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About me
Hiii I'm Mylajah you can call me by name or Afk. I go by she/her.
African-American author/writer
Hobbies are drawing cooking, playing xbox, and now writing.
I love anime my favorite is one piece
I get pictures from Pinterest, and most times I make the header with them
à§Ś Ś synopsis âź You get kidnapped and branded by the joker on christmas. The bat-family sees Jason unravel.
word cnt. 14.6k
cw âșâșâșâș torture, branding, suicidal language, violence, blood, gore
Something is wrong.
Jason feels it like a pressure changeâsubtle, almost politeâbut it crawls under his helmet and settles behind his eyes. It hasnât clicked, not cleanly. Not yet. He hasnât asked. Hasnât said a word through the harbor sweep, through the cold iron stink of saltwater and oil and Christmas rot. A small job. The kind that should feel easy. The kind that still manages to choke the air out of his lungs anyway.
Everyoneâs moving like the night might shatter if they stop.
Tim keeps choosing his words too carefully, syllables slowed and smoothed like heâs sanding down sharp edges. Dickâs doing that thing where he smiles first and speaks secondâbut the timingâs off, the warmth a fraction too late, like a recording lagging behind the video. Damian watches Jason more than the perimeter, eyes sharp, calculating, guarded. Stephanie hasnât joked once. Not even a cheap jab to him, not even under her breath. That alone feels wrong enough to tilt the world sideways.
Bruce didnât come.
That absence is loud. A hollow where a presence should be, echoing through comms and instinct alike. The Cave, heâd said. As if that explained anything. As if Bruce ever sits things out without a reason that claws.
Cassandra says nothingâbut sheâs closer. Close enough that Jason can feel her awareness like static along his spine. When the group splits, she falls into step beside him without discussion, without a glance. Just there. Solid. Protective in a way that feels less like trust and more like vigilance. As if sheâs guarding him.
Thatâs when unease really sinks its teeth in.
Bruce didnât need all of them.
Didnât need six sets of boots scraping concrete, six heartbeats crowding the same dark. Dick alone couldâve dismantled this whole thing with half the effort. Hell, Jason himself couldâve wrapped it up fast and bloody and been home already. Instead, theyâre stacked together, overlapping, slowing each other down like theyâre afraid to let him out of their sight.
He agreed because no one argued about his presence. Because no one questioned whether he was needed. Because the silence around that decision felt intentional.
That shouldâve been his first real warning.
Between two groups of thugs, he had ducked behind a row of shipping containers, Gothamâs lights bleeding gold across the black water. He had pulled out his phone and called you, already rehearsing the apology in his head. Late for presents. Again. Youâd tease him, pretend to scold, maybe force him to wrap some gifts for your co-workers.Â
You didn't answer.
Probably a bath, he told himself. Youâd mentioned one. Candles. The fancy bath salts you bought. Something soft to push the cold out of your bones. The thought settles him, briefly. He sends a text insteadâshort, careful. An apology. An I love you so much that he doesnât overthink, because with you, he never has to.
You always know what he means.
The phone stays quiet in his pocket.
No buzz. No vibration brushing against his thigh like it usually does, grounding him, tethering him back to something warm and real. He told himself itâs nothing. That youâre relaxed, distracted, asleep. That the night is just heavy, that Gotham is doing what Gotham always doesâmaking ghosts out of shadows and dread out of coincidence.
Still.
When he looks back at the others, he notices the way Dick avoids his eyes now. The way Timâs gaze flicks to Jasonâs pocket and away again. The way Damianâs jaw tightens when Jason shifts his weight, like heâs bracing for impact. Cassandra meets his eyes onceâjust onceâand thereâs something there that twists low and sharp in his chest. Not fear. Not exactly.
Knowing. Jason doesnât ask. He doesnât press.
But the harbor feels too quiet, the night stretched thin and listening, and for the first time since he sent that text, a cold, irrational thought curls in his gutâ
That whatever is wrong didnât start here.
And that somewhere far from the water, far from the mission, something precious has already slipped out of reach.
âThat was the last of them,â Jason says, voice rough through the helmet, as Tim finishes cinching zip-ties around the final goon and anchors him to a rust-flaked shipping container. The plastic bites down with a sharp click that echoes too loudly across the concrete. The man mumbled insanities through spit.
The harbor exhales around themâcold wind off the water, carrying brine and diesel and something rotten thatâs been sitting too long. Sodium lights flicker overhead, casting everything in jaundiced gold and long, distorted shadows that stretch and tangle at their feet. The concrete is damp beneath Jasonâs boots, slick with mist and old oil, the kind of surface that never really dries no matter how many âsunnyâ days Gotham pretends to have.
âWe should do another check around the harbor,â Dick says.
Heâs already kneeling, already breaking the man's phone in half with practiced efficiency, grinding it into the concrete with his heel until the screen spider webs and dies. He doesnât look up when he says it. Doesnât grin. Doesnât even sound casual about it.
Jason lifts an eyebrow, slow, deliberate. His gaze slides to Damian automaticallyâbecause Damian is usually the first to shoot an idea like that down, sharp and impatient and blunt as a blade.
Instead, Damian just mutters, âTim could be wrong.â
Mumbles it. Like heâs afraid the words might carry.
That alone sends a small, unpleasant chill up Jasonâs spine.
Tim doesnât argue. Doesnât bristle. He straightens from the goon and dusts his gloves together, eyes flickingânot to Jasonâbut to Stephanie. The movement is quick, practiced, like muscle memory.
âDo you want to take the gates with me?â Tim says, too smooth. Too rehearsed. âJason and Dick could go along theââ
âWhat?â Jason cuts in before he can finish, blinking once. âYou two were perched on the gates the entire op. Whatâre you talking about?â
The wind gusts harder, rattling loose chains and setting a tarp snapping somewhere down the dock. Water slaps against concrete pylons in a slow, hollow rhythm.Â
Jason suddenly feels like the sound is counting something down.
âIt wouldnât hurt to double-check,â Tim says, rising to his feet.
He still wonât meet Jasonâs eyes.
Jasonâs jaw tightens. He shifts his weight, the concrete cold and unforgiving through the thinning soles of his boots, and for a split second his mind driftsâunbiddenâto you. To the warmth of your kitchen lights. To the way youâd probably be halfway through setting out plates by now, humming something low and off-key, waiting for him in that way that makes him want to claw his soul out and hand it over to you.Â
The thought lands soft, intimate, groundingâand then slips through his fingers when he remembers his phone, silent and heavy in his pocket.
ââŠYou guys donât need me for that,â Jason says, firmer now. Thereâs an edge to it, something protective and stubborn. He already has plans. A timeline. A promise he intends to keep. âSeriously. If you want to sweep again, even one person couldââ
Dick finally looks up.
Itâs just a glance, quick and loaded, the kind Jasonâs learned to read over a lifetime of almosts and unsaids. Cassandra shifts closer at the same moment, her shoulder nearly brushing his, her presence steady and deliberate. Jason doesn't think she's ever willingly touched him in his life. Stephanie opens her mouth like sheâs about to say somethingâanythingâthen closes it again.
The harbor feels tighter suddenly. Smaller. Like the stacks of containers have leaned in, hemming them closer, their corrugated sides looming like silent witnesses. The wind cuts sharper off the water, needling through the seams of Jasonâs jacket, and somewhere deep in his chest, that pressure builds again.
Jason turns fully to Damian.
âKid, I swear to God, tell me whatââ
Damian snaps at the exact same moment Cassandra moves. Her hand closes around Jasonâs shoulder, firm and sudden, fingers digging in through armor like sheâs trying to anchor him to the concrete before he does something irreversible. The contact is intimate in a way that feels wrong, alarmed.
âHow the hell should I know? They didn't tell meââ Damian bites back, voice sharp, flaring too fast, too hot.
âDamian!â Dick hisses, the sound cutting through the night like a blade dragged too quickly from its sheath. Heâs already moving, stepping between them without quite committing to either side, hands up in a placating gesture that lands closer to panic than calm. He turns to Jason almost immediately, words tumbling over each other. âCome on, dude, letâs just go check the security towers andââ
âThatâs going to take another hour,â Jason cuts in.
The words come out flat, but thereâs steel underneath. He shrugs Cassandraâs hand offânot rough, but finalâand reaches into his pocket. The harbor lights blur for a second as his fingers close around his phone, the familiar shape of something that connects him to you grounding him. Itâs 10:20. He knows that without looking but checks anyway. Heâs been counting the minutes since the mission dragged past its supposed end.
âI had plans,â he says, quieter now, but more dangerous for it. âLet me at leastââ
The batarang whistles through the air.
Jason barely has time to register the movementâDamianâs arm snapping forward, wrist precise, expression tight and furiousâbefore metal slams into his hand. The impact jars up his arm, sharp and biting, and the phone slips free, spinning once before it hits the concrete.
Crack.
The screen fractures instantly, a spiderweb of dead glass blooming beneath the sodium lights before the device skids to a stop near Jasonâs boot. The harbor seems to hold its breath. Even the wind falters, the waterâs slap against the pylons momentarily muted, as if the night itself is listening.
Jason stares down at it.
At the dark screen. On the way his reflection breaks apart in the shattered glass.
Jasonâs gaze lifts slowly from the ruin at his feet.
It settles on Dick.
âCall Bruce.â
The words arenât loud. They donât need to be. They cut anywayâclean, controlled, edged with something thatâs starting to slip. Dick falters under it, hand coming up to rub at the back of his neck, eyes flicking anywhere but Jasonâs face. The harbor lights stutter overhead, one of them buzzing like itâs about to give out, bathing Dick in a sickly gold that makes him look younger.Â
Guilty.
âWhat, you gonna tattle?â Dick says, trying for levity and missing it by miles. His laugh lands wrong, brittle against the cold. âCâmon, Damian's just in a mood. I was going to surprise you with burgers but I thought the kid would spill. Iâll buy you a new phone, okay? Justââ
âCall Bruce,â Jason repeats.
This time itâs a hiss, dragged out through clenched teeth, something feral and fraying around the edges. The wind picks up again, slicing between the containers, rattling loose metal and carrying the sharp tang of rain that never quite falls in Gotham. Jason turns his head, slow and deliberate, until his eyes find Cassandra.
She hasnât moved. Sheâs watching him like sheâs afraid he might break.
ââŠHeâs busy,â Cass says.
Her voice is barely there. Smaller than usual. Soft enough that Tim, standing a good ten feet away, doesnât hear it at all. The words dissolve into the night almost as soon as they leave her mouth, swallowed by wind and water and distanceâbut Jason hears them. Every syllable.
Busy.
Something inside him tightens, winding down to a thin, dangerous thread.
His hand comes up to his comm without conscious thought. He adjusts it once, fingers steady despite the way his pulse thuds too hard, too fast. The harbor seems to lean in againâthe stacked containers looming like watchful giants, the river below churning black and endless.Â
Gotham breathes around him, damp and unforgiving.
âB,â Jason says.
Sharp. Precise. A single syllable fired into the dark like a flare.
Static answers him. Wind whistling through steel corridors. The distant cry of something alive and miserable echoing off the water. No voice. No correction. No irritation crackling back through the line.
Just silence. It stretches. Pulls thin. Grows teeth.
Jason exhales through his nose, a humorless breath that fogs faintly in the cold air. He thinks of you againâtoo vividly now. The way your voice softens when you say his name. The way you always pick up, even when he thinks you shouldnât. The way silence has never belonged between the two of you.
His jaw locks. Fuck this shit, I should be at home with her.
Jason moves before anyone can stop himâbefore anyone even realizes heâs decided something.
Heâs across the concrete in three long strides, boots splashing through shallow puddles that mirror Gothamâs jaundiced lights in broken pieces. Damian doesnât flinch when Jason grabs his comm. Doesnât pull back. Doesnât protest. That, more than anything, makes Jasonâs teeth grind.
He clicks the emergency signal to the Batcomputerâonce, twice, a break, two clicks hard enough that it hurts his thumbâthen rips the comm free. His helmet follows, clattering against the concrete with a hollow, echoing crack that ricochets between the shipping containers. The sound feels too loud, too exposed. Jason presses the comm to his bare ear, cold metal biting into skin.
No one stops him.
Not Dick. Not Tim. Not Stephanie. Cassandra watches with that same quiet intensity, hands flexing like sheâs bracing for impact. They stand there and let it happen, like this is how it was always meant to goâlike theyâve already accepted that Jason finding out is inevitable, but telling him would be worse. Like this is some twisted test, or penance, or family tradition he never agreed to.
The harbor hums low and restless. Wind slides through steel corridors, rattling chains, carrying the stink of oil and brine and rain-soaked concrete. Gotham feels awake in that way it only does when something bad is already in motion.
âRobin?â Bruceâs voice cuts through the static, sharp and immediate. Too immediate. Thereâs an edge to it Jason hasnât heard in yearsâtight, almost nervous, parental. âRobin, whatâs wrong?â
Jason almost laughs.
Instead, his mouth twists.
âIâm going home, old man,â he hisses, already turning away from Damian. âWhat was this? Ya trying to tire me out, or did you get mind-controlled again? âCause everyone here apparently likes you enough to not tell me the truth.â
âJasonââ
âRed Hood,â Jason snaps, the correction coming fast and mean. He bends, scoops his helmet up by the chin guard, and starts walking toward the exit between the containers where the harbor opens up to the road. âWhat happened to keeping hero names on comms? Or are you the only one allowed to break rules tonight?â
âRed Hood, just give meââ
âItâs a lousy gang!â Jason shouts, voice tearing loose now, bouncing off steel and concrete and dark water. âThey donât even crack the top twenty. Damian couldâve done this shit by himself.â
He doesnât look back, but he knows theyâre following him. He can feel itâthe weight of their footsteps, the way they trail just close enough to intervene if he breaks. Later, itâll hit him why Tim made sure every single goon was double zip-tied, wrists biting white beneath plastic. Insurance.Â
Tim knew Jason would find out.Â
Knew none of them would be coming back to clean this up.
âRed Hoodââ
âMerry Christmas, B,â Jason cuts in, bitter and sharp as broken glass. âPlease donât call.â
âJASONââ
Bruceâs voice snaps through the comm like a gunshot, dragging Jason straight back into another life, another night, another version of himself that answered to that tone. âSheâs in danger. And if you want any chance of seeing her again, get to the Batcaveââ
The line goes dead.
Not static. Not interference.
Bruce cut it himself.
Jason stops, because there's only one person he could be talking about to send all five of them with him.
The harbor seems to lurch, the world tilting just enough to make his balance feel theoretical. The wind howls between the containers, louder now, like Gotham exhaling something foul and satisfied. Water slaps hard against concrete pylons below, relentless, counting seconds Jason no longer owns.
Slowlyâtoo slowlyâhe turns.
He looks at them. At Dickâs pale face. At Timâs clenched jaw. At Damianâs rigid stillness. At Stephanie, eyes bright with unshed panic. At Cassandra, whose gaze is already on him, steady and mournful, like sheâs watching something crack.
They look at him like heâs glass.
Like heâs a bomb theyâre waiting to defuseâor clean up after.
Jason doesnât give them the chance.
âFuck all of you,â he spits, the words coming out broken and small despite his best efforts.
Then he runs.
Out of the harbor. Out of the sodium lights and rust and the weight of too many eyes. Jason runs like Gotham itself is on his heels, boots striking concrete in a brutal rhythm that drowns out thoughtâor tries to. The city stretches around him in jagged silhouettes and wet stone, skyscrapers looming like blackened ribs against a low, churning sky. Clouds hang heavy and swollen, bruised purple and gray, threatening rain they never quite release. Gotham loves the anticipation of pain more than the act itself.
His blood is loud in his ears. Too loud. Every heartbeat punches through his ribs, frantic and unforgiving, as if his body already knows something his mind refuses to accept.
Toward the manor. Toward answers.
Toward the awful, creeping certainty settling into his bones that whatever Gotham has taken this time, it didnât take lightlyâand it didnât take something he can afford to replace.
He takes the shorter way.
Fire escapes. Rooftops slick with mist. Narrow alleys that smell like old rain and older sins. He vaults gaps without slowing, coat snapping behind him like a torn banner, the city blurring into streaks of shadow and light. This route cuts close to your place. Too close. He doesnât consciously choose it; his body does, muscle memory dragging him along a path his heart has memorized better than any map.
And thenâ
Mid-leap, suspended between one rooftop and the next, he sees it.
Your building sits quiet against the skyline, dark in a way it never is. Your lights are off. All of them. The windowsâyour windowsâare shattered, glass glittering weakly under the cityâs glow like fallen stars. The balcony rail is smeared with something darker than shadow.
Blood.
The word doesnât form. Not fully. His brain skids around it, refuses to give it weight. At most, he tells himself, youâre hurt. Something small. A cut. A scrape. A stupid accident that looks worse than it is. Youâll laugh it off when he gets there, scold him for worrying, tell him heâs being dramatic again.
Because youâre untouchable.
Thatâs the rule his mind has always clung to. Gotham can drown him in filth and violence and rot, but youâyouâare clean. Untarnished. Something soft the city hasnât learned how to bruise yet. You exist outside its reach, outside its hunger. Gotham takes things like Jason. It breaks people like him. It doesnât get to put its hands on you.
It canât have you.
Because if youâre hurtâif youâre really hurtâthen everything Jason has built inside himself caves in at once. Every fragile structure, every careful compromise, every promise heâs made to stay standing for you. Thereâs no version of the world where youâre broken and he survives it intact.
He lands hard, barely absorbing the impact before heâs running again, lungs burning, throat raw. The manor rises ahead of him through the trees like a dark monument, windows glowing warm and oblivious against the night. Too slow. The gates are too slow. The doors are too slow.
Jason doesnât bother.
He barrels straight for a ground-floor window and drives his elbow through it without hesitation. Glass explodes inward, sharp and screaming, biting into skin. He doesnât feel itânot reallyâuntil heâs inside, boots skidding onto the polished floor, breath tearing out of him in harsh, uneven pulls.
Blood runs freely down his forearm, drips onto the pale carpet in dark, blooming stains.
It looks wrong there. Violent. Out of place, just like the blood on your balcony.
Jason stares at it for half a second too long, chest heaving, and something in him splinters quietlyâbecause now he knows. The city has already touched you and it has never, not once, let go without breaking something in return.
Jason doesnât slow down in the Cave.
The platform is still lowering when heâs already moving, boots striking metal too hard, too fast, the sound ricocheting off stone and steel. The Batcave yawns around themâvast and echoing, all cold water and colder rock, computer screens throwing pale blue light across jagged walls. The waterfall roars like itâs trying to drown the night itself, a constant, punishing noise that usually steadies him.
Tonight it only sharpens the edges.
Bruce turns at the last possible second. His eyes flick first to Jasonâs face, then to the blood smeared down his arm, dripping steadily onto the pristine metal floor. Bruceâs mouth tightens. Not in anger. In calculation. In fear he refuses to name.
Jason shoves him.
Hard.
Bruceâs back slams into the Batcomputer console, screens rattling, data stuttering for half a heartbeat. A lesser man wouldâve been airborne. Bruce Wayne could have thrown Jason across the Cave without effortâcould have ended this in a clean, controlled second.
He doesnât.
Jason knows he wonât.
âWhere is she,â Jason spits, the words tearing out of him raw and shaking. His hands fist in Bruceâs cape, knuckles white, trembling despite the strength coiled beneath them. The fabric bunches beneath his grip like it might rip if he pulls any harder. âWhere is she?â
Bruce lifts his hands slowly, carefullyânot in surrender, but in containment. Like approaching a live wire. His voice, when he speaks, is measured to the point of pain.
ââŠJason.â
The name alone is an attempt. An anchor. Bruce is already running scenarios, already gauging angles and exits and how much damage Jason could do if this slips another inch. He knows Jasonâs tells. Knows the way his breathing has gone uneven, the way his eyes are too bright, too fixed. Knows this isnât rage yet.
This is terror.
âDonât,â Bruce says quietly. Not commanding. Pleading, buried deep beneath control. âJustâlisten to me.â
Jason laughs once, short and broken, the sound scraping his throat raw. âNo. You donât get to slow this down. You donât get to prepare me.â
Bruce swallows. ââŠJokerââ he begins.
And the world fractures.
The word lands heavy and obscene between them, fouling the air of the cave like poison gas. Joker. The name crawls under Jasonâs armor, past muscle and bone, straight into the place where you live inside him.
Suddenly, youâre not untouchable.
Youâre not the one clean thing Gotham never got its hands on. Not the soft place Jason runs to when the city claws at him too hard. Not the warmth in his bed, the light in his kitchen, the voice that says his name like it belongs to something human.
Youâre not safe.
Youâre not distant.
Youâre not protected by the simple, impossible belief that the worst things in the world know better than to touch you.
Youâre real.
Youâre fragile.
Youâre reachable.
Jasonâs grip tightens without him meaning to, breath hitching violently in his chest. His mind fills with images he refuses to finish formingâbroken glass, blood on pale surfaces, your windows shattered open to the night the same way his chest feels split open now. He thinks of your hands. Your laugh. The way you look at him like heâs something worth keeping.
And nowâ
Now youâre the blood heâs already wearing.
The blood heâs going to feel soaking into his gloves tonight.
Bruce sees it happen. Sees the moment Jason slips past anger and into something far more dangerous. His own heart lurches, sharp and traitorous. Thisâthis is what heâs been afraid of since the second he knew Joker was involved. Not Jason lashing out blindly.
Jason focused.
Emotional.
Unanchored.
âJason,â Bruce says again, softer now, steady as bedrock despite the fear tightening his chest. âI need you to stay with me. I need you here. Because if you go out there like thisââ
Jasonâs eyes snap back to him, glassy and feral and devastatingly alive.
âIf I donât go,â Jason says hoarsely, âshe dies.â
âIf you go,â Bruce says, low and sharp, the words cutting through the roar of the Cave, âyou dieâand you could lose her at the same time.â
The Batcave hums around them, fluorescent light washing the rock walls in cold blue, computer screens flickering with restless data. The waterfall crashes endlessly behind Bruce, mist clinging to the air, dampening everything it touches. It feels like the Cave is breathingâslow, heavy, watchful.
Bruce moves closer and grips Jasonâs jacket with both hands, fingers clutching the leather like itâs the last solid thing in the world. He holds on the way a man holds a ledge heâs already slipping from, hoping friction alone might be enough to keep someone from falling.
It isnât.
âWhere is she,â Jason says.
His voice is flat. Too controlled. His eyes have already left Bruce, already slid to the Batcomputer, to the glowing map littered with red and yellow pings like open wounds across Gothamâs body. Each marker pulses faintly, alive and accusing.
He doesnât notice his siblings closing inâDickâs careful steps, Timâs rigid stillness, Damian hovering sharp and coiled like a drawn blade.
âSheâs alive,â Bruce says quickly, desperately. âShe wasnât the only oneâat least four other children and three womenââ
Jason turns his head.
The look he gives Bruce is devastating in its emptiness. Eyes glassed over, jaw set too tight, brows drawn together like the world has narrowed to a single, unbearable point.
âDo you honestly think I give a damn about them right now?â
The words arenât shouted. They donât need to be. They land heavy, obscene in their honesty, and Bruceâs grip tightens reflexively, knuckles whitening against Jasonâs jacket.
âI know you donât,â Bruce snaps back, frustration bleeding through control. âWhich is why I didnât tell you she was taken. Because we need a plan that keeps everyone who was captured safeââ
âAt the risk she dies in the process?â Jason cuts in.
Thenâhe stills.
Something shifts. His hands loosen, falling away from Bruceâs cape as if the fabric has suddenly burned him. His gaze slides, sharp and intentional, and locks onto Tim.
âHow long,â Jason says.
The question is steady. Solid. Frighteningly calm.
Tim swallows and flicks a glance at Bruceâa silent check, a plea, a habit Jason has seen a thousand times. Jason shoves Bruceâs hand aside and crosses the distance in two strides, grabbing Tim by the shoulders, fingers digging in through armor.
âDonât,â Jason hisses, thumbs pressing hard, grounding, painful. âDonât look at him.â
The words arenât just for Tim. Theyâre for Jason too.
He vaguely registers Dick saying his name, Stephanieâs voice tight with panic somewhere behind him, but it all dissolves into a dull ringing as he stares down at Tim. Tim doesnât flinch. Doesnât pull away. He meets Jasonâs gaze head-on.
âHow long,â Jason repeats. âWhere.â
Tim exhales, slow and controlled, the way he does when delivering bad news. âTwo hours,â he says quietly. âWarehouse two blocks from Crime Alley. Behind that busted playground.â
Crime Alley.
The name echoes through the Cave like a curse, sinking into Jasonâs chest and blooming outward, cold and malignant. Of course itâs there. Of course Joker chose that placeâlayers of history piled atop rot, a shrine built from other peopleâs pain.
Jason releases Tim slowly, hands trembling now, control finally beginning to crack.
Two hours.
Two hours of you alone with the man who taught Gotham how to laugh while it kills.
The Batcomputer hums on, indifferent. Gothamâs skyline glows faintly on the monitorsâjagged towers under a bruised sky, rain finally starting to smear the camera feeds, streaking the city in gray. Somewhere out there, windows are broken. Somewhere out there, that cashmere scarf he wrapped and placed under your tree stays un-wrapped.
Jason understands thenâwith a clarity so sharp it almost feels mercifulâthat plans are a luxury meant for people who still believe time is something they own.
Time has never belonged to him.
Because youâyouâarenât alone. Youâre trapped with seven other people. Four of them children, Bruce had said, like that word didnât rearrange Jasonâs insides completely. His mind does something traitorous then, something he hates himself for even acknowledging: it calculates. It knows how these things go. It knows Jokerâs sense of theater, his appetite for cruelty, his fondness for leaving one survivor behind as punctuation.
And the last one standing is never the strongest.
Itâs the smallest.Â
You would be dying before those kids.
Jasonâs breath stutters, just once.
âJason,â Bruce says from the Batcomputer, voice tight, forced into calm the way it always is when heâs terrified. The blue glow paints him hollow, all sharp angles and restraint. âDonât make me stop you. The cops are on their way. Joker just wants cash.â
For the first time since the harbor, the noise in Jasonâs head goes quiet.
Not peacefulâfocused.
Everything narrows down to Bruce. To the way his shoulders are squared like a barricade. To the way his hands hover, uncertain, like heâs trying to decide whether to reach out or brace for impact. Jasonâs heart hammers so hard it hurts, louder than the waterfall, louder than any threat Batman could ever make.
âIf you even try, Bruce,â Jason says.
He doesnât look at him when he says it. He canât. The name comes out wrong in his mouthâtoo raw, too intimate, scraped down to bone. Instead, he keeps his eyes on Tim, standing rigid in front of him, small in a way Jason suddenly canât stop seeing. He hopesâdistantly, uselesslyâthat he isnât glaring at his little brother. Hopes Tim understands this isnât anger.
Just pure desperation. His last attempt, his last shot.
âIll fucking shoot myself. Iâll make sure you know itâs your fault,â Jason continues, voice low and shaking despite his effort to keep it steady. âIâll use my gun. And if you tie me up today, Iâll wait until next week. If you lock me down for a week, Iâll wait a month. Iâll do it.â
He swallows.
Because thatâs the only thing thatâs ever worked. The only language Bruce Wayne never ignores.
Dick moves fastâtoo fastâgrabbing Jasonâs arm where itâs still braced near Tim, fingers digging in hard. âWhat the fuck is wrong with you?â he shouts, panic cracking straight through his anger.
Jason turns on him then, eyes blazing, voice breaking loose at last.
âWould you be this still?â Jason yells back. âIf that was me with Joker again? If it was me instead of herâwould you have left me there for the police to find? Again?â
The word hangs between them, heavy and damning.
Again.
Jason knows Dick well enough to see it land. To watch his brotherâs grip falter, fingers loosening like theyâve forgotten what they were holding onto in the first place. Dickâs face goes pale, mouth parting uselessly, and Jason twists the knifeânot because he wants to hurt him, but because he needs them to understand.
âThis,â Jason snaps. âThis is why none of you fucking knew about her.â
He looks at all of them nowâreally looks. At Bruce, frozen behind the console like a man staring down a live bomb. At Dick, wrecked with guilt.
âIf you canât even see me beyond a mistake you made,â Jason says, voice hoarse, âthere was no way you wouldnât have seen her as that too. And I love her too much for that.â
The words leave him hollowed out.
Then heâs gone.
The Cave swallows the echo of his footsteps, leaving only the roar of the waterfall and the hum of machines that suddenly feel pointless. No one moves to stop him. No one even tries.
It takes Tim a full minute to cross the platform and reach the Batcomputer, fingers hovering uselessly over keys he knows by heart.
It takes Cassandra four times as long to find a part of Bruce that still movesâsome small, human place in his arm or shoulder that isnât locked rigid like a man bracing for an explosion he knows is already ticking down.
Dick follows Jasonâs trail almost immediately. And Damian follows Dick.
You donât remember the last five hours.
Theyâre goneâhollowed outâlike someone reached into your head and scooped the time away with a careless hand. The last thing you have is small and warm and ordinary: the coffee table between the couch and the window, set for two. Plates aligned just so. The new glasses you bought with Jason on that stupidly perfect thrift-store date, thin and elegant and impractical. Youâd laughed about them, about how easy theyâd be to break. Jason had pretended to scold you, fingers warm around yours as he tugged you toward the bookshelves, already stacking paperbacks in his arms like treasure.
Youâd bought homeware. A vintage mirror with a gold edge, slightly warped, the kind that makes everything look softer than it is.
Jason always said you needed better locks. You realize it numbly.
He always said it gently, like a suggestion instead of a warning. Like he was talking about replacing a lightbulb or buying better coffee. You brushed him off every time, smiling, pressing a kiss into his shoulder, telling him Gotham wasnât that bad. That you were fine. That you were safe.
And you were right. You always are.
Because an extra lock wouldnât have stopped the man with the red smile.
It wouldnât have stopped hands tangling in your hair, fingers tight and merciless as he dragged you across your rug, skin burning where it scraped against the fibers. It wouldnât have stopped the way your mirror shattered when he slammed you against it, glass singing as it broke, your own reflection splintering into a hundred terrified pieces that stared back at you with wide, unbelieving eyes.
It wouldnât have stopped the way he looked at you.
He crouched in front of you like this was intimate. Like this was a secret. His smile stretched too far, paint cracked and smeared, eyes bright with something wrong and delighted and ancient.Â
Joker tilted his head, studying you the way a child studies an insect pinned to cork.
âHereâs the other lovebird,â he murmured, voice lilting, almost fond. âOhhh⊠how cute you are.â
You remember thinkingâabsurdly, desperatelyâthat Jason would hate that word. That heâd bristle at it, roll his eyes, pull you closer just to prove a point. You remember the ache of missing him hitting harder than the pain at first, your mind reaching for him the way it always does when the world goes wrong.
Jason would know what to do.
Jason would make this stop.
The thought is a comfort even now, curled tight in your chest, fragile but stubborn. You cling to it as the man stands, as one of the shadows behind him passes up an old, rusted crowbar. The metal is pitted and dark, flaking with age and something older still. It smells like iron and damp and rot.
It doesnât take a lock to stop that.
It doesnât take a security system to stop the sound your bones make when he brings it down.
The pain comes in blinding flashesâwhite-hot, nauseating, wrong. Your legs scream before you do, nerves lighting up in protest, your body trying to fold in on itself, trying to protect something already broken. You taste blood, copper and thick, your teeth chattering even as your throat burns raw from crying out.
Through it all, you think of Jason.
Of his handsâgentle despite their strength. Of the way he says your name like itâs something precious, something heâs afraid to drop. You think of his laugh, low and surprised, the way he softens when itâs just the two of you and Gotham canât see him. You think of the books still stacked on the table, waiting to be read, of the glasses that shattered just like the mirror did.
Of how he warned you.
Of how he would be here already if he knew.
The room feels wrongâtilted, smeared with shadow, the air thick and sour. Blood pools where it shouldnât, dark against your floor, soaking into the rug you picked out together. The city hums outside your broken windows, indifferent and vast, neon bleeding into the night like nothing is wrong at all.
You breathe when you can. You hold onto Jasonâs name like a prayer youâre afraid to say out loud.
Because if he comesâwhen he comesâyou need to believe there will still be something left of you for him to find.
Your consciousness returns in fragments, drifting in and out the same way you remember nights with him. Not clean breaks. Not mercy. Just gaps.
A void of sleep.
Jason easing your window open like the city might hear him, hands raised in mock surrender, voice low and careful. I didnât mean to wake you⊠shh⊠go back to bed. The mattress dips, familiar weight settling beside you, warmth bleeding into your back.
A void of sleep.
Jason in your bathroom, the light too bright, the mirror fogged. Gothamâs blood and grime rinsed down the drain while he rubs his hair dry with one of your soft, ridiculous pink towels. He smiles at you through the doorway, sheepish and fond, promises heâll be there in a second. He always is.
A void of sleep.
Jason shifting beside you, breath warm against the delicate skin beneath your ear. His arm tightens in his sleep, possessive without knowing it, like even unconscious heâs afraid the world might take you if he lets go. He murmurs your nameâbroken, reverent.
A void of sleep.
White hands. Cracked paint. Fingers threading through your hair, slick and tangled with blood. The touch is intimate in the worst way, scalp burning as he humsâno, singsâa childish tune about robins, voice lilting and wrong, laughter bubbling beneath it like rot under sugar.
A void of sleep.
Concrete tearing at your skin as youâre dragged, knees bouncing, spine jolting with every crack in the ground. A van door yawns open, metal teeth waiting. A child sobs near your ear, small and hiccuping. A woman screams at the child to shut upâpanic sharp and desperateâuntil a gunshot rings out like punctuation. The woman goes silent. The child doesnât. The word mommy repeats, thin and broken, drilling into your skull.
A void of sleep.
You wake choking on pain.
Your body is bound to a chair, wrists cinched tight, ankles screaming. Barbed wire coils around you like something alive, biting deep with every involuntary twitch. The metal is rusted, flaking, cruelâtearing skin open in ragged kisses that burn and throb and never quite stop bleeding. Your legs are numb in places, screaming in others. You can feel blood soaking into fabric, sticky and cooling as it trails downward.
