When I was about.. 12? 13? years old I started reading about every manga our local library could offer.. one of them being "Shishunki Miman" by Yuu Watase (it's a masterpiece! go read it!!)
And in volume 4 there's this panel... this panel that reminded me slightly of two other characters....
To this day I do not know if this dumb panel was one of the reasons I started shipping ZoSan, but as an hommage to "Shishunki Miman" I redrew it with them xDDDDDDDD
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SYNOPSIS: Two of the world’s most famous athletes trying (and failing spectacularly) to hide that they’re disgustingly in love. Oikawa is dramatic and whipped. Reader is media-trained until he looks at her. Public chaos meets private softness.
WORD COUNT: 8.9k
The Ariake Arena was electric.
Twenty thousand fans screamed in waves of blue and white as the Japanese national team faced off against Argentina in an exhibition match that felt more like a world championship final. Lights flashed. Cameras zoomed. Commentators were already losing their voices.
And in a hidden VIP section, tucked behind a pillar and wearing a black hoodie, black mask, and a baseball cap pulled low, you were trying very hard not to exist.
You were a national icon in your own right. Recognized as the face of women’s football in Japan, captain of your club team in Europe, and someone whose face was printed on banners and energy drink cans across the country. Sitting here like a criminal felt ridiculous.
But Oikawa Toru had begged.
“Just one game, princess. I’ll behave. Mostly.”
Liar. He never behaved.
You adjusted your mask and slouched lower as the players took the court for warm-ups. Your eyes found him immediately, like they always did. Number 13. Tall, lean, unfairly gorgeous under the bright lights. His brown hair was perfectly messy, and that signature smug smile was plastered on his face as he spun the volleyball on his finger for the cameras.
Then his gaze swept the crowd.
And stopped.
Right on you.
Even from this distance, you saw it happen. The exact moment his polished celebrity mask cracked. His eyes widened, that fake media smile melted into something real and stupidly soft. His cheeks went a little pink.
You narrowed your eyes at him in warning. Don’t you dare.
He dared.
Oikawa’s entire posture changed. He suddenly moved like someone had injected espresso straight into his veins. His serves became sharper, higher, and cockier. Every time he scored in warm-ups, he’d glance toward your section with this insufferable little smirk that said Did you see that, baby?
The commentators noticed immediately.
“Wow, Oikawa-san looks unusually motivated tonight!” one of them laughed. “He’s been on fire during warm-ups. Maybe he had an extra strong coffee?”
You pinched the bridge of your nose. Idiot. Beautiful, dramatic idiot.
The match started, and it only got worse.
Argentina was winning, but that wasn’t enough for Oikawa. No. He had to perform. He’d set the ball with ridiculous flair, then immediately look toward you like he expected a standing ovation. After one particularly beautiful kill, he landed, spun toward the stands, and made direct eye contact again.
Your heart did something embarrassing.
Because behind all the showboating, there was that look again. The real one. The one that said I wish I could kiss you right now in front of twenty thousand people.
You were so screwed.
By the end of the fourth set, Argentina had won. The arena erupted. Oikawa’s teammates were slapping him on the back, laughing at how extra he’d been all night. You stood up, ready to slip out quietly like you’d planned.
But Oikawa had other ideas.
The second the final whistle blew and handshakes were done, he jogged straight toward the barrier separating the court from the VIP area. His hair was sweaty, his jersey clinging to him, and he was grinning like a lunatic.
You froze.
Toru, no—
Too late.
He reached the barrier, ignored the screaming fans, and looked straight at you. Then he did the one thing that would ruin both your PR teams’ nights.
He reached out, hooked a finger under your mask, and gently tugged it down just enough.
“Hi, beautiful,” he said, voice low but definitely loud enough for nearby phones to catch. “Missed you.”
Your face burned. You were supposed to be the composed one. The media-trained captain who never cracked.
But around him? You never stood a chance.
You rolled your eyes, fighting a smile. “You’re such a show-off.”
“Only for you.” His eyes sparkled. Then he leaned in and pressed a quick, soft kiss to your forehead, right there in front of everyone.
The arena lights suddenly felt a thousand times brighter.
You heard the clicks. The gasps. The immediate flurry of phone cameras.
Oikawa pulled back just enough to wink. “Wait for me after? I’ll be fast.”
“You better,” you muttered, pulling your mask back up. “Because I’m going to kill you.”
He laughed, bright and boyish, the kind of laugh he only let out when he was with you. “Worth it.”
As he jogged back to his team, you could already see his setter partner and a few others giving him knowing looks. One of them, probably Matsukawa or Hanamaki, visiting for the match made a heart shape with his hands behind Oikawa’s back.
You sank back into your seat, heart racing.
Your phone was already blowing up.
Teammate 1: GIRL WHAT WAS THAT
Teammate 2: THE FOREHEAD KISS IS GOING VIRAL ALREADY
Manager: We need to talk. Immediately.
You looked back at the court where Oikawa was doing post-match interviews, still glancing toward your section every few seconds like he couldn’t help it.
A tiny, traitorous smile tugged at your lips under the mask.
Us against the world, huh?
This was going to be a disaster.
But as Oikawa caught your eye one last time and gave you that secret little smile. The one that said I love you without words that you couldn’t find it in yourself to care.
The arena lights hadn’t even fully dimmed before the internet caught fire.
In cinematic slow motion, the moment replayed across millions of phones worldwide: Oikawa Toru—Argentina’s golden setter, number 13—jogging to the VIP barrier, sweat glistening under the spotlights, that signature messy brown hair sticking to his forehead. The way his usual media-polished smirk softened into something raw and tender the second he saw her. The gentle tug of the mask. The forehead kiss that lasted half a second too long to be friendly.
Clips spread like wildfire.
#OikawaMysteryGirl trended number one globally within twenty minutes. Edits synced the kiss to romantic anime OSTs. Twitter was a warzone of theories. TikTok stitched together every glance he’d thrown toward the stands during the match.
You watched the chaos unfold from the back of a tinted black SUV, hood still up, heart hammering.
Your manager, Aiko, sat across from you with the expression of someone whose blood pressure had entered the stratosphere.
“Do you have any idea what this looks like?” she groaned, shoving her tablet at you. The screen showed a paused frame of Oikawa’s soft eyes and your barely-hidden smile. “You’re Japan’s sweetheart. The disciplined captain. Not… not whatever this is.”
You leaned your head against the cool window. “It’s called having a boyfriend, Aiko.”
“Secret boyfriend! Emphasis on secret!”
Meanwhile, in the Argentine locker room, the scene was pure comedy.
Oikawa sat on the bench, still in his jersey, towel around his neck, grinning like an idiot at his phone. The screen was filled with your private chat.
You: Toru. PR is screaming.
Oikawa: Tell them I’m sorry (I’m not)
Oikawa: You looked so pretty even in that ugly hoodie ❤️
You: I’m going to murder you. Slowly. With a volleyball.
Oikawa: Kinky 😌 Come over after?
His teammate, a fellow middle blocker, leaned over his shoulder. “So. Casanova. Was that the famous ‘just a friend’ you’ve been ‘hanging out with’ for two years?”
