He got confused đ€Ż
ICONS NICHOLAS CHAVEZ & COOPER KOCH
MERRY CHRISTMAS EVERYONE!!!! đđ đ»đ
Elsbeth (2024â) | Season 2, Episode 5 "Elsbeth Flips the Bird" | Micaela Diamond as Detective Edwards
Erik at 18, but still a child â€ïžâđ©č
movie night with buffy [25/?]
‷ talk to me (2022)
yo, this spirit's a cunt!
MY MAN MY MAN MY MAN
"His whole face was this pale, ashen and he had this gray under his eyes. The weight of his testimony, of having to really destroy the reputation of my family. I remember when he apologized to me on the stand, for molesting me. That was a devastating moment for me. He had never said he was sorry before."
Erik Menendez
i am obssessed.
You'll never be what is in your heart. Weep, little lion man.
Father Charlie Mayhew x Reader
Warnings:Â NON-CON, mentions of prostitution, mentions of infidelity
â„ banner by @vase-of-liliesÂ
summary: turning your life around is easier said than done when you tempt the very man meant to lead you to salvation.
âBless me, father, for I have sinnedâŠâ
The familiar words tumbled from your lips, and your gaze remained on your lap, eyes following your finger as you traced patterns into the solid black skirt on your frame. It kissed your ankle as you shifted your feet, and the reminder of the long fabric had you swallowing down less than gentle thoughts. You slowly reached up to touch the collar of your shirt, eyes briefly falling closed as you cleared your throat.
Youâd spent hours agonizing over how youâd leave the houseâŠ
âIt has been seven days since my last confession. These are my sins.â
Like clockwork, you listed the time you cursed for some accident or another and the time you took the Lordâs name in vain and the brief impure thought about that attractive man youâd seen in the grocery store. Every week, it was the same. Sins that you yourself would never have considered as such months ago that you were now hyper aware of. They climbed out of your throat seamlessly, remembering every single one until only one was left.
The silence between you and the man just on the other side of that wall stretchedâa familiar occurrenceâand you took your lip between your teeth. You could taste blood as you worried it, swallowing it down before clearing your throat again. You smoothed your hand over your skirt, and you furiously blinked, struggling to blink away the tears that had started to collect. As you sat in silence, you wondered why you were trying so hard to impress people that had already written you off?
âIâve hadâŠsome hateful thoughts as well.â
You struggled to get the words out, always struck by just how emotional this made you. You looked up towards the ceiling, eyes roaming, and you hadnât even realized that your breathing had started to pick up until he spoke.
Father Mayhew.
âTake your time,â he gently encouraged. âSpeak when you are ready.â
It wasnât the first time youâd heard those words, recalling your first ever confessional and how youâd cried. It was as embarrassing now as it was then, but it was necessary. You were determined to live differently nowâto be different, now.
âAlthough I have abandoned my former life andâŠoccupationâŠâ you thought you heard him shift. â...I feel as if I will never truly be forgiven for it.â
You swiped your tongue between your lips.
â...will never be accepted.â
You recalled the eyes that often found their way to you during massâthe judgment, the disdain, the way in which some stared at you as if they didnât know how to place you.Â
Every sunday it was the same. Youâd wake up and agonize over how to present yourself in a place as holy as this. Youâd fret that this skirt was too short and that dress was too tight. Youâd fiddle with your hair for far too long and every lipstick you wiped off would stain your lips a little more than the last. You were constantly at a crossroad, torn between wanting to look nice for church and concerned about looking likeâŠwellâŠa whore.
You struggled to swallow.
âI see the way they look at me,â you eventually whispered, staring at nothing. âI canât hear what they whisper, but I know itâs about me.â
You touched your throat, hating how tight it felt.
âItâsâŠdiscouraging.â
You didnât want to use that word, but it was the only word that was appropriate. It made you sad, and you often wondered why you kept returning to a place that made you sad. Surely a church wasnât necessary to âfind Godâ...right? You didnât think so, but you had wanted to start somewhere, and considering that none of your friends even owned a bible, they had been of no help. Stepping foot into a place that had only ever served to be ominous and oppressive in your eyes was the most terrifying thing youâd ever done.
