5: fate is fickle ; gojo satoru
pairing gojo satoru x fem!reader
summary when satoru breaks off your engagement, you understand and accept it. but when he marries someone else, you don't understand because he didn't want to be tied down.
content warnings mentions toxic family, mentions of forced marriage, emotional infidelity, bad friends (:((), and i think that's it! lmk if i missed anything
word count 3.7k
a/n i think this is my fav chapter so far lov you guys sm thank you so so much for the support on this!!
send thoughts â prev next â to be added to taglist
Spending more time with Suguru after months of occasional contact was easier than you assumed it would be. You, usually accompanied by Reina, would go to his art gallery in the evenings with a cup of coffee for yourself and him. It seemed too similar to old times, but you always chose to ignore the video reel of memories that pressed play as soon as you opened the glass doors to the gallery of how you and Satoru went there for the mere purpose of annoying Suguru.
This was one of the days your elbows were resting against one of the thin marble tables in the basementâwhich, you had to admit, was crafted to perfection to be Suguruâs space in his galleryâand mindlessly scrolling through your phone while he worked on his laptop.Â
âYo.â You heard him call from his desk just a few feet away from you. âI have to run out to pick up a late shipment. Iâll be back in likeâtwenty minutes? You can stay here, we'll meet up with Nanami once I get back.â
Nanami Kento was another new addition into your life, and youâd be lying if you said he wasnât the most exciting one. It wasnât that you hadnât heard about him beforeâyou had, occasionally from Satoru who was his acquaintance back when they were classmatesâbut he was fresh and new which made it a lot easier to open up to him. You, Kento, and Suguru had plans for dinner tonight with Reina, too, who backed out a few hours ago because her mother had arrived from her month-long trip.Â
âYeah, Iâll be fine. Go ahead,â you replied, sending him a small smile over your shoulder as he gave you a short wave, gathered his car key, and went upstairs.Â
You just continued swiping through your phone, replying to some text messages from earlier this week that didnât particularly mean much. Youâd spent the past few days at home to only sleep, choosing to spend time with Reina, Suguru, and Nanami. You had been in touch with Shoko, too, but hadnât found a time to meet up with her since sheâd gone abroad for an internship for a couple months. Still, it had taken you a long time before you finally began talking to the friends you had that were connected to Satoru.Â
You heard the small ding of the sound the system made when the door before the basement unlocks through the keycard and furrowed your brows. It hadnât even been ten minutes since Suguru left, there was no chance he was back. It was followed by heavy thumps of footsteps going down the stairs, and you only had to see the black lace-up shoes to know who it was.Â
You wanted to scramble for your things and hide underneath a table, but you didnât have enough time because Satoru saw you the exact moment his face came into view when he stepped on the third-last step.Â
âOâOh. I didnât know you were here.â
You tried to clear your voice, to pretend that this situation was no big deal. Of course, running into your boyfriend of three years and fiance for a few more months who broke it off with you on a random Tuesday was, in one way or another, a big deal. âHe left to get a shipment. I donât think heâll be back soon.â
For some reason, for some fucking reason he walked closer to you. You had said that Suguru would take a while because you wanted Satoru to take the hint and leave, not so he could step towards youâcloser and closer till you could look into that sea in his eyes almost clearlyâ and take a seat three chairs down from you. No. You didnât want him near you, especially not after the night on the balcony.Â
âGuess Iâll wait, then.â His voice was honey. It was so smooth, so soft that your ears would feel warm whenever he spoke.Â
âYou can just call him.â
There was always something you believed when it came to Satoru ever since he began pursuing you before your relationship: he was persistent. He would leave little notes all over your room that youâd find in drawers days after theyâd been placed, asking you to go on a date, to give him one chance. Some notes, you found days after you went on said date with him, and that was when you realized how he truly was persistent. It wasnât just when it came to you, though. When you, Satoru, Suguru, and Shoko went to a bar with an indoor mini golf area, it had taken all three of you to manipulate the ballâs trajectory when he wasnât looking just so he could pass the hardest route. It was two in the morning and you were ridden with sleepâit wasnât your fault. When Satoru put his mind to something, he almost always achieved it.Â
âNo point. Iâll just waitâI havenât seen him in a while.â Just as you knew, Satoru wasnât backing down.Â
You didnât know his motives, and youâd tried really hard to not dig deep into his actions to try to find out. Satoru always haunted all your questions, he was like a ghost within your body constantly testing you, trying to get you to question why he did what he did.Â
You remembered that you and Satoru were once a blank page, not an entire book that had come to a tragic, unfulfilling end. You tried to erase every word, but they were written in pen and the traces always lingered. So, the only thing you could do was close the book and keep it somewhere far from your sight, but you couldnât do that when he showed up in front of you. Not as a ghost but as a person, reminding you he was still here, real and moving, and he had pieces of you that you would never get back.Â
âIâm leaving,â you murmured, deciding that you had the choice to leave it all behind. To leave him all behind. He could haunt you from within, but you couldnât let him materialize once again into your life.Â
âY/N, stop,â he said, arms reaching out to you when you walked past him to go to the staircase but stopping as though he realized it was wrong.Â
And you replied, âWhat?â because even though you knew you shouldnât, a partâa big partâof you was still left in his car where he asked you for the engagement ring. A part of you still couldnât let him go entirely because you were never good at leaving things behind.
