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The worst kind of days are usually preceded by rain.
That’s something a scientist might say, though you’re no scientist yourself. You’re a journalist; therefore, your profession has absolutely nothing to do with science. Either way, you’re pretty certain there must be at least one expert out there who would agree with you.
You'd checked the weather app on your phone the night before, hoping that somehow, by the time morning came and you had to get ready for work, the weather would clear up and a warm beam of sunshine would follow you on your way to the office.
When your alarm goes off at 7:30 a.m., with sleep still blurring the edges of your sight, you notice the soft patter of droplets on your bedroom window, and you can already tell those gray clouds portend a series of unfortunate events that will unfold during this rainy Wednesday.
Rain is no good. For different reasons, listed down below:
a) You don’t own a car, nor do you know how to drive one.
b) The boots you were gifted on your last birthday, the ones you use for the days when the city feels underwater, are supposed to be water-resistant, though they’ve betrayed you on several occasions.
c) It’s only a matter of time before your hair swells up because of all the humidity.
The worst thing is that some people, other human beings who breathe the same air as you, seem to enjoy these days. For motives you’ll never be able to comprehend, they look forward to them, gushing about the apparent charm and appeal of drizzle. Perhaps the government could use that eagerness to spot potential future criminals.
Lazily, you pull on several layers of clothing: a plain t-shirt, a sweater, and your trench coat. You choose a darker pair of jeans so that any rain-soaked patches won’t make you look like you’ve peed yourself, which has happened before. The temperature has dropped drastically while you were sleeping, and now every room in your apartment feels cold and uninviting as you gather your things.
You know for a fact that the second you step out of this building, you’ll feel like absolute crap. But you can’t stay home and avoid your responsibilities, because it turns out you certainly enjoy having Wi-Fi and food on your stomach at the end of a long day.
And those are things you wouldn’t be able to afford if you didn’t work, because they cost money. Lots of it. So, in the end, you have no option left but to be a functional adult and go to work, contributing to the lovely city of Metropolis by writing articles for a living.
This doesn’t mean that you hate your job. In fact, you love it. You love writing, for it’s the only thing that’s stayed constant in your whole life ever since you were a kid.
The culprit for your attitude is the rain. It makes you insufferable to be around. You're no stranger to your own moods. You do realize rainy days turn you into someone more volatile.
Yet clear skies are no different. You’ve been in a mood for… forever, actually. For the past year, at least. That’s what Jimmy and Lois say.
By the time you make it to the subway, the train you should’ve taken to be on time is already gone, your scarf smells funny, and Matthew’s standing there, just an inch away from your face.
Oh, good ol’ Matthew. A guy, maybe a couple of years older than you, who’s been trying to get your name, number, or even email address for the past few months. You see him every morning as you leave for work, and despite not succeeding in his task, he doesn’t seem to plan on giving up.
“Hi, beautiful.”
You glance to your left, not even bothering to turn your head to face him. “Matthew. If it isn’t another day of smelling your breath way too early in the morning.”
He ignores the part about his breath. Instead, he replies, “I remember telling you that you can just call me Matt.”
“That’s strange, because I remember telling you I’d never do that.”
It surprises you that he still thinks you’re playing hard to get, given it’s been four months and you’ve made it more than clear that you have no interest in him
He grins, his hands in his pockets. “I don’t believe I’ll ever get your sense of humor.”
“Of course you won’t. It’s reserved for highly clever individuals.”
“Gosh, you’re so mean.” This time, he stares ahead, sighing. “Have I ever told you I’m a sucker for these kinds of days?”
One of your eyelids begins twitching. “You’re kidding me, right?”
“You don’t like the rain?” His eyes sparkle with what could be described as amusement. “You know, opposites attract. It’s just inevitable.”
This is the kind of interaction you’re forced to endure before you’ve even had breakfast. You wish for the next train to derail and hit you with all its might.
· · ─ ·✶· ─ · ·
As you set foot in the Daily Planet’s lobby, the rain has evolved from harmless drizzle to complete downpour, the wind unhinged, having spent the last ten blocks trying to steal your umbrella from your own hands. It is now useless, along with your drenched coat and suspiciously squishy socks.
You’re the last one to manage to squeeze into the elevator, which is beyond packed. As you maneuver inside, you accidentally jab a woman’s leg with your umbrella handle, and she mutters something under her breath. Something that sounds a lot like a swear.
“Sorry,” you murmur, avoiding all possibilities of making eye contact with her, although you feel her unfaltering gaze the full thirty seconds it takes to reach your floor.
Holding your bag and umbrella to your chest, you make your way through the maze of desks, nodding your head at those who greet you. You peel off your coat, hanging it from the back of your chair, observing the tiny droplets that start to drip onto the carpet below. You search for your notebook, digging it out and letting out a breath of relief when you notice none of the pages have been damaged by water.
It’s only when you finally sit down that you let yourself close your eyes for a moment, folding your arms over your desk and resting your forehead against them. You can’t deny you feel miserable. You should’ve called in sick.
You feel the warmth of someone standing close to you, and you don’t need to look to know who it is. You’d recognize the scent of his cologne or the sound of his footsteps anywhere, though you really hope that doesn’t sound as weird out loud as it does in your head.
“Turn around, Kent. We’re closed today,” you mumble with your face still pressed to the desk, voice muffled into the crook of your arm.
“You look like you’ve just got out of the shower,” Clark shoots back, the faint hint of a smile in his tone.
That’s when you decide to stop hiding, straightening your back to squint up at him. You should’ve kept your head down: he looks perfect. His hair is neat, his suit unbothered by the rain. You huff when you notice your reflection on his glasses. “How are you… dry?”
“I used my umbrella. They do serve a purpose.”
“Well, mine—” you snap between gritted teeth, ducking under your desk to retrieve the ruined thing and holding it up to shove it into his face, “—has decided to stop functioning properly today.”
He lowers your hand, his forehead crinkling. “Have you been nice to him?”
“Him? Are you personifying my umbrella?”
“I have a spare at home. If you want it, I could bring it tomorrow,” he suggests, changing the subject, and he can’t quite look you in the eye without averting his gaze.
This is where you draw the line. Forcing yourself to act politely, you say, “Thank you, but I don’t need it. I’ll fix mine. I’m sure it’ll probably stop raining in a couple of hours.”
A crack of thunder rattles the windows. Behind you, Jimmy nearly jumps to his feet, startled, drawing in a long breath.
“You okay, buddy?” Clark asks.
“Sure,” Jimmy answers, tugging at his shirt collar. “I’ve never been better.”
Clark raises his eyebrows at him, not convinced, but chooses not to press him. He shifts his weight from one foot to another and clasps his hands behind his back, returning his focus to you. Sometimes, he stares at you in such a way that makes you feel you’re being examined under the lens of a microscope. “Have you already had breakfast?”
“No.”
“Want me to—”
You cut him off before he goes any further. “Clark, I’m fine. Save your kindness for someone who truly wants it.”
His lips form a straight line, and without saying anything else, he jams his hands into his front pockets, walking away to his own desk. Maybe the tone you used wasn’t the appropriate one, but shortly after, you shake that feeling of guilt off.
On nights when you can’t sleep, or on certain days when your eyes keep finding their way back to him when they shouldn’t, you often wonder how he can always seem willing to help. Is it performative? Would he like to be voted as the best employee of the century?
But deep down, you know the reason behind his infinite generosity. It has a name, which starts with an S and rhymes with man.
Let’s put a pin on that. You’ll get back to that later.
“You’re gonna turn that poor man into a villain,” Jimmy says, his voice barely above a whisper. You have to crane your neck to get a look at his face, and even so, you stifle a laugh at his expression. He seems genuinely worried. “I mean it. He’ll have an identity crisis, and it’ll be awful.”
“I think you forget he’s a grown man.” You flick your fingers across the keyboard, checking your inbox. “Don’t worry, Jimmy. He’ll survive.”
“You’re vile.”
You spin around in your chair, scoffing. “Come on! Me? Vile? For not worshipping the ground he walks on like everybody else?”
