Requests are open so feel free to ask me to write about any of the characters on this list! :)
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Fluff = ❤︎ Angst= ✶ Smut= ✿
Megumi Fushiguro
The deadlines series||College AU ❤︎ ✶ ✿
Of deadlines and desires (Pt1) ❤︎ ✿
Of rivalry and ruin (Pt2) ❤︎ ✶ ✿
Of closure and cravings (Pt3) ❤︎ ✶ ✿
Summary: Megumi Fushiguro infuriated you like no one else in that college, he knew how to get under your skin. You wanted to strangle him most of the time but a moment of weakness might just change everything.
One-shots
Restless ❤︎ ✶
Summary: Megumi suddenly wakes you up in the middle of the nigh because he can’t sleep and he needed someone to help him.
The things he doesn’t say ❤︎ ✶
Summary: Megumi doesn’t know how to deal with having a crush and his strategy of deny deny deny might just cost him everything he longs for when you overhear him talking with Yuki and Nobara.
Yuji Itadori
One-shots
The fear I hide ❤︎
Summary: A mission gone wrong might just be the last push that both Yuji and you need to finally stop being idiots.
Lovebirds’ observation log ❤︎
Summary: when two idiotic lovebirds try to keep their relationship a secret from their even more idiotic friends chaos ensues.
Yuta Okkotsu
One-shots
Things we lost, things we found ❤︎ ✶
Summary: When Yuta left for Africa he took part of your heart along with him then Shibuya tore the remains into pieces. Will you be able to pick up the pieces or is it beyond repair?
Toge Inumaki
One-shots
Silent echoes ❤︎
Summary: transferring schools on your second years is never easy when you’re deaf, even less if you’re a sorcerer but maybe a quiet white haired boy makes it just a bit easier.
Noritoshi Kamo
One-shots
Crumbling down ✿ ✶ ❤︎
Summary: When Noritoshi comes back from a specially tough mission he can’t hold it in anymore but you’re there to pick up the pieces.
Mechamaru / Kokichi Muta
Coming soon
Satoru Gojo
One-shots
The sorcerer, the kid and the one who stayed ❤︎
Summary: Satoru Gojo had always been a handful but when he suddenly appeared on your doorstep with a fed-up eight ear old is the final straw. (Or the one where Gojo ropes you into co-parenting Megumi)
Seriously unserious ❤︎
Summary: Gojo’s constantly flirting with you, but that’s just who he is, it’s not as if he actually liked you, is it?
Tequila fueled ❤︎
Summary: mixing tequila and the man you’ve been in love for vos knows how long isn’t a good combination and it’s even worse when you don’t remember the next morning.
Say it back ❤︎
Summary: what happens when you decide to try a trend and not say ‘I love you’ back to your dramatic boyfriend.
Suguru Geto
One-shots
The power of echoes and nostalgia ❤︎
Summary: a high-school reunion can make old feelings and memories resurface, specially when you’re met with your former best friend and first love.
Headcanons
Intimacy with Suguru Geto ✿
Nanami Kento
Drabbles
Dancing to old vinyls in the kitchen ❤︎
One-shots
Third time’s the charm… or maybe the fifth? ❤︎
Summary: Nanami’s used to dealing with curses and paperwork so proposing to the woman he loves should be easy enough… right? (Or the 4 times he tried to propose and the one he actually did +the chaos that follows)
Six o’clock sharp ❤︎
Summary: Gojo somehow manages to get Nanami drunk and you know it’s bad when your favourite salary man sends you an SOS but you expected chaos but not a confession.
The fire series ❤︎ ✶
What the fire left behind ❤︎ ✶ (Main work)
What started the fire ❤︎ ✶ (Prequel)
Summary: Nanami saw how many lifes the Shibuya incident had taken and he hated that he wasn’t one of those, but what he hates the most is the fact that you make him want to live it.
Choso Kamo
One-shots
Kissing lessons ❤︎
Summary: Choso had been learning what it was like to be human for a while now but what you didn’t expect was for him to ask you to teach him how to kiss.
Ink and permanence ❤︎
Summary: when you went to get your first tattooo you didn’t expect that the ink on your arm wouldn’t be the only permanent thing you would leave the studio with.
Toji Fushiguro
One-shots
Silk and sharp edges ✿ ✶ ❤︎
Summary: Toji Fushiguro hated doing babysitting jobs, specially when they involved protecting spoiled rich brats but when he starts realising that you aren’t one it somehow makes it even worse.
Ryomen Sukuna
One-shots
Where the moon doesn’t reach ❤︎ ✿
Summary: A demon that’s hurt beyond repair stumbles into a quiet herbalist. He hates everything soft and weak but, somehow, the way you smile has managed to make its way into a heart he didn’t even know he had.
Babysitting emergency ❤︎
Summary: Sukuna is in charge of babysitting his little nephew for an evening, should be easy enough right? Turns out it isn’t so he finds himself knocking at his annoying neighbour’s door.
If you want to be tagged in future works let me know and I’ll add you to the tag list!
I also write for Haikyuu on my other blog @oikawaisincrisis in case you want to check it out!
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Pairing: Prince!Ushijima Wakatoshi x Herbalist!Reader
Summary: Known as the heartless “Stone Prince” Ushijima Wakatoshi hides his true self behind duty and silence, until a chance encounter with a gentle village herbalist changes everything.
CW (content warning): Medieval AU, mentions of blood an injury (nothing too descriptive), prince Ushijima, herbalist reader, it’s kind of suggestive at some point but it’s nothing descriptive.
AN: Hi guys! 🤍 I’m finally back after my summer break with the first instalment of the medieval/fantasy AU series I posted about ages ago (you can find it HERE). I’m still open to hearing more tropes/pairings for this series as I’m working on posting the rest of the works I put up on the poll. I also still have to go through my requests still hahahah. Anyways, hope you enjoy and let me know what you think! :)
Requests are open so feel free to send yours! (you can check the list of characters I write for on my pinned post)
Masterlist
The village of Shiratorizawa sat like a quiet breath in the lungs of the valley, ringed by whispering woods and rolling lavender hills. The days were gentle, filled with birdsong and the rustle of herbs drying in the rafters. And in the heart of this sleepy place stood a crooked little shop carved into the slope of the hillside, half-stone, half-wildflower, and full of warmth.
It smelled of crushed thyme and rosemary, of honey steeped in elderflower, of smoke and something softer, like the trace of healing in the air.
This was your home. You had no grand titles, no legacy but your mother’s garden and the quiet way she’d taught you to listen to plants like they spoke a language. You brewed teas for aching bones, poultices for burns, tinctures for coughs. You stitched wounds and whispered comfort. Your work was simple, and sometimes hard, but always full of care.
And from across the river, the castle loomed.
A silent watchtower. Cold and unreachable.
Even the children whispered stories about it, about the one who lived there. The “Stone Prince,” they called him. Ushijima Wakatoshi. The son of the aging king, soon to inherit the crown.
“They say he was born without a heart.” One boy murmured to another as you tucked chamomile into a paper pouch for their grandmother’s nerves.
“They say he doesn’t bleed.” Said the other.
You just smiled faintly.
“Everyone bleeds.” You said softly, handing them the packet. “Even princes.”
You didn’t know yet how right you were.
——————————————————————————
That summer morning began like any other. You were elbow-deep in calendula, gently separating the blossoms from their stems, when the sound of frantic hooves shattered the calm.
You looked up sharply, standing just in time to see a horse gallop past the shop. It was riderless, lathered with sweat. Behind it, distant shouts echoed up the path from the forest's edge.
You dropped your shears.
The woods beyond the village weren’t hostile. They were simply wild and dense with pine, root-woven paths, the shimmer of foxglove in shadow. But something had happened there.
You followed instinct more than thought, your apron still tied around your waist, a small satchel of bandages and salves thrown hastily over your shoulder.
You didn’t know you were walking toward him. He was half-hidden in the underbrush when you found him. Slumped against the base of a tree, cloak torn, blood trailing down one side of his face. One leg twisted awkwardly beneath him, his breathing shallow but even. A sword lay discarded nearby, its blade nicked.
You hesitated. Not out of fear, he was clearly wounded, but because something about him felt… enormous. Like a boulder in the path of a stream. Still. Steady. Unmoved.
He turned his head slowly as you stepped closer. Dark eyes met yours. Unreadable. Unshaken.
“Are you hurt?” You asked gently.
A pause. Then, quietly. “Not badly.”
You moved toward him regardless, kneeling to examine the gash above his brow. It had already clotted some, but the skin was split. The bruising at his temple worried you more.
He didn’t flinch as your fingers brushed his skin.
“I’m going to clean this. It might sting.”
He nodded once.
You soaked a linen square in a bitter-smelling tincture and pressed it to the wound. A quiet inhale from him, nothing more.
“How did this happen?” You asked, dabbing carefully.
“An ambush…” He said after a beat. “The carriage. Bandits, I think. We were separated.”
“We?”
“My guards.”
You blinked at the calm in his voice. It wasn’t arrogance. Just… detachment. Like he wasn’t surprised to be bleeding alone in a forest.
“Were you a merchant?” You asked, eyeing the fine weave of his ruined cloak. “You don’t look like one.”
He was quiet.
“Something like that…” He said finally.
——————————————————————————
You didn’t press him.
Not because you didn’t suspect the truth, there was something unmistakably noble in his posture, even injured. But because he didn’t seem ready to say it, and you weren’t the kind of woman who pulled secrets from people’s teeth.
You offered your hand instead. “Can you stand?”
He took your hand without hesitation. His palm was rougher than you expected, calloused. A soldier’s hand. You braced your legs and pulled as he rose, watching pain flicker briefly across his face. The injury to his leg made his stance unstable, so you slipped under one arm, steadying him as best you could.
He didn’t thank you, but he didn’t resist either.
——————————————————————————
It took time to get him back to the shop.
You led him by the less-traveled paths, away from curious eyes and open windows. You were used to helping injured men, you knew the rhythm of their breath when they pushed too hard, the way they leaned against pride until it faltered.
He was quiet. Always quiet, but he watched you.
You could feel it each time your hand found his wrist to check his pulse, or when you shifted under his weight, or when you murmured something low about the slope ahead. His gaze stayed with you.
——————————————————————————
Back at the shop, you guided him onto the low cot you used for patients. He didn’t complain. Just exhaled once and let you peel back the tattered fabric around his leg.
The wound was shallow but long. Clean, at least. No signs of rot or poison. You cleaned it in silence, working by habit.
“Your hands are steady.” He said suddenly.
You blinked. It was the first unsolicited thing he’d said.
“I’ve had practice.” You replied, not looking up.
He said nothing more, but the space between you had changed. Slightly. Like a breeze shifting direction.
——————————————————————————
You wrapped his thigh with care and offered him tea while the salve soaked in.
He took the cup but didn’t drink.
Instead, he looked around. Slowly. As if taking inventory of your little shop, every jar, every string of herbs drying on the wall, every bottle labeled in careful script.
“This is yours?” He asked.
You nodded.
“You live alone?”
“I do.”
He was quiet again. Then, “It’s peaceful here.”
You smiled faintly. “Most days.”
And then, for a fleeting moment, something passed over his face. Not a smile. But not nothing either.
Almost… wonder.
——————————————————————————
You didn’t ask his name that night. He slept on the cot, and you sat near the fire, grinding valerian root with the mortar and pestle. Outside, the wind shifted.
In the morning, he was gone. He left without a word. No note. No name. Just a single gold coin beside the teacup.
You turned it over in your fingers. Thinking about the stoic merchant and the lonely look in his eyes.
——————————————————————————
It was three days before you saw him again.
You were hanging bunches of feverfew in the back garden when the quiet crunch of boots on gravel drew your attention. You turned, expecting old man Hiro or perhaps a neighbor’s child but instead, there he stood.
The stranger. The not-quite-merchant with the sword-callused hands.
He looked… cleaner this time. Less torn. His wound had begun to heal, and though he still limped slightly, he moved with the same quiet, self-possessed strength.
You blinked at him. “You left without a word.”
He gave a short nod. “I didn’t want to trouble you.”
You tilted your head. “You were bleeding.”
He looked away, eyes following the curling vines of ivy across the shop’s stone walls.
“Still.” A pause as he looked at the ground, the broad man before you looking unsure. “I brought this.”
He held out a wrapped cloth bundle. Inside was a loaf of honey-oat bread, clearly from the castle’s bakery. You recognized the delicate scoring on top. No one in the village made bread like that.
You raised an eyebrow. “You’re not from around here.”
He didn’t deny it. “I was raised near the court.”
A partial truth. A carefully chosen one.
You smiled faintly and stepped aside. “Well, court or not, you’re welcome back, but only if you ever decide to leave your name this time.”
His gaze lingered on you. Then he murmured “Toshi.”
You didn’t know why the name felt important then. You only nodded.
“All right, Toshi. Nice to meet you.” You smiled warmly at him, making something inside his chest stir.
——————————————————————————
He came back again. And again.
Never on a pattern. Sometimes in the morning, sometimes at dusk. Never in the rain. Always walking alone.
You noticed he never brought anything to be healed after the first few times. Just small excuses. “I thought you might have a remedy for fatigue.” “Do you sell anything for dreamless sleep?” “My leg aches when it storms.”
He wasn’t good at lying.
But he was good at watching.
——————————————————————————
You would often find him outside the shop before you opened, silently helping carry bundles of fresh-cut herbs, or refilling the heavy water jugs from the well. He didn’t speak much, and when he did, it was always simply, directly.
You learned to speak around the quiet.
Sometimes he helped you sort dried roots into jars. Other times, you’d hand him a knife and a bowl of wild ginger to peel, and he’d sit at your small table, his large hands surprisingly precise in their work.
It became routine. Not daily. Not expected. But… welcome. And fragile. Like a bird who kept returning to your window, unsure if the glass would hold.
——————————————————————————
“I used to think people like you didn’t exist.” He said once.
It was evening. You were drying your hands on a towel, having finished tending to an old woman’s twisted ankle. He’d helped her into a chair and said almost nothing the whole time. Now, he sat with his hands folded in his lap, watching you move about the room.
“People like me?” You echoed.
He didn’t meet your gaze. “People who care. Quietly. All the time.”
You blinked. Then smiled faintly.
“Most people care.” You said gently. “They just forget how loud the world is.”
That night, when he left, he touched the doorframe as he passed through it.
A small thing. But something in you wondered if he needed the grounding.
——————————————————————————
He never told you much about himself. But you began to learn the shape of him in pieces.
He preferred bitter herbs. He slept little. He looked at storm clouds like they were old friends. He flinched but not outwardly, it was only in breath when he heard children cry. He always checked the edges of the room when he walked in.
He never relaxed. Not fully. But when he sat with you, sometimes peeling bark, sometimes watching the kettle steam his eyes softened just enough to change their color.
One afternoon, while you packed salves for a neighboring village, you asked without thinking. “Toshi, were you a soldier?”
He paused mid-reach. “I trained as one.”
You nodded. “That explains the sword.”
He tilted his head slightly. “And the silence?”
You glanced at him. Smiled. “That too.”
——————————————————————————
One morning, a child burst into your shop with a bloodied knee and a shaking chin. You crouched instantly, cooing softly, and began to clean it with lavender water.
Toshi was there, as he often was by then, sweeping fallen herbs into a pile. He knelt beside you without a word, holding the boy’s small hands gently between his own as you worked.
The boy sniffled. Toshi didn’t speak. He just held his hands firm, steady.
When you finished and wrapped the wound, the child glanced up.
“You’re strong.” He mumbled to Toshi, almost in awe. “Like a knight.”
Something flickered across Toshi’s face. A shadow of a frown. But he only nodded once.
After the boy left, you said quietly, “You don’t like being called that.”
“I’m not.” He said.
You studied him. “Not anymore?”
“Maybe not ever.”
But your heart tugged at that. Because you didn’t know what he meant, but the ache in his voice told you it had once mattered.
——————————————————————————
One evening, you were watering the potted sage near the shop window when he spoke again softly, almost like a confession.
“Do you believe people can change?”
You didn’t look up right away.
“I believe people can choose.” You said finally. “Change comes after that.”
He was quiet. Then he whispered, “I never had the chance to choose. Until I came here.”
You turned, then. Slowly. He was standing near the doorway, a shadow in the golden slant of dusk.
“Toshi…”
He shook his head once. “It’s nothing.”
But it wasn’t nothing. Not to you.
——————————————————————————
You didn’t know when it had started to feel like this, like something delicate was building between you, even if neither of you dared touch it.
It lived in small things.
How he held the basket when you gathered rosemary. How you set aside extra tea for him before you even knew he’d visit. How he said your name softly, always just once. Like it mattered.
You weren’t foolish. You knew he wasn’t a simple man. His bearing, his silences, his hands, all told you he came from a world you didn’t know.
But he looked at you like your world rested him. Like he came here to breathe.
——————————————————————————
One night, he stayed later than usual.
You had lit the lanterns early. A storm was approaching the clouds thick and low, thunder grumbling in the distance. Toshi lingered at the window, watching the rain begin to fall in curtains.
“You can stay here.” You said gently. “Until it passes.”
He didn’t answer right away.
Then he sat on the bench by the fire, his profile limned by firelight. You noticed then, his hands were trembling slightly.
“I haven’t felt safe in a storm since I was a child.” He said.
You paused. “Why not?”
He looked into the flames. The silence stretched. “Because everything I love disappears in them.”
Your heart cracked, just a little. You knelt beside him, reached for his hands.
“I’m not going anywhere.” You said softly.
And something in him unraveled.
He slept on the cot that night. You left tea by his bedside and shut the door gently. You didn’t sleep much.
The storm passed quietly, by dawn. And when you woke, he was still there. Not gone. Not hidden.
Still there.
——————————————————————————
The sickness arrived slowly. Like rot under a floorboard, hidden at first, but spreading.
You noticed it in small ways.
A child who hadn’t come for cough syrup in days. A man in the market who looked pale despite the heat. Your neighbor, who stopped tending her garden and stayed inside, the windows dark.
Then, one by one, they began to knock at your door.
——————————————————————————
“Toshi, I need more yarrow. Can you grind it?”
“Boil this bark until the water turns dark red. Stir slowly, don’t let it burn.”
“Help me carry her, she’s burning up.”
“Don’t let that one touch the others, it’s spreading.”
You worked until your fingers went numb. You couldn’t stop. Not when old Mrs. Ota couldn’t breathe through the fever. Not when the Kobayashi twins cried from their mother’s bedside. Not when you were the only one in the valley who knew what tincture even meant.
And Toshi, gods, Toshi was there for all of it. He didn’t leave your side for days. Not once.
He ground herbs until his hands blistered. Carried feverish villagers in his arms like they weighed nothing. Learned the names of every root you handed him. Fetched water and wood and wrapped bandages when your hands shook too hard to finish the knot.
But he also watched you.
Every moment. Eyes constantly on you, quiet, tracking the way your shoulders slumped, the way your breath caught, the way you sometimes stood still for just a second too long.
“You need to rest.” He said once, voice low.
You shook your head. “Later.”
“There might not be a later.” He said.
You smiled weak, but kind. “Then I’ll make sure there’s a now.”
He didn’t argue but he looked like he wanted to.
——————————————————————————
Three more days passed.
You stopped counting how many fevers you treated. How many cloths you changed. How many prayers you whispered between clenched teeth.
And then, on the fourth day, you made a mistake.
You hadn’t eaten. You hadn’t slept.
You were leaning over a child’s bed, checking her breathing, when the room tilted. You blinked. Once. Twice. The air narrowed to a tunnel. Your knees went soft and the last thing you saw before your world tipped sideways was Toshi’s face turning toward you, eyes wide, hand reaching out…
Then everything went black.
——————————————————————————
You woke to cool linen against your forehead and a voice low, rough with panic.
“Don’t do that again.”
Your eyes fluttered open.
You were on your own cot. A faint breeze moved through the window. The smell of willow bark tea and rosewater floated in the air.
Toshi was sitting beside you. His eyes always so unreadable, were raw now. His hand was clenched tight around a cloth he was using to dab at your neck.
“You fainted.” He said quietly. “Your pulse was shallow. You weren’t responding.”
You tried to speak, but your throat was dry.
He handed you a cup before you could ask. Helped you sit up slowly. His arm around your back was steady. Solid.
“Did I…?” You whispered, voice hoarse. “Has anyone- ?”
“Everyone’s stable.” He said. “You did more than enough.”
You closed your eyes. Relief washed through you and shame.
“I’m sorry.” You murmured.
He stiffened beside you. “Don’t say that.”
“I was careless.”
“You were exhausted.”
Your eyes met his. “You were scared.” You whispered.
He didn’t answer. But the silence howled with truth.
“I’ve seen people die.” He said finally. His voice was quiet, but his jaw clenched. “I’ve held men as they bled out. I’ve stood in battlefields, I’ve seen sickness take entire villages. But I’ve never-”
He broke off. Looked away. Then whispered, barely audible. “I’ve never felt what I felt when I saw you fall.”
You blinked. Heat rose to your cheeks, but something inside you ached, because his voice didn’t tremble like love. It trembled like fear.
“Toshi…” You started.
“I thought I was too late.” He turned back to you, eyes dark and burning. “And I couldn’t- I couldn’t do anything.”
You reached out, slowly, and took his hand. He let you.
You felt the tension in his shoulders, the way his breath hitched once before leveling out. He looked down at your joined hands, his thumb brushing lightly over your skin.
“I don’t know what this is.” He said, “but I know it’s the first thing I’ve ever wanted that wasn’t given to me.”
You swallowed hard and, for a moment, you forgot to breathe.
——————————————————————————
That night, the two of you sat outside the shop under the stars. The village was quiet again. Tired, but healing.
He didn’t let go of your hand for hours.
And when you leaned your head against his shoulder, he exhaled slowly, like something in his chest had finally begun to loosen.
But he still didn’t tell you his full name. And you still didn’t ask. Because something told you, if he spoke it aloud, the magic between you might fracture.
So you said nothing. Not yet.
——————————————————————————
The days after your collapse blurred into warmth and quiet.
The village was recovering. Slowly. You still made house visits, still crushed herbs and folded bandages, but now Toshi watched you with a closer eye. Every time your hands trembled, his would steady them. Every time you swayed, he was already there.
But more than that, something had changed between you. He no longer looked away when you caught him staring. You no longer hid the way your breath caught when he reached for you.
It wasn’t spoken. It didn’t need to be.
——————————————————————————
One evening, the air smelled of chamomile and soft wind. The last of the sunset spilled golden across the hills. You and Toshi sat outside, side by side, hands brushing but not quite touching.
He turned to you his face shadowed, solemn, but open in a way you had never seen.
“I don’t know what kind of life you imagined for yourself.” He said. “But if there is space in it… I want to stand in that space.”
Your chest ached.
“I never imagined much of anything.” You said. “But somehow, you’re in all of it now.”
He reached for you then. Not with urgency, but reverence. And when his hand touched your face rough, warm, careful you leaned into it like you’d been waiting all your life.
——————————————————————————
You don’t remember how your feet carried you inside, only the hush between breaths and the trembling gentleness of his hands as he followed.
His touch was unhurried, unpracticed, almost shy. As though he feared he might shatter you if he moved too quickly. You guided him with soft touches, with murmured reassurances. With the truth your body had longed to speak.
When his lips finally met yours, it wasn’t a kiss, it was a vow.
That night, you shed years of loneliness together. You memorized each other in quiet gasps and lingering glances, in the slow brush of fingertips across bare skin, in the ache of holding and being held.
Toshi made love like a man discovering softness for the first time.
Like someone who had never been allowed to want, and now finally could.
After, he lay with you tucked against him, his breath steady against your hair, his arm around your waist like he’d never let go.
And he whispered so softly you almost missed it. “I’ve never been more myself than when I’m with you.”
You smiled against his chest. “Then stay.”
He kissed the top of your head. “I will.”
You believed him.
Until the knight came.
——————————————————————————
It was two days later. You were returning from the river path when you saw the royal crest on the stranger’s cloak, a deep green with silver embroidery. His stallion was war-trained, his armor too pristine for a simple guard.
He was speaking to the baker, brows furrowed. Toshi wasn’t anywhere in sight.
Your chest tightened. You slipped quietly behind the bakery wall and listened.
“…spotted near the border during the ambush. He’s not just missing, he’s avoiding the castle. There’s talk he’s hiding in the southern villages. Have you seen any unfamiliar men?”
The baker mumbled something. The knight frowned.
“He may be using a false name. He’s tall. Broad-shouldered. Scar over his left brow.”
Your breath caught.
A scar.
You stepped back, before turning and running.
——————————————————————————
You found him by the river, just outside the village. He was crouched low, filling a basket with smooth stones, a habit he’d picked up from you. He looked peaceful.
You didn’t feel peaceful.
“Toshi.”
He looked up. Saw your face and stilled.
You dropped the basket in your hands.
“Who are you?”
He stood slowly. “I- ”
“Don’t lie to me.”
Silence.
“My name is Wakatoshi Ushijima.” He breathed out and your world blurred.
You shook your head. “That’s the prince’s name.”
He looked at you and said nothing. As if silence would soften the truth.
“You lied to me.”
“I didn’t mean to.”
“Everything you told me was a lie.”
“No.” He said, voice sharp. “Everything I felt was real.”
Your hands curled into fists. “You let me fall for someone who doesn’t exist.”
He stepped forward. You stepped back.
“You don’t understand.” He said, voice strained. “I came here wounded, hiding. But I stayed because of you. Not because of who I was, but because you saw who I could be.”
“I saw what you let me see.” You whispered. “And I trusted you.”
He said your name and you broke.
“You made love to me while lying to my face.”
That stopped him. Like a blow to the chest.
You turned before he could see the tears fall. “Don’t follow me.”
You left him standing in the riverlight, the wind pulling at his cloak, the prince who was never supposed to be yours.
——————————————————————————
The days after the truth fell apart were hollow.
You moved through them like a ghost, hands still grinding herbs, lips still forming words of comfort, but the warmth was gone. Where once your work had been lit by something bright, now it felt like tending wounds in the dark.
You didn’t speak his name. You couldn’t.
The villagers noticed your quietness, of course. Old Mrs. Ota reached for your hand once and said, “Even healers need healing.” You smiled, small and brittle, but you didn’t answer.
At night, when you lay in your cot, your body still remembered him. The shape of his hand at your waist, the way his breath had steadied when you leaned against his chest. You shut your eyes against the memory, but it pressed in anyway.
He had been yours. And yet, not.
——————————————————————————
Far away, in the castle that loomed over the hills, the prince walked its halls with steps that sounded too loud in the silence.
The palace was colder than he remembered. The walls were lined with tapestries, the air thick with incense, but to him, it felt like stone and emptiness. Every bow from a servant, every formal report from a knight, every polite nod from a courtier scraped against him.
He had spent his life being the “Stone Prince.” The man with no feelings. The one who could not be shaken. And yet, now when he stood in the great hall, when he trained in the yard, when he sat at the king’s table he felt only one thing.
Loss.
Your face lingered in every shadow. Your voice threaded through every silence. And for the first time in his life, he hated himself for not being brave enough to give you the truth sooner.
But duty held him. Or maybe it was cowardice. He truly didn’t even know anymore.
He returned to his role, the prince with iron eyes. But inside, his heart bled still.