âŠbut then you had laid eyes on Father Mayhew.
Heâd been the only one in the church at the time, and you would never forget the curious glint in his dark gaze. Youâd had no doubt that he could see you were scared and unsure and in an environment you were wholly unused to. Youâd appreciated the gentle way in which he talked to you, guiding you towards a pew in the front as you asked him questions that some people had answers to their entire lives. He hadnât treated you like you were stupid, but more importantly, he hadnât treated you like you didnât belong.
You were willing to bet that he hadnât even known about you then.
Although, months later, you were willing to bet that he did nowâŠeven though youâd never told him.
âHumans are flawed,â his smooth voice reached your ears through the wall. âWe all fall shortâeven the most devout of usâand we find ourselves falling prey to the temptation of judgmentâŠprideâŠlustâŠâ
You intently listened. After all, heâd never said these words to you before, always giving you some speech about Godâs love trumping all.
âI have no doubt that it is trying, but I am sure you will come to give them grace for their sins just as they will give you grace for yours. We are all Godâs children striving to lead a life in his imageâŠâ
His voice lowered at that, and you frowned slightly, looking towards the wall and thinking to yourself that he almost seemed to be talking to himself now.
âHe wants his children to love one another, a feat that is not without difficulty Iâm sure you knowâŠâ that actually made you hold back a chuckle. â...but Godâs love is powerful and he always grants forgiveness to those who genuinely yearn and ask for it.â
At that, you did smile.
You told him that you were truly sorry for your sins, and he told you to say ten Hail Maryâs, and you stepped out of the confessional feeling better than you did thirty minutes ago. You didnât know how long the feeling would last though, and so you wanted to hold onto it for as long as you could, but you knew from experience that was easier said than done.
You touched the crucifix around your neck as you stepped out of your building.
It had once belonged to your mother, and despite how long sheâd been gone and how down on your luck youâd been ever since, you could never quite find it in you to pawn it. It was real goldâprobably the only real piece of jewelry you ever ownedâbut you just couldnât do it, and you supposed that you were never meant to. Despite the many years youâd lived life as the complete opposite of a God fearing womanâŠit felt right sitting just below your collarbone.
Even if many would not agree.
You were no stranger to several men in this townâand the ones who often passed through on their truck routesâbut that had not stopped you from seeking solace and guidance from a place youâd never stepped foot into in your life. You couldnât lie and say it didnât feelâŠstrange to be in the same building as some of the men youâd serviced before, their wives and children at their side as they furiously avoided making eye contact with you. It felt even worse to watch the way the women would congregate together after church, excluding you all the while talking about you.
It felt somewhat pathetic for your only ally in the place to be the priest.
Although you sometimes wondered how true that was these days. Youâd never once confessed that you used to be a prostituteâalthough the kids called it sex work these daysâbut you werenât stupid. As godly and devout as they claimed to be, you knew that the church was filled with gossip and there was no telling whoâd let it slip to the dark haired man. You knew when he knew thoughâŠ
âŠbecause he looked at you different.
It wasnât a bad differentâthank God for thatâbut justâŠdifferent, and while it wasnât necessarily bad, you still didnât think you liked it. Confessionâbeing anonymousânever allowed for you to tell him your name, and considering youâd only ever spoken to him once outside of confession months ago, you didnât know if he ever knew it was you he was talking to. You didnât know if he knew that the woman he spoke so gently with each week and listened to cry on the other side of some window was the same woman who often shrunk under his heavy gaze as he looked down on his congregation.
You never felt like he was judging you, no, but you also never felt like he was looking at you as he did that first day, a gentle curiosity in his eyes. He wasnât your friendâfar from it in factâbut he felt like the closest thing you had to one in this church, and so you often forced yourself to find excuses for it. He watches you because he wants to make sure youâre settling in okay. He watches you to observe how other members of the church are treating you. He watches you because heâs wondering if youâll ever come to confession, convincing yourself that heâs never recognized your voice all this time.
That is why he watches you, you told yourself.
