let me have a bite of that
sheepfilms
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

@theartofmadeline
ojovivo

shark vs the universe
AnasAbdin
Cosmic Funnies
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
taylor price

Product Placement

#extradirty

⁂
Jules of Nature
KIROKAZE

oozey mess
cherry valley forever
tumblr dot com
Xuebing Du
Peter Solarz

pixel skylines
seen from Germany

seen from Russia

seen from Malaysia

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Australia

seen from Sweden
seen from Germany

seen from Germany

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Türkiye
seen from Türkiye
seen from Indonesia
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Indonesia
@http-iria
let me have a bite of that
Gojo’s eyes!
these HI pics have me SICK to my stomach please i can’t take it 😭😭 they were just KIDS.
end my pain already
first year gojo 🤏
satoru gojo—the strongest sorcerer—is an absolute softie when it comes to his wife.
the man could kill everyone in japan if he wanted to, yet when you're around, he's as dangerous as a kitten.
and that confused everyone around him.
how was it that even a murmur of your name would make the famous gojo gush and drop everything to talk about you? he could be in the midst of fighting a curse, but if his phone buzzes and your name is on the screen? that curse might as well accept its fate or be prepared for him to be on call with you for the remainder of the fight.
"toru, are you busy?" "not at all, baby—" his words would be cut off as the curse he was fighting attempted to land a hit on him, and the call would only fill with the sound of crashes before you realized what was happening. "are you seriously in the middle of a mission!?" your question remained unanswered for a second before you heard satoru laugh, "i mean, i was, but did you need something? money? sweets? a photo of your handsome husband?" "SATORU!"
it's clear to everyone that gojo is in love with you. he wouldn't just take a bullet for you, but rather a whole nuclear bomb if needed. he's willing to risk everything for you—even his job.
if he's in a meeting and you call him, he's picking up the phone no matter how many dirty looks he gets. what are they going to do about it? he's the strongest, but with the way he acts around you, you'd think otherwise.
his students have noted that every time you come into his classroom, he'd grin like a high schooler in love. he practically has heart eyes that you can see through his blindfold.
"gojo-sensei?" yuji's voice rang out in the classroom, "yes, yuji?" gojo's tone was filled with boredom as the man was leaning back in his chair—feet on top of his desk while he lifted a finger to pull back his blindfold. yuji was seen with megumi and nobara, and all three of them were pointing at the door. where you, his lovely wife, stood with a bento box. "you forgot your lunch—" "MY WIFE!" the sound of gojo's chair hitting the floor echoed as you took a step back from the doorframe, yet your attempt to move out of the way was pointless as gojo barreled toward you with open arms. his arms wrapped around you in a tight hug, and you let out a quiet sigh as you held the bento box up. "is my beautiful wife here to visit her husband?" "i'm here to give you your lunch, toru." "MY BEAUTIFUL WIFE LOVES ME ENOUGH TO COME VISIT ME!" while gojo continued to ramble with you still in his arms, the three students watched the scene with narrowed eyes. "do you think she ever gets tired of him?" nobara asked bluntly, and yuji only shrugged. they continued to watch as gojo only hugged you tighter, and a soft smile appeared on your face as he continued to talk. "i don't think so..." yuji mumbled before turning his attention back to his phone, and the others did the same thing. except for gojo. because his attention was on you and you only.
comments & reblogs are always appreciated !!
So silly 😭💗💖✨
symptoms and causes | ch. 17
pairing — professor gojo x med student reader
summary — he's arrogant, self-centered, and he's your professor. renowned for his brilliance in neurosurgery and infamous for his allure. too bad you have to work with him on this research team. now you're stuck with dr. satoru gojo, delving into the complexities of both the brain and the heart — and of how far you'd go for a love that could destroy not only him but you as well.
word count — 11.9 k
warnings — 18+ ONLY. contains explicit sexual content, substance and alcohol abuse, dark themes, unhealthy relationships, codependency, trauma, medical content and mentions of death, illness, abuse, and blood. full trigger warnings available on the masterlist. reader discretion is advised.
previously — you knew going to naoya’s party was a bad idea. now he’s arrested, but it doesn’t feel over. the lawsuit, the stalled research, the exams—they still hang over you. and satoru’s been acting strange. like something’s unraveling, and the real problem never left.
author's note — hello lovelies !! so it's been quite a while. i want to keep this short and say, that i had a lot of problems with this chapter and still have, and i know some of you will hate it but i really cannot continue writing on this chapter for another five months omg, so here it is :')
& a quick heads up: this chapter is heavy on the angst. it touches on themes of deception, death, explicit injuries, and morally grey territory. please take care while reading. see you in the end notes <3
series masterlist + playlist + ao3 + wattpad
<- prev chapter | next chapter ->
How strange it is.
Not peace. Not rest. Not really. It’s something else entirely—something insidious that seeps into your skull and smothers the noise there, coating your nerves in a lie you swallow.
How strange to sit here, your body sinking inward. Your hands don’t tremble. Your chest doesn’t tear itself open with each breath. Everything’s muted, smoothed over like a grave, freshly filled, the dirt packed tight over the chaos beneath.
You should hate it. You do hate it.
But there’s something sickeningly sweet about the way it dulls the edges, the way it makes everything stop hurting for once.
You know how it works. It tells your overstimulated neurons to slow down. Enhances GABA at the GABA-A receptors. Dampens activity in the amygdala, in the prefrontal cortex, and in the hippocampus. It quiets these circuits like disturbed water finally going still. And all the panic, the anxiety, and the agonizing sense of dread that paralyzes the mind disappears. Like it was never there.
You’ve heard the warnings a thousand times in lectures, seen the statistics on tolerance, dependence, withdrawal. How the brain rewires itself around the crutch until you need more and more just to feel normal again. You know all this, but you ignored it anyway.
You wonder if this is how Satoru feels every day. How he sees the world. So smoothed out and faded, like a photograph left in the rain until nothing’s left but grey. You wonder how one breathes through this every day. But perhaps breathing’s always been harder for him.
You hid the alprazolam in the glove compartment of your car. Funny, isn’t it? Now you could understand him a little more.
“Hey. You still with us?” Maki’s voice pulled you back to the present.
It was cold. The breeze bit deeper these days, sinking its teeth into your bones. Soon, it would snow, and the season would change for good. It was raining again, as it always seemed to be these days. You pulled your coat tighter around you.
You sat outside the campus cafeteria in the courtyard. Students passed by every now and again, wrapped in scarves and hurrying towards shelter from the wind.
“Didn’t sleep well,” you lied, and Maki gave you one of her serious looks across the table. She always saw too much.
“No wonder,” Yuta said, poking at his curry that he barely ate. “How do you sleep knowing this was happening all while we’ve just been walking around and—” He trailed off, like finishing the sentence might make it too real.
“Glad he’s caught,” Toge said between sparse spoonfuls of yogurt.
“Yeah, but still…” Yuta dropped his spoon. “I don’t know how to feel about it all.”
“How should anyone feel about that, really.” Maki hadn’t touched her food either. “It’s not every day something like this comes out.”
“What do you think they’ll do with him?” Yuta asked, almost whispering.
“Whatever it is, it won’t be enough,” Maki said.
“Lifelong,” Toge added.
“God, I hope so.” Maki muttered, stabbing at her uneaten food. “You know what pisses me off? He’s in jail, and he’s still suing Dr. Handsome. Like, what the hell? How is that even allowed?”
“Apparently you can sue someone from jail,” Yuta said. “There’s no law against it.”
Maki leaned back on the bench and stared up at the darkening sky. “Feels like it’s going to rain soon.”
“Maybe even snow,” Yuta added, hollowly. “It’s been quite cold lately.” After a beat, he turned to you. “How’d Physiology go?”
You glanced up from your own curry, long gone cold by now. Earlier this morning, you’d retaken Professor Nanami’s exam—the one you’d failed before, the one Satoru had stayed up all night helping you study for until you got everything right.
“It went well,” you said. Half a lie.
You had known the answers. You could still see them, clear as anything. But when the paper hit the desk, your hands wouldn’t move. Fingers stiff like they’d turned to ice. And the words stayed locked in your head, refusing to find the page. Maybe your hands were shaking. Maybe it was something else. Hard to say what went wrong. Maybe everything.
You couldn’t focus. Not really. Not with your thoughts circling back to how strange Satoru had behaved this morning. How it had taken him ten tries to knot his tie before you finally stepped in, hands brushing his as you fixed it. His skin had been hot to the touch, the veins on his hands stood out, pale and tense, and there was blood under his fingernails. Like he’d been clawing at his skin again.
Looking back, the signs were there. Perhaps you just didn’t want to see them. Or maybe you did see them, but denial is a cruel thing. It coils around your heart like thorns and feeds you lies easier to swallow than the brutal truth standing right in front of you.
Something’s wrong. You knew it.
You felt it in the silence between his words, in the pause before he laughs. In the way his smile never quite reached his eyes these days. Could see it in the way he moved, like he was drowning just beneath the surface, trying not to make waves.
Last night, you pretended not to hear him in the bathroom. Pretended to be asleep when he finally came back to bed, his body trembling slightly as he pulled you close. You wanted to ask, wanted to speak the words that hovered on the tip of your tongue, but they caught in your throat before you could say them.
Because deep down, you knew he wouldn’t answer. Wouldn’t tell you the truth. And maybe, just maybe, you weren’t ready to hear it anyway. Maybe that was his kindness. Maybe that’s how he was gentle with you.
But kindness turns ugly when it festers, and now the dread clings to you so tightly that it feels like a second skin you can’t peel off. Like something buried beneath your ribs, feeding off you, growing heavier the more it takes.
Something’s different. Something’s wrong.
And every time you try to name it, to give it shape, it slips through your fingers like water, and you’re left holding nothing but this fear in your chest and this awful certainty that something terrible is waiting just beyond what you’re allowed to see.
You tried to ask. Don’t demand answers. But the heavier the feeling becomes, the harder it is to find the words. It’s almost as if you’ve become more afraid of the truth than of not knowing. And somewhere along the way, you became complicit in your own blindness, so careful not to disturb this house of cards of willful ignorance that would collapse with the slightest breath.
So instead, you watch. You wait. You pretend everything’s fine when it clearly isn’t. You smile when he dodges your questions and laugh at his jokes that have lost their bite. And at night, when he thinks you’re asleep, you listen to his uneven breathing and wonder how much longer you can keep pretending not to notice the way he’s coming undone at the seams.
Something’s wrong. You know it. He know it. But neither of you speaks it aloud.
Because maybe if you don’t name it, it won’t exist. Maybe if you just make it through dinner with his parents, everything will go back to normal. Maybe if you love him hard enough, hold him close enough, want it badly enough…
Maybe.
Such a cruel word. But it’s all you have now. That, and the quiet terror that whispers:
Something’s wrong. Something’s wrong. Something’s wrong. Something’s wrong. Something’s wrong. Something’s wrong. Something’s wrong.
Something.
Is.
Wrong.
You watched him struggle with his tie in the mirror this morning, fingers trembling as he undid it for the ninth time. Dog lay curled at your side, his head nuzzling against your leg, while Satoru’s frustration built with each failed attempt.
When his knuckles turned white around the silk and a curse slipped between gritted teeth, you couldn’t take it any longer. You nudged Dog gently aside and walked over to him.
“Let me,” you said.
He dropped his hands without a word, surrendering with a heavy exhale. You took the fabric between your fingers, your hands steady where his weren’t, careful not to brush against his skin that seemed too sensitive, too raw, and hot like he had a fever.
A single bead of sweat trickled down his temple. You watched it trace the curve of his cheekbone, and your stomach dropped. You knew the signs too well by now.
He was cutting his meds again.
You should be proud he’s trying, should be happy he’s fighting it. You should feel hope, or something that feels close to hope. But instead, a knot tightened in your chest. Why didn’t he tell you? Did Suguru know?
It wasn’t something he did lightly. It took everything in him to taper, to even consider going through the crash again. So if he’s doing it now, something must have happened. Something important enough to make him think the pain was worth it.
And he hadn’t told you. Probably didn’t want you to know. And that scared you the most.
Your fingertip caught the droplet of sweat before it could fall. He flinched slightly and closed his eyes, as if even that small touch was too much for his frayed nerves.
“You’re not gonna ask?” he said, eyes finding yours, feverish and dulled with pain.
“Are you going to tell me?”
His mouth twitched ever so slightly, and then he pressed you gently back against the wall, his hands trembling as they framed your face, and then his lips were on yours.
You let him. Let him silence the questions with his mouth. Let him bury his secrets in the space between your bodies. Because sometimes a kiss is easier than facing the fear clawing at both your throats. Easier than admitting that you’re both terrified of what comes next.