Oikawa didn’t even flinch. “She’s my soulmate. Obviously.”
The entire locker room erupted in groans and laughter. Someone started playing a horribly cheesy love song from their phone speaker. Another player dramatically clutched his chest. “Our setter’s gone soft! Quick, someone check if he can still serve!”
Oikawa threw a towel at them, laughing. But underneath the dramatics, his chest felt warm. Seeing you there tonight and risking everything just to watch him play had cracked something open inside him again.
Two days later, the denial phase officially began.
You were back in Europe for club training, doing your best to look like the composed, untouchable football captain the world knew. Post-training press conference. Crisp white tracksuit. Perfect posture. Calm smile.
A reporter immediately pounced.
“Regarding the viral video from the Ariake match… any comment on your relationship with Oikawa Toru?”
You didn’t miss a beat. Media training kicked in like muscle memory.
“Oikawa-san is a respected athlete and a friend from the sports community. I was simply supporting international volleyball.” You even tilted your head with that elegant, slightly intimidating smile you’d perfected. “I’m focused on the upcoming league matches.”
The answer was flawless.
It did absolutely nothing.
Because thirty minutes later, a new clip surfaced: Oikawa in an Argentine interview, still riding the high from the Tokyo win.
Reporter pointed the microphone at Oikawa, “There are rumors you’re dating the Japanese football star—”
Oikawa leaned forward, chin in hand, eyes sparkling with mischief. “Rumors? Hmm… I wonder where those came from~”
He didn’t deny it. He teased. The little shit even bit his lip like he was holding back a smile.
The internet lost its collective mind again.
That night, you were doing ice baths after a brutal training session when your phone rang. FaceTime. The screen lit up with Oikawa’s face. Fresh out of the shower, hair damp, wearing one of your old national team hoodies he’d stolen months ago.
You answered, sinking deeper into the freezing water with a hiss.
“Hi, traitor.”
“Hi, love of my life,” he sang, voice syrupy. The camera angle shifted as he flopped dramatically onto his hotel bed. “How’s my favorite soccer menace? Still pretending we’re just ‘sports friends’?”
“You’re the one who kissed me on the forehead in front of twenty thousand people and half the world’s cameras!”
He grinned, unrepentant. “Couldn’t help it. You were there. Looking unfairly hot in a hoodie. My heart took over.”
You splashed water at the camera even though he couldn’t feel it. “My manager wants me to issue a formal statement denying everything.”
Oikawa’s expression shifted. The playful mask slipped for a moment, revealing something more vulnerable. He rolled onto his side, propping his head on his hand.
“… Do you want to deny it?” he asked softly.
The question hung between you, heavy with all the months of secret flights, stolen weekends, and carefully timed calls across time zones.
You really looked at him. At the man who had once told you, voice cracking after a devastating loss, that he felt like he was performing even when he was alone. The man who only ever let the real Toru out around you.
“No,” you whispered. “I hate hiding. But the logistics… your schedule in Argentina, mine in Europe, the media circus…”
“I know.” His voice was gentle. “But I miss you. Like, stupidly. I almost set the ball into the stands tonight because I kept looking for your face.”
You laughed despite yourself, the sound echoing off the tiled walls of the recovery room. “You’re such a sap.”
“Your sap,” he corrected, then added with signature drama, “I’d serve with my non-dominant hand if it meant getting to kiss you in public without causing an international incident.”
The two of you stayed on the call for over an hour just talking about everything and nothing. The ridiculous edits fans were making. How your teammates had started calling him “Pretty Boy Setter” in the group chat. How his teammates kept asking if he wrote your name on his volleyball tape.
At one point you caught him staring again, that same soft look from the arena.
“What?” you asked.
“Nothing,” he murmured. “Just… thank you for coming. Even if it blew up in our faces. Seeing you there made me play like I used to. Like I actually loved it again.”
Your chest ached in the best way.
Later that week, more “evidence” kept leaking.
A fan photo of matching silver chain necklaces. With yours barely visible during a training video, his catching the light during an interview. Airport sightings in the same city on the same day. A blurry reflection in one of your Instagram story mirrors showing a familiar tall figure in the background making heart hands.
Your teammates were relentless.
During a film session, one of them paused the video and zoomed in on nothing. “Hey captain, is that Oikawa’s reflection or are we all hallucinating?”
Another asked, deadpan. “Does he actually practice those dramatic lines in the mirror or does it come naturally?”
You threw a training bib at her while trying, and failing, not to laugh.
Across the ocean, Oikawa was getting the same treatment. His captain had started calling him “Romeo” during practice. Someone even left a bouquet of roses with a card that said “From your mystery girlfriend” in his locker.
Public chaos was reaching critical levels.
But late at night, when the cameras were off, it was just the two of you.
You sent him a photo from your hotel balcony, the city lights glittering below. He replied with a video of himself on his own balcony, holding up the necklace you’d given him, pressing a kiss to it like a lovesick fool.
Oikawa: Distance sucks.
You: I know. But we’re good at this. Us against the world, right?
Oikawa: Always. Hurry up and win your next match so I can wear your jersey again without people “speculating.”
You smiled at your phone, cheeks warm despite the cool night air.
The denial phase was crumbling fast.
And honestly? Neither of you wanted to stop it anymore.
The sun blazed over the Estadio Olímpico in Barcelona like it had a personal vendetta. 55,000 fans packed the stands, a roaring sea of red and gold for Spain versus Japan in an international friendly. The pitch shimmered under the heat haze. Cameras panned across celebrities in the VIP boxes. Commentators chatted excitedly in multiple languages.
And then the broadcast feed caught something that made the entire stadium and the global stream do a collective double-take.
There, three rows behind the Japan bench, sat Oikawa Toru.
Number 13 on his back? No. He was wearing your Japan national team jersey. Your name and number across his shoulders like a badge of honor. A matching team scarf was wrapped around his neck despite the 30-degree heat. Oversized, ridiculous heart-shaped sunglasses perched on his nose indoors, because of course he went full dramatic.
He looked absurd and perfect.
The moment the camera zoomed in on him, the stadium erupted in a wave of confused cheers and laughter. Phones shot up everywhere. The commentators lost their professionalism instantly.
“Hold on. Is that… Oikawa Toru? The Argentina volleyball star?” one announcer said, voice cracking with disbelief. “Wearing the Japanese women’s captain’s jersey? This is not a drill, folks!”
You were in the tunnel, doing final warm-ups, when your assistant coach showed you the live feed on a tablet. Your heart slammed against your ribs.
Toru, you absolute menace.
But your lips betrayed you with a smile.
The match kicked off with high stakes. Spain was strong, physical, playing with home advantage. You, as captain, were in full focused mode. Still elegant and intimidating, the composed national icon everyone expected. Every pass was precise. Every tackle is clean. You barked orders with calm authority, directing the midfield like a general.
But every time you had a moment to breathe, your eyes drifted toward that ridiculous heart-shaped sunglasses in the stands.
Oikawa wasn’t even pretending to be subtle.
