“you look like you could use a hug.”
“do you want to talk about it? ”
“hey, it's ok... i've got you. ”
“you know you can tell me anything, right?”
“take as long as you need to. ”
“go ahead. i'm listening. ”
“you're shivering. here, take my jacket. ”
“you don't have to pretend to be alright around me. ”
“c'mere. let me hold you. ”
“is there anything i can do? ”
“it wasn't your fault. you know that, right? ”
“hey, it's ok to cry. ”
“why are you bleeding? what happened? ”
“tell me who hurt you. ”
“shh, don't be afraid. it's me. you're safe. ”
“i won't let anything happen to you. ”
“i'll love you no matter what. ”
“of course you can hold my hand. ”
“we'll get through this together. ”
“i'm not leaving you. ”
“call or text me anytime. ”
“my door's always open. ”
“you deserve to be taken care of. ”
“come here, let me look after you. ”
“don't worry, i'll be here when you wake up.”
someone: omg you're a writer? can i read-
me: *slams my laptop shut* what no who me i don't write who told you this that's not true-
Absent: preoccupied
Agonized: as if in pain or tormented
Alluring: attractive, in the sense of arousing desire
Appealing: attractive, in the sense of encouraging goodwill and/or interest
Beatific: blissful
Black: angry or sad, or hostile
Bleak: hopeless
Blinking: surprise, or lack of concern
Blithe: carefree, lighthearted, or heedlessly indifferent
Brooding: anxious and gloomy
Bug eyed: frightened or surprised
Chagrined: humiliated or disappointed
Cheeky: cocky, insolent
Cheerless: sad
Choleric: hot-tempered, irate
Darkly: with depressed or malevolent feelings
Deadpan: expressionless, to conceal emotion or heighten humor
Despondent: depressed or discouraged
Doleful: sad or afflicted
Dour: stern or obstinate
Dreamy: distracted by daydreaming or fantasizing
Ecstatic: delighted or entranced
Faint: cowardly, weak, or barely perceptible
Fixed: concentrated or immobile
Gazing: staring intently
Glancing: staring briefly as if curious but evasive
Glazed: expressionless due to fatigue or confusion
Grim: fatalistic or pessimistic
Grave: serious, expressing emotion due to loss or sadness
Haunted: frightened, worried, or guilty
Hopeless: depressed by a lack of encouragement or optimism
Hostile: aggressively angry, intimidating, or resistant
Hunted: tense as if worried about pursuit
Jeering: insulting or mocking
Languid: lazy or weak
Leering: sexually suggestive
Mild: easygoing
Mischievous: annoyingly or maliciously playful
Pained: affected with discomfort or pain
Peering: with curiosity or suspicion
Peeved: annoyed
Pleading: seeking apology or assistance
Quizzical: questioning or confused
Radiant: bright, happy
Sanguine: bloodthirsty, confident
Sardonic: mocking
Sour: unpleasant
Sullen: resentful
Vacant: blank or stupid looking
Wan: pale, sickly
Wary: cautious or cunning
Wide eyed: frightened or surprised
Withering: devastating
Wrathful: indignant or vengeful
Wry: twisted or crooked to express cleverness or a dark or ironic feeling
A sibling relationship is perhaps one of the most complicated things to realistically write about. Your character dynamics and personalities will help determine their relationships but here are some things to consider:
Building their past:
Think about how they were raised. Upbringing plays a large role in impacting a person’s character, and it also helps shape relationships with siblings.
Consider their favourite memories. Good memories are important to a person, and people often seek to create new memories similar to the old good ones. On the other side, also think about their worst memories.
Who was the oldest? Who was the baby? Birth order does have some impact on personality. It also is especially important for the earliest memories.
Think about the roles that they ended up in. Siblings do, to some extent, define themselves by how they are different from each other. They pursue different interests, take on different roles, and explore different identities. These roles can be a source of self-realisation and sometimes frustration.
Giving siblings personalities:
Choose personality traits for each sibling. Even if the sibling is only a minor character, it’s important to know their basic personality.
