βͺ ζ β« . before the ash settled β chapter one of my series ! warnings : childhood trauma & bereavement, underage military involvement, developing co-dependency, antisocial patterns.
βͺ ζ β« . a sovereign's leash β between deer and wolf ! warnings : power exchange, collar kink / ownership, size difference, breeding / fertile themes, praise, scenting, cum involvement, non-pushover f!reader, rough but consensual sex, overstimulation.
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i just read the eight month rule, your writing is amazing!! amateur? i think not! hahah but seriously i enjoyed everything about the fic and how you wrote gen in an alternate setting. can't wait to read more from you! thank youuuu ππ
thank you so much! βΊοΈ iβm already working on some new ideas, so i canβt wait to share more with you soon. thank you again for the lovely energy and for taking the time to leave such a sweet note! π€
β β° : THE πππππ-πππππ RULE β ππππππππππ YOU ππππππ ! π οΉ πarumi πen. οΉ
summary : caught in the peak of rush hour, you find yourself pinned against the subway doors as the crowd surges. the person pressed directly into your space is narumi, your ex. as the commute stretches on, the accidental brushes become deliberate, and it's clear that neither of you has the composure left to walk away when the doors finally open.
a/n : hi everyone! I hope youβre all doing well. my apologies for the lack of updates over the past couple of weeks; university has been incredibly demanding, and itβs been tough to find a moment to breathe, let alone write. Iβm doing my best to get this fic out, but I have to be honestβthe smutty scenes are taking ten times longer because I canβt stop laughing at myself. I have so much respect for authors who can write smut without losing their composure! thanks for your patience while I juggle my studies and my chaotic writing process.
Relationships of any kind are hard, even when they're good and easy. And speaking from your minimal experience of a horrible and difficult one, they can be impossible, even if you really love someone. Such is the reality of a relationship in college.
In college, no matter what you do, there are always going to be lengthy periods of distance between you and your partner which would not exist in the real world, necessitating levels of trust and maturity that definitely are not there. Between summer and winter breaks to semesters abroad, you are undoubtedly going to be separated from your partner in a way that requires a level of seriousness to survive which you most likely do not have or want. You'll inevitably be tempted to go on "breaks" or you'll get dragged into a long-distance relationship you never wanted simply because there is no other option.
Do yourselves a favor and avoid the drama β he's never going to visit you, that hometown ex will resurface, and you will spend all your free time on Facetime instead of enjoying yourself. Why bother?
You should have listened to that advice.
Somewhere between your second and third year at University, you stopped being a girl with a crush and became a girl with a problem. The problem had a name. The problem had dark hair, a stupid smirk, and a Kinesiology & Sports Science major that gave him every excuse to be perpetually unavailable β either he was at the gym, or more often than not, in his apartment with the curtains drawn playing video games at two in the afternoon while his coursework sat untouched on his desk.
Narumi Gen.
You'd known of him before you ever knew him. That distinction matters. On a campus of thirty-thousand students, Narumi occupied a specific kind of space. He was one of those people the university seemed to orbit around β the kind whose name circulated through group chats and dining halls and crowded lecture corridors the way certain songs do in summer, everywhere and inescapable. He was in the Kinesiology department but half the campus knew his face, and the other half knew his social media.
He posted sporadically and without much effort β a gym clip here, a screenshot of his game stats there, the occasional deadpan story about something that annoyed him β and somehow accumulated followers faster than people who actually tried. You remembered following him before you'd ever spoken to him. You'd told yourself it was because one of your friends had shared his page. That was mostly true.
You were in the Literature faculty, on the fourth floor of the Humanities building, buried in Victorian novels and critical theory papers that nobody outside your department cared about. His world and yours did not naturally intersect. They didn't need to. You had your own friends, your own rhythm, your own quiet life that fit you like a coat that had been worn soft over years. You were not the type to chase people like him. You knew that. He was loud where you were still, chaotic where you were ordered, the kind of person who made a room shift without appearing to try. Objectively terrible for you.
You met him, of all places, at a campus vending machine at eleven-thirty on a Thursday night.
You'd been hunting for a specific coffee drink they sometimes stocked in the machine outside the library. It was there half the time and gone the other half and you'd developed a kind of ritual around checking, a small private hope at the end of a long day. He was standing in front of the machine when you got there, staring at it with his arms crossed like it had personally offended him.
"It took my money," he said, without turning around.
You blinked. "Sorry?"
"The machine." He finally turned, and you clocked the face β sharper in person than in photos, jaw cut clean, dark eyes doing that half-lidded thing that his profile pictures always had. "I pressed C4 and it didn't dispense anything. It just ate my coins. Just β gone. No receipt, no explanation, nothing."
You looked at the machine, then at him. "Did you try hitting the side panel?"
He stared at you. "What?"
"This one jams sometimes." You stepped past him, because you'd done this before, and gave the lower right panel a firm knock with the heel of your palm. There was a mechanical thunk and then the slow descent of a can. He watched it drop with a blank expression.
"That worked," he said.
"I know."
He picked it up. Looked at it. Looked at you. "How did you know that?"
"I come here a lot."
"How often is a lot?"
"At least three times a week. This machine and the one outside the science building are the only two on campus that stock the cold brew I like." You shrugged. "You learn things."
A pause. Then something shifted at the corner of his mouth. "You're in the Humanities building. I've seen you over there. Why are you all the way over here at midnight?"
"The machine on my floor broke two months ago. Facilities said they'd fix it in a week. It's still broken." You glanced at the machine. "What were you getting in C4, anyway?"
"The salted caramel drink."
"That one sells out by Tuesday. If you want it, come Monday morning around ten."
He considered that with the expression of someone being given genuinely useful intelligence. He nodded once, like he was filing it. "And you're here forβ"
"The cold brew. B2." You pressed the button. It dispensed without event.
He watched this. "You have this whole campus vending machine ecosystem mapped out."
"It's a skill set."
He almost smiled. "Yeah. I think it is." Then, instead of leaving, which would have been the logical thing, he leaned against the vending machine and tilted his head at you. "What's your name?"
You told him.
"I've seen you around," he said. "You're always reading something."
"I'm in Literature. It comes with the territory."
"What are you reading right now? Like, for fun, not for class. Or is that not a thing in your department β do you all hate books by the second year?"
"By the first semester, actually." You held up the coffee. "But yes, I'm still reading for fun. Right now it's a novel about a man who keeps a detailed log of everywhere he's ever eaten, and it sounds stupid when you say it out loud but it's genuinely one of the best books I've read this year."
He stared at you for a second. "Why is that good?"
"Because it's not actually about food. It's about the way people mark time through ordinary things. Every meal is attached to a memory, a person, a version of himself he either wants back or is trying to leave behind. It just uses food as the vehicle for it." You stopped. "Sorry. You didn't ask for the dissertation."
"No, Iβ" He seemed to consider whether to finish that. "I asked. So."
You looked at him properly then, past the face you'd seen in profile photos, past the campus reputation you'd been peripherally aware of. He was looking at you with something that was less performative than his public image had suggested. Like he was actually paying attention.
"Narumi," he said. "Narumi Gen."
"I know who you are."
"Yeah, most people do." He said it without particular vanity or self-deprecation. Just as fact. "Does that bother you? That I already have context before you've introduced yourself?"
It was an odd question, perceptive in a way you hadn't expected. "A little," you said honestly. "It makes it harder to be an actual person to someone when they already have a version of you from somewhere else."
"Fair." He nodded. "For what it's worth, the version I had of you was pretty vague. 'Humanities girl who's always reading.' That's about it."
"That's accurate."
"So you're basically a mystery."
You almost laughed. "I'm really not."
"You just explained why a book about eating is emotionally complex. You're a little mysterious."
That was the whole beginning. Vending machine small talk that turned into standing in the corridor for forty minutes, then walking in the same direction because you lived on the same side of campus, then exchanging numbers because he said he wanted to know the trick to every broken machine on campus and you'd told him there were at least four others you knew. A joke. He remembered it. He texted you two days later with a photo of himself standing in front of the machine on the second floor of the Science building with the caption: this one took my money too. teach me.
You were already in trouble and you didn't know it yet.
The first few months were the good part. The easy part. He texted in short bursts, often at odd hours, his messages cycling between complaining about his coursework, sending you clips of games you'd never played, and occasionally β without warning or apparent reason β asking you a question that required actual thought.
What's a book you've read that changed the way you think about something? β sent at 1 AM on a Wednesday.
You'd stayed up another hour answering it properly: Honestly? A collection of essays by a writer I can't even remember the name of now. One of them was about how nostalgia is a liar β how it doesn't preserve things accurately, it just preserves the feeling you had about them, which isn't the same. It changed how I think about memory. About what it actually means to miss something.
Three minutes of silence. Then a voice note. His voice, flat and slightly grudging, reading two paragraphs from the book you'd recommended, pausing once to say "this is a lot for a Tuesday" and then finishing the passage. Another message after: okay I see it. still prefer my game though. but I see it. do you think nostalgia being a liar is always bad or is there something useful about it even when it's wrong?
You'd answered that too. Properly. And then he'd answered you. And the conversation had gone until three in the morning about something neither of you had expected to end up talking about.
That was the pattern of him β long silences punctuated by moments of genuine attention that were so specific and so unhurried that they caught you off guard every time.
Dates happened gradually, the way they do when neither person is admitting that's what they are. Coffee. A bookshop you liked where he stood in the gaming section for fifteen minutes and came out holding a used strategy guide from 2009 like he'd found buried treasure, genuinely delighted in the unselfconscious way he got about things he liked. He'd held it up when you found him.
"Twelve hundred yen," he said. "Twelve hundred. This was forty at launch."
"Is that a good thing or a bad thing?"
"It means someone out there didn't know what they had." He turned it over in his hands. "That's always a good thing. For me."
"That's a slightly predatory way of looking at it."
"It's efficient." He put it under his arm and went to look at the shelf beside it. "What are you getting?"
"I'm not sure yet. I come here when I need to find something, not when I already know what I want."
He looked at you over his shoulder. "Does that work?"
"Usually. The right book has a way of making itself obvious." You pulled one from the shelf β spine cracked, second-hand, a novel you'd been vaguely meaning to read for a year. "Like this one. I've walked past it four times and always put it back."
"So today's the day?"
"Apparently."
He'd looked at the cover for a moment. "What made today different?"
You considered it. "I don't know. Mood, maybe. Sometimes things are right but the timing isn't there yet, and then the timing catches up."
He'd been quiet for a second, watching you with that specific attentiveness. Then he'd turned back to the shelf without comment, but something in the set of his shoulders had changed slightly. A convenience store run at midnight where you'd sat on the concrete steps outside eating instant noodles and he'd stolen your plastic fork and refused to give it back just to see what you'd do.
"Give it back."
"No."
"Narumi, I'm eating."
"You can eat with your hands."
"These are noodles."
"Very character-building."
You'd reached across him and he'd moved the fork to his other hand, holding it over the railing, expression perfectly neutral. "You're like a child," you told him.
"You're more interesting when you're annoyed."
"That's not a compliment."
"I didn't say it was. I said it was interesting." He lowered the fork slightly, not all the way. "Tell me something. You pick. Doesn't matter what."
"You're holding my fork hostage to make me talk to you."
"Is it working?"
You'd looked at him. Genuinely looked. In the harsh convenience store light spilling out onto the steps, he was very real β tired around the eyes in a way he never looked in his photos, relaxed in a way he never was in public, the easy careless armor of him set down somewhere between the shop and the steps. "My first year I failed a paper badly enough that I cried in the bathroom for twenty minutes," you said. "And then I went to the professor's office hours and asked him to walk me through every single thing I'd gotten wrong, and he was so surprised someone had come in to do that that he gave me a makeup assignment. I passed it."
He'd been quiet.
"I'm not telling you that to be impressive," you said. "I'm just β you asked for something. That was real."
"I know it's real," he said. He handed you back the fork. "That's why I asked."
By the time you were officially together, you'd been behaving like it for months. Your friends pointed this out. His friends pointed it out louder, apparently β you only heard about that secondhand. He was, as one of your friends put it with no particular delicacy, a very specific kind of popular that usually didn't end up with people like you. She hadn't meant it cruelly. She'd meant: he was flashy and you were quiet and the math didn't look right from the outside. You'd shrugged and told her the math didn't need to look right to anyone but you.
That had been naΓ―ve, in retrospect. Not because she was right about the incompatibility β she wasn't, not exactly β but because you'd underestimated how much the outside would press in.
The first real fault line was small. A weekend you'd planned to spend together in December, just the two of you, the kind of quiet weekend you needed after a brutal essay period. He'd mentioned, offhand, that a friend was hosting something and he'd already said he might go. You asked if that meant the weekend was off. He said no, just that Saturday might shift. Saturday shifted into Sunday shifting into you eating dinner alone in your room watching him post a story from a rooftop gathering you hadn't been told about.
You hadn't exploded. That wasn't your style. You'd let it sit overnight, the way you did with things that stung, and brought it up the next morning with your hands wrapped around a coffee cup. He'd listened.
"I'm not upset that you went," you said. "I want to be clear about that. I'm not the kind of person who needs you to cancel plans every time I want to spend time with you. That's not what I'm asking."
"Okay." He was watching you carefully. "Then what is it."
"What it is β is that I planned for the weekend to be ours. I cleared things for it. I turned down something my friend asked me to on Friday because I thought Saturday was going to be a full day with you. And then Saturday evaporated without you really telling me it was going to, and I found out where you were from your story." You kept your voice even. "I don't need you to cancel your life for me. I need to feel like you thought about me when you were making a decision that involved plans we'd made together."
He exhaled. "I should have told you."
"Yes."
"I didn't think it was a big deal β the plans were looseβ"
"They weren't loose to me. That's the gap." You looked at him. "You were operating off your experience of the plan and I was operating off mine, and they were different, and you didn't check."
A pause. He rubbed the back of his neck. "That's a fair way to put it."
"I'm not trying to make it a fight. I just need you to understand what it felt like on my end."
"I do." He said it with the particular weight of someone who meant it rather than someone trying to end a conversation. "I'm bad at thinking about how things land on other people when I'm in my own head. That's just β that's a thing I do. I know it's not an excuse. I'm not handing it to you as one."
"I know you're not." You looked at your coffee. "I'm also not asking you to turn yourself inside out. I'm asking you to consider me. That's different."
"I know." He had been sitting across from you at the small table in his apartment, his PS5 controller on the armrest beside him and a half-eaten bowl of instant noodles going cold. He looked tired in the particular way he got sometimes, like the easy, careless version of himself he wore publicly had slipped a little. "I'm genuinely bad at that. I'm not saying that to get out of it β I'm saying it so you know I'm aware of it and not just ignoring it."
"Is it something you want to work on?"
He looked at you. "Yeah. With you? Yeah."
"Okay." You softened slightly. "That's all I needed to hear."
"Is that a deal-breaker? If I slip."
You'd looked at him for a long moment. "Not yet. But Narumi β I need the trying to be visible. I can handle mistakes if I can see the effort. What I can't handle is feeling like I'm an afterthought."
"You're not an afterthought."
"I know that. In here." You touched your chest. "But you have to show me, not just know it."
That conversation had felt like something fixed. It wasn't. It was just the first one, and there would be more of them, cycling through the same shape: you feeling overlooked, him apologising with genuine remorse and then not quite translating that remorse into consistent change, the two of you resetting and starting again. He wasn't cruel. He wasn't indifferent, not really. Narumi in private was warmer than anyone who only knew him by reputation would have guessed β attentive in sudden, unexpected ways that caught you off guard when you'd least prepared for it. He remembered small things. He noticed when something was wrong before you said anything. He showed up, sometimes, in exactly the right way.
But he also disappeared into his games for three days without coming up for air. He forgot to reply to messages not out of malice but because his attention worked in one direction at a time and once it shifted, it was fully shifted. He had a social orbit that you were never quite centered in, and you were never sure if that was something you were meant to accept or something you were meant to ask him to change. You'd tried both. Neither felt entirely right.
The summer after second year was when it became properly impossible.
He went back to his family for six weeks. You stayed on campus for a research placement you'd applied for months before the relationship existed. Six weeks of Facetime calls that started strong and gradually thinned into every few days, then once a week, then sporadic voice notes sent at timezone-blurred hours. He wasn't malicious about it. He was just Narumi β genuinely convinced that the feeling being there was enough to sustain things across distance, unbothered by silence in a way that read to you as absence. You'd asked him once, three weeks in, if he missed you.
"Yeah," he'd said. "Obviously."
"It doesn't feel obvious."
"Because I don't show it? Because I'm not sending you good morning texts every day and calling you from every room I walk into? That's not how I work and you know that."
"I know that. I'm not asking for performance. I'm asking for β I don't know. Presence. Something that tells me I exist to you when you're not in front of me."
"You do exist to me."
"Then show me that, Gen. In whatever way feels natural to you. I'm not prescribing the method. I'm just telling you that right now, three weeks in, I feel like I'm floating and I'm not sure you'd notice if I drifted."
He'd gone quiet in a way that was different from his usual quiet β less settled, more held-in. "That's not nothing. What you just said."
"I know it's not."
"I hear you," he said. "I'm going to be better about it."
He had been, for a week. Then things at home got complicated β he'd alluded to it without detail, something with family, something he clearly didn't want to go into β and the calls thinned again and the voice notes came less frequently and you spent a night lying in your dorm staring at the ceiling wondering if you were being unreasonable or if you had every right to feel this untethered.
