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summary: two years had passed since you first met gojo satoru, and it was two years of having an agonizingly one-sided crush on the white-haired genius. for the most part, you were okay with keeping it down and acting like the nights you spent fantasizing about what it would be like to be his were normal. you were fine keeping it hidden until something between the two of you shifts, and you're left wondering if this crush you have on him is truly as delirious as you think.
genre: 18+, nerdjo, slow burn, angst + happy ending (duh), fluff, eventual smut (nerdjo being a munch), some mention of insecurities but nothing major
word count: 33k (oops)
note: nerdjo bu set in oxford! art credit! @to00fu
jjk masterlist
It began at one of the English department get-togethers.Â
Two years ago, when you felt like you had to come to every single event in the hopes of striking expeditious luck at one of them. And itâs not that you particularly disliked these events, but they werenât the first thing youâd think of when it came to how youâd prefer to spend your free time.Â
The weather was just getting chilly enough where youâd rather stay in your dorm and wrap yourself in three blankets and a sweater, and the year had been dragging on long enough where youâd rather just talk about the wonders of Shakespeare and his sonnets in the confines of your next research paper and not with academics who made you feel inferior.Â
You had been invited weeks in advance, and yet you still found yourself dreading being here, the more it led to it, and even more when you were in the thick of it. Awkward small-talk with students youâve seen around briefly and stiff handshakes with male professors who think that they have better places to be were just mentally taxing, and you counted the seconds until it was all over.Â
Thankfully, it was busy enough that you could slip into the background without many people even noticing you were there, but not so crowded that you could just slip away entirely without somebody asking where the great Dr. Howardâs research assistant had gone. And anyways, it wasnât too horrible. You had taken to silently recounting Othello in your mind moments before everything changed.Â
There was a small tap on your shoulder. It startled you at first, and you looked around in your small corner to see a man waiting patiently behind you, a sheepish look on his face as you tried to gather yourself up.Â
âIâm sorry,â he stammered, and you blinked out of your stupor as you tried to recall in your brain if you had met him before to save yourself from the embarrassment of him having to re-introduce himself, âI didnât mean to surprise you.âÂ
He looked familiar. His eyes were a deep amethyst, his smile was soft and kind. His dark and shaggy hair was tied behind his head in a small bun, and his ears were adorned with multiple piercings. Although many at Oxford, especially the men, tried to appear as blank as usual, he seemed apt and content with going against the stuffy and old notions.Â
You must have seemed confused because the man stuttered as he introduced himself.Â
âIâm Suguru,â he restarted, his hand leaving his side as he extended it to shake yours, âI think we had the same English survey course last semester.âÂ
Your confusion melted away into a wide smile as you shook his hand, his own eyes crinkling around the edges as he grinned back, letting out a breath of relief as you nodded insistently, shaking your head at your own self.Â
âRight, right, Suguru! I remember you!â You exclaimed, setting your cup down to the side as you watched him tuck a strand of loose hair behind his ear, âYou sat a little bit in front of me, right?âÂ
His head ducked down momentarily as he chukked, putting his hands in his pants pockets as he nodded.Â
âI did,â he chuckled slightly, âRight in the line of fire for when Howard needed to pick on someone.âÂ
Your lips quirk up slightly as you nod, remembering how the professor you work for now used to terrorize your class and quiz random students on particular syllables and grammatical imperfections in the reading they were supposed to have done.Â
The class was small, as were most major-specific courses you were taking. Although you didnât have many of your friends in the class, you had gotten a good sense of who was in there and who Dr. Howard preferred to pick on. Suguru, for the most part, did the reading and did his work, so he came out unscathed compared to some of the other students. He sat near the front with some of his own friends, and you had talked to him in passing a couple of times when the class as a whole would band together to compare comments on assignments. He was kind, from what you remembered, which is probably why you felt your shoulders growing less tense the more you two talked.Â
âThatâs her style,â you say, shrugging as you fiddle with your fingers. âIt took a while to get used to it,â you admit. Suguru rolls his eyes at your humility, remembering clearly just how much Dr. Howard favored you, but he doesnât say anything as he lets you continue, âI donât know if youâve had Creemer yet, but heâs worse with his cold calls and isnât half as nice.âÂ
âI have him right now for rhetoric and grammar,â he said with a sigh, shaking his head in dismay, âHeâsâŚsadistic, I think.â
You giggle, nodding feverishly at the statement as you recall your past couple of classes with the hellish professor, an infamous name for many English majors and someone that you try to avoid at all costs if possible.Â
The party, or gathering, as it said on the invitation, drones on in the background as you look around to see if anybody is looking in your direction. Most of the time, you can do what you want, but seeing that Dr. Howard had warned you before tonight that somebody from the department might want to swarm you to ask questions that you most likely didnât have answers to, had put you on edge.Â
âAre you enjoying yourself?â He asked, motioning to the rest of the people with a knowing glint as you politely smile, shrugging your shoulders as your lips press tightly together. Whether it be your shy nature or how you preferred smaller crowds, it mustâve been evident on your face that you werenât necessarily having the most amount of fun.Â
âI am,â you answer, wincing at the way your voice sounded warbled, âIâm trying to make the most of these opportunities, I guess.âÂ
Suguruâs head dipped in understanding, taking a sip of his drink as he bit the inside of his cheek, leaning in slightly as he lowered his voice.Â
âThese things drag on for a bit, though, yeah? Iâm feeling my fingers prune from how long Iâve held this glass.âÂ
You let out a sigh of relief, sharing the same sentiment as the two of you share a knowing look.Â
âIâŚI, um, I heard that Howard chose you to research with her, though, right? Thatâs gotta be pretty cool,â Suguru asked after a beat, bringing you back to the conversation as his head tilted slightly, and you felt heat rush to your cheeks as you swallowed. He seemed kind, not asking the question bitterly as some other people have.Â
You nodded again, trying to contain your smile as you leaned against the stone pillar next to you. Letting out a small hum, you swallow again, trying to scope out what sort of place he was coming from.Â
âIt is,â you answered, biting on the inside of your cheek as you were still reeling from being selected from such a wide pool of applicants and such a rigorous interview process to work on her next paper analyzing Moreâs work through a modern lens, âItâsâŚstrenous, sometimes, but Iâm having a lot of fun working with her,â you fidgeted with your fingers, âSo yeah, itâs pretty cool.â You say sheepishly.Â
Suguru smiled at your hidden enthusiasm, the tip of his boot nudging something on the ground. He went to usher you to continue before his eye caught something behind your shoulder, his eyebrows shooting upwards in surprise as his smile grew even wider, his hand raising in a wave.Â
âSorry,â he apologetically muttered, and you craned your neck around to see what it was, or rather who it was that Suguru had seen, âI think my friend just arrived.âÂ
Thatâs when you felt your breathing stop.Â
The bustling group of students and faculty members almost seemed to part theatrically for the man walking towards the two of you, but you couldnât even blame them.Â
He stuck out like a sore thumb, with his icy white hair and strikingly beautiful eyes. His lengthy frame made him nearly a head taller than even the tallest man in the room, and his wide shoulders helped him wade through the bodies as he navigated to his friend. His face seemed stoic, bordering on bored, but you couldnât help but widen your eyes in shock at seeing the most devastatingly gorgeous man to ever exist. He adjusted his glasses over the bridge of his nose, his lips moving in quiet apologies as he tried to move through the people without bumping into them.Â
You suddenly became hyper-aware of the fact that it had been days since you had last had a good night's sleep and that the bags under your eyes were most likely even more evident in the dim lighting of the old hall, and how your sweater was lumpy from being shoved in the back of your closet for so long. You swallow thickly as Suguru quickly excused himself as he stepped away and walked a bit away to hug the stranger, exchanging some words with each other as you stood awkwardly to the side.Â
You watched them silently as they talked for a little bit more before Suguru stepped away, his hand on his friend's back as he, for some horrifying reason, seemed to guide him towards where you were stiffly standing as the two of you made eye contact before you became aware of the way your eyeballs felt in your socket and how heavy your tongue was in your mouth.Â
When Suguru finally pulled away from the modern-day Adonis, you felt like a creeper and a loner as you wondered whether or not to leave or stand in the corner while they talked, but ever the kind person that he was, Suguru led the man by the back to where the two of you were with a wide smile on his face.Â
âSorry about that,â Suguru abashedly apologized, chuckling deeply as he rubbed the back of his neck, âBut this is my friend, Satoru,â he said brightly, pushing the man a little harshly towards you as you stared at him silently.
The man, Satoru, gives you a tight-lipped smile, nodding once in your direction as he looks around, looking uncomfortable and shifty. Suguru rolled his eyes, sighing deeply as he patted his friend's back.Â
You grinned back, swallowing the spit in your mouth as you felt him stare at you once he was done looking at the room, your cheeks heating up. You felt his eyes drift over your outfit, at your posture, and the way your hands were clasped tightly together. This stranger assessed the way you swayed slightly, awkwardly, not knowing how to fill the silence as you tapped the tip of your battered shoes on the ground. When he was done, his chin lifted again, his stare lingering on your blinking face as you glanced between him and Suguru, waiting for somebody to say something before you imploded and left with the lingering scent of your vanilla body spray.Â
Seeing that he was fine with checking you out, you took the time to do the same. He seemed like one of the generational students of the school, the ones whose parents and grandparents and cousins and siblings all came and went and made something important with their lives. They werenât hard to detect, especially him, with his steamed jumper and his creased pants. His leather shoes were shining back at you, and though his hair was somewhat messy, it seemed to be classily messy, unlike what you and some other students would call freely messy.
âI force him to come to these things with me,â Suguru explained, but you could barely hear him over the rhythm of heartbeats in your ear as you tried to fly, appreciate the man a few feet in front of you, âOur friend Shoko sometimes comes, but she had things to do tonight.â
The manâs nose wrinkled ever so slightly, his brows drawing tightly together as he glanced at his friend with a look.Â
âI had things to do too,â he muttered, his voice deep as you felt your heart stupidly tumble at the sounds.Â
Suguru snorted, shaking his head as he shrugged indifferently.Â
âSure,â Suguru replied sarcastically and glanced at you, his brow slightly raised at the way you had gone silent, his lips quirking slightly when he noticed the way you couldnât stop staring at his friend, not voicing anything as his hand on Satoruâs shoulder loosened, âJust act like you want to be here for twenty minutes, yeah?â
You bit your teeth into your cheek, a finger raising slightly as you pointed to the newcomer's face.Â
âI like your glasses,â you said brightly, your smile gentle as you fidget with your own, watching the way his striking eyes moved over to you again, squinting slightly as his hand raised upwards, as if he had forgotten that his glasses were even there, âThey frame your face really well.â Your head tilts a little as you try to place something, âWhereâd you get them? If, if you donât mind me asking. Mine is so old and dingy, and the rims are basically glued on, and Iâve only had them for a few years.âÂ
âErm, well, thank you,â Satoru says stiffly, not used to the direct attention and compliments, his cheeks slightly dusted with pink as Suguru watches his friend struggle for words, taking the glasses off as he turns them to the side, trying to read the logo, âThese are, erm, from Cartier. But I usually wear contacts, anyway.â
You let out a startled laugh, not a stranger to hearing students at this place don expensive items, but this being the first time youâve seen one of them bashful about it.Â
You nod, your smile still there, softer as you take in his slightly awkward nature and let him put the glasses back on before you continue.Â
âContacts are more practical,â you agree, even though youâve always had a phobia of things touching your eyes and would never wear contacts unless somebody forced you, shrugging as you say, âBut Iâve always appreciated the look of glasses.âÂ
Satoru gnaws on his lips, nodding quietly as Suguru starts talking about his friend's major (biochemistry, you came to find out), and how long theyâve known each other, but you could only feel your stupid feelings when Suguru stayed, his friend included, and talked with you for the rest of the evening.Â
That was your sophomore year.Â
Nearly two years passed after befriending Suguru alongside his small group. He introduced you to Shoko after that night, swearing up and down that the two of you were destined to be near each other. And we werenât wrong, not in the slightest. You two girls bonded strangely fast, as if you were twin flames that were being fanned out. Suguru and Satoru seemed to mirror the two of you, but the group functioned as a whole, for the most part. You spent so many nights over at their dorms that you could walk around blindfolded and still find your way to the others with no issue. It was fun, it was what you had dreamt of for so long. It was something that you were fine with, more than content with, ending your university career in a couple of months.Â
Well, everything for the most part, you could consider it as such if it wasnât for your debilitating and soul-crushing feelings for the stranger you met that night.Â
Itâs been four semesters, and you still donât think Gojo Satoru has a clue. Which, in all honesty, is for the better.Â
Although his stoic nature spares nobody, it feels as though you're always on the worst end of it. With his lingering stares that seem to border on questioning why you were even there whenever he sees you, to the way he grows dim and quiet around you, it feels like youâre actively attempting to hurt yourself the more you fall in love with the little things you hadnât noticed the day prior.
Even worse, you know deep down that such feelings are most likely, under this sun and every other universe, with most certainty and heavy grief, unrequited.Â
But youâre fine keeping it down.Â
You were fine until recently.
â
âIâm debating switching majors.âÂ
Shoko declared from the couch, her legs hanging off the side, knocking occasionally on your shoulders as you crane your neck back on the cushion form where you were seated on the ground to look at her upside down.Â
âTo what?âÂ
She shrugged, rubbing at her eyes as she held her neuroanatomy textbook in one hand, her phone in the other as she scrolled through the different majors Oxford offered, as if she wasnât a semester away from graduating.Â
âFilm?â She read out, and you snorted, rolling your eyes at the prospect of Shoko going into film, âHmâŚmaybe art history?âÂ
âGave up on the med school dream?â Suguru quips from the other side of the couch, knowing fully that Shoko was just going on another one of her tangents as she shifted slightly to shove him harshly with her socked foot.Â
âIâm sure your counselor wouldnât mind,â you reply, looking at her as she glares, her eyes falling back to her phone as she peers at the screen. She looked boredly a little bit before her eyes flitted upwards slightly, squinting as she read the new notification.Â
âSatoru said heâs going to be here in a few minutes,â she muttered, reading the next message, âAnd that he wants you,â she nudged Suguru with her foot again to motion that it was him that Satoru was referencing in the text, âTo move to your bed so that he can do his work on his side of the couch.âÂ
Suguru peeked up from his doom scrolling to look at Shoko, his eyes narrowed in a glare as he let out a huff of annoyance.Â
âHis side?âÂ
Shoko shrugged, her knee knocking on the side of your head as you knock it back, the book you were reading resting in your hands as you listened to Suguru mutter distastefully about how this was his dorm and that Satoru had no right claiming his couch, but you heard him shuffle to his feet nonetheless.Â
You tried not to show any peek of interest when the infamous name was called out, but it was hard not to. It had been two grueling years of mulling over your childish crush, yet the sound of his name could still send pulses to your veins that you were sure were minor heart attacks.Â
Because it was Gojo Satoru. You wanted to bang your head against the coffee table just hearing it.Â
Truth be told, you werenât a stranger to having crushes. It was normal, it was human. Or at least, thatâs what you convinced yourself when you were sprawled out on your bed, staring blankly at the ceiling as you tried not to think about the way his fingers ever so slightly grazed your wrist when he handed you some chopsticks earlier at the restaurant.Â
But your crushes came few and far between, and you preferred keeping it that way. Seeing that you were too terrified to ever admit them, and the few, very few times you have, theyâve backfired horrifically, you try not to catch feelings as much as possible. But there was something about Gojo, something beyond reason, that pulled you to him.Â
At first, you bargained. You tried convincing yourself that it was just his appearance that was drawing you in, his suave looks that made peopleâs heads turn whenever he entered a room. But you have seen him at four in the morning with his old band tees (a sight that still made you swoon), with his hair crusted with glitter and his eyes pink with eyeshadow as Shoko attempted to put him in drag. Even then, he was insanely gorgeous, so you knew it had to be beyond that.Â
When you had finally accepted that it was a mind-numbing and life-ending crush that you were feeling towards him, you finally gave in and decided to admire the tall brute from afar. It helped that the two of you had gotten somewhat closer over the past two years, but out of everyone in the group, he was the one you talked to the least. In your defense, he didnât have much to say to anybody, and that was just his nature. He spent most of his time studying and researching, and the other time watching, observant as other people gossiped. It wasnât his forte, and nobody pushed him.Â
So you took in his quietness and his stoicism, appreciated his god-like looks and his overwhelming presence. That was fine.Â
What made it even worse was that he was so unattainably perfect in other ways that your crush festered into something that made you scream into your pillows and throw your balls of clothes at the wall as you wallowed in self-pity.Â
Everyone at this damned university was intelligent, and you had made amends with them early on. But you loved men who were smart, guys who could actually hold a page down and dissect it and make the most of it. And worst of all, Gojo Satoru was probably the most intellectual person you have ever met, and will ever meet. It seemed like his memory was photographic, his mind working twenty thousand times faster than the regular brain as he computed formulas and equations at speeds that you couldnât fathom. He made biochemistry seem easy, something that you sometimes felt guilty for not pursuing. And sure, it didnât help that you were on the other side with your texts about Russian classics and books diving deep into the restoration period, but even Shoko, who could rival Gojo at times, would begrudgingly admit under her breath just how stupidly genius he was.Â
Therefore, when you put those things together, his charming looks, his bookish self, his brooding structure, and just everything else, it made him unattainably perfect.
And thatâs when you get the man youâve been hopelessly in love with since the moment you saw him at that wretched party that wasnât a party.Â
So, when Shoko read off his texts, there was good reason why she looked at the top of your head, a knowing look in her eyes as she playfully nudges you again, watching as you threw her a dark glare to just keep it down seeing that she was the only other soul who knew, despite you trying your best to hide it, about your feelings towards her other friend.Â
âDid you hear that Toji is graduating a semester late?â Suguru asked, leaning back against his pillows, his long legs strewn along his bed as he chewed on some gum.Â
You and Shoko both hummed, not looking up from your respective tasks, having found this information out weeks in advance.Â
Suguru groaned in annoyance, his chest vibrating with the noise as you snorted, rolling your eyes as he threw a small pillow at your head. It bounced off the side of your face, but you didnât look up from the page you were on, too engrossed to hear the door behind you click open and heavy footsteps suddenly thudding through the dorm.Â
You shuffled against the couch, your back feeling stiff as you tried to get comfortable, not knowing that the man of your dreams was moving around somewhere behind you as he hung his coat up (vintage leather, something you found out as he grumbled about getting it wet when Shoko and Suguru insisted on walking in the rain once), kicked off his shoes, and slung his bag around as Shoko craned her neck to see what he was doing.Â
âHey,â Shoko called out, and your eyes widened slightly when you heard a familiar voice grunt back a tired greeting, trying not to look as your ears suddenly sharpened to pick up on the sound of him pulling on his sweatshirt as he rounded the couch, standing at the opposite end as he plopped his backpack on the cushions.Â
You finally allowed yourself to peek over, your eyes following his figure upwards until they landed on his face, and your fists balled in frustration at how pretty he was even when he was simply existing.Â
Gojo sent you a small, tight-lipped and courteous nod, polite and curt as he looked between you and Shoko, glancing back at the bed where Suguru was lying, his fingers barely lifting from his phone as he gave his childhood best friend a lazy three-fingered wave.Â
âWhyâre you here?â His blunt question was directed at Shoko, something that held no bite but mere wondering as he situated himself on the soft cushions, his large hands feeling around his bag as he opened up the zipper to get his laptop.Â
âI thought that it was allowed,â Shoko replied dryly, âApologies.âÂ
You chuckle softly, flipping the page, trying not to let his signature cologne distract you from the words in front of you.Â
âHow was your lab?â Suguru asked, sounding monotone as his thumb swiped on the screen.Â
You watched as Gojo gave him a glare, his nose wrinkling, something he often did when he was frustrated but didn't want to ruin his outward appearance, and rubbed at his tired eyes. His hair was messy with goggle indents lining the upper half of his face.Â
âAn offense to my intelligence,â Gojo grumbled, his face illuminated by the glow of his laptop as he clicked around a little bit, âI canât believe some people have made it this far.âÂ
You flipped another page, not fully having read the contents of the last one, but in an attempt to seem indifferent, tried to keep up with your regular reading pace as if anybody was keeping track.Â
Watching as he riffles through his bag again, you know, almost like clockwork, what heâs going to pull out. His routine is one that youâve familiarized yourself with despite your best judgment, and you know that what comes next are his glasses.Â
Glasses are normal. You have your own pair that you only wear for lectures and outings, but forgo them for times like this because they sit a little too heavy on your nose. But his glasses are something else.Â
They elevate his face ever so slightly, but so much so that it makes you want to keel over and scream. They accentuate his perfect nose with the perfect crook and his freckles that sometimes sit just beneath the frames. He looks even more dashing, if that was even possible, with the way he looks up sometimes, and the lenses make his eyes seem even more blue.Â
He took them off for labs and put them somewhere safe. In moments like this, you were reminded of just how truly stunning this man really was.Â
Gojo unfolded the two prongs, holding them up to a source of light as his nose wrinkled again.Â
Smudges.Â
You watch silently as he dives back into the bag, his long fingers searching through his pockets for something you knew you always kept on hand for yourself and deep down, for him.Â
After a few seconds of not finding the microfiber cloth that you both silently cherished, you gave in, pulling your own bag towards you as you unzipped the smaller pocket, pulling it out stealthily and motioning for Shoko to hand it to Gojo.Â
He took it, his face going so far to relax momentarily as he went to clean the lenses, his head nodding once in quiet appreciation in your direction as you allowed yourself a nod in return.Â
Shoko looked at you with a raised brow, and you chose to hide behind your book.
âWas it Lainey?â Suguru asked, looking over at his friend, the name piquing your interest as you cast a quizzical look at Shoko, but she shrugged, watching Gojo as his expression soured. He handed you back your little cloth, muttering a thanks under his breath as his bitter gaze found Suguru, as if he was cursing him silently for bringing up the sensitive subject.Â
âWhat do you think?â He grumbled out, his right eye almost twitching as his fingers stretched out, typing something quickly as Suguru huffed out a laugh, noting how you and Shoko were both confused, and his smile only grew.Â
âYou didnât tell them?â Suguru asked, a gleam in his eyes as he shuffled to sit upwards, his back resting on the headboard, âOh, this is class. Do you two know Lainey? Lainey Andrews?âÂ
You cast a look at Shoko, your lips pursing as your eyes squinted, trying to recall the familiar name.Â
âThe ginger?â Shoko asked, her head tilting to the side, her hair falling around her shoulder, âPixie cut?âÂ
Suguru nodded, his shoulders raising as your brows furrowed before your mouth slightly fell open when your head bobbed quickly, snapping as you matched the face to the name.Â
âOh, Lainey!â You exclaimed, âSheâs really pretty,â you added, remembering her bright green eyes and the spattered freckles that made her look like a painting, âSheâs also crazy smart - sheâs double majoring in bio and poli sci."
Shoko laughed softly under her breath, giving you a small look because this was somewhat typical of you to know random people, with nearly everyone on campus having had a conversation with you at some point during your four years here.Â
Suguru raised a brow, clicking his tongue as he pointed his phone at Gojo, seeming like he was already anticipating one of his sly comments. Â
âSheâs also just crazy,â Gojo muttered, looking above his laptop, above his wispy lashes at you and then to Shoko, âShe spent half of the lab playing with my hair.âÂ
Your book almost fell out of your hands as Shoko sat up with a barking out a stunned laugh, your hands mirroring each other as they flew to cover your mouths in shock, and Suguru nodded again, his eyes wide as he clicked his tongue.Â
Another thing about Gojo? He hated being touched. Despised hugs, only suffered through quick handshakes, and shuddered at the thought of someone touching his face. Youâve seen the way he pulls back whenever someone approaches him with open arms, seen the way he tries to brush people off of him. He can tolerate Suguru and his insistent bear-hugs from time to time, can sometimes allow Shoko to swat a fly away from his face, and for some reason, doesnât grumble whenever you try to fix his ties before events, but whenever a stranger or someone he isnât close to attempts to touch him, he grows reclusive for the rest of the day.
âI told her to stop, too,â he adds, his big frame seeming to grow in frustration as he thinks back to it, âIt was only after I had to shove her off that she got the hint. I forgot my disinfectant too, so I was justâŚâ he shuddered, his eyes fluttering shut as he shifted uncomfortably, and you watched him let out a restrained exhale as he dropped it and went back to work.
But, after studying him for as long as you have, you know that he probably washed his hands and his face a couple of times after that. You know that he also wouldnât feel complete without some sanitizing wipes and a good shower, so you do the closest thing to that and fish out a hand sanitizer from your bag, an item that you refused to move around without due to your own cleanly nature, which was ironically something else that you and Gojo silently shared, and passed it to him, knowing that he was probably itching till he was able to shower again.
Your friends sometimes joked that you had a Mary Poppins bag, but it came in handy for times like this.Â
Gojoâs ears perked up at the sound of your rumaging, his eyes almost brightening at the sight of the hand sanitizer, and you pinched it between two fingers before throwing it his way, watching as he effortlessly caught it and began spraying his large palms with the lavender scent.Â
âThank you,â he mumbled again, his voice slightly losing the edge it had from before as he passed it back to you, and you smiled, nodding once before you zipped it back up.Â
You tried to ignore the way Shoko was staring at you.
âLucky us that we donât have labs, huh?â Suguru called out, throwing another tiny pillow in your direction, but this time you dodged it, moving your head down slightly so that it would miss. You huff a bit, looking over at Suguru as he shrugged, winking as he went back to his phone.Â
Suguru was another English major, the reason the two of you got familiar in the first place. He liked to say that the two of you balanced out Gojo and Shoko, but you just thought that it pushed you even further down the list of potential people your pathetic crush could be interested in.Â
There were a couple of things that you had come to terms with if you were going to crush on him. One was that you had to know in full certainty that nothing was going to come from it. You werenât going to risk the friendship, no matter how small, by going and confessing and having everything be messy. Two, was that you werenât going to feel, or at least try not to feel, jealous if he entertained the idea of pursuing something with someone else. And three, was that Gojo Satoru was so incredibly picky when it came to potential partners, that it might be impossible for even the most amazing people to snag a chance.Â
âI donât know,â you mumbled, eyes squinting as you tried to make out what one of the characters was saying, âYou didnât have to do that project with Armie.âÂ
Suguru hummed, his brow raising as he thought back to your shared class and the project that paired you up with people you didnât know, Suguru getting the better end of the stick while you were stuck with someone who insisted on plugging the project prompt into a generator.Â
âDidnât you report him?â Satoru asked, his eyes still trained on his work, but the question was now directed to you given the fact that he had sat in on a couple of your tirades in which you would drone on about how the boy was nearly about to graduate and still couldnât cite sources when he, in one of his brief moments of providing comments, would reiterate to report it to the professor.Â
You sank into your spot, giving him a suppressed look, one where your eyes met before you shared a glimpse with Suguru. Your friend rolled his eyes from across the room, shaking his head in annoyance as Satoru looked between the two of you.Â
âShe said that she didnât want to âbe a bitchâ,â Suguru said, restating the words as his fingers move up and down in the air, quoting the statement you had said to him moments before you had to present the assignment in front of the class, shushing him as you pushed him away, insisting that even though you had done the entire project on your own, that it wasnât worth the hassle to make a report with the professor and potentially have someone out for you, âI said otherwise, but she,â Suguru gave you a pointed look, âSaid sheâd cut my hair if I made it a âbig dealâ.â
Satoruâs eyes lingered on the side of your face, and you purposefully kept your head ducked and the book closer, so close that it was nearly touching your nose, as you tried to shield away their judging eyes in embarrassment.Â
âYou need to stop caring about what other people think,â Shoko said as she shoved you with her knee, this time just a little bit harder because she knows you and knows what you hide in the fear of making others think something of you that wasnât good, âI really think your professor wouldâve heard your case if you made it.â
You groaned, swatting at her leg with your book as you shuffled away, backing into another corner as you tried to readjust to the new position.Â
âYeah,â Suguru added, resting his phone momentarily on his chest, âI think it would help if you were more selfish.âÂ
You rolled your eyes, shaking your head at the prospect.Â
âI just hate confrontation,â you murmur defensively, gnawing on your bottom lip as you flip a page, âAnd, plusâŚyou have to give me some credit - at least I told him that he was being frustrating,â you say, pretending to ignore them, your eyes re-reading the same word over and over again until you were confident that they were going to drop this subject, this horse that theyâve beaten multiple times, one that ended with you assuring them that you were going to speak up more until it all looped back again to times like this.
âSpeaking of confrontation, did you ever get a refund for that ticket?âÂ
There was a beat of silence before you let out a frustrated groan when Shoko reminded you of the one task you had forgotten to do in the past couple of days, your head falling to your knees as your palms jammed into your eyes.Â
âNo, oh my god, youâre so right,â your voice is muffled as you bookmark your page, your fists clenching at your own mistake as your eyes crack open, âOh my god, I canât believe I forgot to follow up on that!âÂ
Shoko chuckled, rolling her eyes as Suguru and Satoru shared a look, them now sharing confusion as you writhe on the floor at the thought of knowing you couldâve saved a couple of bucks had you not forgotten to call up the school of drama help center for accidentally buying an extra ticket to the showing of The Beggarâs Opera. And, seeing that it was Tuesday and just days before the theatre program, one that needed funds, was about to perform, the deadline for your refund was most likely up.
âSo does that mean you need me to come with you next Saturday?â Shoko offered, her lips quirking up slightly as your head shot up, nodding quickly as your hands flew to hers, shaking them feverishly.Â
âWould you? Would you really?â You ask, and her laughter grows, shoving you off playfully by pushing your forehead back to where you were sitting.Â
âIâll see what I can do,â she says with a sigh, winking at you before she goes back to her phone, and you settle back in your seat as you gnaw on your lips, thinking back to how on earth you could have possibly messed up so bad when you so usually only buy one ticket for yourself, but you push it aside, thankful that your dearest friend was at least going to make use of it.Â
You, Suguru, and Shoko shared a small laugh and went on with the conversation, but you heard a low, deep noise, something only you could hear, as Suguru and Shoko returned to bickering about which major Shoko was best suited for.Â
The sound made you glance up briefly, looking over the pages to see Gojo still staring at you, his lashes fluttering before he snapped back to it and went back to doing his work.Â
Minutes turned into a few hours, and the room was filled with the occasional story and laughter, but mostly the four of you worked together on different assignments, sometimes looking up as you would recall something from the past couple of days that you were saving to tell them in person.Â
It seemed like everything was going smoothly until Suguru got a notification on his phone, his face lighting up as he swiveled out of his bed, jumping onto the floor as he tugged his shoes on, not explaining anything as the three of you glanced up, waiting.Â
âMy foodâs here,â he said over his shoulder, practically gleaming as he cocked his head in Shokoâs direction, âCome down with me, will you? I need some help.âÂ
You scoff, smiling to yourself as you try to imagine just how much food he had ordered, but careful not to be too loud because you knew he would be sharing it with you all after some choice complaints were heard.Â
Shoko grumbles, but obliged, lifting up from the couch as she stretches, nudging you playing with the tip of her foot as she throws a pillow your way, walking towards Suguru as he holds the door open for her, the two of them calling out some brief goodbye as they head down to the lobby.
When the door clicks behind them, youâre suddenly aware of the fact that itâs only you and Satoru left, and you let your stare linger on the wall for a bit before you look away, suddenly sheepish when you catch his glance from his seat on the couch.
He clears his throat, eyes flickering from his screen to the book in your lap, the highlighters strewn around you, sticky notes sticking out from between the pages, and he points a finger at it.Â
âWhatâre you reading?âÂ
Your brows raise slightly, and your chin ducks down to the book, and you sit up a little straighter as you place a bookmark in the middle of your page you lifting the cover, letting him read the cover as he adjusts his glasses over his eyes.Â
âOh,â he says, his voice holding a lithe of acknowledgement as he slowly sets his laptop to the side, shifting slightly closer, âIâve read this, I think.âÂ
Your head tilts a little, lips quirking a little bit at the sides with a small smile as you look back at the cover.
âYouâve read The Norton Anthology, Volume C before?â
His mouth parts, closing it before he gapes at you, and your grin turns into a big smile, waving it away as you shake your head, shrugging at his stammering expression. Heâs so cute when caught in a lie.Â
âIâm only kidding,â you swear, setting your book down, your knees pulled towards your chest, arms wrapping around your legs, âIâm sure youâve had to read something like this for one of your previous classes.âÂ
âYouâre bothersome,â he murmurs, but his voice holds no bite as you let out another barking laugh, rolling your eyes as he tries not to smile, âIâm only trying to be polite.âÂ
You purse your lips together, giving him a questioning look as he shoots you one back.Â
âI didnât know politeness was in your artillery,â you quip, and he scoffs, moving his glasses upwards as he rubs at his tired eyes, resting backwards into the cushions as his legs part, and you try not to let your eyes linger on his thighs.Â
âI have a reserve for choice people,â he says, opening his eyes back as he looks back at you, yawning as he moves on, âHow was your presentation?âÂ
Your smile falters for a second as your stare turns questioning, chewing on your lips as it turns into something sweeter, something smitten because heâs asking about the presentation you had mentioned once in passing the last weekend you had hung out, stressing over your slides and sources, and trying to seem nonchalant as you finger traces little patterns on the floor.Â
âIt was good,â you tell him, trying not to seem too prideful as you murmur, âMy professor said it was exactly what he was looking for.âÂ
His face shifts, no longer annoyed as you try not to appear bashful, but his teeth shine as his rosy cheeks pull upwards as he gives you one of those smiles that makes you feel warm and happy and giddy.Â
âYeah?â He asks, shifting a little bit as he waved his teasingness off, rolling your eyes as you groan, nodding exaggeratedly as you go back to organizing your highlighters and pens, but he seems intent on pushing this: âDidnât you say it was the hardest assignment of the class?â
You look up at him from above your lashes, trying not to smile again as you shrug indifferently, done with arranging your stationery based on colors as your knees knock together, throwing a pillow his way that he effortlessly catches.
âI mean, everyone told me that it was really, really hard, so-â But youâre cut off by the door swinging open, and the two of you crane your necks around to see Shoko and Suguru arguing over something irrelevant, food nestled in their hands as they close the door behind them with a slam.Â
They start telling you two about the delivery fee and the outrageousness that one of the containers had tipped over, but youâre still busy thinking about how Satoru remembered something so trivial, giving them quiet hums as they spread out the food on the small coffee table, and trying to act normal.Â
Like you have for the past two years.
â
The week passed as it usually does, with papers, readings, and assignments that needed to be completed at an unmanageable rate.Â
You had expected the usual and mundane things, and for the most part, thatâs what came your way. Nights spent in each other's rooms as you finish up your work, spliced with moments where you would all talk, days filled with going to lectures and walking around campus till you found a quiet study spot. Things that you could predict and plan for.Â
For the most part.
Another thing that your little group would occasionally do was meet up at the end of the week at one of the pubs around campus, most of them serving mediocre food and somewhat better drinks, and offer you all a time to reconvene after a usually stressful couple of days.Â
The pub was small and quaint, but you enjoyed the warmth and laughter that muddled together to make the ambiance somewhat private. Either Suguru or Shoko would arrive there early and try to secure the usual spot at the booth near the end of the establishment, seeing that either of them didnât have classes on Fridays, while the other three would meet up outside of Satoruâs biophysical chemistry class and walk there together.  Â
Which is why you found yourself back on that Friday, sitting next to Shoko, settling into your seat as she clambered in after you. Suguru almost pushes Satoru in, impatient to sit down and get back to talking, and you watch as the white-haired man sits in front of you, his hands clasped together as he stares at the wood-grain of the table.Â
âHow were classes?â Shoko finally asks, looking between you and Satoru as she takes a sip from her drink.Â
You sigh, shrugging as your fingers play with the bottom of your cup, the condensation slipping down as you rub at your tired eyes.Â
âFine, I guess,â you say, drinking some water as you wipe at the corner of your lips, âMy professor couldâve ended the class, like, twenty minutes earlier than he did.âÂ
She nods solemnly, patting your thigh in solidarity as she passes the bowl of crisps towards you, nudging you to take one to help settle your stomach after having back-to-back classes, knowing how hangry it made you. Â
âIs this the professor who needs you to see a classical play?â Suguru asked, taking some of the snack as his arms crossed on top of the table, leaning in slightly as you licked some of the salt from your lips, nodding.Â
âYeah,â you heave another sigh, elbowing Shoko as you continue, âWhich is why Iâm seeing Beggarâs Opera next week. I mean, the theatre program did a couple of Shakespeare ones earlier this semester, butâŚugh, I just canât watch another performance of Romeo and Juliet.â You murmur with a groan, resting your chin on the palm of your hand as Suguru hums in agreement.Â
âYou donât like Shakespeare?â
Your eyes shift over to the man in front of you who asked the question.Â
Your brows furrow slightly in the middle, lips pulling into a small pout as you shake your head, playing with the ring of water your drink had left as you itch your nose, trying not to focus too hard on the pretty pink color on Gojoâs cheeks because of the slightly toasty feel of the room.Â
âI do,â you say slugishly, âItâs just that when the only work of his that tends to be popular isnât The Tempest, I get a little annoyed.âÂ
Suguru snorts, shaking his head as his fingers wag at you.Â
âThatâs not even nearly his best stuff,â he argues, and you roll your eyes, your head tilting badly in annoyance after knowing what this was going to lead to, âI canât believe you still think that it outweighs Richard II.âÂ
Satoru and Shokoâs eyes bounce between you and your ink-haired friend.Â
âIâd rather die on the hill of petty magic versus royal family drama,â You quip back, your brow slightly raised.Â
Suguru huffed, shaking his head in dismay as he lightly shoved your foot underneath the table, a small smile on both your faces.Â
âIs Tempest the one with the shipwreck?â Gojo asks, his head tilting slightly as his glasses lean on his nose bridge. You nod, grinning at the fact that someone in the group was able to identify such a classic piece of literary work.Â
You open your mouth to agree, but Suguru beats you to it.Â
âHow do you know that?â He glances sideways at his friend, his brow raised in slight shock as Shoko snorts.Â
Gojo shrugs, his elbows resting on the table as the fabric of his sweater tightens around his arms, making him look delectable and otherworldly. You have to tear your eyes away from it before it becomes too noticeable.Â
âWe went to the same secondary school,â Gojo argues, saying it as if it were the most obvious explanation in the world, âI paid attentionâŚclearly more than others,â he adds under his breath, causing you to drop your hand to your mouth to hide the satisfied grin from when Suguru deflated in slight embarrassment.Â
âOh, speaking of blast from the past,â Shoko shuffles, looking at her phone screen as if suddenly remembering something, âViâs coming back for break.âÂ
You watch as Gojo and Suguru stop their silent bickering by messing with each other's stuff as they look up to Shoko. Suguruâs thin brow shoots upwards, his mouth turning into a surprised line as Gojo stares blankly, an unreadable expression on his face as you poke Shokoâs thigh, shaking your head in confusion.Â
âWho?â You murmur, your eyes squinting as Shoko looks at you, her mouth slightly dropping as she also remembers that you didnât grow up with them.Â
âVivienne March,â Suguru explains, beating someone once again to explain something because he could never hold onto a piece of information for longer than three seconds if he knows that somebody in his vicinity doesnât know it, âShe went to school with us for, what? Five, six years?â He looks between Gojo and Shoko, and they both nod, Shoko unlocking her phone as she goes to pull up the girl's instagram to show you what she looks like, âSheâs his ex,â he murmurs as if secretly, pointing at his friend next to him as you feel something in your gut shift, but he clearly doesnât tell because he leaves that point entirely.Â
âBut I thought she preferred to stay in America till her spring semester was over?â He asks, confused, waiting for you to be done looking, as he waits for Shoko to explain it.Â
You take her phone gingerly, looking at the girl's account as you carefully click through her posts. Youâre greeted with an aesthetic array of photos, some of her friends, some of her cat, and pretty pictures of old brick buildings and fall trees. But your eyebrows slowly move up your face when you see her.Â
Your thumb swipes through each post as you see her stunning hair framing her face in freshly done curls, her eyes striking and delicate as she wanders around a bookstore. Her outfits are always perfectly curated, and her makeup delicately done to accentuate her already natural beauty in a way that makes a part of you, something you tried to bury and starve, twist with envy at the effortlessness of her perfection.Â
âGuess she had a change of heart this year,â Shoko says, taking her phone back from your outstretched hand, turning it off as she placed it face down on the table, âShe texted me this morning saying that she was âgonna be here for December and some of January and that she wanted to catch up.âÂ
âYou would like her,â Suguru directs his attention back at you, his words matching the genuine smile on his face, âSheâs super bright and bubbly. And sheâs so funny. Oh, and she's, like, insanely smart. She graduated from Cambridge when she was nineteen, and sheâs doing grad school at Harvard.âÂ
âHmm, yeah,â Shoko hums, âI mean, she almost came here if she didnât get the call from Harvard,â she nudges you with her shoulder, âBut I donât know how much he,â she points her eyes to Satoru, watching the way his mouth slightly parts at being called out, âWouldâve appreciated that, though.âÂ
He scoffs, his tongue poking at his cheek as he leans in slightly, his arms crossing the table as Suguru snickers.Â
âI have no issue with Vivienne,â he argues, his brows pulling into a cute little frown, âShe was justâŚâ
âWhat?â Suguru juts in, Shoko scoffing a laugh next to you as Gojo only peers at him from the side of his eyes, âMadly in love with you? Was going to pick Oxford to be with you? And you wereâŚwhat, days away from breaking up with her when she came sobbing to us that you have the emotional intelligence of a rock?â
Your eyes widen slightly, looking over at Shoko for confirmation, one she returns with a faint grin. Despite the sunken feeling in your heart, one that you often get whenever you are reminded of the fact that, unfortunately, literally everyone is also in love with Gojo Satoru, you have to control your face not to giggle at the statement.Â
Gojo makes a noise deep in his throat, the tips of his ears slightly pink from the added attention.Â
You swallow as you try to grapple with all this information. But, as always, the conversation moves on and you push everything back as you find yourself smiling once again, listening to how Suguru animatedly tells the story of how he bombed one of his essays because he forgot which citation format to use, and you try to not make it obvious how youâd peek over at Shoko now and then and see who it was that she was stalking, probably some girl from her class that she was plotting on.Â
The music lolls on in the background, the pub getting more packed with students and tired workers, and you find yourself content with listening to your friends tell you about their week, taking small sips from your straw as you grin and laugh as poke Shokoâs thigh whenever a cute guy, devastatingly never as cute as Gojo, walks by the table, and she, gripping your knee whenever a girl her type flashes her a look from over their shoulders.Â
âI think Iâm wanted somewhere else at the moment,â she whispers, leaning closer to your ear as you follow her line of sight to a girl sitting at the bar, her long blonde hair thrown over her shoulder as she steals the occasional glance at your friend, âIâll be back.âÂ
You giggle, pushing at her to go as she swats your hand away playfully, sending you a wink as you send one back, watching her go as Suguru and Gojo watch silently, sending each other knowing looks before Shoko disappears behind the other booths.Â
âWell, if sheâs going, might as well take this time to piss,â Suguru states, putting his hands on the wood as he hoists himself up, sending a cheeky little smile as he imitates Shokoâs sashay, âDonât wait up.âÂ
You roll your eyes, trying not to watch him leave as if to draw out the silence that will inevitably follow, seeing that itâs just you and Gojo remaining. Your fingers play with your empty glass as you glance back to him, sending him a small smile as you feel chagrin already seeping into your veins.
He clears his throat, his eyes darting from your face to your arms, his tongue poking his cheek as he swallows. You wonder how much heâs dreading the awkward silence that has the possibility of ensuing.
âWater?âÂ
Your eyes squint at the sudden question, looking down to the long finger he has pointed at your glass, and you look back up at him, wondering if he was stating the obvious or if your feelings for him had made you delirious and unable to compute anything that comes out of his mouth.Â
âDo you want some more water?â He explains, and you feel your cheeks heat again at your blunder, âIâm going up there to get a refill anyway.â
You nod gratefully, swallowing your feelings down as you glance up at him, handing him your empty glass with ice sloshing around as your smile wobbles.Â
âIâd appreciate it, thank you,â your voice dips slightly as you grin stupidly the longer you look at his long lashes and his pink lips, somewhat glad that he was getting away so you could less opportunities to screw up, and you watch as his beautifully large hand wraps around the glass like it was nothing, sending you a small nod as he crouches slightly so that the overhanging light wouldnât hit his head on the way out.Â
Leaving you alone, you pull out your phone, also thankful to have a little moment to yourself as you quickly try to catch up on the notifications you had gotten in the past couple of hours, as the noise around you mixes, adding a comforting ambience as you lean against the old walls, your head leaning against your fist.Â
You were so engrossed in your own little bubble that you didnât notice the figure hovering near the other end of the table, only noticing the man when you looked to the side, thinking that either Suguru or Gojo was back, only for your eyes to widen in shock and surprise to be greeted with an unfamiliar face.Â
Letting out a small noise, adjacent to an audible gulp, you sit up straighter, looking bashfully at him as you turn your phone off, taking in his slender frame and the rectangular-framed glasses that sit wonkily on his nose as he fidgets nervously with the hem of his lumpy sweater. Ironically, having everything that Gojo has but wearing it so drastically differently that you have to snap yourself out of the comparison.Â
The boy's hair is slightly parted, light blonde, and his eyes framed with what seemed like brown lashes. His cheeks are dusted with light freckles, and his smile is lopsided as he scratches the back of his neck.Â
Cute in a schoolish way, you think.
