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directorâs cut ⤨ tsukishima kei
⨠genre; college!au, childhood best friends to lovers, fluff, minor angst like its there if u squint
⨠pairing; tsukishima kei x fem!reader
⨠word count; 17.3k
⨠description; when you convince your best friend into being the male lead of your film project, you don't expect for it to make you question your whole relationship.
⨠warnings; profanity, alcohol, smoking
⨠a/n; this has been in the works for quite a while now and it is defff the longest fic ive ever written (not saying will ever write yet bc who knows), but i think i like it. i am a sucker for best friends to lovers, ESPECIALLY childhood best friends to lovers, so i hope u guys like it :)
song i listened to writing this: 'being your friend' by katherine li
one.Â
The universe has a top-tier sadism kink, and its living proof is Tsukishima Kei.Â
You know this to be a fact because 1) aside from his bachelor of science in anthropology, heâs pursuing a PhD in sarcasm and uses his learnings primarily to eviscerate your self-esteem, 2) The Umbrella Academy doesnât come out with another season for another few months so your life choices have become the pinnacle of his entertainment, and 3) despite being your Bestie⢠of twelve years, he still makes you beg for his benevolence, even if he does have the annoying habit of showing up when you need him most.
Itâs deeply unfortunate that heâs all youâve got, universe be damned.Â
âName your price. Cake? Head? Money? Câmon, just tell me what you want!â
Tsukishima peers at you over his laptop with disdain, the blue glow of his pirated PDF of The Communist Manifesto reflected in his glasses as he squints at you. His lips are pursed in annoyance, face scrunched up as he seemingly contemplates whether to put himself out of his misery or squash you to little smithereens. âWhat I want is for you to go away.â
True love, honestly. The golden standard for kindness and affection. A picturesque image of camaraderie. Lo and behold, everyone, your best friend.
âOh my god, Kei, please,â you whine, hands clasped together as you look up at him through batted lashes. He doesnât even flinch, looking completely unimpressedâhow pretentious of him. âIâll literally pay you whatever you want.â
The blond rolls his eyes, looking back down at his laptop screen as he briskly retorts, âIâm not a prostitute, idiot. You canât pay me to star in your stupid movie.â
He ignores the several judgmental stares that turn in your direction at his response. You, on the other hand, are praying the libraryâs studious occupants donât assume youâre a pimp preying on broke college students.Â
In all honesty, you probably shouldâve chosen a less populated spot than the libraryâs first floor seats in front of Crowâs Coffee, especially if you actually had any intentions to get work done. But with just a few months left until the end of second semester, you have way too many dining dollars left and not enough places to spend them; in this capitalist world, you refuse to let more money simply be pocketed by the greedy hands of the school. Itâs how you managed to tempt Tsukishima out of the comfort of his apartment in the first placeâwith promises of free coffee and shortcake, courtesy of your four-star meal plan.Â
âTechnically, thatâs a pornstar,â Yamaguchi supplies unhelpfully from his spot buried amongst stacks of math and science textbooks. Heâs the only one of you whoâs effectively completing his assignments because he wonât pass his classes unless heâs in constant fight-or-flight mode (you thank every deity you can think of that you werenât born to be a STEM girlie). âYou know youâve got the time to, Tsukki.â
âYeah, but I donât want to,â he shrugs. You promptly deliver a swift kick to his shins. âOwâwell, now I really donât want to.â
âBe honest, do you hate me?â you sniff dramatically, letting your head hit the table with a soft thud; Yamaguchi pats your head tantalizingly, as if youâre a fuckinâ child, and you want to scream at them both.
âYes,â Tsukishima snorts, not even bothering to glance up. âItâs your own fault for being a film major.â
You shoot him a glare, but no threats come to mind because heâs sadly right.
Being a film major is basically being in a perpetual state of begging: begging your friends to star in your work, begging your professors for an extension because your lead decided to quit the night before shooting, and begging your parents for forgiveness because they didnât send you to college to become a âprofessional movie watcher.âÂ
Sure, you get to watch artsy film-bro movies for homework, but you also spend half your time pulling all-nighters to finish scripts and survive solely off a diet of Shin Ramyun and its complimentary mushroom flakes. Tsukishima likes to tell you how you reek of constant desperation; you concur because no one has a real penchant for the arts these days. In a world where everyone dreams of being the next Spielberg, nothing is truly original, and youâre just barely holding on with the kind of boundless optimism that can only be fueled by sheer willpower.Â
So here you are, offering bribes of cake, coffee, and cold hard cash, trying to convince your best friendâwho has the emotional range of a teaspoon and the patience of a sleep-deprived toddlerâto star in your magnum opus so you can pass the semester. Youâd ask Yamaguchi, but heâs got civil engineering exams and an actual promising future to worry about. Meanwhile, your future, desperation and all, hinges on whether Tsukishima will stop being a pain in the ass for ten minutes and agree to be your leading man.
Luckily, because youâve been #pairbonded for twelve years, you know exactly what buttons to push. You let out a sorrowful sigh, before loudly declaring, âFine. Iâll just ask Shoyo then.â
That does it. Tsukishimaâs jaw twitches, his fingers pausing over the keyboard; you know him too well because the mere thought of the red-head starring in your movie is enough to make Tsukishima reconsider his stance. You never did understand their beef, but Yamaguchi tells you that theyâre just inverse idiots, which seems pretty likely considering theyâre actually both easily provoked and highly competitive. He looks up from his laptop, irritation flashing in his eyes. âAbsolutely not,â he says flatly, closing the lid of his computer with a decisive click.
Yamaguchi snickers, clearly sensing victory in the air. You, on the other hand, suppress your triumphant smile and put on your best wounded-puppy look. âBut heâs so eager to help,â you say, your voice dripping with faux innocence. âHeâll do anything for me.â
Thereâs a moment of silence as Tsukishima contemplates this. His fingers drum lightly on the table, a sign that heâs weighing his options. And then finally, he lets out a long, suffering exhale, head rolled back in exasperation. âFine. Iâll do it. But I swear to God, if this film ruins my life, Iâm holding you personally responsible.â
âYou already hold me personally responsible for most things,â you chirp, practically beaming with delight. âBut thank you, Kei! Youâre the best.â
Yamaguchi looks up from his mountain of textbooks with a bemused smile. âThat was a quick turnaround. Youâre like a married couple.â
âOnly in spirit, âDashi,â you purr, blowing him a playful kiss. The freckled boy pretends to catch your kiss and presses it to his cheek in a dramatic gesture; no wonder heâs your favorite. He really is such a sweetie.
âStop encouraging her,â Tsukishima groans, pushing himself up from the table. âAnd stop saying things like that. People might believe you.â
âWow, not you denying our love,â you scoff, sticking your tongue out at him. âI want a divorce.â
The blond ignores your threat. âI need air. Bye, Tadashi.â
He gives you an unimpressed but telling look, so you roll your eyes and promptly start packing up your things, shoving notebooks and pens into your bag haphazardly. The last things you do are run over to give your beloved âDashi a light squeeze goodbye, swipe your laptop and Owala into your arms (because you are a broke college student who cannot afford to get a new laptop and your New Yearsâ Resolution is to be more hydrated), and skip to catch up with your friend, already halfway out the door. The evening air is a refreshing change from the stuffy library youâve been in for hours; youâre sure if you had any free hands right now youâd bend over and grab a handful of grass, just for the sake of it.Â
âTis is the life of a film major, you guess. Youâre bitchless with a capital âBâ and spend the other half of your time with your equally bitchless friends. And all they do is abuse your dining dollars and mock your miseries in life, so honestly, itâs a good thing youâre in school to write and produce rom coms. You can live vicariously through them, at least.
But whatever. Pathetic love life aside, right now, Kei has agreed, and youâre already one step closer to a successful final project.Â
two.Â
The walk home with Tsukishima is as comfortable as ever, the silence between you two punctuated by the soft crunch of gravel under your shoes and the distant hum of campus life winding down for the night. He doesnât pull his headphones on, but he also doesnât start up a conversation; being alone with him is simply being able to exist.Â
Heâs walked you home everyday since the beginning of middle school, when his mom found out he hadnât waited that day and you had walked home alone in the dark. From your bedroom window in the house next door, directly mirroring his, you had overhead her lecturing both him and Akiteru about the importance of mannersâand to Keiâs credit, heâs dutifully picked you up after your classes and chores ever since, even if he grumbles the whole way home. For some reason, this habit carried over when you, him, and Tadashi committed to the same university, even if it meant standing outside a frat house at two in the morning because you got too fucked up to walk home on your own. You puked out half your stomach on his sweatpants, and heâd made you do his laundry for a month as punishment, but he still waits patiently at the cafĂŠ by frat row every time you get coerced to go out by your roommates.Â
As you reach your dorm building, Tsukishima steps aside, holding the door open for you; you roll your eyes, but a smile tugs at your lips. âSuch a gentleman, Kei. What would I do without you?â
He smirks, letting the door swing closed behind him as you head towards the elevator. âProbably get kidnapped or something. Youâre too trusting.â
âThe only person Iâd let kidnap me,â you say dreamily, pressing the button for your floor with a dramatic swoop. âis Oikawa.â
Youâre only half joking because Oikawa Tooru, the president of Sigma Epsilon Iota (SEI), is in fact extremely pretty and volunteered to be in your film last semester. You later found out that it was because heâs an astronomy major and thus felt compelled to star in your movie (which, yes, was titled Stars); he convinced you to spend many extra weeks in After Effects making sure the sky imagery looked âas perfect as him.â Heâd actually been a really good sport about learning his lines and cues, but youâre pretty sure neither you nor your 2014 Macbook Air would survive that experience again.Â
âRight, fall for the guy who does keg stands at every party,â he drawls, his tone laced with sarcasm. âSmart.â
You huff and stick your tongue out at him, earning yourself a half-shrug and an amused snort. The elevator ride is brief, and soon youâre at your door, fumbling with your keys; as always, Tsukishima stops and stands to the side, waiting for you to invite him in, because again, manners. You turn to him with a playful grin. âYou know, you donât have to stand there like a sentinel every time. You can come in.â
He raises an eyebrow. âIs that an invitation?â
You laugh, pushing the door open and gesturing dramatically. âOh, please, come in. Make yourself at home.â
Not that you had to tell him that. He slouched past you and kicked off his shoes as soon as you gave him the cue. Heâs honestly just as relaxed here as in his own studio, already stretching and making himself comfortable on the couch with your favorite decorative pillow tucked under his head.Â
You two have settled into a pretty comfortable routine. Itâs a Friday night, so chances are that heâll yank out his phone, scroll through his email. Youâll put something on the TV and heâll critique it through mouthfuls of popcorn, only to have it ruin his appetite for whatever you end up ordering for dinner; later, if heâs tired enough, heâll give up on the thirty minute drive home and collapse next to you in your Twin XL. Itâs a mess of limbs and limited space, but you two manageâyou always have. Your suitemates, Yukie and Kaori, have already texted that theyâre bringing home Chinese takeout for four, so you decide against your usual snacks because your twig of a best friend needs actual sustenance.
Swinging by your room to drop off your bag and laptop, you take a pit stop in the kitchen on the way back to pluck two bottles of soju from the fridge. You toss him one; he catches it neatly and observes the flavor with scrutiny.Â
âYou hate strawberry,â he points out. âWhy are you drinking this?â
You shrug, walking over to plop down on the couch by him. âBecause itâs your favorite.â
His head is right up against your thigh because heâs too tall to fit on your shitty university furniture, even with his legs half-dangling off the armrest. You click through Netflix, nursing your drink with a slight pout until you make the executive decision to put on The Bachelor.