The real argument came two weeks before he was due back. You'd said something about feeling like you'd been managing the relationship alone for most of the summer. He'd pushed back.
"That's not fair," he said. His voice over the phone was tight. "I've been here. I've been dealing with things I haven't wanted to put on you."
"That's exactly the problem."
"How is me trying to protect you from stress a problem?"
"Because I don't need protecting from your life. I need to be in it. There's a difference between sparing me something difficult and shutting me out of it, and you've been doing the second one and calling it the first." You sat up in your bed. "I'm not some fragile thing that needs to be kept separate from the hard parts. I'm your girlfriend. Or I thought I was."
"You are."
"Then talk to me. Tell me what's happening at home. Let me be there for it even if you don't want to be comforted. I don't have to fix it. I just want to know."
A long pause. "It's my dad. There's been some financial stuff. It's β complicated and I don't want to get into the specifics but it's been sitting on me since I got here and I didn't want it to be the only thing we talked about when we do talk."
"So you talked about nothing instead."
"I talked about other things."
"Briefly. Every four days." You exhaled. "Gen, I understand not wanting to make it heavy every time. I do. But what you did instead made me feel like you'd stopped wanting to talk to me at all. Those aren't the only two options. You could have said 'things are hard and I can't go into it but I miss you and here's how I'm doing otherwise.' That's a third option. It exists."
He was quiet for a long time. "I'm not good at this."
"I know. You've said that before."
"I mean specifically this. Letting someone in when I'm not okay. I don't β I usually just go quiet and wait until it passes and come back when it has."
"I know. I've watched you do it." You said it without accusation. "And I've let you. But the cost of it, from my end, is that I'm standing in the dark not knowing if you're okay, not knowing if we're okay, just waiting to be allowed back in. And I can't keep doing that."
"I don't want you to have to."
"Then change it."
"I want to." He said it like he meant it. You believed that he meant it. That was the hardest part β that he always meant it. "I just don't know if I'm capable of doing it consistently."
"That's an honest answer."
"Yeah."
"I don't know if it's enough."
The conversation had gone long, longer than any you'd had, and at the end of it you were both tired and neither of you said the word breakup but it sat in the room between you on the screen like something that had already been decided.
When he came back to campus, you met for coffee. You were both very polite. He'd looked at you across the table with something in his face that was harder to read than his usual blankness.
"I want to say something and I need you to let me finish it," he said.
"Okay."
"I think I spent the whole relationship being the version of myself that worked for me and asking you to fit around it. I didn't do it on purpose. I did it because it's just how I exist and I hadn't thought carefully enough about whether that was fair to ask of someone else." He turned his coffee cup in both hands. "And I know that's not a surprise, and I'm not telling you anything you haven't told me. But I wanted to say it without it being an argument. Just β I know. I knew, even then. I just didn't know how to be different."
You were quiet for a moment. "Why are you telling me now?"
"Because you deserved to hear it clearly. Without me being defensive about it." He looked up at you. "I still think about the conversation where you said you felt like you were floating. I think about it more than you'd expect."
"Genβ"
"I know. I'm not trying to reopen it. I justβ" He stopped. "I wanted you to know it landed. Even if it took me too long to say so."
You'd looked at him across the table with something that ached in a way you hadn't fully prepared for. "I know it landed," you said. "I always knew it did. That was never the question."
"What was the question?"
"Whether landing was enough." You held his gaze. "And it wasn't. Not because you're bad, Gen. Just because what I needed and what you were able to give, at that point in both our lives, weren't the same shape."
He nodded. Once. "Yeah." He pushed the rest into a short exhale. "I stillβ" He stopped. "Doesn't matter."
"Gen."
"It matters," he said. "I just don't know what to do with it."
You hadn't known either. So you'd let it go.
That had been eight months ago.
The metro at six-fifteen on a Thursday evening was its own particular kind of hell.
You'd been avoiding it. Since moving to an apartment closer to the city center this semester β a decision made partly for the commute, mostly to get away from the social weight of living on campus β you'd adjusted your schedule to dodge peak hours. But your seminar had run late, your professor had trapped three students including you in a supplementary discussion that stretched forty minutes past its supposed end, and now here you were, standing on a platform so packed that personal space had become a theoretical concept, watching the train that would take you home fill to capacity before you could board.
You got on the next one. Barely.
The carriage was a compression of bodies, heat, the overlapping smell of rain-damp coats and coffee cups. You managed a position near the central pole, one hand gripping it, your bag pressed against your front, the city blurring past the rain-streaked windows as the train accelerated. Around you people existed in the private mode that crowded public transit induces β eyes down, headphones in, everyone maintaining the polite fiction of individual space while physically occupying none.
You felt the body press in behind you at the third stop.
It was unavoidable β more people getting on, the carriage reshuffling, and whoever had boarded had ended up directly behind you in the only remaining gap. A hand found the pole just above yours. A chest settled against your back, not pushing, just there, the warmth of it seeping through your jacket. You shifted forward slightly, as much as the crowd allowed. They shifted with it, the motion of the train carrying you both.
You exhaled and looked at your phone.
The fingers on the pole were close to yours. You registered this distantly, the way you registered everything on a packed train β ambient information, nothing requiring attention. Then the train took a sharp curve and the bodies around you swayed and the chest behind you pressed closer, and you felt an arm come around beside you on the pole, not touching you, just bracketing, keeping them steady. Standard crowded train behavior.
Except.
The nose that dropped briefly to the top of your hair didn't feel standard.
You went still.
It was brief β a half-second, gone before you could be certain of it. You kept your eyes forward. The train straightened out and the pressure against your back eased marginally. You were aware, suddenly and with uncomfortable precision, of the body behind you in a way that had nothing to do with the crowd. The width of the chest. The height of whoever it was, their chin somewhere near the top of your head. The warmth radiating off them with a specificity that felt less like a stranger and more like a memory.
Please don't let it be a pervert.
You turned your head slightly to the left.
"Don't," said a voice behind your ear. Low. Familiar in a way that landed like a stone dropping into still water. "You'll lose your spot on the pole."
Your grip tightened.
"Narumi," you said, and it came out flatter than you intended.
A beat. "Hey."
You faced forward again because there was nowhere to go and because turning fully around in this carriage would require choreography you didn't have the energy for. "What are you doing on this line."
"Same thing as everyone else."
"Narumi."
"Sports faculty moved the advanced performance lab to a building off-campus this semester," he said. It came out evenly, explaining rather than deflecting. "Thursday sessions run until six. This is the most direct route back to my side of the city. It's been this line since week two."
You processed this. He'd been on this train every Thursday for β how long? "Since when."
"Since the semester started. Eight weeks."
Eight weeks. You did the mental arithmetic and didn't like what it produced. You'd been on this route every Thursday too, earlier than this, until today. "You've seen me before."
A pause that lasted exactly long enough to be an answer in itself. "Once. You were in the carriage ahead. You had your headphones in and you were reading something β I couldn't see the cover. You got off two stops before mine."
"You watched me get off."
"I was looking at the doors. You happened to be there."
"That's a convenient framing."
"It's an accurate one." A short beat. "I thought about texting you. To say I'd seen you. I didn't know if that would be welcome."
You didn't know what to do with that. You filed it somewhere and kept your eyes on the window.
The train filled further at the next stop, which shouldn't have been physically possible. The body behind you was not optional anymore β the crowd simply didn't allow for distance. His arm came back alongside yours on the pole, not touching, but the heat of his forearm close enough that you could feel it without contact.
"How's the program," he said.
"Fine." Then, because monosyllables were not actually how you wanted to do this: "Third year thesis is eating me alive, honestly. My supervisor keeps moving the goalposts on what the theoretical framework needs to look like and I've rewritten the first chapter twice. You?"
"Lab work is good. Coursework isβ" A short exhale through his nose. "Existing. I had a biomechanics assessment last week that I'm fairly sure I aced but the professor takes three weeks to return anything so I'm just sitting with it."
"Is that the one who takes forever to email back too?"
"The very same. I sent a question about a rubric clarification in week three and he responded last Monday."
Despite yourself, the corner of your mouth moved. "As it does."
"I heard you got the research grant," he said. "The Humanities faculty one. For the thesis support funding."
You blinked. "Where did you hear that."
"Campus newsletter. I read it occasionally β don't make it into something. I was procrastinating and it was open on my phone and your name was in it." A beat. "I wasn't looking for your name. It was just there."
"Right."
"Congratulations, though. Genuinely. That's a competitive one."
"Thank you." You let a moment pass. "Congratulations on your performance metrics paper. The one on injury prevention in high-load training cycles. I saw it got accepted to that sports science journal." You'd seen this in a different newsletter β not the same one. You had been very casually keeping up with his academic progress in the way that was technically indistinguishable from just being a person who read things. "That's a peer-reviewed submission. That's not nothing for an undergrad."
He was quiet for a moment. "You read it?"
"I read the abstract." A beat. "More than once. The part about how standard recovery protocols don't account for psychological load alongside physical β that's interesting. It's one of those things that seems obvious once someone articulates it."
He didn't say anything immediately. But behind you, you felt the breath he let out, slow and deliberate, and something about the silence afterward was different from the silence before it. "My supervisor wanted to cut that section," he said. "Said it was outside the scope. I kept it."
"You were right to."
"Yeah." A pause. "I know. I just β it's good to hear someone else say it who isn't invested in me being right."
"You could have just texted me," he said, after another long moment, his voice quieter.
"You could have texted me."
"I didn't want to assume you wanted that. After everything. I didn't know where the line was β whether reaching out would feel like I was pulling at something you'd already tied off."
"And I didn't want to assume you wanted that. I thought you'd moved on and I didn't want to be the person who showed up after eight months acting like things were unfinished."
"Are they?" He said it carefully. Not pressing. Just putting it out there.
You kept your eyes on the rain-streaked window. "I don't know what they are."
Another silence. The train swayed and he moved with it, and his chest was flush with your back again, and this time neither of you made any pretense of trying to create space because there was none and you were both past performing that particular fiction.
"I'm sorry," he said quietly.
"For what."
"Knowing what the right amount of contact is. After. With you specifically. Because it's not β it's different than other people. With most people, after something ends, I just β leave it. I don't dwell. But with you it never felt like something I could file away cleanly." He paused. "Which is probably information I should have acted on sooner."
"That's surprisingly self-aware."
"I've had eight months."
"To think about it?"
"Among other things." A beat. "I play a lot of games when I'm avoiding thinking about something. My kill streak has never been better."
You almost laughed. You felt it in your chest, the familiar specific warmth of him making you laugh when you hadn't planned to. "That's a very you way to cope."
"It works. Mostly." He was quiet for a second. "Doesn't work at about two in the morning when the servers are slow and there's nothing else to do."
You didn't answer. The train was warm and loud and you were very aware of his hand on the pole, the ridge of his knuckles near yours, the breath against the back of your hair that came with the low, even rhythm of someone trying to stay composed. You'd spent eight months being over this. You'd done the work of it, the unsexy administrative process of dismantling a relationship from the inside β going through your phone and deciding which photos to keep, relearning how to do Friday nights without factoring in his schedule, choosing not to read too much into it when mutual friends mentioned his name.
You'd been doing fine.
"I thought about calling you," you said, because apparently you were doing this now. "A few times. When the thesis was going badly and I just β you were always the person I wanted to talk to when I was stuck on something. You never tried to fix it. You just asked questions until I figured it out myself."
"Socratic method," he said. "I learned it from you, actually. You used to do it to me when I was complaining about coursework."
"I didn't realize you'd noticed."
"I noticed a lot of things. I just wasn't always good at acting on them." He paused. "What would you have said? If you'd called."
"I don't know. Probably just β talked. About the thesis, about the direction I was going wrong in. About whatever you were playing. The normal things." You let out a breath. "It sounds small when I say it out loud."
"It doesn't sound small."
"It sounds like I missed you."
"Yeah," he said. Simply. "It sounds like that."
"I think about calling you too," he said, after a moment. "More than a few times. There was a day in September when I found out something that genuinely bothered me β nothing I can go into, just a thing with someone from the sports program β and my first instinct was to text you." A beat. "I sat with my phone for about ten minutes. Then I put it down and opened my game."
"Kill streak."
"Through the roof that night."
You felt it again β that laugh, quiet, staying in your chest this time. "I hate that that's actually a little endearing."
"My coping mechanisms have their merits."
"Gen." You said his first name without planning to. Felt his breath change behind you.
"Yeah."
"I don't know what this is. Tonight. Us talking." You kept your eyes forward. "I don't know what to do with it."
"I know." A pause. "I'm not asking you to figure that out right now. On the metro on a Thursday."
"That's remarkably reasonable of you."
"I have my moments."
The train slowed for the next station. People shuffled. The doors opened and a wave of cold air moved through and then more bodies pressed in and the redistribution of the crowd pushed him fully against your back with no remaining gap between you, his hand sliding down the pole to grip below yours as he braced, his chin dropping close to your temple. You felt his jaw against the side of your head, the slight rough texture of it, and something that had been carefully maintained in your chest for eight months quietly began to fail.
"Narumi." Your voice came out wrong β lower, slightly unsteady.
"I know," he said. And he didn't move.
His free hand β the one not on the pole β settled at your hip. Just resting. Fingers finding the curve of it through your jacket with a familiarity that should have bothered you more than it did. You covered his hand with yours, meaning to move it, and then your fingers stayed there on top of his and your grip shifted from removing to holding.
"This is a terrible idea," you said.
"Probably." His thumb traced a small arc against your hip. "You can still tell me to stop."
You were quiet long enough that the answer became clear without words.
His hand moved. Slow, deliberate β sliding from your hip to the hem of your jacket, finding the strip of fabric over your lower abdomen, spreading warm across it. Not lower. Just there, a steadying pressure, and his mouth found the space behind your ear and stayed, his breath moving over your skin in slow, measured intervals.
"I missed you," he said. Just that. No preamble, no hedging.
You closed your eyes. "You're infuriating."
"I know." His fingers flexed against your stomach. "Still true though."
"You don't get to just β say that. Eight months and you get on my train and you say it like it's nothing."
"It's not nothing." His mouth moved slightly, lips grazing the shell of your ear. "That's why I'm saying it."
"Narumiβ"
"I know the timing is terrible." His voice was very quiet, meant only for you. "I know this is a metro and not a conversation and I know I don't have the right to just show up in your space and say things like that without any context. I know all of that." A beat. "I'm saying it anyway because I've been not saying it for eight months and I'm tired of the discipline of it."
The fluorescent light of the carriage blurred behind your eyelids. The crowd was noise and warmth and the specific urban anonymity of a packed train where nobody looked at anyone else because the shared experience required it. You felt his lips graze the back of your ear β not a kiss, just contact β and the fine hair at your nape rose.
"My stop isn't for four more," you said.
"Mine either." His chin rested on your shoulder, cheek pressed lightly to yours, and you were reminded suddenly and viscerally of the way he'd always occupied space next to you β with a weight and a warmth that felt like it had been specifically calibrated for you. "We have time."
"Time for what, exactly." You meant it to come out harder than it did.
A pause. His hand slid lower, to the waistband of your skirt β no further, just resting β and you felt rather than heard his next exhale. "Whatever you want. Whatever you'll let me."
The rational part of your brain, the part that had spent eight months filing him away, submitted its formal resignation.
His fingers slipped under the hem of your skirt from the front, gliding along the top of your thigh, slow enough that you had every opportunity to stop it. The crowd pressed you into him. His chest was solid at your back, his other arm coming forward now to drape across your front, hand flattening against your stomach while his right hand moved further inward, tracing the inside of your thigh with the tip of one finger. He wasn't hurrying. He never had.
You kept your face neutral and stared at the window.
"You're tense," he said, his voice dropped very low, mouth close to your ear.
"I'm on a crowded train with my ex's hand under my skirt."
"That's not the only reason."
"No," you said, after a moment. "It's not."
He pressed slightly firmer. "Tell me if you want me to stop. I mean it. Not as a formality."
"I know you mean it." Your grip on the pole tightened. "I would have said it by now."
His fingers reached the fabric of your underwear β the thin barrier of it β and he paused there, pressing the flat of his fingers against you through the cotton, a gentle pressure that was more question than action.
"Narumi," you murmured.
"Mm." He pressed slightly firmer, feeling the warmth of you through the thin fabric. "There she is."
You pressed your lips together. The man to your left was scrolling his phone. The woman ahead of you had headphones in. The train rocked on its tracks, carrying its crowd of oblivious commuters, and behind you Narumi slipped two fingers beneath the edge of your underwear with the careful patience of someone who had done this before and knew exactly what it built to.
His fingertips found your folds and mapped them β not rushing, just relearning the topography of you with the specific, quiet concentration he gave to things he actually cared about. You were soft and warm beneath his hand, the delicate skin of your outer lips parting under the slow press of his middle finger as he drew it through the center of you. He found the slick already gathering there and you heard the small, controlled exhale he let out against the back of your neck.
"You feel exactly the same," he said under his breath.
"Don't say things like that."
"Why not."
"Because we're in public and I can't respond properly to it."
A pause. "Noted." His finger returned to your entrance, circling the rim of it β not entering, just tracing β and you felt your walls clench involuntarily around nothing. "Better?"
"No. That's worse."
"I know." He said it with the particular flatness that meant he was pleased with himself, and you would have rolled your eyes if you'd had the presence of mind for it.
