this is what i hoped for in season 3 đ„č
Summary: Colin returns from his travels with more than just teas and stories.
Paring: Colin âmy wifeâ Bridgerton x Female Reader
âââââ-
Saying you were nervous was an absolute understatement. In fact the honest truth is that you were on the verge of a panic attack. You knew this meeting was inevitable, had known really ever since you laid eyes on him. But the prospect of shocking, nay disappointing, his entire family made you feel nauseous.
Colinâs hand gently gripping your thigh, stopping your legs nervous bounce, was the only thing keeping you grounded. You could see the grand houses of the ton out the carriage, feel it coming to a halt. It was time, you wanted to run. However the man beside you was enough reason to stay. Colin was the love of your life, and you his. Hopefully his family could see that.
The valet opened the carriage door and you took a deep breath. Colin alighted first, then giving you his hand to help you out. Bridgerton house was stunning, flowers drooping from vines that ran up the brick walls. The sweet smell of the flowering wisterias engulfing you. You gripped Colinâs hand as he led you straight in, not bothering to wait at the front door.
The grand entrance opened in front of you, and you could see it was just as beautiful as the exterior. The walls, painted a lovely shade of baby blue, hung portraits showcasing the happy family. You let go of Colin to examine a painting of him in his youth but was interrupted by a shriek.
âColin, your home!â A young girl screamed with delight as she ran and wrapped him in a hug. âThis must be Hycainthâ you thought smiling. The commotion caused a flurry of footsteps and soon a mass of people were descending into the foyer from all directions. Each gave Colin a spirited greeting ranging from tight hugs to affectionate forehead kisses. Last to arrive was a beautiful women who had to be Dowager Viscountess Bridgerton, taking him in her arms and whispering how happy she was he was home. The closeness of the family brought a grin to your face.
And then suddenly you were spotted Hycainth and with a shout of âWhoâs this?â all attention was directed to you.
âFamily, I have an announcement.â Colin began, grabbing your hand in his. âThis is my wife,â he declared introducing you by name.
âYour what?â One of the brothers, Anthony you presumed, muttered; the first to recovered from the shock.
âWe met in Madrid while I was travellingâ
âMadrid as in Spain? Does she even speak English. She probably just tricked you to marry into English money,â Anthony proclaimed, earning an elbow from his wife in the process.
Colin went to reply, but you gave him a gentle shake of your head.
âViscount Bridgerton, what a pleasure to make your acquaintance. You are just like Colin describe,â you smirked, your polite words not matching with your tone of voice. âAs you can see I do speak English, in fact I am from this country. Just outside of Bath to be exact. I too was doing some travelling when I met your brother in Madrid. My father, a Duke, was there on business and he asked me to accompany him. Colin and I met studying Spanish in a local language school, I wanted to understand the language so I could help my father negotiate his deals.â
âMy apologies for my son, I believe he sometimes forgets he is not the only member of the family with some sense,â Violet said, a gentle smile gracing her face. âBut may I asked what brought on marriage,â
âI knew Colin was feeling homesick, wanting to be nearer to his dear family yet my fathers business in Spain was not due to end for many months. We couldnât bear the thought of being apart, and I didnât want to be the reason Colin stayed away from his family.â
âShe made the sacrifice to leave her family so I could be with mine,â Colin confirmed, pulling you in to his embrace. âI knew we were going to have to marry so we could travel together without scandal, and in all honesty I could not wait to call her my wife,â
âOh sweethearts, congratulationsâ Violet muttered pulling you both into a hug. âBut donât think youâll get out of having a celebration, there will be a ball thrown in your honour!â
One by one each family member came to greet you and give their congratulations.
Benedict gave you a giant hug followed by angrily whispering to his brother âHow dare you leave me to face the tonâs mamas on my own, we had a pactâ.
Eloise gave you a half smile, âI canât say I see why you chose to marry my brother, clearly the imbecile is lacking in the upstairs department. However it would be nice to have another intelligent woman in the house, How would you feel about teaching me Spanish?â You readily agreed.
Hycainth and Gregory both wanted to know if Colin and yourself had brought them anything from abroad, in which you winked conspiratorially as an answer.
Daphne and Kate both gave you warm hugs, and promised to get to know you more over tea once you settled.
Anthony was the final one to approach. He gave you an apologetic smile before muttering âI would be grateful if you could come help me with some documents in my study sometime. We have business in Spain and I admit that I know nothing of the language. Your insight would be a major asset to the family.
ââââ-
Hope you all enjoyed! Honestly I just see this on brand for Colin. As if he didnât fall in love with every female he crossed paths with. Basically I just picture him as young Bill in Mamma Mia
P.S. no surprise who greeted Colin with a forehead kiss xx
MY OTP!!!
Reblog if you are Team Dexter&Rita
đđ can I get an Anthony Bridgerton falling for his childhood best-friend, who he used to climb trees with as a kid to escape the governess also the friend is of a lower class.
even his father saw the love between his son and his friend.
Yes
Pairing: Anthony Bridgerton x Childhood Best Friend (Lower Class, Opera Singer)
Genre: Slow Burn, Angst, Jealousy, Friends to Lovers
Warnings: Grief, Class Differences, Jealousy, Emotional Turmoil, Sienna Being Petty
Word Count: 1,200
Edmund Had Seen It First.
From the drawing room window, he watched as Anthonyâhis eldest, his heirâslipped away from his governessâs watchful eye, ducking around the garden hedge before disappearing into the tall grass beyond.
Violet let out a sigh, setting down her embroidery. âI swear, that boy is impossible. He knows his lessons must be finished beforeââ
âBefore he runs to her?â Edmund interrupted, his lips curling into something knowing, something fond.
Violetâs expression softened as she followed his gaze.
Beyond the hedges, Anthony had reached the old oak tree, and there she wasâwaiting for him, as always. A girl with bare feet, her simple dress catching on the wildflowers, her laughter barely reaching them through the glass.
She was not one of them.
But to Anthony, she had never been lesser.
They chased each other in dizzying circles, ducking and weaving through the dappled sunlight. At one point, Anthony caught her wrist, twirling her around with the kind of joy that was rare for a boy who already carried too much expectation on his shoulders. He wasnât the Viscountâs son in that momentâhe was just Anthony.