Your hands came to rest gently at the back of his neck, torn between pulling him closer and being afraid to hold him too tight, to hurt him more than he was already hurting.
He broke the kiss slowly, then rested his forehead against yours, his breath uneven. You placed your hand gently against his chest. His heartbeat stuttered beneath your palm—too fast, too fragile, like it couldn’t decide whether to keep going or give out.
“Maybe you should skip your lecture today,” you whispered. But he gave the smallest shake of his head. Deflecting. Always deflecting. Instead, he pressed a kiss to your forehead.
“Good luck on your exam today,” he said. “I love you.”
And you let him walk away. Because stopping him felt like admitting the worst. And you weren’t ready for that.
Not yet.
“I’m so over this semester. I just want some damn free time again,” Maki said, pulling you back to the present once more. “We should go on a trip, like a weekend getaway or something.”
“Sounds good,” Yuta said. “God knows we need a break.”
“Agree,” Toge added.
“How about Hakone?” Maki offered. “Hot springs, mountain views, good food?”
“Too crowded,” Yuta replied. “What about Kyoto? Sell our souls at a shrine to survive the rest of our exams or something?”
Maki raised an eyebrow. “But Hakone’s too crowded?”
“Yeah, you’re right. Kyoto’s worse.”
“How about Okutama?” you suggested. “It’s only two hours by train and it’s quiet there.”
Maki let out a soft sigh, pulling her windbreaker tighter as a breeze swept through. “Sounds perfect.”
“Let’s go there,” Toge said.
“Agree,” Yuta echoed, finally giving up on his food and pushing his plate aside.
A small group of students walked past your table. One of them glanced at you, then leaned toward the others and whispered something. You couldn’t make out the words, but you didn’t need to. You’d seen that look before.
“They’re just jealous,” Maki said, her gaze following them. “Not a single one of them is even half as brilliant as you, and they know it.”
“It’s okay.” You gave a faint smile. “I don’t care.”
Maki didn’t look convinced. “What’s their problem, anyway? It’s been getting ridiculous this week—”
Soft drops of rain began to fall, light and cold, darkening the pale concrete beneath your shoes, one dot at a time. Maki lifted her hand to feel the drizzle, and nearby, a couple of students gathered already their laptops and headed inside the cafeteria.
“We should go in,” Yuta said, glancing at the wetening sky. “Not like any of us are finishing their food.” He looked around the table. “Want to head home? We’re done with classes anyway.”
“Can’t,” you said, eyes drifting to a nearby plant. Its leaves trembled as water collected on the edges. “I’ve still got something to do for the research project.”
“Today? After your exam?” Maki said. “They really don’t let you rest, huh?”
“It’s fine. It’s… fun, if you…” You trailed off, unable to find the words to describe how you felt about research lately. It used to be fun and fill you with pride. With purpose. Research had made the world feel orderly. Cells lived or died. Reactions triggered. Equations balanced. Things made sense.
Not like people. Not like Satoru.
You used to walk into the lab and feel certain. Certain of the process, certain of the outcome, certain that if you just followed the steps, the truth would reveal itself. There was always an answer—clean, final, explainable.
But no matter how many hours you spent in that lab, no matter how long you stared into that petri dish, it never gave you the answer you needed most.
“Anyway,” you said, brushing it off, “I just need to check on something. You guys go ahead. Don’t wait for me.”
“What are you testing?” Yuta asked.
“Oh, um… nothing big. Really.”
“Then do it next week,” Maki said, frowning. “Girl, get some rest. You’re scaring me.”
“She’s right,” Yuta added. “Take the day off.”
“It’s fine, really. It won’t take long. I just want to make sure—”
“Then we’ll come with you,” Yuta said.
“No, that’s not—”
“You know,” Maki cut in, “we are med students too. Maybe we can help, see something you and the other two big brains missed because your high-functioning minds are too advanced to see the obvious.”
“Ouch,” you said, giving her a long look. “But really—”
“You know we won’t take no for an answer,” she said, crossing her arms.
You looked between your friends. Yuta gave you a thin smile and a helpless shrug. They were painfully persistent. And, in their own way, kind.
─── ·✧· ───
“Don’t tell anyone, okay?”
“Why? What’s going on?” Yuta asked, brow creasing.
“This… isn’t an official key.” You glanced over your shoulder before sliding it into the lock of Geto’s lab and twisting it. The door gave with a quiet click. You stepped inside and flicked on the lights.
“You made yourself a spare?” Maki asked, following you in.
“Yeah.” You set down your bag and shrugged off your coat. “Geto temporarily took the lab key from me.”
“Is he still mad?” Yuta lingered by the door, glancing down the hallway like someone might catch you and call campus security or something. Eventually, Toge pushed him inside.
“He’s not mad.” But even as you said it, you weren’t sure. You’d hardly spoken since that night at Naoya’s party, and when you did cross paths, Suguru seemed to avoid you. It stung more than you wanted to admit.
“He’s just... concerned I’m overworking myself. He said it’d be best if we all took a step back from the project for a while,” you added. “That’s why he asked me to hand him back the key.”
Maki snorted. “So Professor Geto knows you well enough to confiscate your keys to stop you from continuing to work on the project, but apparently not well enough to realize you’d be crazy enough to make a copy?”
“Hence why we can’t tell anyone.”
Maki flopped into the swivel chair Satoru usually sat in, spinning lazily with her legs stretched out. “Still think he’s being an ass. What happened with the girl wasn’t your fault. So what’s his problem?”
“She’s his patient.” You walked to your usual workstation, hands moving on autopilot. “He was worried about her.”
“Still doesn’t give him permission to make you cry.”
“I didn’t cry.”
Maki’s chair stilled. She looked at you with that flat, unblinking stare she used when calling bullshit without needing to say the word.
“Save your lies for Satoru. He might actually believe them.”
“Maki,” Yuta said with a warning in his voice.
“Sorry. I’m coping with sarcasm.”
“Oh good,” you said. “I thought you were just being a bitch.”
Maki tilted her head, lips twitching. “Not your strongest comeback.”
“Lack of sleep.” A flimsy excuse for why you’d lost your edge.
“So,” Maki continued, leaning back in the chair and spinning half a turn, “what now? What are we doing?”
You didn’t answer her right away. You moved to the drawer, grabbed a pair of gloves, and pulled the culture plates from the incubator.
The results hadn’t changed. The tumor cells had reduced—that part had worked. But the neuron cultures were dying too, wiped out alongside the targets. Collateral damage, Satoru had called it. But what good was a brain tumor treatment if it turns the brain into mush?
“I think I know what’s wrong,” you said finally, setting the plates down. “It’s too aggressive. The T-cells aren’t getting enough time to distinguish what’s malignant from what’s just brain.”
“So they’re… too fast?” Yuta asked, stepping closer to peer over your shoulder.
“Not exactly fast,” you said. “More like blind.”
All three of them blinked, confused.
“I thought the CAR-Ts were specifically designed to recognize only tumor antigens?” Yuta continued, glancing toward the whiteboard, where the last notes you and Satoru had scribbled were still faintly visible.
“They are. But the neurons near the tumor are expressing similar markers that confuse the T-cells. I think it’s triggering some kind of overprimed immune response.” Your friends still looked lost. You tried again. “It’s like burning down the whole house because you saw one spider.”
That, at least, landed.
“Reasonable reaction, I’d say,” Maki said with a shrug.
“So… how do you fix that?” Yuta asked.
“We wait.”
“Wait?”
“I delay the activation,” you said. “Stagger the incubation—give the neurons time to fully express their markers. That creates a clearer contrast window. The CAR-Ts need to recognize what not to attack before we let them loose.”
“I thought the goal was to speed up trials,” Maki said, leaning forward. “Now you’re slowing things down?”
“Not the timeline,” you clarified. “Just the reaction. If I give the cells a few more minutes of exposure before introducing the CARs, it might enhance their specificity and make them more discerning.”
“…So you’re what, easing them into it?” Maki asked. “Like a pep talk before action?”
“Something like that.”
Yuta scratched the back of his neck. “Sounds like the kind of thing Professor Geto would lecture us not to try.”
“Good thing he’s not here,” you said, turning back to your samples.
You knew it wasn’t the kind of solution Suguru would approve of, and definitely not what Satoru had in mind. But you knew, you had to make progress. Principal Yaga was waiting. He wanted results—soon. You had a feeling. And if he didn’t get them, he’d start dangling your scholarship over your head again. Of that, you were certain. So when Suguru put the project on pause, you kept going anyway. You couldn’t afford to let the time go to waste.
Before you knew it, hours had passed. Yuta helped you load the pipettes, careful and steady, while Maki double-checked the media, muttering complaints under her breath but never missing a step. You repeated the incubation steps like a mantra—once for them, twice for yourself, and a third time to the cells, whispered softly like they might actually listen and behave for once.
Everything moved slower. Intentionally so. A waiting game.
It was the kind of approach Satoru hated—too still, too quiet. Waiting made him nervous. He always worried the cells would lose viability if they sat too long, convinced that every extra minute pushed them closer to failure. And failure wasn’t something he could easily stomach. So you’d never considered it before. But now, with the lab empty and neither Satoru nor Suguru around, you had space to try.
Still, you wished he was here. Cracking a bad joke. Reminding you to drink water when a migraine started creeping in. But you knew better than to stress him with research right now—not when he was barely holding it together.
But you weren’t alone, were you? Your friends were here. And for once, you didn’t feel like you were carrying it all by yourself.
The timer on the incubator ticked steadily while you waited.
Yuta disappeared for about ten minutes and came back from the cafeteria with a handful of KitKats and Mars bars. He tossed a few onto the table beside Maki, who now had her legs propped up on the desk, lazily scrolling through her phone. Toge had long since dozed off, cheek pressed to the tabletop, soft breaths fogging a patch of glass as rain painted slow streaks down the windows.
“How long will it take?” Yuta asked quietly, careful not to wake him.
“Hard to say.” You stretched your arms overhead. A sharp ache flared in your ribs, and you winced. “Could be anywhere from a few minutes to an hour.”
“You okay?” Yuta asked. “Do the burns still hurt?”
“Just a little. But I’m good.”
Yuta opened on of the Mars bars and took a bite. “How’s your flat, by the way?”
“Oh, um… good. They’re renovating it, and I can probably move back in by the end of the month.”
“But would you? Now that you’re living with Gojo?”
Before you could answer, Maki suddenly sat upright and swung her legs off the desk. “Oh—shit.”
Yuta turned to her. “What?”
“Look,” she said, turning her phone toward you both.
It was a video. A scene from the party. Satoru, kneeling in front of you. His tongue on your skin. Loud music, flashing lights, too many people laughing in the background. It was blurry and shaky, but it didn’t need to be good quality to make the damage clear.
“Fuck,” Yuta said.
“Yeah,” Maki echoed, her tone flat. “Fuck.”
“Who posted it?” Yuta asked. “We need to find them and ask them to delete it.”
“Too late.” Maki swiped to another app. “It’s already everywhere.”
You watched them talk, but your mind had gone somewhere else. You knew better. You’d known better then, even in the moment, but you’d let it happen. Let it go too far. Naive. And so fucking dumb. And now? It all felt pointless.
Games with Satoru never stayed games for long. Sooner or later, something always broke. And this time, it wasn’t just you who got bruised.
Yuta and Maki finally turned to you, their expressions caught somewhere between worry and waiting.
“What do you want to do?” Yuta asked quietly.
Your gaze drifted back to the experiment, to the blinking lights of the incubator and the careful arrangement of plates. Something solid. Something predictable.
“We can’t do anything,” you said at last. “Can we?”
“But if this keeps spreading—” Yuta started.
“It’s already out,” Maki cut in. Her tone wasn’t cruel, just rational. “It’s probably gone viral by now. There’s no way we can contain this anymore.”
Yuta looked like he wanted to argue, but the words deflated with a breath. “Maybe you’re right… but still.” He looked back at you. “You okay?”
Were you? Why should it matter that everyone had seen? They were already talking. Whispering behind your back and staring too long in the hallway. It all faded into background noise when your real fear lived elsewhere.
Before you could answer, Toge stirred. He blinked slowly and pushed himself upright, rubbing sleep from his eyes.
“But isn’t it weird?” he said, voice rough with sleep.
“What is?” Yuta asked.
“That no one’s done anything.” Toge looked between you all. “If it’s viral, then it must’ve reached the Principal by now. And, I don’t know—normally, someone would be expelled. Or suspended. At least called in.”
Maki blinked. “Damn, that’s the most I’ve ever heard you say at once.”
Toge gave a small shrug. “Still weird.”
Yuta frowned, nodding slowly. “He’s right. It’s been, what—four days? Everyone must have seen that video by now. That’s probably why people keep staring at us.”
“And not a word from Yaga,” Maki added, straightening. “Nothing.”
“It’s like they don’t care,” Yuta said.