He pushed the tip inside β just the tip β and felt you clench reflexively around it. A soft exhale hit the back of your neck. His finger pushed in slowly, first knuckle, second, sinking in to the base while his thumb found your clit and pressed down with a firm, rolling pressure.
Your hand came back to grip his wrist, not stopping him, just needing something to hold.
He began to move. His finger curled upward inside you with each stroke, dragging across the soft spongy wall of you in a way that made your thighs want to close. You were small and tight around him, slick walls gripping the single finger as he worked it through you, and the wet warmth of it was audible to your own ears in a way that made heat climb your neck. He added a second finger without asking, and the split of it β the additional stretch, the slight burn of being opened a little further β made you tip your chin down and breathe through it.
His thumb worked your clit in short firm circles and you felt your hips tilt back against him involuntarily.
He noticed. "There," he said quietly.
"Shut up," you breathed.
"Your body's doing all the talking anyway."
"Narumi, I swear toβ"
His fingers plunged in on the next stroke with a little more force, the slick pull of them audible just between the two of you, and you felt the stretch of his knuckles working into you and out again in a rhythm that was achingly familiar β the specific patient thoroughness of him, never rushing the part that mattered. He was thorough. He always had been.
He drew his fingers out slowly and you were going to say something about that, when you felt him lift his hand slightly. You craned your neck back and found him looking at his fingers with a very specific expression, watching the slick thread stretch and catch between them in the train light.
You reached back and smacked the side of his thigh.
He made a low, suppressed sound that was absolutely a laugh, turning his face into your hair to muffle it. "Sorry," he said, not sounding it at all.
"Stop looking at it."
"I wasn'tβ"
"You absolutely were."
"I was assessing the situation."
"Put your fingers back inside me and stop narrating."
A beat of silence. Then: "You just told me to put my fingers back inside you on public transit."
"Narumi." Your voice was a warning.
"Okay." He slid his fingers back inside you, still quietly amused, and you felt the laughter in him settle into something else as his fingers sank deep and his hips tilted forward against the back of yours. He was hard. You'd been aware of it for several minutes in the ambient way of a body registering what pressed against it, but now, with his fingers inside you and his cock pressing firm through his trousers against the curve of your ass, the awareness sharpened into something specific and demanding.
His fingers worked a different rhythm β longer strokes now, pulling further back before sinking in, his wrist rotating on the in-stroke to catch that spot β and your thighs trembled once before you locked them still. The wave of it was building, warmth spreading up from your core through your pelvis, and you realized distantly that you were a few minutes from coming on a commuter train on a Thursday evening and the thought should have cooled things significantly.
It didn't.
He felt you tightening around his fingers β the flutter of your walls gripping and releasing around his knuckles in the involuntary way that preceded everything else. His thumb pressed down harder. "I've got you," he murmured. The arm across your stomach pulled you back into him and you felt the length of him against you again and then β
He slid his fingers out.
You made a sound. Small, involuntary, bitten back. His arm at your front held you still as you registered the sudden absence.
"Gen," you said, with considerable restraint.
"I know." His voice was rough. His fingers, wet with you, found the front of your underwear and pressed the fabric flat against your clit as a temporary placeholder while his other hand moved between you both. You heard the quiet sound of his zip, precise, barely audible over the train noise. Then his hand returned to your hip, pulling the back of your underwear aside, and you felt the blunt heat of him pressing against your folds from behind.
The head of his cock was thick and warm, a dense and weighted pressure at your entrance, and he was not small β you'd known that and you'd filed it away and your body apparently had not followed the same filing system, because the contact of him against your bare folds brought everything back with the full force of sense memory. He nudged through your wet in a slow, deliberate back-and-forth, smearing the bead of pre-cum from his tip against your slick, spreading it back over himself, painting himself with you. Reacquainting.
"Still okay?" he said. Low and careful.
"Yes." It came out steadier than you felt. "Stop asking and move."
"I'll ask as many times as I want."
"That's annoying."
"And you're clenching before I'm even inside you, so we're both dealing with things." He pressed slightly firmer, the tip catching at your entrance and dipping barely in, and you felt the stretch of just the head beginning to seat itself and exhaled through your nose. "Still okay."
"Still yes," you managed. "Gen."
The name again. His breath caught. He pressed forward β just the head, sitting inside you, stretching you around the thickest part of it while he exhaled through his nose in a long, controlled stream. You felt the pulse of him. Felt your own pulse answering it.
"God," he breathed.
"You say that like you forgot."
"I didn't forget." He angled his hips slightly, adjusting, his free hand coming to spread flat against your lower belly from the front β fingers pointing down, feeling himself just barely inside you through the wall of your stomach, which was deeply unnecessary and extremely him. "I justβ" He pushed forward, inch by slow inch, sinking into you until you felt his hips press flush against your ass and the full, aching stretch of him seated deep. Every centimeter of the fill was present and deliberate. He let out a slow hiss through his teeth. "I just remembered."
You pressed your forehead to the pole.
"You okay?" he murmured, mouth against your temple.
"Full," you said, which surprised both of you with its honesty.
"Good full orβ"
"Good." You shifted your weight slightly, adjusting to him, feeling the way your body rearranged around the intrusion of him. "Very good. Give me a second."
He gave you the second. Held still with his cock buried in you, cheek pressed to yours, breathing through it. The crowd moved around you. Someone's elbow grazed the pole near your hand. The train rocked.
"I keep forgetting," you said, after a moment, "howβ"
"Yeah," he said.
"I didn't finish the sentence."
"You didn't need to."
He pulled back slowly and pushed in again. The stroke was long and unhurried and you felt every centimeter of it β the way he dragged against your walls on the pull, the way the stretch returned on the push, the small adjustment of his angle that put him exactly where he'd always known to find. A specific deep pressure that made your eyelids drop.
"Don't do that," he murmured.
"Do what."
"Make noise."
"I didn't make a noise."
"You almost did."
"Then maybe you should stopβ" He pushed in on a deeper angle and you pressed your lips together very firmly. He had the audacity to settle there, deep and still, and just breathe against your ear for a moment.
"Tell me something," he said.
"Right now?"
"Right now." Another slow thrust. "Distract yourself. Tell me something."
"I hate you," you said.
"Tell me something true."
"That was true." A breath. "My thesis is about unreliable narrators in Victorian domestic fiction and what they reveal about repression of female interiority. It's eight thousand words and I've cried over it twice."
He pushed in again, the rhythm settling into something deliberate and slow, rocking you both with the sway of the train. "Which authors."
"Collins. BrontΓ«. A lesser-known one called Braddon that most people haven't heard of." The words came out with difficulty, fractured by the movement of him inside you. "She's underrated. She wrote this character whoβ" He changed his angle and your sentence dissolved. "That's cheating."
"Keep talking."
"You keep moving like that and I physically can'tβ"
"Then I'll slow down." He did. Barely perceptibly. "Braddon."
"She wrote this character," you continued, through gritted teeth, "who constructs an entirely false identity to escape her circumstances. And the whole novel is narrated in this completely composed, rational voice, and about two-thirds through you realize the composure is the unreliability. The steadiness is the lie." A short breath. "She's been lying by seeming stable."
A pause in his rhythm. "That's good."
"I know."
"Send me the paper when you're done."
"You'll read it?"
"I read the last one you let me see."
"You read three paragraphs."
"I read six. And I had notes." His arm tightened across your front. "Send it."
"Fine." You exhaled. "Then you have to send me the full performance metrics paper. Not just the abstract."
"Already done. I'll send it tonight." He rolled his hips forward, slow and pointed, and the conversation that had been threading through this arrived somewhere quieter β the two of you breathing together, talking through it, which was so absurdly, devastatingly them that you almost laughed again.
His fingers found your clit and resumed β tight deliberate circles β and the heat began to build again in earnest, the tight coil of it low in your pelvis gathering speed. "I'm still annoyed at you," you said. Quietly. The admission came easier than you expected.
"For now," he said. He wasn't disagreeing.
"That's not comforting."
"It's not supposed to be comforting. It's supposed to be honest." His fingers worked your clit in tight deliberate circles. "I'm not asking you to stop being annoyed. I'm asking you to let me in alongside it."
"Those aren't incompatible things."
"No," he agreed. "They're not."
You were clenching around him deliberately. He noticed β felt the intentional squeeze of your walls gripping and releasing around him on every pull, working against the friction of his stroke, and you felt the resulting tension in his arm, the way his jaw tightened against your cheek.
He pinched your clit. Precise, brief, not hard enough to hurt but enough to make you jolt sharply.
You turned your head to glare at him over your shoulder and he looked back at you with the flattest expression, dark eyes completely unrepentant.
"Stop," he said.
"You started it.
"I'm ending it."
"I wasβ"
"You were doing it on purpose." He raised an eyebrow, barely perceptibly. "I know exactly what that feels like."
You held his gaze for a beat. He rolled his hips forward, slow and pointed, and your glare lost some of its conviction. He pressed his cheek back to yours, facing forward, and resumed β the rhythm deeper now, his fingers back to work, and the annoyance folded itself into something else.
The wave built. His cock worked you open in long slow strokes that found the same spot each time with the kind of accuracy that came from memory, and his fingers didn't let up, and you were on a packed commuter train trying to look like nothing was happening while every nerve below your waist was lit up and pulling toward a single point.
The couple to your left shifted. The man reached past you for the pole and you both went completely still β Narumi buried deep, not moving, his fingers flat against you, both of you staring straight ahead with expressions of absolute civic neutrality. The man settled, glanced at his phone, returned to his own world. Narumi's chest rose and fell against your back. Your heart was in your throat.
He waited five full seconds. You counted them.
Then he resumed.
"That was close," you breathed.
"Close doesn't count." His hips rolled forward again. "You okay?"
"My heart is in my sinuses."
"That'll pass." He pressed his mouth to the side of your neck, just below your ear. "You close?"
"Getting there." Another stroke. "You?"
"Yeah." His voice had dropped further, rougher around the edges. "Been close for a while."
"You hide it well."
"I'm focused." A quiet exhale. "When I'm doing something that matters, I'm focused."
You came quietly. The kind of quiet that required every resource you had β chin tucked down, one hand gripping the pole hard, the other pressed over his hand at your front, the orgasm rolling through you in deep full waves that started where his cock met your walls and spread outward through your pelvis and thighs. You felt yourself clench hard around him, tight rhythmic contractions gripping his length, and the rush of wet that followed β the warm flood of it soaking his fingers and running down the inside of your thigh in a thin, slick trail.
He hissed. Sharp, involuntary, controlled just barely. "Fuck." His arm tightened around you. "You'reβ"
"I know," you breathed.
The warmth of it ran down your inner thigh and he felt it against his hand, against his cock still buried inside you, the slick soaking into the fabric between you.
"Sorry," he murmured against your ear, low and quick β barely an apology before it was already over, the word swallowed by intent rather than remorse.
Before you could draw breath to ask what for, his palm came up and covered your mouth β not rough, just firm, fingers spread across your jaw β and his other hand dropped to the back of your thigh, hitching it slightly upward, adjusting the angle between you. Then he thrust. Short and sharp, driving upward, chasing his peak with the focused efficiency of someone who'd been holding back for longer than was comfortable.
The sound of it was immediate and undeniable β the wet slap of his hips meeting yours, the soft collision of his balls against the back of your thigh on each upstroke, rhythmic and obscene and muffled just barely beneath the noise of the train. Your hand flew up to grip his wrist β the one with his palm over your mouth β not pulling it away, just holding on. His exhales came rough and clipped against the back of your neck, all the controlled composure of the last several minutes stripped down to this, and you felt every thrust of it in your chest and your thighs and the deep ache of being used toward the last of him.
He finished with a final, grinding roll of his hips, buried as deep as the position allowed, and stayed there.
He pressed his forehead to the back of your head. Kept moving β shorter strokes now, his breathing uneven in a way he'd been controlling for the last several minutes and was no longer entirely managing. The rhythm stuttered and then he buried himself fully, as deep as he could go with the angle, and held there, and you felt the first pulse of him β a throb deep inside you, then the warm rush of it, his cock kicking against your walls as he came with his jaw set and his exhale hissed through his teeth.
"God," he said. Barely sound. Nearly silent.
You stayed still and felt him finish β the last small pulses, the warmth spreading into you, filling the space he'd opened up, his weight settling fully against your back. The train rocked on. Around you the world continued its commuter indifference.
His softening cock slid out slowly, a wet withdrawal that left you feeling empty and warm and thoroughly undone, the slick of both of you trailing with it. He made a small sound against your hair. He tucked himself away, careful, the quiet sound of his zip barely audible. His hands came to your hips and held steady while your legs remembered what they were for.
You reached down, found the waistband of your underwear where it had been pulled aside, drew the fabric back into place. His gaze dropped β brief, almost involuntary β and you caught the particular stillness that moved across his face as he looked. The cotton settled against you, visibly wet, soaked through with him, his cum pressing against your folds through the thin fabric and clinging there.
He looked at it for one second longer than was necessary, jaw tight, something in his expression that sat between satisfaction and something rawer that he didn't bother to name.
You smoothed your skirt down with steady hands. Drew in a slow breath.
His hands didn't leave your hips.
"You okay?" he said, against your ear. Soft. The question was different now from how he'd asked it before β less checking, more just wanting to know.
"Functional," you said. "Possibly appalled at myself."
"Are you actually."
You considered. "No." A pause. "Ask me again in an hour when I've had time to construct an appropriate amount of dignity about this."
"I'll text you in an hour then."
You went quiet. Outside, the city lights blurred past the rain-slick windows. The train was beginning to slow for the next station and you could feel it in the vibration through the floor.
"We should keep contact," he said, his mouth still close to your ear. Not we should talk β that would have been too direct for him, too much admission packaged in a single phrase. We should keep contact was Narumi: specific and sideways and meaning exactly what it said and more than it said at the same time.
"That's a diplomatic way to put it."
"I'm a diplomatic person."
"You are genuinely not."
"I'm being diplomatic right now."
"You're hedging."
A pause. "Yes." He said it simply. "Because I don't know how much I'm allowed to ask for and I don't want to overstep it. So I'm starting with contact and leaving the rest up to you."
You looked at the doors as the train slowed. "My number's the same," you said. "You know where I am on Thursday evenings now, apparently."
"I wasn't tracking you."
"I know." You didn't move yet. Let the moment sit for one more second before the doors opened and the crowd reshuffled and the ordinary world reasserted itself. "Text me tonight. With the paper."
"I will." His hands fell away from your hips, and the absence of them was immediate.
The doors opened. You stepped off.
You didn't look back. But you heard, in the half-second before the crowd noise swallowed everything, the soft sound of his exhale β the particular one that meant he was smiling in the private way he didn't let people see.
Your phone buzzed before you reached the top of the stairs.
paper attached. read the third section. i meant what i said on the train. all of it.
You stood at the top of the station steps in the cold evening rain, reading it twice, the city moving around. You put your phone in your pocket.
You texted back on the walk home.
@fangnoire [2025] β copy right / all rights reserved : this story is a work of fiction. names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the imagination. any resemblance to actual events or persons is entirely coincidental. no portion of this book may be shared or uploaded to other platforms without the author's express consent.
Δ°m sorry for disturbing but can you make a masterlistππ i cant find all your fics and i want to read them all
you aren't a disturbance in the slightest! iβve been checking my messages today to make sure iβm all caught up, and i realize a masterlist is long overdue. iβm actually going to get that organized and posted by the end of today. i'm so happy you're enjoying my fics enough to want to read them allβthat really makes my day! π₯Ή
YOUR FICS ARE GENUINELY SO AMAZING LIKE I CAN'T THEY'RE SO PEAKK I LOVE THEM π₯Ή
aw, thank you so much! i still consider myself a bit of an amateur and i know i have a lot of room to grow, so hearing that you enjoyed it is such a huge confidence boost! π
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Hello! Your writing is amazing, and it got me thinking about a specific AU. What if Narumi is reader's ex, and they run into each other on a crowded subway? I love the idea of them being pressed together by the crowd, forced to feel every breath and movement. Iβm a huge fan of high-friction tropesβthink heavy staring, accidental (or purposeful) brushing against one another. I'd love for it to get really kinky and spicy as they lose their composure! π€€βοΈ
well, you certainly don't beat around the bush! itβs very refreshing to have someone just come out and say it. iβm definitely on board with this plot, but please bear with me as i post. it takes me a significant amount of time to get these scenes right, especially since iβm constantly fighting off writer's block (itβs a real struggle over here). i'll be updating in chunks to make sure the flow stays consistent! π«Ά
β β° : A πππππππππ'π πππππ β BETWEEN ππππ AND WOLF ! π οΉ πarumi πen. οΉ
summary : the guildβs wildest wolf, narumi gen, only listens to youβhis gentle but firm deer-spirit girlfriend. despite his arrogance and power, he chooses to wear a collar as a sign that he belongs solely to you. your story follows the deep trust and growing tension between you two as you manage his feral instincts after a dangerous mission.
warnings : power exchange, collar kink / ownership, size difference, breeding / fertile themes, praise, scenting, cum involvement, non-pushover f!reader, rough but consensual sex, overstimulation.
a/n : "lupine shifter" is a powerful human capable of taking on the physical traits and predatory instincts of a wolf, often struggling with a "blood-haze" that makes them volatile in combat. "cervine spirit" is an ethereal, deer-like magical being tied to the life force of the forest, possessing a calming aura that can overrule even the most aggressive instincts. "spectral anomalies" are dangerous tears in the fabric of reality that leak dark, corrupting magic, requiring the specialized skills of the sovereign guild to seal. while narumi acts as the guildβs primary weapon against these tears, his wolf nature requires a "handler" to keep him tethered to his humanity. the obsidian collar he wears serves as a magical conduit, allowing to ground his energy and maintain total control over his shifting forms.