When you completed a beautiful through-ball that led to a shot on goal, he shot up from his seat like a rocket, arms in the air, screaming your name at the top of his lungs. The scarf flapped wildly around his neck.
“THAT’S MY GIRL!” he yelled, voice carrying across the pitch even without a microphone. “GO BABY GO!”
Your teammate next to you nearly tripped laughing. “Captain, your boyfriend is unhinged.”
“Tell me something I don’t know,” you muttered, but the warmth in your chest spread like sunlight.
At halftime, Japan was up 1-0 thanks to your assist. As the teams headed to the tunnel, you glanced up again. Oikawa had somehow acquired a large sign from somewhere. With bright pink with glitter that read “#1 FAN OF THE BEST SOCCER PLAYER IN THE WORLD ❤️” in messy handwriting. He waved it like a lunatic, nearly smacking the person next to him.
You shook your head, biting back a laugh so hard your cheeks hurt.
The second half was brutal. Spain equalized early, and the physicality ramped up. You took a hard challenge in the 68th minute. Your cleats clipping your ankle. Pain flared, but you rolled through it, popping back up immediately. The crowd gasped.
In the stands, Oikawa’s entire demeanor changed.
He ripped off the stupid sunglasses, eyes wide with worry. For thirty long seconds he stood frozen, hands gripping the railing, looking like he wanted to sprint onto the pitch and carry you off himself. No more dramatics. Just pure, raw concern.
You caught his eye from the pitch. Gave him the smallest nod. I’m okay.
His shoulders sagged with visible relief. Then he cupped his hands around his mouth and shouted again, softer this time but still full of that unshakable belief. “You’ve got this, my love!”
The words weren’t picked up by the broadcast mics.
But your heart heard them perfectly.
In the 82nd minute, you made the moment.
A counter-attack. You received the ball just past midfield, dribbled past two defenders with that signature graceful speed, and curled a perfect shot into the top corner.
Goal.
The stadium exploded. Your teammates mobbed you. Flags waved. Fireworks of emotion lit the Spanish sky.
But your eyes found him immediately.
Oikawa was crying.
Not full ugly sobs because those he saved for private moments after bad losses, but his eyes were glassy, shining under the stadium lights. He was jumping with both arms raised, screaming your name like it was the only word he knew. The heart-shaped sunglasses were back on, crooked now, and the scarf had slipped to hang loosely like a victory banner.
In that moment, surrounded by 55,000 screaming fans and millions watching worldwide, something clicked inside you.
Oikawa Toru had never been embarrassed to love you.
Not once.
He wore your jersey like it was the most natural thing in the world. He flew across continents after his own brutal schedule just to sit in the blazing sun and cheer like a loser in love. He let the entire planet see his softest, most unguarded self for you.
All this time, the secrecy hadn’t been because he was ashamed.
It was because he was scared. Scared the spotlight would ruin the one person who made him feel human again. Scared that his obsessive, dramatic love would somehow taint your carefully built image.
But here he was anyway.
Loving you loudly.
You jogged toward the sideline during the celebration, pointing directly at him. No more hiding. You tapped the crest on your jersey, then pointed at him with a bright, genuine smile. The kind the public rarely saw from their disciplined captain.
The cameras caught every second.
Oikawa clutched his chest like he’d been shot by Cupid, dramatically pretending to faint back into his seat. Then he blew you a kiss so theatrical the entire section around him erupted in laughter and cheers.
After the final whistle, Japan won 2-1, the mixed zone was pure chaos.
“Captain! The entire world saw Oikawa Toru in the stands today. Care to comment on the nature of your relationship?”
You were sweaty, exhausted, ankle throbbing… and happier than you’d been in months.
You looked straight into the camera, that dry wit and confidence shining through.
“He’s my biggest supporter,” you said simply, a small smirk playing on your lips. “And yes… he’s also my boyfriend. The sunglasses were his idea, by the way.”
The press area exploded with flashes and shouts.
Back in the tunnel, you barely had time to breathe before strong arms wrapped around you from behind, lifting you clean off the ground despite the security trying to maintain order.
“Princess,” Oikawa breathed into your hair, voice thick with emotion. “You were incredible. That goal, that goal, I think I fell in love with you all over again.”
You turned in his arms, ignoring the cameras still flashing. Up close, he looked devastatingly handsome with your jersey slightly too tight on his taller frame, hair messy from running his hands through it in worry and excitement.
“You flew all the way here just to wear my jersey and cry in the stands?” you teased, but your voice cracked with fondness.
“Obviously.” He pressed his forehead to yours, that private softness emerging now that the chaos quieted just a little. “I’d fly anywhere. I’d wear a dress if you asked me to. I’m so proud of you it hurts.”
Your fingers found the silver necklace he still wore that was matching yours. “I saw you worrying when I got tackled.”
“I hate watching you get hurt,” he admitted quietly, vulnerability slipping through. “Even when I know you’re tougher than anyone. It’s stupid… I just want to protect you from everything. The pressure, the media, all of it.”
You cupped his face, thumbs brushing his cheeks. “We protect each other. That’s how this works. Us against the world, remember?”
He smiled, that real, beautiful smile that was only for you and kissed you properly this time. Not a stolen forehead kiss in Tokyo, but a deep, slow, emotional kiss right there in the tunnel, your hands still tangled in his jersey.
When you pulled apart, he was grinning again, dramatics returning. “So… ice bath date tonight? We can gossip about how your teammates kept making kissy faces at me during warm-ups.”
You laughed, loud and bright. “Only if you teach me that ridiculous serve celebration you do.”
“Deal.”
As the two of you walked out hand-in-hand, scandal be damned, the flashes intensified. But for the first time, the public chaos felt lighter.
Because you weren’t hiding anymore.
The weeks following the Spain match blurred into a whirlwind of flashing cameras, late-night flights, and the kind of media frenzy usually reserved for royal scandals.
You and Oikawa had stopped denying anything, but you hadn’t exactly hard-launched either. It was this delicious, torturous limbo with it being a half-secret, half-screamingly obvious that drove the entire sports internet absolutely feral.
Every interview became a minefield.
In Milan, after a Champions League qualifier, a reporter shoved a microphone in your face while you were still catching your breath on the sidelines. Rain dripped from your hair, mud streaked your legs, but your posture remained regal.
“Captain, the world has seen the footage from Barcelona. Oikawa Toru was wearing your jersey. Are the two of you officially together?”
You wiped sweat from your brow with the back of your hand and offered that signature dry smile, the one that made interviewers sweat instead.
“We’re… very good friends who support each other’s careers.”
The reporter blinked. “Friends who kiss in tunnels?”
Your teammate, standing two feet away, choked on her water bottle. You shot her a warning glare, but the corner of your mouth twitched.
“Next question.”
Across the Atlantic in Buenos Aires, Oikawa wasn’t even trying.
During a press conference after a club league win, he leaned back in his chair, number 13 jersey still on, and spun a volleyball on one finger like a bored king.
“Oikawa-san, the Japanese football captain was spotted at your last home game. Any comment?”