——————————————————————————
It was nearly a month later when the news reached him.
A messenger arrived breathless at dawn, dust streaking his cloak. Rebels, he said. Armed men from the neighboring kingdom, slipping across the border to raid. The valley had been hit. Villages burned.
Wakatoshi didn’t wait for orders. He didn’t wait for a council meeting or his father’s decree.
The moment he heard your village’s name, something inside him snapped.
He left the castle that night with only his sword and his horse, his fury so sharp it silenced every knight who tried to stop him.
The “Stone Prince” was gone.
This was just a man wild with fear.
——————————————————————————
The village was smoke and ruin when he arrived. The air stank of fire and iron, of fear and broken things. He cut down two rebels on the path before he even dismounted, their blades still red.
“Where is she?” He demanded of every villager he found, grabbing shoulders, scanning faces. “Where is she?”
No one had seen you.
His chest tightened. His hands shook.
Until he heard your voice.
It was faint, strained, coming from behind the wreckage of the old blacksmith’s shop.
You were crouched there, clutching a wounded child to your chest, blood smeared across your face where a rebel had struck you. And even then, even shaking, exhausted, covered in ash you were still fighting to keep someone else alive.
“(Y/n)!”
You looked up. And the world seemed to stop.
He was there. Bloodied, furious, alive.
“Wakatoshi?” Your voice cracked.
You didn’t have time to say more. A rebel lunged from the shadows behind you.
Wakatoshi moved faster than thought. His sword cut clean through the man’s strike, steel clanging, sparks flying. The rebel fell at his feet, and Wakatoshi stood over you, chest heaving.
“I found you.” He whispered, almost desperate. “I found you.”
—
But it wasn’t over. The fighting surged around you both once again. Shouts, steel, fire. Wakatoshi fought like a storm, cutting down every enemy that drew near. He shielded you with his own body, his eyes burning.
But then, one blade slipped through. You saw it before he did.
“Wakatoshi!”
The rebel’s spear caught his side. The impact sent him staggering. He gritted his teeth, tore it free, and felled the man in one brutal strike, but when he turned, blood poured down his ribs.
You scrambled to him, hands catching his shoulders.
“No, no, no- stay with me.” You pleaded, forcing him down before he collapsed.
His eyes found yours. Steady, even now.
“If this is the price.” He murmured, voice rough. “I’ll pay it. To keep you safe.”
“Don’t you dare.” You snapped, tears blurring your sight. “Don’t you dare leave me now.”
You pressed your hands against the wound, herbs and bandages spilling from your satchel as you worked with frantic precision. Your mind spun with remedies, with every scrap of healing knowledge you had. But your heart, your heart screamed, because this was him.
The man who had lied. The prince who had broken you. The only person you still wanted to live.
——————————————————————————
The battle waned. The rebels fled. Villagers began to gather, but you saw none of it. All you saw was Wakatoshi’s pale face, his heavy breath, the weight of his blood on your hands.
“Stay awake.” You begged. “Please, Toshi, please.”
His eyes fluttered. His hand caught yours, holding it tight against his chest.
“You called me Toshi.” He whispered.
“I don’t care who you are.” You cried, pressing your forehead to his. “Prince, knight, liar whatever name you want- I don’t care. Just stay. Please stay. You promised you’d stay with me.”
And in that moment, he smiled. Small. Pained. But real.
“For you.” He said. “Always.”
——————————————————————————
You kept him alive. Through the night, through the fever, through the hours where every breath seemed like it might be his last, you kept him tethered to this world with your hands and your will.
And when dawn came, he opened his eyes again.
You wept into his shoulder. He held you weakly, but held you all the same.
——————————————————————————
The villagers believed the prince had fallen in the raid. Whispers spread that the Stone Prince had been slain defending innocents, that his body had been carried off by the enemy.
But the truth was quieter. Softer.
In the little shop by the hillside, you tended his wounds. You nursed him back to health. And for the first time, he was not a prince, nor a soldier, nor a stone figure for the world to look upon.
He was just a man.
Yours.
——————————————————————————
Weeks later, when he was strong enough to stand again, you walked together through the village fields, hand in hand. The lavender had begun to bloom, and the hills smelled of summer.
“You’ll be missed.” You said softly.
He nodded. “Perhaps. But they will move on.”
“And you?” You asked, glancing at him. “Do you regret it?”
His hand tightened around yours.
“Leaving the crown is not a loss.” He said. “Losing you would have been.”
Your chest ached with love so sharp it almost hurt.
“I thought you had no heart.” You teased gently.
He looked down at you, his expression quiet but certain.
“You are my heart.” He said simply.
And for once, you believed it.
The Stone Prince was gone. But the man he left behind was everything you had ever wanted.
And when the lavender bloomed that summer, he was there to see it with you.
Always.
Tags: @pizzitamia
Taglist is open so let me know if you want to be added in future works! :)
Summary: A quiet night in might soften Megumi just enough for him to be clingy, only if it’s with you.
CW (content warning): literally nothing, this is just tooth rotting fluff.
AN: Hi guys! I’m finally back after so long hahahah I’m sorry for neglecting you for so long but I had a writers block and thought I’d take some time off while I was starting my summer vacations. I still have a few trips planned but I’ll try to get through my requests and post a few works here hahahah. English isn’t my first language so I’m sorry if there’s any mistakes. Hope you enjoy and let me know what you think! :)
Requests are open so feel free to send yours! (you can check the list of characters I write for on my pinned post)
Masterlist
The faint hum of the television filled the room in a quiet murmur, casting soft colors against the darkened walls as the latest episode of some long-forgotten show played in the background. The blinds were half-closed, the sky outside painted in hues of late afternoon, tipping lazily toward evening. Everything about this moment was the definition of comfortable, the way the air settled warm against your skin, the weight of the blankets across your legs, and most of all, the solid, very much present warmth of Megumi Fushiguro curled up behind you in bed.
You hadn’t intended to get this cozy. It had started with just watching something together, a small shared indulgence between missions and mayhem. But then Megumi had pulled you into bed, under the guise of “getting more comfortable,” he’d claimed, and you hadn’t really fought it. Who were you to resist the rare occasion when Megumi asked for affection rather than quietly hoping for it?
He lay behind you now, arms draped lazily around your waist, chin nudged softly into the crook of your shoulder. You could feel the slow, steady rhythm of his breath against your neck, each exhale warm and ticklish. His grip wasn’t tight, but it was insistent, the kind of hold that told you without words: I’m not letting go any time soon.
You smirked to yourself, glancing at the screen but not really watching it. It wasn’t the show that held your attention. It was the way Megumi had slowly but surely been shifting closer over the last thirty minutes. First, it was a hand on your waist. Then that hand had slipped beneath the hem of your shirt, fingers cool and possessive against your bare skin. Then he’d pulled you closer, inch by inch, until your back was flush with his chest.
You hadn’t said anything. Not yet. But you were very aware.
Especially now, as one of his hands slipped up to brush gently over your ribs, fingers spreading out as if to mold you closer against him.
You bit back a grin. He was trying to be subtle, and failing miserably.
“You good back there?” You asked, voice casual but teasing as you wiggled slightly.
Megumi made a low sound in his throat. “Mhm.”
“You sure?” You pressed. “You’ve been inching closer for the last thirty minutes. I thought maybe you were cold.”
“Not cold.” He muttered, the tip of his nose brushing just under your jaw. “Just... comfortable.”
You turned your head a bit, trying to catch a glimpse of his face. “Comfortable, huh?”
His only response was to tighten his hold just a fraction. If you didn’t know him better, you might’ve missed the slight rise in color along his cheekbones. But you did know him. You knew every shift in his voice, every flicker in his expression. And this? This was Megumi being quietly, hopelessly clingy.
You grinned.
“Megumi Fushiguro.” You sing-songed, dragging your fingers lightly down the arm wrapped around your waist. “Are you being needy?”
His body stiffened for half a second, then relaxed. He didn’t answer.
So you turned in his arms, facing him now, your legs brushing against his under the blanket. He didn’t pull away. In fact, he pulled you closer without hesitation, thigh sliding between yours and arms wrapping around your back instead. His eyes met yours for a second, and you could see the quiet plea there, even if his mouth stayed silent.
“You are being needy.” You said, softer this time. You reached up and lightly traced your fingers over the line of his collarbone, letting them trail lazily across his chest.
He exhaled slowly, barely a sound, but his eyelids fluttered a little, and you swore you felt him melt just the tiniest bit.
Your fingers continued, dancing along the planes of his chest through the thin cotton of his shirt, sketching invisible shapes, patterns, swirls.
A quiet hum escaped him.
He tucked his head a little closer to yours, one hand curling gently into your side. “That feels nice.”
“Mhm.” You smiled. “You like that?”
“Yeah.” He practically purred.
You kept going, watching the way his expression softened more with every pass of your fingers. His eyes were half-lidded now, completely focused on your touch. When you stopped for just a second to shift your arm, he reacted instantly, nudging forward, cheek pressing to your shoulder, breath warm against your collarbone.
You laughed quietly. “You could just ask, you know.”
He didn’t lift his head. “Asking’s embarrassing.”
“Oh, baby.” You leaned down slightly, lips brushing his temple. “You’ve literally dragged me into bed, clung to me like a koala, and made sad noises when I stopped petting you. I think we’re past embarrassing.”
“I didn’t make sad noises.”
“You absolutely did.”
He groaned low in his throat, burying his face more fully against your skin. “I hate you.”
You chuckled, curling your hand back over his chest again, resuming the slow patterns. “Liar.”
“Mhm.” He didn’t argue further. If anything, he pulled you closer, as if he could fuse you together if he tried hard enough.
You stayed like that for a while, cuddled together in the tangle of sheets, the soft flicker of the television casting shadows over the both of you. Megumi was peaceful, you realized. There was always a part of him that carried tension, like he was constantly preparing for the next disaster. But here, in this moment, with you in his arms and your touch gentle against his skin, he let go.
It was rare. Precious and deeply, deeply adorable.
He made a little noise again when your fingers paused.
You raised a brow. “That again?”
“Keep going.” He mumbled, barely audible.
You teased. “Please keep going.”
He lifted his head just enough to give you a look, pink-eared, grumpy-sweet. “Don’t push it.”
You just laughed, kissing the tip of his nose before continuing your gentle ministrations.
Minutes passed, or maybe hours, you weren’t keeping track. The warmth of the blankets, the hush of the room, and the constant contact had lulled both of you into a slow, syrupy calm.
You stretched a little at one point, shifting to get a drink of water from the bedside table, but the second you started moving, Megumi clung tighter.
“Where are you going?”
You blinked. “Just grabbing my water.”
“No.”
“No?”
“No.” He curled around you more securely, dragging you back against him. “Not done.”
You snorted. “Not done with what?”
“With this.”
You turned halfway in his arms again. “Fushiguro, are you saying you haven’t had enough hugs yet?”
He looked you dead in the eye, all earnest seriousness. “Yes. You’re not allowed to move yet.”
You nearly melted right then and there.
“Okay, okay.” You whispered, letting him pull you back down. “I’ll stay.”
His lips brushed the side of your neck. “Good.”
“You’re so clingy tonight.” You murmured, grinning as you tangled your fingers in his hair.
“You don’t mind.” He muttered, almost smug.
“I don’t.” You agreed. “I really, really don’t.”
You spent the next little while trading soft kisses and whispers, hands gently tracing over each other's arms, shoulders, cheeks. Megumi held you like you were the only thing keeping him tethered to the earth and maybe you were. He sighed every time you kissed his temple or carded your fingers through his hair, like each touch grounded him in ways words never could.
“Y’know.” You whispered at one point, “You’re lucky I love you, because this level of clinginess would be criminal coming from anyone else.”
Megumi hummed. “I am lucky.”
Your heart stuttered a little at that.
“You never say things like that out loud.” You murmured, brushing his hair back from his forehead.
His voice was quiet, low and slightly hoarse. “I do when it’s just us.”
That made something warm and soft bloom in your chest, so full and deep that you leaned in to kiss him slow and sweet. He kissed back, sleepy and sincere, one hand cupping your cheek like you were made of something fragile and precious.
You pulled back only a little, your lips barely brushing his. “I love you.”
“I love you too.” He said easily, the words slipping out like they’d been waiting forever.
You smiled against his mouth and kissed him again, more lingering this time.
Eventually, you shifted just slightly to get more comfortable again, but Megumi made a small, scandalized noise and physically anchored you in place.
“You’re not allowed to move.” He grumbled. “You belong here now.”
You laughed, pressing your face into his chest as you gave up entirely.
“Fine.” You said, voice muffled. “I guess I belong to you now.”
“Always did.” He mumbled.
And that was how you spent the rest of the evening. Curled in bed, limbs tangled, the world reduced to the quiet hum of affection and the steady beat of each other's hearts. Whatever chaos waited outside this room, it didn’t matter. Not here. Not now.
Megumi Fushiguro had you in his arms, and he wasn’t letting go.
Summary: what happens when you decide to try a trend and not say ‘I love you’ back to your dramatic boyfriend.
CW (content warning): dramatic Gojo, nothing else really this is purely fluff.
AN: Hi guys! I made this on my Haikyuu blog with Bokuto and thought Gojo would also suit the prompt really well hahahah I’m also thinking about making other versions of this with other characters so let me know if you’d be interested in reading that! 🫶🏻 English isn’t my first language so I’m sorry if there’s any mistakes. Hope you enjoy and let me know what you think! ;)
Requests are open so feel free to send yours! (you can check the list of characters I write for on my pinned post)
Masterlist
You’d never considered yourself particularly brave. You liked to think you were clever, sure but intentionally upsetting Satoru Gojo? That was uncharted, potentially dangerous territory.
Still, the video had made you laugh so hard that your cheeks hurt.
“Try not saying ‘I love you’ back to your boyfriend and record his reaction.”
You didn’t plan to actually record him, because lord knows he’d find the camera, wink into it, and turn it into a spectacle but the idea stuck. You’d always wondered if Satoru ever doubted himself. If he ever worried.
He was, after all, the strongest. Everyone wanted a piece of him. Everyone expected him to be unshakable.
So, for your own curiosity and a little bit of a soft spot for chaos, you decided to find out.
——————————————————————————
It started on a Sunday morning.
The two of you were still in bed, you sprawled on his chest like a particularly clingy cat while he scrolled aimlessly on his phone above your head. The room smelled faintly of coffee and clean linen, and sunlight slanted across the duvet in warm stripes.
You knew from experience that this was his sweet spot, still sleepy enough to be soft and clingy himself, but awake enough to string together complete sentences.
“Y’know.” He said lazily, dropping his phone somewhere beside him to bury his hand in your hair instead. “I don’t know how you did it.”
You tilted your head to glance up at him. “Hm? Did what?”
He grinned down at you. “Convinced me to let you stay over for more than one night. I’ve always been a one-night kinda guy.”
You snorted and poked his ribs. “Oh, shut up. I didn’t have to do much. You fell in love with me the second I said you talk too much.”
“Incorrect.” He tapped your nose. “It was when you stole my dango and then called me a man-child for whining about it.”
“Ah. My bad.”
“Anyway.” He murmured, voice softening now, “I love you. So much it’s gross.”
It was the perfect opportunity.
You propped your chin on his chest and met his gaze, blinking innocently and said nothing.
You watched it happen, the subtle shift in his expression. At first, nothing, he just kept smiling at you, waiting. Then the smile faltered, just barely, and his brow furrowed.
“Did you hear me?”
You stretched lazily and flopped back down beside him. “Mhm.”
“Mhm?”
He rolled onto his side to face you, eyes narrowing playfully. “Mhm what? That’s all I get after I bare my soul to you?”
You bit back a grin and shrugged. “Mhm.”
Gojo stared at you in silence for a beat too long. Then:
“Oh my god.” He whispered. “You don’t love me anymore.”
You clapped a hand over your mouth to stifle the laugh threatening to escape. “What? I didn’t say that.”
“You didn’t have to say it! It’s written all over your face. Betrayal. Heartbreak. Disinterest.”
You rolled onto your stomach to bury your face in the pillow so he wouldn’t see you grinning like an idiot.
He gasped. “Oh my god. You do hate me! What did I do? Tell me. Was it the socks? It was the socks, wasn’t it?”
You turned your head just enough to mumble. “What socks?”
“The socks with my own face on them. You said they were cute.”
You peeked up at him, expression perfectly neutral. “They’re horrifying.”
Gojo clutched his chest like you’d physically shot him. “You wound me, princess. You truly wound me.”
But then he rolled on top of you, pinning you to the mattress effortlessly, his hair falling into his eyes as he peered down at you with mock-seriousness.
“Okay, okay, okay. Be honest with me.” He demanded, caging you in. “Do you or do you not love me?”
You blinked up at him. “You’re heavy.”
“You didn’t answer the question!”
You pretended to think. “Pass.”
“Pass?!” His voice cracked on the word, and you almost broke character right then and there. “Oh no. Oh no no no. This is serious.”
He flopped dramatically onto his back beside you, one arm thrown over his face. “I’ve been rejected. The love of my life thinks I’m just a snack when I wanted to be a full-course meal.”
You stayed quiet, only reaching for your phone to scroll idly, pretending to ignore him.
“You’re really not gonna say it back?”
You hummed noncommittally, biting the inside of your cheek to keep from laughing.
“That’s fine.” He said after a moment. But his voice cracked just slightly at the end. “That’s. Totally. Fine. I didn’t want to hear it anyway.”
You could practically hear the pout in his tone.
——————————————————————————
You thought that would be the end of it but you really should have known better.
By the time you shuffled into the kitchen twenty minutes later to make breakfast, Satoru was already sitting at the counter wearing sunglasses inside, chin in his hand, staring listlessly out the window.
You raised an eyebrow. “What are you doing?”
“Brooding.” He replied flatly. “I’ve become a tragic figure now. A cautionary tale.”
You snorted and opened the fridge. “You’re ridiculous.”
“And unloved.” He added pitifully.
You ignored him, pulling out eggs and bread.
When you cracked the first egg into a pan, he heaved an exaggerated sigh. “Remember when you used to tell me you loved me? Those were the good days.”
You finally glanced at him. “You’re being dramatic.”
“I deserve an Oscar for how well I’m hiding my pain.”
You ignored him again but then he slumped over the counter, resting his cheek against the cold surface as he whined. “You don’t even care.”
At that point, you couldn’t help but laugh and that was apparently the wrong move, because he sat bolt upright, pointing at you accusingly.
“Aha! So you think my suffering is funny.”
You pressed your lips together to keep your composure. “A little.”
“You’re cruel.” He declared, standing now so he could circle the kitchen like some kind of wronged prince. “And here I was thinking we’d get married one day.”
Your hands stilled at that, and for just a second you worried you’d pushed him too far. But then he peeked at you over his sunglasses with a sly grin.
“Still not gonna say it back?” He teased.
You rolled your eyes and turned back to your eggs.
“That’s fine.” He said after a beat, quieter this time. “I can wait.”
——————————————————————————
He followed you around all day like a lost puppy.
When you sat on the couch to watch a movie, he threw himself down beside you with a groan and draped himself dramatically over your lap.
When you tried to get up to grab water, he clung to your waist and whined. “Don’t leave me like this.”
When you went to the bathroom, he stood outside the door, knocking softly. “Do you still love me yet? Blink twice if yes.”
At one point he even disappeared into your bedroom and returned wearing a suit and carrying a rose he had plucked from the neighbour’s bush.
“Maybe you just need to be wooed properly.” He announced, offering you the slightly wilted flower.
You accepted it wordlessly, biting the inside of your cheek to keep from breaking.
He knelt dramatically at your feet. “Marry me.”
You finally cracked then, snorting into your hand. “You’re insane.”
“Insanely in love.” He corrected, still on one knee. Then he straightened and plopped down beside you, muttering, “Still nothing, huh?”
——————————————————————————
That night, when you finally slipped into bed beside him, you thought he’d finally given up.
He was already lying on his side facing you, hair mussed, phone forgotten on the nightstand. You settled under the covers and turned away to switch off the lamp but then his arms slipped around your waist from behind, pulling you close.
“Hey…” He murmured, voice softer now, none of the earlier theatrics. “You’re not really mad at me, right?”
You froze for half a second before forcing yourself to relax. “Why would I be mad?”
“I dunno.” He admitted quietly. “Just… You haven’t said it all day.”
Your heart pinched at that because he sounded genuinely unsure for the first time.
You stayed quiet a moment longer, torn between keeping up the act and putting him out of his misery. But before you could decide, he pressed his face into your shoulder and whispered, barely audible spoke.
“I love you, y’know.”
You smiled softly into the dark and finally relented.
“I know.” You whispered back. Then you turned in his arms to face him, reaching up to brush the hair from his forehead.
“And?” He prompted, voice hopeful.
You laughed quietly, pressing a kiss to his cheek. “And I love you too, dummy.”
The relief that washed over his face was immediate and obvious like someone had just handed him the moon.
“Ha!” He crowed triumphantly, suddenly all grins again. “Knew you couldn’t resist me forever.”
You rolled your eyes, settling against his chest. “Don’t push your luck.”
But he just beamed down at you, smug and soft all at once, and wrapped himself around you like you were something precious.
“You really scared me for a second.” He admitted after a beat, voice low.
You pressed your palm to his chest, right over his heart. “Sorry. Just wanted to see what you’d do.”
He huffed. “What wouldn’t I do for you?”
You smiled into the fabric of his shirt, closing your eyes. “Guess we’ll find out.”
——————————————————————————
And if he spent the next week dramatically clutching his chest and telling everyone you’d “broken his delicate heart” until you threatened to actually stop saying it again?
Well. That was just Satoru being Satoru and you wouldn’t have him any other way.
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Summary: He’s always been your brother’s best friend, he’s always been there from sandcastles to high-school crushes. But somewhere along the way, he became so much more.
CW (content warning): Reader is Suga’s little sister (a year younger than him and Daichi), jealous Daichi, very slightly angst, mutual pining, mentions of a physical fight, not much more this is 99% tooth rotting fluff.
AN: Hi guys! So here’s the second instalment on the childhood series I talked about making on my last Atsumu work. Since Daichi is going last on my medieval AU masterlist (a crime in my opinion) I thought about making this to post something for me and the other 5 Daichi’s fans out there! 🫵🏻 English isn’t my first language so I’m sorry if there’s any mistakes. Hope you enjoy and let me know what you think! :)
Requests are open so feel free to send yours! (you can check the list of characters I write for on my pinned post)
Masterlist
Sandcastles (Ages 4 and 5)
The playground was loud with the kind of wild, half-screamed laughter only kids could get away with. Metal clanged, sneakers pounded on the concrete, and a ball thudded against the fence before bouncing away unnoticed. You sat by yourself in the sandbox, a little island of quiet in a world moving too fast around you.
Sugawara’s friends were over again, he was already in first grade, and that made him cool. Too cool, apparently, to let his baby sister join their soccer game. You didn’t mind, not really. You were only four, and four-year-olds were apparently not old enough to keep up.
So you dug into the dry sand with your tiny plastic shovel, determined not to cry even though your throat felt tight. You’d been trying to build a castle, but it kept falling apart, slumping into sad piles like your mood.
“You’re doing it wrong.”
The voice made you look up. A boy with round cheeks, sun-warmed skin, and messy dark hair stood just outside the sandbox, a soccer ball tucked under one arm. You blinked at him. He wasn’t your brother, but you’d seen him around. He was always with Koushi.
“I’m not.” You said, lips wobbling even though you were trying to sound tough.
He tilted his head. “You kind of are.”
You crossed your arms. “You’re mean.”
“I’m Daichi.” He corrected instead, then stepped into the sandbox like he belonged there. “Can I help?”
You stared at him for a long second, then nodded slowly. His smile was wide and toothy, and you didn’t know it yet, but that smile would become one of your favorite things in the world.
“I’m building a castle.” You explained seriously, gesturing to the sad pile in front of you.
Daichi sat cross-legged beside you and squinted down at it. “It looks more like a mountain.”
You pouted.
“Okay, okay! Castle. Right.” He started scooping up handfuls of sand and packing them into lumpy towers. They were terrible, worse than yours and he kept knocking them over with his elbows. But he made you laugh.
When he managed to accidentally collapse one of your towers for the third time, he dropped his chin into his hands and sighed dramatically. “I’m really bad at this.”
“You’re terrible.” You agreed through a giggle, and that only made him grin harder.
“You know what would make it better?” He asked suddenly. “A moat. Castles always have moats.”
Together, you spent the next twenty minutes digging a crooked, shallow circle around your “castle” Daichi got sand in his socks and down the back of his shirt. You both ended up dirty and sun-warmed and happy.
When Koushi came running over to tell Daichi you were going home soon, you felt a little pang in your chest.
“Bye!” You said, waving your sandy hand.
“Bye!” He said, then paused. “You build really good castles.”
Your face lit up.
That was the very first time Daichi Sawamura made your heart feel a little bit bigger.
——————————————————————————
Skinned knees (ages 6 and 7)
“TAG! You’re it!”
“No fair, I wasn’t ready!”
Daichi bolted across the grass, arms pumping, sneakers kicking up dirt. He was fast, always had been, but the older kids had longer legs, and that meant he had to try harder to keep up. He liked that. It made him feel strong. Grown-up.
Until, of course, he didn’t see the root sticking up in the grass. His foot caught. His body pitched forward, and he hit the ground hard.
“DAICHI!” Koushi yelled.
“I’m fine!” He called back instantly, sitting up fast even though his knees burned and stung. His palms were scraped too, small pebbles sticking to the torn skin. It hurt.
But boys didn’t cry, right?
Still, his lip was trembling a little as he brushed at his knee. There was blood. Not a lot, but enough to make his stomach feel weird. He looked up and saw Sugawara running toward him, panic written all over his face.
And then he saw you, a small blur of pink and pigtails breaking into a run across the grass, your little shoes thudding hard. Daichi quickly looked down again.
“Daichi!” You called, breathless by the time you dropped to your knees beside him. “You’re bleeding!”
“‘M okay.” He mumbled.
But you were already digging into the tiny pink Hello Kitty pouch you carried everywhere. Out came a tissue, slightly crumpled but clean, and a bandaid decorated with sparkly stars.
You dabbed carefully at his knee, tongue peeking out in concentration. “You’re not okay.” You said matter-of-factly. “But it’s okay to cry, you know.”
He looked at you, wide-eyed.
“You’re allowed to cry.” You repeated gently, and then, without warning, you blew softly on his scraped knee.
Daichi blinked fast. He didn’t cry, not really, but his shoulders dropped, the tight knot in his chest loosening just a bit.
You peeled the bandaid and smoothed it over the cut with gentle fingers.
“There!” You said beaming up at him. “All better.”
And he looked at you like you’d just fixed the world.
——————————————————————————
The recital (ages 10 and 11)
Your heart was beating too fast.
You stood just off-stage, fingers twitching with nerves. The recital hall was bigger than you remembered. The polished black piano sat center stage like a challenge, and the rows of folding chairs were filled with strangers. Parents. Teachers. Judges.
Not your parents, though.
They wanted to come. They really did. But Koushi had a fever over 102, and your mom couldn’t leave his side. Your dad stayed too, and though you told them it was okay, your voice had cracked on the word.
You knew it wasn’t their fault but your stomach still twisted with disappointment as your name was called.