Woods don't forgive mistakes.
That's something every Guild member learns in their first year β not in a classroom, not from a manual, but from the particular way the trees close behind you when you venture past the marked boundaries. The way the light dies at a specific depth, like someone drew a curtain between the world you know and the one that wants you dead. Spectral Anomalies favor old growth. Something about the roots, Caldwell once theorized, his spectacles fogging as he scribbled in that battered notebook of his. Something about how long the dead have been rotting in one place.
You stopped listening to Caldwell's theories around year two. Not because they were wrong β they usually weren't β but because knowing why a thing wanted to kill you rarely changed whether it succeeded.
What you know, standing at the edge of the camp clearing with the smell of char and ozone still thick in your throat, is this: the mission ran four hours over, three Guild members are sitting with field-wrapped injuries ranging from mild to significant, the Anomaly they were sent to collapse is nothing but a dark stain on the soil now, and Narumi is standing in the center of the mud with blood matted into his two-toned hair and his eyes burning the wrong color.
Not the sharp magenta you know. Something deeper. Something feral.
The grey-streaked front of his hair is plastered to his temple. His shirt is gone β shredded, probably, somewhere between his third shift and his fourth, because Narumi never bothers to account for clothing when the wolf decides it's time. He's in that space he gets sometimes after a bad one. That in-between place where the man and the animal are still arguing over who gets to be in charge of the body, and neither side is winning cleanly.
His chest heaves. His fingers are curled at his sides β not fists, exactly, but close, the knuckles too pale under the blood and mud. His ears, slightly pointed in this state, are pinned back. Every Guild member within thirty feet is maintaining a very deliberate, very careful distance, which you clock as you step out from the tree line.
Yusuke is the first one to see you. He's got his arm in a makeshift sling β probably the shoulder again, that man has a gift for reinjuring the same three things β and his expression shifts from tightly wound anxiety to something that is not quite relief but is in the neighborhood of it.
"Thank the mountain," he breathes.
"He's been like this for twenty minutes," says Reika, not looking away from Narumi. She's crouched near the supply packs, one hand resting on the hilt of a blade she absolutely knows she won't use but clearly needs to feel under her palm. Her dark braid is half-undone, mud-spattered, and her jaw is set. "Collapsed the Anomaly beautifully, full shift, tore through the last cluster like they were paper β and then just. Didn't come back."
"Did anyone approach him?"
A short, weighted silence.
"Takeda tried," Yusuke says.
You look at Takeda, who is sitting against a log with his knees up and a strip of cloth pressed to a gash above his eyebrow. He raises his good hand in a small, philosophical wave. "Still have all my fingers," he offers. "Which I'm choosing to count as a win."
"Narumi didn't mean to β" Reika starts.
"Oh, I know he didn't mean to. That's not really the comfort you think it is, but sure." Takeda prods at the cut and winces. "Go get your handler, someone said. Great idea, someone said. Fastest runner, everyone said."
You're already walking.
Not quickly. That's the thing people never understand when they watch you with Narumi β the way you don't rush, don't brace, don't reach for anything. Speed reads as prey behavior. Urgency reads as threat. You learned that early, before the collar, before the formal Handler designation, when he was just the Guild's most infuriating new asset and you were the cervine spirit they'd assigned to keep him from destroying the north wing recreation room.
The mud pulls at your boots. The fire someone built at the edge of the clearing throws long shadows. Narumi's head snaps toward you the moment you clear the ten-foot perimeter his instincts have apparently staked out β and the sound that comes out of his chest is not human. Low, wet, resonant. The kind of sound that is a warning and a question and something frightened folded under both of those things.
You don't stop.
His eyes track you. The glow in them pulses β that deep, wrong-register magenta, the color his eyes go when the wolf is sitting too close to the surface for comfort. A muscle in his jaw jumps. His shoulders shift, weight redistributing, the instinct to lunge flickering visibly through him like a current.
You reach up and wrap your hand around his obsidian collar.
Not hard. Not with force. Just β your fingers curl under the carved edge of it, cool stone against your knuckles, and you feel the way it hums faintly with the binding work threaded through it. The enchantment recognizes you. It always does. And more importantly, so does he.
"Gen." Your voice is even. Level. The tone you use when you're telling him a fact about the world that he needs to accept. "Enough. Down."
For one breath, two β nothing.
Then it breaks.
It's not dramatic, the way it happens. No collapse, no shuddering β just a long, slow exhale that seems to come from somewhere deep in his sternum, and the glow in his eyes dims back to the sharp, familiar magenta, and the tension in his shoulders unknots by degrees until he's just standing there. Muddy. Blood-streaked. Exhausted in the way only a full-shift leaves a person.
He leans forward.
His forehead touches yours.
He breathes you in, slow and deliberate, the way he does when his heart rate is still running too fast and his hindbrain needs something to anchor to. You let him. You hold still, one hand still curled around his collar, and you listen to the change in his breathing β the raggedness of it smoothing out, the long inhale, the held pause, the release.
Behind you, you hear Yusuke let out a breath that sounds like it's been trapped in his chest for the last twenty minutes.
"You absolute disaster," you say quietly. Not unkindly.
Narumi makes a sound against your hair that might generously be interpreted as a scoff. "Finished the mission, didn't I."
"You also nearly took Takeda's face off."
"Takeda should've stayed back."
"Gen."
"Fine. I'll apologize." He pulls back enough to look at you. His eyes are fully his again β sharp and slightly annoyed and very, very tired, the way he always looks after a hard shift when he's trying to pretend the tiredness isn't there. There's a cut above his left eyebrow that's already knitting itself shut, the accelerated healing that comes with his bloodline doing its work. A bruise is forming along his jaw. "Is everyone alive?"
"Everyone's alive."
"Then it was a successful mission."
"We'll discuss your definition of successful later." You finally release the collar β slowly, letting your fingers trail the edge of the obsidian before you step back. "Can you walk?"
He gives you a look that communicates, with remarkable efficiency for a non-verbal expression, that he finds the question personally offensive. "I can run."
"I didn't ask if you could run, I asked if you could walk. Those are different questions with different implications."
"I'm fine."
"Your shirt is gone, you have someone else's blood on your collarbone, and you just spent four hours as a wolf. You're functional. You're not fine."
He stares at you for a moment. Something flickers behind his eyes β not the wolf this time, something more complicated, more human. Then he turns away, which is Narumi's version of conceding a point.
The walk back through camp is its own kind of ritual.
The Guild members give you a wide berth β not out of fear exactly, or not only fear, but the particular respectful distance people maintain around a situation they understand is being handled. Reika gives you a look as you pass that conveys a full paragraph of meaning: I'm glad you're here, this was a lot, we need to debrief, but not now. You answer it with a slight nod.
Takeda, to his credit, manages a thumbs up in Narumi's direction.
He doesn't look at him. But the set of his shoulders changes, fractionally, in a way that probably only you would read as guilt.
"He's fine," you say quietly, for Gen's ears only. "It's a surface cut."
"I know."
"He knows you didn't mean β"
"I know." His jaw tightens. He keeps walking. "I'll deal with it."
It's the most you'll get out of him on that subject right now, and you know better than to push. Narumi's relationship with his post-shift behavior is complicated in ways that took you the better part of two years to understand. He's not oblivious to it. He's not dismissive of it. He hates it β hates the gap in control, hates that the people around him have to manage around the wolf the way you manage around a loaded weapon. He just doesn't have a language for that discomfort that doesn't come out sideways, as deflection or bravado or the particular stony silence he's wearing right now.
You let him have it.
The Guild's north wing is quieter at this hour, the hallways lit by the soft gold of mana-lanterns that someone remembered to turn down to evening levels. Your shared quarters are at the far end β a concession the Guild made early, before you fully understood what the Handler arrangement would mean in practice, when they were mostly just hoping to keep Narumi from relocating the walls. The rooms are larger than standard issue: a main space, a washroom with a proper soaking tub because Narumi's post-mission recovery requires it, sleeping arrangements that evolved organically over two years into something the Guild's administrative structure wisely chooses not to examine too closely.
You close the door behind you both.
The sound of the camp, the fire, the low murmur of voices cataloguing injuries and breaking down equipment β all of it cuts off. The quiet is immediate and total. He stands in the middle of the room and doesn't move for a moment, just exists in the stillness like he's reminding himself it's available.
"Washroom," you say. Not a question.
"In a minute."
"Now."
He turns to look at you. That familiar expression β the one that is technically a protest but doesn't quite land as one because you both know how this goes. "I've been moving for four hours. Let me stand still for thirty seconds."
"You can stand still in the tub."
"That's not how standing still works β"
"Go."
"..."
He goes to the washroom.
The tub in your quarters is deep and wide, one of the Guild's older fixtures, the stone worn smooth from decades of use. You run it hot β hotter than most people would stand, but Narumi's thermoregulation runs high after a shift, that internal wolfish furnace burning through the metabolic cost of transformation. He strips what's left of his lower clothes without ceremony and lowers himself in, and the sound he makes when the heat reaches his shoulders is entirely involuntary and entirely incongruous with the image he spends so much effort maintaining.
You settle on the low wooden stool beside the tub and reach for the scrub brush.
"I can do that myself," he says.
"I know."
You hand him the soap and start on his back anyway. He goes still. There's a tension in him at first β that reflexive resistance to being tended to, the part of him that was raised to equate needing something with owing something β but it loosens as your fingers work through the knots in his trapezius, as the hot water does its work on the rest. The mud comes away in long grey-brown streaks. The blood underneath it, someone else's mostly, follows.
"Four hours," you say.
"Mm."
"You went to full shift at the ninety-minute mark."
"The standard partial wasn't doing enough damage."
"That's not the protocol."
He makes a sound. "The protocol assumes the Anomaly is operating at a predicted magnitude. This one wasn't."
"Which is information you had before you shifted fully. Which means it was a judgment call, not a necessity."
"It worked."
"I'm not arguing that it worked." You find a knot just below his shoulder blade and press into it with your thumb, and he hisses quietly. "I'm noting that you made a unilateral call four hours ago that resulted in you standing in a camp clearing snarling at your own teammates twenty minutes ago, and I'd like you to have one thought about the relationship between those two things."
A long silence. The water shifts as he resettles his weight.
"They were going to get to Reika," he says finally. Quieter. "The cluster that reformed on the east side. She didn't see it. Yusuke was down, Takeda was pulling him back, and she didn't see it, and the partial shift wasn't going to be fast enough."
You stop moving your hand.
The admission sits between you, heavy and unguarded in a way Narumi doesn't usually allow himself to be β not out loud, not in words. He's looking at the water. His profile in the low lamplight is all clean angles, the grey-streaked hair falling across his forehead, the cut above his eye a thin dark line, the jaw that seems to have a permanent setting of composed even now.
"You should have said that," you tell him. "In the debrief."
"I know."
"Not to justify the shift. To let Reika know why."
A muscle in his jaw moves. "She doesn't need to know why."
"Gen."
"It would be β" He stops. Starts again. "It would make it weird. She doesn't β I don't need her to feel like she owes me something because I β"
"She won't feel like she owes you. She'll feel like her partner was paying attention." You resume the slow work down his spine. "There's a difference."
He doesn't answer, which is not the same as disagreeing. You let it breathe.
Outside, the mountain wind has picked up, finding the gaps in the window frame the way it always does this time of year, a thin cold thread through the warm room. The lantern on the wall flickers. Narumi leans slightly into the pressure of your hand β unconscious, probably, or close enough to it that he'd deny it if you named it.
"The mission report's going to be a mess," he says eventually.
"I'll help you with it tomorrow."
"You always say that and then you make me do most of it."
"I make you do the parts that require you to reflect on your decisions, which is different from making you do most of it."
He actually makes a sound that is almost a laugh. Almost. Swallowed before it fully forms, but it's there, warm in the back of his throat. "You're annoying."
"You find that genuinely charming and it bothers you?"
"I find it tolerable."
You tug his collar. Not hard β just enough to feel, the obsidian shifting slightly against his throat. He goes quiet immediately, that particular quality of quiet that is different from silence, weighted and aware. You feel the change in him under your hands β the breath that hitches fractionally, the shoulders that drop a half-inch.
"Tolerable," you repeat.
"...fine," he says. Lower. "It's charming. Don't make it weird."
You work through the rest of him methodically β the long muscles of his arms, the back of his neck where the collar sits, the old scar tissue on his left side from a Spectral encounter in his second year that he still won't fully tell you the story of. He talks, now that the walls are down enough. It comes out in pieces, the way it always does after a hard mission: the part where the Anomaly split unexpectedly, the part where Yusuke went down, the particular frustration of watching your team work below their capability because the intelligence they were given was wrong.
You listen. You ask questions where they're useful. You don't fill the silences.
By the time the water cools enough that he admits it's cooled β which takes longer than it would with anyone else, wolf-warm as he runs β the worst of the blood haze is just a shadow. His eyes are steady magenta, sharp and present. He's tired in a clean way now, the metabolic debt of four hours catching up with him, and he rests his forearms on the edge of the tub while you work conditioner through the tangled mess of his hair with your fingers.
"You're doing the thing," he says.
"What thing."
"The thing where you're being patient and it somehow makes me feel worse about myself than being yelled at would."
"I know. That's why I do it."
"That's genuinely diabolical."
"Thank you." You work a particularly stubborn knot free near his temple. "You did well today, Gen. The team is alive. The Anomaly is closed. You came back." A pause. "That last part is the one I care most about."
He's quiet for a moment. His head tilts, very slightly, into your hands.
"You always lead with the mission outcomes," he says. "Like you have to establish that the work was good before you're allowed to say the other thing."
"Occupational habit."
"You don't have to do that with me." He's not looking at you. Eyes on the water, or the middle distance, somewhere else. "You can just β say the thing."
Your hands still in his hair.
"I'm glad you came back," you tell him. Simple. Direct. The way he actually needs things, under all the armor.
The line of his throat moves as he swallows. "Yeah," he says, very quietly. "Me too."
The moon has shifted position by the time he's out of the tub and dry and wrapped in one of the heavy Guild-issue robes, sitting on the edge of the bed with his hair still damp and his expression in that post-mission place it gets: not soft exactly, but quieter. More present than he usually allows himself to be.
You're at the small table by the window, reviewing the preliminary mission notes you'll need to turn into a report, when you hear him shift on the bed.
"Leave it," he says.
"It'll take me twenty minutes."
"Leave it." A pause. "Please."
You set down the pen.
The room is warm, lit by the low gold of the lantern on the bedside table. The mountain wind has settled to a murmur. You cross to where he's sitting and stand in front of him, and he looks up at you β that sharp, direct gaze he has when he's not performing anything, when the lazy irreverence is set aside and there's just him underneath.
The moon is up fully now, visible through the gap in the curtains. You feel it in him before you see it β the way his breathing shifts, something in the quality of his attention sharpening, warming. Post-mission, post-care, wolf instincts settling from the blade-edge of blood haze into something different. Something pointed in a specific direction.
He hasn't moved. He's just watching you.
"I'm going to take the collar off," you tell him, reaching for the clasp.
His hand comes up and catches yours.
Not forceful. Just β stops you. His fingers close over your wrist, thumb against your pulse point, and his eyes in the lamplight are beginning to glow again at the edges. Not the wrong-register deep burn of the blood haze. This is different. This is deliberate.
"Don't," he says.
"Gen β"
"I mean it." His thumb moves over your pulse, slow, feeling the rhythm of it. "Leave it on."
You look down at him. He looks up at you. The collar sits heavy and dark at his throat, the obsidian catching the light, the enchantment-work threading cool silver through the stone β and he is wearing the expression he almost never lets surface, the one that lives under the arrogance and the deflection and the lazy performance of not caring: the one that needs.
"Tell me what you want," you say.
His jaw tightens, then releases. The wolf and the man, both of them honest for once. "You know what I want."
"I want to hear you say it."
A beat. Two. The glow in his eyes intensifies, warm and predatory and somehow simultaneously the most unguarded he ever looks.
"I want you to use it," he says.
Something settles into place.
You reach out and take the front of the collar in your hand β not the clasp, not to remove it, just hold it. The obsidian is warm from his skin. He watches your hand like it's the most important thing in the room.
"Lie back," you tell him.
He does.
Not because you forced him. Not because the enchantment compelled him. Because Narumi, underneath everything β all the battlefield competence and the arrogance and the magenta glare he turns on anyone who questions him β has made the decision, freely and deliberately, to belong to you in this room. The collar around his throat is not a cage. It is a declaration, worn by choice, honored by both of you.
He stretches back against the bedding, one arm bent under his head, and looks at you. The lamplight plays across the lean architecture of him β the long muscle of his chest and stomach, the collar dark against the column of his throat, the damp-dark fall of his two-toned hair against the pillow. He is catastrophically beautiful, in the way that very dangerous things sometimes are.
"Well?" he says. That familiar challenge in his voice, but stripped of its bite. Warm under it. Waiting.