Jimmy throws his arms out, seemingly defeated. “That’s because he’s the nicest guy to ever exist!”
“I just don’t want him to be nice to me. That’s all.” You scrunch up your face, your jaw tightening. “I don’t hate him, but that doesn’t mean I have to like him.”
It’s hard to explain your relationship with Clark, especially to Jimmy, who’s been his best friend for a while and would go to the moon and back for him. He raises his palms, bowing his head. “I feel like a child of divorce.”
“What a weird use of that concept. We were never together.”
“Well, almost.”
“No.”
“Technically, you went on one date.”
Returning your attention to your computer, you rejoice without emotion, “Unlike him, I did show up to the restaurant.”
That appears to be enough to shut him up, and he goes back to work.
The rest of the day unfolds quite easily. Nothing remarkable happens, at least not until you’re on your lunch break, sipping from your water bottle as Lois helps you polish the wording on an article you’ve been working on for a week now. Without knowing when, you two had fallen into a routine where you became each other's proofreaders.
You’d started the draft on paper for some reason you can’t remember. She scribbles in the margins next to your older notes from days ago, biting the end of her pen as she frowns at one word you’ve underlined.
You’re about to finish your salad when something exciting finally occurs on this rainy Wednesday’s workday.
One of the interns is carrying what looks like an entire week’s worth of paper and folders to Perry’s office, and he’s aiming to do it in a single trip. You watch as the tower teeters dangerously, and then, since it was bound to happen, it collapses.
You can’t say you didn’t see that coming. Why didn’t he think twice before trying to carry a stack almost as tall as Clark?
It’s like conjuring him with a thought. One second, the mess exists, and the next, Clark’s kneeling beside the flustered intern, helping him collect the disaster, a gentle smile on his face. Chaos, you've noticed, seems to have a way of summoning him.
“I’m such an idiot,” the boy breathes, rising to his feet.
“Hey, no big deal,” Clark retorts, patting him on the back. “I’ve been on a good streak lately, but this happens to me weekly. Perry won’t mind as long as you get them to him in one piece.”
Clearly enamored with Clark, the intern nods fervently and hugs the papers to his chest before hurrying off and disappearing.
You finish chewing a particularly salty piece of lettuce, and afterwards, because you don’t always let your better judgment catch up to your mouth, you hear yourself saying, “Doesn’t he get tired of playing the part of the upstanding citizen?”
The room goes dead silent. You’ve seen this happen in movies, the uncanny stillness where you could hear a pin drop. At first, he doesn’t move. His mouth hangs slightly open, his cheeks adopting a sudden flush. But the moment he seems to come back to real life, he can’t do anything but blink at you, appearing embarrassed. “Excuse me?”
If Lois’ panicked expression is anything to go by, things aren’t going that well. “Hey, guys, why don’t we—”
“I was just thinking out loud, Kent,” you interrupt her, dumping your empty salad container and closing the distance between you. “I can’t wrap my head around someone acting like they’re on stage all the damn time.”
“You really think I wake up every day and put on an act?”
“I don’t know, you tell me.” You take another step, practically looming over him. “I wonder if your modest decency will ever run out.”
His nostrils flare with each of your words. In that split second, you realize you haven’t been this close in a while. “Maybe if you tried being decent for more than five minutes, you’d see it’s not an act. It’s only called being nice.”
If Jimmy hadn’t materialized out of thin air to separate you, you believe your noses would’ve touched. “Are you seriously fighting?”
“We’re not fighting,” Clark shoots back.
“It certainly looks like it,” Jimmy says.
“Hold on, don’t interrupt the office sweetheart.” You poke Clark’s chest with your finger, feeling nothing but hardness. “I’d love to know more of your thoughts on my attitude. Would you do me a favor and lecture me after work?”
“Well, starting with that sarcasm of yours—”
“I have an idea!” Lois chimes in, and the three of you turn around to see her. She’s smiling. “Jimmy, I need your approval first.”
“Yes, m’lady. I live to serve.” He bows theatrically and makes his way to her. She puts her hands around her mouth and whispers something in his ear, and an almost cartoonish grin stretches across his face.
He covers Lois’ forehead with his palm. “We must protect your brain. It’s one of the last treasures we have as a country.” Then he flicks his eyes again to Clark and you, enjoying himself, and the sight alone makes you feel uneasy.
You’re starting to believe that in the same way bad days follow rain, terrible plans are always preceded by Jimmy’s smirk.
“Will you let me do the honors?” he asks Lois, and the instant she gives him a thumbs-up, he steps forward. “It’s become clear that you have strong opinions about kindness, or the lack of it. Which is why we’re proposing a bet, starting now. It’s called the Good Samaritan Challenge.”
Clark narrows his eyes. “The what?”
“The Good Samaritan Challenge, pal. Are you even listening?” Jimmy repeats, jutting out his hip. He quickly tells Lois to bring a whiteboard, and she’s off like a shot. “Whoever is objectively kinder during the next thirty calendar days wins.”
“That’s ridiculous,” you say under your breath.
Lois elbows you playfully as she comes back with the whiteboard. “Is it?” She raises her brows, handing the board to Jimmy.
He grabs a marker, draws two columns, and writes your name on one and Clark’s on the other. “Here’s the thing. You’ll both try to be the better person for a whole month. Lois and I, as the judges, will track your good deeds. But no cynical motives, alright? It all has to come from the heart.”
Clark seems to be weighing his options when you speak again. “What are the stakes?”
His shoulders look visibly tense. “Wait, you’re agreeing to this?”
“Depends on what each of you wants as the prize,” Lois answers in response to your question, resting her elbows on her desk and propping her chin upon her palms.
You glance at Clark. “If I win, I get an exclusive interview with Superman. You’d have to get it for me, of course, since you’re the only one who’s ever spoken a word to him.”
It's no coincidence you're asking to meet with Metropolis's biggest hero. You watch him flinch, tongue-tied, as he clears his throat and rubs the back of his neck.
Again, you know exactly what you’re asking for, and the reason why.
“And what about you, Clark?” Lois asks.
His lashes flutter together as he considers any possible answer. “You’d have to proofread all my articles for three months,” he explains, fully facing you. “I’m guessing you won’t mind the extra work.”
“Don’t get too excited, because it won’t happen.”
“It will.”
“It won’t.”
“Trust me, it will.”
“Shut up.”
“Guys?” Jimmy intervenes, waving the marker.
“What?” You and Clark answer in unison, and you roll your eyes at him.
Trying to hide his smile, Jimmy concludes, “Shake on it to seal the deal.”
You extend your hand immediately, scrutinizing him with undivided attention. He spares Lois and Jimmy one last look before taking it, his grip firm.
“Your hands are so sweaty.”
“What? No!” you reply, your nose wrinkling. “Yours are.”
“Yeah, sure.”
Leaning in, you murmur your next words low enough so only he can hear them: “You better get ready for that interview.”
He chokes on his own words. “You’re—”
“I have so much to ask him.” You’re genuinely grinning now. “So much to ask you.”
May the games begin, and let the kindest person win.
· · ─ ·✶· ─ · ·
The café door chimes as Lois steps inside, scanning the crowded morning scene for you among the swarm of people.
It’s the day after the bet began, and you still have fifteen minutes before the clock strikes nine. She spots you and heads your way, placing her bag on the chair beside you and reaching into her coat pocket, but then she notices the coffee already waiting on the table.
“I took care of it,” you say, pushing the cup toward her.
Looking visibly pleased, she wraps her hands around it, sitting down by your side. “Wow. Is this your first act of kindness for the day?”
“I thought an old man was lost on the subway, so I tried talking to him. He must’ve thought I was trying to steal his wallet.”
Lois exhales a small laugh, her eyes crinkling at the corners. “This could be fun, you know?”
You slouch deeper into your seat. “Right now, I care about winning. I can have fun in other ways.”
“You could even see where it goes,” she says casually, not missing a beat.
“Where does what go?”
She shrugs, as if the answer’s obvious. “The thing with you and Clark. It’s—”
“Okay. Stop right there,” you warn, holding up a hand. “You go any further and I’m taking your coffee back.”