The walk to the piano felt miles long. You sat on the bench, placed your hands on the keys, and took a shaky breath.
You started to play. The first few notes were hesitant, your fingers stumbling, but muscle memory took over. You got lost in the melody, pouring your heart into the piece you’d practiced for weeks. It wasn’t perfect, but it was yours. When the final note faded, there was polite applause.
You stood, bowed, and left the stage with your hands trembling. Your throat burned. You weren’t going to cry, not here, not in front of everyone but it was close.
You stepped out into the hallway, wiping at your eyes before they could spill over.
“Hey.”
You jumped.
Daichi stood there, awkward in a button-up shirt that didn’t fit him quite right and jeans a little too long. His hair was combed for once. He held a crumpled bouquet of flowers, yellow daisies and baby’s breath tied together with a string.
Your mouth dropped open. “What are you doing here?”
He shrugged one shoulder. “Koushi said you had your recital. Your parents couldn’t come, so I… figured someone should.”
Your hands curled around the bouquet automatically. “You came?”
“I was a little late.” He admitted, rubbing the back of his neck. “But I saw the whole thing. You were amazing.”
You blinked fast. “I messed up at the start.”
“But you kept going. And you didn’t run offstage crying or throw the piano stool or anything. So, yeah. Amazing.”
You laughed, half-choked and half-sniffled. “That’s a bit dumb.”
“Maybe.” He grinned. “But I brought flowers.”
You stared at the yellow petals, heart warm and aching. The hallway was quiet now, just the two of you. You didn’t say anything for a moment. “Thank you.”
Daichi looked at you, softer than usual. “Anytime.”
And somehow you knew he meant it.
——————————————————————————
Fever (ages 11 and 12)
It was supposed to be just a quick errand.
Koushi was stuck finishing an assignment, and Daichi had come home from the overnight school camp sick, like really sick. Fever, sore throat, barely-talking kind of sick. His mom called in to say he’d be home for at least two days. And with the teachers sending over homework, someone had to drop it off.
So, Koushi looked at you. "Please?"
You grumbled a little, but truthfully? You didn’t mind.
You arrived at the Sawamuras’ place after school, your backpack heavier than usual and the plastic folder of assignments crumpling slightly in your grip. Daichi’s mom answered the door, soft-eyed and frazzled, thanking you a little too many times as she let you in.
“He’s upstairs.” She said. “Been sleeping most of the day, but maybe hearing a friend’s voice will help.”
You didn’t correct her. You weren’t sure what to call it friendship didn’t feel like enough anymore. But it was easier that way. Koushi surely was Daichi’s friend but you weren’t exactly sure what you were to him.
Daichi’s room was warm and dim when you pushed the door open gently.
He looked… awful. His face was flushed, dark hair stuck to his forehead, mouth slightly parted as he breathed raggedly through a stuffed-up nose. A cold cloth lay half-slid off his head, and the blanket was tangled around his legs.
You set your bag down quietly and crossed over to the bed. “Hey.” You whispered. “It’s me.”
No response.
You bit your lip, then climbed into the chair by his bedside. You picked up the fallen cloth and stood to re-wet it from the bowl on the nightstand, wringing it out and gently placing it back across his forehead.
Still nothing.
You sighed, then leaned your chin into your hand and began to talk. About school. About your teachers. About how Koushi nearly got detention for talking back to the gym coach. You told him about the vending machine that swallowed your money and about how your lunch had tasted weird but not bad, and how the clouds looked like mashed potatoes that day.
At some point, you looked down and realized he’d turned his face slightly toward your voice.
You reached for his hand. It was warm too warm, but he didn’t let go.
You stayed there, fingers wrapped around his and words spilling quietly into the air. You didn’t even realize how much time had passed until Daichi muttered something under his breath.
You froze.
“What was that?”
He twitched slightly. A soft, strained sound left him. “...’m sorry…”
You frowned, leaning closer. “Daichi?”
His eyes stayed closed, breath shallow. Then, barely above a whisper,your name. Just your name, drifting out like an anchor in a fever dream. Your heart climbed right into your throat.
“I’m here.” You whispered back instinctively. “I’ve got you.”
He didn’t reply again. But his hand never let go and you swore he held on tighter for a moment.
——————————————————————————
The quiet thread (quiet moments over the years)
You weren’t quite sure when it started to feel like something more.
There wasn’t a single moment, but a series of them, threaded together like tiny lights on a string, warm and blinking and easy to miss unless you really looked.
At his matches, you were always in the front row. Screaming his name when he served, clapping until your palms stung. You learned the game slowly, enough to keep up. Enough to see the way his eyes found you first when he landed a good spike. Always you.
At movie nights with the team, he always saved you a seat. Never said it outright, but it was always there, the spot beside him, the bowl of popcorn between you, the way he’d tilt the box of juice toward you first before taking one himself.
Once, Nishinoya tried to take your usual seat as a joke. Daichi didn’t even say anything, just gave him a look. That was all it took.
Noya grinned. “Okay, okay, got it. ‘Princess’ seat.’”
You rolled your eyes.
Daichi didn’t say a word.
But he smiled when you sat beside him anyway.
On rainy days, he’d offer his umbrella before you could ask. “You can give it back tomorrow.” He’d say, rubbing the back of his neck while the rain soaked his shoulders. You gave it back the next day every time. And somehow… it always smelled like him after.
When your cat died, he walked three blocks to your house even though it was a school night. Said he brought homework from Koushi but he never opened the folder. He just sat with you, quiet, legs crossed on your bedroom floor as you cried. When he finally left that night, your pillow smelled like his hoodie.
There was nothing romantic about it. Not yet. It wasn’t flirting. It was more. It was trust, built soft and slow. It was knowing that you could fall asleep in the middle of a movie night and wake up with a blanket over your shoulders and Daichi’s jacket folded beneath your head. It was brushing hands accidentally in the popcorn bowl and not pulling away. It was watching him laugh and not knowing why it made your chest ache.
It was all the things neither of you had words for. Not yet, but something was coming.
And somewhere in the space between childhood and whatever came next, the two of you had become each other’s safest place.
——————————————————————————
What it feels like (ages 15 and 16)
You never knew that watching someone get confessed to could hurt.
It was spring, and the hallways smelled like too many flowers and teenage hope. First-years were already rushing to get their chocolates ready for Valentine’s Day, and second-years were just starting to get bold with handwritten letters and awkward hallway meetups.
Daichi was tall and broad-shouldered by then Captain material, dependable and easy to talk to, with a smile that made even the teachers melt.
You saw it happen again and again: a girl standing with her hands clenched around a ribbon-tied box, red-cheeked and trembling. And Daichi, polite as ever, bowing his head with that apologetic smile that never quite reached his eyes.
“I’m really sorry. Thank you, though.”
And the girl would wilt a little, whisper it was okay, then rush away.
He never accepted. Not once.
And you didn’t know why it twisted your stomach the way it did. Why your heart sped up every time someone even looked at him like that. Why you caught yourself searching his face for a reaction he never gave. Why part of you felt strangely relieved when he turned them all down.
It made no sense. He wasn’t yours. He never had been. Still, every time he smiled at someone else, even just to say “no”, something inside you clenched like a fist.
You didn’t have a word for it back then. But it lived in you, quiet and constant. A dull, aching gravity.
——————————————————————————
The fight (ages 16 and 17)
It started with a name you’d gotten tired of hearing. Kento Takagi. He was a second-year, he was tall, annoying, way too smug. The first time he asked you out, you were polite. The second time, you were firm.
The third time, you ignored him completely. By the sixth time, you were one deep breath away from shoving your school shoe directly into his face.
You were standing just outside the school gates, trying to pack your books into your bag, when he approached again. “Come on, just one date.” He said, reaching for your wrist when you turned away. “You’re not even giving me a chance-”
“Let go.” You snapped.
That’s when you heard the sharp voice from behind you.
“She said let go.”
You turned. Sugawara got there first, stepping between you and Kento like a calm wall of sunshine and thinly veiled menace. “You’ve asked her enough times. She’s not interested. Take the hint.”
You could’ve hugged him.
But it was Daichi who arrived seconds later, face unreadable, steps deliberate.
Kento scoffed. “Seriously? You’ve got two bodyguards now?”
And that was when he grabbed your arm again. That was his mistake.
Daichi shoved between you before you could react, his hand closing around Kento’s wrist like steel. “Are you deaf?” His voice low and cold, “She told you to let go.”
Kento sneered. “What’s it to you? You her boyfriend or something?”
It happened too fast. Daichi’s fist swung clean and hard - crack - straight into Kento’s jaw. The other boy stumbled backward, clutching his face, spitting curses and blood.
“DAICHI!” Sugawara shouted.
Your heart dropped. “What- ?!”
And then the teachers were there, and everything blurred, raised voices, hands pulling them apart, Kento wailing about “assault” and Daichi just standing there, jaw clenched, breathing hard, knuckles bleeding.
——————————————————————————
The walk home (later that day)
Daichi got detention. Of course he did.
One week. After school. Report filed, parents notified.
You waited for him anyway.
You sat on the stone steps just outside the gym, watching the sun dip low behind the school roof. You weren’t sure if he’d even want you there after what happened, but your legs stayed glued to the steps.
He came out just as the light started to fade.
“Hey.” You said.
He paused. “You waited?”
“Duh.” You muttered, standing. “Who else is gonna yell at you for punching a guy like an idiot?”
A smile tugged at his mouth, tired and faint. He didn’t say anything else.
You walked side by side in silence for a while, the wind tugging at your sleeves, leaves skittering across the sidewalk. His hand hovered just a few inches from yours, close enough to feel the warmth radiating off of it.
You didn’t move away.
When you finally reached your street, you caught the way he flexed his fingers, bruised and red, still split at the knuckles.
“Come here.” You said quietly, turning into your driveway instead. “Let me clean that.”
He didn’t argue. You sat him down at the kitchen counter and pulled out the first aid box. He sat obediently, arm resting on the table, watching as you opened the kit with practiced hands.
The light in the kitchen was soft, gold and humming. You dipped a cotton ball into antiseptic, glancing at him before pressing it gently to the raw skin. “This is probably going to sting.”
“I’ve had worse.” He muttered.
You didn’t ask when. You didn’t like thinking about him getting hurt. You worked slowly, carefully, dabbing at the scrapes and cuts, the silence between you thick with things unsaid.
“You didn’t have to do that.” You said finally, voice too soft. “I could’ve handled it.”
Daichi didn’t look away from you. “He shouldn’t have touched you.”
Your chest tightened. “Still…”
He shook his head slightly. “I don’t care if I got detention. I’d do it again.”
Your fingers paused over the edge of a bandage. The weight of the moment pressed between you. You wrapped the gauze slowly, smoothing it flat over his knuckles. Your hands lingered on his, thumbs grazing gently across his skin.
He wasn’t looking away. Neither were you. You could feel his breath, short and uneven. His hand turned slightly, palm brushing yours.
“Daichi…” You whispered.
His eyes dropped to your lips. Your heart stopped. He leaned in-
-and then pulled back, sharp and sudden.
His chair scraped softly against the tile. “Thanks.” He said, voice too stiff. “For… patching me up.”
You sat frozen, heart pounding, mouth still parted like a question. He didn’t look at you again as he stood to leave.
And just like that, the moment passed, too big, too heavy, too much for two people still pretending they didn’t already belong to each other.
——————————————————————————
Realization (ages 16 and 17)
You didn’t realize it all at once.
It crept in slowly, quietly, like a song you’d heard too many times to really hear until one day, it cracked you wide open.
It was in the way he laughed, full and real, the kind of laugh that made your stomach flutter.
It was the way he always noticed when something was off. The way he handed you your favorite drink without being asked. The way he texted you before every exam: You’ve got this. I believe in you.
It was the way he looked at you after matches, chest still heaving, sweat dripping down his temple but his eyes always found you in the crowd first. Always you.
It was in the small things. Because that’s where Daichi always lived.
And one night, alone in your room, scrolling through the blurry picture Suga had taken of you and Daichi at the last team festival, him smiling wide, your cheeks flushed from laughing too hard, you felt it all at once.
You loved him.
It wasn’t loud or dramatic. It just was. And it hurt. Because he had never said anything. He had pulled away from you that night with bruised knuckles and trembling silence. And despite everything you thought you saw in his eyes, he had never crossed the line.
Not once.
So maybe… he really did just see you as Koushi’s little sister. Someone he’d always protected. Someone who had always been around. Familiar. Comfortable.
You told yourself it was fine. That you understood. But the ache in your chest said otherwise.
——————————————————————————
The confession (and it’s not his)
His name was Riku Yamamoto.
He was sweet. Polite. Sat next to you in art class and smelled like peppermint and clean laundry. He made you laugh with his bad puns, and once stayed behind to help you carry paints back to the storage room.
And then one day, after class, heart in his hands, he confessed.
You blinked at him for a long second. “Wait, me?”
Riku flushed. “Yeah. I know it’s kind of sudden, and you probably don’t see me that way, but I just… I thought I’d try. One date. That’s all I’m asking.”
You hesitated. Then you said yes. Not because you didn’t love Daichi. But because he didn’t love you back and, maybe, if someone else looked at you like that, like you were the one they’d been hoping for, maybe it would be enough to forget the feeling of being invisible to the only boy who had ever mattered.
Daichi didn’t find out from you. He found out from Koushi.
It was after practice, the sun beginning to dip below the horizon, everyone sprawled out in the gym, sweat and laughter hanging thick in the air. Koushi was chatting absentmindedly about weekend plans, tossing his water bottle from hand to hand.
“Yeah, I think [Y/N]’s got a date with that Yamamoto kid.” He said casually, wiping his forehead.
Daichi froze. “What?”
Koushi looked up. “Huh? Oh, Riku. You know, from Class 2-C? She said he asked her out and she figured, why not.”
The air shifted. Daichi’s grip on his towel tightened.
“Oh.” He said, flat and hollow.
Koushi paused, brows furrowing. “You okay?”
“Yeah.” Daichi lied. “Fine.”
But he wasn’t. Something cold and sick settled deep in his chest, and it didn’t move.
You didn’t hear from him for two days. No texts. No calls. Not even a glance when you passed in the hallway. At first, you thought you were imagining it. But by the second day, your chest was too tight to ignore it anymore.
You cornered him after practice, outside the locker room, where the hallway was dim and empty.
“Daichi.” You said, breathless. “Why are you avoiding me?”
He turned, slowly, sweat still clinging to his hairline. “I’m not.”
“You are. You haven’t talked to me in two days.”
He shrugged, expression unreadable. “Been busy.”
“With what? Pretending I don’t exist?”
He flinched,just barely, but you caught it.
“You’re mad.” You said. “Why?”
“I’m not mad.”
“Then what is it?”
He looked away. “It doesn’t matter.”
“Yes, it does!” Your voice cracked. “Just say it, Daichi! If you’re upset, then say it! Why have you been avoiding me since Koushi told you that I was going on a date?!”
And then it hit like thunder, loud and raw, shoving out of him before he could stop it. “Because I- ”
But he stopped.
Your breath hitched. “Because you what?”
Daichi stared at you, chest rising and falling. And then- Nothing. Silence. He looked down, jaw tight, fists clenched at his sides.
You laughed, bitter and broken. “Right. That’s what I thought.”
He reached for you instinctively. “Wait- ”
You stepped back. “No.” You said. “You don’t get to do this. You don’t get to get jealous and act like you care and then say nothing.”
Tears stung your eyes.
“I’ve spent years loving you, Daichi.” You whispered. “And I thought… maybe you felt something too. But you never said anything. You just left me hanging. And now I finally say yes to someone else, and now you care?”
He looked shattered.
You shook your head, blinking hard. “I’m not doing this anymore.” You said as you turned and walked away.
Daichi stood frozen in the hallway long after you were gone, gutted and ghost-silent, realizing too late that maybe the biggest mistake he’d ever made was thinking silence would keep you safe.
——————————————————————————
The fallout (ages 16 and 17)
Daichi was a mess.
He went through practice like a ghost, movements tight, eyes distant. He forgot to bring his lunch two days in a row. He barely spoke unless someone asked him a direct question. When he did speak, it was flat, empty, like someone else had taken up residence in his chest.
He still couldn’t believe it. He’d hurt you. You, the one person he’d sworn to never hurt. And he’d done it not with his fists, not with his voice, but with his silence. It was almost worse.
“Okay, I’ve had enough.” Sugawara said, finally slamming his bento box down during lunch break.
Daichi blinked across the bench. “Huh?”
“You’re miserable. [Y/N]’s miserable. Everyone within a 10-meter radius of you two is miserable. And I’m tired of being the only emotionally functioning person in this hellhole.”
“I- ” Daichi started.
“No. Shut up and listen to me.”
Sugawara leaned forward, voice dropping low, expression dead serious.
“I’ve known you my whole life. You’ve been my best friend since we were basically in diapers. And I knew. I knew you were in love with her before you did.”
Daichi stared, color draining from his face.
“You used to look at her like she was the whole damn world. Still do, honestly. But the second someone else looked at her that way? You freaked. You got scared. And instead of saying something, you broke her heart.”
Daichi swallowed hard. “I didn’t mean to- ”
“I know.” Sugawara said gently. “That’s the problem.”
A beat of silence.
Then Suga sighed, raking a hand through his hair before adding with brutal softness, “You’re my best friend, Daichi. I trust you. But if you make her cry again…” He leaned in, all warmth gone. “I’ll make sure you never have kids.”
Daichi choked. “Jesus- ”
“I mean it.”
“I know, that’s what makes it worse.”
“Now go fix it.” Suga said, softening again. “Before someone else does.”
——————————————————————————
Not him
Riku was kind. He held your hand when you let him. He smiled when he looked at you. He paid attention. He didn’t try to be anything other than himself. He was… safe
But he wasn’t Daichi. He didn’t notice the way you only ever half-laughed. He didn’t know that you hated sour candy but kept a pack in your bag because Daichi liked it.
He didn’t know that the piano pieces you played the most were the ones Daichi had once said made him feel like flying.
And it wasn’t fair to either of you.
So one quiet afternoon after class, you sat on the bleachers behind the school and looked at Riku’s warm, patient face and whispered. “I’m sorry.”
He smiled, sad but understanding. “I figured.”
“No hard feelings?”
He shook his head. “You don’t forget someone like him. I wouldn’t want to compete with that either.”
You laughed, choked and wet and when he hugged you goodbye, you didn’t cry. Because the only person who could make you cry like that… was the one who already had.
——————————————————————————
The doorstep
It was three days after you ended things with Riku when the knock came at your door. You opened it and froze.
Daichi stood there on your porch, rain misting through his hair, his hoodie clinging slightly to his shoulders like he’d run here even though the walk wasn’t far.
His eyes were wide. Nervous. He looked wrecked.
“Hey….” He said, breathless. “Can I… talk to you?”
You nodded, heart pounding. He stepped in, water dripping from his sleeves. He didn’t sit. Just stood there, shifting like he couldn’t figure out how to stand still.
“I heard you broke up with Riku.”
You blinked. “How- ?”
“Suga.” He admitted. Of course.
You wrapped your arms around yourself. “If you came to say I shouldn’t have- ”
“No.” He said immediately, almost desperately. “No. That’s not why I came.” He inhaled like it hurt. “I came because I should’ve said something. A long time ago. And I’m scared if I don’t say it now, I’ll never get another chance.”
You froze. He looked at you then, all soft vulnerability and breaking open.
“I’ve been in love with you since I was eight and you made me those stupid flower crowns at the park.” He said, voice cracking. “I didn’t even know what that meant back then, I just knew that when you smiled at me, I felt like the sun was coming up inside my chest.”
Your breath caught.
“You’ve always been more than just Suga’s little sister to me. You’ve been my best friend, my safe place, my home. And I was an idiot for thinking that staying quiet was somehow protecting you. I thought if I kept things the same, if I stayed in that ‘safe’ space, you’d never leave. But I hurt you instead.”
You didn’t move. Couldn’t even breathe.
He shifted, eyes wide and panicked. “I- I don’t know if you can forgive me. I get it if you’re done. I just- ” He ran a hand through his hair. “I just had to tell you. Because I meant it. Every time I looked at you I couldn’t pull my eyes away because you’re the most beautiful thing I’ve ever seen. And I didn’t know how to say it then, but I do now, and- ”
“Daichi.” You whispered.
He froze mid-ramble. “What- ?”
“Just shut up.” You stepped forward and kissed him.
Soft. Slow. Certain. And he melted.
Your hands slid up to cup his jaw, his cheeks cold from the rain. His fingers trembled as they touched your waist, like he still couldn’t believe you were real.
When you finally pulled back, your forehead resting against his, you smiled.
“Welcome home.” You whispered.
He let out a breath that sounded like a laugh and a sob at once and held you like he’d never let go again.
Later that night, curled up beside him on the couch, the soft glow of the TV washing over your skin, Daichi whispered. “I was so scared you’d moved on.”
“I tried.” You murmured into his shoulder. “Didn’t work.”
He chuckled. “Good.”
You tilted your head to look at him. “What about Suga?”
“I already got the threat.” He said, deadpan. “Something about not having kids?”
You grinned. “Sounds like him.”
Daichi leaned down, pressing a kiss to your forehead. “Worth it.”
You sighed into his chest. It had taken you years but you were here now. No more almosts. No more silence. Just the two of you, finally.
—————————————————————————
When Suga finds out
The moment you told Koushi, you were terrified. Not because you thought he’d be mad. You knew your brother, he’d probably suspected it for years.
But because Daichi, the captain of Karasuno’s volleyball team, defender of justice and protector of your heart, had gone completely pale.
“Okay, okay.” You whispered, gripping his hand. “He’s not going to kill you.”
“I don’t know.” Daichi muttered. “He did threaten to neuter me.”
“Okay, valid.”
So naturally, when you finally told him one evening after dinner, it went exactly as expected and also, somehow, worse.
You sat him down in the living room. Daichi looked like he was preparing for a firing squad. You reached for his hand and took a deep breath.
“Koushi.” You said gently. “We have something to tell you.”
He blinked.
Daichi cleared his throat. “I… I’m dating your sister.”
A beat. Koushi saw the opportunity of his life and he was going to milk it. His eyes narrowed, slowly, like a cat sensing prey.
“My best friend.” He said. “My lifelong best friend.”
Daichi nodded, bracing. “Yes.”
“My sister.” Koushi added. “Who I have known since she was a literal embryo.”
“Correct.”
He gasped, clutching his chest dramatically. “Betrayal. My blood. My captain. You’ve conspired under my very nose!”
“Oh my god.” You groaned. “Koushi, please.”
“I leave you two alone for five seconds and suddenly there’s hand holding in my house? Kissing under my roof?”
Daichi was already hiding behind a throw pillow. But then Koushi dropped the act, grinning so wide it made your eyes sting.
“Took you long enough.” He said, eyes kind. “God. You’ve been making heart eyes at each other since grade school.”
You blinked. “You’re not… mad?”
“Please.” He scoffed. “You think I’d have let just anyone get close to you like that? I’ve been waiting for you idiots to figure it out.”
You exhaled, relief slumping your shoulders.
Then he added with a smirk, “But I swear, if I walk in on you making out, I will bleach my eyeballs.”
He did in on you making out.
To be fair, you thought he was out with the team. And Daichi thought the coast was clear.
So when he kissed you against the kitchen counter, slow and thorough you tugged at the hem of his shirt, and he whispered something that made your knees weak-
“OH MY GOD- ”
You both leapt apart like guilty teenagers caught red-handed.
Koushi’s face was scarlet. “I eat there! The counter!”
Daichi was already halfway behind the fridge door.
You covered your face. “Koushi, we weren’t- ”
“You had your tongue in his soul, [Y/N]!”
“Koushi!”
Daichi wheezed. “I’m sorry-”
“You’re dead to me, Sawamura! Dead!”
——————————————————————————
Graduation day (ages 17 and 18)
Karasuno’s gym was buzzing with laughter and soft music, the crowd a sea of uniforms and proud parents. You were practically vibrating with excitement, your camera hanging from your neck, phone fully charged.
You spotted them immediately.
Daichi, sharp in his black gakuran, shoulders broad, smile wide and Koushi, looking radiant as ever, waving his arms dramatically from a distance.
You ran toward them and threw your arms around Daichi first, nearly knocking the wind out of him. “You did it!”
He laughed, wrapping you up tight. “We did it.”
You pulled back only to be immediately seized by your brother.
“Betrayed.” Koushi said, loud and overdramatic. “I’m also graduating, and yet you run to him first? My own kin? Have you no shame?”
You rolled your eyes, grinning. “You’ll live.”
“Will I?”
“You got three flower bouquets, and I saw someone slip you their number.”
“Okay, I’ll live.”
Daichi chuckled, eyes fond as he watched the two of you bicker. Then he slipped his hand into yours, just like he always had. Only now, it meant something.
You leaned your head on his shoulder. You didn’t say it, but he felt it anyway. I’m proud of you.
That night, you sat together on the roof of Daichi’s house, a blanket wrapped around your shoulders, the stars just starting to peek out. He was quiet beside you, his hand warm over yours.
“So….” You said softly. “What now?”
He smiled. “Police academy starts in a few weeks.”
You nodded. “You’re going to be amazing.”
“What about you?”
“I’ve got one more year.” You said. “And then… music school, maybe. I want to teach. Or compose. Maybe both.”
He looked at you like the stars were in your skin.
“I’ll be cheering for you.” He said.
You glanced sideways. “Long-distance okay with you?”
“Only if you promise to send me songs.” He said. “And let me visit you on weekends.”
“Deal.”
You were quiet for a while, the breeze soft around you.
Then Daichi added, voice barely above a whisper. “I want a future with you, you know.”
You looked at him, heart stuttering.
“Not just dating. I mean… life. You. Me. Someday.” He kissed your temple. “I already wasted years of our lives because I was too scared to say something, I plan on spending the rest with you.”
Your throat tightened.
“Good.” You whispered, squeezing his hand. “Because I do too.”
He leaned in, kissed you slow and sweet and everything, the years of near misses, quiet heartbreak, ache and waiting,clicked into place.
Taglist is open so let me know if you want to be added for future works! :)
this isn't a request, i just wanted to say that i found your account recently and absolutely adore the way you write. i wish i could eat your fics, i think they'd be really yummy
Thank you! I’m going through my requests and seeing messages like this is the best 🥹 You guys are the sweetest really 💌
I also wanted to thank you all because we’ve officially surpassed 200 followers! I never thought so many people would want to read my works hahaha. Thanks for all the support 🤍
i have been in loove with your writing so far, its always so soft like bro i wanna cry out of sweetness 😭❤️🥺😭🥺😭❤️
Omg thank you so much!! 🤍 Getting messages like this really means the world. I’ve had other blogs before but just dipped after one work because I didn’t feel motivated but writing her has been so so fun and I’m loving it so far mostly thanks to you guys 💌
I’ve been writing more on my other blog now because I want to get it started but I’m still working on a lot of things to post here once I’m done! :)
Alright I may or may not be cooking up a medieval/fantasy AU series for different Haikyuu characters. I already have some of them written so I’d like to know if you guys would be interested in reading them hahahah 🤍
I’ll leave a poll with the ones I already have so you can vote the one you’d like to read first (I’ll post them all eventually) and you can also let me know if you have ideas for tropes with other Haikyuu characters :)
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Summary: Atsumu Miya has been pulling her pigtails since they were six. What started as teasing turned into years of bickering, tension, and stubborn feelings neither of them could name.