Heâs in front of you.
Smiling.
Head cocked, eyes bright with interest, like youâre a puzzle heâs just started enjoying. He steps closer, crouches until heâs eye-level with you, hands clasped together as if in prayer.
âYou do love your sleep, donât you?â he says, voice almost gentle.
Your vision swims. The room smells like iron and oil and damp concrete. Somewhere nearby, something drips steadilyâwater, or blood, or both. The walls feel too close, the shadows stretching and curling like theyâre listening.
âThe other birdy,â he continues, grinning wider, âwouldnât even sleep if I cracked his skull. Such a shame.â He sighs theatrically, tapping the barbed wire with one gloved finger, delighted by the way you flinch. âI suppose Iâll have to find a way to keep you awake.â
Through the haze, through the pain, one thought stays stubbornly intact.
Jason is coming.
And you cling to that like a lifeline, even as the horror closes in, even as the night tries to peel you apartâbecause if you let go of that belief, if you let the void take everythingâThere will be nothing left for him to save.
You canât see farther than four feet in front of you.
Anything beyond that dissolves into smears of color and motion, the edges of the room bleeding into one another. When you try to focus, your vision tilts violently, the world pitching sideways as warm blood slips down from your temple, sticky and insistent. It drips into your eye, blurring everything further, each blink making it worse. The ceiling swims. The walls breathe.
He notices.
Of course he does.
He steps into what little clarity you have left, face snapping into focus like a nightmare finally deciding to be seen. His hand comes up fast, fingers prying your jaw open with impatient familiarity. Something chalky presses against your tongue.
You gag immediately.
Your throat spasms around his fingers, saliva thick and useless as panic claws up your chest. Your head jerks instinctively, barbed wire biting deeper in protest, fresh pain flaring white-hot along your wrists and ankles. He doesnât pull away. He shoves the pill back, past your tongue, past your resistance, until your body betrays you and swallows.
You choke.
Tears spill from your eyes, hot and humiliating, streaking through the grime on your cheeks. Your lungs burn as you suck in air in sharp, broken pulls.
Jason, you think, distantly, desperately. The name is a reflex now. A prayer you donât dare say out loud.
His hand withdraws at last.
Thenâ
Smack.
Your head snaps to the side, vision exploding into sparks. Before you can reactâ
Smack.
The second strike lands harder, ringing through your skull, teeth clacking together as pain blooms anew. The world steadies just enough to be cruel about it.
âThatâll keep you awake, birdy,â he croons, pleased.
Your heart slams against your ribs, frantic and trapped. Already you can feel itâthe way the haze pulls back just a little too much, the way your thoughts sharpen against your will. Your eyelids burn, heavy but refusing to close, nerves screaming as the drug seeps in and denies you even the mercy of darkness.
âNow.â
He leans back into his own chair like this is a rehearsal, like heâs bored of waiting for his cue. The legs scrape loudly against the concrete, the sound sharp enough to hurt. He reaches forward and adjusts the camera in front of you with careful precision. A small red light blinks every few secondsâsteady, patient. Watching.
âWeâre going to make a deal, okay?â
You donât answer.
Your eyes refuse to cooperate, swimming uselessly as you blink through blood and tears. Every attempt to focus sends a wave of nausea through you, the room tilting, your pulse roaring in your ears louder than his voice. Your jaw trembles. Your tongue feels thick, wrong in your mouth.
âOkay?â
Nothing comes out.
The barbed wire strung cruelly across your throat digs in deeper with every breath you take, a quiet reminder that sound would cost you skin. Air hisses past your teeth in shallow pulls. You can feel your heartbeat there, fluttering and frantic against metal.
His smile thins.
He stands.
The rusty crowbar tightens in his grip as he rises from a stupid, bright orange folding chairâout of place, obscene against the filth of the warehouse. He steps into frame, then closer, until the camera, until you, are all that exist. He hooks two fingers under your chin and lifts your face, forcing your eyes up.
âAnswer.â
You try.
Your mouth opens. Nothing happens.
All you can see is himâcracked white makeup creasing around his eyes, green hair greasy and limp, age showing in the lines around his mouth where smiles have lived too long. He smells like oil and metal and something sour beneath it all. The warehouse stinks of rust, damp concrete, old fuel. It crawls into your lungs.
And thenâ
You hear it.
A sound that doesnât belong to him.
Crying.
Your head turns slowly, painfully, vertebrae protesting as the wire shifts against your throat. The movement costs you another sharp breath. Your vision blurs againâbut this time, shapes resolve.
A cluster of bodies huddled together against a dented equipment container. Two teenage girls with their knees pulled tight to their chests, faces streaked with dirt and tears. Four little boys wedged between them, shaking, hands bound too tight, mouths open in silent sobs like theyâve already learned screaming doesnât help.
Something in your chest caves in.
You donât even see the crowbar move.
The impact comes out of nowhereâwhite-hot, brutal. The hooked end of the bar slams into your shoulder with a wet, tearing sound, metal biting deep as it pierces flesh. Pain detonates through you, ripping the air from your lungs. He yells as he does it, manic and delighted, like the violence startled even him.
Your body jerks against the restraints.
Barbed wire bites deeper. Blood spills warm and fast down your arm, soaking into your sleeve, dripping to the floor in thick, uneven drops. Your vision fractures, stars bursting behind your eyes.
You clamp your teeth down hard on your lip to keep from screaming.
You taste iron immediatelyâsharp and overwhelmingâas skin breaks beneath your bite. Tears spill freely now, blurring everything, mixing with the blood already clinging to your lashes. It burns. It hurts. Your whole body shakes with the effort of staying quiet.
Behind you, the crying gets worseâfractured, panicked.
âOkay,â you choke out.
The word scrapes your throat raw on the way out, barely more than a breath. It tastes like blood and rust and surrender.
Immediately, the pressure is gone.
The crowbar pulls free with a wet sound that makes your vision white out, pain screaming down your arm as the hooked metal tears away from muscle and skin. You shudder hard, a broken gasp ripping out of you despite your best effort to swallow it down.
He steps back like a magician deciding on the next trick.
Then he leans in againâcareful, deliberateâand pats at the wound where the bar pierced you. Not gentle. Never gentle. His palm presses just enough to make you flinch, fingers smearing warm blood across your torn clothes.
âSee?â he says brightly, turning slightly so the camera gets a better angle. âThat wasnât so hard, was it?â
Your breath comes shallow and fast, chest stuttering against the wire. Every inhale sends a fresh bloom of pain through your shoulder, the edges of it pulsing in time with your heart.
His hands come up next.
Dry. Cracked. Too warm.
He grabs your face, fingers digging into your cheeks, thumbs pressing at your jaw as he tilts your head from side to side. The movement drags the skin of your neck against the barbed wire, a searing, intimate pain that makes your eyes flood instantly.
âWhat a dumb dumb birdy you are,â he croons, affectionate in the way predators are. âItâs okay. Joker can teach you.â
Your body trembles uncontrollably now. Your fingers spasm uselessly against the wooden arms of the chair, nails scraping shallow grooves into the surface. You can feel blood slicking your palm and you don't even want to think about how you got hurt there too.
He releases your face.
Pats your head once.
The gesture is almost worse than the violence.
âNow,â he says softly, pleasantly, âsay thank you.â
Your vision swims. The room feels too loud, too close. Somewhere behind you, one of the children sobs so hard it turns into hiccupping gasps. You swallow around the wire, throat burning.
You look up at him with shaking eyes, lashes heavy with tears and blood. Your mouth opens. Your lips quiver.
âThankââ Your voice breaks completely. You force it back together, dragging the word out of yourself like itâs being pulled through glass. âThank you.â
His smile spreads slow and satisfied, stretching the cracks in his makeup wider.
âGood birdy,â he coos, pleased. âSo much more compliant than your love bird already!â
âNowââ Joker announces, voice lifting into a theatrical lilt, like heâs stepped beneath a spotlight instead of flickering warehouse fluorescents. He turns toward the camera, gives it a jaunty little nod, then looks back at you, grin splitting wider. âI was gonna let you go for some cash. Thought your little boy bird might get scared shitlessâjust a fun little bonus, reallyâbutttââ
He drifts away from you, footsteps light, almost playful. You canât turn your head far enough to see what heâs doing. The wire bites when you try. Your vision pulses, dark at the edges.
Thenâ
A scream.
Sharp. High. A girlâs voice.
It cuts off halfway through, collapsing into a thin, broken cry that echoes far too long in the hollow space of the warehouse.
Something in you fractures.
Joker reappears at your side, breath brushing your ear, laughter bubbling out of him like itâs a private joke the two of you share. âGot lucky with a rich bitch on the road,â he cackles, delighted. âGotham really does keep on givinâ.â
Your stomach twists violently. You taste bile. The crying behind you swells again, panicked and animal, and you can feel your own body trying to fold in on itself despite the restraints, like if you curl inward hard enough you might disappear.Â
His hands slide to your throat and at the same time your eyes land onto his hands. Diamond earrings.
He ripped her earrings out of her ears.Â
Before you can flinch at the sight of pieces of skin in his open hand, he yanks.
The chain snaps free with a sharp tug, metal biting into your skin as the necklace tears away. You gasp, the wire at your neck punishing you for it, and the sudden cold where the chain used to rest feels obsceneâtoo exposed. You feel lucky that you took off your earrings when you were doing your hair.
He dangles it in front of the camera, letting it glint under the harsh light, gemstones smeared faintly red from your blood. âThis could go for a couple hundred too!â he sings. âOhhh, how delightful!â
He leans closer, eyes alight, savoring every tremor that runs through you. âAt least one of the birdies knows how to decorate their nest. Found a few rings at your place as well.â
Joker pockets the necklace with a satisfied hum.
âWell, now that I donât need the money,â he croons, voice lilting, playful, like heâs deciding which joke to tell next, âwhat should I do with you?â
His fingers drag along your cheek again, slower this time, the pad of his thumb pressing just hard enough to bruise. His touch leaves heat behind, a crawling sensation that makes your stomach revolt. You feel contaminated where heâs touched you, like your skin is remembering something it shouldnât.
ââŠIâll give you more,â you whisper. Your voice fractures around the word, splintering into something pitiful and thin. âHowever much you wantâjustââ
âOh, I donât need money.â
The change is instant. His tone drops, sharp and venomous, and when he leans in his eyes are blown wide and empty, pupils swallowing the green like oil slicks. A hawk spotting movement. A blade finding flesh.
âI was looking for some fun, love bird,â he hisses. âYou canât give me that?â
You whimper around the grip on your jaw as his fingers tighten, nails biting into your skin. The wire at your throat digs deeper when you gasp, its teeth kissing something vital. Pain blooms hot and bright, stars bursting behind your eyes.
âJasonâ Jason willââ
He doesnât even flinch at the name.
Maybe thatâs mercy.
His fingers move higher, rough and invasive, smearing through the makeup youâd put on hours ago with careful hands. The eyeshadow burns as itâs ground into your skin, sweat and blood turning it into a dark, ugly paste. His thumb drags through the faint blush on your cheeks, erasing it like it was a mistake.
âHow pretty you are,â he murmurs, almost tender. âI do makeup on myself too, you know.â
Then his hands leave you entirely.
He grabs his own face, fingers digging into the cracked greasepaint, stretching the red grin wider, tearing at the corners until the white creases and flakes. For a second you think you see real skin underneathâwhite, lined, angry. Horrid.
âDo you like mine?â he asks brightly. âDo you think Iâm pretty?â
Your mind blanks.
Your eyes flick helplessly to the camera insteadâthe blinking red light pulsing steadily, patiently. Recording. Waiting. You try to speak, to say yes or no or anything that might stop whatâs coming, but your throat locks around the wire and all that comes out is a wet, useless sound.
Thenâ
âVery pretty!â
The voice is behind you.
Too young.
A teenage girl, no older than seventeen. Her voice trembles, thin and frantic, the words tumbling over each other. âSoâso prettyââ
You feel something inside you tear open.
Sheâs trying to survive. You can feel that hope radiate off of her. The hope of throwing words into the dark and praying it lands somewhere safe.
Jokerâs head snaps toward her.
His eyes narrow, sharp and wrong, smile freezing into something predatory. âYou think so?â
Thereâs a frantic nod you can hear more than seeâthe quick intake of breath, the shuddering little sob that follows.
Joker bends down.
The crowbar scrapes loudly as he lifts it, metal screaming against concrete. You catch a glimpse of it as he moves past youârusted, pitted, darkened in places where itâs already been used tonight.
Then heâs gone from your line of sight.
The scream that follows is immediate and unbearable.
Itâs not just painâitâs shock, terror, the sound of someone realizing too late that they were wrong. The metal wall amplifies it, throws it back at itself until it feels like the warehouse is screaming with her.
Thereâs a wet, sickening crack.
A sound like meat hitting concrete.
âWhy donât we match?â Joker coos from behind you, voice light and delighted. âI did one side, now the other!â
The crowbar hits again.
You hear bone give this timeâfeel it in your teeth, in your chest. Her scream fractures into something animal, then into choking sobs, then into a raw, bubbling sound that makes bile rush up your throat.
Your own crying breaks free, ugly and uncontrollable. Your body jerks against the restraints, fingers cramping, nails tearing uselessly into the wood of the chair. Hot tears spill down your face, mixing with blood, dripping off your chin in thick, dark drops.
The cameraâs red light blinks again.
Once.
Twice.
It taunts you by matching every sound that breaks out of you.
Every gasped sob, every wet, hitching breath. The cameraâs red light blinks in time with your chest, like itâs learned your rhythm, like itâs decided to breathe with you instead of for you.
And then the Joker comes back.
You smell him before you see himâiron-thick blood, old rust, sweat gone sour. His hands are slick, red to the wrist, fingers shining under the warehouse lights. The crowbar hangs loose in his grip, darker now, clotted, strands of hair caught cruelly in its curve.
He crouches in front of you, bringing himself eye-level, like heâs talking to a child.
âWell,â he hums thoughtfully. âI canât give you her look, can I?â
Your vision swims. You canât stop shaking. Tears slide down your face in hot, unstoppable streams, carving clean paths through blood and grime. Your mouth opens, but nothing coherent comes outâjust a broken, animal sound that folds back in on itself.
His smile twitches.
âWhat should I do with you?â he asks softly. âHm?â
You donât answer. You canât. You just cry harder, chest stuttering against the wire, throat raw and burning.
That seems to irritate him.
He clicks his tongue, disappointed, and lifts the crowbar. The cold metal taps against your cheek onceâtapâjust enough to make you flinch violently. He pauses, head tilting.
âOhââ
His eyes light up.
âOh yes, thatâs wonderful! Ohââ He erupts into laughter, sudden and explosive, clutching his stomach as if the joke is too much to bear. Spit flies from his mouth, warm and disgusting as it lands in your hair, streaking through blood-matted strands. âOh, isnât my brain just splendid?â
He straightens, still laughing, wiping his eyes like heâs genuinely amused. âYou bats are all poetry, I sayâpure poetry!â
Then he turns.
Walks away.
His footsteps fade, echoing hollowly through the warehouse, until thereâs only the hum of the lights, the distant crying behind youâand the camera.
Youâre alone.
One last sob claws its way out of your throat, wet and choking. Blood follows it, dribbling down your chin, splashing darkly against your chest. You force your eyes open, drag them upward, lock them onto the camera.
You donât know whoâs watching. You donât know if anyone is.
Your voice comes out steadier than it has any right to be.
âHowââ
âShut up!â someone whisper-yells behind you, frantic and terrified. âThereâs other men!â
Your mouth snaps shut.
And the red light keeps blinking.
The metal door slams open with a shriek of abused hinges, the impact shuddering through the warehouse floor and straight up your spine. Dust rains down from the rafters in a thin, dirty veil, catching in your hair and sticking to the blood already drying there.
Heâs laughing before you even see him.
Not distant laughterâclose. Moving. Each step accompanied by a wet, dragging sound, like something heavy being pulled across concrete. His cackle ricochets off the shipping containers, off the steel beams, off the low ceiling that traps the sound and forces it back into your skull.
A little boy cries out behind you as Joker passes him. A sharp, panicked sound that fractures into a sob and then cuts off abruptly, like someone clamped a hand over his mouth.
The air grows hotter.
Through the warped reflection in the camera lens, you see it clearly now: a long metal bar burning red-hot, so bright it hurts to look at directly. Heat ripples distort the image around it, the glow painting the walls in feverish streaks of crimson. The smell hits you nextâburning iron, scorched metal, something faintly organic beneath it that makes bile crawl up your throat.
Joker taps the brand against the concrete behind you.
It doesnât clang.
It hisses.
The sound is sharp and alive, like meat on a skillet. Tiny sparks spit outward where it kisses the floor, leaving blackened scars in the cement. The red glow doesnât dull. Doesnât cool. It stays furious and bright, as if fed by something endless.
Whatever fragile hope you were clutching evaporates in that moment, leaving you hollowed out, lungs burning as you exhale something that feels like your last prayer.
Heâs behind you in the next second.
Jokerâs hand comes out of nowhere, clamping over your mouth, palm slick and hot. The copper taste floods you as his fingers press into your cheeks, nails digging in just enough to hurtâjust enough to remind you that restraint is a choice heâs making. Your head is forced back, neck screaming as the wire saws deeper, the barbs biting into tender skin.
âWould you like to match your birdy?â he murmurs.
His voice is serene. Gentle. Almost affectionate.
He angles the brand around the arm of the chair so you can see it clearly. The letter is unmistakable now, its edges glowing white-hot, heat radiating off it in suffocating waves.
A âđčâ.
Your body reacts before your mind canâyour stomach convulses, gagging against his hand, breath stuttering uselessly through your nose. Your skin feels too tight, like itâs already shrinking away from whatâs coming.
âWeâre going to make the deal now,â he coos.
In the cameraâs reflection, you can see his eyeâwide, bright, utterly focused on the blinking red dot. Performing. Enjoying the audience if there even is one.
âYou either get a matching lookâŠâ The brand drifts closer, close enough that the heat kisses your cheek, nerves screaming in anticipation, sweat instantly breaking out along your spine. ââŠor you tell me who you hate.â
His hand peels away from your mouth.
Air rushes in too fast. You choke on it, coughing hard enough that the wire grinds into your throat, pain blooming hot and blinding. Your voice comes out shredded. âWho⊠who I hate?â
âWho put you here?â he hums thoughtfully, as if the answer delights him. âIt wasnât me.â
The brand pauses, hovering inches from your skin. You can feel the heat burrowing inward, like itâs already memorizing you.
âWhy do you think I found you?â he continues lightly. âDo you know how sloppy he is?â
Silence stretches, thick and oppressive.
You stare at the glowing red letter, your mind drifting somewhere distant and numb to survive. Absurdly, irrationally, you think of Jasonâs helmetâthe same violent red, the same defiant color. You wonder if heâs thinking of you right now. If he can feel this, somehow.
âTell me who you hate.â
The words donât just reach youâthey enter you, heavy and cold, sinking past bone and settling somewhere deep and irreversible. They press the air flat, make the warehouse feel smaller, closer, like the walls are leaning in to listen.
He stands before you in all his wrongness, and up close there is nothing theatrical left. The Jokerâs makeup has melted into something corpse-like, white cracked and flaking into the grooves of his face as though his skin is trying to shed it. The red smile is no longer a grin so much as a wound, smeared unevenly, darker where blood has mixed in, the corners dragged downward by age and use. His hair hangs limp, green dulled to the color of mold, clinging to his scalp in greasy strands. His eyes are too brightâglass-bright, feverishânever still, never soft, reflecting the warehouse lights like knives.
The space around you hums with misery. The concrete beneath your feet is slick with blood and oil, cold seeping up through the chair and into your bones. Shipping containers loom like coffins, their metal sides scarred and rusted, shadows pooled so thick between them it feels like something could step out at any moment. The air reeksâburnt iron, old sweat, copper, rotâand every breath feels like inhaling something alive and hostile.
You look at the camera.
That red eye blinks steadily, rhythmically, a heart that isnât yours. It sees the way your chest shudders, the way your fingers twitch uselessly against the bindings, the way your body is already bracing for pain it knows is coming. Your thoughts drift, slow and exhausted, slipping through your hands like water you canât quite hold.
You think of Jason.
Not the helmet. Not the blood. But his handsâwarm, callused, careful when they touch you. The way he looks at you like the world might soften if you stay. The way he says your name like itâs something solid.
You could say his name now.
You could offer it up like a sacrifice and pray that this monster believes in deals, that you might walk out of here broken but breathing. You could lie and hope he lets you go.
Or you could say Jasonâs name and watch Jokerâs smile vanish as he switches off the camera and kills you quietly, preserving this horror to show your sweet boy later.
Or you could stay silent and take the brandâfeel your skin burn, your body marked, watch the ecstasy bloom in Jokerâs eyes as he claims you like an object heâs improved.
None of them feel survivable.
Something inside you twistsânot courage, not bravery, but love sharpened into something desperate and ugly and defiant. You gather what spit you can in your blood-wet mouth and turn your head as far as the wire allows.
You spit in his face.
It lands wet and unmistakable, dragging a slow line through the cracked white paint, cutting through the red smile like an insult carved in flesh.
For a heartbeat, everything freezes.
The Joker goes utterly still, his expression emptying out in a way that is far more frightening than his laughter. Then his eyes widen, pupils dilating, fury flaring bright and feralâpleased.
You lean forward, neck screaming as the wire bites deeper, and you whisper because your voice will not survive being louder.
âYou know,â you murmur, breath shaking despite everything you do to steady it, âheâs never mentioned you before.â
His breath stutters.
âYou must not have left quite an impression.â
Itâs a lie. A reckless, transparent lie.
You have lived in Gotham long enough to know exactly what he isâhis name written in blood across the cityâs historyâbut lies can still cut, and you see it land. You see the way his smile stretches wider, hungry and thrilled.
Youâve given him a reason.
A reason to prove himself.
A reason to keep you alive.
A reason to make you hurt longer.
His hand tangles in your hair and yanks your head back violently. Your neck slams into the barbed wire, spikes tearing in with a wet, intimate sound that makes you sob despite yourself. Warm blood spills down your throat, choking you, slicking your chest.
Then the brand descends.
The heat is indescribableâancient, total, a pain so vast it consumes thought itself. Your flesh screams as it burns, the smell of seared skin rising thick and sweet, smoke curling upward as the letter is carved into you slowly, deliberately. Your body arches uselessly against the restraints, every nerve on fire, and the sound that leaves you is not a scream so much as something torn out of your soul.
You hate that he hears it. And when that drug denies you the void of sleep you so desperately need, you allow yourself to think numbly as the man pulls it away that at least Jason can't dwindle his appearance anymore.
Your tears stripe down your cheeks, burning as they touch your skin.
We match. You think numbly, Atleast we match.
He strokes over the brand with more delicacy than he has ever had in this whole nightmare, mumbling, âThis is going to hurt you a lot more than it hurts me.â
When you wake again, itâs to the weight of tears landing on your faceâwarm, uneven drops that pull you out of the dark in slow, reluctant pieces. For a moment you donât know where you are. The world rocks gently, like it canât decide whether to keep moving or stop altogether. Thereâs the low hum of an engine beneath you, vibration traveling through bone and bruised muscle, and the smell of old leather surrounds youâworn, familiar, grounding in a way that makes your chest ache.
Leather is good.
Leather is not acid.
Leather does not burn your lungs on the way in.
âHurts,â you mumble, the word barely surviving the journey out of your throat. You offer it up like an apology, like a peace offering, half-expecting pain to answer you back.
Instead, the crying breaks harder.
It comes undone above you, raw and ugly, and through the haze you realize you arenât lying flat on concrete, waiting for the Joker to press a cinder block to your stomach. Your body is stretched across someone, your legs draped over another set of knees, your weight distributed carefully, reverently, like something fragile that might shatter if shifted wrong.Â
An arm is braced beneath your neck, steady and strong, keeping your head from lolling, and your cheek presses into a leather jacket that smells unmistakably like gun oil, sweat, rainâ
Jason.
The knowledge hits softer than it should, cushioned by exhaustion and shock, and when your eyes finally manage to open, everything swims. Light smears at the edges, colors bleeding into one another, but his face is there anyway, hovering close, carved with terror and relief and something so naked it almost scares you more than the warehouse did.
âAm I in heaven?â you mumble.
He lets out a sound that isnât quite a sob and isnât quite a laugh, choking on it as his chin trembles. âYou donât even believe in heaven.â
âWell,â you murmur, tryingâand failingâto pull your mouth into something that resembles a smile, âwhat else could you be?â
Your jaw burns when you speak. Everything burns. It feels like your body has been filled with broken glass and lit from the inside, and youâre dimly aware of warm liquid slipping from your mouth, darkening the leather beneath your cheek every time you breathe wrong. You hate that youâre staining him. You hate that you canât stop.
âIâll kill him,â Jason whispers, like a prayer heâs been holding onto with both hands. His fingers shake as they brush your hair back, careful to avoid places he knows are hurt. âIâll kill him. I promise.â
âCan I have hot chocolate first?â you mumble. The words feel distant, like they belong to someone else. âI bought that expensive kind⊠from Finland. Asshole knocked it all over my carpetâŠâ
Jasonâs breath fractures completely at that. He nods too hard, tears spilling freely now, dropping onto your cheeks, your neck, your collarbone. âYeah. Yeah, Iâll buy you hot chocolate. Iâll buy you all of it.â
Somewhere near your feet, another voice cuts in, low and strained with concern. âHey, Jayâbreatheââ
Jason doesnât hear them. Or maybe he does and simply canât afford to listen. His chest is rising too fast beneath you, breaths sawing in and out like heâs drowning on dry land, his eyes glassy and unfocused, the green in them shifting with every frantic blink.
Or maybe thatâs just your vision still failing you. That would make sense. The powder. The smoke. The way light hurts now.
âStop crying,â you murmur weakly. âI canât die with you looking like that.â
That breaks him.
His face crumples completely, grief spilling over into something fierce and desperate as he bends closer, forehead almost touching yours. âGood,â he chokes. âFuck you. Iâll cry even more, soâso stay with me, yeah?â
âNo,â you whisper, your voice scraping raw against your throat. âWanna sleep.â
âYou slept an awful lot,â he snaps, but thereâs no anger in itâonly terror wearing sharp edges, only love clawing its way out however it can.
âWell,â you murmur, your voice thin but soft, like youâre afraid of startling him, âYou show up in my dreams an awful lot.â
That does it.
Whatever fragile control Jason had left fractures clean through. He folds over you instinctively, shoulders caving as he triesâfailsâto hide the sound of it. His breath comes apart against your hair, his forehead dipping close to your temple like if he presses himself near enough, he can keep you here by force alone. You feel the tremor of him through your whole body, every hitch of his chest echoing in your ribs.
You smell blood on him then. Copper and iron, sharp beneath the leather and sweat and rain. For a distant, numb second you think itâs yours againâuntil the scent is too heavy, too layered.
Oh.
Was thisâ
âDid I interrupt family bonding?â you whisper.
Your lips barely move. The words slip out half-asleep, half-dreaming, and they earn you a startled huff from somewhere behind you. Jason doesnât answer. He canât. His arms tighten instead, one hand splayed carefully at your back like heâs afraid even breathing too hard might hurt you more.
A voice comes from the seat behind, dry and unimpressed, because Jason is currently incapable of speech and whoever has your legs resting in their lap is rubbing slow, grounding circles into his back.
âIf this is what you think family bonding is, youâll fit right in.â
âDamian, be quiet,â another voice snaps.
âSheâs the one shamelessly flirting with him in front of all of us, Timâ Damian continues anyway, undeterred. âAnd Father isnât even saying anything, soââ
âWell sheâs the one dying!â Tim blurts, voice cracking sharp with fear.
Jason chokes on the words that come from Timâs mouth, breath stuttering hard, and a deeper voice cuts in from the front seatâcontrolled, measured, holding itself together by sheer will.
âSheâs not going to die, Tim.â
âI want hoya bellas on my grave,â you interrupt softly.
Jason lets out a broken sound that might have been a laugh in another universe. He shakes his head over you, forehead brushing your hair, and through your blurry vision you think you catch a gloved hand popping up behind him in a solemn thumbs-up.
âGot it.â
Another voice joins in from the front, exasperated and strained. âCassandra, sheâs not being serious.â
âIâm sorry,â Jason whispers, over and over, like a mantra, like something heâs trying to carve into reality. âIâm sorry. Iâm sorry.â His thumb strokes your hair away from your forehead again, impossibly gentle, avoiding the places he knows hurt, the places he doesnât want to know at all.
âIâm gonna sleep now,â you murmur. It takes effort to shape the words. The dark is getting heavier again, tugging at you, warm and deep. âCan one of you give Jason water?â
âHeyââ Jason breathes, panic flaring sharp as his voice cracks. âHey, noâno, no, no, stay with me, come onââ
But youâre already slipping.
Your eyes flutter closed despite him, despite the warmth of his arms, despite the way his heart is racing beneath your ear like itâs trying to outrun fate itself. His glove comes off hurriedly and you feel his bare fingers press to your pulse, grounding himself in the steady beat there, in the fact that itâs still happening.
After a few minutes, Dick leans forward and taps Jasonâs shoulder gently, offering a water bottle. His uniform is torn and scorched like the rest of them, a thin cut bright against his cheek, but his voice is soft when he speaks.
âDrink.â
Jason doesnât look up. He doesnât let go. He just nods once, tight and shaky, eyes fixed on you like if he looks away for even a second, the world might take you again.
He forces himself to take a full gulp of water, the plastic bottle crinkling loudly in the too-quiet car, his throat working like it has to remember how swallowing goes. His hands are still shaking when he passes it off to Tim.
âHey, I donât need anyââ
Jason looks at him.
Not sharp. Not angry. Just steady in a way that leaves no room for argument, the kind of look that says do this or I will fall apart next.
Tim takes a long swig immediately. Somewhere in the background, Damian lets out a low, satisfied cackle.
The digital clock on the Batmobile reads 4:00 a.m.
The numbers glow cold blue against the dark interior, reflected faintly in the windshield like a second set of eyes staring back at them. Gotham outside is hollow and half-dead at this hourâstreetlights flickering, rain-slick asphalt stretching endlessly, buildings slumped together like theyâre exhausted too.
Bruceâs voice is calm as he calls Alfred, clipped and precise, already listing supplies like this is something he can control if he names enough of it out loud.
Jason doesnât listen.
He keeps his focus on you.
On the shallow rise and fall of your chest. The warmth is still clinging stubbornly to your skin. On the way your weight settles into him like it belongs there, like it always has. One hand stays firm at your neck, holding you upright because you need itâbecause you need him steady, and that knowledge anchors him harder than anything Bruce could ever say.
You need him here. You need him present. You need him not to break.
He knows that, because onceâonceâthat was all he ever wanted too.
And thatâs the cruel part of it.
Because the weight of you in his arms has only ever meant safety. Home. Sleep curling warm and heavy in his bones. His body doesnât know the difference between holding you safe and finally being allowed to rest.
Jason Todd passes out with his forehead dipping gently toward yours, his grip loosening only by a fraction, like even unconscious heâs afraid to let you go.
The last thing he hears before everything goes dark is Timâs voice, sharp with panic and disbelief.
âDudeâwhat the fuckââ
âHold his head upâdonât let him fall on her!â Bruce barks from the front, voice cracking sharp through the Batmobile like a snapped cable.
All at once, everyone moves.
Damian fists the back of Jasonâs Tâshirt, knuckles white as he yanks him upright with a strength born of panic heâd never admit to. Dick stretches impossibly from the passenger seat, arm braced awkwardly as he cups the back of Jasonâs head, careful, reverent, like heâs afraid one wrong angle will shatter him. Tim presses a steadying hand to Jasonâs chest, feeling the uneven rise and fall beneath his palm, grounding him the way heâs learned to do with bombs and brothers alike.
Jason is dead weight. Heavy. Still clinging to you even in unconsciousness, his arm slack but stubborn around your shoulders, like muscle memory alone refuses to let you go.
The Batmobile hums on, tires slicing through wet streets, Gotham blurring past in streaks of sodium light and rain-slick concrete. The city feels distant now, muffled, like itâs holding its breath with them.
ââŠDid someone check if the Joker wasâuhâbreathing?â Stephanie asks from the back, her voice small in a way it rarely ever is.
She hadnât stayed for the end. Her job had been triageâgetting the kids out, shouting orders, dragging civilians through blood and broken glass while the rest of them stayed behind in the warehouse with the laughter and the screaming. Sheâd smelled the aftermath on them when they regrouped. She didnât need details then but...
Bruce doesnât look back. His hands tighten on the wheel.
âJason didnât hit any vital points,â he says quietly, like heâs reciting a report heâs already memorized. âJust⊠ahââ
âCarved his face like a jackâoââlantern,â Damian supplies, entirely too calm. âHeated up a crowbar to do it too. Very effective.â
Thereâs a beat of silence.
The city lights flash over Bruceâs faceâold stone and deep eyes that are hollowed by relief he doesnât let himself feel yet.
ââŠYeah,â Bruce exhales, short and rough. âThat.â
The Batmobile keeps moving.
Jason breathes.
You breathe.
And for now, thatâs enough to keep the night from swallowing them whole.
You wake up in bed.
Not the thin, borrowed kind your body has learned to tolerate at your apartment, but something deep and indulgentâclean sheets tucked tight, the mattress yielding just enough to cradle you instead of swallowing you whole. The pillow beneath your cheek feels stupidly expensive, cool and smooth, smelling faintly of detergent and something old and comforting, like cedar and money and quiet hallways that echo.
For a moment, you think youâre dreaming again.
Then you feel him.
Jason is asleep beside you, solid and unmistakable. You donât need to moveâyou canât really anywaysâto know itâs him. The arm wrapped around your waist is heavy with familiar strength, protective even in unconsciousness. His hair brushes against your arm every time he breathes, soft, tickling your skin in a way that makes your chest ache.
Heâs breathing.
That fact alone nearly undoes you.
God. You really need to raise your standards, you think hazily. Youâre reduced to thisâlistening to him breathe, feeling the slow rise and fall of his chest, and already you want to curl into him and coo like nothing in the world has ever gone wrong.