“But why wouldn’t they?” Maki asked.
You sat back, the realization hitting you like the hush before a storm.
Normally, this would’ve been a scandal—academic misconduct, breach of ethics, inappropriate relationships. You should be in the middle of disciplinary meetings and sitting across from some stern official asking if you understood the consequences of your actions. But instead? Silence. And that silence was starting to feel less like mercy and more like a warning.
Toge was the one to say what no one else did. “It’s like they’re not taking action because someone doesn’t want them to.” And then, the monitor beside you blinked amber.
“Something’s happening,” Yuta said, pointing past your shoulder.
You turned, heart climbing into your throat. Maki and Yuta rushed to your side, leaning in as you clicked through the data. The tumor line on the graph had dipped—steeply. Fast. You opened the live cell readout.
Tumor fluorescence was fading. But the neurons—
96%.
94%.
94%.
Still holding.
Yuta leaned closer, squinting. “Wait… is that—?”
“Yes,” you said.
Success.
─── ·✧· ───
You nearly slipped on the wet asphalt in your haste.
You’d fled the lab without explanation, barely glancing back as you called over your shoulder for the others to lock up after themselves. No one asked why you suddenly had to leave. They already knew.
Strange how it had taken this long. Stranger still how everything fell into place now—like scales lifting from your eyes, sharp and painful in their sudden clarity. Why had it taken so long? And why now, of all moments, did you need to see him so urgently, ask him so urgently… while dreading the answer just as much?
By the time you reached the main building, rain had soaked through every layer of your clothing. You were dripping, breathless, your shoes squeaking with each step down the high, echoing halls.
You turned the corner just as students began to spill from the auditorium, their laughter and chatter too loud against the stone walls. Satoru’s lecture must’ve just ended. You paused, drawing one last breath, knowing the next one would surely hurt.
Inside the hall, students gathered their things and slipped past you one by one. They kept their distance, but their eyes didn’t. You felt their stares, heard the whispers—loud enough not to care if you heard. Hungry for drama.
You stood there, dripping water onto wooden floors, still catching your breath when you saw him.
Satoru looked up from a set of papers on the front desk, as if sensing you before seeing you. His bright blue eyes found yours across the room. He frowned. So subtly most people wouldn’t have noticed. But you did. You always noticed. You’d known him long enough.
He knew something was wrong. And he hated not knowing what it was. You saw that too. It was part of the game.
He didn’t speak until the last student had slipped out behind you.
“Lock the door.”
You turned and did as he asked.
“You want to say something,” he said cautiously, watching you. “But let me check first, yeah?”
He nodded toward the desk. You climbed up without protest.
You knew you had to give him this first—let him take care of you. Let him believe it would help, that this small act of tending could undo everything fraying between you. You gave him the illusion that it might make things better.
Because later, he wouldn’t have the chance. Later, there would be questions neither of you wanted to ask, and answers you feared even more. Later, there would be pain, and silences that stretched too long to ignore, and a distance you weren’t sure either of you would know how to cross.
But right now, you could give him this. A wound he could see. Something his hands could fix with antiseptic and gauze. Something not yet slipping beyond his reach.
And maybe, in some small way, it was the last thing either of you still knew how to do—
To patch what was broken, even if only on the surface. Even if everything underneath was already coming apart.
He moved closer until he was standing directly in front of you and reached for the hem of your sweater. As he pulled it over your head, the motion brought your faces briefly, breathlessly close—his exhale brushing your lips. Then, in silence, he undid the buttons of your blouse.
He pulled his chair closer and slipped on latex gloves, the snap of plastic loud in the hush between you. He wore a dark blue tie with his white dress shirt—the one you’d laid out for him that morning and helped him with. You’d always liked that one best. You weren’t sure why.
Carefully, he pushed aside the fabric of your blouse, revealing the small wound low on your ribcage. One of the burns from the fire had torn open again, somewhere in the chaos of Naoya’s party. Maybe it was the alcohol. Maybe the adrenaline. You hadn’t even noticed until the next morning.
You’d tried to hide it. Satoru had found it. He’d been angry. But he’d stitched it anyway. Quietly. Gently. Without a word.
Now, his fingers ghosted over your skin again as he removed the old patch and checked the stitches beneath. A droplet of water slid from your hair and landed on his wrist.
“You’re dripping,” he said, not looking up.
“It’s raining.” Your gaze drifted to the tall windows lining the west wall of the auditorium. Outside, the sky had turned a heavy gray, and rain streaked down the glass in endless sheets.
After a moment, he exhaled slowly, meaning that everything was okay. No infection. No complications. Just a scar now.
You buttoned your blouse again, then pulled your sweater over your head. He rolled his chair back slightly, peeled off the gloves, and tossed them into the wastebasket beside the desk.
“Do you want to talk about it?”
He was asking about the phone call from last night. Your mother was taken into a hospital. A care treatment facility somewhere in the mountains. It was best for her, her therapist had said.
“There’s nothing I can do.”
“Do you want to visit?” he asked gently, like he’d forgotten the doctors had told you she needed time to adjust. Or maybe you’d never told him. Maybe that was the lie you’d chosen. Because it was easier than admitting the truth. Easier than saying you were scared of looking into her eyes and not recognizing what looked back.
“Sometime,” you said.
He leaned back, studying you. “If you need time… I can talk to the faculty. We could push your exams—”
“Did you see the video?”
His expression didn’t change much, but there was a pause. He saw it.
“Did you tell your friends? About your mother?”
“You know what’s strange?” you said, ignoring his question. “That Yaga hasn’t come after your job yet.”
“You should talk about it.”
“I’m pretty sure he saw it. Everyone has. And I’m also pretty sure he’d love to fire you. But he hasn’t.”
“You can’t keep avoiding this.”
“There’s been nothing,” you went on. “No meetings. No questions. No lectures. It’s like they’ve all decided to pretend none of it happened.” You looked at him. “Doesn’t that strike you as odd?”
“What are you getting at?”
“They don’t care, Satoru. They never did. Not about me. Not about rules. Not about ethics. They don’t care because it’s you. Because it’s you that’s fucking a student.”
Silence.
You watched his jaw tighten, but he didn’t speak.
“The ethics committee was ready to sweep it all under the rug. Until Sukuna stepped in, that is.” You watched him carefully. “He’s the problem. Not this. Not us. No one gives a shit about that. Because they can’t afford to lose their star surgeon.”
He stood without a word and turned away. You heard the faint click of a blister pack, then saw the slight tilt of his head as he swallowed whatever it was. You didn’t ask.
“Just ask me already, first-year,” he said finally, still facing away. “Whatever it is you came here to say. No need for pretenses.”
You hesitated, but only for a moment. “Why does Sukuna really hate you?”
He didn’t answer. Didn’t move. For a second, it was like even the air had gone still. He turned, walked back to his chair, and sank into it. He leaned forward, elbows braced on his thighs, and rubbed his jaw. He knew you wouldn’t let it go.
“Sukuna was seeing someone back during our second year of residency,” he said eventually. His voice was low, quiet. “They had this fight and broke up. She came to me that night—upset, angry and hurt… and I was—” He paused. “I was high. On something new, and I’d been drinking too and—”
He leaned back, eyes not on you, but on the space near your feet, like he couldn’t bear to look at you and still keep talking.
“I didn’t stop her when she kissed me. Maybe I wanted it, I don’t know. I barely remember any of it.”
He rubbed a hand over his face.
“Sukuna found out. He’d gone looking for her to apologize and—fuck—Sukuna doesn’t apologize. I didn’t even think he was capable of it.” A beat. “She and Sukuna fought again. I had a stupid shift at the hospital, so I left. She… she was drunk, but got in the car anyway—or at least, that’s what the police report said.” His voice went flat. “Next thing I know, she’s on my operating table.”
Your fingers tightened around the edge of the desk. His words landed like cold water down your spine.
His eyes lifted then, met yours across the space. You wished he hadn’t. Wished he’d kept staring at the floor, or the wall, anything other than dragging you into this truth with him. Perhaps he wanted you to look. Perhaps he needed you to. Needed to watch you flinch, to watch you pull away. Maybe that was the final proof he’d been waiting for—that even you couldn’t stay.
“I called the head of neurosurgery. He was supposed to be on that night. But there was a storm and we were short-staffed. He couldn’t make it in time.” A breath. “So it fell on me.”
“She was losing blood fast, and I tried everything I knew. Did damage control, shunts, applied pressure, transfusions. But nothing held and every time I thought I’d stopped it, it started again.” His voice dropped, barely above a whisper. “There was so much blood, I could barely see anymore.”
A pause so long it could have been silence forever.
“She died before the attending even made it to the hospital.”
Your chest seized, like something had reached inside and wrenched your heart out by the roots. A tear burned its way down before you could stop it, and you swiped it away with the back of your hand. You slid off the desk without a word and turned your back to him.
After a moment, you said, “You slept with her.”
“I didn’t. We kissed, and—”
You turned your head slightly, not enough to face him. “But you would have.”
A long pause. “Probably.”
“And you were high.”
“I was.”
“She died.”
He didn’t answer.
“Why didn’t you tell me?”
“Isn’t that obvious?”
You turned to face him, a deep, trembling breath pulling through your lungs. How could the man standing in front of you wear the same face you love, and still feel like a stranger stitched together from someone else’s bones?
“Do you hate me?” he asked, so softly you almost missed it.
“Isn’t that obvious?”
Maybe you would’ve screamed if it weren’t for the chemical calm flooding your veins. Maybe you’d have fallen apart completely, if not for the weight of the medication holding your limbs hostage, pinning you to the floor of this unbearable moment. You would have cried. Run. Anything to escape this feeling.
How were you supposed to move forward from this? From knowing that the person you loved, the one person whose breath always lived inside your lungs, like you were never fully breathing on your own, had once stood in a room soaked in blood, unable to save the woman dying in front of him because he’d been using?
You couldn’t feel the full weight of it now, but you knew it was waiting. Lurking. It would come later, once the pills had worn off and you were alone.
“I took time off after that,” Satoru continued, his voice breaking the long silence. “Went to rehab.”
“But that wasn’t very successful, was it?”
“No. I left three weeks in. I couldn’t stand the silence in those rooms. And my hands—” he looked down at them, watched them tremble slightly, “they needed to do something. Anything. Other than itch for a pill.”
You closed your eyes, and the tiredness swallowed you whole. “Why do you always make this so hard for me?”
“I know.” His voice was barely there. “I’m sorry.”
But sorry didn’t bring back the dead. Didn’t patch torn arteries. Didn’t bleach out the stain of what he’d done. You wanted to scream that at him. But your body was too tired, too medicated, too full of ache.
“After that, I stopped experimenting,” he said. “I stuck to what I knew I could handle. Doses I could function with—”
“Stable? You think that’s what you are? You were cutting into people’s skulls, people who trusted you—and you were high. That’s not stable, Satoru. That’s criminal.”
“Don’t you think I know that?”
“But you still did it anyway.” You braced your hands on the desk and leaned forward slightly. “How many? How many times did you cut into someone’s fucking brain while you were high on God knows whatever the pharmacy could throw at you?”
His eyes narrowed. “You want the number?”
“Yeah.” The word came out like a dare.
“Seventy-eight.”
“Seventy-eight?”
“Yeah.”
“What—You kept track?” You scoffed and turned away, your breath catching in your throat. Silence spilled into the auditorium, thick and suffocating, broken only by the steady rhythm of rain against the tall windows.
“I went back afterward,” he continued, “reviewed every fucking surgery I’d ever done. Replayed them in my head, over and over, looking for mistakes. For moments I might have—”
“Don’t.” Your hand lifted without thinking.
“Don’t what?”
“Don’t try to defend yourself.”
He stood up, his voice low but sharp. “Don’t act like this now. You knew.”
“I knew?”
“Yeah. You did. You knew I was using,” he said, eyes locked on yours. “You stood next to me in the OR, knowing I was on drugs.”
“Don’t make me complicit in your story.”
“Oh, come on.” His voice sharpened. “You turned a blind eye, didn’t you? Because you finally got to scrub in again. Got to be inside an OR. You needed that fix just as bad as I did. You needed it more than your ethics, more than your high ground. That’s the part you don’t want to admit. So don’t cry about it now—not when you were so willing to look away.”
And there it was. Irrefutable and damning, the accusation lingered between you like a knife twisting deeper, and you couldn’t help but feel so small in this hall opposite him.
He sat in front of you, cutting you open, slow and painful, and maybe he wanted it, needed it in that moment, to see the hurt, the pain. Maybe that would finally be enough for you to step back and leave him to himself. Prove he is what he thinks he is.
And right now, sitting there with water falling down your hair, drenched and cold, you weren’t so sure about it either. If you could stay. If this was what love was supposed to be like.