Violet exhaled. âHe adores her.â
âHe loves her.â
The words were quiet but sure.
Violet turned to her husband, brow furrowing. âYou cannot meanââ
âI do.â Edmundâs gaze did not waver. âAnd it will break his heart.â
Violetâs breath hitched.
Because she knew the truth of it too.
And months later, when the unthinkable happenedâwhen Edmund was the one taken from them too soonâAnthony did what they had both feared he would.
He let her go.
The Opera House Was Alive with Sound, but Anthony Heard Nothing.
The backstage corridors were crowdedâactors, musicians, stagehands moving in a flurry of silk and powder, adjusting costumes, calling for props. The scent of warmed candle wax and expensive perfume clung to the air, thick and intoxicating.
Sienna held onto his arm, her fingers trailing lightly over his sleeve. âYou seem nervous,â she teased, her voice low and knowing. âDid you know she was here?â
Anthony barely registered her words.
Because she was here.
She stepped into view at the far end of the corridor, illuminated by the flickering sconces lining the wall. The dress she wore was midnight blue, the kind that made her look like something out of a dream. She held herself with quiet grace, her hands clasped neatly before her.
But her eyesâ
Her eyes found his, and the world tilted.
Anthony felt it in his chest, the sharp pull of something long buried but never gone. It wasnât just recognition. It wasnât just surprise.
It was her.
Sienna followed his gaze and exhaled softly, her amusement turning into something edged with understanding.
âSheâs beautiful, isnât she?â
Anthonyâs throat tightened.
Because of course she was.
She had always been beautiful, but not in the way of the women who populated his worldâbold, practiced, calculated. She was soft, quiet, effortless. The kind of beauty that settled deep, that lingered.
And he had let her go.
Siennaâs fingers pressed into his sleeve again, a silent test. She was waiting for him to say something, to look at her.
He didnât.
And she saw it.
She let out a soft, almost amused breath and slowly uncurled her hand from his arm. âIâll leave you to it,â she murmured, stepping back.
He didnât respond.
Didnât move.
Didnât even blink.
Because she was still looking at him too.
The years apart stretched between them, thick and suffocating, filled with everything they had never said.
And for the first time in his life, Anthony Bridgerton did not know what to do.
General Hcs :) (more like rambles)
đ©»House & teenage daughter that looks juuust a bit too much like him? Buddy don't get me started-
đ©»I feel like he'd really get along with a teen daughter (he's just a teenage girl too, I fear)
đ©»Like he's one of those cool dads that you can share anything with without getting scolded/grounded or anything like that. Don't get me wrong, you're getting raised with manners, but you're also getting raised to be a menace when it comes to standing your ground.
đ©»I mean c'mon, it's Greg House we're talking about, he's pretty goddamn stubborn.
đ©»You guys also have a bunch of inside jokes. One of which being referring to eachother with the most exaggerated, old-fashioned, formal forms ever known to the English language, when in reality you're just telling him to buy toilet paper on the way home because there's none left
"Father, I regret to inform you that I require hydration, however am far too away from the only water source in our fortress and am far too lazy to raise myself upon my feet."
"My dearest, dearest daughter.
No fucking way, get your lazy ass up and pour a glass yourself." "But dad-"
đ©»Btw swearing is 100% something natural for your household. House would probably squeeze in a remark or two if you overdo it, but overall he has no problem with hearing swears from you (because he also swears every now and then)
đ©»(Off topic, but you'd regularly make puns about the apartment being a 'House-hold' and he'd pretend to hate every single one of them, but deep down he'd actually find them amusing)
đ©»Apartment is a mess. All the time. Almost everywhere.
đ©»But I don't mean filthy mess. I mean just untidy, but you guys know what's where and find a way around it
đ©»Unspoken rule that you tell eachother whenever you move something, just in case the one that did the moving forgets
đ©»You probably know how to cook better than he does, for some magical reason
đ©»You convinced him to try cooking dinner once. Almost burned the kitchen down. But you did have a laugh about it later, so it's all good
đ©»Most times you guys order takeaway, but if you step up and decide to whip something up yourself? He wouldn't tell you face-to-face, but you can see the flicker of pride in his eyes and the hint of an almost fond grin on his face
đ©»He might not be able to cook dinner, but he can definitely make breakfast. Expect scrambled eggs and sausage/whatever ham he could find in the fridge greeting you when you wake up. He might even make pancakes on weekends/rare dayoffs
đ©»Aaah he loves that you share a music taste with him if you do!!
đ©»If you don't, he won't stop you from listening to it ofc, he'd just complain about it whenever it wasn't on headphones (đ)
đ©»But if you did share a music taste? ... Getting noise complaints from the neighbours about classic rock getting blasted past 10 pm wouldn't be the most uncommon
đ©»Would support you in any hobbies you have, 100%. Both financially and by psyching you up.
đ©»You draw? He has a sketch/artwork of yours framed somewhere in his office. Crochet? He still keeps the mini crochet doll of himself on his keys. Knit? He wears the scarf you made him every winter. Read? He's buying you at least one new book every month or two. You'd have to help with installing new bookshelves though, he'd do nothing but lay on the couch for the most part and blame it on the legâą. Play any instrument? You have the whole ass setup for it in your room at home. If the instrument is suitable for piano duets, he's so down to do one with you
đ©»Would so be down to playing any type of video game with you. You guys probably have a gamecube/nintendo 360/xbox/whatever the hell there was in his time I have no idea
đ©»Lets you mess around on his Gameboy if you ever come to work with him and get bored
đ©»Greg might be kind of an asshole to people and he might claim not to care, but he definitely cares, especially about you.
đ©»If you're happy, he genuinely feels at ease too. But if he senses any shift in your normal behaviour, anything that he might find alarming? He wouldn't push it more than an "Anything wrong? Or are you this frowny all the time?" or a "Wanna talk about it?". But he'd do his best to subtly show you he's here for you and you can talk to him. About anything that might be troubling you, anything
đ©»House isn't used to saying 'I love you', but he does his best to show it to you.