Then you see Bruce.
Heâs standing near the bed, still as a statue, watching you with the careful intensity of someone afraid to spook a wild animal. It takes effort to focus on his face, your vision dragging itself into clarity inch by inch.
When you try to lift your headâmanners resurfacing before senseâyour body protests sharply.
Bruce moves instantly.
âHey, heyâno,â he murmurs, hands gentle but firm as he presses you back into the mattress. âRelax. Itâs okay. Youâre safe.â
Your head sinks back into the pillow, and the moment stretches. You swallow thickly before managing a small, hoarse sound of politeness.
âNice to meet you, Mr. Wayne. Jasonââ
âHasnât told you much about me,â Bruce finishes for you, a faint, tired chuckle slipping out. âThatâs alright. I just need you to sleep right now.â
You glance downward as best you can, feeling something sharp dig into your side.
ââŠI canât sleep if your sonâs elbow is in my ribs.â
Bruce blinks.
Actually blinksâsurprised enough that it breaks through the carefully assembled calm. âAhââ he starts, then reaches for Jason, trying to rearrange him with the same precision he uses on everything else.
It doesnât work.
Jason huffs in his sleep, a low, irritated sound, and somehow manages to make it worseâhis arm tightening, his leg hooking over yours possessively, like youâre something heâs afraid the world might steal back if he lets go.
Bruce freezes.
You mumble, exhausted but soft, âItâs alright. Iâm sure he hasnât slept⊠Iâve gotten quite a lot, soâŠâ
Bruce looks like he wants to argue. His jaw tightens, then loosens, the fight draining out of him. He exhales and sits back in the chair by the bed, elbows on his knees, hands clasped tightly together.
âItâs the 26th,â he says quietly.
Oh.
You missed Christmas.
What a shame.
After a moment, Bruce speaks again, and his voice is heavier nowâcareful, deliberate, like every word costs him something.
âI⊠want to apologize to you.â His fingers interlace, knuckles whitening. âI knew youâd been taken. And I didnât tell him. Possibly⊠he could have been there sooner. But I needed to make sure the others would be saved as well.â
âWell,â you murmur, the word barely more than breath, âI donât exactly blame you for that.â
It isnât forgiveness exactlyânothing so grandâbut itâs honest, and it lands heavier than anger ever could.
Bruce doesnât relax. If anything, his shoulders pull tighter, like heâs bracing for a blow that never quite comes. Heâs spent his whole life learning how to deâescalate men with guns, gods with vendettas, cities with teethâbut you unsettle him in a quieter, more dangerous way. Youâre calm. Youâre lucid. Youâre something Jason had threatened to shoot himself for.
He clears his throat, trying to give you something solid, something measurable. Facts are safer.
âJason⊠got him,â Bruce says carefully. âBadly. I thinkââ He hesitates, eyes flicking once toward Jason like heâs checking for movement. âI think the Joker may be blind now. Or at least permanently impaired.â
âYou let him?â you ask.
Still no accusation. Just a soft, stunned curiosity, as if youâre piecing together a story you were never meant to survive.
Bruce nods. Once. The motion costs him. âI did,â he admits. âBut Iââ
âThen thatâs enough,â you whisper, interrupting him gently, like youâre afraid the words themselves might hurt. âJason will realize that too.â Your lashes flutter; exhaustion tugs at you like a tide. âI mean⊠he probably wonât. Heâll still try to kill him.â A faint, crooked exhale. âBut you did everything you could yesterday.â
Your gaze driftsânot to Bruce, but to Jason. To the way his arm is still locked around you, even in sleep. To the stubborn set of his jaw, the crease between his brows that never fully smooths out anymore.
âThank you,â you add quietly. âFor finding me.â
Thatâs when Bruce goes still.
Not rigid. Not defensive.
Still.
Because heâs been looking at you, yesâbut now you realize he hasn't been looking you in the eye while he speaks. His eyes have been caught in one place, drawn there again and again like a bruise you canât help but press.
Your cheek.
The skin there is angry beneath the bandageâs edgeâraw, faintly swollen, discolored in a way he winced at while he bandaged it. Bruce didn't let anyone else tend to it, not even Alfred.Â
Because this was a wound he inflicted, one that he needed to tend to.
âItâs still fresh,â he says, softer now, stripped of the Bat and the rules and the fear. Just a man speaking carefully around something fragile. âIâll get you better medicine. The pigment should fade.â A pause. His voice lowers. âI canât promise about the texture.â
You donât look away. You donât flinch.
âThatâs okay,â you say.
And Bruce doesnât know if you mean the scar, or the pain, or the fact that youâll carry this foreverâbut Jason shifts in his sleep then, brow tightening, arm drawing you closer like he sensed the weight of the moment and refused to let it settle on you alone.
Bruce watches that. Watches how Jason anchors himself to you without waking, how his breathing steadies when yours does, how it pauses even in sleep when yours hitches.
âHe loves you a lot.â Bruce mumbles.
â...And you too Mr.Wayne.â
jason peter todd tag-list (check pinned post for info on how to be added .á ) :@justamarsbar, @peridotnature854, @nayy-a, @that-willowtree,
someone Please write a fic with nanamiâs widow and after she moves on with higuruma a zombie apocalypse happens and nanami comes back looking for her and @ međ«Ą
operation: get over your childhood crush! â gojo satoru
synopsis. in an attempt to move on from your childhood best friendâwho definitely doesnât see you the way you wantâyou hatch a series of plans to help you get over him. it doesn't go as planned.
contents. hurt/comfort, fluff, nerd!gojo, college au, childhood friends to lovers, mutual pining, unreliable narrator, miscommunication, insecurity, dorky references bc u make him go dumb and digimon inaccuracies probably
notes. i did not proofread this monster!! enjoy :P
The hum of the air conditioning fills the room as night settles in, the light from Satoruâs bedside lamp casting a soft glow over his mess of a room. Youâre both sprawled out across his bed, limbs entangled like itâs the most normal thing in the world. Because, for the two of you, it is.
Satoruâs Nintendo Switch is balanced on his stomach, hands lazily tapping away as his little Digimon charges into battle on screen. Youâre curled into his side, one leg hooked around his and a blanket thrown haphazardly across you both. The half-abandoned textbooks sit at the edge of the mattress, tragically ignored. Another study session: failed. Not that Satoru needed it. He passed everything with flying colors. It was more of an excuse for you to come over.
âYour room still smells like that cheap vanilla air freshener,â you mumble, nose scrunching.
âThatâs because you bought it,â he replies without looking up, thumb expertly guiding his character through an attack.
âBecause your room would end up stinking with sweat and whatever freaky stuff you do in here.â
âHey!â He whines. âI shower everyday and you know it. The stink is all you. Have you ever sniffed yourself, princess?â
You swat at his stomach, and he lets out a dramatic grunt. âRude. I brought that candle to add ambiance.â
âAh yes,â he deadpans, ânothing like artificial sugar scent.ââ
You snort, settling your head back down on his shoulder, the fabric of his hoodie soft beneath your cheek. Thereâs a long pause before you say, âYou know, if we fail our exams, Iâm blaming your Digimon addiction.â
He grins. âIâm raising digital warriors, thank you very much. And Iâve never failed an exam, donât wound me now!â
âThey look like mutant toddlers with attitude problems.â
He gasps, clutching his heart. âTheyâre champions, you monster.â
You laugh, letting the sound dissolve into something quieter as your fingers absentmindedly trace a pattern into the blanket. His hand rests near yours. Not holding it. Not not holding it.
His glasses are tilted again. Of course.
You reach up and straighten them with a sigh. âHonestly, youâd be lost without me.â
âNot true.â He says it reflexively, then pauses. His voice softens. âOkay, maybe. Iâd probably just let them slide down until I walked into a wall.â
You smile faintly. âAnd thereâd be no one there to patch you up.â
âTragic,â he agrees. âWould bleed out on the floor, probably.â
âYouâre so dramatic.â
âYouâre so bossy,â he counters, shooting you a sideways look.Â
âAdmit it,â he says, voice full of faux-smugness, âyouâd miss me if I died tragically and left you all alone.â
You hesitate for a second too long before mumbling, âDonât joke about that.â
Itâs quiet. The game music loops in the background as his Digimon wins the battle with a triumphant fanfare.
He doesnât say anything.
You suddenly feel too warm under the blanket. The joke had been harmless, stupid even.
But something inside you twists, the same something thatâs been unraveling lately every time he mentions another girl.
Another type. Thatâs not you.
âYou know,â you say slowly, eyes peeling from the screen to his phone, which lights up with a notification, revealing one of his favorite gravure modelâs latest issues as its wallpaper. âYou could probably date any girl you wanted. Why do you partake in freak stuff like this? Itâs anti-girl repellent.â
He makes a noncommittal sound. âDoubt it.â
âI donât. Youâve got that whole genius-who-doesnât-realize-heâs-hot thing going on.â
He glances at you, skeptical. âIs that⊠a thing?â
âIt is. Annoying, but effective. Girls love it.â
He hums, clearly amused, cheeks slightly flushed. âWell, good to know I have options.â
You try to laugh, but it catches in your throat.
You shouldnât ask. You really shouldnât.
But youâre lying in his bed. Wrapped up in him like you belong here. And some part of you aches to know the answer.
So you pretend itâs a joke. You tilt your head against his shoulder, voice airy, teasing. âHey, be honestâdo you think Iâm cute?â
He goes still.
His hand tightens slightly on the Switch. You think youâve pushed too far, so you try to backpedal before he can respond.
âNot like⊠like that,â you say quickly. âI just meant, like, in general. Compared to those girls youâre into. Say, Waka Inoue. You know, long legs, shiny hair, cute face?â
His jaw tightens.
Youâre still trying to play it off. âI mean, Iâm not fishing for compliments. I justâwas wondering. Curiosity. Science.â
He finally turns to look at you.
His gaze lingers. And for the first time all night, heâs not smiling.
You feel your breath stutter in your throat underneath his gaze.
Then he shrugs.
ââŠNah.â
It slices through the air with quiet finality.
Your heart drops. You donât let it show. Not fully. But it must flicker in your face, because he quickly looks away.
You laugh. It sounds forced.
âYeah, thatâs fair. I mean, I wasnât expecting a yes or anything.â
Heâs silent.
You shift away from him slightly, giving him space. âI should head home soon. We didnât really get any studying done, anyway.â
âItâs late. Why donât you stay the night?â
Usually, youâd accept his offer with a smile, but you really wanted to go home and wallow in your own self pity.
âItâs fine, I have something to do anyway,â the lie slips out of your mouth easily as you begin to pack your things.
And you miss the way he watches youâguilt in his eyes, frustration on his tongue.Â
You knew it was time. Ten years of hopeless, fruitless pining had done enough damage to your heart.
It had started the day your parents moved next door. Satoru had been the loud, obnoxious, too-pretty-for-his-own-good boy on the playground who shoved candy in your hand and asked if you wanted to be friends.
Youâd been doomed since day one.
And to make things worse, youâd both gotten into Japanâs most competitive universityâtogether. Same neighborhood. Same school. Same train route. You werenât just stuck with him. You were haunted.
But you were young. And hot. And allegedly in your prime. You couldnât keep orbiting around a guy who still thought microwave gyoza was a food group and used your shampoo because it âsmelled like you, so why not?â
You were sipping coffee with your two closest friends, and todayâs topic wasâunfortunatelyâyour love life.
âHonestly, I canât believe youâve been stuck on Gojo for this long,â Utahime said, disgusted, as she stirred her latte like it personally offended her. âYou could do so much better.â
âIt was kind of cute in high school,â Shoko added âbut now itâs just sad.â
You sighed, blowing on your drink. âI know, okay? Itâs not like I havenât tried. But heâs literally the only guy Iâve ever been close to. I donât even talk to guys besides him.â
âThatâs because heâs been gatekeeping you since the two of you met,â Utahime said flatly. âI swear, every time someone so much as glanced at you, he pulled that overprotective act.â
You wrinkled your nose. âThat doesnât sound like âToruâŠâ
Shoko and Utahime exchanged a look. One of those knowing glances.
Utahime cleared her throat. âIt doesnât matter! What matters is you are hot. Youâve got the face, the body, the grades, the personality. You just need the confidence.â
You peeked up at her, unsure. âYou really think so?â
Utahime leaned forward, smirking like sheâd just won a war. âI know so. And thatâs why Iâve come up with a plan.â
You narrowed your eyes. âA plan?â
She slammed her hands down on the table, eyes alight. âOperation: Get Over Gojo Satoru.â
You blinked. âThatâs⊠a long title.â
Shoko blew a slow stream of smoke. âItâs either this or pine until you die and haunt him as a love-sick ghost.â
You stared into your cup, sighing. âFine. Iâm in. Whatâs step one?â
Utahime grinned.
âWhatcha doing?âÂ
Gojoâs voice drifts lazily over your shoulder, followed by the soft rustle of his hoodie as he leans in. Heâs far too close, obnoxiously so, his breath tickling your ear and his chin was nearly resting on your shoulder.
You donât even glance up. âStudying.â
The two of you are supposed to be studyingâ finals loom overhead like a guillotine, but as usual, very little academic progress has been made. Mostly because your study partner is a six-foot-something genius who insists on sitting sideways in the booth, long legs tangled in yours under the table like itâs second nature.
He hums, skeptical. âLiar.â
You hum noncommittally, thumbing through the dating app Utahime suggested with vague disinterest. The guys blur together: not tall enough, too cocky, too bland, too not Satoru. One makes a joke suspiciously close to a Gojo classic, and you immediately hit unmatch with a scowl.
âWait,â Satoru says slowly. âAre you on a dating app?!â He practically yells the last part. Half the cafe turns to glare at the source of the disruption.
You hiss under your breath, mortified, swatting at him. âKeep your voice down, idiot!â
His eyes widen dramatically, hands thrown up like youâve stabbed him. âI leave you alone for two minutes and youâre already planning a life with someone named âKeita, aspiring DJ and spiritual healerâ? Iâm wounded.â
âYou werenât supposed to read that far.â
âIâm a speed-reader,â he says with a smug grin. âItâs part of the whole âgeniusâ thing.â
Before you can argue, he snatches your phone with a level of ease that tells you this isnât the first time heâs done something like this. He grins like heâs won a prize.
âSatoru!â
âRelax, Iâm not texting anyone,â he says, fingers flying across the screen. âJust⊠optimizing.â
Your heart drops. âWhat are you typing?â
âNothing~â
You make a grab for your phone, but he effortlessly leans back, holding it above his head with those ridiculously long limbs. You glare at him from across the table, arm outstretched like a furious cat trying to swat at the moon.
âGive it back!â
âPatience.â
âGojo Satoruââ
âOkay, okay!â he relents with a dramatic sigh, finally placing your phone face-down on the table like heâs done you a huge favor.
You snatch it up immediately, eyes scanning for damage. No weird messages. No unsolicited likes. No new matches.
ââŠWhat did you do?â
âI didnât message anyone,â he assures, too innocent to be trusted. âIâm not that cruel.â
You narrow your eyes, suspicious.
âBut,â he adds with a grin, âI didnât know you were dating.â
âIâm not,â you mutter, clicking your phone off. âJust⊠considering it. Trying. Itâs not going well.â
âGood.â
The word comes out too fast. Too sharp. And his face doesnât match the light tone heâs trying to play off.
You raise an eyebrow. âGood?â
He shifts, leaning back in his seat, suddenly very interested in stirring the foam in his overpriced coffee. âI mean, itâs good youâre not settling. You should be picky. Guys are the worst.â
You snort. âYou are a guy.â
âExactly. I know what weâre like.â
You smile despite yourself, rolling your eyes. âIâm sure you think youâre the exception.â
âI know I am,â he says, winking. Then he sobers slightly, eyes flickering to yours. âIâm just⊠looking out for you.â
The sincerity in his voice makes your chest ache. You wish it was more than just him being protective in that big-brotherly, annoyingly loyal kind of way.
You take a sip of your coffee to cool your nerves. It doesnât help. The words come out before you can stop them.
âYou know with the way things are going⊠maybe you should just date me at this point.â
Silence.
Itâs a joke. Supposed to be. But the second it leaves your lips, it tastes real.
Gojo freezes.
You panic. âI didnât meanâlike, I was just jokingââ
But he turns toward you, eyes unreadable behind the fringe of snowy white hair. âMaybe I should.â
You blink.
And then, with infuriating ease, he grins.
âAnyway,â he says quickly, swiping your phone from the table again before you can stop him, âYuto here looks like the type to ghost you after three dates and a karaoke duet. You can do better.â
You gape at him, completely thrown off, your heart slamming in your chest.
You donât even notice what heâs done until laterâuntil you get home and open your app to find that your bio has been changed.
Taken. Mentally married to a nerd since birth.
You want to scream.
Operation: Get Over Gojo Satoru?
Yeah. Not going great.
Not at all.
You werenât sure why you agreed to it.
Maybe it was the look in Utahimeâs eyesâdetermined, dangerous, hopeful. Maybe it was Shoko promising she wouldnât let you walk out of her apartment looking like a clown. Maybe it was the quiet part of you that wanted to see yourself through someone elseâs eyes. Someone who wasnât Gojo Satoru.
âToday,â Utahime had declared, curling the last strand of your hair like she was threading a spell, âis the first day of your Gojo-less futureâ
You laughed nervously, tugging at the hem of your skirt. It wasnât your usual styleânot the dewy makeup you werenât used to seeing in the mirror, not the new haircut that made your eyes look almost too bright, not the blouse that left your shoulders bare in a way that made you feel strangely noticed.
But when you caught your reflection, your heart fluttered. You looked⊠beautiful.
When you stepped onto campus, the sun was out, the wind teasing the edge of your coat. You spotted him immediatelyâGojo, slouched against the wall outside your lecture hall, nose buried in his Switch as he muttered something under his breath about evolving stats and attack modifiers.
He didnât notice you at first.
Then he looked up.
His game froze mid-battle. His mouth opened. Then closed. Then opened again, like someone had unplugged his brain.
âWhaââ he said eloquently. âWhâwhat did you do.â
You blinked. âHi to you too.â
He stared, unabashed. His glasses were slightly crooked, his ears glowing scarlet. He looked like someone had just told him Digimon was real and living in your shoes.
He blinked. âYou look like⊠like you skipped two evolution stages overnight. Straight to Mega. Like if Angewomon fused with⊠I donât know, some kind of rare, limited-release goddess-type Digimon that only spawns on a lunar eclipse.â
You blinked.
Utahimeâs voice in your head: Youâre hot. Unstoppable. Heâs going to be speechless.
And Gojo was. But not in the way you wanted.
You tried to laugh. âSo I look like a cartoon?â
âA beautiful cartoon,â he said, serious now. âLike the kind of boss character they only show for two frames because animating her costs too much.â
Your heart stuttered. It was the sort of compliment only Gojo could give: clumsy and dorky, yet brilliant in its own way.
But the moment passed.
He rubbed the back of his neck and looked away, sunglasses slipping slightly as he muttered, âYou just⊠you look different. Thatâs all.â
Different.
Not better. Not prettier.
Just different.
You swallowed. âYeah, well. Thought Iâd try something new.â
âI didnât say it was bad,â he added quickly, but the words felt unsure. Flimsy.
âI should⊠use the restroom,â you mumbled, turning before he could say anything else.
In the bathroom, you stared at your reflection. Your lipstick looked too bold now. Your lashes too heavy. Despite the change, you were still painfully youâ the you Gojo teased during study sessions, the one he let borrow his hoodie when it rained, the one who sat next to him during endless all-nighters. And maybe that was the problem. You werenât like those girls on the magazines.Â
What you didnât see, what you couldnât see, was Gojo still standing outside the lecture hall, staring after you, Switch forgotten, game over screen blinking on the screen.
He didnât even notice.
âYou good, Satoru?â Shoko asked, walking by.
He blinked. âI think I just saw my best friend⊠and my final boss⊠and my future wife⊠all at once.â
Shoko snorted. âYouâre a dork.â
Gojo just sighed, shoulders slumping as he muttered, âIâm so doomed.â
Itâs a mild Friday evening when you meet himâKazuya, the guy from your psychology class. Heâs polite, articulate, and kind of cute. The kind of guy who asks if you prefer cats or dogs before ordering his drink, and actually listens when you answer.
Utahime and Shoko had insisted you say yes. âA change of pace,â they called it. âYou need a baseline. Not every guy is going to be Gojo Satoru.â
Exactly. That was the point.
Youâre sipping a matcha latte and nodding along as Kazuya explains his thesis on cognitive development when a very familiar voice cuts through the air.
âWell, well, well. Fancy seeing you here.â
Your stomach drops. You look up, and sure enoughâ
Satoru.
In all his tall, obnoxiously eye-catching glory, wearing a white t-shirt that was inside out and a grin like he just won the lottery. He's holding a bottle of ramune and standing directly next to your table, like heâs been there the whole time.
âYeah,â he says, tone innocent. âWeird coincidence, huh?â
Kazuya offers a polite smile. âYouâre her friend, right? Gojo?â
âOh, best friend. Lifelong. Practically her shadow.â He plops into the empty seat beside you without asking, casually tossing his ramune onto the table. âWhatâs your name again? Kaname?â
ââŠKazuya.â
âRight, right. I always mix those up. You look like a Kaname, though. Or maybe a Yusuke.â
You stare at him, incredulous. âSatoruââ
But heâs already leaning over, squinting at the book tucked under Kazuyaâs arm. âOoh, Piaget. Bold move. Love that for you.â
Kazuya blinks. âDo you⊠like developmental theory?â
âI like being correct,â Gojo says with a cheeky smile. âAlso, [Name] hates Piaget. She called him âthe Freud of toddlersâ last semester.â
Kazuya turns to you in mild surprise. âReally?â
âIâI mean, yeah,â you mumble. âSort of.â
Gojo beams. âTold you.â
Kazuya makes a valiant effort to steer the conversation back to safe, neutral ground.
âSo, you mentioned you're interested in behaviorism, right?â he says, offering a gentle smile. âI thought Dr. Takeda's lecture on conditioned responses was kind of fascinatingââ
Kazuya blinks, trying not to smile. âI actually thought that was pretty moving, too.â
âWow,â Satoru deadpans. âA match made in neuroscience.â
Kazuya laughs politely and continues, undeterred. âSo, uh, any research plans after graduation?â
You open your mouth to answer, but Satoru beats you to it again.
âShe used to want to be a vet. Cried when she had to dissect a frog in middle school. Tragic day.â
âIs that true?â Kazuya turns to you, amused now.
âTechnically, yes,â you mutter into your drink.
By the time your cup is empty, you realize youâve laughed more at Satoruâs interjections than you have at anything Kazuyaâs said. Not because Kazuya wasnât interestingâhe was. He was calm, thoughtful, well-read, and clearly trying. But next to Satoru, whose entire presence seemed impossible to ignore, Kazuya didnât stand a chance.
Still, to his credit, Kazuya maintains a steady, if slightly strained, expression as he sets down his cup and finally says, carefully,
âSo⊠is Gojo your boyfriend?â
The question hangs awkwardly.
You and Satoru answer at the same time.
âNo,â you say quickly.
âYes,â he says with a smile.
You both turn to stare at each other.
âI meanâno,â he corrects, waving his hands. âJust a joke. Hah. Obviously.â
âI should go. Early lab meeting tomorrow.â Itâs the weakest excuse, but neither of them calls you on it.
Kazuya stands too, polite as ever. âThanks for meeting up. You seem like a really cool person.â He hesitates, then adds, gently, âI just think maybe youâve already got someone.â
You freeze. You open your mouth, then close it again. Thereâs nothing to say.
Outside, the cold air kisses your cheeks like a reminder. It stings a little, or maybe thatâs just the confusion burning in your chest.
Satoruâs already waiting for you. Of course he is. Heâs leaning against the lamppost, silver hair catching in the wind. But his eyes are downcast, trained on the sidewalk.
He doesnât say anything right away. Neither do you.
You exhale, watching your breath curl white in the air. âYou didnât have to crash it, yâknow.â
âI didnât crash,â he replies without looking at you. âI was invited.â
âBy who?â
âFate. Karma. The gods of poor decision-making.â He shrugs.
You roll your eyes, but it tugs a laugh from you anyway. Stupid, annoying, charming Gojo.
âSo,â he says after a beat, nudging your arm gently with his elbow, âhowâd it go?â
You glance at him. He still wonât meet your gaze. His lips are pursed like heâs holding back a hundred words and none of them are funny.
âHe was nice,â you admit. Despite being rudely interrupted by the white haired idiot beside you.
âNice is boring,â he mutters, kicking at a loose stone on the pavement.
You laugh, soft and tired. âYouâre the worst.â
He finally looks at you then, lips quirking into that smug, too-knowing smile. âBut you like me anyway.â
You look away, cheeks burning, heart thudding like a traitor in your chest.
You donât answer.
You donât have to.
Despite Operation: Get Over Gojo Satoru failing in every imaginable way, things were starting to feel⊠bearable.
Almost good, even.
Satoru still hovered a little too close, always with that same half-smile like he knew something you didnât. And maybe, just maybeâ his constant sabotage, the teasing, the jealousy, the way he looked at you like he was about to say something important but never did⊠maybe it all meant something.
You let yourself believe it, just a little.
And that was your first mistake.
It happens quietly, without fanfare or warning. Just a throwaway line between sips of lukewarm coffee and the soft shuffle of paper. Youâre both at your usual spot in the library, surrounded by open notebooks and highlighted packets, pretending to study more than you actually are.
Youâre halfway through underlining a term in your psychology notes when Satoru leans back in his chair, stretches like a cat, and saysâfar too casually:
âSo, guess who asked me out?â
You hum absentmindedly. âWho?â
âAyane.â
The name hits you like a slap.
You freeze, highlighter paused mid-sentence. ââŠAyane? From the biochem track?â
âYeah,â he says, practically glowing. âYou know her, right? She's in your study group sometimes.â
You do know her. Of course you do. Everyone knows her.
Sheâs beautiful, with this effortless, clean kind of eleganceâlong legs, perfect posture, and that quiet, poised confidence that makes professors adore her and guys fall over themselves. The kind of girl who posts one blurry bookshelf photo and still racks up a thousand likes. The kind of girl Gojo always jokes about marrying.
But heâs not joking now. Heâs beaming.
âShe asked me out to dinner this Friday. Sheâs so smart, tooâI didnât even have to pretend to know what quantum entanglement was. Itâs wild.â He laughs, brushing a hand through his hair. âI thought sheâd never go for a guy like me, yâknow?â
You force a laugh. âA guy like you?â
âYeah. I dunno. Too much, I guess? But she said I was ârefreshing.ââ He grins.Â
Your stomach sinks.
This is what you thought you wantedâfor him to move on, so you could finally do the same. For Operation: Get Over Gojo Satoru to succeed, for real this time.
But now that itâs happening, it feels like someoneâs slowly pulling your ribs apart.
âOh,â you manage, smiling like youâve practiced it. âThatâs great. Iâm happy for you.â
He doesnât notice the way your voice cracks on happy. He just keeps talking, rambling about restaurant reservations and how she likes contemporary poetry and used to live in France. You nod in all the right places, but your thoughts are already slipping away.
Because it isnât just that heâs going out with someone else.
Itâs that he chose her.
Her with her flawless skin and quiet charm and the kind of beauty that doesnât need to try. Her, with everything youâre not. And more than that, itâs that he made you believe you could have meant more to himâwhen really, heâd been searching for someone else all along.
You excuse yourself early, mumbling something about laundry.
He doesnât follow.
You donât cry until youâre halfway home, the cold air biting at your cheeks as your vision blurs.
For the first time in years, you donât text him goodnight.
You donât wait for a meme. Or a dumb joke. Or his usual, âHey, genius. Sleep.â
You go silent.
And when he texts the next day, you donât reply.
You skip your library meet-up. You donât sit next to him in class. You even duck into the stairwell when you see his ridiculous white hair from across campus.
Itâs not because youâre mad. Itâs because youâre heartbroken.
And you canât keep pretending it doesnât matterâthat he doesnât matter.
Midterms, right? Stress. Coffee. You get like this sometimes, and he gets it. He really does.
So he waits. Tells himself not to be clingy.
But then Friday comes.
And he's sitting across from Ayane in some expensive, quiet restaurant where the napkins are folded like origami cranes and the water tastes filtered. Sheâs telling him about her research internship in Osaka, about enzymes and international grants, and all he can think isâ
Youâd be making fun of me right now.
Youâd be kicking him under the table. Whispering some dumb pun about digimon. Youâd be pulling faces every time he tried to pronounce the items on the menu. Youâd be⊠you.
Ayane is lovely.
But she doesnât laugh when he says something stupid. She just smiles politely.
She doesnât ask about why his glasses are always crooked (itâs so you could fix them). Doesnât tease him for double-knotting his laces like a paranoid grandma. Doesnât call him âSatoâ like itâs some private joke only the two of you get.
He walks her home. Thanks her for a nice evening.
Then he goes to the convenience store. Alone.
And he sees your favorite snack on the shelf and buys two out of habit.
He stares at his phone the entire train ride back.
No new messages.
Just the last one you sent days ago:
âLaundry. Rain check?â
And nothing since.
He waits. Another day. Then two.
You donât show up to class again.
You donât like his latest meme.
You donât comment on the Digimon pun he texted you out of desperation.
You are silent.
And Satoru Gojoâbrilliant, blind-sighted, the golden boy of theoretical physics, always five steps aheadârealizes, too late, that heâs been a fool.
That he didnât just lose a study partner.
He lost the one person who knew him better than he knew himself.
The one person he couldnât replace with rare Digimon pulls, half-solved physics equations, or overly sweet desserts.
And for the first time since he was a kidâ
Heâs afraid.
Itâs been a little over a week.
A little over a week since Gojo Satoru has heard your voice. Since you shoved your coffee at him without asking, muttering âtoo sweet for meâ when you really meant âI got this for you.â Since you poked fun at his stupid sock choices, or knocked your foot against his under the table like it was nothing.
And Satoru is suffering.
He's tried everything. Showed up to your house with excuses too weak to be called plans (âHey, I brought your favorite snacks. I just... figured maybe you forgot you liked them?â). Waited outside your lecture hall until a security guard asked if he was lost. Took detours between classes hoping to catch a glimpse of your ponytail, your laugh, anything.
But you were always one step ahead.
You stopped answering his texts. Blocked him on that stupid dating app (whichâouch, even though you hadnât used it seriously). You didnât even show up to the library anymore. And even Shoko started looking at him with thinly veiled pity and a âyou really fumbled the bagâ look in her eyes.
Gojo Satoru is⊠just tired.
Miserable.
So when he finally finds youânot because heâs chasing you down this time, but because heâs walking the long way home, and there you are, sitting on the old swings at the park where you first metâit knocks the wind out of him.
You donât look surprised to see him. Just... tired too.
âI figured youâd find me eventually,â you say quietly.
He swallows. His hands curl at his sides like heâs preparing for a fight.
âYouâve been avoiding me,â he says, like it isnât obvious. âWhy?â
You look away. âYouâre smart. Figure it out.â
Gojo looks down at his feet.
âI didnât know you felt that way.â
Silence stretches between you, heavy and stinging. The playground is empty except for the wind dragging a soda can down the sidewalk and the faint creak of the swing chain.
Then he exhales, ragged and unsure. âLook, I canâtâI canât take this anymore.â
You glance up.
âI canât either.â
Hope flares too fast, too naive in his chest. His shoulders drop like heâs been holding up the world. âThatâs good,â he breathes, stepping forward. âBecause the silent treatmentâGod, I thought I was going toââ
âI donât think we can be friends anymore.â
The words stop him cold.
âWhat?â he breathes.
You laugh, but itâs hollow. Like something already broken. âDonât you get it? I canât be friends with you and pretend that nothingâs changed. That Iâm okay just being your best friend. Iâve been in love with you for years, Satoru.â
His heart stutters. You donât stop.
âAnd I love myself too much to keep hurting for someone who doesnât even look at me that way.â Your voice cracks, but you push through. âDo you know how humiliating it feels? To love someone so much it aches, and still feel like youâll never be enough?â
He opens his mouth. Closes it.
You wipe your eyes with the sleeve of your jacket, swallowing the lump in your throat. âYou never even thought I was cute.â
He looks like heâs been hit.
âIâve been chasing scraps. Leftovers. Mixed signals and stupid inside jokes. IâI canât do it anymore.â
You finally meet his eyes, and thatâs when he sees it: the hurt youâve been hiding behind every smile, every brush-off, every joke you cracked to keep the silence from swallowing you.
And for once, Gojo Satoru canât find a single thing to say.
Not yet.
Not until he stops you from walking away.
âWhere did you get an idea like that?â His cerulean eyes search yours desperately. âI-I donât think youâre just cute, are you kidding?â he blurts, eyes wild.
âY-youâre breathtaking! Everything Iâve dreamt of and more! That night when you asked me if I thought you were cute, I only said no because it would be a divine crime to reduce to such. All of my fantasies have been centered around you since we first met on that playgroundâsince you tripped over your shoelaces trying to race me to the monkey bars!â
Your breath catches.
He continues, desperate now, like every second of silence might kill him.
âI love you! And not like a brother. LikeâI want to marry you. Like, small wedding in Okinawa, barefoot on the beach, you wearing that soft blue dress you like. I already planned it. Our firstborn would be a daughter, with your eyes, my hair. Sheâd be the boss of the house.â
You gape.
âWaitââ
âIâm not done!â he says, hands thrown up. âThen weâd have twins. Boys. Chaos gremlins. One would look like my twin and the other yours, and theyâd absolutely terrorize usâbut their sister keeps them in check, sheâs fierce like you.â
You blink. A tear slides down your cheek.
âI want to move to Kyoto,â he says, softer now. âBuy a house with a dumb little garden. Grow tomatoes weâll never eat. Live out the rest of our lives where itâs quiet.â
You cover your mouth, stunned. âYou⊠really thought all that out?â
âItâs easy,â he breathes, âwhen all I can think about is you.â
He steps closer. The wind tugs his white hair into his eyes, but he doesnât blink.