Taking a long sip, she shuts her eyes close, then opens them again, her brows snapping together. “I’m just saying that the two of you might finally learn to get along. Think of poor Jimmy and me.”
Your gaze lands on her cup, half-wishing you’d saved a few sips of your own drink instead of downing it in the blink of an eye before she arrived. Your hand instinctively searches your bag for some chewing gum.
She studies you in silence, leaning back. “Is this about that failed date you had? You hate him for standing you up?”
You tilt your head, clicking your tongue once your fingers brush the last piece of gum you had left. You unwrap it, popping it into your mouth. “First of all, I wouldn’t consider that a date,” you say, lips pressed into a slight frown. “And why do you guys keep saying I hate him? That’s a strong feeling.”
There’s palpable hesitation in her speech. “This is starting to sound a lot like gaslighting.”
“Last time I checked, I wasn’t a man.”
She crosses her legs, setting her cup on the table. “Ha ha. You’re so funny.”
“Don’t be sarcastic. Leave that to me, will you?”
“You do realize you have a talent for dodging questions.”
“It’s part of the full package,” you say, standing up and grabbing your belongings. Lois shakes her head in your direction, blowing out her cheeks, and you decide to give in. “Look, I’m not a resentful person. This isn’t about that night. We don’t get along because we’re too… different.” You offer her your hand and smile when she takes it, helping her up. “He finds beauty in everything, doesn’t think twice before trusting someone. I’d never be able to do that.”
Lois drops the subject. On your way out, after dropping a generous tip into the glass jar by the register, you hold the door open for her.
“I could get used to this,” she says, and your mouth twitches, giving her a half-smile.
At the Daily Planet, you both head toward the elevators, and as Lois steps inside, Clark appears behind you, looking agitated.
“Hey,” he greets you, straightening his glasses with one hand and gesturing toward the elevator. “After you.”
The fucker.
You mimic his gesture. “No, please. After you.”
“I said it first.”
“Too bad.”
“Guys…” Lois tries without much luck.
Clark’s voice is still thick with sleep when he speaks. “Would you please be a darling and go first?”
“Tell you what,” you say, inching closer and toying with the end of his tie, inspecting the fabric. “Nothing would make me happier than walking in after you.”
You don’t know if you’ve exhausted him or if he just doesn’t want to be late, but he eventually sighs and steps inside. You position yourself beside Lois, and she ends up squeezed between the two of you.
“Morning, Lois,” Clark says.
“Morning, Clark,” she manages, stealing a glance at you. “You know, someone surprised me with coffee today.”
His mouth snaps shut, and he tugs at the sleeves of his suit. “That’s my thing.” He turns on his side, staring at you. “What’ll be your next move? Will you start wearing glasses as well? Just to make sure we match.”
“Oh, please. I’m not copying you.” The doors open and you’re first to exit, tipping your chin up. “It’s called being nice.”
“I am nice,” Clark blurts, trailing after you. “In fact, I’m nicer than you.”
“I wasn’t aware of this competitive side of yours.”
“Let’s just say I had time to think about it last night.”
“You thought about me before falling asleep?” You let out a feigned gasp. “That’s so cute!”
Jimmy appears in the frame to throw an arm around each of your shoulders. “I could hear your voices from the bathroom.”
You detach yourself from the two men, pointing your index finger at the shorter one. “I bought Lois coffee and let Clark go first in the elevator. Write that down on the board.”
“You basically forced me.”
“Drop it, Clark.”
· · ─ ·✶· ─ · ·
Well, how about this way? I love that you get cold when it's seventy-one degrees out. I love that it takes you an hour and a half to order a sandwich. I love that you get a little crinkle above your nose when you're looking at me like I'm nuts. I love that after I spend the day with you, I can still smell your perfume on my clothes. And I love that you are the last person I want to talk to before I go to sleep at night. And it's not because I'm lonely, and it's not because it's New Year's Eve. I came here tonight because when you realize you want to spend the rest of your life with somebody, you want the rest of your life to start as soon as possible.
You muffle a squeak against the cushion you’ve smashed to your face. You could watch When Harry Met Sally a hundred times, and a hundred times this scene would get you. You could quote it word for word, the moment he finally confesses his love for her.
And then they share a loving kiss. They live happily together after, as in all the rom-coms you like to revisit once in a while. You’re certain there must be tears shimmering in your eyes, for they sting just enough. The more you think about it, the more convinced you are that no one will ever love you like that.
It’s undeniable that this belief has turned you into a bitter individual. You used to have hope. You weren’t like this before, when you were younger. At least not a few years ago, when the idea of loving someone and being loved in return still seemed like a thing you could attain if you worked hard enough for it.
Adulthood, in your experience, has been plagued by hostility and disillusionment. Were it possible, you’d have a word with the you from ten years ago, the one who believed that by now she’d be in love and planning a future with a man worth her time.
But you’d only laugh at her in the same way that an adult laughs when an infant talks about unicorns and talking animals. Because she, or you, for that matter, probably doesn’t know you spend most of your nights alone. And since the news would make her cry, you’d also have to hug her.
The last time you attempted to open your heart to somebody else was a little over a year ago, and it didn’t turn out well.
The day you started working at the Daily Planet, since both of your eyes functioned perfectly, you developed an instant crush on Clark Kent. The real question, you thought, was who wouldn't? He was the most handsome man you'd ever seen, and still is to this day. Maybe that's the saddest part of the whole thing.
Your crush wasn’t just about his looks. You were drawn to his clumsiness, the cadence of his voice, and the way he’d ask if he could be of help. He’d buy you coffee first thing every morning without fail, back when you still accepted it. It would be steaming, and he'd always say, "Be careful. It's really hot." You thought you’d never grow tired of hearing those four simple words.
He made terrible jokes during lunch, and you were the only one who’d laugh, solely because he was the one telling them. If you struggled to navigate the newspaper’s website, he’d come up behind you, lean close, and explain each step patiently. His hand would find its place on your desk for balance, his warm breath would graze your skin, and you wouldn’t listen to a word he said.
There were even days when you pretended not to know how the printer worked. It was a treasure to have him that close, and Clark never questioned it. He was always there, and he’d never make you feel stupid for needing his help.
Around three months in, Lois started asking more questions about your personal life. “So… do you have a boyfriend?”
“Oh, no,” you said, downing what remained of your water bottle. “I’m single.”
“Great, because you know who else is single?” She made a short pause. “Clark.”
Her words of encouragement were the final push. You asked him out, and it was the most ungraceful ramble of your entire life. The memory still plays out in your head, a vivid reel of your voice shaking and your eyes fixed on the floor as you stumbled over each word.
It happened during one particular Thursday afternoon, while the two of you were standing by the printer. “I was thinking that tomorrow we could go out, just the two of us. If you want. I mean—if you’re not busy or—”
He gapes at you, his answer nearly written all over his face. At last, he smiles, and then says, “I’d really like that.”
You knew you'd spend the next twenty-four hours in a state of total anxiety. The world as you once knew it had changed for good. You used some of the money you were saving up to buy a dress you felt pretty in. In a moment of madness, you'd even used some of your savings to buy a dress you felt pretty in.
Ten minutes early for your reservation that Friday, you sat alone at the restaurant. You couldn't bring yourself to order, instead staring at your phone, terrified of the blank screen.
With every swing of the door, your heart tightened in your chest. Each new face that entered, you desperately hoped it would be Clark and not a stranger.
Fifteen minutes passed, which later bled into twenty, and then thirty agonizing minutes had gone by. There was a waitress, a girl perhaps younger than you, who kept circling by your table.
“Still waiting for someone?” she asked.
Suddenly, you felt embarrassed. “He should be here any minute now.”
At some point, your stomach had begun to rumble, and that was the exact moment you read his name on your phone, answering so fast you nearly dropped it. “Clark?”
The line crackled with static, and you could barely hear him over a tumultuous roar. “I’m so sorry,” he said, nearly shouting and sounding breathless on the other end of the line. “There’s this thing I have to take care of—I can’t—”
“Are you okay?” you asked, starting to worry. “Where are you?”
