On a team vacation meant to ease old wounds and offer a break from conflict, Bucky Barnes becomes caught in a quiet, forbidden connection with Y/n, a twenty-year-old who should never have become more than a presence at his side. Their relationship is defined by restraint and secrecy—shared disappearances, lingering tension, and words left unsaid. As Steve Rogers begins to notice the subtle patterns forming between them, the atmosphere tightens with unspoken suspicion. What starts as a peaceful
Phillip Graves comes home late to find Y/n waiting in the quiet kitchen. Words unspoken hang heavy, but he won’t let her shut him out. In the stillness of their home, Southern charm and steel collide, and hearts are on the line.
Following a brutal mission, Y/n finds herself under the watchful eye of Commander Phillip Graves, whose concern for his favorite soldier curdles into something darker. As authority, protection, and possession intertwine, their dynamic becomes increasingly unbalanced, testing the limits of loyalty within Shadow Company. What begins as command responsibility threatens to become control.
Jason Todd comes home through the window, injured and tense, speaking only to Y/n. Silence, blood, and unspoken worry hang heavy as he tries to convince her—and himself—that he’s fine. But in Gotham, “fine” is never enough.
According to Smoke, Bo isn’t allowed to love Y/n. If he touches her, smoke and stack will cut his dick off and feed it to him. Bo is gonna risk it anyways
In the quiet aftermath of a night spent together, Rafe Cameron struggles to hide his obsession and tenderness for Y/n, the Pogue he shouldn’t want. As she slips away to face the world, forbidden and fragile lines blur, leaving him desperate, soft only for her, and unable to let go.
Next is the public summary — short, clean, and spoiler-free: Public Summary: Juniors in high school and six months into dating, Joaquin Torres finally meets Y/n’s uncle, Sam Wilson. What should be a simple visit turns into a quiet test of character as Joaquin’s future dreams, family background, and intentions are subtly put under the microscope. For Joaquin, it’s more than meeting the family—it’s proving he belongs.