âI want to⌠apologize,â he began, running his fingers through his unkempt hair. He lifted his hand when you opened your mouth, beginning to say something, and he said, âYou donât have to say anything, okay? Please, just give me fiveâtwo minutes of your time. I just need to talk to you.â
And like he told you to, you didnât say anything because if Satoru wanted to talk for fiveâtwo minutes, then you would let him.Â
âI got married,â he said, as though he was in a daze within his own mind. You scoffed, but didnât say anything. âAnd that⌠that was fucked up. You didnât deserve hearing about the engagement three months after I ended ours.âÂ
Although it was all true, although you had relived all those moments inside your head, hearing Satoru say them made them real. This wasnât Reina helping you get over him, this was the him you tried to get over for months. It was humiliating knowing he knew exactly what he did, though there was no doubt he didnât before this. He knew better than anyone how you felt without talking to you because he was there, holding your hand when a stray tear left your eye as if he was still yours.
You still didnât say anything.
âI met Hana a month before I ended it with you.â You werenât sure you could hear this. If somebody held a knife to your chest at that moment, you probably would still stand still, completely silent because there were no words left in your mouth. âI didnât intend on getting engaged with her, Y/N. I meant it when I said I felt I couldnât be tied down butââ He paused, as if he didnât want to continue.Â
And he didnât continue, at least for a few minutes that felt like long, grueling hours.Â
âBut she was new, and I hadnât felt that⌠newness for so long. Not since Iâd met you. And she said things, Y/N, that made me think we couldnât get married, that we couldnât work.â His eyes looked at your face, and it was equivalent to a thousand needles piercing your skin because he waited for you to say something, to agree? But you couldnât, not even after he had broken you completely and left you on the side of the road like you meant nothing. Because in your stupid, twisted head, you could have worked. If he wanted.Â
He continued, taking your silence as a cue. âWhen I ended it with you, IâI didnât want to. I swear. You deserved better, and I realized that I didnât deserve to be anywhere near you. I couldnât look at you without feeling guilty about the second-thoughts I was having because another girl made me rethink.â
This wasnât what you expected today, was the only thought swirling through the tendrils of your mind.
âYou donât have to say you understand because I donât either. Iâm not sorry for ending it with you, Y/N, because you didnât deserve me after all I did, after all I thought about us. But I am sorry for lying to you and, in a way, making our relationship seem meaningless because you probably thought I moved on too quickly.â
âYou did,â you said, surprising yourself with the finality of your words. But you couldnât take it back now that you had made yourself an almost-coherent member of this conversation.
âWhat?â
âYou did move on, Gojo. Too quickly. I donât think that, I know that and you do, too.â
He tugged his lower lip between his teeth, and you looked anywhere but at his downcast face. It was hard to admit it to him because you couldnât stop your words, not when he was piling on brick after brick preparing to tumble it all down with you on the other side. If you stayed there any longerâ
âI liked Hana then, but the marriage wasnât what I expected.â You leaned back against the wall, placing some more distance between the two of you. Satoru seemed as though he was clutching at the flimsiest of straws to keep you there, to let you let him talk. âMy fatherâhe pushed for it and after losing you, I didnât fight against it. I thought a marriage like this would hurt less than us getting married andââ
âAnd what?â you prompted.
