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#but the course of your acquaintanceship changes dramatically when you go into heat and he's the only alpha around >:)
merakiui · 1 year
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MeraAaaAaaa!!! How dare you bring up having a fwb relationship with alpha!yandere!alhaitham and not expand more on that!! 😭😭😭 I need this. I NEED HIM SO BADLY!!! LAJDKSK
He's actually so frustrating!!! You could be in heat and he will act so unaffected. His restraint is so very commendable; he hardly spares you much reaction and will even cover his nose and say something along the lines of, "You should be more aware of your cycles so that you aren't an inconvenience to others." >:( it's really difficult to know what Alhaitham truly thinks because he's usually so straight-faced and serious, and he takes all the necessary precautions so he won't put himself in a troublesome position. But you beg him, tell him he smells good, cling to him out of biological imperative, and oohhh you're so lucky he's strong enough to resist, if just barely, otherwise he'd have you pinned against the nearest surface right this very moment.
The fwb relationship is established the day he helps you find relief in the midst of your heat. He's just helping you because it would be inconvenient and dangerous to leave you alone when other alphas (who may not have as much restraint or respect as Alhaitham) could be lurking nearby. And he's certain you woudn't want to come out of your heat marked and knocked up by some stranger. Truthfully, he doesn't want you to be marked and bred by someone you hardly know. If it were up to him, he'd rather do those things.
There's no getting rid of him after the fact. You can thank him all you want, buy him lunch out of gratitude, and insist you'll be more cautious going forwards, but Alhaitham is here to stay. He always throws things back in your face. Wasn't it you who begged him for this? Didn't you say you wanted him to be your alpha? He's only following your protocol. :) and, yes, perhaps you did say things like that, but the you who was in heat is vastly different from the you who is not in heat. He just won't drop the matter, reminding you that it's much more beneficial if you engage in mutually beneficial relations with someone you know and trust. What if he hadn't been there to help? What if it was another alpha, one with less restraint? What would you have done? You would have accepted anyone in that state, wouldn't you? And that's exactly the point Alhaitham's trying to make: it's dangerous if you're going to be so careless about your heats.
He does make a good argument. You know that, by biology's design, you will always be at a disadvantage when you're an omega in heat. You know Alhaitham's only looking out for you as a friend should. You know you should feel relieved he's even willing to go through all of the trouble to help you during future heats. And doesn't everyone wish to have a strong, sensible alpha care for them when they're at their most vulnerable?
Alhaitham's infatuation is subtle and so easily hidden. You'll never know he's harboring such an obsession. He only lets it slip when you're in heat because you're too omega-brained to really register the meaning behind his words, and everything he says and does is just music to your ears. He can get away with being possessive and maddeningly infatuated when you're in heat because that's when you're truly his. Though it's all loveless and the two of you are stuck as friends (nothing more, as you always claim) it's hard to ignore the chemistry beyond heat sex. Sometimes you'll spend mornings in bed with him, too lazy to get up, insisting on spending five more minutes in the comforts of his room. Sometimes he brings you breakfast. Sometimes he helps you to the bath. Sometimes it really feels like domestic bliss.
And eventually you'll spend so many heats with him that, the next time you go into heat, your body might even recognize him as your alpha. You really shouldn't tell him to bite you with such a tempting voice. He might just give you exactly what you want, if only to finally make you his and excuse such carelessness on the addictive effects you have on him.
Whatever happens, Alhaitham will have a logical reasoning to explain it away. He always does, and you always believe him.
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cetaceans-pls · 7 years
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Kinktober 2017: (9) Edgeplay
I Would Walk 500 More
What’s this? A love story over a year in the making?
Voltron Legendary Defender, Sheith, Item Check Love AU
-
It’s embarrassing as all hell, to go “I knew it was love when you handed me a hot cup of coffee and I dropped it all over myself because I forgot I have a crap prosthetic where my right arm used to be but you didn’t even blink and just got me a bunch of tissues and made me another cup.”
Convenience store clerks don’t deserve the harassment of having customers coming in and falling in love, especially not at 2:30 in the morning, especially  especially not when the customer is Shiro and spilling the coffee has his nerves so on edge he’s on the verge of a panic attack. 
(It’s a rough night).
Keith, blessedly, is at least semi-familiar with Shiro’s trials and tribulations. Being inadvertent neighbours for the past month has helped; Shiro being forthright and bringing a little fruit basket to his only immediate neighbour in the tiny apartment complex to apologise in advance for any strange noises that might come. Keith had said it wouldn’t be a problem;
He’s acting like Shiro isn’t a problem now. Shiro has a death grip on the fresh cup with his left hand (his only good hand), and that seemed to inspire Keith into action. Keith pulls up the divider and tugs Shiro behind the counter, through a door, and to the informal little office space. He forces Shiro into an old, squeaky office chair, and goes to rifle through his locker.