You always thought there was some kind of invisible thread tying you to Satoru. Something that was meant to be, written in the stars and etched into the spine of fate itself—like a wish a child makes with their whole heart, believing the universe is kind enough to listen.
But that thread was poisoned now. It had rotted and curled slowly from within, until the thread was so fragile you weren’t even sure it was still there.
He stood there, waiting for you to refute it. To deny it. But the words didn’t come. Because deep down, you knew.
“You’re a fucking asshole,” you said instead.
He didn’t argue. Didn’t even flinch. And somehow, that made it worse. Somehow that was the proof.
“You were using me for surgeries, and I let you. Because I fell for you. Because I had those stupid feelings—and still do. Because you made it easy to believe I could be better than I am.” His voice cracked slightly. “And believe me, if I could rewind time, I would. But I can’t. I have to live with this now. And there’s not a single fucking day where I don’t hate myself for what I’ve done.”
You turned away, thoughts spinning too fast to catch, too tangled to voice. There was too much—too much information, too much pain, too much weight pressing down on your chest until breathing became a conscious effort. But instead of panic, you felt strangely hollow. Carved out. Like someone had reached inside and scooped away everything that made you react.
You turned away. “It worked.”
“What?”
“I delayed the process, and now the neurons held. We were too aggressive. But it worked.”
For a moment, he just stared at you, like he didn’t trust his ears. And then—
“That’s… that’s—” He sank into the his chair again, the breath knocked out of him. “We could start trials. This could actually…” He looked up at you. “This could change everything. We could cure brain tumors.”
But you didn’t answer. Not with the excitement he expected. Not with anything, really.
After a pause, he asked, “Will you come home tonight?”
“I don’t know,” you said. “Maybe I’ll stay with Maki.”
“…Okay.”
You didn’t move as he crossed the room. He stopped beside you—close enough that you could feel the warmth of him.
“I kept the files. All seventy-eight cases. Notes, scans, surgical reports. They’re in my office. If you want them, they’re yours.”
You looked up at him. His face was drawn in the pale light, the color drained from his skin, his eyes so painfully blue it hurt to look into them. You could tell he was feeling it too, all that exhaustion from the constant fighting.
“I know you’ll want to look,” he added, and you hated how he always knew that. How he knew you. And he must have guessed your thoughts. “You know me. But I know you too.” And it almost sounded like a threat.
Your throat tightened, but you said nothing.
He hesitated for just a second more, then added—so softly you almost missed it, “I’ve fucked up a lot in my life. And I know I’m not a good person. But you... you were the only thing I ever got right, and I hate that I dragged you into all of this. And for that, I am sorry.” His hand lifted, fingertips brushing your chin, tilting your face toward his. “If you ever want to use me for the rest of my life, I’d let you. You can have it all—every surgery, every opportunity. I’ll open you every door, and never speak to you again if that’s what you want. You have all of me.”
And with that, he stepped back and left the room.
─── ·✧· ───
It started when you said his name out loud for the first time in hours. Or maybe it started earlier—when Maki opened the door without asking questions and handed you a hoodie that still smelled like laundry detergent and peppermint gum.
You hadn’t meant to talk about him. But the moment you sank into her bed, your head in her lap, everything you’d been swallowing started to claw its way back up.
It came out in pieces. Not in order. Not cleanly. You weren’t even sure it mattered anymore. And Maki didn’t try to stop it. She just sat there, running her fingers through your hair while you told her everything.
About the addiction. How you’d known from the first time you found pills in the glove compartment of his car and told yourself they were old prescriptions, leftover from some surgery, some legitimate pain. How you’d looked the other way because looking directly at it would have meant admitting that the person you were falling for was already in free fall. How you’d become an expert at seeing everything except what you couldn’t bear to see.
About the rehab attempts. About the withdrawal. How one time you found him on his bathroom floor, his pulse so weak you pressed your fingers to his throat again and again, and how you never knew what real terror was until that moment when you thought you were too late.
About Sukuna. About how he looked you in the eye and said you’re the problem—and how part of you still believes it.
About the accident. About the woman he couldn’t save. About the seventy-eight cases.
You told her about his parents. How he still sometimes flinches when you touch him unexpectedly. His scars.
And then about your parents. About your father. How much you miss him, how you always wanted to be as good a surgeon as he was. How Satoru stood with you at his grave. How your father would have liked him.
About your mother. How you watch her disappearing a little more each time you visit, how you’re terrified that one day you’ll look into her eyes and see nothing familiar anymore. How grief ate her from the inside out, and how you understand now why Satoru reaches for pills when the pain gets too much.
You told her about the pain. About the resentment. How unfair it feels sometimes, to love someone so much and watch them hurt themselves anyway. How you resent his addiction and your own powerlessness against it, how impossible it becomes to separate the man from the disease, how some days you catch yourself hating him for something that’s killing him too.
You told her how being with him started to feel like drowning—not because he was pulling you under, but because you were holding your breath, afraid that breathing too deeply might somehow make things worse. And how, somehow, being without him feels worse.
You kept going until your throat felt raw, like you’d been screaming with no sound, while Sabrina Carpenter and Billie Eilish played softly in the background. It might’ve been funny, if anything still was.
You told her everything except the part that made you sick to admit. You couldn’t say what Satoru already knew and never spoke about until now—that maybe, at the beginning, you’d wanted what he could give you more than you’d wanted him. You looked the other way because all you wanted was to be in the OR, to finally surface after being underwater for so long. After your father’s death, after watching your mother disappear into grief, after years of drowning in your own mediocrity.
You’d wanted the access Satoru could give you—the validation, the adrenaline rush of complicated surgeries, of holding someone’s life in your hands and knowing you were skilled enough not to drop it. Until—
Until you wanted him. To be seen by him, to be touched by him, to be kissed by him. And only him. Only ever him.
You’d gone from wanting what he could give you to wanting him, completely and irrevocably, addiction and all. And you hate that you still want that—even now, even after finding him unconscious on bathroom tiles, after all those ugly fight and watching him choose pills over you again and again, after realizing that loving him might be slowly killing you both.
You tell yourself you deserve better. But the truth is, you don’t want better. You just want him. But lying there in Maki’s bed, you can’t help but wonder how naive that makes you. How stupid.
And then you told her about the files—the ones that had been waiting on Satoru’s desk like he’d known you were coming for them. Like he’d been expecting you all along. He knew you too well, and sometimes that terrified you. Because there was no version of yourself you could keep hidden from him, even when you tried.
Maybe that’s what broke you more than anything—that he’d still handed you the match and dared you to strike it.
You hadn’t looked at Maki the whole time. Couldn’t. But she didn’t flinch, didn’t interrupt. She’d just listened until you were finished, your voice drained and raw. You braced yourself for what was coming—the lecture, the judgment, all of it. But Maki only said, “You have really horrible taste in men.” And then she leaned down to hug you.
It was deep into the night when you were reviewing file number forty-three. Maki helped where she could, but most of it didn’t make sense to her. She couldn’t read imaging like you could or rattle off vascular anomalies without flipping to the glossary.
She sat opposite you, hair tied up messily, sleeves pushed past her elbows, laptop open beside her to Google terms she didn’t know and helped where she could.
Most of the files were routine—craniotomies with clean margins, clean closures. All of them ended with discharge summaries that sounded clinical and bored and safe. Standard procedures with standard outcomes.
He hadn’t made a single mistake. Not a misplaced incision, not an ignored bleed, not a skipped step in sterile protocol.
“He was using during all of these?” Maki asked once.
“Still is,” you said, and kept reading.
You worked through his second year, when he’d moved from assisting to leading his own surgeries. And the more complicated the cases became, the more obsessive his notes grew—like autopsies of his own mind, meticulous dissections of every decision he’d made.
Every file had several different typed reports, then handwritten annotations, then sticky notes and random scraps of paper stapled onto scans. He’d gone over each case multiple times, you could tell by the changes in ink tone, the way some pages were creased down the middle like he’d folded them, reopened them, stared at them long enough to leave fingerprints in the margins.
He’d marked timestamps, tracked OR durations to the minute, cross-referenced medications with motor responses and blood pressure trends. Little arrows connected patient outcomes to dosage half-lives, and he’d circled anomalies in red that weren’t really mistakes, just… variables. Human noise.
You’d never seen anything like it.
It was like he’d turned every file into a courtroom where every suture was evidence, every reading a defense or confession. And he’d judged himself every single time. And yet—
Nothing. No errors. No unexplained bleeds. No outliers. Even the messiest cases showed perfect protocol adherence. You knew how rare that was. Even the best surgeons left behind complications. But Satoru had none.
He’d been using God knows what. And he’d still been perfect. Somehow, that made it worse. Because he knew what he was risking. Because he knew better.
The next case had photos that made your stomach turn. It was blunt force trauma. Skull fracture. Massive intracranial bleeding. The damage was already irreversible by the time she arrived. You knew that before you even finished the first page. Her skull had split on impact, the parietal bone shattered in three directions.
You didn’t realize this was her case until you found Satoru’s handwritten note: should've tried harder—crossed out so violently that the pen had nearly torn through the page.
You stared at the words until the they blurred. Satoru had said she was bleeding fast. He hadn’t told you it was this severe. She went into cardiac arrest twice on the way to the hospital. No one could have saved her. Not him. Not anyone.
Maki shifted beside you and gently pulled the file from your hands. Her eyes scanned pages, eyebrows knitting as she tried to make sense of it. She tilted the CT scan toward the light.
You asked her what she saw. Or maybe you just looked at her in a way that meant the same thing.
“I don't know much about this stuff, but… that’s not something you can survive, right?”
“She was thrown through the windshield,” you said quietly.
“My god.” She frowned, holding the scan a little higher. “Look at that—the whole front of her skull is just... gone. No one could’ve fixed that.”
You nodded, even though you’d known the moment you read her arrival vitals. It wasn’t about saving anymore. It was about the story Satoru needed—that it wasn’t hopeless, he just hadn’t tried hard enough. His personal punishment for being human. And that was the most Satoru thing of all.
You asked Maki if it changed anything—that he couldn’t have saved her, that no one could have.
She leaned back on her palms and starred up at the ceiling. She asked if you want it to change anything. And that stopped you more than anything else.
You said you weren’t sure. Because it should. Logically, clinically, it should. Knowing he wasn’t responsible for her death should lift the weight in your chest. But it didn’t.
Because it wasn’t just about the surgery. It wasn’t even about her. It was about what he’d been willing to risk, how far he’d spiraled before the guilt caught up.
You folded the scan and slid it back into the file.
“You want to know what I think?” Maki began. “He’s not a monster or anything. But he played Russian roulette with people’s lives—and just happened to win.”
You were at loss for words.
“But you always knew that, right? So why is it hitting you now?”
“I don’t know. I knew. I just... didn’t think he’d actually perform sugery while he’s so unstable.”
“He’s an addict. Being unstable is part of the deal.” Maki softened. “Do you want to know what else I think? He told you everything—even the really fucked up stuff, that he didn’t tell anyone else. Only Geto and you know. And now me, I guess.” She paused. “He knows you could blow this up. Get him fired. Maybe even arrested. But he still told you. He trusts you with the worst parts of himself, and I don’t know... that means something, right?”
“Not saying he’s not an asshole,” She went on. “He totally is. And he really has to get clean. He’s been lucky so far, but luck runs out and what happens when it does?”
You didn't answer. Because it was true. And the fact that he’d succeeded didn’t make it any less horrifying. People were alive because he’d gambled with their lives and won—because he got lucky. But he was still the best surgeon in the hospital. And you couldn’t stop wondering, would those patients have died if anyone else had operated on them? High or not, maybe Satoru was their only chance, and that thought made you feel sick.
“Listen,” Maki said after a long silence. “I can’t tell you what to do. But I don’t want to see you crying over him again. You shouldn’t be so loyal that you forget yourself.”
“What would you do in my position?”
“You already know what you want to do.”
“No. I don’t.”
She tilted her head. “Would you forgive Geto if he pulled the same shit? Or anyone else?”
“I’m not sure.”
“No. You are.”
You watched as she reached toward her nightstand and picked up a spare coin. She held it between her fingers, turning it over. “One side means you forgive him.” She rolled the coin across her knuckles. “Other side means cut him out for good.”
Before you could respond, she flipped it. The coin spun high, catching the light, flashing gold as it turned. Your chest tightened with every rotation. Maki caught it midair and slapped it down on the back of her hand, not looking at it yet. She held it there a second longer, then pulled her hand back.
You didn’t look.
You already knew what you wanted. And that was the problem.
─── ·✧· ───
The fog hadn’t lifted all morning. It hung low and heavy over the city, blurring the edges of buildings and streetlights. Maki drove with the heat turned up too high, the windows slightly fogged at the corners. You watched the world pass by, your eyes unfocused, your heart beating faster than it should have.