Think about each character’s dreams, hopes, and struggles. What do they want in life? What are their goals? Every character needs something to strive for.
Figure out their insecurities. Everyone feels insecure about different things: skills, personality traits, perceived physical flaws etc.
The siblings in your story might have similar looks, qualities and characteristics. However it’s important to make them their own person too.
Keep in mind that siblings might have the same habits, sometimes without even realising it. (Personal example- My eldest brother and I do not look the same. He has green eyes, mine are brown. I have dark hair, he’s blonde. Our faces are shaped different. He takes after our mum, I take after our dad. However, we have a lot of the same habits and mannerisms. We both carry ourselves in the same way, we both quirk our eyebrows in the same manner when confused. Little things like that, that when growing up I’ve picked up from him and vice versa.)
Things siblings do: (This is a generalisation)
Siblings know how to push each others buttons.
Usually they spend so much time with each other, they know exactly how to annoy their sibling and the best way to do it.
Whatever annoys your character, his (or her) siblings already know about it. If your character’s siblings decide to get on his nerves, it shouldn’t take them very long.
Most (if not all) siblings make fun of each other to some degree. Usually they are just messing with each other. Depending on the circumstances, the insult may be forgotten almost immediately.
But it’s important to consider how siblings react when someone else is picking on their brother or sister. A lot of siblings will get defensive in this situation. Unless you have set up a reason otherwise, make sure your siblings know how to tease each other but also how to protect each other.
They rarely call each other “sis” or “bro” unless they’re trying to be annoying. This is seen a lot in films and TV but it’s not common. The occasional greeting like that is fine, but overusing it just sounds strange and unnatural.
Sibling conflict:
Siblings will argue other pretty much anything. Most of the time it’s just to get a reaction. Sometimes one will start an argument just because they’re bored.
The silent treatment! A lot of siblings, particularly children teenagers and young adults will give each other the silent treatment over the pettiest things. But it’s incredibly hard to ignore someone living in the same house as you for a long period of time.
The sibling on the receiving end of the silent treatment will usually do absurd and annoying things to get their brother or sister to speak.
Common things siblings argue about:
The tv remote
Who is going to use the bathroom first
Someone is taking too long in the bathroom
Who gets to sit in the front seat of the car
Who the favourite is
Estranged siblings:
“Sibling relationships are our longest, but it’s also an accident by birth. There are no guarantees that the siblings will grow up with similar personalities, interests or like each other,”
You should be able to find plenty of conflict amongst brothers and sisters. But most of the time there is a resolution.
If you were to fall out with a friend, you can unfriend them, you can’t un-sister a sister, whether you like it or not you’re stuck with that person in some sense.
However, some siblings do fall out and never speak to each other again. It happens, but if this happens in your story there are a few things to consider:
When asked about their family will your character acknowledge that they have siblings? Or will they claim to be an only child?
Why did they stop speaking?
Would they reconcile in times of crisis? For example, if a family member died would the siblings put aside their differences to deal with the situation?
Do they tell stories about their childhood that include the sibling?
It’s important to remember that if someone has a sibling, a lot of their childhood memories and stories from growing up will have some reference or include that sibling. It’s hard to complete cut them out, they will be mentioned at some point.
Given the entangled, long-lasting bond, what’s the price paid for suspending or ending it?
Does the sibling have other brothers or sisters whose relationships are satisfying? “
“If they have no contact with a sibling, it’s losing a shared history and there can be a sense of guilt,”
Or are your character’s relieved? Do they express a sense of relief.
“Like the end of a marriage, sibling estrangement is always sad, even when it brings relief. It’s not what anyone hoped for, but sometimes it’s the wise and necessary choice.”
Ways of bringing together estranged siblings:
Write compassion between your characters. Show them trying to see things from the sibling’s viewpoint alongside their own.
Have them say what they want from their sibling moving forward. Don’t just have your characters vent all the time. Your reader might grow tired of that.