CW (content warning): Atsumu is kind of a warning himself, childhood “friends” (if you can even call them that) to lovers, slight angst but mostly fluff.
AN: Hi guys! Thank you so much for all the love on my Ushijima post I’m so happy you enjoyed it 🫶🏻 This was requested so I hope I made it justice. Also I had a lot of fun writing this and I’m thinking of making a series of childhood friends to lovers with different characters so be on the lookout for that hahah. English isn’t my first language so I’m sorry if there’s any mistakes. Hope you enjoy and let me know what you think! :)
Requests are open so feel free to send yours! (you can check the list of characters I write for on my pinned post)
Masterlist
The sun was warm on the sandbox that day, casting gold across the schoolyard like confetti. Six-year-old [Y/N] sat cross-legged in the middle of it, hands buried in soft, sun-baked sand. Her shoes were kicked off to the side, forgotten. The pink ribbons in her pigtails bobbed as she leaned forward, smoothing the walls of the sandcastle she and Osamu Miya had been building for the past twenty minutes.
“It needs a moat.” She said seriously, tracing a circle around the edge with her finger.
Osamu nodded, equally focused. “I can make a tunnel for water.”
She grinned in response, bright and beaming. “Like a real castle! With a bridge, too?”
“Of course. A drawbridge.”
They giggled together, heads bent, both covered in specks of sand and pride.
Across the yard, Atsumu Miya stood with a red ball in his hands, kicking pebbles with his shoe and scowling. His twin brother was supposed to play dodgeball with him. Instead, Osamu was over there in the sandbox. With her.
Atsumu's gaze narrowed on the girl in the pink hair ribbons. She laughed at something Osamu said, and her smile went wide, soft and bright. Her voice, even from a distance, was gentle and light, like the breeze on a summer afternoon.
She looked like a ray of sunshine, Atsumu thought, warm and glowing, the kind of happy that made your chest feel funny and your ears go red.
He didn’t like her. Not like that. Ew. Gross. Of course he didn’t.
But for some reason he wanted her to look at him. Not at Osamu. Not like that.
So, in his brilliant six-year-old brain, he came up with the best idea he could think of.
Drop the ball. March over. Pull her hair.
And he did. He stomped right over to the sandbox, ignoring the way his sneakers filled with sand, and yanked one of her pigtails.
“Hey!” She squeaked, turning around so fast she almost toppled the castle wall. She blinked up at him, startled. “What was that for?!”
Atsumu puffed his chest, not really sure what to say now that he’d done it. “Your hair was in the way.” He said smugly, even though it definitely wasn’t.
Her jaw dropped. “You’re such a meanie!”
Atsumu grinned, triumphant. She was looking at him now. Her attention was on him and even though she wasn’t smiling like she did just moments ago with his brother, just the fact that she was looking at him made it feel as if he had gotten what he wanted.
Osamu groaned loudly behind them. “Can we build one castle without a disaster for once?”
“No.” They both said at the same time.
And that was the beginning.
From that day on, the pattern was set: [Y/N] with her soft voice and fiery glare, Atsumu with his smug teasing and constant interruptions, and Osamu, forever in the middle, sighing into his rice balls and wondering why he had to be born a twin.
——————————————————————————
Four years passed, and they were ten now.
Things had changed, sure. Osamu was a bit taller, Atsumu louder, and [Y/N] wore her hair in a braid now instead of pigtails. Especially after a certain boy pulled them one too many times.
But the essentials remained: she still brought her markers to school and drew at recess, Osamu still snacked all the time, and Atsumu still annoyed her every chance he got.
Today, the classroom buzzed with the end-of-day hum, papers shuffling, chairs scraping, kids packing up bags.
[Y/N] had drawn something that afternoon, something she was actually proud of. A little fox curled up under a tree, its fur shaded with orange and gold and bits of red leaf detailing. She had used every warm marker she had.
She kept it tucked carefully inside her notebook as she walked out into the hallway, clutching it tight.
Unfortunately, she wasn’t alone.
“Hey, what’s that?” One of the boys from class, Kenta, grabbed the edge of her notebook and yanked it open before she could stop him.
“Don’t!” She cried, reaching for it.
He held it out of reach. “Aw, what’s this? You still draw little animals like a baby?”
A couple of his friends gathered around. One of them snorted. “Is it sleeping under a tree? That’s so dumb and childish.”
“She probably talks to them too. Like, ‘Oh, Mr. Fox, would you like some tea?’” They mocked, laughing.
[Y/N] felt her cheeks burn. “Give it back!”
They didn’t. One of them mimicked her voice in a high-pitched squeak. “Do you wanna cuddle, Mr. Fox?”
“Stop it!” Her eyes stung before she could stop it. “Just stop!”
And of course, that made it worse.
“Aww, crybaby’s gonna cry?” Kenta grinned. “Maybe your fox will cheer you up!”
“Crybaby!” They all chanted, snickering, as they finally tossed the drawing to the ground and ran off.
[Y/N] stood frozen for a moment, fists clenched, blinking away the blur in her vision as she knelt down to pick up the crumpled drawing.
She didn’t know that someone else had heard everything.
——————————————————————————
Atsumu didn’t mean to hear it.
He was just turning the corner on his way to grab a juice box when he heard them shouting.
He stopped when he recognized her voice. Heard the word “crybaby.” Heard the laughter. By the time he peeked around the corner, it was already over. The boys were running off. She was kneeling on the floor, shoulders stiff.
Atsumu’s blood boiled. He clenched his fists, stared after the boys, and turned on his heel.
——————————————————————————
The fight happened at recess.
Kenta never saw it coming.
Atsumu charged him by the tree near the fence and socked him right in the mouth.
“OW! What the heck!?”
“You’re the crybaby!” Atsumu yelled, tackling him to the ground.
They rolled and punched and kicked, and it was two-on-one after that because Kenta’s friend jumped in, but Atsumu didn’t care. He was furious. He didn’t even know what he was yelling anymore.
Eventually, a teacher pulled them apart. Atsumu’s lip was busted, his eye was swelling, and his fists were scraped and dirty.
He got sent straight to the nurse’s office and scolded all the way there.
——————————————————————————
“Honestly, Atsumu. What is wrong with you?” The nurse muttered, dabbing at his lip with antiseptic.
He hissed. “Nothin’.”
“Do you want to explain why you were in a fight with two boys?”
“Nope.”
The nurse sighed. “You’re lucky your brother’s not in trouble too.”
“Osamu didn’t do nothin’. Leave ‘im out of it.”
She left to grab a bandage for his hand. A few minutes later, the door creaked open again, but it wasn’t the nurse. Atsumu turned his head and froze.
[Y/N] stood in the doorway, frowning, a folded handkerchief in one hand. Her braid was a little messy, and her cheeks were still pink from earlier. But her voice was calm.
“You’re so stupid.”
Atsumu blinked. “You’re welcome.”
“I didn’t ask you to fight them.”
“I didn’t ask ‘em to be jerks to you.”
“You’re mean to me all the time.” She huffed and crossed the room, hopping onto the stool beside the cot where he sat. “You’re also bleeding.”
“I know, thanks.”
She gave him a look. “Let me see.”
He started to protest, but she was already tilting his chin with two fingers and gently dabbing at his lip with her cloth.
He winced but not because of the sting from the cut.
“Oh, don’t be a baby.” She muttered, even though her touch was gentle.
“You’re the baby.” He grumbled. “Cryin’ over a dumb fox.”
“It wasn’t dumb.” She snapped, eyes flashing.
Atsumu looked at her and didn’t tease her again. They sat like that for a moment, quiet. She folded the cloth again and kept working.
“You didn’t have to do that.” She said eventually, softer.
“Yeah, I did.”
“Why?”
He shrugged. “’Cause it made me mad. That’s all. I never liked that idiot, this just happened to be a good excuse to beat him up.”
She frowned, like she didn’t believe him.
She stayed beside him until the nurse returned and said he was cleared to go home. When he slid off the cot, she handed him the cloth.
“Keep it.” She mumbled.
“I don’t want your crybaby handkerchief.”
She glared. “Then give it back.”
He shoved it in his pocket. “Too late.”
She rolled her eyes, he expected her to get up from the chair and leave him there after throwing one last passive-aggressive comment at him. She didn’t.
“I still think you’re an idiot.” She said as she folded her legs underneath her, no intention of leaving his side. “And just for the record I don’t want to be here.”
Atsumu grinned, lip still bleeding.
“Yeah? You’re still a pain in the butt.”
Osamu met them outside the nurse’s office, arms crossed.
“You’re both ridiculous.”
They looked at each other and, just for a second, smiled.
——————————————————————————
Middle school was... weird.
Everyone was growing too fast or not fast enough, the desks were too small, and people started caring about who liked who and who passed notes in class. It was the start of confusing feelings and bad haircuts and awkward silences in the hallway.
But some things hadn’t changed. Osamu and [Y/N] still got along like peanut butter and jelly. They were lab partners, shared snacks during lunch, and could communicate in shrugs and eyerolls with the kind of ease that only came from years of friendship.
Meanwhile, Atsumu was still a menace.
“You forgot your pen again, didn’t ya?” Osamu muttered one morning in science as they settled in for lab work.
“No.” [Y/N] said.
“Yes.” Atsumu called from the next table over, spinning around in his chair. “She always forgets. Princess over there’s helpless without Osamu savin’ her.”
[Y/N] narrowed her eyes. “Call me princess one more time and I swear I’ll dump hydrochloric acid in your shoes.”
“Ooh, scary.” Atsumu said, dramatically clutching his chest. “You gonna cry if I take your pen too?”
He reached out and snatched it from her desk.
“Give it back!”
“C’mon, share with your favorite twin.”
“I’m gonna strangle you with your own shoelaces!”
Osamu didn’t even look up. “Please don’t. I don’t wanna have to explain a murder in my lab report.”
It was always like that. Constant bickering. Paper balls tossed at her head during lectures. Sarcastic pet names. Sassy comebacks. Everyone around them thought they hated each other.
Even [Y/N] and Atsumu had half-convinced themselves that was true but then there were the in-between moments.
Like how he always sat behind her in class, even though there were open seats up front. Or how he’d pretend to steal her erasers just to give them back when she pouted. Or the way he’d go strangely quiet when she talked about someone else.
Especially when she started crushing on Daiki.
Daiki wasn’t in their class, but he played soccer and was tall and charming and always said hi when he passed her in the hallway.
Osamu rolled his eyes whenever she brought him up. Atsumu on the other hand? He made fun of her mercilessly.
“You’re doodlin’ his name in your notebook now?” Atsumu said one day, snatching the paper from under her elbow at lunch.
“It was one heart!” She snapped, trying to grab it back.
He held it high. “You want me to sign it as him? Dear [Y/N], I think you’re super cute and your eyes are like, what is this? Sunlit puddles?”
“That’s not what I wrote!” She shrieked, face flaming.
Osamu sighed. “Stop being an idiot, Atsumu.”
Atsumu ignored him. “[Y/N], if you like someone that cheesy, you’ve officially lost all taste.”
She finally got the paper back and shoved it in her bag.
“Jealous?” She said before she could stop herself.
Atsumu’s grin dropped for half a second. “Why would I be jealous of him?”
But he didn’t tease her about it again.
——————————————————————————
It all fell apart a week later.
It had taken her everything to finally gather the courage. [Y/N] wrote Daiki a short note and slipped it in his locker. She didn’t expect a yes really, but she didn’t expect him to laugh either.
He’d read it with two of his friends and started snickering immediately.
“She thinks you’d date her?” One of them said. “Isn’t she that weird girl with the markers?”
“She hangs out with those volleyball twins, right?” Daiki added, not even trying to lower his voice. “Kinda loud. She’s like a little sister or something.”
His friends laughed. “Ouch. You broke the poor girl’s heart.”
“I didn’t even answer her yet.”
“You don’t have to.” She said, geez fixed on the ground.
[Y/N] had been around the corner, just out of sight, close enough to hear everything. She ran. Behind the gym, where no one ever went during lunch.
She wiped her eyes roughly, furious that she even cared. Furious at herself. She wasn’t loud. She wasn’t clingy. She just... liked someone. But apparently, that was hilarious.
So she sat down behind the school building, pulled her knees to her chest, and tried to breathe.
——————————————————————————
Atsumu had been looking for her.
He’d noticed she wasn’t at her usual lunch spot with Osamu. He told himself it was just because she still owed him a pen but when he checked the classroom, the courtyard, and finally spotted the edge of her shoe behind the gym, he knew something was wrong.
She didn’t look up when he approached. He didn’t say anything either. He sat beside her slowly, folding his long legs under him, and dug into his pocket. A slightly smushed, but still warm, milk bread roll appeared in his hand. He held it out silently. She stared at it.
“I didn’t ask you to sit here.” She mumbled.
“Good.” He said, tearing the plastic open with his teeth. “’Cause I didn’t ask ya if I could.”
She didn’t move. He placed the roll gently beside her on the pavement and leaned back on his elbows, eyes closed like he wasn’t paying attention to her at all.
The silence stretched between them.
“I hate middle school.” She whispered.
“I hate Daiki.”
She startled a little, turning toward him.
He peeked one eye open. “He’s a prick.”
“You don’t even know what happened.”
“Don’t need to.”
[Y/N] looked down at the milk bread. It was a little flat from being in his pocket, but it smelled sweet and soft. She picked it up.
“Thanks.” She said quietly.
“Don’t get used to it.” Atsumu said. “I just did it because my brother would be upset if he saw you like this so get over it quickly.”
She almost smiled.
He didn’t ask what Daiki said. He didn’t need the details. All he knew was that her eyes were red, her voice was tight, and her sleeves were damp from wiping her cheeks.
So he stayed there until the bell rang, kicking pebbles and making dumb comments about ants. When she finally stood up, she glanced back at him.
“You’re still a jerk.”
He smirked. “You’re still a princess.”
And for the first time, she didn’t throw something at him for saying it.
——————————————————————————
Inarizaki High School had no shortage of noise. But few things were louder than the crowd that followed Atsumu Miya wherever he went.
Star setter. Flirt. Loudmouth. Ego the size of the gym. Girls slipped him notes between classes. Fans squealed at tournaments. Even teachers groaned when he walked into class with that lazy swagger and messy hair, five minutes late and grinning like the world owed him something.
[Y/N] was not impressed.
“You’re like a walking ego.” She told him one afternoon, arms crossed, as she watched yet another girl press a folded letter into his hand. “You’ve got a fan club, Atsumu. An actual fan club.”
He grinned, cocky and unbothered. “What can I say? I’m lovable.”
She rolled her eyes so hard it hurt. “You’re impossible.”
“And yet,” He said, leaning against her locker, “you still talk to me every day. What’s that say about you, princess?”
“That I have no self-preservation instincts.”
Osamu walked by and deadpanned. “None. Zero.”
——————————————————————————
When the team’s first big tournament of the season rolled around, Inarizaki’s volleyball team packed up early for the bus. Their school was hosting, which meant they had to arrive first and, since [Y/N] had somehow ended up on event staff through sheer bad luck and one “volunteer” sheet signed without reading, she was stuck riding with the team.
As the last few seats filled, she looked up from her clipboard only to freeze in horror.
“Wait. No. Anyone but him.”
Atsumu was already grinning, tossing his bag into the seat beside hers. “Looks like we’re seat buddies, princess.”
“There are ten other seats.”
“All full” Osamu said from behind her. “Sorry. I already called dibs on the aisle with Aran.”
[Y/N] groaned. “Why do bad things happen to good people?”
“I’m sittin’ right here.” Atsumu said, dropping into the seat. “Guess that answers that question.”
She shoved her bag down beside her legs with a sigh and crossed her arms. “Don’t talk to me.”
“Wouldn’t dream of it.”
He didn’t, surprisingly. For the first thirty minutes of the ride, he just leaned against the window, one earbud in, nodding along to something on his phone.
[Y/N] leaned away from him at first, but the bus was stuffy and warm, and her clipboard was heavy in her lap, and the sun through the window was just right...
By the time they hit the highway, she was fast asleep, cheek pressed to Atsumu’s shoulder.
He looked down the moment he felt the weight. She didn’t snore. Her lips were parted slightly, hair falling across her forehead, and her brow furrowed just a little like she was having a dream she couldn’t catch.
Atsumu didn’t move.
Carefully he shifted his arm to make her more comfortable, adjusting so her head rested in the crook of his shoulder. He reached up without thinking and gently brushed a strand of hair away from her face.
Then he just sat there. Still. Quiet. Watching her like she was the only thing in the world that wasn’t moving too fast.
——————————————————————————
At the tournament, everything was chaos.
The gym was packed with teams, staff, fans, and noise. [Y/N] had a clipboard in hand and her event badge hanging around her neck. She flitted between tables, updated match scores, and passed out water bottles like her life depended on it.
Somehow, even in the mess, she ended up in a conversation with Kita Shinsuke, Inarizaki’s composed, respected, mildly terrifying captain and somehow... they hit it off.
He was kind. Blunt, but thoughtful. Quiet, but funny when he wanted to be.
They chatted between matches. About the game, about her ridiculous volunteer hours, about how she managed to keep Atsumu from getting himself banned from school. Shinsuke even smiled at one of her jokes.
Atsumu noticed. He noticed everything. From the way Kita leaned in to hear her better to the way [Y/N] laughed, softer than usual, almost shy.
By the third time Atsumu found them talking, he stomped over, holding out an empty water bottle like it was urgent.
“Oi, princess. Water me.”
She stared. “Are you... serious?”
“I’m dyin’.”
“You’re fine.”
“I’ve got heatstroke.”
“We’re inside.”
Kita raised a brow. “You’re interrupting.”
“I noticed.” Atsumu said flatly.
[Y/N] rolled her eyes and turned back to Kita. “Sorry, he does this.”
“It’s fine.” Kita said calmly. “He’s just jealous.” There was no I’ll tone behind his words, he just said it like it was a fact that everyone but the two people before him knew.
Atsumu choked on air. “Wha- jealous!? Of what?!”
——————————————————————————
Later that night, after a long loss and a close score that came down to a missed serve and a broken rhythm, Atsumu didn’t speak to anyone.
The team went back to the school to change and clean up before dinner.
[Y/N] knew where he’d be before anyone else even realized he was gone.
The outdoor stairwell behind the gym, right where the vending machines buzzed and the shadows crept long in the afternoon light.
He sat on the lowest step, arms draped over his knees, head tilted back.
“You didn’t go to dinner.” She said, walking over.
“Wasn’t hungry.”
“You always say that when you’re mad.”
“I’m not mad.” He muttered.
“You are.”
He didn’t look at her. So she sat beside him. Silence stretched for a few seconds.
“I missed that serve.” He said eventually. “It was my fault.”
“It was one point.”
“One point matters.”
She glanced at him. “You’ve won games with worse odds.”
“Not the point.”
“No,” She said gently, “but it’s still true.”
He finally turned to her. “Do you ever get tired of knowin’ exactly what to say?”
She smiled, a little smug. “Only when you’re too stubborn to hear it.”
He huffed a laugh, eyes falling to the space between them. “They expect me to be perfect, you know? I mess up once and it’s like... like I broke somethin’ important.”
“You didn’t.”
“It feels like I did.”
She was quiet for a moment. Then, spoke softer. “You’re allowed to mess up.”
He didn’t respond.
She bumped his shoulder with hers. “Even if you are an insufferable, arrogant pain in my ass.”
He finally smiled.
“Thanks, princess.”
“Anytime, drama queen.”
——————————————————————————
By the last day of the tournament, Atsumu had started to feel like something was shifting. Like maybe the way her voice softened around him meant something. Like maybe her bumping his shoulder and staying behind with him meant more than just old habits.
He hadn’t even teased her when she fell asleep on him again during the bus ride back to the venue. Maybe she’d finally see he wasn’t just a walking ego.
So when he came looking for her before the final exhibition match, planning to tell her something real for once, he didn’t expect to see what he did.
Behind the gym, again. Her and Kita. Close. Talking. Laughing. Kita handed her something. Her fingers brushed his. She smiled, soft and unguarded.
Atsumu stopped in his tracks. His stomach twisted. He felt something sharp and ugly bloom in his chest. He wasn’t thinking when he walked over.
He wasn’t thinking at all.
“Hope I’m not interruptin’ your date.” He said, voice louder than it needed to be.
[Y/N] jumped, startled. “What? It’s not- ”
“Oh, please.” Atsumu snapped. “You’ve been followin’ him around like a lost puppy all weekend.”
Kita stood slowly, eyes narrowing. “Watch it, Miya.”
“Why? You two already makin’ plans for next weekend? Gonna braid each other’s hair too?”
“Atsumu!” [Y/N] hissed.
He turned to her fully now, anger blooming too fast for him to stop. “You know what? Go ahead. Flirt with him. At least he won’t be stupid enough to think you’re special when you’re not.”
The words hung in the air like a slap. Her face fell. Everything stilled.
He saw it immediately, the change in her eyes, the way her mouth parted slightly, stunned. Like he’d actually hurt her. For real. Not just irritated. Not just teased.
He had hurt her.
She stepped back. Once. Twice.
“Right.” She said softly. “Thanks for clearing that up.”
And then she turned and walked away. He wanted to run after her, tell her that he didn’t mean it but his muscles refused to move so he stood there frozen in place like a statue as he watched her slipping through his fingers.
——————————————————————————
It had been four days since the tournament. Four days since the words flew out of Atsumu’s mouth like knives. Four days since he saw the way [Y/N] flinched like she didn’t even recognize him anymore.
And now… she didn’t look at him. Not once.
She came into class, greeted Osamu, smiled at her friends, laughed at something Kita said when he passed by, but when Atsumu threw a comment in her direction?
Silence.
“Oi, princess.” He said that morning, leaning back in his seat, tone casual. “Got a new hair routine or somethin’? Looks shinier than usual.”
No answer. Not even a roll of her eyes. Not even a groan. Just silence as she scribbled something in her notebook, ignoring him completely.
Atsumu felt something cold bloom behind his ribs.
This was worse than yelling. Worse than insults. Worse than all their back-and-forth.
This… nothing was unbearable so he tried again at lunch.
“Ya know, I heard people who spend too much time with Kita start developin’ a stick up their ass.”
Osamu gave him a flat look. “[Y/N], you gonna let him get away with that one?”
She glanced at them, expression unreadable. Then went right back to her food and said nothing.
——————————————————————————
By the end of the week, Atsumu was unraveling. Truly losing his mind.
Every room felt louder without her voice snapping back at him. Every moment felt slower. Every hallway he passed her in felt like a missed chance he was too scared to grab.
He hated himself for what he said. He hadn’t even meant it, not the way it came out. “You’re not special.” He could still hear the echo of it.
She was special. She always had been and now she wouldn’t even look at him.
——————————————————————————
Osamu noticed the change almost immediately.
He wasn’t blind. He saw the way [Y/N] stiffened anytime Atsumu walked into a room. Saw the forced, polite smile she gave him when she couldn’t avoid him. Saw the way Atsumu’s teasing got quieter, sloppier, more desperate each time.
Until one day, in the locker room after practice, Osamu dropped his bag hard on the bench and said:
“What the hell did you do to her?”
Atsumu didn’t look up from tying his shoes. “What are you talkin’ about?”
“You know what I’m talkin’ about.” His voice was cold now. “She’s not lookin’ at you. She’s not talkin’ to you. I’ve never seen her act like this, not even when you pulled that stunt with the glitter glue in eighth grade.”
Atsumu winced. “I just…” He muttered. “I said something I didn’t mean. I messed it up.”
Osamu crossed his arms. “What’d you say?”
Silence. Then, quietly spoke. “That she wasn’t special.”
Osamu’s jaw clenched. “You what?”
“I didn’t mean it. I was mad. I saw her with Kita, and- ” He stopped himself.
Osamu stared at him, exasperated. “You’ve been in love with her since we were six, dumbass.”
Atsumu’s head snapped up.
“I’m not stupid, Atsumu. I saw the way you looked at her when she was buildin’ that sandcastle with me. The way you’d steal her markers just so she’d yell at you. The way you shut up when she cried behind the school. This has always been about her. And you’ve always been too much of a coward to admit it.”
Atsumu ran a hand through his hair, voice low and rough. “I don’t know if I can fix it this time.”
“Then don’t.” Osamu snapped. “Let her go. Let her move on. Let her be with someone who doesn’t hurt her just because he’s scared.”
Atsumu froze. Osamu took a breath, a little softer now.
“But if you’re not gonna let her go? If you’re not gonna spend the rest of your life kickin’ yourself for blowin’ this? Then grow a damn pair and tell her how you feel.”
Silence. “I don’t know if she’ll forgive me.” He said quietly.
“Then you apologize anyway.” Osamu said. “And maybe, for once, stop hidin’ behind sarcasm and say what you actually mean.”
——————————————————————————
The next few days crawled. Atsumu hovered on the edge of every room she was in. He watched her laugh with Osamu, passing notes during class. Watched her hand Kita a sports drink after practice, smile small but real. Watched the way her eyes slid right past him like he wasn’t even there.
It was a new kind of punishment. Not yelling. Not anger. Just being invisible to the one person he’d been trying to get to look at him his whole life.
He caught himself remembering things in flashes. Her sleeping on his shoulder, her smile behind the gym lights, the way she had gently cleaned his lip with her handkerchief years ago, pretending she didn’t care while her fingers trembled.
Now he felt as if he’dbroken it. He’d broken her and he wasn’t sure if he deserved to fix it.
——————————————————————————
The gym was mostly dark by the time [Y/N] stepped outside, her duffel slung over one shoulder, hair still damp from a quick shower. She sighed, rubbing at her neck, exhaustion creeping into her bones after a long afternoon of cleaning up after practice and managing the volleyball team’s logistics.
The last thing she expected was to find Atsumu Miya leaning against the wall just outside the main doors.
She stopped in her tracks.
“What do you want?” She asked, deliberately trying to keep her tone flat.
Atsumu straightened immediately, hands shoved into his pockets like he didn’t know what to do with them.
“I… just wanted to talk.”
She rolled her eyes and walked past him. “Not in the mood.”
He followed. “Just for a second.”
“Miya- ”
“Please.” He said, and it came out quieter than she expected. “I... I need to say somethin’. Just once. You don’t even have to say anythin’ back. I just- let me talk.”
Something in his voice made her stop. Not the usual sarcasm. Not teasing. No smugness, no stupid grin. Just... him. Real and raw.
She turned to face him, arms crossed. “You have exactly two minutes.”
He looked like he was trying to wrestle the words into shape. Like he hadn’t practiced this half as much as he’d claimed he would.
“I was lookin’ for you that day.” He said. “The last day of the tournament.”
She blinked. “What?”
“That morning. Before I saw you with Kita. I wasn’t plannin’ to fight. Wasn’t plannin’ to ruin everythin’. I was... gonna tell you. How I felt.”
Silence. He kept going, voice low and thick with everything he’d kept buried for years.
“It started when we were six, okay? You were sittin’ in the sandbox with Osamu and you were smilin’ and buildin’ that stupid castle like it was the most important thing in the world. And you looked so happy. So... bright. Like a sunbeam or somethin’. And all I could think was- I wanted that smile pointed at me. Not Osamu. Me.”