âH-hi,â his voice is high, squeaking and wobbly as he leans on the booth, not knowing what to do with his arms as he uses the back of his hand to push his glasses upwards, âHi, I justâŚâÂ
Your head tilts slightly, curiosity filling your eyes as you give him a gentle smile, waiting patiently for him to find his words.Â
âIâm Kento,â he stammers after a second, scratching behind his ears as a red flush settles over his high cheeks, âIâm sitting over there,â he points to a table behind him, and your neck cranes to see a group of boys his age all staring at his back, âAnd I just thought-âÂ
He opens his mouth to say something else, but pauses, his gaze drifting to something, or rather someone, coming his way, and youâre too focused on the way sweat dots at his hairline or the way he fidgets with the hem of his sweater to even notice the full glass of water sliding in front of you from the other side of the booth.Â
Your back straightens as your head whips to the side, eyes widening when you realize that Satoru had returned, his one drink nestled in his hand as his stare bounces between you and, who you evidently had just discovered, Kento.Â
Blue eyes flicker over your face, a moment's decision faltering in his mind as he slithers into not his original seat in front of you, but next to you, his large frame taking up half of your side of the both as your brows furrow in confusion, lips pulling into a tote as your eyes squint at the way he hunkers in like it was normal.Â
Is he okay? You try not to have your heart burst out of your chest and flip flop around on the table like a fish out of water at being in such proximity to Satoru, but you donât even have time to think about that as the rest of your mind falters, trying to make sense of this behavior.Â
One of his beefy arms unravels from his side as it stretches above your head, resting atop the cushioned seats as he sighs deeply through his nose, taking a sip of his drink as if he hadnât interrupted anything, and his chin turns over to the boy, waiting.Â
Kento stammers, even worse than before, as he pushes back his spiky hair with a hand, looking between you and Satoru as you blink slowly, not really knowing what to do, awkwardly lingering in your seat as you wonder if anybodyâs going to talk.
âEverything alright?â Satoru asks finally, his voice slightly lower than usual, somewhat taunting but hard to tell, seeing that his face was blank, thick as it almost bounces off Kentoâs skull, his cheeks turning into a bright pink as you lets out a small exhale of air, something resembling a shocked laugh at the strange and sudden shift in his behavior.Â
âI, uh, I,â Kentoâs voice wobbles as he seizes up Satoruâs size and his overall presence, a strange look of shock and even awe as you gnaw on the inside of your cheek, not fully knowing what was going on as Kentoâs head dips in embarrassment, âIâm sorryâŚI didnât know, uh, that you, you wereâŚyeahâŚsorryâŚâ
His arm raises in a small wave, quickly turning on his heels, the back of his neck almost red as you blink rapidly, letting out a small huff of air as your neck almost snaps towards the man next to you, stammering as you try to find your words.Â
Satoru looks at you, taking another sip.Â
âWhat?âÂ
You scoff, eyes nearly bulging out of your head as you stumble over a slew of words.Â
âWhat? W-what do you mean what?â You let out a bewildered laugh, looking across the pub at the boy and his group of friends that almost seem to be comforting him, their hands on his shoulders as he profusely shakes his head, âWhat the hell was that for?â
His white brows pinch in the middle, as if he doesn't understand your startlement, as if you were the one being crazy.
But you werenât being crazy. Not in the slightest.Â
You brushed it off the first time Satoru scared off a guy who was talking to you. You thought it was strange, sure, how in the middle of your lively conversation of John Milton and Paradise Lost that he wandered from the other side of the room, suddenly attached to your side, his height towering over the other guy as he quieted down and scurried away. You just chalked it up to him being bored, despite how annoyed you were.Â
The second time, a guy was seconds away from putting his phone in your number when Satoruâs voice rang in your ears, and you watched, horrified, as he peered down at the guy's cracked phone screen, scoffing at the fact that he was listening to some stupid band he disapproved of.Â
Then there was the time when you were at this same pub, getting some drinks for Shoko, waiting at the counter, flirting with the guy next to you when Satoru found his way back to you, as if pulled by a magnet, and asked the guy if he always chose to talk to girls he didnât know with a fresh hickey on his neck. (That one you werenât mad at, more so embarrassed).
But itâs happened countless times. At the pub, at gatherings, at galas heâs invited you to as his plus one because he said nobody else could make it, at the library when he came a little too early and a guy from your class was sitting next to you, at the cafe, and at the small party he threw last year.
And if you werenât so in love with him, youâd be madder than you were. You knew he was just being a protective and caring friend, not wanting you to get hurt, but you knew youâd have to start moving on from this debilitating crush, and he wasnât making it any easier.
âI just asked him if everything was alright,â he explained, his tone bordering on bored as he pulls out his phone, checking the time as he angles his body slightly to look at you better, and you're somewhat aware of the fact that his arm is still somewhere above your head, âHeâs the one that scurried away.âÂ
Your mouth drops open, your palms jamming into your eye sockets as your head hits the table, banging it a couple times as you try to pull away from him, slightly angered, slightly, and very, ever so slightly, internally flustered at something you definitely should be flustered over.
âYouâŚyou scared him away!â Your voice is muffled as you groan, not caring much as you shoot him an angry and bitter look.
Satoruâs lashes flutter slightly, his pink lips pulling into a confused line as you shove his knee with your own, realizing that you were, in fact, not joking and were seriously considering the idea of giving that blubbering mess a chance.
âAre you - are you serious?â His thumb jabs in the general direction of where he had gone, âHim?â
You roll your eyes, chest heaving with a sigh as your forehead continues to rest on the cool tabletop, the tip of your nose rubbing against the varnish as you groan.
Deep down, you know that this crush of yours is fruitless and useless. Itâs never going to get anywhere, and the only thing it can offer you is more hurt and rejection. You know that you are so far from his type and out of your league that heâd never see you as more than a friend, if that, but you continued to have it because it lit a fire inside of you that you sadistically enjoyed.Â
That being said, you would prefer, at some point, to have a romantic moment, even if fleeting, and having the man youâve been in love with for two years chase away the only guy whoâs had the balls to come up to you made you irrationally annoyed for some reason that you didnât fully understand.Â
âHeâŚhe seemed nice,â you argue, your eyes closing shut as your hand shifts, and you rest your cheek on the back of it, your back bent at an angle as you look up at him from your position on the table, âAnd he was cute-âÂ
Gojo cuts you off with a startled laugh, a disbelieving one as his eyebrows shoot upwards, showing more than the five emotions you usually see him with as genuine shock laces his features, and it only spurs on that angry fire inside of you as you press.Â
âWhat? What? He was cute!â Your head lifts quickly from its spot on the table as your body shifts to look at him even better than before, trying not to notice the cute wrinkle of his nose or the frosty irises of his eyes that are looking so intently at you that it could knock the air out of your lungs if you stare long enough, âAnd IâŚI donât know, I think he wanted to talk to me!âÂ
Gojo snorts, his arm tightening around the cushion behind you, his hand dangling off the end, his fingers dangerously close to the side of your ear as you swallow thickly.Â
âWell, of course, he wanted to talk to you,â his other hand pushes his glasses upwards, the veins on the back of his hand evident, â I just canât believe that heâs someone youâd want to entertain.â
You stutter, hurt flashing across your face as it pulls into sour bewilderment.
Youâve barely talked to Satoru for more than a couple of minutes at a time about classes or projects or annoying classmates, and you canât believe your luck that the first conversation between the two of you that stemmed outside of those points is about this.
âWhat, whatâs that supposed to mean?â Your voice dips slightly, embarrassed, as his own expression slightly shifts at your tone.
He pinches the bridge of his nose, clearly not expecting this to blow up in his face as it did, and he sighs, retreating to his old, composed self as he explains himself.Â
âLook, I have him in a couple of my classes,â he starts again, lips pulling into a thin line as he looks over his shoulder to Kento and then glances back to you, âHe shows up late and never does his work and always asks to most ridiculous questions,â Satoru adds and you try not to have your lips quirk at the sudden revelation, not wanting to give in and let your foolish feeling stake the wheel and guide you to forgiving him, but itâs not use as he continues, âI just figured thatâŚsomeone like that isnât someone good for you. Even if he did just want to talk.âÂ
Your mouth dries up, and you try not to let your head burst and remind yourself that heâs thinking about this from a friend's perspective, something kind and caring and companionly, but not in the way you would want from your crush, but Satoru is still waiting on your response so instead you swallow everything down and your lips tote, avoiding eye contact as you attempt to seem indifferent despite your outburst.Â
âHow ridiculous are his questions?â You finally ask, peeking over at him from where your gaze had been training on the ice in your water, and you swear you see a flicker of surprise take over his gorgeous features, as though you were going crazy with the way his blankness faded momentarily and gave way to a little smile.Â
He sighs, this time lighter, his hand behind you shifting ever so slightly to push at the back of your head, gingerly but in a teasing way as you try not to smile a giddy smile, one that doesnât reflect the fact that you couldnât really care about the guy who had come up to talk to you when Satoru cared enough because he didnât think he was good enough for you to talk to.Â
âEven more ridiculous than asking if adding ice to rice would help it steam up more than if you used water,â he says, picking up his drink as he nurses it over his mouth, fighting back a smug grin at the way you sputter, pushing him roughly as your cheeks heat up again for bringing up one of your late-night queries.Â
âFine, fine, fine, Iâll give you this one!â You rub at your eyes, shoulders hunched, âBut you have to stop scaring off every single guy that tries to talk to me! He could be a normal guy whoâs going to come up, and youâre going to disapprove of him just because he wears mismatched socks or only writes in pen!âÂ
Satoru snorted indifferently, proving your point that he didnât seem to care.Â
âWriting solely in pen is psychotic behavior,â he grumbled to himself, recalling the time one of his classmates had the gall to ask you for your number before he quickly shut it down, inserting himself in the middle of the conversation until the guy gave up and left.Â
You groan, head dropping back onto the table as you tap it lightly, a quiet thud reverberating in your tiny corner of the room.Â
âOne of these days youâre going to have to come to terms with the fact that the reason you shut people down is different from the reasons I shut people down.â You say, moving your arms upward so that you could set your cheek on it, looking at the empty seats in front of you instead of the man youâve had a crush on, sputters.Â
âWhat do you mean?â His voice drops a little bit, and you angle your head to look up at him, brows pinching in the middle as you let out a little laugh, something sardonic as you shake your head to yourself.Â
âYouâŚâ you pause, stopping, sighing to yourself as you try to control your words before you say something youâll regret, âYou have likeâŚperfect people coming up to you. And if you choose to reject them, thatâs up to you, I get it. But last week you turned a girl down because she said that Star Wars was a waste of money,â the two of you share small laugh because you can recall just how red he got, embarrassed but peeved when somebody just offended his entire lifeline, but you continue, âItâŚitâs just,â you press your lips together as something in your chest clenched, âI donât really have that luxury. I donât have perfect guys coming up to me with little quirks, you know? Thereâs always something wrong with them, even if I donât see it then. Like they donât show up to dates or they make fun of my major, or justâŚonly want to sleep with me, and then when they find out I donât want that, they leave. And any of the sane ones that have small issues, youâre always there to shoot them down!âÂ
You stop, taking in a deep breath as you try to regulate your emotions, refusing to look at him right now as you let some pent-up feelings loose, just grateful that he hasnât left and decided to let you figure this out on your own.Â
âLook,â you glance at him, giving him a small smile, âIâm thankful that you care. Really, I am. ButâŚbut I just want to experience somethingâŚwith someone, yâknow? At least once when Iâm still in university. Iâm almost twenty-one, and I havenât even had my first kiss!â Despite how embarrassing it is, it slips out, and your chees heat up as you hurry on with your ramble, âAnd if it has to be with something who asks stupid questions or says my name wrong on the first attempt or doesnât know what my favorite color is, I guess Iâm just gonna have to bite the bullet and take that risk. I,â you look away, back to focusing on the leather cushions in front of you as you gnaw on your lip, âI donât really have any other option.â
Giving it a moment, you let your shoulders sink, going back to playing with the straw wrapper in front of you as you debate whether it would be better to just throw yourself out the window or risk saying something else that youâd stay awake the next couple of nights pinching yourself over.
You heard him inhale exaggeratingly, the arm behind you moving a little downwards in order to hook one of his fingers around the collar of your sweater, trying to grab your attention. You tilt your chin sideways, lips pursed, and attempt not to let his overwhelming presences budge how bitter you were feeling for some reason.Â
âI think,â he sighed again, gnawing on his bottom lip as he tried to formulate his thoughts, the overhead lamp casting a soft orange light over his face and it made your pitiful stomach churn with desperate want, âI think that if youâre too pessimistic.âÂ
That getâs a dry laugh from you, and you roll your eyes at his statement. Before heâs able to say anything, he gets interrupted by Suguru rounding the corner, sliding into his seat with a wide grin, one that falls when he sees his friend has changed the seating arrangement.Â
âWhyâd you move?âÂ
Satoru paused, tearing his eyes away from the side of your face as he glanced at his friend, his fingers moving upwards as you tried not to look at him and make anything obvious. You hope he doesnât bring up Kento and your little meltdown, but he seems to read your mind.Â
âYou were bothering me too much,â he mutters, and Suguru lets out a startled scoff, throwing the hair tie around his wrist at him as Sator just flings it to the side. Suguru doesnât push, though, and starts telling the two of you that he was held up at the bathroom entrances because a couple was having a âlover's spatâ, his words not yours, and he just had to hear it before he left.
The rest of the night continued as it usually does.Â
If you could consider the uneven rhythm of your heart as normal.Â
â
Another week had passed, another seven days of agonizingly slow school work and duties.Â
It seemed like the days would flicker away at a snail-like pace until it got you to the one day of the week that you actually wished wouldnât arrive, and would force you to stalk around the limited space of your dorm room as you think about what to wear to the theatre production thatâs taking place in thirty minutes.Â
Your hand was on your hip, feet tapping against the floor as you looked at the two outfits you had hung on your dresser, lips pursed as your eyes moved back and forth between the one that would go better with those pair of kitten heels you thrifted with Shoko, or the dres that you rarely get to wear.Â
It took a couple more seconds of deciding, but you ultimately picked the more comfortable option, knowing that the university theater was always freezing, especially in October, and that a cute sweater was probably the better choice.
Thankfully, this gave you some more time to fix your hair and touch up your makeup, humming along to the music as your eye kept wandering down to your phone and then to your door, squinting as you turned it over, confused as to what was taking Shoko so long.Â
Instantly, your eyes widen at the plethora of messages you have from Shoko, a telltale sign that something was seriously wrong, given the fact that she never sent more than two messages at once.Â
shoko: pick up
shoko: girl ur literally always on ur phone wya
shoko: pls pls pls pick upÂ
shoko: ur making me beg rn pls can u call me backÂ
shoko: plsÂ
You donât have time to send her one of your stupid stickers, your fingers fumbling around as you look at the five missed calls you have from her, shaking your head in dismay at how it was possible to leave your phone alone for twenty minutes and come back to this.Â
It doesnât take more than a ring before she answers on the other line.Â
âAre you okay?â Your voice cuts through immediately, rushed and worried, your legs bouncing as you hear some people talking in the background, and you can hear the way Shoko snaps at them to hush so that she can hear you better.Â
âHi, yeah, no, no Iâm fine - hey can you guys just,â she calls out again, hey annoyance dripping form her tone, some shuffling happening over the line as she moves somewhere where the noise is less, âHey, hi, sorry for the noise,â she starts again and you just hum, eyebrows still pinches together in worry as you wait for her to continue, âIâm really sorry for spamming you, but I have some news.âÂ
The worry on your face melts as you lean back in your seat.Â
âYeahâŚ?â you ask, but already predicting what it was that she was stressing out over telling you, but she lets out another exhale, and you could imagine her nodding wherever it was that she was at.Â
âIâm so sorry but Iâm at work right now and,â some clattering happens in the background, the kitchen in great hustle for the Saturday evening rush it usually has at the restaurant she waitresses for, âGod, Tommy just screwed everything up with our shifts and I thought he had written me as off for tonight but he wrote me as off for next Saturday and I wasnât able to fine somebody to-âÂ
You laugh softly, cutting off her rambling.Â
ââKo, babe, itâs fine, donât worry about it,â you stress, leaning in slightly as you hear some silverware being unloaded, âItâs so okay, your job is so much more important than-âÂ
âNo, youâre more important than this - believe me,â she cuts you off this time, and you can see her standing hunched in the corner, gnawing on her fingernails in stress, âAnd I promised you Iâd come with you and I canât, and now IâŚI feel horrible.âÂ
A smile creeps onto your lips, and you shake your head.Â
âItâs fine,â you stress, chuckling at her incoherent rambles, âI promise. The playâs going to be lengthy anyway, might as well take the time to make some money while youâre at it.âÂ
You hear nothing except the kitchen roaring in the background for a few seconds before she sighs, clicking her tongue as she hums softly.Â
âYou sure?âÂ
âIâm sure,â you tell her, hearing her chuckle softly over the phone, the disappointment evident in her voice, and you didnât want to push her over the edge despite the small flicker of disappointment of having to go alone, âI promise youâre not gonna be missing anything.âÂ
âLook, I know itâs not the same, but I was with Suguru when I found out, and heâs said that he could-âÂ
This time, sheâs cut off, but not by you.Â
A knock sounds over your door.Â
You sigh, smiling at your friend as you slowly rise, âYou guys are so sweet, but you shouldâve told him Iâd be fine. Really, I usually do these things by myself anyway.âÂ
She groans at your antics, somebody calling her name from the back as she tells them that sheâs almost done.Â
âShit, I have to go, but promise me youâll tell me about how tonight goes, yeah?â She sounds hurried, and you make a few steps towards your door as you snort, rolling your eyes as you unlock the brass knob, shaking your head at the thought.Â
âTell you about what? Oh, like how Suguru has a horrific attention span and canâtâŚâ You swing the door wide open, but you trail off as your mouth hangs slightly, not greeted by your black-haired and eyebrow-pierced friend,Â
But Satoru.Â
Shoko seems to have picked up on your silence as meaning that you finally understood what she was talking about, and you can barely register her sing-songy bye as she leaves, the phone in your hand lying limp as Satoruâs brow raises skeptically at your dumbfounded expression.
Damn you, Shoko Ieiri.Â
âHi,â you say breathlessly, almost stupidly, as your hand falls from behind the door to your side, tilting your head a bit as Satoru just stares, hands in his pockets, and you shake back to reality, laughing apologetically as your neck prickles, âSorry, IâŚI was just expecting someone else.â
His brow arches even more, and you huff out a laugh.Â
âShoko just said that Suguru was coming,â you explain, stepping back from the entranceway as his mouth parts slightly.Â
âRight,â he nods, his hair falling gracefully in his face as you churn in your spit at the magnificent sight of him in his denim jeans and the navy sweater he was in, âI hope itâs okay that I came. Suguru couldnât make it.â
You blink, wanting to say that you were so okay with him, but you swallow that done as you shake your head, waving his statement away.Â
âThis isâŚthis is fine,â You stammer to say, your smile wobbly. You hope that he canât pick up on the way that your eyes are roaming over the way his button-up sits comfortably on his broad chest, or the way his glasses look on the bridge of his nose, âI, uh, I just have to do my mascara, so give me like,â you look at the clock behind you. Your eyes bulge at the fact that you have only five minutes left, âTwo seconds and Iâll be done.â
He nods, his head tilting slightly to the side as he looks at your face and his eyes travel down your outfit. His hand raises, a finger pointed at your sweater.Â
âNice sweater,â he says, something teetering on teasing, and you look down, suddenly realizing that itâs the sweater he had given you last year for your birthday, the one that you had seen months prior after walking past a vintage store and exclaimed how much you liked it, only to be stumped by the price.Â
Your confusion melts into a wide smile, your head still poking out from outside your door as you survey the material, not noticing the way his eyes soften just a smidge at your flighty reaction.Â
âOh - right, thank you again for getting it!â You say cheerfully, an entire evening or perfection and romance already forming in your head as you try not to appear too excited, pointing back to your room as you duck away, âIâll, uh, Iâll be back, then!â
Satoru nods, giving you a small smile as you shut the door behind you, your back hitting it as you give yourself a moment to reciprocate, curse Shoko and her blasted antics, and calm your heartbeat down long enough.Â
This was so fine, you tried to tell yourself,Â
Everything was going to be fine.Â
â-
The lobby of the Oxford theater was unusually packed, and you even voiced your surprise when Satoru led you in, your eyes wide as you took in all the students, some looking at the programs, others waiting in line for the bathroom.Â
âDamn,â you mutter, squeezing past someone as Satoru follows behind you, âI didnât think it was going to be this busy.âÂ
The walk here had beenâŚfine. You had talked for most of it, which you had predicted, and with the few times Satoru would interject and give some comments on the stories you told him about your week, you feel like you told five times that amount of embarrassing and lame jokes, shutting yourself up once after wincing at how terrible it was. Satoru cracked a small smile, though, a pitiful one, most likely to keep you from shutting up the entire night.Â
Itâs strange, just how different you act around him. In attempts to make yourself seem cooler and interesting, you wind up embarrassing yourself even more. You could have sworn that you never acted like this with Shoko or Suguru, or literally anybody else, even your old crushes, but when it came to Satoru, you seemed to lose the sense of normalcy you had come to know.Â
But you donât have time to worry about that, now trying to put your attention on wondering how many of the students here are from that stupid class youâre taking right now, and even looking in the sea of bodies confirms that answer when you see some familiar faces. The concession stand in the corner, the one run by the theater department to raise some extra funds, seems to be swarmed, and your stomach grumbles instantly at the smell of buttered popcorn that wafts through the air.Â
âWhereâre our seats?â Heâs standing by you now, and you have to crane your neck slightly to look at him. You sift through your tote, pulling out your wallet and opening it to reveal the tickets tucked inside, and hand one to him while keeping the other for yourself.Â
âRow H,â you read out loud, âYouâre seat 18, and Iâm 19.âÂ
He nods, pocketing it before he looks back out into the lobby, his eyes focusing on the wide double doors that led you into the theater, watching the ticket taker check the peopleâs tickets before looking back at the concessions, remembering how much you were raving on your walk here about how good the snacks were.Â
âDo you still want someâŚ?â He juts his chin towards the hand-made sign that reads Beggars Snacks!Â
âHm?â You look back at the table, and you let out a small laugh, âOh, yeah, right,â you look through your wallet again, putting your ticket there for safekeeping as you glance back up at his gorgeous face, âYeah, Iâll be back. You can go find your seat, if you want.âÂ
Satoru opens his mouth and then shuts it, glancing at you and then the doors, and his shoulder straightens slightly.Â
âRight, wellâŚ.right,â he murmurs, looking a little torn, his voice drowning out by the roar of sound around you two, but youâre able to make out the low grumble of his after being near him for so long, âIâllâŚIâll see you in a few.âÂ
You smile again, giving him two thumbs up as you turn on your heel, your hands clenching in frustration at how utterly inhuman you seem to act around him, somehow making it seem like it was your first day on this planet.Â
Peeking over your shoulder, you watch as he leaves towards the entrance of the theater, and you duck your head down as you find your way to the large line leading up to the snacks. Coming here for the past four years has taught you to go for the popcorn, pass on the homemade cookies, and snatch up the little boxes of candy if they have them.Â
Checking your phone as you wait idly, you text Shoko a slew of messages cursing her and her entire bloodline for blindsiding you like this, hoping she sees them after her grueling shift and only feels worse about leaving you like this.Â
Keep a tab of the line as it slowly moves, you eye the clock, knowing that the show was going to start soon. It seems to dwindle a bit, as some people in front of you and behind you give and leave, deciding it wasnât worth it, and after scrolling through your feed a little bit more, you find yourself next in line.Â
Glancing through the snacks, your stomach protests louder, ravenous after a day fueled on granola bars, a pathetic excuse of a yogurt bowl, and some crisps you had lying around, until you feel your hopes and dreams plummet when you see a small sign at the edge of the table that says only cash.Â
Fucking bullshit, you think angrily, whipping your wallet out again as you rifle through the confines, who still uses only cash? What medieval system was this? They accepted cards last time, this is entirely-
And you could complain petulantly in your head as much as you want, but your face falls as you search through for the third time, coming to the consensus that you didnât have a lick of cash on you. The person in front of you is almost done, but your shoulders sag as you begrudgingly step away, shaking your head in dismay as you make your way to the theater entrance, flashing your ticket to the ticket taker as he lets you in with a wide smile.Â
The ushers point you towards aisle H, and you patiently dispute the hate still inside of you, burning. Waiting as those in front of you find their seats, and it doesnât take long before youâre able to see a pop of hair standing high amongst the rest of the people in the audience.Â
You move past a couple of people talking as you move closer, almost skidding when you stop instantly, realizing that Satoru was, in fact, not alone.Â
From this angle, you could see the girl standing in front of him, a wide grin on her face as she laughs at something he says. Your eyes go to his face, your posture falling even more when you see the little quirk of his lips, a sign that he wasnât necessarily hating the conversation, and the loss of the popcorn feels pointless now as your stomach churns for another reason.Â
It was selfish to think that you were the only person who liked Satoru, but it didnât hurt any less when you were confronted with this fact at least once a week. You knew you couldnât expect anything from this stupid crush, a theorem forming inside your head that you continued to fall for Gojo Satoru just because you liked the sting of knowing you had no shot with him, and seeing other girls and their gleeful smiles at the fact that you probably had a chance is what maybe hurt the most.Â
You werenât ever angry at these girls, understanding them completely, even admiring the way they could flirt so effortlessly, and treated you kindly whenever you were near, but it singed a part inside of you that liked to act that you were in this small fictional bubble that you dreamt of whenever he looked your way.Â
Like he was right now.Â
Standing awkwardly to the side, at the end of the row, you sway idly in your spot, looking at the two of them and then around, wondering when the lights were going to start dimming and notify you of when the show was about to start.Â
You hear your name being called, a familiar cluster of syllables from his throat, and you look away from the painting on the wall to the side as you see Satoru throwing up a hand, trying to grab your attention.Â
When he sees you finally looking his way, he turns back to the girl, saying a few more words as she nods, her smile still soft as she glances at you, a strange look on her face as she sends you another smile, and you canât help but return it despite the sinking feeling in your gut.Â
She leaves through the other end, and you mutter a few apologies as you finally make your way down to where he was standing, ducking your head down sheepishly as you fidget with the strap of your tote.Â
âHey,â you say meekly, your cheeks heating as you finally get to him, âI didnât mean to interrupt anything.âÂ
One of his hands waved, shaking his head as he looked back to where the girl had retreated with her friends.Â
âYou werenât interrupting,â he tells you, and your brows furrow slightly because that was a white lie if youâve ver heard one, âI knew her from my lab,â he he says, scratching the back of his neck as his eyes trace of your face, falling to your empty arms as they squint, the conversation with the girl suddenly feeling his head as he points, âWhereâs your popcorn?â
The past couple of moments seem to flee too as you wring your hands awkwardly together, shooting him a tight smile as you try to appear indifferent.Â
âOh, they didnât take card,â you mumble bitterly, âAnd I forgot my wads of cash back in my dorm, so,â you shrug, laughing it off as you point to the seats, âBut itâs fine, IâŚerm, wasnât really feeling it anyway,â a lie, since that was all you could talk about, but you push past him as you sit down, setting your tote on your lap as you look at him, waiting for him to do the same.
Satoru peeks at you, his lips pressed into a thin line as he swallows, not doing anything to sit down as one of your brows moves upwards, confused about the mental turmoil that he was going through, which made him reluctant to sit.Â
âEverything okay?â You ask slowly, shifting your legs, wondering if he was tight for room, but he just nods, tongue poking through his rosy lips as he glances back towards the double doors as he briefly nods.Â
âI need to use the bathroom,â he mutters, and you nod, lips pursing in understanding as you look over your shoulders, watching as more people start taking their seats.
âOkay,â you sit back a little bit, your finger pointing behind you to where the bathrooms were, âWell, you, you should probably go, like, now. I think the shows going to start,â you say with a light chuckle and check your phone, realizing that there were only five minutes left till the lights turned off, âIn a little bit.â
Satoru just nods again, saying spoke few words before he turns to leave, murmuring apologies to the people sitting down as his long legs knock their knees, and you watch him leave the aisle and go before you turn your attention back to the stage, taking the time to admire the props and the set design, trying to think back to the original story and see if it lines up with how you remembering it starting.Â
When the overhead lights start flickering, and Satoru isnât back yet, you churn in your seat, looking over your shoulder every couple of seconds, hoping that he doesnât have to navigate back in the dark.Â
You send him a small text saying that it was almost going to be lights out when you see his figure in the corner of your eye, watch as he nears your row with his arms full, and you squint, trying to see through the dimness to see what it was that he was holding.Â
The closer he gets, the more youâre able to see, and itâs only until heâs lowering himself to sit down that you make out the popcorn bag in one hand, and some boxes of sweets in the other.Â
He says nothing as he shoves the popcorn into your hand, settling in as he looks around the seat, trying to move the armrests up only to see that theyâre stuck in place, completely oblivious to your wide-eyed stare as he lets out a big sigh, resting back as his legs spread out a little bit. He opens a box of Maltesers, adjusting his glasses as he looks at the stage.Â
âWant some?â He finally says, his voice low as he pushes the red box towards you, and your cheeks are almost on fire as you glance at the paper bag of popcorn in his outstretched hand.Â
âIâŚâ you blink, holding onto the popcorn so that it doesnât spill, âHere.â You dumbly give him the bag back, assuming that he had only given it to you so that he could sit down more comfortably.Â
Only now does he tear his eyes away from the stage, tuning out the voice over the announcements, the regular message of turning off your phones and staying quiet, as his elbow pushes your arm back to your seat.Â
âCanât have corn,â he says bluntly, looking over at your startled expression, âItâs yours.âÂ
Itâs yours.
Hereâs another moment you're going to mull over before another minuscule thing he does happens again, and you spend the next months thinking about that. Â
âAre you sure?â You whisper, already pulling your phone out to Venmo him for it, but Satoru can already tell what you're about to do as he flicks it away, as if it was repulsive to him, and you donât have any time to argue because the curtains pull outwards and reveal the actors.
You drag a hand over your face, trying not to look over at him anymore as you begrudgingly accept the kind token, trying to relax in your seat as the show begins, a tentative finger plucking out a popcorn as you bring it to your mouth, hoping that the only person who can what the blood roaring in your ears is you.Â
â
Nearly a quarter in, and you start to realize just how bad an idea this was.Â
The play itself was great. The actors were delivering their performance in a manner that felt reminiscent ot the campy nature of the original text, and some people in the audience were keeling over with laughter in certain parts.Â
You found yourself with a wide smile throughout most of it, recalling some of the bits and others jogging your memory, but you were thoroughly enjoying it nonetheless. The issue was, the person next to you seemed to be despising it.Â
The rare couple of times you peeked over to see his reaction to a couple of things, you noticed his jaw clenched, sitting straight and uptight as his eyes never left the stage. He barely mustered up a smile during the funny portions, looking utterly depleted during the serious bits, and his hands were clasped together, fingers interwoven as he sighed, unamused.Â
Every time somebody would do something weird, youâd glance his way and would still see the same stone-cold expression on his face. You were aware that the play itself was over exaggerated and strange at times, but that was the whole appeal of it in the first place. But at times, you tried to view it through the lens of someone who didnât go in-depth into literature and read the nuances of somebody like Satoru, who would rather spend their free time studying and working on their mountain of assignments, not something like this, and you felt your chest getting heavier and heavier with each second.Â
When it neared intermission, you couldâve sworn you had nearly melted in your seat, your popcorn done as you glanced over at Satoru when the lights finally turned back on, people around you standing up to leave or stretch.Â
A beat of silence passes before you clear your throat, mustering up a wobbly grin as you jab a thumb to the curtains.Â
âFunny, huh?âÂ
Satoru blinks, as if coming back to, and you debate if he had been half asleep. The thought makes you sink even deeper in embarrassment.Â
âItâs, uh,â he ran a hand through his hair, pushing it back as he swallowed thickly, âItâsâŚinteresting. I havenât really seen anything like it before.âÂ
You pause, chew on the side of your lip, rubbing at your eyes as you try to think of anything else to say. Youâve spent time with him alone, sure, but never in a situation where it felt like you had to defend yourself, your background, the whole reason why you were here in the first place, like you are now.Â
People bustle around the two of you, and he sits up a little straighter, pushing his shoulders back as his neck cracks a bit.Â
âItâs raunchy and⌠theatrical,â you try to explain, attempting to seem unconcerned as you fold the paper bag up and set it neatly on the ground, making a mental note to pick it up before you leave. âBut I think itâs really interesting given the period it was written and how vulgar, everything is, and the characters are all super unlikable, which you donât really see in these kinds of productions, and, well, itâs supposed to be funny andâŚfun, I guess,â your voice dies down, your lips almost chewed raw as you wait for a reaction, a facade of interest, a pitiful acknowledgement to what felt like your livelihood, but he just nods.Â
You suck in a deep breath, gaze darting around the theater as you try to look at anything else.
Noticing your sudden silence, his eyes leave the stage for a moment as they rake over your expression, see the way your lips pull into a small, worried line, the crease between your brows, something that appeared whenever you were stressed or confused. His face seemed to melt to mirror yours.Â
âIs there a reason why they keep calling the daughter a slut?â He finally asks, and your eyes dart back to him, and your cheeks puff, blinking slowly as you nod, embarrassed for some reason as you stammer to find words.Â
âItâs, erm, well, itâs in the original material, but,â your words mesh together as you try to call back on the research paper you did for this piece, your mind blanking as your cheeks heat, âBut I think they keep it in because itâs supposed to be a demonstration of the degradation of women and the differentiation between men who also exhibit premarital interest in the sexâŚand itâs not supposed to be funny but they repeat it a lot, so you kind of become numb to the meaning of the word...â Your rambling quiets near the end as you shoot him another tense smile, wringing your hands together as your lips tremble, looking away as a last resort to save your dignity.Â
After spending two years with him, youâve become familiar with his routine and what he expects from his day-to-day life. What some describe as the prodigal son, Gojo Satoru, if not with friends, is usually found in the back of the library, in his dorm, or somewhere quiet with papers strewn in front of him, with his laptop out, typing away. He sometimes goes to benefits and galas, some to attend because of his parents, others because of his biochemistry path, but his time isnât usually spent at the theater watching vulgar plays.Â
Thatâs what you did.
And of course, you didnât come here weekly. You had to be here for that godforsaken Literature in English class. But this was a part of you, this play, this environment, these exaggerated dialogues are what you spent your time obsessing over. The history and the meaning, and the importance of English literature and writings are your life, and having someone next to you, watching a personification of it live, felt like inviting them into a piece of your mind, even if they wouldnât view it as such.Â
But to you, you who liked to overcomplicate and read into things, saw it as such, and your heart was thumping erratically when you realized that Satoru probably saw this, you, as equally insane for enjoying something like this.Â
And you hated how much the thought made you spiral, made you think of yourself less than when there was a possibility that this wasnât what Satoru was thinking at all, but the slight chance, the small probability, is what stirred the trepidation in you.Â
âAre you enjoying it?âÂ
His question brings you out of your mental fever, and you bite your cheek, wondering what the right answer would be. Heâs watching you, waiting, and you exhale shakily, smiling poorly as you swallow back some bile.
âI, I am,â you say finally, âItâs justâŚI did this huge essay on this last year, and Iâve been looking for a rendition of it, but thereâs only this old movie thatâs so far been made, soâŚseeing this live is pretty cool.âÂ
He nods, looking at your stalled expression as you keep your eyes trained on the curtains, not wanting to show your internal thoughts on your ever-so expressive face, and he tries to keep his slight confusion at bay for your suddenly reserved self.Â
As you try to feign indifference by going on your phone, you can watch him from the corner of your eyes, look around, and uncharacteristically fidget in his seat as he debates doing the same as you or talking some more, which, at the moment, you donât appear content to do. But the more you try to ignore him, the more it seems like your body has a physical reaction to it, protesting your desire to keep to yourself.Â
âDid you do anything fun today?â You ask, putting your phone down as you scratch at the inside of your wrist. He blinks, looking a little quizzically at you before he clears his throat.Â
âWell, Suguru had set me up for a double date,â he explains, and you feel your chest tighten a little bit, âButâŚeh,â he shrugs, âI wasnât really feeling it,â he drags a hand over his face, âIf only he knew where Iâd end up instead, huh?â He nudges your elbow with his, a teasing grin on his face, but blood roars in your ears upon hearing his words.Â
Gods, the man who despised dates and unaccounted occasions and strange meetings would rather take that over this.
You let out a little puff of air, trying to give him a smile as you feel sweat dot on the back of your neck, your palms clammy as you wring your hands together, looking down at your shoes as you try to bite back the lump in your throat.
Heâd rather be anywhere else than here, your mind blares, the unspoken words ringing in the small expanse of your heart.
Thereâs a strange gurgle in your stomach, one that shifts sharply, and you wince. This is definitely not a part of your internal trade, and you hope that when you shift to place a hand on it to try and calm it down. You turn your phone off, pocketing it in your tote, and the sudden movement makes you jerk in pain. You sit back up, hoping that he won't notice.Â
But, of course, he does.Â
He angles his body towards you, brows cinched as your eyes twitch barely.Â
âAre you okay?â His voice his deep, tinged with worry, his head leaning towards you just a bit so that you can feel his minty breath fan across your warm cheek.Â
You wave him off, shooting him a horrifically terrible smile as you shift, your head tilting to the side as your stomach makes another alien noise.Â
âYeah,â you mutter, almost like a question because even you donât know if youâre alright, âYeah, I just think itâs the popcorn on an empty stomach.â But even that explanation made no sense. It seems like your stomach is churning even more with each passing second, and you really wish that he couldnât tell that every moment is a testament to your battle for control of your own body.
âDo you want some water?â He asks, looking over his shoulder to the doors, remembering that the concession stand was also selling bottled drinks, âIâll get some-âÂ
But your hand shoots out, gripping the fabric of his sleeve as you tug on it, shaking your head as you attempt to situate yourself back in your seat, your act going well besides the slight crack in your face at a particularly painful jab.Â
âNo, no, itâs fine, Iâm fine,â the lights flicker again above you, and youâre somewhat grateful for them, grateful hat you canât see the obvious fear on his face at the prospect of you being sick near his very hygienic self, âThe shows starting, anyway, so just,â your voice dips a little as you try to contain a groan, âJust stay.âÂ
He goes to protest, but your hold on him is strangely tight for someone so riddled with pain, and his mouth parts to say something, but the glare you shoot him nearly shuts him up.Â
âPlease,â you mutter, the embarrassment from several things thick in your voice as you wince, your eyes melting into something pleading as the applause begins, and his face falls for a second, but you look away, weakly clapping along with everybody else.Â
You feel tears prickly in your eyes.Â
And you hope he canât see the shining gloss when you try to blink them back.Â
â
When the show ends, youâre nearly debilitated with the pain in your abdomen, and the mortification from having watched Macheathâs other wife battle it out with Polly alongside Satoru. They mix into a terrible combination, one that forces you to come back into consciousness in the middle of the theater, the bright overhead lights nearly sending you into a psychosis.Â
There must have been something horrifically wrong with either the popcorn or the butter they put on it, because, despite your blurry view, you can see a few people in the audience huddled up in their seats the same way as you, despite the play ending.Â
Satoru cleans up next to you, taking his boxes of candy and your strewn popcorn bag, and sits back up to look at you nervously.
âAreâŚare you sure youâre okay?â His gentle tone is one that you barely register as your hands grip onto the armrest. You can barely even muster up a hum, giving him a shaky thumbs up as your stomach gurgles again, this time, audibly.Â
You try to stand, but your knees wobble, and you grip onto the back of the seat as your head sways. You can feel his grip on your elbow, nearly knocking over some people's bottles beside him from how fast he stands up, and your clammy face looks upward at him, swearing that he looks like an angel with the light framing his hair.
âI,â you clamp your mouth shut, swallowing thickly as you wince, taking a few seconds before you start again, âI have to use the loo.â The declaration comes out as a whisper, an ashamed one, and you canât look him in the face, even if his nods insistently, an arm of his wrapping around the expanse of your back as he tries to steady you
âThereâs one near the concessions,â he tells you, his voice strangely considerate and temperate, head leaning down to get closer to your ear so that you could hear him better, âDo you think you can make it?â
You feel like a child, but you only nod, neck and face flaring up in embarrassment as you allow him to guide you through the aisle of people, not looking anybody in the eyes as you make it out, your legs shaking slightly. If it werenât for him, youâre sure you wouldâve toppled down in pain by now.
The walk out of the theater becomes a blur, letting him guide you towards the bathrooms with one of your hands wrapped tightly around your stomach, as if it would ease the pain, and you feel the two of you come to a stop as you stand next to the ladies' door.Â
His arm around you falls, and you miss its warmth. He looks crossed with different emotions as you use the wall to hold yourself up, wobbling towards the bathroom as you shoot a look over your shoulder.Â
âThanks,â you whisper, your eyes widening and then shutting instantly at how much it hurts your head, âIâllâŚIâll be back.â The words slur in your mouth, and you donât give him any time to react before you leave through the wooden door and book it to a stall.Â
The moments that follow afterwards are what youâd expect from a case of bad butter.Â
You kneel on the floor, heaving everything up, trying to be as quiet as possible so the girls in the stalls around you canât hear, but itâs not a process that youâre particularly fond of and can feel your will to continue weakening as you leave back on the wall, your head in yours hands as you hear the toilet automatically flush.Â
At least getting it out of your system seems to have made the painful throbs dull down to an annoying little jab, but you feel like the bulk of the damage has already been done. Satoru was sweet enough that heâd try to never bring this up again, but you knew youâd have to live with the humiliation of this evening for a couple of months before you did something else that would top it.Â
You let your head tilt back and heave a gulp of air, palms jamming into your eyes as you attempt to swallow, your mouth too dry to produce any saliva. If Shoko were here, sheâd at least try to make you laugh about the ridiculousness of it all. But itâs just you and Satoru, and you donât know if you can even look at him for the next week after tonight.
Giving yourself a little more time to calm down, you heave yourself up from your position on the floor, careful not to touch the ground, and pluck your bag off the hook, miraculously throwing it on before you hunched, so as it wouldnât touch anything too icky.Â
You wash and scrub your hands, feeling dirty and still a little sick as you splash some water on your face, hoping the cool water will help snap you back. The girls around you talk, some drying their hands, others touching up their makeup in the mirror. One of the girls next to you watches you through your reflection, her face pale and strands of hair wet as she splashes some water onto her face.Â
âPopcorn?â She asks, and your eyes find hers through the mirror, blinking slowly as your hands grip the counter.Â
âYeah,â you take a deep inhale of air, sharing a small smile with her as you turn off the faucet, âDo you want some hand sanitizer?â You offer, going to reach into your tote, but she waves it off, giving you a kind smile as she continues to wash her hands, probably feeling just as bad as you were.Â
Giving her a small nod as you go to the paper towel dispenser, you reach around for your phone, opening it up as you quickly send a text to Shoko to update her on where you were, nothing too long, just to be safe, and tap the tip of your shoe on the ground, debating what to do next.Â
You could go see Satoru, probably waiting outside, and awkwardly explain that you should probably walk back, seeing how his germaphobic personality might not mesh with the fact that you had basically deposited your entire day in the theater washroom. You could also try to sneak away and hope that he was standing somewhere that granted you the option of stealth, but you quickly shook that off, quickly understanding how pathetic and childish it was.
After another moment of thought, you ball up the towel and throw it away, pushing the door open with your shoulder as you enter back into the lobby, the business having died down just a bit, and look around bravely for the man.Â
Spotting the pop of white near the end of the room, you take a few steps forward before you halt, stopping near a wall that offered you a little bit of insight as to what he was doing as you peeked around the corner.Â
2 - 0, you think sunkenly, watching the way Satoru talks to another girl, his broad shoulders shielding her from where you originally were, and that familiar ache enters your chest as you play with the hem of your sweater.
You could be sadistic when it came to your unrequited feelings; that much you had made peace with. But the universe was horrifically masochistic for the situations it thrust you into.Â
His face is a little more stiff than before, but still polite and kind as he cranes his neck to look at the girl. Her hair is pulled into a sleek bun, one that you always envied with how clean and precise some girls were able to make theirs, and watched how her hand lingered on his arm, something you could never get away with without his face falling into contained disgust.Â
Itâs unfair to think this way of this stranger, you remind yourself, after all, if you had the guts, youâd try to make a move on him too.Â
So, in another moment of decision-making, you get your phone out again, trying to contain the little tremble in your lips as you start drafting a message to him. Itâs for the best, you try to reason, telling him that you were too sick and didnât want to give him what you had. You send another message, saying that you were going to make your way back to your dorm and that you hope he had fun, thanking him as much as you could without sounding pathetic for how much he did this evening and for coming.Â
You also sent him the venmo transfer for the popcorn you were going to make earlier for good measure.Â
Where you were presented you an easy way to slip out of the building, one of the exits a little bit behind you, as you rubbed at your tired eyes, wrapping your arms around your torso as you prepared for the cold gusts of wind that were going to hit you the moment you stepped out.Â
People around you were talking in muted voices, laughter ringing around your ears as you ducked your head down, hoping that this time by yourself could give you some moments of peace, even though you knew that being alone with your onslaught of thoughts was going to do the exact opposite.