âAnd having to end. I donât knowâI didnât want us to fail, Y/N.â
You smiled wryly, understanding there was nothing more left for him to explain. âOkay.â
âOkay? Thatâs⌠it?â
âI didnât question why you did what you did before, didnât try to get answers. Iâm not going to change after youâve given me those answers I never asked for.â At that point, you were looking to find any words to make a swift exit, but you still remained rooted in your spot.Â
He sighed, fingers reaching up to pinch the bridge of his nose. âYouâre saying you would rather not know?â
Of course, you wanted to know, but you had kept yourself from looking for answers. You knew that whatever ran below the surface of Satoruâs flimsy, no-good, unbelievable reason to end your engagement would hurt, and you were always good at taking what he said at face-value. Obviously, you were right but that didnât grant you the satisfaction of a person whose beliefs were just proven right would.Â
âIâm saying Iâm over it, Satoru.â Your voice was convincing enough. "And if you want a successful marriage, maybe you should tell your wife that you got involved with her while you were engaged to me. I'm not the only one who you should be apologizing to."
As soon as you turned your back towards him and headed for the stairs, the door on top clicked open and Suguru gave you a wide smile and wave when he saw you on the other end.
It was funny, real fucking funny, how on a random Tuesday, every question that had plagued your mind like a ceaseless tornado over almost two years was answered by the harbinger of pain himself. You had been so deeply lost in your own soul, and even a person drowning felt uneasy when pulled back up into the air. Satoru pulled you out and now, he stared at you as if he was a friend who offered you a single piece of a chip because you were starving while he ate an entire packet of it. You werenât sure how he felt but, with the way he looked at you, you were sure that some immature, adolescent part of him thatâs growth stunted in middle school truly believed he had done you right. By telling you the truth two years later.Â
You didnât notice Suguru had walked down the steps and taken notice of Satoru and was now flashing his eyes between the two of you as if you were a ticking time bomb waiting to explode. You werenât.Â
âSatoru, man. What the fuck are you doing here?â Suguru asked, and you shouldâve made your way up the stairs and away from them but you stayed put. Your mind somersaulted, making excuses for yourself to yourself that you had plans with Suguru anyway, and you would leave with him once he makes Satoru leave.
âI just wanted to hang,â Satoru replied, shrugging his shoulders.Â
Suguru inhaled a deep breath and you could see the corners of his ears turning a dark, angry shade of red in annoyance as he stared his friend down. âJust leave for now, dude. Iâve got plans.â
You didnât look at Satoru, but you felt his gaze on you as his footsteps reached closer to the stairs. You moved, not wanting to have any unnecessary contact with him. As he reached you, he halted his steps and looked at you and you could have buried yourself right then into a hole because you hated this.Â
âI know Iâm not in the position to ask for anything but I want to tell you, again, that I really donât want you to hate me. We donât ever have to talk again, if you donât want to, but please donât hate me.â
You looked at his eyes, then stared at him for a moment longer. You laughed, it was bitter and held a certain form of venom you had never shown Satoru, at the sincerity in his features. âSay what you just said but slower, just so you can also comprehend how utterly senseless you sound.â
A hint of annoyance flashed across his features before he tamped it down and shook his head. He started heading up the stairs, not bidding Suguru or you a goodbye, and you sighed in relief.Â
âY/N, Iââ Suguru started, but you cut him off by pushing him by his shoulders in annoyance. âWoah, woah. What did I do?â
âYou didnât tell me!â you exclaimed, your voice finally coming back to you after whatever-that-was. âHe cheated, Suguru! And you didnât tell me.â You were saying your thoughts exactly as they leaped through your mind, barely comprehending that you had resorted to punchingâalbeit lightlyâSuguruâs chest as you closed your eyes.Â
Everything was blank, and for a moment you were convinced you had lost a wire inside your brain throughout this entire ordeal.Â
âHey, listen,â Suguru said, his arms reaching out to gently grab onto your shoulders. âYou kept on saying you donât wanna dig deeper and all that bullshit once the two of you broke up. And you were doing good, Y/N. You know how long it took you to start acting like yourself again? Four months. I didnât want to ruin your process because you were healing.â
You gritted your teeth and said, âYou had no right, Suguru. And you had no right to assume when I moved on because it didnât take me just four months. If yourâif your fiance cheated on you and didnât tell you, I wouldnât keep it from you.â Your voice trailed off as you stared into his eyes, and that was when youâd realized you truly couldnât rely on him because he was Satoruâs friend first and yours second.Â
You hadâin great fashionârun away from Suguruâs art gallery before he could even form a defense to your words. At that point, you were sure he wouldnât be showing up to dinner with Nanami because that would not be a good moment for the three of you. You had dug for your phone and texted Nanami, telling him that youâll be at the restaurant in ten minutes to which heâd instantly replied saying heâll be there in five.
