This is a book-length work, so not every chapter will involve sex. If you're just looking for a quick wank, this may not be your story.
Thanks for reading!
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Even after living with Matt for a couple tendays, I still thought of the room as the captain's quarters. It's weird how shit like that gets stuck in your brain and you actually have to practice changing the way you think. The captain wasn't doing nothing to make me feel like I didn't belong; in fact, he told me I could do whatever I liked with the place. He even offered to move in with me if I'd rather, but that would have just made things more complicated. His quarters were bigger, plus he had direct access to the command deck. And I didn't have any special attachment to my bunk, though I had made some rather tasty memories there. It was just that the place had been
his
, never mine, and I was having trouble turning it into
ours
.
No matter how much time you spend with a person, moving in together, sharing space on a day-to-day basis, is going to teach you things. You're going to find out they have these little habits that annoy you, and that goes the same the other way around. You'll also see a side of each other you never had access to before. Living with someone means you share "home," so the person you are at your most unguarded, your most relaxed, is eventually going to come out. You can only keep your farts to yourself for so long.
For example, I learned that Matt hated clipping his nails. He would leave it until they were annoying him - and me, to be honest - and then a few days past that. When it finally had to be done, he would complain the entire time about the necessity. It made sense, in a way: before, when the captain had been doing celeb interviews, their teams would give him mani-pedis while fixing his hair and makeup. Nail clipping was not a thing he'd had to do a lot of. I found it equal parts endearing and exasperating that such a small task got under his skin.
One of my biggest surprises was seeing just how much the captain worked. The time we'd been involved hadn't been the norm for his career, but that didn't really sink in until after the first few days we'd been living together. As he got used to me being around and didn't feel the need to hover over me all the time, he reverted to his usual habits. This meant he was always busy. First thing in the morning, he'd be checking the main newsfeeds as he drank his coffee. Then it was meetings on the station or up to the command deck for the day to do all the captainy stuff - with yet more coffee. Back in the room, he'd be checking his messages over dinner and then spending half the night at his console prepping his next project or going over edits that required his input. I always thought of myself as a pretty hard worker, but watching Matt do his thing made me exhausted.
Me and the XO made sure to drag Cap out to have dinner in the galley as often as possible. He'd gone through a lot of effort while I was in the hospital to make sure he connected with the team and I wasn't about to let him piss that away. Plus it got his nose out of his tablet for a few hours. I like my tech as much as the next guy - hell, probably more than most - but the captain took it to a whole different level. As a bonus, it was always interesting to watch him with the crew, the way he charmed them by just being himself. My skills trended toward machines and not people, so seeing him draw the others out and make it look effortless was fucking magic.
That night, the one when Matt asked me to move in with him, after I got done kissing him silly, he gave me this really odd look. "What are you feeling right now?" I asked him. I'd noticed him giving me that look a lot since my first night in the hospital and I wanted to find out what the hell it meant.
"I feel like champagne," he said.
"You want some champagne?" I didn't understand the terran fascination with drinking bubbly shit. "Oh yeah, that's what you dirt eaters use to celebrate."
"Dick," he responded affectionately, shoving at my shoulder. "And no, I don't
want
champagne; I
feel
like champagne. Like I'm all full of bubbles, just fizzing over with how happy I am." Oh. Well, that was different. It kind of made me feel a bit bubbly myself, hearing something like that. And yeah, I knew I needed to do something to figure out my feelings. That had been clear since the night I stood outside his door, worrying he might not let me in. It was our door now, and a hell of a lot had happened in the time between, but I was no closer to understanding that part of myself.
Sure, I may not be the smartest guy around, but I'm not stupid, and I was fully aware Matt wasn't going to wait around forever. He acted like he was okay with things how they were, like he didn't need me to say it back, but then there was that instant after he'd say those three fucking words where he'd hold his breath and I could feel him hoping. Each time when I didn't speak up, he'd exhale this little sigh that let me know I'd disappointed him again.
Then there was his interfering best friend. The XO had flat out told me to figure it out. I'll admit, after that kick in the ass, I did dedicate more of my energy to the issue. Not that I wasn't already working on it, but I kept making excuses to myself, too, about how I'd have more time after changing out the fuel core or once we'd left the Ring. Getting my face shoved in the fact that other people knew stuff about how things were between me and the captain - even if those "other people" was just Alix Li - well, that gave the whole deal a new sense of urgency.