“I wish I could explain, but—” A sudden rush of air swallowed his words. “I won’t make it tonight.”
Your eyes scanned the restaurant, taking in the sea of couples laughing over dinner. “Okay. That’s fine. Thank you for letting me know.”
“I’m—” he began, but to your surprise, the sentence was cut short by the call ending.
Utterly defeated, you clutched your phone, observing as his name faded from your lock screen with every passing second. You remained seated for another five minutes, trying to conjure a believable excuse for the waitress before you left.
She ended up returning to your table. “Will you be ordering anything tonight?”
It seemed she didn't need much to grasp what had happened. When you got home, you peeled off the dress, folded it carefully, and put it back in the store bag. To keep from seeing it, you hid it under the couch, then collapsed onto the cushions, letting out a contained breath.
I should’ve stayed home, you told yourself. Your bed wouldn't have stood you up, neither would your couch or your phone. You opened social media, searching for a distraction, something simple, like videos of dogs trying to talk with their overreacting families.
What you found was starkly different from your initial vision. It was a video of Superman, flying high in the sky while holding a phone to his ear. Seconds later, the phone tragically slipped from his hand, plunging into a river below. The video had millions of views and had been posted less than an hour ago. The comment section was full of users drawing their own conclusions.
d1stalker: GET OFF THAT DAMN PHONE 😭 how is he literally flying and talking at the same time? multitasking king
elysianymph: i’d love to know who he was talking to… a girl can only dream
dayapad: guys don’t worry IT WAS ME ON THE OTHER END 🥀 he’s safe now. just tucked him in and we’re about to watch a movie (i scream as they drag me back to my room in the asylum)
redgie-69: now he needs to do an ad por iphone or sth. superman get that bag !!!
Unable to stop yourself, you clicked the video again, pausing and rewinding it. The wind was a deafening roar in the background, and you couldn't make out half of what the bystanders were saying. With the line cutting and his phone falling into the river, the video's timestamp was a perfect match for the time he had called you.
Realization hit you like a freight train. Fuck. That was Clark. Clark was… Superman.
A whirlwind of feelings coexisted within you, but none was strong enough to snap you out of the trance you were in. You kept watching those fifteen seconds over and over again, replaying the memory of the call and his exact words.
There had always been something about him that was slightly off, and not precisely in a bad way. You'd always chalked it up to him being dorky and a little shy, traits you didn't mind in the slightest. But now, after that footage, you couldn't bring yourself to simply unsee it.
You recalled a specific incident that had taken place a few weeks ago. Jimmy, insisting Clark would be the perfect actor for a Superman biopic, had reached to pull off his glasses. With grace, Clark had swatted his hand away, claiming they were too fragile to be passed around like a toy.
You knew better, knew exactly why he reacted the way he did. And, God help you, did that make you like him even more?
That night, you sent him two text messages, having momentarily forgotten he wouldn’t be able to read them.
I think I understand why you didn’t show up tonight.
And shortly after:
I saw the video. You look good in blue.
By the time Monday came around, you’d already picked all your nails. You arrived at the office earlier than usual, and his desk was still empty, but you kept checking the elevator every time it stopped at your floor.
He was nodding good morning at someone when you saw him, and you didn’t hesitate. You strode straight up to him, took his hand between yours, and whispered: “We need to talk.”
“Uh—hi?”
“Now.”
You led him down the hall and into the break room, closing the door behind you once the two of you were inside and turning the lock.
“Is everything—”
“You’re Superman,” you said, not even bothering to mince your words.
Clark looked like he’d seen a ghost, pure anxiety brewing in his eyes. You could imagine the gears turning in his head as he remained silent, lost in thought.
“Cat got your tongue?”
His gaze darted to every object in the room but you. “I—I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
“Don’t lie to me. I saw the video, Clark. You called me while flying, and you dropped your phone midair.”
He was breathing differently now, as if he was attempting to calm himself.
“Does Jimmy know? Lois?”
That question made him look up. “No,” he said. “No one knows, except… well, you. I didn’t want you to find out this way.” His eyes bore into yours, his mouth set in a hard line. “I’m sorry I stood you up, but I heard this explosion on the east side, and I couldn’t ignore it.” Clark’s face reddened the more he said. “And then I dropped my phone. I went back for it later, but I couldn’t find it.”
Recognition settled over you at his words. “I’m not mad at you,” you assured him, giving a nod. The way his brows knitted burned a hole through your heart. “Would you maybe want to reschedule our date?”
The silence between you deepened, making your smile fade off of your face as the tension in the room thickened.
“I—I mean, if that’s something you still want,” he managed, the tone of his voice betraying him. “I don’t know if—I mean, I do want to, but—I wouldn’t want things to be complicated for you and me.”
Were you being friend-zoned? “Right.”
He runs a hand through his hair, getting more notoriously verbose by the minute. “It’s just that, now that you know, I don’t want to put you in danger. And I’m not sure it’d be fair to ask—”
“Okay,” you cut him short. “So what you're saying is that we should just leave it, then.”
“Wait—”
“We can just stay colleagues, if that’s easier.”
He seemed taken aback by your resoluteness. “Is that what you want?”
It wasn’t, but either way, you smiled. “Yes. That’d be better. We shouldn’t ruin what we have.”
You could’ve sworn he was just about to contradict you, but nothing came out of his mouth. Reaching for the door, you unlocked it, and he didn’t seem to be planning on following you. You cast him a glance over your shoulder before saying, “I promise I won’t say anything.”
Having fled the break room, you thought you might feel better, more professional even, but as you sat back down at your desk, your insides were turning into knots.
When Lois and Jimmy showed up beside you, eager for updates, you gave them a breathy laugh, which was meant to sound casual. “Guys, there wasn’t a date to begin with.”
“What?” Lois whispered harshly. “Why not?”
“He had to go to Kansas,” you explained, the lie feeling foreign on your tongue. “His parents needed him there, so he left Friday evening.”
“Is everything okay now?” Jimmy asked.
“Oh, yeah. It wasn’t a big deal. But we talked, and we agreed to stay friends. It’ll be for the best.”
Lois studied you a second longer than necessary, her gaze narrowing as if she could hear what you weren’t saying. You assured them both you were fine, that there was no drama between the two of you, and that this was the smartest, most mature decision you and Clark could’ve made. You just hoped they would believe you.
What shocked you the most was that he’d looked so nervous, maybe even more than usual. If he hadn’t wanted to go out with you, he could’ve just said so when you asked him out. But Clark, always the sweetheart, probably hadn’t wanted to hurt your feelings. It was funny, considering he’d managed that anyway.
Was it stupid to think he might’ve liked you back? Maybe you’d been seeing things that weren’t actually there. Maybe you’d overanalyzed every smile, every gentle gesture, every moment your world seemed to spin faster just because he was in the same room as you.
It made sense: someone who wants to be loved will look for it everywhere, even in places it doesn’t exist.
From that moment on, you stopped looking for his eyes when he walked past your desk. You declined his offers to grab you coffee because his gentleness felt like charity, and you wanted no part of it.
Back to the present. Enough of your sad memories. The credits of the movie are still rolling, but you shut the laptop, getting up and stretching. In the bathroom, you brush your teeth while staring at your reflection, and once you’re in bed, you pull the covers all the way up to your chest.
You’re choosing the fantasy you’ll think about tonight to fall asleep when you hear the rhythmic sound of your neighbor’s headboard rocking against the wall.
You’d run into her in the elevator earlier today, and she’d mentioned her long-distance boyfriend was coming over for the week. You hear her laugh, then his, alongside other noises you won’t try to dissect.
The walls in this building are paper-thin, and on any other occasion, you would’ve grabbed the first thing within reach to knock on the wall. But you won’t do that tonight, not because you can’t, but because you don’t want to. You stare at the ceiling, thinking they deserve these kinds of moments after being apart for so long.
