance. She didn’t need to.
Her presence alone was enough to shift the air.
Riku chuckled, but it was weak now. “Geez, you’re really babysitting him?”
Peko didn’t blink. “This is your final warning.”
Her hand moved slightly, her fingers brushing the handle of her sword on her back.
Riku scoffed but stepped back, muttering something under his breath. He wasn’t stupid. No one crossed Peko Pekoyama.
The moment he was gone, Peko turned her attention to (Y/N), whose back was still against the lockers, chest rising and falling fast.
“(Y/N),” she said, softly now. “He’s gone. You’re safe.”
It took a moment, but his gaze finally met hers. Wide, haunted.
She stepped closer. Slowly. “May I?” she asked, gesturing vaguely toward him- not to touch, just to be closer.
He nodded once.
They sat down on the bench nearby, the world narrowing to the silence between them. Peko waited. Patient. Steady. He clutched his sleeves tightly, knuckles white, before he finally broke the quiet.
“My stepfather…” he began. His voice cracked. He paused. Swallowed.
She waited.
“He used to do things like that. The cornering. The threats. And worse. I’d hear his boots coming down the hall and- I just- I couldn’t breathe.” His voice wavered, and he shut his eyes tightly. “I always thought it was my fault. That I wasn’t strong enough.”
Peko didn’t speak right away. When she did, her voice was low. Intent.
“You survived that,” she said. “Not because you were weak- but because you endured. And that kind of strength... is rare.”
His lips trembled. “Why don’t you run from me, Peko?”
She tilted her head slightly, frowning. “Why would I run from you?”
“Because I’m messed up. Broken. You could be with anyone-”
“I choose to be near you,” she interrupted, voice firm. “Not out of pity. Not out of duty. But because... when I’m with you, I feel calm. Like I don’t have to always be a weapon.”
His eyes widened.
She hesitated, then reached out- not touching him, just letting her hand hover, waiting. “May I?” she asked again.
Slowly, (Y/N) nodded.
She took his hand gently, her grip warm but never tight. Never controlling. Just… there.
And for the first time in years, he didn’t feel like a victim.
Mikan:
The first time Mikan saw him, (Y/N) was curled up in the corner of the classroom, sleeves tugged over his hands, eyes glued to the floor like looking at anyone might make him shatter.
She recognized it instantly- the stiffness in his shoulders, the flinch at every sudden movement, the way his breathing changed when someone walked behind him. Fear. Not the kind that faded with time, but the kind etched into the nervous system like a scar.
She understood that kind of fear too well.
Mikan had always been too much- too clumsy, too anxious, too eager to please- but she was never too much for pain. Pain, she'd learned, made people pay attention. She'd hated it, but she'd lived in it for so long that when she saw (Y/N), she knew. He lived there too.
It started small.
A quiet hello after class, barely above a whisper. A bandaid offered when she noticed he was biting the skin around his nails until it bled. He didn’t say thank you. He didn’t look her in the eye. But he didn’t push her away either.
That was enough for Mikan.
She didn’t try to fix him. She just sat next to him sometimes, talked softly about things that didn’t matter- how the nurse’s office was out of gauze again, how her hair wouldn’t stay right no matter how she brushed it, how the sky looked heavy with rain. He never responded, but slowly, he started listening. And eventually, he started nodding.
Then one day, he spoke.
“I hate being touched.”
His voice cracked on the last word.
Mikan froze. She didn’t ask why. She didn’t need to. She just nodded, her hands clasped tightly in her lap. “Okay. I won’t touch you,” she said.
(Y/N)’s shoulders relaxed, just a little.
Weeks passed like that. (Y/N) never told her what happened, but sometimes he’d trail off mid-sentence and she’d see the flicker of something behind his eyes- something haunted and heavy. She didn’t press. She just kept showing up. With warmth. With patience.
And one rainy afternoon, everything changed.