I thought it would be easier if I made a game of it, asking Matt how he felt whenever I caught him looking at me in that certain way: his head tilted a bit, lips slightly parted, eyes all soft and kind of dreamy. Sometimes he'd give me a short answer - "happy" or "in love" - but other times he would get really descriptive. Then I'd compare that to how I was feeling, trying to see if anything matched at all. Yes, it made me happy to be around him and he was on my mind a lot when we weren't together, but I wasn't confident that qualified as love.
Unfortunately, though not really unpredictably, the whole thing backfired. Trying to judge my feelings based on how the captain described his was a recipe for failure. I ended up feeling more irritation than anything and then I would snap at Matt over the smallest shit. He gave me these wounded looks that only made me more angry. Not at him - no, it was never him pissing me off: it was me. I was frustrated this thing that everyone else found so simple was causing me so much grief, and then I'd go and hurt the person who meant more to me than anything and have yet another reason to be angry at myself. It went on like that for days. We always made up because, honestly, the bunks weren't big enough to sleep with someone you're trying not to touch, but I could tell my bullshit was taking a toll.
And then the XO stormed into the engine room one day and told me the captain was lying in bed, taken out by a migraine. I don't remember if I even said anything in response. I have no recollection of travelling the distance between engineering and the crew deck. I was looking at Li, listening to her say Matt was hurting, and then I was standing in the door to his -
our
- quarters, looking at the sheet outlining his hip. My view of his face was blocked by the table, so I couldn't tell if he was sleeping or not. The lights were turned down low and I became aware of how much illumination flooded into the room from the corridor behind me, even with my body blocking most of the doorway. Staying as quiet as possible, I stepped around the table and froze, wincing as the door hissed shut and I waited for my eyes to adjust.
A damp cloth was on the pillow next to Matt's face and I realized the XO must have wet it to cool his head. He had rolled onto his side while he slept, allowing it to fall off. Retrieving the washrag, I wet it again and replaced it on his forehead, taking a moment to brush my thumb lightly over the crease between his brows. The furrow disappeared, skin smoothing under my touch, and the captain even smiled a little in his sleep. Invisible bands tightened around my ribs, squeezing enough that I couldn't actually breathe for a bit.
I knew he hadn't been sleeping well recently, that my moodiness had been getting under his skin and keeping him up. He needed this sleep. Badly. So I just sat there, elbows on my knees, and dropped my head into my hands. Matt's breathing provided the soundtrack to uncounted rounds of self-recrimination, randomly interspersed with attempts to argue myself into some sort of coherence as far as my feelings went, these always derailed by worry about the cause of his headache. I was afraid that, after everything else, it would turn out I'd caused some deeper damage when I tackled him and his head bounced off the floor at the station.
Over and over I argued to myself that I loved him. I had to, right? What else could make me feel this way? But I couldn't know for sure. And, no matter how hard I tried, I couldn't find a way to get to that point. After everything else, I refused to tell him I felt that way if there was a chance I didn't. I would not put him through that. So each time, I argued myself right back out of it.
After an eternity of the same shit I'd been doing for tendays, Matt shifted a bit behind me and made a quiet noise. Glancing over my shoulder, I noticed he had dislodged the cloth again at some point. While he was still asleep, it seemed likely he wouldn't stay that way for long. Headache or no, I knew the captain, so I slipped out of the room and went to brew some coffee. I hadn't even made it back to the bed before he was stretching out an arm, demanding caffeination. I couldn't fight the smile - equal parts fondness and relief - that spread across my face when I saw him acting so, well,
him
.
It would be a lie if I said it was easy to keep the fear that had gripped me out of my voice when I asked about his headache. Learning migraines were common for him when he was younger stirred up a confusing emotional cocktail. The tension in my neck eased when I realized this meant the headache wasn't caused by a lingering issue from the attack on the Ring. Then the rest of it penetrated. That he hadn't been having migraines for a long time. That I had caused this one. Of course he didn't outright say that, but it was strongly implied. And he was right to hold me accountable. If I wasn't fucking everything up, this wouldn't have happened.