He flashed that million-dollar smile, eyes sparkling with pure mischief. “She’s incredible, isn’t she? Best midfielder in the world. I’m just lucky she lets me watch.”
The entire room erupted in murmurs. One brave journalist pushed: “So she’s your girlfriend?”
Oikawa tilted his head, biting his lip like he was considering the secrets of the universe. “I think the fans have already decided that for us~”
He left it there. Tease. Drama. Chaos agent.
Your managers were losing their minds. Group chats between both PR teams became daily therapy sessions.
But privately?
The two of you had never been happier.
One rare overlapping off-day, you stole a quiet moment in a tiny coastal town outside Buenos Aires. Oikawa had flown you out after your match. No security. No cameras. Just sunglasses, hoodies, and the sound of waves.
You sat together in a private ice bath setup he’d rigged on the terrace of a rented villa. Just two giant tubs side by side filled with freezing water and ice. Gossip hour, as you called it.
Oikawa was dramatically complaining about the cold while somehow still looking like a model. “This is torture. Why do you athletes do this voluntarily? I’m dying, princess. Hold me.”
You splashed him, laughing. “You’re such a baby. Volleyball players are spoiled.”
He gasped in mock offense, clutching his chest. “Rude! I’ll have you know I train harder than anyone. Except maybe you, my terrifyingly hot captain.”
The teasing faded as he reached over the edge of the tubs, threading his wet fingers through yours. The sun was setting, painting the sky in soft oranges and pinks that matched the warmth in his eyes.
“I’ve been thinking,” he said quietly, voice losing its usual theatrical flair. “About how long we hid this. I thought… if the world saw how much I love you, they’d twist it. Make it ugly. Take away the only thing that feels real.”
You squeezed his hand, heart aching at the vulnerability he only showed you. “I know. I felt the same. Everyone sees the disciplined icon on the pitch. Not the girl who steals your hoodies and laughs at your terrible dad jokes.”
He smiled softly. “I like that girl best.”
You leaned across and kissed him. When you pulled back, foreheads still touching, you whispered, “I’m tired of hiding, Toru. Let’s stop pretending we’re just supporting each other’s careers.”
His eyes lit up like you’d just handed him the world. “Yeah?”
“Yeah.”
The night before the big rematch in Tokyo. The Argentina versus Japan exhibition that everyone was calling “The Power Couple Bowl,” you surprised him.
You showed up at the Argentina team hotel wearing his spare jersey. His name stretched across your back in bold letters. It was slightly oversized on you, falling to mid-thigh, paired with simple black leggings and his favorite necklace resting against your collarbone. No hood. No mask. Just you.
When Oikawa opened his hotel room door, he actually froze. For five full seconds, the man who never shut up was speechless.
Then he made the most embarrassing noise you’d ever heard: a strangled mix between a squeak and a moan.
“You— That’s— My jersey—” He yanked you inside, slamming the door, and immediately spun you around to see his name on your back again like he needed visual confirmation. “I’m going to combust. Actually combust. This is unfair. How am I supposed to play tomorrow when my girlfriend looks like that?”
You laughed, turning back to face him. “Figured it was my turn to be the loud one.”
He cupped your face, eyes glassy with emotion. “You’re really doing this? No more hiding?”
“I choose you,” you said simply. “Loudly.”
He kissed you like the world was ending. It was desperate, grateful, and so full of love it made your knees weak. When he pulled back, that familiar dramatic sparkle returned.
“I’m going to be insufferable tomorrow. Just so you know.”
“I’m counting on it.”
Game day arrived under blazing Tokyo lights once again.
Ariake Arena was a pressure cooker. Signs with both your names and ship hearts filled the stands. Commentators had fully embraced their new roles as professional shippers.
“And there she is!” one announcer practically sang as the camera panned to you. “Japan’s football captain, sitting front row in Oikawa Toru’s jersey! Number 13 never looked better!”
You sat openly this time. No pillar. No disguise. Chin high, elegant as ever, but with a proud little smile that said yes, this is exactly what it looks like.
Oikawa spotted you during warm-ups.
His entire face transformed. The cocky media smile melted into pure, radiant joy. He pointed directly at you with both hands, then made a heart shape over his chest. The crowd lost it. His teammates groaned audibly.
The match began, and his gameplay told the whole story.
First set: shaky. Overexcited. He overserved twice, one ball sailing straight into the stands. His sets were flashy but slightly off. With too much power, too much emotion. Every time he glanced your way (which was constantly), his focus fractured.
You watched with soft eyes, understanding. He wasn’t just playing volleyball. He was processing two years of loving you in secret.
His captain pulled him aside during a timeout, probably telling him to get it together. Oikawa nodded, then looked straight at you again. You mouthed breathe and gave him a small, steady nod.
Second set: better. He started channeling the chaos into brilliance. A ridiculous behind-the-back set that led to a kill. After the point, he turned toward you and did his signature serve celebration by pointing dramatically, but this time he added a little bow in your direction.
The arena chanted. Edits were already being made in real time.
By the fourth set, with Argentina leading, he had settled. The shakes were gone. His movements became fluid, confident, happy. Every perfect set felt like a love letter. He wasn’t performing for the cameras anymore. He was playing because he loved the game again. Because loving you had reminded him how good it felt to just be.
When Argentina sealed the win, the roar was deafening.
Oikawa didn’t head straight to his teammates. He jogged to the barrier, eyes locked on you the entire way. You stood up, heart pounding, and met him there.
He reached over, grabbed your hand, and pulled you into a tight hug over the railing. His sweaty forehead pressed against yours.
“You came loud,” he whispered, voice cracking with emotion. “Thank you.”
“You played beautifully.” you whispered back, fingers threading through his damp hair. “I’m so proud of you.”
Flashes exploded around you like stars.
The post-match interview was the final piece.
Oikawa stood in front of the cameras, still breathing hard, jersey clinging to him. A reporter asked the inevitable question:
“Oikawa-san, with the football captain here tonight wearing your jersey… is there anything you’d like to say about your relationship?”
The arena quieted. Millions watching live.
He looked straight into the camera, then turned his gaze to you in the crowd. That real smile, the one that made your chest hurt in the best way, broke across his face.
No dramatics. No teasing. Just honesty.
“Yeah,” he said, voice warm and steady. “That’s my girlfriend. She’s the best thing that’s ever happened to me. On or off the court.”
Simple. Sincere. Devastating.
The arena erupted. You felt tears prick your eyes as you smiled back at him, mouthing I love you.
He mouthed it right back.
The roar of the Ariake Arena had finally faded into a distant hum, like a storm that had passed and left only quiet lightning in its wake.
Security had cleared most of the corridors. The last camera crews were packing up outside. Even the die-hard fans lingering by the exits had begun to disperse, still buzzing about the post-match interview where Oikawa Toru had looked straight into the lens and said, without flair or filter: “Yeah, that’s my girlfriend.”
You walked hand-in-hand through the dimly lit back hallways, both of you still in each other’s jerseys. His number 13 draped over your frame, your lingering scent on his. Exhaustion sat heavy in your bones, but it was the good kind. The kind that came after choosing honesty in front of the entire world.