âTrying to prove you can love both me and Oikawa at the same time?â Tsukishima comments, watching the screen as he pops open the cap of his bottle. Heâs referring to Ben telling both Lauren and JoJo he loved them in season 20; you lowkey love the series and he highkey loves the drama. Thereâs just something about people finding their supposed soulmates after knowing each other for like a month that really makes life entertaining.
âDonât ever compare me to Ben,â you frown, because you think he was a massive asshole for doing that to JoJo and then not even picking her in the end. These bitches really be throwing each other under the bus. âYouâre so mean to me.â
âYou just bribed me with strawberry soju.â
âItâs not bribery if itâs out of love. Plus, I can tolerate it for one night,â you roll your eyes, taking a sip of the drink. âSo, you wanna know what the filmâs about or not?â
He looks at you over the rim of his bottle, eyebrow raised. âDo I have a choice?â
âNot really,â you grin, patting his head affectionately. âOkay, so, the film. Itâs a romantic short about the progression of a college relationship. Like, from the first meeting to the final stages of being together. Itâs dreamy, very aestheticâyâknow, all those soft hues and hazy shots. A smoking scene thrown in there somewhere.â
âSounds like every other indie film ever made.â
âShut up. This oneâs different,â you insist, lightly tugging on a strand of his hair. âItâs got a great castâYachiâs playing the female lead.â
He nods, seemingly interested. âYachi, huh? Whatâs my role, then?â
âThe male lead, obviously,â you say, not even bothering to look away from the screen. The opening credits have just finished and youâre instantly sucked into the magical world of Malta; God, what you would do to be there right now instead of in your overpriced residence complex.
âOh, great. Falling in love. My specialty,â he deadpans, taking another swig of his drink. âWhat do I have to do?â
You hum absentmindedly. âLearn the lines, cues, whatever. Yachi said sheâs free tomorrow, so maybe we can get coffee with her in the afternoon and run through the working script?â
Tsukishima groans. âWe already have to get started?â
âYeah, thereâs a lot to do,â you retort, giving him a gentle punch on the shoulder. He frowns up at you disapprovingly, and you mockingly frown back. âGet over it. Youâre my main star.â
He shakes his head as you both watch the girls line up in knight costumes to compete in the episodeâs extra-time competition. Modern television is truly unreal. âWhy did I agree to this?â
âBecause you love me.â
You flick your eyes from the TV to him, gauging his reaction. Heâs rolling his eyes, of course, but the small smile and faint blush creeping up his cheeks tells you everything you need to know.
three.Â
The prior night, your suitemates eventually came home with the promised takeout; Kaori even brought home boba orders courtesy of her friend Bokuto closing shift at the campus Broba Tea, so itâs safe to say you have the best roommates ever.Â
Turnabout is fair play, so you and Tsukishima agreed to clean upâtherefore, even after your suitemates retreated to their rooms, you two lingered behind in the living room, sorting away recyclables and compost into their respective places and watching your favorites get eliminated. Friday nights like this are nice: just you and your best friend, making three-pointers with empty soju bottles into the blue plastic bin. Even after you finished the seasonâs finale, you put on some nature documentary (courtesy of his Disney+ subscription, which he exclusively uses for National Geographic like a fuckinâ weirdo) and argued about which ugly fish looked more like each other the whole hour and forty minutes. You mustâve crashed no earlier than one A.M., but the specifics are hazy: you donât actually remember falling asleep.
So the miserable blaring from your phone right now is truly, in short, cruel. Apparently, you forgot to turn off your alarm for your usual Friday 11 A.M. lecture last night, because youâre currently being rudely awoken at a completely unnecessary time on a Saturday morning. Groaning, you slap around the bed until your fingers find your phone, silencing the alarm. As you roll over, you find yourself face-to-face with Tsukishima, whoâs occupying the other half of your twin XL bed, looking every bit as disgruntled as you feel. His hair is a mess, and thereâs a faint crease on his cheek from your pillowcase; his arm is slung loosely over your waist as he grumbles and tries to hide his face from the light. He mustâve carried you to your bed after you dozed off on the couch.
âYouâve got to be kidding me,â he mutters. His voice is hoarse with sleep. âWhy do you set alarms on days you donât have class?â
âI forgot to turn it off,â you mumble back, burying your face in your pillow. âSorry for waking you up.â
He sighs, rolling over onto his side and squinting at you as he makes out the hazy figure of your silhouette through his shitty impaired vision. âMove over. Your greedy ass is hogging all the space.â
Ah yes. Truly, a dreamboat. You roll your eyes, but scooch closer to the wall nonetheless; his grip tightens slightly around the curve of your back as you make space, and you canât help but smile into your pillowcase. Despite his grumpy demeanor, thereâs a warmth to his presence that youâve grown to appreciate over time.Â
âBetter?â you ask, your voice muffled by your cotton pillow.
âA little,â he grumbles. He shifts closer, his body warmth seeping through the thin fabric of your pajamas.
You lay there in comfortable silence for a few moments, listening to the quiet sounds of the morning outside and the soft rhythm of his breathing. Your head kinda hurts; you havenât woken up this early on a Saturday in forever. Maybe in another life, youâre born as one of those matcha latte girls who get up at 6A.M. for a run and have their lives sorted out by noon, but in this one, you love procrastinating and Netflix far too much to have yourself in order like that. Truly, you run off caffeine and spite and Google Calendar remindersâand as if on cue, your phone buzzes with a reminder about the meeting with Yachi.Â
Tsukishima, recognizing the sound of the notification, leans over and hands you the device to read, giving you a minute before he asks, his voice soft to match the stillness of the room, âSo, whatâs on the agenda for today?â
âCrowâs with Yachi at one,â you murmur back. Normally, youâd be giddy to meet with your beloved angel of a friend (you would literally give Yachi your whole life), but truthfully, you donât really want to get out of bed. Keiâs fingers, lightly tracing patterns on your back as he processes the information, feel so comforting and warm. Youâre tempted to cancel and spend the day here, in bed, with him, but you know just as well as he does that you canât.
âRight,â Tsukishima sighs. âGuess we should get up soon, then.â
âMmm, in a bit,â you reply, savoring the warmth of the moment. âJust a few more minutes.â
He doesnât argue, instead allowing the silence to stretch on comfortably. But eventually, it does slow. âWe should get going, or weâll end up being late,â he says, though he makes no move to get up.
You groan in response, but you know heâs right.Â
âFine,â you mumble, reluctantly sitting up. The room is still dim, the curtains drawn, and you glance over at Tsukishima, whoâs also making an effort to get up; he grabs his glasses, neatly folded on your nightstand, and puts them on, blinking back into consciousness. He looks far too composed for someone whoâs just gotten up, but of course he would be.
What a lovely, familiar sight. You hope this, these Saturday mornings with him, never end.
***
The campus is slowly waking up, students milling about, heading to the library or the better of the two dining halls, the one that serves freshly-made waffles on Saturdays. The other one only serves the worldâs runniest scrambled eggs thatâs held together with the most plasticky cheese, so even if itâs a ten minute walk further, itâs worth it.
You secure a table near the window; the dining hall overlooks the square and you like watching the way people narrowly dodge the campus seal. Itâs a superstition that you wonât graduate if you step on itâand especially now, in the second semester when everyone gets pretty desperate, you gotta respect the grind. Tsukishima has already gone to order at the counter with your dining card, so youâre left alone to ponder about your impending project; you go over the working script in your head, running the lines and dialogue over and over.Â
Your thoughts are interrupted when he returns with a tray loaded with waffles, two matching cups of coffee, and an extra serving of fruit for youâbecause he claims you need to eat healthier. You think he should eat more, period, but whatever.
âWow, Iâm impressed. Fruit? Did you find it hard to carry all this food without your arms falling off?â you tease, as he takes his seat across from you.
He rolls his eyes, picking up his fork. âSomeone has to make sure you get at least one vitamin today.â
You stick your tongue out at him and dig into your waffles because you never wake up early enough on a Saturday to actually have them often.Â
âWhen we finish eating, I need to go back and get my laptop,â you announce over a mouthful of waffle, ignoring the disgusted look Tsukishima gives you. âAnd then weâll head to the library.â
âI am begging you to chew with your mouth shut,â he groans, throwing a well-aimed napkin at your face. You catch it with a dramatic flourish and quickly dab at your mouth, before you ball it and toss the napkin back at him; he ducks violently, almost knocking over his cup of coffee. You fight the urge to laugh at him and instead stab your fork into a piece of cantaloupe.Â
âYou need to eat,â you declare, promptly sticking the fruit in his direction.Â
His eyebrows arch slightly as he glares at the fork held out toward him, but after a beat of silence, he leans forward and bites off the melon with a grumble. âHappy now?â
âEcstatic,â you beam, popping a grape into your own mouth. âSo, Crowâs at one. We can read for like, an hour? And then youâre free to go home and do whatever you do.â
âStudy.â
âSo boring,â you sigh. âDonât you have any friends, Kei?â
He scoffs, sawing off another meticulous square of waffle. âI have you. Thatâs enough socializing for a lifetime.â
âLucky me, I guess,â you roll your eyes.Â
He smirks in response, taking a sip of his coffee. âYeah, lucky you.â
four.Â
After breakfast, you head back to your dorm to grab your things. Tsukishima scrolls through his phone, making an occasional snide comment about whatever nonsense he comes across on Twitter. You pack your bag with your notebook, laptop, and a few pensâdesperation fuels organization, and you canât afford to leave anything behind.
The walk to the library is filled with light-hearted banter, and soon enough, you spot Yachi waving at you from a corner table. Sheâs already got her laptop out, a notebook filled with neat handwriting open next to her, and you skip up to the table.Â
âHi baby girl,â you coo lovingly as you give your friend a hug. Tsukishima gives Yachi a polite nod before sliding into the seat across from her, leaving you to fill the middle one. âThanks for meeting us before your shift.â
âOf course! Iâm really excited about this project,â Yachi beams, her cheeks slightly pink from your affectionate greeting. âIâve been reading over the script and itâs just so lovely. I canât wait to get started.â
And this, everyone, is why you adore Yachi Hitoka with your whole heart. You would actually dropkick your best friend off the face of the earth for her, and that is not an exaggeration.
Tsukishima sighs, reaching into your bag to pull out your laptop; he settles it on the desk and pries it open for you. âLetâs get started.â
His impatience makes you roll your eyes, but nonetheless, you click to the latest draft of the script and slide it over for your Blondes⢠to see. âHereâs what Iâve got so far,â you say, pointing at the section still titled SCENE 1 DARFGT :P from when you wrote the first six pages over the course of an all-nighter. âThe first scene sets the tone for our whole film, and Iâm thinking of having it outside the library, so get used to this cafĂŠ.â
âAs if we donât already spend half our time here,â Tsukishima deadpans, but he leans closer to the screen anyway. You watch the way both of them take in the script, their gazes fixed on the document as they read through the lines.Â
He looks visibly relieved as he scrolls through the very short document; itâs a mess of director and action notes because you have a very specific vision in your head that you want to execute. âIt doesnât have much dialogue because I want it to be focused on the little details that show your initial connection,â you say as they near the end of the script. âYâknow, body language. The way you look at each other. Your expressions.â
Momentarily, you pause to read their reactions; youâre minorly concerned because acting is actually the hardest part of the job, even if memorizing dialogue does suck. Thankfully, Yachiâs eyes visibly light up, and she chirps cheerily, âI love that! It feels very natural and genuine; I think thatâs beautiful.â
Her reassurance makes you kick your feet like Sofia the First because she says it in a way that feels completely real.Â
Tsukishima, on the other hand, does not acknowledge this statement: heâs too busy raising his stupid eyebrow and smirking as he reads scene four. He drags his finger over the screen, where the line reads Interior - Dorm Room - Night. âOkay, first of all, very original,â he snorts. âBut second, you volunteered my place without asking me? How very presumptuous of you.â
âWell, I have roommates,â you say, really emphasizing that last word because you want him to feel as stupid as he looks smirking like that (he looks very annoyingly pretty with his cat-like simper). You know he doesnât actually care about the usage of his studio: he just loves seizing the opportunity to mock you.