đ©»Until one day you come home crying and he realises - he has no idea what to do. So he does what feels most unnatural to him, but knows that you need. He offers a hug. If you accept it, he gladly wraps his arms around you and tucks your head under his chin. Rubs your shoulders and back a little. Offers to hear you out if you need to talk. Then proceeds to trashtalk whoever/whatever made you cry with you. He's a number 1 gossip buddy, makes you feel so much better by doing it too. He'd then order your fav food and offer to do whatever you wanted, really. Ends the night by sending you off to bed with an awkward shoulder rub, but a look of soft longing in his glossy eyes (he wants to kiss your forehead and tuck you in like he did back when you had nightmares, but he's scared of being vulnerable with you cuz you're older now)
đ©»Overall, House is pretty emotionally constipated at times and doesn't like being vulnerable or showing affection. But he'd be a cool, loving father and I die on this hill.
Ah yes! the defining unit on deciding the mental issues of a person "vibes"
I like that one of the major plot points in Dexter is just that the police are a deeply flawed institution. So flawed that a cop can kidnap one child and condemn another to life in a mental hospital based on âvibesâ.
The thing that strikes me about Megstiel is how nobody but Meg CLAIMED Cas the way she did. "I'll just take MY angel," "That's MY boy," "Save your brother... and MY unicorn." When Cas was just kind of... there... to Sam and Dean (most of the series, tbh), Meg was the only one who said, "Does nobody want this sad weird little angel? OK, DIBS!"
And fuck yeah it was mutual. Seven years after she's dead and you're still calling yourself by your pet name for you? You think you see her in a nether realm and for a split second look less world-weary and more hopeful and joyous than you have in years?
He was HER angel. No question. But also, she was HIS demon. They were each other's. Fight me.
I love post canon fics where Snape survives, and then he finally meets up with Harry again and itâs like
Harry: I finally respect you as a person, and I am grateful for everything you have done. We could not have won without you and your sacrifices, so thank you.
Snape: âŠ
Snape: Ew
Summary: After a long day of research, you go bother Dean in the garage.
words: 2.7k
Warnings: none
The bunkerâs garage. Dean is under the hood of the Impala, a socket wrench in one hand, grease smudged on his forearm. His muscles flex subtly beneath his t-shirt with every movement, the faint sheen of sweat catching the dim light filtering through the room. The scent of motor oil hangs heavy in the air, mingling with the metallic tang of tools and old leather. The rhythmic clinking of metal echoes softly, grounding the space in familiar sounds of work and grit.
You wander in, your footsteps light but still noticeable against the concrete, the echo bouncing lazily through the garage. Boredom clings to you after hours spent in the bunker.
 The day had started off normal: wake up, polish some ancient weapons down in the bunker, make breakfast, and check the news for any strange sightings. One report caught your attention, a possible wendigo sighting. You never liked those. They always made your skin crawl.
Thatâs where youâve been for most of the afternoon: doing research with Sam. Well, mostly heâs been doing the actual research while your mind drifts elsewhere.
Honestly, youâre a little annoyed with him. The younger Winchester and his big, stupid puppy-dog eyes. And that hair, god, that hair. Always falling into his face until he sweeps it back with that effortless little motion, usually when heâs frustrated or deep in thought.
Youâd caught yourself staring, a lot.
Anyway.
You spot Dean, engrossed in his work in the garage, and smirk to yourself.
"Hey, grease monkey," you call, leaning against the workbench with a lazy grin.
Dean doesnât flinch. His arm tenses as he tightens something under the Impalaâs hood, the movement drawing attention to the way his shirt strains slightly across his shoulders. Thereâs a faint sheen of sweat along his forearms, catching the light just enough to highlight the grease smudges marking his skin. The garage hums with the familiar scent of motor oil, metal, and leather, a warm, grounding smell that feels like him.
"If youâre here to help, thereâs a rag over there. If youâre here to annoy me, the exitâs where you left it," Dean mutters, not bothering to look up.
You smirk but donât move. "Why not both?"
Finally, Dean ducks out from under the hood, giving you that half-annoyed, half-amused look heâs perfected over the years. His eyes meet yours, sharp and clear, but your mind has already started drifting, back to where you spent most of the afternoon.
Research with Sam.
You were more focused on how easily he navigated the endless pages of lore and obscure texts, piecing things together faster than you could even process. Itâs annoying, how effortlessly smart he is, how his mind seems to work ten steps ahead while youâre still trying to catch up.
You pretend it doesnât bother you, but sometimes it does. Not because he makes you feel small, Sam would never do that, but because you wish you could keep pace. And honestly, itâs a little embarrassing how often you find yourself nodding along, hoping he doesnât notice when youâre completely lost.
Dean's voice pulls you out of it. "Arenât you supposed to be helping Sammy with the case? Or did you solve it already while staring at his hair?"
Your cheeks heat, but you roll your eyes, playing it off "Samâs doing his super-sleuth thing," you say, waving your hand dismissively. "I was starting to lose brain cells watching him cross-reference, so I figured Iâd come see some manual labourâ
Dean smirks, turning back to the engine. "Well, you came to the right place. Watch and learn, kid. This babyâs a masterpiece."
"Masterpiece? Itâs stuck together with duct tape and prayer."
Dean freezes, socket wrench in hand, and slowly turns his head to glare at you. Thereâs that dangerous glint in his eyethe one that usually means youâre about to get roped into cleaning weapons or organizing the storage room. But beneath the mock offense, thereâs humor simmering just under the surface.
"Careful," he says, voice low with faux seriousness. "Youâre walking a fine line."
You hold his gaze, arms crossed, trying not to let the corner of your mouth twitch. Deanâs like that, a mix of sharp edges and warmth that sneaks up on you. He acts tough, all bravado and snark, but youâve seen him stay up all night patching Sam up after a hunt, or quietly fixing the broken lock on your door without ever mentioning it.
"Relax," you tease, nudging the Impalaâs fender with the toe of your boot. "I know sheâs your baby. I wouldnât actually insult her⊠to your face."
Deanâs glare narrows further, but the smirk tugging at his lips betrays him. "Good. Because this âbabyâ has more heart than most people I know. Youâd be lucky to be half as reliable."
You snort, shaking your head. "Sheâs lucky to still be running at all."
Without missing a beat, Dean grabs the dirty rag from the workbench and flicks it at you, the grease-streaked fabric catching you square in the shoulder.  Â
"Hey!" you yelp, recoiling with a laugh as you swat it away. "Gross!"