Oikawa’s thumb traced lazy circles on the back of your hand. “So… how does it feel to be half of the most Googled couple on the planet right now?”
“Terrifying,” you admitted with a tired laugh. “My manager sent me seventeen messages. Seventeen. I think one of them was just keyboard smashing.”
He grinned, that dramatic sparkle flickering back to life despite the late hour. “Mine sent a single emoji. The skull one. I think he’s planning my funeral.”
You bumped his shoulder. “You deserve it. You cried during my goal in Spain and nearly served into the stands tonight. Your ‘cool celebrity’ image is in shambles.”
“Worth it,” he said softly, squeezing your hand. “Completely worth it.”
He led you back onto the court itself.
The massive lights had been lowered to a gentle amber glow, casting long shadows across the polished wooden floor. The net still stood in place, but the stands were empty now. No screaming fans, no flashing cameras, no pressure. Just the two of you and the faint echo of your footsteps.
Oikawa stopped in the middle of the court, right where he’d celebrated the final point hours earlier. He looked around slowly, taking it all in, then tugged you down with him as he sat.
You settled between his legs, leaning back against his chest. His arms wrapped around your waist immediately, chin resting on your shoulder. The court felt enormous and intimate all at once.
“Feels different without twenty thousand people watching me fall apart over you,” he murmured.
You tilted your head back to look at him. “You didn’t fall apart. You played like you were free.”
His expression softened, the playful mask slipping away to reveal the real Toru. The one the world rarely got to see. The one who carried the weight of being “Argentina’s charming golden boy” for years.
“I used to hate this part,” he confessed quietly. “After the match. When the lights go down and it’s just me and the silence. It always felt like the performance was over and I had to figure out who I was again. But tonight…” He pressed a kiss to your temple. “Tonight it doesn’t feel empty.”
Your fingers found his, intertwining them over your stomach. “Because we’re not performing anymore. No more hiding in VIP seats. No more ‘just friends’ lies in interviews. Just us.”
He let out a long breath, the kind that carried two years of secrecy with it. “I was so scared I’d ruin you. You’re this elegant, intimidating, national treasure on the pitch. And I’m… me. Loud. Dramatic. Needy. I thought if the world saw how obsessed I am with you, they’d tear us apart.”
You turned in his arms so you could face him properly, knees bracketing his hips as you straddled his lap. Your hands cupped his face, thumbs brushing his cheekbones.
“I like you needy,” you said, voice warm with affection. “I like when you fly across time zones just to watch me play. I like when you wear my jersey like a proud loser and cry in the stands. I like that you look at me like I hung the moon even when I’m sweaty and yelling at my teammates.”
Oikawa’s eyes shimmered. He laughed, but it cracked with emotion. “God, I’m so in love with you it’s stupid.”
“Extremely stupid,” you agreed, leaning in to kiss him.
The kiss was slow and deep. Nothing rushed, no audience to impress. Just the quiet press of lips, the taste of shared exhaustion and relief, the way his hands slid up your back under his own jersey like he still couldn’t believe he got to touch you so openly now.
When you pulled back, you rested your forehead against his. “We’re going to be okay, Toru. The circus will be loud for a while. But we understand the pressure. We understand the schedules. We understand each other.”
He nodded, eyes closed, breathing you in. “Us against the world.”
“Always.”
A comfortable silence settled over the empty court. Somewhere in the distance, a janitor’s cart rattled faintly, but it felt like another universe.
Oikawa’s fingers traced patterns on your thigh. “Remember when I tried to teach you volleyball in that tiny hotel gym in Paris?”
You snorted. “You mean when I accidentally spiked the ball into your face and you dramatically pretended to die for twenty minutes?”
“Exactly. Peak romance.” He grinned. “And you tried to teach me football. I still have the bruise on my shin from when I tried to dribble.”
“You were terrible,” you laughed. “But you kept trying just to impress me.”
“Still do,” he admitted. “Every single day.”
You shifted, curling tighter against him. The cool floor of the court seeped through your clothes, but his body heat made it perfect. “I used to watch your matches in secret, you know. Before we were even official. I’d stay up at 3 a.m. in Europe just to see you set those impossible balls. And I’d think… ‘That dramatic idiot owns my heart.’”
Oikawa’s chest rumbled with soft laughter. “I used to screenshot your post-match interviews and stare at your calm, composed face like a creep. Then I’d text you dumb memes at ungodly hours just to see if you’d reply.”
“I always did,” you whispered.
“You always did.”
Eventually, exhaustion won. You both stretched out on the court, using his duffel bag as a makeshift pillow. Oikawa pulled you close, your head on his chest, legs tangled together. The arena’s faint echoes made the moment feel cinematic. Just two world-class athletes lying on the floor where millions had watched them shine, now just two people in love.
“I don’t want to go back to the noise yet.” he murmured, voice heavy with sleep.
“Then don’t,” you replied, pressing a kiss to his collarbone. “We’ve got this one quiet court for tonight. Tomorrow we can face the edits, the gossiping athletes from other sports, the commentators who are now full-time shippers.”
He chuckled. “I heard your teammates started a group chat called ‘Oikawa Protection Squad.’ They’re worried I’m too dramatic for you.”
You smiled against his skin. “Tell them I enable all your nonsense. Willingly.”
A peaceful quiet fell again. His fingers stroked through your hair in slow, soothing motions.
After a while, he spoke, barely above a whisper. “Thank you for choosing me loudly. For wearing my jersey. For letting the world see how much I love you. I feel… human again. Not just the polished setter. Not just the guy surviving fame. Just Toru. Yours.”
Your eyes stung with happy tears. “And I feel seen. Not just the disciplined captain. Not just the icon. You make me want to be playful and chaotic and soft. You make me better.”
He tilted your chin up for one last gentle kiss.
When it ended, he rested his cheek on top of your head. “We’re gonna make this work. The flights. The time zones. The ice bath gossip sessions across continents. All of it.”
“We already have been,” you said. “Now we just get to do it without hiding.”
Oikawa’s smile was soft and content. “I can’t wait to be disgustingly in love with you in public every single day.”
You laughed quietly. “You already were. The secret was never that good.”
“True.”
As sleep finally pulled you both under on the empty court, the weight of fame, pressure, and expectation felt lighter than it had in years.
Two world-famous athletes.
Two hearts that had finally stopped performing.
One love that chose authenticity over perfection.
The arena was silent.
But your story had never sounded louder.
The Yokohama International Stadium pulsed like a living heart under the night sky.
This was it. The biggest game of your career. The Women’s Football World Cup Final. Japan versus Brazil. Ninety-plus minutes of war on grass, with the entire world watching. You had carried your team this far: captain’s armband heavy on your sleeve, legs burning, lungs screaming. The score was tied 2-2 in extra time.
Oikawa sat in the front row wearing your Japan jersey, heart-shaped sunglasses long abandoned, face pale with tension. He hadn’t sat down properly in thirty minutes.
The play moved like lightning.
You received a long ball in the attacking third, chesting it down with perfect control. Two Brazilian defenders closed in fast. You feinted left, exploded right, and then it happened.