This campus was always bustling on a Saturday night, so you never felt too alone as you made your way away from the theater, pulling out your headphones as you geared up your phone to listen to some music before you heard a muffled shout from behind you.Â
Brows furrowing and your eyes slightly shifted in confusion, you, along with some other students around you, looked to see what the sound was.Â
To your utter horror and stupefaction, you watch as Satoru whips his head around, as if he were looking for something, or rather someone.Â
You stand like a deer in headlights, hands raised mid-way to your ears to put your headphones in them as you see him check his phone and then look up again, not caring that other people were looking at him strangely as he runs a worried hand down his face, typing something furiously fast as he looks around again.Â
Finally, it seems like he found what he was looking for when your eyes lock, and he sends you an ice-cold, deathly glare, one that made you glance around as if it were someone behind you more deserving of such a look, but before you can do anything, heâs jogging over to where you were frozen in place.Â
The closer he gets, the more you can see the agitation and vexation in his microexpressions, things youâve taken pride in before in reading, now not so much because you were on the receiving end of them.Â
When he comes to a halt, phone still in hand, his chest rises and falls a little fast, as if he were out of breath, and he runs another frustrated hand through his white locks as he pushes them back.
Your mouth gapes, and you suddenly remember that you were supposed to be âdeathly illâ according to the text you had sent him, and try to make your breathing seem more labored, your posture more haggard, but that doesn't work as he eyes you like he knows.
âWhere the hell are you going?â He snaps, and you wince slightly at his tone, and he reels, shooting you an apologetic look despite the fire burning inside of him from the way youâve been acting this night.
âBackâŚback to my place,â you whisper, voice hoarse, and he hears it instantly, expression melting as he takes the time to really dissect the way your eyes are slightly bloodshot, your lips chapped, your lashes clumped with tears, and he takes a small step back, taking in a deep breath.
âNo, I, shit,â he stammers, restarting, âAre youâŚâ His voice comes out as thick and low, and you almost feel it in your bones as he pinches the bridge of his nose, trying to calm his nerves as he gives you a tilted look, âAre you okay?âÂ
This time, heâs not asking because you were exhibiting signs of ailment, but because you had been acting like you were strangers since the moment you saw him tonight. Because your behavior was so off and unlike you, he was struggling to understand if there was something beneath the surface, something that had happened that he wasnât aware of, that was fueling this shift.Â
Your eyes seem to waver as you try not to look at him, attempting a nonchalant shrug that is anything but, as you think of how to lower your voice to a deeper register to appear more sick than you really are.
âI feel sick,â you mutter, coughing feigningly as you pull on the straps of your tote upwards, as you clear your throat, trying not to feel the weight of the looks other people were giving the two of you.
A single brow of his raises, one that you know is detecting bullshit as you rub at your nose.
âIâm sure,â he finally murmurs, rolling his eyes at the obvious statement, âI think the entire lobby heard you throwing up your small intestine.â That statement alone almost makes you keel over in shame, humiliation, embarrassment, and disgrace, but he continues, âButâŚare youâŚokay? Youâve beenâŚoffâŚthe entire night.âÂ
And you know you canât sidestep this landmine because you know how weird youâve been acting this evening, knowing that your attempts to make things better have only backfired, and the past couple of hours come screaming back at you, and for some stupid, depressing reason, cause a sting of tears to prick behind your eyes.Â
Your bottom lip catches between your teeth as your head falls slightly, your stomach still aching, your pride and confidence bruised, and you can still smell the lingering perfume of the girl he had been talking to, another reminder that you probably didnât smell like that perfume you had spritzed on so long ago.
âIâm okay,â you murmur, looking at the cracks on the ground, your voice shaking and wobbling and so clearly not true that you tilt your head back up to see his reaction, your face crumpling into a little wet laugh when he seems completely unmoved. Upon hearing your little giggle, his anger fades a bit, but is quickly replaced with another emotion when he hears you sniffle.Â
âLook, you-â he looks down at his phone to reread the text you had sent him, and his confusion seems to grow even more when he reads another notification, âDid you Venmo me?âÂ
You nod again, weakly, and when you look up at him, you see him fighting back a startled laugh, the quiver on his face making your lips pull up into a wobbly smile, your own emotions turning into something strange as you watch him shake his head in dismay, running a stressed hand through his hair.Â
âDid something happen today?â He asks, not taunting, never taunting, but something you canât place as you weakly not, a sheen over your eyes as you tug at your sleeves.Â
ââŚno,â you whisper, but the two of you know itâs far from the truth because even you canât hide the way your lips tremble and your hands shake slightly.Â
He presses his lips together tightly, his jaw ticking as he takes in your sunken form, something heâs never seen before, and chews on his cheek, thinking.Â
Sighing deeply, he pockets his phone, not able to look at your texts anymore because they made him too nauseous, and moves to be closer to you.Â
âCome on,â he says after a moment's silence, âLetâs go.â
You peek over at him, your brows furrowing slightly as you huff out a breath of air, trying to contain your tears as you sniffle again. Your bottom lip trembles slightly, and your stomach still has a lingering ache, but thereâs something else thatâs causing you to be like this, and you donât like whatever it is.Â
Heâs waiting, his elbow budging yours, and so you heave a sigh, rubbing at your cheeks as you nudge him back slowly.Â
âThank you, âToru,â you murmur, and he pauses, his tongue caught between his teeth because you rarely call him by that nickname, rarely use it unless you really mean it, âFor everything. And Iâm sorry,â you peek over at him from above your lashes, looking back at the ground at your shoe so you couldnât see his reaction, âI didnât mean to spoil your evening like this-â But before you can say anything more he raises a hurried hand, cutting you off.Â
âYou didnât spoil my evening, love,â he says quickly, his tone soft and teetering on worried, the little title slipping out of his mouth like it was natural, and if you werenât feeling like a pile of shit, you might have fixated on it more, his eyes roaming your anxious face.
But you insistently nod, your lips pressed together as if you were trying your hardest not to let out a pitiful cry in front of him.
âI-I did,â you voice cracks, and you rub at your eyes as some treacherous tears escape, and if only you could truly see the way he looks like he was breaking seeing you like this, âWith you getting the popcorn and then me getting sick and then the s-stupid show,â and he winces because he knows you were enjoying the play, could hear your twinkling laugh and he hates it whenever you feel the need to shut down the things you like because youâre worried other people will judge you for doing so, âAndâŚand I wish you had told Shoko o-or me about your date, I would have totally understood,â you try for a smile, your words choked and wobbly and if only you knew what you were doing as you ramble, âIâm justâŚIâm really sorry for everything." You finish with a quivering chuckle, your heart shaking like a leaf as you finally meet his eyes, hoping he canât see the little shake in your breathing when you finally do.
He breathes in deeply, and you can hear the gears in his head turning. But you nudge his side again, wanting to leave it at that. You can feel his eyes burning into the side of your face, but you donât want to look.Â
And youâre grateful that to some extent, he understands that, even if not fully. He murmurs a gentle come on, his hand gingerly wrapping around your arm as he tugs to next to him, his warmth enveloping you as he leads the way.
â
As much as you insist, the one thing he doesnât seem to budge on is taking you back to your dorm.Â
You pleaded with him, begged him not to get him sick, but he wouldnât listen. Itâs almost as if he steered you towards his building, a hand hovering over your back as he led you inside and up the elevator and to his room before you could even have the ability to ditch and run away.Â
âIf youâre going to talk, fine, but donât think Iâm insane enough to leave you alone right now.âÂ
That alone could have sent you into a psychosis if you werenât so worried about puking all over his bed.Â
With the way his germophobic and clean tendencies forbade him from going to public restrooms, youâre stunned that heâs even standing near you with everything that has happened this night. He even lent you his old band shirt and trousers from when he was going through a phase.Â
It was a blur as you spun around his room, rifling through his drawers for towels and soap and things he thought you might want to use in the shower. You stood awkwardly at the foot of his bed, not sitting down on the mattress because you knew how he felt about outside clothes on his sheets, and you said nothing as he handed everything to you, shooting you a shaky smile, one that was tense because you figured he was most likely worried about you staining or ruining one of his clean things. You donât say anything as he suddenly ducks, his knees hitting the floor as he starts undoing the laces to your shoes, mumbling something about how you bending over might not be the best for your stomach.
He was lucky enough to be in one of the newer buildings, meaning that he had a personal washroom, so he just led you to it and let you know to use the shower and to call out to him if you needed anything. He even had an extra pack of toothbrushes and boxers that he hadnât touched that he set aside for you.Â
You watched as he shut the door, the water roaring behind you as it began to heat up, and you silently stripped, neatly folding your clothes as you set them to the side. You took a tentative step inside his very clean shower, letting the steaming water hit you as you stood there for a couple of minutes, reflecting.Â
Washing your face, scrubbing roughly at the makeup and the evening away, you feel some salty tears bite at your cheek, and you donât even know why youâre crying right now. Well, in all honesty, you do, and thatâs probably what hurts the most.
Youâve never cried over Gojo Satoru before. Youâve never felt like it was so depressingly lost where youâd need to use these muscles and these feelings that you reserve for truly important things, but it felt like tonight was a confirmation and closure all in one. It felt like you slowly came to your senses, realized that despite your wishes, it was fruitless. You just werenât the kind of girl that he could cherish, at least, not in the way you wanted him to, and you knew it would be selfish of you to ruin any chance another girl could have of him being hers.Â
It took you a little longer than expected, but you feel like you were slowly gaining consciousness, the reality at hand as you turned the water off, patting yourself dry with the soft towel he had provided you.Â
You move carefully, brushing your teeth, pulling on the clothes he left you, as you assess yourself in the fogged-up mirror. Your eyes are a little puffy, but you can just tell him from earlier. Your voice is croaky, but youâll just bite your words back tonight until you can go back to your place in the morning and start distancing yourself from him until your feelings are choked out. Itâs time you began moving on, anyway.Â
Braving the other side, you take a deep breath before you carefully open the door, peeking around the corner until you see him sitting on the corner of his bed, furiously typing away until he hears the creak, looking up from across the room as you sheepishly smile.Â
He quickly puts his phone away, standing to his feet as he rubs his hands, not knowing what to do as he buffers.Â
âWas, erm, was everything good?â He motions to the bathroom, and you quickly nod, walking away as the steam from behind wraps around you, your body adjusting to the shift in temperature as your eyes stray to the couch in the corner, pillows and blankets set up in a makeshift bed.Â
âIt was great, thank you,â you say gently, âIâm sorry, again-â But he holds a hand up, cutting you off as he insistently shakes his head.Â
âReally, it was nothing,â he stresses, his cheeks dusted pink, his glasses discarded on his desk.Â
You nod again, embarrassed, and smile stiffly, pointing to the couch as you make your way over.Â
âThanks for this, too,â you say, but he seems to awkwardly shuffle, his hands behind his back, looking like he wants to say something, and your brow slightly quirks at his odd reaction.Â
âThatâsâŚthatâs for me,â he explains, moving away from his lofted bed as he shows you the changed sheets and the new pillow case covers, what he must have been doing in the time it took for you to shower, âYou can sleep here.â He pats the mattress, and you let out a disbelieving chuckle, shaking your head as you move closer to the couch, feeling like the worst person in the world.Â
âI couldnât,â you stress, but heâs already moving closer to you, looking like he wants to move you away from the cushions, âIâve already imposed enough. Iâll sleep here. Itâs fine, really, I like couches.â
He opens his mouth and closes it, lips pressed into a thin line.Â
âYou havenât imposed,â he finally says, as if thatâs all he took away from your rambles, and you sigh, pinching the bridge of your nose as you wave aside his polite nature and hold your hands up.Â
âIf I sleep on your bed after everything, Iâm never going to be able to look you in the eyes again, okay?â You put it bluntly, âSo Iâll take the couch, and youâll take your bed, and itâll be fine. Okay?âÂ
His tongue darts out, blinking rapidly as if heâs assessing his different options, and he looks at you, to the couch, and then to the bed. He seems like heâs torn, but he figures that the next best thing is to ignore this completely, shaking his head to himself as he moves around you to the cupboards behind your body, shuffling around until he finds what he needs.
âIâm going to wash up,â he mutters, glancing briefly at you as he pulls in his towel to his chest, his new pair of clothes, and you feel your chest tighten at the sudden dismissiveness in his tone, ad if heâs given up with you, and he makes his way to the separate room, âMake yourself comfortable.â He calls over his shoulder before he shuts the door behind him, and you give it a few seconds before you wince, falling back down onto the couch as you pull a pillow to your chest and allow yourself some time to relax before he comes back.Â
You allow yourself some time to look around, appreciating his tidy room and the mess-free atmosphere. You can smell the lingering scent of bergamot, and you see the warmer on his desk, a candle right under it. The wall that his desk is parallel to is littered with postcards and retro movie posters (mostly Star Wars and Star Trek). There are some polaroids he has pinned up, some with Suguru and Shoko from their years in secondary school, some photos he had taken himself with his camera. His bookshelf, which is nearly leaning over with how heavy it is, is at the end of the couch, and you shift to get a better look at the books he has on his shelf.Â
Youâre so rarely in here, especially by yourself, so you peek around, hearing the water still running, and lift from the cushions, your eyes squinting as you move closer, trying to make out the names on the spines, your curiosity getting the better of you.Â
Most of the shelves are full of textbooks from previous courses he had taken; therefore, most of them are science-related. Your eyes shift across the spines, seeing some books about botany and a couple about astronomy and astrophysics, a specific interest of his despite specializing in biochemistry. Notes are jammed into the empty spaces, and you make out his cursive on some of them, smiling despite yourself when you pull some of them out, making out his quick scribble from when he was either in class or studying.Â
The bookshelf itself is insanely tall for no reason, tall enough that youâre sure Suguru or even Satoru, in his sprawling height, would struggle reaching to top, so you have to go onto your toes, stretching your calves as you tilt your head upwards to look at some of the higher shelves, pulling some books out by placing a finger on the top of the spine, careful not to disrupt anything as you let yourself get lost in the names.Â
Suddenly, in the midst of all the chemistry and biology and Latin names, something familiar catches your eye, a book that was resting on its side on the highest shelf, and you struggle but can wedge yourself up on the edge of the couch to reach it.
The Count of Monte Cristo.
Your eyes widen in spite of your heavy emotions riddling your mind, and you turn it around, reading which edition and publisher it was as you scour through the pages, seeing his little citations in blue ink in the margins. You flip through the pages, each one highlighted and marked for different reasons, similar to the way you read through a book, and you close it shut, feeling like you were somehow intruding on something private as you set it back down in its initial place on the shelf until something else caught your attention.Â
Familiar titles and authors all paint the top level of his bookshelf, books that have nothing to do with his major or classes or even remotely with something you think he might enjoy reading, and you almost fall as you try to get closer.Â
A small box at the edge of the shelf piques your interest, and your lips catch between your teeth as you put all of your focus on this task, your nimble fingers moving closer, plucking it from its spot as you hold it gingerly in the palm of your hand, looking back to the bathroom as you hear the pipes groan as he turns the water off, an alarming sound, one that meant that you didn't have a lot of time left.
The box itself is also familiar, this one for more reasons than most, because you remember this box; you gave it to him for his previous birthday. amongst other little trinkets, finding it at a flea market, and thinking he could make some use of it. The wooden grain and the carvings on it were delicate, and your hold is even more careful as you unlock the little latch, the top lifting open as you peer inside.Â
Your eyes adjust to the sight, something you werenât necessarily expecting, as what you can only describe as junk littered the inside of it. A ticket stub from a movie he had seen, a dried leaf, candy wrappers, spare coins. You huff a little in disappointment, your nosey nature quelled by the contents within as you rifle around a little more, knowing you should stop and sit down and act like you saw nothing when you feel a glossy texture beneath your fingertips.Â
Gently, you pinch it between your pointer finger and thumb, pulling it out from beneath all rubble as you hold it closer to your face, your breath catching in your throat.Â
Itâs a polaroid of the two of you.
You remember the night well, a couple of months ago, during the summer. The four of you and a couple of mutual friends had rented a car and had gone up to a cabin, one of the many properties Satoruâs family owned, and had spent the weekend there. Suguru had insisted on setting up a fire and eating around it, and you had huddled up next to Shoko as the night got colder. You remember the voices and the laughs and the squeals as some of the friends, people you didnât know that well, began chasing each other, and you and Shoko watched, amused. You remember how one of the boys had been carrying a jug of water, one meant for inside, when somebody bumped into him, and he tripped, and the water came falling on you. You remember letting out a small laugh, shocked and forgiving as you assured the stranger that it was okay, shivering, nonetheless, as Shoko laughed uncontrollably.Â
But above all, you remember how Satoru hurried over from wherever he was, his stare worried that you were hurt, everything shifting when he saw the playful glint in your eyes, the fireplace illuminating your features in red, yellow and orange hues as you shrugged his worries off, his hands on your elbows, steadying you as Suguru took a photo of the moment, of your head thrown back in a laugh and his eyebrows pulled into an anxious line while his lips pulled into a gentle smile, the stars twinkling in the background as he steadied you to your feet.Â
You distantly recall hearing the click and asking Suguru about the photo, but hearing him say something along the lines of the lighting being too dark, but clearly that was a lie because you were holding the small photo in your hand, staring at it with no problem.
Before you can spend more time thinking about his junk box and what the hell this photo was doing in it, you heard some shuffling on the other side of the bathroom, the door clicking open as you scramble to put the box back, nearly tripping as you jump down, going back to where you were seated on the couch in a flash, appearing to look nonchalant as he stepped out.Â
You donât let your eyes linger too long on the way his shirt stretched tightly across his chest, or the way that the water has caused the fabric to slightly stick to his arms. He shakes his hair into a towel, ringlets of water falling as he pushes his hair back. You also try not to fawn too much over his mismatched pajamas, or how his trousers have prints of lightsabers in different colors all over them.Â
âHey,â he calls out gruffly, rubbing at the back of his neck as he tosses his towel into the hamper, his feet padding over to his desk as he checks the clock and then his phone for any notifications. He sighs, and your throat is dry, heart hammering in your chest as you realize a grave mistake.Â
In your haste to put everything back, the careful clutch you had on the photo had appeared nonexistent, and you had, for some reason, made the blunder of still holding the photograph of the two of you resting in the palm of your hand.Â
His back is still to you, and you swallow thickly, shuffling across the couch as you try to deposit it onto one of the nearer shelfs, hoping that if he were to see it he would think it had mistakenly fallen out or something less drastic, but his ears turn towards your movement, looking over his broad shoulders at the way you scramble to dispose of the film.Â
âWhat areâŚ?â His eyes pierce yours, and you sheepishly snap around to look at him, your hand going behind you as you shake your head, acting confused as his head tilts to the side, jumping from your seat at the edge of the cushion to your leg, angled towards his bookshelf.Â
âI was just looking at your books,â you quickly state, trying to cover your ass as lips purse together to give you a knowing look, a white brow rising so high that it disappears in his hairline, one calling you out on your obvious bullshit.Â
âHm,â he hums, taking a step closer to you, his skin still glowing from the shower as he makes his way to where you were sitting, towering over you as his arms cross deliciously across his chest, âThen what do you have behind you?âÂ
You feign innocence, blinking as you shake your head, acting dumb as you shrug.Â
âI,â you scoff, leaning back into one of the pillows as you shrug, âI donât have anything behind me.â
âRight,â he drawls out, his voice slightly deeper, intimidatingly so as he crouches down a little until his face is to face with you, his fingers moving to poke at your arms, twisting at an odd angle to hide behind your back, âThen you wouldnât mind if I gave you some medicine, yeah? Something that requires both hands?âÂ
Damn him.Â
You shake your head, swallowing as you shoot him a shaking smile.Â
âNot at all,â you stress, shifting uncomfortable as he nods, his eyes raking over your face one last time as he moves to his desk, pulling a drawer out, his medicine drawer, you deduce, and watch as he pulls out a bottle that seems to promise helping with stomach aches, and he turns it over, reading the label until he seems satisfied.Â
He strolls back to where youâre seated, holding the medicine bottle out towards you as he patiently waits.Â
You shoot him a fake smile, biting back annoyance as you shift awkwardly, wringing out a hand from underneath your body, the one thatâs not holding onto the photograph, as you take the bottle from his outstretched hands. You stare at it, realizing that heâs waiting for you to open it, and if it wasnât for the unimpressed look on his face, youâd almost wager that he was amused.
âSomething wrong?â He asks, fully knowing the answer, and you shoot him a glare.Â
âNo,â you bite back, your other hand moving slowly, careful not to crumble or tear the film as you place it under your thigh, showing him both of your hands as you twist the cap of the medicine bottle off, âSee?â
He nods, still unbelieving of your little tactic, as he takes the bottle away from you. You watch as he moves to set it down on the table, assessing the situation as he moves down in one swift motion, not giving you any time to understand what was going on as he loops one hands under your knees, another across your back as he lifts you up and over his shoulders like you genuinely weighed nothing more than a sack of flour and you screamed in horror at the rudeness of everything.Â
âFreak!â You shout, your face looking at his muscular back as he chuckles, not seeing anything yet as you try to kick his face, âThis is so degrading, put me down!â You scream, horrified and mortified as he pinches your calf that was near his chest.Â
âStop squirming,â he chides, but his voice is anything but chiding as he swivels around, your body jerking sideways as your head drops, motion sickness from already feeling a little off from earlier tonight, and you weakly punch his back, groaning.
âIâm going to puke all over you,â you threaten, but he just chuckles, shaking his head as he pretends to drop you, only to catch you last minute, his chest shaking with the sound, and you go to snap at him again,
 But you feel it, hear it the moment he sees the polaroid you had taken.Â
He goes tense, his grip on you tightening a little bit out of shock, and heâs suddenly silent. You wince, turning around, hoping he could take the hint and set you down, and he finally does, carefully setting you on the ground as he bends, picking up the photograph from where it had fallen onto the floor, and staring blankly at it.Â
Your hands clench, chest tightening as his eyes flicker from it to you, his face unreadable as his jaw clenches slightly.Â
Nobody speaks for a moment, the room suddenly as tense as it was when you first entered, and you watch as he puts the photograph face down on a random shelf, turning back to you as he sighs deeply.Â
âWere youâŚWere you going through my things?âÂ
The question shakes you, and your mouth parts as you clamp it shut.Â
âN-no,â you finally say, âWell, no, not really, but I guessâŚI donâtâŚI was,â your head drops to your hands in mortification as you motion weakly to the bookshelf, âI was only looking at your books.â You mutter weakly, not even able to look at him as you keep your stare trained on the books and their titles.Â
âI didnât mean to see it, butâŚâ You trail off, thousands of emotions racing through you as you try to deny it in your mind, sadness from before, anger with yourself, and suddenly feel vexation towards him for no particular reason as your eyes snap to his, âGod, why do you care? Itâs just a photo! I didnâtâŚI didnât mean to look, but I saw that thing I gave you, and I had thought you wouldâve tossed it away by now, and I just wanted to see what youâd keep in there andâŚyeah, fuck, okay, I looked! Iâm sorry, okay? ButâŚI mean, you keep it as a junk box anyway, itâs not like itâsâŚlike itâs an heirloom!â Youâre trying to ration and reason and trying to justify your clearly immoral actions as you ramble again, a terrible trait of yours, as he just takes it, takes your anger and your slew of words and your hurt as you feel your eyes water for no reason again as you hug your arms to yourself.Â
He says nothing for another moment, his eyes dark and piercing.Â
And then he moves.Â
His arm reaches upwards, up to the shelf, up behind your head to where the box was resting on the top shelf, and he slowly brings his hand down, your heart in your throat as he nearly throws the lid open, beginning to pull everything out one by one.
âThis,â heâs holding the ticket stub, âThis is from tonight.â
Your hands instantly drop to your sides as the anger fades and utter confusion floods your senses.Â
âŚhuh?
You had just looked at the box; how did you not notice? But you look closer at it, the date and the row and seat number nearly the same as the ticket stub you had thrown away after leaving the theater in a hurry, and your eyes flee up towards him, his chest heaving as he continues.Â
âThis is from when we went to the beach,â he pulls out a chipped seashell, and you recognize the pattern instantly, remembering the one time the four of you had gone to the shoreline, a seashell you had picked up and thought was interesting, showing it to him before Shoko called you away, but you donât have any time to compute that as he pulls out the next time.Â
âThis is from the candy you gave me during a study session we had,â he pulls out a wrinkled wrapper, âThis is the hair tie you left at my place and forgot,â he has a simple black elastic band sitting in the palm of his hand, but he could very much so be holding your pittering pattering heart the more he continues, his voice quivering slightly, and youâve never heard him ramble like this, ramble like you.
âThis is the leaf that was stuck in my hair that you pulled out,â he admits quietly, holding up the dried leaf from the time you had been walking next to him in the fall, the trees shaking in the wind, giggling at his white hair littered with the colorful leaves, âThese are the coins you gave me because I didnât have any change,â heâs holding up the spare sterlings you had lent him when he wanted some ice cream but forgot his card at home, and your eyes move up and down, a strange thumping sound in your ears because you feel like youâre about to faint, and he slows to a stop, his cheeks flushed and his hands shaking as his hand fills with all of the things you have given him over the past two years, things that a normal person would have thrown away or used or given back.Â
âThisâŚâ his lips tremble as he shuts them for a second, looking unlike the person youâve begun to know so deeply as his fingers wrap around something, pulling out a neatly folded white napkin, unused, as he takes in a steadying breath, âThis is the, erm, the napkin you lent me. From the night we first met.â
The box is empty now, but the room fills with moments in time, moments that you would cherish in the deepest parts of your mind before you went to bed, and pretended like they were fleeting and didn't matter so that you could face him bravely the next time you saw him. Moments that you thought he treated like normal moments in time that would pass and would never be remembered again, moments that you didnât think he wouldâŚhold onto.
Not the way you did.
âItâs notâŚjunk,â he admits thickly, âFor me itâs not.â
He stops, taking in a deep breath as he pushes his hair away from his face, carefully putting everything back in the box, including the photograph, as he sets it down, turning back to face your stunned expression.Â
âLook, have you ever seen me without my glasses?âÂ
You blink. Realizing that heâs waiting on you to answer, you blank before shaking your head slowly, and he nods.Â
âRight, right, well, I used to wear contacts. All the time. Ask Suguru o-or Shoko butâŚever since you said that you like the way glasses look, IâŚI donât know, I kept wearing them, hoping youâdâŚâ he trails off, his cheeks completely red, the tips of his ears a bright pink as he ducks his head down, scratching his nape sheepishly, whispering, âHoping youâd maybe say it again.â
Your eyes go wide, and you blink owlishly, swearing you look fish-adjacent with the way you can only give him this look on repeat as he takes your silence as an okay for him to go on a rare nervous tangent of his own.
âWhen I was little, my grandfather taught me how to tie his tie. He said that I should learn how to do it by myself so that I wouldn't need any help when I grow up.â
You donât say anything, and he doesnât get angry at your silence, but simply offers you a small, worried smile.Â
âIâve gotten pretty good at it,â he confesses with a farce laugh, something empty and shaky, "But you always ask to tie them, andâŚI always let you. Youâre the only person I feel comfortable with; the only person who it doesnât feel like,â he shivered, wincing slightly as if his skin was prickling at the thought of other people touching him the way you do, âThe only person who can touch me and I feelâŚokay.â
âI have a shelf of all the books youâve talked about,â he persists, motioning upwards, and you slowly look around to where The Count of Monte Cristo was sitting, along with all the other books youâve raved about in the past, thinking heâd only listen and give you kind comments, not knowing that he had gone home and sat down and read them all afterwards, âI stopped drinking whenever we go out together because you said you donât really like the smell of alcohol on peopleâs breaths. IâŚâ he rakes his hand through his hair again, a nervous fidget of his as he looks pleadingly at you, âI have my spot on Suguruâs couch because your spot is right next to it.â
âAnd our friends tell me that Iâm not crazy, thatâŚthat I might have a chance,â he motions a shaking hand between the two of you, and you allow yourself this time to blink again, âBut, I donât know,â his head ducks as he chokes back some tears, and your eyes widen even more, your eyebrows up in your hair at this point because youâve been rendered speechless, âItâs like any time I try to get closer to you, you leave or immediately want to be anywhere else or seem uncomfortable and I donât want you to feel that way, especially because of me.âÂ
When he looks up, his eyes are glassy, looking like a stormy ocean, and you feel tears prickle at yours, your breath lodged in your throat as you try to pinch yourself, swearing that you were in some vision, but this is real, and heâs not stopping, saying the words youâve only dreamt of.Â
âI know Iâm not reallyâŚthe kind of person that youâd usually go for,â he explains, his voice dim, âIâm not good with literary nuances or dissecting medieval texts. I canât read the way you read, and Iâm not good with understanding people the way you do, butâŚI want to be. I want to be that, I want to be good for you.â
Your mouth is wide open as you gape at him, trying to make sense of the words that you could only imagine as you stared silently at him saying to you, saying them to you here. The two of you donât say much for a second, your eyes blinking rapidly as your mind travels faster than the speed of sound, and you realize that heâs not lying or trying to make you laugh. Heâs not confessing his love for another girl, but instead clutching his chest because it felt like your silence was leading up to a personal rejection, and you can barely muster up any actual words as you surge towards him, stopping his rambling as your arms wrap around his neck, knees knocking against his as your lips slam against his.Â
Your heart plummets as you feel him still, his arms still at his sides as his eyes widen in shock, and you feel like youâve completely screwed things up, going to step away before his hands shoot upwards, wrapping around your waist and legs as he hoists you up, his lips moving against yours hungrily.Â
âYouâre soâŚso stupid,â you mutter in between breaths, his lips parting yours, soft and gentle and fast and desperate as they chase the way you taste, wanting to savor the plushness of yours as you mewl at the way his fingers dig into your soft skin, moving you effortlessly towards his bed as the two of you smile against each other, laughing in the air as your back hits the mattress. He fidgets with his glasses, pushing them up with his middle finger, coming a little loose after everything.Â
âYeah?â He murmurs, happy, giddy, his eyes bright and alive and electric as he nips at your bottom lip, his own shining with spit as he ducks down again, pressing kisses to your face, and you feel lightheaded, âTell me how Iâm stupid, baby.âÂ
You groan, lightly hitting his chest as he chuckles lightly, his kisses moving to your cheek, across your nose, as your smile turns bright enough to power the sun for the rest of eternity if it were to die in this very moment.
âI,â you huff, your chest burning and your hands tangled in his hair, fisting his shirt as you bring him in impossibly closer, âIâve had thisâŚdebilitating crush on you ever since I saw you,â you admit quietly, and he pauses, his sunset dusted cheeks turning into a wide grin as he huffs out a laugh and push his face away from your as you turn away in discomfiture, âAnd Iâve done everything to get you to notice me. Iâve embarrassed myself like, twenty times a day, hoping youâd look my way.âÂ
Satoru raises a slender brow, and you have the urge to pull him down by the collar, pressing your lips to his as he happily obliges, his tongue poking out to tease yours as he turns to an even bigger taunting menace as he pulls away.Â
âI canât stop looking at you,â he mumbles shyly, ducking down as he kisses your throat, and you shift slightly to give him more access, your breath catching in your lungs as his kisses turn into him sucking in a patch of skin, licking it over when heâs satisfied itâs going to mark. âI could barely focus on the play tonight because I kept looking over.âÂ
You let out a giggle, curling his soft strands of hair around your finger as he glances up to see your smile, pressing a chaste kiss as if he wanted to taste the way your unabashed happiness felt.
âAnd I try to sound smarter whenever youâre around,â you admit, and he snorts against the skin of your cheek again, enjoying how plush and soft it was, biting it as you squeal, but it was never hard enough to hurt, just experimental, and he laughs, âAnd you never even acknowledged the number of times Iâd bring up a science-y article I had spent the entire night analyzing just for you to ask me about my stupid book report.â You pout, and he attempts to kiss it off of you, his hands roaming the exposed skin of your waist and stomach, hot against your cold self, and he rolls his eyes.Â
âThatâs only because I was having tiny aneurysms whenever youâd do that,â he reasons, his face morphing into something sweet and gentle and something so entirely new andâŚyours that you wish you could take a picture of it, âAnd I wanted you to know that I remembered the things you told me.âÂ
You throw a hand over your face, not wanting him to see the gleefulness on your face, but he just wrings your hands away, slotting his long legs in between yours as he lets out another joyous laugh.
âCome on,â he insists, nudging his nose against your jaw, âHow else am I stupid?â
You let out an exaggerated groan, biting your lip as you try to think through your muddled thoughts.Â
âYouâŚyouâŚyou kept only the ridiculous things I gave you!â You argue, and he moves upwards slightly, giving you a pointed look, as if you were offending his lifeline or treasures, âIâve given so many things andâŚâ But you trail off, feeling his large hand gently wrap around your face, turning it to the side so you could see his room from his point of view.Â
âLook closely,â he softly urges, and your eyes trail across the walls, the shelves, the tabletops, âThis room is full of you.â
And heâs right.Â
The postcards he has up are the ones you gave the three of them from the time you had gone to Paris with your family over the summer, picking out individual ones you thought each of them would like. Vintage telescopes and microscopes you imagined him enjoying, but never enough to actually put them up. The music box that plays the theme of A New Hope, a simple melody from his favorite movie that you had also gotten for his birthday, sits on his bedside table. The books you had found on sale about plant biology, a little thing you thought he might like, rest on top of his bookshelf.Â
Your bottom lip catches between your teeth, and he chuckles at your quiet reaction, dipping down to kiss you again, wanting to nudge those sounds from you, even if he has to take them like this.
âIs this why youâd scare off any guy who came up to me?â You ask, but you already know the answer, just wanting to see the look on his face as he groaned, pinching your side as you giggle at his antics.Â
âI thought I was being so obvious,â he murmured against your lips, his tongue roaming through your mouth as you part it slightly for him, eyes fluttering shut at the feeling, a string of spit connecting the two of you as he pulls away, âEveryone could see how badly I wanted you.âÂ
You shrug, feeling sluggish from his movements.Â
âI didnât,â you argue faintly, and he looks up, white lashes fluttering as he grins, kissing the tip of your nose as he smiles.Â
âGuess I didnât either,â he whispers teasingly, âGuess weâre both stupid for that.âÂ
You go to fight back, but you let out an embarrassing moan at the way his hands travel across your stomach, pushing your shirt upwards slightly as your back arches upwards to chase the feeling. His hands are large and travel expertly across your body, as if heâs mapped out the small things that make you squirm and the things you itch for, as if heâs spent the past two years studying you instead of his dusty textbooks, and the thought alone makes you shake with anticipation.Â
âCanât believe I waited this long,â he murmurs against the skin of your stomach, kissing the plain of it as you shake with an uncontrollable giggle, âWhy didnât you say anything, hm? Did you like tormenting me like this?â
The question makes you stop.
Suddenly, everything from before comes rushing back.Â
It seems like it sets off alarm bells in your head, as if you had been functioning through a rose-tinted fog for the past couple of minutes, and suddenly reality hits you becauseâŚyou havenât told him for a reason. The months and months of pining after him werenât just because you liked torturing yourself, but because of your frankly very real fears of rejection for more reasons than one.Â
After a second, you huff, hands clenching by your sides as you feel a surge of feelings, deep ones that youâve choked on and tried to hide, and he notices the instant way you tense up, stopping his movements as he glances upwards at you.Â
âDo you want to stop?â He asks gently, tugging the hem of your (his) shirt back down to cover your stomach, and you let out a delicate laugh, a pensive look on your face as you chew worriedly on your face.Â
Sighing, you rub a hand down your face, sitting upright with your back resting on his headboard, and turn to look back at his desk, feeling the weight of his stare more than before as heat licks at your cheeks.Â
âWhat aboutâŚwhat about the others?â
The question rings through the room, bouncing off the walls, and his brows furrow in slight confusion as you still refuse to tear your eyes away from his desk, your hands resting in your lap, and he moves slowly, his large hands encompassing yours, unraveling your fingers, alleviating the tension you didnât know was building.Â
âWhat others?â Satoru asks after a moment, unjudgmentally, tenderly, and caring, patient as you huff out another shaky laugh, shrugging your shoulders as they fall in a heavy drop, your chest rattling with the emotions you had been trying to kill off from the past two years.
You chew on the inside of your cheek, feel his fingers against yours, and your gaze flickers to his before going back to focusing on something to the side.Â
âThis is gonna sound stupid,â you preface, but his thumb presses into the palm of your hand, a small sign that he wasnât going to judge anything that came out of your mouth because he just showed you that he kept the first napkin you had ever given him.Â
âButâŚâ you drop your head into your hands, your voice muffled as you continue, âI see the girls that come up to you. O-or your ex. ViâŚright?â You peek up, and his eyes are slightly squinted, nodding slowly, as if he wants you to make your point before he says something, âAnd theyâre just soâŚugh, I donât knowâŚperfect? Like, they seem perfect for you. Either theyâre stunning, or theyâre in your major, or theyâre both, or justâŚso different, and I feel like IâmâŚnotâŚthat.âÂ
He blinks slowly, piecing this together with the fact that he asked you why you hadnât spoken up sooner, and his lips tug upwards in a little grin, one that makes you want to roll your eyes if not for the storm brewing inside of you, and he tugs you closer, one of his hands wrapping around your waist as he drops his head onto your chest.Â
âI think youâve got it backwards,â he says against you, his voice vibrating off of you, and you feel it shake you to your core, his hand moving up and down the expanse of your back as you hand unconsciously move upwards, back to his soft white locks, âBecause none of those girls could measure up to my perfect girl.â
You stop, glad he canât see the large smile on your face as you head falls backwards, thumping against the wood as your chest swells with joy, and when he looks up, his goofy grin could match yours, and you push him away by the cheek, but he just moves, kissing the palm of your hand as you laugh softly.
âYouâre so stupid,â you repeat, but he knows youâre only masking the giddiness you feel as he nods against your hand, his eyes shimmering and bright as he sits up a little straighter, nearly encompassing you with his body as he leans closer, his nose nudging yours as the two of you smile against each other's lips.Â
âYouâve got that right,â he whispers in the small space of air between you, âIâm such a fool for you.âÂ
You decide then that you donât give him any more time to talk or say something else that could turn your insides to mush, so you tug him down by his neck, his lips curling upwards as they press against yours.Â
He seems like heâs experimenting with kissing you, as if he knows youâre learning in real time, and has no qualms taking it slow. He lets you take the lead when you want, lets you dart your tongue out slightly, and opens his mouth to welcome you in. When you get a little shyer, he takes the initiative, hands roaming around your hips, pulling you into his lap as you mewl him again. When he could tell you needed some air, heâd pull away, kissing the corners of your lips, your cheeks that he loved so much, the edge of your brows that would pull into the cutest furrows whenever you were confused, and cherished you the way heâd been aching for ever since he saw you at that stupid English department banquet.Â
You chase the feeling of his skin on yours, the way his fingers feel when they trace your features, the way his hands run up your arms, the way his palm cups your jaw. Your hands seem to have a mind of their own, his as well, as they drop down to the drawstring of his trousers, running up the smooth and hard skin of his abs, feeling greedy as you run a finger down his delicious v-line. You feel him shuddering beneath you, and you grin evilly, your mouth water as you untie his pants, your fingers running over the white tufts of hair of his happy trail, and your shuffle around a little bit to help him as he tugs up the hem of his old band shirt that you donned, and you almost let out a whine when they suddenly stop, lashes fluttering open to see what he was going to do next.Â
His forehead drops onto yours, one of his arms pulling you closer to his chest, the other still cradling your face, and you see the way his face has gone pink, a light hue that you rarely see him in.Â
âJust so you know, this, em, this isnât how I wanted things to go.âÂ
You let out a stark laugh, your hands pressing against his as your fingers curl around his hair, tilting your head slightly to the side.Â
âYeah? How were things supposed to go?â You ask, trying not to sound too selfishly drunk on him as he shrugs, his lips pressing together as he divulges you in his own fantasies, things heâd only think about when it was the two of you together and heâd be wanting to confess his undying love for you while youâd be rambling on about John Milton or another one of your other favorite authors.
He looks shy, and you want to bite him, watching him gather up some of the courage you had kissed away as he takes one of your hands away from his arms, playing with your fingers as he pushes some of his tousled hair away from his face.
âWell, I was planning on telling you how crazy I am about you after this whole day I had planned out,â he starts, scratching the back of his neck as he turns a little red, âI had, erm, bought tickets to the museum youâve been wanting to go to,â he says, his eyes flickering from your face to the side as his head drops, and you nudge it back up as he chuckles, âThe one displaying the original copies of those old books you like so much.âÂ
He swallows, taking a deep breath, and then continues.Â
âAnd I wanted it to just be us, nobody else. I would have obviously read up on all the authors on exhibit, so I wouldnât look like a total idiot when, or if, you had come, and Iâd spend the entire time sweating and hoping you couldnât see.â You giggle, and he squeezes your hand, rubbing his thumb up and down the back of it in a soothing gesture. Your eyes drop, urging him gently to continue because you feel like youâre in a dream, and if he stops, youâre going to wake up from it.Â
âAfterwards, Iâd take you to this restaurant Iâve heard is good,â he grins boyishly, tongue poking in between his lips, âAnd when we were done, Iâd walk you back to your place andâŚtell you that I liked you then.âÂ
You canât stop smiling, and he canât stop either.Â
âJustâŚjust that you liked me?â you tease, humming as he shifts a little, his arms wrapping around your waist, âNot to beâŚselfish, or anything, but I feel like this way was so much more romantic with your little box of trinkets and your rambling.â He groans, pinching you lightly as you snicker, but he ultimately shakes his head, smoothing over the place he pinched with his soothing touch.
âNo, no,â he mutters, his face determined, as if he was recounting everything he had planned to say, âIâd tell you how much I liked the way you look when you start talking about your day,â his thumb brushes across your cheek, running across the soft hair of your brows, âAnd how much I like the way you care about everything you do and everybody around you. Iâd tell you that I really like it when you tell me about the book you just finished, and how much I admire your kind heart. Iâd tell you that IâŚI like how wonderfully weird you are, and how I wish I could be half as interesting as you are on a regular day. I would have told you how youâre always the first person I look for when I enter a room. AndâŚâ his shoulders rise and drop as he pulls you impossibly closer, âI would have really hoped that Suguru and Shoko were right about this because Iâd beâŚa little embarrassed if not.â
You hum, pretending to think as you twirl his white strands around your pointer finger even though you feel like youâre on fire and you canât breathe and everything feels like itâs burning in the best way possible, try not to freak out because the guy youâve been in love with basically just admitted the most amazing things to you, so you take a steadying breath, your head tilting as you smile.
âAnd what if I didnât want you to stop?â You feel heat blossom across your lungs when you hear his breathing hitch, âAfterâŚafter youâd do all of that?âÂ
He nods, surveying his different options as his blue eyes turn into a slightly different shade, as if they were dependent upon his emotions, and his hands turn a little heavier as they roam across your stomach, up across the skin of your ribcage, and they stop right under your bra.Â
âHmm, well, I wouldâve have asked you what you wanted to happen next,â his smile is wicked as his face drops down to your neck, leaving wet kisses until he ends up at your collarbone, right at the neck of your shirt as you nearly whine, feeling his teeth scrape just barely over the soft skin, âWhat is it you want, baby? What else would you want me to do?â
Your breathing stutters, and you arch your back a little, letting his nimble fingers fiddle with the clasp of your bra, giving you enough time to turn him down, but you donât; you want, no, need, for him to continue.Â
âI,â your breath lodges in your throat when he opens the clasps, helping you tug the straps down until your old ratty bra, the comfortable one that you were sure wouldnât matter being worn tonight because you never imagined something like this happening, but he doesnât care, setting it to the side as he wait patiently, menacingly, for you to find your words, âIâd probably ask you toâŚto come up.âÂ
He groans lightly, a mix between a guttural moan and a laugh.Â
âYeah?â Itâs not so much a question, but a confirmation as you nod, shivering when his hands move back upwards, your chest heaving as you feel his nimble and long fingers cup your tits, his fingers running over your nipples as your head falls to his shoulders, âThen what? What would I have done after I came up?âÂ
You go down, you want to say tauntingly, but donât have the willpower as his thumb flicks over a nipple, and you whine.Â
âEh, youâd, uh, Iâd, we, would probably end up onâŚon my bed and Iâd probably be wearing something cuter than this,â you try to say indifferently, and he rolls his eyes because you could be wearing faux feathers glued to the entirety of your body and heâd still think you were the most beautiful woman to ever exist, âAnd Iâd probably be a little more confident telling you what I,â you gulp audibly, your cheeks heating up, âWhat I want, seeing that you wouldnât have just seen me at my virtual lowest hours earlier.â And he chuckles, and it feels right, feels like this was meant to happen as his hands fall from your breasts, trailing down your stomach as you shuffle a little, moving to lie back on his pillow as he shuffles to, situating his body in between your thighs, waiting for your next command.Â
Satoruâs grin turns soft, like he knows what it is you want, but needs to hear you say it for him to feel okay doing the thing thatâs setting him alight. His hand moves, taking yours into his again and intertwining his fingers between yours.