Dean grins, clearly pleased with himself. "Thatâs what you get for disrespecting the queen." He tosses the rag back onto the bench like nothing happened, already turning his attention back to the Impala.
"Youâre impossible," you mutter, brushing off the faint smear left behind.
"And youâre still standing in my garage," Dean counters, leaning back under the hood. "Which means youâre fair game."
"Yeah, yeah." You roll your eyes, but thereâs no stopping the grin tugging at your lips.
Moments like this, easy, light, and a little messy, are the rare ones you tuck away for later, because you know they donât come around often.
Itâs strange, really. How easily this life found you. Or maybe how easily they found you.
Meeting the Winchesters hadnât exactly been planned. You stumbled into their world under circumstances that could generously be called chaotic, one wrong place, wrong time situation after another until suddenly, there you were. Tied up in the mess of hunts, ancient books, and things that shouldnât exist outside of nightmares.
But somehow, instead of leaving you to deal with it on your own, theyâd taken you in.
Dean likes to act like youâre a pain in his ass, but heâs the one who never lets you drive anywhere alone. The one who shoves a gun into your hand and taught you how to shoot, even if he complained about it the entire time. And sometimes, when he thinks youâre not looking, his eyes soften, if only a little.
And Sam, Samâs different. Gentler in his approach, but no less protective. Heâs the one who stays up late researching the things you donât understand, explaining it all in that calm, patient way that somehow makes you feel a little less out of your depth, even when you know youâll never catch up to him.
They donât call it family. Not out loud. But itâs in the way Dean knocks your boot off the workbench with a muttered "Get your feet off Baby," or the way Sam always checks to make sure you ate something after long nights.
Itâs quiet, unspoken, but you feel it all the same.
You let out a breath, still leaning against the workbench, watching Dean work. "So, whatâs wrong with her this time?"
Dean shrugs, wiping his hands on another rag, his muscles moving slightly with the movement. "Nothing serious. Just a tune-up. Gotta keep her running smooth." He glances over at you with that smug, gruff look, eyes gleaming. "Something you wouldnât understand, what with you not knowing the difference between a carburetor and a spark plug."
You gasp, hand to your chest in exaggerated offense. "I know what a spark plug is! Itâs the⊠sparky thing."
Dean freezes for half a second, staring at you like youâve personally insulted his entire existence. And then he barks out a laugh, loud and unapologetic, shaking his head. "Sparky thing. Yeah, okay. Youâre a regular gearhead."
You roll your eyes, stepping around to the other side of the Impala and leaning against the fender with a lazy stretch. "Iâm just saying, for someone who spends hours messing with this thing, you could at least upgrade to something newer. You know, with Bluetooth. Or seat warmers."
Deanâs hand stops mid-wipe, and he lowers the rag slowly, fixing you with the kind of glare that suggests youâve crossed into dangerous territory. "Seat warmers? Really?" His voice drips with disbelief, as if youâve just suggested painting flames down the sides of the car.
"First of all, seat warmers are for wimps. Second, this carâs got more soul in her headlights than any of those plastic toys rolling off assembly lines. Sheâs not just a car. Sheâs family."
"RightâŠ." you say, holding back a laugh. "The Impala is the real Winchester sibling."
"Damn straight," Dean replies, his tone serious.
He goes back to tightening a bolt, his forearms shifting with the motion, tense and controlled. Thereâs a natural ease to the way he moves, like heâs done this a thousand times, every motion instinctive. His t-shirt pulls just slightly across his back as he leans over the engine, the faint sheen of sweat from hours in the garage catching the low light.
You try not to notice, but itâs hard to ignore the quiet strength in the way he works, strong hands, calloused and capable, making even the smallest task look deliberate.
For a moment, the only sounds are the soft scrape of metal and the rhythmic click of his wrench, and you find yourself lingering longer than you meant to.
You tilt your head "You really love this car, huh?"
Dean glances at you, his expression softening slightly. "Yeah, I do. Sheâs been through a lot with us. Hell, sheâs saved our asses more times than I can count."
He pauses, rolling the wrench absently in his hand, eyes flicking over the engine but not really seeing it. His voice drops, quieter now, like heâs talking more to himself than to you. "When everything else goes to crap, at least I know sheâs still here. Still running."
For a moment, the weight of his words lingers, heavier than the air thick with motor oil. You catch the flicker in his eyes, the kind that doesnât need explanation. Itâs not just the car. Itâs everything sheâs carried him through.
The unexpected honesty catches you off guard, and for a moment, you donât have a snarky comeback. You watch the way he absently runs a hand along the edge of the hood, fingers tracing the curve like itâs second nature. You canât help but wonder how many nights heâs sat in the driverâs seat alone, gripping the steering wheel like it was the only thing tethering him to reality.
"Thatâs... kinda nice," you say quietly, the words feeling too small for the moment but all you can come up with.
Dean straightens, shrugging it off almost immediately, like he didnât just crack the door open to something more vulnerable. His eyes flick back to you, the faintest smirk returning to his face. "Yeah, well, donât get too sentimental on me. Next thing I know, youâll be asking to drive her."
Your eyes light up, a mischievous grin spreading across your face. "Oh, can I?"
The shift is subtle, classic Dean, slipping behind the wall the second things start feeling too real. But thereâs still something lingering in the way he watches you
"Not a chance in hell."
"Come on, Dean!" you whine, stepping closer. "Just once! I wonât even go out of first gear."
"Nope," Dean says, popping the P with exaggerated finality. "This carâs got standards."
You pout, leaning against the Impala dramatically. "Youâre no fun."
Dean raises an eyebrow, and walkâs round the car towards you: leaning in a little closer, his teasing smirk tugging at the corner of his mouth. "Iâm plenty of fun. You just donât meet the qualifications for the VIP package."
His voice drops slightly at the end, smooth and full of that effortless confidence he carries around like armor. Itâs the kind of line he throws out without a second thought, but it lingers longer than you expect, heating the space between you just enough to make your pulse pick up. You tell yourself itâs just the closeness, the warmth of the garage air, and not the way his eyes flick over you like heâs enjoying your reaction.
"Wow," you say, tilting your head with a mock-offended scoff. "Now youâre just being mean."
Dean chuckles under his breath, shifting back a fraction but still well within armâs reach. Thereâs something easy about the way he leans, like he knows exactly how to walk the line between playful and challenging.