You hadn’t worn anything dramatic. A simple black dress borrowed from her, with your coat pulled over it. Your fingers curled inside your sleeves the whole drive. You weren’t sure if it was from the cold or something else.
“We can still turn around, you know,” Maki said, glancing over at you.
“I know. But what would he do without me?”
She let out a soft breath. “God, you two are the worst.”
When you reached for the door, she stopped you with a hand on your arm. “Remember what I said? Don’t be so loyal you forget who you are, okay?”
You leaned in for a quick hug, then stepped out of the car.
Cold autumn air bit at your skin as you stood on the sidewalk outside Satoru’s apartment building. He appeared in a black suit that made him look like he was dressed for a funeral. Maybe he was.
He had one hand on the car door when he saw you. His whole body went still, like a deer caught in headlights. For a moment, neither of you moved.
You walked toward him, your footsteps echoing on the empty street. You stopped just short and leaned your side against the car, arms crossed.
“I didn’t think you’d come,” he began, cautiously.
“I promised I’d be by your side."
For a second, something in him seemed to give. His shoulders dropped a little. His fingers twitched against the edge of the car door, like he didn’t know what to do with them. Like he wanted to reach for you but wasn’t sure if he still had the right.
You studied his face. He looked like he hadn’t slept.
“You look like shit.”
“You look beautiful.” And the way he said it—fragile and so softly—nearly undid you. But you forced yourself to hold the line, at least for a few more seconds.
“Do you think you could’ve saved her?”
He swallowed. “I don’t know. Maybe.” His hand clenched tighter on the car door. “Even if I couldn’t, I still feel like I should have.”
“Do you blame yourself?” you asked, though you already knew.
“Yes.”
“Okay.” You said it firmly, definitively, knowing how much he blamed himself for everything—how he always turned every failure into something bigger, into proof of his unworthiness.
His worst enemy wasn’t the pills or his parents or even Sukuna. It was his own mind, and nothing you could say would ever be as cruel as what it had already told him.
“Okay?”
“You don’t need me to make you feel worse. You’ve already done that enough,” you said. “You know me,” you echoed his words, then added, softer, “But I know you too.”
You pushed off the car and took a small step closer. Just one. Your heart ached with how much you still loved him. Hopelessly. Stupidly.
“Promise me something,” you said. “When this is over—when the lawsuit’s done, when we’ve dealt with Naoya—we leave.”
His brow furrowed. “Leave?”
“We don’t have to stay and fight Sukuna forever. We could walk away. There won’t be an ethics committee if we’re not here.”
“We can’t just leave. Everything’s here—your studies, my job—”
“You told me once that if you weren’t afraid, you’d leave it all behind. Find us a little house. Somewhere quiet. Somewhere we could be happy.”
He didn’t say anything.
“I can finish school somewhere else,” you added. “Go back to my old university. You could teach anywhere. Just… preferably not where I’m a student again.”
“Yeah, that part didn’t go great.” A ghost of a smile touched his lips. “But Tokyo’s the best place for you. You know that. You won’t get the same chances anywhere else.”
“I don’t care about chances. I care about you.” You stepped a little closer. “So promise me that we’ll leave when this is over.”
He stared at you for a long moment, his hand still gripping the car door. And then he stepped forward, just enough to close the space between you.
“Okay,” he said at last. He looked like he wanted to say more—maybe touch you, maybe kiss you.
“But this is it, you know. This is our last chance. So, if there’s anything else you want to say to me say it now.”
He opened his mouth, then closed it. You saw the fight in his eyes, the words he couldn’t say.
“There’s nothing,” he said, and you knew that was a lie.
“Okay. Then let’s finish this.”
─── ·✧· ───
The driveway to his parents’ house curved through dense forest, the trees crowding in on either side as the light slowly thinned beneath their canopy. It wasn’t until the last bend that the house came into view, rising from the lawn in concrete and glass. Its tall windows caught the overcast sky and the dark silhouettes of pines, reflecting the world back without letting any of it in. Behind it, a lake stretched wide and still.
Satoru guided the car along the circular drive. Gravel shifted under the tires as he eased the car to a halt at the foot of broad concrete steps.
“Home sweet fucking home.”
You looked up at the house, at all the glass and steel and the clean, brutal lines. It was striking, sure, but in the way a museum is striking—beautiful, polished, and built for silence.
“It’s beautiful,” you said.
“It’s cold.”
He shifted the car into park and sat still for a moment. He reached into his jacket, pulled out a pill, and set it on the center console. Then he placed his phone flat over it.
Without a word, he brought his fist down hard. The screen cracked with a sharp sound. You looked away.
A quick sniffle, a wipe of his nose, and then he stepped out of the car. Gravel shifted under his shoes as he rounded the hood. He reached your door and offered his hand.
There was always something heartbreakingly elegant about the way he did those things—how he held his hand out to you, like muscle memory from years of practiced politeness. And standing in front of this house built of steel and glass and cement, it made sense where he’d learned it. Or was forced to lean it.
He didn’t let go right away. Instead, he held you close, arm resting lightly behind you, your back to the car.
“Thank you,” he said. “For coming with me.”
“You don’t have to thank me for that.”
“No, I do.”
He leaned down and kissed you, slow and careful. Hesitant in that aching way he always was after a fight, like he wasn’t sure of his place anymore. His lips were soft against yours, still bitter from the opioids. Strange how you had gotten used to that taste. Then, you caught a flicker of movement—a figure in one of the tall windows above the front steps.
His mother. You recognized her.
She was watching. And the moment she realized she’d been seen, she turned and vanished into the house. Satoru must have noticed her too—you felt the faint shift in his posture.
“You ready?” Satoru asked.
“No.”
“Yeah, me neither.”
He guided you forward, his hand resting against the small of your back.
The front door opened before you could knock. Standing there was an older woman with silver hair, her expression softening the moment she saw Satoru. The years seemed to fall from her face, replaced by something almost maternal.
“Young master!”
Her weathered hands reached for his face, cupping his cheeks and pinching them lightly. Satoru let her fuss over him like a long lost boy coming home. His earlier detachment gave way to something more warm.
“Chiyo. Still putting up with this place?”
“Someone has to.” Her gaze fell on you then, her eyes softening as a smile creased the lines in her face. “And you must be—”
“She’s my girlfriend.” Satoru’s hand found yours. “The only good thing in this house besides you, Chiyo.”
“About time you brought someone around. And such a lovely one, too.”
“Yes, she is,” he said, tugging you a little closer.
“Dinner’s nearly ready,” Chiyo added, already turning back towards the hall. “Your parents are waiting in the dining room.”
You followed Satoru down a hallway lined with tall windows, the dark forest pressing in on both sides. The grey stone floors reflected soft shades of green from the trees outside, everything muted in steel and cement. The house was immaculate—too immaculate. Not a speck of dust, not a single thing out of place.
There was no clutter. No photos. No warmth. No scuff marks from children running. No crooked frames capturing birthdays or holidays. No evidence anyone had truly lived here.
It all reminded you more of a hospital than a home. Walls adorned with expensive art pieces that felt more like investments than personal choices. Each vase, each object seems positioned with mathematical precision, as if the entire house is a museum display of wealth rather than a home.
You thought of your mother’s house—the worn spots on the carpet from years of footsteps, the slightly crooked family photos covering nearly every inch of wall space, the collection of colorful mugs in the kitchen cabinet, the magnets cluttering the fridge, the overall comfortable chaos of a place where life had happened. Before it stopped, that is.
Here, it felt like life had been sanitized away. Like someone had gone through with bleach and scrubbed away anything too human. No wonder Satoru hates hospitals so much. He grew up in one.
Satoru’s hand stayed wrapped around yours the whole time, thumb brushing lightly over your knuckles, like he was reminding himself you’re real. You’re here.
A long, dark brown table stretched the length of the dining room, its surface untouched except for the exact placement of black porcelain plates and silver utensils. Outside, the forest leaned against the glass, its reflection swallowing the glass as dusk settled over the lake.
“I thought we agreed you’d let me know before bringing guests.”
You turned. His mother stood by the sideboard, a glass of wine resting in one hand. She was striking in some strange intimidating way. Ash-blonde hair, and her charcoal dress fit like it had been tailored around her bones. A diamond flashed on her finger, the only jewelry she wore.
“Right,” Satoru said, not letting go of your hand. “In case the table gets too crowded.”
“Courtesy, not capacity.”
“I didn’t come for courtesy.”
“No. Clearly not.” Her eyes flicked over you. “Still, you don’t bring guests without notice. We’ve talked about this.”
“We’ve talked about a lot of things. I don’t remember you listening to any of them.”
His mother gave a tight smile. “Is this the same girl from the conference?”
You felt yourself go still. Satoru didn’t.
“She has a name.”
“Forgive me. Is this what you’re doing now? Students?”
“You could try being a little more polite to your future daughter-in-law.”
His mother’s wine glass paused halfway to her lips. “Future—?”
Footsteps echoed from the hallway. A tall man stepped into the room, and everything went still. He didn’t speak right away—he didn’t have to. His presence hit first. You saw the resemblance immediately. Same height, same cutting blue eyes. But where Satoru’s were kind and warm, his father’s were flat and and devoid of any warmth, like frosted glass.
“Mr. Gojo,” Satoru said. No warmth. Like this was a stranger he’d been forced to learn by name.
“You’re late.”
“That’s because I didn’t want to come.”
“And yet here you are.”
“Yeah. Life’s full of disappointments.”
His mother sighed behind her wine glass but said nothing. His father moved to the sideboard, steps quiet on the stone floor. He didn’t look at you once.
“The board's asking about succession,” he said, pouring himself something amber. “They expect a Gojo at the head of the table. It’s time.”
“Of course they do. Can't let the family curse die out.”
“This isn’t a joke. The hospital needs someone capable. Not a surgeon with a God complex and a scandal hanging off his arm.”
You stiffened, but Satoru didn’t even blink.
“Well, lucky for you. I’ve never been much for politics.”
“Unfortunately, that hasn’t stopped you from embarrassing the family.”
Satoru smiled without humor. “You’d have to care about the family to be embarrassed by it.”
“Still so dramatic. When will you finally take responsibility?”
“Responsibility? You mean sitting in boring meetings, pretending I’m important alongside others who think they’re just as important—but really, they’re all quite irrelevant, and most of them can’t even tell a bipolar from a monopolar if their patient’s life depended on it. And we sit there discussing ways to cut costs and starve our personnel. Yeah, well. I’d rather cut my own throat. But then again, you’d probably enjoy watching that, wouldn’t you?”
His father turned then, and the look he gave Satoru could have frozen blood. “You haven’t changed a bit.”
“And I wouldn’t give you the satisfaction of seeing me any other way.”
The silence that followed felt like standing on the edge of a cliff. You could hear your own heartbeat, your own breath. And then you noticed how Satoru’s grip on your hand had tightened.
“Perhaps we should eat before the food gets cold,” Chiyo tried.
“Actually,” Satoru said, turning to you, “I think my wife would love to see the rest of the house first. Everyone loves this beautiful balcony overlooking the lake where I used to plan elaborate murder scenarios, after all.”
Without waiting for an answer, he led you out of the dining room. You caught a glimpse of his mother taking another long drink of wine and Chiyo hovering by the door, her hands clasped together as if in prayer, before she quietly slipped away toward the kitchen.
In the hallway, Satoru let out a breath. “Well, that was fun.”
“That was awful.”
“That was normal.”
<- prev chapter | next chapter ->
author's note — sooo i don’t even know where to start ? i know this update took forever, and i’m not super happy with it tbh. i’ve had the feeling that maybe the forgiveness came too soon, and it might’ve been better to let that emotional distance stretch a bit longer. but after five months of fighting with this chapter, i just couldn’t figure it out. so maybe this one’s a bit weaker.
i really struggled with how to deliver what happened between satoru and sukuna. and i know this chapter might divide people but i always stuggle a bit with "what do readers want" and "what i want to write." so believe me, i toned it down already, but in the end i have to stick with what i want to write, even if it means losing readers (but pls don't come at me, okay, this is just a hobby, thank u).
also… sorry for the pure angst. the next chapter’s gonna be heavy too. i do see that we need some fluff again to breathe a little, and i’ll try my best to sneak in some lighter moments between everything.
and yes, i know the story is kinda like: argument → getting back together → argument again, and at this point it’s just… yeah. that’s on me not planning things out more tightly, and then stumbling into all these big reveals that naturally lead into conflict ahhh. but i swear i crave the soft, fluffy times for them too omg.
overall, this chapter was really about choosing compassion over condemnation. i hope that came somehow through, even if it all feels a little rushed. thank you to everyone who’s been patient and still sticking with me, truly <3
ps: i wrote a little about suguru's and satoru's post from suguru's pov. it's called "suguru's memories" if you want to read that too <3
ps: if you want to get notifications for future updates, you can join my taglist here !