He was shaking when he stumbled into the nurse’s office, soaked through, bruises blooming across his ribs. He wouldn’t say who did it. Mikan didn’t ask. She only helped him sit down on the cot, hands trembling as she reached for the medical kit, then paused.
“I-I-I’m going to clean your injuries now, but… I won’t touch you unless you say it’s okay, okay?”
There was a long silence. Then, barely audible:
“…Okay.”
It was the first time he let her touch him.
Her hands were soft, careful. Every movement was slow, narrated in a gentle whisper. “I’m cleaning the cut now. It might sting a little, b-but I’ll be really careful, promise…”
He flinched, but didn’t pull away. His breathing hitched. She didn’t say anything when a tear slid down his cheek. She just handed him a tissue.
“I’m sorry,” he whispered, voice cracking. “I’m so broken.”
“No,” she said immediately, shaking her head so hard her hair slipped from its pins. “You’re not. You’re hurt. You’ve been hurt really badly, but that’s not the same as being broken.”
He looked at her then. Really looked at her. She saw the raw ache in his expression, the doubt, the exhaustion. But also, the beginning of something else. Hope, maybe.
In time, (Y/N) stopped flinching as much. He started sitting closer. Sometimes, he even smiled. It was small and fleeting, but to Mikan, it was brighter than the sun.
He wasn’t healed, not completely. Healing didn’t happen all at once. It came in pieces. In trust built moment by moment. In safety found in gentle hands and soft voices.
Mikan didn’t need him to be perfect. She didn’t even need him to be okay.
She just needed him to know he didn’t have to suffer alone.
And little by little, he began to believe it.
After that, the nurse’s office had become a kind of sanctuary.
At first, (Y/N) had only gone there when he had no choice- when bruises needed hiding or a panic attack left him too dizzy to think. But now, he found himself drifting there even on quiet days. Days when nothing hurt, at least not visibly. Days when the ghosts were just whispers, not screams.
Mikan was always there.
She never asked him to explain himself. She never pushed when the words got stuck in his throat. She just smiled- nervous, shaky, but real- and made space for him beside her. Sometimes she offered tea. Sometimes she rambled about classwork or clumsily spilled cotton balls across the floor. Sometimes she just sat with him, in silence, and that was enough.
(Y/N) found comfort in her softness, in how careful she was. How she always announced every move.
“I’m reaching for the thermometer now, o-okay? I won’t touch you.”
“I’ll sit here, if that’s okay. I c-can move if it’s not…”
He never realized how deeply he craved that kind of gentleness until she gave it to him.
It was a Thursday when something shifted.
(Y/N) was staring out the window, watching a few birds hop along the grass just beyond the courtyard. The sky was a dull gray, the kind that made everything feel a little heavier. Mikan sat beside him on the cot, legs drawn up beneath her, chewing nervously on her lower lip.
She looked at him, then down at her hands. “U-Um… (Y/N)? Can I ask something?”
He stiffened, but nodded.
“Have you ever… had anyone tell you they’re proud of you?”
He blinked.
“…No.”
Mikan’s lips parted like she might cry, but instead, she scooted just a little closer. “I am,” she whispered. “I-I mean… I’m proud of you. You’re so brave. You keep going even when it hurts, and you’re always so kind even when you're scared, and… I just think that’s really, really strong.”
The room was too quiet. Too still.
Then- without thinking- (Y/N) reached out. His fingers brushed her sleeve. Not skin. Just fabric. But it was the first time he’d reached for anyone in years.
Mikan didn’t move. Didn’t breathe.
“Is… is it okay if I stay like this?” he asked, voice trembling. “Just for a minute.”
Her eyes went wide with emotion, then she gave the smallest, warmest smile.
“Yes. Of course it is.”
Later that night, (Y/N) sat on his bed with the lights off, staring at the soft imprint of her touch left in his memory. His stepfather’s voice still echoed sometimes, cruel and sharp and impossible to silence. But for once, it was quieter than the sound of Mikan’s voice.