Confirmation of love and affection:
Are the siblings in your story the type to talk about feelings? Maybe they don’t talk about it but the feeling is still there. Consider showing the depth of their relationship through actions.
(Personal example - When I was born my brothers were 4 and 6 years older than me. From what my mum has said they were both excited to have another sibling and would fight about who got to hold me first. When we were younger we used to cuddle on the sofa and play together, and frequently said I love you etc, however as we got older that stopped. I can’t remember the last time I said I love you to either of them, which sounds terrible. But it doesn’t change the fact that I know they love me and that they know I love them, we just show it and say it in different ways.)
Relationships with parents:
How did parents or caregivers react to fights between siblings?
Was there parental favouritism, real or perceived? How did the non-favourite sibling(s) react?
Do your siblings stick together when arguing with their parents?
Would your characters lie in order to prevent their brother or sister being told off by their parents?
Some siblings will join forces to tease their parents.
What if the siblings don’t have a good relationship with their parents:
If this is the case in your story, research it, google is your friend.
Try and read up on real life experiences.
Consider how the siblings view their parents. Do they stand together with the same opinion or do they have conflicting recollection of events?
Do the parents have a healthy relationship with each other? How has this impacted their children?
Writing siblings who have abusive parents:
If the siblings come from an abusive home, how has this affect their behaviour?
Do the siblings ever talk about what happened?
Do they have the share the same experience? Do they ever argue about the situation?
Are they over protective?
Has their own relationship become strained? Have they drifted apart?
Do the siblings ever acknowledge the past? If not, does this cause friction?
Common assumptions about sibling age order:
Oldest child: people pleasing, bossy, organised, punctual, natural leader, controlling, ambitious, expected to uphold family values, caretakers, financially intelligent, responsible
Middle child: flexible, easy going, independent, sometimes feels like life is unfair, sometimes will engage in attention-seeking behaviour, competitive.
Youngest child: silly or funny, risk-taking, creative, sometimes feels inferior, easily bores, friendly, outgoing, idealistic, the baby of the family.
Only child: close to parents, demanding, leaders, spoiled, self-absorbed, private in nature, may relate better to adults to kids their own age, independent, responsible
While these are common assumptions, they are not strictly true and it’s important to consider your characters personality before you apply any of these stereotypes because it may clash with how your character truly is.
Half siblings:
Half-siblings can run along several lines:
They might act like full siblings, depending on how long they’ve known each other.
They may view each other as space takers.
Your characters may feel “eh” about their half- sibling, they could just be someone who is there but they don’t have a relationship with. The half-sibling may even be a complete stranger.
Consider that they might be rivals. Are they friendly rivals or bitter rivals?
Don’t get caught up in trying to build their relationship based on what “should be” in accordance with society. As you establish these characters, let your own imagination lead you to what their relationship is. But remember that their relationship will be impacted on how the parents treat them too.
(@its-the-tear-in-my-heart thanks for asking about sibling relationships. This post is more generalised than your question but I hope it helped in some way.)
“you?! why are you here?!”
“can’t believe i’m stuck here with you.”
“just stay away from me, okay?”
“shut up and mind your business.”
“wow. you suck at this.”
“i hate you.” “no you don’t.”
“you know you love me.”
“listen, let’s just get this over with, okay?”
“don’t touch me with your filthy hands.”
“why did i have to end up partnered with you of all people?”
“listen, just let me do all the work, okay? i’d rather not have you ruin everything.”
“stop acting like i wanted to be paired with you!”
“why do you hate me so much?”
“i’ve hated you since we were kids.”
“go away. i don’t wanna be seen around you.”
“god, this is why i hate you.”
“get out. you weren’t invited.”
“can you just pretend that you like me?”
“my friends always said you were terrible.”
“we belong to different types of people, okay?”
“don’t waste your breath talking to me.”
“hey-,” “shut up.” “i haven’t even said anything yet!”
“ha! you’re so stupid!”
“you’re such an asshole!”
“aww, are you gonna cry?”
