Soulmate au where itβs not the first words your soulmate says to you, but the words most important/impactful to you that appear on your wrist.
This doesnβt always mean something nice or love confessing, it can also be the cruelest thing they ever say. Itβs also completely in the eye of the beholder, the most important thing your soulmate might say to you might be their first words, or maybe itβs them remembering your favorite color.
I like this because i feel like it leaves room for the relationship to develop before they actually realize that theyβre the one.
But then take this with Klance
One day Lance gets hit from a blast by the core reactor and suddenly Keithβs telling him that theyβre soulmates. That they had some βbonding momentβ that Lance /doesnβt even remember/ in which Lance had happened to say Keithβs words. Words that god knows Lance would NEVER say to Keith. βWe make a good teamβ what a load of bullshit. Keith must be messing with him.
And Keith letβs it go eventually, because anyone in space could say that to him when youβre fighting on such a big team. So Lance and Keith go back to normal, if not fighting even more, with Lance trying to compensate for the fluke of the βbonding momentβ.
Then, Lance starts to think, as he and Keith get closer, that maybe Keith wouldnβt be so wrong for him, that maybe it wasnβt such a fluke. But somethingβs not adding up.
Lance had always been teased for his words. How could something so mean be the most important thing they ever say to you? Basically calling you dumb, even if maybe theyβre just poking fun at you.
βMaybe your soulmate saying that is what gets you to finally realize that you really are stupid,β the kids at his school would always tease.
Lance didnβt want to think that his soulmate thought he was stupid, one of his biggest insecurities, so he ignored them. All his life he believed that there must be some explanation he was missing, until now.
If Keith was his soulmate then it would add up. Keith was always calling Lance stupid.
βThe amount of information inside your brain could be stored in a paper airplane,β he had once mocked.
But then again, it doesnβt quite add up. If Keith was always saying things like that, then what made this one more impactful? What makes this one important?
He concludes that it must not be Keith and leaves it alone after that.
But another wrench gets thrown in when Shiro comes back. It throws everything off kilter and Lance feels like heβs knocking into walls he didnβt know existed.
6 paladins. 5 lions. And heβs the weakest link.
It runs through his head like a mantra. He should talk to someone about it. Hunk, or Shiro, or even Allura. But something draws him to Keithβs room late at night instead.
βIβve been thinking,β he starts, wringing his hands and looking at the floor to avoid eye contact, βthat thereβs six lions and only five paladins.β
He explains how when everything sorts itself out, when all the math adds up, heβs going to be the odd one out. The weakest link, his brain helpfully supplies.
He lays his broken mess out in front of Keith and watches as he doesnβt falter in picking it all up and putting the pieces back together.
Security falls over Lance and makes him feel so much better. Maybe it had been the right choice to talk to Keith. Heβs really grown into the position of team leader.
Keith sends him out, but not before quickly tacking on, βAnd Lance? Leave the math to Pidge.β Before the door shut behind him.
Lanceβs eyes widened and the realization hit him like a truck. Is his room that night, he didnβt sleep at all. He stared at the ceiling and contemplated everything his groggy brain could get its hands on.
It didnβt quite make sense to him why that was the most impactful thing Keith ever said to him. Because, of course it mattered and of course it helped him feel better, but there were so many more important things that could be said or even had been said. It still didnβt add up. But maybe Keith was right, and math just wasnβt his thing.
He found out that he wasnβt half bad at math the next morning, when Keith was gone.
He ran off to join the Blade of Mamora. Heβd left Lance behind. And Lance just knew, that it was all his fault.
If he hadnβt gone whining to Keith about the lions, he wouldnβt have put that stupid idea into his head. And now they wouldnβt see each other for the next who-knew how long.
So, finally, all the math added up, and Lance was all alone.
















