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DirtyDox

@mayday2007

Hey there, I'm may! She/her, Daryl Dixon admirer and huge twd fan. Feel free to ask me anything! I mostly just reblog stuff tho(⁠≧⁠▽⁠≦⁠)

✧✧✧~°•°~°•°~°•◎◎◎•°~°•°~°•°~✧✧✧

Requests are open, so ask away people!

Smut-❤️‍🔥 ✧~◎

Angst-💙 ✧~◎

Fluff-💗 ✧~◎

Twd:

Blade II:

The boondock saints:

I write for the following:

Twd: Daryl, Rick, Shane

Blade II: Joshua 'scud' Frohmeyer

The boondock saints: Murphy MacManus

Pretty much any character Norman reedus plays(but not normie himself,he is a real person with children and I will set myself on fire if he ever finds this blog😭)

That's about it for my tiny master list 😄

THE WRITING TROPES THAT I DO NOT FEEL COMFORTABLE WRITING/REFUSE TO WRITE INCLUDE BUT ARE NOT LIMITED TO THE FOLLOWING:

★Non-con

★Incest

★Dub-con

★Stepcest

★Huge age gaps(where the reader is like 18 and any of the characters are like 40 or above)

★Hardcore degradation to the extent it's abusive

★Piss kinks

★Abdl

★Foot fetishes

★Ddlg

★(i also don't write for x male! reader)

Tags:

Banners by @cafekitsune

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im actually losing my mind i need him so bad its not even fucking funny i just want him to hold me oh my god oh my god please please i would do literally anything

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Reblogged

Daryl Dixon and the Five Love Languages

Part Two: Acts of Service

A/N: Everybody's been so nice on my last post. I've been writing for a while and I've never had this many people interact with my work. It's honestly really motivating and makes me want to write more! So seriously thanks to everybody for the love on part one. I hope you guys like part two!! <3

The Quarry

  • Daryl didn't know what to think when he came back from a hunting trip to find his brother gone and another hot shot cop spouting bullshit. And when he found out that bullshit cop had left his brother to die? He thought he might kill him. Right then. Right there. But things moved too fast and all of a sudden Officer Friendly was volunteering people to go back to the city to find Merle. And then he saw you
  • Rick wanted you with them. You'd joined up with the group after being stranded in the city just shy of too long. You were jumpy, eyes sharp and ready to grab for the knives at your sides. You knew the city. Daryl told himself he didn't care if you looked scared. You did, but you could help him and that was all that mattered. It had to be
  • The roof. The walkers. Merle's severed hand. None of it went according to plan. And then the focus shifted to those damn guns and Daryl thought he was going to lose it. But he needed the group, even if he didn't want to admit it. He got stuck with you and Glenn in the alley. He turned his back for a second. Just a second. And you and Glenn were gone. He didn't know why, but he couldn't stop thinking of your eyes. Wide, assessing, intent to stay alive even if you were terrified. Panic clenched at him. It was all too damn much. Losing Merle. And now you two. It felt like he couldn't keep anybody safe, and Daryl wasn't gonna let that shit slide
  • Things were a mess even after they got you both back. But when things finally settled, when camp was quiet and Daryl could hear himself think, he found himself sitting next to you at a fire.
  • Daryl tried to ignore how stiff you looked. How pale. But he couldn't look away from the way you kept shifting your shoulder and wincing. You'd pulled on a long sleeve shirt, but Daryl hadn't missed the gash you'd gotten back in the city. You'd fallen and slashed it on a piece of broken glass in the scuffle just before you were taken. You hadn't told anybody to Daryl's knowledge, and it ate at him. The way you shifted again and again but said nothing. He grimaced, but you'd gotten hurt helping him and he knew the least he could do was offer to help with your arm
  • "Here," he grunted, inching over to close the gap between you. You stilled, and he fought the urge to move away. He owed you this, and it needed to get cleaned up either way. He gestured to your arm and you frowned, you relaxed just a bit, and held it out to him
  • He worked quickly, satisfied with the fact that this was something he could do. It was something more than just sitting there staring at the fire, thinking about all the ways he'd failed that day. He worked with deft hands, undoing the sloppily tied fabric that you'd used as a bandage. With a quick glance to be sure the group didn't see him, he slipped the flask he'd snagged in the city out of his pocket. You hissed in pain as he peeled the bandage off the gash. He'd seen worse, but a flash of guilt hit him as he uncapped the flask
  • "S'gonna hurt," he said quietly. You nodded and clenched your jaw. He didn't wait, he just poured the liquid over the cut. You squeezed your eyes shut and breathed slowly. You masked your pain well enough, but Daryl knew firsthand what it looked like to hide a wound, to shrink back from the attention of it. Daryl finished and pulled a cloth from his pocket. It wasn't clean, but it'd do.
  • When he was done, he nodded once. More to himself than to you. He stood, looking out at camp. Everyone was so preoccupied with their own drama that no one had noticed you, bleeding, in pain. He grimaced. "Keep it clean," he muttered, then stalked off into the dark, deciding not to think of why you in pain in the dark, unnoticed, bothered him so much.