“I’m proud of you.”
Those words replayed over and over, like a lullaby.
Tenko:
The dojo was quiet- unusually so. Dust motes floated in the sunlit air like tiny spirits, dancing just above the polished floorboards. Tenko Chabashira stood barefoot at the center of the room, her dark hair pulled into a high ponytail that swayed with every practiced movement. Her breathing was controlled, sharp, matching the flow of her kata.
But she paused mid-strike, her sharp eyes flickering toward the door. Someone was there- hesitating. Hovering like a shadow.
"(Y/N)?" she called softly, letting her arms fall to her sides.
He flinched, half-hidden behind the sliding door, as if even hearing his name spoken aloud was too much. His knuckles were white where he clutched the edge of the frame, shoulders hunched beneath his too-large hoodie.
Tenko straightened and offered a gentle smile- not too big, not too forceful. She knew better than to rush him. Over the past few weeks, she’d noticed how (Y/N) never looked anyone in the eyes, how he avoided crowded hallways and jumped at loud voices. And worst of all- how he tensed around every man, like his whole body was bracing for a blow.
She had been careful. Always letting him choose the distance. Always making sure he knew she saw him as more than what the others whispered behind his back.
"I was just finishing up training," she said, wiping sweat from her brow. "You can come in… if you want."
He hesitated, then stepped forward like he was walking into an unknown world. Every step seemed like a negotiation with himself. He didn’t meet her eyes, but he sat at the far edge of the room, back to the wall, as if needing a way out.
Tenko didn’t mind. She simply walked to the corner, grabbed a bottle of water, and took a slow sip before sitting cross-legged across from him.
"You’re always welcome here, you know," she said softly. "No pressure. Just… a place to breathe."
(Y/N)'s hands curled tightly in his sleeves. His voice, when it came, was almost inaudible. “You’re the only one who doesn’t… look at me like I’m broken.”
Tenko’s heart twisted. She leaned forward slightly, mindful of her posture- open, nonthreatening.
"You're not broken, (Y/N). You've just been hurt. And healing... takes time. But you're strong. I can tell."
He shook his head. "I'm not. I can't even look at half the class without freezing up. I can’t-"
“You showed up here,” she cut in gently. “That’s strength.”
There was silence. A long, aching silence.
Then, as if asking for something he couldn’t name, he whispered, "Can I stay a while?"
Tenko’s expression softened. She nodded, voice quiet but firm. “As long as you need.”
And so they sat there, in the soft golden light, surrounded by the scent of pine wood and old paper walls. No fighting. No fear. Just two people- one offering calm, the other learning to breathe again.
Tenko glanced at him, watching the way his shoulders relaxed just slightly.
"I don’t usually like guys," she admitted suddenly, rubbing the back of her neck. "They make me uncomfortable. Scared, sometimes. I… guess that’s why I understand you a little."
(Y/N)'s head turned, just barely, and for the first time, their eyes met. Not for long, not intensely- but it was enough. Enough to see the sincerity in hers, the warmth behind the guarded strength.
“Thank you,” he murmured.
Tenko gave him a soft smile- one that didn’t need words.
After that day, the dojo became their quiet haven.
Most days after class, Tenko would finish her practice while (Y/N) sat nearby, always keeping his distance, always watching. Sometimes, he brought a book. Other times, he said nothing at all. But he came back- day after day- and that was enough for her.
One afternoon, when the clouds hung low and the wind rattled the paper windows, Tenko finished a round of sparring with the training dummy and sat beside him on the polished floor. She didn’t speak at first. Neither did he.
Instead, she handed him a cup of tea she’d brewed earlier. Chamomile. Something calming.
He took it slowly, hands trembling just slightly as he held the warm porcelain between his palms.
“I used to drink tea with my mom,” he said, voice low. “Before everything… changed.”
Tenko glanced over, surprised he’d spoken first. She stayed quiet, letting him decide how much to share.
