Dadcrush - Willow Ryder - Can You Take My Virgi... -
Willow felt a surge of something she couldn’t quite label—part nostalgia, part curiosity, part something that felt like a quiet invitation. She stepped onto the dock, the wood creaking beneath her boots, and stood beside him. The river’s gentle song seemed to swell, as if urging her forward.
They talked of the past, of the places she’d been and the places she’d longed to see. He spoke of the river’s seasons, of how it carved its way through stone and time, never rushing, never stopping. As the sun began to dip, painting the sky in shades of rose and amber, their conversation slipped from memories into something more intimate.
She smiled, feeling, for the first time in a long while, that the story she’d been living was not just a series of performances, but a deeper, richer narrative—a tale of roots, of currents, and of the quiet, steady love that can be found when two strangers meet on a riverbank and recognize the same longing for authenticity in each other’s eyes. DadCrush - Willow Ryder - Can You Take My Virgi...
The river’s surface reflected the first stars, twinkling like distant promises. In that quiet space between them, the world seemed to hold its breath. They didn’t speak of love or desire in explicit terms; instead, they shared a quiet, unspoken understanding—a recognition of each other’s depths, the currents that had shaped them, and the way the river could both erase and preserve moments.
“You’ve always been brave,” he said, his eyes lingering on hers. “You chase the lights, the cameras, the applause. But I see you here, on this old dock, breathing the same air the river does. That takes a different kind of courage.” Willow felt a surge of something she couldn’t
She paused, heart thudding a little faster. “Dad?” she whispered, half‑laughing at the absurdity of calling a man she’d never known a “dad,” but also feeling the strange, comforting weight of the word.
Willow turned once more, watching the water catch the moonlight. The river’s song seemed to whisper back, “You are home.” They talked of the past, of the places
They sat there until the sky turned a deep indigo, the river continuing its endless flow. In the stillness, Willow felt a connection that went beyond titles and pasts—a connection rooted in shared silence, in the simple act of being present with another soul who understood the language of the river.
Willow felt a warmth spread through her chest, a feeling that was more than gratitude. It was the recognition that, after all the years of performance and façade, there was a part of her that still yearned for the steady presence of someone who understood her without words.
She didn’t expect to find him there.
He nodded, his gaze lingering on the water before returning to hers. “Thank you, too. For coming back to where it all began.”



