â⌠what do you want, love?â His voice is thick, and it settles deep in your bones as your head falls, squeezing his fingers as you sheepishly mutter something, and he barely hears you, nudging you to say it a little louder as you groan in embarrassment, an arm flying over your face as your head falls back, not able to look him in the eyes as you timidly whisper;
âFor you, likeâŚto do stuff,â you murmur so quietly you think that your lips barely even moved, âToâŚto eat me out orâŚ.or whatever.âÂ
When he says nothing for a moment, you peek between your fingers and see his cheeks flushed, a shit-eating grin on his face as he sets his chin down on your stomach, his glasses crooked as his brow arched. He moves, gingerly tugs your arm away from your face, and sits down by your side as he presses a chaste kiss to your stomach.Â
âYeahâŚ.yeah, I think I can âeat you out or whateverâ,â he says, and you groan ever louder, flicking his forehead as he chuckles, taking your words as the sign to go, go, go, his fingers moving excruciatingly slow as they start to tug the waistband of your pants and boxers (his, again), down, looking up at you for a little assistance, and you lift your hips, allowing him to slide them down fully.Â
You blink, relaxing that youâre completely bare right now, but he doesn't give you any time to be self-conscious as his pupils seem to blow up with lust, hungrily eating up the way your pussy is glistening with want and need, his cheeks a fiery red as his chest moves in a large exhale, like the air had been knocked from him.Â
His hand raises upwards to take his glasses off, but you make a sudden movement, as if your body was functioning on autopilot, when your hands wrap around his wrist, stopping him from doing anything else.Â
âDonât,â your voice is barely above a whisper, âK-keep them on.âÂ
His white lashes flutter slightly, and he gives you one of his boyish smiles that you love so much, his teeth shining as he presses his lips to the inside of your wrist, nodding slowly as he pushes his glasses back on.Â
âIf I knew that waiting so long for you to tell me that you liked my glasses would have been when Iâm about to do this, I think I could have waited another couple of years more.â He says honestly, dropping himself down between your thighs, and your eyes flutter shut, head falling back on the pillow as you feel his warm hands slowly move up and up and up, parting you ever so slightly so he could situate himself better between them.Â
Your mouth parts when you feel his fingers move on the outside of your lips, collecting the slick, and you hold back a wanton moan, your hands flying up to his hair, tugging him closer. You watch as he pushes his glasses up by using his shoulder to move the frames up, and when his lips suddenly latch onto your clit you actually think youâve gone insane.
His tongue darts out, moaning like a whore when he finally gets to taste your saccharine taste, his eyes rolling back as he parts your lips, the sound greedy as he moves a thumb to circle your clit, moving down to run his tongue selfishly up and down your pussy for his own pleasure, needing to feel you or else he was going to go mad.Â
âYou taste,â his voice is muffled as he pants against your cunt, using a finger to move up and down the slit, âYou taste sweet,â he said it like he was startled, like he had spent hours and hours studying female anatomy and how to pleasure a girl and what to do, but never could have expected this unexpected turn, to taste you and realize that you were sweeter and more delicious than any candy heâs ever eaten before, âWhy do you taste soâŚso sweet?âÂ
You would laugh if you werenât so turned on, saying some jumbled-up words as he ducks down again, your fingers digging into his scalp as his thumb goes a little faster on your swollen nub, his long pointer finger rubbing at the outside of your pussy, getting ready to push it in.Â
When he finally does, your walls instantly clamp down on it, and you moan, not expecting the stretch, and he gives you some time to adjust. Itâs not like youâre a prude, youâve at least attempted this before, but your fingers arenât like Gojo Satoruâs, and you feel like you could come just from this.Â
âFeeling good, baby?â He questions, and you hurriedly nod, hearing him chuckle.
âYeah,â you stutter out, your teeth clenched as you feel his finger start to move out, and then your mouth falls open as he starts to slowly pump it in and out of you, a mind-bending pace that has you clenching around him, âFeels good.âÂ
He nods, taking it as confirmation to keep going, and he switches between a finger and his tongue, darting them inside of you. He keeps his pressure on your clit, and you grow impossibly wetter when he leans down to lay a cute little kiss on it, his glasses slowly fogging up.
Gojo Satoru eats you out like youâre his last meal, like heâs been living like Tantalus for his twenty years alive, and finally, the fruit tree doesnât move from his grasp, and heâs able to divulge like the greedy and sinful man he always has been.
Sometimes the hand thatâs occupying your clit moves upwards, pulling his old shirt up and over the expanse of your torso to see your supple skin shake beneath his large palms, and he cups your tits, groaning like a slut when he feels your nipples pebble, and he pinches them between his pointer finger and thumb, twisting a little to feel you squeal, and he grins, softening his touch as he smooths it over, moving back down to your nub as if nothing happened.Â
You watch from hooded eyes, watch the way his eyes close, like heâs savoring your taste. You see the way he slowly ruts into the mattress, like he was getting off to this, and the thought itself makes you gush even more.Â
When heâs satisfied that youâve adjusted to his one finger, he decides to slip another one in, and the size alone makes you whine, the stretch something that causes tears to dart in the corner of your eyes in delicious pain.Â
âHmm,â you moan, one of your hands fisting the sheets, the other tangled in his white hair as you guide him up and down, and you can swear you feel him smiling against you, as if your reactions were a symphony to his ears, âItâs not like I really have a metric butâŚyouâre good at this.âÂ
Satoru chuckles, looking up at you, and the sight knocks the air out of your lungs. His cheeks are flushed, wet in the dim lighting of the room, his glasses crooked, and his hair a mess, but he looks positively radiant as his smile flashes bright.Â
âI hope I am,â his voice is lower than youâve ever heard it, and it vibrates against your pussy, âIâve been studying.â
Despite feeling lightheaded, his statement chased you to come to your senses a bit, sitting up on your elbows as you looked at him through furrowed brows.Â
âStudying?â You parrot, and he nods eagerly, his thumb putting pressure on your sensitive and swollen clit as your mouth falls open in a silent moan, barely able to keep your eyes open as he explains.Â
âMhm,â he hums, his nose, the beautiful nose that you want to kiss all over, rubs expertly on the hood of your clit as he presses chaste, sloppy kisses to your cunt, âI read all these posts and books and papers about what the best way to eat a girl out,â his voice is hoarse, licking up and down your syrupy inner walls, his two fingers never stopping their relentless pace as something deep in your stomach begins to build up, âBrushed up on someâŚ.anatomy and the sorts.â
You let out a breathless laugh.Â
Because of course he had.Â
âYou,â your mouth clamps shut when he hits the spongy part deep inside of you that makes your toes curl, your lashes fluttering against your hot cheeks, and you canât talk correctly but make the attempt to, barely above a whisper as you mutter, âY-youâre insane.âÂ
He rolls his eyes, but doesnât deny it as his thumb swirls in figure eight patterns on your clit, his pointer and middle fingers curling upwards, and you canât really find it in yourself to chide him when heâs making you feel heavenly.Â
You feel like youâre unraveling at his skillful hands, and it definitely doesnât help that whenever you have the guts to open your eyes youâre met with the view of Satoru loosing himself in your cunt, as with each second that passed, he was going just as crazy as you were, and it felt like that familiar feeling of an orgasm building, but unlike anything youâve ever felt before.
Itâs almost like he knows, because he seems to go faster, switching between licking and his fingers, and your grip on him tightens, and he moans, welcoming the sting.
âCome on,â he presses, urging, needing you to finish around him, to taste your relief on his tongue, âCome on, baby, I know you wanna come.â
You nod, sweat dotting your forehead, your chest heaving up and down with labored breaths, that knot inside of you tightening as your thighs clamp down around his head, your walls pulsing around his fingers.
It gradually builds, but that feeling suddenly snaps, and you jolt, your back arching, moving into him, his fingers never stopping, his thumb and lips on your clit, suctioning in a perfect way that sends you over the edge. You clench tightly around him, creaming, spasming as you gush, your eyes rolling back in your head as you let out the quietest but sweetest moan, and when you feel your orgasms slow to a dull pulse, you fall back onto his mattress, limp as he doesnât stop instantly.Â
Instead, he lets his fingers slow down carefully, as if youâd get immediate withdrawal from the feeling of having him inside of you. He kisses your clit once, then twice, and pulls away, connected by a string of spit, slick and your cum, and when you finally have the energy to wring your eyes open, the sight of him wrecked form eating you out makes you even more wet.
You take a few moments to catch your breath, your chest heaving up and down, your hand falling away from his soft locks as it sprawls across your stomach, and you stare helplessly at the ceiling.Â
Blinking owlishly, you awkwardly scootch upwards until youâre resting on the back of the headboard, and you watch as he brings his fingers up to his mouth, grinning coyly as he moans at the taste of you, and if you could, youâd pinch him, but you just weakly push him with your foot, looking away abashedly.Â
âNasty,â you whisper hoarsely, your voice gone, and he coos, crawling towards you, bringing his face towards yours as he nudges his nose with yours, and youâre weak, giving in as he hungrily presses his wet lips to yours.Â
You can taste yourself on him, and you mewl, feeling his tongue in your mouth, licking inside of you, wanting you to enjoy what he just enjoyed, and your shaking hands grip around his neck. He pulls away a little bit, biting your bottom lip before kissing it, and he rubs a loving thumb across your cheek, his eyes turning gentle as he peers at you through those ocean eyes through those stunning glasses you adore so much.
You donât trust your voice, so instead you let your hands unravel from his nape, moving upwards towards the expensive frames, straightening them on his nose, making sure they rest correctly on his pink ears, and he watches silently, reverently, as you push him back gently by the chin, making sure that they looked right on the bridge of his nose.
âHmm, looks better,â you whisper affectionately, kissing the tip of his nose like youâve always wanted, and that seems to push him over the edge, quickly wrapping his arms around your midsection as he pulls you closer to him, falling back on the bed as he tugs you into his chest, his head resting in the crook of your neck.Â
At that moment, you feel it, and your eyes blink rapidly from their hazy state as his hard-on pressed against your thigh.
âHey,â you murmur, poking his side, but he doesnât seem like budging, his overwhelming heat and size covering you, his thick arms not moving from caging you to him, and you canât even wrangle free, ââToru, what about you?âÂ
He doesnât even lift his head, just hums against the skin of your neck, his lips busy leaving hickeys all over it, ones youâre going to deeply regret in the morning but canât seem to care right now except for the boner youâre sure is deeply uncomfortable.Â
âWhat about me?â He dreamily replies, his voice barely audible, and you roll your eyes. From this angle, you can see the way his shirt is riding up, his abs on display, the veins leading downward prominent, and his trail of white hair is calling your name.Â
You wedge your hand in between your bodies as you press against his cock, the movement causing him to yelp and shudder, whimpering against you as you snicker, sure that now heâs going to give you some more undivided attention.
He sits up a little bit, resting his head on his fist, his elbow on his pillow as he peers down at you, his brow slightly cocked, not looking impressed with being tormented like this after treating you so kindly by giving you the best orgasm of your life.
âNot nice,â he reprimands warmly, poking your side as you yelp, his finger much more sturdy than yours, âYouâre not really supposed to grab dicks like that, yâknow?â
Your cheeks heat at his choice words, and you shrug, feigning innocence as you bring his hand to yours, admiring the large size a syou play with his fingers, feeling more touchy than usual, and youâre ever so glad that he lets you.
âIâm just saying,â you mumble, flashing him a look that sends a nonexistent punch to his gut, the blood rushing south because you look ethereal like this, âDonât you want me toâŚreturn to favor? Tit for tat?âÂ
He chuckles, his thumb moving across your eyebrow, soothing the furrow as it moves down to rub against your cheek.Â
âWe can do tat later,â he uses your terminology and you giggle, your lips pulling into a bright smile because youâre sitting in a post-orgasm afterglow with your crush, and that stupid theorem you had stressed over doesnât even matter anymore because the impossible outcome is happening right now and you donât bother with looking normal because youâre feeling anything but, âI still have a date I need to take you out on.âÂ
You try not to gush like an idiot, your head falling into his sturdy chest, and his hand moves up and down your back, tracing stars and circles and hearts and writing his name, as if he wanted everyone to see the invisible ink thatâs bleeding from his fingertips into you.
His finger hooks around your jaw, tilting your head upwards so he can see you better.Â
âYou wanna date me?â You ask breathlessly with dizzingly joy, the question holding no weight because the two of you already know the answer, but he indulges you, his head falling to yours, forehead against yours, glasses sitting perfectly on his perfect face thatâs pressing against your perfect one.Â
âI want to be yours,â he murmurs, vulnerability thick in his voice as your lashes flutter, âSo, yeah, I want to date you.âÂ
You giggle again, and you lift your head a little to slot your lips against his plush ones.Â
âI want to be yours too, Satoru,â you say, and he groans, his eyes rolling back like those were the only words heâs been dying to hear, and he lets out a victorious laugh, something happy and sickeningly sweet because the girl heâs been in love with for the past two years just so happens to love him back.Â
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Sukuna should have known he was screwed the moment you told him you wanted to go to the mall for "just a few clothes." Now he follows you, shuffling, his arms already laden with bags overflowing with fabric, unnecessary items, and beautifully wrapped treats. He grunts, of course. But he follows anyway.
And then you see it: the makeup store, all glittering. Your eyes lock onto it as if it's calling you. Sukuna sighs heavilyâbut he doesn't say anything. Because it's you. And even though he won't admit it, he likes watching you.
You glide through the aisles like a strategist, fingers brushing over each package, brows slightly furrowed in your earnest quest. You pick up a lipstick, test it. A thoughtful sigh. A pout in front of the mirror.
Then you call him. "Come here," you say, your voice as soft as possible to make him listen.
He approaches without question, intrigued but obedientâwhich, coming from Sukuna, is almost a miracle. And without warning, you kiss his cheek. A quick, tender kiss. You pull back immediately, carefully examining the kiss mark.
"Such a pretty color," you murmur, already testing another shade on your lips.
He groans but remains perfectly still. He accepts his fate as a test subject, so you continue. One shade. One kiss. This time, a little lower, on the sharp line of his jaw.
Your gestures are gentle but methodical, as if you were testing the colors on the back of your hand. Except it's him, his cheek, the back of your hand.
People pass around you. A few curious glances linger. He doesn't pay attention. His whole world narrows around you: your quiet laugh, the warmth of your breath, the soft pressure of your mouth against his skin.
By the sixth shade, his face has become a canvas of delicate kisses. He finally sees himself in the mirrorâhis cheeks stained pink, coral, warm brown⌠and he's so silent.
You return to his side, lips coated in a deep burgundy that suits you so well. You turn the mirror toward him, proud of your work.
"So, which one do you prefer?" you ask, a teasing smile on your lips.
Sukuna doesn't answer. He watches you, red to the ears, his arms still laden with bags, unable to say a single word. He just leans toward you and places a kiss on your lips.
"This one brat," he breathes with a slight smile that he addresses only to you.
pairing â undercover prince satoru x servant reader
synopsis : satoru is many things: a crown prince in disguise, a so-called eunuch draped in silk and secrets, and entirely too clever for his own good. but when you appear in the middle of palace chaosâcalm, competent, and wholly unimpressedâsatoru finds himself watching a little too closely. you cure what the court physicians couldnât, ask the wrong questions with the right kind of precision, and somehow manage to look like you belong everywhere and nowhere at once. he tells himself itâs curiosity. itâs duty. itâs absolutely not personal.
but then again, inconvenient things rarely are.
tags â oneshot divided into two parts, apothecary diaries au, fluff, humor, slow burn, sexual tension, secret identities, enemies to lovers, royal court politics, witty banter, mutual pining, medical drama, imperial intrigue, disguised royalty, forbidden affection, reader is so done, satoru is so annoying, suguru is tired, palace hijinks, touch-starved idiots, eventual smut, masturbation, possibly inaccurate court etiquette & other cultural inaccuracies, i tried my best please be kind ^^
wc â 29k | gen. masterlist | part two | read on ao3?
a/n: yes this was meant to be a oneshot but tumblr said no to my 46k draft so i split it into two parts. part two will be up tonight or tomorrow!! i also added A LOT while editing because i have no self-control. huge thanks to power thesaurus for enabling the vocabulary overdose. sorry for the long wait and i hope you enjoy <3
a calamity of cosmic proportions had just befallen the inner courtâor so the wrenching sobs reverberating through the silk-draped pavilion would have you believe.
a hairpin, delicate as a poetâs ego, had snapped clean in two, its jade heart fractured like the dreams of a dynasty on the wane. the air thrummed with tragedy, thick with the scent of jasmine oil and the faint, acrid tang of ink from a nearby scholarâs overturned pot, as if the universe itself had taken offense at the ornamentâs demise.
at the pavilionâs heart, satoru held court like the star of an imperial opera, his presence a spectacle of calculated excess.
âit is truly a heartbreak of craftsmanship,â he intoned, cradling the broken shard as if it were a soldier felled in a war only he had the imagination to mourn. the jade caught the morning light, refracting it into mournful glints that danced across the lacquered floor. âthis was no mere ornament, my lady. thisâthis was a poem carved in bone and stone, an elegy to elegance itself.â
the concubine, lady mei, sniffled with the fervor of a stage heroine, her silk sleeves fluttering like moth wings as she dabbed her eyes with a gold-threaded handkerchief. each sob was a performance, perfectly pitched, as if sheâd rehearsed it in front of a mirror. her powdered cheeks glistened with artfully placed tears.
satoru sighed, the sound heartfelt and entirely performative, a maestro playing to an audience of one. he tilted his head just so, pale hair spilling over his shoulder like moonlight cascading over porcelain, catching the light with a shimmer that felt choreographed.
a breeze curled through the open lattice, lifting the hem of his embroidered robes with such enviable timing it seemed less natureâs doing and more the work of a bribed servant. with satoru, both were plausible.
behind him loomed suguru, a study in austere black, hands clasped behind his back with the rigidity of a man bracing for chaos. his expression was carved from stone, all sharp angles and weary resignation, as if heâd been sculpted to endure satoruâs theatrics for eternity. his hair, tied with habitual neatness, let a few rogue strands graze his cheek.
his gaze skimmed the scene, heavy with the exhaustion of a man whoâd watched this exact farce, with only slight variations in props, more times than the palace cats had stolen fish from the kitchens.
âperhaps,â satoru declared, raising the jade fragment aloft as if offering it to the heavens for judgment, âwe must mourn it properly. a vigil, steeped in moonlight? a commemorative tea ceremony, with cups etched in sorrow?â
âa funeral pyre,â suguru muttered, voice dry as the desert beyond the red cliffs. âiâll fetch the kindling. maybe some incense to mask the absurdity.â
satoru ignored him with the serene grace of a man whoâd long since perfected the art of selective hearing, his eyes never leaving lady meiâs trembling form.
âfear not, my lady,â he vowed, dropping to one knee with the flourish of a knight swearing fealty. he clasped her hands, his fingers cool and deliberate, adorned with a single ring that glinted like a conspiratorâs promise. âi shall find a replacementâmore exquisite, more divine, more⌠unbreakable. yes, even if i must scour every silk merchant, every jade carver, every whispering bazaar between here and the red cliffs.â
he let the silence stretch, heavy with portent. lady mei gasped, her breath catching like a plucked zither string. a single tear traced her cheek, glistening like dew on a lotus petal.
mission accomplished. satoruâs lips twitched, the faintest ghost of a smirk, gone before anyone but the narrator could catch it.
behind them, suguru pinched the bridge of his nose with the slow, methodical frustration of a man who knew it would do nothing but give his fingers something to do. his sigh was a silent prayer to deities whoâd clearly abandoned him long ago.
when the theatrics finally subsidedâlady mei comforted, her handkerchief sodden, the jade fragments swaddled in silk like relicsâsatoru glided from the pavilion with the poise of a swan who knew exactly how devastatingly beautiful he looked. he trailed perfume, a heady blend of sandalwood and smug self-satisfaction, curling behind him like incense smoke.
suguru followed, a silent shadow with a scowl etched so deeply it mightâve been carved by a jade artisan.
once they slipped beneath a carved archway into a quieter corridor, the performance peeled away like silk robes sliding over lacquered floors. satoruâs spine straightened, the exaggerated flourishes vanished, and he walked with the easy, unyielding grace of a man born to command palaces.
the air here was cooler, scented with wisteria and the faint, medicinal bite of herbs drying in a distant courtyard.
âwhat?â satoru asked, eyes gleaming with faux innocence as he adjusted the sapphire-studded sash at his waist. âi was being helpful.â
âyou were being ridiculous,â suguru replied, his voice flat as the surface of a frozen lake.
âridiculously helpful,â satoru corrected, flashing a grin that could outshine the emperorâs polished jade throne. he flicked open his fan with a snap, waved it twice, then forgot it entirely.
suguru shot him a sidelong glance, more sigh than stare, the kind of look that carried the weight of a thousand unspoken retorts.
now that the mask had fallen, subtle details sharpened: the glint of satoruâs ceremonial earrings, forged from gold so pure they whispered of plundered kingdoms; the way his sleeves brushed the corridorâs tiles with deliberate drag; his hair, nearly waist-length, swaying like a silk banner, catching latticed sunlight in a cascade of silver.
âa hairpin emergency,â suguru deadpanned. âyou skipped a logistics meetingâwhere we were discussing grain shortagesâfor a hairpin emergency.â
âit was tragic. deeply symbolic. that hairpin was the fragility of desire itself, suguru,â satoru said, his tone lofty, gesturing with the fan. âa metaphor for the fleeting nature of beauty, shattered in an instant.â
suguru glanced skyward, seeking divine intervention from heavens that had long since stopped answering.
the corridor stretched before them, vermilion pillars rising in regal procession, their surfaces carved with dragons that seemed to smirk at the absurdity below. sunlight filtered through the screens, painting latticed shadows that danced over the tiles.
âand your grand plan to unravel the true nature of court politics,â suguru said, each word measured, âinvolves⌠hosting interpretive grief sessions for concubines over broken accessories?â
âthe best disguises become second nature,â satoru replies, his wink a fleeting spark in the afternoon light, the sapphire stud in his earlobe catching a glint as he tilts his head. âbesides, would you rather i act like a stuffy prince?â
the irony isnât lost on himâhe is a stuffy prince, or will be someday, when his father, whose breath rattles like dry leaves in his chest, finally yields the crown still heavy with the ghost of tragedy.
the late empressâs assassination, when satoru was barely old enough to stumble through palace corridors, had carved a brutal lesson into the imperial family: visibility invites blades. better to cloak the heir in silk and paint him with harmless whimsy than risk another dagger finding its mark.
only five souls in the sprawling palace know the truth: his father, whose sunken eyes track satoru with fading sharpness; the imperial chancellor, whose pinched lips birthed this charade; the minister of justice, whose tribunal and ledgers guard the successionâs fragile legality; suguru, whose shadow clings to satoru with the weight of unspoken oaths; and satoru himself, whose laughter sometimes blurs the line between performance and truth.
the inner court, bereft of an empress dowager, pulses with the consortsâ ruthless ambition, their silk robes whispering of power sharper than any sword. though the emperor weakens daily, these women wage silent wars for his favor, each dreaming of a son to crown her empress should the hidden prince perish.
they know such a prince exists, veiled for safety, but none suspect he flits among them, orchestrating their rivalries with a peacockâs strut and a courtesanâs smile.
the ladies adore their ornamental peacockâhis flair for theatrics, his mastery of rouge and kohl, his gossip that slices like a hairpinâs edge. they sigh theatrically in his presence, their voices dripping with the practiced melancholy of lives honed by ambition and cushioned by luxury.
âwhat a waste,â the third imperial consort murmurs behind her fan, its ivory slats trembling faintly as her jade-green eyes trace the elegant curve of satoruâs throat, where a single pearl pendant rests against pale skin. âif only heaven had been more generous with your... wholeness.â
satoruâs smile blooms, honed over yearsâa charm that invites secrets, a distance that keeps them safe. his fingers, glittering with rings that snare the light pouring through latticed screens, adjust a fold in his azure robe, the silk whispering like a conspirator. âperhaps heaven knew iâd be too dangerous otherwise, my lady. imagine the chaos if i possessed both beauty and... capability.â
the women titter, their fans fluttering like startled sparrows, their laughter a delicate chime of scandalized delight. he navigates their tempests with a diplomatâs grace, though the irony of wielding statecraft to soothe cosmetic squabbles stings faintly.
lady xiao, her skin glowing like moonlight on snow from some costly powder, leans forward, her gold hairpin swaying as she adopts a conspiratorial whisper. âyou simply must settle our debate, master satoru. lady chen insists crushed pearls in face powder yield the most ethereal glow, but i maintain powdered moonstone is far superior.â
âboth have their merits,â satoru replies, his tone grave as a scholarâs, though his eyes flicker with amusement only suguru, leaning against a pillar, would catch. he lifts a strand of lady chenâs hair, its ebony sheen catching the light as he studies it with exaggerated focus, his silver bracelet glinting.
âwith your warm undertones, crushed pearls would complement beautifully.â he turns to lady xiao, close enough that her breath hitches, her kohl-lined eyes wide. âbut for your cooler complexion, moonstone would weave that otherworldly glow you chase.â
the verdict sparks preeningâlady chenâs fingers smooth her hair, lady xiaoâs fan snaps shut with a triumphant click. satoru sinks back into his cushioned seat, silk rustling like a secret unveiled, accepting their praise with the ease of a man crowned in their vanities.
âthough,â he adds, mischief curling his lips as his lashes cast delicate shadows, âtrue radiance comes from within. perhaps you should consult the palace physicians about inner harmony before fussing over external charms.â
the suggestion, cloaked in earnestness, lands like a jest. laughter erupts, bright and sharp, the women reveling in his knack for dressing insults as wisdom, their painted nails gleaming as they clutch fans tighter.
suguru watches from the gardenâs edge, his black robes stark against the pavilionâs vermilion pillars, his face a mask of weary endurance. a stray breeze tugs a dark strand loose from his neat bun, brushing his cheek as his eyes track satoruâs performance with the resignation of a man tethered to chaos.
âmaster satoru,â lady qiao ventures, her voice honeyed, her lips glistening with rose-tinted gloss as she tilts her head, a jade comb glinting in her upswept hair. âsurely you have preferences regarding feminine beauty? purely from an aesthetic standpoint, of course.â
the question is a silk-wrapped trap. satoruâs smile holds, but his eyes sharpen, a flash of the mind destined for thornier battles. his fingers, tracing the carved armrest, pause briefly, the gold ring on his thumb catching a stray sunbeam.
âbeauty,â he muses, âis like fine poetry. exquisite verses reveal new depths with each reading. surface prettiness fades, but intelligence, wit, character...â his gaze sweeps their faces, lingering just long enough to flatter, âthose transform mere charm into transcendence.â
the answer sates their hunger for praise while baring nothing, a masterstroke they mistake for depth. their fans resume their dance, silk rustling like whispers of approval.
hours might pass thusâsatoru weaving through cosmetic crises with finesseâbut today, peace shatters like porcelain on marble.
the trouble begins with a silk scarf.
lady yun sweeps into the pavilion, azure silk draped to accent her porcelain skin, the emperorâs favored hue shimmering with intent. her hairpin, a silver crane, gleams as she moves, her eyes cool with triumph. lady mei, in pale lavender, stiffens, her fan halting mid-flutter, her lips tightening beneath their coral stain.
âhow... bold,â lady xiang purrs, her smile sharp as frost, her fingers tightening around a jade bangle that clinks faintly. âto wear his majestyâs signature color so prominently. one might think youâre presuming your position.â
satoruâs fingers pause on his teacup, its porcelain cool against his palm, sensing the venom brewing. suguru edges closer, his hand brushing the hilt of a hidden blade, his jaw set.
âpresumptions?â lady yunâs laugh chimes, her sleeve rippling as she gestures, revealing a bracelet of sapphire beads. âi wear what his majesty gifted me. perhaps if you spent less time whispering with servants and more earning his favor, youâd grasp the difference.â
the barb cuts deep. lady xiangâs face flushes beneath her powder, her eyes flashing like struck flint. satoru counts three seconds before chaos erupts.
âladies,â he interjects, rising with a honeyed command, his robe catching the light in a cascade of azure folds, his silver hairpin glinting. âsurely we can resolve this withoutââ
âstay out of this, master satoru,â lady xiang snaps, her voice cracking, her fan trembling in her grip. the dismissal bites, though satoru cloaks his flinch in feigned concern.
lady yun pounces, her nails tracing her sleeve with studied nonchalance. âhow refreshing to see your true colors,â she says, her voice silk over steel. âhis majesty noted your... common mannerisms lately. perhaps the strain of clinging to relevance frays your breeding.â
lady xiangâs palm meets lady yunâs cheek with a crack that silences the pavilion, her bangle clinking sharply. gasps ripple through the consorts, their fans freezing mid-air, eyes wide with shock. lady yunâs cheek blooms red, her crane hairpin trembling as she touches the mark with delicate fingers, her gaze hardening into something lethal.
âyou dare strike me?â she whispers, her voice low, her sapphire beads catching the light like tears. âa daughter of the northern provinces, educated in the capital, marked by heaven with this beauty?â
âbeauty fades,â lady xiang hisses, advancing, her lavender silk swaying like a predatorâs tail, her hairpin glinting. âbut vulgarity is eternal. his majesty will tire of your pretensions soon enough.â
âhis majesty,â lady yun counters, her smile venomous, her fan snapping open with a flick, âhas tired of your seduction attempts. why else cancel tonightâs private audience? other matters, he said, demand his attention.â
the blow lands. lady xiang falters, her breath catching, her coral lips parting as the truth sinks inâher meticulously planned evening with the emperor, her chance to secure favor, stolen. her bangle clinks again as her hand trembles.
âyou scheming witch,â she breathes, lunging with murder in her eyes, her hairpin slipping slightly in her hair.
satoru moves, swift and fluid, his robe whispering as he steps between them, his fan snapping shut with a crack. âmy dear ladies,â he says, voice laced with subtle command, âsurely such passion belongs in more... productive pursuits?â
his tone halts them, though their glares burn like embers. satoruâs mind races, cataloging lady yunâs intelligence network, lady xiangâs desperation, the shifting sands of favor. his pearl pendant sways as he tilts his head, feigning concern.
âperhaps,â he ventures, his voice smooth as jade, âlady xiang, you wished to discuss that complexion treatment? and lady yun, your poetry recitation tomorrow deserves preparation.â
the suggestion, edged with condescension, reins them in. lady yun smooths her silk, her sapphire beads clinking faintly, her rage cooling into a mask of poise. lady xiangâs smile sharpens, but she nods, her hairpin now askew, betraying her frayed composure.
satoru claps, the sound sharp, his rings flashing. âhow marvelous! such spirited discourse invigorates the afternoon. shall we revisit pearl powder versus moonstone? we were on the cusp of brilliance.â
the redirect forces civility, though tension crackles. satoru sinks into his cushions, his silk settling like a sigh, his mind dissecting the consortsâ movesâlady yunâs spies, lady xiangâs fragility, the courtâs delicate balance.
as evening shadows stretch across the marble, satoru rises, his movements liquid, his hairpin catching the fading light. âduty calls, my ladies. the third consort awaits my counsel for her evening attire.â
their disappointment flickers, but they turn to tomorrowâs schemes. satoru bows, precise yet playful, his robe trailing like a cometâs tail. suguru falls into step as they leave, silent until the pavilionâs whispers fade.
âexhausting performance, your highness,â suguru murmurs, his dark sleeve brushing a pillar, his bun loosening slightly.
âgetting easier,â satoru replies, shedding his theatrics, his posture sharpening, his fan tucked into his sash. âthough my future subjects will despair when their emperor knows more about catfights than regiments.â
âyour father would say palace politics and battlefields demand the same cunning,â suguru notes, his voice dry, a faint crease at his brow.
satoruâs laugh carries mirth and shadow, his earrings glinting as he strides forward. tomorrow brings more cosmetic crises, more veiled barbs, more lessons in power disguised as powder disputes. the crown prince will hide behind silk and sighs, studying his subjectsâ souls one shallow secret at a time.
after all, the best disguises become second nature. and sometimes, the sharpest power lies in pretending you hold none at all.
the palace hummed with a frenetic buzzânot the charming, festival-lanterns-and-rice-wine kind, where moonlight glints off sake cups and laughter spills like cherry blossoms, but the swarming, fretful, everyone's-talking-and-no-one's-hearing kind that screamed someone important was either sick, scandalized, or both.
lucky for the court, it was a two-for-one special: the emperor's favored concubine, lady hua, had taken ill, and the whispers swirling through the vermilion halls were ripe with intrigue sharp enough to cut silk.
it began with fainting spells, delicate as a willow branch snapping under snow. then came the headaches, each one described with the reverence of a poet lamenting lost love.
by the time rumors slithered to satoru's ears, the court physicians had added skin lesions to the listâdelicate ones, naturally, because heaven forbid a woman of the inner court suffer anything less than poetic. âfemale hysteria,â the physicians declared with the smugness of men who'd never questioned their own brilliance, waving it off as a trifle. âprobably just summer heat affecting her delicate temperament.â
maybe it was. maybe it wasn't. but satoru was boredâa state as dangerous as a spark in a lacquered pavilion when paired with his curiosity and the kind of power that hid beneath shimmering silk like a blade in a jeweled sheath.
he sprawled across a divan like a cat claiming its throne, pale hair spilling over the brocade cushion in a cascade that caught the lantern light like spun silver. âi want to see her,â he drawled, voice lazy yet laced with a spark of intent, like a cat batting at a moth it fully intended to devour.
suguru didnât lift his eyes from the scroll he feigned reading, arms crossed over dark robes that seemed to absorb the light, their folds creasing like a storm cloud on the verge of breaking. his hair, bound with a cord of black silk, gleamed faintly in the slanted glow, as if even it resented being tethered to satoruâs orbit. âthe emperor hasnât summoned you,â he said, voice flat, though the faintest twitch of his brow betrayed a patience fraying like a worn thread.
âthatâs the charm of playing eunuch,â satoru replied, rising with the fluid grace of a dancer who knew every gaze followed him. his robesâsilver threaded with sapphire embroidery, ostentatiously tastefulâshimmered like moonlight rippling across a still pond, the hem whispering against the polished floor like a loverâs sigh. âevery door yields if you smile just so and dazzle them with a touch of charm.â
suguru exhaled through his nose, a sound heavy with a thousand unspoken curses, each one honed by years of trailing satoruâs chaos. âyour highness, court gossip is beneath your station.â
ânothingâs beneath my station when iâm cloaked as a eunuch,â satoru chirped, swiping a sesame-crusted rice cake from a lacquered tray as he sauntered toward the door. he popped it into his mouth, the seeds crunching faintly, and shot suguru a grin that was equal parts mischief and menace, as if daring the world to challenge him. âitâs half the thrill. havenât i earned a bit of fun after wrangling the inner courtâs tantrums?â
and with that, he was gone, robes flaring behind him like a cometâs tail, leaving a trail of sandalwood perfume and the promise of impending upheaval. suguru muttered a curseâsomething about peacocks strutting toward their inevitable fallâand followed, because someone had to tether the fool before he plunged headlong into ruin.
what they found at lady hua's quarters was chaos distilled into a single, suffocating room. maids scurried like ants fleeing a crushed nest, their silk slippers whispering frantically against the floor.
court physicians argued in hushed but venomous tones, their elaborate sleeves flapping like indignant birds, silk badges of rank glinting on their chests as they gestured wildly at treatment scrolls. someoneâlikely a junior attendantâsobbed into a brass basin, the sound muffled but piercing. the air reeked of bitter medicinal herbs, sharp and acrid, tangled with the cloying sweetness of sandalwood incense and the sour undercurrent of barely-contained hysteria.
a breeze from an open screen carried the faint tang of lotus blossoms from the courtyard, but it did little to ease the oppressive weight of the room.
satoru leaned against the doorframe, one hand languidly fanning himself with a jade-inlaid fan, its painted silk fluttering like a butterfly's wing. the other hand rested lightly on the fan's hilt, fingers tracing the carved dragon as if it might whisper secrets.
he looked like a man at the theater, idly amused by a tragedy he had no stake inâand to be fair, he was. his eyes, sharp as a hawk's beneath their lazy half-lids, scanned the room with the casual precision of someone who missed nothing.
then his gaze snagged on somethingâor rather, someone.
you.
in the heart of the maelstrom, you knelt in the corner like a shadow given form. not beside lady huaâthat privilege belonged to the proper court physicians with their silk badges and centuries of inherited authorityâbut close enough to see, to listen, to absorb every frustrated gesture and dismissive wave of their sleeves.
you weren't dressed like anyone of importance. your outer court servant robes were simple, practical cotton dyed the color of weathered stone, sleeves rolled past your elbows in a way that would scandalize the inner court but served you well in the servants' quarters where actual work got done. your hair was pinned back with a plain wooden stick, not jade or silver, and your hands bore the telltale stains of someone who ground herbs by moonlight when the day's official duties were done.
but oh, how you watched. your eyes tracked every movement of the physicians' hands, cataloged each herb they selected, noted the precise angle of lady hua's breathing.
when one physician mixed powdered deer antler with ginseng, your jaw tightened almost imperceptibly. when another declared her pulse âflighty as a sparrow,â your fingers twitched against your thighâonce, twice, three times, as if counting beats they couldn't feel from across the room.
satoru straightened, the motion so slight it mightâve escaped anyone but suguru, who stood at his side like a storm cloud tethered to a comet. his fan slowed, silk shivering in the pause, as if the air itself held its breath. âwhoâs that?â he murmured, voice low, curling like incense smoke as he tilted his head, pale hair slipping over his shoulder like a cascade of moonlight.
suguru had already marked you, his arms crossed tighter over his chest, the dark fabric of his robes creasing under the strain. âouter court servant. kitchen work, mostly. cleans the medicine rooms.â each word clipped, as if to dismiss you before satoruâs curiosity took root.
âhmm,â satoru hummed, but his eyes never left you, sharp and gleaming with the delight of a puzzle half-solved. âand yet sheâs not scrubbing pots.â
you shifted, angling your body to better observe the lead physicianâs fumbling needlework, seeking a pressure point to ease lady huaâs pain. the movement was subtle, practicedâa dancerâs adjustment, born of months spent watching, learning, memorizing from the shadows. your lips moved again, silent but deliberate, and satoru caught the glint of something fierce in your expression, like a blade catching lamplight.
this wasnât idle curiosity. this was hunger, raw and disciplined, the kind that drove scholars to madness or mastery.
the physician botched his needle placement, and you winced, fingers curling into fists, your silent corrections now a faint whisper of frustration. satoru watched, enthralled, as your hands mimicked the motionsâprecise, fluid, as if you could thread the needle through her meridians from across the room.
âshe knows,â he whispered, more to himself than suguru, his voice alight with discovery.
âknows what?â suguru asked, though his tone suggested heâd already glimpsed the answer and dreaded its consequences.
âthat theyâre doing it wrong.â satoruâs smile was slow, delighted, like a child uncovering a forbidden game. âlook at her hands.â
your fingers danced against your thigh, tracing the exact patterns of needle insertion, herb grinding, pulse-takingâmuscle memory honed through countless unseen hours, knowledge that shouldnât belong to a servant who spent her days scouring medicine bowls. each movement was a silent rebuke to the physiciansâ arrogance, a testament to a mind that refused to be confined by her station.
one physician stepped back, wiping sweat from his brow with a silk handkerchief, his voice heavy with pompous resignation. âthe ladyâs condition defies our current wisdom,â he declared, more concerned with preserving his dignity than her life. âweâve exhausted all known remedies.â
thatâs when you moved.
not with boldnessâthat wouldâve been suicide. instead, you rose from your corner with the fluid grace of a crane taking flight, approached the lead physician with eyes appropriately downcast, and spoke in the deferential tones expected of your rank.
âhonored physician,â you said, voice clear yet soft, cutting through the roomâs chaos like a bell in a storm, âthis humble servant has seen similar symptoms in the outer courts. if it would not offend your wisdom⌠a kitchen maid last month suffered likewise.â
the physician barely spared you a glance, already dismissing whatever peasant cure you might dare suggest. âfemale hysteria is commonplace. hardly comparable to lady huaâs refined constitution.â
âof course, honored sir,â you murmured, eyes still lowered, but satoru caught the steel beneath your silk-smooth tone. âyet the maidâs symptoms mirrored theseâthe headaches, the pallor, the precise pattern of lesions. she recovered fully after a decoction of chrysanthemum, mint, and processed rehmannia root.â
his attention snagged, though he masked it with scholarly disdain. âabsurd. such simple herbs could never address a condition of this intricacy.â
you held your ground, voice humble yet unyielding, like bamboo bending in a gale. âyour expertise far surpasses my crude observations, naturally. but the maid did recover, and her symptoms aligned so preciselyâŚâ you trailed off, the perfect portrait of respectful hesitation, your fingers twitching as if itching to demonstrate.
the physicianâs pride warred with his desperation. lady huaâs breathing grew shallower, her skin taking on a waxen pallor that would soon spell ruin for everyone in the room. âthese herbs,â he said at last, feigning casual curiosity, âyou saw their preparation?â
âthis servant cleans the preparation rooms,â you replied, a careful lie wrapped in just enough truth to pass muster. âsometimes the physicianâs assistants share their methods while i work.â
satoru watched the performance with rapt fascination, his fan now still, its silk frozen mid-flutter. you werenât merely suggesting a cureâyou were orchestrating the entire scene, playing the physicianâs ego like a kotoâs strings, submissive enough to avoid offense, knowledgeable enough to be indispensable, desperate enough to seem harmless.
yet your eyes, when they flicked upward for the briefest moment, held secrets sharp enough to cut glass, a mind that danced circles around the men who dismissed you.
within the hour, lady hua sat upright, color blooming in her cheeks like dawn over a lotus pond, the mysterious lesions fading like mist under morning sun. the lead physician accepted congratulations with magnanimous grace, claiming credit for âconsulting palace staff to compile comprehensive symptom reports,â his chest puffing like a rooster at dawn.
you had already melted back into the shadows, your work done, but not before satoru caught the satisfied curve of your lipsâfleeting, triumphant, gone in a breath.
âfascinating,â he murmured, eyes lingering on the corner where youâd vanished, as if the air still held traces of your presence.
suguruâs expression remained a study in neutrality, though the tension in his jaw betrayed his resignation. âa lucky coincidence. simple remedies sometimes outshine complex ones.â
âhmm.â satoruâs smile lingered, bright and sharp as a freshly drawn blade. âtell me, suguruâwhat do we know of kitchen maids who memorize advanced medical techniques? who position themselves flawlessly to study court physicians? who move like theyâre accustomed to being heeded, not ignored?â
âwe know,â suguru said dryly, his voice heavy with the weight of impending trouble, âthat youâre about to make this our headache.â
ânot our headache,â satoru corrected with a grin. âmy amusement.â
because lady huaâs recovery mightâve dazzled the court, but youâyou were a riddle cloaked in servantâs robes, wielding knowledge that could heal or harm, navigating the palace with the lethal precision of someone who knew their own danger.
and satoru gojo, crown prince masquerading as eunuch, had just stumbled upon a game far more captivating than court whispers, one he intended to play to its end.
the emperorâs study always smelled faintly of old powerâthat particular blend of sun-warmed parchment, cedar polish, and something faintly metallic. blood, maybe, or the memory of it. it was the kind of room where even the air seemed to walk softly.
satoru sat across from the emperor with the calm of a man desperately trying not to tap his fingers. he adjusted the fold of his sleeve, eyes flicking toward the desk where his fatherâs brush moved in careful strokes. his posture was perfect, intentionally soâchin tilted, one knee loosely crossed, silver hair tied back but predictably disobedient with a few strands curling just beside his cheek. his robe, navy lined in restrained gold, sat sharp against the sun streaming through the lattice window. he looked every inch the noble son. all very deliberate.
âfather,â he began, and the word felt heavier than it should have. maybe because he hadnât used it in a while. maybe because he still wasnât sure which version of the emperor he was talking to today.
no reply. the brush continued its whispered dance across parchmentâa list of names, most likely. or death warrants. same difference in the imperial court.
âiâve been thinking about the medical needs of the inner court.â
still no reaction, just the soft scrape of ink and paper. satoru swallowed the urge to fill the silence with more words and waited instead, watching for the telltale signs of his fatherâs attention.
thenâa twitch of a brow. not much, but it meant he was listening. unfortunately.
âthe women,â satoru continued, his voice smooth but softer now. âtheyâre suffering. quietly, of course. as they always do. theyâre afraid to speak about their ailments, or worse, theyâve learned not to bother trying.â
the emperorâs brush paused for just a heartbeat before continuing its careful work.
âbecause they canât be examined properly by male physicians, their symptoms are dismissed. attributed to nerves, to wombs, to feminine hysteria.â satoru kept his tone clinical, professional. âreal suffering gets reduced to mood swings.â
âand youâve discovered this how?â
the trap was expected, so satoru smiledâjust a little, mostly to himself. âthe third consort mentioned it during a conversation about hair ornaments. she gets migraines, told me she stopped letting the court physicians treat her after one tried to give her a mercury concoction and advised her to avoid loud colors.â
he left out the part where heâd actually laughed at the absurdity. sheâd joined him. misery loves company, after all.