A reckless slide tackle. Cleats caught your ankle at the wrong angle. A sickening crack echoed through the stadium microphones.
Pain exploded up your leg like fire.
You hit the ground hard, rolling instinctively, but the scream that tore from your throat was raw and involuntary. The referee blew the whistle immediately. Red card for the Brazilian player. The stadium fell into a horrified hush.
Medics rushed onto the pitch. Your teammates surrounded you, faces pale. Through the haze of agony, you heard the commentators’ frantic voices booming over the speakers.
“Japan’s captain is down! This is devastating. She’s been the heart of this tournament!”
You clenched your jaw, tears stinging your eyes as the medics examined your ankle. Sprain? Fracture? You didn’t know. All you knew was that this couldn’t end like this. Not the final. Not after everything.
Then you heard it, his voice cutting through the chaos.
“Move!” Oikawa shouted, vaulting over the barrier despite security yelling at him. He sprinted across the pitch in street shoes. Stadium security tried to stop him, but he dodged them with the same agility he used on the volleyball court.
He dropped to his knees beside you, ignoring everyone.
“Hey, hey, princess,” he breathed, voice shaking as he gently cupped your face. His hands were trembling. “Talk to me. Where does it hurt? Look at me.”
You grabbed his wrist, breathing through the pain. “It’s bad, Toru… but I’m not coming off. Not yet.”
His eyes were wide with panic. The real kind, not his usual dramatic flair. “You’re insane. I love you, but you’re insane. Let them take you—”
“No.” You locked eyes with him, that competitive fire still burning brighter than the pain. “Help me up.”
The medics protested. Your coach yelled from the sideline. But Oikawa, your dramatic, whipped, completely in-love boyfriend understood. He slid an arm around your waist, supporting most of your weight as you limped back into position.
The crowd erupted in a deafening roar. Chants of your name shook the stadium.
Extra time continued. With only eight minutes left, you refused to be subbed. Every step felt like knives, but you played anyway. Despite your limping and kept yelling instructions with pure willpower.
In the 118th minute, you made the miracle.
A corner kick. You positioned yourself despite the agony, jumped mostly on one leg, and headed the ball with perfect precision. It rocketed into the net.
Goal.
Japan took the lead 3-2.
The stadium exploded. Your teammates mobbed you carefully, trying not to jostle your injured ankle. Tears streamed down your face. Pain, exhaustion, triumph all mixed together.
The final whistle blew seconds later.
Japan were World Champions.
You collapsed to your knees on the pitch as golden confetti rained down like stars. Fireworks lit up the Yokohama sky. Your teammates were screaming, crying, jumping around you. But your eyes searched for only one person.
Oikawa was already running.
He sprinted through the chaos, dodging celebrating players and staff, until he skidded to his knees in front of you. His face was streaked with tears. Sweat. Pure, overwhelming emotion.
“You absolute madwoman,” he laughed, cupping your face with both hands. “You won the damn World Cup on one leg. I think I just fell in love with you for the thousandth time.”
You laughed through the pain, gripping his jersey. “Couldn’t let you be the only dramatic one tonight.”
The cameras zoomed in. The entire world was watching this moment live. The injured captain and her openly obsessed volleyball star boyfriend kneeling together in the middle of the pitch, surrounded by confetti and glory.
Oikawa reached into his pocket with shaking fingers.
He pulled out a small velvet box.
Your breath caught.
“Toru…?”
He opened it. A stunning diamond ring caught the stadium lights. Elegant but bold, with a central stone shaped like a tiny volleyball fused with a football. Perfectly you two.
“I had this whole plan,” he said, voice cracking as the crowd around you fell into stunned silence. “Fancy dinner. Private jet. Rose petals. The whole dramatic Oikawa experience. But then you went and won the World Cup while injured and I— I can’t wait anymore.”
He took your hand, eyes shining with happy tears.
“I’ve loved you through the secrets, the time zones, the rumors, the pressure. I’ve loved you when we had to hide and when we finally got to scream it. You make me feel human. You make the fame worth it. You make everything worth it.”
The stadium had gone almost completely quiet, millions watching on screens worldwide.
Oikawa’s voice carried across the pitch, raw and sincere.
“Marry me, princess. Let’s keep being this ridiculous power couple forever. Us against the world, officially.”
You were crying now too, pain forgotten in the rush of pure joy.
“Yes,” you whispered, then louder, laughing through tears, “Yes, you dramatic idiot. Of course I’ll marry you.”
He slid the ring onto your finger with trembling hands, then pulled you into a deep, emotional kiss right there on the pitch. The stadium erupted louder than it had for the winning goal. Fireworks exploded overhead. Your teammates cheered wildly. Even the Brazilian players were clapping.
When you broke apart, Oikawa pressed his forehead to yours, grinning like a fool.
“I can’t believe you said yes while sitting on the ground with a probably-broken ankle.”
You laughed, tugging him closer by his jersey. “Only you would propose during the most intense moment of my life.”
“Had to match the drama,” he winked, but his voice was thick with love. “I love you so much.”
“I love you more.”
Security finally reached you both, but not before Oikawa scooped you up bridal-style, careful of your ankle, and carried you toward the sideline as the crowd chanted both your names.
The biggest night of your career had just become the beginning of forever.
Six months later, the private beach villa in Santorini glowed under a perfect Greek sunset. The Aegean Sea stretched out like liquid gold, reflecting the soft pinks and oranges of the sky. White flowers and subtle volleyball-net-inspired arches framed the aisle. A small but very elite crowd had gathered. With only close teammates, family, a few carefully selected celebrities from the sports world, and, of course, both of your PR teams who had finally accepted their fate.
This was the wedding of the decade, whether you wanted it to be or not.
You stood at the beginning of the aisle in a stunning off-shoulder gown that flowed like it was made for movement. Perfectly elegant enough for the national icon, but with a subtle slit that showed the faint scar from your World Cup ankle injury. A delicate silver chain with a tiny football charm rested at your collarbone. Your bouquet was made of white roses and miniature volleyballs, courtesy of Oikawa’s ridiculous but adorable request.
Your heart hammered as the music swelled.
Then you saw him.
Oikawa Toru stood under the flower arch at the end of the aisle, wearing a perfectly tailored white suit with a number 13 embroidered subtly on the inside of his jacket cuff. His hair was artfully messy, eyes already glassy the second he saw you.
He looked completely undone.
The moment you started walking, he made the most embarrassing noise. A choked gasp that was half-laugh, half-sob. His Argentina teammates, including a very proud Iwaizumi who flew in started elbowing each other and whispering.
“Casanova’s crying already,” one of them muttered loud enough for the front rows to hear.
“Shut up,” Oikawa hissed back without looking away from you, voice cracking. “My future wife is walking toward me. I’m allowed to lose it.”
You reached him, and he immediately took both your hands, squeezing them like you might disappear if he let go.
“You look…” He swallowed hard, dramatic as ever. “I have no words. None. I’m broken. Marry me right now. Wait, we’re already doing that. Good.”