Your internal irritation clearly goes ignored by him, because he just grins as he continues to blissfully dissect your script. âAnd âthey kiss passionatelyâ? Really going for the heartstrings, arenât you?â
âItâs called intimacy, Kei. Itâs a crucial part of developing the relationship on screen.â
Yachi, ever the peacekeeper, nods eagerly. âI think itâs really sweet. Itâs important to show the depth of their connection. The close-ups will make it feel very personal.â
âSure, whatever you say,â Tsukishima says, raising an eyebrow, his expression still amused. He gestures to the next few pagesâblank sans the text DJEJSJSJDJ PAIN, because again, you spend a lot of time writing during deranged all-nighters. âBut whatâs with the cut to black right after? Did you run out of ideas?â
You bite your lip. âI havenât finished the ending yet. I want to see how you two portray the characters and their chemistry before I decide how it concludes. Itâs not just about the script; itâs about the emotions you both bring to the roles.â
âYou mean youâre winging it.â
âCreatively winging it, yes,â you roll your eyes. âItâs a work in progress, and I trust you two to help bring it to life.âÂ
Tsukishima rolls his eyes, but thereâs a hint of a smile tugging at the corners of his mouth. âAlright, Iâll give you that. But if I have to make out with Yachi and you cut it short, Iâm going to hold it against you.â
Yachi blushes, but sheâs smiling too. âIâm sure itâll be great. We can practice and make sure it looks natural.â
âThanks, guys,â you beam at them both, grateful for their willingness to dive into your project.Â
As antsy as you were, the filmâs got a lot going for itâYachi is a sweet, earnest cutie pie and Tsukishima is⌠well, him, so their contrast will hopefully make for compelling cinema. And the word compelling is honestly enoughâthose three syllables are truly music to a film majorâs ears.
***
By the time you finish at Crowâs, the sun has already dipped below the horizon, casting a dusky glow over the campus. Tsukishima predictably gets ready to walk you home; he shoves his hand in his jacketâs pocket and tries to look nonchalant, so obviously you tell him he looks stupid, to which he promptly flips you off. Rude. Some people just donât know how to appreciate honesty.
Yachiâs already headed off to her shift at the cafĂŠ, so you two are left alone, navigating past other tables to the library doors. The evening air is cool, a welcome contrast to the warmth of the crowded cafĂŠ; you walk in companionable silence for a while, the only sounds being the rustling leaves and the distant chatter of other students.
He walks you to your gate, and youâre honestly about to just head inside, but you pause in your tracks because he deserves to hear it twice.Â
âKei,â you say softly, breaking the silence. âThanks again. It really means a lot to me.â
He looks at you, his expression unreadable. âI know. Thatâs why Iâm doing it.â
You blink up at him, momentarily thrown off by his directness. Tsukishima isnât the type to say things he doesnât meanâheâs never been one for flattery or unnecessary kindness. And yet, thereâs something about the way he says it, the quiet certainty in his voice, that makes your heart do something stupid in your chest.
Tsukishima Kei cares about you. No matter how much he pretends otherwise, you know heâll be there for you when you need it most. If twelve years have taught you anything, itâs that heâll do it reluctantly, begrudgingly, but heâll be there for you.Â
He always has.
five.Â
The first day of filming is, somehow, going smoothly.
Youâre not sure if you should be suspicious of this. Typically, film shoots involve at least three things going horribly wrong within the first twenty minutes. A mic cutting out. A location suddenly getting overrun with people. A key actor arriving late because they forgot their costume at home.
But today? Today, things are working. The morning light is perfect, the sound equipment is cooperating, and most importantly, Tsukishima and Yachi are actually⌠really good together.
Which is a huge relief, because you were honestly half-convinced youâd have to wrangle the emotional chemistry out of Tsukishima with sheer force. But watching them run through the first scene on the bench outside the library, you realize you donât have to do much at all.
Heâs relaxed, leaning back with an elbow draped over the back of the bench, his eyes sharp and calculating as Yachi speaks; sheâs perfect for the blushing, hesitant-but-artistic old soul character you want to portray and he takes to his role just as quickly. Thereâs something natural about the way they interactâthe slight hesitations, the way he looks at her before speaking, the subtle smirk that plays at his lips when she nervously tucks her hair behind her ear.
Itâs not forced. Itâs not awkward. Itâs just real.
You bite your lip, watching through the camera screen as Yachi delivers her next line, her voice soft, a little unsure. Tsukishimaâs response is barely above a murmur, but it carries, even in the open air. The way heâs looking at herâthatâs what makes it work. Itâs the kind of gaze that makes people believe in love stories.Â
Holy shit. This might actually be good.
âCut!â you call, your voice a little breathless as you lower the camera. Yachi blinks up at you, a little startled, before breaking into a smile.
âWas that okay?â she asks, a hint of uncertainty in her tone.
âMore than okay,â you say, grinning as you step over to them. âYou guys are killing it.â
Yachi lets out a relieved laugh, cheeks pink. âOh, thank god. I was worried I looked weird.â
âNope. You look like the perfect indie film love interest.â You pat her on the shoulder before glancing at Tsukishima, who raises an eyebrow at you.
âWhat?â he drawls.
âYouâre actually trying.â
He scoffs. âYeah, because Iâm not going to embarrass myself on camera.â
âRight,â you deadpan, smirking. âNothing to do with the fact that you two have, like, the easiest natural chemistry Iâve ever seen.â
Tsukishima rolls his eyes, but you catch the way his jaw ticks slightly before he stands up, stretching. âAre we done here? Or are you going to keep talking?â
Impatient idiot. You snort and go to collect your camera and sound system, and together, you all head off to film scene two.
***
The second scene of the day takes place in the small, naturally-lit art studio on campus. Itâs not often used, especially not on the weekends, now that the universityâs built the big fancy modern art building in the north campus, but itâs perfect for this scene. You wanted something intimate, somewhere that made the world feel smaller, quieter, to parallel the deep intimacy of a relationship (wow, look at you talking like a true film bro). A space where the characters could be alone, even if they werenât saying much.
Tsukishima sits at the table, his hands idly flipping through a sketchbook thatâs just a prop, though you think it suits him weirdly well. Yachiâs holding a paintbrush, standing near the window, looking at a half-finished canvas, the soft glow from outside catching the strands of her blonde hair just right.
âAlright,â you say, stepping back behind the camera. âTsukishima, this scene is mostly you watching her. Yachi, I want you to look like youâre lost in thought. Youâre thinking about something big, but youâre not sure if you want to say it.â
Yachi nods, exhaling as she settles into place. Tsukishima just leans on his elbow, glancing at her through his glasses, waiting.
You call action. And for a moment, the room changes. Itâs not just a studio anymore. Itâs a quiet, suspended moment in time.
Tsukishima watches Yachi, and you canât look away. The way his gaze lingers, not quite analyzing, not quite soft, but something in between. The way Yachiâs fingers trace the edge of the painting, distracted, unaware of the way heâs looking at her. The way they look so perfectly together, like halves of a whole, like something thatâs meant to be.
Itâs... breathtaking.
You swallow, suddenly feeling warm.
Theyâre good. Too good.
âCut,â you say softly, your own voice sounding a little distant.
Tsukishima looks up at you immediately, brows slightly furrowed, like heâs searching for something in your expression. Yachi, however, simply exhales a breath of relief, breaking into a small laugh. âThat felt really real,â she says, beaming.
âIt was really real,â you admit, trying to shake the weird feeling creeping up your spine.
Wow, honestly. They must be some of the best actors youâve ever met. If you didnât know better, you would think they were actually in love.
six.Â
The blinking cursor on your laptop is mocking you.Â
Itâs a tiny, relentless metronome ticking away the seconds, reminding you of your failure to move forward. You glare at the half-finished sentence on the screen, fingers hovering over the keyboard, willing your brain to conjure anythingâliterally anythingâthat makes sense.
You had an ending in mindâof course you did. The perfect, soft, cinematic conclusion to your film. A final shot drenched in golden light, delicate and lingering, like a whisper against a bruise. The kind of scene that settles into the chest like an old song or a half-remembered dream, stirring something deep and unshakable. The culmination of all those quiet, electric moments between your leads, woven together into something fragile and honest.
Except every single draft youâve attempted so far? Complete garbage.
You groan and throw yourself back against your chair, rubbing your hands over your face in frustration. Why does this feel impossible? You shouldâve known writing the ending would be the hardest part. Youâre always better at beginningsâopenings are easy. Openings are full of possibilities. But endings?
Endings mean making a choice.
And right now, you have no fucking idea what choice to make.
As if on cue, summoned by your misery, your door swings open without warning, and Yukie strides in like she owns the place. Which, to be fair, she practically doesâshe and Kaori have an open invitation to barge in at any time, and they use that privilege liberally.
âPlease tell me youâre taking a break from that thing,â she says, nodding toward your laptop as she flops onto your bed. âYouâve been staring at it like itâs personally offended you.â
âIt has personally offended me,â you mutter back, head caught between your hands, visibly in distress. âIâve rewritten it like five times, and it still feels wrong.â
Yukie hums, but her attention drifts toward your open script document, skimming the words with the sharp, practiced gaze of someone who enjoys knowing things before you tell her. A beat later, her eyebrows shoot up.
âI still canât believe youâre letting Yachi and Tsukishima film together,â she says, lips curving in a smirk.
You glance at her, confused. âUh, yeah? Theyâre the leads? Kind of an important part of the whole thing?â
She rolls onto her side, propping herself up on one elbow, expression downright mischievous. âNo, I mean⌠you donât think itâs a little risky?â
You blink. âRisky how? Like existentially?â
Yukie snorts. âNo, dumbass. I mean, donât you think itâs easy for co-stars to catch feelings for each other? Like hello? Zendaya and Tom Holland broke the Spiderman-MJ curse cause of it.â
âOh câmon,â you scoff immediately. âKei and Yachi? Please. Heâs the human equivalent of a hazard sign, and sheâs literally an angel.â
âAnd opposites attract,â Yukie sing-songs, wiggling her eyebrows like sheâs just cracked some grand conspiracy.
âNot like that. Itâs literally just acting.â
Yukie tilts her head, looking entirely too entertained by your dismissiveness. âYou say that, but itâs not uncommon. You spend enough time pretending to love someone, and eventually, it stops feeling like pretending.â
You open your mouth to retortâbut for some reason, your brain short-circuits. The words are there. Theyâre on the tip of your tongue. But they wonât come out. Because now youâre thinking about it.
Tsukishima and Yachi. Together.
Itâs ridiculous, obviously. Tsukishima is sarcastic and emotionally constipated, and Yachi is sweet and nervous and actually respects peopleâs feelings. They make sense on screen, sureâchemistry is chemistry, and thatâs what acting is for. But in real life? You canât even picture it. Matter-of-fact, you shouldnât even be picturing it.
And yet, something uneasy churns in your stomach, and you shift in your seat, suddenly feeling uncomfortable in your own skin. No, this is stupid. Youâre overthinking. Yukieâs just stirring up unnecessary drama because thatâs what she does when sheâs bored.
âItâs fine,â you say, voice forcibly even. âTheyâre just acting. Besides, you really think Tsukishima of all people would catch feelings for someone just because of a film?â
âMmm.â Yukie hums, neither agreeing nor disagreeing. âYou say that, but youâre weirdly defensive about it.â
âIâm not defensive,â you snap, too fast, too sharp. A mistake.