He took a breath. She stood there with an unreadable expression on her face but he kept going.
“So I did the dumbest thing I could think of. Pulled your pigtails. Got yelled at. Called a meanie. And it still felt better than bein’ ignored.”
She stayed silent, her eyes on his, unmoving.
“And it never stopped.” He said. “Every time I teased you, every time I said somethin’ stupid, it was just ‘cause I didn’t know how else to make you look at me. I was scared if I didn’t get under your skin, I’d disappear.”
His voice cracked a little.
“You looked at Osamu like he was the only person who understood you. Then you got older, and you started lookin’ at other people like that. And every single time I saw it, I wanted to tear my own goddamn hair out because I wanted it to be me.”
Atsumu swallowed.
“That day behind the gym. I saw you with Kita and... I don’t know. I lost it. I thought I missed my shot. I thought I was too late. So I said the one thing that would push you away for good. And I regretted it the second it left my mouth.”
He looked at her now, no longer hiding behind anything.
“I’m sorry. I’m so sorry. You are special, [Y/N]. You always were and I’ve been in love with you for as long as I can remember. Even when I didn’t know what that meant.”
A beat of silence. And another. And another. [Y/N] didn’t move. Didn’t blink. Didn’t say a word. Atsumu’s chest tightened. The silence clawed at his throat.
“I- I get it if you don’t wanna talk to me ever again,” he rushed out. “I mean, after everything, I’d hate me too. I’m a loudmouth. I don’t think before I speak. I ruin everythin’. And I get it if you’re into someone like Kita ‘cause he’s mature and quiet and- God, I’m makin’ this worse, aren’t I- ”
“Shut up.”
He blinked. She was suddenly in front of him, close. Too close and, before he could process the way her eyes were shining or how her lips parted or how her hands grabbed the front of his jacket. She kissed him.
Hard. Like she’d been waiting years. Like all that time she’d been biting her tongue and pushing him away had been holding back this single, explosive moment.
He froze for a second. Then kissed her back like he might never get the chance again.
Her hands curled into his collar. His found her waist. She was warm and real and right there in his arms and he couldn’t stop tasting the apology between their mouths.
When they pulled apart, barely an inch between them, her breath hitched.
“I really hate you.” She whispered.
His lips quirked up. “You kiss all the people you hate like that?”
“Only the ones who pull my pigtails and get into fights over me.”
He laughed, the sound soft and disbelieving. “Does that mean you’re not gonna pretend I don’t exist anymore?”
“No promises.”
He grinned wider. “Still a princess, huh?”
She raised an eyebrow. “Still a meanie?”
They stood like that, foreheads almost touching, breath mingling in the cool air outside the gym.
Then, like it had always been this simple, like the whole world had just clicked back into place, she leaned into him again.
And this time, he didn’t have to pull her pigtails to make her look at him.
Tags: @stanwallpapers
Taglists are open so let me know if you want to be added in future works! :)
Summary: Ushijima finds himself lost when an injury keeps him away from the volleyball court so in a desperate attempt to keep his sanity he goes back home. Surrounded by memories and people from the past, will he find himself once again or something else entirely?
CW (content warning): post-time skip!Ushijima, mentions of sport injuries, slight angst, smut, MDNI (+18), p in v, oral (m recieving), despite the smut this is mainly fluff.
AN (author’s note): Hi guys! I’ve been writing for Haikyuu for a while now but I never really thought about posting it until I started posting my jjk works on my other blog (@yuujispunches if you want to check it out 🫶🏻), I’m kinda nervous because it’s really different but I hope you guys enjoy this! English isn’t my first language so I’m sorry if there are any mistakes :)
Requests are open so feel free to send yours! (you can check the list of characters I write for on my pinned post)
Masterlist
The crack of impact was sharp, clean, almost too clean. At first, no one understood what had happened. The rally kept going. Ushijima had leapt high, even for his standards, dominating the air like it belonged to him. But when he came down.
He didn’t get up.
The arena didn’t fall silent immediately. Ushijima’s absence in movement wasn’t noticeable until the ball hit the floor with a hollow thud. Then there was that chilling beat of delay before every head turned.
He clutched his leg, his face twisted in a rare grimace. Not from pain, Ushijima Wakatoshi had played through pain before. This was something deeper. Something breaking apart, not just torn muscle or strained tendon, but something fundamental inside of him.
——————————————————————————
The prognosis came in harsh and sterile, in a room that smelled like antiseptic and dread.
"A full tear of the Achilles tendon."
Surgery. Recovery. Three to six months minimum before rehab. Closer to a year before he could even think of spiking a ball again.
The doctors gave him comforting smiles. The team’s manager offered words of reassurance. Fans flooded social media with hashtags, edits, tributes, well-wishes.
None of it touched him.
Wakatoshi found himself sitting alone in his apartment in Sendai, his leg immobilized in a boot, staring at the wall as if willing it to become something else, something useful. Something moving and not broken.
He hated stillness.
——————————————————————————
Two weeks passed in the haze of forced rest and ice packs. Then four. The more his body stagnated, the more his thoughts grew wild, unrecognizable. He had built his world around control, around the sharp edge of purpose that volleyball gave him. Now, everything felt dulled.
That’s when he made the decision. One morning, with no plan except the aching emptiness he couldn't shake, he packed a bag, informed his manager he needed some time away, and booked a train to Yamagata.
——————————————————————————
The old roads were unchanged. The farmland rolled out under a soft spring sky, gentle and wide. Wakatoshi hadn’t visited in years, not since his parents sold the family home and moved closer to the coast. But the town hadn’t forgotten him.
Even walking down the main street with a hoodie pulled low, heads turned. People still recognized him, somehow. Tall as ever. Stoic. Broken now, though they couldn’t see it.
He stayed in a quiet inn on the outskirts, a simple place with tatami mats and a view of the rice fields. He didn’t do much. Didn’t want to be recognized, didn’t want to talk. Mostly he limped through memories, haunted by the sound of his own breath.
Until he ran into you.
——————————————————————————
You were standing outside the local café, arguing with the barista about the new seasonal drink. Something about how coffee shouldn't taste like strawberry.
“Just because you can make it doesn’t mean you should.” You huffed, spinning on your heel and nearly walked straight into a wall of muscle and fleece.
You stepped back instinctively. Then your eyes narrowed.
“Wakatoshi?”
His shoulders went stiff. He turned.
Your face lit up like summer. “Oh my god. It is you!”
He opened his mouth. Nothing came out.
You filled the silence. “You probably don’t remember me [Y/N], from Shiratorizawa? I was in Class 3, used to talk your ear off during lunch. You always stared like I was speaking a different language.”
His brow creased a little, like he was digging through dusty memory files. And then, you saw it the flicker of recognition.
“You liked strawberry milk.” He said.
You blinked.
“I… did, yeah.” A laugh escaped you. “That’s what you remember?”
He nodded slowly. “You said it was the superior drink. I disagreed.”
You looked up at him. The Ushijima Wakatosh you knew, now a famous, national-level athlete but he still stood like a fortress. Still had that calm, unreadable expression. But now there was something else underneath it. Something frayed.
“I’m glad you remember.” You said softly. “Hey… are you okay?”
——————————————————————————
You didn’t ask him to join you for coffee.
You just started talking again, like years hadn’t passed. Like he hadn’t disappeared into the world of professional sports, and you hadn’t grown into your own life, working remotely now from your childhood home, helping your aging aunt run her flower shop.
Somehow, you both ended up walking down the street together. You talked about the town, how things had changed, who had moved, who hadn’t. You told him about the café’s new obsession with flavored drinks. About your dog. About how the sakura festival was coming soon.
He barely said a word. But he didn’t leave either.
——————————————————————————
The next day, you saw him again. This time sitting alone on a park bench, leg propped up, staring into the lake like it might give him answers. You sat beside him with a box of taiyaki.
“You look hungry.” You said simply offering the box to him.
He took it. Ate in silence. You swung your legs off the edge of the bench and let the sun warm your skin.
“Still hate strawberry?”
He chewed slowly, nodded.
You grinned. “Some things never change.”
The words didn’t really mean anything but for some reason they sounded almost like comfort to him.
——————————————————————————
The days after followed a rhythm.
You bumped into each other “by accident” again. Then not by accident.
You invited him to your aunt’s shop to see the garden you’d been working on. He stood among the lilies and said nothing, but his eyes didn’t wander. He watched you kneel in the dirt, brush pollen off your fingers, talk about soil PH like it was sacred.
You brought him books you thought he might like. He read them. You could tell by the way he handed them back without creases but with little post it annotations places on the margins with calculated care.
When you were with him, you didn’t expect words. You filled the quiet with stories, with small kindnesses. And slowly, he started to talk, not much, just enough. But when he did, it always mattered.
——————————————————————————
One evening, as the sky turned lavender, he admitted:
“I can’t play.”
You looked up from where you were adjusting the garden’s irrigation pipe. “Right now?”
He hesitated. “Maybe not again. Not at the same level.”
You stood, wiped your hands on your pants, and looked at him. Really looked.
“Does that scare you?”
He didn’t answer for a long time. Then, “Yes.” Another pause filled with a deep breath. “I don’t know who I am without it.”
Your voice was soft. “I do.”
His eyes flickered to you.
“You’re still Wakatoshi.” You said. “You’re still kind of intimidating, loyal and a little weird about vegetables.”
A beat passed.
“I’m not weird about vegetables, broccoli just tastes like grass objectively.”
You laughed.
And for the first time in weeks, he smiled.
——————————————————————————
You weren’t supposed to become his routine. Or at least that’s what he told himself at first.
But one day turned into two. Then into a week. Then more.
You started seeing Wakatoshi every day without even planning it. At the park, the shop, the café. Sometimes he limped along beside you while you rambled about your latest dream something along the lines of “There were three ferrets in a trench coat pretending to be my landlord. Don’t ask”, or told him the entire plot of a romance drama in excruciating detail while he nodded once, maybe twice, with solemn confusion.
And he… didn’t mind. In fact, he started waiting for you.
Not obviously. No, never that. But he’d be in the places you might show up, sitting on the same bench, outside the same shop, buying the exact coffee you liked so you wouldn’t have to wait in line. It wasn’t that he needed you there.
But when you were, the silence in his chest didn’t ache as badly.
——————————————————————————
You were light. Loud and quick and always moving. You talked with your hands, with your whole face. You had this thing where you’d lean in close when you were excited, as if your joy couldn’t be contained in just your voice.
Wakatoshi had never met anyone like you. Not really.
On the court, everything was angles. Force. Timing. Discipline. He was good at that. Better than anyone. But off the court?
He didn’t know what to do with the messiness of people.
Yet somehow, your messiness didn’t feel like chaos. It felt like sun through the leaves.
——————————————————————————
One afternoon, it rained.
You showed up at the inn he was staying at, dripping and barefoot, holding two bags of convenience store snacks and a half-wilted daisy you’d stuffed behind your ear.
“Surprise!” You beamed. “Rain check on the flower beds, literally. Thought we could hang out here. Unless you don’t want company, in which case I will melt dramatically into the road.”
He stared at you for a long moment, almost as if he was trying to convince himself of the sight before him. Then stepped aside.
You took that as a yes.
——————————————————————————
That night, you both sat cross-legged on the floor of his room, watching a movie on your tablet. You kept shoving snacks into his hand without asking. He never refused. You talked through most of the film.
“Okay, but if the ghost is her dead twin, how did she not know the entire time?!”
“I’m just saying, if I die tragically, you *better* make it a dramatic haunt.”
“Do you think ghosts get bored?”
“Do you believe in ghosts?”
Wakatoshi didn’t speak much. But he watched you like you were more compelling than the screen.
After the credits rolled, the thunder outside softened to a distant rumble. You glanced at him.
“Hey” You said, quieter now. “How are you holding up?”
He didn’t answer right away. “I really don’t know. Badly I think.”
The word fell heavy between you. Honest. Plain. But weighted. You nodded gently, inching closer so your knees brushed.
“I figured.”
He looked down at his hands. “Everything I’ve worked for… all the time, the years. I don’t know if I’ll get it back. I don’t know who I’m supposed to be now.”
You reached over and touched his wrist, light as rain.
“You don’t have to know yet.” You whispered. “It’s okay to not be okay, Toshi.”
He didn’t move. But he didn’t pull away either. The nickname falling from your lips made a weird feeling spread through his chest and he found himself wanting to believe you.
——————————————————————————
The next day, you made him a makeshift rehabilitation chart. It was full of sparkles, doodles, and completely inaccurate medical advice.
“Goal: stop walking like Frankenstein.” You grinned, pointing to the top.
Wakatoshi blinked. “This isn’t a real program.”
“Correct.” You said proudly. “But it made you stop brooding for five seconds, didn’t it?”
He exhaled through his nose. Not quite a laugh. But close enough. A smile tugging at his lips.
You considered it a win.
——————————————————————————
The more time you spent together, the more you learned his rhythms.
He was blunt but not unkind. He hated loud music. He preferred savory to sweet. He didn’t like when people asked him how he was unless they actually wanted to know.
He also had a strange fondness for animals. You caught him once, crouching awkwardly to pet a neighborhood cat that had hissed at you five minutes earlier.
“You’re a traitor.” Uou accused playfully.
He blinked. “I didn’t say I disliked cats.”
“She tried to bite me!”
“She likes me.” He said simply.
You gawked as the cat curled into his palm.
“Okay, Snow White.”
——————————————————————————
Sometimes, though, he shut down.
There were days he didn’t come out of the inn. Didn’t answer your texts. Days when you knew he wasn’t hurt, just hollow. You didn’t push him on those days.
You dropped off fresh onigiri with a note taped to the lid:
It’s okay. I’m here when you’re ready.
He never replied. But the containers were always returned, empty. The notes were kept on his nightstand, to reread when he felt like loneliness was about to swallow him.
——————————————————————————
One evening, he joined you on the roof of your house.
You’d invited him there once before, told him the view was better than therapy.
Now you both sat with your feet hanging off the edge, the stars bright above, the air filled with the chirp of summer bugs. You handed him a cold beer and didn’t say anything for a while.
Then, quietly. “I used to think you were scary, you know.”
His brow twitched. “Why?”
“You never smiled. You had that whole murdery volleyball thing going on.”
He stared straight ahead. “I wasn’t trying to be scary.”
“I know that now. You’re just… intense.” A pause. Then you spoke again. “You’re still kind of intense but you’re kind, too. And steady. I like that about you.”
He didn’t speak. But you saw his knuckles tighten around the bottle.
Your voice softened. “You know, you don’t have to go back to who you were before. You’re allowed to change. To figure out what you want.”
He turned to you then. There was something raw in his expression, something that cracked just enough to show what was underneath.
“I don’t know what I want.” He said.
You smiled at him, tired but warm.
“Well… until you do, you’ve got me.” You said as you nudged your shoulder against his softly. Bright eyes shining as you looked at him.
For the first time he found himself that maybe tomorrow didn’t sound so terrifying anymore.
——————————————————————————
You didn’t realize it yet, but something was shifting inside him. Slowly. Like spring thawing frozen ground. Every time you said his name, it softened him. Every time you smiled at him like he wasn’t broken, it pieced him back together.
But cracks let the light in.
And the light hurt.
——————————————————————————
One night, he snapped.
It was the first time he raised his voice at you.
You’d brought him a flyer for a local festival. They were holding a charity volleyball event. You thought it might cheer him up.
“It’s just a small thing.” You said. “You wouldn’t have to play. Just be around people. Might feel good.”
He stared at the paper. Then his jaw clenched.
“I said I can’t play.” He barked harshly.
You blinked. “I didn’t mean- ”
“I’m not a mascot.” He cut in, voice low but sharp. “I’m not interested in pretending I still belong there.”
You stood, holding the flyer like it had burned you.
“I wasn’t pitying you, Wakatoshi. I thought maybe it’d help to be near the thing you love.”
“I don’t need help.”
Your chest tightened.
“Yeah, well…” You said, voice cracking. “You’re doing a hell of a job proving it.”
You turned and walked away.
He didn’t stop you.
——————————————————————————
He didn’t sleep that night.
The room felt like it was closing in. The air too heavy. The silence too loud.
He hadn’t meant to yell. He hadn’t even known the anger was there until it boiled over. But it wasn’t you he was mad at.
It was himself.
His body. His failure. His fear.
He didn’t know how to say any of that. So instead, he said nothing.
Which meant he had to live with the echo of your hurt expression. The way you walked away like you couldn’t fix him anymore.
And maybe that’s what scared him most.
That he was pushing away the only person who saw him as more than an athlete. The only one who didn’t flinch when he broke down.
——————————————————————————
Two days passed.
You didn’t show up at the café. Or the park. Or the bench.
He stared at your last text:
Take care of yourself Wakatoshi.
Neutral. Kind. But distant. Full last name instead of the nickname he had quietly grown fond of.
He hated it. God, how he hated it.
——————————————————————————
The morning of the festival came.
He didn’t plan on going. Of course not. But his feet took him there anyway.
You were working a booth when you saw him.
The crowd parted like it knew. Like the story was unfolding just for you.
Ushijima Wakatoshi. Standing still in the middle of the street, in a sea of movement. No crutches. Just a limp. In a plain black shirt that clung to the curve of his shoulders, eyes scanning every stall until they landed on you.
You froze.
He walked toward you, slow, deliberate.
“I was wrong.” He said, stopping in front of your table. “The other day.”
You raised an eyebrow. He looked down. Swallowed hard.
“I was scared.” He said. “I still am. Everything I am. Everything I’ve worked for was built around being the best. And now I don’t know if I’ll ever get that back.”
Your expression softened. “I wasn’t trying to take that from you.” You whispered.
“I know.” He said. “But I didn’t want you to see me like this.”
You stepped around the booth, closer now. Close enough to feel the heat of his skin.
“Toshi” You said quietly, “I’ve only ever seen you like this. And I’ve never once thought less of you.”
He looked at you like you’d just said something in a language he couldn’t translate. Like the words didn’t make sense, because no one had ever spoken them before.
You lifted your hand slowly, touched his chest just over his heart.
“You don’t have to be strong with me.”
His breath hitched and in that moment, he leaned his forehead against yours.
Not a kiss but something closer. Something deeper.
——————————————————————————
After the festival, he stayed by your side the entire day.
You didn’t ask for it but he handed you water when your voice got hoarse. Kept kids from knocking over the display. Sat on a crate in the back of your booth like a silent bodyguard, expression unreadable but his eyes never strayed from you.
When the crowd thinned and your feet ached, he offered his arm. You took it without question. He felt… steady again. Not because he was healed. But because you were there.
Later that night, you brought him to the lake.
Same bench. Same spot. This time, you leaned into his side. He didn’t move away.
“I’m sorry for being a brat.” You said quietly.
“You weren’t.”
You turned your head against his shoulder.
“You sure?”
He glanced down at you. “You were right to be upset.”
You smiled. “Wow. Did Ushijima Wakatoshi just admit I was right?”
A long pause.
“Yes.” A reluctant smile on his lips
You grinned, poking his ribs gently. “Growth.”
It was silent for a while. But it wasn’t empty.
Then you said, “Do you ever think about what you’d do if you didn’t play?”
His hand twitched beside yours.
“I don’t know.” He said finally. “I’ve never let myself think about it.”
You looked up at him. “Well. Maybe you don’t have to figure it out alone.”
He met your gaze. And something softened. “Okay.”
Just one word. But when he took your hand in his it it felt like a beginning.
——————————————————————————
The lake was quiet when you brought him there again.
A week had passed since the festival. Since he let his forehead touch yours like it meant something. Since he started showing up without needing a reason.
Now, he came because he wanted to.
He still didn’t talk much. Still didn’t smile often. But the way he looked at you had changed.
He watched you like he was trying to memorize something fragile. Like he was afraid of blinking and losing it.
Tonight, you sat side-by-side on the grass, the stars reflecting in the still water.
And you told him, soft and sure. “You don’t have to prove anything to me.”
Wakatoshi swallowed thickly. “Sometimes I feel like… if I’m not playing, I’m nothing.”
You turned, eyes warm and fierce. “You’re so much more than that.”
He met your gaze, slow and aching.
“You’re the first person who’s ever said that to me.”
Your heart broke a little at that.
But it bloomed too. Because it meant you could be the first and maybe the only.
This time you were the one that reaches for his hand. He took it without hesitation.
——————————————————————————
The walk home was quiet.
The kind of quiet that buzzed under the skin. Every brush of his arm sent a pulse down your spine. Every glance felt like a tether pulling tighter between you.
When you got to your door, you turned to him.
“Do you want to come in?”
He hesitated, just for a breath then nodded.
Inside, the lights were low. You kicked off your shoes and walked into the kitchen, nerves fluttering. He stood near the entry like he didn’t know where he was allowed to go.
“Make yourself comfortable.” You said gently, setting your keys down. “You’re safe here.”
Something in his face shifted. He stepped closer.
“You always say that.”
“Because it’s true.”
You turned to him. He was closer than before. His eyes dark in the soft light, jaw tense.
“I don’t know how to do this.” He said quietly. “But I want to.”
Your chest swelled. “You don’t have to know how.” You whispered. “Just stay with me.”
He reached out, brushed a strand of hair behind your ear.
And then he kissed you.
——————————————————————————
It was slow. Careful.
Like he was afraid of shattering something he didn’t know how to hold.
But when you kissed him back. When you leaned in and let your lips open under his, he deepened it with a groan that vibrated through your chest.
Your fingers tangled in his shirt. His hands cupped your waist like he didn’t know where to touch, only that he needed to.
You pulled back, breathing heavy, and looked into his eyes.
“You can touch me.” You said. “However you want.”
He blinked. Like the permission stunned him.
You took his hand and guided it to your cheek. Then lower, to your chest, over your heart. His breath caught.
“I want you.” You whispered. “But only if you want this too.”
His voice cracked. “I do.”
——————————————————————————
You led him to your room.
He sat on the edge of your bed while you stepped between his knees, hands at his jaw.
“Tell me if anything feels wrong. Or too much.”
He nodded once. Silent. A storm behind his eyes.
You kissed him again, longer this time. Slower.
And then you knelt between his legs. Wakatoshi tensed.
“Wait- ” He started, but your fingers worked open the button of his jeans with calm precision.
“Let me.” You said. “I want to.”
He swallowed. Adam’s apple bobbing. “I don’t usually… let people do this.”
“I know.”
You kissed the inside of his knee. Then the scar.
It was thick, pale, a little raised. You ran your thumb over it, then pressed your lips to the center. Slow, reverent.
His breath hitched. His hands fisted in the sheets.
“I hate it.” He murmured. “It’s horrible”
You immediately know what he was referring to. The scar that reminded him of what he might lose. You looked up at him.
“It’s part of you.” You said in between kisses as your lips trailed up along his inner thigh.
He stared down at you like you weren’t real. Like he was dreaming.
Then you leaned in and took him into your mouth.
He was big. Of course he was. But that wasn’t what made him lose control. It was the way you looked at him.
The way you held him in your mouth. Slow, unhurried, every pass of your tongue deliberate. Your hands resting on his thighs, fingers stroking gently, grounding him.
You didn’t rush.
You let him feel everything. Every inch. Every second.
He groaned your name once. Rough and low like it punched the air out of him. His hips twitched, but he held himself back, muscles trembling with restraint.
You pulled off with a soft pop, lips swollen, eyes full of heat.
“Lie back.” You said, standing to undress.
He obeyed without question. Watching you undress. His gaze didn’t devour you. It honored you. Like he was witnessing something sacred.
You climbed into his lap, straddling him, and ran your fingers through his hair.
“You okay?”
He nodded.
But his voice was hoarse. “I don’t deserve this.”
Your heart ached. “You deserve everything.”
You guided him to your entrance, bodies flushed and warm, and sank down onto him slowly.
His hands clutched your waist like a lifeline. His mouth fell open. Low grunts and moans filling the room as he looked at you as if he was scared you’d slip through his fingers if he didn’t.
You rocked against him, slow and tender. Your bodies fit like you’d been made for this. Every movement dragged another broken breath from his throat.
You kissed his jaw. His neck. His shoulder. You caressed the scar again, when you shifted his legs spreading wider under yours.
And when he came. He was shuddering, breathless, his arms wrapped around you like he’d fall apart otherwise. You held his face in your hands.
“You’re not broken.”
He came down slowly, blinking up at you like he didn’t know what world he was in.
You brushed a hand through his sweat-damp hair.
“You’re safe.”
——————————————————————————
You lay together after, tangled in the sheets, your head resting on his chest.
His arm was around you. Tight. Protective. His fingers trailing up and down your spine. But not out of fear. Out of need. Out of something new and fragile blooming between you.
He whispered, after a long while. “Thank you.”
You smiled against his skin.
“You don’t have to thank me. I want you.”
He swallowed.
“I don’t think I’ve ever felt this… wanted. Not like this.”
You kissed his shoulder.“Get used to it.”
He didn’t answer. But you felt the way his body relaxed. The way his fingers curled into yours and he held you closer to him before kissing your lips once more.
——————————————————————————
The morning after was silent. Not because anything was wrong, but because everything was finally right.
You woke first. The sun filtered in soft and golden through the curtains. Ushijima lay beside you, broad chest rising and falling with the steady rhythm of sleep, one arm still draped around your waist like his body refused to let you go, even unconscious.
You reached up and brushed his hair back from his face.
He looked… peaceful. Like the war inside him had quieted for the first time in a long, long time.
He woke slowly. Brows furrowing at first like the sunlight confused him. Then his eyes opened, and he looked at you. Like he knew exactly where he was. Like he’d been hoping this wasn’t a dream.
You smiled, soft and sleepy. “Hey.”
He didn’t smile.
But he reached up and touched your cheek, callused fingers grazing your skin like you might disappear if he wasn’t careful.
“I’m still here.” You whispered.
He exhaled. A shaky breath. Like he’d been holding it all night. “I don’t know if I want to go back.”
You curled into his side. “You don’t have to. Not yet.”
“But I will, eventually.”
You looked up. “Are you scared?”
He was quiet for a long time. “Yes.” He exhaled as he tucked a loose strand of hair behind your ear.
You didn’t offer empty encouragement. No false hope. Just your arms, and your warmth, and the solid truth of your presence beside him.
“You’re not alone this time.” You said simply. “I’ll be there for you.”
He nodded and, finally he smiled.
——————————————————————————
The weeks passed slowly, and for once, neither of you minded. He stayed longer than he planned.
Sometimes he helped your elderly neighbor carry groceries. Sometimes he sat in the sun with you and read, barely turning the pages, just listening to the sound of your voice as you rambled.
He limped less. The stiffness faded.
But what changed most wasn’t his body, it was the way he carried himself. Like he wasn’t rushing to prove anything anymore. Like he knew that, even if he never played again, someone still saw worth in him.
You did.
And that changed everything.
——————————————————————————
One morning, you found him at the bench by the lake. Same one you always went to. This time, he was alone.
You approached quietly, but he didn’t look up. Just held out a hand as you came near, like he felt you before he saw you.
You took it without hesitation and sat beside him.
“I’ve been talking to my trainer.” He said softly. “They think I can start light drills next month.”
You felt your heart leap but didn’t let it show too much.
Instead, you squeezed his hand. “That’s great, Toshi.”
He looked at you then, eyes quiet but steady.
“I want to go back.”
You nodded. “Then you should.”