The Farm

  • The group did well on the farm
  • Shelter and safety agreed with everyone. It didn't solve all their problems, though. There was still tension. Rick and Shane pushing and pulling to lead. Hershel looking at the group like any one of them might snap and set the place on fire. It was an added strain on the group, but everyone did their best to keep the peace. Especially you
  • Mealtimes were always stressful. Even if everyone wanted to act above it now, they all knew what it was like to be hungry. Everyone wanted their portion first
  • Carol ladled soup into bowls a scoop at a time. Daryl stood off to the side, hating how aware of you he was. Ever since that trip to Atlanta, when you'd disappeared under his nose, he couldn't stop looking for you
  • You had tucked yourself away at the back of the group, always last. Daryl watched the way your eyes followed the ladle as Carol portioned out lunch. You weren't hanging back from a lack of want. No. Daryl knew all too well what it looked like to keep yourself small and out of the way. He'd done it for years. It had kept him safe
  • Carol tasked as she scraped the bottom of the pot, scooping the dregs for one last helping
  • "That's it, Hershel said he wants to keep an eye on supplies from the house. We'll have to wait until dinner for the rest," she said, shrugging. She had a bowl set aside; a rule Rick had set once he realized how much Carol was cooking. She always got her meal first
  • She turned and, with a simple sweet smile, she handed the bowl to Daryl. "I think everyone got some anyway."
  • Daryl took the bowl, memories of when he first learned what it meant to be really, truly hungry flickering in his head. "Not everyone," he said quietly
  • He walked directly to you and pushed the bowl into your hands
  • "It's fine, I can wait," you said, eyeing the group eyeing you
  • "No," Daryl bit out, not bothering to look back as he turned away, "eat," he said quietly, and he knew that with that look in your eye and warm meal in front of you, you would. He strode off from the group without another word
  • Late that night, Daryl walked into camp and, unceremoniously, dropped a buck in front of the fire
  • Your eyes flicked up from the knife you were sharpening, meeting Daryl's over the fire
  • Daryl jabbed a finger at the buck, "Carol and her," he emphasized, pointing at you, "first. Then everyone else." He said it with enough force that, after a moment, even Shane nodded.
  • Daryl strode back to his tent, pausing as he saw something in front. He stooped down and grabbed it. It was a bundle of fabric, and inside were three biscuits and a slice of cheese from dinner. Pinned to the fabric was a neatly written note that said, "thank you for the soup"
  • Daryl ate the bread and cheese, then crawled into his tent, content in the knowledge that tomorrow, and from here on out if he had anything to say about it, you would always have something to eat