No other reason.Â
âYou always come to pray at least three times a weekâŠâ
The familiar voice startled you as you stood, hand lowering as youâd just finished signing the cross. Your hand was still on your chest as you turned to face him, a small smile on your lips as he stood directly in the center of the aisle. You hadnât even heard him make a single sound, and you wondered how long heâd been standing there.
He slowly returned your smile with one of his own, although it was smaller, and the silent way in which he stared at you reminded you that heâd said something to you.Â
âYes,â you finally said, moving away from the altar. âIt helps withâŠumâŠreally everything.â
He blinked at you, and you noticed that a strand of his hair was threatening to go rogue. He always looked so neat and perfect that it was hard to miss. Father Mayhew was handsomeâif anyone had seen enough men to know it was youâbut he was handsome in a way that you would categorize as flawless. Divine even. In a way that was untouchable and only meant to be admired in the most innocent of appreciation.Â
He slowly nodded at your response, and you didnât miss the way he studied youâdark eyes drinking you in and taking note of every stylistic choice youâd made today.
âYou know, I think I might see your face far more than those who have been coming here for years,â he lightly told you, a slight laugh on his lips.
You laughed with him, only offering him a shrug.
âIâm still new. Iâm sure it just seems that way because you arenât used to seeing me.â
He started to shake his head before you could even finish talking, and you watched him move closer.
âNo,â he murmuredâso low you almost didn't hear him. âI think you are perhaps my mostâŠdevout congregant.â
He touched your crucifix as he said this, dark eyes tracing the shape of it, and he was so close that you could smell his cologne. You blinked at the scent, finding it strange to know that he wore cologne. It shouldnât be strange, you supposed, but you realized then that you didnât quite view priestsâview himâas human. As normalâŠ
His eyes lifted then to finally connect with yours, and a crooked smile danced along his pink lips.
âItâs admirable,â he whispered. âMore of my congregation could stand to follow your lead.â
You couldnât ignore the way your chest bloomed at those words, almost hating how much validation you wanted from this place. Validation that you were a good personâŠyou werenât who you used to beâŠthat you were worthy of something more, you didnât know. It just felt relieving to hear such a compliment from Father Mayhew when no one else in the church would even give you a chance.
âThank you, Father,â you quietly replied to him. âThat means a lot to me.â
You watched him slowly inhale as he dropped his hand, and he seemed even slower to step out of your way. When you walked past him, you could feel his gaze on youâalways watchingâand you smiled when he called out to you, telling you that he looked forward to seeing you on Sunday.
No one was more sad than you when you had to disappoint him.
An unexpected cold had you bedridden for days, and while you knew that an illness was a perfectly valid excuse to miss church, you couldnât swallow down the disappointment. You hadnât missed a single Sunday since you first started going, and you thought to yourself that the first thing youâd do when you returned was explain your absence to Father Mayhew.
You had never anticipated him showing up at your door to get it himself.
No one ever knocked on your door these days, so the sound had taken you by surprise. Your friendsâwhile supportive of the direction your life had takenâdidnât quite understand it and so you didnât see them as often, and as for anyone else⊠Well, there wasnât anyone else who would come knocking on your door. You didnât do that anymore so no customers were going to be greeting you on the other side with their money in their hand and an eager grin on their lips, and you doubted any of the women in town would want to sit down for a chat anytime soon.
Your shock at Father Mayhewâs presence was all over your face.
âFather,â you stated, the lilt in your voice hinting at your surprise.
He looked just as you were used to seeing himâclerical collar still on, not a hair out of place, and a hint of a smile on those pink lips. You stood there gaping at him for all of five seconds before it struck you how rude you were probably being.
âIâŠIâm so sorry. UmâŠcome in,â you told him, stepping out of the way and widening the gap in the doorway.
He didnât respond nor move right away, looking past you into your small house with a look in his gaze that you couldnât name. If he were anyone else, you might worry that he was judging where you lived. You watched his jaw briefly tighten, a noticeable strain in his face, and it only just occurred to you that maybe this wasnât appropriate? Although you were positive youâd heard of priests and pastors visiting the sick before, and while you certainly werenât on your deathbed, you didnât see why this would be different.
Before you could say another word though, his foot crossed the threshold, and you closed the door behind him.