"Mean?" he echoes, standing upright and planting his hands on his hips, the muscles in his arms flexing just enough to be noticeable beneath the grease-smudged fabric of his shirt. His gaze locks onto yours with that familiar intensity, the one thatâs half teasing and half something else you can never quite place. "You just called my car a sparky, duct-taped death trap. Youâre lucky I let you breathe near her."
You know heâs joking, mostly. But thereâs something about the way he says it, the protective edge creeping into his voice like heâs daring you to insult the Impala again. Youâve seen him put himself between her and danger more times than you can count.
You laugh, holding your hands up. "Okay, fine. Iâll leave your precious car alone." You step back, your grin still in place. "But if you get stuck in a ditch again, donât call me to push."
Dean snorts, shaking his head. "Like you could push anything heavier than a shopping cart."
His voice carries that familiar roughness, laced with amusement, the kind that makes it impossible to take him seriously, even when heâs laying the sarcasm on thick. You roll your eyes, pushing off the Impala with an exaggerated sigh.
"Iâll remember that next time you need me to help save your sorry butt," you shoot back, already heading toward the door.
Itâs the kind of banter that feels second nature by now, the words rolling off your tongue as easily as breathing. But just as your hand brushes against the doorframe, something tugs at you to glance back.
Deanâs still there, leaning against the Impala with his arms crossed, watching you leave with a half-smirk tugging at his lips. His eyes follow you, not in a way that demands attention, but in that quiet, lingering way of someone whoâs gotten used to having you around. Like maybe he notices more than he lets on.
Your grin softens almost involuntarily, the sharp edges of the teasing fading into something quieter. "Besides, youâd miss me too muchâ
Dean raises an eyebrow, but thereâs no denying the way his eyes warm just a little. He doesnât say anything, just gives a short, gruff nod like thatâs answer enough.
And it is.
"Thanks, Deanâ
Dean rolls his eyes, picking up his wrench again. "Yeah, yeah. Get outta hereâ
You giggle lightly as you disappear down the hallway, your footsteps soft against the cold bunker floor, Deanâs eyes trail after you. He shakes his head with a faint smile tugging at the corner of his mouth. "Seat warmers," he mutters under his breath, glancing at the Impala like she might somehow agree with him.
The sound of Samâs voice drifts faintly from the library, calling your name, probably to drag you back into research or help with whatever case heâs buried in.
Deanâs smile fades just slightly, not gone, but dimmed, like someone turned the dial down a notch.
His hand lingers on the Impala for another beat longer than necessary before he shifts his weight, rolling his shoulders as if to shake something off.
He ducks back under the hood, wrench in hand, and mutters under his breath, "All right, Winchester. Get a grip."
But even as he works, his thoughts are still trailing after you, following the soft echo of your laugh down the hall.
âŠâââââââââââââââââââââŠâââââââââââââââââââââŠ
Please be nice it was my first one, any feedback would be appreciated ;)
Its soooooooo goooooooooddddd!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Anthony Bridgerton x fem!reader
Introduction: They called it dinner. With candlelight and wine and the illusion of civility. But beneath the silver and silk sat something hungrier. A table of secrets. A room of witnesses. A game no one agreed to playâ and everyone was losing anyway.
Anthony sat rigidly in his chair, hands folded too tightly over his napkin. Lucien was too quiet. Edwina too radiant. And youâtoo far away. Still laughing softly at something Hyacinth had said. Still occasionally turning toward Lucien like he was gravity.
Violet had nearly succeeded in shifting conversation toward something neutralâopera seasons, carriage redesigns, the weather in Bathâwhen Daphne, seated beside her husband, lifted her wine glass and gave her brother a look that could only be described as wicked.
âWell, since weâve all touched on the subject of Anthonyâs impressive... need for control,â she began, smooth as clotted cream, âdid you know he once challenged Simon to a duel?â
There was a beat of stunned silence.
Thenâ
Gregory gasped audibly.
Hyacinth knocked her spoon into her bowl.
Lady Mary made a startled noise into her wine glass.
Edwina blinked rapidly. âA duel?â
Colin groaned. âNot this story again.â
Colin dropped his spoon. Benedict leaned back, suddenly grinning.
âOh, absolutely this story again,â Benedict said, leaning in with an almost reverent grin. âI had to physically stop him from marching Simon into the woods like a madman.â
Simon, calm as ever, lifted his glass with a small smile. âHe was halfway through threatening my bloodline before Daphne even finished adjusting her hem.â
Anthony shot him a glare. âYou laid your hands on my sisterââ
âI kissed my fiancĂ©e,â Simon corrected, eyes twinkling. âYou responded like an unhinged opera villain.â
Lucien, very casually cutting his meat, didnât even look up. âThat explains the dramatics. I did always sense you had a flair for duels, Bridgerton.â
Anthonyâs jaw clenched. âAt least I didnât court my scandals publicly.â
âOh no,â Lucien murmured, still not looking at him. âYou just escorted yours into the woods and declared war.â
A collective snort erupted from Colin, Benedict, and Hyacinth.
You, despite yourself, let out a sharp laughâand quickly masked it behind your wine.
Anthonyâs gaze snapped to you.
You were already composed again. Almost.
âI do recall Daphne mentioning the incident,â you said mildly. âAnd something about you screaming something dramatic about honor while she was still smoothing her skirts?â
Eloise grinned. âHe did. I heard about it from the butler before breakfast.â
Simon chuckled. âI believe his exact words were: âThis family shall not be disgraced by a Duke with no intentions.ââ
Benedict added helpfully, âAnd then he tripped over a tree root and tried to duel anyway.â
Hyacinth, delighted, leaned forward. âDid you use swords or pistols?â
Anthony, visibly exhausted, pressed his fingers to his temple. âPistols.â
Lady Danbury, who had been silently sipping her wine through the entire affair, spoke for the first time. âI remember that morning. The ton nearly combusted. You know, if youâd fired a moment earlier, half the gossip circles would have had to rename the Bridgertons entirely.â
Colin mock-gasped. âThe Bleedgertons.â
Lucien, shaking with silent laughter, raised his glass. âTo duels poorly thought out, and reputations narrowly saved.â
Anthony ignored him, turning to Daphne with something that looked suspiciously like pleading. âYou couldnât have picked any other story?â
Daphneâs smile was sweet. âYou chose to escalate. I chose to educate.â
Gregory, still wide-eyed, turned to Simon. âWould you have shot him?â
Simon looked contemplative. âPossibly in the leg. Nothing fatal.â
Lucien finally looked up, eyes gleaming with wicked delight. âAnd would you have apologized, afterward?â
Simon met his gaze evenly. âDepends which leg.â
Even Kate cracked a reluctant laugh at that.