Yukieâs smirk deepens, and you hate her for it. She swings her legs off the bed, stretching like a cat. âWhen youâre done pretending youâre not in denial, dinnerâs ready,â she chirps, sauntering toward the door.
You roll your eyes. Classic Yukie. Your roommates are simultaneously your greatest strength and your worst influence; they know you inside and out, and unfortunately, that means they never let you run from your own feelings. Theyâve been convinced for years that youâre in love with your best friend, which is laughable. Delusional, even.
And yet.
The thought lingers longer than it should, trailing after you like a shadow as you trudge to set for the first day of filming.
You tell yourself itâs just curiosity when you glance Tsukishimaâs way. Just morbid fascination when you catch the way his gaze lingers on Yachi between takes. Just professional interest when you watch how his sharp, unimpressed scowl softensâbarely, just a fractionâwhen she nervously stumbles over a line, and he mutters a quiet correction, his voice steadier than you expect.
Itâs just good acting, you reason. Nothing more.
Because Tsukishima is your best friend. And thatâs all heâs ever been, all heâs ever going to be. You tell yourself that, over and over and over again, trying to make it feel like the truth. But for some reason, despite all your effort, it doesnât, and it bothers you in a way that it wouldnât bother friends that are purely just platonic.
seven.
âYou look like shit.â
You rub your eyes, very conscious of the fact that youâre sporting dark eye bags and a goofy-ass fit. Your hoodie is three sizes too big, your sweatpants have a suspicious stain on them from an unknown source, and your hair looks⌠actually, you donât even want to talk about it because it really is that bad. You blink up at Tsukishima, who has somehow managed to find you after your afternoon lecture, looking disgustingly well-rested and put-together as always.
âThanks,â you deadpan, shouldering your bag. âGreat to see you too, Kei.â
Tsukishima rolls his eyes but doesnât move out of your way. Instead, he tilts his head slightly, studying you with that keen, observational gaze of his. âSeriously. Are you okay?â
You pause, thrown off by his genuine concernânormally, heâd just mock you and move on, but thereâs a sharpness to his tone today, like he actually cares. Maybe itâs because youâve barely been outside in the last few days, much less seen him and Yamaguchi. Now that youâve made it through over half of the filmâs scenes, youâve already started editing it together (arguably the worst part of being a self-produced film student: the excessive time spent with Adobe Creative Cloud). You hesitate, then sigh. âJust tired. Iâve been working nonstop, and I still havenât figured out the ending.â
He lets out a long-suffering sigh, crossing his arms. âWhy do you always do this to yourself?â
âI thrive under pressure.â
âYou thrive off caffeine and bad decisions.â
âSame thing,â you mutter, rubbing your temples. âLook, Iâll figure it out. Eventually.â
Tsukishima doesnât look convinced, but instead of pressing further, he reaches into his pocket and pulls out his car keys, holding them up with a lazy shake. âCâmon.â
You blink. âHuh?â
âYou clearly need a break. Letâs go.â
You frown at him, confused. âGo where?â
âDoes it matter?â he counters, raising an eyebrow. âI swear to god, if you go back to your dorm and stare at your screen for another five hours, youâre gonna lose whatever brain cells you have left.â
You open your mouth to argue, but you know heâs right. Your brain is fried, your eyes are starting to blur from staring at a screen all night, and you could really use some air. So, with a dramatic groan, you give in. âFine. But if you take me somewhere boring, Iâm jumping out of the car.â
âNoted,â he says dryly, shoving his keys back in his pocket before turning on his heel. âNow move it.â
***
The drive is familiar, comfortable. You donât even ask where heâs taking you because, honestly, heâs right: it doesnât matter. Being in his car like this feels natural, like muscle memory.
You remember when he first got his license, the first of you three to do so. Akiteru had gifted him a car to use once he did, an old but functional, clean and simple one, much like him. At the time, it had felt like the biggest dealâsuddenly, Tsukishima had a ticket to freedom, and by extension, so did you and Yamaguchi.
You can still picture those early drives vividly: the three of you packed into the car, Yamaguchi in the passenger seat nervously checking the map while you sprawled in the back, shouting ridiculous directions just to mess with Tsukishima. He always acted like he hated it, threatening to pull over and leave you on the curb, but he never actually did.Â
There were the late-night drives to nowhere, just because none of you wanted to go home yet. The ice cream runs in the middle of winter, sitting in the parking lot with the heater cranked up as you argued over movie rankings. The way Tsukishima always kept one hand on the wheel, the other fidgeting with the volume knob, adjusting it up or down depending on whether he was feeling indulgent or annoyed by whatever you were blasting through the speakers.
You remember one time, when a storm had rolled in suddenly and you got caught out in the rain on the way back from a late study session; heâd picked you up after you spam-called him seven times. Tsukishima pulled up to the curb in front of your house, the wipers barely keeping up with the downpour, but for some reason, instead of rushing out of the storm into your apartment, youâd just sat there for a while, listening to the steady rhythm of the rain against the car roof. He hadnât told you to get out, hadnât asked why you were lingering. He just turned up the music, leaned back, and let you stay.
The cityscape blurs past the windows as the car hums beneath you, the low rumble of the engine mixing with the sound of the playlist Tsukishima has quietly playing in the background. You recognize the song instantlyâitâs from one of your old shared playlists, one you made together back in your first year of high school.
You glance at him, but he keeps his eyes on the road, one hand on the wheel, the other resting lazily against the gearshift. His sweater is vintage, made of a gorgeous dark green wool that you had been ecstatic to find when you first took him to your favorite thrift store back home; it looks good contrasted with his blond hair and fair skin. His usual stoic expression is softer in the evening glow, illuminated by the street lamps lining the road.Â
God. Have his eyes always been able to capture the city lights like that?Â
***
Tsukishima drives for what feels like forever, but when he finally pulls over, itâs basically where you started: an empty parking lot, outside of your favorite convenience store because theyâre open late and always stock freshly-made to-go onigiri. Itâs owned by a sweet old woman, so double points; you two have been coming here since the start of your freshman year.Â
He throws the car in park and gives you a look. âYou coming?â
You sigh dramatically but unbuckle your seatbelt, stepping out into the cool night air. The storeâs neon sign hums quietly, casting a soft glow over the pavement.
As soon as you step inside, the familiar scent of warm rice and miso greets you, and you immediately relax. Tsukishima heads straight for the onigiri section, while you linger near the drinks, debating between a matcha latte and a cappuccino.
âYouâre getting the matcha,â Tsukishima calls over his shoulder, barely even looking up.
You roll your eyes but grab it anyway, because yeah, heâs right. You join him at the counter, where heâs already placed two onigiri on the registerâone salmon, one tuna mayo.
âYou know my order,â you say, amused.
He shrugs, handing over his card to pay before you can argue. âYou never change it.â
The words are casual, offhanded, but something about them settles deep in your chest. You look at him, at the way heâs effortlessly familiar with your habits, your preferences, your life.
And for some reason, that makes your stomach twist.
eight.Â
You tear into your onigiri, letting the familiar taste of salmon and warm rice settle on your tongue. The quiet hum of the city surrounds you both as you sit on the hood of Tsukishimaâs car, drinks resting beside you. The neon glow of the convenience store sign flickers in the periphery, casting long, gentle shadows over the pavement; the night is cool but not biting, the breeze rustling the stray napkins youâd forgotten beside you.
The conversation flows lazily, touching on everything and nothing at onceâcomplaints about professors, Yamaguchiâs latest doomed tutoring attempts with Hinata, Tsukishimaâs upcoming project on primate evolution that he absolutely does not care about. Itâs easy, the way it always is, but thereâs a weight pressing against your ribs, something you canât quite name.
Then it slows. After a beat, you sigh, staring out at the dim glow of the streetlights. âI think I might change the ending.â
Tsukishima shifts beside you, glancing at you briefly before turning back toward the night sky. You donât even have to specify: he knows what youâre talking about. âYeah?â
âI wanted a happy one,â you admit, your fingers picking at a loose thread on your hoodie. âBut I donât know if it fits. Every version I write feels fake. Too neat. Too⌠easy.â
Heâs quiet for a moment, taking a slow sip of his drink before shrugging. âThen donât force it. If itâs not working, make it ambiguous.â
You scoff, shaking your head. âItâs not that simple.â
âIt is,â he argues, stretching his long legs out in front of him. âPeople like things that feel real. If youâre struggling this much, maybe thatâs your answer.â
You chew on his words, considering. Maybe heâs right. Maybe an open-ended conclusion is the answerâletting things linger, unresolved but full of possibility. But something about that unsettles you, like leaving something unfinished, like waiting for something that never comes.
And then, it clicks: how to leave it ambiguous without being unfinished.Â
You exhale, pressing your phoneâs power button and watching the screen light up, a blank notes app staring back at you. Your fingers hover over the keyboard before you start typing, the inspiration finally clicking into place. You can already see the scene in your mindâthe way the light will filter in, the subtle expressions, the carefully chosen silence between words.
Tsukishima watches you with mild amusement, his lips quirking up just slightly. âAre you seriously writing right now?â
âShut up,â you mumble, furiously typing. âYou said something smart for once, and now I have to take advantage of it.â
He snorts. âYou wouldnât survive without me.â
You roll your eyes, but deep down, you know heâs right. The thought lingers, unspoken. How many times has he done this? Pulled you out of your own head before you spiraled, pushed you to do better, reminded youâwithout ever really saying itâthat you arenât alone?
The words on your screen blur slightly. Maybe itâs just the neon lights. Maybe itâs something else.
Then, softer, almost offhand, he says, âYou know, if itâs really bothering you this much, maybe itâs because you want it to mean something.â
Your fingers still over your screen. The words sit heavy in the air, pressing down on you with a weight you canât quite place. You look up at him, but heâs already turned back toward the city, his expression unreadable.
nine.
You think that you need a distraction. A long walk, or a snack, maybe. Or better yet, what you actually really want: a frontal lobotomy.Â
Instead, you have filming.
Which is, honestly, the opposite of helpful when your current goal is to shove all of your weird, unwelcome, inexplicable feelings into the deepest recesses of your mind. Itâs awful, but now that youâve started to see your best friend in a whole new light, itâs really all you can think about. Therefore, you cope as you always have: running from your problems. Youâve been distant the last few days. Youâre responding less, cancelling on your weekly study sessions, sprinting out of your lectures before he can catch up to you. Youâve even been ghosting Yamaguchi out of proximity.Â
But you canât do that today. Because today, youâre shooting one of the final sequencesâthe rooftop scene. The one drenched in soft intimacy, lingering glances, and unsaid words thickening the air between them. The one where Tsukishima and Yachi have to act like they exist in their own world, where nothing and no one else matters.
You try not to think about it too hard.
The rooftop set is perfect. The city sprawls beneath them, lights flickering like stars, a mirror to the actual night sky above. Yachiâs already in position, sitting at the edge, her posture relaxed but poised. Tsukishima is beside her, long legs stretched out, hands lazily resting on his lap. The camera is set up, framing them beautifully against the endless stretch of buildings and sky.
You call action, and for a while, itâs fine.
Yachi takes a slow drag of the cigarette (a prop oneâshe refuses to even come close to tainting her lungs), the smoke curling up between them. Her voice is soft, contemplative, as she delivers her lines. Tsukishima exhales smoke into the night, his face not particularly expressive but not detached. Heâs⌠engaged. Focused. Too focused. Thereâs something in the way he looks at her that makes your chest tight, even though you know, know, itâs just acting.
Still, the words he says donât feel like lines. Not when his voice dips just slightly, not when his eyes linger on her face.
âMaybe,â he says, his tone quieter than rehearsals, âbut some moments leave imprints on our souls. Theyâll last forever in our hearts.â
The air shifts.