“But not because I need to prove I’m still strong.” He said. “Not to anyone. I just… I want to feel the court again.”
You leaned your head on his shoulder. “That’s the best reason.”
He exhaled through his nose. “And I want to take you with me.”
You blinked, startled.
He turned slightly toward you. “You don’t have to answer now. But… if I go back to playing, to traveling. I want you to be part of that world. However you can be.”
“Toshi.” You whispered.
He squeezed your hand. “You make it quiet. In my head. Like I can breathe.”
Tears pricked the corners of your eyes. You leaned up and kissed him, slow and full, pressing your heart into every touch.
“I’m already yours.” You said.
——————————————————————————
That night, he laid you down again.
Not rushed. Not broken. Just full of love he didn’t know how to put into words.
He kissed your body like he was learning you all over again. Touched you with reverence.
When you made love, it was less about need and more about being known.
He whispered your name into your neck as you moved together.
And for the first time, he let go completely.
——————————————————————————
You saw him off a few weeks later.
His rehab was scheduled to continue back in the city. There were evaluations, contracts, trials. But this time, when he stepped on the train, he didn’t look hollow.
He kissed you softly and promised he’d call every night.
And he did. Every time.
——————————————————————————
Months passed.
You visited when you could. He sent you photos of his practices. His scar faded, but not entirely and he never hid it.
You never stopped telling him how proud you were.
And when the first game came, and he stood on the court again stronger, slower, more deliberate. You watched from the stands.
He spotted you right after the final point. They’d won. But the look on his face wasn’t victory. It was peace.
——————————————————————————
Later that night, in the quiet of the locker room, a teammate asked him. “Hey Ushiwaka what changed? You play different now.”
He paused. “I found something that matters even when the game ends.”
——————————————————————————
As time passed the lake was quiet again. You sat on the bench, older now. Still just as in love.
He came up behind you, arms wrapping around your waist. You tilted your head to look up at him, grinning.
“You’re early.”
“I missed you.”
You beamed.
And he did something he only did for you. He smiled.
You lived together now, in a small home near the city but close enough to visit his hometown. He still played, but more balanced. Not like it was life or death because now, he had a life outside of it.
A life that included you. Warm meals. Early morning cuddles. Your voice reading out loud while he rested. He talked more now, always honest. Always tender. And always yours.
Sometimes, you’d trace the scar on his knee before bed. Kiss it. And every time, he’d close his eyes and breathe a little deeper. Because you never saw it as a wound. You saw it as a part of him like his silence, his strength, his love.
And slowly, he started to see it that way too.
“I love you.” He’d whisper every night as he held you close to him.
“This would be quite awkward if you didn’t.” You laughed, caressing his face softly, the metal of the ring on your hand that matched his felt warm against his skin. “I love you too.”
He kissed you slowly and tenderly because now he had the rest of his life to do so.
Taglists are open so let me know if you want to be added for future works! :)
I write for most male characters in jjk, you can check the list here! 🫶🏻 I was also thinking about maybe making a secondary blog to write for Haikyuu because I have a couple fics already written but idk if y’all would be interested in that hahahah If anyone would be interested in reading Haikyuu fics from me let me know and I’ll probably make a secondary blog to post there 🫡
Summary: Megumi doesn’t know how to deal with having a crush and his strategy of deny deny deny might just cost him everything he longs for when you overhear him talking with Yuki and Nobara.
CW (content warning): maybe some cursing but that’s it, this is mainly just fluff.
AN: I’m back! I finally finished my exams and I’m free so I’m back to writing. I’ll be going through the requests as soon as I can 🤍 English isn’t my first language so I’m sorry if there’re any mistakes. Hope you enjoy and let me know what you think! :)
Requests are open so feel free to send yours! (you can check the list of characters I write for on my pinned post)
Masterlist
The late spring air buzzed with the hum of insects and the smell of sun-warmed concrete as training wrapped for the day. A warm breeze danced across the open field behind Tokyo Jujutsu High, rustling the sleeves of uniforms and the grass that sprouted between cracks in the stone tiles.
Megumi Fushiguro stood with his arms crossed, gaze locked across the yard.
You were training with Yuji, your laughter ringing out as you clumsily dodged one of his exaggerated mock punches. There was a smear of dirt across your cheek, sweat shining on your forehead, and your smile. God, your smile, every time he saw it, it was as if it caught the sunlight like a net.
Megumi couldn’t look away. Not that he wanted to stare. But it was like his eyes had a mind of their own like his heart was some stupid, traitorous thing that leaned toward you every time you got within ten feet of him. He didn’t even like most people. But you? You made him feel… soft. Stupid. A little terrified.
“Okay.” Nobara said behind him, voice sing-songy. “You’ve been watching her for like, ten minutes straight.”
Megumi frowned. “No, I haven’t.”
Yuji snorted, having appeared beside him at some point. “Bro, yes, you have. It’s getting creepy.”
“I was making sure she didn’t overdo it.” He shifted uncomfortably. “She sprained her wrist last week.”
“Aw, so you’re able to care about someone?” Nobara teased. “That’s cute.”
“It’s not- ” Megumi's tone sharpened. “I don’t have a thing for her, okay? Drop it.”
——————————————————————————
You had just stepped around the back of the toolshed to get a drink from the water tap, coming back toward the group when the words hit your ears.
"I don’t have a thing for her, okay? Drop it."
You froze.
Your heart stumbled in your chest, awkward and loud. You stayed back, hidden by the shed’s corner, not even daring to breathe.
“She’s just a classmate.” Megumi continued, his voice clipped and cold. “There’s nothing going on. You guys are imagining things.”
The air between them seemed to shift. Nobara muttered, “Wow. Harsh.”
Yuji laughed nervously. “Y/N’s cool, though. I mean, I’d get it if you did like her.”
“I don’t.” Megumi said again. And this time, it was more than just annoyed. It was sharp. Final. “She’s annoying sometimes, honestly. Always asking questions, always smiling like we’re not about to die on a mission. I don’t get it.”
You didn’t hear the rest.
Your hands had gone cold, water bottle clutched tight to keep them from shaking. The back of your throat burned as you slowly backed away, heart hammering.
“She’s annoying sometimes, honestly… I don’t get it.”
His words kept echoing in your head. It felt like someone had slapped you, hard.
——————————————————————————
That night, you didn’t come to dinner.
You weren’t mad, exactly. You didn’t think Megumi meant to hurt you, he probably thought he was protecting something, like he always did. That didn’t stop it from stinging like hell.
You sat in your dorm room, fingers curled loosely around a hot mug of tea you didn’t feel like drinking. Your phone buzzed a few times. Yuji, probably. Or Nobara. You ignored them all.
Across the courtyard, Megumi sat outside on the steps of the dorm, arms resting on his knees, gaze distant. Something felt off. You weren’t you tonight. You hadn’t looked at him once after training. Usually, you’d nudge him with your shoulder, say something quietly, something that made the tension in his chest ease.
Tonight, nothing.
He didn’t know why it bothered him so much. Or maybe he did. Maybe he’d just spent so long pretending it didn’t matter that he forgot how much it did.
——————————————————————————
The first time he noticed you was on a mission.
You weren’t like Nobara, loud and stylish and sharp-edged. You weren’t like Yuji, either, overwhelmingly bright, brimming with impossible optimism. You were quieter, not in a shy way but in a present way. Focused. Observant. You asked questions no one else asked. You noticed things.
During the mission, you’d pulled a cursed spirit off his blind spot without hesitation, taken a shallow gash to the ribs for it. Megumi remembered the way your hands shook, the blood blooming through your uniform and still, the only thing you said shocked him.
“I’m fine. You okay?” A concerned look on your face.
He’d looked at you like you were a different species.
Since then, something had shifted. And it scared the hell out of him.
——————————————————————————
The next day came with clouds heavy in the sky, the promise of rain clinging to the air.
You avoided him.
Not in an obvious way, there were still group training sessions, still shared missions but the warmth was gone. No small talk. No soft, thoughtful comments that made him feel seen. No casual touches or gentle teasing.
Megumi noticed.
It ate at him in quiet moments. During breaks, he’d glance over to find you talking with Yuji, laughing but never looking at him. When Nobara dragged you into town for shopping, you didn’t ask if he wanted to come.
And worst of all you’d stopped smiling at him.
One afternoon, he caught you in the courtyard alone, bandaging a scrape on your arm after training.
“You should disinfect that better.” He said, stepping up without thinking.
You looked up, then back down. “I’m fine.”
He hesitated. “You haven’t been talking to me.”
“I didn’t realize we talked much anyway.” You replied, tone even. Not cruel. Just… distant.
Megumi flinched inwardly. “Did I do something?”
You finally met his gaze. There was no accusation in your eyes just quiet resignation. “No. Not really. I just don’t want to bother you.”
That landed like a punch to the ribs.
He sat down beside you, legs crossed, staring at the grass. “You don’t bother me.”
“You said I was annoying.”
Silence.
You didn’t say where you’d heard it. You didn’t have to.
Megumi stared straight ahead. “That wasn’t… what I meant.”
“Then what did you mean?” You asked quietly, not looking at him. “Because I was starting to think we were friends. But maybe I read too much into it.”
Megumi’s throat closed up. He couldn’t say it. Not here. Not like this.
“I’m sorry.” He said instead.
You stood, brushing off your pants. “Don’t be. It’s my fault. I let myself think you cared.”
He looked up sharply, eyes wide. But you were already walking away, each step driving nails deeper into the floor of his chest.
——————————————————————————
Later that night, Megumi sat in the common room with Yuji and Nobara, both chattering about something or other while he stared at the floor.
“You okay, bro?” Yuji asked between bites of chips.
Megumi didn’t answer right away.
Nobara narrowed her eyes. “It’s Y/N, isn’t it?”
“I messed up.” Megumi said simply.
Yuji blinked. “Did you two fight?”
“No.” He exhaled through his nose. “But I lied. I said I didn’t care about her. And she heard it.”
Nobara grimaced. “Yeah, okay. That’s bad.”
“I didn’t want you two making a big deal out of it,” Megumi muttered.
“Dude, you made a big deal out of it.” Yuji pointed out. “You went all ice-prince ‘I don’t like her at all’ of course she’s hurt.”
Megumi scrubbed a hand over his face. “I thought if I pretended it wasn’t real, it wouldn’t hurt.”
Nobara crossed her arms. “And now?”
“Now it hurts worse.”
——————————————————————————
The clouds broke open just after you and Megumi were dispatched together on a joint mission outside Tokyo.
A cursed spirit had been stalking a neighborhood near Kyoto, an old manufacturing district turned residential. It wasn’t high-grade, likely a grade 2, maybe 1 but it was slippery and fast, and the higher-ups wanted it gone discreetly. Gojo had paired you and Megumi “You two are quiet and competent.” He said. “No property damage, please.”
You’d barely said a word to Megumi on the train. He hadn’t tried to start a conversation either. The air between you was heavy, like a storm about to break.
Now, trudging through the damp streets just after sunset, the rain soaked through your jackets, making your breath fog and your hands cold. Your cursed energy flickered outward, on alert.
“It’s close.” You murmured, scanning the alley ahead.
Megumi nodded, summoning Divine Dogs. “Split left. If you catch it, don’t engage alone.”
You nodded stiffly. “Copy.”
He hated this. Not the mission, he could handle the mission. He hated the way you moved around him like a stranger, your voice clipped, movements economical, eyes never quite meeting his.
He wanted to reach out. But every time he opened his mouth, the words died on his tongue.
——————————————————————————
The cursed spirit was stronger than expected.
It lunged from the shadows behind a warehouse, fast and wide, all teeth and claws and thick, bristling curses that slashed like wire through the air. You ducked under its first strike, slashing upward with your blade. It screeched, retreating, and you pursued.
Then, too late, you felt the shift.
A second spirit dropped from the roof behind you, small, but fast. Its claws raked your side before you could turn, searing pain flashing hot across your ribs.
You cried out. Megumi’s blood ran cold.
“Y/N!” He shouted, moving fast. Shadows burst outward, his wolves intercepting the small one before it could strike again.
He reached you in three heartbeats.
You staggered, one hand pressed to your side, blood seeping between your fingers. “I didn’t sense the second one.”
“You shouldn’t have been alone,” he snapped, eyes dark. “I told you not to engage- ”
“I had to.” You hissed. “It was going after a kid- ”
“Goddammit, Y/N.”
He didn’t mean to sound so furious. But fear twisted in his gut, ugly and choking.
He moved fast, summoning Nue to stall the remaining spirit as he caught you, half carrying you out of the danger zone. His grip was tight, protective, anchoring, and trembling just slightly.
You winced. “I can walk- ”
“Don’t argue with me right now.” He said, voice low.
He didn’t let go.
——————————————————————————
You sat against the wall of an abandoned convenience store, blood soaking your uniform. Megumi worked silently, cleaning the wound with water from his canteen and bandaging you as best he could.
You stared past him, jaw clenched. “If this is about me being annoying again, don’t bother.”
Megumi’s hands froze.
“What?”
“I get it.” You muttered, not meeting his eyes. “I smile too much. I ask too many questions. I’m a burden. I’m not as strong as you or Yuji. You don’t have to pretend.”
His voice was quiet. “You really think I feel that way?”
“I heard you, Megumi. That day. You didn’t just say you didn’t like me. You sounded like the idea of liking me was disgusting.”
Megumi sat back on his heels, breath unsteady. The rain had stopped, but thunder still rolled distantly in the sky.
He looked wrecked.
“I didn’t mean it.” He said finally. “I was trying to shut Yuji and Nobara up. They wouldn’t stop teasing me. I panicked.”
You stared at him, hollow. “And the part about me being annoying?”
He swallowed. “I was angry. Not at you. At myself. I’ve felt this way for months and I didn’t know what to do with it. So I turned it into something ugly so I wouldn’t have to deal with it.”
Silence.
He looked down, ashamed. “You were never annoying. I lied.”
Your throat burned. “Why?”
“Because I like you so much it scares the hell out of me.” He said, finally meeting your eyes. “You make me feel like I’m not just a weapon. Like I’m allowed to be human. And I didn’t want to lose that.”
You stared at him.
“I thought if I kept it quiet, I could protect it. Protect you. But I ended up hurting you instead.”
Your voice cracked. “You really like me?”
His answer was immediate. “Yes. A lot.”
The silence between you changed. It wasn’t cold anymore. It buzzed warm and uncertain.
You exhaled shakily. “I thought I was just being stupid.”
“You’re not.” He said, leaning closer. “You’re not stupid. You’re brave. Kind. Smarter than me, half the time. You see people for who they are and you still smile like the world doesn’t deserve you.”
You blinked fast. “That was… a lot.”
He blushed furiously. “Yeah. Sorry. I’ve been holding it in.”
You reached for him without thinking, hand brushing his wrist. He stilled, then turned his hand under yours, fingers closing around yours.
Your voice was small. “I like you too, you know.”
Megumi let out a breath like he’d been drowning and finally found air.
“I know.” He said softly. “I just didn’t want to believe it. Thought maybe if I ignored it, I wouldn’t mess it up.”
You smiled weakly. “You kind of did mess it up.”
He nodded. “I’ll fix it.”
“How?”
“I’ll stop hiding.” He said. “I’ll be honest with you. From now on no more running away.”
You were quiet for a beat.
“Okay.” You said. “But that means telling Nobara.”
He groaned. “Please no.”
“She knows.”
“She’ll never shut up.”
“She deserves the satisfaction.”
He scowled. “You’re cruel.”
You smiled, softer now. “You like that about me.”
He rolled his eyes but didn’t argue. Instead, he reached up gently, pushing a damp strand of hair behind your ear. The touch was light, reverent. You leaned into it.
“You’re not allowed to lie again.” You whispered. “Not about how you feel.”
“Promise.” He said.
And when he leaned in, tentative but sure, and pressed his forehead to yours, you felt the shift not just in the air, but in the weight you’d both been carrying.
This time, it didn’t feel so heavy.
——————————————————————————
The next day, back at the dorms, Nobara cornered Megumi on the steps.
“So” She said with narrowed eyes. “Y/N looked very happy this morning.”
Megumi sighed. “Don’t start.”
Yuji leaned around the doorway. “Wait- wait. Did you finally tell her?!”
Megumi muttered. “Yes.”
Both Nobara and Yuji exploded with noise.
“I KNEW IT!”
“ABOUT TIME!”
“I GIVE IT THREE WEEKS BEFORE HE PANICS AGAIN!”
Megumi, for once, didn’t snap at them. He just shook his head and let the teasing roll off.
Because when he looked across the courtyard and saw you waiting, smiling that real, soft smile just for him and nothing else mattered.
Summary: transferring schools on your second years is never easy when you’re deaf, even less if you’re a sorcerer but maybe a quiet white haired boy makes it just a bit easier.
CW (content warning): deaf reader, this is the first time I’m writing a reader with a disability so I hope I made it justice (if there’s something that you find inaccurate or want to correct me please feel free to do so, I’d love to learn more), text in bold is sign language, purely fluff, maybe some light cursing.
AN: Hi guys! I’ve been out for a few days but now I’m back, I still have a few exams left but I have a few half-written works that I think I’ll be able to post these days until I get back to the requests 🤍 English isn’t my first language so I’m sorry if there’re any mistakes. Hope you enjoy and let me know what you think! :)
Requests are open so feel free to send yours! (you can check the list of characters I write for on my pinned post)
Masterlist
You weren’t expecting the front gate of the Tokyo school to creak like that, the sound vibrating under your fingertips as you slowly pushed it open.
It groaned like an old man getting out of a deep chair, slow and reluctant. You adjusted the strap of your duffel bag on your shoulder and stepped inside the grounds, boots crunching over gravel. The ancient stone paths seemed too peaceful for a place that trained sorcerers to fight curses.
This wasn’t your first jujutsu school, but it felt like it might be your last. A second-year transfer wasn’t exactly common. But you weren’t exactly common either. If this wasn’t your place you were almost ready to give up.
A cursed technique that was strong enough to draw attention. A talent for barrier crafting. A deaf sorcerer.
You glanced at the buildings ahead, tall and traditional, backed by thick forest and quiet sky. It looked like a shrine crossed with a private academy. Peaceful, at first glance. But you could feel it. The pressure in the air. Subtle. Ancient. Like the whole school was breathing quietly, waiting to see if you’d fit in.
You adjusted your hearing aids out of habit. They were mostly useless, but familiar. Your own quiet ritual.
A tall girl with green hair neatly tied in a high ponytail and glasses leaned against one of the pillars by the entry, arms crossed. She noticed you before you noticed her. She had a wooden staff slung over her shoulder and an eyebrow raised like she wasn’t sure if she liked you yet.
Next to her, a… panda? You blinked, utterly confused.
Yes. That was definitely a panda. Waving enthusiastically as he stood beside two other people that were also looking in your direction.
And off to the side, standing under a sakura tree, was a boy with soft white hair, a high collar that reached his nose, and a slouch that said "I’m either incredibly tired or terminally over it."
He was watching you. As if he was analysing your every move.
You stopped at the top of the steps. Three students. All second-years, like you. This was your class.
The tall girl pushed off the wall and approached with confident strides.
“Are you the new student?” She asked, blunt but not unfriendly. Her mouth moved clearly. Thankfully, she didn’t mumble.
You nodded quickly in response.
She pointed to herself. “Maki Zenin. Staff specialist. I’m the one who’ll be beating you up in training.”
You gave her a nervous look and signed. “Can’t wait.”* Then mouthed: “Nice to meet you.”
Maki raised an eyebrow. “Huh. You’re deaf?”
You nodded again, slow and deliberate. You were used to this part. It usually went one of two ways: awkward curiosity or weird overcompensation. But Maki just tilted her head, thoughtful.
“Huh. That’s kinda cool.” She said, like you’d just told her your hobby was blacksmithing. “You read lips?”
You gave her a thumbs-up.
“Nice. Hope you can read ‘ow’ too.” She added with a smirk. “Panda! Get over here!”
The panda in question, still surreal if they asked you, came bounding up the stairs like a golden retriever in a martial arts gi.
“I’m Panda!” He declared proudly.
You signed. “Fitting name.” A shy smile playing on your lips.
He tilted his head, then tapped his chin and signed back with surprising clarity. “You sign?”
Your eyebrows lifted. “You do?”
“Of course.” Panda said, puffing out his chest. “I’m a modern beast. Accessibility matters.”
You laughed. Not out loud, just the air in your chest catching and releasing in a way you hadn’t felt all morning.
Then you felt it again. Eyes on you.
The white-haired boy hadn’t moved from his spot under the tree. He stood still, hands in his pockets, collar obscuring the bottom half of his face.
Maki followed your gaze. “That’s Toge Inumaki. He doesn’t talk much.”
You looked between the two of them. “Shy?”
“No.” Maki said, grinning like she was in on the best joke in the world. “Dangerous.”
Toge gave a small wave from under the cherry blossoms. His fingers move. He was clumsily fingerspelling. “Nice to meet you.”
It was slow, a little clumsy. You caught the hesitation in his gestures, like he wasn’t used to signing but had tried to learn anyway.
“Nice to meet you too.” You signed back, smiling. “Are you learning?”
He nodded and quickly picked up a small notebook from his gym bag. Quickly writing something on it.
“I’m trying to. Just know a few basics now.”
You tilted your head and offered a thumbs-up. His eyes crinkled slightly above his collar, it looked like he was smiling. He pulled his collar down slightly, just enough so you could see his lips.
“Salmon.”
You blinked. Then looked at Maki.
“He does that.” She said, unbothered. “Cursed speech. Every word he says has power, so he mostly sticks to food names. Don’t worry, you’ll learn his weird code eventually.”
“So he can’t speak?” You asked.
“He can. Just shouldn’t.” Panda chimed in. “If he says ‘stop,’ you stop. If he says ‘explode,’ well…” He shrugged. “You get it.”
You watched Toge again. There was something fascinating about him, he was silent by choice, unlike you. You wondered what it felt like to have your words come with that much power.
And if that power made him lonely.
Maki slung an arm around your shoulder. “C’mon, new kid. We’ve got a combat assessment in fifteen, and I need a warm-up target.”
You smirked. “You’re assuming you’ll land a hit.”
She grinned wider. “I like you already.”
You turned back to glance at Toge once more, but he was already walking behind you, a respectful distance away, hands tucked in his pockets, calm and unreadable.
The silent one.
You adjusted your duffel bag and stepped further into your new life.
——————————————————————————
Combat training at Tokyo Jujutsu High was nothing like your old school.
For one, there was a talking panda throwing trees. For another, Maki hit like a semi truck.
You’d barely finished stretching when she took the first swing. It was fast, precise, and clearly not meant to hurt you, just to test your reflexes.
You dodged. Barely.
“Nice.” Maki said, adjusting her grip on her staff. “You’re not just cosplay.”
You responded with a sharp jab of your own, crafting a minor barrier to redirect her staff mid-swing. She blinked as her weapon ricocheted off your technique, harmless.
“Oh.” She said, grinning. “You’re one of those.”
The sparring continued, and though Maki landed most of the hits, you managed to keep her on her toes. She liked that. You could tell by the way she started calling out playful insults mid-fight. You read her lips well enough, though a few curse words were new to your mental vocabulary.
Meanwhile, Panda stood on the sidelines clapping like a proud dad at a T-ball game.
But it was Toge you kept catching in your peripheral vision.
He sat cross-legged by the edge of the mat, notebook on his lap, watching you fight like he was studying a language. Quiet, observant, unreadable. But his eyes followed every movement, especially yours.
After the session, while you and Maki flopped onto the cool grass, sweaty and bruised, Toge stood and made his way over.
He held out a small carton of strawberry milk.
You blinked. Accepted it and signed. “Thank you.”
He nodded, crouched beside you, and opened his notebook. He flipped to a page that had a few messy attempts at fingerspelling drawn across it. Underneath, in neat block letters, were the words.
“You’re strong. Good reflexes.”
You signed, “You write compliments in advance?”
He shrugged, a little sheepishly. Then signed slowly, “Practice.”
Maki leaned over, squinting at the page. “He’s been practicing for weeks. Since Gojo told us you were coming.”
That caught you off guard.
Toge glanced sideways at her, then down again, pretending to brush dirt off his page.
“For me?” You signed, eyebrows raised.
He hesitated… then nodded.
Your cheeks flushed faintly. You quickly looked down and opened your milk carton. “You didn’t have to,” you mouthed, but you weren’t sure he caught it.
Panda wandered over, plopped down on the grass, and threw an arm over Toge’s shoulder like an oversized teddy bear. “He was worried you wouldn’t like him and that you would feel lonely here.”
Your gaze flicked to Toge, surprised. He didn't look at you, but his ears were a little pink.
Maki smirked. “He’s a big softie. Doesn’t talk much, but he makes up for it with snacks and overthinking.”
Toge muttered “Mustard leaf” dryly.
Panda gasped. “How dare you.”
You were still trying not to smile as you drained the strawberry milk. The three of them were strange, intense, and chaotic in a way that made your head spin.
But you didn’t feel like an outsider here. Not exactly. You were used to people treating you like someone they had to accommodate. But this was different.
Toge had practiced for you. Weeks in advance. You weren’t sure how to say thank you in a way that really conveyed it.
So instead, you tapped his arm gently and signed, “Want to train with me tomorrow?”
He looked up at you, and for the first time, you saw it. A tiny smile hidden just behind his collar, crinkling the corners of his eyes. He nodded.
Then raised his hand. “Tuna.”
You tilted your head. “That’s a yes?”
Panda nodded sagely. “Tuna is yes. Salmon is neutral. Mustard leaf is no. They vary a bit sometimes but we keep a glossary, don’t worry.”
“Don’t show her the glossary yet.” Maki added with a grin. “Half the fun is guessing.”
——————————————————————————
The next few days fell into a rhythm. Training, meals, group assignments. You got used to the quiet way Toge lingered near you without saying a word. At first, you thought he was shy. But you quickly learned that that wasn’t the case, he was just… intentional.
You taught him a few more signs each day. He was a fast learner, surprisingly expressive once his hands got used to the motion.
In turn, he began slipping you notes during class or mealtimes. They started simple:
“Your barrier work is cool.”
“Nice form during drills today.”
“I think Panda is hiding snacks in the broom closet.”
Eventually, they got bolder:
“Your laugh is pretty.”
“I like sitting next to you.”
“Can I train with you again tomorrow, please?”
The last note had a tiny sketch of his signature rice ball on the corner. You stared at it a little too long before answering yes.
You found yourself waiting for his gaze during class. His quiet attention had stopped feeling like observation, it felt like companionship.
Toge didn’t use his voice often, but when he did, it was in carefully controlled bursts during combat. You’d seen it once, during a joint exercise, when a simulated curse got too close to Maki. Toge whispered, “Sleep” and the thing crumpled in place like a marionette with cut strings.
You felt the shiver of cursed energy run down your spine even from twenty meters away.
And yet, that same person passed you a note the next day that said:
“Do you like horror movies?”
You answered with a drawing of a popcorn bucket and a terrified stick figure under a blanket.
——————————————————————————
By the end of the week, everyone noticed.
Panda teased you both mercilessly. Maki tried not to smirk when she caught you “accidentally” sitting closer to Toge during lunch. You didn’t mind. It felt… safe. Earnest.
You hadn’t expected to make a friend so quickly.