Plus, it’s only a week. Just because you’re not getting laid doesn’t mean the rest of the world should stop having sex out of pity, so you turn onto your side, pull the covers up over your ear, and decide to sleep. It turns out that kindness can also sound like silence.
· · ─ ·✶· ─ · ·
It’s been two weeks since the bet started, and you’ve come to discover that complimenting people is a good way to earn points, especially if you deliver them in public for everyone to hear.
“Lois, I love your blazer,” you say as she walks past your desk one morning.
She stops mid-stride, smiling at you. “Thank you. It’s thrifted.”
You’ve also made a habit of stapling Jimmy’s copies before he gets to them. “I think somebody wants to win,” he notes, watching you finish his stack.
“You would too if interviewing Superman was on the line.”
“Well, you better keep it up, because you’re still behind.”
Safe to say you take that personally. Later that day, Lois gives you a point when she catches you holding the door open for nearly ten people in a row. Clark earns another when he finds someone’s missing phone after searching for fifteen straight minutes.
Just to be clear, you were also looking for it. He just happened to be the one who found it first. But yes, you’ve been trying lately, and Clark notices.
Though today you’re moving more slowly because of a headache that has settled behind your eyes. You spend most of the morning at your desk, head bent while typing out emails, but you’re forced to look up when a cup of coffee lands beside your keyboard.
Your first instinct is to say no. Politely, of course, because of the bet. You haven’t accepted anything from him in a long time.
He places something else down: an aspirin. “It’s 2025. We have advanced medicine to ease your suffering.”
“Are you that desperate to win?” you ask, resting your chin on your palm.
Clark snorts. “What would you like my answer to be?”
You drop the subject, accepting both things and picking up the coffee. “If I kindly take this coffee, would that earn me a point?”
“That wouldn’t make any sense.”
“Then I don’t want it.”
“Half a point?”
“We’ve got a deal.” You take a trial sip, tasting its flavor and muffling a satisfied sound. “God, it’s really good. Thanks. How much was it?”
He shakes his head. “Forget about it.”
“Hey, no. I want to pay you for it.”
“I’m sorry, I don’t think I can hear you,” he says, walking backwards and away from you.
“Asshole.”
“What did you just say?”
“That you look nice today,” you admit instead, folding your hands on your lap. “I like your shirt.”
It’s a plain one, honestly. Nothing special, but it still looks good on him. He glances down at his clothes, the corners of his mouth lifting. “How nice of you to say that. You don’t look so bad yourself.”
· · ─ ·✶· ─ · ·
So apparently, you and Clark are starting to get along.
It’s easier if you hide behind the bet, because you can be decent to each other while racking up points. What’s so bad about it? Yet you can’t ignore the fact that you kind of enjoy being like this with him, despite the whole challenge finishing in less than two weeks.
Clark: Don’t forget Jimmy’s birthday tomorrow.
You groan around a mouthful of apple, cursing your poor memory
You: Fuckkkkkkkkkkkkkk
Clark: I knew it. See, I’m that nice. I could’ve chosen not to tell you.
You: That would’ve made you a prick
Clark: You’re right, but now owe me one.
You: I could bake him a cake… or cupcakes??? Idk
Clark: I’d go with the cake. Just imagine Lois and Jimmy giving you ten points for it.
Pressing your thumb against your mouth, you gnaw at it, holding your breath as you type a message.
You: We can make it five and five if you help me
You put your phone down, covering it with a cushion, but the moment it buzzes again, you snatch it back.
Clark: Sounds fair, though I’ve never baked anything from scratch before.
You: I’ve got the perfect recipe
Clark: Are we having dinner as well? I could bring some takeout.
You can’t help but re-read that text too many times.
You: Sure, whatever you want
Clark: Chinese?
You: Yuppp but please hurry up because I’m starving
He asks for your address, and twenty minutes later, he’s knocking at your door, a plastic takeout bag swinging from one hand. He loosens his tie the moment he’s inside, shrugging off his coat and rolling up his sleeves
“So…,” he trails off, pacing around the living room, “you’re in charge tonight.”
You suggest eating first, otherwise, the food will go cold. While you set the table, Clark turns on the TV and lets it run in the background. As expected, you mostly talk about work. Does this count as a date? You’re not sure.
The first thing you ask him to do is to preheat the oven, and he obeys without a word. Your kitchen isn’t big enough for two people, and if anything, Clark’s towering height only makes it more difficult. His elbows constantly bump yours, and he apologizes every single time.
While you handle the measuring of ingredients, he takes the whisk. It seems the Man of Steel has no coordination when it comes to baking. He’s hyper-focused on not pouring the whole bottle of vanilla extract, tongue peeking out slightly as he pours. You can’t resist the temptation, so you give in to it and blow a puff of flour into his face.
His right profile is now covered in white, and he blinks rapidly, nudging his face against his shoulder. “It got in my eye.”
“It didn’t. I’m right here, remember?”
Wide-eyed and frozen in place, Clark stares at your head. “What’s that on your hair?”
“There’s nothing on my—”
He dips his fingers into the flour bag while you aren’t looking and flicks a pinch at you. A malicious laugh bubbles in his throat as he takes in the sight of you, frowning and crossing your arms.
“Now we’re even,” he says, waggling his eyebrows.
Afterward, you pour the liquid batter into a prepared pan, smoothing the top. You put it into the oven, finding Clark scraping the bowl with a spoon, licking it with pure contentment and savoring the remnants. There’s a small dot of batter near the edge of his mouth, which he doesn’t seem to notice.
“Clark, there’s—” You point to your own mouth, hoping he’ll mimic you.
But he doesn’t get the hint, putting down the bowl instead. “What?”
You sigh, taking a step toward him and wiping your thumb across the corner of his plump lips. He stops breathing in that moment, and so do you. You clean your finger on the edge of a dirty kitchen towel, then ask, “Can you wipe the counter while I make the frosting?”
He looks astonished. “I can—Sure. I’ll do it.”
Neither of you utters another word for a couple of minutes, focusing on your respective tasks. After testing that the cake was done, you take it out of the oven, unmolding it onto a rack to cool.
Clark plops down on the couch, covering his eyes with his forearm. “We can’t decorate it yet, right?”
“No. We have to wait, or the frosting will melt.”
“I’m so tired,” Clark says, yawning, and then his contagious yawn makes you do the same.
“I didn’t realize it was this late.” You sit on the opposite side of the couch, unlocking your phone. “I’ll put an alarm. We can take a twenty-minute nap, and then we finish it.”
His eyelids are already drooping, and he murmurs, “Just twenty minutes.”
You struggle to find a comfortable position to fall asleep in. Normally, you’d stretch out fully, but now you can’t, and you blame the giant sitting next to you. By the time you drift off, you swear you can hear him snoring just a little.
The alarm went off twenty minutes later, but neither of you stirred. You only woke up to switch sides, blocking the intrusive light from the curtains. Your eyes opened just long enough to see Clark, still in the same position as before, his mouth slightly parted and his hair a beautiful mess.
The cake.
“Clark!” You bolt upright, almost jumping to your feet. You touched his shoulder, shaking him. “Wake up. We overslept.”
He rubs his eyes, huffing. “What time is it?”
“We have… twenty minutes before we need to leave.”
Both of you get to work. Clark retrieves the frosting from the fridge and tries to help you spread it on the cake, but it ends up looking less like a smooth layer and more like a lumpy hill.
“Oh, God. I hope the cake isn’t dry.”
“It looks good,” he says, admiring it from a distance. “At least from here.”
You melt some dark chocolate in the microwave. It’s surprisingly thick, and you grab a fork, trying to write Happy Birthday Jimmy across the top. The letters are wobbly and melted into one another, but it’s the thought that counts. You grab the single birthday candle you always saved for such occasions, placing it in the center.
Clark hovers just behind your shoulder. “It’s… definitely abstract.”
You glance down at your clothes from the night before, realizing you didn’t even get a chance to shower. “Shit. Do I smell?”
His expression softens, his gaze landing on your head. “You don’t, but you still have flour on your hair.” He brushes his fingers through your hair with the delicacy you’d expect from a man like him.