Yachi leans her head on his shoulder. The city hums below them. The scene is exactly as you envisioned it, the kind of moment that pulls people in, that makes an audience believe.
And yet, it feels like you canât breathe.
The worst part is that it isnât even that badâno, you get through the scene just fine. No one else notices the way your stomach churns, or the way your hands tighten around the back of the directorâs chair. No one notices that the words arenât just dialogue in your head anymore, that they feel⌠wrong, out of place, too much.
It isnât until Tsukishima reaches out, without prompting, without direction, and brushes a loose strand of hair out of Yachiâs face that you realize you actually feel sick.
Itâs not scripted.
The camera catches it perfectly, a soft, natural movement. The kind of instinctive touch that makes a scene feel real. Your breath stutters in your chest. And then, as if that wasnât enough, he leans in slightly, pressing the briefest kiss to her forehead before pulling back, the ghost of a smile on his lips.
Not in the script.
Not in the goddamn script.
âCut,â you say, too quickly, your voice tighter than you mean it to be. You clear your throat, forcing a neutral expression onto your face when both of them glance toward you. âThat wasâgood. Really natural.â
Yachi beams, a little shy but pleased. âIt felt nice, actually. He made it really easy to stay in the moment.â
You swallow down whatever the hell it is that rises up in you at that.
Tsukishima doesnât say anything. He just watches you, sharp and unreadable.
Your fingers curl into your palm. âI think weâre done for tonight,â you announce, forcing a yawn into your voice like exhaustion is the reason you need to leave so badly. âIâve got a migraine coming on, and we still have to film the passion scene this weekend.â
Yachi nods easily, already stretching out her legs, but Tsukishimaâs expression darkens slightly.
âYou sure?â he asks, low enough that only you hear it.
You nod quickly, avoiding his gaze. âYeah. Just need sleep.â
He stands, brushing invisible dust from his jeans, and you know whatâs coming before he even says it. âIâll walk you back.â
âNo!â you panic, waving your hands wildly. âKaoriâs picking me up.â
Itâs a lie, an obvious one, but you donât care. You grab your bag and sling it over your shoulder before he can question it. âIâll see you guys later.â
Then you leave, practically sprinting out, before he can say anything else. Before you have to deal with whatever the hell this is, whatever it means.
Because if you stop to think about it, even for a second, youâre pretty sure youâll break.
ten.Â
Midway through your most recent homework assignment (dissecting the art behind the glorious film Carsâthe best Disney movie out there, fight with the wall), your phone vibrates against your nightstand. The screen flashes the text message thatâs popped up, but you donât even need to check to know who it is: itâs a notification that you already know you donât want to see.
(11:12 PM) kei :P: are you avoiding me?
You stare at the text, thumb hovering over the keyboard, your mind spinning with an answer that wonât sound like a complete lie. The problem is, you are avoiding him. Youâve been practically stonewalling him, dashing away inconspicuously whenever you know heâll be nearby, and itâs getting obvious. He knows it. Thereâs no use pretending otherwise, but the idea of confronting itâconfronting himâmakes something anxious curl in your gut.
You sigh, flopping onto your bed, one arm draped over your eyes as you try to gather your thoughts. Your fingers type out a response before you can overthink it.
(11:15 PM) y/n: no? y/n: iâm j busy lately u know that
The three dots appear, then disappear. Reappear, then disappear again. Heâs debating his response, and for some reason, that is terrifying. Then it buzzes.
(11:21 PM) kei :P: right.
Itâs short. Barely anything at all. But you know him, and you know exactly what that one-word response means. He doesnât believe you. Heâs letting it go for now, but he isnât letting it go entirely. The thought unsettles you more than you want to admit.
Your room feels suffocating suddenly, like itâs pressing in on you. You glance around, searching for somethingâanythingâto keep your mind occupied, but all you find are pieces of him.
Tsukishima had helped you move in, so he has a fundamental part in the whole place already, but when you look even closer, heâs really in the details. Thereâs the framed picture on your desk from your high school graduation, his hand resting lazily on your shoulder as Yamaguchi beams from besides you. Thereâs a hoodie draped over your desk chair, long since stolen from his closet during a late night out that never got returned. Thereâs a battered copy of Normal People by Sally Rooney tucked into your bookshelf, its pages creased and worn from the way he always mindlessly flipped through it when he came over.Â
It never seemed evident until now, when youâre trying so hard not to think about him, to not let him occupy a space that heâs so clearly always kept filled, but now that you see it, itâs simple: Kei has been a part of your life for as long as you can possibly remember. Heâs always been there, from the very moment your family moved into the house next door to him when you were seven. Heâs in your daily routine. If you turned on your phone right now, itâd open to a picture of you three; if you were to open Spotify, youâll find your blend at the very top of your pinned playlists.Â
Heâs everywhere. Heâs everything. Tsukishima Kei is worn into your very bones, into every single cell, written into every little part of your being.Â
Your fingers tighten around your phone, and for a moment, you consider texting him back. Saying something real. Something honest.
Your gaze flickers to your desk, to the script sitting on top of a stack of notebooks. The ending you rewrote stares back at you, the words bold and final.
Scene 6 Exterior - Rooftop - Sunset Yachi returns to the rooftop, now alone. She sits on the edge, looking out at the city. The sun sets, casting a warm glow over everything. She takes out a cigarette and lights it, inhaling deeply. Cut to: Tsukishima, walking through the city streets, the sunset reflecting in his eyes. He pauses, looking up at the rooftop where Yachi is sitting. The screen fades to black. Text on screen: âWeâll be there at the end of the world, together as the stars go out.â
The moment your professor read it, she called it striking. Said it felt honest. That the ache in the words felt real, like someone had lived it.
But you didnât just write it. You felt it.
Because if the world were ending, if the stars were truly burning outâthereâs no question where youâd be. Who youâd be with.
And yet, here you are, running.
You inhale sharply, pressing the heels of your hands against your eyes.
With the weight of twelve years of friendship comes the obligation to not let it go to waste: you are terrified of what a confession could do. You canât even imagine what a world without Kei looks like; you would honestly rather die than lose him. And well⌠admitting your feelings could very well mean losing him.Â
Then again, you could very well lose him too if you keep ignoring him and running away. You just need to come up with some way to either 1) get over your feelings, or 2) explain to your best friend that youâve suddenly started having inexplicable dreams about him and feeling the urge to kiss him.Â
You mean, how hard could it really be?
eleven.Â
Evidently, very difficult.Â
Youâre standing outside the door of Tsukishimaâs flat for the first time in days, feeling like you might actually throw up. You have the horrible urge to cancel. Maybe you should turn around. Maybe you should fake food poisoning. Maybe you should suddenly develop an urgent need to flee the country.
But no. You canât do that. This is your film, your project, your fucking grade on the line. You canât just run away forever.
So youâre here. And you take a deep breath before you knock, because your heart is hammering like you just ran across campus, and it only picks up when the door swings open.
And then heâs there tooâTsukishima, standing in the doorway of his apartment, hair still damp from a shower, hoodie hanging loose on his frame. His glasses slide down his nose just slightly, and for a second, he just looks at you, eyes scanning your face, your posture, like heâs already found something off about you.
âYouâre early,â he says, stepping aside to let you in.
You nod, stepping over the threshold, hyperaware of the way the air inside feels differentâwarm, his, thick with something you donât have the words for.
âWanted to set up before Yachi gets here.â Your voice is steady, detached, the way it should be.
Itâs not a lie, not entirely, but itâs not the truth either. The truth is sitting in the space between you, glaring and heavy, pressing in like the weight of an oncoming storm.
He hums in response but doesnât say anything else. Tsukishima doesnât move, doesnât drop his gaze. His arms are crossed, his posture lazy, but thereâs something pointed about the way heâs looking at youâsharp, analyzing, like heâs cataloging every tell, every avoidance, every reason why youâre standing here instead of texting some excuse from the safety of your dorm.
You drop your bag near the couch and move to set up your camera, your hands moving automatically as you avoid his gaze. The apartment smells like himâcoffee and citrus, faintly like that stupid expensive detergent he swears isnât a luxury purchase but definitely is. The scent is so him, so familiar, that it makes your stomach flip.
And then he speaks.
âWhatâs going on with you?â
You freeze.
Itâs not accusatory, not sharp, just⌠careful. Measured. Like heâs trying to get an answer without pushing too hard. Which, honestly, is worse than if he had just called you out directly.
You force yourself to keep your hands steady, adjusting the cameraâs angle. âNothing. Just busy.â
His eyes narrow slightly. âBullshit.â
Your stomach twists. The air in the room shifts, thickens.
Heâs always been quick. Always been able to pick apart your bullshit before you even finish spinning it, before you can even convince yourself itâs real. And now, with those gold-flecked eyes trained on you, burning through every excuse you try to build between you⌠well, youâre drowning.
His voice is steady, but edged with something dangerous. âI donât know what your problem is, but if you think I havenât noticed, youâre dumber than I thought.â
Your breath hitches in your chest.
For a second, you want to tell him. Everything. The thoughts, the jealousy, the confusion thatâs been clawing at your throat for weeks. You hate that he knows you this well, that he can see through you so easily. You hate that heâs giving you that look, the one that says Iâm waiting for the truth, waiting for you to finally be honest, and you hate, hate, that you donât know what to say.Â
But then, the door swings open. Yachi steps in, breathless and smiling. âSorry Iâm late!â
The moment shatters.
You exhale, stepping back, forcing a smile as you greet her, ignoring the way Tsukishima is still watching you. He goes still, expression unreadable. And thenâjust like thatâhis face smooths out, his posture relaxes, his hands sink into his hoodie pocket like nothing happened at all.
âLetâs get this over with,â he mutters.
You nod too quickly. âYeah. Letâs start.â
If you want to make it through a whole scene of them making out for three minutes, you have to stop looking at your best friend. His amber eyes, under his layer of concern, confusion, and annoyance, are filled with hurt, and your stomach feels like itâs being ripped out, torn to fucking shreds, to see him like that.Â
So you avert your gaze, stubbornly keeping your eyes on Yachi and your camera, and set up to film the scene.
***
The camera is steady. Your breathing, however, is not.
The apartment is dimly lit, the soft hum of music playing through the speaker, some indie song with melancholic chords that you once added to the shared playlist, long before thisâbefore all of thisâbecame something unbearable. It filters into the space like a ghost of a memory, like something familiar that you canât quite place.
Yachi sits on the edge of Tsukishimaâs bed, her hands folded neatly in her lap, waiting for direction, waiting for him. Tsukishima stands in front of her, tall and composed, his fingers flexing at his sides like heâs testing the weight of the scene before stepping into it. His shoulders are loose, his stance easy, his face unreadable. Too unreadable.
Too casual.
Like heâs trying to make it look effortless.
Like heâs making it look effortless for you.
Your grip tightens around the camera. The frame is perfectâlow lighting casting long shadows, the soft golden glow from the bedside lamp catching on strands of Yachiâs hair, the curve of Tsukishimaâs jaw. Itâs intimate. Close. Exactly what you wanted.
It should be fine. This should be fine.
The scene is simple.
Close-ups of hands, of fingers grazing over fabric. Of a breath caught in the space between them. Of a moment stretched too thin, heavy with something unsaid.
And then, they kiss.
Your stomach lurches.
Itâs instinctâthe way your body reacts, the way something tightens in your chest like a vice, the way your nails press into your palm where you grip the camera. You tell yourself to look at the screen, at the framing, at the way their silhouettes fit together like pieces of a puzzle.
But youâre not looking at the shot.
Youâre looking at him.
The way his head tilts slightly, the angle just right. The way his hand ghosts over the small of Yachiâs back before settling, fingers barely pressing into fabric. The way he moves slow, deliberate, like every part of him has been designed for this moment, like heâs meant to be here, kissing her, making it look real.