“you’re sickening.”
“because i’m jealous of you!”
“i hate people like you.”
“please. we could never be a thing.”
“me? with them? you must be joking.”
“they hate me, and i don’t know why.”
This is an ultimate masterlist of many resources that could be helpful for writers. I apologize in advance for any not working links. Check out the ultimate writing resource masterlist here (x) and my “novel” tag here (x).
Outlining & Organizing
For the Architects: The Planning Process
Rough Drafts
How do you plan a novel?
Plot Development: Climax, Resolution, and Your Main Character
Plotting and Planing
I Have An Idea for a Novel! Now What?
Choosing the Best Outline Method
How to Write a Novel: The Snowflake Method
Effectively Outlining Your Plot
Conflict and Character within Story Structure
Outlining Your Plot
Ideas, Plots & Using the Premise Sheets
Finding story ideas
Choosing ideas and endings
When a plot isn’t strong enough to make a whole story
Writing a story that’s doomed to suck
How to Finish What You Start: A Five-Step Plan for Writers
Finishing Your Novel
Finish Your Novel
How to Finish Your Novel when You Want to Quit
How To Push Past The Bullshit And Write That Goddamn Novel: A Very Simple No-Fuckery Writing Plan
In General
25 Turns, Pivots and Twists to Complicate Your Story
The ABCs (and Ds and Es) of Plot Development
Originality Is Overrated
How to Create a Plot Outline in Eight Easy Steps
Finding Plot: Idea Nets
The Story Goal: Your Key to Creating a Solid Plot Structure
Make your reader root for your main character
Creating Conflict and Sustaining Suspense
Tips for Creating a Compelling Plot
The Thirty-six (plus one) Dramatic Situations
Adding Subplots to a Novel
Weaving Subplots into a Novel
7 Ways to Add Subplots to Your Novel
Crafting a Successful Romance Subplot
How to Improve your Writing: Subplots and Subtext
Understanding the Role of Subplots
How to Use Subtext in your Writing
The Secret Life of Subtext
How to Use Subtext
Beginning
Creating a Process: Getting Your Ideas onto Paper (And into a Story)
Why First Chapters?
Starting with a Bang
In the Beginning
The Beginning of your Novel that isn’t the Beginning of your Novel
A Beginning from the Middle
Starting with a Bang
First Chapters: What To Include @ The Beginning Writer
23 Clichés to Avoid When Beginning Your Story
Start Writing Now
Done Planning. What Now?
Continuing Your Long-Format Story
How to Start a Novel
100 best first lines from novels
The First Sentence of a Book Report
How To Write A Killer First Sentence To Open Your Book
How to Write the First Sentence of a Book
The Most Important Sentence: How to Write a Killer Opening
Hook Your Reader from the First Sentence: How to Write Great Beginnings
Foreshadowing
Foreshadowing and the Red Hering
Narrative Elements: Foreshadowing
Foreshadowing and Suspense
Foreshadowing Key Details
Writing Fiction: Foreshadowing
The Literary Device of Foreshadowing
All About Foreshadowing in Fiction
Foreshadowing
Flashbacks and Foreshadowing
Foreshadowing — How and Why to Use It In Your Writing
Setting
Four Ways to Bring Settings to Life
Write a Setting for a Book
Writing Dynamic Settings
How To Make Your Setting a Character
Guide for Setting
5 Tips for Writing Better Settings
Building a Novel’s Setting
Ending
A Novel Ending
How to End Your Novel
How to End Your Novel 2
How to End a Novel With a Punch
How to End a Novel
How to Finish a Novel
How to Write The Ending of Your Novel
Keys to Great Endings
3 Things That End A Story Well
Ending a Novel: Five Things to Avoid
Endings that Ruin Your Novel
Closing Time: The Ending
Names
Behind the Name
Surname Meanings and Origins
Surname Meanings and Origins - A Free Dictionary of Surnames
Common US Surnames & Their Meanings
Last Name Meanings & Origins
Name Generators
Name Playground
Different Types of Characters
Ways To Describe a Personality
Character Traits Meme
Types of Characters
Types of Characters in Fiction
Seven Common Character Types
Six Types of Courageous Characters
Creating Fictional Characters (Masterlist)
Building Fictional Characters
Fiction Writer’s Character Chart
Character Building Workshop
Tips for Characterization
Fiction Writer’s Character Chart
Advantages, Disadvantages and Skills
Males
Strong Male Characters
The History and Nature of Man Friendships
Friendship for Guys (No Tears!)