On the Road

  • Daryl was pretty sure that you didn't even like Lori. But that didn't stop you from offering up a portion of your food or a nice spot to sleep or anything else you thought might make her a little more comfortable. It was sweet. With how far along Lori was, everyone knew she was miserable on their long walks during the day. But Daryl couldn't help noticing that you seemed to offer up everything you had, even if what you had wasn't much
  • She didn't take you up on your offers often. But on a particularly cold night when Rick was taking watch, after a rain soaked god awful day of walking, you gave her and Carl the spot Daryl knew you wanted for yourself. It was the only spot of dry ground in the camp, and Daryl forced himself to look away as you sank down onto the cold, wet ground beside the meager fire they'd made
  • He couldn't offer you any better. His spot was cold and wet and worse than the one you were currently settling into. He shifted in his spot, his vest crinkling with the mud caked on him
  • An idea pulled at him, and as he looked back to you and saw the way you were shivering in the cold, he didn't pause. He stood and crossed the space between you. He settled in next to you by the fire
  • You didn't look at him, you just curled into yourself to try to conserve what warmth your soaked pants and thin shirt provided.
  • The fire gave him some warmth, which he was thankful for as he shrugged off his vest
  • He fanned it out and laid it gently over you, hoping that it'd do something, anything, against the cold wet ground
  • You looked up at him, moving to get up, eyes wide, "Daryl, no. You'll be cold."
  • "M'fine," he shrugged, shaking his head when you started to give it back. You stilled, catching the intensity in his eyes. He wouldn't take it back even if you threw it at him. After a moment, he watched you lay back down, tugging the vest around you as a barrier between your skin and the slick mud
  • Daryl stared into the fire for a while, then looked back over at you a few minutes later. You were fast asleep, curled tightly in his vest. Something warm and unrelated to the fire filled his chest. He'd never seen you look this peaceful. The ease on your face, it was something Daryl realized he'd always wanted to see you with. He cleared his throat and looked back at the fire and decided not to think about how that look on your face made him feel

The Prison

  • With a home, a real, solid home, Daryl started to see that look a whole lot more
  • He'd never seen you as bright or as happy as you'd been the past few months. You were finally relaxing into your place in the group. You were a core part of what made everyone feel relaxed here, especially the newcomers from Woodbury. You smiled more. You cracked jokes. And if Daryl was being honest, it wasn't just the people from Woodbury that you were helping. How you'd been lately...it was making Daryl feel more at home, too
  • He was on his way in one night, passing so many newcomers that he was starting to feel claustrophobic, when he passed your cell and paused
  • You were inside, trying in vain to tack up a tie-dye sheet to the wall. It was blue and swirly and a little ridiculous, and Daryl had to cover his mouth with his hand to stifle the laugh threatening to spill out
  • You turned and your eyes lit up in a way that made his heart pound, "Daryl! Hey!" You wobbled, the chair you'd perched yourself on tipping. Daryl crossed the distance quickly and held it still, looking up at you
  • "What're you doin'?" He asked, suddenly aware of how close he was to you
  • "Can you hold that still?" you pointed at the chair, eyes wide and imploring. He nodded and you smiled, "Thanks Daryl," you turned back to the wall, standing on your tip toes to push a tack through the material. "I never got to do this kind of stuff you know..." you said, struggling to push it in, "Decorate. have a spot of my own." Daryl hummed in agreement, looking up at your concentrated expression. You finished the side you were on, then shifted to the other, "I always liked tie-dye. Granted, didn't think I'd be decorating a jail cell with it but..." you trailed off, finishing the other side and pulling back, "we work with what we have," you grinned at the sheet and wiped your hands on your jeans. You looked down at him, smile bright.
  • You paused there for a minute, just looking at him. "Thanks Daryl," you said quietly, "for everything."
  • He shifted on his feet and shrugged, "S'nothing."
  • "It's not nothing," you said, and you moved to jump down from the chair, it rocked a bit and Daryl steadied your waist on instinct. He stilled, and you looked down at him in a different way. A closer one. "Thanks for that, too."
  • You hopped down gently, and Daryl turned to leave, "Thank you, too" he murmured, realizing how close the two of you were now.
  • "What for?" you ask gently
  • "Just...just bein' around. Bein' there," he meant it. Even with the lump in his throat at how he sounded, how soft. Through everything the group had been through, you'd been there. And getting to see you find your place in the group meant something. Maybe it meant he could find his place, too.
  • "Anytime, Dar," you said with a smile brighter than the prison cell warranted. The prison cell decorated with tie-dye. Daryl smiled, and as he walked back to his cell, he realized that maybe his cell felt a little sparse. Maybe he'd hang something, if he came across anything. Maybe this place really could be a home, for the both of you.