“She used to hum,” he added. “All the time. While cleaning, cooking… even when things were bad. I miss that.”
Tenko looked down at her cup, her brow knitting softly. “I miss my sensei,” she said. “She taught me everything I know about Aikido. She said it wasn’t just about defense- it was about connection. With yourself. With others.”
She turned her head to meet his eyes.
“That’s why I started letting you sit here. I wanted you to feel safe… connected.”
(Y/N) bit his lip, shoulders curling in slightly like he was trying to keep himself small. But he didn’t move away.
“Sometimes I think I’ll never be normal,” he whispered.
Tenko scooted just a little closer- carefully, never pushing.
“What if you don’t have to be?” she said. “What if who you are now is already enough?”
He looked at her, eyes wide. There was no judgment there. No pity. Just Tenko-blunt, honest, warm. After a few moniutes, she suggested something.
“Just stretching,” she promised. “You don’t even have to touch me. It’s just you and your body. Reclaiming it.”
(Y/N) was hesitant. The idea of his body being his own felt... foreign. But Tenko’s voice was soft, and her patience never wavered.
He followed her lead one day, mirroring her as she slowly bent forward, arms extended. His form was shaky, unbalanced, but she never corrected him harshly.
“You’re doing great,” she said gently. “This part’s about feeling. Not perfection.”
Each day, he got a little better. He started standing straighter. Breathing deeper. Letting his hands relax at his sides instead of fisting in his sleeves.
He even laughed once- when Tenko tried to show off a high kick and accidentally knocked over a training mat.
She flushed red. “T-That was intentional, of course! A lesson in humility!”
His laugh was small but real, and she smiled like she’d just won a gold medal.
It was late one evening when (Y/N) had a nightmare and ended up knocking on her door at the dorms, pale and shaking.
Tenko didn’t ask questions. She pulled him inside and handed him a blanket. Made him tea. Sat on the floor with him until the trembling stopped.
“Do you want to talk about it?” she asked.
He shook his head.
She nodded. “Then we don’t have to.”
But after a while, as the tea grew cold between his hands, he said, “He used to come into my room when the house was quiet. Said it was my fault. That I was weak.”
Tenko’s hands tightened on her lap, her jaw clenching with quiet rage.
“You were never at fault,” she said. “Not even a little.”
And then- carefully, with the softness of someone offering a bridge- she opened her arms.
“I can hold you, if you want.”
His breath caught, chest rising unevenly.
“…Okay.”
He leaned in slowly, as if expecting her to flinch. But she didn’t. Her arms wrapped around his narrow shoulders, strong but warm. She held him like she meant it- like she wasn’t afraid of what he carried.
“I’ve got you,” she whispered. “No one’s going to hurt you anymore. Not while I’m here.”
Question: Aside from fanfics, are you open to headcanon requests? If so, do you have any sort of character limit?
Hello, anon! :}
I'm open to doing headcannons, I mean, I basically insert all of my hc's into the stories I write LOL
It might take some getting used to, though! Since I'm so used to writing flowing stories.
As of right now, I don't have a character limit. But be aware, the more that is requested, the longer it might take to write. I usually write every other day, so I have days in between to draw. I'd appreciate if the characters requested are in the same fandoms, though. Unless it's something like a mix of fandoms, like my Hunter x Fem!Reader (which was a mix of TOH and SU) fic that was requested.
Just make sure any requests follow the guidelines on my masterlist, and I'd be more than willing to try!
Thank you for asking!
20-year-old artist in learning (Digital and traditional)| Gender fluid (They/Them) | ♑ | Pansexual/Demiromantic/Polyamorous | @piratemaxine05 is my lovely wife | On the Spectrum | SOCIALS!!! (Tumblr: @DeliciousSpecimen | ao3: DeliciousSpecimen | Wattpad: @idefcanyway | FFnet: DeliciousSpecimen | Insta: delicious.specimen)
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