âI go to study nonlinear quantum field theory and all I see is your face. I try to cool off and play Digimon, and even thatâs ruinedâmy lineup is garbage now! I only keep the ones you said were cute!â
A laugh bubbles out of you, fragile and watery.
âYou idiot,â you murmur.
âI am,â he nods solemnly. âIâm the worldâs biggest idiot. And Iâm in love with you.â
Another tear slips down. He wipes it away before you can.
âIs it too late?â he asks, voice cracking slightly. âPlease tell me itâs not too late.â
You stare at himâthis man, this brilliant, ridiculous, loyal boy who had held your heart long before you ever admitted it.
âItâs not too late,â you whisper.
He doesnât speak. Just steps closer. Gently and carefully, like he's handling something sacred, he cups your cheek in his hand.
Your nose bumps his. His breath ghosts over your lips.
âIâve been waiting to do this for years,â he whispers.
And then, finally, he kisses you.
Itâs not perfect, your cheeks are still wet, his nose bumps yours again, and his hand trembles just a little, but itâs warm and sweet and soft. It tastes like home. Like every unanswered question finally getting its answer.
When he pulls away, his smile is sheepish. âSo⊠are we still doing the whole âOperation: Get Over Gojoâ thing, or?â
synopsis â of all the people in your chemistry course, you get stuck with ryomen sukunaâthe most insufferable, arrogant asshole on campus. he barely does any work, runs his mouth like itâs a sport, and somehow manages to make your life even more exhausting than it already is. if this project doesnât kill you, he just might.
wc â 26k (ONLY 1K ABOVE THE EXPECTED WC YAAAY)
warnings â explicit sexual content (unprotected sex), sukuna is quite mean in the beginning, possibly incorrect depiction of frat culture (spare me i am not american), lots of sexual jokes, brief tiny smidge of angst, reader is a bad bitch, mentions of feeling insecure, choso and toji are gym himbos.
âPlease, anyone but him, professorââ You try begging, hands gripping the edge of the desk like your life depends on it. You know itâs useless, but desperation makes a fool out of you.
Professor Shimizu sighs, sympathy flashing across her face, but itâs gone in an instant. She adjusts her glasses, pushing them up her nose, and gives you a rueful smile. âI understand your concerns,â she says, âand if it were up to me, Iâd happily rearrange the groups, but the pairings were assigned by the department. Something about fostering academic cooperation.â She shakes her head like she, too, thinks itâs bullshit. âMy hands are tied.â
Your stomach sinks. Fostering academic cooperation? With him? Youâd have better luck reasoning with a brick wallâone that could talk back and insult you for fun. You turn back toward the class, eyes darting between the clusters of students already deep in discussion. Some of them look at you with poorly concealed amusement, others with pity. And then thereâs him, sitting by the window, looking positively bored like this whole situation is an inconvenience.Â
Ryomen Sukuna.
The campus heartthrob. The golden boy of the mechanical engineering department. A nightmare wrapped in a six-foot-something frame of smugness and muscle. A nightmare that you unfortunately have to share your CHEM10002 course with (why heâd picked a premed course as an elective was beyond you) You hate him. And not in the petty ugh, heâs annoying kind of way. Itâs deeper than that. Heâs insufferable. Arrogant. Egotistical. The type of guy who always has a girl in his bed but never the same one twice. He walks around campus like he owns the place, flashing that sharp grin, that lazy confidence that makes peopleâgirls, especiallyâfawn over him despite his reputation. Cocky, rude, impossible to work with.
And now youâre stuck with him. Oh, hell no. Your body stiffens. No way. No fucking way. Like hell youâre going to spend the next few weeks working with him. You whip your head back to Professor Shimizu, grasping at anythingâanythingâto get out of this. âWhat if I did extra credit? A research paper? A presentation? Anything,â you plead, voice tight. âIâll take a lower grade. Dock my participation. I donât careâjust not him.â
She sighs, but itâs not exasperated, just⊠tired. âI appreciate your enthusiasm,â she says, like youâre asking for more work because you love learning instead of trying to escape an actual nightmare. âBut, again, I canât change the pairings. And as much as Iâd love to give you an alternative assignment, the department is very strict on this. Itâs meant to âchallenge students to collaborate beyond personal preference.ââ She air-quotes it, which means she definitely thinks itâs bullshit. You slump, stomach twisting with something bitter. Collaboration? With Sukuna? The only thing he collaborates on is making everyoneâs life harder.
You grit your teeth, hard. Heâs lounging now, one hand shoved in his pocket, the other lazily spinning a pen between his fingers while he lazily eyes you from where heâs manspreading in his seat. He doesnât even look like heâs trying, and thatâs what pisses you off the mostâhe never tries. Not in class, not with people, not with anything. Everything just seems to work out for him anyway.
You hate that you know that. You really hate that you know that. But youâve known him long enough. Long enough to rememberâ
Freshman Year
It was something small. Stupid, even. But you still remember the heat of humiliation crawling up your neck, the way people laughed under their breath, how he barely even looked at you afterward, like it hadnât mattered. You had been in a required first-year seminar, and the professor called on you to answer a question. It wasnât hard, but the nerves got the best of youâyou stumbled over your words, your voice wavered.
And then you heard it. A tsk, followed by a lazy, mocking lilt:
âDamn. Spit it out, dumbass.â
Heat flushed through you, the classroom suddenly too bright, too small. A few people chuckledâsome outright laughed. You had swallowed thickly, willing yourself to focus, to get through the answer. When class ended, you stormed out, ignoring the lingering stares, the murmured that was brutal from some guy behind you. But Sukuna? He didnât even glance your way. Because to him, it wasnât anything. It wasnât worth a second thought. And now, here you are, stuck working with the one person who had made you feel like an idiot before you even had the chance to prove yourself.Â
You hadnât even thought about it that much at the timeânot really. But later, when you were alone, it festered. You were just a freshman. Barely out of high school, still figuring things out, still nervous about speaking up in a room full of people smarter, older, better than you. It wasnât even like you got the answer wrongâyou had just hesitated. That was all it took. And it was stupid, so stupid, but after that day, you started thinking twice before speaking in class. Before raising your hand. Before answering anything unless you were absolutely sure you wouldnât trip over your words. And god, you hate that it got to you. Itâs not like it was some big, scarring moment. It was one second of his life. A second he probably doesnât even remember.
But it was yours. It wasnât just that one time. There was another. Worse, somehow, because this time, he hadnât even been speaking to youâjust about you. It was late freshman year, after youâd spent the whole semester training yourself not to stutter, not to hesitate, not to embarrass yourself again. You were doing better. At least, you thought you were. Until one afternoon, outside the student center, when you walked past Sukuna and his group of friendsâToji, Choso, Mahito, and a couple of others, all leaned back on the benches like they owned the place.
You werenât eavesdropping. You didnât mean to hear it. But thenâ
ââwas struggling so bad, I thought she was gonna pass out.â
A few chuckles. A low whistle from Toji.Â
âLike, just say it, dumbass,â Sukuna scoffed, sharp, mocking. âOr at least commit. That shit was painful to listen to.â
Your stomach dropped. You donât know who they were talking about. Maybe some other poor freshman who had choked on their words mid-discussion. Maybe a random classmate. Maybeâ
Your face burned. You forced yourself to keep walking, head down, pretending like it wasnât about you, like you werenât suddenly back in that seminar with his voice in your ears and everyoneâs quiet snickers pressing into your skin. He didnât even look at you as you passed. Of course, he didnât. He probably didnât even remember it was the same person. And now, three years later, you have to sit across from Ryomen Sukuna, the campus asshole, the man who probably hasnât stuttered a day in his goddamn life, and pretend you donât want to walk out of this classroom and never come back. You exhale sharply, pressing your fingers into your temples.
This is fine. Youâve dealt with annoying people before. Youâve had to work with partners who contributed nothing, who slacked off, who treated group projects like free rides. Sukuna is just another roadblockâone with a stupid face and a worse attitude.
And, honestly? Itâs not even about the stuttering thing anymore. That was years ago, and youâd be damned if you let some insignificant moment from freshman year shake you now. Just because he made you insecure about one thing doesnât mean youâre meek. Youâve worked too hard to let this get to you. So, with all the grace you can muster, you pull out the chair across from him, stiffly sit down, and say, âHi, Iâmââ
Sukuna doesnât even look at you. Doesnât acknowledge you. Doesnât even pretend to try. Instead, he leans back in his chair, stretching his arms behind his head, and immediately starts talking to Toji, whoâs standing nearby.
âSo, dinner at that steak place tonight?â
âYeah,â Toji mutters, tapping at his phone. âGonna see if theyâve got space.â
Sukuna scoffs. âThey always have space.â
âNo, dumbass, last time we went, they were booked.â
âThey let us in last time,â Sukuna corrects, smirking, and that smugness makes your eye twitch. Are you being fucking ignored? You glance between them, incredulous, and then say, âIâm literally talking to you.â
That finally gets his attention. Slowly, like youâre the inconvenience here, Sukuna turns his head toward you. His gaze flicks over you, slow, unimpressed, like heâs barely registering you exist. You square your shoulders. âThis project is quite hefty. We need to split up the research so weâre not scrambling at the last minute.â
He stares at you for a moment, blank, and thenâ
He rolls his eyes.
âJesus,â he mutters, leaning forward, elbows on the table. âYouâre one of those, huh?â
You frown. âExcuse me?â
âThe tryhard type. Gets assigned a little homework and suddenly thinks theyâre running a Fortune 500 company.â He tilts his head, smirking. âRelax, woman. Itâs just a project.â
Woman. Your jaw clenches so hard it hurts.Â
âThat âlittle homeworkâ is forty five percent of our grade,â you bite out.
âDonât give a fuck,â he grunts, sounding bored.
You inhale deeply. âSo, I was thinkingââ
But he groans, dragging a tattooed hand down his face. âAre we seriously doing this now?â
âYes, weâre seriously doing this now,â you snap. He exhales sharply through his nose, glaring. âGod, youâre fucking annoying.â
Youâre not sure whether you should be offended or hurt. On one hand, obviously as a normal human being, being spoken to like this from a person youâre quite literally talking to for the first time is bound to hurt your feelings. On the other hand, this guyâs dickhead personality is kind of well known through your university. Your grip on your pen tightens, but you keep your voice even.
 âIâm annoying because I want to pass?â
âYouâre annoying because you talk way too fuckinâ much.â
 That stings more than youâd like to admit. You grit your teeth, ignoring the way your stomach tightens, and push forward anyway. âIf we divide the research today, we wonât have to meet up as often,â you say, firmly. âI assume youâll want to do as little work as possible, so letâs justââ
âHoly shit.â Sukuna pushes his chair back with a loud scrape, fixing you with an exasperated look. âDo you ever shut up?â You blink, stunned. Toji snickers.
âOh, come on,â Sukuna scoffs, throwing up a hand. âYouâre gonna sit there all wide-eyed like I just kicked your fuckinâ puppy? You started it.â Your fingers twitch against the table. âStarted what?â you ask, voice dangerously calm. âThis whole thingâacting like Iâm some bum ass delinquent who needs a babysitter.â His eyes narrow. âIf you wanna play boss, go find some other loser to be a bitch to.â
Your patience snaps. âOr you could just not be a lazy asshole. Do you lack brain cells? Youâve seriously told me to shut up like 5 times in the span of about ten minutes. Do you have a problem where you canât focus?â The air between you shifts.
Sukunaâs jaw tics. His expression darkens, something sharp flashing through his eyes, but then his lips pull into something crueler than a smirkâsomething with edges, something dangerous.
âYou think Iâm lazy? Got somethinâ wrong with me because I canât take your nerdy bitching?â he asks, voice low. You hesitate, but only for a second. âGlad you have the ability to comprehend what I said.â That makes him grin. âAnd you think Iâm an asshole?â
âYes.â
He hums, tilting his head. Then he leans forward, just slightly, elbows resting on the table. His voice drops into something smug, mockingâ
âThen why the fuck are you still talking to me?â
Your blood boils.
What the fuck is his problem?
You lean forward too, matching him, refusing to shrink under his gaze. âBecause I have to, dumbass,â you snap. âI tried to change my group. I begged. I offered to do extra credit. I would have written a whole goddamn thesis if it meant not sitting across from youâbut guess what?â You gesture sharply between you. âIâm stuck with you.â
Sukuna raises an eyebrow, unimpressed. âTragic.â
You let out a frustrated breath, gripping the edge of the table so hard your knuckles turn white. âSo, as much as Iâd love to pretend you donât existââ
âThen do it,â he interrupts, tone dry.
You blink. âWhat?â
âIf you wanna pretend I donât exist, go ahead,â he drawls, leaning back lazily. âDo the whole project yourself. Youâll probably enjoy it, since youâre clearly getting off on playing group leader.â
âOh, my god.â You clench your fists, barely restraining yourself. âWhy are you such a dickhead? Parents not teach you basic respect?â
âBecause you donât shut the fuck up,â he snaps, finally looking genuinely irritated.
Your lips part, incredulous. âIâm literally just trying to do the fucking project? Like any normal human being?â
âNo, youâre trying to control shit,â Sukuna says flatly. âLike this is some big dealâlike I havenât passed a million of these useless classes already.â
You stare at him. âYou think this is useless?â
He smirks. âYeah.â
Oh, you hate him.
âSome of us actually give a shit about our grades, Sukuna.â
âYou know my name? Cute.â You inhale sharply through your nose, trying to stay calm, trying not to launch your textbook at his stupid, perfect face. âI donât care how many classes youâve passed,â you say, voice taut. âYouâre doing this one with me. I care about this project. And if I have to suffer through working with you, you can at least pretend to give a shit.â He tilts his head, mockingly thoughtful. âMm. No.â
You exhale slowly, tryingâfailingâto stop your hands from curling into fists.
âI swear to godââ
âWhat, huh?â he cuts in, voice dripping with condescension. âYou gonna whine to the professor again?â He lets out a low chuckle, shaking his head. âPathetic.â
Your jaw tightens. He grins, like heâs won something. Like heâs getting exactly what he wantsâlike this is a game to him, something to toy with, something to waste his time on. And you refuse to let him win. So, you straighten your spine, lift your chin, and meet his gaze without flinching. âFine,â you say, voice steely. âIf you want to half-ass this, be my guest. Just donât expect me to pick up your slack.â
Sukuna watches you, amused, as if heâs waiting for you to crack. When you donât, he smirks.
âWeâll see.â
You inhale sharply, forcing yourself to keep your voice level.
âWell, unfortunately for you,â you say stiffly, âyou actually have to do your share.â
Sukuna snorts. âSays who?â
âThe professor.â You cross your arms. âSince apparently, students have been slacking on group projects, we have to submit proof of collaborationâmeeting logs, progress updates, actual proof that weâre working together.â His expression darkens. You fight the urge to smirk. Suffer.
âYouâve gotta be fucking kidding me,â he mutters.
âNope.â You press your lips together, trying to hold back your pure satisfaction. âSo, congratulations, Sukuna. You have to meet up with me at least once a week.â He exhales sharply through his nose, glaring at you like youâre personally ruining his life. âYouâre telling me I have to sit through this shit every week?â
âYep.â
âYou specifically?â
âYep.â
Sukuna groans, dragging a hand through the unruly pink strands of his hair. Then, just as youâre about to remind him that this is literally his problem for being a shit student, he lifts his headâeyes raking over you in a slow, lazy once-over. And then, he smirks. You freeze.
âWhat?â you snap, immediately on edge.
His smirk widens.
âNah, I was just thinking,â he drawls, tipping his head back against his chair. âIf you were hotter, this would be way less painful.â
Your stomach drops. The words hit you like a slap, and for a second, all you can do is sit there, stunned, completely caught off guard by how casualâhow easyâit is for him to say something like that. Like itâs just true. Like itâs a fact. Your fingers dig into your sleeve. And the worst part? Itâs not even the insult itself that stingsâitâs the sheer, blatant dismissal. The fact that he looks at you and immediately decides youâre not worth even pretending to be interested in. As if you were hoping for his attention. As if you were seeking his approval.Â
âYeah?â you say, voice flat, emotionless. âWell, if you were smarter, I wouldnât have to carry your useless ass through this class.â His grin falters, just barely, but you see itâand for once, itâs your turn to smirk. You lean forward, matching his posture, tilting your head mockingly.
âGuess weâre both disappointed, huh?âÂ
For a moment, Sukuna just stares at you. And you donât miss the way his jaw tightens, how his fingers twitch against the table like heâs fighting the urge to rip you apart. Good. Thenâhe exhales sharply through his nose, tipping his chair back slightly, acting unfazed even though you saw the flicker of irritation in his eyes. âDamn,â he muses, voice slow, dragging. âDidnât know you had a mouth on you.â
âYeah?â You tilt your head. âDidnât know you gave a shit.â
Sukuna scoffs. âI donât.â
âThen shut the fuck up and do your assigned work.â
He lets out a low, mean laugh, running a hand through his hair. âYouâre lucky Iâm feeling generous today.â
âGenerous?â You nearly choke. âYouâve been nothing but a dick since the moment I sat down.â
He shrugs, unbothered. âCould be worse.â
You want to strangle him. Instead, you inhale sharply through your nose, pressing your palms flat against the table before forcing yourself to stay on track. âWhatever,â you say, shaking your head. âHereâs the deal: we have to meet at least once a week. I donât care where. I donât care when. But we need to get the work done, and I need proof that you were actually presentâbecause if we donât, we both fail.â
Sukuna glares at you, as if the very concept of responsibility offends him.
âFucking hell,â he mutters, dragging a hand down his face again. âYouâre really gonna be a hardass about this, huh?â
You raise an eyebrow. âYou donât care about failing?â
âNot really.â
Your eyes narrow. âThen why are you even in this class?â
At this, he finally drops his chair back down onto all four legs, leaning in slightly. âLetâs get one thing straight,â he says, voice lower, more serious. âI donât need this shit. Iâm here because my old man thinks I should at least pretend to give a fuck about college.â He smirks, sharp and taunting. âBut donât get it twistedâI donât actually give a fuck.â You pause, studying him, trying to piece together the weight behind his words. Of course, you know he comes from money. Everyone does. The Ryomen family name carries weight, old money, power, prestigeâso it makes sense that college, for him, is just some bullshit obligation rather than a means to a future. Still, something about the way he says itâhow bitter it soundsâsticks with you. Not that you care.
You roll your eyes. âRight. Got it. Poor little rich boy.â
His smirk drops.
For a second, thereâs silence.
Thenâ
âYou know what?â Sukuna says, voice eerily calm. âFine. Iâll meet up with you.â
You blink, a little thrown off by how easily he gives in.
ââŠOkay?â
âBut.â His gaze darkens, and the corner of his mouth twitches, almost like heâs daring you to argue. âYou work around my schedule.â
Your stomach twists with irritation. âThatâs notââ
âNot my problem,â he cuts in smoothly, leaning back in his chair. âI donât do morning meetups. I donât do last-minute bullshit. And if you start bitching about how I âdonât take this seriously,ââ he mocks, voice lilting high, âI will walk out and leave you with an automatic fail. Or whatever the fuck happens to your grade if the other person doesnât do their part. Got it?â Your blood boils. But what can you do? You already tried to get reassigned. So, through gritted teeth, you say, âFine.â
Sukuna smirks.
âGood girl.â
â
You should have known it was going to be hell the second he suggested meeting at the East Wing library. Itâs the furthest damn library on campusâtwenty minutes from the dorms, uphill, and completely out of the way. Not a single other student in your class would have chosen that location. And yet, when you tried suggesting the much closer, more convenient library, Sukuna had just shrugged, barely sparing you a glance as he packed up his bag.
âAw, did you forget that Iâm in charge of where we meet up?,â he drawled, voice dripping with fake sympathy. âThat sounds like a you problem.â
And just like that, the decision was final. So now, here you are, twenty minutes later, climbing the last flight of stairs to the East Wing library, already in a foul mood before the study session has even started. And when you finally get there? You find Sukuna kicked back in his chair at one of the study tables, feet up, scrolling through his phone like heâs waiting on room service instead of his own damn groupmate.
No laptop. No notes No book. Just his phone. Un-fucking-believable. You drop your bag onto the chair across from him, loudly, but he doesnât even flinch. Doesnât look up. Doesnât acknowledge your presence at all.
âSeriously?â you deadpan, arms crossing. Sukuna exhales through his nose, still not looking at you. âTook you long enough.â You almost black out from rage.
âOh, Iâm sorry,â you say, voice flat. âMy dorm is on the opposite side of campus.â He hums, barely acknowledging your words, his focus glued to his phone. You take a deep breath, count to three, and pull out your laptop. âOkay. So, the projectââ
Before you can even finish, his phone rings. And instead of silencing it, like a normal human being, Sukuna just smirks and answers it, right there in front of you. âYo,â he says lazily, stretching his arms behind his head. Your eye twitches. The person on the other endâyou recognise the voice as Chosoâsays something that makes Sukuna huff a laugh, shaking his head.
âYeah, yeah, Iâm at the library,â he mutters. âWith that chick from class.â Your hand tightens around your pen. So he didnât even know your name. Great. And you two were supposedly paired for the rest of this semester? You wanted to fucking die. Not even two minutes in, and heâs already testing your patience. Sukuna leans back, grinning as Choso says something else. âNah, itâs just her,â Sukuna says, completely offhand. âNo eye candy here, bro.â
Your grip tightens around your pen. Did this dumbass seriously just say that out loud? In a library? In the middle of your study session? You drop your pen onto the table with a sharp thud, but the sting in your chest lingers. Itâs not like you expected anything different from him. Itâs not like you cared.
âŠExcept you do. Just a little. Not because you want him to think youâre prettyâfuck noâbut because thereâs something uniquely humiliating about being dismissed like that. Like your presence is some minor inconvenience he has to tolerate. Your jaw locks, and you square your shoulders, forcing the feeling down. Screw him. Youâre not here to impress him. Youâre here to get your damn work done. Sukuna finally glances up, raising a brow like he just now realized youâre sitting there. You stare at him, completely done. He hums, completely unbothered, before turning his focus back to his phone. âRelax. You look like someone stuck a stick up your ass.â
âGenuinely do you have a mental illness or some shit?,â you shoot back, your irritation reaching an all-time high. âWe have a chemistry project thatâs 45% of our grade, and youâre sitting here talking aboutââ
âBro, hold on,â Sukuna suddenly says into the receiver, cutting you off mid-rant. He holds his hand up like heâs physically silencing you, turning his head away. âChoso, you hear this? Shortyâs about to pop a blood vessel over some homework. All âcause I said she isnât some eye candy. Women, right?â
Your mouth falls open.
Did he justâ
âIâ Youââ
Your brain short-circuits for a second, tripping over the sheer audacity of him. Sukuna leans back in his chair, grinning up at you like a complete bastard. âYou need to get laid or something?â A beat of silence. Your entire body stills. And then, without hesitation, you lean forwards and rip his phone out of his hand and slam it face-down in front of you.
âThe fuck?â Sukuna scoffs, finally looking genuinely surprised for the first time all day. Then, his smirk returns, and he props his chin on his hand, clearly amused. âYou got some nerve,â he muses.Â
âAnd you have the IQ of a fucking vegetable, but weâre still here.â
Sukuna huffs a laugh, shaking his head. âDamn. Whatâs got your panties in a twist?â
âMy panties in a twist?â you scoff, staring at him in pure disbelief. âYou refuse to work, you talk shit about the way I look while Iâm sitting right here, and youââ
âYou are sitting right there, and youâre not really hot enough for me to notice.â he interrupts smoothly. âWhat, you want me to lie?âÂ
Your eye twitches. âYou could at least pretend to have an ounce of human decencyââ
âPfft,â Sukuna snorts. âFor you?â Your nostrils flare. Sukuna just grins. âOh, come on,â he drawls, waving a hand. âYouâre taking this way too personally.â
âHowââ You press your fingers to your temples, inhaling sharply. âHow else am I supposed to take it when youââ
âAnd you,â Sukuna counters casually, âare a fucking headache.â You slam your hand against the table, startling the people sitting nearby. âAt least Iâm a headache with a work ethic. Youâre a pain in the ass and canât focus for like what? 2 seconds? Without spacing out.â
âCongrats,â he deadpans. âYou want a gold star?â
You want him to get hit by a bus.Â
Sukuna shakes his head, leaning back again, still looking far too entertained. âLook, we both know youâre gonna do most of the work anyway,â he says lazily. âSo why not just save yourself the stress and accept it?â
âBecause this is a group projectââ
âYeah, and Iâm in the group. So technically, that counts.â You inhale sharply, barely keeping yourself from lunging across the table.
âSwear to god, bro,â Sukuna snorts, having picked up his phone from where youâd slammed it down, resuming his call with Choso, âI got this chick sending me, like, three nudes back-to-back last night. Shit was insane.â
âYou are,â you say, voice flat, âfucking disgusting.â Sukuna smirks, clearly thriving off your irritation. âOh? Why, âcause I get pussy?â
âNo,â you snap, willing for your cheeks not to redden with the way he speaks so crudely. âBecause weâre supposed to be working.â
He hums, completely unbothered, before turning his focus back to his phone. âRelax. I got time.â You scoff. âOh, so you do know how deadlines work?â
âDamn,â Sukuna mutters, shaking his head, lips curling into an annoyed frown. âYouâre really pressed over this, huh?â
âThis is not happening,â you mutter under your breath. âI am not about to let some oversized thug skate his way through a semester while Iââ
âThug?â Sukuna repeats, laughing. âYou mean scholar? You hear that, Choso?â He puts his phone on speaker. âShe just called me a thug.â
âYeah, I heard,â Chosoâs voice comes through the speaker, lazy and unbothered. âSheâs right.â Sukuna snaps his head down at his phone. âThe fuck?âÂ
You bark out a sharp laugh, your first real one of the evening. Sukuna rolls his eyes and hangs up, tossing his phone onto the table with an annoyed click of his tongue. âChosoâs a bitch,â he mutters.
âAnd youâre a waste of oxygen.â Sukuna grins at you. âYouâre a piece of shit.â You snatch your textbook off the table and throw it at him, eye twitching when he easily manages to catch it.
âOh my god, please kill yourself and do us all a favourâ Sukuna laughs at that, tilting his head like heâs genuinely entertained by how close you are to losing your shit. âCâmon,â he drawls, placing his phone face-down on the tableâfinally giving you some attention. âLetâs hear it, then. Whatâs our big, bad, super important assignment?â
You exhale sharply, flipping open your notes. âItâs a research-based chemistry project. Weâre supposed to choose a topic related to reaction mechanisms and provide a full breakdown of the process. That includesââ
Sukuna leans back. âBoring.â You snap your notebook shut again. âOh my god.â He grins. âThis is really your shit, huh?â
âWhat?â
âThe nerdy little projects,â he teases, resting his chin on his hand. âBet youâre thriving right now.â You glare. âI am thriving off the idea of you getting hit by a bus.â Sukuna just chuckles, shaking his head. âViolent,â he muses. âDidnât think you had it in you.â You press your fingers against your temples. âI hate you.â
âYeah?â He smirks. âThatâs cute.â You inhale sharply. Exhale. Inhale again. This is fine. This is totally fine. He is just a guy. This is just a project. And you are not going to let him get under your skin. You open your notebook again, forcing yourself to focus. âOur topic isââ
Sukuna clicks his tongue. âOoooor,â he interrupts, leaning forward with a lazy smirk, âyou can just shut up and do it yourself.â
You pause. You blink at him, barely processing what he just said. He shrugs. âYouâre good at this shit. Iâm not. Seems fair.â Your jaw clenches. âHavenât you gotten it through your thick skull? Even if I wanted to, we have to constantly update all the meeting logs, andâ.â
Sukuna just smirks wider, cutting you off in true Sukuna fashion. âBut itâd be so much easier if you did all of it, wouldnât it? And those fucking collaboration logs can be faked.â You stare at him. You are going to lose your mind. You are actually going to lose your fucking mind. You inhale one last time, roll your shoulders back, and meet his gaze with renewed determination. âLetâs get one thing straight,â you say, voice sharp. âIf you refuse to contribute, I will tell our professor. And you know that they take the reported behaviour for consideration the next time they mark a group assignment from literally any other class, yeah? â
Sukuna snorts. âSnitch.â You glare harder. âI donât care.â He clicks his tongue, shaking his head like youâre just so exhausting to deal with.
âSuch a pain in the ass,â he mutters, stretching his arms above his head. âBut whatever. Weâll see.âÂ
You stare him down. You know what that means. It means he has no intention of doing shit. You exhale slowly, clenching your jaw. This is going to be the longest semester of your life.
â
You try to keep your composure. You really, really do. But after a week of dealing with Ryomen fucking Sukuna, youâre already at your breaking point. Itâs bad enough that he refuses to contribute anything to the project. Bad enough that every time you try to get him to focus, he leans back in his chair like some smug, insufferable prince, making a point to not listen.
âOh, come on,â he drawls one day in class, stretching lazily in his seat while you sit next to him, barely keeping yourself from strangling him. His shirt rides up just a bit, flashing a sliver of tattooed skinâ and a happy trailâ and you look away on instinct. He deserves no admiration. âYou love this shit. Itâs kind of sweet, honestly. Doing all the work for me like this?â
Your grip tightens on your pen, knuckles going white. âI wouldnât have to if you actually did your part, dumbass.â
Unfortunately, the guy was worse than you had anticipated, so begrudgingly, only once or twice you had taken up his slack, deeming that he wouldnât get into too much trouble even if you complained to the professor. It wasnât too bad considering it was just the introductory part of the project, but you would probably complain if he pulled this shit in the middle of the semester when things got serious. Sukuna just smirks. That smirk. The kind that makes you want to throw something at his face. âDo I, though?â
Your eye twitches. âYes.â
âBecause, from where Iâm sitting, it looks like youâve already taken care of most of it.â He gestures lazily to your open notesâyour notes, where half the research under his name is written in your own handwriting because you were sick of waiting for him to do it. âAppreciate the help, baby.â Your jaw clenches. âYouââ
You exhale sharply, fingers flexing against your notebook. You swear, if murder wasnât illegalâ
Across the table, Choso (They had been lounging here with him even before you had arrived, and you were sleep deprived and tired from the venture to the East wing from your dorm, so you kept your mouth shut about their presence) chuckles. âDamn, Sukuna,â he muses, lips quirking as he glances between the two of you. âSheâs really out here doing your degree for you.â Toji snorts. âShit, at this point, just put her name on your diploma.â
You snap your head toward them, scowling. âIâm notââ
âOh, but you kinda are,â Sukuna interjects smoothly, smirking. âDonât worry, sweetheart. Iâll make sure to give you a nice lilâ thank you when I graduate.â You glare. âI donât want your fucking thanks. I want you to do your damn work.â Sukuna just clicks his tongue and leans back, propping his feet up on the chair next to him like he has not a single care in the world. âYeah, yeah,â he mutters, so fucking dismissive. âWeâll see.â
â
It gets worse. Because apparently, refusing to do work and making you look like an idiot in front of his friends isnât enough. No, of course not. Sukuna has to make sure you suffer. So, during one of your scheduled study sessions (during the most odd times of the day), while youâre actively trying to go over the research, Sukunaâin all his dickhead gloryâleans back in his chair, tilts his head toward the nearest girl, and flashes that cocky, stupid toothy smile of his.
âHey,â he purrs, voice dropping into that low, slow tone that has half the campus wrapped around his fucking finger. âYou got a pencil?â The girl blinksâclearly flusteredâbefore fumbling through her bag. âUhâyeah! Yeah, here.â Sukuna smirks, taking it from her fingers way too slowly, thumb brushing against hers. The poor girl sucks in a sharp breath, eyes widening like sheâs just touched a live wire. He leans in just slightly, voice dropping to something just for her. âThanks, cutie. Real lifesaver.â
The girl giggles, twirling a strand of hair between her fingers. âYouâre welcome, Sukuna.â You knew he was an asshole. You knew that his stupid, irritating grin made girls fall over themselves. But this? This was just blatant disrespect. You were right there. He was doing this on purpose. And sure enough, when you glance up, Sukunaâs already watching youâmouth twitching, eyes glinting with amusement. You slam your book shut. âAre you done?â Sukuna raises an eyebrow, playing dumb. âWhat?â You gesture vaguely toward the poor girl, whoâs still blushing and dazed from his attention. âWith your little⊠whatever this is?â
His smirk stretches wider. âJealous?âÂ
Your nostrils flare. âIâm annoyed.â He hums, twirling the pencil between his fingers. âCouldâve fooled me.â You clench your fists under the table, swallowing the very real urge to dump your coffee on his head. You refuseârefuseâto let him get under your skin. So, instead, you take a breath, roll your shoulders back, and force your voice to stay level. âAre you actually going to contribute today, or should I just log that you didnât show up?â
Sukuna laughsâloud and unbothered. âDamn,â he drawls, leaning forward on his elbows. âYouâre kinda a hardass, huh?â You stare him down, unwavering. âAnd youâre a waste of fucking time.â His grin widens, something sharper, meaner curling at the edges of it.
âNow, thatâs just mean,â he muses, tapping the pencil against the table. âWhat happened, sweetheart? You just pissed off, or do you just need to get fucked? Seriously with the way you act so fuckinâ bitchy all the time, I swear you act like you havenât had dick in ages.â
You still for half a second. Then your jaw locks. Your entire body runs hot, blood boiling, because what the fuck? Youâre already on edge, and now heâs going there? You let out a short, sharp laugh, shaking your head. âYou speak so disgustingly, you know that? So weird and perverted...â Sukuna leans back again, sprawled out, totally relaxed. âWhat? Iâm just saying.â He gestures vaguely in your direction. âMaybe thatâs why youâre so uptight all the time.â Across the room, the girl from earlier glances over, eyes flicking between you and Sukuna like sheâs witnessing something amusing. You refuse to give herâor himâthe satisfaction. You inhale sharply, steadying yourself. And then, voice cold and clipped, you meet his gaze dead-on.
âDo your fucking work, Sukuna.â He grins. And then, of course, he doesnât.