Shiro tries to focus on what he can see, tries to control his breathing, tries hard to not lose his mind. The soft whumph of something landing across his shoulders startles him a little, but it’s just Keith, laying his motorcycle jacket on Shiro.
It looks ridiculous, probably; Barbie trying to dress an Incredible Hulk doll, but the weight is reassuring, Keith’s intense stare even more so.
“Just take your time. I’m going to go restock the instant ramen, but I’ll leave the door open.”
It’s been a while since someone’s idea of helping him didn’t involve making him talk things out.
Feels warm and rich and a little strange; tastes like hot, freshly-brewed coffee and fits like an undersized jacket on an oversized man.
Barely a month into their acquaintanceship, and Shiro’s mildly overcome in the first throes of a crush.
-
They meet in spring, and a season full of Shiro stopping by the convenience store on Bad Nights and Keith stopping by in the mornings with just barely out-of-date cooked foods and theirs is now quite the admirable friendship.
Keith’s got a bit of a temper, a bit of a bite, but he is unwavering and he is honest. He doesn’t ask for more than Shiro will give, doesn’t really ask for anything at all, so Shiro’s not even sure what he gets out of this relationship aside from homework help and the (questionable) privilege of having Shiro relaxed enough around him to go without his prosthetic when Keith comes over.
No looking a gift horse in the mouth, though. It’s a sweltering hot summer’s day, vacation in full-swing for most students, but Shiro’s a beleaguered graduate student. It’s noon and his room is boiling hot as he stares at his laptop and prays for some insight from the statistics gods re: some sweet, sweet data analysis.
Our Lady Of Variance chooses to answer with a different kind of variable; there’s a knock at his door, and it’s Keith. 
“You haven’t left your flat in 2 days,” the man announces matter-of-factly. “Get changed, we’re hitting the beach.”
It takes way too long for Shiro to understand what’s being said to him, and when he does it mildly horrifies him (no big deal, he’s spent much of his adult life in a constant state of mild horror). “Keith, no, buddy, I can’t get my prosthetic wet in the sea, it’s gonna rust.”
The reply is pretty much instantaneous. “Then don’t take it with you.”
That mild horror? It’s escalating. He has to be shirtless, and armless? It probably doesn’t show in his face, he’s way too good at a poker face, but his heart is pounding right there in his throat, for all to see. “But... My arm. It’s. It’s the only arm I’ve got left there.”
Keith shrugs. “I can be your right hand man.”
It’s only been 3 months, Shiro yells in his head, face completely neutral. And being his right hand has a terrible fuckin’ track record.
Breathe, Shiro, breathe. “I can’t.... Not now. Sorry, Keith.” He mourns it, mourns what might have become an almost-romantic beach date.
They stand in silence facing each other for a while, before Keith seems to figure something out. “We can break into the school swimming pool. I have a copy of the keys from when I used to work in security, you can bring your arm or you can leave, and you can dress however you like. I don’t give a shit, but neither of us are staying in our rooms in this shitty heat. Your brain’s gonna melt right out.”
Oh, geeze. Shiro swallows a few times, because it feels like if he opens his mouth to talk right now, he’ll hurl up his heart, and not even Keith could possibly be willing to deal with him after that.
It’s a hell of an option, and Shiro finds it more and more appealing. “Would you mind if I kept a shirt on in the water?”
Keith flashes a sharp grin. “My only rule is to at least move further away if you’re about to pee in the pool.”
Shiro’s offended. “I would never!”
“That makes one of us. Now just go change already.”
It’s agony and bliss; Keith in just broad shorts, the cool chlorinated water in the heat.
Yearning’s a soppy word, but floating on his back in the pool, prosthetic safely tucked away in his bag and occasionally bumping into Keith who’s doing the same, it’s about all that Shiro can do to yearn that this easy, easy friendship continues.
-
Autumn comes, dragging in her wake his second semester. It’s off to a better start than spring; when it’s not too hot and not too cold, his stump aches less, and now that he’s gotten used to his advisor and school itself, his stress levels aren’t at ceiling-height.
He still stops by the convenience store pretty regularly, laptop in tow. He knows all of Keith’s co-workers by now, and the 3 night-time managers are all mothers trying to fit in work amongst looking after their families, and oh, how they dote.