âI do apologize for the unexpected visit,â he said to you, gazing around before his eyes landed on you again. â...but when I noticed that mass was absent of a face Iâd grown to look forward to, I became concerned.â
You couldnât stop your smile at his words
âOh,â you softly said. âWell, thereâs no need to be concerned. Itâs just a small cold that will be gone in a day or two.â
You watched him exhale at that, nodding to himself, and you studied him, surprised to see that he looked genuinely relieved at that.
âIâm glad to hear thatâs all it isâŠâ
At that, your brows furrowed, and you watched him slowly walk about your living room.
âI had feared that some of your fellow church goers had scared you off.â
Your lips parted at his words, and he turned and looked at you.
âThey often fall into the temptation of judgment, after allâŠâ
Your heart skipped a beat, and you didnât know how to react with the knowledge that he knew it was you who came to see him once a week. Youâd only spoken to him face to face twice, and you swallowed, looking away.
âI thought it would be a shame if they scared you off,â he confessed, and you noted that he was closer now. âI wondered what I would have to do to convince you to come back. Drag you, perhaps.â
You gave a soft laugh at that, although he didnât join you, and it awkwardly faded. He stared at you in silence for what felt like a long time, and just when you were considering asking him if he wanted anything to drink, he reached out to touch the crucifix around your neck again.
âSo devout,â he quietly said to himself. âIt almost makes me ashamedâŠâ
At that, you gave a heavy laugh, wondering how you could ever shame a priest.
âWhy?â
â...because I see why they flocked to your doorâŠmoney in hand.â
His gaze lifted as he said that, and you were still as you both just stared at each other. His words made you blink, and you were suddenly very aware of his hand practically on you. You couldnât stop the slight frown that fell over your face, and for the first time in monthsâsince you first stepped foot into that churchâyou feltâŠwrong.
âI see why their eyes trace every inch of you when youâre not lookingâŠas if to relive the memory of what you felt likeâtasted like.â
You finally took a step back, hand coming up to cover your necklace as if protecting it from his touch.
âWhat memories they must have of youâŠâ
You wrapped your other arm around yourself, mind whirling to reconcile the man before you with the same man whoâd always been so welcoming and gentle. Not once did you ever think he judged you for your past, and you supposed that you were right, but not once did you ever think he also mightâŠ
You hadnât done that in over a year, but had it really escaped you so quickly that a seemingly devout man was stillâŠa man?
âFather, I think you should-.â
âI donât say any of this to offend you,â he interrupted, tilting his head. âI say it because I fight the urge to touch you every time youâre in my presence.â
You moved by him to make your way to the door, but like an ever present shadow you only just noticed, he was close behind.
âYou can cover up as much as youâd likeâwear skirts down to your ankle and shirts up to your chinâŠâ his hand on the door halted your movements.Â
You felt his chest just barely grazing your back, and his lips followed suit, the softness of them brushing against your ear as he spoke. That familiar cologne invaded your senses.
â...but none of it can hide the temptation you pose by merely existing.â
You shrunk away from him at that, tears in your eyes as he verbalized the same fears you had every time you walked into the building. You flinched when his lips touched the back of your neck, heart dropping to your stomach, but you reached for the door handle anyway.
âFather, Iâd like you to leave-.â
Your words were cut off by your own sharp scream, taken aback by the feel of his fingers harshly pressing into the skin of your throat. His hand rested on the back of your neck, and you pressed your hand to the door when his lips grazed your cheek.
âTheyâre all like rabid dogsâŠjust waiting to pounce,â he mused against your skin, sliding between you and the door and forcing you further into your house with every step. âJust waiting for you to give up this charade and go back to taking their money for a quick fuck.â
You blinked, and a few tears escaped.
â...but they donât know you like I know you.â
He grinned against your cheek, and you winced as he lightly nipped at the skin there.
âThey donât know that you come to church at least thrice a week to light candles and prayâŠâ
You were full on sobbing now, and you could feel the cool metal of his ring against the back of your neck.
