Sol Meu | Hinata Shลyล x f!reader
paring. timeskip! hinata x f! reader cw. long oneshot. manga spoilers!!!. reader knows japanese (and portuguese). slowburn. friends to lovers. mutual pining. drinking. long-distance separation (it gets angsty). reader is a little bit of a simp (can we blame her). hinata is down bad. cowards in love. touch starvation. implied smut. lots of feelingsโข. we're gonna pretend hinata's debut on the msby black jackals happened on december 23rd because happy holidays everyoneee. as usual, please let me know if i missed anythingโก tldr. you meet hinata shลyล far from home, under a different sun, and at a time in your life that wasn't really meant to last. but he's warmth and laughter and something you swear is just friendshipโbecause anything more from him would be asking for too much. and distance stretches. time passes. but some feelings refuse to behave. because loving hinata shลyล was never the problem. and loving the sun means missing its warmth once it sets to chase other skies. wc. 14.9k an. written for @tyga-lily for the secret santa fic exchange! i really hope you like it โก i loved writing for hinata, i fell deeper and deeper in love with him while doing his character study and even more now i'm finished Q.Q i even made a spotify playlist for this! in case anyone would like to listen to it while they read (or in general, they're bangers). it's all bossa nova, all songs i listened to non-stop while writing and whose lyrics and sound gives me this story's vibe. i hope y'all enjoy reading this as much as i enjoyed writing it.
Saudade is a Portuguese word with no perfect translation.
It's the ache of missing something you loved so deeply it left a permanent warmth behind. Not just absenceโbut lingering, aching presence.
Something gone, and yet everywhere.
You only knew the vague meaning of that word when you met Hinata Shลyล.
You learned it way too deeply later. Learned it the hard way.
The first time you met him, it was after an hour and a half of trying every possible method to hang a picture in your apartment without using a drill or screwsโcommand strips, reusable putty, that weird string-tension trick a YouTuber swore byโall to absolutely no avail. Eventually, you had to accept reality. This was the one DIY project that had defeated you fair and square.
So, braving Rio's heat, still suffocating even in the fall, you made your way to the hardware store. You knew your neighbor had a drillโjudging by the ungodly hours at which he liked to fire it upโso you figured that buying a few screws would finally get the job done. And since you were already going out, you thought you might as well look at paint swatches too; anything to make your apartment feel a little more like your home and a little less like it was trying to cosplay a hospital room.
When you'd asked the owner if painting was allowed, she'd waved it off with a smile. You were supposed to be staying for a good while anywayโhopefully the full two-plus years of your study program. The place was central, not too small, and at a price you could actually afford.
All it needed was a little love. A little color. A little you.
So you'd finally decided to start.
When you walked into the store, the first thing you noticed was that it was somehow hotter inside than outsideโhumid warmth that wrapped around your body the moment the glass door clicked shut behind you. The air smelled faintly of metal, wood dust, and whatever industrial cleaner had been used that morning.
The second thing you noticed was the nervous look the store clerk, trapped behind the register, shot your way.
The third thing you noticed was why he looked like he was two seconds away from stress-eating a bag of nails.
He was trying very, very hard to understand the person standing in front of himโa panicked foreign with bright orange hair sticking up from humidity, a shirt that was slightly damp from the walk in the sun, his phone clutched in one hand, and a burnt-out bulb in the other.
You assumed he was a tourist. Thought you might help. And honestly? He looked adorableโlike someone had dropped a golden retriever into a foreign language exam. His expression showing a desperate blend of determination and impending meltdown.
You were halfway down the aisle, weaving between shelves full of screws, nails, and tools you were pretty sure you didn't know how to use, when you heard a soft stream of Japanese.
"Chotto... chigau... What was the word in Portuguese? It'sโฆ laitoโฆ No, that's English," he let out a small, frustrated sigh. "Come on, you practiced thisโฆ"
You couldn't help smiling.
This was cute. Very cute.
You stepped closerโslow enough not to startle him but confident enough that both he and the clerk looked up. He was mid-typing something into a translation app when you reached toward him, gently placing your hand over his and lowering his phone. His eyes went wide immediately at the contact: warm brown, huge and a little frantic, like he wasn't sure if you were here to save him or witness his demise.
"Ele quer uma lรขmpada," you said lightly, turning to the clerk. [He wants a lightbulb.]
Relief washed over the man like a blessing. "Ah! Sim!"
When the clerk left to get the lightbulb, you looked up and winked at him with a smileโjust a conspiratorial little gesture.
But it hit him like a spike to the chest.
He made a tiny sound. Not quite a gasp. Justโฆ a noise of pure overload. His ears turned red. Then his cheeks. Then the back of his neck.
Partly because of the wink, mostly because your hand was still in his, and absolutely because he thought you were stunning. An angel. A stunning Japanese-speaking angel.
"AhโobriโTHANK YOU!" he blurted, the words tripping over each other like he couldn't decide which language to malfunction in.
You laughed softly, and it felt like a breeze cutting through the heat for him.
"You're welcome."
When you slowly withdrew your hand, his breath hitched like he'd been holding it the entire time.
The clerk returned with two different types of bulbs. Hinata picked the cheapest, bowed far too deeply, thanked him far too many times, and then turned back to youโstill flustered and glowing with gratefulness.
"Youโyou speak Japanese?"
You nodded with a soft smile, asking the clerk in Portuguese for screws before switching languages as you glanced back at him.
"A little."
"A little?! Your Japanese is amazing!"
You couldn't help the slight blush on your own cheeks as you shook your head.
"I'm still not there yet..."
"No, no, no. It's amazing!" he insisted, hands flailing just slightly. "My Portuguese is stillโฆ terrible. I practiced the word for lightbulb last night, I swear, but then the clerk looked at me and I forgot everything."
"That happens," you said, tilting your head. "And your Portuguese isn't terrible. You're trying, and it shows. People here appreciate that."
His mouth opened. Closed. Opened again. Nothing came out.
A tiny spark of triumph lit your chest. Making such a cute guy flustered should not have been that satisfyingโbut oh, it was. You could tell he was sweet. Honest. You could read everything he felt right off his face, and you really liked that.
"Are you here enjoying the beaches?"
He nodded.
"Sorta. I moved here recently. I'm training for beach volleyball."
"Oh. I see..."
And it made sense nowโthe broad shoulders, the steady legs, the lean but athletic build, the spark of energy around him like he constantly ran on warm sunlight.
"Are you a Libero?"
He visibly deflated at that.
"Do you say that because I'm short?"
You couldn't help but laugh, hiding behind your hand. That earned you an embarrassed-but-amused smile from his end.
"No, no," you said in between laughs. "I said it because you have a lot of energy..."
"Ah, I see... I was a middle blocker in high school, actually."
"Interesting..."
"How did you learn Japanese?" he asked suddenly, making you happy that he asked about you, too.
"I like traveling. I'm not originally from here eitherโI'm on a study program," you explained as you paid for your screws and thanked the clerk. "Obrigado. Are you liking Rio so far?"
You turned to leave, half expectingโand half hopingโhe would follow. He gave one more quick bow and a breathless thank you to the clerk, who was looking between the two of you with the mischievous smile of someone watching a romcom in a language he didn't understand but was absolutely rooting for anyway.
Hinata hurried after you, stepping into the heat-bleached sunlight.
"I do! I really like it here," he said quickly, answering your earlier question. "The water's warmโway warmer than Japan's. There's always so many people at the beach, and everyone is so nice. Even if it's hard toโฆ You know, talk."
"Have you made any friends yet?"
The shift was instant.
Just a soft flicker in his expression, like the word friends tugged at his heart. Like a cloud passing over the sun.
That bittersweet saudade. You could see it. Relate to it, too, when you thought about your loved ones back in your home country.
"Not yet..." he admitted, voice small but honest.
A gentle smile curved your lips before you even realized it.
"You knowโฆ I have a group." You nudged his arm lightly with your shoulder. "Sorta like a club? A few more Japanese speakersโnot natives, though. If you ever feel homesick, we meet every Thursday night at a bar not too far from here."
The effect on him was immediate. The shadow in his eyes vanished like it had never been there. And sunlight poured back inโbright, warm, and honestly breathtaking.
And then...that smile.
That huge, open, and absolutely beautiful smile. The kind of smile that felt like it reached straight inside your ribcage and squeezed your heart like a hug, sweet and warm and a little terrifying.
Time didn't freeze like in romcomsโbut stretched instead.
The heat outside had softened into a gentle breeze, carrying the scent of pressed sugarcane from a nearby kiosk, mixing with the salt of the sea. A sweet-salty blend that wrapped around you both.
"Oh god," you thought, "Oh god, you could totally fall in love with this guy."
Hinata bowed againโawkward and sweet, like he didn't know what to do with all the gratitude piling up in his chest.
"Thank you," he said softly. "Really."
You stepped back toward your street, smiling with newly found fondness.
"No problem. Try not to start any more crises in hardware stores, yeah?"
He let out a breathy, helpless laugh. "I'll try!"
"It was very nice to meet you," you added, and the words felt truer than they should have for someone you'd just met. "Hopefully we'll see each other again."
You meant itโbut the realization of how much you meant it burned under your skin. Embarrassment, excitement, something dangerously close to longing.
So you turned and started walking. And five steps later, you glanced back over your shoulder.
Hinata was still standing exactly where you'd left him, watching you leave. A little stunned. A lot charmed. Blushing up to his ears so hard it looked like the heat itself had kissed him.
And when he noticed you caught him staring, he wavedโway too fast.
You only saw his flustered smile as you turned the corner, grinning to yourself.