Shiro’s not super used to it, has always been brought up to be fiercely self-reliant. Sometimes it’s a little overwhelming, because they can get really rather touchy when they’re missing their kids and Shiro’s there on a rough night looking like a soaking wet puppy, but those times Keith runs interference as best he can, once even spectacularly pulling an entire shelf’s worth of potato chips to the ground to get attention away from Shiro.
“It’s no big deal,” Keith had said. “You would have done the same for me.”
This is true, of course. They’re both students at the university nearby, and Shiro makes an effort to meet up when they have empty slots in their schedule; Keith’s finishing his undergraduate thesis and he’s still undecided between furthering his studies and getting a job, so Shiro shares what he knows as someone who’s done both. Once, when Shiro had followed Keith to the administrative office to help Keith book a meeting with the career guidance counsellor, things had gone a little bit south with a clerk insisting that Keith wasn’t eligible for the service since he was a scholarship student, and Keith getting increasingly agitated as the clerk harangued him in front of the entire office for not even reading the fine print in the student’s guide.
It probably wouldn’t have come to blows, but it might have come to words that could land Keith in hot water, so Shiro does the only thing that without a doubt can de-escalate any situation.
He’d reached under his coat with his left hand, fiddling with straps and ports, and just as the arguing voices reached their peak, he unhooked his prosthetic and let it slide right out his sleeve, landing on the ground with a heavy whump.
Shiro hadn’t freaked out, not even a little. The thick fabric of the coat kept the sleeve’s shape; as long as he tucked the end into the pocket, he wouldn’t even need to re-attach his arm before he can get out of here. So making a face that was mildly aghast, he had looked down at his prosthetic and convincingly warbled his voice as he exclaimed (way too loudly even in his own opinion), “Oh my god.”
The clerk had echoed it, but Keith was already bending down to grab Shiro’s arm (oh, were it but attached to his body!), turning around and brandishing it like a club of guilt at the man on the other side of the counter. “Are you just going to let me schedule the meeting, or would it be better for me to take my friend out of here,” he growled as he waved the arm a tad dramatically, “but then leave him one hand down just so that I can come back and argue with you some more?”
Paler ‘n a ghost, the man had handed over a form to Keith along with a time slot, and Keith just barely deigned to thank him for it. Keith had filled it in and slid the paper back, before tugging Shiro out, still techinically holding Shiro’s hand.
They’d gotten as far as the low-key haunted and consistently empty bathrooms on one of the upper floors before Keith had let go of of Actual Shiro, to then fully wrap his arms around Arm Shiro and proceed to laugh so hard Shiro actually got worried.
“What the hell was that? You some kind of gecko? Sense danger and then drop a limb? Fuck.” Keith had had tears in his eyes by then.
Shiro had smiles, still a little jealous of his prosthetic. “Guess that’s my Halloween outfit all figured out.”
In summary, there is not a detachable limb nor a bag of junk food that they would not drop to the ground for each other. Shiro’d take a hit for Keith, probably. This close to the edge of his terrible, all-consuming feelings that he’s been skirting for months now, Shiro thinks that for Keith, Keith who’s always got his back and will always hide away one 4-cheese macaroni gratin for him to have for a late-night snack, there isn’t much he wouldn’t take for Keith.
He’s a hopeless man dancing on a thin wire, Shiro thinks, and he’s a terrible dancer.
Hopefully, desperation can keep him going so that Keith doesn’t find out that Shiro’s a barely-controlled no-good hound dog, and oh, the leash is fraying terribly.
-
Winter is rough, cold, unpleasant, all the usual adjectives used by people who aren’t her biggest fans. Shiro knows that logically his joints can’t possibly be getting iced over, it’s not even dipped below 0 yet, but it’s miserable. 
He’s miserable, and not a heavy wool scarf and warm gloves and long johns under his pants help him leave his winter funk. His therapist says it might be Seasonal Affective Disorder, but Shiro’s got enough regular sad on his plate that unless pushed, he won’t be admitting to having SAD on top of it all too. 
It drags on him like the night keeps hold of the sun; lingering, holding him down long enough that everything’s off-kilter. In a distant sort of way, Shiro knows he’s getting stressed over due dates, and that he’s fundamentally a man who needs sun on his face to feel that everything’s going to be okay.
Shiro’s as calm and measured as he can manage on his convenience store runs, but this is his first winter on his own sans his right arm but plus hideous scars, and he’s just constantly on edge.
Keith had kept his silence through November and most of December, only insisting that they meet for Christmas day.
Shiro’s grateful, because the holidays are frankly an extra type of awful when you’re alone and unpleasantly sad, but Shiro’s irritated because he just wants to lie under his heated blanket in his room and stare at the ceiling.