You climb onto the bed and over him, settling your weight on his hips, and his hands move immediately to your waist β large and warm through the fabric of your clothes, fingers pressing in. The sound he makes is low and private.
"You're still dressed," he says.
"I'm aware."
"That's inconvenient."
"For you."
The glow in his eyes brightens. He watches you reach down and take hold of the collar, one hand curled under the obsidian, and the sound that rises from him at that contact is something between a groan and a purr β deep in his chest, involuntary, the wolf's response to the one thing it trusts completely.
"You ran your mouth the whole way back from the Woods," you tell him, holding his gaze. "Told me the mission report would be 'straightforward.' Told me the blood haze 'wasn't that bad.' Told Takeda β while Takeda had a gash above his eye that you put there β that he should've 'read the situation better.'"
"In my defense β"
You tighten your fingers on the collar. Not hard, but certain.
He stops talking.
"You're going to apologize to Takeda in the morning. In person. Without qualifiers." You feel him shift beneath you, that restless wolfish energy looking for somewhere to go. "Nod if you understand."
He holds out for approximately four seconds β which is, for Narumi, a significant exercise in restraint β before his chin dips. Once.
"Good," you say.
And then you lean down and kiss him.
It is not a gentle kiss. He doesn't want gentle β you know that by the way his whole body surges upward the moment your mouth finds his, hands gripping your waist hard enough to feel each individual finger, a low growl breaking in his chest like something that's been dammed up for hours finally finding a crack. He tastes like cedar soap and something underneath it that is just him β warm and animal and winter-sharp β and when his teeth catch your lower lip you let him have it, let him pull, let the small sound he drags out of you be real and unguarded.
He pulls back a half-inch, chest heaving, and his lower lip is caught between his own teeth now β that specific thing he does when he's trying to hold himself in check, jaw tight, eyes blazing magenta. He looks catastrophic. You want to ruin him entirely.
"Off," he manages, fingers already working at the hem of your shirt.
"Ask."
The growl again, lower this time, more frustrated. The glow in his eyes pulses. "Please."
You sit up and pull the shirt over your head, and the sound that comes out of him is unfiltered β not a word, not even close to language, just a low sharp intake that he doesn't manage to swallow in time. His hands move immediately, palms flat and fever-hot against your stomach, your ribs, the underside of your breasts, relearning the geography of you with that thorough greedy attention he gives to things he considers worth his full focus. His thumbs drag slow circles over your nipples through the thin fabric of your bra and you feel them stiffen against the pressure, feel the warmth of it pull a line straight down your spine.
"Look at you," he says quietly. There's no performance in it. Narumi in private says exactly what he means.
You reach back and undo the clasp. The straps fall. He watches with his lower lip back between his teeth and his chest rising and falling visibly faster, and the restraint it's costing him is written in every line of his body β the tendons in his forearms, the locked set of his jaw, the way his hips have shifted underneath you with the animal's reflex to push up and take.
"Slow," you tell him.
His exhale shudders. He closes his eyes for one beat β gathering himself, the wolf and the man negotiating β and when he opens them again, the urgency is still there but it's banked. Channeled. He looks at you the way he looks at things he is in no hurry to stop looking at.
"Both hands," you say, and guide them up yourself, placing them exactly where you want them.
He follows without resistance. His palms cup the weight of your breasts and he learns β presses and holds and watches your face, adjusting, until you make the sound that tells him he's found the right place. He works his thumbs in slow rolls over your nipples until they're stiff and aching and you have to breathe through the want of it, and the whole time he watches you with the focused patience of something that has decided it is in no rush at all.
"There." The word comes out lower than you intend.
"I know." He says it like it isn't arrogance but simply truth. "I know you."
He pulls you down and his mouth finds the curve of your collarbone, your throat, the soft place under your jaw β and you feel the drag of his teeth, controlled and deliberate, the wolf's reminder that it could, that it is choosing not to, that the choosing is its own kind of thing. He moves lower and when his mouth closes over your nipple the sound you make is sharp and real, and his response to that sound is another low groan, his cock hard and insistent against the inside of your thigh through the robe.
You reach down and wrap your hand around his cock through the cloth.
Every muscle in his body locks.
"Fuck β" His voice is wrecked already, barely a word, and his head tips back against the pillow, throat exposed, the obsidian collar dark against his pulse. You can see him swallow. You can see the way his teeth go back to his lower lip, biting down hard, the tendons in his jaw standing out. "Don't β if you β please β"
"Please what," you say.
"Please keep going." Strained, hoarse. "Please."
You tug the robe open and take your hand back, and he makes a sound of protest that ends when your fingers close around the bare length of him. He's hot in your hand, skin tight, already leaking at the tip β and the sound that tears out of him when your thumb drags through the slick there is the least composed thing you've heard from him all night. His hips roll up before he can stop them, chasing the friction.
"Still," you tell him.
He goes still. His knuckles are white in the bedding. His chest heaves.
You stroke him slowly. Deliberately. Long pulls from root to tip, feeling every ridge, every pulse, his cock twitching in your grip, and you watch his face the entire time β the way his lip is bitten so hard now there'll be a mark, the way the glow of his eyes has bled out to consume most of his irises, the way his canines are just slightly more pronounced when his mouth drops open. He's beautiful like this. Undone. All that battlefield competence stripped back to just want.
"Please," he says again, smaller this time. "I need β come on, I need to touch you β"
You let him.
His hand slides down your stomach and between your thighs and when his fingers find how wet you already are, he goes completely silent for one breath β just the look on his face, raw and honest and something close to reverent β and then he makes the groan that comes from somewhere in his sternum, low and resonant, his forehead dropping back against the pillow.
"Christ." He says it to the ceiling. "You're β god β"
"Don't get poetic," you tell him, but your voice is not entirely steady.
He huffs a sound that might be a laugh and then his fingers move, and it stops being funny. He finds the slick heat of your cunt like he does know you β two years of learning exactly this, exactly where, exactly how much β and he works two fingers inside you slow enough that you have to press your palm against his chest to brace yourself, feel his heartbeat hammering beneath it. The wet noise of it is obscene in the quiet room and he listens to it, the wolf's ears tipped forward, attentive.
"There," he says quietly, watching your face. Not a question. "Right there."
You rock against his hand, thighs trembling, his thumb finding the tight bud of your clit and working it in small circles while his fingers curl inside you, and the sound that builds in your throat is not composed. His cock is hard against your hip. He's got his other hand on the small of your back to hold you as you move, and the look on his face β the focused, burning, privately undone look β makes heat flood the base of your belly.
"I want β" you start.
"Yes," he says immediately. He doesn't wait for you to finish. He already knows.
You pull his hand free, hear the wet drag of it, watch him lift his fingers to his mouth without thinking about it β wolfish, instinctive β and the sight of that, the casual claiming of it, winds something hot and tight in your chest.
"Gen."
"What?" He doesn't sound apologetic. He sounds wrecked. "You taste like β I can't β" He stops, jaw working. "Come here. Please. Right now."
You line yourself up over him. Take the collar in one hand. His whole body locks at that contact β that low chest-deep sound, half groan and half something more animal β and you hold his gaze as you sink down onto him, taking him in by degrees.
The stretch is significant. The burn of it pulls a sharp exhale from you and a wrecked, guttered groan from him, his hands on your hips gripping without pushing, holding without directing β giving you the pace and the depth while his whole body shakes faintly with the effort of not taking more.
"God," he manages, voice like gravel. "You're so β fuck, you're so β"
"Don't stop talking," you tell him, because you know what it does to him, the asking. The being asked.
"Tight." He says it like a confession. "Hot. Perfect." His lower lip is between his teeth again, hard, and there's a sound rising from him that's almost constant now β low and continuous, not quite a growl, not quite a moan, something in between. "Please move, please, I need you to β"
You move.
You set the pace slow and deep at first, the full drag of him with every roll of your hips, and the wet sounds of it fill the room β slick and explicit and shameless, the noise of you two and how much you want each other, and Narumi makes a sound like it's killing him every time you come down. His hands flex on your hips. His head tips back, the pale column of his throat exposed, the obsidian collar shifting.
"More," he says, hoarse. "You can β harder, I won't β"
You tighten your grip on the collar and he snaps.
Not wildly β not breaking, not taking control, just his hips surging up to meet you, the pace fracturing into something less measured, the deep roll of him becoming urgent thrusts that drag at something inside you and make your thighs shake where they bracket him. The sound that comes out of you is not composed and you don't try to make it so. His grip on your hips tightens to the edge of bruising and he watches your face like it's everything.
"There," he breathes, reading your expression, your sounds, everything. "That's β yeah, right there β"
"Don't stop β"
"Not stopping." His voice is completely wrecked now, private and raw and nothing like the man who sleeps through briefings and tells Takeda to read the situation better. "Not stopping. I've got you. I've got you."
You lose the thread of time.
It is slow and messy and completely unguarded β his hands moving from your hips to your back to your hair, your fingers finding his chest, his throat, the collar, and every time you take the obsidian in your hand his whole body responds like a live current running through it. There's sweat at his temples and in the groove of his collarbone and you feel your own thighs slipping on his skin, the obscene wet sound of where you're joined, and he listens to all of it with his head tipped back and his lip ruined from his own teeth.
He talks. He always talks, in private, that stripped-back Gen who never learned to perform in bed: like that, yes, don't stop, stay right there, please and your name β not your name, never your name, always you, as though that is the only word that fits.
You come apart the first time with your forehead against his shoulder and his name in your throat, and the sound he makes at the clench and pulse of it is filthy and honest and everything.
He doesn't stop.
"Again," he says, against your hair. Not a request. A fact. "I want to feel you again."
You tighten your grip on his collar and ride him through it.
"Turn over," he says. Not a request. Low and rough and coming from somewhere behind his teeth.
His eyes are almost entirely consumed by the glow. Magenta, blown wide, the wolf sitting right behind his face. His jaw is set. He's got that expression β the one that lives at the exact threshold between Narumi and the animal, where the man is still nominally in charge but asking nicely has stopped feeling like enough.
You should probably be more cautious about that.
You turn over.
He doesn't waste time. His hands find your hips before you've even fully settled β dragging you back against him, pulling your hips up and your chest down until you're on your forearms in the wrecked bedding, and the sound he makes when the new angle hits is not human. Low and guttural and raw, his hands gripping the jut of your hips with intent.
"Gen β"
He pushes inside you in one long stroke and the word dissolves.
The angle is different like this β deeper, sharper, his cock pressing into places that make your vision blur at the edges, and the wet obscene plap of his hips against your ass is so loud in the quiet room that it makes heat flood your face. You can hear it. You can hear how soaked you are, the slick pull of him dragging back and snapping home, the sound of it filthy and real and completely unignorable.
"Slower β" you start.
He goes harder.
The thrust drives you forward into the pillow and cuts your sentence in half and replaces it with a sound you didn't plan to make β desperate, helpless, real. His fingers dig into your hips in a grip that will absolutely bruise and he pulls you back to meet him, and the resulting plap is loud enough to make the headboard rattle.
"Gen, I said β"
Another thrust. Harder than the last. The slick heat of you takes him in and holds and you feel him in your sternum.
"βfuckβ"
"Say it again," he says, voice like gravel dragged over rock. "Tell me to slow down again."
You reach back and shove at his hip. Hard.
He catches your wrist.
And then it stops being a negotiation.
You push back into him instead β hips rolling, meeting every snap of his, matching him thrust for thrust until the rhythm becomes something less like a pace and more like an argument β messy and urgent and neither of you giving ground, the headboard knocking against the stone wall and the wet slapping sound of skin on skin filling up every corner of the room. The sheets beneath you are soaked through. You can feel it on your knees, the damp drag of fabric, the evidence of how long this has been building pooled into the bedding below you.
He leans over you, his chest against your back, his mouth finding the back of your neck β and his teeth graze the knot of your spine and the hiss that escapes him is the wolf, barely translated.
"Mine," he says into your skin.
"Yours," you say back, because you are, and you both know it, and there's no armor left in either of you for pretending otherwise.
His hips are relentless. You feel it in your thighs, your stomach, the swollen ache of being taken hard and well, and every thrust drags a sound out of you that you've stopped trying to swallow. His cock is splitting you open in the best possible way, the thick slide of him, every ridged inch, the plunging wet heat of it β and the sound β god, the sound, the plap plap plap of him driving home, obscene and rhythmic and completely divorced from anything either of you would call composed.
He hisses again, sharp, through his teeth β the deep involuntary sound of a man who is running out of runway.
"I'm going to β" he starts.
"Inside." Your voice comes out broken. "Don't you dare pull out β"
He doesn't pull out.
The pace fractures into something less rhythmic and more desperate β short, hard, grinding thrusts that press him as deep as you can take him, his hips flush against your ass, his cock buried to the hilt and pulsing β and you feel it before it happens, the way he swells at the base, that specific thick pressure that makes you gasp and try instinctively to pull forward.
His hand flattens on your lower back and holds you still.
"Take it," he says. Rough. Strained. Close.
The knot forms fully and you feel it lock β that hot, impossible fullness, his cock buried deep and swollen where you meet, pressing against every interior wall, and the stretch of it sends a shudder through your whole body that starts at your spine and ends somewhere you don't have a word for. It doesn't hurt β you're far too wet, far too ready β but the pressure of it is total. Complete. He is everywhere inside you and there is nowhere else he could possibly reach.
He comes apart.
Not quietly. The sound tears out of him β raw and guttural and completely unguarded β and you feel it, the pulse of him, the wet rush of heat flooding you from the inside, again and again in long shuddering waves. It is warm in a way that is almost shocking, visceral and real, the slick of it seeping around the knot where he's sealed inside you, soaking the already-ruined sheets beneath you in a slow wet spread.
His whole body shakes. His hands on your hips loosen from gripping to holding, palms flat, and he folds over your back, chest heaving, the damp fall of his two-toned hair against your shoulder.
You're both breathing like you ran somewhere.
"Christ," he says, into your spine. One word. That's all he has.
You feel him still pulsing. Slow and deep and involuntary, his body wringing out the last of it, and the fullness of the knot presses with every throb β not painful, but present in a way that makes coherent thought difficult. You're soaked. You can feel it everywhere, the slick mess of both of you, the ruined sheets, the cooling wet on your inner thighs.
"Gen."
"Mm."
"You did not slow down."
A beat.
"No," he agrees, without any detectable remorse.
You would elbow him but the angle is wrong and honestly you don't have the structural integrity for it right now. You settle your weight more evenly instead, forearms in the damp bedding, and feel the knot hold β locking you together, his warmth spilling slow and relentless, his heartbeat still hammering where his chest rests against your back.
His hand moves up your spine. Slow. Aimless. Landing between your shoulder blades and staying there.
"You pushed back," he says. Quieter now. That private Narumi voice. Something almost wondering in it. "You always push back."
"Someone has to."
He makes the sound that is almost a laugh. It resonates through his whole chest, through you, through the warm mess of where you're still joined.
"Yeah," he says softly. "Someone does."
A beat of genuine quiet. His heartbeat slowing under your palm. The knot still holding, the warmth of him still pooled deep inside you, and for a moment it is almost peaceful β the wrecked sheets, the low lantern, the mountain wind outside.
Then he moves his hips.
Not a thrust. Not urgency. Just β a slow, deliberate circle. Lazy. Intentional. His cock shifting inside you, the knot pressing into a new angle, and you feel the obscene slosh of him β the wet heat of everything he spent still sealed inside you by the knot, moving with him, warm and filthy and inescapable.
He does it again.
"Gen."
"Hm." Innocent. Completely unconvincing.
Another slow roll of his hips, and the sound it makes β the wet, clicking, absolutely ruinous gluck of it β makes your face go hot to the ears. You feel every drop of him shifting inside you like he's reminding you of it. Like the point needs to be made again.
"Are you seriously β"
"Just getting comfortable," he says. His voice has recovered entirely. That lazy, self-satisfied register is back, fully operational, as though he did not just shake apart against your spine twenty seconds ago. You can feel the smile in it.
He does it a third time, slower, and makes a low sound of pure smug contentment.
"You can feel that, can't you." Not a question. "All of it. That's β"
You elbow him.
Hard. Square in the ribs. The satisfying thud of it lands exactly where you intended and he makes a noise that is nothing like the composed battlefield commander or the wolf or any version of Narumi Gen that the Guild has ever documented β
"Ow β"
You drop your forehead into the pillow.
Somewhere in your chest, despite everything β the ruined sheets, the bruises forming on your hips, the fact that you are thoroughly and completely stuck with him for the foreseeable future β something warm and helpless turns over.
"That hurts," he says again, smaller, into your shoulder. Aggrieved. Genuine.
"Good," you tell him.
His arms tighten around you. You feel his mouth curve against your skin.
@fangnoire [2025] β copy right / all rights reserved : this story is a work of fiction. names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the imagination. any resemblance to actual events or persons is entirely coincidental. no portion of this book may be shared or uploaded to other platforms without the author's express consent.
to be honest, i haven't tried yet. i tend to get very meticulous and detailed with my writing, so i've been waiting for the right moment to really focus on it. iβm definitely open to writing it, though! π₯Ή
β β° : πππ πππ THE πππ πππππππ β CHAPTER πππ OF MY SERIES ! π οΉ πarumi πen. οΉ
summary : now sixteen and a prodigy in the second division, he is socially isolated and frequently dismissed from platoons for insubordination. he encounters you, a reliable and observant officer who acknowledges his tactical genius without judging his personality. after a successful joint simulation where you anticipate his moves, a quiet bond begins to form, marked by him keeping a game cartridge you once owned.
a/n : as you can see from the foundations laid in this first chapter, this story is moving away from being a lighthearted or "fluffy" experience. while I am a total sucker for the deeper, more complex bonds between characters, I want to be clear that this narrative is headed toward a much more mature and grounded exploration of their psyche. I am really pushing myself to explore my writing style on something more raw and psychologically intense.