You didn't hear the way he muttered to himself after:
"Yabaiโฆ kawaisugiru." [Oh no... She's too cute.]
It was only when you got back to your apartment that you realised you hadn't even asked for his name, nor had you given him yours. It hit you right as that painting hung nicely from a screw on the wall, and you'd wanted to bash your head against it.
It was silly, really.
The way every time you and your group of language-addicted university friends gathered at the bar over the next few weeks, you couldn't stop your eyes from looking up each time the door creaked open, half-expecting a bright pop of orange hair to appear.
And it was even sillier how the tiny sting of disappointment would settle low in your chest when it didn't.
But you'd been looking for him anywayโthe whirlwind stranger with the sunlit smile who'd crossed your path for mere minutes and branded himself into your mind like he'd been there for years. It didn't make sense. It wasn't logical. You barely knew him.
But something about him had stayed with you, this bright and warm feeling, like catching the sun itself on your hand.
"Looking for your lightbulb guy again?" your friend Nina asked, nudging your arm with her elbow, that infuriatingly perceptive grin of hers adorning her lips.
"No Portuguese!" came the sharp scolding from across the table. 'The general', another of your friendsโnervous intellectual, relentless rule-enforcer of language nights, and resident panic machineโadjusted his glasses without looking up from his notebook.
Nina rolled her eyes dramatically.
"Yeah, yeah. German night or whatever."
"No Portuguese!" he repeated, more distressed this time, because she was 100% doing it on purpose.
She stuck her tongue out at him and turned back to you with a wicked little glint in her eyesโone that made him sputter softly. He always acted like he hated her playing games with him, though the faint blush of his ears said otherwise.
"So?" she pressedโstill in Portuguese, but The general had given up in correcting her for he was too busy being flustered. "Why hasn't he shown up yet? I'm starting to believe he doesn't exist. Maybe it was a heat-induced hallucination?"
You laughed, lifting a glass of sugarcane juice to your lips. The ice clinked gently in the dim, warm lighting of the barโceiling fans whirring lazily overhead, wood tables buzzing with multilingual chatter all around.
"It's alright, he'll show up if he wants, no biggie," you said, though the flutter in your stomach disagreed.
"You did tell him the name of the bar, right?"
Oh.
You bit your lip, an embarrassed smile creeping in as realization slapped you in the face.
No name. No bar. No way to ever see him again.
Nina burst into laughter as you hid your warming cheeks behind your hands.
"You didn't," she gasped in between laughs. "Are you dumb?"
You were laughing with her, begging to be left alone, when the bell over the entrance chimed, a sharp ding that sliced clean through the noise.
You looked up, didn't expect much.
But there he was.
Hinata Shลyล in the flesh.
A little breathless, a little flushed from the warm night outside, clutching the strap of a backpack like he'd been running around for hours.
His gaze swept the room, searching.
And when his eyes found you, they lit up. His whole face brightened with that same smile you'd replayed in your head more times than you cared to admit.
"What is it?" Nina asked, taking in your amused expression.
"It's him."
"There's no wayโ" she whispered as her eyes landed on Hinata, stunned.
The general beside her nearly knocked over his beer when he heard you.
"It's him! It's actually him!"
Nina jumped on the opportunity without a second to spare, looking at him with narrowed, mischievous eyes. "No Portuguese~"
But you barely heard any of it.
Hinata approached, steps hesitant but hopeful, still unconvinced that you were real and not some mirage he'd conjured out of homesickness and desperation.
He stopped right in front of your table, cheeks a soft pink.
"H-Hi," he said, rubbing the back of his neck. "I, umโฆ I've been trying every bar around here forโฆ a while."
Your jaw nearly dropped. "Everyโevery bar?"
He nodded earnestly, somehow both sheepish and proud of himself.
"I forgot to ask for the name, soโฆ I just kept checking all of them on Thursdays."
Nina snorted beside you. "That's either romantic or crazy."
You slapped her arm without even looking at her.
Hinata flinched, embarrassed. He hadn't understood much, but he'd caught "loucura" at the end.
"Ahโsorry! I didn't mean to sound creepy. I just really wanted toโumโsee you again!" He waved his hands frantically, even redder now. "Not in a weird way! Justโbecause you were kind! And nice! And you helped me! Andโ"
You reached out without thinking, placing your hand over his to stop the verbal tailspin.
He froze.
"It's okay," you said softly, smiling. "I'm really glad you found us."
His blush went absolutely nuclear.
The general, meanwhile, had completely malfunctioned.
โMy godโAn actual Japanese native hereโAT THE BARโthis is the greatest day of my lifeโokay we switch immediatelyโno more German night!! Japanese night!! We must honor our guestโ"
Nina laughed. "You're fanboying so hard right now. You're going to scare him."
Hinata laughed tooโa bright, warm, slightly shy sound.
"Thank you for having me!" he said, and the whole table melted a little.
You scooted, patting the chair beside you. "Sit. Please. If you want."
He sat carefully, like he was afraid he'd mess something up. You leaned a bit closerโyour natural style, friendly and warmโand you could practically see the thoughts scrambling inside his head like hamsters running on a wheel, and the wheel was on fire.
"So..." you started, a little embarrassed at the admission. "I realised I never asked your name."
"Ah, yeah. Hinata Shลyล."
"Shลyล... I like it, it's pretty."
He nodded, posture straightening and still a little red. He'd gotten used to people calling him by his name without honorifics, but somehow hearing it from your lips made him feel a little bashful.
"And, umโฆ what's yours? I neverโฆ umโฆ asked either."
You laughed, cheeks warming. "Guess we're both idiots, huh?"
He brightened. "Then we match!"
It was ridiculous how fast your heart stuttered at that.
As you introduced yourself properly, the general was already drawing up makeshift new rules for Japanese night, Nina was teasing him mercilessly, and Hinata looked equal parts overwhelmed and delighted.
He kept sneaking glances at you. Every time he did, he smiled a tiny, private smile, way too happy at the fact he'd found you again. (He was starting to lose hope after the fifth bar)
And he stayed closeโclose enough that your arms brushed now and then, close enough that he could whisper to you quietly:
"Heyโฆ umโฆ you're really good at making this feel less scary."
"Scary?" you asked.
He nodded, eyes soft. "I'm a little nervous. But you're here, soโฆ I'm okay now."
Your heart did not handle that well. Not even a little. It was too easy to be fond of him, too easy to enjoy the warmth of his presence and resent the cold in his absence.
And after that first night, you and Hinata slipped into a friendship so easily it felt like you were picking up where something had already started a life or two ago.
He'd join your group whenever he wasn't workingโalways arriving a little out of breath, always with a smile that made your chest tighten in ways you refused to unpack. Other days, you'd meet him at the beach, watching him play volleyball with literally anyone and everyone who needed a partner. Sometimes you'd help him translateโbut you quickly realized that once Hinata was in his element, communication barriers didn't exist.
Volleyball was the language he was fluent in.
He adapted instantly to every new teammateโold man or teenager, tourist, first-timer or seasoned playerโfalling into their rhythm like he was born to match whoever stood beside him. You'd watch him, always astonished, always caught off guard by just how bright he was when he played.
Stronger, sharper, and quicker each week. He was truly a sight to behold.
And after every match, he'd jog toward you with that proud, boyish grin, sand sticking to his shins, and you'd hand him a bottle of water like it was your assigned role from the universe. He'd flop beside you in the sand, cataloguing everything he still needed to improve on. Listing weaknesses the same way other people list shopping itemsโno shame. Just determination.
And every time, after another match or two, he'd fix everything he was not happy about.
You'd pretend you weren't staring. You'd pretend your heart wasn't squeezing itself into tiny origami shapes.
The number of times you almost said "fuck it" and kissed him on that beach wasโฆ Embarrassingly high.
And the physical proximity didn't help.
Hinata had been startled at first by how touchy people were in Brazilโhandshakes that turned into hugs, cheek kisses from strangers, friends who always touched an arm, a shoulder, a knee during conversation. But he warmed to it quickly, melting into it like sunlight.
The "Japanese nights"โthat only happened because he showed upโwere both a shelter for when he felt homesick, and a place where he could learn from the culture. Every time he came, whatever language chapter you were supposed to study got tossed out immediately.
"Japanese night!" The general would declare, already flipping through his notebook like a man seeing God for the first time.
He'd try to enforce the 'No Portuguese' rule, only to fail spectacularly once the bar glowed with soft string lights and the haze of too many caipirinhas. And after a couple rounds, everyone would be hugging, singing, dancing, and slurring half-Portuguese, half-Japanese sentences that sometimes made absolutely no sense and sometimes helped him greatly in learning the language. Someone always pulled out a guitar and sang tunes that everyone knew the lyrics to.
And he found it beautiful. How the warmth of the Brazilian sun seemed to warm everyone's hearts as well, how everyone seemed to be so open about loving and liking each other, much different from the poisedโand arguably a little coldโJapanese society.
Hinata looked around one of those nights, admiring the chaos with a soft kind of longing. You were leaning against The general's shoulder, cheeks rosy, singing and laughing into the music, and you caught Hinata watching you with an expression you couldn't translateโwarmโฆ confusedโฆ something else.
"Are you two... dating?" he asked suddenly.
Drunken group vocals drifted behind you as you turned to him.
You laughed. "No, he's just a friend. Over here it's super normal for friends to be this close. There's nothing more to it."
Hinata blinked, trying to process that. You gently nudged his foot with yours, then pointedโsubtlyโto The general.
"Besides, he's already head over heels for someone else." You grinned. "Watch."
Hinata followed your gaze. The general, half-lidded and singing quietly to himself, was watching Nina as she swayed and laughed with such open, unguarded affection that even the dim bar lighting couldn't hide it. Absolutely smitten.