‘I Love You, Man’ and the rules of male friendship
Male Friendship
Understanding Male Friendship
Straight male friendship, now with more cuddling
Character Development
P.O.V. And Background
Writing a Character: Questionnaire
10 Days of Character Building
Getting to Know Your Characters
Character Development Exercises
Chapters
How Many Chapters is the Right Amount of Chapters?
The Arbitrary Nature of the Chapter
How Long is a Chapter?
How Long Should Novel Chapters Be?
Chapter & Novel Lengths
Section vs. Scene Breaks
Dialogue
The Passion of Dialogue
25 Things You Should Know About Dialogue
Dialogue Writing Tips
Punctuation Dialogue
How to Write Believable Dialogue
Writing Dialogue: The Music of Speech
Writing Scenes with Many Characters
It’s Not What They Say …
Top 10 Tips for Writing Dialogue
Speaking of Dialogue
Dialogue Tips
Interrupted Dialogue
Two Tips for Interrupted Dialogue
Show, Don’t Tell (Description)
“Tell” Makes a Great Placeholder
The Literary Merit of the Grilled Cheese Sandwich
Bad Creative Writing Advice
The Ultimate Guide to Writing Better Than You Normally Do
DailyWritingTips: Show, Don’t Tell
GrammarGirl: Show, Don’t Tell
Writing Style: What Is It?
Detail Enhances Your Fiction
Using Sensory Details
Description in Fiction
Using Concrete Detail
Depth Through Perception
Showing Emotions & Feelings
Character Description
Describing Your Characters (by inkfish7 on DeviantArt)
Help with Character Development
Creating Characters that Jump Off the Page
Omitting Character Description
Introducing Your Character(s): DON’T
Character Crafting
Writer’s Relief Blog: “Character Development In Stories And Novels”
Article: How Do You Think Up Your Characters?
5 Character Points You May Be Ignoring
List of colors, hair types and hairstyles
List of words to use in a character’s description
200 words to describe hair
How to describe hair
Words used to describe the state of people’s hair
How to describe your haircut
Hair color sharts
Four Ways to Reveal Backstory
Words Used to Describe Clothes
Flashbacks
Using Flashbacks in Writing
Flashbacks by All Write
Using Flashback in Fiction
Fatal Backstory
Flashbacks as opening gambit
Don’t Begin at the Beginning
Flashbacks in Books
TVTropes: Flashback
Objects in the Mirror Are Closer Than They Appear: Flashback Techniques in Fiction
3 Tips for Writing Successful Flashbacks
The 5 Rules of Writing Effective Flashbacks
How to Handle Flashbacks In Writing
Flashbacks and Foreshadowing
Reddit Forum: Is a flashback in the first chapter a good idea?
Forum Discussing Flackbacks
P.O.V
You, Me, and XE - Points of View
What’s Your Point of View?
Establishing the Right Point of View: How to Avoid “Stepping Out of Character”
How to Start Writing in the Third Person
The Opposite Gender P.O.V.
LANGUAGE
How To Say Said
200 Words Instead of Said
Words to Use Instead of Said
A List of Words to Use Instead of Said
Alternatives to “Walk”
60 Synonyms for “Walk”
Grammar Monster
Google Scholar
GodChecker
Tip Of My Tounge
Speech Tags
Pixar Story Rules
Written? Kitten!
TED Talks
DarkCopy
Family Echo
Some Words About Word Count
How Long Should My Novel Be?