(not updated, sorryy will do later)
tags — @browrm @panteramarron @starlightanyaaa @wiserion @http-iria
@myahfig4 @rosebluod @bloopsstuff @depressedemosantaclaus @nanamis-baker
@tofumiao @shoruio @s3vtrue @rosso-seta @bnha-free-writing
@chiyokoemilia @bonequinhagojo @janbannan @mikkmmmii @yeiena
@coeqi @faustina @glenkiller338 @yenmrtnz @buni-bunnydoll
© lostfracturess. do not repost, translate, or copy my work.
year one
this is my adult nintendogs
*… 𝗚𝗼𝗷𝗼 𝗦𝗮𝘁𝗼𝗿𝘂’𝘀 𝗱𝗼𝗺𝗮𝗶𝗻…*
*𝗚𝗼𝗷𝗼 𝘀𝘁𝗼𝗽𝗽𝗲𝗱 𝘂𝘀𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝗿𝗲𝘃𝗲𝗿𝘀𝗲 𝗰𝘂𝗿𝘀𝗲𝗱 𝘁𝗲𝗰𝗵𝗻𝗶𝗾𝘂𝗲 𝘁𝗼 𝗵𝗲𝗮𝗹 𝗵𝗶𝗺𝘀𝗲𝗹𝗳!*
SUGURU'S MEMORIES — PART FOUR
featuring — professor geto and professor gojo
summary — long before it all fell apart, they were just two surgeons leaning on each other to make it through the night. suguru, too tired to keep pretending he was fine; satoru, too reckless to admit he wasn’t. between aneurysms and clipped sutures, they joked like brothers and bled like men who knew the crash was coming. and then she arrived, and nothing between them stayed the same.
word count — 12.8 k
note — this memory flashback is for my ongoing medical AU series. if you've been following "remedies & reasons" and "symptoms & causes," this is a glimpse into the past of our beloved characters from suguru's pov. while it can be read as a standalone, it's best enjoyed as a reader of the main storylines.
warnings — angst, graphic surgical detail, substance use, addiction, smoking, unrequited feelings, guilt, parental neglect, mental health struggles.
author's note — welcome to the last part of suguru's memories ! it's been a lot of fun to write about their past from suguru's point of view. this chapter is more like the beginning of the story when s&c reader enters the picture. hope you enjoy <3
masterlist + playlist + ao3 + support my writing
<- prev chapter | finished <3
I stretched my arms over my head, my spine cracking loud enough to startle the nurse on the other side of the break room.
Twenty hours into a twelve-hour shift yet again, and I was running on caffeine, a stale protein bar I found at the bottom of my bag, and the vague promise of mortality being optional if you just drank enough terrible hospital coffee.
I should really start saying no to these weekend shifts more often. But then some idiot thought it was a good idea to steal a streetlamp, crash into a guardrail, and end up with two broken legs and a mild concussion and somehow it became my problem to fix. God, I hate teenagers.
I checked my phone. A couple texts from her. She was still interested in observing some surgeries next week, undeterred by the last... incident.
But there was something achingly familiar in her persistence. She reminded me of how I used to be before bureaucracy and disappointment burned the joy out of me.
I should probably warn her that Satoru’s leading next week’s surgical block. Maybe tell her to sit this one out. Or tell him not to be an asshole about it. But I guess it’s easier to warn her than telling Satoru to shut his mouth for once.
Get ahead of the inevitable disaster or so. Satoru misinterpreting her curiosity as arrogance, her calling him a megalomaniac, him calling her insufferable, and me standing between two egos with an open skull bleeding out on the table all while the nurses pretend not to stare, wondering if we’re about to throw punches over the operating field.
In all our years together, I rarely saw anyone get under Satoru’s skin like she did. It was... funny, in a morbid sort of way. Maybe “funny” wasn’t the right word. Fascinating, definitely. Concerning, certainly. Watching her hold her ground against him, watching him actually listen. No one else managed that. No one else ever had.
I made a mental note to reply to her later, when my brain wasn’t functioning on fumes. Running these marathon shifts was killing me, but what else was new?
Suddenly the door to the break room swung open and Satoru walked in. He kicked the chair opposite me out with one foot, and dropped into it with a long sigh.
“You look like shit,” he said.
“Good to see you too.” I didn’t bother to lift my head from my coffee.
“You know, normal people sleep when they’re tired. You should try it sometime.”
“I’ll sleep when I’m dead.”
“At this rate, that’ll be Thursday.”
I shot him a flat look. “Optimistic. I was aiming for Wednesday.”
“Seriously, Suguru. Keep this up and the hospital’s gonna start confusing you for a patient.” He leaned back lazily, arms folding behind his head. “Want me to wheel you into the ER? Get you a nice little ID bracelet?”
“If I collapse, just bury me in the break room. Save everyone the paperwork.”
Satoru laughed and tipped his chair onto two legs like he wanted to be the next head trauma in the ER. “Tempting. Always said you belonged here.”
“Dead?”
“Chained to your job. Same thing, really.”
“You’re more chained to this job than I am.”
“Am I?” He reached over to steal my coffee and took a sip before he made a face and shoved it back at me “God. How do you drink this shit?”
“Years of practice,” I said, reclaiming the cup. “Like tolerating you.”
He laughed at that. A real one, the kind that crinkled the corners of his eyes. It dragged my attention up from my cup for the first time.
He looked good, put together, like always, but his eyes gave him away. Dark around the edges, duller than they should’ve been. And there was stubble along his jaw, like he hadn’t bothered pretending he had time for anything as ordinary as shaving. I’d known him too long not to notice.
“How was your last case?” I asked, taking another sip of that out of this world awful coffee.
Satoru groaned and ran a hand through his hair. “Teenage boy. Fifth concussion tonight. Decided it was a brilliant idea to skateboard down the parking garage ramp at three a.m.”
“Kids are fucking stupid.”
“Yeah. I hate them,” Satoru agreed, slumping further in his chair. “When I was their age, I at least had the decency to do dumb shit alone and suffer in silence. Not make it my mission to annoy every doctor within a ten kilometer radius.” He huffed out a breath. “And guess what, I let one of the new kids close after a basic craniotomy yesterday and it fucking looked like frankenstein. I had to rip out every stitch and redo the whole damn thing. Took longer than the actual surgery.”
“You’re too hard on them. Remember when you convinced me to break into the anatomy lab so we could practice sutures on the cadavers?”
“And we got caught by Professor Yaga? He was so impressed with my technique he let us off with a warning.”
“He was impressed with my technique. You were butchering that poor dead guy worse than whatever killed him in the first place.”
“Lies and you know it.”
“In your dreams,” I said.
He nudged my chair with a lazy little kick. “Says the guy who can’t tie a one-handed knot to save his life.”
“I did one last week,” I said. “During that carotid repair.”
“Video or it didn’t happen.”
I rolled my eyes, but I was already fighting a smile.
We were in our thirties now—on paper, respected attendings with research grants and titles and all the shit of adulthood. But at the core? We were still those two idiots from university, trading punches over textbooks and racing each other to finish anatomy labs. Still never letting the other win too easily. Still measuring ourselves by each other’s standards, like we didn’t know how to stop.
We weren’t just friends. We were brothers, shaped by decades of pushing each other, challenging each other, holding each other accountable in ways no one else could. And looking back now, I realize it was this—this stupid, effortless banter in break rooms reeking of bad coffee—that mattered more than anything else.
Because everything else changed. People left. Dreams cracked under the weight of reality. Even we weren’t the same in the end. We’d seen each other at our worst. At our breaking points. And still, somehow, we stayed.
And maybe I didn’t know how to say it at the time, but I was grateful. Grateful to have something that didn’t shift under my feet. Grateful to have him, exactly as he was.
Even when I wanted to strangle him. Which, let’s be honest, was often.
I was about to throw something appropriately cutting back at him when both our pagers went off at once.
“Ruptured aneurysm. Emergency transfer from Central. ETA ten minutes,” I read aloud, exhaustion shoved aside in an instant.
“Race you to the OR?” Satoru was already on his feet. “Winner gets to clip.”
“This isn’t a game, Satoru,” I said, even as I stood up too. He knew exactly which buttons to push to get me moving.
“Everything’s a game if you’re good enough at it,” he said, already backing toward the door. “And I’m very, very good.”
“Keep telling yourself that,” I muttered, but my feet were moving. “Last one there buys drinks at Joe’s after shift.”
“Deal.” And then he was gone.
I knew he’d take the main corridor, so I cut through Radiology— fifteen years in this place, and I knew every shortcut like the back of my hand. Besides, Satoru couldn’t resist slowing down to flirt with half the staff. His personality always cost him time.
I half-jogged down the hall, dodging a startled tech pushing an EKG machine. I could picture Satoru doing the same on the opposite side, both of us too proud to full-on sprint but pushing the definition of “brisk walking” to its absolute limit.
I rounded the last corner into the surgical wing just as Satoru appeared from the other side. Our eyes met across the hall, both of us pretending we weren’t breathing harder than we should be.
“Nice of you to catch up,” he called, speeding up the second he realized it was going to be close.
We hit the scrub room door at the same time, shoulders bumping hard as we both tried to squeeze through. Grown men. Respected neurosurgeons. Still acting like fucking kids.
But that’s how it’s always been with us. And maybe, after everything, I was glad we hadn’t changed that much.
Ten minutes later, we were standing side by side at the scrub sink, aggressively soaping up to our elbows, neither of us willing to admit our race had ended in a tie.
“Fifty-eight-year-old male,” Satoru said, his voice shifting from playful to professional. I’d heard these rapid shifts a thousand times before, but somehow, I still can’t quite get used to it. “Previously diagnosed with an unruptured aneurysm in the anterior communicating artery. Opted against preventive surgery last year. Ruptured during his grandson’s baseball game.”
“Classic subarachnoid hemorrhage presentation,” I continued, rinsing my arms under the water. “Sudden onset of the worst headache of his life, nausea, photophobia, brief loss of consciousness. Glasgow Coma Scale 11 on arrival.”
“Could be worse.”
“Could be better.”
Despite the constant back and forth, there was a rhythm to us when we worked. Instinctive, seamless, like speaking a language only we understood. Years of moving in sync, of filling in each other’s gaps without even thinking about it.
“The surgical approach is straightforward,” Satoru said, already slipping into the next step of planning. “Pterional craniotomy for access. Quick entry, minimal retraction. The bleed’s localized—we need to work fast.”
“The real challenge’s the temporary occlusion,” I added, catching his eyes in the mirror. “The clip placement has to be perfect on the first try. No margin for error.”
“Exactly why I should do it,” he said, scrubbing meticulously between each finger. “My hands are steadier.”
“I’ll believe it when you stop tripping over your own arrogance.”
“Says the man who’s been awake for what, twenty-four hours? When’s the last time you actually slept, Suguru?”
The use of my first name caught my attention. He only did that when he dropped the act and let the real concern slip through.
“I got a solid four hours yesterday,” I said, which was only a slight exaggeration. “Besides, I’ve operated on less.”
“Yeah, and I still have nightmares about that corpus callosotomy you nearly botched.”
“I didn’t botch it. The patient had an anomalous venous drainage pattern. Not on the pre-op imaging.”
“Whatever helps you sleep at night.” He grinned, but it faded quickly. “For real, though. You good? If you need me to take lead, I will. No gloating. No bullshit.”
For a second, I wanted to be offended, but one look at him told me this wasn’t about ego. It never was, not when it counted. Maybe that’s why we’d made it this far.
“I’m good,” I said. “We’ll follow protocol. First scrubbed gets primary. Second assists. Fair?”
“Fair,” Satoru agreed, nodding once. A smile tugged at the corner of his mouth. “She’d love that,” he added, almost offhand.
“Who?” I asked, though I already knew.
His hands slowed under the water for a second. “The first-year.”
“You’re talking an awful lot about her lately.”
“She’s different.”
“In a good way?”
“I don’t know yet. She irritates me, I guess.” He glanced out through the scrub room window, where the patient was being sedated. His face softened almost imperceptibly. “Talks too much. Wants too much.”
“I thought you liked dedicated students.”
“It’s not the same.” He shook his head slightly. “There’s something about her… I don’t know. She’s the kind of crazy who might actually love this shit.”
“What, aneurysms?” I rinsed the soap from my arms, glancing at him sideways.
“Yeah,” he said. “The blood, the pressure, the stakes. All of it.”
I watched him a beat longer. And it hit me. “Don’t tell me you like her.”
“Huh?” Satoru looked up at me, genuinely startled.
“You don’t like anyone, Satoru,” I said.