Hinata's breath hitched in soft amazementโand a little jealousy.
Not necessarily of them, but of the ease of that emotion, of how freely it was allowed to love in the open here. Kinda wishing he could do the same.
He pressed his lips together, chest tightening.
Your eyes widened when you felt his weight settle on you as he rested his head on your shoulderโhesitantly, like he was testing the weight of a dream.
"Then I guess I can, too," he murmured.
Your heart stuttered.
He smelled like salt and lime and sunscreen. And when you looked down at him, feeling the brush of his hair on your cheek, he was red up to his ears, eyes squeezed shut in mortified determinationโlike if he opened them, he'd lose the courage to keep leaning on you. His whole body vibrated faintly from nerves, as if he was fighting the urge to pull away.
A tiny, gentle laugh escaped you, and you rested your head on top of his.
He let out a breath you didn't know he'd been holding and sank into you completely.
You thought it was innocent.
Truly.
You thought it ended on that warm bar night, that little shared moment on your shoulder.
Little did you know how much he'd make your heart suffer as months passed and your friendship developed. Because once you gave him a green light to touch you, Hinata became very touchy.
Very.
He hugged you tight every time he saw youโfull-body, earnest hugs that lifted you a little off the ground, like he'd missed you in a way that didn't make sense for two people who'd seen each other less than twenty-four hours earlier. He'd bury his face in your shoulder, saying things like:
"Ahhh, I needed this!"
And your heart?
Your poor, dumb, heart? Melted into a puddle every single time.
He rested his head on your shoulder constantly. On buses, on bar stools, in line at aรงaรญ stands. He did it like it was second natureโlike leaning on you was simply where his body preferred to be.
But the worst of all were the beach days.
Those were lethal.
Because Hinata very quickly became obsessedโobsessedโwith using your thighs as a pillow. At first, it was a drunken decision, then a sleepy one, then it became a habit so natural you didn't know how to survive it anymore.
He'd flop down next to you in the warm sand with his hair sticking up in all directions, and murmur:
"Can I?"
And before you even answered, he was already lowering his head into your lap, smiling up at you with the softest, most devastating expression imaginable. Innocent. Trusting. Sunlit and breathtaking.
You were just friends, though.
Of course. Obviously. Totally.
You watched anime together on your couch, knees touching, arms brushing, his laughter vibrating against your ribs when he leaned into you during funny scenes. You took naps together, limbs tangled so naturally it felt like you'd done it your whole lives. The general nearly had an aneurysm each time he caught you two asleep, spooning on the couch during movie nights. Nina kept taking pictures. And with all that, even when there was no space between you bodies most of the time, when you both cuddled, evenโfully, openly, shamelesslyโyou'd still shook your heads violently every time someone asked if you were dating. (Which was very often.)
Specially at the beach, where strangers would always asume you were a couple.
Hinata always panicked, waving his hands in frantic denial while still lying on your thighs.
"No, no, noโwe're just friends! Justโjust friends!" He'd let out, while your fingers were literally in his hair.
The day he introduced you to Oikawa was chaotic in ways only Oikawa could bring.
You showed up to the beach as usual, expecting to spot Hinata stretching near the nets or chasing a stray ball barefoot through the sand. Instead, you found him already looking for youโpractically vibrating with excitement, jumping up and down as he waved you over like a kid who'd found something shiny and couldn't wait to show it off.
You smiled before you could stop yourself.
It felt good to see him like thatโbecause lately, your bright sun had been dimming a little.
It wasn't anything dramatic. Hinata still laughed, still talked with his hands, still showed up every day. But his smiles had been arriving a second too late, like they had to travel farther to reach his face. He'd been sleeping more, stretching longer, rubbing at his shoulders with a quiet little frown when he thought no one was looking. Some days, he moved like gravity had decided to be cruel to him in particular.
You could tell he was strugglingโwith work, with volleyball, with learning how to exist in a country that wasn't his, under a sky that didn't quite feel like home.
Even when the Japanese nights with your group helpedโlate dinners, loud conversations, shared laughter that echoed off concrete wallsโyou could tell they didn't fix everything. It softened the edges, sure. But something in him still feltโฆ unsteady. Like he wasn't sure where to set his feet anymore.
You didn't know what to do about it, not really. So you did what felt right. You stayed close without crowding him. Gave him space when he went quiet and offered your ear when he was ready to talk. Let him lean without making it obvious.
You had no idea how much that meant to him.
So seeing him nowโeyes bright, grin easy, energy sparking off him like sunlight on waterโmade your chest warm with relief.
And maybe a little jealousy.
Because whoever this "Great King" was, he'd managed to pull Hinata back into himself.
"You're gonna love himโ!! Ohโactuallyโhe's a littleโuh...โjust, don't believe everything he says."
"Shลyล, that is not a reassuring introduction."
"It's fine! He's fine! Mostly!" he assured you, already waving him over.
Oikawa strutted across the sand, sunglasses on, shirt unbuttoned one button too many. He fit every description Hinata had ever given from his high school days perfectlyโradiating that unmistakable 'I'm the protagonist' energy.
"Well helloooo~," he sang in Argentinian-accented Portuguese, "So you're the mysterious friend Chibi-chan kept talking aboutโ"
Hinata smacked him in the arm so fast you barely saw it.
"I DID NOTโ!!"
"You did," Oikawa hummed innocently, eyes sparkling.
Hinata blushed hard enough to turn into a huge, pouting tomato, and you could only hide a laugh behind your hand because it was too cuteโdangerously soโand if you hadn't rein yourself in, you might've actually done something reckless. Like kiss him. Right there. In front of everyone.
And yet, beneath the laughter, something shifted.
Meeting Oikawaโthis living, breathing fragment of Hinata's pastโmade the future feel closer. Sharper.
More real.
Hinata's departure was a silent, ticking clock that the two of you pretended you couldn't hear. But you knew it. He'd go back to Japan when his two-year training ended. You'd always known. Even when you let yourself believeโjust a littleโthat this could last forever. That he would always be beside you. That you could keep bathing in his warmth, in his laughter, in the steady comfort of his presence.
That he would always be your sun.
And for the first time, the thought of losing that light hurt.
But you swallowed the feeling. Watched the duo lose against the infamous 'Buy-me-a-beer' brothers, watched Hinata's fiery eyes sparkle even in defeatโalready lit with the promise of next time. Watched him laugh it off, already thinking ahead, already chasing something brighter.
Watched them train the next day.
And then the rematch.
Electric.
Hinata in full competitive modeโeyes sharp, movements precise, all instinct and fire. Oikawa barking orders like a true Great King, voice cutting clean through the air, while the brothers yelled absolute nonsense every time they scored, laughing like chaos itself.
You cheered your lungs out for him, hands cupped around your mouth, screaming "VAI, SHOYOU!!" until he nearly tripped from laughing mid-sprint.
They won in the endโbecause of course they didโand Hinata sprinted to you immediately afterward, high on adrenaline and sunlight, practically throwing himself into your arms.
"You saw that?! We won!"
You screamed and laughed as he lifted you from the floor and spun you around.
"You were incredible, Shลyล!"
He set you down and pulled away from you only briefly, with his arms still around you, and that spark in his eyes you loved so, so much.
"They say they're gonna buy us dinner! Wanna come?"
And just like that, the countdown in your chest ticked louder. The joy stayed. But it hurt now.
You smiled, small and crooked, and avoided his eyes. This was his momentโshared with an old rival, a piece of his pastโand it felt wrong to anchor him to you. To pretend you weren't already starting to loosen your grip.
You were trying to teach yourself how to step back. Because you knew that only that way, his departure wouldn't kill you.
"That sounds amazing, but..." you murmured. "I think I'll pass. I have to study..."
He seemed a little sad at that, but he recovered quicklyโbecause he always didโgiving you a thumbs-up and one of those beautiful, earnest smiles that had undone you from the start.
"Okay! Gambatte!"
You nodded. Said goodbye.
And cried the entire walk back to your apartment.
Every week, the sands of Rio felt warmer, the sunsets sweeter, the nights longerโbut the calendar kept thinning anyway. And even though Hinata always answered your questions with bright smiles and big energy, he never brought up Japan unless absolutely necessary.
And you didn't bring it up at all.
You kept hanging out like always: late-night anime marathons, naps tangled together, bossa nova at the beach to help him learn Portuguese, volleyball in the sun. You let yourself be happy and triedโreally triedโnot to think about the fact that the happiness had an expiration date.
Sometimes, though, you caught him watching you.
Not with worry or sadnessโHinata never liked showing eitherโbut with a soft, lingering look, like he was memorizing you. Your smile, your hair, your voice. The way you said his name.
He pretended he wasn't doing it.
You pretended not to notice.
Two cowards in love, dancing around it beautifully.
One evening, after he'd had a first match with Nestor Santana as his partner, the two of you stayed at the beach as the sun dipped toward the water. The sky was turning honey-gold, and the sea breeze had softened into something gentle, almost shy.
Hinata stretched out beside you, head once again finding your lap like gravity had chosen you specifically.
"Portuguese practice?" you teased, pulling up the playlist you'd curated for him.
He perked up immediately. "Yes!"
As usual, you put on some bossa novaโsoft guitar, warm vocals, the kind of music that sounds like sunlight feels. Hinata hummed along, his foot tapping lightly against the sand. The waves rolled in, rhythmic, slow, and for a moment, you forgot the world had anything else in it besides this.
After a few songs, he tilted his head back to look at you, eyes filled with curiosity.
"Neโฆ you hear this word a lot."