The Universal Mary Sue Litmus Test
Writer’s “Cheat Sheets”
Last but not least, the most helpful tool for any writer out there is Google!
Friends to lovers prompts:
Being cast as the main characters in a school play and having to perform a romantic confession scene together. You're okay with it since it's your friend playing the love interest, and they (probably) don't mean it anyway. But when they start acting it out, it almost feels real. Once the scene has ended, you realize how much you wished it was
Or being the one who has to act out the confession to your friend (who you've been crushing on for years) and trying so hard to not faint from embarrassment
Calling each other by nicknames
Accidentally confessing to each other while laughing over something
Being separated from each other for sometime and realising how much you miss the other's presence
Sharing a book and reading it together in a library, when your friend rests their head on your shoulder. It's been a common thing for years, so why has this fuzzy feeling taken over you all of a sudden?
Drawing small doodles in each other's notebooks, when one day your friend writes 'I like you'
Helping your friend move to another place, coming across the teddy bear you gave them ages ago
Sharing the most awkward first kiss ever, but becoming better at it by the second try
Telling their friends about their relationship, only to be surprised by the fact that they already knew and placed a bet on when they'd get together
Proposing at the same place where they first met as kids
Random dialogue prompts.
" Hey , look at me ... You're okay. It's going to be alright. "
" Can't you trust me just this once ?"
" I -It hurts... Everything hurts- ."
" Oh yeah ? Why don't you come here and say it to my face "
" You have five seconds to run before I slit your throat "
" Don't test me, love . Patience isn't my biggest strength "
" Hurt her again and I'm gonna harvest your balls !"
" Say it one more time. I dare you "
"Aww... That touched my stone cold heart "
"Baby , I love you ...but if you fart one more time - "
" I'm sexy and I hate it ...~"
" I can't breathe. I can't -"
" Am I crazy if I say I can't get enough of you ?"
" We shouldn't do this here . Someone might see ..."
" I want to love every part of you . Just let me love you .. "
" look me in the eyes and say it " " Don't Tell me you don't feel the same "
" Aww... You're so good to me. "
" Shut up and get out of my sight ! "
" Did you even love me ?"
" Why do you care now ?! You never did before !"
" I can't love you..."
" I despise you ! . I despise you with every fiber of my being! "
" Wow . For once you actually said something sensible "
" I can't stop thinking about that kiss "
" Wow...! So that's how a plant looks like. It's so ... green."
" Did I even matter to you huh ?"
" You're not allowed to kiss me "
" leave me alone . I'm not talking to you anymore"
" I bet he banged you senseless right ?"
" oh my gosh. Did I say that aloud ?"
Do you have dialogue for asking to kiss your best friend?
“ okay, this is going to sound crazy, and you're totally free to punch me in the face, but... “
“ i can't believe i'm even admitting to this but, you now, i've always kinda wondered what it would be like to kiss you. “
“ do... platonic best friends kiss each other? “ “ people make-out all the time. for pleasure, you know. doesn't always mean there's feelings involved. “
“ so... does that mean you've thought about this for quite a while, or... “ “ no. no, it's totally just something that crossed my mind today. “
“ come on, you're attractive, and you're a great guy. you've got good lips... “
“ we're friends. “ “ yeah, friends kiss each other all the time, right? “
“ you're right, it's weird. “ “ no, it's not weird, it's just -- i've never really thought about it before. “
“ you never thought about it? not even once? “
“ this is awkward. “ “ yeah... it is. “
“ i'm sorry for bringing it up. “ “ actually, i would love to kiss you. “
“ you mean, you, and me? kissing? “
“ what do you say, you and me, just get it done and over with? “
“ come on, you've never thought about it? “ “ maybe once or twice. “
“ you mean us, kissing? “ “ can't say it never crossed my mind. “
“ let's just... kiss to see what it's like. “
“ fuck it. get over here. let's do it. “
“ it's just an innocent kiss. it's not like it means anything. “
“ come on, you talk about your... bedroom adventures all the time, and from what i can tell, you're pretty successful, so... maybe i'm a little curious. “
“ wait, you're serious? you're actually going to kiss me? “ “ it's not like i have anything better to do. “
“ i mean, it's a little awkward, but i guess things could always be... more awkward? “
do you have any prmpts for rivals bonding?