âshe said a servant helped her instead. a woman from the outer court.â satoru watched his fatherâs face carefully. âi saw her treat the consort myself. her technique was impressiveâprecise, not palace-trained, but more effective because of it.â
what he didnât say: you hadnât spared him a glance during the treatment. your fingers had moved with unbothered certainty, tucking the consortâs hair behind her ear while applying pressure to specific points with your other hand. your eyes had flicked toward him only once, and the look had been unimpressed, functional, dismissive.
it had lit something unfortunate in him.
âyou seem very well-informed about this woman.â
satoru inclined his head, letting one finger trail along the edge of the lacquered desk. âi asked around. standard diligenceâyou know how thorough i can be when something catches my interest.â
âi do,â his father murmured, finally setting the brush down with deliberate care.
satoru let the moment stretch, just enough to suggest sincerity without overselling it.
âshe has no political affiliations, no family ties, no suspicious history. sheâs been in the outer court six months and caused no disruptions. the only people who mention her are the ones sheâs treated, and they talk about her like sheâs something they dreamed during a feverâthere but not quite real.â
he didnât mention the late nights heâd spent tracing palace gossip until it led to your name, or how no one seemed to agree on what you looked like, only that you were quiet, clean, and dangerous in the way truly intelligent women often were.
âsheâs better than most of our court physicians,â he said simply. âmore hygienic too. she washes her hands, makes her patients do the same. revolutionary concept, apparently.â
the emperor gave him a lookâhard to read, as always, but with an edge of something that might have been amusement.
âa woman like that, appearing out of nowhere with such skills.â
âsuspicious, yes,â satoru agreed readily. âbut also exactly what this court needs. what the women deserve. and...â he paused, letting the weight of unspoken words settle between them. âwhat you need.â
the temperature in the room seemed to shift, though neither man moved.
âyou want to bring her into the inner court.â
âi want to give her an official appointment. court apothecary with proper access, recognition, protection.â satoru leaned forward slightly, and the afternoon light caught the edge of his silver hair, framing his face in something almost holy. âsheâs worth the risk.â
he waited, watching his fatherâs expression for any sign of rejection. when none came, he pressed on.
âand thereâs another reason.â his voice dropped, becoming something more vulnerable. âyour condition hasnât improved despite everything the court physicians have tried. she might see what theyâve missed, notice something theyâre too set in their ways to consider.â
his voice didnât shake, but it was closer than he wanted. closer than was comfortable.
his father said nothing for a long moment, fingers drumming against the desk in that familiar thinking rhythm satoru remembered from childhood.
âif thereâs even a chance she could help...â
âthen we should take it.â the emperorâs decision came swift and final. âappoint her. sheâll report directly to youâyou brought her to my attention, you can manage her integration into court life.â
relief flooded through satoru like a tide, and he stood quickly, trying not to look as shaken as he felt. âthank you.â
âdonât thank me yet,â the emperor said, and there it wasâthat familiar edge of knowing amusement. âhandling a woman of exceptional skill and mysterious background wonât be simple. especially when thereâs personal investment involved.â
satoru hesitated, then offered what he hoped was a convincing lie. âmy interest is purely professional.â
his fatherâs look could have cut glass. âyouâve described her capabilities in detail but havenât once mentioned her appearance. either sheâs remarkably plain, or youâre working very hard not to think about how she looks.â
âi hadnât noticed.â
âmm.â it wasnât quite a sound, more like a judgment rendered and filed away for future reference.
âinform the steward of her appointment,â the emperor added, returning his attention to the documents spread across his desk. âand do it properly. if youâre going to gamble on someone, donât play your hand halfway.â
satoru bowed again, quick and precise, then left the room feeling like heâd been carefully dissected and sewn back together.
the hallway outside hummed with the usual quiet motion of palace lifeâservants gliding past with tea trays, scribes shuffling along with scrolls tucked into their sleeves, the distant sound of a flute meandering through some half-finished melody. normal sounds, normal sights, but everything felt different now.
youâd be staying. elevated to a position where your skills could be properly utilized, where he could watch you work and maybe, eventually, understand what drove someone with your abilities to hide among the servants.
he tried not to smile as he headed toward the inner court to deliver news that would change everything. tried and failed completely.
the first thing satoru noticed was the crack in your expressionânot a chasm, just a flicker, like a lanternâs flame caught in a draft. he was always watching for it, his eyes sharp as a hawkâs, trained to catch the smallest tells in a court where lies were currency and truths were contraband.
that blink-and-you-miss-it smileâthe quiet, cautious pride that bloomed when the summons reached youâvanished the instant your gaze landed on him in the receiving hall.
you went still, not with fear but with the kind of disappointment that stings like a paper cut, laced with offense, as if someone had promised you a jade pendant and handed you a wriggling rat instead.
he found it utterly delightful.
âyou,â you said, the word a curse wrapped in velvet, sharp enough to draw blood.
âme,â satoru replied, spreading his arms just enough to invite applause, his grin a crescent of pure mischief. his robes today were pale violet, embroidered with butterflies that shimmered like moonlight on water, each thread catching the lantern glow with ostentatious grace.
his hair was twisted into a gold pin, too ornate for a eunuch but perfectly satoru, perched in the grey space where rules bent to his whims. a fine line of kohl rimmed his lashes, accentuating eyes that sparkled with dramatic intentâbecause if he had to endure the stifling heat and court nonsense, heâd damn well look like a painting while doing it.
the head steward droned on, his voice a monotonous hum about imperial favor and sacred duty, a speech satoru couldâve recited in his sleep.
he didnât bother pretending to listen.
he was too busy cataloging your betrayals: the faint hitch in your breath, like a zither string plucked too hard; the way your hands folded, knuckles whitening as if gripping an invisible blade; the defiant tilt of your chin, a silent challenge to the world. you were furious, a bonfire masquerading as a lantern, and oh, how you tried to cloak it in courtly composure. but satoru saw the embers, and they thrilled him.
he caught the moment realization struck you, sharp as a needle: this wasnât just a promotion. this was proximity. to him.
âthe inner court welcomes you,â the steward concluded, his voice fading into the hallâs polished silence.
âiâm sure it does,â you said, your tone sugared with venom, each syllable a dart aimed at satoruâs smug face.
once the others dispersed, satoru glided forward, arms tucked within his sleeves, his voice dropping into that soft, insincere purr he saved for spooking cats and bureaucrats. âcongratulations,â he said, leaning just close enough to make you bristle. âyouâve ascended. fresh linens, finer herbs, a view of the lotus pond. and, of course, me.â
you blinked at him, slow and deliberate, like a cat deciding whether to swipe or ignore. âis it too late to crawl back to scrubbing pans?â you asked, your deadpan so perfect it deserved its own pavilion.
âdonât flatter yourself,â he said, his grin widening, sharp as a crescent moon. âyouâll still scrubâjust not linen. now itâs egos and temperaments, lotus tea for headaches, petals for petty heartbreaks. all the flowers of the inner court, lovingly pruned by your hand.â
âthrilling,â you muttered, the word dripping with disdain, as if youâd rather mop the emperorâs stables. âa promotion and a leash.â
ânot a leash,â satoru said, pressing a hand to his chest with a mock gasp. âcompanionshipâunsolicited, exquisitely dressed, and utterly unavoidable.â
and there it wasâthe faintest twitch at the corner of your mouth, not a smile but a threat, like a blade half-drawn from its sheath. he liked it. no, he adored it, the way it promised trouble as much as it deflected his own.
he lingered a beat too long, eyes glinting like polished jade, before turning and strolling off, his robes fluttering like a butterflyâs wings, as if the world spun on his axis. and maybe, just maybe, it did.
later that evening, purely by coincidence (his words, not truthâs), he found himself drifting past your new quarters. entirely by accident (again, his words). three times, his steps echoing softly on the stone path, each pass a little slower, a little bolder. the fourth time, he stopped.
he waited until the courtyard shadows stretched long, pooling like ink beneath the flickering lanterns that cast gold over the tiles. then, with the humility of a man whoâd never known the word, satoru leaned against your doorframe, one hand toying with the edge of a scroll, its wax seal glinting like a conspiratorâs wink.
âwhat,â you said, not turning from the table where you sorted herbs, your voice flat as a bladeâs edge.
âi brought a gift,â he said brightly, his tone all sunshine and mischief, as if heâd just unearthed a treasure.
âis it my resignation?â you asked, still not looking, your fingers pausing over a vial of crushed ginseng.
âbetter. a medical mystery.â he stepped inside, uninvited, and held out the scroll, its parchment crinkling faintly. you didnât take it, of course. you just stared, expression as unyielding as the palace walls, as if calculating whether a pestle could double as a club.
finally, you snatched it, your movements sharp, and scanned the text with a flick of your eyes. âthese symptoms contradict each other,â you said, voice clipped, like you were scolding a particularly dense apprentice.
âi know,â satoru said, leaning against a lacquered cabinet, his sleeve brushing a jar that wobbled but didnât fall.
âthis is fabricated,â you added, your glare pinning him like a butterfly to a board.
âonly the illness,â he said, undeterred, his smile a spark in the dim room. âthe need for your attention? painfully real.â
you sighed, loud and theatrical, a performance worthy of the imperial stage. satoru mentally awarded it a nine out of tenâsolid, but you couldâve thrown in a hair toss for flair.
you unrolled the scroll again, your lips twitching in a scowl as you muttered, âridiculous.â the word was a dart, but satoru caught it like a prize.
âyouâre a parasite in silk,â you said, louder now, tossing the scroll onto the table with a flick of your wrist. âthe most useless eunuch in three dynasties, and thatâs saying something.â
âflattery will get you everywhere,â he replied, utterly unfazed, his fingers brushing the edge of a clay bowl as he wandered your space like he owned it. âkeep going, iâm taking notes.â
âi wasnât flattering you,â you snapped, finally turning to face him, your eyes blazing like a forge.
âthatâs what makes it so charming,â he said, his grin widening, as if your ire was a rare vintage he couldnât resist savoring.
you shot him a look that couldâve curdled goat milk, then turned back to your work, your fingers moving with the precision of a calligrapher, sorting herbs into neat piles. but you kept the scroll, its corner peeking from beneath a stack of notes, and your muttering continuedâsnatches of âinsufferable peacockâ and âwhy is this my lifeâ drifting like smoke.
satoru prowled your quarters, ignoring the way your gaze tracked his hands, as if you were mentally mapping every pressure point from wrist to neck.
he brushed his fingers over jars, their labels curling at the edges, and peeked into a box of tools, its contents gleaming faintly in the lantern light. he didnât speak, just watchedâthe furrow of your brow as you concentrated, the deliberate flick of your wrist as you ground yanhusuo, the rhythm of your work like a silent song.
he didnât know why he stayed.
or rather, he did, but admitting it felt like stepping into a trap of his own making. you were a puzzle with edges that cut, a contradiction that hooked him deeper with every barb. the faint scent of crushed herbs clung to the room, mingling with the wisp of incense curling from a burner, and it anchored him there, tethered to the moment.
when he finally slipped out, you didnât look up, hunched over your desk, scribbling notes like you were waging war on the scrollâs nonsense. but as he passed the water basin by the door, its surface caught your reflectionâa glare aimed at his retreating back, sharp and searing, like a blade thrown in silence.
it made his whole damn day.
he found suguru by the koi pond, pacing the stone path, hands clasped behind his back like a tutor bracing for a lecture on broken vases. the moonlight glinted off the water, the fish darting like silver needles beneath the surface.
âdonât say it,â satoru said, cutting him off before a word could escape.
âyou like her,â suguru said anyway, his voice dry as the desert beyond the red cliffs, each syllable a judgment.
âi said donât say it,â satoru shot back, tossing his hair with a flourish, the gold pin catching the light like a star.
âand yet, here we are,â suguru said, his gaze flicking to satoruâs face, reading the spark there with the ease of a man whoâd seen this play before.
satoru sighed, dramatic and long-suffering, tilting his head to the moon as if it might explain why his heart thrummed like a war drum. âiâm just monitoring a potential threat,â he said, the lie so flimsy it barely held together.
âsure,â suguru said, his lips twitching, not quite a smile. âbecause that gleam in your eyes screams caution.â
âiâm delightful,â satoru corrected, spinning on his heel, his robes flaring like a dancerâs.
suguru groaned, the sound heavy with the weight of a thousand future apologies. âyouâre doomed.â
and he was probably right. but gods, what a glorious disaster to waltz into, with you at its heartâsharp-tongued, untamed, a flame that burned brighter than satoruâs own, and twice as dangerous.
satoru had never been a creature of habit.
routines were for bureaucrats, monks, and men with lives too dull to warrant a second glance. he craved spontaneity, thrived in chaos, relished derailing the meticulously stacked schedules of others like a fox scattering a henhouse.
unpredictability was his dance, disruption his song. so the fact that he now drifted down the same shaded corridor every morningâat roughly the same hour, with the same lazy gait and the same infuriating glint in his eyeâwas a confession heâd never voice aloud.
not that heâd admit it, even to himself.
his excuses shifted like the seasons. delivering a scroll to a scribe who didnât exist. inspecting inner court security for threats that never materialized. dodging paperwork that multiplied like roaches in the archives. conducting a surprise audit of herbal stores. critiquing the palace tea for âquality control.â evading a minister whose droning voice on strategy briefings could bore a statue to tears.
each alibi flimsier than the last, but satoru wielded them with the confidence of a man who knew the world would bend to his whims.
really, it was one thing. one person.
you.
he found you as alwaysâelbow-deep in some concoction, sleeves knotted tightly past your elbows, hair pinned in a haphazard bun that threatened to unravel with every movement.
a faint smudge of greenâlicorice root, perhapsâstained your cheekbone, a badge of your battle against the chaos you wove and tamed.
you were a paradox: a whirlwind of spilled herbs and scattered parchment, yet sharper, more focused than any silk-clad noble posturing in the emperorâs court. you looked like a battlefield medic with a grudge against decorum and a vendetta against wasted time, and it never failed to spark both amusement and distraction in satoruâs usually restless mind.
âyou again,â you said, voice dry as crushed ginger, not bothering to lift your eyes from the mortar where you pulverized a root with grim determination.
âyou sound shocked,â satoru replied, stepping over the threshold with a roll of his shoulder, his robesâdeep cream silk embroidered with winding cranes that shimmered with each stepâswaying like mist over a dawn lake.
todayâs ensemble was absurdly extravagant for a glorified supply closet, the fabric catching the lantern light in soft ripples. his hair, loosely tied at the nape, let silver strands frame his face, and a delicate trace of plum-red pigment accented the corners of his eyes, a flourish that screamed performance. he was too much, and that was precisely the point.
âi thought weâd settled into a rhythm,â he said, leaning against your worktable, perilously close to your neatly bundled herbs and stacked parchment. âme, you, the tang of crushed roots, and that slow-simmering resentment you wear so well.â
you didnât answer. instead, you ground the pestle with a force that suggested the root had slandered your ancestors, the bowl rattling faintly under your wrath.
he tilted his head, silver hair catching the warm glow like threads of starlight, his ringsâthree today, each etched with faint sigilsâclicking softly against the tableâs edge.
âno one else to pester?â you muttered, jaw tight, your fingers flexing around the pestle as if it might double as a weapon. âno decrees to ignore? no ministers to torment?â
âoh, plenty,â he said, his grin slow and sharp, like a blade unsheathed for show. âbut none of them look half as charming when theyâre plotting my demise.â
your hand stilled, the pestle clicking sharply against the bowl, a punctuation of pure exasperation. he nearly clapped, delighted by the precision of your irritation.
because it wasnât just that you disliked himâplenty did, and he wore their scorn like a badge. you didnât pretend. no groveling, no fawning, no hollow courtesies offered to his eunuchâs guise. your disdain was raw, unfiltered, a silent roar in every glance.
it was refreshing, like a cold stream after too long in the palaceâs stifling opulence, and deeply, wickedly entertaining.
he returned the next day. and the day after. each visit a little bolder, a little longer, as if testing how far he could push before you snapped.
sometimes he brought absurdities disguised as inquiries: a scroll detailing a servant who sprouted hives when he lied, complete with fictional case notes. another time, a cracked jade hairpin, its edges worn smooth, which he claimed induced fevers under a full moonâs gaze.
once, he presented a koi scale in a silk pouch, its iridescence glinting like a stolen star, declaring it a rare cure for heartacheâjust to see if youâd fling it at him.
you did, with the aim of an archer, the scale skittering across the floor as you muttered something about âidiots in silk.â he gave you a mental ovation.
he started noticing thingsâmore than he meant to, more than was wise. you drank your tea standing, spine rigid, eyes flicking to the window like you expected a rope ladder to unfurl. you reused parchment, scribbling notes in the margins of torn festival flyers or crumpled ceremonial edicts, your script tight and precise.
your tools gleamed, arranged like a generalâs arsenal, each blade and vial in its place, but your hair perpetually slipped its pins, curling defiantly against your neck until you shoved it back with an impatient hand.
you hummed when you thought no one heardâa fleeting melody, half-forgotten, like a song from a village far from the palaceâs red walls. your brows twitched, a subtle dance, when you puzzled over a formula. your lips curled, just so, a heartbeat before you unleashed an insult, as if savoring the barb.
and despite every barbed word, every glare sharp enough to draw blood, you never truly banished him. not really.
âyou know,â he said one afternoon, sprawled in the corner of your workspace, one leg tucked beneath him like a cat claiming a sunbeam, his sleeves pooling like spilled cream, âyou havenât thanked me.â
âfor what?â you asked, voice muffled as you rummaged behind a bamboo curtain, the clink of vials punctuating your words. âwrecking my mornings like a plague in peacock feathers?â
âfor ushering you into the inner court,â he said, tipping his head back against the wall, silver hair cascading over his shoulder like moonlight spilling across snow. the motion was deliberate, a painterâs stroke, and he knew it.
a beat. then the sharp scrape of wood as you slammed a drawer shut, the sound a silent curse. you emerged, clutching a bundle of dried leaves, your glare sour enough to wilt the lotuses in the courtyard.
âright,â you said, each word a blade honed to kill. âmy deepest thanks for the promotion i wanted and the permanent shadow it dragged in.â
âshouldnât you be grateful?â he teased, propping his chin in his hand, rings glinting as he traced the edge of a nearby jar. âi handed you the emperorâs courtâprestige, resources, a front-row seat to my radiance.â
you turned to him, slow and deliberate, like a swordmaster sizing up a foolhardy opponent. âand i curse it every dawn,â you said, your voice low, each syllable a spark. âif iâd known you came tethered like a leech, iâd have begged to stay in the outer court, scrubbing pans in peace.â
he clutched his chest, a theatrical gasp, his eyes sparkling with mock agony. âyou wound me, truly.â
ânot yet,â you muttered, turning back to your leaves, your fingers ripping a stalk with unnecessary force. âbut iâm practicing.â
his grin widened, sharp as a crescent moon, and he settled deeper into his perch, as if your scorn were an invitation to stay.
and you let him. not with words, never with warmth, but with the absence of a broom or a thrown pestle. and he kept returning, drawn by the rhythm youâd carved between youâinsult, retort, silence. a glance, then another, lingering like a brush of silk. proximity that stretched longer than it should, close enough to feel the heat of your irritation, the weight of your presence.
it wasnât peaceâgods, never peaceâbut something like understanding, a pattern etched in barbed words and stolen moments. a hum beneath the surface, unnamed, unacknowledged, but growing louder with each visit.
then came the laughâsharp, unexpected, a single burst when he presented a âcaseâ about a noble who sneezed only during poetry recitals. your eyes crinkled, head tilting back for a heartbeat, the sound bright and unguarded before you smothered it, your face twisting into a scowl as if youâd betrayed yourself. you looked like you wanted to burn the room down to erase it.
satoru stared, too long, too openly, catching the way your cheeks flushed, the way you ducked your head to hide it. he saw you glance at him, then away, quick as a startled bird, and something in his chest tuggedâsharp, stupid, undeniable.
he left that day with a thought that prickled like a splinter: he was in deeper trouble than heâd planned, and it was entirely, gloriously your fault.
todayâs morning puzzle was more unhinged than usual.
âman experiences nosebleeds only in the presence of caged birds,â you read aloud, your tone so flat it couldâve scraped the lacquer off the palace floors. âand when exposed to lacquerware.â
satoru, sprawled in his usual corner of your workspace like a sculpture no one ordered, blinked with the kind of innocence that fooled no one, least of all you. his robeâwarm ivory threaded with golden phoenix feathersâcaught the dawnâs light, casting fleeting sparks against the wall like a firecrackerâs afterglow. his hair, braided with a defiant thread of red silk (he knew you loathed it), spilled over one shoulder with the precision of a stage cue.
he was every inch the frivolous, silk-draped menace he aimed to be, his ringsâtwo today, etched with coiling dragonsâglinting as he propped an elbow on a crate of dried herbs.
âdonât you think thereâs a tragedy woven in that?â he asked, voice too chipper for the hour, like a bird chirping before the world had rubbed sleep from its eyes.
âyouâre banned from tragedy,â you snapped, shutting the scroll with a crack that made a passing maid jump, her tray of tea wobbling. you tossed it onto the table, narrowly missing a jar of powdered rhubarb, its clay surface dusted with your fingerprints.
this wasnât his first medical case, nor even the twentieth. heâd stopped counting around the time he concocted a patient who sneezed whenever lies were spoken nearby.
what began as a gameâprobing your diagnostic skill with obscure, half-invented symptomsâhad spiraled into a ritual as absurd as it was unshakable. yet you read every one. scrawled notes in their margins. laced them with insults sharp enough to draw blood. returned them smudged with ink and bristling with barely restrained fury.
he hoarded them like relics.
âyou shouldâve seen the drafts,â he said, as if that salvaged anything. âthe first version had goose feathers and wine fumes. i spared you.â
âif this is your plot to bury me in professional shame,â you said, wrenching open a jar of salves with a force that suggested personal vendetta, âyouâre nearly there.â
he tilted his head, a single silver strand slipping free, brushing the curve of his ear like a painterâs afterthought. he watched you moveâalways with purpose, always taut as a bowstring. you no longer flinched at his presence, but you never softened either. you wielded words like scalpels, keeping him at bay with precision cuts.
he liked sharp things. always had.
at first, the game was straightforward: deliver impossible cases, watch you unravel them, maybe coax a laugh if the stars aligned.
they never did.
you didnât laugh. but you scowled, rolled your eyes, muttered poetic venom into your mortar as you ground herbs to dust. you called him names with the accuracy of a physician lancing a woundââpeacock,â ânuisance,â âsilk-clad calamityââeach one a tiny victory he tucked away like a magpie with trinkets.
âthis isnât a diagnosis,â you muttered now, flipping the scroll open to scrawl furious notes, your brush slashing the parchment like a blade. âthis is a poem having a tantrum.â
âyou wound me,â he said, pressing a hand to his chest as if your words could be stitched into his ribs. âyouâre the only one whoâs ever called me poetic.â
âyouâre the only fool in this empire whose puzzles come with a musical accompaniment,â you shot back, your brush pausing mid-stroke, ink pooling at the tip.
he grinned, quick and wicked. âyou noticed?â
âyou brought a flautist last week,â you said, voice flat as a bladeâs edge. âhe tripped on your sash.â
âhe needed the practice,â satoru said, smooth as polished jade, his fingers tracing the rim of a nearby vial, its glass cool under his touch.
you didnât bother responding, just turned back to your work, sharpening a bundle of dried ginger with a knife that gleamed like a silent threat. the bladeâs rhythm was steady, each slice a rebuke to his existence.
he watched it all. the way your hands danced, precise yet restless, as if they could never quite settle. the way your lips pressed thin when you read something particularly absurd, a silent curse forming before you spoke. how your hair, always slipping its pins, curled defiantly at your nape, streaked with ink from fingers too busy to care. how you muttered in a cadence just off-kilter from the palaceâs polished formalities, a dialect of frustration and focus.
you were chaos cloaked in competence, a storm bound by will, and he couldnât look away.
every day, he brought another case. a man who laughed himself into fainting fits during banquets. a servant girl who sleepwalked into the kitchenâs rice stores, waking with flour in her hair. an aristocratâs daughter who swore her vision flipped upside down every other hour, blaming it on cursed earrings.
he scribbled them late at night, brush half-dry, on balconies between court sessions, once even during a poetry recital where he feigned sleep, his sleeve hiding the ink stains. each case a thread, a tether, an excuse to linger in your orbit.
because you read them. frowned. sighed. looked at him.
and the lookingâgods, that was everything. he didnât need your laughter. he craved what came after: the pause after the sigh, the flicker after the eye-roll, that fleeting moment where you seemed to forget you loathed him, where your gaze held something softer, unguarded, before you rebuilt your walls.
âi should report you,â you said now, your brush scratching the parchment with deliberate force, each stroke a small rebellion.
âfor what?â he asked, shifting to prop his chin on one hand, leaning forward like a cat too stubborn to abandon its perch. âcreative medicine?â
âfor impersonating someone with a shred of sense,â you said, your voice low, each word a dart aimed at his ego.
he made a wounded noise, theatrical and bright, but his smile stretched wider. âi have sense. i just keep it locked away, like a heirloom too fine for daily use.â
you gave him a look, long and withering, that couldâve soured wine. it only made his grin sharpen, his rings catching the light as he tapped the tableâs edge, a rhythm to match your knifeâs steady cuts.
âyou treat patients like mildew treats silk,â you said, tossing the ginger aside and reaching for a vial, your fingers brushing a stray leaf that clung to your sleeve like a conspirator.
he laughedânot the polished chuckle he offered concubines or ministers, but a real one, sharp and sudden, echoing in the cramped quarters like a misfired firework.
your eyes snapped to him, and for a heartbeat, you werenât just annoyed. not entirely. there was something else, a flicker of surprise, maybe curiosity, gone before he could name it. but it tightened his chest, a knot he couldnât untie.
he kept bringing puzzlesânot for their cleverness, not for their humor, but because they carved a space for him in your shadow. they let him listen to your muttered curses, watch your hands move like a weaverâs, feel the weight of your presence. they let him be noticed, even if only as a thorn in your side.
and maybe they let him be wanted there, if only for the span of a scowl.
âwhy are you like this?â you asked one morning, your brush stilling mid-stroke, the question dangerously soft, like a blade hidden in silk.
he had a dozen quips readyâflippant, charming, deflecting. but he leaned forward, caught the way a loose strand of hair curled near your temple, ink-smudged and defiant, and said, soft and unguarded, âyou look alive when youâre annoyed.â
you froze, your brush hovering, a drop of ink trembling at its tip. then, slowly, you looked up. met his eyes, their blue sharp and unguarded, like a sky before a storm.
he smiledânot mocking, not entirely, just a curve of lips that felt too honest for the game you played.
you threw the scroll at his head. it sailed wide, fluttering to the floor like a wounded bird.
he ducked, barely, laughter spilling from him as he retreated, the sound trailing behind like a cometâs tail. your glare followed, searing, but he caught the faintest twitch at your mouth, a ghost of something that wasnât quite hate.
later, he sat beneath the south pavilionâs shade, one leg tucked beneath him, the other dangling off the edge like a boy too restless for propriety.
a breeze tugged at the red sash cinched at his waist, lifting it like a lazy flag, as if even the wind knew he was procrastinating. beside him, scrollsâcourt reports, diplomatic briefs, a poetry contest invitation heâd already singed at the edgesâsat ignored, their wax seals glinting like accusations.
he thought of your scowl, your voice, the way your gaze landed on him like a blade seeking a target. everyone else in the court tiptoed around him, offering flattery or fear.
you never did.
and maybe that was why, every day, without fail, he drifted back to your door, armed with another impossible case, another absurd tale. each one a thread to bind him to you, a reason to linger, to disrupt, to be seen.
because the worst part of his morning was the hour before he saw youâempty, quiet, a void where his thoughts echoed too loudly.
and the best part? watching you glare like you wanted him gone, yet never quite forcing him out, your silence a grudging invitation to return.
the scrolls were getting longer.
not just longerâdenser, labyrinthine, absurdly ornate. satoru had upgraded to calligraphy brushes dipped in perfumed inkârosewater one day, sandalwood the next, a faint whiff of osmanthus lingering on the parchment like a taunt.
he was testing how long itâd take before you snapped and hurled something profane, maybe the inkstone itself. the symptoms wove intricate webs, the logic knotted like a courtierâs braid, the footnotes teetering on operatic.
he cited phantom case studies, fictitious physicians from provinces that didnât exist, and once, with brazen pride, slipped in a forged imperial seal that nearly landed him in front of a magistrate. nearly. that one, heâd written in couplets, each line a smug little bow.
âyouâre wasting my time with this drivel,â you snapped, brandishing the scroll like it carried a plague. âdonât you have feathers to preen or mirrors to seduce?â
he was perched, as always, on the low bench by your window, posed like a statue some lovesick noble commissioned and regretted. his posture was too perfect for someone whoâd spent half an hour picking a robe to irk you mostâstorm blue, embroidered with cranes mid-flight, sleeves pooling over his knees like spilled ink, dragging across the floor with every restless shift.
a gold hairpin gleamed in his braid, red silk threaded through it, swaying like a pendulum when he tilted his head in mock fascination. he was a painting overburdened with flourishes, every detail screaming excess.
âyour thorns are almost charming,â he said, sipping from a porcelain cup, its rim chipped from a prior visit when heâd âaccidentallyâ knocked it off your table. his boots, still flecked with courtyard mud, left faint smudges on your floor. âlike a pufferfish dreaming of cuddles.â
you fixed him with a stareâslow, lethal, the kind that could sour fresh cream or silence a minister mid-rant. the breeze from the open lattice tugged at the scrollâs edge, rattling the ash tray, but you didnât blink, your fingers tightening until the parchment crinkled.
he beamed, as if youâd serenaded him.
you muttered something under your breathâlikely a curse involving his tea turning to sludge, his bones melting to tallow, and a cholera revival tour.
he showed up again the next day. and the day after. and again, undeterred, even after you told the guards to âmisplace his map.â they never did, swayed by his bribes of candied lotus and whispered gossip, plus a promise to rank their uniformsâ aestheticsâa scale he invented on the spot, complete with commentary on tassel placement.
each scroll outdid the last. a plague afflicting only left-handed nobles, their sneezes synchronized with lunar phases. a woman who could digest only white foods, weeping hysterically at the sight of lotus root, claiming it sang to her in minor keys. a child coughing poetryâverses from a romantic epic banned by the late empress, each stanza more scandalous than the last. one footnote, scrawled sideways in gold ink, taunted, âsolve this with that temper you wield like a blade.â
you unraveled them all, dissecting each with surgical precision. your annotations bled red, sometimes purple for peak offenses, your brushstrokes sharp as a duelistâs thrust.
but somewhere between the sarcastic jabs and hissed curses, your critiques softenedânot in tone, never in tone, but in focus. you asked questions, prodded his logic with a gentler hand, your frowns less like thunderclouds, more like passing shadows.
you lingered over his absurdities, as if they were puzzles worth solving.
not that he noticed. of course not.
suguru did.
âtwelve visits this week,â he said, voice dry as a desert wind, eyes fixed on the go board where satoru was losing spectacularly for forty-five minutes. âshall i carve you a plaque for her door? engrave it with âsatoruâs follyâ?â
satoru flipped a game piece, then flicked it at suguruâs shoulder, where it bounced off his black robes like a pebble off a cliff. âiâm running an experiment.â
âon what?â suguru glanced up, one brow arched like a drawn bow.
âthe effects of sustained hostility and ground herbs on royal composure,â satoru said, his grin a crescent of pure mischief.
suguruâs stare was withering. âfindings?â
âunexpectedly delightful,â satoru said, leaning back, his braid swaying like a metronome.
court sessions were crumbling. satoru, once the deity of theatrical boredomâmaster of mock gasps, swoons timed to derail debates, and insults so sharp they left officials blushingâwas drifting.
he missed the minister of ritesâ botched couplet, a travesty heâd have roasted for weeks. he forgot to deliver a memorandum to the archivesâtwiceâits wax seal cracking from neglect. tax discussions passed in a haze, his fan unopened, his quips dormant. his eyes wandered, tracing patterns in the ceilingâs carved dragons, as if they held answers he didnât dare seek.
suguru kept a tally in his meeting notesâ margins: missed snide remarks: five. disinterest level: catastrophic.
the inner court ladies noticed, their eyes sharp as jade pins, their tongues sharper.
they tracked satoru like hawks circling a wayward sparrow, cataloging his absences with gleeful precision. first, he vanished from their mid-morning gossip salons, leaving their tea untouched and their scandals half-shared. then came his bizarre fixation on medical theory, of all things, muttering about rare fungi and diagnostic riddles like a scholar possessed.
âweâve scarcely seen you,â one lady said during a stroll through the peony courtyard, her fan snapping open like a daggerâs unsheathing, its silk painted with vipers. âhas the emperorâs health grown so dire?â
âoh,â satoru said, voice slow and honeyed, âthe apothecaryâs got a fungus collection thatâs positively riveting. almost as captivating as her glare when i nudge her vials out of order.â
giggles scattered like dropped pearls, sharp and knowing. he offered no further explanation, his smile a closed gate.
that afternoon, he swept into your quarters, scroll in hand, bound with red thread, inked in violet on paper too fine for his nonsenseâproof it was his worst yet. his hair was half-loose, wisps clinging to his cheek where heâd skipped pinning it, a faint ink smear on his thumb from a late-night drafting frenzy. the scroll bore your name, penned at the top in a flourish that dared you to burn it.
you opened it, scanned the first lines, and your expression couldâve shattered a tea bowl. âthis better not rhyme,â you said, voice low, each word a warning shot.
he smiled, too soft at the edges, less smug than something unguarded, like a seam in his silk had frayed. his fingers brushed the benchâs edge, lingering as if to anchor himself, and he watched you read, his gaze catching the way your brow twitched, the way your lips pressed thin.
somewhere beneath the posture, the perfume, the performance, his heart stutteredâa single, traitorous skip.
it was enough to whisper: this was no longer just a game.
he sent a courier three provinces south for a flower that didnât even bloom this season.
âyou dispatched a royal courier to the southern mountains for a sprig of winter jasmine?â suguru asked, voice taut with disbelief, arms folded so tightly it seemed he was trying to cage a migraine. his shadow loomed across the verandaâs polished wood, sharp against the dappled sunlight filtering through the wisteria.
satoru, reclining in the east verandaâs shade, swirled his teacup with a lazy flick of his wrist, the liquid long gone cold and forgotten. âitâs for a case,â he said, shrugging, stretching one leg until his silken robes spilled over the floor like ivory ink, catching flecks of light.
his fan lay discarded beside him, its painted cranes motionless, but his posture screamed decadence: languid limbs, robe slipping to bare the gleam of his collarbone, silver hair a cascade tucked behind one ear, a blue cord woven through for no reason but to catch the eye.
âitâs a seasonal ornamental,â suguru snapped, his boots clicking as he took a half-step forward, resisting the urge to pace. ânot medicine. not even symbolic medicine. itâs for perfume, satoru. perfume.â
âdepends on the metaphor,â satoru replied, grinning without looking, his gaze drifting past suguruâs scowl to the corridor snaking toward the inner court. his ringsâtwo, etched with lotus vinesâglinted as he tilted the cup, letting it catch the light like a conspiratorâs signal.
suguru dragged a hand down his face, his sigh heavy enough to stir the wisteria petals scattered nearby. âiâm going to strangle you with that sash.â
âyouâd have to catch me first,â satoru said, raising the cup in a mock toast, his grin sharp as a bladeâs edge.
he had no intention of explaining. not the three couriers heâd sent in secret, their horses kicking dust across provinces. not the velvet-wrapped parcel one returned, petals still dewed from mountain mist, their fragrance curling like a secret. and definitely not the way your brow furrowedâhalf suspicion, half aweâwhen he set the sprig on your worktable, its silk wrapping unfurling like a bribe from a poet.
âthis is fresh,â you said, nose wrinkling, holding the jasmine between two fingers like it might bite. âthis isnât local. not even close.â
âi know,â he said, voice bright as festival lanterns, chin propped on one hand as he watched you with the shameless glee of a man too pleased with his own audacity. âgorgeous, isnât it?â
your glare couldâve sterilized a scalpel. âyouâre unbearable.â
âand yet, here i linger,â he said, his sleeve brushing a vial as he leaned closer, just enough to make you stiffen.
âtragically,â you muttered, tossing the sprig onto a parchment, where it landed like a fallen star.
he stayed longer that dayâfar longer, until the shadows slanted sharp and the afternoonâs warmth bled into duskâs cool edge. your tea sat untouched, its steam long gone. your sighs grew louder, each one a performance, yet you never shoved him out. he watched you work: arms bare to the elbow, sleeves knotted loosely, hands stained with pigment and resin, moving like the shelves and tables were extensions of your will.
you always faced the window when handling volatile herbs, not for light, heâd learned, but for the breeze, its faint stir cutting the fumes and teasing loose strands of your hair.
he cataloged it all. the way you hummed when focusedâfractured, tuneless, like a half-remembered lullaby from a village beyond the palaceâs reach.
it wasnât daily, but frequent enough that he timed his arrivals to catch its fading notes. the way you sorted jars by scentâcamphor to the left, ginseng to the rightâignoring strength or tradition. how you cracked your knuckles before mixing tinctures, a sharp pop like a soldier before battle. the pause before you spoke to him, as if weighing which barb would cut deepest.
it was intoxicating, like chasing the edge of a storm.
he crafted excuses to linger: forged dosage errors scrawled on stolen parchment, misfiled records he âdiscoveredâ in dusty archives, fake prescriptions only he knew were nonsense. once, he claimed mint sensitivity just to spar with you over its diagnostic merit. he lost, spectacularly, your rebuttal so sharp it left him grinning for hours.
âiâm starting to think youâre a fixture here,â you said one afternoon, not looking up as he sauntered in, uninvited. your hands were buried in a jar of powdered ginseng, your hair falling into your face, dusted with chalk like a scribeâs error.
âdonât be absurd,â he said, claiming the spare cushion by your shelves with the ease of a man whoâd never heard the word no. his robeâcobalt blue, stitched with black cranes and storm cloudsâpooled around him, dramatic and excessive, its hem brushing a stray leaf youâd missed. âi have other haunts. theyâre just less⌠stabby.â
âand less likely to throw you out?â you asked, flicking a speck of dust from your sleeve, your tone dry as the desert beyond the red cliffs.
âprecisely,â he said, his grin a spark in the dim room.
you didnât laugh, but you didnât banish him either. and when your hand grazed his sleeveâa fleeting, accidental brush as you reached for a vialâyou didnât pull back. didnât flinch. the contact, barely a whisper, burned in his mind like a brand.
he was too comfortable now, not just in your space but in your orbitâyour rhythms, your silences, the way you tilted your head before a fight, lips pursing when you swallowed a sharper retort. you insulted him with the grace of someone whoâd decided he wasnât worth charming, each barb a masterpiece of disdain.
it was the truest exchange he had all day.
no one else dared. but you? you called him a fungus with delusions of grandeur. you said his robes looked like a peacock mugged by a thunderstorm. you told him his puzzles were âan affront to medicine and common sense.â
and still, he returned. because every insult was a flare, every glance a challenge, every unspoken word a riddle more gripping than any court intrigue.
he told himself it was curiosity. a game. a puzzle to unravel.
but if that were true, why did he measure his day by how long he could linger before you snapped? why did he trace the curl of your handwriting in his mind, the rhythm of your humming, the way you bit your cheek when lost in thought?
and why, when he left, did the world feel a little flatter, the colors muted, like a painting left unfinished?
lately, he wasnât sure if he was studying you or unraveling himself. each visit chipped away at his excuses, leaving something rawer, riskier, in its place. he caught himself watching not just your hands but the faint scar on your knuckle, the way your eyes softened when you thought no one saw. he noticed how you lingered, tooânot in words, but in the way you let him stay, let him disrupt, let him fill the silence with his nonsense.
he was in too deep, and the worst part? he didnât care.
because every sprig of jasmine, every forged case, every stolen ribbon was a thread pulling him closer to youâand he was too far gone to cut it.
it began with a flower.
well, no. it began with a lie about a flower.
âlunar-affected fever,â satoru said, voice solemn yet dripping with drama, holding a scroll like it was an imperial decree rather than a parchment stuffed with absurdity.
he lounged across your workspaceâs threshold, as if the breeze itself had swept him in, robes of slate grayâstitched with pale moons that shimmered faintlyâbillowing with each subtle shift. his hair, half-tied with a silver pin, caught the filtered sunlight, glinting like spun thread, a few strands curling defiantly against his jaw. ârare as a comet. strikes only under moonlight. fever, dizziness, faint prophetic dreams. possibly contagious.â
you didnât look up. didnât pause. just dipped your brush in ink with the precision of a surgeon, your movements steady as stone. âthere is no such thing as lunar-affected fever,â you said, voice flat as a pressed leaf, not even indulging him with a sigh.
he tsked, tapping the scroll against his palm like a tutor poised to chide a wayward pupil. âhow can you be sure without seeing the flower?â
your head liftedâslow, deliberate, your eyes locking onto his with a glare sharp enough to wither an orchard. your lips pursed, brow twitching, a silent vow of retribution etched in your expression.
satoruâs smile widened, blue eyes sparking with mischief, like a cat whoâd just knocked a vase to the floor and called it art.
which is how you found yourselfâagainst logic, reason, and three stern vows to your own sanityâtrailing him through the moonlit paths of the imperial gardens, gravel crunching softly under your sandals.
your sleeves were tugged tight around your wrists, knotted to keep them from snagging on stray branches. your hair, pinned in a hasty bun, unraveled in soft curls that clung to your temples, damp from the nightâs humidity. you walked in silence, letting the faint whisper of your steps speak for you.
ahead, satoru moved with the effortless grace of someone who owned every pebble, every leaf. the lantern in his hand swayed, its warm glow dancing across the path, painting his silver hair with flecks of gold, like a halo he didnât deserve.
he glanced back now and then, just to check you were still there. each time, his smirk softened for a heartbeat, a flicker of something unguarded, before he faced forward, humming a tuneless melody under his breath, the sound weaving into the night like a secret.
âyou couldâve just asked me to see a flower,â you muttered at his back, your voice low, edged with exasperation.
âand skip the theatrics?â he half-turned, walking backward with infuriating ease, his robes catching the moonlight in ripples. âyou wound me.â
the pavilion he led you to crouched in shadow, draped in ivy and curling wisteria, their leaves glistening with dew. moonlight poured through the open beams, silvering the air, catching the faint mist that clung to the ground. the night carried a sharp, green bite of moss, layered with something sweeter, fragile, like a bloom holding its breath.
and there it was: the night-blooming cereus.
its petals unfurled, slow and tentative, as if coaxing itself into existence. the bloom glowed, ethereal, held together by moonlight and whispers, its edges curling like a secret shared in the dark.
âit blooms once a year,â satoru said, voice softer now, stripped of its usual flourish. he stepped beside you, not quite touching, but close enough for the warmth of his presence to brush your skin. âonly under a full moon. they call it the queen of the night.â
your lips parted, breath catching, a faint hitch you couldnât hide. your arms, folded in defiance moments ago, slowly loosened, fingers twitching as if to reach out. your eyes locked on the flower, and for the first time in days, your face shiftedâbrow easing, mouth softening, the hard edges melting away. you werenât the court apothecary, nor the wary prisoner of palace games.
you were someone rediscovering wonder, like a child glimpsing a star for the first time.
âbeautiful,â you whispered, the word escaping before you could cage it, fragile as the bloom itself.
satoru wasnât watching the flower.
âyes,â he said, voice barely a murmur, âit is.â
he stared at you, caught in the moonlightâs caress on your cheekbone, the soft curve of your profile. his fingers flexed, not to touch, but to hold the momentâthe way your eyes shimmered, the faint flush on your skin, the curl of hair clinging to your temple. he wanted to etch it into memory, to keep it sharper than any painting.
the silence stretched, warm and alive, a fragile bubble of stillness that pulsed with its own rhythm. the night held you both, the cereus glowing between, its petals trembling as if aware of the weight it carried.
thenâpredictably, perfectlyâyou shattered it.