"What word?โ
"Saudade."
You smiled softly. "Ah. That one."
He waitedโbright, trusting, and eager to learn.
"It's a feeling that'sโฆ hard to translate," you began, combing your fingers gently through his hair. "It's like natsukashii, butโฆ sadder. Emptier. It's missing something or someone so much that the feeling itself becomes kind ofโฆ beautiful."
Hinata's eyes softened, lashes fluttering as he processed it.
"Beautiful sadnessโฆ" he whispered.
"Yeah."
He was quiet for a moment, listening as the next song mentioned the word again and again.
Then he laughed, a small, embarrassed puff of air.
"I thinkโฆ I think I'll feel saudade of you when I go back to Japan."
Your heart clenched so suddenly you almost dropped your phone.
Hinata didn't noticeโor pretended not toโbecause he looked away toward the sea, face glowing pink from the sunset, or maybe from the honesty he hadn't meant to let slip.
You swallowed.
"Shลyลโฆ"
"I meanโ" he rushed in, waving his hands a little, "โjust, you knowโBecause you're the first person who made me feel at home here. And you teach me so much. And you're always with me and you laugh with me andโ"
He stopped. Shoulders tight, voice small.
"โฆand I like being here with you... So much."
The waves kept crashing. The sky kept glowing.
And your fingers kept moving through his hair like you weren't fighting a small war inside yourself.
You leaned down just a little.
"I'll feel saudade of you too," you whispered.
And Hinata's breath hitched. Then he closed his eyes and relaxed fully, sinking into your lap with a small, somewhat sad smile that made your chest ache in places you didn't know existed, looking down at him and playing with his hair of fire.
And as the sun disappeared behind the waves, turning the sky into a deep coral pink...
your suffering had officially begun.
You shouldn't have cried at Nestor's wedding.
But you absolutely did.
It was impossible not toโeverything was too beautiful. Fairy lights strung between palm trees. A warm breeze carrying the smell of tropical flowers.
Nestor and Nice looked stupidly, beautifully in loveโhands trembling as they held each other, vows spoken with voices that cracked halfway through.
Hinata sniffled so loudly during the ceremony that the couple snorted in the middle of their vows. You squeezed his hand. He squeezed yours back.
You watched the couple kiss, watched everyone cheer and clap, watched love spill everywhere just like the champagne in their glassesโloud, open, and unapologetic.
And something traitorous bloomed in your chest.
A little bit of sorrowful envy.
Hinata found you at the edge of the venue a little later, sitting alone beneath a string of lights, blinking rapidly to keep your emotions from spilling over. Everyone danced barefoot on the grass, the kind of dancing that's more swaying than anything, with warm bodies pressed together, and music so soft and happy it seemed to float between guests.
He crouched in front of you, worry softening his features.
"Hey. Are you okay?"
You noddedโplanting a smile on your lips a little too quickly. Without hesitation, he sat beside you, legs brushing yours, shoulder touching your shoulder.
The music drifted from the dance floorโa rendition of 'Besame Mucho' by Joรฃo Gilberto that made it feel like it was laughing cruelly at you.
You looked at him. At his bright eyes, his sun-kissed skin, at the smile that held a sadness nehind it he tried to hide because he knew you were sad, too.
"Shลyลโฆ" you started, but stopped yourself.
I love you.
It was right thereโon the tip of your tongue, trembling, begging to be said.
But you swallowed it.
Because how could you do that to him now?
Hinata Shลyล, your sunโwho came here for a dream, who worked every day with fire in his chest, who was leaving soon because he had to, because he was chasing his place in the sky.
You couldn't be the gravity that held him back, no matter how much you wanted to keep him close.
So, with tears pricking your eyes, you whispered with a smile instead:
"...I'm going to feel so much saudade of you when you leave."
His breath hitched. You watched as his eyes searched for something in yours, and you feared for your secret. But whether he found what he was looking for or not, you couldn't tell.
He pulled you into himโnot the usual eager hug, but something deeper, tighter. Arms wrapped around you fully. Chin pressing into your shoulder like he was trying to anchor himself to the moment.
"Me too," he murmured, voice trembling just enough for you to notice. "More than you think."
You closed your eyes. Held him back. Pretended it didn't break your heart.
And the day Hinata finally left, something in you left with him.
Not in a dramatic, fall-to-your-knees wayโno. It was way quieter than that. Hollow. Like someone had scooped out the warm center of you and forgotten to put it back. Like the days had no sun and no moon. Only cold.
You kept moving, because life didn't stop for a heartbreak you weren't even allowed to admit. You still went to class, still met your friends at the bar every Thursday; still listened to guitar chords drifting over the sand; still watched volleyball games spark and dissolve in the glow of late afternoons.
But the world feltโฆ muted.
You laughed a second too late. Smiled a little too small. Stared at the sea a little too long as if calculating swimming distances your body wouldn't ever survive.
Your group noticed. Of course they noticedโthey weren't blind, and you weren't exactly subtle.
Nina cornered you one night, on a Christmas party you'd forced yourself to go to because you thought it might help you. Instead, you just sat outside the venue, a bourbon instead of a caipirinha. No chaser. The melted ice in the glass had numbed your fingers minutes ago, but you didn't care.
She watched you for a second, leaning her elbows on the railing of the balcony, overlooking the water. The waves rolled in and out, slow, lazy, and uncaring. You felt like shouting at them for not noticing your world had ended.
"C'mon," she said gently. "O que houve contigo? What's with you lately?"
You didn't look at her.
Couldn't.
Instead, your eyes followed the dark line of the horizon, where the water melted into the skyโthe direction you'd been unconsciously staring at every day now. Wondering whether the ocean was thinner somewhere out there. Whether it was as cold as Shoyou had told you once.
Your throat tightened.
And before you could stop yourself, you whispered:
"ร queโฆ euโฆ sinto tanta falta do sol, Nina." [It's just that... I... miss the sun so much, Nina.]
It wasn't about the weather. It was summer, after all.
Her face softened instantly, and she wrapped both arms around you from the side, pulling you close in a wordless, protective hold.
"Oh, amigaโฆ" she murmured, pressing her cheek to your temple.
And you hated yourself a little for feeling so deeply when the entire time you'd been 'just friends', so broken when on occasions you'd denied it yourself, so betrayed, when you'd been the one who stopped your own words when you were about to confess.
But grief doesn't care about labels, does it? It doesn't care about deadlines, or longing confirmation, or cowardly loves that never get to be and stay in stories you'll tell friends once the wounds heal and in soft bossa nova songs you cry yourself to sleep to while they haven't.
You closed your eyes, breathing in the familiar salt of the sea. The night breeze lifted your hair, warm in that uniquely Brazilian way that always felt like a gentle embrace. You wished for the hundredth time that Hinata had stayed to watch the sunset with you just one more time. Just one more golden hour with him laughing beside you. Just one more evening where you could pretend he'd never leave.
Little did you know, all the way back in Sendai, in a room still half-filled with unpacked suitcases, Hinata Shลyล curled forward on his mattress, phone clutched to his chest like it could anchor him to the life he'd left behind.
Bossa nova trickled softly from the tiny Bluetooth speaker on his nightstand. The same songs you'd played for him on the beach, watching the sun hide behind the waves, explaining what saudade meant while he rested his head on your thighs.
He understood it now. He understood it too well.
His chest tightened, and his eyes stung, then overflowedโsudden, embarrassing, and impossible to stop. He swiped at his face with the sleeve of his hoodie, but the tears kept coming, dropping onto the album cover glowing on his phone screen.
Outside, the snow poured steadily, softening the world into pale silence. The quiet Sendai landscape felt suddenly so small compared to the vastness of the sea he'd fallen in love withโthat sea that smelled like salt and sun-warmed skin and the laughter of strangers who welcomed him like family.
He missed Brazil.
He missed the freedom in the air, the warmth of its people, the open affection he'd never experienced so deeply before.
But mostlyโฆ
God, he missed you.
He curled in tighter, shaking a little and letting the quiet guitar and soft Portuguese vocals wash over him.
If anyone asked, he'd say it was just jet lag.
Not heartbreak. Not loneliness. Not the ache of missing you so much it hurt to breathe.
Because the truth was cruel and simple:
Japan had his dream. Brazil had you.
And he didn't know how to live in a world that kept both so far apart.
"Nii-san! Christmas dinner is ready!"
Natsu's voice rang from the living room, pulling him back. He swallowed hard, wiped his face again, and prayed he could sit at that table and tell his family all the stories they were waiting to hear about Brazilโwithout breaking down in tears and admitting in front of all of them just how badly he wished he'd brought you with him.
But life kept happening, the show must go on.
Time didn't heal everything, but it softened the edges. Slowly, too slowly. Clumsily. Like both of you were learning how to walk with a bruise you kept bumping into.
Hinata threw himself into volleyball the way he always hadโwith every atom of energy his body could muster. Morning runs in the cold, solo drills before sunrise, practices that left his legs trembling. Scrimmages where he pushed himself until his lungs felt like fire.
Tryouts began. Then callbacks. Then more training.
His body grew steadier, sharper, strongerโฆbut the ache in his chest stayed the same.
And every night, when he finally collapsed onto his bed, Brazil crept back inโand he would always dream of that same sand under his toes, the warm press of your thigh under his cheek, and the sound of bossa nova floating through the breeze.
Sometimes he'd open your chat.
Not to send anything. Just to look.
Your last conversation full of cheerful emojis and polite support, both of you pretending not to read between the lines.
Every now and then he'd send you a pictureโa snowy street, some silly food he tried, a selfie where he looked unbearably homesick but smiled anyway.