â
The lecture hall is freezing, the air-conditioning cranked too high like the university is trying to keep students awake through sheer environmental hostility. It doesnât work. Youâre exhausted. After back-to-back shifts at work, an avalanche of coursework, and the black hole of stress that is your chem project with Sukuna, youâre running on fumes. The moment you step into the lecture hall, your eyes instinctively scan for the back row. Ifâwhenâyou inevitably start nodding off, you donât want the professor clocking it. You sink into a chair near the corner, stretching your legs out with a sigh. Heavy-lidded eyes drift toward the front, barely focusing on the professor setting up slides. You could close your eyes just for a secondâ
The seat next to you creaks. A familiar presence drops beside you, and you know who it is before you even turn your head. Sukuna. Of course. You donât acknowledge him. Maybe if you ignore him, heâll take the hint andâ
His knee knocks against yours, jostling you just as your head dips forward. Your body tenses, and you snap a glare in his direction. Heâs manspreading like he owns the place, legs sprawled wide, one arm slung over the back of your chair like this is his personal space and not a public lecture hall. Heâs wearing one of those long-sleeve compression shirts that clings to his frame, every inked line of muscle pressing against the fabric. Not that you care. But the sheer arrogance of it is annoying. You scowl, shifting as far away from him as possible. âWhy are you here?â
âDunno,â he drawls, voice low and amused. âFelt like it.â You roll your eyes and turn back toward the front, trying to focus on the professorâs voice. Your brain is barely keeping up with the lecture, exhaustion pressing against your skull like a weight. Sukuna doesnât let up. He leans in just enough to make his presence known. âDamn,â he muses, eyes dragging over your face with something unreadable. âYou look rough. Didnât get the chance to put on concealer or whatever you women use to cover up that?â The words land heavier than they should. Itâs the way he says it. Careless. Blunt. No humor to soften the edge. And you know youâre not uglyâ the opposite in fact, butâ
Your face drops before you can stop it. You donât have the energy to fight back today. You just swallow whatever sharp retort you could say, fix your gaze on the front of the lecture hall, and pretend like he doesnât exist. Sukuna notices. For the first time in ever, he doesnât get the reaction he expects. No snark, no glare, no half-assed insult thrown back at him. Just⊠silence. You donât even look at him. Something weird stirs in his chest, something unfamiliar and fucking irritating. It sits in the back of his throat, in the pit of his stomach, but he ignores itâbrushes it off like itâs nothing. He doesnât say another word for the rest of class.
â
By the time the second week of working with Sukuna rolls around, youâre wrecked. Sleep-deprived, overworked, running purely on caffeine and sheer spite. Between your job, your other classes, and this hellish project, there isnât a single moment to breathe. Youâve been taking shifts at work to make rent, pulling late nights cramming for exams, and somehow, despite your best efforts, Sukuna is still making your life miserable. The last thing you need is another study session with him. You drag yourself into the East Wing Library, exhausted and bitter about it. The East Wing is so far from your usual haunts, practically on the other side of campus, and the walk here in the late afternoon heat is hellish. You mumble complaints under your breath the entire wayâsomething about how your feet hurt, how this library is ugly anyway, how he shouldâve come to your spot insteadâbut you know Sukuna wonât care. He probably wonât even listen.
Sure enough, heâs already lounging at one of the study tables when you arrive, acting like heâs been here for hours when in reality, he probably sat down two minutes ago. Heâs slouched in his chair, all sprawled out and insufferable, wearing that same damn compression shirt that makes him look more like a gym rat than a student. His legs are spread so wide heâs practically taking up half the table. In fact, the table looks small compared to how long his legs are. You resist the urge to drop your bag onto his lap just to make him move. Instead, you sink into the chair across from him and immediately rest your forehead against your palm. âKill me,â you mutter.
You sigh heavily. You donât even have the energy to glare at him. âGee, thanks.â Heâs watching you. You can feel it. That lazy, assessing stare, like heâs about to say something thatâll make you want to slap him. Something thatâll make that weird, uncomfortable feeling go down your spine.
And thenâ
Nothing. You brace yourself for the insult, for the inevitable Damn, you look fucked up but it never comes. He just clicks his tongue, looking back at his laptop screen, eyebrows furrowed. You squint at him. Weird. But whatever. You donât have the time or patience to dissect the mysteries of Ryomen Sukunaâs behavior. You flip open your notes, rubbing at your eyes. âOkay, letâs just get this over with,â you mumble. âI still have an essay to write after this.â
Sukuna stretches, the fabric of his compression shirt shifting as he raises his arms above his head. His shirt rides up slightly, revealing a sliver of inked skin carved just above his hip. You donât mean to notice, but you doâbecause of course, heâs the type of asshole who shows off his tattoos like theyâre a personality trait. You snap your eyes away before he catches you looking. âRelax, woman,â he drawls, voice dripping with lazy amusement. âNo need to be so fucking tense.â
Your grip tightens around your pen. Woman? Again? You level him with an exasperated glare. âTense? Iâve been doing our project by myself while you sit on your ass, and Iâm the one whoâs tense?â You scoff. âAnd stop calling me woman, you sound like you get life advice from Andrew Tate.â That earns you a sharp, wolfish grin. âAre you not a woman?â he counters smoothly, tilting his head. Before you can answer, his eyes deliberately dropâslow, pointedâtrailing down to your chest. He doesnât even try to be subtle about it, and the sheer audacity of this man has you gaping at him, heat rushing to your face in a mixture of anger and secondhand embarrassment. Your jaw clenches, your hands curling into fists beneath the table. âAre you fucking serious?â you grit out, voice low and sharp.
Sukuna just smirks, lazy and unbothered, flicking his eyes back up to yours with a knowing look. âWhat? Just checking.â
You resist the urge to lunge across the table and strangle him on the spot. Just breathe. Donât get expelled for homicide.Â
âAlso, Andrew Tate? Seriously, woman? What, you think Iâd listen to a broke, bald bitch like him?â Sukuna leans forward, arms resting on the table, shoulders broad and imposing. âYouâve got some real shitty assumptions about me.â
âIâve got accurate assumptions about you,â you correct.
He just smirks. âYou say that like Iâve done nothing.â
You glare harder. âYou have done nothing.â
âHave I?â he challenges, cocking a brow. He tilts his laptop screen toward you, and there, staring back at you, is a shockingly filled-out document. Your eyes flicker across the paragraphsâcoherent, formatted, and even cited.
You blink. Pause. Stare at him like heâs just grown another head. Because for the past week, this man has contributed exactly two sentences to the project. ââŠAnd?â you say, deadpan. âWhat do you want? A gold star? A participation trophy?â Sukuna leans back, manspreading like the chair was custom-built just for him. âDonât need validation from you, sweetheart.â
âGood,â you shoot back. âBecause youâre not getting any.â He lets out an exaggerated sigh, rubbing a hand down his face like youâre the exhausting one here. âLook, I donât see what the big deal is. The projectâs coming along fine.â You inhale sharply. Count to five. Resist the urge to fling your notebook at his fat head. âItâs coming along fine because Iâve been doing all the work.â
Sukuna shrugs, unconcerned. âTeamwork makes the dream work.â You stare at him. A long, silent, murderous stare.Â
âYou make me wanna end my life,â you finally say, voice utterly devoid of emotion. He grins, teeth sharp and infuriating. âI know.â You exhale slowly through your nose, willing yourself not to commit homicide. Instead, you rub your temples and look back at your notes. âLetâs just finish this. I donât want to be here all night.â Sukuna hums, tapping at his laptop. âYou sound so eager to spend time with me. Desperate?â
âOh, absolutely,â you deadpan. âItâs the highlight of my week.â
âI knew it.â He smirks. âYou wanna spend the night with me, hmm? Naughty.â
You actually throw a pen at him this time. He dodges effortlessly, laughing under his breath. âFucking finally,â you mutter. âMaybe now youâll shutââ
âShhh!â
You both freeze. The librarianâan older woman with a stern face and sharp eyesâis glaring at you from the front desk. You and Sukuna exchange glances. âYouâre the one being loud,â you whisper harshly. Sukuna raises an eyebrow. âIâm the one being loud?â
âYes, youââ
âOut.â The librarianâs voice cuts through the air like a blade. You and Sukuna both go silent. And thenâ
ââŠShit,â Sukuna mutters, closing his laptop. You sigh, pinching the bridge of your nose. âYou are such a waste of time.â
âYeah, yeah.â He stands, stretching. âLetâs go, dumbass. You can yell at me somewhere else.â You glare at him as you gather your things. âI will be yelling at you somewhere else.â Sukuna smirks, shoving his hands into his pockets as he saunters toward the exit. âCanât wait.â You storm out of the library with Sukuna trailing behind you, still looking disgustingly relaxed for someone who just got thrown out of a public study space. You wish she had thrown him out alone. âDick,â you mutter under your breath, shoving your laptop into your bag as you walk. Your head throbs with exhaustion, and the last thing you need is him making this night even worse.
Behind you, Sukuna hums, amused. âYou say that like itâs a bad thing.â Your steps falter for half a second before you pick up the pace again. He, of course, notices. "You're so fucking touchy today," he drawls, stuffing his hands in his pockets as he strolls beside you, the very picture of unbothered arrogance. "On your period?" Your eye twitches. You suck in a sharp breath through your nose, gripping the strap of your bag so hard it might snap. "Okay, we're going to the study lounge near my dorm," you say, tone clipped.
Sukuna groans. Loudly. Like you're torturing him.Â
"The hell? Why?"
"Because you got us kicked out," you snap. "And we havenât even done half of what we were supposed to get through today." Sukuna clicks his tongue in irritation but doesnât argue further, shoving his hands into his pockets as he follows behind you. His pace is slower than yours, like this entire walk is beneath him, like heâs graciously putting up with it. You can practically feel his annoyance radiating off of him, thick and palpable in the evening air.
The east wing is far. Too far. Youâre used to it by nowâyour classes are scattered across campus, your dorm inconveniently placed, and your schedule an absolute disaster. Between balancing coursework, shifts at your part-time job, and somehow squeezing in study sessions, your days bleed into each other in a never-ending cycle of exhaustion. And because Sukunaâs the most infuriating person alive, heâs been forcing you to make this trek every damn day, dragging you out to the main library just so he can half-ass his way through this project in a space that he prefers. Youâve followed along because you refuse to let this assignment tank, but every second spent with him is another test of patience youâre not sure youâll pass. So when, predictably, about ten minutes into the walk, he lets out an exaggerated, loud huff of irritation, you already know something stupid is about to leave his mouth.
"Are we still walking?" he grumbles, scowling at the path ahead. "This is taking so fucking long." Your eye twitches. You keep walking, fists clenched at your sides, tryingâtryingâto ignore him. But he doesnât stop. Because of course he doesnât.
"This is stupid," he mutters. "Should've just stayed at the fucking library. Or better yet, we couldâve just worked at my placeâ"
And thatâs it. Thatâs the last straw. You snap.
"I do this every day because of you!"
The words come out harsher, sharper than you intended, but you donât care. You whirl around to glare at him, eyes blazing, voice rising louder than it should, this late at night. "You think this is taking too fucking long? You made me do this every night. You insisted on working at the damn library. You refuse to meet anywhere else because apparently, my dorm study lounge isnât good enough for you!" You huff out a breath, heart pounding in your chest. "So yeah, Sukuna, it is a long walk. And guess what? I do this every single day while you sit on your ass and complain!" Sukuna stops mid-step. His mouth is half-open, clearly ready to throw some cocky remark back at youâexcept nothing comes out. For once, heâs quiet. That, more than anything, unnerves you. But you donât stick around to decipher the look on his face. You turn back around and keep walking, jaw clenched, shoulders tense, because if you donât, you might actually lose your mind. And this project isnât worth a murder charge.
Sukuna watches as you keep walking, your back rigid with frustration, your fingers curled so tightly around the strap of your bag it looks like the only thing anchoring you upright. Itâs only now, in the dim glow of the overhead lights of the university hallways, that he actually sees you. The exhaustion carved deep into the lines of your face, etched into the tight pull of your brows and the faint downturn of your lips. The way your steps drag just slightly, like your body is moments away from giving in but you refuse to let it. The dark circles beneath your eyes, barely concealed by whatever concealer you mustâve swiped on this morning.Â
(Yes, you ended up feeling the tiniest bit hurt and put some on the next time you saw him)
You look tired. Not the kind of tired that comes from a late night or an early morning. No, this is the exhaustion that settles deep in your bones, that lingers even after youâve slept, the kind that never really leaves. And then thereâs something elseâsomething off. Itâs not like you to get this quiet after snapping at him. Normally, youâd keep going, pushing, throwing words at him like knives, sharp and ruthless, waiting for him to hurl them right back. Thatâs how itâs always been between you two. You say something snarky, he says something worse. You get pissed off, he laughs. Itâs a cycle. A game.
But right now? Right now, you donât fight. You donât even look at him. Sukuna exhales sharply through his nose, irritation flickering beneath his skinâbut itâs not directed at you. Not this time. He shoves his hands in his pockets, jaw clenching, his usual smirk nowhere to be seen. And for the rest of the walk, he doesnât say a word. No complaints. No grumbling. No sarcastic remarks. Just silence.
â
The place is smaller than the library, tucked into the corner of your dorm building, but at least itâs quiet. Fluorescent lights hum overhead, and only a few other students are scattered around, focused on their own work. You drop into a chair unceremoniously, opening your laptop with a sigh. Sukuna takes the seat across from you, stretching his legs out obnoxiously under the table until they almost bump into yours. You kick him. He smirks. âFeisty.â
"Shut up."
For the next half hour, you work in silence. Sukuna pretends to read something on his screen, but you can feel his eyes flicking to you every so often, assessing. You try not to think about it. Itâs quiet for a moment, and thenâ
"You formatted this wrong," he says. Your head snaps up. "What?" Sukuna tilts his screen toward you, pointing lazily at a section of your document. "The citation. APA, not MLA, genius." You stare at him, brows knitting together. "Why the hell do you know that?" Sukuna shrugs, leaning back in his chair. "What, you think you're the only one with a functioning brain?"
"Functioning is a strong word," you mutter, fixing the citation. He snorts, but then, because heâs him, he adds, âI mean, makes sense youâd fuck that up. You look half-dead.â Your eye twitches. "And you look like a walking midlife crisis, but you don't hear me pointing it out every two seconds." Sukuna grins, sharp and unrepentant. âLiar. You know I look good.â
âUgly.â
âSexy.â
"Say that again and I'll stab you with my pen."Â
Itâs late by the time you finally close your laptop, rubbing at your temples. The day has dragged on forever, and the last thing you want is to keep dealing with him. You shove your things into your bag, ready to leave, when Sukunaâstill leaned back in his chair, still looking infuriatingly relaxedâsays, "Tch. Whatever. Weâll just meet here next time." You pause. Blink at him. "Huh?" He doesnât look at you when he says it, like this entire conversation is so beneath him. "The hell, are you deaf? I said weâll just meet here next time. Less walking." You stare, uncertain of what to make of that. Of him saying anything at all.
Thenâ
"Uh. Okay," you mumble. Sukuna snorts, pushing himself up from his chair, rolling his shoulders like this entire night has been a mild inconvenience to him and nothing more. âTry not to die of exhaustion before then.â
You flip him off.
He grins.
â
The dorm study lounge in your building isnât anything specialâjust a couple of couches, a cluster of wobbly desks, and chairs that groan when anyone shifts. But itâs quiet, itâs close, and more importantly, itâs not the goddamn East Wing library. Youâre already seated with your laptop open when Sukuna strolls in like he owns the place, hoodie thrown over his shoulder, compression shirt clinging to him in that casually smug way that makes you want to set your notebook on fire.
âDamn. You live like this?â he says instead of greeting, glancing around at the peeling posters and flickering overhead light.
âYouâve been here three times now,â you mutter, not looking up. âGet over it.â To your surprise, he actually sits down and opens his laptop. No dramatic sighs, no drawn-out complaints. Just pulls up the shared doc and starts typing. You side-eye him suspiciously. âWait. Youâre actually doing work?â
Sukuna doesnât even look at you. âTold you Iâm not completely useless.â
âYou literally did none of the intro. Or the background research. Or theââ
He turns slightly, eyes narrowed. âJesus. You want me to write your acknowledgements too?â
You roll your eyes and keep typing, but you canât help the way your gaze flicks back to his screen every so often. Heâs doing it. Slowly, a little messily, but heâs actually doing the work. You hate how thatâs kind of impressive. The door creaks open an hour in and Toji saunters in with a protein bar in one hand and Choso trailing behind him, hoodie half-on like he got distracted putting it on. âYo,â Toji says, tossing himself onto the arm of your chair like thereâs no concept of personal space. âThis where the grindâs happening?âÂ
Choso raises a brow at Sukuna. âDidnât think you actually meant it when you said you were working on your project.â Sukuna scoffs, not even looking up from the screen. âDonât start.â They pull up chairs, half-invited, half-ignored. Somehow, you end up the only person who seems to be actually working while the other three devolve into semi-productive chaos. Eventually, the conversation driftsâlike it always does when boys are left alone with too much time and not enough supervision.
âYo, did you see that blonde on the cheer squad last game?â Toji starts, popping open a protein bar like itâs part of the ritual. âThe one with the ribbon thing in her hair. Face card was solid.â Choso smirks, still half-focused on his phone. âI think she followed me on Insta. Or her friend did. Canât tellâcheer girls got that same face filter thing going on.â
You hum under your breath, noncommittal. Youâve learned how to tune this out. Let the background noise of testosterone and ego bounce off while you focus on your screen. But thenâ
Choso glances up, flicking his gaze between you and Sukuna like heâs just had a thought worth sharing. âActually⊠Sukunaâs got the best deal out of all of us.â You pause your typing. Slightly. Toji quirks a brow. âHow you figure?â
âHe gets to sit across from her every day,â Choso says casually, jerking his chin in your direction. âDudeâs been staring at that face for what, like a week straight?â Your head snaps up. âExcuse me?â
Choso lifts both hands in mock surrender. âJust saying. When youâre not chewing him out, youâre actually kindaââ
He doesnât finish the sentence. Just gives a slow, meaningfully raised brow like the conclusion is obvious. Toji lets out a low whistle, the corner of his mouth twitching. âNo, waitâheâs right. Youâve got that whole mean girl, academic weapon, doesnât-look-up-in-lectures thing going on.â You just blink at them, caught somewhere between wanting to melt into your chair or hurl your laptop at both their heads. Sukuna, up until now half-listening while scrolling on his screen, exhales like this whole conversation is beneath him. âShut the fuck up.â His voice is flat. Lazy. Like he's bored with their entire existence. But his eyes flick upâand linger on you just a beat too long. Thereâs no smirk. No wink. Just that unreadable look again. Heavy-lidded. Slightly narrowed.
Toji raises a brow. âStruck a nerve?â Choso glances between you and Sukuna, curious now. âDamn. Didnât know you were the territorial type.â Sukuna doesnât even rise to it. Just drags a hand through his hair and mutters, âYou idiots hear yourselves talk?â That seems to be enough. Toji snorts and mutters a half-apology under his breath. âAlright, alright. Chill.â
Choso shrugs. âSheâs still bad though. No take-backs.â You clear your throat and mutter, âThanks⊠I guess?â
No one hears it except Sukuna, whose gaze shifts back to his laptopâbut his ears are slightly pink now. Not that heâd admit it. And just like that, the boys forget they ever had a filter. Theyâre back to talking about the football coach and some frat party coming up next weekend. You, meanwhile, keep your eyes glued to your screenâbut your skin feels hotter, like that look Sukuna gave you never quite left. You try to refocus on your screen, but your heartâs still thudding in your chest in a way you hate. You donât want to be flustered. Especially not over Sukuna, who has the emotional depth of a spoon. Still, when the session winds down and Toji and Choso finally get bored and wander off, Sukuna leans back and says, with the same bored tone he uses when talking about the weather, âIâll see you here again next week. Iâll finish up some of the work at my place before I come, so we donât hafta sit here on our asses long enough for these idiots to show up again.â
You blink. âUh⊠okay.â He doesnât wait for a response. Just slings his bag over his shoulder, walks off like he hasnât just stunned you into silence with the barest sliver of consideration, and mutters under his breath on the way out:
âBetter chairs anyway.â You stare after him. Annoyed. Confused. Unsettled. Slightly amused. And a little less sure about how much of a dick he really is.
â
Itâs been three weeks since you started meeting in the dorm buildingâs study lounge. The sessions are no less exhausting, but theyâve become⊠bearable. You still argue. Heâs still insufferable. But Sukuna actually does the work now. Not without the occasional passive-aggressive comment or that maddening little smirk when he catches you getting flustered. But he contributes. Sometimes he even takes initiativeâlike today, when you arrived and found heâd already opened the shared doc and annotated the latest journal article. Miracles, apparently, do happen.
You're both seated on opposite sides of the same table, a precarious peace holding between the clack of your keys and the scratch of his pen against paper. Sukuna's in a black hoodieâwhich really emphasises how broad his shoulders areâpaired with some low-slung sweatpants. Heâs got one leg up on the chair, knee almost brushing the tableâs underside, completely manspreaded in a way that takes up far more space than necessary. Typical. Youâve tuned it all out. Almost. The only sound in the lounge is the soft hum of the vending machine and the low rustle of paper. That is, until your phone buzzes.
You glance down.
[8:37 PM] Yuna:
pls tell me ur free next friday night
frat party at Theta house
i need a plus one u owe meee
You pause. Theta house. The name sparks something in your brainâa half-formed association, faint and unimportant until now. Youâve heard it muttered in passing, caught glimpses of its parties plastered all over peopleâs Instagram stories. Flashy. Loud. Too many red solo cups and too little self-respect. But more importantly: it rings a specific bell. Something familiar. Your eyes flicker back to the message on your screen, rereading Yunaâs plea. Your brows furrow. You bite the inside of your cheek, lips tugging downward as you try to decide if this is worth the impending social fatigue, or if you can just ghost her and fake a fever. Maybe a paper cut. Across the table, the scratch of pen on paper falters. You donât even notice until Sukunaâs voice cuts in, sharp and dry.Â
âWhatâre you making that face for?â he asks without looking up. Flat, disinterested, like your expression is an inconvenience. You blink, mildly startled. â...What face?â
âThat weird one.â He finally lifts his head, narrowing his eyes at you with vague irritation. âLike you just found out you forgot to pay your car registration or somethinâ.â Your mouth opens, closes. âItâs just a text,â you say eventually, letting out a quiet sigh as you flip your phone facedown. âMy friendâs dragging me to a frat party next week. She needs a plus-one.â At that, Sukuna stills. Not dramatically. Just... a subtle pause. His elbow stops bouncing. His pen hovers above the page.
âWhat frat?â he asks. The question is casual, but his gaze sharpens ever so slightly. You hesitate. ââŠTheta house. I think.â
He snorts. Loud and unmistakable. âThatâs mine.âÂ
Your head snaps up. âWhat?â
He leans back lazily, one arm thrown over the back of the chair, looking maddeningly relaxed. âTheta. Thatâs my frat. Toji, mine and Choâs. Didnât ya know? They were talkinâ about it before.â You blink, momentarily at a loss. The realization hits with a muted thudâof course. It all makes sense now. The flashy parties, the obnoxiously loud music every other weekend, the guys who walk around campus with too much cologne and too few responsibilities. Of course he lives there.
âOh,â you say finally. It hangs thereâawkward, brittle, like a glass ornament someone forgot to put away after Christmas. You both look back down at your notes, pretending the moment never happened. You reread the same sentence in your textbook three times and still canât register what it says. The silence isnât exactly uncomfortable, but it isnât comfortable either. Just... weird. Like thereâs something in the air that neither of you wants to acknowledge. Then, after a minute, Sukuna exhales slowly and leans further back in his seat.
âYou should swing by,â he says offhandedly. So casual it sounds like a throwaway line.
You glance up. âHuh?â
âThe party,â he says, eyes flicking briefly toward you, then back to the ceiling. âYour friendâs already going. Might as well.â You study him. His expression is unreadableâcalm, indifferent. No trace of smugness, no expectation behind the offer. Itâs almost too nonchalant. Like he wouldnât care either way. You narrow your eyes a little. âAre you⊠inviting me?â
He shrugs. âYouâre not special. Iâm inviting everyone.â Your lips twitch at that, but you donât call him out. âRight. Of course.â
Still, you hear your voice soften slightly.Â
âIâll think about it.â
Sukuna hums in response, eyes drifting downwardâright to your hoodie, baggy enough to cover you from neck to knee, sleeves tugged over your hands. You can practically see the judgment forming. âJust donât show up dressed like this,â he mutters, the corner of his mouth twitching. You snort before you can stop yourself. A short, surprised laugh bursts out of you. âSeriously?â
He gives you a deadpan look. âItâs a party, not a cult meeting.â You raise your brows, amused. âClearly, you donât know me at all if you think I dress like this everywhere.â Sukuna tilts his head, studying you like you just issued a challenge. âSo you do have real clothes.â
âIâm a woman of mystery,â you say smugly, folding your arms. âYou donât get to know.â A rare smirk twitches onto his faceâbrief, dry, almost like heâs trying not to be amused. âThat sounds like a yes.â You roll your eyes, grabbing your highlighter again. âFocus on organic chemistry, casanova.â
He chuckles under his breath but doesnât argue, returning to his notes. The mood shifts againâeasy now, fluid in a way you didnât expect. The banter lingers, like a residue in the air, and for once, you donât feel like youâre dodging landmines when you speak. You work in silence for a while longer, but itâs not the same brittle quiet from before. Itâs something softer. Settled. And maybeâfor just a secondâit doesnât feel like youâre enemies anymore. Not friends, either. But not enemies. When you finally pack up for the night, Sukuna doesnât say anything. He just slings his bag over his shoulder, glances at you once, then jerks his chin toward the door like letâs go. You fall into step beside him, not speaking, the click of the lounge door swinging shut behind you. You donât even know how it happened. How somehow he waited for you by the staircase that led up to your dorms before departing back to where he lived. The hallway is quiet. The air, cool and crisp, smells faintly of late-night ramen and floor cleaner. You say nothing. But somehow, that moment stretches longer than it should. And it stays with you. All the way back to your dorm.
â
âYuâ I donât know,â you say, pulling at one of the spaghetti straps of your top and glancing at your reflection in her full-length mirror, âI like wearing shit like this but⊠donât you think itâs too much for a frat party?â Your voice comes out unsure, tinged with that all-too-familiar pre-party doubt that creeps in five minutes before youâre supposed to leave. Youâre still adjusting the fabric over your chestâthis stupid, tiny top that clings a little too perfectly to your figure, exposing just enough skin to make you question if youâll even make it through the front door without second-guessing everything. The bra underneath? Completely unintentional. You didnât even mean to match itâhad just grabbed something clean and vaguely push-up-ish from the drawer, but of course, it had to be your most expensive set. Lacy, pink, and not remotely subtle. Victoriaâs Secret, you realize with mild betrayal, had made your boobs look criminally good. Like, pause-a-manâs-conversation good.
The top itself wasnât the issueâit was cropped, sure, but cute. Flimsy fabric and soft color, something you could probably dress down if you were pairing it with anything other than this damn skirt. The skirt was what had you feeling like you were in over your head. And it wasnât even yours. It was Yunaâs. A distressed, light-wash denim mini that was practically a belt. It hugged every curve, curved a little more than you were used to, and sat low enough on your hips to make you feel a tiny bit scandalous with every breath. If you shifted too fast, it felt like itâd ride up and expose everything. And with the panties that came with your VS setâthin, lacy, and technically classified as lingerieâyou felt dangerously close to flashing someone if the wind so much as thought about picking up.
âI look like Iâm trying to seduce someoneâs dad,â you mutter.
âOh my god,â Yuna gasps from behind you, eyes wide as she stops in her tracks. âYou look so fucking hot. Iâm not hearing any complaints about this.â She spins you around, hands on your shoulders as she takes in the full outfit like sheâs styling you for a Vogue shoot. Her perfectly manicured fingers trail to the hem of your skirt, and with a gleam in her eye, she gives your butt a dramatic, playful slap.
You glare at her. âCan you not grope me right now?â
âSorry,â she says, completely unapologetic. âYou just look so good. Like, painfully good. Likeââoops, I just made that guy trip over a keg because I walked byâ good.â You attempt to give her your best unimpressed stare, but itâs hard to hold when she looks that excitedâand especially when sheâs standing there in a sparkly, strapless top thatâs practically glued to her skin and a skirt shorter than yours. Not to mention the rhinestone eyeliner and lip gloss she reapplied twice already. You sigh, defeated, because if she looked hot, and you looked hot, maybe it wasnât the worst idea to just embrace it.
âUgh, okay, fine,â you mutter. âYou look sexy too.â
âSo do you,â she grins, squeezing your wrist before spinning toward the mirror to grab her purse. âWeâre gonna be the baddest bitches there.â
You snort. âThatâs not exactly a high bar. I saw someone show up to one of these in a Pikachu onesie.â
âExactly,â she says, throwing a jacket over her shoulder. âWeâll be legends by comparison.â Despite yourself, you laughâand when you turn back to the mirror, something about the reflection feels less terrifying than it did five minutes ago. The outfit was bold, sure. But with Yuna beside you, her energy electric and effortless, you could feel yourself slipping into that mindset, too. The one where you were allowed to be hot without apologizing for it. You slip on your shoes, grab your phone, and follow Yuna out of the dorm. The hallwayâs quiet, dimly lit with that weird yellow lighting all college buildings have after 10 PM. You both walk down to the street where your Uber is already waiting, music faintly thumping from the frat row just a few blocks away. And for once, youâre not dreading it. Youâre a little nervous, maybe. But with your favorite person beside you, in outfits that could start wars, heading into a night with no plans other than chaosâyouâre ready.
The Uber ride is a blur of Yunaâs makeup touch-ups, last-minute accessory debates, and Spotify blaring a throwback remix that has both of you scream-singing the chorus. The nerves in your stomach ease up a little more with each passing minute. Maybe itâs the way Yuna keeps hyping you up or how good the outfit actually looks under the glow of the passing streetlightsâbut by the time the car pulls up in front of Theta house, youâre no longer on the verge of changing outfits or ghosting the night entirely. The frat house looms ahead like every other frat house youâve ever seenâloud music already spilling out from the open door, string lights tangled across the porch, people clustered out front with red cups in hand like itâs a high school movie come to life. You can hear someone whoop as a beer pong shot lands across the front lawn, and someone else yells âTake it off!â from an upstairs window.Â
Yunaâs eyes sparkle. âHome sweet home,â she says, linking her arm through yours. Inside, itâs chaoticâbut weirdly cozy. Warm. The air smells like cheap beer, cologne, and weed, the floors already sticky under your heels. Thereâs a crowd around the living room-turned-dance-floor, another bottlenecking at the kitchen where a keg is set up beside a counter full of jungle juice and liquor. You spot a couple of people you vaguely know from class or mutuals through Yunaâmost of them already tipsy, greeting her with hugs and loud compliments. Someone hands you a drink you donât ask for, and you take it anyway, sipping something vaguely fruity and deceptively strong. The thrum of music settles in your chest, rattling the floorboards beneath your feet, and for the first time in weeksâmaybe even monthsâyou feel something close to relaxed. Youâre halfway to the kitchen to grab a chaser when it happens.
You turn a corner and bump into someoneâshoulder to chest. Solid. Firm. Tall enough that you instinctively glance up before you even register who it is.
Sukuna. He looks down at you, expression unreadable for a momentâuntil his eyes very obviously drop from your face to the low neckline of your top. And linger. Thereâs the barest flicker of somethingâsurprise? amusement?âin his eyes, but itâs gone too fast to confirm. You step back, blinking. âOh my god. You are so weird.â
He lifts a brow. âExcuse me?â
âYouâre literally checking me out like Iâm a Victoriaâs Secret window display,â you deadpan, tugging your top slightly higherânot that it helps much.
âYou wore that and expected no one to look?â he says, voice dry and annoyingly smooth. His eyes flick lazily down again. âAlso, hate to break it to you, but your braâs doing a lot of heavy lifting right now.â
You scoff. âYouâre actually such a freak.â He shrugs, tilting the water bottle in his hand toward you. âNot denying it.â Youâre about to roll your eyes and walk away, but then he says itâso nonchalantly it barely registers at first.
âYou look nice, though.â
You freeze mid-step.
ââŠWhat?â
His mouth quirks up slightly, like he didnât just toss a grenade into the conversation. âYou heard me.âÂ
You stare at him, trying to gauge if heâs mocking you. But thereâs no smug grin, no teasing lilt. Just that lazy drawl, that unreadable expression that always keeps you guessing. You fold your arms, shifting your weight to one hip. âWell,â you say slowly, âclearly you donât know what to do when Iâm not wearing my usual two layers of oversized fabric.â
Sukuna snorts. âThought you were gonna roll up in your campus hoodie again. Kind of a shame, actually. I miss how it swallowed your whole body. You looked like a walking laundry pile.â
âWow,â you deadpan. âThatâs the nicest thing anyoneâs ever said to me.â
âI try.â
You take a slow sip from your drink, hiding the small grin tugging at your lips. âSo this is what youâre like when youâre not being the biggest dick on the planet.â
âIâm not the biggest dick, although Iâd say I have the biggest dickâ he retorts with a snicker. âYouâre just distracting now.â
You blink. âDistracting?â
He shrugs again, way too casual about the whole thing. âYou look good. Iâm not blind.â You glance around to make sure no oneâs listening, then mutter, âYouâre way more tolerable when thereâs alcohol involved.â
âYeah?â He raises an eyebrow. âYouâre way more tolerable when youâre not scowling at me for breathing too loud.â You glare. âThat happened once.â
âIt happened twice.â
âOnce,â you insist.
He just smirks and takes a sip from the water bottle in his hands. His gaze flicks past you, toward the hallway, and he jerks his chin slightly. âCome on. Iâll introduce you to some people who wonât talk about your bra.â You narrow your eyes. âIs that your idea of an apology?â
He smirks again, already walking off. âTake it or leave it.â You roll your eyes and followâonly because your drinkâs almost empty and the kitchenâs in that direction anyway. Obviously. And maybeâjust maybeâbecause being around him like this, when heâs not being a complete jackass, isnât the worst thing in the world. At least not tonight. Sukuna leads you through the crowd like heâs done this a million times beforeâwhich he probably has. You catch a couple of people eyeing him as he walks by, and you wonder if itâs because heâs hot or because he radiates that unapproachable energy like itâs cologne.