Anthony, thoroughly outnumbered and glaring daggers at everyone, turned to youâhis last possible source of dignity.
But you only tilted your head with faux sweetness. âWell. I suppose this means you wonât be proposing a garden stroll tonight.â
Benedict choked on his wine.
Edwina blinked between the two of you, utterly baffled by the dynamic she could not name.
Anthony said nothing.
And Simonâever the quiet disruptorâleaned back, swirling his drink.
âIâm beginning to enjoy family dinners,â he said.
Lucien, with barely veiled amusement, leaned forward. âSo just to be clearâŠyou threatened bodily harm because a man fell for your sister?â His gaze flicked to Anthony, eyes glinting. âAre we sure you have not scheduled my duel yet?â
Anthony stiffened.
You, ever so sweetly, patted Lucienâs arm. âIf he has, I will stand between you and the bullet.â
Lucien turned to you with a grin. âAh, my angel. Always dramatic.â
Colin snorted. âYou are one to talk.â
And for the first time since soup had been served, you found yourself laughing out loudâwith Lucien beside you, Anthony smoldering across the table, and the entire house two anecdotes away from burning to the ground.
The laughter from Daphneâs duel anecdote still lingered in the air like smoke â sharp, stinging, leaving behind the burnt edge of revelation. Anthony had gone quiet again. Simon had leaned back into his chair, smug and satisfied, while Benedict and Colin wore identical grins that said weâve waited years to say this out loud.
You had barely touched your wine, fingers tracing the rim of the glass, eyes fixed somewhere past the flickering candlelight in front of you. You werenât retreating. Not exactly. Just⊠breathing. Carefully.
Which is why you missed the glint in Eloiseâs eye before she spoke.
âSo, Lord Blackbourne,â she said, far too casually for anyone to believe she hadnât planned it. âWhy do you call Y/N angel, anyway?â
The fork you were holding paused mid-air.
Eloise continued, elbows unapologetically on the table as she leaned in toward him with narrowed curiosity. âYou donât use her name. Not even in passing. Just⊠angel. Repeatedly. Sounds intimate.â
Gregory immediately turned, alert. Hyacinthâs eyes sparkled. Colin snorted into his wine. Kate tilted her head.
Anthony⊠didnât move.
You felt every eye shift to youâbut you didnât flinch.
Lucien didnât flinch.
Instead, he set down his glass with a quiet ease, his gaze finding you immediately. Not with a smirk or a laugh. But with something quieter. Something that slowed the beat of your heart.
âWhen I first said it,â Lucien murmured, his voice like velvet brushing against the grain of the roomâs tension, âit was meant as mischief.â
Your breath caught.
âThe kind of name you give someone when youâre trying to disarm them,â he continued, eyes never leaving yours. âBecause theyâre looking at you like they know your game and wonât play it. Because their smile is lovely, but not soft. Because you say it once and expect it to land lightly.â
He leaned back slightly, almost contemplative now. The room around him faded â for you, and seemingly for him as well.
âBut she didnât flinch when I said it,â he added, softer now. âShe didnât blush, didnât glare, didnât fall for the bait. She just⊠smiled. This quiet, maddening little smile. Like I had no idea how deep Iâd just sunk.â
Your throat went tight.
Lucienâs fingers lightly tapped against the stem of his glass, once, before stilling.
âAnd from that moment on, nothing else fit,â he finished simply. âNot her name. Not miss. Not any title. Just angel. Because sheâs never been anything less than my undoing in disguise.â
Silence wrapped around the table, taut and humming.
Hyacinth let out a breathy âoh my God.â
Colin blinked rapidly. âDid anyone else feel that in their spine?â
Daphne pressed a hand over her heart. âHonestly, that mightâve been the most romantic thing Iâve ever heard.â
Simon raised a brow at Anthony, who hadnât moved. His knuckles were white against the silver of his fork, and the muscle in his jaw had gone tight enough to crack.
You still hadnât said anything.
Lucien turned to you now â just you â and, with the gentlest edge of a grin, added, âUnless, of course, youâd prefer I stop.â
It wasnât cocky.
It wasnât for show.
It was a question. A quiet one.
You didnât look at anyone else. Just met his gaze and shook your head once, slow. âNo. I donât mind it.â
Lucien smiled.
Across the table, Anthony reached for his glass, slower this time. Measured. But his eyes didnât leave yours. Not for a moment.
The tension still shimmered in the air like heat off stone, delicate and dangerous.
Lucienâs gaze hadnât left yours. You held it, steady, a breath from something⊠more.
But Hyacinth, ever the chaos elemental in curls and silk, broke the moment with a sing-song curiosity that cut through the silence like a ribbon:
âBut waitâwhen was the first time you said it?â
You blinked, startled. Across the table, Lucienâs mouth curved just slightly.
âOh, I remember that,â Colin chimed in, already grinning. âIt was that dinner. The one where I lost a bet to Benedict about whether or not Anthony would snap a butter knife in half.â
âI believe the final tally was⊠two,â Benedict added helpfully. âOne bent beyond recognition. One thrown in the general direction of the fireplace.â
âI knew something was missing from the cutlery drawer the next morning,â Violet murmured, sipping her wine with the serene composure of a woman who has seen the apocalypse in cravat form.