You always replied. Not instantly, maybe not in paragraphs. But always there.
And that was enough for him to breathe again. Sometimes.
Your days went back to being what they'd always beenโclasses, studying, part-time work, your language groupโฆ the things you used to love without thinking.
But now everything carried the faint aftertaste of him.
A stray volleyball on the beach made your heartbeat stutter and then hurt, someone laughing brightly made you look twice. Bossa nova felt like someone had unfolded those origami shapes in your ribs into sheet music.
You finished your study program. Your friends celebrated you. You smiled and danced.
But every night, when your painted and decorated apartment went quiet, you'd open Hinata's messages and read them again.
And again.
And again.
You sent him pictures tooโsunsets, your group's goofy outings, Nina hugging the general while he pretended not to blush.
Short messages, kind, warm.
Careful.
Always careful.
Neither of you mentioned the beach. Or heartbreak. Or how much it hurt when you accidentally said saudade in front of someone else and had to swallow tears.
But you sent him a voice note onceโjust you laughing at something your group didโand Hinata listened to it seven times, smiling so hard his cheeks cramped.
So you both kept going.
Life kept happening, the show must go on.
But your routines had a new, quiet rhythm.
Shลyลโผ: Good luck on your exam tomorrow! : Ganbatte on your tryouts! You're going to crush them. Shลyลโผ: Look at this curry I made! It's kind of ugly www. : Looks delicious???? Don't disrespect the curry like that. : Nina and the general won a trivia contest today. Shลyลโผ: Ehhhh so cool!! I wanna see you guys again. : Saudades. Shลyลโผ: (typingโฆ deletingโฆ typing againโฆ) Me too.
Hours. Days. Sometimes weeks between messages. But the connection never faded.
It was quiet and gentle, as it always had been. Like a low tide that never fully receded.
One quiet Wednesday night, you were on your bed, half-studying, half-asleep, half-bored, when your phone buzzed.
Shลyลโผ: Today was kinda rough.
You paused.
He rarely said things like that. Not without stuffing them between emojis and sunshine.
: You okay?
Three dots appeared. Disappeared. Then came back.
Shลyลโผ: Yeah justโฆ tired. I miss Brazil a lot today.
Your chest tightened softly.
: Brazil misses you too. Some days will be heavier.
A minute passed.
Then:
Shลyลโผ: Is it weird that I miss talking to you the most? Even when we text all the time it feels likeโฆ I dunnoโฆ not the same.
Your breath stilled.
It wasn't a confession. But it was definitely close enough to hurt a little.
You stared at the screen, heart thumping painfully with that familiar mix of joy and sorrow curling in your stomach.
And then typed carefully, fingers trembling:
: Not weird at all, Shลyล. I miss you too.
He didn't answer right away, and it made you wonder if you said too much. But then your phone buzzed again.
Shลyลโผ: Oh!! Also!! I have my official debut next week!! Likeโฆ my actual first pro match! MSBY Jackals vs Schweiden Adlers! I'll finally show Kageyama what I can do.
You smiledโa real one, warm and involuntary.
Shลyลโผ: I wishโฆ I wish you could see it. It'd calm me down a lot if you were in the crowd. I don't get stomach aches before matches anymore tho, don't worry.
Your eyes softened, drifting instinctively to the corner of your room, where an already-packed suitcase sat.
Your flight was in three days.
And the tickets to the match were bought weeks agoโcourtesy of Oikawa Tลru, who had somehow gotten your number and sent them with a cryptic:
"He'll want you there. And you'll want to be there. Don't be late. And don't spoil the surprise~ (เน>ุโขฬเน)"
Your fingers hovered above the keyboard.
You almost told him. Almost typed: I'm coming, you dummy. I wouldn't miss your debut for anything. I miss you too much to stay away.
But you swallowed the confession.
Instead, you wrote:
: You'll do amazing. I'll be cheering for you, don't worry.
He responded immediately.
Shลyลโผ: Haha sorry for being clingy! Just thinking a lot today. But thank youโฆ hearing from you always helps.
You held the phone to your chest with a fluttering heart. He didn't have to thank you. In three days, you'd be close enough to touch him again. Close enough to feel the warmth of him, to hear his laugh in person, to see that first brilliant spike with your own eyes again.
And maybeโฆ maybe this time you wouldn't look away when the feelings got too big.
Maybe neither would he.
You hadn't been that nervous since finals weekโmaybe ever.
Your hands were sweating, your heart was dancing frenetically, and the stadium lights felt too brightโlike they knew you were hiding a secret under your jacket:
You were here for him.
For Hinata Shลyล.
Your sun. Your saudade in human form.
The arena buzzed around you as you waved through the crowd to your seat, warm and alive, filled with gold, black, and white. Flags waved, fans shouted chants you didn't know, and your seat vibrated faintly from the bass of the speakers. You sat down, curling your fingers around the strap of your bag like it could anchor you to something, anything. You inhaled slowlyโ
โand then froze when you heard a familiar name.
"You think Hinata is at the toilet right now?" a small blonde girl whispered, hiding a small laugh behind her hand.
"He said he didn't get stomach aches anymore..." the freckled boy beside her murmured.
"You think that's even true?" came another, unamused voice from behind them.
You turned your head just an inch.
And recognized them instantlyโnot from real life, but from Hinata's wallpaper.
Yachi Hitokaโtiny, blonde, and vibrating with anxiety. Yamaguchi Tadashiโkind-faced, freckled, and clutching a Jackals towel a little too tightly. Tsukishima Keiโtall, blond, and unimpressed by the entire world.
They were talking about him.
Their Hinata. Your Shลyล.
A strange dizziness hit you, and you laughed to yourself. The universe had a sense of humor, and tonight it was being loud. Out of the entire stadiumโฆ You were seated next to the people who shaped him, who loved him, who knew him in ways you only saw glimpses of.
You were trying very hard not to stare when Yachi bent down too quickly, panickedly searching for something in her bag, and elbowed you right in the arm.
"AHโ! I'M SO SORRY!" she squeaked in English, bowing so fast she nearly headbutted you next.
You quickly shook your hands. "No, no, I'm okay! Don't worry!"
She sagged in reliefโmostly because you were chill about it, partly because you answered in Japanese.
"โฆThank goodness. I would've died if I bruised a stranger before the game even startedโฆ"
You smiled, soft and warm.
"Are you... Hitoka by any chance?"
She blinked. "โฆY-yes? Do we know each other?"
"Oh! No, I just recognized you from some photos. I'm a friend of Shลyล's. From Brazil"
And all three of them went completely still.
Yachi's mouth fell open. "Are you... Are you Y/N?"
When you nodded, their shock only grew. Yamaguchi's eyes widened comically. Tsukishima choked on absolutely nothing.
You stared at them, suddenly a little confused.
"โฆUm. All good?"
They exchanged looksโsilent, intense, chaotic telepathy happening in real time. Then Yamaguchi, bless his sweet heart, blurted:
"Hinata talks so much about you."
Yachi nodded violently.
"Likeโso much. You're gorgeous by the way!"
Tsukishima groaned, burying half his face in his scarf. "Oh my god, he actually didn't make you up.โ
"Iโheโฆ talks about me?"
"Constantly," Yachi said, small fists clenched to her chest. "He won't shut up about youโuhโsorry, that sounded rudeโ! He's justโhappy? Like really, really happy when he talks about you."
Yamaguchi tilted his head, careful, but so curious he couldn't afford to not ask right now, with you right in front of him.
"Are you twoโฆ?"
"Ohโno, no," you said quickly, waving your hands, heart hammering. "We're just friends."
They all shared a look, and it suddenly felt nostalgic, seeing that look again. That loud, judgmental, liar look you got used to back when Hinata was in Brazil.
Your heart stuttered so hard at that you almost missed the lights dimming. You cleared your throat, staring back down at the court as the Jackals jogged out for warm-ups.
And thenโThere he was.
Same bright hair. Same brilliant energy. Same smile that hit you like summer.
He lookedโฆ different. Noโhe looked the same. But also so, so different.
The boy you met in Brazil had been brightโall potential, all warmth, all eagerness. The man warming up on the court now was that same brightness distilled into purpose. Focused. Sharper. Radiant.
His body moved like it knew exactly what it was made for. His smile lit the entire stadium.
And your heartโฆ oh, your heart hurt. It swelled. It cracked. It overflowed.
Because he looked so happy. Because he looked like the dream you used to fall asleep next to on the sand. Because distance hadn't dimmed any feeling you thought it hadโnot about him, not for you.
Your chest tightened at the sight of him jumping, running, laughing with his teammates like your world hadn't tilted the day he left.
Tsukishima noticed. Because of course he did. And seeing those eyes, the way they shone, following Hinata's every move, made him smirk faintly and mutter:
"โฆSure. Just friends."
Yamaguchi elbowed him. He smirked harder.
The match finally started, and every jump made your pulse spike. Every receive made you exhale in relief. Every spike made your whole body reactโmuscles tightening, breath hitching, the kind of involuntary joy that comes from watching someone you love do what they were born to do.
And you reacted exactly like someone who knew just how many dawns he trained through. Someone who witnessed the first steps toward this very court.
He was brilliant, beautiful. And you were so proud you thought you might cry.
Hinata spikedโand scoredโand you nearly jumped to your feet.
Yamaguchi grinned. "He improved that angle."
"He improved everything," Yachi agreed, eyes shiny.
Tsukishima glanced your way again, noticing how emotional you looked.
"He's been different since he came back from Brazil," he said casually.
You swallowed.
"Yeah," you whispered. "He's worked really hard."
Tsukki hummedโa knowing, almost annoying humโand looked back at the court.