The Woods

  • Losing Beth was the closest Daryl had ever seen you get to giving up
  • Everything you'd been through, everything everyone had been through, none of it had impacted you like watching that bullet go through Beth's skull
  • When you lost her the first time, when those sons of bitches at the hospital had taken her, you'd been your usual determined self. You kept him going, and the two of you were intent on getting her back
  • And you were close. You were so close. Daryl watched the way your spark flared when you found her, when you finally saw the girl who'd come to be a sister to you, in front of you again
  • And when she died, he watched that spark die, too
  • He had carried Beth out, her small body frail in his arms. But Rick had carried you, half dragging and stumbling in shock, out of the hallway. Away from all of it. You looked just as small and broken as Beth felt in his arms, and Daryl felt himself breaking apart looking at the both of you
  • You were silent after that. Not quiet, not reserved, silent. You were a ghost moving through a land of the dead. You did what was expected of you. Kept yourself alive. Helped the group. But you were a shell. Everyone noticed, the light you'd become for them dying before their eyes. But they didn't know what to say or do. They didn't get you, not down to your core. Not like Daryl did
  • But he did know you. He knew you and he knew that you needed something. He just didn't know what
  • When you made it to that town that had been Noah's, and everyone's, last hope, only to find it empty, Daryl knew he had to do something. You couldn't take another loss like this, and he couldn't take seeing you break
  • So, the day after you left the town, the day after another one of you died, Daryl didn't give you time to feel the weight of another death and another loss. He woke you early, saying he needed help on a hunt. The fact that you didn't crack a joke about him needing help on a hunt for once was almost enough to break him. But he didn't let it, he just waited patiently as you got your things together and followed him out into the woods
  • The noise of the woods echoed around the two of you. The buzz of cicadas and the distant growl of walkers filled the quiet between you. Daryl didn't talk, he just walked farther and farther out, looking for the right spot
  • He expected you to ask where you were going, maybe complain in that joking, teasing way you did whenever a walk got too boring. But you didn't, you just followed along a few steps behind, a vacant look in your eyes whenever he looked back to check
  • You reached a field, open on all sides so Daryl could keep an eye out
  • "Alright," he said, voice gruff as he turned back to you. "You wanna break shit or cry or scream or something, you do it here."
  • You blinked at him, the only indication you'd even heard him
  • He waited for something, he wasn't sure what. But he knew you. He knew that the silence brimming on the surface was a mask for what was going on in your head. You needed this.
  • You blinked again, blank eyes devoid of life staring into his
  • "Please," he heard himself say, surprised at the crack in his voice
  • You frowned and it was something. So he kept going
  • "I can't keep walking around with you like this. I'm sorry. I'm so fuckin sorry that we lost her. I should have- I should have done more. I should have gotten there sooner. Should have been closer. I should have-"
  • "It's not your fault," you said, quietly. The first words you'd said in weeks
  • He paused, "It is. It is my fault. It ain't yours. You ain't gotta carry that."
  • "Yeah I do, Daryl. You know I do."
  • Daryl balked, "The hell are you talkin' about?"
  • Your frown deepened, "We promised Daryl. We promised we'd find her. But I promised we'd save her." He went to interject, to stop you. You hadn't said that. Neither of you had. Finding her had always been the goal, finding her alive was the dream. "Don't," you snapped, voice sharper than he'd ever heard it, "I didn't promise you, Daryl. I promised myself. I promised myself that I'd get her back to Maggie. I didn't. I failed Daryl, so yeah. I do have to carry that."
  • "We both failed. She's gone. There ain't nothing we can do about it. But we keep going. We don't give up."
  • "You think that's what I'm doing? Giving up? I'm still here Daryl. I'm out here in the middle of god knows where with you! I'm still here-"