âThis isâŠ?â someone asks when you both approach a small group gathered around a tall keg table. He jerks a thumb toward you lazily. âMy chem partner.â You resist the urge to roll your eyes at the title. âHi,â you say instead, a little wave as you flash a quick grin.
âYo, youâre in Shimizuâs class too? That womanâs a menace.â
âTell me about it,â you groan. âI swear she adds extra steps to procedures just for fun.â Someone laughs. âYou actually talk to her? I just fake nod through half of her lectures.â You slip into conversation easily after that, bouncing off the group's energy. Youâve always been extroverted when youâre comfortable, and itâs oddly easy here, surrounded by strangers who are just buzzed enough to be nice. Itâs even easier when you catch Sukuna watching the group banter from a short distance, sipping from his water bottle again, his expression unreadable. You break away to get another drink, winding toward the makeshift bar on the patio. The music's loud, the air sticky with alcohol and cologne, and just as you reach for a clean cup, a shoulder brushes into yours.
âShitââ
You turn, and there he is again. Ryomen Sukuna. Up close this time. âJesus, what is your problem?â you mutter, looking up at him. âDo you teleport?â He looks unfazed. âYou walked into me.â
You snort. âYou walked into me.â
He doesnât argue. Just leans slightly back and lets his eyes flick down, over your outfit, andâyep. Not subtle. Not even trying to be. Your eyes narrow.Â
âYouâre such a creep. I donât care if Iâm slightly drunk, I can definitely tell youâre staring at my boobs.â He scoffs, openly amused. âWell, sorry. Iâm a man. And those are practically fighting for their lives in that top.â You gasp, smacking his arm. âYouâre disgusting.â
He shrugs. âAnd youâre the one who wore it. Donât act surprised people are looking.â You roll your eyes but the corner of your mouth twitches. âWhatever. At least I can pull it off.â
âWho said you couldnât?â
You pause for half a second too long. Then you glare. âYouâre pissing me off.â
âAnd youâre drunk,â he retorts, smirking.
âIâm not drunk yet. Youâd know if I was drunk.â
âOh?â He raises a brow. âWhat, do you start crying or something?â
âNo,â you scoff. âI just get⊠more honest.â
âTerrifying.â You give him a sweet smile thatâs anything but. âWhat, afraid Iâll hurt your little ego?â He looks down at youâreally looks. Like he's taking in the pink flush in your cheeks, the glint in your eye, the way you don't back down even when heâs standing so damn close.
âNah,â he says. âMy egoâs huge.â
You blink. â...Thatâs not as reassuring as you think it is.â
He laughs, low and dry, then tilts his bottle at you in mock cheers before walking off again. You stand there for a moment, a little dazed, before grabbing another drink. Eventually, a while later, you find your way back to Yuna, whoâs already three sips away from shouting compliments at strangers. She gasps when she sees you. âBabe. Baby girl. My precious. Did I just see you with Sukuna?â
You blink. âYeah, why?â
âYou know him?â
âWeâre in the same chem class,â you mutter, sipping your drink. âGroup project.â Yuna grabs your arm. âAnd you didnât say anything?â You eye her suspiciously. âSay what?â
âThat heâs literally the hottest man on this campus?!â You make a face. âHeâs not that hot.â Yuna gives you a look like sheâs been personally offended. âYouâre lying to yourself. Also, you two have like, that weird tension. Itâs kind of hot.â
You groan. âYunaââ
âJust fuck him.â
âWhat is wrong with you?â
She only cackles in response before she gets whisked away by a guy whoâs clearly her on-again-off-again situationship. She doesnât even look guilty as she leans in to whisper something to him. A few minutes later, you get the text.
sorry i love u but iâm gonna go with him ok iâll send u money for an uber ily donât die xx
You stare at the message, swaying slightly on your stool. The room blurs a little when you blink. You swipe over to the Uber app. Try to log in. Error. Try again. Error. The third time your phone crashes entirely and you groan, bracing your elbow on the edge of the bar counter and burying your face in your hand. Your heels are starting to hurt and you can already feel tomorrowâs hangover tap dancing in your brain.
âYou good?â
You lift your head slowly. And of course. Of course. Itâs Sukuna again. Leaning one arm against the edge of the bar like heâs been summoned by your suffering. âYouâre like a cockroach,â you mutter. âYou just keep showing up.â
He grins lazily. âStill here?â
âYeah, unfortunately. My friend ditched me and my Uber appâs being a little bitch.â He hums, gaze flicking over your glazed expression, your flushed cheeks. âYou look like youâre about to pass out.â
âI might,â you admit. âIf I donât cry first.âÂ
Thereâs a beat of silence before he says, âIâll drop you off.â You blink. âWhat? No. Youâve been drinking.â
âI havenât. Canât have everyone in the frat house drunk. Someoneâs gotta babysit these idiots.â You blink again, the lag in your brain buffering like bad Wi-Fi. â...You?â
âYeah, me. Shocking.â
âYou know where I live?â
âYou told me. Last week. After lab.â
You squint at him. âI donât remember that.â
âYeah, well, I remember everything.â
âEw.â
He just stares at you, expectant, one brow cocked like heâs got all the time in the world.
You exhale dramatically. âFine. But if you kill me Iâm haunting your frat house.â
âI welcome it. Itâs been boring lately.â
âFreak.âÂ
He smirks and plucks your phone straight from your hands to toss it into your purse, ignoring the half-hearted slap you aim at his wrist.
âCome on.â You groan, dragging yourself off the barstool, your legs not cooperating in the slightest. Your heels were cute in theoryâsilver with a tiny bow on the back and barely any support. Very much not made for trudging across dark college lawns and cracked sidewalks. You follow him out, still kind of mad at the universe for letting your Uber app crash. He opens the door like it's nothing, like heâs a gentleman or somethingâgrossâand the cold night air wraps around your skin instantly. As it does, you swear you hear him mutter something. You turn, squinting through the haze. âWhat?â
âNothing.â But it wasnât nothing. It was something. And you're drunk, but not that drunk. It sounded suspiciously like you look pretty tonight. But you donât say anything, just frown and follow him out into the night. Until you realize heâs not heading toward the street. Heâs heading toward the back lot. Behind the frat house.Â
You pause. âWaitâwhere the hell is your car?â
âOther side,â he says, without slowing.
âWhat do you mean other side?â
âI live here, dumbass. The resident lot is across the quad.â
âAre you kidding me?â You groan. âMy feet are going to fall off.â
âShouldnâtâve worn stripper heels.â
âShouldnâtâve been born with a stick up your ass.â He snorts, hands shoved deep into the pockets of his hoodie as he walks ahead of you, like he's not dealing with a barely coherent girl in a miniskirt and heels struggling to walk in a straight line. You try to keep up, but the lawn dips, uneven and soft, and your ankle rolls slightly to the side. Your foot catches. Your knee gives out. And suddenly youâre stumbling, arms flailing, balance goneâYou land hard on your ass with a sharp oof.
âFUCK,â you hiss, grabbing your ankle, already feeling the sting. You stay there a second, stewing, overwhelmed and overstimulatedâthe lights from the party still flickering behind your eyelids, your chest heaving from the sudden jolt, your mouth dry and head spinning. âYou good?â Sukunaâs voice comes from somewhere above you, way too calm for someone whose lab partner just ate shit in front of him. âNo, Iâm not fucking good,â you snap, scowling up at him. âMy feet are bleeding, my brain is melting, and your car is apparently in Narnia.â
âYouâre so dramatic.â
âYouâre such a dick!â
âJesus Christ,â he mutters, suddenly stepping closer. âJustâfuck it.â You barely register him moving before thereâs a sudden shift in gravity and your world tips sideways.
He scoops you up like itâs nothing.
Bridal style.
Your arms instinctively hook around his neck as you squeak, instinctively clinging to his hoodie as your legs leave the ground. âWhat the fuck are you doing?!â you yell, even though your voice comes out way too breathless to be convincing.
âCarrying you. Because youâre useless.â
âPut me down!â
âNo.â
Your mouth opens to protest again, but your brain short-circuits becauseâ
His hand. One of themâlarge, warm, callousedâis curled under your thighs, gripping firmly but not rough, fingers splayed slightly against the bare skin between your skirt and where your panties ride up your ass. But itâs the other hand that breaks your brain. Itâs pressed right beneath your chest, right where the thin fabric of your top clings to your ribs. His knuckles graze the underside of your boob with each step. Not on purpose. Probably. Hopefully. But your body registers every tiny movement, every bounce and shift. Your breath stutters, nipples tightening under the lace, andâ
God, you need to shut your brain off. He smells like expensive cologne and weed and something darkerâmusk and leather and sweat. The hoodie under your palm is worn soft, like he's had it for years, and his chest is so warm against your arm itâs making you feel dizzy. You go quiet. Not because you want to, but because your mouth wonât work right. He notices. âWhat, no snarky comment? Are you dying?â
âJust⊠conserving energy,â you mumble, trying to ignore the way your head is now resting against his shoulder, half from exhaustion, half because it feels nice there.Â
âShame. I was enjoying the sound of you bitching.â He makes it to his carâa black â09 Civic parked in the furthest back rowâand sets you down gently, like you're glass. Which somehow feels even more ridiculous than being carried. You try to get your balance again, but before you can even reach down, he crouches and grabs your ankle.
âHeyâwhat are youââ
Heâs already unbuckling your heel. âYour feet are bleeding,â he mutters, slipping it off carefully. Then the other. âWhy are girls like this?â
âBecause we suffer for fashion,â you reply, watching as he sets them neatly in the footwell of the passenger side. âIdiots,â he mutters, straightening and helping you into the seat. The door is still open as he leans in and buckles you up, the seatbelt snapping into place just under your chest.
âDonât look at my tits,â you mumble, half-asleep, half-defensive.
âIâm not looking.â
âYou are. Youâve been staring all night, you absolute perv. I might be drunk but Iâm not blind.â He sighs, shuts the door, walks around to the driverâs side, and slides in beside you. The carâs interior is cool and clean and smells like the same cologne thatâs still clinging to him. Once the engineâs on and the headlights glow, he glances over at you.
âSorry Iâm a man. My bad.â
âYou are bad. And thatâs not an excuse.â
âAnd yet here you are,â he drawls, pulling out of the lot, his hand casual on the wheel, the other resting lazily on the gear shift. His thighs spread slightly as he adjusts, and you donât mean to look butâ
Yeah. No. Youâre drunk. Because thereâs no way youâre checking out his hands or his stupid muscular legs or the way his jaw clenches every time he shifts gears. Absolutely no way. You fold your arms and press your forehead against the window, trying to cool your cheeks down, but it doesnât work. The drive is short. He doesnât play music. Just lets the silence sit, and somehow itâs not awkward. Just⊠quiet. Kinda warm. When he pulls up in front of your dorm, he doesnât speak right away. Just sits there for a second. You turn to him slowly. âThanks⊠for not letting me pass out in a bush or get murdered.â
He shrugs. âWouldâve ruined my grade if you died.âÂ
You scoff. âSo romantic.â
A pause. His eyes flick to yours, and his voice drops just a bit.
âYouâre welcome.âÂ
And you donât know why, but that makes your stomach flip a little. You nod, mumble something incoherent, and go to open the door. But he stops you, reaching across you suddenly to grab your purse from the floor. His arm brushes your chest again and you freeze. He pretends not to notice. But the corner of his mouth twitches. He hands you your bag without a word, and you climb out, the night air immediately biting your skin. As you shut the door and start toward your building, you hear his voice behind youâlow, amused, maybe even a little genuine.
âGet home safe, dumbass.â
You turn over your shoulder.
âNight, perv.â Then you're gone. And his car stays parked for a few more seconds than it needs to.
â
It starts slow. Just like always, you two keep meeting up for study sessions, mostly in the same tucked-away campus library room. And technically youâre still working on your project. There's still the usual back-and-forth, the occasional threat of flinging a pen at his head, and your ever-reliable "God, you're so annoying" whenever he pushes too far. But something's changed. Some invisible shift. Like the night of the frat party cracked something open. You still bicker, still throw jabs like it's oxygen, but nowâ
Thereâs laughter. Actual laughter. From you. And snickering from him, like heâs low-key delighted when you call him a dickhead with that little smile twitching at the corner of your mouth. Now he leans closer than necessary when youâre reading. His arm brushes yours and he doesnât move. His eyes linger on your mouth when you talk and when you call him on it, he just shrugs and says, âSorry, your lip gloss is distracting.â You throw your pen at his forehead. He catches it without looking. You start referring to the group project as our child, and he calls himself the hot absentee father. You start keeping a tally of how many times he sighs dramatically when he doesn't get the answer before you. He keeps a separate one of how many times you chew your pen cap when youâre stressed and says itâs âborderline erotic.â
âI will murder you,â you say sweetly.
"That's what makes it erotic," he replies. But itâs not just that. Thereâs more. Quieter things. One time, he walks in late with two iced coffees and just drops one in front of you without a word, like itâs normal now. (It becomes normal. He starts bringing snacks too. Sometimes even the weird granola bars you said once in passing that you liked.) When youâre tired, he starts reading sections aloud to you in a voice that's somehow both mocking and comforting. When you're scribbling notes and your pen runs out, he's already tossing you a spare. And eventuallyâ
You exchange numbers.
Itâs just for âconvenience,â you both claim. So you can update each other on meeting times. So he can send you stupid memes related to your topic. So you can text him "you forgot the rubric again, dumbass" when he shows up with nothing but a Monster and the same black hoodie heâs worn four sessions in a row. You never call each other, of course. Not yet. But the texts get more frequent. More casual. Sometimes youâre not even talking about the project. Sometimes itâs just:
You: tell toji to stop calling me your lil nerd wife
Sukuna: donât flatter urself. he called u my leashYou: even worse??
Sukuna: not to me đ
And one day, you're the first to arrive. Youâre early, even. Kinda excited to see him, which you don't interrogate too hard because you're a busy girl with academic priorities and definitely not thinking about his stupid shoulders lately. So you sit. And wait. Ten minutes pass. Then fifteen. Finally, you send a text.
You: where u at bruh wtf im already here
Thereâs a delay. Then your phone buzzes. Itâs a photo. A mirror selfie. Gym bathroom. Fluorescent lighting. Heâs shirtlessâno, wait, technically his shirt is in his mouth, bitten between his teeth. His abs are cut like they were designed in a lab. Thereâs a sheen of sweat on his chest, and the pinkest hint of a happy trail disappearing into black shorts. And godâ the tattoos that intricately line his hips, and youâre ashamed that youâre zooming in to see them a bit more clearly. Tojiâs in the background throwing up a peace sign and smirking like a menace. And the caption?
Sukuna: gym
You stare at your screen like it personally offended you. Because okay. Fine. You tolerate him now. You maybe even like him a little. Like, as a person. As in, you donât fantasize about choking him out every time he opens his mouth. Thatâs progress. But nothingânothingâcould have prepared you for the way your stomach plummets at that photo.
Itâs shameful, really. Youâre sitting alone in the study room, already annoyed that heâs late, your phone clenched in one hand and your cold coffee sweating on the table. You only texted him out of impatience, fully expecting some lame excuse. And instead, you get that. His abs are right there. Cut. Sharp. Obscene. His happy trail is a faint pink stripe leading down, dusted just enough to make your thighs clench, and you hate yourself for it. Your face heats so fast you think you might spontaneously combust. You look around the room like someone else might have seen it, like that would somehow make this a shared crime and not just your own private downfall. You blink at the photo. Then again. Then you lock your phone. Then unlock it.
You type.
Delete.
Type again.
Backspace halfway. Then finally give in and hit send.
You: keep those freaky selfies to urself bro
Sukuna: u sure? u stared at that one a little too long
You: YOU CANT SEE ME
Sukuna: can feel it tho
You: ew
Sukuna: ur welcome
You throw your phone face down on the table like it just slapped you. He shows up twenty minutes later. Hair still damp, gym bag slung over one shoulder, hoodie half on, clinging to the edge of his frame like it was trying to slide off. Thereâs still that smug grin curling on his lips like he knows exactly what heâs doing. You donât even say hi. You just cross your arms and raise your brows as he strolls in like he owns the place.
âI said keep the thirst traps to yourself, gym rat.â
He collapses into the chair next to you, legs spread way too wide, stretching his arms back behind his head with a low groan like heâs been working so hardâand the motion tugs his hoodie just enough for you to catch a flash of skin. A line of muscle. That stupid V again. âThirst trap?â he echoes, voice low and lazy. âNah. That was community service.â
You make a show of rolling your eyes, flipping a page in your notes. âYouâre disgusting.â He leans over, chin propped in his hand, eyes glittering with something sharp and amused. âCâmon,â he says, his voice dropping, thick and playful, âyouâre telling me you didnât like it?â You donât answer. He grins like thatâs an answer. Then, slow and deliberate, he leans back againâslouches down in the chair like he owns it, hands behind his head, and lets his hoodie inch up. Not a lot. Just enough. Enough to show the ridges of his abs. The line of his hipbones. The tattoos. The happy trail, pink and soft and infuriating, peeking above the waistband of his shorts like he planned this entire thing. Like this is a setup and you walked into it willingly. âSure about that?â he murmurs, eyes heavy-lidded and watching you now. You make a strangled sound in your throat and smack a folder in front of your face.
âYou are so weird,â you mutter from behind it. He laughs. Real, deep, warm. And you hate the way it makes something loosen in your chest. And it keeps happeningâthese strange, flirty little moments you donât know how to explain. He starts texting you just to annoy you. You start sending him selfies of your weird coffee orders with captions like for our child (the project). He calls you baby mama when you least expect it and winks every time you make eye contact. And maybe the worst part?
You start dressing better. Not for him, obviously. Thatâd be dumb. Itâs just⊠youâre a girl. Sometimes you want to look cute. Sometimes you want to wear something other than an oversized hoodie and leggings. So you start showing up in cropped tops. In fitted shirts. In actual shorts when it's warm out. Sometimes you evenâGod forbidâdo your hair. Not for him, of course. Except... he notices. Youâre bent over your laptop one afternoon when you catch him staring again. Not like heâs trying to be subtle. He leans back in his chair, arms crossed, smirking lazily.
âWhat?â you say, defensive.
âYou look good,â he says, so bluntly it makes you blink. Then, almost offhand: âBut I liked when you wore those weird baggy clothes, too.â You snort. And suddenly the words tumble from your mouth, words you didnât expect to say at all.
âYeah? Didnât you say the project would be easier if I was hot?â
His smirk falters for the first time. He pauses. Thenâquietly, sincerely, and in that very Sukuna wayâhe says, âYeah, well. I lied about that to piss you off. Obviously.âÂ
A beat.
âYouâre touched in the head if you donât think youâre hot.â You go quiet. The air goes weird againâthick and strange and soft around the edges. You blink down at your notes, unsure what to say. Then, like itâs nothing, he shrugs. âAlso⊠sorry. About that. And all the other comments. Shouldnâtâve said that shit.â
You glance at him. Heâs not looking at you. Just fiddling with the ring on his finger like heâs not even sure if he meant to say it out loud. You swallow. Your stomach flips. Something tender and unfamiliar blooms in your chest. Then, because you canât handle the softness, you bump his foot under the table and mumble, âYouâre still annoying.â He grins like heâs won something. You work in silence after thatâyour legs stretched out, your ankles resting comfortably on his lap. He doesnât move them. Just shifts to make space. At one point he starts absently tracing circles on your sock with one finger. And you donât move either. You just let it happen. Because whatever this isâitâs not nothing anymore. Itâs weird and slow and unfolding. Itâs not sharp like it used to be. Itâs soft. Itâs warm.
And you donât know what this thing is. Not yet. But itâs something. Itâs teasing and warm and slow and building. Itâs softer around the edges now. His glances linger longer. His jokes donât always have a bite. He starts giving you the better chair. He moves his laptop so you can stretch your legs out and rest your ankles on his lap like itâs no big deal. He taps your water bottle when you forget to drink. He waits for you after class sometimes now. He starts noticing things. When youâre tired. When youâve skipped lunch. When your legâs bouncing under the table and youâre clearly spiraling about a deadline. He just reaches over and taps your water bottle. âDrink something. You look like youâre about to combust.â
And one day you realizeâ
Youâre not dressing better because you feel like it. Youâre dressing better because something inside you wants him to look at you. Want him to notice. Wants him to sit across from you with his dumb jawline and his pretty mouth and his stupid gaze and look. Like he sees you. And he does. Itâs horrifying. And kind of thrilling. You donât say anything. You just keep showing up. You let your shirts fit a little tighter. Your hair falls a little smoother. You wear that one necklace that always rests right at the tops of your chest. You tell yourself itâs fine. Itâs nothing.
â
The last few weeks of the semester come fast and loud. Finals hang heavy in the air, coffee-fueled library sessions and group study chaos around every corner, but somehow, Sukuna still finds a way to plant himself next to you in every single lecture. Literally. He doesnât even ask anymoreâjust drops into the seat beside you like itâs his birthright. Kicks his legs out wide under the desk, slumps dramatically back in the seat, leans over with that lazy, smug-ass voice to ask if you did the pre-lecture reading (you did, obviously; he did not, obviously). Sometimes he brings snacks. One time, it was gummy worms. Another time, chips he smuggled in the sleeve of his hoodie like a middle schooler. He offered you one and you made a face but still took it. He grinned.Â
Your chem project is basically wrapped up. Youâre in editing and final-presentation mode now, which somehow translates to even more time together. Study sessions have blurred into hangouts, your text convos half-project, half weird jokes and chaotic memes. He still calls you namesâairhead, goblin, menaceâbut sometimes his voice gets soft when he does. He still teases you, but the silences in between stretch warm and easy. So when youâre walking out of a bookstore downtown one Saturday afternoon and spot him across the street, itâs almost normal. Heâs with Toji and Choso, the three of them leaning against a car like theyâre posing for some kind of delinquent calendar. Sukuna clocks you first. His eyes catch on you, and he lifts his hand in a lazy, beckoning wave.
You cross the street.
He smirks. "Didnât know you had business on this side of town. What, you stalking me now?" You roll your eyes. "Relax. I was running errands. Thereâs a stationery shop over there that sells the pens I like."
"Nerd," Choso says, but he sounds kind of fond. Toji just nods like, fair. Sukuna tilts his head. "You taking the bus back?"
"Yeah, why?"
"Itâs getting dark," he says like itâs a passing observation. Then, in that dry, effortless way: "You look like a perfect kidnapping target. All spaced out and clueless. Câmere, little lamb."
You gape. "Okay well youâre the type of person to be the one doing the kidnapping."
"Uh-huh. Get in. Iâll drive you."
Youâre protesting before he even finishes the sentence. But Toji just shrugs, opens the passenger door for you like this is something heâs used to, and Chosoâs already climbing into the back. You sigh and slide in, heart pounding for reasons you refuse to name. The drive starts off easy. After a while, he drops off both Choso and Toji to the gymâ where they were apparently headed for an evening grind session. Spending time with these three makes you think that the gym might be their second home besides the frat house where they live. You lean your head against the window, watching the city pass by in a blur of dusk and brake lights. But traffic hits near campusâan accident or something up aheadâand the car slows to a crawl.
You sigh, long and dramatic, throwing your head back against the seat. âWell. Looks like weâre stuck.â Sukuna shoots you a flat look, one hand tapping the wheel while the other lazily rests across his lap. âIncredible deduction, Sherlock. What gave it away? The line of cars stretching into the abyss?â
You flip him off without looking. âIâm putting on music.â
He sits up a little straighter. âDonât you dare play weird indie-girl shit.â Youâre already unlocking your phone, smug. âToo late.â And then it beginsâthose soft, dreamy guitar chords of She Wonât Go Away, spilling out through the car speakers like a bubble bath in audio form. Sukuna visibly flinches.
âWhat the fuck is this?â he groans, pinching the bridge of his nose. âThis sounds like it belongs in a movie montage of someone getting dumped in the rain.â You grin, curling your legs up into the seat and pressing your temple against the cool glass of the window. âItâs art. Itâs emotion. Itâs currently the only thing keeping me alive during finals.âÂ
Youâre already humming under your breath, voice quiet but matching the lilt of the lyrics like youâve done this a hundred times alone in your room. You donât even notice youâre doing it at firstâjust this soft, distracted singing, like muscle memory. Like breathing. Sukuna groans again, leaning back against his seat like heâs physically in pain. âPut on Playboi Carti like a normal human being.â
âNo,â you reply sweetly, already queuing the song again. âIâm hyper fixated. That means Iâm playing it at least three more times.â
âJesus,â he mutters, but doesnât reach for the aux. Instead, he leans his head back against the headrest and shuts his eyes, as if surrendering to the inevitable. His tattooed arm is draped lazily along the console between you. The setting sun outside paints soft orange lines across the curve of his throat, the ridges of his knuckles, the cut of his jaw. You glance over. Just for a second. His damp pink hair is curling a little where it rests against his forehead, the collar of his shirt a little stretched from where he tugged it off earlier. His hands are relaxed, but youâve seen them clenched around a pen, a steering wheel, a canâso often that itâs weird to see them soft like this.Â
When the chorus hits again, you canât help itâyou clutch your water bottle like itâs a microphone and sing along, full volume, completely tone-deaf. Your voice cracks on a high note. You donât care. The car is stuck, the sun is bleeding out across the horizon, and for once your brain is quiet enough to let you just be. Sukuna cracks an eye open to stare at you. Thereâs an expression hovering on his faceâpart judgment, part amusement, all exasperated affection. âYouâre fucking insane,â he murmurs, but doesnât tell you to stop. You play the song two more times. The last time, he even taps his fingers on the steering wheel in time with the beat. By the time the traffic thins and he pulls up in front of your dorm, itâs fully dark out. The streets are quiet. A light breeze rustles the trees overhead, and your building glows warm from the windows.
The car idles for a moment. Neither of you moves. You fiddle with your bag strap. âThanks. For the ride.â Sukuna shrugs like itâs no big deal, hand still resting casually on the steering wheel. âDidnât want you to get kidnapped. Iâll be pissed if I have to deal with a new project partner this late in the semester.â
You snort. âSo heartwarming. Hallmark should hire you.â But still, your smile softens. You open the door, start to slide outâ
âHey,â his voice cuts in, low. You turn back. Heâs watching you, one elbow propped against the window, his mouth tugged into something just barely resembling seriousness.
âYouâve got a nice voice,â he says, slow. âWhen you sing.â
You blink. Then: âI meanâitâs not good,â he adds quickly, defensive. âJustânice. Like. You know. Tolerable. Shut the fuck up.â Youâre already laughing, your whole face warm, stomach fluttering for a reason that makes you want to scream into your pillow later. You shake your head, half-dizzy, and wave him off.
âFreak.â
He grins. âObviously.â And then heâs pulling away, the soft glow of his taillights disappearing around the corner as you stand there on the curb, heart doing something you really wish it wouldnât.
â
The dorm lounge is dark. A sad, crooked little sign is taped to the door, flapping slightly from the draft in the hallway: CLOSED FOR MAINTENANCE. You stare at it in disbelief.
âYouâve gotta be kidding me,â you mutter. Sukuna makes a noise behind youâsomething between a groan and a sigh that says of course this would happen now.
âWe walked all the way here,â you grumble, adjusting your bag on your shoulder. âAnd East Wing Libraryâs still under construction as well.â You sigh, then shove your phone back in your pocket. âWhatever. Guess weâre not studying tonight.â Sukuna scratches at his jaw, eyeing you sideways. âWe could go to my place.â
You blink. âExcuse me?â
âMy frat house,â he clarifies, as if that helps. You squint at him.Â
âYeah, no offense, but the last thing I wanna do is walk into a testosterone-infested lair filled with Axe body spray and half-naked dudes playing Call of Duty.â
Sukuna smirks. âWhat do you think a frat house is, Animal House?â You raise a brow. âIs it not?â
âItâsâŠmarginally cleaner.â
âUh-huh.âÂ
He grins, lazy and wolfish. âWhat, you scared youâll get corrupted?â
âOh please. Iâm scared Iâll catch a fungal infection from your couch.â
âWow.â He mock clutches his chest. âThatâs the same couch Toji had sex on junior year.â You wrinkle your nose. âYouâre not helping your case.â
â
But youâre already walking beside him as he pulls his keys out of his pocket, smug as ever. The house is surprisingly... not awful. Itâs big, for one. Tall windows, wide wraparound porch. Someoneâs put effort into decorating the front roomâthere are actual plants. A couple are plastic, sure, but still. Progress.
âDonât touch anything,â Sukuna says as he unlocks the door. âYou might set off a trap.â You snort and follow him inside. Almost instantly, voices erupt from the kitchen.
âYo!â someone calls. âSukuna brought a girl? What the fuck?â You round the corner and find a man with gauges, hair tied back into a bun, leaning back in a chair with his feet propped on the table. Chosoâs there too, hair also tied up in a low bun, sipping some horrifying green drink out of a mason jar.
âHoly shit,â Suguru grins, âshe real?â
âSheâs not my date,â Sukuna says, already annoyed. âSheâs my lab partner.â
âUh-huh, heâs actually not making up bullshit this time, Sugu,â Choso says, nodding solemnly between Sukuna and you. âSuguru, you shoulda seen the way he talks about hâ.â
âShut up, bitch.â
âSheâs cute though,â Suguru adds, eyeing you with an arched brow. âYou sure this isnât, like, your redemption arc?â
You just raise a brow. âThis what you call hospitality?â Suguru snorts. âShe talks back. I like her.â
âBye,â Sukuna says sharply, grabbing your wrist. âUpstairs. Now.â
Youâre still laughing as he drags you past the second floor landing. âDamn. Didnât know you hadnât brought anyone home in months.â
âJesus,â he mutters.
âWhatâs wrong, celibate king? Losing your edge?â He stops in front of a door, turns to face you with that cocky smirk curling up again. âYou wishing I havenât gotten laid recently?â
You blink at him innocently. âJust surprised you havenât. With how obsessed you are with yourself.â
âYeah, well,â he says, pushing the door open, âstandards.â You snort. But his room is⊠not what you expected. Itâs neat. Cleaner than yours, probably. Dark wooden desk against the wall, books stacked haphazardly but intentionally. An unmade bed with black sheets and a dark grey hoodie tossed over the pillow. Thereâs a little lamp glowing low in the corner and a record player next to a speaker. You hate how nice it smells in here. You set your bag down on the floor. âWhy does it smell like... sage and expensive soap?â
âBecause Iâm not disgusting?â
âDebatable.â You both settle on the floor, laptops out, papers scattered. He brings over a half-full bag of spicy chips and a water bottle, which he throws at you without looking. It hits you square in the chest.
âDickhead.â
âYouâre welcome.â
The first twenty minutes are actually productiveânotes reviewed, graphs tweaked, last-minute slides double-checked. But inevitably, the banter creeps in. His foot nudges yours under the desk. You nudge back. He leans over to steal a gummy from your bag and you slap his hand away.
âStop stealing my candy.â
âYou ate my gummy worms last week.â
âI didnât steal them. I accepted them.â
âWow. Youâre so full of shit.â
âEat dirt.â He laughsâlow, under his breathâand it shouldnât affect you the way it does, but it sinks into your skin like heat, lingers in your bloodstream. Itâs not the usual cocky bark of a laugh he throws at you when heâs being a menace. This one is quieter. Throatier. Less sharp edges, more velvet. Like heâs amused with you, not at you. It wrecks your focus. Heâs leaned back against the edge of his bed now, legs splayed carelessly, one knee bent, the other stretching toward you like it owns the space. His shirt rides up a little at the waist, just enough to flash the hard lines of his stomach, the deep cut of his hipbones disappearing under black sweats. One of his arms hangs lazy over his knee, veins taut beneath inked skin, fingers playing absently with a red pen. And his hairâfuck. It's a mess, falling over his forehead in soft waves, a few strands catching on his lashes when he looks down. You want to brush it back. You want to tug on it.
You shift slightly, trying to re-cross your legs, trying to re-engage your brain with the paper in front of you. But your sweater dips with the movementâa soft, oversized thing you threw on without much thought. It hangs loose over your collarbones, dips just enough to expose a hint of skin and the swell of your chest where the neckline falls low. You feel his gaze before you see it. A flickerâsubtle, but deliberate. Your eyes lift slowly. Heâs staring.
âYou're staring.â
Sukuna doesnât even flinch. Doesnât pretend to be caught, doesnât have the decency to look embarrassed. He just meets your eyes, unashamed, and shrugs one shoulder in a way thatâs all smooth arrogance. âCan you blame me?â You snort, but it comes out quieter than intended. Your throatâs a little dry. âYouâre gross.â
âYeah?â He shifts a bit, elbow sliding behind him so heâs leaning fully back now, neck tipped against the wall, gaze still locked on you. âDonât act like you didnât wear that on purpose.â
You scoff. âExcuse me?â
He lifts a brow, lazy. âThe sweater. The whole off-duty art girl thing. You knew what you were doing.â
âI didnât,â you protest, but your voice slips a bit, too defensive. âI just⊠liked the color.â Sukuna hums like he doesnât believe you. His eyes stay exactly where they wereâlingering, slow, blatantly appreciating. You glare at him. âYou're an asshole.â
He grins. âTrue.â But then, softer. Less teasing. âYou look cute.â
It lands differently. The words settle between you like something solid, something heavy. Not a joke. Not just banter. Youâre suddenly hyper-aware of everythingâhow warm it is in the room, how quiet. The hum of the old radiator. The scent of whatever he uses in his laundry detergentâsomething clean and citrusy and a little intoxicating. You donât respond. Your heart is thudding against your ribs, a little too loud, a little too fast. He watches you. Waits. Then, finally, you manage: âStop being weird.â But your voice isnât sharp anymore. Itâs soft. Uncertain. He smirks, but his eyes stay serious. âYou love it.â
You roll your eyes, trying to drag your gaze back to your notes, to anything other than the way his gaze is dragging over your skin like a physical touch. You pretend to read, pretend to write, but you feel itâthe tension, thick as syrup in the air. Heâs close. Closer than before. You can feel the heat of him next to you, the way his thigh shifts slightly, brushing yours. Your eyes lift slowly. Heâs already watching you. His expression is unreadableâequal parts amusement and hunger. Heâs studying you like heâs memorizing. Like heâs waiting for the exact right moment to pounce.