It didnât take long for you to drive and reach the restaurant, which is why you were sitting across from Kento who looked more curious than anything. You tried to avoid his watchful gaze, though he didnât say anything. That might have made it tenfold uncomfortable because he often came to his own conclusions, without asking any questions, and ran with them.Â
âStop staring,â you muttered, fingers absentmindedly flipping through the menu. âAnd decide what youâre going to eat.â
âI already know,â he replied, unmoving with his stare.Â
âYou and Geto fight?â he asked as soon as youâd both placed your order with the waiter. He raised a brow when you tilted your head, feigning confusion. âYou can tell me, I donât give a fuck.â
You laughed at the lightness of his words. âWhy do you think we fought?â
He let out a chuckle, barely audible, and took his phone out. âBecause he isnât here? And because he texted me and said âsorry, canât make it.â And he said you two were coming together and his text was sent the same time you said you were on your way.â
âOkay, genius,â you drawl, resting your arms casually on the wooden table. âI guess it could be considered a fight,â you admitted.
His eyes flickered with the slightest hint of interest but it was gone the next second. âOh, yeah? Loverâs quarrel?â
âGod, shut up.â
âDonât go thinking Iâm God just yet,â he muttered, a smirk playing on his full lips.
You threw the napkin in front of you at his face which he, unfortunately, caught with his hand. âMe and Suguru arenât even friends like that,â you said, almost believing it. Truth was, it was the heat of the moment and you wanted to clutch at every strand of dignity to make it seem like what Suguru did didnât hurt, alongside with what you now knew Satoru did, too.Â
âUh huh,â Kento sarcastically went along. âSo what happened?â
You debated on whether or not you should tell him the entire story, knowing that he was friends with Suguru and sort-of knew Satoru. But there wasnât anything wrong with confiding in a friend, right? You chose to give him bits and pieces from the dayâabout how Satoru, your ex-fiance wanted to talk and give you a whole rundown of how he pretty much fell in love with another girl while you were engagedâwhich slowly got you talking about the few months after the breakup and Satoruâs new engagement. By the time the two of you were about to order dessert, you had told him pretty much everythingânot without being prompted though. As soon as the two of you moved on, heâd say something like that fuckerâs so stupid. What did he say after that? It was almost like a conversation with Reina, but with Kento it felt different.Â
Heâd look at you every so often while you talked, a glint present in his eye that usually wasnât there. Heâd run his fingers through his blond hair and slightly lift the direction of his eyes to meet your eye, and if you hadnât been shit-talking your exâs best friend, you wouldâve felt the warmth radiating through your body under his gaze more.Â
âI meant it,â Kento started, chewing the last bit of the cake you forced him to order. âThat Gojo kid is stupid for that shit.â
You laughed, biting your lip to contain the blush that crept up your cheeks. âCalm down, otherwise I might start to think you like me.â
He looked at you with a blank stare then tilted his head to the side, as if trying to read you. âYouâre dumb.â
âWhat?â
âYou actually think Iâm not interested in you?â he asked, then laughed as if it was the most preposterous thing he had heard. You thought about it for a moment, and realized every attempt at flirting he made, you brushed off as a joke. Thatâs just Kento, youâd kept on saying to yourself. Youâd ignored every attempt he made because the waters after a three-year-relationship were tumultuous, and it was never your first thought that Kento was truly interested everytime he made a comment slightly suggestive.
It took you a moment to realize you still had to reply to him, and in that moment you allowed yourself to feel the warmth underneath his gaze. âWhat?â
âIâm not saying Iâm about to drop to one knee and propose or something. Iâm just telling you thereâs interest present.â
You werenât surprised; only Kento could make something that people always shy away from saying seem so easy. You smiled. You werenât sure if this could work, and you werenât even sure if this conversation would ever lead to anything in the future, but it felt like a welcome recess from every other part of the random Tuesday. For a moment, it was easy to forget Satoru, Satoruâs betrayal, and Suguruâs behavior. Kento had come into your life during, what youâd consider, a limbo period where you were still navigating the almost-two-years-ago-breakup and its aftermath. He was fresh, and he was new. Perhaps that was the newness Satoru was talking about.
And maybe there was something innately weird about Kento, someone who was interested in you, to listen to you talk about your ex and then tell you heâs interested in you, but youâd always been a fan of the unexpected.
âDonât go all quiet,â he murmured, twirling his glass of water around absentmindedly.
âThereâs interest on my end, too.â