Making it feel real.
Your fingers tighten around the camera, but you donât move.
The shot is perfect.
Tsukishima is slow, careful. One hand cups Yachiâs jaw, his thumb brushing lightly across her cheekbone, his other resting against her waist, anchoring her in place. He leans in, the motion seamless, practiced, lips pressing against hers with just enough pressure to make it believable.
Your chest feels like itâs caving in.
Itâs nothing. Itâs just a film. It doesnât matter. He doesnât care.
But you do.
The words sit at the back of your throat like acid, thick and burning, because this is what you wantedâthis is what you asked forâand yet you canât seem to convince yourself that youâre okay with it.
You should be focusing on the technicalities. On the way the lighting frames them, on the way the movement aligns with your vision, on the way Yachiâs fingers twitch against his hoodie like sheâs nervous, like sheâs fully immersed in the moment.
But all you can focus on is him.
The way his eyelashes flutter for half a second before he closes his eyes.
The slow exhale against Yachiâs lips.
The way his grip shifts against her waistâjust slightly, just barely, like heâs grounding himself. Like heâs steadying his breath, like heâs trying to remember itâs acting.
Something inside you twists, sharp and visceral, something so wrong it makes your stomach ache.
Your fingers are shaking.
And then, the worst part: Tsukishima tilts his head further, deepening the kiss.
Your breath catches.
Itâs instinctive, automatic, the way your entire body tenses. You barely realize what youâre doing until the words leave your lips, unbidden, a little too fast, a little too urgent.
âCut.â
The word slices through the air like a blade.
Tsukishima pulls back immediately, blinking, like something had momentarily snapped.
Yachi exhales, touching her lips, a little dazed, but then she laughs, easy and light. âThat felt really natural.â
Natural.
The word rings in your ears, cold and foreign, something heavy and nauseating settling in your stomach.
Natural.
You feel like youâre going to throw up.
Tsukishima is still looking at you. Not at Yachi, but at you.
His expression isnât unreadable anymore. Itâs something elseâsomething unread, something searching, something sharp enough to make your skin burn under the weight of it.
You swallow, forcing your voice into something neutral. âYeah. That was good. Really⌠natural.â
Yachi grins, stretching her arms. âI have to runâI promised Hinata Iâd help him study tonight.â
You nod too quickly. âYeah, yeah, of course. Go ahead.â
She gathers her things, slings her bag over her shoulder, completely unaware that the air in the room is thick with something else, something unspoken, something unraveling.
The door clicks shut.
You inhale.
You should leave too, right now. You should grab your bag, make up some excuse, and go.
But before you can even think about moving, a hand wraps around your wrist, and drags you back in.
twelve.Â
The door clicks shut behind Yachi, but the weight in your chest doesnât lift. If anything, it gets heavier, pressing against your ribs like an iron hand squeezing the air out of your lungs. You force yourself to breathe, force yourself to move, force yourself to not think about the way Tsukishima had looked at her, had touched her, hadâ
A hand wraps around your wrist.
You freeze.
Tsukishima tugs, firm but not rough, pulling you back before you can escape.
Your heart stutters.
âWhat the hell is going on with you?â His voice is low, controlled, but thereâs something underneath itâfrustration, confusion, anger.
You try to twist your arm away, but he doesnât let go. His fingers tighten slightly, not enough to hurt, just enough to anchor you, to keep you here. You force yourself to look at him, to meet the sharp, burning gaze thatâs demanding answers.
You swallow. âNothing.â
His jaw clenches. âTry again.â
âTsukishimaââ
âNo.â His voice cuts through the air, low and unyielding. âYouâve been acting weird for weeks. Avoiding me. Lying to me. Looking at me like I fucking killed your dog or something. Not even calling me Kei anymore. And then tonightââ He breaks off, exhaling sharply through his nose. His grip on your wrist doesnât loosen. âWhat is your problem?â
The words sting, sharp and cutting, but the worst part is that heâs right. Heâs right.
And youâre tired.
Tired of pretending it doesnât bother you. Tired of biting your tongue. Tired of shoving down every ugly, twisting, unbearable feeling that claws at your throat.
So, suddenly, recklessly, you snap. âYou! Youâre my fucking problem!â
The words burst out of you like theyâve been waiting, desperate to escape, and suddenly, thereâs no going back.
Tsukishimaâs eyes widenâjust slightly, just enough for you to see the flicker of shock before his expression hardens again.
âWhat?â His voice is sharp, almost mocking, like heâs daring you to say it again, to spell it out for him.
You rip your wrist from his grip, shoving him back a step. Your hands are shaking. Your heart is pounding.
âYou donât get it, do you?â The words come fast, breathless. âDo you even see what you look like? How easy this is for you?â Your voice wavers, thick with something too sharp to be just frustration. âHow you can justâ just kiss her like itâs nothing?â
His brow furrows. âIt was a scene.â
âThatâs not the fucking point!â
You shove him again, hands pressing against his chest, but he barely moves.
âI had to watch you,â you spit, voice cracking at the edges. âWatch you hold her like that. Watch you look at her like that. And I hated it, Tsukishima. I hated it.â
Something shifts in the air between you.
The anger is still there, but beneath itâsomething else. Something fragile and aching and real.
Tsukishima doesnât speak. His lips part slightly, but no words come.
Heâs staring at you, his expression unreadable, but his eyesâGod, his eyes.
You inhale, shaking, your hands balled into fists. âI donât know when it happened, or how, or if Iâm just an idiot who took too long to figure it out, but Iââ Your breath stutters. Your throat feels tight. Fuck, you shouldnât be saying this. You shouldnât be saying this.
But you do.
Because itâs too late.
Because thereâs no running now.
âI love you.â
The words drop between you like stones in water, sinking deep, sending ripples through everything.
Silence.
You can hear your heartbeat in your ears, erratic and deafening.
Tsukishima stares at you. Gaping. Frozen.
Like the world just tilted on its very axis. Like the entire sky is tumbling down, like gravity is the sole thing keeping him on the ground.Â
And then you panic.
âIâI didnât meanââ Your voice shakes, your fingers twitch, you need to fix this, you need to take it back before you lose him, before you ruin everythingâ
But then he moves.
Fast.
His hands are on your face before you can breathe, fingers threading into your hair, tilting your head back.
And then he kisses you.
Itâs not careful. Not controlled. Not measured, the way he was with Yachi.
This is something else entirely.
This is desperate. This is frantic. This is a storm breaking after years of tension, of longing, of something building between you that neither of you had the courage to name.
His lips crash against yours, stealing the air from your lungs, pulling a sound from the back of your throat thatâs more relief than surprise. He kisses you like heâs been holding himself back for too long, like the second he let himself move, he couldnât stop.
Like heâs been waiting.
Like heâs always wanted this.
The heat of his body devours you, swallowing you whole, pulling you under like a riptide you donât want to escape. His hands slide down, fingers spreading against your waist, gripping tight like heâs afraid youâll slip through his grasp. He tugs you forward, flush against him, so close thereâs no space left, no room for doubt, no hesitationâonly him, only this, only the way heâs holding you like he never intends to let go.
His mouth moves against yours with intent, deliberate and thorough, a silent demand, a confession with no words, just the press of his lips and the desperate, aching pull of his hands. Heâs tasting, memorizing, mapping out every gasp, every shiver, every fragile part of you that has ever been his without either of you realizing it.
You make a sound against his lips, something caught between a sigh and a plea, and thatâs all it takesâhis grip tightens, his fingers pressing into your skin like heâs learning you by touch, like he needs you closer, closer, closer.
You melt into him. You break into him.
There is no hesitation when your hands reach for him, twisting in the fabric of his hoodie, clutching it like a lifeline, because you are terrified heâll stop, that this will disappear, that heâll come to his senses andâ
But he doesnât.
Because when you part, just barely, just enough to let air slip between you, Tsukishima chases after you.
His lips find yours again, softer this time, reverent, like he needs to remind himself that youâre real. That this is real.
That youâre not running anymore.
His forehead rests against yours, his breath uneven, warm, fanning over your lips in slow exhales. He doesnât speak for a long moment, just lets the silence stretch, heavy and fragile and trembling with meaning.
Then, his voiceâlow, hoarse, something wrecked and beautiful.
âSay it again.â
Your heart stutters, something sharp and sweet twisting in your chest.
He pulls back just enough to look at you, amber eyes burning, raw with something youâve never seen before, something almost pleading.
Your fingers loosen against his hoodie, but you donât let go. âWhat?â
His thumb brushes over your cheek, his jaw tight, his gaze steady, searching yours for something unspoken.
âSay it again,â he murmurs, quieter this time.
Your throat is dry. Your world has shrunk to the space between you, to the way his hands still hold you, to the weight of his gaze pressing into you like an answer he already knows but needs to hear anyway.
You swallow once, then again. Then, soft but steady, you let it slip. âI love you.â
The way he exhales, sharp and shaky, is enough to undo you completely.
And then he kisses you again.
Slower this time. Deep. Intentional. Like heâs taking his time, like he wants to make sure you understand.
This isnât a mistake. This isnât something he can write off as an impulse, something fleeting or meaningless or careless. This is him. This is him choosing you.
He kisses you like heâs learning you, like heâs memorizing the way your breath hitches when he moves a certain way, the way your hands tremble when they slide up to cup his jaw, the way youâGod, the way you kiss him back like heâs the only thing thatâs ever mattered.
Like you love him, and youâve always loved him.
Like he loves you, and heâs always loved you.
And maybe itâs too much, too late, too terrifying, but when you pull apart, he still doesnât let go.
His fingers linger against your jaw, his thumb brushing over your lower lip, swollen from his kiss.
His voice is rough when he finally speaks.
âYouâre a fucking idiot,â he snorts.
You laugh, breathless, and it comes out half-shaky, half-dazed. âExcuse me?â
He shakes his head, his lips curving slightlyâsoft, unbearably fond, annoyingly smugâbut his eyes stay serious, stay warm.
âI love you too,â he says, just like that, like itâs simple. Like itâs easy.
And for once, it is.
thirteen.Â
You wake up in a panic.
Your heart is a drum in your chest, erratic, wild, out of sync with the soft pre-dawn quiet of your dorm room. The weight of last night presses down on you all at onceâthe argument, the confession, the way Tsukishima kissed you like heâd been waiting, like he meant it, like he wasnât going to let you take it back.
You squeeze your eyes shut, inhale sharply through your nose. It doesnât help. The air is too thick, your limbs too restless, your thoughts too loud.
What the fuck did you do?
You sit up, shoving the blankets off you like theyâre suffocating you. Your hair is a mess, the hoodie you slept in (not yoursâhis, fuck) twisted around you uncomfortably, but you donât bother fixing it. The digital clock on your nightstand blinks 6:04 AM, and outside, the world is just beginning to wake.
You should be asleep.
You should be anything but this.
Blindly, you reach for your phone, thumb swiping over the screen to unlock it. The notifications hit you like a brick.
â 17 missed calls â 3 new voicemails â kei :P: pick up your phone â kei :P: are you serious right now â kei :P: weâre not doing this â kei :P: text me back
Your stomach lurches.
Your fingers twitch over the screen, hovering, hesitating, and thenâfuckâyou lock the phone and throw it onto your desk like it burned you.
You canât deal with this right now.
Not now, not when youâre still caught in the aftermath of what happened, not when the ghost of his lips still lingers on your skin.
You need a distraction.
You push yourself up from the bed, dragging your feet to your desk, where your laptop sits untouched from the night before. The screen glows as it wakes, casting a pale blue light over your desk. You click open Premiere Pro, fingers moving on autopilot, pulling up the final cut of your film.
Something to ground you. Something to keep you from spiraling.