It wasn’t an accusation, just a fact. In all the years I’d known him, I’d never seen Satoru pursue anything beyond distraction. A warm body, a clever smile—enough to pass the time, never enough to stay. Real connection was messy. Complicated. It asked for things Satoru didn’t know how to give—honesty, vulnerability, the kind of weakness that comes from being seen.
It wasn’t that he couldn’t feel. He just never let anyone close enough to prove he did.
“I like you,” he shot back, smirking.
“You know what I mean.” He did. He just didn’t like hearing it. “You’re not built for... that.”
“For what?”
“Something serious.”
He went quiet, the smirk fading at the edges. And for a moment, I almost felt sorry for saying it. But the truth was, back then, I couldn’t picture him letting anyone close.
I thought about the first-year. Her sharp mind and that steady, unflinching gaze. Stubborn enough to stand her ground against either of us without blinking. Too stubborn for her own good sometimes.
I’d brought her into our research because I saw potential. Not so she could become Satoru’s newest obsession.
“She’s a student,” I added. “And way younger than you. Stay away from her if you can’t control yourself.”
He didn’t say anything. But the slight furrow in his brow told me the warning had struck a chord. Even if I already knew he wouldn’t listen. Satoru never could resist crossing the lines he wasn’t supposed to. Especially when I was the one who drew them.
A nurse stuck her head into the scrub room. “Aneurysm patient’s in OR 3. Prepped and ready. We need you both now.”
I rinsed the last of the soap from my arms and reached for a towel. Satoru was still scrubbing between his fingers, slower than usual.
“Looks like you’re assisting, genius,” I said.
“Yeah, yeah,” he muttered, but he didn’t argue.
Rules were rules. Even for him. Or at least, I hoped they still were.
We pushed through the double doors into the OR, the conversation shelved for now but not forgotten. The room was already in motion—scrub nurse arranging instruments, anesthesiologist monitoring vitals, residents hovering like satellites around the table and trying to look useful. The familiar chaos of an emergency procedure.
As we moved to our stations and started gowning up, Satoru leaned in. “I don’t like her. For the record.”
“The fact you’re bringing it up again makes me doubt that,” I muttered, sliding my arms into the gown the nurse held open.
“I just wanted to be clear.”
“You’d better be,” I said, as gloves snapped over my wrists. “You know I’m her mentor. You mess with her, you mess with me.”
“I’m not gonna do anything.”
“Good.” I stepped toward the table. “Just try to get along with her without making it weird.”
He took his place across from me, checking the drapes, scanning the tray like he hadn’t already memorized the layout. Then, casually—too casually—he asked, “Did she say anything about me?”
I arched an eyebrow. “Like what?”
“I don’t know.” He shrugged. “Anything.”
I hesitated, grimacing slightly as I thought back to last week when she came storming into my office, furious after one of Satoru’s lectures. She’d ranted for nearly twenty minutes about his condescending attitude and insufferable teaching methods, and I’d nodded along, pretending to listen, when all I really wanted was to go home and not deal with either of them. It struck me then that they would probably never get along.
It would have been almost funny, if dealing with the two of them wasn’t already giving me gray hairs.
I never even considered that he might really do something as stupid as pursuing her. How wrong I was. How wrong we all were, about what would unfold between them.
But there were more pressing matters at hand.
I reached for the first instrument and noticed it immediately—the slightest trembling of my fingers. Not enough for most to see. But enough for me. Enough to matter when you were working millimeters away from catastrophic brain damage.
Satoru saw it too. Our eyes met across the table. We didn’t need to speak. Years of working together had carved that silence between us into something functional.
I made the decision before I could overthink it.
“Satoru, take the clip.”
“What?”
“Your hands are steadier today. I was up all night with that trauma case. You lead the clipping. I’ll handle exposure.”
“You sure?”
“Don’t make me repeat myself,” I said.
The patient came first. Always. Satoru didn’t argue. For all his showiness and ego, he knew when to shut up and work.
“Alright, friends,” he called out, voice bright and commanding as he turned to the room. “Let’s save a life today.”
****
Hours later, I was slumped in a chair in the surgeon’s lounge, filling out post-op notes with handwriting you’d barely be able to make out the actual words anymore. But the patient would live. He’d go back to watching his grandson’s baseball games. And despite the exhaustion dragging at every cell in my body, despite having to let Satoru take the lead—it still felt like a win.
Second later, Satoru strolled in, dark blue scrub top replacing his usual white coat, carrying two cups from the decent coffee shop across the street.
“Peace offering.” He sat one down in front of me. “Figured you could use something better than whatever swamp water they brew here.”
“What’s the catch?”
“No catch. Just one brilliant neurosurgeon appreciating another.”
“Thanks.” I took the cup, sniffed it suspiciously, then took a sip. “And... thanks for earlier. For not being a dick about the clip.”
Satoru dropped into the chair across from me. “Don’t mention it. I would’ve done the same if the positions were reversed.”
“Would you, though?”
He paused, then grinned. “Probably not. I’d have milked it for all it was worth. ‘Remember that time I saved your patient because your decrepit hands were shaky as fuck?’ I’d never let you live it down.”
I tossed my pen at him. He caught it without even blinking.
“But seriously,” he said, tossing the pen back onto the table. “It takes guts to make that call. Not everyone would put the patient ahead of their pride.”
“It’s not a big deal. It’s just what you’re supposed to do.”
Satoru’s phone lit up then, the screen facing up on the table beside him. I glanced at it—just out of habit—but the name froze me for a second.
Gojo Kenichi. His father.
“You’re not gonna get that?” I asked, nodding toward it.
Satoru didn’t even look. Just reached over and flipped the phone face down. “Nope.”
“That’s, what, the third call today?”
“Fourth. He’s been on my ass about some board seat opening up. Wants me to step in, get involved with the hospital leadership. I told him I’m not interested.”
“He’s not the type to drop something just because you said no,” I said. “You know that.”
Satoru scoffed. “Yeah, well, fuck him.”
I watched the way he pressed his thumb against the side of his phone, not hard enough to crack it, but like he wanted to.
Gojo Kenichi had spent most of Satoru’s life pretending his son didn’t exist. Cold dinners. Missed birthdays. Praise handed out like corporate notes—rare, impersonal, and always transactional. Satoru had grown up in that absence, carving out space for himself in the absence of anything resembling paternal affection.
And now, when his name opened doors and his reputation meant something, the old man wanted him close. Not out of love. Not even guilt. Just strategy.
It wasn’t surprising. But that didn’t mean it didn’t cut deep.
Satoru always acted like it didn’t bother him. Like he’d long since written them off, scrubbed them from the list of things that had any power over him. But I’d seen it—the quiet after another award, another publication, another impossible case pulled off with grace—and still no call. No pride. Only silence.
He’d never asked for their approval. But I guess that didn’t mean he hadn’t wondered what it would feel like. But then Satoru shifted the conversation like he always did when it got too real.
“How’s your mom?”
“She’s good. Still teaching pottery classes twice a week. Says it keeps her young.”
“Sounds like her.” Satoru gave a faint smile. “And Hanami?”
“She’s seeing someone,” I said. “Some guy from her work.”
It was still strange, seeing my sister as an adult. All independent and such. And yet, some part of me, the part still stuck in big brother mode, didn’t like the idea of anyone getting close enough to hurt her.
“She sounds happy,” I added.
“You met him yet?”
“Not yet. But I will.” And I didn’t have to say the rest. He already knew. If the guy so much as made her cry, we’d both be knocking on his door. Probably without knocking.
Satoru laughed under his breath. “If he hurts her—”
“I know,” I said, smiling despite myself. “We’d both break his face.”
Satoru leaned back, studying me like I was some post-op complication. “If she ever gets married you’d need a plus one, you know?”
I groaned. “Not this topic again.”
“You still seeing that radiologist?”
“Ended it last week.”
“Oh?” One eyebrow lifted, just enough to be annoying.
“I can’t handle it,” I said. “Working twelve-hour shifts and then going home to talk about work some more. I need a few hours a day where no one says words like ‘subdural hematoma’ without making me want to jump out a window.”
“Poor you.” He tilted his head back to stare at the ceiling. “Might want to consider dating someone normal for once. You know. Nine-to-five job. Doesn’t know what a ‘laminectomy’ is.”
I let out a dry laugh. “Hard to meet anyone when you never leave the building.”
“Fair point,” Satoru conceded, sitting up to take a slow sip of his coffee. “When was the last time you went on an actual date? Outside the hospital, I mean?”
“I don’t see how that’s any of your business.”
“That long, huh?” He grinned. “You know they invented this thing called dating apps? Even someone like you could figure it out.”
“And deal with people who want a free diagnosis for their second cousin’s mystery headaches? Yeah, no thanks.”
Satoru laughed. “God, we’re pathetic, aren’t we?”
“Speak for yourself. At least I’m not drooling over a student.”
He blinked, and for a second, he looked like a spoiled brat who’d just been caught in the act. “I’m not drooling over anyone.”
“Right,” I said, drawing the word out deliberately.
“I’m serious, Suguru.”
“So am I.”
I leaned forward slightly, locking eyes with him. “I’ve known you long enough to tell when you’re lying. You don’t ask if someone’s said anything about you unless you care.”
“I was making conversation.”
“Twenty-five years, Satoru.” I let out a sigh. “Twenty-five years, and I’ve never once heard you ask about anyone’s opinion for the sake of ‘conversation.’”
He stared into his coffee, suddenly quiet. But then, “Even if I was interested—and I’m not saying I am—nothing’s going to happen.”
“Because you know better, or because you’re afraid?”
His head snapped up. “Since when did you become my therapist?”
“Since your taste in women started threatening both our careers.”
“That’s a bit dramatic, don’t you think?”
“Is it? You know what happens when attendings get involved with residents. Now imagine what will happen with a students. Committees. Reviews. Research grants getting jeopardized. You know how it is.”
“Nothing’s happening,” he said firmly, but he couldn’t quite meet my eyes.
“Keep it that way,” I told him. “She’s too good to get dragged into hospital politics. And you’re too good a surgeon to throw your career away over an infatuation.”
“She’s not an infatu—ah, forget it.” He shook his head and pivoted hard. “The patient’s post-op scans looked good. Clean occlusion. No signs of vasospasm.”
“Yeah.” I let him change the subject. “Your clip placement was solid.”
“Our work,” he corrected. “Your exposure was textbook perfect. Couldn’t have done it without that.”
“We’ve always made a good team,” I admitted, “when you’re not being an insufferable ass.”
“And when you’re not being a self-righteous prick,” he countered, but he was smiling now.
We fell into an easy silence, the tension bleeding out. Outside the window, the sky had darkened completely. Another day ending. Another life saved. The rhythm of our existence.
My pager buzzed sharply against my hip, slicing through the quiet. I checked it and sighed. “Trauma coming in. Car accident.”
“Want me to take it?” Satoru asked.
I shook my head. “I’ve got it. You’ve done enough showing off for one day.”
He grinned. “There’s no such thing.”
I grabbed my coffee, heading for the door. Behind me, Satoru called out.
“Suguru.”
I paused, glancing back.
“Thanks,” he said.
“Don’t thank me,” I said. “Just don’t be stupid.”
“No promises.”
And that, I thought as I hurried toward the ER, was what worried me most.
****
Satoru and I never fought over women. It was the one unspoken boundary we never crossed, even through all the rivalries, the challenges, the years of pushing each other to the edge. Until I brought her into our lives. And suddenly, the one line we’d never dared to touch was the one that cracked everything open.
I still remember the moment I realized she wasn’t like the others.
After calling in more favors than I want to admit, I got her into the university. In the middle of the year, with a full scholarship and a decent apartment within walking distance of campus. You don’t want to know how many board members I had to charm, bribe, or threaten to make that happen.
But I did it without hesitation. Because she was worth it. I knew it the second I walked her through the university’s halls, through the lab that had taken me years to build from nothing.
Takuma Ino, one of my better postdocs, was hunched over his workstation when we came in, still beating his head over with the same neural interface glitch that had been killing us for weeks. Feedback loops that turned signal clarity into static. A problem so maddening it made you feel dumber every time you looked at it.
I was halfway through giving her the standard tour when she stopped walking. Eyes narrowed, focused not on me but on the code running across Ino’s screen. Without asking, she crossed the room and leaned over his shoulder.
“Your feedback loop,” she said after a moment, finger hovering above a block of code. “You’re treating synaptic plasticity as a constant, but it isn’t. It follows a logarithmic decay curve, not linear. That’s why your model keeps destabilizing.”
Ino looked up, startled, ready to dismiss her. But then she grabbed a marker and started writing on the whiteboard.
“See?” she said, her tone almost impatient. “If you adjust for the temporal variation here, and introduce a compensatory algorithm along this pathway”—her hand moved swiftly, the calculations appearing almost faster than I could follow—“the feedback stabilizes.”
It was quiet.