âThey donât know that you never miss your weekly confession, telling me every time you so much as say the Lordâs name in vain.â
His free hand was reaching for the buttons of your shirt, popping them open one by one, and you gasped when his fingers finally met skin. He dipped his head, mouth finding the skin of your shoulder and collarbone interesting before his hand searched for your wrist.
âThey donât know that you are the most pious woman to walk through those doors,â he purred, pressing gentle kisses to the inside of your wrist. â...and that I just want to ruin you for it.â
When his hand dipped between your legs, you were quick to try and stop him, still wincing at the tight grip on the back of your neck. Father Mayhew made a noise of disapproval, and your hand faltered when he harshly bit your shoulder.
âWe areâŠand always will beâŠsinnersâŠâ
Once his fingers were inside of you, it was like the point of no return. You found it funny that he likened the men in church to that of rabid dogs when he himself was behaving like the very thing he used to insult them. When your knees buckled, he followedâone arm around you and holding you in place while the fingers on his other hand curved into you.
Every thrust of his fingers made you wetterâembarrassingly soâand when he pulled your head back, he forced a kiss onto your lips. He swallowed down your whimpers and noises of protest, a moan escaping him as he tasted the inside of your mouth. With him so close to you, you could feel the muscles and contours of his frame beneath his clothes, and you were forced to recognize your predicament and his strength and what that meant for you.
When you were face to face with him again, his hair was nowhere near as neat as it was when he first walked through your door. His pink lips were swollen and reddened from kissing you and dragging over your skin. Your pajama top had long been discarded, the bottoms long ripped and pulled off of you. Father MayhewâsâCharlieâclerical collar was long gone, his shirt pulled open and hanging off of him.
You recalled the way your mouth had parted into an âOâ shape when the head of his cock finally dipped into you, stretching you with every inch and making your heart momentarily stop. His hand covered a breast, the feel of his ring cooling that singular part of your skin, the rest of you so overheated. His other hand was wrapped around your throat, and you clawed at his hand as he fucked you.
The sound of skin slapping against skin was loud in your tiny home, the only sound to rival it being his harsh grunts and your strained voice. Any fight that youâd put up had been quickly squashed down, shown in the harshest manner just how strong your priest was. You hated how good it felt, hated that you didnât want this but was now forced to enjoy it. Nevermind the fact that you hadnât enjoyed sex for the act itself in yearsâŠ
âŠbut of all people to find yourself in this predicament with.
Father Mayhewâs hands never stayed in one place for long. He seemed determined to touch every part of you he could get his hands on, lips tasting the saltiness of your skin. Sweat clung to your frame and his, his fingers sliding over you as he kneaded your thighs and your waist and your chest. Every time you reminded yourself how wrong this was, heâd push his cock into you to the hilt, and youâd involuntarily throw your head back.
You could feel your crucifix pressing into your skin, and your eyes watered.
âI must admit that I wasâamâjealous,â he dragged out, voice hoarse and throaty and wholly unlike how you were used to hearing him. âYour devotion to God inspires an envy within me that I never knew existed.â
You took note of the scars on his back underneath your fingers.
â...a desire to have you completely devoted to me,â he bit out, covering your lips with his own. âYou so desperately desire forgiveness and acceptanceâŠand all the things you didnât think you were worthy of having.â
He harshly thrust into you, making you gasp.
â...and I can give that to you,â he whispered into the kiss.
The power behind his thrusts had you scratching at both his back and the floor, eyes squeezing shut at the way his fingers dug into your skin. It was like he was both holding you to him and trying to prevent you from ever walking away. Your chest arched up into his as you gasped, choked whimpers climbing out of your throat with every push of his hips. He growled against your skin as his lips traveled to your neck, the sound almost demonic to your ears.
When you came around himâyour first orgasm in over a yearâyou couldnât swallow down the noise it forced out of you. You could feel blood beneath your nails and a slickness on the inside of your thighs, but all the while Father Mayhew didnât stop.
With one hand pressed against the floor, he pushed himself up to look down at you. His free hand slid up your sweaty frame, coming up to wrap around the crucifix that rested against your skin. He tightened his hold around it, and he pulled on it, forcing you to lift your head and meet him halfway for a kiss.
âI want you just as eager to get on your knees for meâŠâ