The thing about growing up the way Narumi Gen did was that it didn't leave room for sentimentality.
Not when the first memory you could pull with any clarity was smoke. Not the kind that came from a campfire, something manageable and warm, something someone else had built for you. The kind that swallowed a city block whole. The kind that turned the sky the color of a bruise and made the air taste like metal at the back of your throat, and you stood thereβsmall, maybe six or seven, you could never be exactly sureβwatching the building your parents had been inside fold into itself like wet paper.
He didn't cry. He remembered that clearly, actually. He'd wanted to, understood somewhere in his chest that crying was the correct response to what was happening in front of him, but the feeling justβdidn't come. He stood in the street with ash falling around him like snow and watched the Defense Force arrive, all shouting and urgency, and thought: they're too late. Not with anger. Not even with grief. Just as a fact, the way you'd note that it was raining. They came too late and my parents are dead and now I don't know what happens next.
What happened next was an orphanage in Chiba Prefecture. Then another one two cities over. Then a third that he got removed from after breaking a boy's nose for stealing his game consoleβwhich he maintained to this day was completely justified. A string of placements and a string of teachers who marked him excellent in every academic and physical category and then wrote things like disruptive, non-collaborative, refuses to operate within group structure in the notes section.
He found that funny, actually. Still did. Like a warning label on something dangerous. Handle with care. He wasn't dangerous. He just didn't see the point of pretending that effort was the same thing as results, and everyone who'd ever tried to explain it to him had done such a bad job that he'd stopped listening.
This was the philosophy he carried into the Defense Force entrance exam at fifteen, which he passed with the highest marks in the written and physical portions in his cohort, and into the Second Division six months later, which was where things began to go sideways in the way things only went sideways for someone who was genuinely, empirically correct about everything but had a talent for making other people feel terrible about it.
He was sixteen when he got dismissed from his third platoon.
The barracks of the Second Division smelled like industrial floor cleaner and someone's instant ramen from three floors up. Narumi had developed an immunity to both over the past year, along with an immunity to the particular way people looked at him when they found out he'd been transferred againβthat mixture of wariness and curiosity that he'd learned to read the same way he read weather. This one's heard things. Positioning themselves accordingly. He'd gotten good at that. Reading people. It cost him nothing to do it and gave him information, which was the only currency he'd ever found genuinely useful.
He was sitting in the common room on the ground floor when they logged the transfer in the system. Not doing anything particularly productive. He had his console, the new one he'd bought himself with three months of his first real salary because he'd wanted to and had no one to explain the purchase to, and he was working through the final dungeon of something he'd started two weeks ago and kept almost finishing before getting interrupted by a mission. His legs were slung over the arm of the chair in a way that the common room's posted guidelines specifically discouraged.
He was aware of this and had decided he didn't care.
The common room was mostly empty. A few officers at the far table running through drill cards, two others near the window doing absolutely nothing with great concentration. He didn't know any of their names. Hadn't made a particular effort to. After the first platoon dismissal, his bunkmate at the timeβa guy named Oda something-or-other, decent at perimeter work, bad at shutting upβhad sat across from him and said, you know, it might help if you talked to people more. Narumi had looked at him and said, help what? and Oda had made a face he couldn't quite interpret and gone to bed without finishing the sentence.
He still didn't know what Oda had meant. He was doing fine. He was measurably, objectively better than most of the people in this building, and the numbers bore that out every time they ran an assessment. The problem was never the results. The problem was apparently the way he went about getting them, which he maintained was not a problem at all but rather an extremely efficient use of resources, those resources being himself.
The door to the common room opened.
He didn't look up. He was in the middle of a boss sequence that required actual concentration, and the door opened enough times throughout the day that registering it was a waste of processing. Footsteps. More than one person. The conversational sounds of people who'd been talking before they entered and were continuing without a pause for the change in scenery.
"βtold me the rotation changed again, which means I'm covering the eastern perimeter for Hashimoto's team on top of my own assignments, so I'm just going to have toβ"
"That's not fair, you could push back on that."
"I could, but they're short-staffed right now and it doesn't actually affect my mission output, so."
He glanced up. Two officers. The one talking about the rotation was taller, a third-year by the pins, already moving toward the supply cabinet with the focused energy of someone who had somewhere to be after this. The one who'd told her to push back wasβ
Different.
That was the word that landed, though he didn't examine it right away. He registered it the way someone registers an inconsistency in a familiar environmentβthat small alerting signal, the brain catching on something without quite finishing the thought. She was second-year. He could tell from the badge. She was carrying a stack of folders that had clearly come from somewhere administrative, and she set them on the end of the table with the kind of care that suggested either the contents mattered or she'd been told the contents mattered and had decided to treat them accordingly regardless.
Then she pulled out a chair for the taller officerβnot her own chair, the other oneβwithout saying anything about it, just moved it slightly so the other woman would have easier access to the table, and sat down herself.
Narumi looked back at his game.
Interesting, he thought, and immediately dismissed it.
He learned your name the way he learned most things about the people around him: passively, through accumulation, without asking. Someone mentioned it in the mess hall. Someone else used it in the context of oh, she helped us recalibrate the formation last week, I think she's the one who noticed the gap in the defensive spread. A platoon leader referred to you in a briefing as a reliable presence, which was the kind of language people used when they meant she does what she's told and doesn't cause us headaches, but he was starting to suspect that wasn't quite right.
He didn't form an opinion about you. He didn't have enough data.
What he had was proximity, which increased incrementally and without his doing anything to cause it. The Second Division was not large. The training facilities were shared. The mess hall had assigned seating blocks based on platoon rotations, and twice in the first two weeks after his transfer he ended up at a table where you were already sitting at the far end, quiet, reading something on a tablet while the officers around you talked over each other.
He noticed you didn't participate in those conversations unless you were asked something directly. And when you were asked, you answered with the kind of specificity that told him you'd been paying attention the whole timeβyou'd just decided that adding to noise for the sake of it wasn't worth your time.
He found that more interesting than he wanted to.
The third week, he walked into the training hall for a solo calibration session that he'd scheduled through the systemβlegally, with paperwork, because some senior officer had lectured him for twenty minutes about unauthorized facility usage and he hadn't wanted to hear it againβand you were already there.
Not using the equipment. Sitting on the floor against the far wall, back straight, reading the same tablet from the mess hall. He registered this, went to the equipment, and started his session without saying anything, because there was nothing to say. The space was large enough. You weren't in his way.
He got through forty minutes of the calibration before you said, without looking up from your tablet: "You're compensating on the left side."
He stopped.
Not because the comment startled himβit didn'tβbut because it was accurate, and you'd said it like you weren't particularly invested in whether he agreed with you or not. Just observational. Like noting weather.
"I know," he said.
You glanced up then. He'd expected something like surprise, or the small satisfied look people made when they felt they'd caught someone out. Instead you just nodded, looked back at the tablet, and said: "Old injury?"
"Older than me liking this job." Which wasn't a real answer. You didn't push.
He went back to his session. You kept reading. Somewhere around the hour mark you stood, gathered your things, and left with a quiet I'll see you around, directed at no one in particular but in his general vicinity, and he stayed until his session time expired and then sat on the equipment for a while longer because he didn't feel like going back to the barracks.
He thought about the compensation on his left side, which had been there since he was twelve and had decided to see what happened if he hit a concrete wall hard enough. He thought about the fact that you'd noticed it in forty minutes when no one in any of his three platoons had said a word about it.
He didn't think about you specifically. He was careful about that.
The dismissal from his fourth platoon generated paperwork. The paperwork generated a mandatory meeting with Unit Coordinator Lieutenant Fujimoto, who was the kind of person whose face was built for disappointmentβlong and deeply lined, with eyes that communicated I have explained this before even when this was the first conversation.
"This is the fourth time in sixteen months," Fujimoto said, which Narumi already knew.
"I'm aware of the count."
"Officer Narumi." A pause. The kind designed to make him feel like he was supposed to fill it with an apology. He waited it out. "The assessment of your platoon leaderβyour former platoon leaderβindicates that during the Hiraoka operation, you deviated from the assigned formation, engaged the primary target independently before the platoon was in position, and neutralized it before the backup team could arrive."
"All of those things are accurate."
"You understand why this is a problem."
"I understand why people say it's a problem," he said. "I don't understand why it actually is one. The target was neutralized. No casualties on our side. The alternative was waiting for the formation to complete, which would have taken another eight minutes, and the analysis team put the civilian evacuation window at six."
Fujimoto looked at him for a long time. "You could have communicated that reasoning to your platoon leader."
"I did."
"The report saysβ"
"The report says I told him we don't have time for this and then went ahead. That's also communicating my reasoning."
A silence. He watched Fujimoto make a note on the form in front of him and recognized the gesture for what it was: not worth continuing this specific argument.
"You'll be reassigned to general pool while a new placement is determined," Fujimoto said. "In the meantime, you're expected to attend the joint training exercises scheduled for the fourteenth. Participation, not observation."
Narumi looked at him. "Participation."
"With other officers. In a group. Yes."
He considered objecting and decided it wasn't worth the additional paperwork. "Fine."
The joint training exercise on the fourteenth was exactly what he'd expected, which was a mixed group of officers from across platoons working through a coordinated neutralization scenario in the simulation bay. He'd done versions of this before. They were designed to evaluate teamwork, communication, and response time under pressure, all three of which he could technically demonstrate when he felt like it. The issue was that he usually didn't.
He spotted you immediately. You were in the second cluster of officers near the briefing board, listening to the lead trainer go through the scenario parameters with the focused expression he'd filed away from the training hall three weeks ago. You'd already marked up the scenario printoutβhe could see pencil annotations at the edges, not heavy, preciseβand you were cross-referencing something against the facility map on the back.
He found a position near the edge of the group and waited.
The scenario was a three-team extraction with overlapping coverage zones and a mobile target. Standard enough. He ran the math on it in approximately thirty seconds and arrived at the most efficient resolution, which involved two teams holding position to redirect traffic while one central team moved on the target with maximum speed and minimum lateral exposure. He could do the central run himself in about four minutes.
"Team assignments," the trainer called, and began reading from a list.
He was assigned to Team Three. You were in Team Three.
Oh.
He didn't read anything into this. The assignments were randomized. He looked at the simulation bay layout and started planning.
The exercise began.
Eleven minutes in, he'd already separated from the other members of Team Three, cut through the secondary access corridor, and reached the target's projected location ahead of scheduleβat which point the scenario updated and the target moved, which he'd partially anticipated, and he adjusted. Behind him, he could hear the comm channel cycling with status updates from the other teams.
Then: your voice, steady in the earpiece. "Narumi. Position?"
He almost didn't answer. "Sector nine. Target's moved to the junction."
"I know. I'm in sector eight. I can create a redirect from the maintenance corridorβthere's a structural choke point that'll force target movement northeast, which puts it directly in your approach window."
He stopped.
Not for long. Two seconds, maybe. Enough to recalculate. "You'd have to hold the corridor until I'm in position."
"I can hold it."
"There'll be secondary targets."
"I know. I counted four on the simulation feed before I came in here. I've been managing two already."
He didn't say anything for a moment. Then: "Give me ninety seconds."
"I've got sixty to spare, so you've got ninety."
He moved. You held. He reached the approach window at eighty-three seconds and neutralized the primary target, and when he came back through the maintenance corridor you were standing at the choke point with both secondary simulations cleared and the timer reading a comfortable margin.
You looked at him. He looked at the timer. Then at you.
"You counted the secondaries before you entered," he said.
"I like knowing what I'm walking into."
"Most people don't bother."
"Most people complain about secondaries afterward instead." A small, dry thing that might have been a smile. "Clean approach on the primary."
He looked away. "You set it up well."
It came out less easily than he'd intended. Like the words had a small resistance to them that he had to push through to get them out. You didn't make a production of itβjust gathered your equipment and said, "Come on, they'll be doing a debrief," and walked back toward the main bay.
He followed.
In the debrief, the trainer went through each team's performance. When she got to Team Three, the result summary showed the fastest target neutralization of the exercise by two minutes and change. The trainer looked between him and you with the expression of someone doing math that wasn't coming out right.
"Officer Narumi deviated from the established team formation," she said.
"He did," you agreed.
"But the resultβ"
"The result was good because the formation we were given wasn't calibrated for target mobility. He saw that faster than the rest of us." A beat. "I'd rather have a good result than a clean form."
He turned to look at you. You were reviewing your annotated printout again, unhurried, not looking back at him. He had the strange and specific sensation of not knowing what to do with the thing he'd just heard, which didn't happen to him often.
The trainer moved on to Team Two.
He stared at his own printout for the rest of the debrief and thought, without particularly choosing to: she's going to be difficult.
Narumi meant difficult in the sense of someone who complicated a system he'd built carefully over several years. The system was: results mattered, people were largely interchangeable tools for achieving them, and anything that looked like attachment was just an inefficiency he hadn't found a use for yet. The system had served him well. It had gotten him through every orphanage, every school, every platoon, and the only cost was that he came out the other side of each one alone, which didn't feel like a cost from the inside.
You complicated that in a way he couldn't immediately locate, which annoyed him.
It wasn't that you were particularly remarkable. You were goodβtechnically precise, situationally aware, the kind of reliable that other officers mentioned in passing the way you mentioned weather. Oh yeah, she'll have done it already. She always does. Without treating it as exceptional. You weren't trying to be exceptional. He couldn't figure out if that was deliberate or if you genuinely just didn't care about being seen.
What annoyed him most was that you talked to him the same way you talked to everyone else.
Not deferentially, which most people did when they were nervous around himβthat careful over-politeness, the slight pause before responding like they were checking their words for acceptable content. Not warily either, which was the second most common register he got from new contacts, this watchful restraint that told him they'd heard something and were waiting for the version of him that confirmed it. You talked to him like he was a person in a room. Like the specifics of who he was had registered and been filed away and now you were simply working with that data in real time.
He found this both much easier than talking to anyone else and much harder to maintain distance from.
The first time he ate lunch at the same table as you by choice, he told himself it was because the other available seating was worse. The table near the window got afternoon sun directly in your eyes. The back corner had bad acoustics from the ventilation. The table in the middle meant sitting within conversation range of three separate groups of officers who were the type to talk loudly about nothing.
Your table was positioned next to the support pillar. Reasonable noise buffer. Good sightlines. He sat down across from you, pulled out his console, and you looked up briefly, said "there's been a change to the eastern perimeter rotation," and went back to your food.
I know," he said. "It's not my rotation."
"It's not mine either, but the briefing's tomorrow morning and they always run long, so." You reached for your drink without looking up.
He looked at you. You had, inexplicably, written bring coffee on the back of your hand in pen, which he found so specifically unheroic that something in him wanted to laugh. He didn't. "You write notes on yourself."
"I forget things if I don't."
"You didn't strike me as someone who forgets things."
"I don't," you said, and pointed at your hand, "because I do that."
He did laugh thenβnot much, just a short exhale that was mostly breathβand you went back to eating and he went back to his game, and neither of you said anything for the next twenty minutes. It was the most comfortable silence he'd had in the Second Division, and he thought about it for longer than was useful afterward.
He got kicked out of his next assigned platoon six weeks later.
This time the circumstances were technically defensible. The platoon leader had issued an order that was, objectively, going to get two officers injured unnecessarily, and Narumi had flagged it, been overruled, ignored the order anyway, and gone left when everyone went right. Everyone went right and the ambush hit them exactly where he'd said it would, and nobody got seriously injured because he'd already neutralized the flank, which should have been the end of it.
It was not the end of it.
"You undermined unit command in the field," Fujimoto said.
"I preserved unit integrity in the field."
"Those are not the same thing."
"In this case they were."
He found you in the corridor outside the administrative wing afterward without planning to. He was walking with the particular energy of someone who had made every correct decision and had been formally censured for it anyway. You were coming out of the equipment room carrying a pair of gauntlets that were clearly not yoursβtoo large, someone else's sizeβand you stopped when you saw his face.
He wasn't making a face, as far as he was aware. His expression was neutral. But you looked at it and said, "Bad meeting?"
"Fifth dismissal."
Something moved through your expression. Not pityβhe would have walked away from pity immediately. Something more like the careful acknowledgment of someone who understood that you didn't always get to be right and be recognized for it at the same time.
"Where will they put you?" you asked.
"General pool again. Probably another placement in a few weeks."
You were quiet for a moment. The gauntlets were tucked under your arm. Then you said, "Come on, I need to return these to Nakamura in the east wing." You gestured with them. "Walk with me."
He did.
He didn't particularly have anywhere to be, and you hadn't asked him to talk about it or explain himself or perform any version of being fine about it. Just to walk, which was the right call. They went through the east corridor and up a half-flight of stairs to the equipment storage wing, and he watched you return the gauntlets with the same quiet efficiency you brought to everythingβa quick exchange, a thank you, the door closingβand then you were back in the corridor.
"You were right about the ambush," you said.
He looked at you. "How do you know about that?"