The match ended in roars and applause. Your ears rang, your cheeks were wet, and you didn't even remember when you started crying.
Yachi tapped your shoulder gently.
"Um... Y/N-san?"
You wiped your eyes quickly, hoping you didn't look as wrecked as you felt, and smiled at her.
"Y-yes?"
"We're all celebrating Hinata's debut later... Would you like to come?"
"It's a Christmas party!" Yamaguchi added.
Your answer was instant.
"Absolutely. I'd love to. Thank you, Hitoka-san."
The night air outside the restaurant was cold in that late-December Japan wayโsharp enough to sting your lungs when you breathed too deep, clean enough that the city felt awake and hushed all at once. Your breath fogged faintly in front of you. Strings of Christmas lights spilled warm gold across the sidewalk, reflected in the thin sheen of melted snow and afternoon rain that still clung to the pavement.
The street smelled like fried food and sugarโkaraage and something sweet and seasonal you couldn't quite place. Somewhere down the block, a busker strummed a slow, melancholy tune, the notes wobbling gently through a portable amp, half-swallowed by traffic and winter coats.
You'd been standing there for ten whole minutes. Maybe fifteen. Maybe an hour. Time lost all its meaning when your heartbeat was trying to escape through your ribs.
Yachi had stayed with you, sweet and chatty, filling the waiting silence with little stories about the first time she'd met Hinataโhow he'd given her courage she didn't know she had, how he made people feel braver just by being there. She talked about university, about design projects, about life moving forward.
You nodded. Smiled. Tried to listen.
You felt a little guilty, because your nerves wouldn't let you be fully present. Your attention kept slipping back to your phone, to the familiar name lighting up your lockscreen again and againโmessages stacked like tiny, impatient bricks:
Shลyลโผ: Did you watch the stream?? God, I'm so tired www DID YOU SEE THAT LAST POINT THO??? ARE YOU AWAKE?? HELLOOOOOO
You didn't respond. Not because you didn't want toโbut because you didn't trust yourself not to type out the truth the moment your fingers touched the screen.
I'm here. I'm already here. Where are you?
The surprise felt worth the guiltโright up until now, when your brain started whispering doubts in the spaces between breaths.
What if he's too tired? What if this is weird? What if he's moved on?
Your stomach twisted so tightly it felt like your ribs were holding their breath. You pressed a hand to your sternum, fingers curling into your coat, and inhaled slowlyโrepeating the small prayer you'd picked up in Brazil without ever meaning to.
Calmaโฆ calmaโฆ
Headlights swept over the sidewalk. A van rolled to the curb. Laughter spilling before the doors even slid openโvoices overlapping in post-match chaos.
"Ah! It's them!" Yachi chirped, and the sound sent your pulse into overdrive.
Bokuto jumped out first, already mid-sentence, hooking one arm around Hinata's neck even before his feet hit the ground.
"YOU WERE AMAZING OUT THERE!" he boomed, messing with his hair and shaking him like a bobblehead.
"BoโKutoโsanโstopโ" Hinata wheezed, laughing that loud, sun-crackling laugh you had replayed in your head a thousand times with his hands fumbling uselessly as he tried to pry Bokuto off.
He looked a little tired, a little sweaty, hair mussed from all the movementโbut he was glowing in that particular way only Hinata managed: like he'd swallowed the sun and it leaked out in his grin.
You drank him in the way parched people drink water. You drank the sight of him in like someone who's been wandering in total darkness, and finally got a sight of the sun again.
Your sun.
Then he turned.
His eyes swept over the small cluster of smokers huddled outside, the street slick with melted snow, the warm glow of the restaurant windowโand then they landed on you.
His smile collapsed like a dropped curtain, and his whole body went stillโjaw slack, shoulders folding inward, as if the cold had suddenly reached straight through his chest and knocked the air out of him.
For one terrifying second, he looked almostโฆ lost.
Atsumu, halfway behind him, followed his frozen gaze and let out the most obnoxiously delighted, "Ohoooo?"
Kiyoomi paused mid-step, one eyebrow lifting slowly. Bokuto's hand slipped from Hinata's head, forgotten.
Meian frowned faintly.
"What's up? What are we staring at?" he muttered, craning his neck. Because Hinata was looking at you the way people look at miracles, and that in itselfโhis shiny eyes, his rising chest as he held in his breathโwas a sight for sore eyes.
"โฆHi," you managed, the word barely more than fog in the cold air.
But something in the sound of your voice broke whatever fragile spell had frozen him. Tears pooled in his eyes so fast that a surprised gasp escaped you.
"Shลyลโ"
But you barely managed to let a sound out, barely managed to open your arms before he was crashing into you.
You stumbled back a half-step from the sheer force of it and let out a tiny, startled laugh as his arms locked around your waist with a force that was half joy, half desperation. His face buried into your neck, and you felt the dampness of his eyes against your skin.
His hair tickled your ear. His heartbeat felt like a hummingbird trapped against your chest.
You didn't realize you'd started to cry, too, until you felt his fingers fist the back of your coat after a first sob broke through you.
He held you like he'd been drowning. Like he'd forgotten how to breathe without you. And when he finally spoke, it was a whisperโragged and trembling against your neck, in that accent you'd missed so much it hurt to even remember, but was now right here.
"Senti... tanta saudade de vocรชโฆ" [I missed you so much.]
The breath on your skin sent a chill down your spine. His scentโsweat from the match, a hint of citrus shampoo, and something unmistakably himโfled your senses until everything hurt in the sweetest way.
Your voice broke as your hands curled up his back, pulling him impossibly closer.
"Eu tambรฉm, Shลyลโฆ tanta, tanta saudade." [Me too, Shลyล. So, so much.]
He exhaled like he'd been waiting years. Centuries to hear that.
Behind you two, the team was very much staring.
Atsumu's grin stretched wide, sharp and triumphant. "Is that the Brazil girlfriend?" he called, eyes wicked.
"I KNEW THEY WERE REAL!" Bokuto crowed, beaming.
Meian sighed, long-suffering but smiling despite himself, and planted a hand on each of their heads, making them yelp.
"He said she was not his girlfriend," he hissed under his breath.
"But he saidโ"
"Well, well," Meian cut in, already steering them toward the restaurant, "let's celebrate inside. Give them some space."
The two rascals protested loudly as he ushered them away, murmuring a few indulgent 'there, there's like he was corralling overexcited children.
Hinata pulled back just enough to look at you, his hands still warm against your cheeks, palms cradling your face as if afraid you might vanish if he blinked too hard.
You were certain he was going to kiss you.
Everyone was.
Even Meian paused at the door, eyebrows lifting as he took in the scene, before Sakusa nudged him sharply in the side with a dry, unimpressed, "Get on with it."
Meian only shrugged, a knowing smirk tugging at his mouth, and finally turned away.
Hinata's eyes were glossy with tears as they traced your face slowly, revisiting freckles, the curve of your lashes, the familiar shape of your mouth. As if he were committing you to memory all over again.
His voice trembled when he spoke again.
"I thoughtโI didn'tโ You didn't answerโ I thought maybeโ" He swallowed, breath shaky. "You're really here. What are you doing here?"
You blinked hard, chasing away the sting in your eyes, forcing a smile that felt a little fragile around the edges.
"I came to see your match, dummy!" you said, letting out a small laugh to steady yourself. "Aaand to apply for a work or study visa. Something like that."
His expression shifted in a blinkโconcern, then hope.
"Where are you staying?"
"At a hotel. I'm looking for somewhere to rent while I get all the paperwork readyโ"
"Come live with me."
The words landed between you like a dropped glass. You froze.
"Eh?"
"I have space, stay with meโ" His words tumbled out, urgent and sudden.
"ShลyลโIโ"
It was too much, too sudden.
You hadn't seen him in so long, and in the span of minutes he had cried into your neck, held you like he was afraid to let go, and now he was asking you to live with him?
With what intentions exactly? He couldn't have possibly been thinking straight.
And you knew. You knew if you moved in with him now, the careful boundaries you'd drawn would evaporate, and every feeling you'd repressed during his stay in Brazil would bloom open again and probably swallow you whole.
Your mind was a thousand tiny images at once: moving boxes, nights you had spent cuddling with him in Brazil, another "we're just friends" that would tear you apart, the terrifying thought of confessing and losing him, and above them allโthe wild, shimmering possibility of waking up next to him every morning.
You couldn't survive the heartache, the uncertainty; you couldn't let him play with your heart again without meaning to.
But god save youโ
His eyes, his face in that momentโbegging for an answer, begging for a yes.
They made it very hard to not give in.
Yachi, who had witnessed the entire moment with the wide-eyed devotion of a rom-com extra, finally stepped inโlike a saving beam of awkward, earnest sunlight.
"Hi-Hinata! Umโmaybe you two can talk about this later?" she said, hands fidgeting nervously in front of her coat. "People are waiting for you inside. We'll celebrate first, thenโafterโtalk?"
Her voice carried the careful gentleness of someone trying very hard not to intrude.
Hinata blinked, as if the world snapped back into focus. His shoulders relaxed, eyes softening.
"Right. Sorry."
You offered Yachi a small, grateful smileโone edged with something fragileโand she returned it with a knowing nod that felt like a promise: "I've got you."
You needed to think. Think about it well.
So you swallowed the moment whole, tucked it somewhere deep in your chest like a secret you weren't ready to open yet, and followed Hinata inside. The noise was welcoming and terrible and perfect all at once.
Inside, the restaurant buzzed like a living thing.