  • "No, you're not. You're a god damned corpse. Don't bullshit me. You're here but you're not. Don't stand there spoutin' that shit like I'm gonna buy it like everybody back there."
  • "Why? Why does it matter? I'm doing what I need to do for the group. That's all I have to do. Long as I do that, shouldn't matter how I feel," you spit the word with derision, anger flaring in your eyes.
  • Daryl felt something give in his chest. Anger was something, anger was alive.
  • "It matters because you do," he snapped back, "you don't get to quit on me. You just don't," he said, his voice quieting on the last word, and he couldn't believe how much he wanted you to get it. To get that you meant more to him than what you could do. That you were more than that.
  • "Why? Why can't I quit Daryl? All you ever do is shit for the group. For me. If I weren't such a fucking drain...maybe...maybe-"
  • And he could see it. He could see the blame and the self-hatred swirling in your expression that he'd known was there. You really thought that that shit he did for you and for the rest of the group was a weight on him. You thought that if you weren't around, if you weren't a weight, then maybe Beth would still be alive
  • "For a long time..." he started before he could think about it, the words taking on a life of their own, "For a long time I just-" he cleared his throat, and he watched the pain in your eyes shift, watched you watch him, he pushed forward, "I looked out for myself. For my brother. It was all I had. And when he died..." he closed his eyes, made himself think past the memories, of how hard it was and how lost he felt when Merle was gone, "I didn't have anybody. The group just saw me as Merle's brother," he shook his head, "but you didn't. You didn't see me as anything other than someone safe. Someone capable. It gave me what I needed to feel that way about myself. Doin' shit for you, doin' shit for the group, it's who I am now. Wouldn't give that up for anything." He took a careful step toward you, closer to you now than he'd ever been, "it ain't a weight. You...ain't a weight." Your eyes welled with tears and there you were. Sharp and clear and caught up in a storm in your head. "You did everything you could for Beth. We both did. We lost her," it cut him like a knife to his stomach, "we lost her and there's nothing we can do but keep going. She wanted that for us, you know that. And watching you break like this...Beth wanted us to live. We have to do what we can to do that. For her and for us."
  • You were close to him, and he felt something warm fill his chest as you slipped your hand into his, you squeezed it, and the strength of it washed over him. Tears slipped down your face as you looked up at him, "I'm a lot, Daryl. I'm a lot and you've got enough and I can't carry all this by myself. I can't hold myself up on my own anymore and I'm tired of trying. It's too much. It's too much-"
  • And you broke. You broke and you mended all at once as you leaned into his chest. You cried and he held you, his chest ached as he said, "You ain't alone. You let me help you carry it. You let me help you because I want to and because I need to." You shook, and he pulled you tighter into his arms, murmuring into your hair again and again, "I'm here. You let me help you". He said it until he felt your shaking body still, until the sobs wracking your body eased.
  • You pulled back, just enough to look up at him, eyes clear and sharp, looking at him like you knew him better than anyone in the world because you did
  • "I'll let you carry me if you let me carry you too sometimes, okay? We do it together" you said, eyes wide and sharp and searching once again
  • And because that look in your eyes was his favorite in the world and he was so damn happy to see it again, he did something he'd never done before. Daryl agreed to let someone else take care of him. He nodded, just once, and you buried your head in his chest again, arms tight around his middle. He dipped his head down and, like it was the most natural thing he'd ever done, pressed a light kiss to the top of your head. If it meant you'd keep going, keep trying, keep letting him carry you, he'd agree to letting you carry him when he needed it, too. You'd carry the weight this fucked up world hung around both of your necks, together. No matter what