And then he moves. No warning. No smart remark. Just a slow lean forward, one hand braced near your thigh as he closes the distanceâeyes flicking from your lips to your eyes and back again, like heâs giving you a chance to pull away.
You donât.
And before you know it, his lips are melding against yours. The kiss is slow. Careful. Not tentative, but measured, like heâs savoring the first taste. His lips are soft, warm, coaxing yours open. His hand comes up, rough fingers brushing your jaw before settling lightly at the base of your neck, thumb against your pulse. You inhale sharply when his mouth deepens against yours, tongue sliding over your bottom lip, teasing, askingâand when you give in, he groans, low and satisfied in the back of his throat. The sound goes straight to your stomach. He tastes like cinnamon gum and spice, something dark and smoky underneath. His teeth scrape lightly against your lip and you gasp into him, fingers fisting in the hem of his shirt without even realizing. When he finally pulls back, itâs barely an inch. His breath brushes against your mouth. His eyes are lidded, lashes low, lips parted and slightly swollen. He looks fucking wrecked. And somehow still manages to smirk. âStill think Iâm gross?â
You blink at him, dazed. âYes.â He laughs, that soft velvet-laced one again. You donât even hesitate this time. You kiss him againâharder, needier, something unspoken unraveling fast between you. Your fingers curl tighter into his shirt, pulling him closer, and he doesn't resistâin fact, he deepens it like he's been waiting for this, like every smartass comment and every prolonged look was just him biding time. His hand drifts, slow, from your jaw to your throatânot pressing, just resting, thumb stroking just under your jawline, grounding you. The contrast of his rough fingers against your softer skin sends heat spiraling straight down your spine. Not just thatâ The hand on your throat sends a wave of heat right between your legs. Like heâs showing you whoâs in control.
He pulls away just slightly, breath ragged, forehead grazing yours. "You kiss like youâve been thinking about this.â You giggle against his mouth. âWhat if I have?â
That makes him groanâlow, deep in his chestâand then heâs kissing you again, more urgent this time, less slow-burn and more fuck, finally. His hand slides into your hair, cradling the back of your head as he tilts your mouth open wider, tongue sliding against yours with a filthy kind of rhythm. You shift instinctively into his space, knees brushing his thighs, your body angling toward his like gravity made the call for you. His hands trail from the length of your back to your ass, squeezing it in his large, calloused palms. It gets hazy, fast. The taste of him, the weight of his palm as it trails from your throat to the dip of your collarbone, fingers catching on the edge of your sweater. He breaks the kiss just long enough to look downâhis hand still on youâand you see the shift in his expression the second he remembers your neckline. He hooks a finger into the v-line of the neckline, exposing the swells of your pretty tits to his hungry gaze.
âSee,â he murmurs, voice rough now, barely-there smile curling the corners of his mouth. âYou did wear this shit on purpose. Look at the way it just falls down so easilyâ âS like you wanted me to stare at your tits.â You breathe out a laughâshaky. âYouâre so full of yourself.â He ducks his head, mouth grazing your collarbone now, slow and deliberate, hands palming your breasts. âYouâre not denying it, though.â
Your response gets swallowed by the way his lips brush the base of your neck, warm and soft, and then he bitesânot hard, just enough to make your breath catch.Â
âFuckâSukunaââ
âSay that again,â he mutters, voice vibrating against your skin. âSay it like that.â You yank at his shirt in response, pulling him closer until he's practically between your legs, notebooks shoved aside and forgotten. He lets you, smiling against your neck, one hand situated on your breast, the other settling on your thigh now, fingers pressing just enough through the fabric of your leggings that it sends your heart into a tailspin.
âYouâreâI donât even like you like that,â you breathe, even as your hips shift slightly forward, even as your body clearly wants him, your heat pressed directly on the very evident bulge in his sweatpants. He drags his mouth back up to yours. âSo stop kissing me.â You kiss him harder.
His hand slides up your thigh, slow but sure, fingers skating over your hip, his palm pressing warm through the fabric. You gasp into his mouth when his thumb brushes just below your waistband, teasing, testing. Still not rushing. Sukunaâs the kind of guy who knows exactly how to draw something out until it burns. His kiss slows againâlike heâs dialing it back, testing your limits. âTell me to stop,â he says, voice lower than youâve ever heard it. âIf you want me to.â You shake your head before the words even leave his mouth.Â
âDonât.â He exhales, almost like relief. âGood.â
Because now his fingers are slipping under your sweater, not even pretending to be shy, tracing the warm skin of your stomach, the skin above your waistband. When he feels the way your breath stutters, he pausesâlifts his head to look at you.
âYou good?â His voice is soft. Different. You nod, swallowing. âYeah. Iâm good.â His lips twitch like heâs amused with how breathless you sound, but he doesnât say anything cocky this time. He just kisses you again, slower now, more methodical, hands exploring like heâs cataloguing every inch of you. Youâre vaguely aware that you're still in his room, that the doorâs closed but the walls are thin, that youâre half-on, half-off his bed surrounded by a mess of notes and highlighters and open laptops. And none of that matters. Because the way heâs looking at you nowâeyes dark, mouth kiss-swollen, hair a mess from your fingersâitâs not just heat. Itâs hunger. Craving. Like heâs been waiting for this since the day he sat next to you in chem lab with that annoying smirk.
And now that he has you? Heâs going to take his time. You're not sure when studying officially got left behind. Somewhere between the first kiss and the way his hands slid under your sweater, books became background noise. The project became irrelevant. Now, heâs laying you back on his bedâslowly, carefully, like heâs trying not to make you overthink it. The room is dim, golden light spilling in from the desk lamp. Your legs are tangled with his, your sweater halfway off your shoulder, and heâs hovering over you, kissing you like itâs something he needs to do, like heâs been trying not to all semester and finally gave up. You feel his hand slide under your sweater again, this time pushing it up your ribs, warm palm skating over your skin like heâs memorizing it. He doesnât even rushâhe just looks down at you like youâre something to unravel, slowly.
âYou sure?â he says again, quieter this time. His thumb brushes just under your bra, like heâs offering you a way out, even now. You nod, heart stuttering. âYeah.â Thatâs all it takes. Because after that, Sukuna moves like a switch flips. His hands are suddenly everywhereâsliding your sweater off completely, tossing it somewhere behind him, and then heâs kissing you again, this time lower, trailing his mouth down your neck, down the line of your collarbone, licking into the dip between your breasts like heâs been thinking about doing it forever.Â
His hand tugs off your bra roughly, making you squeakâ youâre not sure if itâs from the surprise from having the material ripped off of you so roughly, or the fact his long fingers are pinching at your nipples. He takes one in his mouth, sucking and rolling the sensitive bud around, before doing the same to the other one. With each action, you feel yourself getting wetter and wetter, to the point youâre half wishing heâd just take your leggings and panties off, and just get on with it.
âFuck,â he mutters, half against your skin. âYouâreâgod, youâre driving me fucking crazy.â He pulls off your nipple with a resounding pop, eyes darkened by the sight of the sheen of his saliva on your breasts. You laugh, breathless. âYouâre literally the one climbing on top of me right now.â
He looks up at you, hair falling in his face, mouth wet and swollen. âYeah, because you look like this. Wearing that stupid little sweater. Coming to my room. Being allââ He cuts himself off with a groan. âYou knew what you were doing. You expected me not to do all this?â He punctuates this with a light pinch to your nipple, making you squeal.
âI came here to study!â
âYeah, and now youâre in my bed. About to get your little pussy wrecked until you canât walk. Real tragic how that worked out.â You feel yourself heat upâ like your entire body aflame at his vulgar words, mouth opening to retort something back at him. He kisses you again before you can reply, this time rougherâhis hands slipping under the waistband of your leggings, tugging slow and deliberate. You lift your hips to help him, cheeks flushed as he pulls them down and off in one fluid motion, leaving you in just your underwear. His eyes darken.
âJesus,â he mutters. âYouâre unreal. And wet. Fuck, I can practically see your pussy because of how wet you are.âÂ
You reach for the hem of his shirt, tugging it up. âTake this off. It's unfair Iâm the only one half-naked.âÂ
He grinsâsharp, pleasedâand yanks it over his head in one smooth move. Suddenly youâre staring at the body that youâve been unconsciously (consciously) staring at everytime he wears something even slightly form fitted. Defined, lean muscle, broad chest, ink curling along his side. Do you even need to mention the pink smattering of hair below his navel? It makes your thighs clench uncomfortably, making your eyes darken. He catches your look and smirks. âLike what you see, huh?â
âShut up and get back here.â And he does. He presses his body flush against yours, warm and solid, one hand braced beside your head, the other cupping your waist. You can feel how hard he is through his sweatpants now, the heat of it making your breath catch. His hand trails down, teasing the edge of your underwear. âStill good?â You nod, hips shifting toward him. âSukuna, please.â He growls, soft and low in his throat, and hooks his fingers into the waistband, tugging them down. He kisses your neck as he does it, slow and hot, and you shudder. He gets them off and then leans back, just for a second, to look at you spread out in his bed, wet and inviting. His eyes are practically black now, jaw tight like heâs holding something back.
âHoly fuck,â he mutters. âYouâre actually gonna kill me.â You tug at the waistband of his sweats. âThen die faster.â He laughs, breathless, and strips them off, boxers too. Holy fuck. Itâs impressive. Thick and girthy, leaking from the pink tip. You try not to stareâtry being the operative wordâand he notices.
âCute,â he says, climbing back over you. âYouâve been a nuisance to me all semester and now youâre blushing over my dick?â
âYouâre literally about to be inside me. Give me a break.â That shuts him up real quick. He leans in, kisses you slow, hand sliding between your thighs. He teases you with his fingers first, dipping the long digits in and out of your wetness, making sure youâre ready, whispering things against your neckââYouâre so wet already,â and âFuck, this tight for me?ââuntil youâre shaking, seeing stars just from two, thick fingers of his, clinging to his muscled arms. Once heâs deemed that youâre pleasantly even more wet than you were pre-orgasm, he strokes his shaft, the tip pink and angry as he stares with a half lidded gaze at the glistening area between your legs.
And then heâs there, lined up, pushing in slow. You gasp at the stretch, the pressure, your hands grabbing onto his biceps as he sinks into you inch by inch. âGod,â he grits out, forehead pressed against yours. âYou feelâfuckâyou feel insane. Oh myâ Shit, Iâm never letting this pussy outta my sight.â You canât speak. You just hold onto him, breathing through it, until heâs all the way in and stills. Gives you a second. Kisses you again. When you finally nod, his hips start to moveâslow, deep strokes that make your whole body arch into him. Itâs hot and messy and intense, but thereâs something else in it tooâsomething careful. He watches you like he wants to memorize every expression you make, every sound you let out.
It builds fastâfrustration and release and months of tension finally cracking open. His name falls from your lips more than once, and he groans each time like itâs doing something to him.
âS-SukunaâfuckâIâmââ
âI got you,â he mutters, kissing your shoulder. âI got you. Come on, baby. Make a mess on my dick. Yeah, mhm. Fuck.â And when you come, it hits like a waveâsharp and overwhelming, your whole body curling into him, his name leaving your mouth in breathy moans. He follows not long after, hips stuttering as he barely manages to pull out, his warm seed splattering on your stomach, head buried in your neck, cursing softly against your skin. He kisses you briefly, heading quickly to his bathroom to grab a warm washcloth to wipe your stomach clean, tossing the balled up cloth into the hamper in some corner of the room.
Afterward, thereâs just heavy breathing and tangled limbs. His hand finds yours under the sheets, fingers interlacing. Youâre the first to speak, voice still shaky. âThat wasâThat was not studying.â
Sukuna laughsâhoarse, wrecked. âYeah, no shit.â You glance at him. âSo⊠do we pick the project back up tomorrow?â He rolls over, smirking at the ceiling. âMaybe if you let me come inside next time.â You throw a pillow at his face. He catches it without flinching. âWorth it.â
And you laugh, falling back into the sheets beside him, skin still buzzing, body still flushed. For once, everythingâs quiet.
â
You stretch, groaning into the pillow, body aching in a way thatâs half delicious and half criminal. Your thighs hurt. Your back hurts. Your soul might hurt a little. From across the room, you hear the sound of Sukuna's shower turning on. âNo,â you croak, face still buried in the pillow. âI am not moving. I live here now. This is my bed.â
âYouâre literally lying on my hoodie.â
âThen itâs mine now too.âÂ
He snorts. âGet your ass up. We should shower before everyone in the frat wakes up and thinks I killed someone in here.â You peek out with one eye. âYou can go first.â
âI wasnât offering,â he says, walking out of the bathroom with just a towel slung low around his hips. Drops of water are still clinging to his chest, and the tattoos on his ribs look somehow worse in the daylight. In the best way. âCome on.â You blink at him. âYou want to shower⊠together?â
He raises a brow. âYeah?â
âNo.â He squints. âWhy not?â
âThatâs intimate.â
He stares. âMy dick was inside you last night.â You wave a hand. âThatâs physical. This is emotional.â He laughsâactually laughsâand crosses the room in two strides. âYou're such a weirdo.â
âIâm serious! Showering together is, like, emotionally naked. I donât know how to explain it. Itâs so vulnerable. Thatâs like⊠domestic. Thatâs, like, soft.â
He rolls his eyes, completely unfazed. âYouâre such a freak.â Then, before you can protest further, he grabs youâstill very naked, still very soreâand throws you over his shoulder like a caveman. His hand slaps across your ass lightly, snickering to himself.
âSUKUNAââ
âIâm not listening to you spiral about emotional nudity,â he says, totally calm, carrying you into the bathroom like you weigh nothing. âYou moaned my name like a porn star last night. You can handle a shower.â
âI canât walk!â
âWhich is why Iâm being a gentleman and carrying you.â
âYou are the opposite of a gentleman.â He kicks the bathroom door shut behind him and sets you down on the edge of the counter. Steam curls around both of you, hot and fragrantâhis shampoo smells stupidly good, which is somehow infuriating.
You stare at the water, then at him. âThis doesnât mean anything.â
Sukuna grins, dimples flashing. âObviously.â You roll your eyes, but your stomach flips a little anyway. The second you step under the spray, your muscles sigh. Hot water hits your back, and you slump forward with a sound thatâs halfway between a groan and a prayer. Sukuna slides in behind you, and his hands immediately land on your hips, holding you steady like he knew you were about to collapse.
âI told you I couldnât stand,â you mumble, leaning back against his chest.
âI didnât realize you meant it literally,â he says, smirking into the curve of your neck. âYou should work on your stamina.â
âYou should get bent.â
âHm, I think I bent you. Very successfully, actually.â
You try to elbow him, but he catches your wrist easily, still grinning. âWant me to wash your hair?â You eye him warily. âWhat are you gonna do? Douse me in Axe body wash?â
âHey. Thatâs slander.â He grabs a bottle from the ledge and starts working it into your scalp before you can protest. His hands are warm, gentle, and surprisingly careful. Heâs quiet for a second, and so are you. Then he murmurs, âYou smell good.â
âItâs your shampoo. Thatâs like self cest. Youâre saying I only smell good because I smell like you?â
âYeah, but now itâs on you. Itâs different. Not self cest. You just⊠Shut up and lemme wash your hair.â You glance up, heart doing something stupid in your chest. âYouâre being weird again.â
âYeah?â He ducks down slightly, voice lower now, breath ghosting against your ear. âAnd what if I said I like being weird with you?â You freeze. Then you shove a palm into his chest. âShut up. Thatâs so corny.â He laughs, but his grip on your waist doesnât falter. You stay under the water a little longer, letting the heat and his hands and the way his chest feels against your back melt the rest of the tension out of you. When he reaches for the soap again, you catch his wrist. âDo not start anything. I physically canât take another round.â Sukuna leans in, kisses the side of your jaw with a smirk. âDonât worry, baby doll. Iâll be good.â Heâs not. Safe to say you ended up begging for it too.
â
The hallwayâs cold. Way colder than your dignity can handle when youâre limping barefoot behind a shirtless Sukuna in his frat house, wearing his hoodie and a pair of his shorts that might as well be pants. Your hairâs damp, your thighs are wrecked, and your pride? Thatâs somewhere on the floor of his room with your underwear.
âYou didnât have to break me in half,â you mutter under your breath, wincing with each step. Sukuna snorts, completely unbothered. âYou seemed fine last night. And in the shower.â
âI was faking it.â
He glances over his shoulder, smug. âYou were screaming.â
âFaking it loudly, then,â you snap. He just chuckles, steps into the kitchen like heâs not Satan incarnate. Tojiâs already thereâstanding shirtless in front of the stove, flipping protein pancakes in a pan that looks like itâs seen war. He glances up the moment you hobble in behind Sukuna, eyes trailing from your flushed face to the unmistakable fact that you are wearing Sukunaâs hoodie and walking like youâve been in a car crash.
Toji freezes. Then grins. Slow. Evil.
âOh shit.â
You want to die. You want the linoleum floor to open up and swallow you whole. You press the sleeves of Sukunaâs hoodie over your face. âI knew I heard something last night,â Toji says, flipping a pancake like this is the best morning of his life. âTold Choso it wasnât the pipes. Thatâs gotta be why he slept on the couch.â
âI hate this house,â you mumble. Sukuna yawns. âShut the fuck up, Toji.â Toji just cackles. âSheâs limping, bro. You broke her.â Your head snaps up. âShut up! Donât say it like thatââ
âToji,â Sukuna says again, voice dropping low now. âIf you say one more thing, Iâm banning you from ever speaking in the kitchen again.â Toji raises both hands, innocent. âDamn. Yâall are sensitive this morning.â Sukuna grabs a water bottle off the counter and throws itânails Toji square in the chest. Water explodes. Toji wheezes laughing.
âIâm putting a ban on the entire house,â Sukuna mutters, turning toward the hallway. âNobody comes out of their fucking rooms for the next twelve hours.â Toji wipes water off his chest with a paper towel. âThatâs not how a frat works.â
âIt is now.âÂ
You, meanwhile, are dying silently in the corner of the kitchen, gripping the counter for dear life like Bambi on ice. Your legs genuinely might give out. You pull the hoodie lower and try to disappear into it. Toji eyes you, smirking. âYou want a protein pancake, champ? Youâve earned it.â
âI swear to Godââ
Sukuna slams a mug down on the counter. âTOJI.â
âOkay, okay! Damn. Sensitive and possessive.â
Sukuna grabs two mugs, fills them with coffee, then turns to you like nothing happened. âCâmere.â You shuffle over, still avoiding eye contact with the man who just witnessed your walk of shame, and accept the mug gratefully. Your fingers brush Sukunaâs as you take it, and he glances at you. That look again. The one thatâs always a little cocky, a little smug. But softer now. Like he hasnât quite recovered either. You sip the coffee to avoid saying something dumb.
Toji, of course, ruins the moment by smacking the spatula on the counter. âSo whenâs the wedding?â Sukuna chucks a pancake at him. And despite the embarrassment, despite the ache in your thighs and the fact that your ego might never recover⊠when Sukuna leans against the counter next to you, shoulder brushing yours, and murmurs, âStill think showeringâs more intimate than sex?ââyou donât argue. You just bump his hip with yours and whisper, âNext time, youâre the one limping.â He barks out a laugh at that, looking down at you.
âYou sound like youâre gonna peg me.â
âKeep embarrassing me like this and I might just peg you.â
â
It keeps happening. Somehow, even after you swore you werenât gonna end up tangled with a smug frat boy who wears rings like armor and calls you âmenaceâ every time you breathe wrongâhere you are. The project is basically done, but that doesnât change much. You still see each other constantly, like itâs built into your week now. Study sessions, late-night editing, grabbing food on the way back from the library. He still comes over unannounced and flops onto your bed like itâs his, still kicks his shoes off and demands snacks and calls you bossy for forcing him to fix his citations.
And okay, yeah. You keep hooking up. Itâs not even subtle anymore. Sometimes heâll press you into your mattress before your laptopâs even warmed up, muttering something like âfive minutesâ that always turns into an hour. You fall asleep tangled in his limbs more often than youâd like to admit, his hand wrapped around your waist like it belongs there. And itâs not just sexâitâs everything. The way he orders your coffee without asking. The way he instinctively tilts his head down when you talk so he hears every word. The way he looks at you, like heâs memorizing you. Toji and Choso have basically stopped pretending itâs casual. Every time you come over to the frat house, someone whistles or yells, âYo, Sukunaâs girlâs here!âÂ
You always roll your eyes, but your cheeks warm anyway. Sukuna usually throws a middle finger over his shoulder and drags you inside like he doesnât careâbut youâve caught the smirk on his face more than once. But then. One Wednesday, you walk into class a couple minutes late. Youâre digging for a pen in your bag, not paying attention, until you hear itâhis laugh. You glance up. Heâs already in your usual seat. But heâs not alone. Thereâs a girl next to himâcute, brunette, sparkly earrings. Laughing with her hand on his arm like theyâre in the middle of a joke. And Sukuna? Heâs laughing too. That low, easy laugh he uses when heâs genuinely amused. His whole body turned toward her. His eyes crinkled at the corners. Familiar.
Too familiar. It shouldnât matter. Heâs not your boyfriend. You never asked him to be. But something curdles in your stomach, this horrible bitter twist of heat and nausea. Because heâs never laughed like that with anyone elseânot that youâve seen. That was yours. You sit on the other side of the lecture hall. You donât text him back that night. Or the next. Youâre not cold. Just⊠distant. Muted. Detached. You donât flirt. You donât roll your eyes when he calls you names. You donât even rise to the bait when he eats the last of your chips and says, âYou snooze, you lose.â You just nod, distracted. Quiet. The first time he tries to pull you into his lap during a break, you shrug him off.
The third time it happens, he snaps. âThe fuck is going on with you?â You glance up from your notebook, eyebrows raised. âNothing.â
âBullshit,â he says, jaw tense. âYouâve been acting weird all week.â You look at him flatly. âIâve been busy.â
âWith what? Avoiding me?â The words hang heavy in the air. He stares at you across the room, breathing hard, the project open on your laptop but completely forgotten. Your throat is tight.
âForget it,â you mutter, pushing back your chair. He grabs your wrist. Not hard. Just enough to make you stop.
âTell me whatâs wrong.â You inhale, shaky. âI saw you. In class. With that girl.â
His expression shifts, confusion tightening into something sharper. âWhat girl?â
âThe one you were laughing with,â you say, voice brittle. âItâs not a big deal. I justâforgot who you are, I guess. You can talk to whoever you want.â He stares at you. Like he doesnât know whether to scream or laugh. âAre you serious right now?â
You rip your arm from his grip. âYeah, actually.â
âThat was my cousin, you idiot.â You freeze. âWhat?â
âMy cousin. From Osaka. She was visiting campus and sat in for class,â he says, exasperated. âJesus, you thought I was flirting?â
âYou were laughing with her!â
âI laugh with you more than anyone! Does that mean Iâm flirting with you too?â
âYes!â you blurt, and then immediately regret it. His eyes narrow. âSo you do see it.â You open your mouth. Close it. Your face burns. He steps forward, close enough to make your pulse jump. âYouâre jealous.â You look away. âNo, Iâmââ
He cuts you off. âYou are. And you know what? Good. âCause Iâve been going fucking insane pretending weâre just study buddies who coincidentally spend every second together and coincidentally fuck and coincidentally sleep in the same bed, but canât call each other anything real.â You stare at him, breathless.
âI like you,â he says, low and hoarse. âI like you so much itâs driving me nuts. And if you donât feel the sameâfine. But donât act like I havenât been making it obvious.â You swallow hard. âYou have a fucked-up way of showing it.â
He snorts. âYouâre one to talk. Giving me the silent treatment because I laughed once?â
âYou laughed like you do with me,â you whisper. âThatâs what hurt.â
Something flickers in his expressionâsomething soft and real. He cups your jaw.
âI only laugh like that with you,â he says, voice thick. âI only want to laugh like that with you.â Your heart stumbles. âNow shut up,â he mutters, âso I can kiss you.â You do. And he doesâhard, hungry, like heâs been waiting for years. Hands are in your hair, yours are on his shoulders, and everything finally clicks into place. When you pull back, flushed and breathless, he grins. âWell. Youâre my girlfriend now.â You blink. âThatâs not romantic at all.â He kisses your cheek. âDidnât say it was. But itâs the truth.â You shove his chest. âYou suck.â He just grins harder, tugging you back in. âNot what you were saying last week. In fact, you were sucking it.â You groan. But you donât argue. Because yeahâyouâre his now. And he's yours. Officially.
â
Sukunaâs room is warmer than usual. The windowâs cracked, the scent of pine air freshener battling the distinct smell of boyâclean laundry, leftover cologne, something vaguely woodsy. Youâre cross-legged on his bed, surrounded by notebooks and crumpled printouts, while heâs sitting in his desk chair with one foot up on the edge, tapping away at the final slides of your presentation. Toji passed by the door earlier and shouted, âYo, project couple!â before Sukuna flipped him off and slammed the door shut with his heel. Youâre both halfway through your second coffees, the last dregs sloshing around your cups. The projectâs done for real nowâjust tweaks now. Alignment stuff. Graph polish. The usual shit that seems small until itâs 2 a.m. and your brain starts melting.
âYou typed âphotochemistray,ââ you murmur, leaning forward to peer at his screen. He doesnât even look up. âNo I didnât.â
âYes you did.â
âI donât make typos.â You snort. âYou make so many typos.â
âI make sexy typos.â
ââPhotochemistrayâ sounds like a bootleg brand of nerd lingerie.â He finally glances over, one brow raised. âYou say that like itâs not a market I could corner.â
You throw a pillow at him. He laughs, full and low and so familiar it warms your stomach. That soundâs become muscle memory at this point. Embedded into your damn soul. The moment settles. Quiet for a beat. His keyboard clacks, and you start flipping through your notes, eyes skimming blankly. Then, out of nowhere, your voice slips into the silence. âYâknow⊠weâve technically talked before this semester.âÂ
He glances up. âWhat?â
âLike, you and me. Before we got partnered.â He blinks. âWhen?â You hesitate. âThat freshman welcome thing. In the orientation lecture hall. They made people from different majors introduce themselves. I stood up and said something about being interested in environmental science.â He frowns, clearly digging through his brain.
âAnd I stuttered,â you add, dryly. âAnd youâvery loudlyâmocked me from the back row.â Thereâs a beat. His face changes. Just slightly. Jaw tightening.
âFuck,â he mutters. âSeriously?â
âYeah. You said something like, âDamn. Spit it out, dumbass.ââ
He winces. âShit.â You shrug, trying to brush it off. âI mean, whatever. It wasnât a big deal.â
âYeah, it was,â he says immediately, looking at you now with that intense, unreadable stare. âI was an asshole. I didnât even remember that was you.â You shrug again, but it feels a little thinner this time. âYou werenât wrong. I was stuttering.â
âDoesnât fucking matter,â he says. âI was a piece of shit. Iâm sorry.â The quiet that follows isnât awkwardâitâs just⊠charged. The way he says it, that gravel in his voice. The way heâs leaning forward now, elbows on his knees, rings glinting under the dim desk lamp. It does something to you.
âDidnât think the Ryomen Sukuna apologized,â you say lightly. He lifts a brow. âOnly when I mean it.â You nod slowly. Then: âGuess Iâm honored.â His eyes narrowâplayfully, but thereâs heat there now. âYou should be.â Your heart skips. You stretch your legs out, feigning boredom. But the hem of your shorts rides up, and his gaze flickers downâlingers. You see the change in his posture. The way his foot drops from the desk, his chair creaking as he shifts.
âI wasnât gonna say anything,â he says, voice lower now. âBut youâve been sitting there looking like that for the past hour and itâs getting hard to think.â You blink. âLike what?â
He tilts his head, mouth twitching. âAll pretty and smug. Like you donât know exactly what youâre doing to me.â You raise a brow. âIâm literally in a hoodie and gym shorts.â
âAnd yet,â he says, slowly standing. âHere I am. In physical pain.â
You scoff. âMaybe focus on the final slide instead of your dick.â
âMaybe stop sitting there looking like a fucking sin,â he mutters, now crossing the space between you. You donât move. You canât. Your breath is caught somewhere in your chest as he stops right in front of the bed, towering over you, eyes hooded. âCan I?â he asks, voice quieter. Rougher. You nod. The shift is immediate. His hands slide up your thighs, slow and deliberate, as he kneels onto the bed, caging you in. His mouth brushes the shell of your ear as he whispers, âDidnât like that I hurt your feelings.âÂ
You swallow. âYou didnât. Not really.â
âI did,â he murmurs, kissing the side of your neck. âAnd now Iâm gonna make it up to you.â Your breath stutters. He pulls back just enough to look at youâhis thumb grazing your jaw, eyes dark and locked on yours. âYou good?â he asks, tone shifting just slightlyâchecking in. You nod. âYeah.â
âSay it.â
âIâm good.â
Thatâs all it takes. His mouth crashes into yours, all heat and teeth and months of tension bleeding out between your lips. His hand finds your waist, gripping you like heâs been starving. You slide your fingers into his hair, tugging just enough to make him groan. The laptop slides off the bed with a thunk, forgotten. You pull him down with you, and he goes easily, one knee slipping between your thighs, his weight bracing over you. He kisses like he studiesâfocused, intense, overwhelming. His tongue licks into your mouth and your brain just short-circuits. He looks at you for a long second. Then, suddenly, grabs your waist and pulls you into his lap.
âAlso,â he murmurs, breath hot against your neck, âfor the record, if Iâd known the hot chem girl from freshman year would end up riding me like five times a week, I wouldâve introduced myself sooner. And not have been such an asshole to you.â You slap his chest. âThatâs your way of apologizing?â
âYeah, but you like it.â You kiss him to shut him up, and somehow, that turns into another hour of not reviewing the presentation.
â
itâs the final day, and your nameâs being called. You head to the front of the class with your laptop while Sukuna follows, looking every bit the cocky, casually dressed bastard heâs always beenâexcept now heâs your cocky, casually dressed bastard. He nods at the front row like heâs about to win a Grammy, and you nudge his ribs. A significant portion of the project requires an overview accompanied with an oral presentation, so here you are.
âBehave.â
âIâm always well-behaved,â he mutters, grabbing the clicker. You start the intro. He takes over halfway through. You canât help but grin a littleâbecause heâs good. Actually good. Clear, confident, no stuttering, and he even makes Professor Shimizu laugh with a sarcastic quip about the data trend in one of the chemical reactions. And then, without thinking, he leans down and kisses your cheek. Like itâs second nature. The room doesnât even react that muchâprobably because no oneâs shocked anymoreâbut when the class ends and people start packing up, Professor Shimizu catches your arm. She grins. âIsnât that the same boy you were begging me not to pair you with at the start of the semester?â
Your face burns. âWe hadâŠa rocky beginning.â
âMmm,â she says, amused. âWell, you turned it around. Solid work. And the chemistry was palpable.â You groan. âPlease donât say chemistry.â But sheâs already walking away, still smiling to herself. After class, Sukuna drives you back to your dorm like always. One hand on the wheel, one resting over your thigh like he doesnât even notice heâs doing it. Halfway through the drive, he queues something on his phone. And the soft strum of Faye Webster's She Wonât Go Away fills the car. You whip your head toward him. âNo fucking way.âÂ
He doesnât look at you. âDonât start.â
âYou said this was depression music for people who get dumped in the rain.â He clicks his tongue.Â
âYeah, well. Maybe I like that kinda concept now.â You cover your mouth with a gasp. âYouâre evolving.â
âIâm gonna shove you out of this moving car.âÂ
Youâre already singing by the chorus, and even though he groans, you catch him mouthing the words beside you. He tries to act like heâs just being ironic, but his fingers tap the rhythm on your leg, and he keeps the song on repeat the whole ride. By the time he pulls up to your dorm, the sunâs setting. You lean in, eyes soft, smile lazy. âThat was kinda romantic,â you murmur.Â
He scoffs. âDonât get used to it.â You kiss him anyway. And when you pull back, heâs watching you with that grin. The one thatâs half smug, half stupidly, hopelessly fond. âYou know,â he says, âif you werenât so annoying, I mightâve asked you to be my girlfriend sooner.â You blink. âThat was the least romantic thing Iâve ever heard. Like, worse when we had that little argument and you just told me that I was your girlfriend now.â
âYeah, well.â He shrugs. âYou didnât fall for me because Iâm romantic.âÂ
You narrow your eyes. âWhy did I fall for you, actually?â
He leans in close. âProbably the dick.â You shove him away, laughing. âGod, youâre disgusting.â
âAnd yet,â he says, as you open the car door, âyouâre still letting me hit. Also, this song, I actually really like itââ
You squint. âAre you saying this to get laid?â
âNo,â he mutters. âBut if it works, I wonât complain.â You slam the door in his face, but youâre grinning. And heâs still smiling when you look back through the window.
a/n: i had way too much fun writing this lollll now i need sukuna!!!
also, honourable tag for @writesvani bc of whom i actually had the motivation of writing this because she sent the most beautiful words of support 2 me after whisper of the heart. thank u so much and ily immensely <3
Asano GakuhĆ was one of my first hear me out. From one of my first ever animeâs Assassination Classroom. Iâm making a yandere one shot of him making him a sugar daddy/mob boss right now.
Warnings : sexual themes, oral (female receiving), mention of future pregnancy, um, idk how to write âsmutâ tbh, but I triedâŠ
You were lying in bed watching the time on the clock. Sukuna had his arms wrapped around you, kissing your shoulder. He was confused why you were still awake and told you to go to bed. As soon as it hit 12, you turned around and dropped the bomb.
âCongratulations, you officially forgot our anniversary!â
You turned around, turned off the lamp, and went to sleep. He was shocked and looked at you resting. He checked his phone, and it was true; he forgot. That makes sense as to why you were clinging to him all day asking him what you all were doing today. Of course he just shoved you off.