“ maybe we're not so different after all. “
“ thought you hated me. “
“ you hate me, huh? sounds like the beginning of a love story. “
“ or maybe, i don't hate you as much as i thought i did. “
“ regardless of where we stand, i admire you. “
“ let's start over. “
“ i think we both know i never really hated you. “
“ you're quite extraordinary. “
“ guess that's part of the reason; you were just a constant, walking reminder of [...] “
“ why won't you let people see the good in you?
“ you and your well-being matters more than some stupid childhood rivalry. “
“ why won't you let people see the good in you? “
“ thank you, for what you did tonight. “
“ i'm tired of fighting. i don't wanna do it anymore. “
“ i like you, name. more than i care to admit. “
“ come to me, all right? whenever you have a problem. “
“ maybe i haven't given you enough credit. “
—Prompt List <3
angst
"It would be better if you stayed away from me."
"Do you really want me? Or is this your way of getting back at my father?"
"You have given me enough memories to last a lifetime."
"If I ask you to kiss me in front of all these people, will you do it?"
"I am here to tell you that I cannot meet you anymore."
“you always push people away. i just thought you’d never do it to me”
“i know i have a heart because i can feel it breaking”
“i hate the way that i don’t hate you.”
“i didn’t realise i was such an inconvenience.”
“how many times am i supposed to forgive you?”
“all my friends told me you’d break my heart.”
“how could you let them say that about me?”
“i’d take our relationship back in a heartbeat.”
“i don’t see the same person i loved when i look at you anymore.”
“promise me you’ll still be here when i wake up.”
“you look happier”
“you still live in the silences between my thoughts.”
“i am in love with a moment we never had.”
“you didn’t just break promises, you broke me.”
"Don't go on that date." "Why?" "You know why." "Say it."
fluff
“if you cry, i’ll cry ─ and that won’t be fun for anyone.”
“my lipgloss is all over your lips.”
“that’s the first time i’ve ever seen you smile.”
“you cancelled plans for me?”
“quick, kiss me!”
“that’s the sixth time you’ve complimented me today.”
“how mad would you be if i kissed you?”
“it’s hard to sit here and be close to you and not kiss you.”
“ i never planned to have you on my mind this often”
“ i never want to stop making memories with you”
“a sky full of stars, and i’d still watch you.”
“my heart is so full of you i can hardly call it my own.”
“ i think i might be in some kind of love with you.”
“your lips look cold, want me to warm them up for you? “
"don't lie, your dimple usually shows when you're actually smiling. what's wrong?"
"i heard what you said...no one's ever talked about me that way before.."
“here’s a spare key so you don’t have to keep coming in through the window.”
“Oh my god you never told me you could cook”
“I know it’s 2 in the morning but do you want to...”
"Can I wear your sweater? It smells like you, I can't promise to give it back though."
smut
“shh. there’s people in the other room.”
"I need you to be quiet for me, okay?"
“say you want me, and i’m yours.”
“my boyfriend/girlfriend would kill us.”
“there’s so many things i wanna do to you.”
“i didn’t like the way they were looking at you.”
“ i shouldn’t allow myself to get this close to you.”
“i’m going to ruin you.”
“want me to model these for you?”
“no ones here. we can be as loud as we want.”
“do you think of me when you touch yourself?”
“if you called just to get off on my voice, i’m hanging up.”
"what's the matter, love? you get nervous when i look at you like this?"
"what pretty noises you're making for me… am i making you feel good?"
Car sex in the rain
“against the window? are you insane?”
“leave the heels on.”
"I swear I'm gonna fuck the next person that walks through that door."
"Oh princess, I thought we learn from the last time you decided to make me jealous."
"I thought we agreed to share her?"