âwhat a waste of my night,â you muttered, spinning away with a dramatic eye-roll, your sleeve swishing like a curtain falling on a play.
but your hands betrayed you.
you reached for the bloom with a reverence that belied your words, cupping it as if it might crumble to dust. when you turned, you cradled it to your chest, fingers curled protectively, like guarding a secret you hadnât meant to claim.
satoru didnât tease. didnât speak. he fell into step beside you, lantern swinging gently, casting slow-dancing shadows that tangled with the gravel path. he stole glances as you walked, catching the way you peeked at the flowerâonce, twice, like you needed to be sure it was real. your sandals scuffed softly, a counterpoint to his silent steps, and the night seemed to lean in, listening.
he didnât sleep that night. not properly. he lay beneath his canopy, robes half-discarded, staring at the lattice ceiling as moonlight slanted through, replaying the curve of your lips, the softness in your eyes, the way youâd held the bloom like it was a piece of yourself youâd forgotten. his chest felt tight, restless, like a bird trapped in a too-small cage.
the next morning, he arrived at your chambers as always, leaning in the doorway like heâd been carved for the space, robes of deep indigo shifting with each breath. you didnât greet him, didnât look up, your focus buried in a stack of parchment, your hair already slipping its pins, ink smudged on one knuckle.
same sleeves. same scowl. same you.
but when he leaned too close, feigning interest in your notes, his eyes caught it: pressed between the worn pages of your herbarium, nestled beside meticulous entries on sedatives, the cereus. flattened, pale, its glow dimmed but defiant, like a star pinned to earth.
your handwriting, precise and sharp: epiphyllum oxypetalum. blooms once yearly, under full moon. fragile.
he said nothing. didnât smirk, didnât tease. but his chest ached, a low, slow throb, tender and mortifying, like a bruise he hadnât earned.
for the first time in weeks, he forgot to bring a new case. no scroll, no absurd symptoms, no ribbon-wrapped nonsense. he just stood there, watching you scribble, the silence heavier than it shouldâve been.
and when you finally glanced up, your eyes narrowing at his stillness, he felt itâa tug, sharp and undeniable, like a thread pulling taut between you.
he didnât know what to call it. not yet.
but as he left, his steps lighter than they shouldâve been, he wondered if youâd noticed the absence of his usual chaosâand if, maybe, you missed it.
it started with kiyohiro, a court eunuch, collapsing in the corridor outside your chambers.
not with flair. not convincingly. just a calculated wobble, a practiced sway, before he sank to the floor with a theatrical sigh, clutching his stomach like the palace kitchens had slipped arsenic into his rice.
âabdominal pain,â he groaned, palm pressed to his navel, eyes fluttering as if scripted. âpossibly fatal. i need the court apothecary at once.â
you didnât flinch. didnât glance up. the pestle in your hand ground dried peony root against stone, its rhythm steady, unyielding, like a heartbeat ignoring a storm. âeat fewer sweet buns,â you muttered, voice flat as sunbaked clay, handing a tonic to a maid without breaking stride.
it shouldâve ended there.
but gossip spreads faster than truth in a palace of whispers. by weekâs end, your chambers had become a pilgrimage site for every bored eunuch with a noble title and a flair for drama. a sudden rash? a fluttering pulse? a dizziness that struck only when you entered, your sleeves brushing the air like a challenge?
satoru watched it unfold, his displeasure sharp and simmering. arms crossed, posture a studied nonchalance that screamed irritation, he haunted your doorframe like a specter with a grudge. his robesâtoo fine for indifference, deep indigo threaded with silver lotusesâshimmered under lantern light, his hair tied with lazy precision, glinting like frost on a winter stream.
âremarkable,â he drawled one afternoon, voice silk laced with venom, as he ushered another swooning eunuch out with a smile that never touched his eyes. âhow many eunuchs have fallen mysteriously ill this month?â
you didnât look up, fingers folding linen cloths with deft flicks. âjealous?â
his gaze snapped to you, blue eyes narrowing. your face was a mask, but your hand paused, just once, on the bowlâs rim, a flicker of defiance. âof what?â he said, voice low, edged. âtheir fake ailments or their pitiful flirtations?â
âboth, it seems,â you said, a smirk tugging your lips, mischief woven into your exasperation. your eyes stayed on your work, but your voice carried that familiar spark, like a blade hidden in a sleeve.
your sleeves were rolled to your elbows, dusted with faint lotus bark, strands of hair slipping from their pins to cling to your jaw, damp with the roomâs humid breath. you looked unruffled, impervious to the parade of titled eunuchs feigning ailments to bask in your presence.
satoru, though, was anything but.
not openly. not officially. but he was thereâalways. every time a noble eunuch swept in with a new complaint, satoru materialized, claiming urgent business nearby. every consultation hosted his lounging formâleaning against a lacquered pillar, fan snapping open with a lazy flick. he never interrupted outright. he just⌠watched, his comments slicing with surgical precision.
âtakamasa, you faint in sunlight?â he asked, voice dripping with mock concern, as the young eunuch clutched a silk handkerchief to his chest.
âcurious,â satoru cut in, fan pausing mid-flutter. âwerenât you sprawled in the courtyard yesterday, under midday sun?â
the silence that followed was a masterpiece, heavy and delicious. you didnât bother hiding your eye-roll, your lips twitching as you ground herbs with renewed vigor.
âyouâre absurd,â you told him later, after heâd dismantled enjirouâs complaint of âchronic sighsâ with a single arched brow and a quip about fainting goats.
âiâm diligent,â he said, lips curving, his fan tapping his chin. âyour timeâs too precious for noble fairy tales spun in silk.â
he didnât say the restâthat he loathed how they looked at you, like your attention was a prize to be won with theatrics, like you were a treasure to be claimed with a well-timed swoon. he hated the way their eyes lingered, as if they could buy your focus with flattery or feigned frailty.
then came the emergency.
a kitchen servant collapsed, breath shallow, sweat beading like dew on his brow. no posturing, no poetry. just raw panicâgasps, shouts, the clatter of a dropped tray. his skin burned under touch, his pulse a frantic stutter.
satoru was already there.
he didnât knock, didnât wait. he followed the stretcher into your chambers, sleeves shoved up, hair slipping from its tie, strands catching the sweat on his neck. the usual glint in his eyes was gone, replaced by something taut, focused, like a blade drawn and ready.
you were already in motion.
your face was a mask of calm, eyes sharp as you issued ordersâclear, clipped, commanding. this wasnât the you who wielded wit like a dagger; this was you at war, hands swift and sure, voice steady as stone. you didnât glance at satoru, didnât need to. he moved with you, seamless, like heâd studied your rhythm for months.
he passed you cloths, their edges fraying from haste. helped lift the servant onto a cot, his grip steady but gentle. ground herbs under your curt instructions, his fingers quick, precise, remembering how you liked the mortar angled for rhubarb root, its bitter tang sharp in the air.
âyou actually care about these people,â he said quietly, voice almost lost in the clink of vials, as he handed you a ladle and wiped the servantâs brow with a damp cloth.
âsomeone has to,â you said, eyes fixed on your work, your fingers deftly measuring a tincture. âmost here see servants as props.â
he didnât reply, didnât know how. just kept moving beside you, his sleeves brushing yours in the cramped space, the air thick with bile, heat, and crushed leaves.
the night stretched on. two more servants were carried inâone vomiting, one limp as a rag. the room reeked of sickness and herbs, the floor littered with discarded cloths.
your voice frayed at the edges, your hands trembled onceâbrieflyâbefore you clenched them steady. your braid had come loose, strands sticking to your sweat-damp neck, but you didnât pause to fix it.
satoru stayed.
when it was overâwhen the last fever broke, the last pulse steadiedâyou collapsed into your chair, limbs heavy, breath ragged. your brush slipped, smearing half-written labels across the desk. your eyelids sagged, your head dipping to rest on the crook of your arm, ink smudging your cheek like a childâs mistake.
he approached softly, his outer robe already in hand, its deep indigo folding over your shoulders like a shield. his fingers hovered above your arm, a moment of hesitation, then pulled back, leaving only the faint warmth of the fabric.
your cheek pressed to your arm, breath slow, lips parted in sleep.
he sank into the chair beside you, not touching, not speaking. he tilted his head back against the wall, eyes closing, his own exhaustion pulling at him. his feet throbbed, his fingers stained with bark and ink, but he didnât move.
when you stirred at dawn, throat dry, eyes gritty, he was still thereâhead back, arms folded, mouth slightly open, a faint crease in his brow, like even sleep couldnât ease his tension.
your voice cracked, raw from the night. âyou stayed.â
his eyes opened, slow, steady, like heâd been waiting for you to speak. âsomeone had to make sure you didnât drown in your own brews,â he said, voice hoarse but carrying that familiar lilt, a spark of amusement in the ruin of the night.
you looked at himâreally lookedâand said nothing more. neither did he.
but the silence between you wasnât hollow.
it was heavy, alive, woven with something newâsomething neither of you could name, but both felt, like a pulse beneath the skin.
the summons came at dawn.
no pomp, no ritualâjust a folded slip passed in the corridor, stamped with the emperorâs seal, its wax glinting like a quiet threat. satoru read it in silence, his face a mask, brows twitching faintly before he slipped it into his sleeve.
he rose from the window seat where his tea sat cold, the morning light catching the sheen of his indigo robes. his movements were fluid, but a weight clung to himâanticipation, not fatigue, heavy as a stone sinking in still water.
his father didnât call unless it mattered.
and lately, everything mattered.
the emperorâs chambers were dim, morning sun barely piercing the heavy curtains, casting long shadows across lacquered floors. incense curled in the corners, frankincense and cedar weaving a thick, ancient haze, clinging like a memory too stubborn to fade.
satoru stepped inside quietly, his robesâindigo lined with black, unadornedâswallowing the light. his hair, usually a defiant spill, was pulled into a tight tail, no stray strands, no red cord for flair. he bowed low, spine rigid, fluid as a dancer, but his hands clenched too tightly at his sides, knuckles pale against the silk.
âyouâre late,â the emperor murmured, voice thin but steady, a thread stretched taut.
ânever late,â satoru said, slipping into the chair by the bed without waiting for leave, his tone light but guarded. âjust selectively punctual.â
his father, propped against a mound of cushions, gave a faint huffâhalf breath, half fond rebuke. his eyes, sharp despite their sunken frame, flickered with a spark of the man beneath the crown. his skeletal hand adjusted the jade charm at his wrist, its edges worn smooth by restless habit.
silence fell, heavy, expectant, like the air before a storm.
âwhoever she is,â the emperor said at last, gaze drifting to the far wall where a painted crane seemed to watch, âdonât let her pull you from what matters. your coronation looms closer than we planned.â
satoru stilled, his breath catching, a faint hitch he buried beneath a neutral mask. his lashes flicked, the only sign of the jolt beneath his skin. âitâs strategic,â he said, voice smooth, polished. âshe fascinates me for reasons i canât name. i need to know why.â
the emperor turned slowly, his gaze piercing despite the tremor in his fingers as he smoothed his robeâs folds. âis that why suguru says you linger in her chambers like a moth drunk on lantern light?â
satoruâs eyes dropped to the floor, tracing the mosaic of lotuses and dragons, their curves blurring in the dim glow. suguru, his bodyguard, had seen too muchâevery visit, every scroll, every stolen glanceâand carried it to the emperorâs ear. duty bound him to report, and satoru couldnât fault him, though the sting lingered.
âvery strategic,â the emperor added, voice softening, a faint amusement curling beneath the weariness. âsuguru tells me youâve sent couriers across provinces for her. flowers, of all things.â
satoruâs lips parted, then closed, words dissolving like mist. his fingers tightened on the chairâs edge, the wood cool under his grip.
âshe reminds me of your mother,â the emperor said, eyes drifting to the ceilingâs carved phoenixes, their wings frozen mid-flight. âsharp-tongued. unyielding. challenged me every day of our marriage. made me a better ruler. a better man.â
satoruâs throat burned, a dry ache he couldnât swallow. his gaze stayed on the floor, the weight of his fatherâs words pressing against his chest, fragile and unnameable. he had no reply, no quip to deflect the truth laid bare.
he left with silence draped over him like a second robe, his steps too quiet, his face too blank. guards bowed as he passed, their armor clinking softly, but he didnât see them, his mind tangled in the echo of his fatherâs voice, suguruâs report, and you.
that night, he didnât bring a scroll. no absurd case, no ribbon-wrapped nonsense to make you sigh. he brought flowers.
dahlias, crimson and bold, tied with an ink-dark ribbon, their petals vivid against the muted light of your chambers. dignified, elegant, deliberateâa choice that spoke louder than his usual theatrics.
he entered with a hesitant confidence, like stepping onto a bridge he wasnât sure would hold. the air carried the familiar bite of herbs and ink, softened by the faint musk of drying parchment. you glanced up from your worktable, sleeves rolled, fingers stained with licorice root, one brow arching in quiet surprise.
âthese are forâŚâ he started, holding the bouquet with a care that belied his usual nonchalance, as if the flowers might wilt under a careless grip.
âanother fake ailment?â you cut in, eyes narrowing, though a spark of curiosity flickered beneath the suspicion.
his lips curved, soft, not his usual smirk. âjust thought they suited you.â
you paused, breath hitching for a moment, your fingers stilling over a vial. then you reached out, your hand brushing hisâa flicker of contact, light as a mothâs wing, warm and gone too soon. it was nothing. it was everything.
neither of you moved, not at first. the air held its breath, charged with the weight of that touch.
then you cleared your throat, turned away, busying yourself with a jar that hadnât moved in weeks, its label curling at the edges. he smiled at your back, eyes tracing the slant of your shoulders, the faint tilt of your headâalways left when you were flustered, a detail heâd memorized like a map.
from then on, he brought meals.
not with fanfare. not every night. just often enough to become a rhythm. evenings blurred with your work, and heâd appear, tray in hand, the food simple but warmâsoft rice flecked with sesame, miso delicate as a sigh, sweet egg custards you claimed to dislike but always finished, scraping the bowl when you thought he wasnât looking.
âyou donât have to keep feeding me,â you said one night, chopsticks hovering, steam curling from the rice like a secret.
âand miss watching you eat while insulting my wit?â he said, settling beside you, his knee brushing the tableâs edge. ânever.â
some nights, words came softly, worn by exhaustionâsnatches of court gossip, old memories, musings on the rain like it held answers. other nights, silence reigned, comfortable, heavy with unspoken things.
your chairs drifted closer.
knees brushed beneath the low table. once. then again. neither of you pulled away. his hand rested a little too close to yours. your gaze lingered a little too long. and the quiet between you stayed warm, charged, not innocent, but not yet dangerous.
still disaster bloomed, as it always does, in the quietest breath of night.
the garden held its breath, a rare stillness cloaking the night. the koi pond shimmered under moonlight, liquid silver rippling with each stray breeze, its surface catching the faint glow of lanterns swaying like conspirators. wisteria hung heavy, its scent weaving with damp earth, sharp and fleeting, the air thick with the promise of something about to break.
you walked side by side, sleeves brushing now and then, deliberate in their graze. the concubine youâd treated earlier slept at last, her fever broken, the air in her chambers no longer taut with dread. yet neither of you moved to part, steps slowing as the gardenâs quiet conspired to hold you there.
satoru trailed a half-step behind, hands clasped behind his back, his long robe whispering against the gravel, its pale gray hem catching the lantern glow like mist.
moonlight wove silver through his white hair, sharpened the elegant line of his jaw, made him look like a figure etched from starlight. his eyes, glacial blue, flicked to you every few momentsâmemorizing the curve of your profile, the way your hair curled against your neck, damp from the humid air.
his silence tonight was heavy, careful, like a man cradling a glass too full to spill. âyou really donât rest,â he murmured, voice low, a thread of concern tucked into his usual drawl, barely louder than the windâs sigh.
you didnât slow, sandals scuffing softly. ârest is for those who can afford carelessness.â
he huffed, almost amused, the sound soft as a falling petal. âremind me never to share my medical records with you.â
your lips twitched, a ghost of a smile, gone before it could settle.
silence returned, thrumming now, alive with something unspokenâfull, heavy with possibility, like a storm gathering just out of sight.
then you stopped.
he nearly bumped into you, catching himself with a soft inhale. you turned, gaze locking onto his, clear and unreadable, a spark of something sharp and startled flickering in your eyes. his breath hitched, chest tightening with a feeling he didnât dare name.
no script existed for this. no smirking quip, no practiced tease. just a slow, swelling pause, the world narrowing to the space between you.
he leaned inânot a game, not a performanceâraw, unguarded, his heart a traitor beating too loud.
his hand lifted, trembling faintly, hovering near your cheek as if afraid to shatter the moment. his eyes searched yours, seeking permission, a sign, anything to stop him.
you gave none.
so he kissed you.
softly at first, reverent, lips brushing yours with the care of someone handling porcelain. his mouth was warm, unsure but honest, and your breath caughtâa soft hitch he felt and paused for. his eyes fluttered half-shut, lashes long and pale, his silver hair swaying slightly as he leaned in further.
your lips parted, startled but not retreating, your fingers curling tight at your sides. his hand found your jaw, slow and sure, thumb grazing your cheekbone like heâd memorized it. he tilted his head slightly, shadows shifting along his high cheekbones, his breath mixing with yours. your heart thudded, loud in your throat.
you tilted up, just enough, your mouth moving under hisâtentative, then firmer, a quiet answer. the moment bloomed between you, the stillness of the air broken only by the soft brush of silk against silk, the distant sound of wind chimes trembling in the garden. satoru forgot how to think. his mind emptied, breath stolen. the world dissolved into the warmth of your breath, the taste of crushed herbs on your lips, and something sweeter beneath that made his chest ache.
he kissed you againâdeeper this time, less cautious, more aching. his hand slid from your jaw to the back of your neck, fingers threading into your hair, holding you there like a secret. his other hand, trembling, hovered at your waist before pulling you in by the small of your back. his lips parted, tongue brushing yours in a slow, exploratory sweep, reverent, like he was afraid to break you.
and you kissed him back.
not immediately, but when you didâit was real. your mouth opened to him, breath shaky, spine stiff but yielding. you leaned forward, just slightly, your hands still curled but not pushing. he tasted you like a prayer, like something sacred, like maybe if he kissed you long enough youâd stay.
then he pulled back, eyes dark and wide, pupils blown, lips red from the kiss. he looked at you as if he couldnât believe it had happened, as if the world had turned inside out and there you were, still in his arms.
âyouââ he breathed, voice hoarse, gaze flicking from your mouth to your eyes, dazed, lost, drunk on something he never thought he could have.
and then he kissed you again.
this time, hungry. this time, like a man stepping into fire knowing full well heâd burn. your lips met his with a gasp, and you let him take you for one heartbeat too long. one second too many.
your fingers twitched. your knees wavered. you wanted to hate him for how good it felt.
and thenâyou shoved him.
hard.
he stumbled backward, arms flailing like a heron skidding across ice, nearly tripping over the embroidered hem of his robe. he caught himself on a stone lantern with a grunt, robes fluttering around his ankles. his eyes were wide, lips still parted, chest rising and falling like heâd just run a mile.
âhave you lost your mind?â you snapped, voice like a blade. your cheeks blazed, your chest heaved, and your glareâgods, your glare could level dynasties.
he blinked, then grinned despite himself. crooked and boyish, maddeningly unrepentant.
âpossibly,â he said, breathless.
âiâm not wasting my genes on a eunuch,â you spat, your voice sharp as shattered jade. âno matter how pretty his face.â
satoru froze.
then blinked.
then let out a laugh. not one of those dramatic, hand-over-mouth princely chuckles he liked to use when causing a scene. no, this one was quiet, startledâundignified, even. a breath of disbelief that hiccuped past his lips and got swallowed by the wisteria.
âyou think iâm a eunuch,â he muttered, mostly to himself.
you didnât dignify him with an answer. nor did you stay to argue. didnât pause for a cutting remark or a dramatic glance over your shoulder. no, the moment he stilled, the moment that too-long silence fell between you like a dropped fan, you turned. spun on your heel and stormed off with the kind of pace that said if you didnât leave now, you might do something youâd regretâlike kiss him again. or worse: ask if he meant it.
which, of course, he did.
still, you muttered as you walked away. low and furious, under your breath, like the words were bubbling out whether you wanted them to or not. he caught fragments. something about hormones. about silk-robed maniacs with too many rings. about eunuchs, eggplants, and the gods forsaking your common sense.
the silence sank teeth into his shoulders. the night air folded around him like silk dipped in ice. his thumb grazed the edge of his bottom lip, slow, like he could rewind the last few seconds through touch alone.
he had forgotten.
forgotten what he was pretending to be. forgotten the rings, the incense, the mask heâd sewn into his skin over the years. he had kissed you like a manânot a prince, not a eunuch, not a myth wrapped in silk and riddles. just a man.
and you had kissed him back.
but the moment shattered before it could be named. your words had carved right through it. not cruelly, not intentionally. that was the worst part. you didnât know what youâd done. you hadnât even seen him.
you kissed the lie.
he pressed his hand to his mouth, jaw clenched. it was almost funny. it should have been funny. and maybe in the morning, it would be.
but right now?
right now, he was half-sick with the sweetness of it. with how close heâd come to believing that moment was real. with how much he still wanted it to be. the ache wasnât sharp, but it was deepâa bruise blooming slow beneath the ribs.
he should have laughed it off. he should have returned to his quarters, poured wine, told suguru something smug and unrepeatable. instead, he just stood there, dumb and dazed and smiling like an idiot.
âshe thinks iâm a eunuch,â he said again, quieter this time. and stillâstillâhe wanted you to kiss him again. not because you didnât know who he was.
but because, somehow, impossibly, you might want him anyway.
he didnât see you for three days.
not for lack of trying. you were a specter, slipping through locked doors, vanishing into sudden meetings, leaving maids shrugging when he pressed for your whereabouts. even the gossiping servants, usually eager to spill, offered nothing but vague apologies.
in court, he was a shadow of himself. during a trade council, he sat rigid, staring through a minister droning about tariffs, his fingers tracing the same spot on his lips where your kiss had burned.
the roomâs incense choked him, too sweet, and when a scribe dropped a brush, the clatter made him flinch, his thoughts snapping back to your startled shove. he nodded at the right moments, but his voice, usually sharp with quips, was dull, his eyes drifting to the window where moonlight mightâve been.
concubines noticed. one wept over a broken hairpin, its jade splintered like her heart, and satoru could only muster a tired, âitâs just a pin.â another sulked over a petty slightâsomeone had worn her shade of crimsonâand he waved her off, words flat: âwear blue instead.â their pouts deepened, but he had no energy for their dramas.
suguru found him sprawled on the pavilion roof, one arm flung across his eyes, the other tossing dried plums at passing sparrows, each throw more despondent than the last. âso,â suguru said, tossing him a rice cracker with no pity, âshe hit you with reality?â
âno,â satoru muttered, snapping the cracker in half with the mournful air of a man betrayed by fate. âshe pushed me. emotionally.â
suguruâs pause, mid-bite, was louder than words, his raised brow a silent judgment.
the worst part? satoru couldnât stop replaying it. the shape of your mouth against his, warm and yielding. the sharp twist of your face when you pulled back, eyes blazing with fury and something softer, unguarded.
a week passed. he performedâattended court, smiled on cue, offered wry commentary in meetings, even penned a birthday poem for the favored concubineâs pet nightingale, all wit and charm. but it was hollow.
in a session on border disputes, he doodled your name in the margin of a scroll, then scratched it out, ink smearing like his resolve. a concubine wailed about a lost fan, and he stared through her, muttering, âbuy another,â his voice a ghost of its usual spark.
every night, when the palace quieted, his steps led him back to the garden, to the spot where youâd stopped, where heâd leaned in, where the line between strategy and sincerity had dissolved. the wisteria was fading now, petals curling brown, and he stood there, moonlight pooling around him, hand drifting to his lips, still tingling.
the ache wasnât intrigue. wasnât curiosity.
it was wantâraw, relentless, refusing to fade.
and as he lingered, the irony gnawed deeper: heâd disguised himself as a eunuch to protect his life, only to lose his heart to a woman who thought he had none to give.
the problem began with a scream.
not yours.
hers.
lady mei, daughter of the insufferable minister of war, unleashed a shriek that couldâve cracked the palace jade, scattering birds from the rafters and jolting the court from their jasmine-laced tea. it ripped through the corridors like a war horn, shrill and self-important, drawing eyes and whispers like blood draws flies. by the time satoru caught the rumor, it had spread like ink in waterâravenous, unstoppable, vicious.
poison. hair falling in clumps.
dark magic, they hissed. foreign plots. a witch.
and youâgods, youâstood accused before the tribunal, chin high, jaw forged in iron, wrists bound in red silk that chafed raw welts into your skin. your robe sagged, one sleeve torn where a guardâs grip had twisted too hard, but you didnât flinch. your lips were a tight slash, face a mask, yet your eyes blazedâdefiant, untamed, a storm caged in flesh.
satoru overheard it by chance. or fate. call it what you will.
heâd been pacing the eastern promenade, robe loose at the throat, hair tied with reckless grace, his posture a thin veneer of boredom. two servants lingered by the reflecting pool, their whispers sharp, gleeful, cutting through the spring air. âshe cursed lady meiâs beauty cream,â one breathed, eyes wide as lotus blooms.
âno,â the other hissed, leaning in, âa tonic. thins the blood. deadly in excess.â
satoruâs world snapped. his ears roared, a high, searing hum drowning all else. the gardenâs lattice blurred, its patterns bleeding like smeared ink. the koi pond burned too bright, the air choking despite the breeze.
his hands clenched, nails carving crescents into his palms, silk twisting in his fists. he spun, robes flaring like a tempest, the blue fabric cracking with each furious stride. court eunuchs scattered as he stormed past, their bows faltering, stunned by the raw fury radiating from him. the usual glint in his eyes was dead, replaced by something glacial, murderous.
suguru caught him at the tribunal wingâs threshold, breathless, hair tied back, sleeves rolled as if heâd sprinted from his post. âyour highness,â he hissed, seizing satoruâs arm in a grip that could bruise, âyou cannot barge in. your position. your disguise.â
satoruâs head turned, slow, deliberate, like a blade aligning for a strike. rage poured from him, white-hot, unyielding as a forge. âtheyâre going to execute her over lies,â he snarled, voice low, jagged, each word a shard of flint. âi wonât stand by.â
his body trembled, not with fear but with violence barely contained, his jaw locked so tight the muscle twitched near his ear. his eyes burned beneath his white hair, colder than a winterâs edge, promising devastation.
âthink strategically,â suguru urged, stepping in front, voice firm but pleading. âthis screams more than justice. it screams you.â
satoruâs breath caught, a sharp stutter. his lips parted, then clamped shut. a beat. another. he exhaled through his teeth, a hiss like a blade drawn from its sheath. âfine,â he bit out. âstrategy. but if they touch one hair on her headââ
âthey wonât,â suguru said, softer, his gaze tracing satoruâs face, seeing the fractures in his mask. âthey wonât.â
satoru didnât nod, didnât thank him. he turned, vanishing like a storm unleashed, not to brood but to burn.
he tore through the palace like a wraith on fire. scrolls ripped from shelves, bamboo frames splintering under his grip. records cracked open, pages scattering like ash. his movements were sharp, relentless, stripped of the lazy grace he once wore like a second skin.
servants stammered, spilling secrets under his stare, their voices quaking. he bribed, coerced, lied, threatenedâone steward nearly fainted when satoru leaned in, his smile all teeth, voice a silken blade: âcare to clarify?â
by midnight, his sleeves were rolled, white linen smudged with ink and soot, his hair fraying from countless rakes of his fingers, strands clinging to his sweat-slick neck. scrolls and witness names littered the lacquered table like battlefield wreckage, his voice raw from demanding testimony. lady meiâs handmaidens trembled under his questions, eyes darting like sparrows before a hawk.
her perfumer tried to flee, only to find satoru waiting by the storage room, leaning casually against the doorframe, voice like frost: ârunning somewhere?â
he summoned an outer court physician under a false name, tearing through ledgers with brutal precisionâred stamps, supplier lists, ingredient logsâuntil he found it.
mercury.
tucked in an imported skin tonicâs recipe, a whisper of silver in the fine print. enough to shed hair, to bleach skin, to kill in time. he held the vial to the candlelight, its liquid shifting like molten guilt, thick and treacherous. his reflection twisted in the glassâpale, wild-eyed, lips a grim slash, the boy whoâd kissed you burned away by rage.
the fury in him cooled, hardened, became something sharperâcertainty, cold and unyielding.
he didnât smile at first.
then he did. not the charming mask, not the courtierâs grin. this was jagged, raw, all teeth and shadow, a predatorâs bared edge.
because he had itâthe proof, the truth, the blade to cut you free. because no oneânot a spoiled heiress, not a scheming courtier, not a whisper cloaked in silkâwould touch you.
not while he still drew breath.
his rage didnât falter, didnât soften. it fueled him, a fire in his veins as he prepared to storm the tribunal with evidence in hand, the irony of his eunuch disguise a bitter sting. heâd hidden to save his life, only to find his life now hinged on saving yours.
the vial still sat in his palm when the sun began to rise.
dawn crept in, golden and soft, a cruel jest against the storm in his chestâtight, raw, ready to split at the seams. light spilled like syrup across the chaos of scrolls and vials strewn around him, glinting off ink-stained bamboo and glass, but nothing could dull the acid churning in his gut. he hadnât slept, hadnât sat, the night consumed by evidence and fury, leaving only the mercuryâs cold gleam and the certainty that if he didnât act, theyâd rip you from him.
he didnât change, just yanked his robe tighter, the pale silk creased from hours of pacing. his hair, tugged back with a frayed black ribbon, was crooked, strands escaping to cling to his sweat-damp neck. his movements were sharp, stripped of flourish, the mask of poise shattered by sleepless resolve.
he strode through the palace corridors with lethal purposeânot the slouch of a court eunuch, not the drawl of the royal fool they took him for. he moved as who he was: crown prince, predator, a blade honed and aimed. his steps struck the tiled floor like war drums, each echo a challenge.
no bowed head, no softened gazeâhis outer robe flared with every stride, stark against the morningâs glow seeping through latticed windows. officials turned, startled, as he stormed into the tribunal, a figure cloaked in silk and wrath, moonlit hair twisted high, eyes like shattered ice.
suguru trailed three paces behind, silent, jaw clenched tight enough to crack stone. he moved like a shadow, hand resting on his swordâs hiltânot for defense, but as if ready to drag satoru out if this went too far. his disapproval burned like a brand between them, unspoken but searing.
you were there.
kneeling, silent, spine rigid as jade. your robes were plain, hair hastily knotted, strands fraying against your neck. your wrists, unbound now, rested stiffly in your lap, fingers knotted white. your lips were a taut line, jaw locked, and your eyesâgods, your eyesâhad shifted. still clear, still fierce, but now laced with something new: calculation, suspicion, a blade-sharp wariness that hadnât been there before.
because youâd seen him enterânot as a servant, not as the eunuch youâd assumed, but as a man with too much power in his stride, too much steel in his voice, too much weight in how the court stilled. something didnât add up, and your gaze cut through him like a scalpel.
satoruâs eyes locked on yours. unwavering, unyielding.
for the first time, in all your barbed exchanges, he couldnât read you.
âlord satoru,â the minister of justice intoned, voice brittle as dried reeds, âyou were not summoned.â
âi rarely am,â satoru replied, smooth but icy, his smile a blade that didnât reach his eyes. âyet i arrive when it matters.â
he stepped forward, robes hissing across the floor like a drawn sword, and drew a lacquer boxâblack, polished, lethalâfrom his sleeve. âi trust the tribunal still cares for truth?â
he didnât wait for permission, didnât bow, didnât blink. his fingers, steady as stone, snapped the lid open.
inside: the vial, sealed, labeled, venomous.
âlady mei has been slathering mercury on her skin,â he said, voice clipped, cold as a winterâs edge. âan imported cream to bleach her complexion. overuse brings tremors, fatigue, hair loss.â he let the last word hang, sharp as a guillotine. âsymptoms unrelated to the apothecaryâs work.â
he turned to the panel, gaze unblinking, deliberate. âit wasnât her tincture that poisoned mei. it was meiâs own vanity.â
whispers erupted, spreading like mold. fans snapped shut, silk rustled, discomfort coiling through the court. ministers exchanged glances, some avoiding your eyes, others squirming under satoruâs stare.
âyour source?â the minister of justice asked, voice thinner now, authority fraying.
âher handmaidens. her perfumer. her personal effects.â satoru tilted his head, expression a mask of frost. âshall i list the ingredients by name or rank them by toxicity?â
suguruâs glare bored into his back, a silent warning, his tension a pulse in the air. satoru felt it, ignored it.
because the room shifted. your name slid off the pyre.
âthe tribunal finds no fault in the apothecaryâs conduct,â the minister of justice said, voice tight, reluctant. âcharges dismissed.â
you exhaled, a soft release, like youâd held your breath since the scream. your fingers flexed, chin lifted, but your gaze didnât softenânot for him.
satoruâs shoulders eased, just a fraction, the knot in his chest loosening. but relief was fleeting.
âhow convenient,â the minister of justice said, eyes narrowing, voice dripping with suspicion, âthat you know so much about a servantâs case. one might think you have a personal stake in this apothecary.â
satoru smiled, slow, calculated, a jagged edge of teeth. âknowledge is my trade.â
âvery well, your hiââ
the slip was a whisper, barely there. the silence that followed was a chasm. satoruâs gaze didnât flinch. suguruâs jaw ticked, a muscle jumping under his skin.
ââmaster satoru.â
and that was that.
the matter closed.
satoru turned, robes flaring like a stormâs wake, the lacquer box gripped tight, its edges biting his palm. no triumph warmed his chestâonly dread, heavy as iron, settling in his bones because heâd stormed in with fire in his veins and too much truth on his tongue.
suguru followed, wordless, his silence blistering, storm-browed and heavy. they didnât speak as they left the hall, didnât need toâsuguruâs disapproval was a blade at satoruâs back.
but just before satoru crossed the threshold, he turned.
just once.
just long enough to see you, still kneeling, still watching. your eyes werenât grateful. they were narrow, probing, a scalpel slicing through his facade.
and in that fleeting second, he breathedânot relief, not victory, but the hollow ache of knowing heâd saved you and damned himself.
you wouldnât thank him. youâd ask questionsâthe kind that could unravel his lie, his title, his heart.
and gods help him, heâd still do it again.
contrary to what he was expecting, you gave him nothingâthatâs the thing about silenceâsatoru feels it like a blade to the throat.
especially when itâs yours.
it hits him hardânot metaphorical, but literal, a sharp slap to the back of his head from his father the morning after the tribunal, in the locked imperial study where guards stood sentinel and the air reeked of bitter incense and sharper disappointment.
âhave you lost your senses?â the emperor snapped, voice a low rumble, the kind that precedes a stormâs break. âyou kindized your cover for the court apothecary. do you grasp the risk to everything weâve built? your coronation looms, and one slip could have the court tearing itself apart with questions.â
satoru stared at the floor, fists clenched, knuckles bone-white, jaw locked until his teeth ached. his ceremonial robe sagged, sash skewed, hair knotted with an ink-stained ribbon, the black fraying at the edges. âi did what was right,â he said, voice steady but tight, each word a stone dropped in defiance.
âyou did what was emotional,â his father countered, eyes piercing, seeing too much.
the worst part? he was right. no defense would sound like anything but a confession, so satoru swallowed it, the truth burning like bile.
now, days later, heâs chasing the one he risked it all for, and you wonât even look at him.
your silence is a weapon, surgical, precise. he feels it instantlyâthe way your shoulders tense when his voice spills into a room, a subtle flinch like youâre bracing for impact. your spine stiffens when he steps too close, a wall rising without a word. your gaze skims over him, light as a stone skipping water, never settling, never sinking. your hands freeze, as if expecting an unwanted touch, your face a perfect mask, blank and unyielding.
itâs not avoidance. itâs retreatâcalculated, deliberate, leaving nothing for him to grasp, not even your sharp-tongued barbs.
he first catches it in the herb garden, where youâre crouched among flowering angelica, sleeves rolled, fingers stained green, a smudge of pollen dusting your cheek like gold in the sunlight.
you glance up, startled, then pivot smoothly to the court physician beside you, words clipped, professional, before excusing yourself. you brush dirt from your hands, braid swinging like a snapped cord as you vanish around the corner, leaving the air colder, heavier.
satoru stands frozen, clutching a jar of honeyed lotus heâd meant to give you, its petals already curling, drooping like his hope. he followsâof course he does.
the next day, and the next, he trails you through corridors, across courtyards, into the inner palaceâs echoing hush. he memorizes the whisper of your sandals, the way your lips thin when he enters, how you wrap your arms tighter around yourself, even in the summerâs heat, as if shielding something fragile.
you donât insult him. donât banter. donât anything.
your greetings, when they come, are cold, formal, a blade pressed lightly to his throatâpolite, practiced, punishing. each one carves deeper than your sharpest quip ever could.
he corners you by the water jars one morning, after mapping your routes like a hunter. his robe is creased from rushing, a loose thread dangling from the sleeve, his hair half-falling from its tie, white tufts framing his temples. he clutches a sprig of purple gentianâregret, heâd learned, hoping youâd read it too.
âheyââ he starts, voice softer than he means.
you look through him, eyes empty, like heâs vapor, insignificant. then you step around, sandals hissing on stone, not rushing, not flinching, gaze fixed ahead, unreadable, distant. you leave him clutching a flower that feels heavier than it should, its petals bruising in his grip.
he staggers, heart lurching, chest hollow with disbelief. not because youâre coldâheâs endured worse. not because youâre sharpâheâs always craved that. but because youâve erased yourself from the game he loved losing. youâve left him swinging at shadows, and the absence of your fight is a wound he canât staunch.
by midday, he slinks into suguruâs quarters, dragging his feet like a scolded child, arms crossed tight as if they could hold his unraveling together. his sash is half-untied, a dark smudge on his collar from spilled ink he didnât bother to clean. he collapses onto a cushion, graceless as a felled tree, robe tangling at his ankles, a gentian petal stuck to his shoulder, wilted and sad.
âsheâs avoiding me,â he declares, voice heavy with the weight of a man mourning a war lost. his hair is a wreck, strands clinging to his neck, the petal fluttering to the floor like a final surrender.
suguru, buried in scrolls, raises a brow, unimpressed. âyes. i noticed.â
satoru flops back, one arm flung across his eyes like a tragic poet. âiâve been to the medicine hall four times today.â
âiâm sure they loved the interruption.â
âthey offered me a foot bath and begged me to leave.â
suguru hums, dry as dust. âreasonable.â
satoru peeks from under his sleeve, the gentian now a crumpled heap beside him. âwhy?â
suguru sets his brush down, pinching his nose like heâs bracing for a saga. âmaybe sheâs unnerved by how you stormed the tribunal to save her.â
satoru sits up, indignation flaring. âi couldnât let them execute her.â
satoru scowls, raking both hands through his hair, worsening the chaos. âthatâs absurd. i saved her. she should be calling me brilliant, handsome, terrifyingly heroic.â
âshe should,â suguru says, bland, âbut instead, she sees you as a threat.â
âiâm not a threat,â satoru poutsâyes, pouts, lips jutting like a child denied sweets. âiâm charming.â
âyou kissed her,â suguru says, blunt as a hammer, âthen risked your identity to clear her name. you nearly exposed yourself in the tribunal. if thatâs charming, weâre reading different scrolls.â
satoru opens his mouth, then shuts it, the truth landing like a stone. he is dangerousânot to you, never to you, but in the way men are when they want too much, feel too much, when your name in your sharp-tongued cadence has become a rhythm he canât unhear.
maybe you saw itâthe depth of his care, the reckless edge of it. maybe you knew what it could cost in a palace where love is a weakness, where weakness is a death sentence. maybe thatâs why youâve gone silent, because youâve lived here long enough to know how quickly devotion becomes a noose.
and gods, it hurts.
no oneâs ever run from him like this, not with this quiet, cutting precision. heâd rather you scream, call him a peacock, mock his silk robesâanything but this silence, this absence that feels like farewell.
because heâs not ready to let you goânot when your kiss still burns his lips, not when heâd burn the palace down to keep you safe again.
the thing about denial is satoru is incredibly good at it.
heâs practically a master of delusionâan expert in selective optimism, an artisan in pretending everything is fine, especially when it very much isnât. itâs the first week of your silence, and heâs convinced this is a temporary misstep. a phase. a momentary lapse in your usually impeccable judgment that will surely pass.
surely.
he starts showing up in places he has no business being.
âoh! what a coincidence finding you here⌠in the herb garden⌠at dawn⌠when you always collect morning dew,â he says brightly one morning, attempting nonchalance. he leans far too casually against the wooden trellis, his outer robe slightly askew, strands of silver-white hair glinting with condensation from the early mist.
he even has the audacity to smile like he hasnât been pacing that path for the last half hour, waiting for you to arrive.
your back is to him. you donât flinch, but your hand pauses over the mint leaves for a beat too long before moving again. your fingers move with mechanical precision as you snip the stems, pile them into your basket, and keep your gaze locked firmly on the greenery in front of you.
you donât answer.
he stands awkwardly for another breath, then another, shifting from foot to foot, clearing his throat onceâtwiceâuntil you finally rise with your basket and brush past him with all the grace of a falling leaf that still manages to cut like a knife. your sleeve doesnât even brush his. your hair smells faintly of crushed basil and dried chrysanthemum, and the scent follows you as you walk away.
undeterred, satoru escalates.
he appears in the medicinal stores that afternoon, arms folded behind his back like he owns the place. which, in a roundabout way, he technically does. his hair is freshly tied back, his sleeves rolled precisely to the elbow like he might do something useful. heâs even wearing his softer silk robes, the ones he knows donât intimidate patients.
he produces a small pot from within his robe with the dramatic flourish of a magician mid-performance.
âa rare specimen from the southern provinces,â he announces, eyes sparkling. âwhite-tipped chrysanthemum. useful for calming fevers, clearing toxins, and healing broken hearts.â
he adds the last bit with a grin that slides a little crooked at the corners. lopsided. hopeful. a little pathetic.
you donât even look up at first. your hands continue grinding dried rhubarb root into powder, movements efficient, clinical. your brow is furrowed. thereâs a streak of ash under your eye from hours near the incense brazier, and your sleeves are dusted with crushed herbs. when you finally glance his way, itâs brief. dispassionate. two seconds of eye contact that make him feel like heâs been dissected and found wanting.
âi have twenty-two of these in the western cabinet,â you say, voice devoid of venom or warmth. âbut thank you for the⌠professional courtesy.â
your bow is precise. and then youâre gone. the hem of your robe whispers against the stone as you turn the corner without a single backward glance.
he stands there in the cool quiet, alone but for the chrysanthemum pot in his hands, which suddenly feels heavier than it should. the silence in the room hums louder now. it presses at the back of his skull. he sets the pot down on the nearest shelf and doesnât look at it again.
later, he finds himself slouched sideways across suguruâs low table, picking at the edge of a rice cracker he has no intention of eating. his forehead is pressed to the polished wood, arms sprawled out like heâs melting.
âsheâs just busy. itâs nothing personal,â he mumbles into the grain of the table.
suguru, who has been dealing with palace politics since before satoru could tie his sash properly, looks at him like heâs watching a fire burn too close to the curtains.
âbusy?â suguru echoes, his tone so dry it might as well be powdered bone.
satoru lifts his head a fraction, eyes shadowed under his bangs. âoverwhelmed,â he insists, sitting up and tossing the uneaten cracker onto the tray. âthe tribunal aftermath, new responsibilities, increased patient loadâsheâs under a lot of pressure.â
âyou stormed a tribunal to save her,â suguru interrupts, setting down his brush with pointed slowness.
âyes, but heroically,â satoru says, arms folding tighter around himself, like he can physically ward off the doubt creeping in. ânobly.â
suguruâs eyebrow rises. high. impossibly high. it might detach from his face and float away like a skeptical spirit.
âlook,â satoru mutters, shifting to lie on his back and drape an arm over his eyes like the protagonist of a particularly tragic play, âthis is just a bump. a weird, quiet, icy bump. iâve weathered worse. sheâll come around. she always does. sheâshe has to.â
he pauses.
âright?â
suguru doesnât answer. just watches him in silence, eyes narrowing with the kind of older-brother pity that makes satoru want to melt through the floor.
and then he sighs. a long, theatrical sigh that fails to lighten the weight in his chest. because heâs starting to realize this isnât just a bump.
this is a slow, cold freeze.
and youâre the one pulling the frost line farther back every time he gets close. the air between you grows thinner, colder, until every word he wants to say dies frozen on his tongue before it ever reaches you. and for the first time, heâs afraid that all the warmth in the world might not be enough to melt it.
the thing about desperation is it turns satoru into a mastermind of madness.
week two dawns, and your icy silence is a fortress his charm canât breach, so he pivots. he schemes. he crafts plans so absurd theyâd make court poets weep for their lost dignity. you canât be mad he saved youâimpossibleâso this is just a phase, a fleeting misstep heâll charm into oblivion.
his opening gambit? a theatrical ailment, served with flair.
âmy pulse races, i canât eat, and sleepâs a stranger,â he proclaims one morning, materializing at your workstation like a ghost draped in pale silk, robes pristine but hair gleaming as if he spent an hour brushing it to catch the dawnâs glow. he leans over your table, just close enough for his sleeve to graze a vial, voice dripping with mock woe. âalso, my palms sweat when i see⌠certain peopleâwhich is definitely not you!â
the apothecary hall hums with early light, golden rays slicing through lattice windows, casting woven shadows across stone. camphor and dried licorice root scent the air, sharp and heavy. junior assistants shuffle behind, sorting valerian and lotus pods, their murmurs a soft drone.
youâre a statue, unmoved, flipping a ledger page, ink brush scratching measurements with ruthless calm. âsounds like a minor imbalance,â you say, voice a blade, clean and cold. âchrysanthemum tea and more sleep.â
satoru gaspsâgasps, hand to chest, staggering back like your words are divine judgment. a pestle clatters from an assistantâs grip, a tea bowl teeters on a shelf, wobbling like his pride. ânone of that worked,â he insists, eyes wide, tragic. âitâs chronic. possibly terminal. i need daily checkups. twice daily, for⌠observation.â
you donât reply, just pluck a jar of calming ointment from a cabinet and set it on the tableâs edge with a thud, not sparing him a glance. he snatches it, clutching it like a sacred talisman, bowing with such reverence his hair spills forward, a silver curtain brushing the floor.
thatâs the spark.
what follows is a campaign satoru deems elegant, a symphony of strategy. in truth, itâs a farce teetering on lunacy.
he turns sleuth, all subtle inquiries and innocent smiles. he grills kitchen staff on your lunch habitsâbitter plum candies, you love them. he corners a laundry maid about your robesâsame deep indigo, always pressed. he charms couriers for your midday hauntsâwest pavilion, near the koi pond. harmless, he swears, just⌠research. he scribbles notes, tucked in his sleeve, scrawled between council dronings: tools right to left, hums odd rhythms, hates wasted ink.
heâs not stalking. heâs conducting a study, a meticulous survey of your existence.