Alexandria

  • "What do you think?" You said, stepping back to study the wall the two of you stood before
  • You'd gone back and forth on the color for a few days. Not with Daryl, no, Daryl would have told you to paint the wall lime green if you wanted to. You'd gone back and forth between a deep burgundy, a forest green, and a light blue. You wanted the house you and Daryl now shared to feel like a home. Somewhere the two of you chose to be, not somewhere you ended up
  • "I like it," Daryl said, pressing a kiss to the side of your forehead. He smiled, you were covered in blue paint, it was splattered across your clothes, sure, but your face and your hair were also covered, like you hadn't even tried to keep it off. It was smeared on your face, too, and he couldn't help but look at the way it contrasted with your eyes. He paused. He'd been wondering why you wanted that shade of blue in particular. You liked burgundy, you'd told him once. And the green reminded you of the woods beyond the walls, a place the two of you went often on your runs and your early morning hunts, but the blue was a wild card
  • "Why the blue?" he asked, studying a smudge on your cheekbone, his mind ticking closer to an answer
  • You turned to him and he pulled you into his hold, reveling in the ease of this. In the two of you painting your living room
  • You shrugged, heat blooming on your cheeks. "Your eyes," you murmured, peaking up at him through your mussed hair
  • He laughed, it was so warm and easy, and he realized he'd laughed more since you'd settled in Alexandria than he had in his whole life
  • "You serious?" he said, smiling
  • You lifted a hand and settled it on his cheek, "Yeah, it's my favorite color"
  • He hummed, leaning into your touch. He looked to the wall, then back to you, blue paint and all, "I think it's perfect," he said, before pressing a kiss to your forehead
  • You pulled back, smiling, "Yeah," you said, studying him and the blue paint that was smeared all over him, too, "I think it's perfect too."
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Anonymous asked:

how would daryl try to make up with his kid after an argument or an incident (specifically a teenager)?

A talk.

No shouting just a talk.

If the kid did something wrong then he’d explain why it was wrong and tell them not to do it again.

If he did something wrong, he’d apologise profusely and make it up by doing something nice. Maybe a trip on the motorcycle or maybe just a simple hug, maybe some chill time with a movie or something. Just something to show he feels bad for it.

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I need all my Daryl Dixon girlies to remember that, at the very least he USED to, POSSIBLY STILL DOES, believe he saw a real Chupacabra.

That’s it

That’s the post

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Anonymous asked:

Hii I was wondering if you could please write a one shot about Daryl x Grimes!Reader (Rick’s daughter) I was thinking younger Daryl, they gotta keep their relationship secret (Rick thinks his sweet angel is too pure for redneck Daryl). It could be fluff, smut, or both!

Daryl Dixon x Reader || smut MDNI 18+, semi public sex, pinv, secret relationship, rick'sdaughter!reader, farm!daryl, idk im sure there's more tags but im tired. this is a fantasy world where creampies don't equal babies || a/n: anon requested this awhile back and just reminded me of it during my prompt giveaway! I'm sorry this took so long my love!

Daryl and his Kingdom girl.

He doesn't know her that well, but he’s seen her often enough around the Kingdom. Whether she’s in the gardens tending to the crops, ensuring everything with the cattle is in order, or simply walking through the bustling streets, her presence is something he finds impossible to ignore. That smile of hers—bright, unbothered, always there—is something he finds deeply irritating. In fact, everything about her grates on him: her laughter, which echoes like a bell, the way her hair slips free from her ponytail and falls delicately across her face as she works, even the way she seems so effortlessly at ease with everything around her.

The first time he hears Ezekiel call her "princess," he nearly laughs out loud, thinking how well the title fits her. But when she scoffs and rolls her eyes at the moniker, as if it’s the most absurd thing she’s ever heard, a fresh wave of irritation surges through him. The way she dismisses the title bothers him even more than the title itself.