You laughed softly, that dry wit surfacing even through the emotion. “Breathe, Toru. Try not to propose again. You already did that on the pitch.”
The officiant smiled warmly and began.
The ceremony was intimate but carried the weight of everything you’d been through. When it was time for vows, Oikawa went first.
He pulled out a piece of paper, then dramatically crumpled it and shoved it in his pocket.
“Nope. Not reading that. Too polished.” He looked straight into your eyes, voice thick but steady.
“I used to think being loved by the world was the goal. Then I met you. You saw the version of me that was exhausted from performing. The clingy, dramatic, insecure guy who needed someone to remind him why he fell in love with volleyball in the first place. You taught me that being known isn’t the same as being loved. You chose me when it was hard. You wore my jersey when the world was watching. You head-butted a World Cup winning goal on one leg and still said yes when I proposed like an idiot on the pitch.”
Tears slipped down his cheeks. He didn’t bother wiping them.
“I promise to keep being your loudest supporter. To fly across continents for your matches. To do ice baths with you even though I complain the whole time. To make you laugh when the pressure gets too heavy. And to love you so obnoxiously that the internet never runs out of edits. You’re my greatest set. My perfect match. My forever.”
The crowd was sniffling. Your teammates were openly crying. Even Iwaizumi looked suspiciously misty-eyed.
Your turn.
You took a deep breath, holding his hands tighter.
“Toru… you absolute menace.” Soft laughter rippled through the guests. “You came into my life like a serve I never saw coming. Loud, flashy, impossible to ignore. You made me feel seen when I was tired of being the perfect captain. You flew across the world just to wear my jersey and cry in the stands like a proud loser. You taught me that it’s okay to be chaotic and soft at the same time.”
You reached up and brushed a tear from his cheek.
“I promise to keep teasing you when you’re being dramatic. To steal your hoodies forever. To support your dreams as loudly as you support mine. To build a life with you that’s equal parts chaos and peace. Because even when schedules are impossible and the media is watching, loving you has always felt like the easiest thing I’ve ever done.”
Oikawa was fully crying now. He didn’t even try to hide it.
The officiant barely got through “You may now kiss the bride” before Oikawa pulled you in, dipping you dramatically as he kissed you like the world was ending and beginning all at once. The guests cheered wildly. Someone who was definitely one of his teammates set off confetti cannons early.
The reception was pure chaos, exactly as expected.
Long tables overlooked the sea. The speeches were hilarious. Your vice-captain gave a deadpan toast about how you went from “scary composed leader” to “Oikawa-enabler supreme.” Iwaizumi’s speech was short, brutal, and perfect: “Finally. Took you long enough, dumbass. Don’t screw it up.”
Oikawa’s Argentina teammates performed a ridiculous group dance that involved volleyball moves. Your teammates countered with a football chant that ended with everyone chanting “Power Couple! Power Couple!”
At one point, Oikawa stole the microphone.
“Quick announcement,” he said, grinning like a madman. “My wife— God, I love saying that— just agreed that our first dance will include me attempting to teach her my serve celebration.”
The crowd lost it as he dragged you to the dance floor.
The song was slow at first, starting off soft and romantic. You swayed together under string lights, his arms wrapped tightly around your waist, your head on his chest.
“I can’t believe we’re married,” he whispered against your hair. “After all the hiding. All the rumors. All the late-night FaceTimes where we were both exhausted but still stayed on call for hours.”
You looked up at him, eyes shining. “Best decision I ever made.”
Later, when the party was in full swing, you slipped away together to a quiet cliffside balcony overlooking the water. The noise of the celebration faded into background music.
Oikawa leaned against the railing, pulling you between his legs. He was still wearing his suit jacket over your shoulders like a blanket.
“Mrs. Oikawa,” he murmured, testing the name with a soft, awed smile.
You raised an eyebrow. “We’re hyphenating, remember? But I’ll allow it tonight.”
He laughed, pressing his forehead to yours. “Thank you for loving me loudly. For choosing the chaos with me.”
You kissed him slowly, deeply, tasting salt from the sea air and the sweetness of celebration.
When you pulled back, you whispered, “Us against the world. Forever.”
He slipped his hand into yours, fingers brushing over your wedding band and the engagement ring that started it all on that World Cup pitch.
“Forever,” he promised.
In the distance, fireworks lit up the Greek sky. Not for the wedding, but because the universe itself seemed to be celebrating.
Two athletes.
Two hearts that refused to stay hidden.
One love story that went from secret VIP seats to the biggest “I do” the sports world had ever seen.
And they lived loudly, softly, dramatically, and completely ever after.
headcanons for roommate/dormmate jofoe and reader opening their door to show an exhausted-looking neighbor begging them to keep the noise down at night because reader is too loud (ifykyk) 💔💔💔
lol sure! this is a hilarious idea haha hope you enjoyyy <333
Dio
The knock at the door comes at like… 11 AM. Which already pisses him off because who the hell interrupts his sleep?
He opens the door shirtless too. Not just because he just woke up. No. He’s fully awake. He just likes the intimidation factor.
The neighbor is already sweating before they even speak.
“Uh… sorry to bother you, but your uh… partner is… kind of loud at night…”
Dio just stares at them for a second before the slowest, meanest grin spreads across his face. He LOVES this.
Behind him, you’re immediately covering your face in horror from the couch.
Meanwhile Dio leans one arm on the doorway all smug like: “Really? I hadn’t noticed.”
He absolutely noticed. He encourages it.
He starts asking questions on purpose too. “How loud?” “Every night?” “Could the entire floor hear us?"
You are dying in the background.
The neighbor regrets coming here instantly because instead of embarrassment, this man looks genuinely flattered.
Dio absolutely starts getting worse afterward too because now he knows the neighbors can hear.
He’ll literally murmur in your ear later, “Try to be louder tonight. I want them to suffer.”
Evil. Terrible.
Kars
Kars opens the door in complete silence.
The neighbor already looks exhausted and nervous before they even start talking.
“Sorry, I just… the walls are thin, and your partner is very loud at night.”
Kars simply looks at them for a moment. No visible embarrassment. No amusement at first either.
Just this calm, unreadable stare that makes the poor neighbor start fumbling their words.
“I-it’s just been difficult to sleep-”
“I understand,” Kars says smoothly.
That’s it. No dramatic reaction. No argument.
Honestly he handles it with almost unsettling composure. He closes the door quietly and just stands there for a second. Then he glances over at you.
You’re already covering your face and refusing to look at him.
“…Humans truly are sensitive creatures,” he says dryly.
There’s the faintest trace of amusement in his voice now.
He walks over, tilts your chin up, and studies your embarrassed expression like it’s fascinating.
“You seem more distressed than they were.”
WHICH DOES NOT HELP.
There’s this subtle smugness underneath everything now.
Little comments spoken completely seriously:
“Try to control yourself tonight.”
Meanwhile he knows perfectly well you won’t.
This whole situation satisfies his ego immensely.
Kira
Kira’s soul LEAVES HIS BODY when this happens.
He opens the door expecting maybe a package.
Instead: “Sir, I’m begging you, your partner is extremely loud at night.”