The next morning he made breakfast and said he was sorry. He could make dinner reservations and spend the whole day with you. You ignored him and silently ate.
âIâm talking to you, you know that, right?â
âI do, but Iâm heading out for a walk after eating.â
âIâll go with you then.â
âYou donât hav-â
âIâm going with you, and Iâm not taking no for an answer, brat.â
You just hummed in agreement and then got ready for a walk. It was sunny with a chill breeze; as soon as Sukuna joined your side, you walked around the neighborhood.
â Iâm making those reservations for dinner. We can also go to that anime cafe you've been talking my ear off about for lunch. After this walk, how about we go to that mall you said you wanted to go to? We can hit the spa as well. We can watch a movie while wearing those pajamas you brought us. Next week letâs go to some type of island; you pick, alright?â
âAlright, Iâm still mad at you though.â
âOf course you are.â
You spent the whole day dragging him around stores, not to mention the fact you almost ate everything at the anime cafe. He brought you anything and everything you wanted. He even got a male masseuse because he didnât want another woman touching him. You both got your nails done, and you constantly said that you were mad at him.
Hereâs a little secret: you both have been working so hard this current week that you even forgot your anniversary. The only reason you remember is because your best friend texted you to âbe safe.â When you texted back question marks, she replied it was your anniversary. So no, you werenât actually mad, but it wouldâve been suspicious if you werenât.
After the whole fancy dinner, you got into your matching pajamas. You played with his hair during the movie, cuddled him through the second, and started to get tired through the third, so you guys headed to bed.
You got on âyour sideâ of the bed and laid down.
âAre you still mad?â
âMaybeâŠâ
âOk thenâŠâ He took off his shirt and laid in the bed. All of a sudden you're being lifted up and placed on his chest.
âSukuna!â
âTake them off.â
âWhat...?â
âTake off the damn pants!â
âIâm not taking off my pants!â
âStop being a damn brat! Take them off before I rip them off!â
âFine, fine, calm down.â You stood on the bed, each foot beside his stomach. Mumbling how you would beat his ass if he ripped your favorite pajama pants. You slipped them off, and he grabbed you and put you back on his chest.
âAre you happy now?â
âYou forgive me now?â
âNo.â
âThen no,â his lower two arms grab your hips and slide them to his stomach where his other mouth was. The other two grabbed your wrist and placed them on his shoulders.
You felt the warm breath and then the tongue of his second mouth. He took long strides and lickes just to tease. He heard you attempting to hold back your moans. One of his hands moved from your hips to your underwear. He moved the aside, and his hand went straight back to your hips, pushing you harder on his stomach.
His tongue opened your folds and licked at your clit, tongue swirling around the bundle of nerves, and pleasure shoots through your entire body. He heard the gasps and the moans and moved to your entrance. He licked all around before sticking his warm tongue in and out. You felt a hand grab your chin.
âEyes on me, brat. Are you going to tell me what I want to hear, or are we going to be here all night?â
âI-fuck.â He started thrusting his tongue faster. You let out a couple more moans, but you saw him frown.
He moved his tongue back to your clit, moved it up and down, then in circles, sucked it, and went back to your entrance.
âI canât hear you or make out what youâre saying.â
âIâIâm sorry, Kuna.â
âHmm? Thatâs not what I wanted to hear; try again.â
âWhat!â He laid you down to the point, your chest right in front of his face. His top to hand took of your shirt and bra. His hands other made you grind on him and he took a boob and sucked on it like a damn baby.
The rooms filled with the sounds of squelching and slurping. You had came about 3 times; that asshole wonât even let you speak and teases you about it. Every time you attempt to speak, he pinches your nipple, moves his tongue faster, sticks it in your ass, and even bites you a good couple of times.
âAre you ready to speak now, baby~?â Of course he says that while his other mouth is sucking and lapping away at you.
âOk, ok! I forgive you; stop it,â he continues, until you come again. He lets go of you and laid on his chest, catching your breath.
âSee, that wasnât that hard.â
âSh-shut up, itâs not that hard to keep up a simple date.â
âYou said you forgave me; let it go, doll face.â
âWhatever, I didnât even remember until Yora texted anyways.â
He got stiff and grabbed your hips again.
âIs that so⊠It looks like you owe me an apology, and since you're so âgoodâ at remembering dates, let me give you a new date to remember. Mark your calendar, baby, nine months from now.â
He gave you one of those smirks, one that you werenât sleeping until morning arrived.
Ah shit.
I got inspired by this reel I will link in the comments if I can.
This is my first time writing something âspicyâ
word count: around 1088 (I had to fix some mistakes and lost countđ
Summary: A baker who recently moved after a toxic relationship is looking for a new start. Who opens a new bakery in the peaceful but busy side of town? A wealthy CEO who is stressed out and never knows how to relax looks up how to and decides to give a bakery a try.
Warnings : mentions of abuse and sexual assault (just mentioned, not explained), Female pronouns used.This is my final draft, so I might make some changes if needed. :)
Flipping over the open sign in the window, you smelled the sweet air. You opened a bakery just 4 months ago, and business was going well. You only lived here for 6 months total. You decided to leave your hometown after your nasty breakup with Kai.
You walked in on him cheating on you with your closest best friend. He got upset when you said it was over. He snapped even though he was the one in the wrong. He gave you a couple of bruises; luckily, the neighbors heard the noise and came running in. You got a restraining order against him, and he was arrested for assault, physically and sexually.
Your aunt, who was a therapist, called and visited to make sure you were ok. She called almost every day for two months and helped you move. You had enough money saved for a small apartment and a building by busy workplaces. You made a couple of friends and managed to hire 8 employees.
You walked behind the counter ready to serve the first customer. A few minutes passed, and a taller blond businessman walked in, and he looked like he came from a dream. He wore a blue dress shirt underneath a tan blazer with matching slacks and light shoes. He was a bit older and looked exhausted.
âGood morning, sir. Welcome to My Love Sweets. What can I get you this morning?â You put on the sweetest smile and the sweetest voice to match. However, he just gave you a tired look before his eyes slowly scanned the menu. A few more awkward minutes, and finally a deep voice replied.
âIâll have a black coffee and 4 different sweets that you would recommend, if you donât mind.â
âSure! What size coffee mug or coffee cupâ?âThe medium cat mug would be fine.â
âIâll bring it to your table; feel free to sit wherever, and if needed, the WiFi password is on the picture frame.â He nodded, then walked off.
Earlier this week he had been looking for a place to wind down and maybe do some planning. He had been way too stressed out with work, not to mention his friends acting like fools. He saw the bakery a couple of times while taking a walk on his lunch break. His coworkers even talked of the place, so why not give it a try?
As soon as he walked in, he knew he would like the place. It was quite cozy and smelled wonderful. Then he happened to see a beautiful woman who looked sweeter than any dessert there. He scanned your body and then the menu. He almost melted when he heard your voice; he barely registered the question until he realized a couple of minutes later you were looking at him a little confused.
Anyways, he sat down writing in his planner when you brought his coffee to him and a plate of desserts.
âI got you our vanilla macaroons, lemon cheesecake, Nutella croissant, and strawberry shortcake cookies. Are you allergic to anything?â
âNo, how much?â
â5.96 Itâs 50 percent off for the first customer, and since youâre new, it went up to 75 percent off (did I do the math right? We will never know). Iâll leave the tab here and leave you to it!â
âThank you, miss?â
â(Name)â
âWhat a beautiful name; it fits your beauty.â He takes a bite out of his cookie while going back to his planner. You walk away a blushing mess. He actually enjoyed each sweet and got another coffee.
20 minutes past, he put the tab on the counter when you came back from making fresh desserts. He waited on you to come back to give you the tab. Even though there were other waiters and bakers, he waited for you. He smiled, told you to have a wonderful day, and you didnât notice at first, but he left you a 250 tip! Jaw dropped, you rush out to thank him, but he already was in his car, making sure to write in his planner to come here at least twice a week.
Should I make this into a mini story or keep it like this?
summary: on the rare occasion that sukuna takes his nephew out to the park, he notices another kid with blush pink hairâ a baby to be exact. he tries not to stare too much, but itâs hard not to, itâs a rare hair color. itâs not until the babyâs mother takes her out of the swing set and back into her stroller when he realizes why you ghosted him almost 2 years ago.
genre/warnings: hidden child trope, ex-fwb to co-parents to lovers, angst, fluff, smut
master list
part one | part two
Sukuna wasnât very obsessed with the thought of having children, that desire (or lack of) continued to dwindle after his nephew turned 4 and is now all over the fucking place. He doesnât mind watching him, but with each year it's becoming more difficult trying to get the kid to focus and listen to him.Â
âYuji.â The man barks out, beginning to scold the boy because he immediately starts running across the street the moment the crosswalk sign turned on for them. Didnât matter if it was a private neighbourhood, heâd speed through the signs as much as anyone else. âI told you to hold my fucking handâ get over here.â
âOops, sorry!â Yuji starts to skip back. Itâs almost insulting how unworried he is when it comes to Sukuna and his temper, but heâs used to it by now. He reaches out to hold his uncleâs handâ even having the audacity to swing it back and forth. Sukuna just lets him because he ends up feeling bad whenever he yells at Yuji while heâs happy.Â
He guesses the one thing thatâs gotten easier when it comes to watching the little crackhead is that he can now finally take him to the park. Heâs able to run all that unnecessary excess energy off, making mid-afternoon to dinner time easier because he just eats and naps until Jin comes to pick him up.Â
Yujiâs especially excited today, they're going to a new park thatâs just down the street from Sukunaâs new house. It was a nice neighbourhood too, Sukuna already knew the place was going to be like Disneyland for the kid.Â
âUncle! Look!â Yuji yells out.Â
Heâs been looking this entire fucking time, why are children like this? Yujiâs slightly better than most, immediately flipping under the monkey bars like a pro after receiving his Uncleâs nod of approval.Â
âGood job, Yuj.â He says in return. Jin should really take him to a parkour gym one of these days⊠maybe get him checked for adhd too while heâs at it.Â
He continues to watch the boy until he suddenly hears some babyâs laughter on the other side of the playground. It reminded him of when Yuji was a baby, always squealing over something, even if it was something as simple as ripping a piece of paper in half. It was cute.Â
He tried to drown out the noise, but this kid was having the time of their life, so he eventually looked in the direction of where the laughter was coming from. Heâs genuinely surprised when he sees a little baby girl with fluffy pink hair. Itâs a rare hair color and outside of his family, heâs only seen less than a handful of people that naturally had it in his entire 27 years of life.Â
She couldnât be older than a year old. Her motherâ or nanny, this neighborhood has a ton of them, is kneeling in front of her and gently pushing the swing back. Everytime she pushes the swing back, the laughter gets louder.
The lady eventually picks the baby up and smothers her with kisses⊠the same way you used to smother him with kisses, almost 2 years ago.Â
And the moment you turn around and place her back in her stroller, it becomes very apparent as to why you completely ghosted him 1 year and 7 months ago.Â
Yes heâs kept track, you were the best fuck of his life. Heâs been chasing that high after you practically vanished off the face of the earth, you even changed your phone number. For all he knew, you were dead.
Sure, he complained about Yuji here and there, but it couldnât be that bad to the point where you decide not to tell him anything and just raise a baby completely on your own.
Maybe you werenât all on your own to begin with. That thought makes him continue to mentally spiral, heâs honestly ready to fuck everyone up at this point.
âYou fucking bitch.â He murmurs to himself as you begin to walk off with the child that is without a fucking doubt his. He quickly grabs his phone and calls a close friend, one thatâs a little too good at finding people's personal information.Â
âHey whatâs uââ
He immediately cuts Uraume off and cuts straight to the chase. âI need you to find someoneâs address for me.â
---
âHowâs the party planning going?â Your mother asks, trying to keep the conversation going, in hopes of her granddaughter waking up before you inevitably end the conversation.Â
âItâs alright,â you vaguely answer. âI don't know, Iâm not too worried about it. I told the planner to just make it pink and cute⊠and to trust her gut so she doesnât bother me too much.â
âHoney!â She scolds you. âItâs your daughter's first birthday for christ sake, can you sound a little more excited about it?â
âI am excited,â you hiss back. âIt just makes me sad to think about how fast time went by, I donât want her to grow up.â
âI was sad about it too when I was planning your first birthday, but I was still included in the process.â
âWell thatâs you.â You giggle as you finish wiping the kitchen counter. âItâs not that big of a deal, thereâs party planners for a reason.â
âYouâre going to look back one day and regret it.â She says, you can hear her shuffling around in the background.Â
âMaybe.â You mumble, thinking about other things youâll probably regret more than not being included in the process of planning a party.Â
Like not telling Sayomiâs dad about her.Â
You always wonder what his reaction would be if he were to ever find out. Itâd most likely be one filled with rage, youâre just not sure if it would be towards having to be responsible for a little human being or towards the missed time.Â
Probably the former. He was as irresponsible as they come, but so were youâ at least at that time anyways.
You both were too busy in your careers to settle down, itâs why you never put a label on things. With anyone else, you wouldâve put your foot downâ if theyâd didnât claim you, you were gone.Â
Not with Sukuna, he made you weak.
He made it so hard for you to put your foot down that you never even considered asking the dreaded âso what are we?â
He gave you just about everything during those meetupsâ he was fun to talk to, made you feel wanted, even the aftercare he gave you was unmatched.Â
He fucked you like he loved youâ slowly dragging his cock out of you, as if he wanted you to think about what you were missing in those few moments. All just so he can shove himself back into you, as a reminder that everything you needed was right there, on top of you.Â
Heâs a fucking asshole, but knew how to play the role of a loving boyfriend in the hours you visited him.Â
Keyword: in those hours. Outside of that, he was practically none existent. But you couldnât blame him, he was an up and coming rugby star. He spent his days training or strategizing with his teammates for the next game, he spent half of his year traveling. He didnât have time for anyone but himself.
Eventually, you started ditching a condom all together. You swore your birth control would do the jobâ it fucking didnât, and a part of you still wants to sue that company.Â
But you donât, because it wouldnât hold up in court due to the 1% chance it wonât work, or whatever that percentage is. Plus, you donât want your daughter getting on your case over it one day if she did find out.Â
Itâs not her, itâs the principle.
It was your fault at the end of the day. You were just straight up reckless with the way you let him.. ahemâ beggedâ him to come inside of you each time he was all up in your guts. Heâd taunt you for being weak, driving his dick inside of you even faster and harder whenever you showed signs that you were close, then encourage you to cum right on his cock thatâd split you open each and everytime time you met up with him.Â
You were so scared at first, going back and forth on how you should tell himâ if you should tell him. A big part of you wanted the baby and convinced yourself heâd make you get an abortion out of fear that you might just be after money, so you never did.Â
Yeah, you gaslit yourself.
But everything turned out better than you thought itâd be. Your parents were willing to set you up in a gated community just because it was safer for you and your daughter to live there. They pay the rent while you pay for everything else.Â
You now run your own business managing multiple businessesâ social media accounts. Itâs quite lucrative, so youâre able to afford a nanny while working from home.
Your parents love Sayomi and donât hold back showing it. They donât know who her father is, you wonât tell them⊠but she oddly looks like a well known rugby player that's from the region.Â
It's a suspicion they keep to themselves though, they like spending time with her and would rather not start an argument with you after asking who the father is. It didnât end well last time, so they just avoid the topic now.Â
Youâre suddenly pulled out of your thoughts after someone rang your doorbell, must be your neighbor that you became friends with shortly after moving here. Sheâs the typical neighbour that shows up at your door asking for sugar or eggs comically enough.Â
âCan I call you back, mom? Someoneâs at the door.â You kindly interrupt her.Â
âActually, we can continue this later.â She sighs, you can hear her keys jiggling. âIâm leaving for a yoga class right now.â
âOkay. Have fun!â
âThank you sweetheart. Give Yomi a kiss for me when she wakes up.â
âI will, bye.â The doorbell rings again right after you hang up, which slightly annoys you since they havenât been waiting that long. Itâs like they think a second ring is gonna have you running to the door.Â
It rings a third time and you hold your tongue, yelling back is just going to wake up the baby.Â
You finally open the door and an immediate chill runs down your spine as you look up at a very angry Sukuna. He as tall as ever, presence as imposing as ever, and for the first time it is you that his anger is directed towards.
His eyes momentarily drift down to your chest before speaking. âWe need to taâ.â
Completely terrified as to how he even found you, let alone get past security to even enter this neighborhood, you immediately slam the door in his face.
And you should be terrified, he begins to laugh before raising his voice. âI see you havenât changed one bit.â He saysâ hoping you can hear him, hoping your back's up against the wall and panicking right now. âI havenât changed either, sweetheart. Better open up before I show you Iâm still crazy as fuck if you piss me off.â
Youâve seen it before, multiple times, just not towards you. Each time you saw it, youâd always pray that youâd never find yourself on the receiving end of the man's wrath.Â
âYou need to leave before I call the cops. You canât just go around threatening people like that.â You say, powering through the shakiness of your voice.Â
âAnd you canât just hide a child from their father either. I saw you two at the park, let me see her.â His voice is still calm, but becoming more firm. He knows you're bluffing. âIâm giving you 10 seconds to open this door before I give you a reason to call the cops.â
Thereâs nothing but silence from your end, itâs infuriating to him. Each second that passes, he feels like heâs slowly being removed from his own body, being replaced by something that thrives off rage.Â
And for you, you kind of wanna die right now, but unfortunately you canât because you have a daughter to take care of. The sound of his voice ends up being drowned out by your own thoughts, thinking about the possibilities of what would happen if you opened that door.Â
But before you know it, youâre quickly pulled back to reality as he ends his countdown and begins to bang on your door incessantly.Â
âOpen the doorâ Iâm not fuckinâ around, open the FUCKING DOOR.â He yells out your name, pounding at the door so hard youâre sure heâll break it off its hinges. âIâm not fucking leaving until you open up and let me see her! You should be glad I came here instead of going straight to my lawyer you piece of SHITâ OPEN THE FUCK UP.â
As if it couldn't have gotten any worse, your daughter wakes up from the ruckus. Her cries will always be ten times worse than Sukunaâs knocking, youâre convinced from the way she is screaming from the top of her lungs as if someone were hurting her.
âFine just.. shut up! Please!â You finally snap and nearly beg from the overstimulation of listening to your daughter crying and a grown man literally barking at the same time. You begrudgingly swing the door open and heâs met with a set of tired, glossy eyes and decides to settle down. âI just put her down and it takes forever doing it.â You lightly complain.
He says nothing in the response, slightly stunned at how quick your mood changed. Not like he has much of a choice though, you storm off before he gets the chance tooâ being left to shut the front door on his own and awkwardly wait at the foyer because he doesnât know where the hell you went off to.Â
The house is nice, almost as big as his. But itâs also too big for just the two of you, leaving him to wonder again if you had a partner or something. Not that heâs one to talk. He lives alone, but he has his family and girlfriend over often since he has the space to entertain guests.
Fuckâ he just asked if she wanted to make things official last month. Sheâs not gonna be happy about this.
His thoughts are quickly pushed away though when he hears the sounds of footsteps, whimpering, and you gently shushing them.Â
You and the baby finally come into view, both frowning at him for different reasons. He was too far away earlier to see, but aside from your eyes and death glare, the girl looks just like him.Â
Sayomiâs staring at him with a look that screams âwhat the fuck is this stranger doing in my houseâ, all while gently sniffling because she is rightfully pissed about being woken up.Â
You canât help but notice how stiff he is while looking at his carbon copy and decide to be the first one to speak up, by formally introducing him to her.Â
âThis is Sayomi and sheâll be 10 months old in a week.â Itâs cuter when you say it to other people, their reactions are usually squishing her cheeks and raving about how adorable she is. Sukuna looks more shell shocked than anything. â...Do you wanna hold her?â
âI mean⊠yeah, but not if sheâs just gonna get mad at me and start crying.â He says, while Sayomi continues to stare him down. Well, at least he respects boundaries, thatâs sort of a good sign.Â
âLucky for you, she stares at things she finds interesting. If she didnât want you to hold her, sheâd have a death grip on to me right now with her face tucked into the crook of my neck.âÂ
He has a quick flashback of how he used to do the same with you whenever he was tired, but quickly shakes it off. Nowâs not the time to start yearning for you or your touch all over again, he literally just got over you.Â
âYou sure about that?â He says, slightly hurt from the way sheâs side eyeing him.Â
âPositive.â You hold back a sigh at his hesitance. He was acting like he was going to murder you just 5 minutes ago, now he looks like heâs scared of an innocent baby. âJust take her please, my arms are starting to hurt.â
Itâs one of the things that comes with having a child with a rugby player, theyâre chunky. But you canât complain too much, sheâs very huggable.Â
You end up handing her to him before he gets another chance to protest, not bothering to instruct him on how to hold her because you know all about how heâd watch Yuji. Even with your child being in the 90th percentile, she still looks miniature when being held by him.Â
âLook at you, cheeks are all wet from cryinâ.â He murmurs, beginning to wipe them off. She sniffles again and lets out a deep sigh in responseâ you both know it's a good sign, sheâs finally settling down after getting ripped out of her sleep. âMâsorry, I just wanted to meet you.â
You talk to her normally too, so she usually babbles back to people in response, which is what she does in response to his words. Itâs ridiculous(ly) (cute), watching her slowly open up to him just minutes after losing her shitâ something she gets from her father. Each time she babbles out some incoherent sentence, he acts like he knows what sheâs saying and she smiles a little more each time.Â
âMama.â She suddenly turns to you and says, pointing her finger at him. It's her little way of asking who he is since you always tell her the names of things she points at.
âThatâs Dada.â You say in response. âCan you say Dada?â
ââŠAda.â She confidently says.
Close enough.Â
You avoid Sukunaâs gaze, you can just feel how annoyed he is at this point. âHas she said Dada before?â
âMhm, last week.â You say enthusiastically, playing with Sayomiâs hand after she grabbed onto your thumb.
âMustâve been her tryna manifest me. Probably thinking, âlet me meet my dad, you conniving bitchâ or something.â He says in the same smooth tone.
âWatch it.â If he werenât holding her right now, you wouldâve smacked him for calling you that.Â
âDid I lie?â He argues with you in a playful tone, then turns his attention back to his daughter whoâs completely unaware of anything for obvious reasons. ââCause last time I checked, your Mama hid you from me.â
âDonât do this in front of her.â You warn him.
âFine.â He lets it go, after getting one last jab in. âAny other words that I missed out on?âÂ
âShe also knows how to say no.âÂ
He chuckles, âsounds like my kid.âÂ
âUnfortunately.â You say under your breath. It wipes the smirk off of his face but you donât notice it since you start to walk away from him, he quickly follows with little Sayomi in his arms.Â
âHow did you find me? Actually, how did you even get past security?â You ask, leading him to the living room.
âI know someone. I also live in the northern part of the neighborhood.â He not-so-humbly brags. Thatâs the area where you need to go through three different gates just to get to a house. âJust moved there last week.âÂ
No wonder why you havenât seen him at the private grocery store yet.
âWell thatâs⊠good.âÂ
âYou donât mean that.âÂ
âI donât know what else to say. I donât even know what to think right now to completely tell you the truth.â You admit.
âYeah? Imagine how I feel.â He scoffs, plopping down on the couch with the baby still in his arms. âCan she walk yet?â
âNo, sheâs able to pull herself up and stand for a couple seconds though.â
âIs that so?â He looks back at her, at this point her interest has moved on to something elseâ the little bunny plush on the other side of the couch that sheâs pointing and humming at.Â
You beat him to it and hand it to her before sitting down beside him, with a reasonable amount of space between you two. Heâs taking this a lot better than you thought he would, probably because he wants to behave right now in front of her.Â
âWhyâd you do it?â He murmurs as he fiddles with the bunnyâs ear while Sayomi continues to play with it.Â
âGuess I was scared of your reaction,â you begin to pick at your cuticlesâ a bad habit that shouldâve been dropped a long time ago. âThought youâd make me get an abortion or something.â
âThat wasnât for you to decide.â He sighs, surprised that you thought that low of him. He wasnât around a lot, but he was nice to you when he was. Not once did he ever raise his voice at you, never snapped at you. Even when he was ordering food delivery, he'd let you pick-- every single time. âIt wasnât for me to decide whether you wanted to keep her or not either.âÂ
âI know.â You sigh, leaning back out the couch and giving yourself a moment. âI was scared.âÂ
âYou said that already.â He looks down at the kid then back up at you, unsure if he should just feel thankful that heâs here now or if he should just continue to be pissed. âThatâll never be a good enough answer for me.â
âFor what itâs worth, it was something Iâve always regretted after giving birth to her.â
He only hums in response to that, trying his best to hold his tongue because itâs hard to believe. If you truly did regret it, you wouldâve reached out to him. Heâs convinced you wouldâve gone the rest of your life without telling him. âAre you gonna let me be in her life now or am I gonna have to fight you over that too?â
âWhat does being in her life look like to you?â
âI dunno.â He shrugs, taking the time to think it through. He works a lot, travels a lot, parties a lot. âWeâre technically neighbors, so how about I just start coming over to see her for now. Iâll figure the rest out later.â
âWe can do that.â You cautiously say.Â
Hopefully he keeps it fair, he has the upper hand already by being the good guy for once.
a/n: soooo do we think sukuna's gonna be a good boy?
Pour it Up Masterlist / Stripclub Owner Sukuna headcanons
Part One - Part Two - Part Three - Part Four - Part Five - Part Six - Part Seven - Part Eight (final)
Pairings: Stripclub Owner Sukuna x Stripper F!reader
Summary:- You are a single mother, your baby daddy is not just worthless, he also is actively trying to sabotoge you, so you go out on your own and raise your kid by yourself. Struggling your ass off, a friend of a friend named Toji decides to offer you a hell of a deal, a few hours a night at a strip club to make BANK. While there, you meet the other owner, Sukuna, and the moment he sees you? You annoy him how beautiful you are, how much he wants you, pushing him to insanity. He knows he must have you- no matter whose ass he needs to beat.
Warnings:- reader is a mom, lowkey/highkey Yandere Sukuna behavior (He's obsessed) recreational drug use, drug dealing Sukuna (the club lowkey a front lol) Mafia ties, EXPLICIT sexual content, blow jobs, cunnilingus, fingering, masturbation, teasing and mafia related violence, some former trauma of reader, lots of smut and also fluff, watch Kuna morph into a softie hehe.- Ties into the Satoru x reader story Losing Control Now
Ongoing- WC so far- 47k - ao3 link here - Playlist
Headcanons/story preview below!
Stripclub Owner Sukuna- who loves what he does, the money he makes, the women, the entire atmosphere. What more could he really need in life?
Stripclub Owner Sukuna lights up a blunt with his co owner, Toji, as they lounge back on one of the bright red Sofa's, watching their girls dance around them while they hold business meetings. Sukuna certainly doesn't mind beautiful women, nor does he mind snorting coke right off them.
Stripclub Owner Sukuna throws back a shot, when suddenly he sees someone so different, so fucking pretty it makes his heart thud in his chest. He can barely stop himself from yanking you right away from this. He's slicking back pastel hair when Toji introduces you so casually, wearing a pretty silver bikini that shows too much of your sexy body. You look shy? You look nervous?
Stripclub Owner Sukuna takes your hand then, smirking at you, watching the blush decorate your cheeks, when he finds you're going to be a dancer, he immediately wants to say no, dance for just him, a level of possession he's never even felt with his girlfriends. Sukuna's shared plenty of women, but if he got you!?
Stripclub Owner Sukuna smacks Toji for even bringing you here later, and Toji scoffs. 'She has a kid and shit, she'll make top dollar here' Sukuna falters at such news. 'Don't ya think she'll make bank?' 'Tch, of course she will... it's just she's so...' Toji snorts. 'you got the hots for her, huh? Well she ain't some easy girl, I know her'
Stripclub Owner Sukuna knows he must have you, when you're stepping around the stage, and he's eyeing you, sitting right in front of the stage as you get on your knees, crawling toward him and smiling shyly. 'how're you a shy stripper, huh? not gonna work' he huffs, and you tilt your head, hand slipping down his tie. 'No allure in a shy dancer, Mr. Sukuna?'
Stripclub Owner Sukuna loses his mind when he hears his name spilled from your glossy lips, as he thinks of shoving his cock deep inside that mouth, so close to his when you turn. You bend over, ass right in the air, begging for a smack as you look back at him, hair falling over your face. 'Why're you here?' he demands, eyeing the curve of your back, cock hard like he's some pathetic teenager or something.
Stripclub Owner Sukuna tenses when you say - 'I need the money, isn't it why everyone does this?' 'Toji says you got a kid' you tense then, turning toward him nervously, as the stagelights glimmer all over your skin. 'That a problem?' Sukuna shakes his head. "Nah, lots of girls here do...' You exhale. 'I'm a single mom, my friend can watch her at night, why not work while she's asleep? I can spend my time with her'
Stripclub Owner Sukuna admires the fuck out of you as you dance your pretty ass off, but he hates the men that see you, see you in just your little bottoms and tassells, breasts bouncing, ass jiggling as you shake it, as you move. You're a whole star quickly, the few hours a night you come in you make bank, but as soon as you leave, he's in his office, jerking it to you, imagining those nipples, that pussy he sees hints of with your spandex panties.
Stripclub Owner Sukuna On one particular night forgets to lock the door, you're still out there dancing but he can't take it, you're too fucking sexy, he's picturing burying his face in that nice ass of yours as you step inside, shutting the door quickly when you see it, his enormous dick in his hands, covered in precum. You gasp, looking away quickly. 'shit I'm sorry, it's my ex... he's such an ass and I didn't want him to see me...'
Stripclub Owner Sukuna pauses, in shock as you look back down at him, licking your lower lip. 'I'm interrupting...' you come closer though, watching, breath catching in your throat. 'Want me to beat him the fuck up? ruin him?' Sukuna murmurs, voice husky, when you keep walking towards him, and he slowly strokes, from the base to the tip of his veiny length, acting so casual. 'No, you don't have to do all that, you're already so good to me' he laughs then, shaking his head. 'You are, maybe I should... be good to you?'
Stripclub Owner Sukuna can't form a thought when you're stroking his cock, leaning so close, lips just a breath from his, taking two of his fingers and sucking his precum off them, cheeks hollowing. Sukuna loses his control then, using those two fingers to slip so deep you cry out, earning his groan, uncaring if anyone heard. He's curling them up in your walls as you stroke, his eyes laser focused on your pretty face when he grips your hair by the nape of your neck. 'wanna suck me, huh brat?' he tries to keep it together, but when you nod eagerly, on your knees, he can't take how good your throat feels.
Stripclub Owner Sukuna has his cock fucking up into your throat, his salty precum against your tongue, and he wonders if it's some dream it has to be, you're too fucking beautiful to just be doing this, you shouldn't even be working, he thinks. He'd like you just naked around his house, to fuck you on every surface, fill you up with so many kids you'd never leave. Sukuna is groaning while you suck him greedily, looking up at him with dilated, beautiful eyes, making him simultaneously want to fuck you and want to make love to you, stupid insane shit that irritates him.
Stripclub Owner Sukuna stutters when you suck harder, and he's cumming deep in your throat, not meaning to. No he wants to fuck your pussy, not this, but you make him cum so fast it's stupid, swallowing him with a pretty smile, as you lean up on shaky legs. He presses a kiss to your lips, desperate and messy, tasting all of his cum all over your mouth. You're gasping, until the door opens, and you pull apart, seeing an amused Toji. You are losing your mind later as you clean up to go home, wondering what's gotten ahold of you, when Sukuna is waiting right outside.
Stripclub Owner Sukuna loves it when you look down so shy and pretty, you're biting your lower lip to death, he releases it from the grip of your teeth. 'you free tonight, brat?' you blink in confusion. 'you want...' 'want you at my place, spread wide f'me, yeah?' you gasp at the thought, shaking your head then. 'I'm not, I have to get home to my kid... but tomorrow night?' he nods, ushering you to your shitty car, picturing you in something so much better soon, leaning over with a smirk as he seatbelts you in.
Stripclub Owner Sukuna now that he's had a taste, he can't stop thinking of you, when you're at work the next day you're quickly in his office again, this time he's got you grinding on his lap, slick arousal pooling in your little outfit. 'I'll fuckin pay you triple, take the day off' "Mr. Sukuna...' 'Take. The. Day. Off.' Sukuna finally gets you home, having you bent over his couch before you can blink, ripping your pretty costume to shreds, pumping you so full of his cock you're trembling, shaking, head falling back as he fills you so good, slamming your cervix.
Stripclub Owner Sukuna has never felt anything like you, like your cunt pulsing around his cock, like his balls slapping your twitchy little clit, as you're sobbing it hurts so good, tears streaming down your pretty face while he rails his cock so deep. Sukuna busts deep in you as he wraps a big hand around your throat, fucking into you over and over, feeling you milk his cock for all he's got. 'Gonna fill you the fuck up, huh brat? gonna drip on the goddamn stage'
Stripclub Owner Sukuna has your pussy on his mouth when he's busted in you, starting to lap all the gooey white cum from your pretty pussy. 'Sukuna! ah!' you've never felt like this, so fucked out as his tongue scoops all your cum out, he's leaning over you, spitting it right into your mouth, chuckling. 'pathetic, just how I fuckin need you'
Stripclub Owner Sukuna is pathetic for you, he doesn't let you leave, he pays you for another day, fucking you in every position, at some point he's holding you upside down, you're bobbing on his cock as he's gripping your ass, moaning against your hole, you're falling apart, so weak and sore. when you finally have to go home, because you have your kid, Sukuna can't stop thinking about you, about how he wants you to have his babies, to be under him every goddamn night, so excited when you come into work, only to see you devastated.
Stripclub Owner Sukuna demands to know what's wrong, only to see your shady ass ex, who wants to saunter up to him like he's shit, you shake your head, but soon Sukuna is beating the fuck out of him. 'you have no clue who he is, Mr. Sukuna...' you tell him then, earning Sukuna's chuckle, his big grin. 'You don't know who I am, baby'
I never even liked Sukuna that much but omg this story led down a path of obsession. I canât get rid of this man all heâs all over my fyp. This is my favorite Sukuna story and favorite author here.