You definitely hadn’t expected the friend to be the quietest boy in school, or that he’d make you feel more heard than anyone else ever had.
——————————————————————————
Your favorite part of the day quickly became the late afternoons.
Not the mornings when Panda was too chipper for someone with paws, or the chaotic training hours when Maki hit you with her staff "in the name of love." No, it was those golden post-mission, post-lunch hours when the world seemed to slow down, when you and Toge found yourselves alone on the school rooftop or beneath the shade of the courtyard trees.
He always brought snacks. Always.
Today it was a small box of taiyaki that was warm, slightly squished fish-shaped pastries stuffed with red bean paste. He handed you one silently, settled down beside you on the bench, and opened his notebook again.
“This one’s my favorite. I hope you like it.”
You took a bite and smiled. “I do.”
He watched you eat for a second, then scribbled something else.
“You always make the same face when you eat something good.”
You blinked. “What face?”
He looked at you with a straight face, then exaggerated the way your eyes softened and your mouth turned up just slightly. He looked more like a confused cat than anything, but you got the idea.
You nudged his shoulder, laughing soundlessly. Then you signed. “You’re observant.”
He tapped his head. “I have to be.”
You nodded slowly. “So do I.”
The breeze picked up, rustling the pages of his notebook and your hair. Neither of you moved to speak or sign for a while. But it wasn’t uncomfortable. It was the kind of quiet that felt like sitting inside a favorite book.
You watched a crow land on the fence nearby, tilting its head. It cawed twice, then flapped away. Toge scribbled again.
“If I had to guess your technique, I’d say it’s about control. You’re calm. Measured. Your barriers are precise.”
You read it twice.
“You really do notice a lot more than you let on.” You signed.
He shrugged. “Can’t talk. Have to listen.”
You nodded. Then tapped your chest gently, signing. “Same.”
It wasn’t dramatic. It wasn’t a huge breakthrough. But something in his eyes softened, like he hadn’t realized, until now, just how much you might understand each other.
——————————————————————————
Over the next few weeks, the bond you shared quietly deepened.
Toge stopped using his notebook as much. Instead, he fingerspelled more, started learning compound signs, even mimicked your casual gestures when you were explaining something. You caught him practicing behind buildings sometimes, watching his own hands carefully like they were puzzle pieces.
You started noticing his small habits too. Like how he always handed you the better snack first. How he tilted his head slightly when he was confused, like a curious puppy. Or how he always lingered just long enough to walk beside you, but never too close.
He respected your space. But somehow, he always ended up inside it anyway.
Once, during a weekend spar, you twisted your ankle landing a jump. It wasn’t serious but it did suck. Maki was busy being impressed with her own move, and Panda was trying to replicate it with a broomstick.
Toge crouched beside you immediately. “Hurt?”
You signed back. “A little.”
He hesitated, then tapped his fingers against your shin, just a gentle brush. “Permission?”
You nodded.
He pressed a small ice pack into your hand, then unwrapped a bandage from his jacket pocket and began wrapping your ankle with careful precision.
“You always carry medical supplies?”
He signed back. “You always fall on your face?”
You scowled, and he gave you that slight crinkle-eyed smile again.
Touch wasn’t something you usually allowed from people. But Toge wasn’t pushing. He offered, waited, and moved with a kind of softness that felt rare in your world of curses and chaos.
That night, you found another note tucked into your locker:
“You’re the strongest person I’ve met who doesn’t need to shout about it.”
You stared at it for a long time, folded it carefully, and slipped it into your sketchbook.
——————————————————————————
One evening, after dinner, you found Toge sitting alone under the sakura trees again, legs crossed, notebook unopened in his lap. The blossoms hadn’t bloomed yet, but the air smelled like something was about to begin.
You approached, sat beside him wordlessly. For a while, neither of you signed.
Then you took out a small whiteboard from your backpack. A gift from one of your old teachers. You rarely used it, but today felt different.
You wrote:
“I used to think silence meant loneliness. Now it feels like peace.”
He read it, then took the marker.
“Same.”
You smiled, then added:
“You make it easier.”
He paused. Then signed very slowly, very deliberately. “You make me brave.”
Your heart did a little summersault that you tried very hard to ignore. He was looking straight at you when he said it with his hands, with his eyes, with every careful inch of him.
You wanted to say something equally meaningful.
So, naturally, you signed. “You still owe me more taiyaki.”
He looked at you flatly. Then raised a finger. “Tuna.”
Yes.
——————————————————————————
By the time March rolled in, the cherry trees began blooming and you had developed a rhythm with Toge that was so natural it almost scared you.
He’d sit next to you during study periods and help quiz you with flashcards using only signs. You’d write small jokes or doodles in his notebook when he left it open. You began teasing him more. Light sarcasm, exaggerated gestures, drawing little hearts on his pages just to watch his ears turn pink.
He retaliated by hiding rice balls in your locker.
Somehow, this quiet, slow thing between you felt more real than any rushed conversation you’d had with anyone before.
——————————————————————————
One night, you were both walking back from a short mission. Clearing a minor curse near the outskirts of the city. Nothing dangerous, but it had taken longer than expected. The sky was a soft indigo, painted with stars.
You stopped at a vending machine outside the station. Toge pointed to a can of hot cocoa. You nodded. He got two.
As you waited for the train, sipping quietly side by side, you signed. “Do you ever wish you could talk?”
He was quiet for a long moment. Then replied. “Not around you.” You blinked. He added. “You listen. I don’t need to speak.”
And just like that, your heart did another flip.
——————————————————————————
You didn’t expect to get paired with Toge for your first real joint mission without supervision.
“Low-grade curse.” Maki said, tossing you a file. “Warehouse in Saitama. Should be easy. No fatalities yet, but the locals keep reporting headaches, nausea, and weird dreams.”
Panda leaned over your shoulder and whispered, “Probably just expired miso.”
Toge raised a hand and signed. “Dream curses are unpredictable.”
Yaga nodded. “That’s why I want two of you. You’ll watch each other’s backs.”
You glanced at Toge. He glanced back, then gave a quiet nod. “Tuna.”
The train ride was quiet, just the two of you watching the blur of city lights pass the windows. You didn’t need to fill the silence. Sometimes, just having him there was enough. You passed your time sketching out a barrier formation on your phone while Toge wrote in his notebook.
He tapped your sleeve and held up a page.
“Do you get nervous before missions?”
You hesitated. Then nodded. He nodded back, like he understood more than he could say.
“Me too.”
You smiled. Then signed. “I’m glad it’s you.”
He looked at you for a second longer than necessary, then nodded.
“Me too.”
——————————————————————————
The warehouse was bigger than expected.
It stood like an abandoned skeleton, sagging under the weight of time. Vines crawled up the rusted siding. The inside was dust and shadows, rows of cracked crates and broken forklifts.
You both stepped in carefully, staying close. Toge held a finger to his lips, not that you needed the gesture, but it made you smile anyway.
You could feel it, the cursed energy hanging thick in the air, like damp fog clinging to your skin.
It didn’t take long to find the source.
A spirit, bloated and lopsided, slithered out from behind an old pillar. Its body was stitched together from fragments of nightmares, faces overlapping, eyes blinking from the wrong places. It let out a screech that scraped against your bones.
You moved fast. Barriers snapped into place like instinct, shielding Toge as he darted left. He threw a handful of kunai and signed. “Distract it.”
You nodded and activated your formation, drawing its attention with a flash of cursed light. The creature lunged, teeth bared.
Toge’s voice cracked the air like thunder. “Don’t move.”
The curse’s body locked mid-lunge, frozen. Its limbs twitched, then buckled. You didn’t hesitate, your barrier needles spiraled into its chest, and with one final shriek, it evaporated into smoke.
You were breathing hard when the dust settled, your body humming with the aftermath of adrenaline.
Toge touched your shoulder gently. “Are you okay?”
You nodded, then grinned and signed. “Nice timing.”
He signed back. “Nice aim.”
And for a moment, the warehouse didn’t feel haunted anymore. Just quiet. Just… calm.
——————————————————————————
Back at the school, Toge was quieter than usual, even for him.
You found him the next morning sitting under the sakura trees again, sipping tea from a paper cup. You joined him, tugging your hoodie tighter against the morning chill.
He passed you a folded note before you could sign anything.
“I was scared I might hurt you yesterday.”
You looked at him. He didn’t meet your eyes.
You wrote back on your whiteboard.
“You didn’t. You helped me.”
He finally looked up.
“You always help me.” You added, then signed it again. Slowly. So he could watch your hands.
Toge hesitated, then nodded. His fingers hovered like he wanted to say something more but instead, he reached into his jacket and handed you something wrapped in paper.
You blinked. Unwrapped it.
It was a taiyaki. This one was warm, fresh. Custard this time.
You signed and smiled brightly at him. “Did you make this?”
He nodded. Your heart did that annoying flutter thing again.
You wrote:
“You’re getting dangerous. I might fall for you if you keep feeding me.”
You meant it as a joke.
You didn’t expect his ears to turn pink again. Or the way his hands stilled completely in his lap, unsure.
Then, slowly, he took your whiteboard and wrote:
“Would that be bad?”
You stared.
You stared so long he almost erased it but you covered his hand with yours before he could.
“No” You signed softly. “It don’t think it would be bad.”
——————————————————————————
After that, things shifted.
Not in a dramatic, firework way. But in the little things.
He started sitting closer. You found excuses to brush your fingers against his sleeve. He’d bring two drinks instead of one without asking. You’d start signing jokes during lectures just to see him hide his laughter behind his collar.
You still hadn’t said it. Not really.
But it was there.
One evening, Maki cornered you behind the training grounds. “Just kiss him already.”
You choked on your energy drink. “What?”
“You heard me.” She said, grinning. “You both act like you’re married, but neither of you has the spine to make it official.”
You signed back, half-laughing a bit awkwardly. “He hasn’t said anything.”
“He won’t.” She said bluntly. “Not out loud. That’s your job.”
——————————————————————————
The next week, Toge invited you to the edge of the forest just behind the school. It was quiet, almost dreamlike. The moon spilling silver over moss and stone. You recognized the spot. It was where the third-years used to meditate.
You sat beside him. He passed you a tiny folded paper crane. Inside it was a note.
“You make the silence feel full.”
You looked at him, then signed slowly so he could understand. “You make it feel like someone is always listening.”
He didn’t move.
So you reached over and gently tugged his hand into yours.
He froze. But didn’t pull away.
Instead, he turned to you and signed back. “I want to be near you, even when I can’t speak.”
You answered the only way you could of in that moment.
By leaning your head against his shoulder.
——————————————————————————
The following days were filled with near-misses.
Moments where you almost said it. Almost signed it. Almost reached out and pulled him in by the collar and kissed him until you forgot why you’d waited so long.
But each time, something stopped you. Not fear. Not uncertainty. Just… patience.
Because even if it was unspoken, it wasn’t unsaid. Toge’s feelings were there in every small kindness, every carefully signed question, every quiet second spent at your side even when no one else stayed.
You didn’t need to rush.
But still… your heart itched with wanting.
——————————————————————————
It wasn’t until the school was hit by a freak storm that everything changed.
Thunder cracked overhead like the world was tearing at the seams. Most students had gone home for the weekend, but you’d stayed behind, training, of course. You weren’t surprised to find Toge had stayed too.
By the time the storm reached its peak, the power flickered out.
You stood in the middle of the empty dorm hallway, flashlight in hand, heart skipping with every rumble of thunder.
Then a tap on your shoulder. Toge.
He signed. “You okay?”
You nodded. “You?”
He hesitated. Then tilted his hand side-to-side. “So-so.”
You cocked your head. “You don’t like storms?”
He shook his head.
You signed again, slower this time. “Do you want company?”
He gave you a tiny nod, almost guilty. So you followed him back to his dorm room.
It was smaller than yours, surprisingly clean, the walls almost fully covered in different kinds of posters except for a calendar with rice ball stickers marking random days. He offered you tea, gestured for you to sit on the futon while he fiddled with a battery-powered lamp.
When the soft light filled the room, you saw it clearly for the first time.
The drawings on his desk. You recognized your own hands, signs sketched over and over. Notes with arrows pointing to different positions. Little side comments like “thumb higher”, “eyebrows matter more than you think”, and “she laughs when I mess this one up.”
You didn’t realize how tight your chest felt until you exhaled. Toge followed your gaze, then froze.
He moved quickly, as if to hide them but you caught his hand.
“You practiced this much?” You signed, heart swelling.
He nodded once. Then looked at the floor.
You gently pulled him back toward the futon and made him sit. Then you signed. “You make me feel understood. That’s rare.”
He looked up at you, eyes open and full of something so much deeper than any spoken word.
“You make me feel safe.”
He watched your hands like they were precious.
Then reached for his notebook. You stopped him with a shake of your head.
“No notebook.”
He looked confused. You took a breath, touched your fingertips to your chin, and signed slowly:
“I like you.”
His eyes widened.
Then, tenderly, like the motion had weight, he reached out and mirrored the sign back to you.
“I like you too.”
Your fingers touched, briefly, as the signs faded.
Then he moved, hesitant and gentle, and pressed his forehead to yours.
You closed your eyes, every nerve lit with quiet, aching affection. No rush. No loud declarations. Just presence. Pressure. The soft shared air of something becoming real.
And finally, after all this time, you leaned forward and kissed him.
It was slow. Careful. Not clumsy, just new. His lips were warm. His breath shallow. His hands didn’t grip or pull, they just hovered near your jaw, reverent, steady.
You felt everything he wanted to say in that moment.
And when you pulled back, you were already smiling.
So was he.
You tapped your chest again. Signed. “You’re my favorite quiet.”
He responded, both hands shaking slightly, with something you hadn’t seen him use before.
He signed back. “You’re my voice.”
And that was it. That was everything.
——————————————————————————
Later, you lay side by side under his thin blanket, facing each other in the soft glow of the lamp. You hadn’t meant to stay. But neither of you asked, not wanting to part ways just yet.
He touched your hand lightly under the covers and signed. “Do you think they’ll tease us?”
You smiled. “Panda already suspects everything.”
He laughed softly. “Maki will say, ‘finally.’” Toge chuckled, soundless but clear. You laughed too, your fingers brushing his. He signed slowly again. “I’ve never wanted to say so much… until I met you.”
You touched your thumb to your lips, then placed it over his heart. He placed his hand over yours.
And for the first time, there was no need for a notebook. No need for perfect timing.
Because silence was no longer the absence of words. It was where you both spoke clearest.
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Summary: Sukuna is in charge of babysitting his little nephew for an evening, should be easy enough right? Turns out it isn’t so he finds himself knocking at his annoying neighbour’s door.
CW (content warning): cuteness overload, modern AU (no curses), ooc Sukuna (he’s kinda nice), Sukuna is an architect for literally mo reason, some light cursing.
AN: This is way too long because I got too into it hahahah but I think really like how this turned out 🤍 English isn’t my first language so I’m sorry if there’re any mistakes. Hope you enjoy and let me know what you think! :)
Requests are open so feel free to send yours! (you can check the list of character I write for on my pinned post)
Masterlist
There were very few things that could rattle Sukuna Ryomen. Earthquakes, client meltdowns, the occasional burst pipe on-site, those were all things he could handle effortlessly. But standing in his living room in a faded black hoodie, sweatpants, and socks that hadn’t matched since 9 a.m., he was definitely rattled.
The source of his current crisis was none other than a pink-haired five-year-old named Yuji, his nephew.
The kid was adorable. When he was asleep. Awake? He was a human pinball, a juice-powered chaos gremlin with endless questions and zero fear.
“Uncle Suku, can I feed the fish again?” Yuji called, already climbing onto the kitchen counter.
“We don’t have a fish!” Sukuna snapped, catching a juice box midair. “That’s my garlic press!”
Yuji grinned, completely unbothered, as he jumped down and ran in circles around the coffee table, dragging what used to be a potted plant behind him like a leash.
It was only noon.
Sukuna pinched the bridge of his nose. His sister had begged him, really begged him, to babysit while she and her husband attended a last-minute emergency at her office. He’d said yes because he was a responsible adult with a flexible work-from-home schedule and because, well, he wasn’t heartless.
But this? This was slowly turning into a war of attrition.
He tried distracting Yuji with cartoons. Didn’t work. Tried coloring. Yuji drew on the wall. Tried snacks. The living room now smelled like stale applesauce and childhood regrets.
Sukuna’s eye twitched as a toy firetruck zipped past him and hit the front door.
He needed backup. But not just any backup. His neighbor. He stared at the wall separating his apartment from hers.
You’d lived next door for about six months. Too cheerful. Too nosy. Always humming in the hallways and leaving little potted plants outside your door like this was some rom-com set instead of a downtown apartment building.
And you loved to get on his nerves.
Whenever he bumped into you in the hallway, it was like sparring with a cartoon character. You smiled too much. Talked too much. You once called his very expensive minimalist furniture “cold serial killer chic” and he still hadn’t forgiven you.
But Yuji liked you. A lot. And right now? Sukuna was desperate.
With a long-suffering sigh, he knocked on your door. It opened a few seconds later, revealing you in leggings, a hoodie, and fuzzy socks. You were holding a mug that said BITE ME in cheerful bubble letters.
Your eyes widened. “Well, well. If it isn’t Mr. Brooding himself. Need to borrow a cup of angst?”
“Help me.” Sukuna said flatly.
You blinked. “Sorry, come again?”
He cleared his throat. “I said… Help. Me.” He said it like the mere act of those words leaving his lips physically hurt him. It probably did in fact.
You leaned in slightly, eyes twinkling. “Did you swallow a thumbtack, or did you actually just ask me for help?”
“Yuji.” He said simply, gesturing behind him. A loud crash followed.
Your smile widened. “Say no more.”
——————————————————————————
Fifteen minutes later, you were in his apartment, crouched on the carpet, helping Yuji build a pillow fort. The kid had immediately latched onto you like a magnet, and you? You looked completely at ease.
Sukuna watched, leaning against the kitchen counter, arms crossed.
“Okay, Yuji, your mission, should you choose to accept it, is to guard this pillow castle from the evil broccoli overlords.”
“Broccoli is gross!” Yuji shouted.
“Exactly!” You said solemnly. “They must be stopped.”
Yuji saluted you. “Yes, General!”
Sukuna felt like he’d stepped into an alternate universe. One were his heart did weird things when he saw you laughing at something his little nephew did. He wasn’t handling it well.
“How do you do that?” He asked finally.
You didn’t even look up. “Do what?”
“That. Handle him like you’re some sort of… tiny human whisperer.”
You shrugged. “It’s not that hard. He just wants to play. And not be barked at like he’s a military recruit.”
Sukuna scowled. “I wasn’t… Okay, maybe a little. But in my defense, he colored on my tax documents.”
You laughed. “Honestly? That’s kind of iconic.”
He groaned. “Of course you’d say that.”
Yuji popped up from behind the couch. “Uncle Suku, can she stay forever?”
He sputtered. “No.”
“Yes.” you said at the same time.
Yuji laughed, then returned to his fort.
Sukuna rubbed the back of his neck. “Thanks for stepping in.”
You waved him off. “I love this stuff. Chaos is my natural habitat.”
“I can tell.” He muttered, eyeing the glitter stuck to your sleeve.
You grinned. “Admit it. You’re relieved I came over.”
He looked away. “I… You’re not entirely useless, I guess.”
“A glowing review.” You said. “Should I write that on my resume?”
You ended up staying all afternoon. Sukuna tried to pretend he was annoyed by it, but the truth was… the apartment felt lighter with you in it. Your laughter made Yuji light up. Your presence calmed the room. You even helped him clean up after Yuji crashed for a nap on the couch, completely worn out from fort-building and broccoli slaying.
“You want tea?” He asked, half-grumbling.
You raised an eyebrow. “Are you offering because you’re being polite, or because you’ve realized I’m delightful?”
He sighed, dragging a hand through his hair. “I’m offering because you stopped him from destroying my apartment and my will to live. Tea is the least I can do.”
“Romantic.” You said dryly. “But sure.”
He handed you a mug and sat across from you at the table, eyes half-lidded, arms folded.
The silence was surprisingly… comfortable.
“I still don’t get why you hate me.” You said after a moment.
“I don’t hate you.”
“You kind of do.” You smirked.
He exhaled. “You’re loud.”
“And?”
“Too cheerful.”
“And?”
“You rearranged the mailboxes that one time.”
You laughed. “Because they were in the wrong order. You’re such a Virgo.”
“I’m a Scorpio.”
“That tracks too.”
He gave you a look, but the edge in his eyes was softened by something else. Amusement?
“Okay.” You said, sipping your tea. “Let’s lay it out. You’re grumpy and tense. I’m sunshine and rainbows. Opposites attract.”
“Are you flirting with me?”
“Maybe,” You said with a shrug. “Is it working?”
Sukuna opened his mouth, then shut it. For the first time in years Ryomen Sukuna had been rendered speechless. The silence stretched for a bit.
Then he stood and walked to the sink, muttering, “You’re insufferable.”
You smiled behind your mug. Because you knew that in Sukuna language that wasn’t a no.
——————————————————————————
You came over again the next weekend.
This time, Sukuna asked. Not begged. Not pleaded. Just a text that read:
You busy? Yuji’s back. Bring sugar.
You arrived ten minutes later with cupcakes and a grin.
Over the next few weeks, it became a pattern. Sukuna watched Yuji during the day. You popped over to help when you could. The three of you became an oddly functional little trio.
You learned that Sukuna was surprisingly good at drawing. That he secretly loved cooking shows. That he kept extra fuzzy blankets but pretended they were for guests.
He learned that you used sarcasm as a shield. That your last relationship ended because someone told you to “stop being so much.” That you secretly worried you were too loud for quiet people like him.
He told you, one night while Yuji was snoring in the other room “You’re not too much. People just suck.”
You smiled so hard it hurt.
He noticed. He was utterly screwed.
——————————————————————————
The day it all changed, Yuji had just left with his mom, and the apartment was quiet again. You were helping Sukuna pack away the last of the kid’s toys.
You held up a plastic lightsaber. “I’m keeping this.”
“You literally didn’t buy it.”
“I earned it with emotional labor.”
Sukuna smirked. “You’re ridiculous.”
You put the lightsaber down and looked at him.
He was closer than you thought. Still in his black hoodie, hair a little messy, he had red finger paint smudged on his left cheek and his eyes were dark and unreadable.
“I like you, you know?” You said softly.
He didn’t respond right away. Then he stepped forward. His hand found your waist.
And just like that he kissed you.
It was warm and slow and soft in a way that made your heart ache. No snark. No banter. Just the press of his lips on yours and the quiet hum of understanding between two people who had somehow, impossibly, become each other’s favorite chaos. When he pulled back, you blinked in shock, your heart almost beating out of your chest.
“Wow.” You whispered. “That was…”
“I should’ve done that weeks ago.” He said.
You smiled. “You absolutely should’ve.”
He hesitated, only for a moment, just enough to make you squirm a bit. “Wanna go out sometime? Like, a real date. No Legos involved.”
You looped your arms around his neck. “Only if you promise to let me win at Mario Kart.”
“Not a chance.”
“Then I’m in.” You beamed at him.
——————————————————————————
The first date was his idea. Which, honestly? Surprised both of you.
It started with a knock on your door, three days after the kiss. You opened it expecting mail or a neighbor with a Wi-Fi emergency. Instead, there was Sukuna, in a navy-blue jacket, holding a small paper bag and looking like he’d spent twenty minutes pacing before mustering the courage to ring your bell.
He cleared his throat. “Put on shoes. I’m taking you somewhere.”
You blinked. “Wow. So romantic. You didn’t even offer me a rose or tell me to pack a bag for a mysterious getaway.”
“I brought food.” He held up the bag like it was a peace treaty.
“What is it?”
“Gyoza from that place you like. The one with the sarcastic waiter.”
You smiled, grabbing your coat. “You’re lucky I’m easy.”
He muttered something that sounded suspiciously like “That’s debatable”, but his ears were pink.
——————————————————————————
The date started at a park. Sukuna led you to a quiet, tree-lined path, where you sat on a bench under the soft glow of streetlamps. The weather was cool, the sky cloudy, and for some reason, it felt oddly cinematic.
“You brought me to a park?” You teased. “What are we, eighty?”
“I considered a rooftop, but someone’s afraid of pigeons.”
“I was attacked once.” You said firmly. “They’re sky rats.”
Sukuna rolled his eyes and handed you the gyoza bag. “Eat before you get even more dramatic.”
You bit into a dumpling, humming contentedly. “You know, I never expected you to be the ‘pack a picnic and stroll through the park’ kind of guy.”
“I’m not. But you like this kind of stuff.”
You paused mid-chew. He kept looking straight ahead, refusing to meet your eyes.
“You remembered I like this?”
He shrugged. “You talk a lot. Stuff sticks.”
Your chest tightened with that stupid, fluttery ache that happened every time he did something unexpectedly sweet.
And of course, being you, you couldn’t help but push a little. “So… is this your idea of boyfriend material?”
He gave you a dry look. “Don’t push it.”
“I dunno…” You teased, bumping his shoulder with yours playfully. “I might have to make you a Pinterest board.”
“If you do, I’ll set your phone on fire.”
You giggled, and for the first time that evening, he smiled. A real one. Small, lopsided, and rare as hell.
You didn't kiss that night. You both kind of wanted to, but something about it felt too… gentle. Like rushing would break it.
So instead, you walked home with him in silence, hands brushing occasionally. When you reached your door, he said, “Same time next week?”
You grinned. “Only if you bring dessert.”
——————————————————————————
By the third date, he was holding your hand.
By the fourth, he’d let you see his apartment’s second bedroom, the one filled with sketchbooks and drafting tables and old, half-finished models of buildings.
He told you, without looking at you. “I used to want to design theaters.”
You sat beside him on the floor, tracing your fingers over the paper. “Why didn’t you?”
He shrugged. “Money. Clients want modern. Steel and glass. Emotionless. Easy to clean.”
You whispered, “But you wanted magic.”
He looked at you then, really looked at you, and said quietly. “Still do.”
That was the night he kissed you again. Not a maybe-kiss, not a I’ve-wanted-to-do-this-for-weeks kiss.
It was a you matter to me kiss.
And that’s when it started.
——————————————————————————
The relationship, if you could even call it that at first, was chaotic.
You were still neighbors. Still bickered like you were trying to win a verbal UFC match. But now he’d kiss you when you were mid-rant. Now you’d steal his hoodies like it was your God-given right. Now you sat on his kitchen counter and kicked your feet while he cooked, and he let you eat the last dumpling without pretending to fight you for it.
Yuji figured it out before either of you said anything.
One Saturday morning, while you were helping him build a pillow fort version 3.0, he looked up and said, “Are you Uncle Suku’s girlfriend now?”
You blinked. “Uh…”
Sukuna, from the other side of the room, said “Yuji.” In almost a warning tone.
“What?” The kid said, frowning. “She’s here all the time. And you kiss. That’s what girlfriends do.”
You covered your face with a pillow.
Sukuna walked over, ruffled Yuji’s hair, and said, “You’re too observant for your own good.”
Yuji beamed. “Does that mean I can call her Auntie?”
“No- ” You and Sukuna said at the same time.
Yuji pouted. “Lame.”
——————————————————————————
It was bumpy, of course. Sukuna didn’t exactly slide into domesticity. The first time you left your hairbrush in his bathroom, he stared at it like it was a live grenade.