Keith had kept on insisting, and it’s such a rare sight that he finally relents. Keith was usually happy to support Shiro even through bad decisions, but he had put his foot down when in a fit of all-encompassing misery Shiro had said he was going to quit school and maybe just work at the convenience store too until he died (Keith had called up Shiro’s therapist after ‘comandeering’ Shiro’s phone, and that was how Shiro had a 2 hour long conversation with Doctor Takizawa in the backroom of a 7-11 at half past midnight), and he’d put his foot down now too.
So Shiro had forced himself to clean and neaten up his house, good enough for company, and even makes the effort to pick up a little Christmas cake, with a log house made of chocolate. The candles cheer him up, even if the dark sky outside at just 5 damn p.m. gets to him. He’s making tea when Keith lets himself in with the spare key, holding a large box in his hands. “I have a present for you,” Keith announces, before he’s even taken off his shoes.
It’s a sweet enough a moment that Shiro manages to pull up a smile, all the way from who even knows where, to tell Keith thank you. They head to the main living space, and Shiro pours them teeth.
Music plays in the background, Shiro leaving his Youtube playlist playing. It’s mostly soft folk, good for meditation, good for winding down when he comes back from exerting himself at the gym. They both just listen in pleasant silence, getting through their cake, before Keith starts getting antsy and none-too-gently starts poking Shiro’s leg with his present.
“All right, all right,” Shiro relents, finally, pushing over his own gift to Keith. “I’ll open it now, okay?” It amuses him to find that the gift appears to be wrapped in about 2 dozen flattened paper packages that were meant to eventually house nuggest. He tears it open, to find..... a massive.... light.....thing.
“Keith?”
“It’s a light therapy box. I checked the internet and it said if you’re sad, uh, S-A-D SAD, getting more light might help. The site said you should figure out how to use it with advice from your doctor, but it might be good for you.”
Shiro doesn’t know what to say. Keith’s a goddamn star, and he’s gotten him a literal box filled with light. It’s hard to resist cradling the light box like a sweet, awkward puppy, and he only barely manages to ignore his urges. “You shouldn’t have, Keith, this looks really expensive.”
Keith just rolled his eyes, tearing open his own present and making a deep, rumbly satisfied sound to find a pair of beautiful leather driving gloves, so that Keith can have a winter-version of his go-to fingerless gloves that always threaten frostbite at this time of year. The gloves are jet-black with red trim, made of leather so soft Shiro had almost wanted a fair for himself. “I wanted to. If I thought it would help, I’d buy you light every year in winter.” He pulls on the gloves to see how they fit, and it’s some Excalibur-and-Arthur bullshit, honestly, how perfect they are.
Keith reaches across the little table they’re seated at, to hold Shiro’s jaw between his leather-clad. “You’re worth doing these things for,” he says slow and clear, like Shiro’s a little dim and Keith’s just trying to make him understand.
He’ll beat himself up for it later, Shiro really will, but his reaction to the stern/soft touch on his face had left him so painfully keyed-up it made his head spin as he leaned more heavily into the touch.
Keith is so close, and so far. The light box is heavy in his lap, but a Keith’s touch is so gentle he’s quite sure he’s losing his mind.
Shiro’s going to do it, he’s really going to do, he’s going to tell Keith now and settle it once and for all.
Dancing man’s sick of the edge.
Shiro pulls Keith’s hand further up his face, so that he can press it against his cheek and take pleasure in the touch.
It feels like something’s on the edge of happening, and Shiro just...wants to lean in and-
Suddenly Keith’s pulling away, cursing and patting himself down for his phone. He’s brusque, borderline-rude to whoever’s talking, and when he hangs up, his scowls are deeper than trenches.
“You okay?” Shiro asked, having swallowed his confession. 
“3 people called in sick today, and they wanted me to come in half a shift earlier to deal with the rush of people doing last-minute shopping. I’m sorry, Shiro, I have to go.”
Keith looks as mournful as Shiro feels, but Shiro just shakes his head and smiles. “Don’t worry ‘bout it, I can put the cake in the fridge and we can have the rest of it when you have time. You should go and get ready, Keith.”
Keith still looks conflicted, and if this were a romance novel, Shiro would’ve described it as a man torn between desire and duty.
But it’s not a romance novel, unfortunately, and really is a face touch that much weirder than their frequent shoulder pats?
Shiro shouldn’t put Keith’s actions into romancin’ words. It’ll be okay if all he can manage is a quiet long-lasting unrequited love as Keith’s friend; he refuses to be selfish.