The pad of his thumb grazes your hairline, and your breath catches in your chest. He pulls back abruptly, grasping what he’s doing a second too late. “There you go.”
Scrambling to get ready, you transfer the cake to a cardboard pastry box, securing it. “Okay, subway. Now.”
As Clark and you rush through the station, you clasp the cake box in your hands. The platform’s already crowded with people. You steal a quick glance at Clark, catching the ghost of a smile on his lips.
“I asked you if you had a boyfriend like, ten times, and you always said no.”
It’s a pity you recognize that voice. Matthew appears at your side, glaring at Clark, his eyes darting from him to you. The look on his face is one of total disappointment.
“He’s not—”
“I’m sorry, who are you?” Clark asks, subtly stepping forward to angle his body between the two of you.
“Matt.” He extends his hand in offering, but Clark silently refuses to take it, staring at him. “I just—sorry, dude. I had no idea she was taken.”
You wave your hand at them. “Hello. I’m right here.”
“Honey, you’ve never mentioned him before,” Clark says, draping his arm around your shoulders.
How smooth. “Well, honey, I must’ve forgotten,” you rejoice, leaning into his solid frame, playing the part of the loving girlfriend.
The screeching noise of the train marks the end of that conversation as the doors slide open. Just before the rush of people floods the car, Clark grabs your hand, tugging you inside, and Matthew’s left standing behind on the platform.
Even after finding two empty seats, he doesn’t let go of your hand, and neither do you.
“May I ask who that guy was?” His eyes gloss over the cake box above your legs.
“A not-so-secret admirer. He’s asked me out a few times, but hasn’t had much luck.”
“He seems persistent.”
“Trust me. He is.”
“I hope you don’t mind what I did back there,” he says, lowering his voice. “I thought it was the right thing to do.”
“It helped.” You squeeze his hand before gently dropping it. “Thank you.”
You make it to the office just before nine, taking the stairs because the elevator’s far too packed. Now it’s Clark’s turn to carry the cake, and he trails after you with precise steps.
To say Jimmy’s thrilled at the surprise would be an understatement. The corners of his eyes crinkle as he opens the box. “Holy crap! You baked this?”
“Yes,” you both say at once.
“I love it so much!” He takes the cake out of the box, looking at it from a different angle. “Can someone please take a picture of me with it? I feel like I’ve just met my firstborn.”
Lois materializes out of nowhere, trying to analyze the situation. “Why are you two wearing the same clothes from yesterday?” She lets a beat slide, then adds: “And why did you arrive together?”
“Well—the thing is—”
“It’s a long story,” Clark jumps in.
“But we have all the time in the world,” Lois shoots back.
And that’s how you know you’re trapped.
· · ─ ·✶· ─ · ·
Only a week before the bet ends. There’s a guy with too much gel in his hair lingering a few feet from your desk. You’ve seen him around. He’s one of the new hires who writes for the newspaper’s column on culture and arts.
You’ve been expecting him to approach you for ten minutes now. When he finally does it, you see a confident smile tugging at his lips. “Hey, I’m Ethan,” he introduces himself, cocking his head.
“Nice to meet you, Ethan. I’m—”
“I know,” he interrupts you, squinting a little as if he’s embarrassed by his own enthusiasm. “Okay, that sounded weird, but what I meant is that I know your name.” he wraps his arms around himself, taking a deep breath. “I was wondering if you’d like to grab a drink sometime.”
That’s not what you expected. He’s a handsome guy, charming even, but—
This is the kindness challenge, and you're supposed to be all friendly and polite, at least for another full week.
You plaster a practiced smile on your face. “Sure. Why not?”
He asks for your number, and you rattle it off in a monotonous tone. As he heads off, you catch Clark in the distance across the bullpen, sitting at his desk. He must have used his super hearing because he doesn't tear his gaze away from yours, and you feel as if all the oxygen in the world has been sucked out of the building.
Hours later, you’re in the break room, pouring coffee into your favorite mug, the one with a tiny kitten curled on the front. Clark walks in, closing the door behind him after he sees there’s no one else there.
“You want some coffee?” You ask him while stirring your coffee.
He stays quiet for ages. “What’s the deal with that new guy?”
“You mean Ethan?”
“We’re using names now.”
“He asked me out,” you continue to explain, lifting the mug to your lips. “And I said yes.”
“Why?”
“It's just a drink, Clark. I’m being nice. That’s the whole point, remember?”
“I had no idea being kind involved bar hopping with strangers.”
Why is he acting like this? “Jealousy doesn’t look great on you.”
“I’m not jealous. I just—” He runs a hand through his hair, tugging at the dark locks. “You don’t know him. Nobody does.”
“He seems nice.”
“Everybody seems nice if you only exchange two words with them!”
You grind your jaw. “Why are you assuming the worst? Why does the idea of me going out with someone bother you so much?”
Clark doesn't answer immediately. “You can do whatever you want,” he says, his tone shifting to a pained one. “I'm just asking you to be careful.”
“You don't need to worry about me. I can take care of myself.”
Pride claims a full point from both of you.
· · ─ ·✶· ─ · ·
You’re nodding along to another of Ethan’s stories from his college days, your eyes fixed on the rim of your glass.
It’s not that he’s boring, but for some reason, you’re unable to pay attention to anything he says. He’s talking about some phenomenal frat party he attended during senior year, which you can’t even relate to, because you’d never liked them.
He gulps down his drink, grinning. “I’m not letting you speak, am I?”
“Well—”
“Tell me something about yourself.”
You take a look around the bar, which is dim and cozy. The bartender hasn’t stopped mixing cocktails behind the counter. You shift your attention back to Ethan, lifting your eyebrows. “I’m currently stuck in a kindness challenge at work.”
You can’t blame him for seeming confused. “What’s that supposed to mean?”
“Lois and Jimmy had this brilliant idea that Clark and I should compete to see who’s nicer. He’s the guy with—”
“The glasses, I know. You’ve already mentioned him.” Ethan rolls his eyes, sighing at the same time a forced smile flashes across his face.
You can tell he’s bothered. Have you really been talking about Clark this much on a date with someone else? “Sorry.”
He gives a dismissive wave of his hand, waving it off. “And how’s the bet going?”
What an awfully complex question. You toy with the straw you were given with your drink, pressing your lips together. “Pretty much okay. We baked a cake last week.”
He chuckles. “You know what’s funny? I thought you two were dating at first.”
You tear your eyes away from the straw. “What?”
“I’d see you together all the time,” he says with a shrug, resting an arm on the back of the booth. “Then someone told me you hated him or something, and I had to shoot my shot.”
You hear him laugh, and he must expect you to do the same, but you don’t. “Hate him?” you echo his words. “I don’t hate him. Who said that?”
“I… don’t remember now. Does it matter?”
“Well, of course it does. Your source is wrong.”
“Yeah. I figured that around the fifth time you found a way to bring him up tonight.”
In a rare moment of clarity, a stark contrast to the bar's dark interior, you look down at your hands. Shutting your eyes, and behind closed lids, you can only picture the face of a man who isn’t here, who isn’t the one sitting across from you.
This isn’t where you’re supposed to be.
Pushing back your chair, you reach for your purse. “This won’t work,” you murmur, putting on your jacket. “You’re a nice guy, really. You’re not the problem. I shouldn’t have come tonight.”
Even though he calls your name as you make your way to the door, you don’t go back. Outside, driven by instinct, you fumble for your phone in your pocket. Since you’ve never felt this determined before in your life, you decide to call Clark.
It rings twice before he picks up, and when he does, his voice sounds groggy. “Hello?”
“Were you sleeping?”
“Sort of.”
You throw your head back, giving yourself a face palm. “I’m sorry.”
“It’s okay,” Clark assures you, the rustle of sheets reverberating through the line. He must be tossing around in bed, given the hour. “Is everything alright?”
For a moment, pressure wells in your chest. You glance both ways down the street, half-expecting to stumble into him. “I just wanted to say something.” You exhale, pressing the phone further into your ear, as if you could merge it with your skin. “I don’t hate you.”