"I was on comms backup for the mission." A pause. "The flagging was also right. The outcome was the worst possible version of right, which I imagine is deeply annoying."
He exhaled. "Yeah."
You didn't tell him it would be fine or that it would get better or any of the things people said when they wanted to make themselves comfortable with someone else's frustration. You just walked back toward the main block in a direction he recognized, after a moment, as the longer routeβyou'd taken the corridor that added three minutes without explaining why.
He recognized it for what it was and didn't say anything about it.
"There's a game in the common room," you said when they'd turned back into the main corridor. "Someone left it in the recreation cabinet. Looks unfinishedβI think they transferred out and forgot it."
"What genre?"
"Tactical. Turn-based. The UI is genuinely terrible. I tried it for about five minutes."
He considered this. "The UI or the mechanics?"
"The UI is what made me stop. The mechanics looked promising."
"I'll look at it tonight."
He didn't know why he said I'll look at it instead of someone should look at it. You nodded like it was a natural conclusion to reach, and at the corridor junction you turned right toward the residential block and he turned left for the equipment bay because he'd remembered a recalibration session, and he went about the rest of his day without examining any part of the previous forty minutes too carefully.
He looked at the game that night. The UI was, as you'd said, genuinely terrible. The mechanics were decent. He played it until nearly two in the morning because the underlying logic of the back half was interesting and he wanted to see how it resolved, and when he passed you in the mess hall the next morning he said, "You were right about the UI," and you said, "You found the mechanics though," and he didn't ask how you knew, because it was the obvious thing and you were someone who paid attention to obvious things.
He started to notice the shape of you in the building.
Not consciously. Not as something he made room for on purpose. More that you became a kind of data point he processed without choosing toβwhere you were in the training rotation, whether you were in the mess hall at your usual hour or running late, the particular sound of your footsteps in the east corridor that told him you were going somewhere specific rather than just moving between places. He stored all of this the way he stored tactical information, automatically, without reviewing it.
The problem was it didn't feel like tactical information when he actually looked at it.
You were sixteen weeks into the joint training program when the scenario went badly. It wasn't his faultβthe simulation malfunctioned, the parameters generated a secondary cascade that wasn't in the briefing, and the team they'd been assigned to got pinned in a configuration that shouldn't have been physically possible. He'd sorted it. The way he always sorted things, which was by moving quickly and ignoring the instructions that no longer applied. But two officers had taken simulated hits that would have been serious in a real scenario, and the post-session debrief had that particular atmosphere of a room full of people looking for someone to direct their frustration at.
You came in fifteen minutes later.
You didn't come looking for himβhe could tell from the path you took, straight to the gear rack on the far wall where your assigned equipment lived, not even glancing toward his corner. You started going through your kit, the methodical post-exercise check he'd seen you do before, unclipping and inspecting and re-securing with the focus of someone using the action as a reset.
He watched you. You didn't acknowledge that he was there.
After a while, he said: "Were you in the debrief when I left?"
"Yes."
"How did it end?"
"Without resolution, which is usually how those things end." A pause as you inspected the connector on the right side of your harness. "No one blamed you, if that's what you're actually asking."
He looked at the wall. "I'm not asking that."
"Okay."
Another silence. The kind that didn't feel like the absence of conversation, more like a different kind of it.
"The malfunction was documented," you said. "Trainer Higashiyama put it in the report. Whatever you're running through in your headβthe simulation failed, not the decision-making."
He said nothing.
"You got everyone to the extraction point." You put the harness back and started on the kit bag. "Even with the cascade. That's what actually happened."
He looked at you. You weren't looking at himβstill working through the kitβand he had the sudden, specific feeling of being seen in a way that didn't require him to perform anything. No explanation. No defense. No demonstration of being fine about it. You had simply stated what happened. Like it was simple. Like it had always been simple and the only complicated thing was everything built around it.
He didn't know what to do with that.
"I'm getting reassigned again," he said. It wasn't what he'd meant to say. He hadn't meant to say anything.
You looked up. "When?"
"Soon. Fujimoto said two weeks."
Something moved across your faceβbrief, contained, the expression of someone making a private calculation. Then you said, "Well. Before you go." You reached into the side pocket of the kit bag and held out a small thing he recognized after a second as the abandoned game cartridge from the recreation cabinet. "The second half has better mechanics. You'd want to finish it."
He stared at it for a moment.
The thing about Narumi Gen was that he'd built his entire understanding of himself around not needing anything from anyone. Results, not effort. Strength, not dependency. Everything he'd collected in his lifeβhis scores, his neutralization numbers, his recordβwas proof that he could exist in any environment without anything taking root, because nothing ever had to. He moved through places and the places closed behind him like water. That was fine. That was correct. That was exactly how it was supposed to work.
He reached out and took the cartridge.
"I'll give it back before the transfer," he said.
"Don't worry about it." You zipped the kit bag and slung it over your shoulder. "I borrowed it from Nakamura's cabinet anyway."
He let out a breath that was very nearly a laugh. You were already heading for the door, unhurried, the way you were always unhurried, and at the threshold you paused and looked back.
"Good decision-making tonight," you said. "For whatever it's worth."
He looked at you in the doorway. The corridor light was behind you, and you were backlit in that specific way that made you look briefly like a silhouetteβclear at the edges and complicated in the middle. He would remember this image later without meaning to, during a mission in another platoon, in a barracks room that smelled like someone else's detergent, in the quiet before sleep when his mind went still enough to retrieve the things he'd stored without filing.
"It's worth something," he said.
He meant it to come out flat. Uncomplicated. A simple acknowledgment.
It didn't, quite.
You nodded once. Then you were gone, and he sat in the equipment bay for another twenty minutes with the game cartridge in his hand, not playing it, not thinking anything particularly coherent, just existing in the specific and unfamiliar warmth of having been somewhere that felt, briefly, like it was built for him to occupy.
He packed the cartridge in his kit three days later when the transfer paperwork came through. He hadn't given it back. He'd told himself he would, and then he'd kept not doing it, and eventually he stopped telling himself anything about it and just kept it.
That was the first thing of yours he kept without meaning to.
It would not be the last.
There were things he could say about the months that followedβanother platoon, another dismissal, the mechanics of surviving a system that had decided, by committee, that he was more trouble than his value justifiedβbut the part that stayed with him was simpler than all of that.
He'd walk into a room and check, without choosing to, whether you were in it.
He didn't have a name for this yet. He wasn't looking for one. He just knew that when a mission went wrong and the debrief ran long and the corridor smelled like industrial floor cleaner and he was tired in a way that didn't have anything to do with the physical, he looked for the particular angle of your shoulder when you were reading something, or the sound of your footsteps going somewhere with purpose, or the small dry precision of something you'd said that he hadn't expected, and whatever was sitting wrong in his chest shifted slightly toward right.
He thought: this is useful.
He thought: you are easy to be around.
He didn't think past that. He was careful not to.
He was sixteen, nearly seventeen, and he had been alone for most of his conscious life, and the thing about being alone for that long is that you stop recognizing the difference between solitude and something you've built to look like it. You stop noticing the shape of the space where another person could be, because it's been empty long enough that it just seems like the natural geometry of things.
He would not figure this out for a very long time.
But it had started. Even then, sitting in an equipment bay with a borrowed game cartridge and the sound of someone's footsteps fading down the hallβ
it had already started.
@fangnoire [2025] β copy right / all rights reserved : this story is a work of fiction. names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the imagination. any resemblance to actual events or persons is entirely coincidental. no portion of this book may be shared or uploaded to other platforms without the author's express consent.
summary : narumi gen is a lot of things: the first divisionβs greatest assetβan elite captain, and a world-class gamer (definitely). he is also, unfortunately, the worldβs worst patient. when a high fever leaves him delirious, youβre forced to physically block the door to keep him from collapsing in the hallway. but as his "flawless" persona glitches under the heat, a clingy, vulnerable side of narumi emergesβone that leads to a sleepy confession he definitely won't admit to when the sun comes up.
a/n : this piece marks my official introduction to this account, and I couldnβt think of a better way to start than with a certain stubborn, gaming-addicted captain. that being said, Iβm always looking to grow! I truly appreciate any and all feedbackβconstructive criticism and general engagement are what keep me inspired and give me the motivation to post more frequently.
You are not a babysitter.
You want that on record. You want it written down somewhere official, notarized, filed in the Defense Force's central records database under your name with a timestamp. [Name], First Division Analyst, is not, has never been, and will never consent to being anyone's babysitter. You've been in the Defense Force for three years. You survived the entrance exams, the physical trials, the six-week joint field training in Hokkaido where it rained for thirty-one consecutive days and your bunkmate snored like a diesel engine, and you did all of it with your dignity mostly intact.
And then Shinomiya Kikoru knocked on the analysts' hall door at twenty-two hundred hours and looked at you with those eyes β sharp, assessing, carrying the full genetic weight of a father who once stared down a Class 5 Kaiju and didn't flinch β and said, very calmly, "Captain Narumi has a fever and he won't stay in medical."
You looked up from your tablet. "Okay?"
"He's been trying to leave for two hours."
"Okay."
"He kicked over the monitor stand."
A pause. "...okay."
"I need you to go sit with him."
And that's how you ended up here, standing in the corridor outside medical room twelve at twenty-two fifteen, holding your tablet like it's a shield, wondering what specific sequence of life choices led you to this exact moment. You go back through them mentally β every decision, every fork in the road, every time you could have taken a different path β and they all seem completely reasonable in isolation, which is the most frustrating part. You didn't do anything wrong. You worked hard. You were competent. You filled in the data gaps on sortie reports that other people left incomplete because incomplete data gets people killed and nobody else seemed to be losing sleep over it, so you did, and somehow that means you're here.
You did this to yourself, you think, staring at the door. You were too good at your job and now it's your problem.
Behind you, Kikoru's footsteps have already faded down the corridor. She delegated and left. Clean, efficient, surgical. You can't even be annoyed about it because it's exactly what you'd have done.
The thing about Narumi Gen β and there are many things about him, a volume's worth of things, possibly several volumes β is that you've known him since before he was Captain Narumi. Before Japan's Strongest. Before the titles piled up on him like sediment. You came up in the same recruitment cycle, both of you fresh out of whatever lives you'd had before, both of you seventeen-years old and taking the Defense Force entrance exams in the same freezing gymnasium on the same grey October morning.
You'd noticed him immediately, and not for a flattering reason. He was the one in the back row who kept finishing the written evaluations before the timer and then just. Sitting there. Not restless. Not smug. Just sitting, waiting for everyone else to catch up, in the way of someone who'd already moved on internally and was merely remaining present in the room as a courtesy.
Ugh.
Who does that?, you'd thought at the time, more annoyed than impressed, because you'd been on question forty-seven of sixty and he was clearly done and it was distracting.
Nine years later, you push the door to room twelve open.
The first thing you notice is that he's standing.
Not sitting on the edge of the bed, reluctantly resting standing. Not up to get some water standing. He's standing in the middle of the room with his arms crossed, and he's in medical-issue clothes β standard grey, institutional, completely at odds with the way he usually carries himself β and his hair is down, the black and grey of it falling forward without the usual deliberate styling, and he is looking at Okuma with the precise expression of a man in the middle of a debate he is absolutely certain he's winning.
Okuma looks like she has aged fourteen months in the last two hours.
"βand I'm telling you, Okuma," Narumi is saying, in the patient tone he uses when he thinks the other person just hasn't been given sufficient information to understand why he's right, "my temperature has been stable for the last twenty minutesβ"
"It went up by point-three degrees in the last twenty minutes, Captainβ"
"That is within margin of errorβ"
"It is not within any margin ofβ"
You close the door behind you.
He turns. Registers you. And you watch his face do something β a very fast, very controlled recalibration, the argument he'd been running redirecting like water finding a new channel. He looks at you the way he looks at everything: directly, already assessing, already three steps into whatever comes next. His eyes are too bright. His cheekbones are flushed in a way that has nothing to do with exertion. Even from across the room you can see the elevated color, the specific sheen of someone whose body is working hard at something it shouldn't have to work hard at.
He looks, objectively, terrible.
"[Name]," he says. His voice has a roughness at the bottom of it, a texture that wasn't there yesterday.
"Captain," you say.
Okuma's tablet is in your hands before you've consciously decided to reach for it. She relinquishes it with the relief of someone handing off a live grenade and says, very professionally, "His temperature is thirty-eight-point-eight and has been climbing since oh-six-hundred. He has refused to lay down. He has attempted to leave on two separate occasions. He hasn't eaten since fourteen-hundred." She pauses, and then, in the tone of someone who has tried everything available to them and is now tapping out, "I'll leave him with you."
And then she leaves.
You watch her go. You think about going with her. The door swings closed.
Narumi is watching you. You're watching Narumi. The room is quiet except for the monitor's steady beeping and the ambient hum of the ventilation system and the distant sounds of the base settling into its nighttime rhythm.
"I don't needβ" he starts.
"I know," you say.
"I was justβ"
"I know." You look around the room, locate the chair in the corner β standard Defense Force issue, aggressively uncomfortable by what you've always assumed is intentional design, the physical equivalent of the institution saying you should be better soon, or at least leave β and drag it across the floor to position it between him and the door. You sit down. You open your tablet. "I have a report to finish. Pretend I'm not here."
He stares at the chair. Stares at you in the chair. Looks at the door, which is now behind you.
You can see the exact shape of what he's thinking because you've been watching him think for nine years and you've gotten good at the geometry of it. He's calculating. Exits, obstacles, available arguments, energy expenditure versus probable outcome. He's running it all at thirty-eight-point-eight, which means he's running it at maybe seventy percent of usual capacity, which means he arrives at conclusions a beat slower than he normally would but still faster than most people on a good day.
"This is unnecessary," he says.
"Probably," you agree.
"I wasn't actually going to leave."
"Okuma says you tried twice."
"Those were inquiries. I was inquiring about my discharge timeline. That's not the same as leaving."
"You kicked over the monitor stand."
A very brief pause. "That was an accident."
You look up at him over the top of your tablet. He meets your eyes with complete, unflinching confidence, the absolute composure of a man who has never once in his life said something he didn't believe.
You look back down at your tablet. "Sure," you say.
He stands there for another moment. You can feel him standing there, can feel the particular energy of Narumi trying to decide whether this is a battle worth having, doing the math on his remaining resources versus the probable outcome of arguing with you right now. And then, quietly β no declaration, no concession, just the simple physics of a body that has been running for too long finally accepting the offer of a surface β he turns and sits on the edge of the bed.
Hmph.
Back straight. Arms crossed. Every line of him communicating that this is temporary and strategic and not because anyone told him to.
You don't say anything. You type a sentence in your report.
The monitor beeps.
Good, you think. One down.
At some point, without quite deciding to, you stop pretending you're focused on your report and start paying attention to him properly β the way his jaw sets when he's working through something, the slight furrow between his eyebrows, the way his posture has started to lose its precise uprightness by increments so small you'd miss them if you weren't looking.
"You should eat something," you say.
"I'm not hungry."
"That's not what I said."
He looks at you. You look at him. The silence has a particular quality to it β the kind you've both learned to navigate, the kind that says I know what you're doing and you know I know but neither of you is going to be the one to name it out loud.
"There's rice porridge in the medical ward kitchen," you say. "I can get some."
"I told you, I'm notβ"
"It's not a request." You're already standing, already moving toward the door. "I'll be back in four minutes. Don't move the chair."
You hear him make a sound behind you β not quite a protest, not quite an agreement, something in the middle that you've come to recognize as I am allowing this under formal objection. You keep walking. The medical ward kitchen is two corridors down. You find the rice porridge, find a bowl, find a spoon. You also find a cup and fill it with water because not drinking enough is how fevers spike to territory nobody wants to deal with at twenty-three hundred hours.
"You didn't have to do that," he says.
"I was hungry anyway," you lie.
He looks at the bowl. Looks at you. Then, with the air of someone making an executive decision that happens to align with someone else's request, he picks up the spoon.
You sit back down and don't look triumphant. Although, it takes some effort.
It's past midnight when you notice his posture has finally, completely given up.
It happens the way these things always happen with Narumi: not in a visible moment of surrender, but in accumulation. By degrees. His shoulders have come down from their rigid elevation. His back is no longer perfectly straight. He's sitting against the headboard now, legs stretched out, arms still loosely crossed but with the feel of habit rather than intention. His eyes are open but their focus has gone soft and distant, the particular un-focus of a mind that has been running too fast for too long and is starting to involuntarily slow.
He looks younger, like this. Less constructed. The fever has taken the polish off him, stripped away the deliberate architecture of Japan's Strongest and left something more human β flushed skin, loose hair, eyes that keep losing their sharpness and then fighting back to it. Like watching someone keep catching themselves falling asleep and jerking awake, except the thing he's fighting isn't sleep but the general concept of being unwell.
You set down your tablet.
"Come here," you say, and stand up, crossing the room.
He looks at you. The calculation is slower than usual. "Why?"
"You've been running a fever since this morning and no one has checked you properly in the last hour." You stop at the edge of the bed. "Let me check your temperature."
"The monitorβ"
"The monitor is for general tracking. I want to check." You reach out before he can assemble another objection, pressing the back of your hand lightly to his forehead.
The sound he makes is very small. Almost nothing. But it stops you.
He hasn't pulled back.