The editing timeline stretches before you, a mess of layered clips and audio tracks. The cursor blinks, waiting. You set it to the last scene you worked onâthe rooftop scene, Yachi and Tsukishima against the night sky, the cigarette smoke curling between them like something ephemeral, fleeting.
You press play.
The footage unfolds in perfect clarity.
Yachi sits on the ledge, her fingers wrapped loosely around the cigarette, her expression thoughtful. Tsukishima is beside her, arms draped over his knees, his profile sharp against the neon haze of the city below.
She turns to him, voice soft, hesitant. âDo you think itâll last?â
Thereâs a pause.
Thenâhis response.Â
âAs long as we exist, it will.â
You exhale sharply, the words hitting you harder than they should.
The scene plays through, Yachi taking a slow drag of the cigarette before exhaling toward the sky, the glow of the embers casting flickering light over her features. Tsukishima doesnât look at her. His eyes stay forward, locked on something distant, something unseen.
Your fingers twitch over the keyboard, and without thinking, you hit the spacebar.
The scene rewinds.
You play it again.
âDo you think itâll last?â
âAs long as we exist, it will.â
A lump forms in your throat.
You rewind it again.
Again.
Again.
You donât know why you keep watching it, why the words keep lodging themselves deeper and deeper into your chest.
Maybe because it doesnât sound like acting. Maybe because you remember the way he said it, the way he delivered the line so effortlessly, so quietly, like it wasnât a scripted moment but something real.
Maybe because it reminds you of last night.
The way he kissed you, the way his hands held you firm, like he was afraid youâd vanish if he let go. The way he told you, Say it again, like he couldnât believe it, like he needed to hear it over and over to make it real. The way he looked at you when you did. The way you let yourself believe, just for a second, that everything you wanted wasnât impossible.
Your breath hitches, sudden and sharp, and thenâ youâre crying.
Itâs not dramatic. Thereâs no sobbing, no wretched gasps for air.
Just silent tears, slipping down your cheeks, slow and unrelenting, as the weight of it all crashes into you.
Because you love him. Because youâve always loved him. Because you canât remember a time of your life where you didnât, and because you canât imagine a time where you donât.
And youâre terrified.
You donât know how long you sit there, shoulders curled in, fingers gripping the edge of your desk like you need to physically hold yourself together.
The sun creeps through the window, light spilling over your room in soft golds and oranges. Outside, the campus hums to lifeâdoors opening, footsteps in the hallway, distant laughter.
You should move. You should do something.
Instead, you hit play one more time.
âDo you think itâll last?â
âAs long as we exist, it will.â
The tears keep falling, and you donât know why youâre crying anymore: whether itâs because you believe it, or because you donât.
fourteen.
Your hands are shaking as you pull up your contacts list.
Itâs barely past 6:30 AM, the sky still tinged with the last remnants of dawn, but you canât stay here. The weight of your realizationâyour love for Tsukishimaâis suffocating, curling around your ribs like something clawed and desperate, something that refuses to let go.
You need to talk to someone, and thereâs only one person who will actually pick up at this hour. So you press the call button and wait.
The phone rings once. Twice. Three times.
Then, a groggy voice, scratchy with sleep but undeniably familiar.
âThis better be good, or I swearââ
âI need you.â
A beat of silence.
Then, rustling sheets. A sigh. And finally.
âWhere?â
***
The tiny cafĂŠ is quiet, still waking up alongside the rest of campus. The smell of freshly brewed coffee lingers in the air, mingling with the scent of vanilla and warm pastries. Sunlight filters through the floor-to-ceiling windows, casting golden rectangles onto the worn wooden floors.
You sit in your usual booth, hands wrapped around a steaming cup of tea, though you havenât taken a single sip.
You barely register the sound of the door swinging open before a familiar figure drops into the seat across from you, yawning into his hoodie sleeve.
âYou look horrible.â
You huff out a weak laugh, your throat still tight from earlier. âGood morning to you too, âDashi.â
Yamaguchi stretches his arms overhead before slumping against the seat, blinking at you with the exhaustion of a man who has spent way too many nights buried under physics equations. He eyes you carefully, then his gaze flicks to the untouched tea in your hands.
âYou called me before seven in the morning,â he says, running a hand through his messy hair. âWhich means either the apocalypse is happening, or you did something monumentally stupid.â
You drag a hand down your face. âBoth.â
His lips quirk up slightly. âAlright. Start talking.â
You open your mouth, butâwhere do you even start?
The confession? The kiss? The fact that you spent half the night crying over your laptop, replaying Tsukishimaâs voice like some deranged, lovesick film major clichĂŠ?
Your hands tighten around your cup. âItâs about Kei.â
Yamaguchi doesnât even blink. âFigured.â
You exhale, shaky and uneven. âIâI donât know what to do.â
He leans forward slightly, forearms resting against the table, his expression turning serious. âOkay. Take it from the top.â
So you do. You tell him everything.
About the jealousyâthe awful, gut-wrenching feeling that took root in your chest the second you saw Tsukishima kiss Yachi, the way it spiraled into something uncontrollable, something you couldnât suppress.
About the fightâthe way Tsukishima saw right through you, called you out, made you snap. The way you finally admitted the truth youâd been running from for so long.
And then, the kiss. The way he grabbed you, the way he pulled you in, the way he kissed you like he was starving, like heâd been waiting for this just as long as you had.Â
And the way, afterwards, you panicked.
The silence stretches when you finally stop talking. You canât bring yourself to meet Yamaguchiâs eyes.
âI left,â you whisper, shame curling in your chest. âIâI freaked out and left. And now I donât know what to do.â
Yamaguchi doesnât respond immediately. Instead, he reaches for his coffee, takes a slow sip, and then sets it down with a soft thunk. Thenâfinallyâhe speaks.
âYouâre a fucking idiot.â
Your head jerks up. âExcuse me?â
He sighs, pinching the bridge of his nose like youâve personally caused him actual, physical pain. âThis is literally the worst case of mutual pining Iâve ever seen.â
âMutualâ?â
âYes,â Yamaguchi says, exasperated. âAre you seriously telling me you didnât realize heâs been in love with you since we were, like, fifteen?â
You choke on air. âWhat?â
He gives you a flat look. âOh, come on. You think he just puts up with people like that? Have you met Kei? He barely tolerates most human interaction, but you? Youâre different.â
Your stomach sinks.
Yamaguchi leans back against the booth, studying you carefully. His voice is quieter when he says, âNow heâs waiting for you.â
And suddenly, it all comes rushing back.
Like that summer when you were fourteen, sprawled on the grass in his backyard, swatting mosquitoes away while he read some ridiculous philosophy book heâd scoffed at but couldnât put down. You had called him pretentious, poked fun at his stupid little annotations, and thenâjust when he was about to snap backâhe had looked at you. Really looked at you. And for a moment, you couldnât breathe.
Or the time in high school when he stayed up with you, sitting outside your house at two in the fucking morning, just because you had a nightmare and didnât want to be alone. He didnât say anything about it, didnât mock you for it, didnât act like it was a big deal. He just let you talk about stupid shit until you werenât shaking anymore.
Then there was college. The night he drove across town just because you were too drunk to make it back to your dorm. The way he let you ramble about some stupid movie you had watched for class while he carried youâactually carried youâup the stairs because your legs had stopped working.
And then, of course, last night.
The way he kissed you like he had been holding himself back for years.
The way he whispered, Say it again, like he needed to hear it more than anything.
The way you had run.
Because maybe, deep down, you always knew.
Yamaguchi watches you, then exhales through his nose, shaking his head. âYou love him.â
Itâs not a question.
It's a fact.
And you know that, of course. Youâve always known that. But hearing it out loudâhaving someone else say it, no doubt, no hesitationâit does something to you.
Your fingers tighten around your cup.
âI love him,â you admit, voice barely above a whisper. âI love him, and Iâm scared.â
Yamaguchi hums, tapping his fingers against the rim of his coffee cup. âWhy?â
âBecause if this goes wrong, I lose him,â you say, staring down at the caramel liquid in your cup.
He tilts his head. âAnd if it goes right?â
You swallow.
Thatâs the terrifying part.
If it goes rightâif you actually let yourself believe in this, in him⌠then everything changes. You can never get it back.Â
But then again, if you donât, youâll never move forward.
Yamaguchi leans forward, voice softer now. âLook, I get it. Kei is⌠a lot. Heâs a pain in the ass. But you donât have to be afraid of this. Not with him.â
You swallow hard. Your thumb hovers over his name on your phone. But you donât call him.
Not yet.
Instead, you look at Yamaguchi, heart hammering, voice barely steady.
âWhat do I do?â
He smiles, small and knowing.
âGo to him.â
fifteen.
Your heart is pounding.
Your pulse is an erratic drumbeat in your ears, your breath uneven as you stand outside Tsukishimaâs apartment at 7 AM like an absolute psychopath. The hallway is empty, most of the residents still asleep, because normal people do not show up at their best friendâs door at the crack of dawn after confessing their feelings, running away, and then ghosting them for a whole night.
But here you are.
You raise a fist to knock. Pause. Lower it.
Your mind runs through every possible thing that could go wrong. What if heâs still asleep? What if heâs awake, but heâs pissed? What if you just turn around and pretend this never happened and never speak to him again and maybe flee the country?
But no. No more running. Youâre done with that.
You exhale sharply, grit your teeth, and knock.
Thereâs no response at first.
Then, a very loud, very irritated groan.
Footsteps. A thud as something (probably his knee) collides with something else (probably his desk), followed by a mumbled string of very colorful expletives.
And then, the door swings open.
Tsukishima is standing there, half-asleep and thoroughly unamused.
Heâs not wearing his glasses, which is so much worse, because without them, he looksâsoft. His blond hair is a complete mess, sticking up in every direction, and heâs wearing that stupid old hoodie thatâs two sizes too big, the one youâve definitely stolen at some point but returned because it stopped smelling like him. His sweatpants are loose around his hips, and his expression is pure murder as he squints at you.
ââŚThe fuck?â His voice is rough from sleep. âItâs seven in the morning.â
You should probably say something. You should probably apologize. You should probably explain why youâve lost your goddamn mind and decided to show up here like some dramatic main character in an early 2000s rom-com.
But instead, you go on your tiptoes, yank down him by his hoodie, and kiss him.Â
It happens fast, and at first, he completely freezes.
Like full-body shutdown. His entire frame locks up, his hands hovering uncertainly, breath caught in his throat.
For one horrifying moment, you think youâve made a mistake.
But then⌠then his hands find your waist. And suddenly, heâs kissing you back.
Itâs slow at first, tentative, like heâs still processing this, still trying to believe itâs real. But then his fingers tighten against your skin, pulling you closer, and you can feel the exact moment he gives in.
The exact moment he stops thinking.
And God, you feel it everywhere.
The heat of him, the slow, deliberate press of his lips, the quiet, shaky exhale against your mouth before he tilts his head and deepens the kiss. Heâs warm, solid, real, and for the first time in weeks, your head isnât a tangled mess of doubt and fear.
For the first time, everything makes sense.
You pull away first, breathless, heart hammering.
His hands linger on your waist. He keeps his face close to yours, just centimeters away, and when he finally opens his eyes, theyâre dark with something youâve never seen before. Something raw. Something completely, utterly unguarded.
You swallow hard. âIââ
His thumb brushes over your hip, the smallest, barest movement.
You inhale sharply. âIâm sorry.â
Tsukishima doesnât move. He just watches you, eyes sharp, unreadable. âFor what?â
âForââ You hesitate. Your fingers tighten against the fabric of his hoodie. âFor running. For taking so long to figure this out. Forââ
He sighs, but thereâs no real annoyance in it. His gaze softensâjust slightly, just enough.
âYouâre a dumbass,â he mutters.