âreconnaissance,â he mutters one afternoon, crouched behind a decorative screen in the infirmaryâs rear hall, wedged between a linen cart and a scroll of spleen meridians, half-unrolled like his dignity.
itâs a ritual now. daily excuses, each more brazen. a fan âdroppedâ near your herbs, its silk tassel suspiciously pristine. a scroll âforgottenâ on your desk, its contents a poem he swears isnât his. a combâhis personal seal carved deep, definitely not hisâleft by your inkstone. a pouch of dried dates, âslippedâ from his sleeve, suspiciously your favorite.
he times his returns perfectly, catching the flicker of annoyance in your eyes, the slow sigh as you spot his silhouette. your jaw tightens, lips purse, gaze narrows like youâre diagnosing a plague.
âoh, thank the heavens,â he says one afternoon, kneeling by your table, robes pooling like spilled moonlight, embroidery glinting in the sun. âi feared this comb lost forever.â
âthat comb is carved with your seal,â you deadpan, stirring crushed kudzu, steam curling around your face. âyouâre the only one here who uses that seal as inner palace manager.â
he gasps, hand to heart. âso it is mine. a miracle.â
assistants exchange glances. one chokes back a laugh, sleeve muffling the sound. anotherâs eyes roll so far they might never return. you just stir, unamused, the bowlâs steam hiding the twitch of your mouth.
suguru finds him later, crouched behind a silk screen in the medicine hallâs corner, half-veiled by pressure-point charts and an abandoned anatomy scroll.
satoruâs staring at you mixing tinctures, gaze soft as if youâre a rare painting or a storm breaking over mountains. your sleeves are rolled, ginger staining your fingers, brow furrowed as you test the liquidâs thickness. a stray hair slips free, brushing your cheek each time you lean, and he tracks it like a comet.
âare you⌠spying?â suguru asks, voice teetering between worry and exhaustion.
âreconnaissance,â satoru says, eyes never leaving you. âcompletely different.â
âhow?â
âitâs dignified.â
suguruâs sigh could topple empires. he walks away, leaving satoru to his vigil.
he stays, knees aching, drafts chilling his ankles, even as shift bells chime and servants pass with raised brows and whispered gossip. he canât stop. watching you workâyour precise hands, your quiet focusâis the only time the world feels right, the only time youâre close, even if you wonât see him.
your silence canât be anger, not when he saved you, not when he was your shield. itâs just⌠a phase. youâll crack, throw a barb, maybe hurl a vial at his head. heâd take it gladly.
heâll keep showing up, unavoidable, until your frost thaws or you snap.
because if heâs in your orbit, youâll have to see him eventuallyâright? right?
the thing about humiliation is satoru has no sense of it.
or maybe he feels it but buries it beneath stubborn vanity and desperate theatrics, draping it in silks and timed flourishes like a tragedian clutching a tattered script. heâs not wrongâyou canât be mad he saved youâso he barrels forward, undaunted, a peacock in a storm.
week three crashes in like summer monsoonsâheavy, unyielding, impossible to ignore. satoruâs antics scale to operatic madness, each act more brazen than the last.
it begins at a court ceremony, the air thick with incense curling like specters around bored officialsâ heads. sunlight seeps through high lattice windows, spilling gold across tiled floors, glinting off jade pins and silk fans fluttering like moth wings. courtiers murmur, voices low, while a servantâs dropped tray earns a hissed rebuke that echoes faintly.
you stand beside the inner palace physician, posture rigid, face a mask, eyes fixed forward, your refusal to see him sharper than any blade.
he notices. gods, he notices.
so he âcollapsesââclutching his chest, dropping to his knees with a choked gasp mid-chant, silk robes pooling like melted snow. the sacred hymn stumbles, a musicianâs brow arches, but the koto strings hum on. âweakness,â he rasps, voice cracking just enough to sell it, hand trembling as he sways. âsudden⌠overwhelmingâŚâ
you glide to him, linen rustling, herbal scent trailing like a faint curse. kneeling, you press two fingers to his wrist, jaw tight as iron. his pulse? steady as a war drum.
âyour hands are so healing,â he murmurs, lips parted, lashes low, a saintly look ruined by the smirk tugging his mouth.
you drop his wrist like itâs plague-ridden.
âget up,â you say, voice flat as slate.
he pouts. âbutââ
âup.â
he rises, brushing nonexistent dust from his robes, their shimmer catching the light like a winter lake, regal and utterly shameless.
it spirals from there.
next, the rash. âa mysterious affliction,â he whispers one afternoon, leaning in the apothecary doorway like heâs spilling state secrets. his robes are artfully mussed, a few silver hairs astray for effect, his seal as inner palace manager glinting on his belt. âin places too improper to show anyone else.â
you donât look up from your mortar, grinding ginseng with mechanical precision. âi trust your medical discretion,â he sighs, hand over heart, theatrical as a funeral ode.
you gesture for a eunuch assistant without a blink. satoru dismisses him in five minutes, claiming a âmiraculous recovery,â his grin brighter than the noon sun.
then, the hiccups. âthree days,â he tells a dubious herbalist, face grave between hiccups so staged they could headline a festival. âunprovoked. incurable.â they flare only when youâre near, vanishing the instant you leave. âhicâlady rin fainted in the greenhouseâhicâscandalousâhicâheat or a lover?âhicââ
you shove a pressure point chart his way and keep walking. he trails you, hiccuping like a deranged waterfowl, robes swishing in your wake.
he takes to hiding behind potted plantsâliteral, not figurative. you catch the glint of embroidered silk behind a jasmine bush near the treatment wing. it rustles. he sneezes. you donât pause. the gardeners are less forgiving; one finds a scarf snagged in a fig tree and mutters about cursed spirits with tacky taste.
a palace maid starts a betting pool on a parchment scrap behind the tea station. by midweek, court ladies wager on his next ailment: lunar migraines, aphrodisiac allergies, silence sensitivity. the tallyâs pinned to a beam, fluttering like a rebel flag.
suguru finds him one evening, propped against a doorframe outside the record room, squinting at his reflection in a polished bronze tea tray. âwhat are you doing?â suguru asks, voice flat as a stepped-on reed.
âfinding my best angle,â satoru says, tilting his chin, robes catching the lamplight like liquid frost. âthis sideâs devastating.â
âwhy?â
âsome of us care about aesthetics, suguru.â
suguru stares three heartbeats, then leaves without a word, sandals slapping stone. satoru sighs, adjusts his sleeve, rechecks the tray. the problem isnât his tacticsâclearly, itâs the lighting.
because you canât be furious. this is just a phase, a fleeting frost heâll melt with enough flair. heâll keep performing, unavoidable, until you laugh or snapâeitherâs a win.
the thing about pretending is the mask eventually cracks.
week four creeps in like a slow fogâdense, suffocating, clinging to satoruâs bones. his schemes, once fueled by giddy denial, turn brittle, their spark snuffed out. youâre not mad he saved youâsurely notâbut your silence is a void, and his antics no longer draw your gaze. still, he canât stop, even as the performance bleeds into something raw, something real.
he spends an afternoon perched in a tree outside your window, teetering on a gnarled branch not meant for a man in layered silk. robes bunch under his knees, snagging on rough bark, his personal seal as inner palace manager glinting at his waist. ceremonial hairpins clink with each shift, the branch groaning under his weight.
petals drift into his lap, mingling with dust and a bold beetle that crawls up his sleeve. he swats it, muttering, as sap drips onto his shoulder, staining the silk. birds mock him from above; a maid below stifles a giggle, scurrying off.
he stays for hours, legs numb, arms clutching the trunk, eyes fixed on the lanternâs warm flicker behind your rice paper screen. a breeze carries distant gossip, the clack of slippers, the faint crash of a dropped mortar from the apothecary wing. he dozes offâchin to chest, cheek mashed against bark, mouth slack, snoring softly, undignified. a sparrow shits on his sleeve and flees.
your window slides open, airing out the stale warmth. he jolts awake, flailing, a squawk escaping as he tumblesâa sprawl of silk and limbs hitting dew-soaked grass with a grunt that echoes through the courtyard. leaves tangle in his hair, a grass stain blooms on his shoulder, a twig juts from his sash. one robe sleeve hangs off, his hairpin crooked.
you stare down.
âi was inspecting landscaping,â he croaks, blinking up, voice raw, throat scraped from days of shouting your name. âroot systems. erosion. vital work.â
your eyes narrow. you slide the window shut, the woodâs soft thud louder than any rebuke.
his voice starts failing after that. he calls after youâacross training fields, past koi ponds, through garden pathsâfirst hopeful, then frantic, then ragged with need. his throat burns, words slurring, a dry cough haunting quiet moments, like his own body rebels. you never turn, not even when he trips over his sandals, voice cracking on your name.
âyouâre overworking yourself,â suguru says one morning, watching satoru prod a congealed pile of rice. the breakfast hall buzzesâteacups clink, servants weave with platters of dumplings and lotus rootâbut satoru sits still, a ghost in the chaos where he once shone. his robes sag, collar limp, sash half-tied, dark crescents bruising under his eyes. he hasnât slept, not truly, not in a way that heals.
âiâm fine,â he rasps, voice a brittle whisper, throat raw.
a thread frays from his sleeve, tugged absently for half an hour. a maid swaps his tea for honey water; it sits untouched, steam curling into nothing.
he stops performingânot by choice, but because his body betrays him. the court notices, their amused whispers turning wary. âcursed?â one mutters under the moon-viewing pavilionâs arch. âheartbreak,â an older consort replies, fan slow, knowing, âuntreatable by herbs.â
the betting pool withers; no one bets on a man breaking in plain sight.
a young court lady tries teasing him during a scroll signing, giggling about his missing sash. he looks through her, face blankânot cold, just gone. her smile fades, and she retreats, fan drooping.
the emperor summons him. the chamber reeks of aged wood and sandalwood, cicadas shrieking outside, a moth dancing near the lantern.
âyour distractions are⌠obvious,â the emperor says, voice mild over a porcelain cup of spiced tea. âhave you sworn to starve?â
satoru blinks slowly, words sinking in late. âiâm capable,â he says, voice fragile, unconvinced.
the emperor sighs, cup clinking softly. âsuguru, pinch him when he sighs.â
âgladly,â suguru mutters, already poised by the window.
he pinches satoru at the next council briefing. satoru yelps, startling a western envoy who drops his brush. âsorry,â satoru says, straightening, blinking fast, âmuscle spasm. stress. common.â
no one buys it, least of all him.
you pass him in the apothecary hall later, face blank, pace even, tray of powdered herbs in hand, fingers stained with crushed petals. your sleeve brushes his, a fleeting touch that stops his breath, his hand twitching, hoping for your gaze.
you donât look. not a flicker.
he wonders if heâs fading, if heâs a ghost you never truly saw.
the thing about hitting rock bottom is satoru drags props and a crowd with him.
by week five, even the imperial koi dodge him, one darting away when he slumps over the pond, sighing into its depths like a poet scorned. a servant mutters, âtalking to fish again?â
another hisses, âno, monologuing. thereâs a difference.â his antics swing from pitiful to deranged, depending on the hour and how close you are before he sneezes. palace staff whisper behind sleeves, watching a tragedy laced with farce unfold in real time.
it starts with rainâa relentless downpour soaking roof tiles, seeping into scroll rooms, turning courtyard stones slick as eel skin. it clings to bones, weighs hair, chills marrow. attendants scurry with parasols, eunuchs huddle under eaves, guards eye the sky, dreaming of indoor shifts. the head gardener slips twice, cursing weather gods with a rake in hand.
satoru lingers outside your quarters.
four hours.
he leans against a wooden post, a drenched statue of damp nobility and sniffles. rain beads on his jaw, dripping onto his robeâs collar, silver hair plastered to his cheekbones like wet silk threads. his soaked outer robe clings, transparent, revealing embroidered underlayers meant for court, not courtyards. his slippers squelch, squishing with each shift. he sneezes every five minutes, loud, pathetic, drawing glances from servants who now reroute entirely.
you open the doorânot from pity, but because maids are betting in the side hall, giggling: five minutes more? ten? the cook wagers candied ginger heâll faint; a laundress bets on a song; the steward swears he saw satoruâs eyelashes blink code.
you sigh, step inside, return with gloves and a cloth mask. your hairâs knotted tight, sleeves pinned, expression sharp enough to carve jade. he coughs, theatrical anguish. âyouâre treating me like iâm plague-ridden.â
âyou are plague-ridden,â you snap, gloves crackling as you seize his wrist, touch clinical, cold. his skinâs chilled, pulse steady despite his act.
he leans into your grip. you flick his forehead, precise as a dart.
he whines all day, mostly to suguru, who slumps in the physicianâs lounge, regretting every choice leading here. an unread scroll lies in his lap, herbal poultice stench thick in the air. outside, birds chirp, mocking the farce within.
âshe wore gloves, suguru,â satoru moans, swaddled in three blankets, sipping a garlic-laced brew that reeks of despair. his personal seal as inner palace manager dangles from his sash, glinting dully. âgloves. like iâm a festering toadstool.â
âyouâre feverish,â suguru says, eyes on his scroll. âyou are a toadstool.â
satoru gasps, rattling a tea set. an attendant flinches, a teacup teeters, caught by a mortified apprentice.
then, self-diagnoses. ânocturnal hemogoblins,â he declares one evening, bursting into your workroom, clutching his side, face pale from sleeplessness and a dusting of tragic powder. âitâs dire.â
you donât look up from your parchment. âyou mean hemoglobinemia.â
he beams. âyou spoke to me.â
you freeze, brush hovering, face souring like you bit a rotten plum. you resume writing, silent. he tallies seven words in his head, a victory he celebrates like a war won.
his ploys escalate. rare herbs appearâones you havenât seen since southern training, wrapped in silk not from palace stores, their earthy scent lingering in halls. he trails sandalwood one day, golden pollen the next, a perfumed cloud like incense smoke.
âfound this lying around,â he says, setting a saffron root sprig on your table, its crimson threads vibrant against wood.
you raise a brow. âsaffron root from the western isles⌠lying around?â
he shrugs, smile strained.
then, disaster. he brings a volatile herb youâve warned against, cradled in a velvet box like a jewel. within an hour, his face swellsâleft eye shut, lip ballooned, nose a vivid plum. âi feel⌠handsome,â he slurs, voice muffled.
you administer antidote with the weary air of someone resigned to fate, humming faintly, maybe to cope. your fingers are deft, grip firm, expression a blank wall. âwhereâd you get this?â you ask, spreading minty salve with a spatula reeking of despair.
âsources,â he wheezes.
that night, suguru catches him before a mirror tray, rehearsing lines like a doomed actor. a breeze lifts the corridorâs sheer curtain, a moth fluttering past.
âoh! fancy meeting you here, exactly where i knew youâd be!â satoru chirps, smoothing his robe, chin tilted for sincerityâlooking haggard instead. ânew hairpin? it suits you perfectly!â âyour humor theoryâs brilliant. also your face. mostly your face.â
suguru sighs, shoulders sagging under satoruâs folly. âgods save us,â he mutters. âheâs full peacock.â
satoru twirls a mugwort sprig, eyes glassy, grinning at his warped reflection. âsheâll talk tomorrow. i feel it.â
suguru doesnât argueânot when satoru looks like heâs praying to a deaf god.
because rock bottom isnât the end, not when you havenât looked at him. heâll keep performing, props and all, until you see him again.
the thing about spectacle is it spills beyond the stage, especially when youâre satoruâinner palace manager, supposedly useless eunuch, suspiciously well-connected, and now openly consulting marble lions for romance tips.
by week six, palace gossip sheds its humor. giggles behind perfumed fans turn to pity, whispers hushing as he enters, soft glances heavy with concern and secondhand shame. attendants quiet, kitchen staff wince at his approach. heâs no longer the flamboyant eccentric juggling concubine schedules, overseeing embroidery, delivering orchids with a bow. heâs a wilted ribbon snagged on your heel, trailing the apothecary who wonât spare him a glance.
the man who once danced through courtyards now stumbles into furniture, walks into half-shut doors, topples garden lanterns, eyes locked on you. youâre not mad he saved youâimpossibleâso this is just a phase, he tells himself, even as denial frays.
âi think iâve forgotten how to swallow,â he declares post-midday meal, voice grave, like heâs diagnosing his own doom. honeyed yam lingers in the air, courtiersâ fans rustling faintly outside in the spring heat.
you donât look up from your scroll, brush scratching ink. âthatâs a tragedy,â you say, dry as dust.
âwhat if itâs muscular or psychological? some stress-induced esophageal issue?â
âchew slowly. drink water.â
âbut what if i choke?â
âthen iâll have peace at last.â
he haunts formal events, a mournful specter five steps behind youâalways five, counted under his breath like a lifeline. âone, two, threeâdamn it,â he mutters, crashing into a eunuch with a hairpin tray when you veer past the lotus fountain. the clatter echoes, pins scattering like stars. three attendants scramble to clean it.
you donât pause.
his hair, once a silver crown, rebels, strands haloing unevenly, a jade pin perpetually crooked. his robes, once pristine, misbutton, sashes unraveling, trailing like a poetâs failed verse. heâs less courtier, more shipwreck, washed ashore after a botched love letter.
in the east garden, he slumps against a mossy lion statue, sighing so loud the gardener pauses, rake hovering, checking for wounds. âshould i go for subtle longing or theatrical suffering?â satoru asks the lion, squinting at its weathered snout. âbe honest.â
the lionâs silent. a maid stifles a snort, fleeing.
suguru finds him thereâagain. âare you talking to rocks now?â he asks, arms crossed.
âhe listens without judging,â satoru says, solemn.
âhe also doesnât talk back.â
âthatâs the appeal.â
satoruâs decline hits new lows. suguru catches him outside your quarters, face blank, as if willing himself into the stonework.
âyouâre groveling for scraps of her attention like a starving dog,â suguru says, voice sharp but steady.
satoruâs head snaps up, eyes flashing, lips jutting in a pout that could shame a spoiled child. âgroveling? me? the inner palace bends to my every whim! and soon the empire!â he huffs, crossing his arms, personal seal glinting at his waist. âiâm strategizing, suguru. strategizing! sheâs just too stubborn to see my brilliance yet.â
he stomps a foot, robe swishing petulantly, then jabs a finger at suguru. âand donât you dare call it groveling when iâm clearly executing a masterful campaign of devotion!â
suguru raises a brow, unmoved. âa campaign? you spent three hours yesterday faking heart palpitations just so sheâd take your pulse. then you begged for a recheck because âit might be irregular.ââ
âmy heart does race when sheâs near,â satoru says, chin high, though his voice wavers, petulance cracking. âthatâs a medical fact!â
âitâs called infatuation, your highness, not an emergency.â
âand that swallowing thing could happen to anyone,â satoru adds, puffing his chest, but his shoulders slump, the fight leaking out.
suguruâs gaze softens, concern replacing jest. âthis isnât sustainable, satoru. youâre the crown prince. this behaviorâitâs beneath you.â
satoru stiffens, petulance fading to a flicker of dread. âi know my place,â he says, but the lie tastes like ash, heavy on his tongue. his shoulders sag, bravado crumbling under the weight of his secret.
the emperor summons him that evening. the chamber glows dim, sandalwood incense crackling, its nostalgic scent thick in the stillness. tea steams untouched in a porcelain cup, its delicate aroma lost.
âyouâre not sleeping,â the emperor says, eyeing him over his teacup, voice calm, not accusatory.
âiâm fine,â satoru lies, sitting rigid, eyes shadowed, nails carving crescents into his palms. his sleeve bears an ink blot, smudged from hours hunched over pointless scrolls.
heâs not fine.
âwhoever she is,â the emperor says, pausing, gaze unreadable, âsheâs left a mark.â
both of them know who is his father referring to.
the thing about spiraling is you run out of masks to hide behind.
week seven slips in like damp airâsilent, heavy, inescapable. no corridor theatrics, no feverish wails, no ailments flung at your workspace. the palace corridors echo emptier, as if bracing for a storm. satoru stops performing, and the silence left screams louder than his boldest quip.
no giggling attendants trail him. no court ladies stage stumbles for his glance. he doesnât lurk by the apothecary hall, conjuring maladies. he watchesâfrom shadowed walkways, courtyards, corners where he can feign a passing errand. his eyes follow you, a silent question too raw to voice.
in court, his voice fades. once a spark in the dull churn of palace bureaucracy, now he speaks only when called, words brief, humor gone. no jabs at garish sashes, no quips to ease tense silences. he lets the quiet fester. when he skips sparring with the southern envoyâa woman who thrives on his banterâheads turn.
suguru notices, arms crossed in the council chamber, head tilted, eyes asking: whatâs happening?
the truth lies at your door.
before dawn, satoru leaves heliotrope bouquets at your thresholdâsmall purple blooms, fragile yet vivid, whispering devotion, unspoken love. not native, not in season, their existence defies reason.
he pulls stringsâhis authority as inner palace manager, his personal seal flashing in shadowed deals with garden masters and secret merchants. delivered under moonlight, wrapped in fine parchment, stems cut sharp, theyâre offerings to a shrine only he tends.
he never signs them, never speaks of them. he waitsâbehind a painted screen, a corridor curtain, close enough to see your fingers brush the petals. his breath catches. your face stays stone, but he sees: the pause, your fingertips lingering, the faint crease in your brow, swallowing a sigh.
each day, the bouquets grow intricateâheliotrope laced with silk one dawn, wrapped in medical gauze the next, paired with a scrawled line from a physicianâs text. the message roars, wordless.
palace staff whisper. some say a ghost leaves the flowersâwho rises before the fifth bell? others bet on a nobleâs secret suit. a concubine swears a fox spiritâs at work. guards step around the blooms, wary, reverent.
satoru says nothing, just watches, always watches.
at night, he haunts the moonlit gardenâwhere you kissed, where he fractured. barefoot, steps silent on stone, pale hair loose, catching moonlight like spun silver. he murmurs to the koi pond, half-hoping for answers. âshe doesnât hate me, does she?â he asks, voice a breath, hoarse.
suguru finds him there, again. âdoes she hate me, suguru?â satoru asks, raw, fraying.
suguru pauses, arms folded, gazing at the pondâs still surface, a breeze barely stirring it. âitâs not that simple.â
satoru exhales, shaky, slumping, rubbing his palm against his eye, exhaustion carving every line. âwhat did i do wrong? besides everything.â
he replays your voice, your teasing eye-rolls, how youâd answer his nonsense yet see him, real. now your toneâs cold, courteous as a bladeâs edge, eyes never landing. when he nears, your wall rises, unyielding.
in a corridor, maybe chance, maybe not, you nod politely. something breaks. âdonât worry,â he mutters, bitter, sharp, âi wonât keep you. i know you find me repulsive.â
you stop, head turning, confusion and guilt flickering, but heâs gone before you settle.
his mask flakesâslow, not sudden. he skips meals, nights blur sleepless, small slights spark fury. he snaps at a scribe for smudged ink, slams a door, cracking its frame, over a misfiled scroll. his hands shake reading reports you once marked with sharp notes.
âare you well, master satoru?â a junior physician asks, soft during rounds.
he smiles, too bright, too thin. ânever better.â
the court whispersâbehind screens, fansâabout his silence, his temper, his drift. the inner palace manager, once a dazzling oddity, fades. none suspect his crown prince bloodâonly suguru, the emperor, the chancellor, and chosen ministers know, their secret guarded tight. but they question his focus, his steadiness.
suguru hears itâevery murmur, every doubtâand watches his friend, the empireâs sharpest mind, the boy who made consorts laugh, unravel, thread by silver thread.
because spiraling starts quiet, until itâs a scream he canât voice.
the thing about shame is that it never arrives alone. it drags longing behind it like a train of silk, heavy and unyielding, and satoruâs learning fast that longing is a damn tyrant, bowing to no one, least of all him.
week eightâs been a fever dream of jagged edges, but now, in a corridor outside the emperorâs chambersâvermilion walls lacquered to a bloody sheen, sandalwood choking the air like incense gone sour, scrolls rustling behind paper screens like whispers of the dead, morning light slicing through lattice to scatter dust motes like ashâsatoru gojo is a wreck.
his robeâs crooked, one sleeve slipping, silver hair half-loose, sticking to his sweat-slick neck, dark crescents bruising under his eyes. his breath catches, raw, as regret gnaws his ribs, sharper since last weekâs bitter words. your silence, your averted eyes, the way you glide past like heâs a plague-riddled corpse you wonât bother to nameâitâs worse than your barbs, worse than fury. itâs absence, and itâs killing him.
you appear, a flicker of your silhouette against the screen, steps soft on the worn runner, scrolls clutched to your chest like a shield. your jawâs clenched, lips a tight slash, gaze fixed above his shoulder like heâs nothing, air. his heart stumbles, forgets how to beat. he moves too fast, too desperate, a man drowning.
âfancy seeing you here,â he says, breathless, slouching to fake nonchalance. itâs a lieâhis voice shakes, hands twisting in his sleeves, fingers knotting silk to hide the tremor. his eyes, bloodshot, cling to you, raw, pleading.
your face doesnât shift, cold as stone. âi need to pass,â you say, voice clipped, sharp as a bladeâs edge, stepping left.
ânot until you tell me what i did wrong,â he says, sliding into your path, shoulders hunching, robe swishing like a broken fan. his toneâs too raw, too sharp, betraying the ache clawing his chest.
âi have patients waiting.â you pivot right, scrolls creaking in your grip, knuckles pale.
âthey can wait longer.â the words cut, harder than he meant, and he sees itâa flicker in your eyes, anger or hurt, gone before he can name it. âwhy are you avoiding me?â
you move left. he mirrors. you shift right. heâs there. his robe flares in dramatic waves, a stage actor mid-meltdown, planting himself with the stubborn desperation of a man whoâs got nothing left to lose.
your lips press thinner, a muscle twitching in your jaw. âmove,â you say, low, a warning that could draw blood.
ânot until you look me in the eyes and say youâre just busy.â he drops his voice, rough, tilting his head to catch your gaze, breath unsteady, carrying a tremor of need.
you scoff, eyes dropping to the runnerâs frayed weave, and duck under his arm. âiâm not avoiding you,â you lie, voice snapping like brittle wood. âiâm simplyââ
âlook me in the eyes and say that again,â he demands, voice low, gravelly, arm bracing against the wall, caging you without touching. his sleeve hovers near you, trembling, silk brushing the air like a ghostâs touch.
you pivot. quick. a step to the side, a swerve meant to slide past him.
he steps with you.
you dart the other wayâheâs there too, like a mirror with better posture. you try a feint, then a fake-out, then a spin worthy of palace dancers. every time, he matches you beat for beat, fan flicking, robe swishing, like this was all a pre-choreographed tragedy staged just to annoy you.
âare youâare you blocking me for sport?â you hiss, ducking and weaving like a cat trying to escape a curtain.
âi consider it cardio,â he replies, far too pleased.
âyou are notââ you lunge leftâblocked. ââa door.â you spin rightâblocked. âyou areââ
he shifts again, one arm rising to lean against the opposite panel, successfully completing his transformation into the worldâs most aggravating, smugly-dressed wall.
âdamned peacock,â you mutter under your breath, your patience unraveling like a poorly tied sash.
he grins, all teeth and challenge. âis that panic?â
thenâfate, that cruel bastard, plays its hand. in his eagerness to perform one final smug pivot, satoru overcommits. his foot catches the embroidered hem of his robeâonce regal, now a treacherous coil of silk. a curse, sharp and scandalized, escapes him as his balance betrays him.
his arms flail like a bird startled mid-preen. he reachesâgrabs the only thing in reachâyou.
the world lurches.
youâre yanked forward in a graceless blur. scrolls burst from your sleeves like startled pigeons. your sandal skids. silk snaps. the floor rises.
you crash atop him, your knees bracketing his hips, robes tangled, your weight knocking the wind from his lungs. one hand braces on his chest, the otherâlands on his thigh, then slips higher, dragged by momentum and misfortuneâand then time stops.
your hand rests where no eunuchâs should be, pressing against the hard, pulsing truth of his lie. satoruâs eyes snap open, wide as moons, heart slamming, drowning the corridorâs hum, his pulse a wild drum in his throat.
you freeze, breath hitching, eyes widening in slow horror, pupils dilating until they swallow the light. your lips part, a faint gasp, your gaze locked on his lap, then flicking to his face, shock warring with disbelief. your fingers flex, instinctive, the slight pressure a spark that sets him ablaze, raw, unbearable.
his face ignites, crimson flooding ears to throat, sweat slicking his brow, matting his hair. shame burns like a pyre, but longingâeight weeks of it, festering, unspentâflares hotter, primal, coiling tight in his gut. his cock twitches under your hand, a traitor, throbbing, straining against silk, a humiliating pulse he canât stop, fed by your touch, your horrified stare.
he tries to speak, mouth opening, closing, a fish gasping on dry land. a sound escapesâhalf-whimper, half-choke, not human, raw with need and mortification, a plea he canât shape.
ây-youâreââ you start, voice a trembling whisper, hand jerking back like itâs burned, fingers curling into your palm, scrolls forgotten, scattered across the runner.
âlate for a meeting!â he yelps, pitch shattering, a glass-breaking wail. he scrambles up, nearly headbutting you, sleeves flailing in a whirlwind of panic. âas are you! very late! we should go! separately! you first! or me! both!â
he shoves himself upright, stumbles, one sandal half-off, toes catching the runner, and crashes into a lantern stand. it wobbles, brass clanging like a mocking gong; he mutters a frantic, âsorry, sorry,â to the metal, voice high, fraying.
heâs gone, fleeing down the corridor like deathâs on his heels, robe flapping, silver hair streaming like a cometâs tail. his footsteps echo, uneven, desperate, fading into the palaceâs hum, sandalwood trailing like a curse.
he doesnât stop until he hits the eastern wingâs darkest storage room, a crypt behind a forgotten pantry. dusty scrolls pile like forgotten sins, edges curling in stale, mildewed air. a broom slumps against a wall, bristles choked with cobwebs, spiderwebs veiling the corners, shimmering faintly in the gray sliver of light from a cracked window. the floorâs cold, gritty, biting his knees as he collapses, back slamming the door shut, sealing himself in.
his breath heaves, lungs raw, face buried in his hands, fingers digging into his scalp, tugging silver strands until his scalp stings, sweat dripping down his neck, pooling at his collarbone. shame scalds, a molten wave, but longingâweeks of your silence, your cold eyes, your absence carving him hollowâchokes him worse.
your touch, accidental, sears like a brand, your horrified gaze a knife twisting in his ribs. his cockâs still hard, painfully so, straining against his robe, a throbbing pulse that wonât relent, fed by every thought of you, every memory of your voice, your fire, your fleeting glance that once saw him whole.
he groans, low, broken, forehead pressed to his arm, cursing himself, you, the gods, the robe, the corridor, the whole damn world. his hand twitches, hovering over his lap, resisting, pleading, but the needâs a tyrant, born of eight weeksâ yearning, your sharp tongue, your gaze that cut him alive, your silence that breaks him now. he surrenders, fingers fumbling, shoving silk layers aside, fabric scraping his fevered skin, cool air hitting the heat of his flesh like a slap.
he frees himself, cock heavy, swollen, tip slick with precum that glistens in the dim light, dripping down his shaft, a shameful bead that pools on the gritty floor. he grips himself, a hiss escaping through clenched teeth, the contact a jolt that makes his hips jerk, his breath catching like a sob, raw and ragged. itâs not lustâitâs longing, raw, bleeding, for your eyes that once saw him, your barbs that cut him alive, your touch that burned through his lies.
he strokes, slow, punishing, hand tight, calluses from a hidden sword scraping sensitive skin, each slide dragging a moan, chest heaving, sweat matting his hair to his flushed cheeks, silver strands plastered across his brow, his throat bared as his head tips back, veins pulsing under sweat-slick skin.
he pictures youâyour wide eyes, shocked, lips parting as you fell atop him, robe clinging to your frame, the faint herb scent on your skin, sharp and clean. he imagines your breath on his neck, your fingers deliberate, curling around him, guiding him, your voice whispering his name, not in horror but want, low and rough like it was in his dreams.
his strokes quicken, desperate, slick with precum, the wet sound obscene, echoing off dusty scrolls, bouncing in the stale air. his free hand claws the floor, nails scraping grit, fingers digging into cold stone, seeking an anchor as his body shakes, hips bucking into his fist, rhythm frantic, no control left, only need.
his moans spill, raw, unfiltered, bouncing off the walls, a litany of broken sounds. âfuck,â he gasps, voice shattering, âwhy you?â itâs your absence, your fire, the way you looked at him once, like he was real, now a ghost he chases.
his hand moves faster, rougher, slick and relentless, each stroke a plea for you to see him, to cut him again with your gaze. âplease,â he whispers, to you, to nothing, âjust look at me.â his vision blurs, tears or sweat, he canât tell, heat coiling low, a knot tightening, pulling, until it snaps like a bowstring.
he comes hard, a shudder tearing through him, spine arching, hips jerking as he spills over his hand, thick, hot, splattering the gritty floor, staining his robeâs hem, a shameful mark that burns his eyes. his moanâs a broken cry, half your name, half a curse, echoing in the crypt-like room, jagged, raw, filling the air until it chokes him.
he collapses, sprawled across dusty linens, chest heaving, eyes wide, staring at the cracked ceiling, its fissures mirroring his fractured mind. his handâs still wrapped around himself, slick, trembling, aftershocks fading into a hollow ache, longing unspent, pooling in his gut like poison, heavy, unyielding.
he lies there, time blurring, mildewâs scent thicker now, mingling with his sweat and release, air suffocating, pressing his chest. his hairâs plastered to his face, silver strands streaking his flushed cheeks, robe a tangled wreck, one sleeve torn, another inside-out, silk clinging to his sweat-soaked skin. heâs gutted, undone by his own hand, your touch a memory he canât unmake, your horrified eyes a wound he canât close, bleeding him dry.
later, he emerges, robe barely tied, one sleeve dangling, hair damp at the temples, flushed like heâs wrestled a demon and lost. his steps falter, sandals scuffing stone, smile forced, brittle, not touching his bloodshot eyes, dark crescents bruising beneath, cheekbones sharp from skipped meals, skin pale as moonlight gone wrong.
suguru passes him, dark robe pristine, pausing mid-step. âyou look like you fought an assassin,â he says, flat, one brow lifting, eyes scanning satoruâs ruinâflushed skin, trembling fingers, sweat-slick hair matted to his neck.
âcalisthenics,â satoru chirps, too bright, voice cracking, a pitch too high. âfantastic for circulation.â
suguruâs eyes narrow, lingering on the rumpled robe, the damp hair, the faint bruise on satoruâs knuckles from clawing the floor. âcirculation,â he repeats, slow, heavy with doubt, like he smells the lie and the shame beneath it.
satoru hurries off, pace quick, like heâs fleeing a fire he set. his robe flutters, misaligned, dragonâs tail mocking him with every step. he doesnât dare picture your face, your hand, your horrorânot again.
heâs considering faking his death. or switching identities. exile in a fishing village sounds appealing.
(give him two hours. maybe three.)
a/n: LMAO pls donât mind part one ending here. as i said this is meant to be a oneshot only đ§đťââď¸
â asking roommate!sukuna if you can sleep with him because youâre scared
âno.â
the door slams in your face, grazing your nose ever so slightly. you donât know what you were expecting when you knocked at 2am â maybe you werenât thinking at all. the booming thunder outside was dizzying and your feet raced you out of your room and down the hall in record speed before you could even process the rattling of your bones.Â
you knock again. the door swings open. he is not happy.Â
sukunaâs sporting a scowl, piercings glinting from the hallway light, as he glares down at you. heâs shirtless and wearing boxers that hang low on his hips, revealing sharp angles and thick lines of ink. on any other occasion, you would have swooned to yourself but nowâs not the time.Â
âplease, sâkuna. i canât sleep on my own like this.â
his brow quirks up. âand thatâs my problem because?â
fuck.Â
heâs not listening. you canât even blame him â itâs late and heâs already warned you heâs not the sweet type, that you shouldnât treat him like a boyfriend, and he doesnât cuddle so unless youâre up for spreading your legs, you should keep your distance. but you thought since you guys have been having dinner together, going out for errands, and even building inside jokes that he might feel inclined to do you a little favour.Â
ây-yeah, youâre right. sorry.â you jolt when the next rumble sends the apartment swaying. âoh! fuck. justâŚsorry. night.â
scrambling back, you clutch yourself tight, resenting the shudders running through you, like the storm has wormed its way in and is eating you from the inside.Â
âah!â
two huge arms wrap around you, lifting you up, back, and tossing you onto a bed. you bounce once. twice. sukuna makes an exasperated noise and runs his hand through his hair. âyouâre an annoying little shit. you better not snore or iâm kicking you out.â
then, heâs climbing in behind you, lying on his stomach, faced buried in his pillow and paying you no mind. youâre in his bed like itâs the most natural thing in the world, like youâve been here before and will be again. it did occur to you that things might get awkward, but the way heâs not even the slightest bit tense and letting you hike up the covers over both of you even though he runs hot tells a different story.Â
minutes pass by, you still canât sleep. the storm is suffocating. just as your eyes flutter shut, a flash of lightning breaches the blanket of his curtains and a fierce roaring follows shortly after, shaking the bed frame. shit.
âquit shivering. canât fucking sleep when youâre on vibration mode.â
âsorry.â
he opens one eye to judge you. âyou scared of a little thunder? embarrassing.â
âyeah.â
grunting, he mutters something, as if scolding himself and throws an arm around you. sukuna rolls you two over so heâs on his back and youâre on his chest. heâs warm and hardened with muscles, yet you melt into him as if heâs a teddy bear. he smells nice too.Â
youâre rendered confused, unable to reconcile his actions with the relevance to anything that had transpired in the last ten minutes. butâŚyou hear it. or rather, you donât. his body is shielding you from the sounds outside, distracting your senses with the feel of him, bare, against you. the thunders are washed away by the beating of something inside his chest.
quietly, you quip, feeling the need to cover up the heat rising to your cheeks, âi didnât know you had a heart.â
sukuna scoffs. âyeah, neither. now shut up, donât want to deal with your grumpy ass in the morning.â
maybe you are closer than you thought. though you wonât bring that up to him, knowing how defensive he gets. unspoken and subtle, youâre content with the way he shows his loyalty. itâs sincere and consistent and thatâs all that matters.
so, you find yourself falling asleep dreaming of a fire engulfing you, drowning all else away, and laying a gentle kiss on your head.Â
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you always thought satoruâs most favorite thing in the world â right after you, of course â was sweets.
but you were wrong.
because according to him, itâs your marriage license.
not because heâs sentimental, no â that would be too normal for gojo saroru. itâs because, in his words âit literally says youâre mine. officially. legally. governmentally. cosmically.â
you stare at him from across the couch as heâs holding the document like itâs a national treasure.
âthatâs not what it saysâ you deadpan.
satoru gasps as if youâve just told him santa isnât real. âexcuse you? learn to read between the lines. use those pretty eyes i fell in love with. it says, and i quote: âthis absolute angel is now property of one (1) extremely handsome sorcerer, forever and always.ââ
âthatâs definitely not what it says.â
âwell, thatâs what it means. same thing, bigger pictureâ he grins, tapping his temple like heâs unlocking a divine truth. âwhy else would i get it laminated and sleep with it under my pillow?â
ââŚyou laminated it?â
âof course i did~ itâs my most prized possession. you think iâd risk coffee stains?â
you roll your eyes, but your smile gives you away.
he pulls you into his arms like heâs claiming a lifetime supply of sugar, pressing a kiss to your cheek. âyou may not see itâ he whispers smugly âbut this paper right here? itâs just the government confirming what i already knew the moment i met you.â
âoh yeah?â you lift an eyebrow. âand whatâs that?â
he smirks. âthat youâre stuck with me forever, mrs gojo.â
â§ PAIRING: wolf!toji fushiguro x f!reader | 9k words
â§ SUMMARY: this fic has always been 18+ but now especially I MEAN IT mdni, toji gets horny fr this time (like 2.5k words of just that), masturbation, toji gets turned on by love idk, rut/heat cycles, basically abo/hybrid mating tendencies, idk let me write my porn sigh, misogyny, um stalking, more hybrid mistreatment, talks of murder, the typical blood as a metaphor for love :/
â§ RHEYA'S NOTE: lol okay i'm vv sorry for the six month absence.. had to get that degree :33 but hopefully this chapter being 9k words and having horny toji makes up for it.. however pls do heed the warnings! i yap a lot about mating and other abo things so if that's not your thing pls scroll TT.. anyways i'm thanking you all so much for your patience !! hope you enjoy <33
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"pause."
toji's form stops abruptly, and you bite back a chuckle when he turns to glare at you over his shoulder. "what?"
you grin, rocking back on your heels even as the rest of the street continues bustling around you. "i'm hungry."
the street's lights reflect over toji's facial features, and the way his jaw drops looks extra comical. "already? we just had dinner."
you frown, affronted. "that was like an hour ago."
toji snorts, rolling his eyes, though it comes off fonder than you expected it to. "so you want dessert?"
you nod eagerly, and a muted chuckle escapes the wolf as you catch up to his side. his jade eyes scan the lively streets critically, before falling on you again. "well, go crazy."
you immediately grab his wrist and tug him along, peering at different stalls and stores despite his protests. toji ends up just crossing his arms as he waits for you to buy your dessert (ice cream, you've decided. on a cone). he watches you grin as you pay and then hurry over to him, both of your hands full.
"here," you chirp, shoving a cone into his hand. a few melted drops stain his skin, still cold to the touch. "for you!"
he huffs. "kid, i told you i don't like sweets that much."
"that's what you say at first." you point your finger at him as you lick up the dripping sides of your own cone, gaze all too knowing. "but then you try it and realize you can't get enough."
toji rolls his eyes, but still obediently takes a lick. the flavor of chocolates and some other sweet confections burst across his tongue. it's strong, almost unbearably so, but then it settles on his palate and leaves a satisfaction in its wake. he can't help the subtle twitch of his lips, almost pleased, and you give him a smug smile.
(it seems like he will always be doomed when it comes to sweet things.)
you both walk home in relative silence, save for the occasional bit of chatter when you remember something you haven't told him. the streets are still bright and bustling with people trying to enjoy their saturday night, and toji feels a little more comfortable because it's so easy to blend in.
"are you sure you don't want me to hold those?" you ask pointedly, peering at all the shopping bags he's balancing on his arms. "aren't they heavy?"
he gives you a sidelong glanceâaffronted. "seriously? how weak do you think i am?"
you raise your free hand in surrender, biting back a laugh as you look at him with that same spark of a challenge in your eyes. "don't you sleep with a nightlight?"
toji's glare is boiling when it settles on you. "shut up and eat your ice cream."
you chortle, nudging his side with your elbow, and he groans under his breath. his fingers itch. it would be so fucking easy to just grab your free hand that's swinging listlessly at your side. the lines of his large, rough palm pressed against your smaller, gentle one. his fingers would curl around yours so gratefully, sweet and soft and yet still keeping you attached to him.
(he can't elaborate on how pleased the thought makes him. keeping you at his side, where he can always see you. where you can always see him.)
but all he can do is clench his fist, internally reprimanding himself for taking such liberties with you to begin withâeven if it's just in his own head.
when you both make it back home, you hop in the shower quick and then toji takes his turn, so used to the mundane routine. he heads into the bathroom, not before making a sarcastic jab at your choice of pajamas for the night (doughnuts, printed in all shapes and colors), to which you just punch his arm as he cackles.
toji enjoys the feeling of the searing hot water burning into his skin. psychopathic maybe, but it feels comforting. it's not like he was given the luxury of hot water back when he was underground.
(that being said, even once he'd started living with you, it's not like he took hot showers often. in fact, he'd sometimes find himself relying on cold showers. especially when you were around him. a fleeting touch here, a meaningful glance there, and he'd find himself under pelting ice, breathing heavily through his nose until he's finally got himself under control.)
even now he tries not to think too deeply about that, focusing on enjoying his warm shower. he feels a little guilty when he stops to consider that you probably have no idea that his thoughts about you are so fucking depraved.