Hyacinth leaned across Simon like a spy at court. âIt was the night Lord Blackbourne flirted like the house was on fire and Y/N was the only woman worth saving.â
Lady Danbury arched a brow. âSounds theatrical.â
Daphne chuckled. âIt was art.â
âI wasnât even there,â Simon said, âand Iâve heard the story at least three times. From three different sources. None of which included the same number of wine bottles or swooning incidents.â
âOh, there was no swooning,â Colin said cheerfully. âJust Anthony pouring enough wine to drown a scandal.â
Anthony, seated across from Lucien and very much present, set down his glass with care. âI do hope the entertainment value outweighs the embellishments.â
âFunny,â Eloise said, swirling her wine, âI donât remember needing to embellish. Lord Blackbourne served the tension. You roasted in it.â
Hyacinth squealed. âYes! You were seething, Anthony. You tried so hard to look composed, but your fork nearly pierced the duck.â
Lucien, ever composed, didnât gloat. Not quite. But the glint in his eye as he turned to you was unmistakable. âIf memory serves,â he said softly, âyou were the one who started the real fire.â
You tilted your head, meeting his gaze. âI mightâve poured the oil. You struck the match.â
Colin snorted. âAnd the rest of us? Roasted marshmallows.â
Gregory, wide-eyed, stage-whispered, âDidnât someone say âturn about the gardenâ and it was basically a marriage proposal in disguise?â
âI asked if she wanted to walk,â Lucien said innocently. âI never said how far.â
Eloise nearly fell off her chair laughing. âAnd she replied âAre you sure you can keep up?â Like she hadnât just murdered him in cold blood.â
Hyacinth pointed a dramatic finger across the table. âAnd then he smirked. Said he never has trouble keeping up. I nearly fainted.â
Daphneâs smile was knowing. âAnd Anthonyââ
âI remember perfectly well,â Anthony cut in, voice low.
Silence descended, taut and immediate.
All eyes flicked to him.
He didnât raise his voice. He didnât move. He just looked down at his plate, then up at Lucien. Thenâyou.
Kate, seated beside Edwina, watched it all. Closely. Like someone reading between lines only a few others could see. Her gaze lingered on Anthonyâs tightened jaw. On your hand as it rested a little too still near your wine glass. On Lucien, whoâdespite all the revelryâwasnât looking at anyone else but you.
Anthony exhaled, sharp and slow, then turned his attention to Edwina beside him, reaching for the wine to refill her glass.
âIâm afraid,â he said, his voice steady, âmy family takes great pleasure in exaggerating past events.â
Edwina smiled, slightly confused. âI donât remember it being so⊠theatrical.â
Kateâs brows twitched faintly.
âExaggerated?â Colin laughed. âAnthony, you were seething. Daphne tried to change the subject and you looked at her like sheâd insulted your lineage.â
Benedict grinned. âYou were about to quote something dramatic. Then Blackbourne beat you to it. Poetry, wasnât it?â
Lucien didnât confirm or deny. But he turned to you, and with that quiet cadence of his, murmured just loud enough:
âThere is pleasure in the pathless woodsâŠâ
Your lips parted. Your breath caught.
ââŠthere is a rapture on the lonely shoreâŠâ
Hyacinth gasped. âHeâs doing it again.â
Anthony reached for his wine.
Kate leaned in, eyes narrowedâsharp, calculating. âThat was Byron, wasnât it?â she asked lightly.
Lucien nodded. âIndeed. Quite a favorite of Lord Bridgertonâs, I hear.â
The corners of Kateâs mouth didnât move, but something shifted behind her gaze. Slowly, she turned toward Anthony.
âIs it?â she asked.
Anthony said nothing.
Daphne leaned into the chaos like it was a chaise lounge. âTo be fair, itâs one of the most romantic recitations Iâve ever heard. From either of them.â
Anthonyâs fingers gripped the stem of his glass a little too tightly.
You felt it.
The pressure.
The attention.
The way Lucien hadnât taken his eyes off you, even as he dropped words like embers.
The way Kate watched Anthony with rising suspicion.
The way Anthony looked at you like memory was a weight he couldnât put down.
It was Colin who broke the tension.
âWell,â he said brightly, âif that dinner was a fire, then this oneâs at least a slow roast.â
âAnd dessert hasnât even arrived,â Eloise added gleefully.
Violet raised a brow at no one in particular. âThen heaven help us when it does.â
Across the table, Lady Danbury spoke again, her voice dry as brandy and twice as strong.
âI cannot believe I missed that dinner.â
Lucien smiled. âIâm sure this one will make up for it.â
He looked at you again. Not with amusement. Not with victory.
But with something quieter.
Like he saw all the cracks in the roomâand only wanted to know if he could hold them together.
Anthony, from across the table, saw that look too.
And for now?
He said nothing.
Dessert hadnât even been announced, yet Violetâs napkin already looked suspiciously like it had been squeezed within an inch of its life.
Which is when Benedict, with the kind of grin only a man too comfortable with fire could wear, leaned into the quiet.
âSo,â he said, casually tearing a piece of bread in half. âNow that weâve revisited the dinner that shall not be named⊠what say we play a game?â
Colinâs eyes gleamed. âOh no. Is it time?â
Hyacinth sat up straighter. âI knew I wore the right earrings for scandal.â
Gregory whispered, âThis better be the game with secrets.â
âIt is,â Eloise said brightly. âAnd the adults havenât ruined it yet.â
Lucien raised a brow. âWhat kind of game are we playing?â
Hyacinth clapped once, delighted. âItâs simple. We take turns going around the table and ask each person to describe the last scandalous thought they had during this meal.â
You blinked. âThatâs not simple. Thatâs social warfare.â
âItâs Bridgerton dinner,â Eloise said. âSame thing.â
Violet opened her mouthâperhaps to objectâbut paused. Then sighed. âI am going to need a stronger wine.â
Simon leaned forward with a wolfish grin. âShall I begin, or will you, Lord Blackbourne?â
Lucien didnât flinch. âLadies first.â
Eloise jumped in. âPerfect. Iâll start.â She turned to Simon. âWhat was the last improper thought you had at this table?â
Simon smirked. âI imagined throwing a bread roll at Anthony when he said âembroidered cushionâ with such confidence. Miss Sharma deserves better metaphors.â
The table erupted.
Anthony looked personally wounded.
Edwina blinked in confusion.
Kate nearly snorted her wine.
Lady Danbury murmured, âSo do I. Heavens, it was dull.â
Benedict was wheezing. âThrow the whole metaphor out. Start again.â
Simon sat back, sipping his wine with the elegance of a man entirely unbothered.
Lucien grinned. âWell played.â
Colin leaned in next. âMy turn.â He turned to you. âTell us â what were you thinking when Lord Blackbourne quoted poetry to you a few minutes ago?â
You paused â dramatically. Eyes sweeping the table. Then you smiled, sweet and dangerous.