He freezes so hard he almost stops breathing.
Meanwhile you hear this from the kitchen and immediately crouch behind the counter in shame.
Kira’s eye twitches. His PERFECT quiet life… ruined.
“I… apologize deeply. It will not happen again.”
He bows too. Fully serious.
The neighbor actually feels kinda bad because he looks genuinely mortified.
The second he closes the door he just stands there in silence. Absolute silence.
Then very quietly: “Do you know how many people might have heard you?”
You’re whining that it’s not your fault and HE’S the one causing the problem.
He gets flustered because you’re right.
Kira definitely starts trying to muffle you afterward. Pillows, hand over your mouth, moving you away from shared walls, EVERYTHING.
But the issue is that hearing you try to stay quiet honestly makes him lose composure faster.
Horrendous situation for a man who values peace and anonymity.
Diavolo
The knock at the door immediately irritates him.
He already hates apartment living. Hates people nearby. Hates being perceived in general.
So when he opens the door and some exhausted stranger starts talking about hearing you at night, his expression darkens instantly.
“Your partner is… really loud.”
Silence. Actual oppressive silence.
The neighbor visibly starts regretting this decision.
Diavolo’s stare is horrible.
“You can hear us?” he asks quietly.
The neighbor starts stumbling over explanations immediately.
“N-not intentionally! The walls are just thin-”
Diavolo is already furious. Not at you. At the fact strangers can hear anything involving him. The lack of privacy genuinely enrages him.
He mutters a cold apology just to end the interaction faster and shuts the door HARD.
Then he immediately checks the locks even though nothing happened.
You’re standing there mortified while he’s pacing now.
“Unacceptable.”
He’s genuinely paranoid afterward too. Keeps lowering his voice. Listening for sounds outside. Watching the windows.
He starts talking about moving almost immediately. “This place is compromised.”
Like you being loud during sex is a security breach.
He absolutely becomes more controlling about noise afterward though. Not because he’s embarrassed, he just despises the idea of outsiders hearing private moments involving him.
Doppio
Doppio answers the door all confused and sleepy looking.
The neighbor awkwardly explains the noise issue.
The SECOND they specifically mention you being loud in bed?
His face goes completely red.
“O-Oh” He just stares at them in horror for a second.
The neighbor keeps trying to explain politely but Doppio is already dying inside.
“SORRY-”
SLAM.
Door closed directly in their face.
You hear him muttering “oh my god….”
Meanwhile you’re in the living room ready to evaporate.
Doppio starts pacing immediately. “They can hear us???”
He gets genuinely paranoid afterward. Keeps peeking through the blinds.
“Do you think they told other people?”
He becomes weirdly tense for DAYS.
Every time neighbors walk past him he assumes they know.
Eventually, the embarrassment kind of mutates into irritability.
He’ll suddenly groan and bury his face in his hands remembering it at random.
“This is so bad…”
Part of him also gets flustered remembering exactly why you were loud.
So now he’s embarrassed and distracted. Terrible combination.
Pucci
Oh this is catastrophic. A neighbor comes to complain to a PRIEST about loud sex noises..
Pucci opens the door calm and composed as ever.
The neighbor awkwardly explains. There’s this long silence.
“I see,” Pucci says very softly.
He’s externally calm but internally he’s burning alive.
Because part of him is embarrassed. Another part is deeply possessive. And another part is replaying every sound you’ve ever made.
He apologizes politely and closes the door with dignity intact somehow.
Then he turns around and looks at you sitting there horrified.
“…You are… exceptionally loud.”
He starts lecturing you about self control while very clearly struggling not to think about it.
The worst part is that your embarrassment visibly affects him.
Seeing you hide your face and whine makes him want to pull you into his lap immediately.
He absolutely starts trying to keep you quieter afterward.
Which fails. Miserably. Because hearing muffled little noises from you destroys his composure.
Funny Valentine
Valentine already despises apartment living. He sees it as cramped, undignified, intrusive nonsense.
So when the neighbor comes to complain.. Oh this is the final straw.
He opens the door very composed and respectable as always.
The exhausted neighbor awkwardly explains: “Your partner is very loud at night.”
Valentine’s smile stays perfectly polite.
But internally he is mentally recoiling from this entire situation.
Shared walls. Noise complaints. Neighbors listening. Absolutely barbaric living conditions to him.
“My sincerest apologies,” he says smoothly.
The interaction itself is handled with complete dignity. The SECOND the door closes though, he exhales slowly and pinches the bridge of his nose.
You’re apologizing profusely while hiding your face.
Meanwhile he’s already thinking. A house would solve this. A large house. Preferably isolated. Thick walls. Private property. No strangers nearby.
The more he thinks about it, the more irritated he becomes with apartment living itself rather than you.
“No spouse of mine should be subjected to this sort of indignity.”
Mind you, the two of you aren’t even married yet
He starts casually bringing up homes afterward. “A quieter residence would suit you.” “You deserve more privacy.” “Perhaps somewhere farther from the city.”
This man is fully house hunting in his head because the neighbors heard you moan.
Diego Brando
Diego answers the door already irritated because somebody interrupted breakfast.
The neighbor explains the noise issue.
Diego just blinks.
Then: “Wait. That’s what this is about?”
You’re in the background screaming into a pillow.
Diego starts laughing immediately. Then yells back to you “Christ, sweetheart, you’ve been terrorizing the building.”
The neighbor looks SO uncomfortable because this man is treating the complaint like the funniest thing he’s heard all week.
Diego absolutely throws you under the bus too.
“In my defense, they’re the noisy one.”
You throw something at him. He dodges it while laughing harder.
Diego’s ego goes through the roof afterward. He’s unbearably smug.
Keeps making comments like: “Careful, love. Don’t want the neighbors filing another complaint.”
Meanwhile he is 100% making the situation worse on purpose.
He likes getting reactions out of you. Loves seeing you embarrassed and flustered. Knowing everyone can hear feeds his ego terribly.
Cocky bastard behavior.
Tooru
Tooru answers the door looking completely relaxed.
The neighbor awkwardly explains the situation while clearly expecting some kind of embarrassment.
Tooru just listens with a calm expression.
“Ah,” he says. “Yeah sorry about that.”
That’s it. No panic. No anger. He acts incredibly normal about the whole thing.
Which somehow makes it more embarrassing for you listening from inside.
The neighbor actually relaxes a little because he seems chill and reasonable.
Tooru even gives this casual little smile. “We’ll try to keep it down.”
Then he closes the door and walks back inside like nothing happened.
You’re sitting there horrified while he just flops onto the couch beside you. “You’re red.” He sounds way too amused by this.
You start yelling about how humiliating that was and he just laughs quietly. “It’s not that serious.”
Easy for HIM to say.
He’s definitely teasing afterward though.
“Try not to wake the whole building tonight, okay?” Meanwhile he says it while pulling you into his lap.
He doesn’t really care what the neighbors think.
As long as nobody interferes with his life directly, he treats it like mildly funny apartment drama.
Honestly the person most bothered afterward is you.
He’s just sitting there relaxed while you die of embarrassment for the next week.
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