He offers no immediate response. After a while, he says, “What?”
“I don’t hate you. Not in the slightest.”
“You’re scaring me.”
“I needed you to know it.” Each of your words feels thick in your mouth, heavy like sand. “I wouldn’t be able to hate you.”
Judging by the background noise on his end, you guess he must be out of bed and pacing now. “I don’t hate you either.”
“It’s not the same. I already knew it.”
“Right,” he laughs, and the sound fills the line. You can almost imagine the dimples in his cheeks. “Wasn’t your date today? How did it go?”
“Let’s just say there’s a section of the bullpen I’m not allowed into anymore.”
“Oh. That bad?”
“He said I talked a lot about you, so you tell me.”
The last time you two spoke in person, you had stormed out of the break room. He’d sounded jealous, a fact he fiercely denied, and his attitude had finally gotten to you. Maybe it was that time of year when you got a bit paranoid, but the thought hit you: you could die at any minute. Living in a city full of unknown threats and creatures, were you seriously going to spend the rest of your life keeping everything bottled up?
Yet, as if reading your very thoughts, he asks: “Would you like to come over?”
“Like… now?”
“Right now.”
You don’t need to be told twice. You hail the first cab you find on the streets of this Saturday night, counting down the minutes until you arrive at his apartment.
Fifth floor. Apartment C. Clark opens the door to you, and the mere sight of him steals your breath. He isn’t wearing his glasses. A pair of gray sweatpants sits low on his hips, along with a navy blue shirt stretched across his chest.
The only thing you can bring yourself to say is: “Hi.”
He invites you in. You hear the door clicking shut behind you as you put down your purse, turning around to face him. You clear your throat, staring deep into his eyes, and you notice he still hasn’t said a word.
“I spent almost ten minutes thinking about what to say to you. I even came up with what I thought was a great speech. It made sense in my head, but I can’t… remember it now,” you explain, swallowing the lump in your throat. You’re nervous, so freaking nervous you feel dizzy. Has he always been this tall?
“You don’t need a big speech,” Clark says, inching forward.
“I wanted to give you one, like they do in movies.”
“Then, just—come up with one right now.”
As if it were that easy. You press your hands to your face for a moment, imploring some god above for the courage you so desperately needed.
It doesn’t have to be well-structured. Doesn’t have to have perfect grammar. It just has to come from the heart and be true, and you couldn’t be more certain of what you feel for him.
“I would’ve dated you, you know? Even after finding out about the whole Superman thing, I would’ve risked everything, because it didn’t change the way I felt about you. It hasn’t changed it. I feel the same I did yesterday, and the day before that, and a year ago,” you blurt, edging closer to him. “I can’t imagine existing in a world where I’m not madly in love with you.”
You can't read the look on his face. His shoulders are rigid, his gaze giving nothing away as he studies you, and you find yourself wondering what exactly he’s thinking.
“I’ve tried putting it all behind me. I’ve tried starting over. For God’s sake, I went on a date with a man I didn’t even like! Just because you looked so… frustrated about it, and I thought maybe it was worth it.”
The past month’s blur of events rewinds in your mind. Your feelings, which you had tried to quiet and smother for so long, have come roaring back to life stronger than ever. You believe this must be love: that force you can try to extinguish and contain, but one that always burns through, because it is as real as the blood in your veins and the bones in your body.
“I can’t keep pretending I’m not dying to kiss you every time I see you at work. I feel like I’m in hell whenever you’re near me, and there’s nothing I can do to stop it. I can’t let you go, Clark. I don’t want to, but I swear I’d make the effort if you asked me to. I’d try, just for you.”
All the cards, including the ones you were keeping to yourself, have been laid out. You yearn for Clark Kent. You need him in your life, in any way he’s willing to offer himself, with those eyes of his that now look at you like you’ve gone nuts.
You’ve learned that there will always be something wrong. That’s how things work, at least for the alive-and-kicking ones. And you know for a fact that love won’t save you. Clark’s love, in this case, won’t assure you anything. But you’d much rather navigate those complexities with him by your side.
A flush creeps up his face, and he inclines his face. “I’d never ask you to walk away from me. Understanding you has been one of the hardest things I’ve ever had to endure, which sounds absurd considering we speak the same language,” he says, and you can’t help but let out a laugh at that. “I mean it, and not just as Clark, but also as Superman.”
“You’re saying I’m hard to understand?”
“I’m saying that there’s so much you don’t say. I have to translate every look and sigh. I believe I’ve developed a whole new dialect just to make sense of you—”
“I feel like you’re using this as an opportunity to roast me.”
“—but loving you is the easy part, and you don’t even realize it.”
Your heart hammers unpleasantly inside your chest. “Clark, I thought you wanted us to stay friends.”
“I thought that’s what you wanted.”
“But you said it. Kind of,” you argue, your forehead creasing.
He holds out his arms, stifling his laughter. “You didn’t let me explain! I panicked. I didn’t know what to say. You know how I get when I’m nervous.”
You’re left standing there, beyond stunned. “So this whole time… we could’ve been together?” You make a brief pause, falling silent. “I was so mad at you. So fucking—”
“Hey, hey, hey.” Clark takes hold of your chin, angling your head backwards so your eyes peer directly into his. “Stop doing that.”
“Doing what, exactly?”
“Complaining about the past. We’re here now. We can make it up to each other.”
You sigh, and he hunches over to rest his forehead against yours. His stare carries so much, but you can’t look away. “I think I remembered my speech.”
“We’ve already moved past that.”
“I could still deliver it—”
You’re cut off by Clark’s mouth on yours. He kisses you with the intensity of a starved man, and you freeze, caught off guard and barely moving your lips, until he guides your arms around his neck, and that’s when your body catches up. His own hands find their sacred place on your waist, clutching the fabric of your sweater.
This is the aftermath of months of pent up-frustration. His tongue presses insistently against yours to seek entry. Ever so gently, he corners you against the nearest wall, and your head nudges a frame that ends up clattering to the floor. It’s not enough to get Clark off of you. He shoves it aside with his shoe, further pressing you into the wall.
“I don’t want to fight anymore,” he gasps between kisses, holding your cheeks as his nose bumps into yours.
“We won’t,” you say, dizzy from all the kissing. “I promise.”
It turns out that his lips can’t seem to leave yours for long. “And please don’t go on any more dates with new hires.”
You roll your eyes, running your fingers through the short hair at his nape. “I told you it went horribly.”
“Still.”
“You’re unbelievable.” Your mouth crushes onto his once again, your pulse quickening with every second his hands are on you. You then whisper against his lips, “It’s always been you. You can stop worrying about other men.”
He blows out his cheeks, shaking his head. “Golly, this isn’t fair.”
“What isn’t?”
“I just—love you so much,” he mumbles, pecking your lips, “and you’re so beautiful, and there’s so much I want to do with you. I want to do everything—”
“We’ll take our time.”
“I know, I know.” He grazes the skin of your neck as he pulls you in for another kiss. “But touching you, kissing you… it feels too good to be true.”
A small chuckle escapes you, and you caress his cheek. “Alright, Romeo. You’ve done enough talking.”
When you come back to your senses, he’s got you all sprawled across the couch, his touch insistent yet careful. You’re struggling to remain still the more acquainted he becomes with your body. He digs his fingers into your waist, your hips, the sides of your thighs, leaving a trail of all the places where he’s been.
He’s kissing down your jawline the moment your mind conjures up an important question. “Clark?”
“Tell me.”
“Let’s say that, hypothetically, I spend the night here.”
“…Hypothetically.”
“Exactly. Would you have a spare toothbrush in that case?”
He lifts his head from your neck, the corner of his eyes crinkling. “You’re marking territory.”
“Hey. I said hypothetically. And I care about dental hygiene.”
“You’re lucky you’re cute,” he says, your head squeezed between his forearms. He ducks down to kiss you. “I do have a spare toothbrush. Don’t worry about that.”