Paper lanterns glowed softly overhead, their golden light spilling across polished wooden tables already crowded with food and laughter. Someone had strung up subtle Christmas decorationsโpine sprigs, red ribbon, tiny bells that chimed whenever the door opened. Outside it was winter, sharp and cold, but in here, everything steamed and hummed and lived-in.
Plates arrived in wavesโgrilled meat, steaming rice, shared bowls that vanished as quickly as they appeared. Hungry athletes and proud families clinking glasses. Toast after toast rose into the air, voices loud and a little tipsy as they praised Hinata again and again.
Your head spun a little. In a good way, though. Not from the alcoholโyou'd barely had anyโbut from sheer fullness of it. And from the amount of Japanese your brain was computing and interpreting in your head.
Hinata was everywhere, and he brought you everywhere with him. Laughing, bowing awkwardly at congratulations, waving his hands too much when people praised him, cheeks warm with beer and excitement. He looked lighter than ever, like something in him had finally clicked into place.
If he was disappointed about you sidestepping the conversation earlier, he didn't show it. Not even a crack. No hesitation, no shadow behind his smile. And that eased the tight coil of anxiety in your chest just a little.
For tonight, at least, he was simply happy.
Because of course he was enjoying himself. Hinata Shลyล didn't know how not to.
He introduced you proudly to everyone, hand resting at the small of your back whenever he pulled you into conversations, touch familiar and grounding.
"This is Y/n! From Brazil."
From Brazil. Not my friend. Not the girl I like.
Just enough distance to be safe. Just enough closeness to make your chest ache.
Everyone reacted the same wayโeyes widening in recognition, faces lighting up like they'd finally put a voice to a name.
"Ah! From Brazil!" "So you're real." "You're gorgeous!" "How long are you staying?" "He talked so much about you!"
Every time, Hinata laughed and rubbed the back of his neck, ears turning red in a way that felt painfully familiar. You smiled through itโwarm and a little dizzyโyour heart caught somewhere between pride and a quiet, loving panic.
Dinner went on. Plates emptied. Drinks refilled.
Bokuto started recounting Hinata's every point in the match with wild arm movements. He knocked over a glass, then deflated instantly when the man beside himโhis friend with glassesโscolded him under his breath. Then Bokuto leaned in, his friend whispered something in his ear, and then he lit up all over again, cheeks pink, grin soft and unguarded.
You filed that away absently.
Akaashi, you learned, worked as an editor for a shลnen manga magazine. He was soft spoken, but there was a steadiness to his voice that carried easily across the table.
"Hinata mentioned you know many languages."
You smiled, shaking your head. "He's being too nice. I just love learning any language I can get my hands on."
"Have you ever done translation work?" Akaashi asked. "We're currently looking for a localization specialist at my company."
You blinked, caught off guard, then shook your head again.
"I haven't. And I can't really work on a tourist visa, can I?"
Akaashi hummed thoughtfully, nodding as if turning over a puzzle piece.
"That can be arranged."
You laughed softly, unsure if he was joking. "Would youโฆ would you really do that for me? A complete stranger?"
"Only if you plan on staying for a while," he said easily.
He threw a fond look at Hinata, who was chatting with Bokuto next to you.
"And we really hope you do."
Heat rushed to your cheeks. You looked down for a moment, then back up, offering a genuine smileโcareful to avoid the knowing glint in Akaashi's eyes.
"Thank you, Akaashi-san."
"There's no need," he replied. "Call me when you've made up your mind. I'll hold the position until then."
His words settled over you quietly as you exchanged contact information.
Everyone seemed to expect you to stay in Japan. Everyone seemed to want you to. You liked that.
Somewhere in the middle of conversation, in the middle of celebration and happiness, and without any ceremony at all, Hinata's hand found yours beneath the table.
You startled a little. Not enough for anyone to noticeโbut enough that your breath hitched, sharp yet quiet.
His fingers slid between yours easily, like they'd done this a thousand times before, like it was muscle memoryโthe most natural thing in the world.
At least in Brazil, it was.
There, touch had been light. Casual. Sun-warmed and easy. It never felt like a statementโjust affection, just comfort. Just friends who were a little too close, in a place where closeness came easily.
But here?
Here it felt denser. Like this small, hidden contact carried weight. Like every inch of closeness wasโฆ deliberate, on his part.
You suddenly became acutely aware of everything all at once: the people around the table, the way his thumb pressed gently against the side of your index finger and traced the skin there, slow and absent-minded. The way his knee bumped yoursโand stayed. The fact that no one else could see it, and yet it felt like the loudest thing in the room.
Hinata didn't look at you right away. He kept listening to Bokuto talk, nodding along, smiling politely at the right moments. But his grip tightened just slightlyโgrounding.
Then, finally, he glanced down at youโjust for a secondโand his eyes softened instantly.
Not the bright, explosive joy he showed the rest of the table, but the kind of look that said 'I'm glad you're here' without using words.
The kind of look that said something else entirely, too.
Something you couldn't quite name. Or maybe didn't want toโbecause naming it would mean hoping, and hoping meant risking disappointment.
Your stomach flipped, and for the first time since you'd met him, you looked away first, suddenly fascinated by your drink.
He squeezed your hand once more, gently, and didn't let go.
You swore you heard him laugh softly.
"Too cute," he murmured against the side of his other hand.
You knocked your knee against his in flustered protest and tried to slip your hand free.
But he didn't let you.
The night rolled on like thatโcelebratory, loud, and impossibly warm.
And through it all, Hinata stayed exactly where he was supposed to be: laughing, shining, alive. But every now and then, beneath the table, his fingers would tighten around yours.
As if reminding himself. As if reminding you.
Of what, you didn't know.
The celebration dissolved slowly, like sugar at the bottom of a glass.
People filtered out in small, noisy groupsโlaughing too loud, swaying just a little. Bokuto declared he was not drunk (he absolutely was). Atsumu tried to start a chant that Meian shut down immediately, with the van keys already in hand and Dad Mode fully activated.
"Everyone who's riding with meโnow," he ordered.
Groans followed, but compliance followed faster.
Hinata walked you outside with the others, and the night air was cooler now, clinging to your skin after the warmth of the restaurant. Neon still glowed above the street, but softer somehow, like the city was winding down with you.
You lingered near the curb as goodbyes unfolded around you.
Yachiโ with flushed cheeks and questionable balanceโhugged you tight and exchanged contact info with you, whispering something sweet and earnest you promised yourself you'd remember. Yamaguchi waved with a wide, drunken grin, slurring his farewells, and Tsukishima, sober as ever, gave you a brief look that felt suspiciously like approval before turning away and getting into the car with the other two.
One by one, engines started. Doors shut. Laughter faded.
And then it was just you and Hinata.
He rocked slightly on his heels, with his hands buried deep in his pockets and suddenly shy in a way that made your chest ache with recognition.
"Ahโum," he started, then stopped. Cleared his throat. "Soโฆ where are you staying again?"
"At a hotel," you said, smiling. "Still."
He nodded, eyes flicking away, then back to you. There it was againโthat look. Like he was standing at the edge of something and deciding whether to step forward.
"Do youโ" He inhaled. "Do you wannaโฆ come over?"
You thought of your suitcase, abandoned and lonely in a generic hotel room. Of the way he'd introduced you to everyone he loved, of how his hand had fit so easily in yours under the table. And before your courage could falter, you tilted your head and let a teasing smile curl your lips.
"Wow, Shลyล," you said lightly. "We just saw each other again and you already want me at your place? Japan really turned you into a player, huh?"
Hinata made a noise somewhere between a squeak and a choke.
"EH?! NโNOโTHAT'S NOTโ!" he rushed, face going nuclear red as his hands flew out of his pockets to cover it. "I didn't mean it like that! I justโI meanโI thoughtโyou're tiredโand the hotel isโand my place is close, IโI have spaceโ!"
You laughed softly, stepping closer, saving him from his own spiraling.
"I'm kidding," you said gently. "Relax."
He froze. Because you were close now. Close enough to see the faint shadows under his eyes. And your breath caughtโbecause this time it was even clearer. Intent. Your teasing smile softened.
Thisโฆ this was it, wasn't it?
Whatever had been hovering between you for years. Whatever had grown quietly in shared caipirinhas, training sessions, and long talks at the beach. Whatever had survived distance and silence and longing.
Your heart beat loud in your ears.
"โฆOkay," you said. His eyes widened.
"I'll stay with you," you added, quickly, before fear could steal it from you. "Just tonight."
Hinata blinked, momentarily stunnedโeven though he'd been the one to ask.
"R-really?"
You nodded.
"Really."
He smiled then, small and breathless.
"Okay," he said. "Okay. Yeah. Just tonight."
Famous last words.
Hinata's apartment was small.
Not crampedโjustโฆ compact. Thoughtfully lived-in.
You slipped your shoes off at the door, instinctively lining them up before you even realized you were doing it, and stepped inside. The place smelled faintly of clean laundry and a lot like him. A narrow hallway opened into a combined living space and kitchen, everything neat in that slightly chaotic way that screamed busy person who tries his best.
By the window, perched on a low cabinet, stood a small Christmas treeโbarely taller than your thigh. Simple. A little crooked. Decorated with mismatched ornaments: a few red and gold baubles, a string of warm fairy lights, and what looked suspiciously like a tiny volleyball charm hanging from one of the branches. No topper. No presents underneath. Justโฆ there.
It felt very him.
A low table sat by the tv, in front of it, a small couch. Volleyball gear was stacked carefully in one cornerโknee pads, shoes, a worn duffel bag with fraying straps you recognized from Brazilโwhile another corner held a bookshelf that surprised you. Manga spines. Training manuals. A couple of Portuguese textbooks, dog-eared and heavily annotated.
Your heart squeezed.