“You’re moving in?”
You blinked. “It’s a brush, not a lease agreement.”
“I’m just saying, that’s how it starts. First the brush. Then you’re here every night. Then I wake up and there’s throw pillows on my bed.”
“God forbid you experience lumbar support.”
Eventually, though, he got used to it. You being there. Your humming in the morning. Your socks in his drawer. The way you curled up on his couch and tucked your feet under his thigh like you belonged there.
One night, after too much wine and too many old horror movies, you looked at him,flushed and sleepy, and said, “I think I’m in love with you.”
He froze.
You panicked. “I mean, not like in love in love. Not in a weird way. Just, like, casual love. Like a chill-”
He kissed you. Long. Firm. No hesitation.
When he pulled back, he said “I love you too. Ever since you knocked on my door with a batch of welcome cupcakes.”
You blinked. “You don’t say anything for ten minutes and then just- ?!”
“I was trying not to freak out, okay?” He snapped. “You caught me off guard.”
You snorted. “You? Mr. Stoic? Freaked out?”
He grumbled. “Shut up.”
But you didn’t.
You laughed, leaned into his chest, and said once again “I love you.”
And this time, he whispered it back immediately.
——————————————————————————
Dating Sukuna was like learning a new language.
He didn’t always say the right things. Sometimes he snapped when he meant to ask. Sometimes he shut down when he should’ve opened up. But he showed love in small, quiet gestures.
A thermos of your favorite tea on his counter when you were sick. An extra key on your keyring that you definitely hadn’t put there. A grumble of “Don’t be late” when you had a big meeting.
And you? You loved out loud. Sticky notes on his mirror. Spontaneous takeout at midnight. Kisses on the back of his neck while he worked on new sketches.
You argued, of course. Loudly. Often. Once about the right way to fold towels. Another time about whether Die Hard was a Christmas movie, which, by the way, you won. Once about the color of a shower curtain.
But the make-ups were always worth it.
Sometimes that meant soft apologies whispered under the covers. Sometimes it meant passionate, desperate kisses against the kitchen counter.
Sometimes it meant cuddling on the couch with Yuji between you, asleep, while the TV played forgotten cartoons in the background.
——————————————————————————
One night, months into the chaos, you were curled up on Sukuna’s bed, flipping through one of his sketchbooks. He was brushing his teeth, hair damp from the shower, wearing the gray sweatpants that absolutely should’ve been illegal.
You held up a sketch of a tiny theater with stained glass windows and velvet curtains.
“I love this one.”
He spat into the sink. “Old. From college.”
“Why didn’t you build it?”
He shrugged. “Too sentimental. No one wants that crap.”
You hesitated. “I do.”
He glanced at you in the mirror.
You closed the book. “I want all your sentimental crap. All of it. The weird sketches. The hoodie you never wear but won’t throw away. The grumpy texts. The yelling. The quiet. I want all of it.”
He turned. You waited.
Then, softly, he said, “You already have it.”
You smiled. “Even the hoodie?”
“Especially the hoodie.”
You laughed, and he climbed into bed beside you, pulling you into his chest.
——————————————————————————
Six months after the first kiss, you officially moved in. Not all at once, it started with your toiletries, then your sweaters, then somehow your cat, who terrorised Sukuna for the first week.
The building super made a joke about it one day in the hallway.“You two finally caved, huh?”
Sukuna just smirked, one hand on your lower back.
“Better than her breaking into my apartment every other night.”
You elbowed him. “I never broke in.”
“You climbed through the fire escape.”
“Once!”
“You brought tacos.” He conceded. “So I let it slide.”
——————————————————————————
One morning, while brushing your teeth beside him, you looked at him in the mirror and said, “You know I love you, right?”
He met your eyes. “I know.”
“And you… love me too?”
He leaned down, kissed your toothpaste-foamed cheek, and said “Unfortunately.”
You grinned.
It wasn’t perfect. But it was yours.
A slow-burn romance with yelling and laughter and pizza stains. A relationship built on bickering and babysitting and the most unhinged five-year-old matchmaker alive.
And somehow, against all odds? It worked.
——————————————————————————
You two had decided to keep your relationship to yourselves for a while, not that you were ashamed of it because you weren’t in the slightest. You just wanted to enjoy the peace and quiet of living in your own little bubble, but given that there was a five-years-old that was the embodiment of ADHD that knew… the secret was meant to come out rather sooner than later.
It happened at a family barbecue. A simple, innocent Sunday afternoon.
Sukuna’s sister had invited him, meaning, both of you to her house just outside the city because she wanted to thank you for “Not allowing her brother to throw Yuki out of the window”. It was a yearly tradition: kids running around, way too much food, and at least one uncle getting into an argument about lawn maintenance.
You didn’t expect much. Just decent grilled corn, a slightly-overcooked burger, and maybe a chance to mess with Sukuna’s head by being overly charming to his extended family.
You didn’t expect Yuji to completely detonate your secret relationship like a tiny pink-haired grenade.
——————————————————————————
“I told you.” Sukuna muttered as you got out of the car. “My family is nosy.”
You slipped on your sunglasses. “And I told you: I’m adorable. They’ll love me.”
He gave you a deadpan look. “You stole my last piece of cheesecake last night.”
“And yet you still let me wear your hoodie this morning. That’s love, baby.”
He made a noise that could’ve been a scoff or a suppressed laugh. You counted it as a win either way.
You walked into the backyard hand-in-hand, a detail you both completely forgot until it was too late. Music was playing, kids were screaming, and the smell of charcoal filled the air.
Sukuna’s sister came over first, grinning. “There he is! The brooding menace himself.” She said as she hugged the brooding tattooed man next to you. “And his emotional support ray of sunshine.” She beamed at you, as she embraced you.
She laughed as hugged you both. “It’s about time you brought her around again. Yuji hasn’t shut up about her.”
“Of course not.” You said. “I’m his favorite adult.”
“Excuse me?” Sukuna said.
“I don’t make him eat vegetables.”
“You bribed him with marshmallows to get him to brush his teeth.”
“And it worked, didn’t it?”
Sukuna muttered something about bad influences and childhood cavities, but his hand didn’t leave your lower back the whole time.
You tried to play it cool. Smile. Be casual. Only… it was hard to stay subtle when Yuji was running toward you at full speed, arms wide.
“AUNTIEEEE!”
Sukuna flinched like he’d been hit.
You bent down to scoop Yuji into a hug. “There’s my favorite little chaos goblin!”
“I missed you!” He said. “Uncle Suku was so boring last week. He wouldn’t let me use the hose indoors.”
“Because I’m not a psychopath.”
You whispered to Yuji “We’ll stage a mutiny later.”
He giggled and kissed your cheek loudly.
That was strike one.
——————————————————————————
Strike two came later when one of Sukuna’s cousins, a tall guy with a man bun and too many opinions about kombucha asked. “So, what’s your deal with the grump here? Just friends?”
You opened your mouth, ready to deflect with your usual “I’m his handler” joke, but Yuji beat you to it.
“They kiss a lot!” Exclaimed proudly, licking a popsicle. “Like, a lot a lot. I saw them one time on the couch and Uncle Suku said I had to pretend I didn’t.”
Dead silence. You blinked. Sukuna blinked.
The cousin blinked and grinned. “Ohhhh.”
You covered your face.
——————————————————————————
Strike three came barely a minute later when Yuji, still unaware of the social nuke he’d dropped, said to Sukuna’s mom, loudly. “Uncle Suku said he’s gonna marry her one day but he’s being a big chicken about it.”
Sukuna choked on his beer. You very, very calmly set down your lemonade before you dropped it.
Yuji looked up at his grandmother innocently. “Right, Ba-chan? He said he was gonna do it soon. With a ring and everything. Like on TV.”
The silence was now legendary. Sukuna’s mother turned slowly to her eldest son.
He coughed, red-faced, and muttered “Kids say weird things.”
“Oh no.” You said, barely holding back laughter. “Let’s hear more about this ring, chicken man.”
“I’m going to exile him.” Sukuna growled. “I swear to God.”
——————————————————————————
You didn’t bring it up again that night.
He was flustered enough. You could tell by how much he was cleaning. Sukuna never cleaned while angry, only while thinking. While trying to process. And judging by how many times he rearranged his spice rack, he was practically having an existential crisis.
So you let it go, for about a week at least. Until you noticed him acting… weirder than usual.
You’d wake up and find him staring at you like he was trying to memorize every freckle on your face. He kept checking his coat pockets, muttering under his breath. He googled “best restaurants with rooftop views near me” and pretended he didn’t. He even said “I love you” first one night and then acted like he hadn’t.
You were no genius, but you could put two and two together. Still, you didn’t say anything.
Because this? Watching him unravel like a tightly wound spool of sarcasm and anxiety? This was fun.
——————————————————————————
The night it finally happened, he invited you to dinner. Which wasn’t weird. Except he was nervous. Weirdly nervous.
“You okay?” You asked, brushing lint off his shirt as he fiddled with his keys.
“Fine.”
“You look like you’re about to testify in court.”
He scowled. “Just get in the car.”
He took you to a rooftop restaurant overlooking the city. Very fancy. Very romantic. Very not Sukuna.
You raised an eyebrow. “Wow. Trying to get laid or trying to hide a body?”
“Shut up.”
The dinner was good. The wine was better. And you were just starting to feel that warm, fizzy buzz when Sukuna reached into his coat pocket.
Paused. Frowned. Checked the other pocket. Then the inside. Then his wallet.
“Everything okay?” You asked, eyeing him as if he had just grown a second head.
“I… I forgot something.”
You tilted your head. “What’d you forget?”
He didn’t answer. Instead, he stood up so abruptly he knocked his chair into a waiter. Then he mumbled “Be right back” and practically sprinted down the stairs.
You stared after him.
Okay you thought to yourself, So either he’s proposing or he just remembered he left the oven on.
——————————————————————————
Ten minutes later, he came back, flushed and out of breath, holding…
A tiny, slightly crumpled black velvet box.
You blinked. He sat down, still panting.
“Had to run to the car.” He muttered. “Was in the glovebox. Under your fuzzy socks.”
You stared at him. Then at the box. Then back at him.
“You kept a ring next to my socks?”
“I panicked!”
You covered your mouth, trying not to laugh.
He exhaled and pushed the box toward you, not opening it, not kneeling, just sliding it across the table like it was a cursed artifact.
“I was gonna do this right.” He said. “Fireworks. String lights. Maybe a cat in a tux.”
“A cat in a- ”
“But then Yuji opened his gob, and you started looking at me like you knew, and I started panicking every time you reached for a coffee mug like you might find it by accident- ”
You opened the box. Simple. Silver band. A small, round-cut diamond in a vintage setting. Elegant. Understated. So you.
You looked up, eyes glossy. “You picked this?”
He shrugged. “You said you liked rings that look like heirlooms. You were half-asleep. Probably don’t even remember saying it.”
Your chest ached. You stood, walked around the table, and sat on his lap, not caring that half the restaurant was now watching.
“You’re a mess.” You whispered, wrapping your arms around his neck.
“And you’re a menace.” He said. “I think I’m about to have a heart attack, so can you please just put me out of my misery?”
“You didn’t actually ask, you know.”
He rolled his eyes. “Will you marry me, even though I’m emotionally stunted and allergic to sentiment?”
You grinned. “Absolutely.”
He kissed you. Not gentle, not shy, but completely, hopelessly yours.
Applause broke out from a nearby table.
You flipped them off without breaking the kiss.
——————————————————————————
You didn’t tell Yuji until a week later.
He was on your shared couch, watching cartoons, shoveling goldfish crackers into his mouth. You sat beside him. Sukuna stood behind the couch, arms crossed, trying not to smile.
“Hey, champ.” You said. “Guess what?”
Yuji looked at you.
“We’re getting married.”
Yuji gasped. Loudly.
Then jumped up and screamed. “I WIN! I WIN! I TOLD YOU!”
You blinked. “Told who what?”
He pointed at Sukuna. “He said he wasn’t gonna do it until next year. But I said he was a big chicken and he was gonna do it this month! I win!”
Sukuna stared at his nephew like he was an ancient demon haunting his bloodline.
“Did you bet on my proposal timeline?” You asked.
Yuji looked smug. “I also bet with Ba-chan. She owes me ice cream.”
You howled with laughter.
Sukuna groaned. “Why do I feel like I’m being outsmarted by a five-year-old?”
You leaned into him, kissing his cheek. “Because you are.”
Would you please give us more fluff with Nanami realizing he wants to propose to you & how he does it?
Third time’s the charm… Or maybe the fifth? ~ N.K.
Pairing: Nanami Kento x Reader
Summary: Nanami’s used to dealing with curses and paperwork so proposing to the woman he loves should be easy enough… right? (Or the 4 times he tried to propose and the one he actually did +the chaos that follows)
CW (content warning): this is purely fluff, maybe some cursing (?
AN: Hi guys! I really want to thank you all for the love my works are getting 🤍🫵🏻 I’m working on a few pieces right now as well as going through the requests so expect a whole lot more from me these days hahahah. English isn’t my first language so I’m sorry if there’re any mistakes. Hope you enjoy and let me know what you think! :)
Requests are open so feel free to send yours! (you can check the list of characters I write for on my pinned post)
Masterlist
Nanami Kento was a man who appreciated order.
From the perfect symmetry of his tie knot to the exact minute his coffee steeped in the morning, he found comfort in predictability. Even in a life so deeply entrenched in the chaos of curses and supernatural insanity, Nanami carved out islands of control. Stability, quiet, routine.
And then he met you.
You were chaos, in your own quiet way. Not the kind that came from malevolent spirits or sudden explosions in the middle of a city street. You were the kind of chaos that came from rearranging the bookshelves by color instead of genre, leaving half-drunk cups of tea around the apartment, adopting plants and then forgetting their names, or showing up late because you stopped to feed a stray cat and gave it a name.
You were also the first person to make Nanami miss a train and not be mad about it.
It was somewhere between your third "impromptu" weekend getaway and the time you insisted on stargazing in the middle of winter wrapped in six layers of blankets that Nanami knew, he was in love with you.
But the moment he realized he wanted to spend the rest of his life with you came on an otherwise uneventful Tuesday.
You had fallen asleep on the couch waiting for him to return from a late mission. There were still traces of the dinner you’d tried to keep warm, a half-watched rom-com on the TV, and there you were. Curled up in one of his sweaters, hair messily pulled back, mouth slightly open as you snored softly.
He stood there, shoes still on, a tired man with bloodstained sleeves and aching bones… and all he could think was I want to come home to this forever.
That was it. No bells, no cosmic sign. Just the quiet realization that he had found his peace in you.
——————————————————————————
Nanami went about it the way he did everything else, meticulously.
He visited jewelers, reviewed cut, clarity, carat. Took into account your style. Simple, elegant, nothing too flashy and your tendency to lose things if they were too small. After two weeks and three polite but insistent rejections from aggressive salespeople, he found it: a platinum band with a round diamond, modest in size but framed by a delicate twist of metal that reminded him of how your fingers always found his in a crowd.
He kept it hidden in the inside pocket of his suit jacket and he started bulging his plan to a perfect proposal.
——————————————————————————
Attempt one was the restaurant disaster.
It was a Saturday night. You both had dressed up. He in a pressed navy suit, you in a flowy dress that made him forget how to breathe for a second. He took you to the rooftop restaurant you loved, where you could see the city skyline and pretend you were somewhere else, somewhere softer than reality.
The wine was perfect. The conversation was easy. The waiter brought out a dessert with a flourish.
And just as Nanami reached into his pocket, there was a loud gasp from the table across from you.
“Oh my god, baby, YES!!”
Nanami’s head snapped up. A man was kneeling in front of his partner with a glittering ring in hand.
You blinked, then clapped along with the other diners, grinning as the newly-engaged couple embraced.
Nanami slowly returned the ring box to his pocket.
You turned to him, still smiling. “That was so sweet, wasn’t it?”
He nodded. “Mm.” He grunted in response.
He flagged down the waiter for another glass of wine.
——————————————————————————
Attempt two was the picnic that drowned.
Nanami decided a picnic might offer more control. Open air, your favorite homemade sandwiches, that secluded corner of the park under the gingko trees you liked.
He checked the weather. Sunny skies predicted. He double-checked.
And yet, two bites into the sandwiches, a freak thunderstorm rolled in like divine comedy.
You squealed as fat raindrops fell, grabbing the picnic blanket and racing to a nearby shelter with Nanami close behind, soaked through and glaring at the sky like it had personally offended him.
You were laughing, your mascara smudged, your hair dripping.
“This is like that movie I made you watch last month where the guy proposes in the rain.” You joked, shivering.
Nanami arched an eyebrow, he had fallen asleep during that movie. “Does he succeed?”
You tilted your head, thinking. “No, actually, the ring floats down a storm drain.”
He hummed. “Figures.”
You never noticed how he kept one hand over his jacket pocket the whole run home.
——————————————————————————
Attempt three was the home-cooked catastrophe.
If the world wouldn’t cooperate, Nanami would make his own moment.
He cooked. Chicken katsu, your favorite miso soup, even tried to bake mochi, which turned into something vaguely weapon-like but you appreciated the effort.
He dimmed the lights. Candles flickered. Jazz hummed softly in the background. You were barefoot in the kitchen, dancing in one of his shirts, humming off-key.
Nanami decided this was the moment.
He cleared his throat. “Love?”
You turned, smiling, and he sank to one knee. And then the fire alarm blared.
Apparently, the mochi had dripped sugar onto the oven coil and was now emitting thick plumes of smoke.
The next ten minutes involved frantically opening windows, waving towels, and you nearly falling off a chair trying to reach the alarm with a broom.
By the time the smoke cleared, the mood had been entirely asphyxiated.
He sighed and poured you both a drink instead.
——————————————————————————
Attempt four was the beach ambush.
Gojo had insisted on a “group vacation” to the beach. Nanami had resisted, as he did all of Gojo’s plans, but somehow you convinced him with a single look and the promise of seeing him in swim trunks.
Nanami brought the ring with him.
There was a moment, where it was just the two of you walking along the shoreline at sunset, sand warm beneath your feet, your hand in his. You paused to admire a tidepool, crouching down and cooing at a crab.
He opened his mouth.
And then Itadori came screaming down the beach, flailing like a windsock, pursued by a very angry jellyfish.
You burst into laughter. Nanami muttered something impolite under his breath and once again returned the box to his pocket.
—————————————————————————— By the time attempt five arrived it wasn’t even an attempt, it was just his absolute breakdown.
You found him at the kitchen table at midnight, staring at a tiny velvet box like it had personally betrayed him.
“Love?” You asked gently.
He looked up. He was in his reading glasses, hair slightly mussed, shirt unbuttoned at the collar. He looked exhausted.
He was utterly defeated.
You padded over, wrapping your arms around his shoulders from behind. “What’s going on?”
He hesitated for a moment. Then he sighed, pushed the box across the table like it was a chess piece.
You blinked down at it. “Is this…?”
“I’ve been trying to propose to you for a month.” He said, deadpan. “Every time I try, something catastrophic happens. I was going to do it in the restaurant. The park. The house. The beach. Hell, I even considered doing it at the train station but the announcement system kept glitching.”
You opened the box. The ring gleamed up at you.
Nanami rubbed a hand over his face. “So now I’m sitting here, without having even brushed my teeth, with leftover curry on the stove, and I’ve given up.”
You were silent for a beat. Then, you leaned in and kissed the top of his head.
“Well…” You said softly. “I say yes.”
His hand dropped from his face. He looked up at you.
You grinned. “I’ve been wondering how long you were gonna take. I found the ring in your jacket two weeks ago.”
He groaned, slumping forward as you laughed.
“You could’ve told me.” He muttered.
“I wanted to see how long you’d last.”
“I take it back, I’m not proposing, I hate you.” He murmured grumpily as he ran a hand through his hair, the smile that was tugging at his lips betraying him.
“No you don’t.” You mused poking his chest affectionately. “You love me and want to marry me.”
He paused. “Unfortunately, yes.”
You beamed, climbing into his lap and cupping his face. “Good. Now put the ring on me and let’s call it official.”
He did, hands warm and steady. The ring slid onto your finger like it belonged there all along.
You kissed him. “There. Wasn’t that easier than waiting for lightning to strike or the jellyfish to call off the manhunt?”
He shook his head, smiling for real now. “Remind me never to plan anything again.”
“Too late. We’re planning a wedding.”
His face froze. “Do I get a say?”
“Nope.”
And standing there while you looked up at him with that big and bright smile, quiet chaos, he found himself thinking Yes. This. Forever.
No interruptions. No perfect timing. Just you and him, flawed and human and exactly right.
——————————————————————————
Nanami had made peace with a great many things in his life. Curses, death, unpaid overtime. Gojo’s existence.
But nothing had prepared him for telling Gojo, Itadori, and the rest of the gang that he was, God help him, engaged.
In his mind, he imagined it would be straightforward. Calm. He would inform them. They would congratulate him. Perhaps a few mildly inappropriate jokes, and then they’d move on.
Instead, he found himself standing in the training yard of Jujutsu High with a distinct sense of dread pooling in his stomach, like he’d swallowed a cursed worm by accident.
You were beside him, dressed casually, fingers interlaced with his. He could feel your excitement radiating like sunshine off pavement. His polar opposite.
“Are you sure about this?” He asked for the third time.
You beamed. “They’re our friends. They’ll be happy for us.”
He glanced toward the field, where Gojo was currently trying to convince Yuji to ride on his shoulders and pretend to be a kaiju. Megumi was pretending not to know them. Nobara was filming it.
“Debatable.” Nanami muttered.
You squeezed his hand. “C’mon. It’ll be fun.”
He sighed.
He was so in love with you it was frankly concerning.
——————————————————————————
“Everyone!” You called, cheerful as a character in a school festival episode. “We have something to share!”
Yuji immediately bounced over, grinning. “Oh? Did Nanami finally agree to get a dog?!”
“No.” Nanami said flatly.
You giggled. “Almost better.”
Gojo appeared, shades askew. “Wait, did you finally convince him to go to karaoke? Oh my GOD, I have been begging for months. Nanamin doing enka? I would die. Literally pass away.”
“No.” Nanami repeated, slower. The mere idea gave him chills and a weird feeling creeped o all over his skin.
Megumi muttered “I hope it’s not another cursed womb.”
“Would you stop thinking everything’s cursed?” Nobara smacked him. “She said it’s good news.”
“Are you pregnant?” Yuji blurted out.
Nanami looked like he wanted the ground to open and consume him.
You, ever the chaos lover, just laughed. “Nope! But we are…” You lifted your hand, wiggling your fingers, “Engaged!”
Silence. Then Gojo’s glasses fell off, Yuji gasped like he’d witnessed a murder, Megumi blinked in disbelief and Nobara screamed, “I KNEW IT!”
——————————————————————————
Gojo fell to his knees like he’d been shot in a soap opera. “No… No, no, no. Nanamin?! Married?! You swore yourself to a life of bland suits and emotional repression!”
Nanami looked at you before whispering “This was a mistake.”
You patted his arm. “Too late now.”
Gojo clutched at his chest. “Is this why you’ve been smiling lately? You SMILED last Tuesday. I thought it was indigestion.”
“Do you want to be uninvited from the wedding?” Nanami asked.
“I’M YOUR BEST MAN!”
“You were not even invited yet.” Nanami quickly shot back.
“You wound me.”
You leaned over and whispered in his ear “I did have him on the potential guest list.”
Nanami muttered something deeply unprintable.
Meanwhile Yuji’s eyes were misty. “This is the most beautiful thing I’ve ever heard. I’m gonna cry. No, wait- I am crying. I’m crying!!”
And then he did. On Nanami’s shoulder.
“Yuji.” Nanami said calmly. “You’re sweating on me.”
“It’s tears of joy!”
“I can’t tell the difference.”
“I want to be the ring bearer!” Yuji proclaimed loudly.
“We are not doing a traditional wedding party.”
“I will wear a tiny tuxedo and throw flowers.” The pink-haired said, completely ignoring Nanami.
Nanami sighed. “I already regret this.”
Yuji sniffled. “I love you, man.”
To Nanami’s horror, Yuji pulled him into a bone-crushing hug.
Nobara snapped pictures like paparazzi. “This is going in the wedding slideshow!”
“There will be no slideshow.” Nanami countered.
“Oh, there will be a slideshow.” Nobara clapped like a seal. “Okay, okay, listen up! First of all, I demand to be maid of honor.”
You blinked. “Even though I have three sisters?”
“Tell them to arm wrestle me.”
You burst out laughing.
Nanami pinched the bridge of his nose.
“Secondly.” She continued, “theme. We need a theme.”
Nanami raised a brow. “There is no theme.”
“Oh, old man. Yes there is.” Nobara said shaking her head with a smirk on her face.
You nodded in agreement. “Actually, I kind of like the idea.”
Nobara gasped. “You’re perfect. I take back everything I said about your messy bun last week.”
“I thought you said it looked cute!” You gasped.
Megumi stood quietly off to the side, arms crossed, expression unreadable.
Nanami approached him cautiously. “You’re quiet.”
“I just…” Megumi shrugged. “Didn’t think someone like you would bother with love.”
Nanami stared.
Megumi added quickly. “Not in a bad way. Just- you’re always so serious. It’s kind of nice to see you happy.”
Nanami blinked. “Thank you.”
Megumi glanced away. “If Gojo plans anything, I’m vetoing it in advance.”
“You may be the only voice of reason in this group.”
“Tell me something I don’t know.”
——————————————————————————
Somehow, within ten minutes, a whiteboard had appeared. Gojo claimed he “carried it in case of emergencies.”
You wrote WEDDING BRAINSTORM in pink marker. Nobara added hearts. Yuji suggested fireworks, live animals, and “a surprise flash mob.”
Nanami looked like he was witnessing war crimes.
“Can we elope?” He muttered to you.
“And miss this?” You gestured at Gojo and Yuji arguing over whether pandas or doves made better ring bearers. “Absolutely not.”
On his end, Gojo drew a flowchart titled Ways to Emotionally Destroy Nanami With Joy and underlined “karaoke reception” three times.
“I’m canceling the engagement.” Nanami declared.
“No you’re not.” You said, smiling sweetly.
He sighed. “I should’ve just proposed and never told anyone.”
Yuji gasped. “Imagine if we didn’t know! I would’ve found out on Instagram and thrown myself into a river!”
“Drama queen.” Megumi muttered.
——————————————————————————
Later that night you both finally escaped the group and walked back to your apartment under a canopy of soft streetlights. The air was cool. The city was alive.
Nanami laced his fingers through yours.
“Well…” He said quietly “That was horrifying.”
You smiled. “You did great.”
He glanced sideways at you. “They’re going to plan the whole wedding, aren’t they?”
“They’re going to try.”
He sighed. “Should we tell Shoko?”
You paused. “Do you think she’ll be happy?”
“She might be the only one who won’t start a Pinterest board.”
You laughed. “Then yes. Let’s tell her next.”
He stopped walking, pulling you to a gentle halt.
“Despite everything… I am glad we told them.”
You leaned your head on his shoulder. “Me too.”
There was a long pause.
“Do you think Gojo was serious about the panda?”
You grinned. “Oh yes, 100%.”
He groaned and held your hand just a little bit tighter.