âI was wondering,â you said slowly, âwhether itâs possible to melt silverware from sheer eye contact alone.â
Hyacinth gasped. âThatâs the quote of the evening!â
Lucien leaned in. âYouâre welcome to test that theory. Privately.â
Eloise groaned, âGod, I hate how good that was.â
Anthony didnât move. But you saw it.
The shift.
The flex in his jaw. The tight grip around his spoon. The flicker of heat that bloomed in his eyes before he blinked it away.
Kate saw it too. Her gaze narrowed.
You caught Kate watching you againânot with hostility, but precision. Like a seamstress deciding where the thread frays.
You looked away first. That unsettled you more than it shouldâve.
âAlright,â Benedict said cheerfully, âmy turn. Blackbourne. What scandalous thought crossed your mind during the soup course?â
Lucien, unhurried, locked eyes with you. âThat if I were born less decent,â he said quietly, âI would have kissed her, right there, in front of every person here.â
Silence.
Not gasping silence.
Gutted silence.
The kind that trembled on the edge of danger.
You didnât blink.
You didnât flinch. You didnât smirk.
You reached slowly for your wine glass, took a measured sip, and let the silence stretch long enough to be felt.
Then you smiled.
And the table tilted.
Hyacinth whispered, âI think I forgot how breathing works.â
Daphne, blinking hard, muttered, âRemind me to steal that line.â
AnthonyâŠ
Anthony looked like he was about to stand. His knuckles turned white against the table.
And Lucien â the devil wrapped in velvet and candlelight â finally glanced at him.
And smiled.
It was not a taunt. It was a challenge.
Simon leaned in toward Hyacinth. âDid you get that sketch?â
Hyacinth nodded solemnly. âLucien with devil wings. Anthony with smoke coming out of his ears. Iâll add flames.â
Lady Danbury cackled. âI like him.â
Kate, meanwhile, was looking at Anthony.
âAnthony,â Benedict said brightly, like he hadnât just dropped a match into a room filled with gas, âyour turn.â
The words landed like thunder.
Every head turned.
Even Edwina blinked, gently surprised. âOh, yesâLord Bridgerton, what has been your most scandalous thought this evening?â
Anthony didnât answer immediately.
Didnât twitch.
Didnât blink.
Just⊠stared at the wine in his glass like it had betrayed him for the final time.
âIâve been thinking,â he said at last, voice calm but low, âabout restraint.â
Lucien let out the softest laugh, just enough to draw attention.
Anthony continued, tone measured. âHow itâs a virtue. How it separates men from boys.â
Colin raised a brow. âSo⊠nothing scandalous, then?â
Anthony glanced at him. âYouâd be surprised what a man has to restrain when people wonât stop provoking him.â
A beat.
Lucien, swirling his wine, looked entirely relaxed. âSome of us provoke without meaning to, Bridgerton. Itâs just the hazard of having charm.â
Anthony looked up, sharply.
Lucien didnât even flinch. âYou should try it sometime.â
âOh,â Gregory whispered. âOh, heâs going to die.â
Eloise leaned forward like she was front row at a play. âDo it again.â
But KateâKateâcut across the table like a knife.
âWhat exactly are we restraining, my lord?â
Everyone turned.
Anthony blinked.
Kate was watching himânot accusing, not angry.
Curious.
Anthony cleared his throat. âDecorum. Diplomacy.â
âDesire?â Lucien offered, oh-so-softly.
The word sliced through the air.
Hyacinth actually whooped.
Daphneâs hand went over her mouth.
Edwina let out a quiet, confused laugh.
âLord Blackbourne,â she said, still trying, bless her, âyou really do enjoy dramatics.â
Lucien didnât answer.
He wasnât looking at her.
He was still watching you.
Anthony finally turned back to his glass. âRestraint,â he repeated. âItâs useful. Especially when others forget theirs.â
You shifted in your seat, the weight of all their eyes grazing your skin like fingertips. Your breath felt heavier nowâlike the air had started playing tricks.
Lucien leaned closer, voice just for you.
âAre we talking about my restraint, darling?â he asked, tone velvet and velvet thorns.
 You turned slowly, your lashes low. âI think everyoneâs restraint is hanging by a thread.â
âYou seem fine,â he murmured.
âIâm not the one being fought over in metaphors.â
He grinned, and whisperedâjust loud enough for only the very worst people to hearâ
âOh, Iâm not fighting for you in metaphors, angel. Iâm fighting with teeth.â
Anthony stood.
No warning.
No sound but the scrape of chair legs and the unmistakable heat that poured off of him like a thunderstorm with too much pride.
âI believe I need air,â he said tightly.
Edwina startled, half-rising. âOhâbut the next courseââ
 âIâll return.â
But his eyes werenât on Edwina.
They were on you.
Just for a second.
Long enough to say everything he wasnât allowed to speak.
Then he was gone.
The room froze.
And then, finallyâ
Colin muttered, âWell. There goes the thread.â
Hyacinth threw her arms up. âBest dinner ever!â
Lady Danbury toasted the candlelight. âAbout bloody time.â
Kate, silent until now, lifted her wine and murmuredâhalf to herselfââThat wasnât restraint. That was retreat.â
You didnât move.
Lucienâs hand was still resting near yours, his posture utterly unshaken. His smile was soft now. Sharpness tucked away.
âIâm sorry,â he said, finally looking at you. âDid I⊠overstep?â
You didnât answer immediately.
Then you leaned inâclose enough to make him hold his breathâand said quietly, sweetly:
âIf this is your version of restraint, Iâd love to see what losing control looks like.â
Lucien let out a breathless laugh, low and dark.
âOh angel,â he whispered, âso would I.â
Across the table, Simon raised his wine glass toward Hyacinth.
She clinked her goblet with his and grinned.
There was a beat of stunned, simmering silence after Anthony exited.
The flicker of candlelight danced in the absence he left behind, a space at the table filled only by the tension he abandonedâand the heat of every gaze that followed.
Taglist: @bollzinurmouth @drewstarkeysrightarm @thorins-queen-of-erebor @yearninglustfully @khaleesibeach
Incest fics are way too common
Looove fanfics and movies, trying to stop that but it ain't working
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