You let out a breathless laugh. âI know.â
A pause. Then, he asks, âDo you wanna go for a walk?â
You blink up at him, caught off guard. âA walk?â
âYeah.â Tsukishima shrugs, stepping back, rubbing a hand over the back of his neck.Â
You raise an eyebrow. âAre you gonna walk me back to my dorm? Because I literally just dragged myself here for nothing if thatâs the case.â
He rolls his eyes. âNo, dumbass. I justââ He exhales, shoving his hands into his hoodie pocket. âJust wanna walk somewhere.â
Your lips twitch. ââŚHow romantic of you.â
He scoffs. âShut up.â
But he doesnât deny it.
The air is crisp, the early morning quietâthe kind of stillness that only exists before the rest of the world wakes up.
You walk side by side, the distance between you not much, but enough. For a while, neither of you speak.
âI meant it.â
You glance at him. âHuh?â
Tsukishima doesnât look at you. His gaze is fixed ahead, his hands still tucked into his hoodie, his jaw set. But his voiceâlow, certainâdoesnât waver.
âI meant it,â he repeats. âWhen I told you to say it again.â
Your breath catches. He keeps walking, staring straight ahead like this isnât some life-altering confession, like heâs just casually commenting on the weather. But his hands are tensed inside his hoodie pocket. His shoulders are tight.
You swallow. âKeiâŚâ
âI donât like a lot of people,â he says bluntly. âI barely tolerate most people. But youââ
He stops walking. You stop too.
Finally, he turns to you, and Godâhis eyes. They burn, golden in the morning light, open and completely unguarded.
âYou make me feel like I belong in a movie.â
Your breath stutters.
He exhales, shaking his head, voice quieter now. âAnd I fucking hate movies.â
A laugh bubbles up your throat, sudden and unexpected, and you canât stop smiling.
He rolls his eyes. âDonât make it a thing.â
âOh, Iâm absolutely making it a thing,â you tease, nudging him with your shoulder. âMy grumpy, six-foot-four, emotionally constipated best friend just confessed heâs been hopelessly in love with me for years.â
His ears go pink. âI didnât say that.â
âYou did.â
âShut up.â
You grin. âMake me.â
A pause. Then, he does.
This time, the kiss is gentler. No urgency, no desperationâjust warmth. Just him. And as his hands settle against your waist, as your fingers curl into the fabric of his hoodie, as his lips move against yours with something quieter, steadier, you realize something very, very important.
For the first time in a long, long timeâyouâre exactly where youâre supposed to be.
With him.
But then, the moment stretches, and a thought occurs to you. An extremely essential thought.
You pull back slightly, blinking up at him. Tsukishima frowns. âWhat.â
You open your mouth. Close it. Then, after a beat, you blurt out, âSo⌠does this mean weâre dating?â
His eyes flicker with something unreadableâhalf amusement, half exasperation. He doesnât answer right away. Instead, his thumb brushes absently along your waist, his grip shifting slightly, like heâs still getting used to the fact that heâs touching you.
Then, flatly, he says, âI donât know. Do you plan on kissing other people?â
âNo?â You reply, your nose scrunching.Â
âThen yeah.â
You stare. âThatâs it?â
âThatâs it.â
You gape at him. âKei, you are the most unromanticââ
But then something flickers across your mind, something bigger, heavier. A thought that makes your stomach tighten, your fingers twitch against his hoodie.
You inhale. âHey,â you say, softer this time. âHow long?â
He watches you. âHow long what?â
You swallow hard. âHow long have you loved me?â
A pause. A long pause.
Tsukishima doesnât flinch, doesnât look away. But thereâs something in his expression that shiftsâsomething softer, quieter. His fingers tighten just slightly at your waist. And then, voice low, steady, like itâs the simplest thing in the world, he sighs.
âI canât remember when I didnât.â
Your heart stops. Your breath catches, your fingers clench around his hoodie, and Godâwhat are you supposed to say to that? Because thereâs no hesitation, no uncertainty. Just him. Just this. Just the reality of a love so deeply ingrained in the both of you that it has no beginning and no end.
You exhaleâshaky, breathless. âYou suck at romance, you know that?â
He rolls his eyes. âAnd yet, youâre still standing here.â
You laugh, bright and full, and before you can think about it, before you can overanalyze, youâre kissing him again.
Itâs easier this time.
Because now, youâre sure.Â
And maybe the universe really does have a thing for sadism, because somehow, against all logic, it made him your person. The same Tsukishima Kei who laughs at your mistakes and misfortunes, who calls you out for your delusions and idiocy, who makes fun of your collection of Smiskis and love of reality TV. But at the same time, this Tsukishima Kei would do anything for you, even if you have to beg and beg. This Tsukishima Kei has held you through the worst days of your life, has seen you at your lowest moments and stayed, has waited for you for years to see him the way he has always seen you.
And you think, feeling his hands tighten at your waist and his lips linger against yours like heâs memorising the feeling, that maybe, just maybe, the universe got this one right.
⨠closing notes; i adore tsukishima kei so much. tbh i rly struggled w this work bc i had this concept fleshed out for so long and j cldnt execute it the way i wanted, but thank u to @kinaskorner for beta reading and for the reassurance <3 i hope u guys love this too!! if u made it to the end of this super long fic lol then thank u sm and i hope u have the loveliest day
I WISH YOU WERE A BOY [bestfriend!ellie]
(id love to credit whoever made this divider but irdk who did iâm sorry đđ)
warnings: (not proofread i wrote this in like 15 mins lol) ANGST ANGST ANGST, hints at religious trauma, religious parents, internalized homophobia if you squint
authorâs note: i wrote this based off of a situationship i had đ def not projectingâŚâŚ also yâall should totally listen to keep on loving you by cigarettes after sex (i listened to it while writing this so hopefully itâll set the tone)
best friend!ellie who you met for the first time in your sophmore year of highschool. you had just transferred to a small all girls catholic high school in the outskirts of austin, texas having had just moved states. you were quiet and completely out of ellieâs extroverted vicinity of a personality. yet, they say opposites attract and you two were pulled together like magnets.
best friend!ellie who taught you the ropes of everything you knew. from your music taste down to the smallest complimentary accessories you infiltrated into your style. you were completely immersed with love for her that it nearly swallowed you whole. anyone you ever met would have to know her to truly understand you. yâall were just that close.
best friend!ellie who comforted you the first time you got your heart broken by some stupid boy you met at a football game. he began to pursue you and practically begged to take you out. âbe ready at 7â he proposed with boyish charm and you couldnât help but to be swooned, as any naĂŻve teenage girl would. yet 8 rolled around the corner, and the only thing sweeping you off your feet was the feeling of rain droplets beating down on your hair and a pit of embarrassment that coiled in your stomach as you stood in a pretty white dress on the corner of a cafe. the only person to show up for you was ellie who was at your beck and call whenever you needed her.
best friend!ellie who sat with you in her car for nearly 30 minutes as the rain beat down on her windowsills. she wiped away at the mascara mixed tears on your cheek and an unfamiliar feeling began to unravel in your gut as she went on a rant about how perfect you were and how you didnât need the guy whose name you couldnât even seem to recall anymore.
best friend!ellie who was the only girl you realized made you feel this way and it scared you. you always knew you werenât completely straight but this set everything in stone for you. yet, admitting it out loud was the last thing you wanted to do. it would only make the situation all the more real to you and you didnât know how much of that you could handle.
best friend!ellie who made your stomach churn every single time sheâd bring up another girl romantically in front of you. sheâd ramble about some girl she was talking to and you couldnât do anything but suck it up and pretend like you were happy for her but deep down you hated it. all of it. all you wanted to do was bury yourself in the grave you dug because you didnât want to ruin anything between the two of you. ellie williams was the only person who had enough of you to completely tear you apart.
best friend!ellie who read your body language better than anyone else. your parents were spewing unsolicited comments about some taboo magazine about a same-sex couple one day while she was at your house. her head was rested atop your leg as you tried to drown out your parentâs conversation. your gaze fell on her and you smiled apologetically wanting to block out the rest of the world in that moment.
best friend!ellie who you smoked your first joint with as yâall snuck out of your parentâs house and to a nearby park across town. giggling and low eyed, yâall talked about the stupidest things as yâall shared a pair of cheap earbuds. the moon gleamed brighter than it usually did that night and cigarettes after sex blared through the earbuds lodged in your ears as you realize then you were in love with ellie williams.
best friend!ellie who laughed and asked why you were staring at her that way. âi wish you were a boy.â you said without thinking. maybe it was the way the light reflected off her freckled face or the way the drug coursed through your system, but the words slipped faster out your mouth before your brain could process them. her brows furrow and green eyes dance over you features searching for any type of emotion that emitted from your expression. âwhat?â
best friend!ellie who kept trying to get in touch with you ever since that night. you were relentlessly drowning yourself in shame and embarrassment. the remembrance of what you said made you feel foolish. but no amount shame can mask the guilt you felt every time you remembered the way ellieâs face fell as soon as you said what you did. you couldnât say anything else after. all you did was brush it off and insist yâall go back home. the walk back was silent and tension brewed between the proximity of the two of you.
best friend!ellie who called you again at 11 pm in attempt to talk about that night. you were about to decline it but your guilt ate away at you. you agreed to meet her on your porch to talk. you planned on apologizing for both saying what you did and avoiding it. âi didnât mean it. i was just high.â the excuse played on a loop inside your head. you were set on just leaving the situation and your feelings for her in a puddle of voided nothingness but closure didnât come easy for you when she was actually in front of you now.
best friend!ellie who sat patiently outside your house. she was clad in a black sweatshirt, washed out blue jeans, and the same dirty converses she wore daily. she spared you a familiar smile as you sat down next to her trading her one as well.
best friend!ellie who watched as you began to fumble over your explanation in a panic. âi donât know why i said that. god, iâm so stupid iâm so sorry.â you sniffled and gentle hands pulled you into a soft hug. for the first time in a week, you let yourself fall apart in her embrace and somehow, everything you thought you felt began to disperse. it was in that moment, that you accepted you wouldâve loved her either way. whether she was a boy or a girl. it didnât matter to you as long as you got the same soul in whatever body she was in. pulling away from her arms, your hand snakes over the nape of her neck as you press a kiss on her lips and she returns the energy reverently.
i wanted to make a post about this just because i've seen it talked about and i wanted to share my opinion on the matter. as discussed by @bambiesfics, i do think it's odd when most ellie writers make the readers ex/boyfriend/other love interest a man, just because of the nature of the community.
while i do understand that writing from your own perspective is important, i also think acknowledging that this is a sapphic community is important. what links the lesbians and bi/pansexuals in this community is their love for women which shouldn't negate that bi/pan people are also attracted to men. i guess if your target audience doesn't include reaching everyone then that's fine but remember that not everyone in this community is attracted to men but we all are attracted to women.
but this also comes back to remembering to try and be inclusive in your work. not everyone is white or thin and i think there is such a deep disconnect when people read about features that they just can't relate to. if you are writing a self-insert for yourself, awesome, but i think remembering that there is an audience out there that vary in looks and beliefs is important.
fanfiction is such an important community for a lot of people, regardless of whether you believe so or not. it provides escapism and ways to healthily cope through a creative outlet. i hope more writers strive to making this a larger community so everyone can enjoy it!
Third paragraph is so real. Iâm tired of reading things that clearly indicate that the reader is white or at least pale. âTurning a BRIGHT REDâ âHIDING YOUR BLUSH in your handsâ itâs corny and annoying. There are so many different ways to indicate that someone is flustered or embarrassed. Also including hair types (not everyone has straight hair). Maybe you donât feel like being inclusive, whatever, but acknowledge the fact that your fic isnât âx readerâ itâs a self insert.