After the accident on the bridge, when he decided to distance himself from everything, she was the last person he wanted to encounter. Yet, even in his self-imposed exile, he couldn’t escape her. The first time he saw her outside the safety of the Kingdom, his immediate reaction was confusion—what was she doing out here? He found himself following her, not out of concern, he doesn't care about her at all, but because she was close to Carol and Ezekiel. If nothing else, he reasoned, he could make sure she didn’t get herself killed.

But when he sees her hunting, a strange feeling knots in his stomach. There’s something unsettling about how capable she is, how she moves through the forest with the same ease and grace that he does. Damn it, he thinks. Now, every time they cross paths while hunting, she greets him with that same annoying smile that makes his blood boil. And yet, no matter how much it bothers him, he finds himself nodding back in acknowledgement, as if compelled by some unspoken rule.

He can still remember the first time they actually spoke. He had been tracking a deer for nearly two days, but just as he fired his crossbow, he noticed another arrow strike the deer almost simultaneously. His frustration surged as he rushed forward, only to see her emerging from the trees, heading towards the same prey.

"My arrow hit first," she declared, her voice steady as she approached the deer, now lying on the ground with two arrows embedded in its chest.

He rolled his eyes and scoffed at her audacity. "Ya wish," he retorted with a mocking tone, unwilling to concede even an inch to her.

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“Christ! Would ya—Jesus, would ya just step away from the damn edge!” Daryl growled at you. “I ain’t kiddin’! Yer gonna fall off and die!”

You had your back to the edge of the bluff and were enjoying the wind that whipped across the water and gained speed as it collided with the cliff, rushing past you and blowing your hair forward. Your arms were extended and if you shut your eyes you could almost imagine you were flying. “You really should try it!” you called back at him, grinning.

“I think yer tryin’ it enough for both of us. Just—get away from the damn edge!”

“Daryl, are you afraid of heights?”

“No. ’M afraid of dyin’ fallin’ off a cliff!”

You laughed jovially and despite his concern and the queasy feeling seeing you that near the abrupt end of the ground was giving him, his heart did still leap at the sound of your carefree laughter. That was rare these days and he wished he could hear it every day. “What will you give me if I step away?” you asked, your teeth dimpling into your bottom lip.

A sudden, strong gust of wind whipped past you and Daryl worried you’d be knocked off balance and tumble down. “Shit—anythin’ ya want! Just step away, I ain’t playin’!”

“Anything?”

“Sure!” he hollered back.

You stepped toward him, away from the edge. “Alright.” You glanced up at the innumerable stars in the sky and the almost iridescent swirls of the milky way. “I want the whole galaxy in the palm of my hand then,” you said, your eyes still gazing up at the immenseness of the night sky.

Daryl allowed himself to memorize your expression, the scene for a long moment. “When I said “anythin”’, I meant within reason.

You looked back down at him and bit your bottom lip again. "Alright. A kiss then,” you said, your mouth curving into a subtle smile that stopped his heart altogether. “Is that unreasonable?”

Daryl gulped. “…Completely. Dun make any sense.”

You moved in even closer to him. “You said anything.

Happy Flashback Friday!

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Reblogged

Rules were Meant to be Broken

Pairing : Daryl Dixon x Reader

Era : No Apocalypse AU

Pronouns : she/her

Genre : Fluff / a tiny bit of angst

Word Count : 4.3k

AN ~ Hiii I haven't done a one of these in a hot minute so I'm excited! This was requested a little while ago through anon, and you can click here to read the details of what this oneshot entails. I've never written a young Daryl before so it was fun to try something new. And don't hate me, but I sort of left this at a cliffhanger, so let me know if you guys would want a part 2!

Hope you enjoy! xoxox

You sighed tiredly, forcing yourself to stay awake to try and finish the assignment that was laying on your desk before you. The words on the paper were mocking in a way. Knowing that you had put it off until the last minute and were now paying every possible price of staying up later to get it done as it was due first thing in the morning. Graduation couldn’t come fast enough it seemed like.

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