Collins!Reader
Series Metadata
Listing Series
-
Tags
Summary
“Are you going to tell people that we’re not dating?”
You paused, “It would make my life a lot easier considering even Liz thinks we’re dating.” But you’ve obviously got some type of angle with this and I’m trying to figure out what it is. “The real question is why do you want people to think we are?”
She skipped the denial and without missing a beat said, “Good publicity. It looks very good to be dating a member of my competitor’s family. You’re the only viable option, as you said you don’t really have an opinion of me."
OR
You make a deal with Angie in exchange for not cursing your family. Two months couldn’t be that long right?
Series
- Part 1 of Collins!Reader
-
Tags
Summary
There was a sudden scraping sound against the wall, and you turned to see the broom slide and hit the shelf. Knocking one potion off the shelf.
"Y/N." There was a warning to her voice, and panic that sent your heart pounding. You glanced up at Angie. A purple mist rose from the broken glass, swirling around you so that the last thing you saw was your wife lunging for your arm. And then you were engulfed.
The smoke dissipated a few seconds later and you found yourself standing in a field.
You turned around full circle; you were standing in a field. Anxiously you walked around and finally you stopped. Panic rising. You stopped to stand where your bedroom would’ve been. Should be. From that place you could see Collinsport. Panic rose, you felt nauseous. Because there sat Collinsport, smoke from chimneys and log cabins and boats that looked like they were from textbooks, and it looked how Barnabas had always described Collinsport centuries ago.
OR
Several years after 'the name of the game' you're enjoying domestic bliss with your wife, when an accident throws you back to eighteenth-century Collinsport. Now you're faced with the problem of getting back to the present without screwing up the timeline.Series
- Part 2 of Collins!Reader
-
Tags
Summary
“Do you enjoy Christmas?”
You considered the question momentarily before shrugging, “I mean well enough?” Tore your focus away from the shining ornaments to find Angie watching and waiting for you to elaborate. Spurred, you did. “You know my family, and you know how we are. Christmas always seemed nice for others but ended in some argument or long-lost family relatives trying to get money out of us.”
OR
Angie's determined to make your first Christmas together a good one, unfortunately things don't go exactly to plan.
Series
- Part 3 of Collins!Reader