You're β close, now. Closer than you usually get. Close enough to see the slight parting of his lips, the way his eyes have gone very still. Your hand is against his forehead β your hands run cold, always have, the medical staff have complained about it during exams for years β and against the heat of his skin the contrast is stark, and apparently stark enough that something in Narumi's body has simply made a unilateral decision to lean into it.
He doesn't do it obviously. It's β barely anything, just a fraction of pressure, just the faintest shift of his weight forward. But you feel it. And because you're this close, because the room is this quiet, you can also see the exact moment he realizes what he's done.
His eyes come up. Find yours.
And for just a second β just one unguarded, undefended second, before the control reasserts and the composure slides back into place β his expression is something you've never quite seen on him before. Something unarmored. Something that doesn't immediately translate into anything as simple as sick or tired or pained but sits underneath all of those, quieter and more careful, watching you from very close up with an attention that feels different from how he usually looks at things.
You become, very suddenly, aware of the distance between his face and yours. You pull back. Slowly.
Still elevated," you say. Your voice is steady. Good. "Have you been drinking enough water?"
"Yeah," he says. His voice comes out slightly different β not different enough for anyone else to catch, but you've been listening to this voice for nine years. It's flatter than usual. More rough.
"Okay." You step back. Create distance. Reasonable, professional distance. "You should try to sleep."
He's quiet for a moment. When you glance back at him, he's looking at the window β the narrow reinforced rectangle showing nothing but the base's exterior lights and the dark beyond them.
"I don't sleep well in medical," he says. "I sleep better in my own quarters."
"You can't be in your own quarters alone." You sit back down in the chair, pick up your tablet. "If it comes down by morning, you can be in your own quarters by morning."
Another pause. "And if it doesn't come down by morning?"
"Then you stay, and I find someone else to complain at me while I work." You turn back to your report. "Either way."
He doesn't say anything to that.
But when you look up again, ten minutes later, he has lain down. He's flat on his back on top of the covers, hands laced behind his head, staring up at the ceiling with the air of someone who has agreed to occupy a space and nothing more. His legs are crossed at the ankle. The ceiling, Narumi decides, is genuinely the worst ceiling he has ever been made to look at.
There is a water stain in the upper left quadrant that bears a passing resemblance to Honshu if you tilt your head. There is a crack running through the plaster above the light fixture that he has been examining for approximately twelve minutes and finds increasingly offensive. The ventilation system hums. The monitor beeps. Outside the reinforced window, the base is doing its nighttime routine, which he is not part of, which he would like to be part of, which β the specific frustration of this β he is not allowed to be part of because his immune system has staged what is, in his professional assessment, a deeply disproportionate response to a very manageable viral threat.
The BS5 is in his quarters.
His console, the third round of the ranked match that Okuma interrupted. He had been winning. He had been winning without trying particularly hard, which is the best kind of winning β the kind where the gap between you and the opponent is so structural that the outcome was a foregone conclusion long before they figured it out. His rating would have gone up. He had plans for where that rating was going by the end of the month.
Instead he is here.
He shifts his hands behind his head and looks at the ceiling and tries not to glance at you.
The thing is β and this is, he notes to himself with the calibrated detachment of someone capable of recognizing a cognitive hazard even when he's inside one β being cared for is not something that happens to him. It has not happened in a long time. His admirers have been numerous. Several of them have been genuinely exceptional people by any reasonable metric. He is not, despite what Shinomiya occasionally implies with her eyebrows, emotionally illiterate. He knows what it means when someone brings you water without being asked. He knows what it means when someone drags a terrible institutional chair between you and the door and sits in it for hours with their report and does not make it a production.
He simply has not allowed himself to stay somewhere that meaning can land.
Not because he doesn't understand it. Not because he hasn't β occasionally, in the margins of a mission debrief or a shared three-in-the-morning silence β come close to letting it. But because attachment has a radius. It has a weight that distributes itself across decision-making in ways he cannot fully account for, and he has watched what that weight costs people β the split-second hesitation in the drift, the way eyes change after enough close calls, the specific exhaustion of caring about someone who occupies a high-risk classification. He has never wanted to be the source of that exhaustion in anyone.
So. Commitments are declined.
Dangerous territory, some part of him notes, with the unhurried certainty of a tactical system completing a scan. You have been cataloguing this person for a long time.
He knows. He is aware. He is many things and he owns most of them, and stupid is not among them, and he has known for a while now β in the way he knows inconvenient truths about terrain or weather systems, at arm's length, filed accurately but not acted on β exactly what the cataloguing means.
But. Glancing at you, soft-lit and focused and quietly hereβ
He could, he thinks, theoretically, understand how a person might reconsider a policy.
Theoretically. Strictly theoretically. As an intellectual exercise only.
He is fine.
"I'm cold," he says.
You look up from your tablet.
You look at him, then at the thermostat on the wall, then at the thin standard-issue blanket still folded at the foot of the bed where neither of you has touched it. There is a brief, visible calculation happening behind your eyes β he can see it, the geometry of it, the same way he can always see you think.
"I can adjust the AC," you say, and start to stand.
"Don't." It comes out flat. He adds, because that had less context than intended: "If you're comfortable. The temperature is fine for you."
You look at him for a second. "Narumi," you say, in the tone that means I am going to say the obvious thing and you are going to have to just hear it, "that doesn't answer whether you're cold."
"I said I was cold."
"And I said I can turn the ACβ"
"I don't need the AC turned down." He pauses. "There's a blanket," he says instead. "At the end of the bed."
"You're on top of it."
"I'm aware of that."
A beat.
"Move," you say, and cross the room.
The warmth is immediate and better than he expected and he says absolutely nothing about that. You are already turning back toward the chair, and the specific quality of sitting alone in a too-warm room at this hour is β less appealing than it was twenty minutes ago for reasons he is not currently examining. His hand moves. Pats the space beside him. Once. Not looking at you. "Your body temperature runs cold," he says, to the water stain. "Naturally. It's a physiological fact. I'm running a fever. Basic thermodynamics."
A pause enters the room.
You turn around slowly.
He is looking at the ceiling with the complete composure of a man who has not just done that.
"That'sβ" You stop. You start again. "You literally have a fever. Sharing body heat with someone who is also warm is not how fevers workβ"
"You're not warm. You're the opposite of warm. You've been cold since the Hokkaido training and you were cold before that and the medical staff have on recordβ" He pauses, which suggests he has just processed that he knows this and that knowing this is its own kind of information. He continues anyway. "βthat your baseline temperature consistently reads point-four to point-six below average. You are, by definition, not contributing heat. You are mitigating it."
Silence.
"I'm not forcing you," he says, with the measured tone of someone making a completely reasonable offer that happens to benefit them primarily. "Obviously. I'm simply presenting the logic."
You open your mouth.
"But," he says, not looking at you, "I think you want to."
You close your mouth.
"I don'tβ" You hear yourself and stop because your voice has landed with less conviction than intended. You try again. "Okuma could come in at any moment."
"She's off until seven."
"There's still a night-shift nurseβ"
"Who has been doing rounds every forty-five minutes and was last here eleven minutes ago." He pauses. "So you have thirty-four minutes, at minimum, before it's a concern."
"The fact that you've been timing the nurse roundsβ"
"βis practical, yes. I like knowing my variables." Finally, he looks at you. Direct. Already three steps ahead in whatever this conversation is. "It's just sleep, [Name]. I'm not suggesting anything scandalous. Unlessβ" The corner of his mouth again. "βyou're the one who thinks this would be scandalous."
You stare at him.
"That's a deflection," you say flatly.
"It's a question."
"It's a deflection disguised as a question and you know it."
You pull the blanket up from the foot of the bed, snap it once to straighten it, and lay it over him with the same brisk no-ceremony of before. Then you lie down.
On top of the covers. On the far edge of the mattress. On what is approximately eight inches of available space between the boundary of him and the boundary of the bed, which is β it turns out β not eight inches. It's closer to five. Defense Force medical beds were not designed with two people as a variable and whoever made this decision clearly assumed patients would have the decency to be alone. A centimeter of space exists somewhere between your arm and his and neither of you moves toward it or away from it.
"Still convinced this was a good idea?" you say, to the ceiling.
A pause. "I don't have bad ideas," he says. Also to the ceiling.
You breathe out through your nose. He is insufferable. He is thirty-eight degrees and running this conversation on reduced capacity and he is still, somehow, insufferable.
"Go to sleep, Narumi," you say.
A beat. "Probably smart," he agrees, which from him is the closest thing to okay you're going to get.
He closes his eyes.
You do the same, eventually. The room offers nothing new.
Narumi does not fall asleep.
He can hear you breathing. Not asleep β you have always been a light sleeper β he knows this from field rotations, knows the specific way your breathing shifts when something in the environment changes, knows that you have been awake for the better part of twenty hours and are now lying next to a warm body and a beeping monitor and approximately nine years of unfinished business. "Hey," he says. Quietly. Not loud enough to wake someone up. Just loud enough to reach someone who is already awake.
Beside him, you don't move. But the quality of your stillness changes β the particular held quality of someone who has been waiting for something without admitting they were waiting.
"Listen," he says. He pauses. He chooses the next words the way he chooses everything, deliberately and with full knowledge of their weight. "I'm going to say something. And I need you to hear it and β not respond immediately, and not make it a discussion, because I'm going to say it once. I'm not repeating it in the morning." Another pause. "In the morning this didn't happen. Those are the terms."
The room is very quiet.
"...okay," you say.
"I mean it. These are the actual terms."
"Narumi." Your voice is quiet and a little rough from the almost-sleep. "I heard you. Okay."
"I notice when you're in a room," he says, and his voice has the flatness it gets when he's being straightforward, stripping the affect out to make sure the content lands clean. "I notice when you aren't in a room. I notice which problems you find before anyone else does." He pauses. "I'm a difficult person to be near. I'm aware of this. The hours are long and the arguments are frequent and I have a pathological relationship with risk assessment that two separate medical officers have flagged in my file." The corner of his mouth, just barely. "I'm not a good investment."
The monitor beeps.
"But I think about you," he says, quieter now, the sentence arriving with a simplicity that has no performance in it at all. "Outside of work. Outside of briefings and reports. I think about you when there's no operational reason to. I have been doing this for β a while. I haven't said anything because I thoughtβ" He exhales. "I thought the not-saying was a kindness. Keeping it in arm's length. Not making it something you'd have to navigate."
Something shifts in the room. He doesn't look at you. He finishes.
"It's possible," he says, "that I've been wrong about that. That's β that's all. That's the thing."
He stops.
A long silence. Long enough that he wonders if you're going to take him at his word β if you're going to let it sit in the dark and not answer, which would be, technically, exactly what he asked for.
Then you say: "You're so stupid."
He blinks. "...what."
"You heard me." Your voice is still quiet, still rough at the edges, but the quality of it has shifted β something has come loose in it, some careful-held thing. "Nine years. Nine years, Narumi, and you were keeping it at arm's length as a kindness β do you know how long I've beenβ" You stop. You breathe. He can hear you making the same decision he just made, the same choice to just β say the thing, let the management layer run at whatever capacity it has left at three in the morning.
"I have been not saying so because you were β you were very clear, about the redirecting, and I wasn't going to be something you had to redirect, so I kept it β " A short breath. "I kept it somewhere. Same as you. Apparently in the exact same place."
"That'sβ" he starts.
"In the morning," you say quietly. "This didn't happen. I know. Those were the terms."
A beat.
"Right," he says.
"Right," you say.
The terms were not, he now realizes, designed for the scenario where you said nine years, Narumi with your voice gone rough and low in the dark. It was something you'd carried so long it had become part of your weight. Where you called him stupid with the specific exasperation of someone who has been waiting a very long time for someone else to catch up.
He had set up an exit hatch.
He is looking at the exit hatch and finding that he does not, actually, want to use it.
"[Name]," he says.
"The termsβ" you start.
"I'm revising the terms."
A pause. You turn your head. He turns his. You are looking at each other in the dark, close enough that the monitor light catches the edge of your expression β careful, a little wary, something underneath that that he can read now with the specific clarity of a man who has just spent nine years learning one person's face.
"You can't revise the terms afterβ"
"I proposed the terms," he says. "I can revise them."
"That's not howβ"
The mattress shifts.
You stop.
Narumi has pushed himself up β one elbow on the pillow, weight on his side, turning toward you β and now he is above you, not looming, just β there, close, closer than the five centimeters, closer than anything that has happened tonight, and his hair has fallen forward with the movement, the black and grey of it loose and falling over his forehead and into his eyes.
You have not, until this moment, seen them this close.
His retinas are on, the faint magenta luminescence catching the low monitor light β not bright, not aggressive, just there, just the natural glow of them this close to your face, and his expression is β not composed. Not performing anything. Just him, looking at you, having apparently decided somewhere between that's not how and right now that the five centimeters were a miscalculation he intends to correct.
You don't say anything. You're not sure what you'd say.
"Okay," he says, quietly. To himself as much as to you. "Okay." He looks at you β directly, fully, the way he looks at problems he has decided to solve. "I like you."
"I've liked you," he continues, unhurriedly, like he's had this organized for a while and is simply choosing now to say it, "Since every time I've walked past the analyst hall late and the light was still on and I already knew whose station it was before I checked." He pauses. His bangs fall a little further forward. He doesn't push them back. "I like the way you argue. I like that you're right about things and you don't need everyone to acknowledge it, you just need the thing to be right. I likeβ" Something in his expression shifts, a fraction, like he's deciding how far to go. He goes. "I like that you're here. That you stayed. I have liked you for nine years and I have been keeping it at a very responsible distance and I have decided, that the responsible distance is no longer something I'm interested in maintaining."
His hair is in his eyes and his cheeks are still faintly flushed from the fever and he is looking at you from twenty centimeters away with the expression of a man who has just put everything on the table and is now waiting with the particular stillness of someone who genuinely does not know the outcome and has decided that's okay.
"Your hair is in your face," you say.
He blinks.
You reach up and push it back β just that, just your fingers brushing his forehead, pushing the loose strands back off his face β and you feel him go very still at the contact, the same way he went still when your cold hand touched his forehead hours ago except different, entirely different, and when your hand drops he is still looking at you with that expression, the unguarded one.
"I like you too," you say. Simply. "I have for a long time. You know that β I told you, earlier. Same place, same timeline, same everything." You hold his gaze. "But you had terms."
"I'm revoking the terms."
Eventually β without announcement, without ceremony, the way most things happen between the two of you β he lies back down. Closer than before. You don't move away. His shoulder is against yours, barely, just the fact of it, warm through the thin fabric, and that is all, and that is enough, and neither of you says another word about it.
Okuma arrives at seven-oh-one.
She has her tablet. She has her thermometer. She has the professional composure of a woman who has spent three years working the Defense Force medical ward and believes herself, after everything she has seen, to be essentially unshockable.
She opens the door to room twelve.
She stops.
The scene presents itself to her as follows: Captain Narumi, First Division, Japan's Strongest, ranked number one in the Defense Force active roster, is asleep. This is not the shocking part. The shocking part is the configuration β specifically, the way he is on his back with one arm having apparently migrated, at some point in the night, to settle loosely around the analyst from the First Division's data team, who is asleep on her side with her face pressed against his shoulder and her tablet still open in her hand, screen dark, stylus on the mattress like she fell asleep mid-sentence.
They are, objectively, tangled. Not dramatically β this isn't a romance serial, there are no intertwined limbs, the covers are askew and the pillow situation is frankly chaotic.
Okuma looks at this for three full seconds.
She looks at her tablet. She looks at the temperature reading from the bedside monitor. Thirty-seven-point-one. Acceptable. Technically, by every medical metric, dischargeable.
Looks back at the two people in the bed.
Taking a photo. She will not be explaining this to anyone. She will, however, be keeping it. For personal archival purposes.
Now backing slowly out of the room when Narumi's eyes open.
He is, infuriatingly, immediately awake β no groggy transition, no disorientation, just his eyes opening and his expression going through a very rapid sequence that Okuma watches with great professional interest: present, assessing, registering the room, registering her, registering, with a downward glance of approximately one-point-five seconds, the situation he is in and how he arrived there.
She watches his face do the calculation.
She watches him arrive at the conclusion.
"Okuma," he says. His voice is composed. Completely, entirely composed, with the absolute composure of a man who has found himself in a compromising position and has decided that the correct play is to simply not acknowledge the compromise. "Temperature?"
"Thirty-seven-one," she says, with equal professionalism, because she is a medical officer and she has standards.
"Then I'll need my discharge papers."
"Of course." She makes a note on her tablet. "I'll return in thirty minutes."
"That's acceptable."
Nodding. She turns around.
She stops with her hand on the door. She should not. She is a professional.
"Captain," she says, looking at the door.
"Mm."
"You may want toβ" She gestures, vaguely, without turning around. "βbefore I return with the paperwork."
A pause. "Noted," he says. With, she would swear, approximately three percent more dignity than the situation warrants.
She leaves.
Making her way down the corridor before she takes out her tablet again and sends a single message to Shinomiya Kikoru that reads: Your plan worked.
Kikoru's response arrives in four seconds.
I don't know what you're talking about.
And then, three seconds after that:
How bad.
Okuma considers this. She types: He didn't move his arm.
A longer pause.
I'm framing this.
@fangnoire [2025] β copy right / all rights reserved : this story is a work of fiction. names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the imagination. any resemblance to actual events or persons is entirely coincidental. no portion of this book may be shared or uploaded to other platforms without the author's express consent.
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