(poor thing. you don't deserve something so unhinged breathing down your neck.)
and unfortunately that's all he truly is. unhinged. an animal that lacks self control. and you are nothing of the sort. sweetness and good all bundled up into a human being. night and day, dark and light, sun and storm.
good and evil.
toji knows this well. knows that he has no right to let his claws tear into your perfect flesh and rip you to pieces. only monsters ruin perfection after all.
and perfection you were. he knows you don't really see yourself that way, but it's hard for him not to. reminds him of statue deities the old artists left behind to stand in museums under heavy spotlights. for people to flock to, eager and awestruck as they marvel at beauty like they've never seen it before. and he'd bow front of you, knees digging into rough earth, bloody and bruised as he reaches for your marbled fingers. letting stone gently tickle the sharp curve of his jaw, trace the scar cutting over his lips. maybe when he finally looks up at you he'll only remember your smile immortalized into the stone.
but toji is selfish. he doesn't want to worship a statue. he'd rather have you as is, life thrumming through your veins the way blood does. warmth bursting from under your skin and seeping into his own. and there's a part of him that knows you'd touch him so eagerly, ready to please and give him everything that he's ever wanted. you've already been so generousâgiving and giving and giving some more. if he asked to let him take you apart, would you dare say no? would you let him sort through sinew and muscle until he's found your very core? would you let him hold your beating heart in his claws no matter how many times they nick the flesh and make you bleed?
you would, with stars in your eyes. in fact, there's a greedy part of him that thinks you'd do the same in return. tear him apart piece by piece with careful fingers until he's nothing but laid bare in front of you. press your flesh against ragged scars and bruised skin, rough with use and danger. if he focuses a little harder, he can feel your touch linger on those scars. your lips will follow, pressing deep against his blood, staining you wine red. but you'll just smile, light bursting behind your silhouette (angelic; awe-inspiring), and he'll once again be speechless in front of you.
(powerless in every sense of the word.)
this is followed by yet another dangerous thoughtâjust how much of an animal would you let him be?
it would be easy to cage you between his arms, close enough that he can count every eyelash and see every shade in your skin. it would be easy to hook his claws around the waistband of the fabric that hid you away, press a searing kiss into the stripe left by the elastic. it would be easy to reduce you to a shaking mess, quiet whimpers escaping into the space only he shares with you.
it's ridiculous, how quickly his obsession bleeds into arousal. a thin line, his toes dancing over it. but he doesn't have it in him to dwell on the shame behind it. it's instantaneous, how heat starts thrumming through his veins at the thought of you, alighting every expanse of flesh and breaking through skin.
toji bristles, tail flexing even under the weight of the water.
you have to know what you're doing. weren't you ever warned about dangers like him? wasn't it common sense not to dangle prey in front of a predator's eyes?
(though, if he's being honest, toji doesn't feel like much of predator. if anything, you're the predator, circling him with attentive eyes that makes his hair stand on end. makes him want to expose his underbelly and let you pounce.)
it doesn't make sense to him, how his mind relates someone as sweet as you to a role so unflinchingly unkind. in reality, the only one who's fucked enough to take on that role is him. the true animalâunhinged, reckless, cruel.
the only one who'd dig his fangs into your flesh and tear you apart with no hesitation. let sweet blood drip from his lips, lapping away until not a drop is left. reverentâbecause he knows how valuable it is.
the problem is you'd let him.
welcoming, with open arms and a warm smile that makes him want to take even more. more and more until nothing is left.
(would you enjoy it? his claws encircling your fragile wrists and pressing them into sheets. heavy body weighing yours down, scarred muscle meeting soft flesh. fanged teeth digging into the tender meat of your lips. perhaps you'd tell him as much, quietly sighing into his mouth, singing his praises and whispering a sweet combination of toji please, more.)
blood rushes south, his cock hardening so quick it's almost humiliating. this had been an ongoing issue for months now. toji never thought anyone would have the ability to drive him up the walls like this. not that you had gone around deliberately trying to give him a hard time (no pun intended), but it'd become more difficult to ignore. even just noticing little thingsâlike the texture of your fingertips against his skin or the way your scent bleeds into the walls of the house. or the way his height towers over you and forces you to look up at him in a way that is so easy to imagine in certain other scenarios. in between his legs, gentle hands on his knees, eyes peering through lashes, and swollen lips wrapped around hisâ
fuck.
he's rock hard now. thick and aching in a way that makes him feel almost ashamed because there's no reason he should be acting like a whelpling who's just been thrown into a rut for the first time. no, he'd been an adult for a long time. one that had gotten through a lot worse than this.
(it's seared into his brain, the way the faceless doctor from the underground would hand him suppressant pills a couple weeks before a rut was due to hit, eyeing him to make sure they were swallowed without any issues. his body remembers scratching at the stone ground of a cell as he snarled through the pain of one of his most natural instincts being manipulated through a drug.
it was normal for them. every hybrid there had experienced being put aside for a day or two, labeled "out of commission" for a fake sick period while they rode out their cycles with no help or relief.
what would've normally been a couple weeks of rut was cruelly suppressed into two short days. in that time, toji was confined to a special cell with no outside contact. no fights, no interactions with any other hybrid.
all he had was the time to get increasingly more feral and frustratingly turned on. and no way to deal with it but ruthlessly fucking his own fist until he was exhausted.
exhausted, but never satiated. never satisfied.
after all, the suppressant pills couldn't erase the nature of his instincts. the part of him that craved not for a simple release, but for the experience of sharing a rut with someone. craved forming a connection with another being who could not only provide relief through it, but also take every bit of devotion he had to offer. the pills were effective in dulling down the intensity of ruts and heats, and shortened the length of them tremendously. but even after all that, they were still animalsâthere was no denying it. no, none of it could be erased; the instinctual craving for a fucking mate.)
all of those years under suppressants had made toji forget what a real rut felt like. but if it's anything close to the way he'd been feeling lately, he was definitely screwed. his mind had become increasingly more creative, able to conjure up the most inappropriate images of his most shameful fantasies. and this issue could only be fixed by jacking off until cum was dripping between his fingers and he felt even more ashamed than he did before.
which is exactly what he's being pushed to right now.
it seems almost instantaneous the way his fist wraps around his cock, throbbing flesh hot and angry. he bites back a hiss at the sensitivity, the hot water doing nothing to help his already searing flesh.
toji knew to start expecting flare ups of arousal. after all it was just a part of his nature, but a headache all the same. unfortunately, when escaping that hellhole he called a home, he didn't think about what would happen to his body now that those bastards weren't pumping his body full of suppressants.
sukuna had once said that it was their way of stripping them of their natural instructs, domesticating hybrids without them even knowing. the thought had pissed both of them off, but the tiger was right. nothing inherently natural about controlling such a significant facet of their bodies.
if he had more time to prepare his escape, he would've broken into the medical wing and stolen a few years' worth of suppressants for himself.
hindsight. instead, now he has to deal with these admittedly intense pangs of carnal desire. he knows why. how long had it been since he'd had a natural rut? definitely not since eighteen, because that's when he'd given up his freedom and they started feeding him suppressants (after all, can't have a feral wolf in rut running free throughout the barracks; bad for business; too dangerous to control). it makes sense that his body is working on overdrive now that it's finally tasted freedom.
(finally tasted a sweet scent and warm smile.)
toji isn't sure what he'll do when his rut really hits. he had thought that maybe he could get away with lying to you, passing it off as some contagious sickness and locking himself in his room for a few days until it passed. but then he got nervous thinking about just how bad this rut might be, and he figured he probably wouldn't be able to keep it from you even with the walls acting as a barrier.
there was also the option of telling you the truth. you'd probably be so accepting about it; after all, you've been nothing but understanding. and it seems like you know more about hybrids than your fellow humans, so he's sure you wouldn't judge him for something he can't really control. and yet despite all that, the thought of telling you feels strangely nerve wracking. some strange implication behind admitting just how vulnerable he'd truly be (and some sick thrill at the unspoken boundary that could end up being crossed).
a boundary line that he had scratched into the floor over and over again. so intent on denying the thought of ever being that close to you.
and yet he can't deny it. can't deny that the idea of trailing his tongue over the swells and divots of your body doesn't make him salivate. like the thought of your lips pressing into the ridges of his neck doesn't make his ribcage jump.
(like the thought of you saying yes to him doesn't make him want to lay the entire galaxy at your feet. because saying yes to him means something more than you'll ever realize. means bonding yourself to him for a lifetime. souls intertwined, the way only a mate can beâ)
toji's presses his forehead against the damp tiled wall, exhaling shakily. there's a reddish pink shade crawling up his skin, spreading like liquid gold. his fist feels like nothing special, but it still offers a semblance of relief from that stupid aching feeling. the warmth of the water and the remnants of soap makes it easy for his fist to slide back and forth, and god he's so fucking hard. he's starting off fast, but he doesn't really care. all he knows is that it feels good, and it's utterly humiliating to be jacking off in the shower when you're just across the hall, so he just wants to get it over with.
but his brain? his brain lingers, cruel in its torture.
if he closes his eyes, toji can picture you doing it instead. your hand's a lot smaller, but it's softer than hisânot rough with scars and callouses and danger. maybe you'd touch him slower, not as stupidly fast as he is, not with the mission to just get off and be done. no, you'd probably touch him with intention, eager to take him apart. he'd be glad to let you do as you please, so pathetically ready for whatever you want from him.
his fangs dig into the scar cutting over his lip, almost hard enough to taste blood. he thinks about sinking those fangs into the open canvas of your neck, and his dick twitches in response, eager and swollen. he tightens his grip and twists his wrist in the same way he's always done, knowing it'll get him there quick.
toji's head presses harder into the tiled walls, and he blinks the water away from his eyes as he tries to focus. his brain conjures up a strikingly detailed image of you pressing your lips against his dick, and that itself shoots a searing hot flash of arousal up his spine. but that's not all. he imagines that you'd be a lot more generous with your touches than he is. you'd touch him all over, gentle fingers tracing over the curve of his jaw and over the slopes of his cheeks. down over the planes of his chest and the ridges of his abs. gentle, the way only a lover's caress could be. chills run over his skin, the shiver so pleasurable it makes his breath hitch.
his high creeps up frighteningly fast, tingles shooting up the nerves in his body like he's never touched himself before. the muscles in his arm strain as heat pools in his lower belly, licking at his insides like an uncontrollable flame. the sound of the soapy water each time his hand moves is embarrassingly inappropriate, and he's briefly struck with the filthy thought of the type of sounds he'd be able to pull from your body if you just gave him the chance.
he wonders where to touch you to make you sing. where you'd be the most sensitive. what spots would have your voice catching on a strangled moan or have a breathy whimper escaping your throat. maybe you'd beg him for more, or perhaps you'd demand it from him. maybe you'd give in finally tell him what he's been dying to hear. in that same sweet voice, quietly sighing an earnest toji, i love yâ
ropes of cum splatter between his fingers, and he's thankful that his muffled grunts are drowned out by the shower. his hips twitch, instinctual, and his dick pulses with every spurt, pelvic muscles contracting with effort. and throughout all of it, all he can think of is you.
(horrible, he is. so dirty, filthy.)
"ah fuckâ" he feels messy, and hypersensitive. he stands there for a minute, catching his breath and doing his best to quell the mess in his head. it takes all but a minute to wash away the evidence of his crimes, but the thoughts of you still lingerâinfectious and deep.
(he thinks maybe he'll never be rid of you. you've latched onto him the way he has to youâparasitic and flesh deep. some part of him really likes that; a sick and twisted part.)
the wolf huffs out a tired sigh, standing under the pelting water like some kind of mindless idiot. what kind of freak was he? you offer him a place in your home and here he was jerking off in your shower with nothing but filth in his head. he's terrible; a dirty animal.
and yet, he feels good. feels good in the same way he feels when he sees you smile. or when you finally come back home. or when you grin at him from across the dining table as you watch him dig into his food. or when you accidentally fall asleep while watching some stupid movie.
his brain is foggy, and there's still a few aftershocks of pleasure tickling his nerves. but his guilt is smothered by that good feeling, pressed down into the deep recesses of his subconscious as he focuses on how you seem to have such an influence on his emotions.
(powerful, sneaky little thing.)
"hey toji?"
your muffled voice cuts through the pleasant haze in his head, and the panic is instant. he flinches so hard his elbow thuds against the shower wall, eliciting a yelp that he tries hard to recover from.
"y-yeah?!" he winces at the voice crack (trying to pretend he didn't just bust to the thought of you not a minute earlier), and clears his throat.
"i'm running low on period stuff so i'm gonna run down the street and grab some pads."
"i can go grab em if you want?" he replies, scrubbing his skin with a quickening pace, but then you chuckle and wave him off.
"no no it's fine. enjoy your shower. it's like two streets over, i'll be back soon."
"wellâŚ" he hesitates, but then nods even though you can't see him. "fine. be careful, y'hear?"
"yeah yeahâŚ" your voice fades away as you head down the hall, and toji's shoulders relax. for a second he thought you might've somehow heard his less than appropriate little session, but instead you're just updating him on something he probably wouldn't have cared about many months ago. but here he is, ultimately caring so deeply.
hot water streams between toji's eyes, and he pushes his wet hair back with a tired huff. his ears fold under his palms, muffling all noises and for a second, the raging thoughts in his head subside.
(if it were up to him, he'd stay in this peaceful bubble for as long as he could. hoping, dreaming, praying that you'd join him in the space with no protests. comfort, chaos, and everything in between.)
****
the streets are a lot more deserted than they were a few hours prior, back when you were dragging toji to eat ice cream. now there's only faint chatter, the occasional squeals of laughter and excitement permeating the sounds of your slippers against pavement. normally you would've dragged toji out with you, especially so late on a saturday night, but since this is barely a 15 minute walk and you've been here countless times before, you decided not to bother him.
after all, you would grant toji as much peace as you could give him (god knows he deserved it and more).
there's some faint song playing over the speakers when you enter the store, instantly fading into muted background noise as you smile at the elderly man behind the counter. he recognizes you, a local frequenter, and smiles back before going back to the paper he was reading. your steps take you to the feminine products quickly, memorized route guiding your feet, and then you're scanning the shelves for familiar colors and brands.
the store is almost completely deserted, save for a few other likeminded individuals who needed a late night run. your fingers drift over boxes until you finally find the brand you like.
"excuse me? can you help me with this?"
the flinch that comes from you is almost embarrassing, but you're genuinely impressed by how quietly this guy seems to have snuck up on you. you glance over your shoulder carefully.
dyed blonde hair, dark roots, narrowed beady eyes. and yet a sheepish, awkward smile that makes your shoulders drop when you notice the box of pads in his head. you tilt your head questioningly, quirking a brow. he raises the box. "my girlfriend sent me out to get supplies but i have no clue what to pick for herâŚ"
the helpless smile that crawls onto your face feels natural. at least he was trying, that in and of itself was a lot to ask for these days. "well do you know if she has a heavy flow or a light one?"
"heavy i think?" his brows furrow thoughtfully. "she says she bleeds a lotâŚ"
"well then this is probably better for her than that." you reach for a different box on the shelf, one that's specifically labeled for handling heavy bleeding. "they're better for heavier flow. and they're longer so that should help her out."
he takes the box from you carefully, before smiling. something shines in his dark eyes. "thank you so much. i'm clueless when it comes to this stuff."
you chuckle, shaking your head. "no it's okay. at least you're trying."
"i would've been lost without your help. i'm naoya by the way." his smile gets a little more pointed, that gleam in his gaze brighter. he sticks his palm out expectantly.
warning bells start ringing in your head, but you don't know why.
"oh uh, nice to meet youâŚ" you trail off, cautiously taking his hand. you're sure he's being polite, but you don't really understand why he's telling you his name. maybe it's paranoia, but you bite your tongue and hold off on giving him yours, something telling you that maybe you shouldn't be sharing that information.
the blonde doesn't comment on your lack of forthcoming, but something feels off. he looks like he knows something, like he's dissecting you on a surgical table. you let go of his hand, and awkwardly smile, before turning back to the shelf. his voice gets a little louder. "naoya zenin."
you freeze. the name washes over you, a brief sense of warmth, before it bleeds into something cold and jarring. you know this name wellâheard it murmured from scarred lips a few times (in a voice that was filled with nothing but distaste.)
now if you think back, you can remember the same blonde hair and dark eyes being in the background of pictures you've seen on the internet. random news articles of what the head of one of the biggest companies in the country did that day. you don't know why you couldn't remember it earlier. maybe you just weren't expecting to see naoya zenin at your tiny little store so late at night. but he looks calm, as though it's all intentional, as though you should've expected to bump in to him like this.
the warning bells ring louder.
"so!" the blonde claps his hands together, brightly smiling as though he's catching up with an old friend. "how is he?"
you feel your tongue grow numb. an image of a moody scowl and twitching ears flashes behind your eyes, and you finally realize that warning bells had nothing to do with your own safety.
(too preoccupied with dedicating your care to someone else. someone who's probably patiently waiting for you back home.)
"who?" you're playing dumb, and you're sure he knows it because he just laughs and quirks his brow knowingly.
"you know who." he pins you with a level stare. "toji of course. my precious cousin."
you remain quiet, mind spinning. you're not sure if you should lie or continue playing dumb or just run and hope he isn't fast enough to follow. but naoya just continues on without a care in the world.
"let's stop beating around the bush." the blonde's smile drops, voice going serious in the same way you've seen it go on those television interviews. "i don't know how or why you're connected to him but i'm sure you know what he is by now."
"ah yes the wolf ears and tail really gave it away," you reply sarcastically, not even bothering to keep the bite out of your tone. naoya grins predatorily, making a show of leering at your blatant hostility.
"well yes, the poor beast was unfortunately born that way." naoya waves offhandedly, before his expression sours. "just my luck, he had to be born into my fucking family."
you snort out a scornful laugh, crossing your arms. "well it makes sense. i mean he might be the wolf, but it's pretty clear that dogs run in the family."
naoya pauses, before his smile returns. this time, it is icy, and yet there is spark of malice flickering in his eyes. "hah! you're more interesting than i thought. you look so boring from afar, you know?"
you glare at him irritably.
"but! you're much more entertaining than i expected. maybe that's why toji's hanging around you." naoya glances down at his fingernails with feigned interest, his voice dropping. "it's a shame he didn't teach you any manners though."
his hand drops to his side, and his expression darkens so fast it makes your head spin. "if it were up to me, i'd cut your tongue out and deliver it to him, you know?"
your bravado shatters, blood going cold. naoya seems to catch the change, so he just smiles again with that fake politeness. "but father says we should be nice and talk it out. so that's what i'm doing! i had no clue how i was going to find the time to chat with you, but i'm glad i caught you today."
you swallow, fingers creasing into the sleeves of your sweater.
"you know, when i told father i saw toji with you today, he was surprised. that freak doesn't seem like the type to get help from others, let alone humans like you and me." the blonde hums, amused. "but seems like he liked something about you. that, or you had something pretty valuable to offer."
you almost roll your eyes. clearly this asshole liked to hear himself talk.
"i mean i'm kinda surprised that you got close to that freak. don't you have any survival instincts?" he tuts, exaggeratedly pouting at you like you're nothing but a dumb child. the blood in your veins grows hot with indignation.
"he's not dangerous." your voice is resolute, stating a fact rather than an opinion. naoya observes you with mild interest. he hums thoughtfully, and you shift your weight not knowing what to do.
"you know, i saw you both being all cute on your little shopping trip." naoya's expression turns bored, almost like he's disgusted. he leans against the shelves haphazardly. "it's a shame i lost you both in the crowd as you left though. i would've stopped by at your house otherwise."
the threat is not lost on you. and something churns in your gut when you think about this man being anywhere near your house. near toji.
"i don't understand," you say, raising your head. you have no clue how you manage to keep your voice steady when your heart is beating so fast, but you'd rather not look too deep into that. "what exactly is it that you want from me?"
"you haveâŚinfluence," naoya grins, peering at you. his expression is mocking. you think you might vomit. "i'm sure you can bat your eyes and convince my dear cousin."
when you swallow, it feels like rocks are sliding down your throat. "convince him to what?"
naoya's grin drops, eyes narrowing dangerously. "to go back to where he belongs."
your words tumble forth before you can even stop them, hot and indignant. "and what if he doesn't want to go back there?"
a burst of laughter escapes his throat, though it is sharp and unamused. "don't you get it? he doesn't have a choice. that's all he was born to do anyway."
you glare at him, teeth digging into your tongue so hard it hurts painfully. naoya's expression turns bright, a very dramatic flare of sick amusement filling his tone. "ohh i finally get it!"
he leans closer to you, smirking. "who would've thought my dear cousin went and found himself a girl!"
the traitor organ sitting in your ribcage gives an eager jump, getting distracted by its original threat. you steel your expression. "what are you even talking about?"
"no need to play coy. i understand!" he raises his arms like he means no harm, a greasy smile still splitting his face. "that just means you really should be able to influence him."
"you don't even know what you're saying." you roll your eyes, turning away from him, though you still keep his figure in your peripheral. "it's not even like that. we're barely even friends. the most i would say is acquaintances."
the lie bleeds through your teeth easily, molten lava. worth it if it means keeping him safe. away from the treacherous vines that seem so intent on chasing him and pinning him down.
"oh sure." the blonde chuckles, looking at you with a sharp mockery in his gaze. it's obvious he doesn't believe you, especially with how quickly his tone turns chilling. "i don't really give a damn who you are to him. let him know what he needs to do, or we're gonna have a problem."
"and if i can't convince him?"
naoya shrugs casually, but then he pins you with a stare that makes you feel like your bone marrow is turning to lead.
"well then, we'll just have to see what happens, won't we?" he says nothing more, but the implication is very clear. the blonde then glances down at the pads in his hands. his expression goes disgusted once more, and he haphazardly chucks the box back onto the shelf. "ewâŚ" he mutters, dusting his hand over his coat. his eyes find you again, and then that same smile appears once more. "anyways, i'll definitely see you around! get home safe!"
your pulse is thudding wildly as you watch him leave, a heavy onset of nausea making your stomach churn like never before. the hidden threats were so carefully placed, but not obscure enough for you to miss, and that scares you even more because it says that this guy is just that confident. you stand in the aisle for another two mins, mind running in a thousand different directions. suddenly you feel strangely exposed, like you've been placed into a glass box for someone to observe your every movement.
(suddenly, you feel completely and utterly alone. scared and vulnerable and in real danger. suddenly, all you can think about is the brooding wolf you've left at home, and how seeing him is the only solution to making these feelings go away.)
you're out the door before you even realize it. your legs carry you back in the direction of your home, but your paranoia leads you to take as many convoluted turns that you can think of (because you can't shake the feeling of those beady brown eyes digging into your shoulder blades).
naoya zenin. you don't know how he shares blood with toji. if you squint hard enough you can maybe find some similarities in features. but still, you cannot understand how someone so outwardly horrible can be related to someone like toji. toji is not warm, not inherently sweet. but he is good, and that much is obvious to you. the same way you know this naoya is bad, with nothing but negative intentions.
when you finally reach your doorstep, you keep your head down and slip inside. your fingers double check every lock, every window. your mouth feels dry and there's too many weaknesses and he's definitely still out there andâ
"hey."
the voice makes you jump, and when you look up, toji is staring at youâconfused. his brow quirks as he peers at you through his wet hair. "well that was dramatic."
you sigh, quelling the thundering of your heartbeat. sweat beads on the skin of your palms, and you drag them over the fabric of your pants. "you just scared me."
"oh yeah, i'm so fucking terrifying." he sits on the couch, aggressively drying his wet hair with a towel. you snort, grinning as your eyes trail over the way his pointed ears fold under the weight of the fabric.
"shaking in my boots." toji rolls his eyes at your reply, and you pull off your coat with a quiet chuckle.
(honestly a little jarring how easy it is for you to relax in his presence. how easy it is to start smiling again.)
"i thought you went to get supplies?"
you freeze, glancing over your shoulder. "w-what?"
he motions to your empty hands. "you didn't get anything?"
your stomach drops. "oh umâŚ" you clear your throat. "they were closed. so i came back."
it's almost laughable how quick the lie slips from your mouth; sickening, really, because it shouldn't be quite so easy to lie to someone who obviously trusted you. you've felt guilty before, but not like this. this goes past the dull surface ache and settles as a deep stinging, fraying your nerve endings. maybe it's because you know that you have no right to keep this from him; after all, it's his family. but something about the gleam in naoya's eyes makes your hair stand on end. if it were up to you, you'd stand in front of toji with a smile even with knives raining down your back.
the way toji's brow arches tells you that he's a little confused, maybe a little skeptical, but he shrugs and turns back to the tv, turning it on with a flick of his finger. "well okay then. i can grab some tomorrow on my way back home."
you inhale through your nose, forcing a smile. there's really no point stressing. naoya can't do much to you to begin with, not without starting something potentially dangerous with toji. so you just push it to the back of your mind and take a seat next to the grumpy wolf you realize you would do anything for.
(even lie.)
"thank you, toji," you say earnestly. the wolf gives you a sidelong glance, ears twitching at the sound of your voice, and he scoffs.
"whatever. it's not like i haven't done it before. quit bein' dramatic."
you grin, watching him cross his arms and sulk like an overgrown puppy. for some reason, his expression settles the chaos in your chest and you decide that whatever problem it is, you'll do anything it takes to keep it from him.
(perhaps it's silly, thinking that you could easily stand in front of a hybrid capable of tearing you to pieces and expect to be able to protect him. but you know he would do the same for you, and that's why it feels all too natural. easy.)
you think you will always be willing to offer him whatever space you have left. comfort, chaos, and everything in between.
****
toji doesn't consider himself a very intelligent person. not to say that he's dumb. no, he thinks he excels at street smarts. after all, no one survives a life like his without a brain.
but in terms of emotional intelligence.. well he doesn't feel all that confident. yet another area where he feels like you're a lot better than he is.
it scares him a little, how fast you can read him. how you can pick apart his every expression and behavior like it comes naturally to you. and then how you're able to to adapt and give him exactly the response he needs. whether it's sweet comfort or rational courses of actionâit's perfect.
(you're perfect.)
but he's not like you. he cannot pick people apart, can't look at them and figure out what they're thinking. cannot read them like an open book the way you can.
but right now, he feels like something is wrong.
it's been almost a week since he's noticed this change in behavior. you've been looking over your shoulder like you're in some kind of horror movie. eyes constantly scanning your surroundings, fingers fiddling with the window locks. even peering outside through the gaps in your curtains.
you're nervous, he realizes. paranoid, like something's chasing you. whatever it is, toji understands that he doesn't like the way worry looks on you. in fact, he hates it. hates the way his ears can pick up your increased heartrate. hates the way he can smell the spikes of anxiousness in your scent.
he's trying to be a good housemate and respect your boundaries. trying not to be nosy and let you deal with your own issues like an adult. but then his mind wonders if there's something really wrong, if someone's giving you a hard time or stressing you out, and then he just gets angry.
(don't you know that he adores you? don't you know that you need only say the word and he'd kill a man for you? don't you know the amount of power you have over him?)
regardless, he's still trying to be a good housemate and respect your boundaries. but it's becoming increasingly more difficult to watch you come home everyday like there's someone chasing after you. even now, he watches you double check the door locks before you hurry over to your windows. double check the locks, tug the curtains shut, peer outside through the gaps.
only when you're done do your shoulders relax, and when you turn around, you jump when you notice him standing there staring at you. the surprise bleeds into a quick, barely there smile. "oh hey! how was your day?"
you don't even wait for his answer before you're turning around to hang your coat up, and that's enough to make him crack.
"alright what the fuck is wrong with you?" toji's voice cuts through the silence like ice, and you internally wince. defensive walls rise quickly, and then you're turning on him with fire in your eyes.
"excuse me?"
toji's bulky arms flex as he crosses them, staring down his nose at you completely unfazed. "you've been hiding something."
"iâ"
"âand don't even bother tryin' to deny it. it's written all over your face."
the wolf watches you inhale heavily, and the crease in between your brows makes his fingers twitch (eager to reach out and smooth them down carefully).
you sigh, defeated. "remember last week when i went to the store that one night?"
toji nods.
"i, um, bumped into someone there." your fingers rub over your arms in an attempt to be soothing, and toji's frown deepens in tandem.
"who?"
you glance at him. guilt gnaws its way up your esophagus. "um, naoya zenin."
toji's reaction almost makes you vomit. his ears stand up straight, tail going rigid, and the anger that contorts his expression makes you shiver. "what?!"
his voice has taken on a timbre you haven't heard before, an inherently primal growl ripping through his vocal cords in a way that sounds almost painful. you wince, trying to placate by backtracking.
"i was gonna tell youâ"
"what the fuck did he say to you?!â"
"he justâ"
"that fucking creep i swear to godâ"
"toji." your palms find his forearms in this strangely natural way that makes his stomach churn. steadying, stable, everything that he lacks. "please. can we just relax and sit down?"
his ears droop slightly, but he still maintains his heated glare. not that he's necessarily angry at you. but his palms feel too sweaty and his heartbeat feels too fast and his stomach feels too heavy. still, he forces himself to breathe deep through his nose, quelling the instinctual rise of feral panic that seems to want to burst from his veins. he lets your hands, barely able to fit around the width of his arms, maneuver him to the couch.
when you take a seat next to him, he can smell the nerves.
(spiked; hints of bitterness hiding between layers of sugary sweet.)
more so, you look guilty. it briefly strikes him that perhaps you feel bad about keeping this from him. he's then struck with a similar feeling when he realizes he's kept something from you too. this is all followed by a searing streak of anger when he remembers the reason why you both have been hiding things from one another.
(maybe it wouldn't be so bad to live up to their expectations of him. be the real curse of the zenin bloodline. they always said he was an uncontrollable animal. maybe it would be okay to finally prove them right. have his family's life force dripping red rivulets through his pointed claws. taste its metallic tinge between his sharpened teeth.)
"he came up to me at the store," you start, wiping down your palms on your thighs. "he already knew that i knew you. said he saw us walking around that night shopping."
toji's claws dig into the flesh of his palm painfully. the memory is now tinged with something poisonous. always breathing down his neck.
"he was talking about how his father was surprised that you were even interacting with another human. and then he said it was a shame he lost us in the crowd because otherwise he'd come to our house for a visit."
you watch the wolf next to you clench his fists, and your lips slant.
"what else did he say?" toji tries to keep his voice even, but it comes out strange. your teeth dig into the flesh of your bottom lip painfully.
"he⌠he said that since i was clearly c-close to you, i should convince you to do something."
"and what's that?"
you pause, before letting the bitter words spill. "convince you that's it's time to go back where they want you to be."
"that fucking asshole!" toji's voice is akin to a roar, and you wince as you watch him stand and snarl like he's been beaten. he pushes his claws into his hair and grits his teeth. "how fucking dare they evenâ"
another pained growl rips from his throat. the sound makes your stomach coil, and before you can stop yourself, you're reaching out to grab his arm. his head whips around at the contact, baring his teeth with a snarl as he ears point upright. but then he sees your expression, sad and tired, and his shoulders drop immediately.
"you know that i don't want you to go, right?" you ask him quietly. toji stares at you, long and hard. his jade eyes are bright with anger, but there's a hint of fear in there that makes you want to cry.
"⌠you sure?" his voice is so quiet you almost have to strain to hear it. your fingers tighten around his forearm. even with the way he is standing over you, you think he looks smaller. like he's carrying the weight of the world on his shoulders.
"i'm sure." your voice is resolute, like it's always been when it comes to him. his exhales slowly, and you smile at him in this tragic way that makes him want to rip his eyes out.
(you're too good. too trusting. too confident in the fact that he won't lead to your downfall.)
"kid," he calls out, voice strained.
"hm?"
"i gotta tell you somethin' too."
you frown, but then you're pulling him back to the couch (right next to you; close enough that your scent wraps around him once moreâwarm, blanket-like), and then you're looking at him earnestly. "what is it?"
he tells you all about his run in with naobito zenin. details the angry confrontation in which his stupid uncle had warned him to go back to where he belonged, tired of the wolf's running game. how the old man had been close to calling his men to come get him before toji had resorted to nearly crushing his windpipe in retaliation. how naobito had warned toji that hurting him was a punishable offense that would lead to him being locked up again. and how, at the end of it all, toji had told him that it would be worth it if it meant being rid of the stupid zenins once and for all.
and then he finishes by telling you that his uncle was so convinced toji would end up back there on his own anyway, because he was nothing more than a mindless animal.
(he carefully leaves out the threat naobito made about putting him down. and he also leaves out how none of that scared him more than the idea of his family's clutches ultimately reaching you.)
you sit there and listen with an expression that bleeds horror. the divot in your brow is so deep toji worries it may become permanent, and your eyes shine with a sadness he's never seen before. when he's done speaking, you exhale shakily.
"kid, i'm never gonna be rid of them," he says quietly. "they're always gonna be breathing down my neck. which means they're always gonna be breathing down yours too."
you nod slowly, eyes distant as you stare at the edge of the coffee table like it's got all the answers in the world.
"there's nothing i can really do." he finishes with that final statement.
you chew on your bottom lip quietly. something is working behind your eyes, calculating, evaluating. "you threatened him?"
toji scoffs. "of course i fucking did. threatened to kill him and his brat son."
you turn to him, eyes alight. "would you?"
toji's heart leaps into his throat. he will never deny the amount of times he's thought about it. since the day he was old enough to realize his own brute strength. every day he was thrown into that damn cell. every fight where he would scratch and claw just to live another day. and every day since the old man stopped him in the streets.
the thought has lingered in the back of his mind, poisonous. rotting. because he knows that it is the only way. he knows that they deserve it. he knows that it is the one path that could lead him to peace.
(that could lead to him wiping the worry from your eyes.)
it's always been there. and now youâŚ
"you can't be serious?"
"toji, answer the question. would you do it or not?"
"of course i would!" he fires back quickly, before taking a steadying breath. "you don't get it, kid. i got no love for them. been dreaming about ripping those bastards apart since the day i was smart enough to realize they only saw me as an animal."
you nod slowly, still chewing on your lip. something settles behind your eyes, and the thrill it sends up toji's spine is almost sadistic. your voice is flat when you speak, but it does not waver. "toji⌠if there was something that came into my life that was threatening me and my loved ones. our livelihood, our safety, our security⌠i wouldn't really be thinking about morals anymore."
toji stares at you mutely, and you continue. "so⌠if there's an unwelcome guest showing up at the door, and we've asked themâno, begged themâto leave us alone and they haven't listened⌠then maybe the only thing left to do is force them to leave."
his mouth runs dry, and simultaneously, his ribcage jumps. you're looking at him with all the conviction in the world, and something in his deep complicated web of feelings for you shifts on its axis.
(you are sweet. you are peace and comfort and good. you are innocent and untouched by the horrors of the world in the best way. you are completely humane and understanding and you give nothing but kindness. you've offered him the world and he's gratefully cradled it in his palms. which is why this deeply root loyalty, this protectiveness, this affectionâit has all come so naturally to him.
he would show mercy if you wanted him to. he would rip apart limbs if you wanted him to. he would dig a knife into his own intestines if you wanted him to.
but this. this is something he's wanted; dreamed about for as long as he can remember. cursed himself for thinking about because it makes him evil and wrong and horrible. but here you areâgiving him support. telling him that you want it too.
this utterly wrong and animalistic thing that makes him the monster.
maybe you aren't all that pure. maybe he's the one who corrupted you. but then he thinks back to the fire in your eyes, that same resolute determination in your tone. and then he thinks that it couldn't have been him. it had to have come from within you, this desperate and complicated decision.
and then toji realizes that the reason it appeared is because you value him so highly. because on your moral scale, it is worth it to sin if it means keeping him safe. it is worth it to be animalistic if it means having him by your side.
he wants to envelop you in his arms. find your lips and breathe his own soul into you because he knows you'd keep it safe. knows you're willing to do whatever it takes for him.
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being gojoâs fake girlfriend means that you have to bottle up your real feelings just so he can express his. but it also means that for the first time, he sees you in a different way too.
maybe itâs the time spent together in front of people acting like youâre a real couple, maybe itâs the closeness that you never had before, but gojo starts seeking out your touch, your laugh, your voice, your presence more than he thought he would. itâs weird, itâs addictive.
so sue him if he sometimes takes advantage of it.
âgâoff me!â you yell, muffled by the large body slumped on top of you. thereâs no bite, maybe even a little laughter as he stays still, arms caging you into the couch.
you were over at his apartment for the night, not feeling like driving back to your house after classes, and seeing how gojo lives so close to campus you decided to crash at his place.
but now, after dinner and a movie, he doesnât seem like heâs ready for bed. he doesnât seem like he wants you to get ready for bed either.
âno,â he says into the crook of your neck, his lips pulling into a smile as you helplessly try to shove him off. those countless nights at the gym are really showing up and now and you wonder what he looks like under all those baggy clothes.
âneed to pee!â you shout pathetically, giggling a little bit as his fingers pinch at your sides. he shakes his head, however, at your request, and instead moves his arms to wrap even tighter around your waist.
you feel a warmth creep up your neck and to your cheeks, stilling for a second as you feel his breath on your skin, his lips against your neck. itâs all so close, so intimate that you feel your heart rattle around your chest.
your hands push at his shoulders, squished between your two bodies as you flail around helplessly.
âi canât feel my lungs,â you say, kicking your legs up a bit, and he chuckles, pushing himself up just a bit so he could look at you better.
âyouâre still alive though, yeah?â his voice is teasing, a litttle groggy from a long day and you roll your eyes.
in moments like this you forget the whole stupid fake dating scheme. you forget about suki and geto and about your stupid feelings. itâs all as if nothing changed, as if the two of you were still as close as you were when you were still just friends.
âi need to pee, i need to take my makeup off, i-â you ramble, going down the laundry list of things you needed to do before sleep got a hold of you.
gojo stares, perplexed at your running list, and his eyes flash a bright blue, lips pulling into a mischievous smile as he shushes you.
âi can help with your makeup,â he announces, dropping his head back down closer, moving at the speed of light as he brings his face close to yours, his tongue running a long strip from your chin to your cheekbones.
you freeze, shock in your eyes as you look at him. thereâs another moment of silence before you screech, mustering up enough strength that you were lacking before to shove him off of you. he tumbles off the couch and to the ground, his hand splayed across his chest as he laughs, something hearty and warm as you scramble to wipe him off.
âyouâre so weird!â you scream, your nose scrunching up in annoyance and disgust as yuh run to the kitchen sink, wetting a paper towel as you try to scrub him away from you.
you can still hear his laughter when you walk back, throwing the wet towel on his face. you feel a little satisfaction as he sputters, scrambling to take it off.
âbet your loverboy suguru wouldnât do that for you,â gojo quips, throwing the towel on the coffee table as he sits up, resting his weight on his elbows as you sit on the other end of the couch.
you scoff, kissing the back of your teeth. you donât know hat your more ticked about; the fact that he still thinks youâre in love with suguru or the fact that he seems a little annoyed to admit it.
ânobody would do what you did âtoru,â you mutter in annoyance. still, his nickname rolls off of your tongue, and his grins widens a little bit.
he schooches a little close to you, so that heâs near where you feet hang off the couch and mindlessly fiddles with the hem of your socks.
âyouâre so touchy tonight,â you observe, squinting your eyes, âeverything good?â
gojo looks up at you, confusion in his eyes. he looks back down to where his hand was, as if he hadnât noticed what he was doing. he shrugs, trying to act indifferent when he answers.
âjust felt like it,â he looks at you, âis that so wrong?â
you try to act indifferent to, not wanting him to know just how much this is affecting you, these little touches and moments.
ânot wrong,â you say after a beat, âjustâŚnew.â
gojo nods, pursing his lips together as he thinks.
âgood new?â he finally asks, and you canât help the little smile that makes its way onto your face. damn gojo and his antics.
clanhead!satoru, who grew up behind paper walls and formal greetings, thinks heâs doing fine. he doesnât need warmth. doesnât need partnership. definitely doesnât need you. not your voice. not your gaze. not your hands reaching out in that quiet way they always do, halfway between anger and hope. he doesnât need softness, doesnât need mornings spent with knees brushing beneath the table, or nights curled around shared exhaustion. he doesnât need any of that.
he keeps telling himself that.
you were arranged. names selected. lives assigned. there was no falling in love, no whirlwind romance. only obligation, and a shared contract, and two people who didnât know each other at all. the clan called it a bond. satoru called it a sentence. and maybe, so did you. maybe you still do. but you're both too stubborn to say it out loud.
and yet, here you are. somehow, sharing a home that isnât quite a home. circling around each other like bored cats, passive-aggressively polite, trading jabs like candy wrappers. itâs a miracle neither of you has murdered the other in your sleep. though, sometimes, itâs close. last week you slapped his shoulder with a ladle because he said your miso soup was âa little too philosophical.â
every morning, he wakes up alone in the house you both live in. passes your closed door, always closed, like a wall he isnât meant to climb. makes his own coffee. glares at your mug next to his like itâs mocking him. sometimes he touches the handle like it might give him a sign. sometimes he almost washes it and puts it away, but doesnât. not yet. not when you might still come down. not when the ghost of your presence still lingers in the air like perfume.
he starts narrating your morning habits in his head like he's in some tragic sitcom. âthere she goes. my legally wedded stranger. master of mug placement. destroyer of peace.â he doesnât say it aloud. mostly because youâd probably throw a pillow at him and then heâd have to feel something about that.
youâve filed for divorce again. thatâs five now. seven, if heâs honest. twice were his. he still doesnât know why he ripped them up. they sat on the edge of his desk for days, heavy and clean and final. and then one night, he came home soaked in rain, looked at the envelope, and tore it to shreds like it meant nothing. it meant everything. he couldnât breathe with it there. couldnât sleep. couldnât stop hearing your voice, even when the house was dead quiet.
maybe heâs just tired. maybe itâs the quiet way you look at him when you think heâs not paying attention. maybe itâs the way you always buy him those god-awful sunglasses, even though he hasnât worn a pair in years. he lines them up on his desk like trophies. he doesnât know what heâs competing for.
he doesnât eat unless you cook. says the clan's food makes him sick. lies through his teeth. you roll your eyes every time, muttering, âgo starve then.â and he almost does, until you slide a plate across the table an hour later. he stares at the food like it might vanish if he breathes wrong. he doesnât say thank you. you donât expect him to. but sometimes, he finds himself eating slower, like the warmth might linger longer that way.
âiâm not your maid,â you mutter once, shoving a bowl of miso soup toward him without looking.
âcouldâve fooled me,â he replies. you hit him with a rolled-up magazine. he deserved it. he actually smiles into his spoon.
he didnât know how to be with someone. he still doesnât. no one taught him gentleness. no one told him how to reach across the silence and say something that mattered. he grew up with expectation in his bones and solitude in his chest. you grew up dreaming of something else. something soft. something kind. he wonders what version of yourself you had to kill to become the one sitting across from him now.
on bad days, you donât speak at all. the tension hangs like wet fabric, clinging to everything. the walls feel closer. the air feels thinner. you text like strangers. argue like enemies. sleep like strangers, too. and yet⌠you still leave the porch light on when heâs out late. he still puts your laundry on the drying rack so it doesnât wrinkle. you refill the coffee beans. he folds your sweaters when theyâre left on the couch. no one mentions these things. maybe because if you said them out loud, they might count as hope. and hope, in this house, is more terrifying than anger.
sometimes he wonders if you even remember the day they told you. the day they said, âyouâll be marrying gojo satoru.â did you cry? did you laugh? did you try to run? he doesn't know. never asked. maybe he didnât want to know. maybe he was afraid the answer would make him hate himself more.
he remembers the first time you touched him. it wasnât romantic. just a hand on his wrist, steadying him when he almost tripped on the temple steps. but it lingered. it stayed with him longer than it should have. maybe because it felt real. because it was the first time in years he didnât feel like a ghost inside his own body.
the first time you made him laugh was when you shoved a whole rice ball in his mouth mid-argument just to shut him up. he nearly choked. you didnât apologize. he thinks that mightâve been the moment he fell a little in something with you. not love. not yet. but something dangerously adjacent.
he started doing small things too. placing your phone on the charger when you fell asleep watching dramas. hiding your favorite snack in the cabinet behind the protein powder because he knew youâd never look there. writing your name on his calendar, next to his meetings, like it was just as important.
this isnât working. he knows that. itâs not love, not the kind that grows with laughter and time. itâs something else. something quiet. something fragile. itâs the way you both keep showing up, even when you have every reason not to. like a game of chicken no one wants to lose.
but for some reason, when the elders ask about the paperwork, he always shrugs and says, âshe mustâve lost it again.â and when youâre alone in the same room, you always say the same thing. your voice is flat, practicedâbut your hands tremble when you pick up the mug, and your eyes flick to his like they might say something your mouth wonât.
he wonders if youâre lying too.
and if you are, he wonders what it means that he hopes you are.
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he doesnât bake sweets often, but when he does, just for you, theyâre always so tasty! a perfect amount of sweet and well-baked, though, sometimes, you swear you can taste a little saltiness :c
sukuna tells you not to worry about that.
you donât need to know that he milks himself dry trying to produce that stupid drizzle for you, hands tugging his throbbing cocks to get every last drop into the measuring cup, or that he has to keep himself hard with your dirty panties and a photo of you in lingerie that heâs never quite gotten over, despite ripping said lingerie to shreds a couple of weeks ago.
itâs a tough job, one filled with grunts and groans and the very, very occasional whimper when his angry-red tips are beyond sensitive and his balls are empty. that you definitely donât need to know.
itâs all worth it, though, when you finally take a bite, a soft, content moan leaving your full mouth and a happy twinkle in your bright eyes. something about the sight makes sukunaâs cold, cursed heart thump, especially when you praise him.
âthese are really good! you should make sweets more often, âkuna,â you say in-between bites, and he can only scowl and flick your forehead.
âyouâre so greedy. they arenât that easy to make.â
yet, a couple of days later, thereâs another fresh batch waiting in the kitchen. anything for his wife, right?