The kitchen was tidy but clearly underused: a rice cooker, a frying pan hanging from a hook, instant noodle cups stacked on the counter like a guilty secret. On the wall above the sink, taped slightly crooked, was a photo. A group pictureโblurry, laughing, and familiar.
Brazil.
The beach. The sun. Nina. The general.
You.
"โI, um," Hinata said behind you, scratching the back of his neck, ears already pink. "It's not much. Sorry."
You turned, smiling softly. "Shลyล, this is cute. It's so you!"
That only made him blush harder.
You glanced toward the sleeping arrangements, and there it wasโone futon, neatly folded in the corner.
You raised a brow, slow and deliberate.
"Only one futon?" you asked lightly.
Hinata combusted.
"IโI meanโ! I was planning to sleep on the couch! It's fine! I usually do when Bokuto-san crashes here, andโ!" He gestured wildly, then froze. "โฆYou're teasing me again, aren't you?"
You laughed, warm and easy, and his shoulders finally dropped.
"Relax," you said.
You both settled on the couch eventually, the city lights spilling in through the window in soft amber stripes. The television played something mindlessโvariety show chatter fading into background noise as you both talked over it, filling in the blanks of months spent apart.
At some point, without really thinking about it, you shifted.
You sat between his legs with your back resting against his chest, his knees bracketing your hips. It felt natural. Your bodies remembered this shape from Brazil, even if your minds pretended not to.
Hinata inhaled as you settled, slow and deep, and then sighed.
"I missed you," he said quietly, voice warm against your hair.
Your chest ached most sweetly.
"Yeah," you murmured. "I missed you too."
Your phone buzzed. You frowned slightly and lifted it.
Akaashi Keiji: Spoke to my boss. The company can sponsor you for a work visa if you decide to accept. We'd need to start the process soonโlet me know when you want to talk details.
You huffed a small laugh, looking at the time on your phone and wondering how and why he'd talk to his boss right after a celebration, and at these hour of the night.
"God. He's efficient."
Hinata peeked over your shoulder, half-reading the message.
"That's Akaashi-san for you. I think he works even when he sleeps."
You smiled, then grew quieter as you locked your phone.
Hinata hesitated for a second, then squeezed you a little harder without noticing.
"โฆAre you going to say yes?"
You leaned back a little more into him, eyes on the ceiling. "I don't know yet."
He nodded, though you felt the motion more than saw it.
"I have time," you added gently. "Tourist visa's ninety days. I want to think. Properly."
Silence settledโnot uncomfortable, but heavy. The kind that pressed against your ribs and waited. Hinata's arms rested loosely at your sides, not holding you, not letting go either. His chin hovered just above your shoulder.
You didn't know it yetโbut somewhere in that quiet, with the city breathing outside and your heartbeat syncing with his, Hinata Shลyล was already standing at the edge of a decision he'd been building toward for months.
Your weight against his chest, the steady rise and fall of your breathing, the warmth of your body fitting against his like it had always belonged thereโit was almost enough to make him forget how fast his heart was beating. Almost.
"The next time I see her, I'll tell her."
He'd said it so casually in the locker room after practice, sweat-soaked and laughing, Sakusa shoving a bottle of water into his hands. Bokuto had been talking too loud, Atsumu had been annoying as usual, and Hinataโstill riding the high of being back, of finally standing on this side of the netโhad said it without thinking.
The room had gone dead silent.
Thenโ
"Ohhhhhh?" "Brazil girl?" "Knew it." "GO SHOYOU! BE BRAVE!"
He hadn't taken it back. He never would.
Brazil had been a slow, beautiful undoing.
He remembered you walking ahead of him on the beach, barefoot, dress fluttering in the wind, turning back just to smile at himโbright and teasing and so warm it made his chest ache. The sun had painted your skin gold, and for a second, he forgot how to breathe.
He'd wanted to reach for you then. To lace his fingers through yours. To pull you close and feel if your heart raced like his did.
It happened again and again.
You laughing, head tipped back. You calling his name across the sand. You brushing sunscreen onto his shoulders like it meant nothing. You curling into his side on the couch, soft and sleepy and there.
Every time, something in him screamed mineโnot in ownership, not in entitlement, but in certainty. In recognition.
But he never crossed that line. Because he knew himself.
If he kissed you, he wouldn't stop there. If he held you, he'd want to hold you forever. If he loved youโhe would do it loudly. Openly. With his whole chest and no shame.
And he was leaving.
He couldn't ask you to come with him, nor could he ask you to wait for him. He couldn't ask you to stretch yourself across an ocean just to meet him in the middle.
Long-distance wasn't just hardโit was cruel. And if it broke, it wouldn't break quietly. It would tear.
So he'd chosen silence.
He'd told himself it was kinder, that you deserved freedom, that loving you from afar was better than risking hurting you.
Even if it meant suffering anyway.
Now, sitting here in his apartment. In Japan. With you wrapped in his arms and a message glowing on your phone that could change everythingโ
He couldn't wait anymore.
If you stayed. If you chose Japan?
Then he wanted you. All of you. Not in pieces. Not in almosts.
He couldn't stand the thought of you belonging to a future that didn't include him. Couldn't imagine holding anyone else the way he held you now.
There was no one else in his heart.
Hinata lowered his chin, resting it gently on your shoulder, breath steadying as he made his decision.
No more guessing. No more assuming. No more silence.
If you stayed, he would tell you. And if he could do anything to convince you to stay, he would take his chance at it.
And if you would take him, he would love you the way he always had: completely.
He didn't move for a long moment.
He just breathed you in.
The quiet of his apartment hummed around youโthe low whirr of his fridge, the distant city noise softened by the winter air and the snow that was starting to fall. The glow from the TV painted everything in muted blues and golds, flickering gently over your skin.
You were warm in his arms. To warm. Perfectly so.
The decision settled and solidified, unshakable in his chest. He whispered your name like it pained him, but in the way only a beautiful ache was leaving him.
And then carefully, he leaned in. Breathing you in, brushing his lips on the skin where your shoulder met your neck. They made their way up, softly caressing the skin and leaving the heat of the sun in their wake.
Then, barely there. A soft, lingering press just below your ear.
Your breath caught. You felt him smile faintly against you at the reaction.
Then, in a voice so quiet it felt like a secret meant only for your skin, he whispered:
"Would it be okay... If I asked you to stay?"
His lips lingered there after the question, unhurried, as if granting you time to think. As if offering himself completely and waiting to see if you would take him.
Your eyes softened.
Because you knew.
You weren't an idiot. You'd known, really. In the way he had looked at you all nightโsoft and awed and like there was something lingering at the edge of his tongue. In the way he had introduced you to everyone at the restaurant, and the reactions of his team. In the fact that you'd been offered a job by one of his most trusted people. In the way his hand hadn't once let go of yours under the table.
This was it.
This kiss.
This plead against your skin.
You slowly turned in his arms until you were facing him, and cupped his face in both hands.
He looked into your eyes like he had been waiting his entire life to be allowed to. Half-lidded, shining eyes. The windows to his soul were open and earnestand utterly unguarded. Lips parted, just lightly, breath shallow. Every thought was written plainly across his face without even trying to hide it.
You smiled. Gentle. Fond. Teasing, if just a little.
"Took you long enough, Shลyล."
His eyes watched your lips as you spoke, and before he could even attempt to respond, you leaned in to kiss him.
The kiss was soft, at first.
Your lips met like they were checking. As if asking permission to one another though you already had it. A careful press, warm and sweet and full of restraint that lasted exactly half a second before he exhaled your name into your mouth like a prayer.
Then it turned a little clumsy. Both of you figuring out the right timing to match eachother.
He was hungry, but unrushed, reverent. Like he was afraid it might be a dream and he didn't want to wake.
His hands came up to your waist, with fingers that trembled just slightly as they anchored themselves on the plush of your flesh. He kissed you deeper, pouring everything he'd held back into the way he fit himself into you.
You tasted home on his tongue.
Brazil sunsets and shared breaths and all the words he'd never said.
Your thumb brushed his cheek, your other hand travelling to the back of his neck, and then melted into you, pressing closer, a quiet helpless sound slipping from him before he even realized it. His forehead pressed against yours when you pulled back for air, breath warm and uneven.
He smiled softly. Shaky. Real.
"I love you."
Always the simplest truth in the world.
And outside, it was cold, so cold. The kind of cold that crept into bones, the city wrapped in silver and stillness as snow fell quietly against the windows.
But in here, in between his arms, in his hands and his tongue as his breath traced along your skin, in the feeling of his skin on yours as layers of clothing fell under tenbling hands, it was warm.
So warm.
Like melting under the sun in the most delicious way.
With Hinata sleeping beside you, breathing slow and even, with one arm heavy around your waist like it had always belonged there, you reached for your phone.
The screen lit the room softly. You opened your messages and typed:
: Thank you so much, Akaashi-san. Whenever you have time, I'd love to meet for coffee and talk about the job.
It was the easiest text you'd sent in your life.
Hinata shifted beside you, pulling you closer in his sleep and pressing his forehead lightly against your shoulder with a quiet humโlike he sensed it even then, even in the arms of Morpheus.
You smiled in the dark, slipping the phone away and sinking back into him, pressing a soft kiss on his forehead.
There was no ache pressing at your ribs. No doubt tugging at the edges of your thoughts, no weight of everything left unsaid in Brazil. Of late nights and unasked questions and longing that had nowhere to go. No weight of the years and miles you'd survived apart.
No coldness, even if snow fell outside.
Only the warmth of the sun.
Your sun.
Im crinin son



