So he smiles and waves as Keith heads to the door, almost late, but not so late that he can’t duck in to give Shiro  a hug. 
“Make sure you talk about that light thing with your doctor. And don’t work so hard, it’s Christmas.”
“Tell that to yourself, bud, I’m just going to be hanging out under the kotatsu and eat instant ramen.”
Keith snorts, wrapping his scarf around his neck. “Don’t go too wild.”
“No promises. I get wild when I eat too much salt.”
Shoes on, Keith’s got his hand on the front door. When he turns to look at Shiro, it’s with an expression so ridiculously fond Shiro reflexively tries to fold his arms.
(He can’t, he hasn’t actually let go of the light).
“Come by later. I’ll make you the last Christmas special peppermint latte we have in the store.”
Great, and also could you please touch my face again? Shiro does not say. He just goes “I will. Thanks for everything, Keith.”
“Embarrassing,” Keith says, but he still springs for another hug, and Shiro figures that like it or not, if Keith keeps on being this unbearably good to him, the confession’s going to happen. He can’t really hold it in anymore, regardless of his intentions.
It’s gonna happen.
Just not today.
-
They come full-circle on one day in early Spring, more or less. Shiro’s stressed with reports, and the stress agitates him into, funnily enough, even greater heights of stress, and he just needs to get out. So he stumbles out of his flat, still in pyjamas because at this point there is nothing left to him that could surprise anybody on the night shift.
When the chime rings to announce that a customer’s come in, nobody looks surprised that it’s Shiro in fuzzy fleece pyjamas and a warm overcoat. Shiro heads straight for Keith’s counter, and they don’t even say ‘Hello’, because Keith’s already turned around to get him a cup of coffee.
“Here,” Keith says. “You’re not looking good.”
“Do I ever?” Shiro asks, reaching for it-
-and knocking it all over the counter with the goddamn hunk of shitty plastic that’s supposed to mean that he’s okay that he’s lost his arm but obivously it’s not because he can’t really even type with it and he can’t even grab a cup of goddamn coffee without spilling it like some child and-
Keith clapping Shiro’s face between his hands bring him out of mid-spiral, and Shiro comes back into himself, unpleasantly slow. “Sorry,” he forces out, because he really is. The counter’s going to smell of coffee again, and there’s already a little bit of a stain on the cash register from the last time (has it actually been a year already?)
Keith doesn’t let him go. “3 days ago, a drunk office worker came in here, asked for help looking for the hangover meds, and then threw up on my shoes. Coffee’s fine. You’re fine. Okay?”
He really isn’t, Shiro knows he isn’t, but Keith does make him feel better, that one’s beyond a shadow of a doubt. Keith’s still holding his face, in a death-grip but gentle, and the only sound is the steady drip-drip-drip of coffee on counter becoming coffee on the ground.
Keith has that frown on his face, the one that means that he’s unsatisfied with something and he’ll be working to make it better some way, somehow. 
Keith already really helps to make Shiro better, that’s also something Shiro doesn’t doubt. He settles a little more into himself, into feeling Keith’s warmth leeching in through his cheeks (boy always runs so warm, even in the dead of winter), and he controls his breathing until his panic isn’t controlling him.
“Thanks, Keith.” Shiro figures he’s as good as he’s going to get for tonight, and tries to move back from this half-lean across the counter.
Keith doesn’t let go.
“Uhm, buddy?”
“What?”
“I’m all right now, and we’ve gotta clean up this mess I made.” 
Keith doesn’t even glance down. “That can wait, and this is nice anyways.”
That certainly is true; it’s so nice that Shiro’s beginning to suspect that if there’s a kink for having one’s face touched, he’s definitely got it. This is way too nice, and he sighs a little, settling lower and closing his eyes.
They startle open when he feels something gently bump against his head, to see that Keith’s also leaned in, now insistently pressing their foreheads together even as he continues to stare at Shiro, trying to figure out if Shiro’s really okay or not.
All at once, it’s too much. His hand’s shaking, as Shiro rests them over Keith’s, nerves shot to hell and flying on adrenaline. He’s terrified, but he’s hit his limit and there’s nothing left to give. “I. I’ve got something I need to tell you, Keith, and I need you to know that I don’t have any expectations, or anything, just, I won’t hold it against you if you turn me down. Okay?”
Keith nods, mashing their bangs together. “You can do it. I’ve got you, so c'mon, just come on.”
And Shiro does.
--------
A/N: Lord fuck this was a struggle and a half. Edgeplay..... where it’s sorta just Shiro..... edging himself. What a mess. Hope you like it anyways!
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