You resume the make-out session after that. You sink deeper into the cushions as he shoves your sweater further up your chest, just enough to ghost his fingertips along your bra, eliciting a choked whimper out of you. The sound seems to spur him on because he pulls off his own shirt, allowing you to get a better look at his stomach.
The words die on your lips, and you draw a pattern over his pecks, then up to his biceps, ending in the happy trail that leads to what remains hidden beneath the tent on his sweatpants.
“You’re getting ahead of yourself,” he breathes, pining your hand above your head. “I thought you were the one who said to take our time.”
“I’m gonna combust and you haven’t even touched me properly yet,” you admit, gaping at his lips as he hovers over you, teasing you. “Imagine the state I’m in.”
That makes him smirk, and he slides a thick thigh between your parted legs, pressing it to your center. You throw your head back, cursing. “You like that?”
You nod, watching him through hooded eyes. “Please.”
“Please what?”
“Fuck, Clark. Do something. I need—”
Upon the coffee table next to the couch, your phone starts ringing, and Uptown Girl by Billy Joel fills the living room.
The spell breaks, and you hide your face into the crook of his neck. “I hate my life.”
“Ignore it.”
“I can’t. I know who it is,” you say, reaching your arm without looking. Eventually, you drag the phone out of the purse, and show the screen to him. “It’s Lois. She must be calling to ask how the date went.”
“Text her instead.”
“Clark, I can’t—just don’t make a sound, okay? I have to take this, or else she’ll keep calling.”
You accept the call without noticing your voice has gone up an octave. “Hi!”
“Hey! You didn’t text me about the date, so I figured I’d just call you.”
“Sorry, I must’ve forgotten.” You gulp down as he rolls your sweater over your head in one swift motion, and you slap his shoulder when he almost makes you drop your phone. “It was… average.”
“You don’t sound convinced.”
“We didn’t have much in common,” you continue, drifting your attention to the ceiling to try and stay composed. “He was—oh.”
Clark’s kisses have now migrated to your chest, his fingers sneaking beneath your back to unclasp your bra. He doesn’t break eye contact as he takes hold of your breasts in his hands, and you squirm under him.
Lois’ voice breaks through, sounding distant. “Are you okay?”
“Y-yes. I’m here, sorry. We didn’t even talk that much. I left quite early.” You mouth a ‘stop’ to him, holding the phone away from your ear, but he just smiles at you.
“Dammit, that sucks. Are you home now?”
“I was—Clark!” You yelp as he closes his mouth around your right nipple, scraping his teeth against the hardened peak. He looks at you with a horrified expression, and your whole frame stiffens.
“…Clark?” Lois repeats, and she gasps. “Are you—is Clark there? CLARK KENT?”
“IhavetogoI’msosorrybyeloveyouuuuu,” you push out the words quickly in one breath before hanging up, dropping the phone to the floor. “You’re a prick. What the hell was that?”
“I’d put it into silence mode if I were you.”
“That wasn’t fair.”
“What’s not fair is that you’re still wearing clothes.” He sits on his knees to unbutton your pants and yank them to your ankles, his eyes dark with want. Then he does the same to his own, until all that’s left are your underwear and the hardness confined inside his briefs, which presses against you the moment he leans down.
You begin kissing him as he lays on top of you, holding himself up on his forearms so as not to crush you with his weight.
“When did you become a horny teenager?” you ask, biting back a moan as he aligns himself with you, both of you still clothed. You know there must be a damp spot on your panties at this point from how wet you are.
“Always been one around you,” he replies huskily, slipping his hands under your thighs to tug you even closer. As he grinds his hips into yours, his jaw clenches, his breath damp against your skin. “Can I—is this alright?”
“Yeah, yeah.” You shift to give him more space between your legs. “It’s nice.”
The temperature in the room is borderline unbearable. Clark rocks into you in earnest, muttering sounds next to your ear. Some you catch, but some are so low that they are swallowed by the way he murmurs your name.
“I feel stupid doing this,” he grits out, pressing his lips to yours, his brows knitting. “I wish I could do more for you, but—I can’t. I need this. You feel—”
Shushing him, you roll your hips up to meet his mid thrust just right, whimpering when his tip catches against your entrance through the sticky fabric. He shivers, making a strangled noise.
“Oh, God—”
“Clark—”
“I swear—”
You cut him off with a kiss, sucking on his tongue. “Do you want to be inside me?”
He’s panting against your mouth, pupils blown. “What?”
“You heard me.”
He flattens his palms on the back of your thighs, his fingernails scraping gently. “I mean, of course I—yes, I’d love that,” he says, laying heavy stress on the ‘love’ part. “But I’d like to make you come like this first.”
A grin curls your lips. “Great. We’ve got four days until the bet’s done. Each orgasm equals ten points.”
That night, you have sex with Clark Kent for the first time, and it’s the best sex of your life.
He earns forty points in the span of an hour and a half.
· · ─ ·✶· ─ · ·
The day the challenge started, the sky was falling apart, rain had laughed in your face, soaking you from head to toes, and Clark had offered you a spare umbrella, which you declined.
But today, four weeks later, the sun couldn’t be shining brighter, you get to work right on time, and Clark brings you coffee and a pastry for breakfast at the office.
You’re in the break room. He drags a chair across the floorboards so that he can sit next to you. Neither of you are working, though after a month of constant fighting, a short period of ten minutes of peace feels like the real prize after all.
The memories from that first day feel almost laughable now in your mind.
I was just thinking out loud, Kent. I can’t wrap my head around someone acting like they’re on stage all the damn time.
You really think I wake up every day and put on an act?
I don’t know, you tell me. I wonder if your modest decency will ever run out.
Maybe if you tried being decent for more than five minutes, you’d see it’s not an act. It’s only called being nice.
Glancing to your side, you find him scrolling through something on his phone. There’s a slight crease between his brows as he reads, his bottom lip caught between his teeth. You smile before you can stop yourself.
He must feel your attention on him because he catches you staring. A smile spreads across his face too. “What’s got you like this?”
You shake your head, feeling the rising to your cheeks. “Nothing,” you say, taking a sip of your coffee. “I was just… thinking.”
Across the room, Jimmy and Lois hover protectively over the whiteboard where they’ve kept track of every good deed you’ve performed. She attempts to speak, but he shushes her, looking at the two of you over his shoulder.
“Did you two do this on purpose?” he asks, capping his marker, and neither of you know what he’s talking about. It’s only then that Lois and him step aside to reveal the final score.
You lean forward, scrutinizing the numbers on the board. “We’re… even?”
Pursing his lips, Jimmy runs a hand through his hair. “I can’t believe this. There was supposed to be one winner, as in any other game.”
You raise your hands. “Clark should win. He's been preparing for this his whole life.”
“I’m sorry, but no,” he objects, crossing his arms over his chest. “You did some really nice things for the sake of the challenge. You deserve it more than me.”
“But you—”
“She wins!” Clark concludes, standing up to clap for you, encouraging Lois and Jimmy to do the same.
After the round of applause is over, you take a bow, wiping imaginary tears from under your eyes. “I never thought this could actually happen,” you say, glaring at Clark. “My partner in crime, you made this possible.”
“We’ve created a monster,” Jimmy whispers, loud enough for you to hear it, and tugs on Lois’ sleeve. “Alright. Now I feel uncomfortable.”
“You two… are disgustingly… cute!” she chirps, being dragged outside the room.
Arms clasped behind his back, Clark puffs out his chest, looming closer. Behind his glasses, his eyes flicker with mischief. “Congratulations. You can have that exclusive interview with Superman anytime you want.”
“So I finally get to meet him? What an honor.”
“Does tonight work for you? At my place. He told me he’s dying to have a word with you.”
“I see.” You twist his tie around your fingers. “Will you be there?”
“Of course. I’m the mediator.”
Before he can say anything else, you pull him forward by the tie, kissing him. He cradles your face in his big hands, his nose brushing yours lovingly as he trips over his own feet to close the door. You warn him about someone eventually walking in, but he just answers, “We can make it quick.”
To be fair, you like this new version of yourself, the one who’s been making an effort to be nicer.
The one who’s irremediably in love with Clark.
THE END.