Ino stared at the whiteboard, then at his screen, then back again. His mouth opened like he meant to argue, but nothing came out. He punched in her code, line by line, and almost immediately, the system stabilized.
“Holy shit.” Ino turned to her. “How the hell did you even see that?”
It hit me then. She wasn’t just smart. She had that rare kind of brilliance you couldn’t teach, the kind Satoru always had, like it was wired into his bones.
Watching her work felt almost painfully familiar. That restless energy. The refusal to accept limitations just because someone older and supposedly wiser said so. The way her mind jumped three steps ahead because it simply couldn't help itself.
It was like staring at a younger version of Satoru. Before everything. Before the expectations. Before the pressure. Before the drugs and the endless weight of being extraordinary.
I told myself bringing her onto the project was purely practical. Her talent was exactly what we needed. When I introduced her to our team, I thought nothing more of it. She was a student—promising with a sharp mind, an investment in the future of neuroscience, if you want to say so. Nothing else.
But maybe that was part of it too. From the very beginning, there was an ease between us I couldn’t explain. Some unspoken closeness that usually took years to build. Maybe she felt familiar because, in some strange way, she was. Some part of me, the part shaped by decades alongside Satoru, recognized her before I even knew what I was seeing. And by the time I realized how close I’d let her get, it was already too late to pull back.
I wasn’t surprised by how Satoru reacted the first time I brought her into the OR. What surprised me was what happened after—when she answered his question without flinching, no hesitation, none of the nervous stammering his presence usually provoked.
To be fair, I thought he’d hate her. She was exactly the kind of student he couldn’t stand—young, stubborn, brilliant enough to know it, and not afraid to challenge authority. The type who walked into a room already convinced they were the smartest one in it.
Normally, Satoru would’ve chewed someone like that up just to prove a point. Call out their poor logic in front of a full OR, pick apart flawed reasoning until the student couldn’t tell if they were still breathing or not. He hated arrogance in people who hadn’t earned it. Hated it more in students who thought they had.
But she wasn’t like the others. She was smart. Not loud-smart or textbook-smart, but sharp in a way that cut straight to the core of a problem. And beneath the confidence, there was control. Restraint. A precision Satoru usually only found in himself.
I’d expected whiplash. A clash. Maybe even the start of his usual fallout he saved for students who thought they were smarter than they were that usually ended with someone crying in the stairwell. But this time?
I didn’t see annoyance in his eyes. Or disdain. I saw interest.
That’s when I knew something was off.
Twenty-five years of friendship teaches you how to spot the shift. The tells he didn’t know he had. With Satoru, it always started the same: left eyebrow, not the right—meant he was surprised. Then the tilt of his head, just slightly, like he needed a new angle to understand what he was looking at. Meant he was intrigued. Then came the narrowing of his eyes.
Meant he was interested, and he didn’t like it.
In all our years together, I'd rarely seen Satoru truly impressed by anyone. He was always the smartest person in the room. Always ten steps ahead. Already bored with the conversation before it began. Students, residents, even other attendings—they were predictable variables to him, operating inside a system he'd already solved.
But she wasn't. She was the first unsolved problem he hadn't already dismissed. I could count on one hand the number of times that's happened.
I knew he hated it and when he repeated her name, I knew we were in uncharted territory. Satoru didn't bother learning names unless they mattered. Unless the person behind them had somehow breached his indifference.
I'd brought her into our world thinking I was nurturing a promising student, advancing our research and all that. I hadn't realized I was introducing Satoru to the one person who might actually be able to reach him—and break him.
Looking back now, I wonder if I would have done anything differently had I known. Probably not. Some chemical reactions are inevitable once you introduce the right elements.
I didn’t think much of it at the time. Satoru getting obsessed with puzzles was nothing new. I figured he’d treat her like any other complex problem—fixate until he cracked the code, then lose interest once the mystery was solved.
I’d seen this pattern play out countless times. A weird case, a challenging research problem, some theory that didn't fit his understanding—he’d drive himself crazy figuring it out, barely eating or sleeping until he could explain it. Then he’d move on to the next thing, always chasing that hit of solving what nobody else could.
I thought she’d be just another challenge for him, that his intensity would push our research forward, maybe even teach him some humility along the way. God knows his ego could use it. But that wasn't how it turned out in the end, was it?
After the surgery I asked him what he thought of her and he said he hated her. I laughed at the time. Maybe because we were both tired after another long shift, maybe because it was actually funny how easily she could get under his skin.
I’ve known Satoru since we were kids. I’ve seen him flirt with countless women, date casually, charm his way through every social situation without breaking a sweat. But I’d never seen him react to anyone the way he reacted to her.
I guess I should have paid more attention. Because the signs were there. The way he’d actually show up on time to meetings she attended. The way he’d listen when she spoke instead of cutting in with his usual impatience. The way he’d argue with her for hours, not to prove himself right like he did with everyone else, but because he actually cared what she thought.
By the time I realized what was happening, the chemical reaction was already well underway. Unstoppable. Irreversible. And I had been so focused on protecting her from hospital politics, from career pitfalls, that I completely missed the more obvious danger.
Satoru Gojo falling for her.
And maybe worse, her falling for him too.
In the beginning, I told myself it didn’t bother me. I was her mentor. Her professor. And the pride I felt when she cracked a difficult equation or solved a problem I’d spent weeks chewing on was professional. Satisfaction in a promising mind. Nothing more. And for a while, that was almost true.
Those early months were some of the best I can remember. Working with her, working with Satoru—it felt easy in a way nothing had in years. Like back at the pond with Eri. Like how it used to be before the weight of everything twisted us into who we’d become. We balanced each other without needing to name it. Pushed each other without ever pushing too far. A perfect team.
But then I caught myself staying later than I needed to just to keep the conversations with her going and discussions that started with data points and neural algorithms slowly slipped into literature, philosophy, stories I hadn’t told anyone in years. I told myself it was harmless. That it was good she challenged me. That I just appreciated the company.
“You’re working too hard,” I said one night, finding her still in the lab long after the others had left.
“Not hard enough,” she said.
I should’ve told her to go home. Told her to rest. Be smarter. Be careful. Instead, I said, “Let me buy you dinner.”
And that night over two bad vending machine sandwiches in the cafeteria became the first of many. Late meals in the break room. Research papers passed between bites of cold noodles. Debates over sugary energy drinks at the crack of dawn. Somewhere between the lab work, we built something else. Something I pretended was just mentorship.
But something shifted, whether I wanted to see it or not.
The way she bit the inside of her cheek when she was reviewing results, like she was holding back a critique she hadn’t finished formulating yet, or the way she tilted her head or tucked her hair behind her ear when she was thinking.
All of it snuck in slow. Quiet. Dangerous in its subtlety. And I was too far in before I realized it.
I’d always taken pride in knowing myself. Even as a kid, when Satoru was burning too bright for his own good, I was the one keeping our feet on the ground. I stayed calm when the system chewed him up. I cleaned the mess after his recklessness left fallout. I was the constant. Predictable. Controlled.
But this... this wasn’t something I could name. Couldn’t put it in a folder and file it away like a case note or a data set. It didn’t behave. It crept in sideways.
I felt it the first time her hands lingered on mine after a surgery that had wrung everything out of me. It had been a long one—some nightmare of a cranial bypass that pushed the team to its limit and left me standing at the scrub sink after, gloves still on, feet numb, mind somewhere stuck on the final suture like it mattered more than the air in my lungs.
I didn’t hear her come in. Didn’t register her presence until her hands reached gently for mine. She peeled the gloves off slowly, carefully, like it mattered that she didn’t rush. Like she knew how tightly I clung to function when everything else started to fray.
She had handwritten notes with her—probably meant to ask something about the experiment we’d shelved that morning—but she dropped them on the edge of the sink without looking, and the pages slid into the basin. Water bled across them. Ink smeared into nothing. She didn’t notice. Or she did, and didn’t care.
She stepped closer and rose slightly onto her toes to reach the back of my head, fingers tender as they untied the knot of my mask, and for one second, just one, I wanted to pull her close and not let go.
Her chest brushed mine as she leaned forward, barely a breath of space between us as she undid the second knot. But she didn’t flinch. Didn’t pull away. Unbothered by the mess of me. And it hit me then—how close we were. How close I’d let her get.
She pulled the mask away, setting it aside, and finally looked up at me. Not with concern. Not even with pity. Just a tiny smile and that calm attentiveness she always carried, like nothing escaped her notice and none of it scared her. And for a heartbeat, I forgot every reason I wasn’t supposed to feel the way I did.
I must’ve made it back to my office eventually. I didn’t even remember the walk. A knock stirred me sometime later.
I blinked against the dim light, my neck stiff from where I’d passed out on the office couch. Someone had draped my jacket over me. I didn’t remember doing that.
The door creaked open and a nurse stepped in with a clipboard in hand. “Sorry, Dr. Geto. Post-op reports from the OR.”
I sat up, muttered a thanks, took the clipboard. She left without waiting for more. I flipped through the pages—scanning vitals, surgical notes, post-op instructions. And then I saw her signature. Tucked at the bottom of the last page.
She’d taken care of everything.
Post-op orders. Equipment logs. Medication sheets. Follow-ups scheduled, rooms cleared, the whole chain managed in silence while I’d been unconscious and useless in my own office.
She wasn’t authorized to handle most of it. Technically. But when you work under the two neurosurgeons who run half the building, people stop asking questions.
She hadn’t left a note. No message. Just her name on the page. And that’s when I felt it. Not the slow pull I’d been pretending wasn’t there. Not the vague irritation I’d mistaken for protectiveness. This was different. Clearer. Sharper. Unignorable.
I felt something for her.
I didn’t name it then. Didn’t let it bloom into anything that could be spoken aloud. But I knew. I knew it the way you know a fracture by the way the bone holds wrong, the way the body tells the truth before the mind catches up.
It stayed quiet, buried under all the roles we were supposed to play—professor, mentor, colleague. It wasn’t loud. But something had shifted. And I wasn’t the same after that. Not really.
I told myself I could handle it. That it didn’t mean anything. But deep down? I already knew better. But what can you do when you realize your best friend since childhood feels the same?
And worse—when she does too?
I noticed it the first time she laughed, really laughed, at something Satoru said. We were in the lab well past midnight after another failed run, everyone tired and a little on edge. Satoru cracked some stupid ass joke, I guess to lighten the mood or whatever, and everyone laughed in that weird way you do when you're running on four hours of sleep.
But her laugh was different. It was the kind of sound that didn’t care who was listening. She threw her head back, wiped at her eyes. It wasn’t even that funny what he said, really. But the way her eyes found Satoru’s across the table, like no one else was there—it stuck. And I felt it then. This strange pull in my chest.
I told myself it was nothing. That I was tired. Overthinking. As if I didn’t know myself better than that.
But the feeling didn’t go away and I noticed it more and more—in small moments, mostly. Like how her gaze lingered on him when he wasn’t looking, how his attention always found her voice first and how he’d finish her sentence when she stumbled through explaining her thought process, or how she’d quietly slide her notes over for him to see—like it was natural to share everything she was thinking.
None of it was obvious, and maybe that’s what made it worse. It crept in, slow and silent, like a shift in gravity I couldn’t prove but couldn’t unsee either.
One night, when we were supposed to be reviewing data in his office, I couldn’t take it anymore.
“You’ve been staring at that photo for ten minutes,” I said, finally, after watching his eyes drift to the same spot over and over again.
Satoru was slouched across from me, elbow on the desk, gaze flicking toward the framed picture on the shelf. It was our research team—a random picture we took a few weeks ago. But he wasn’t looking at the group. I didn’t need to ask who his eyes kept landing on.
“It’s a good picture,” he said.
“Good picture, or someone good-looking in it?”
“You’re reading too much into it.” And the way he said it told me everything I needed to know. Too quick. Too flat. Dismissive in that way Satoru only got when something did matter, and he didn’t want anyone to see it. “Let’s call it a night.”
Maybe it was those small, fragile feelings I didn’t want to name that made it worse when our research project fell apart. Not just because of the failure itself. But because of everything it dragged up with it.
****
By the time surgery day arrived, it felt like we’d been holding our breath for weeks. Our neural interface project had drawn serious attention—journalists, specialists, the kind of people who only showed up when something was either about to change the field or crash spectacularly. If it worked, it would redefine prosthetic integration. If it didn’t, it would be our greatest failure.
Very publicly.
The stakes couldn't have been higher.
That morning, the observation gallery was packed. Doctors. Investors. Even a few camera crews. I’d never seen so many people in one place all pretending they weren’t secretly hoping to witness a train wreck.
We scrubbed in quietly, running through steps we’d memorized a hundred times. She stood next to me, her movements steady as ever but I caught the shift in her breathing, the slightest pause before she pulled on her gloves. Something in the way she adjusted her mask a second time, even though it didn’t need fixing.
“Nervous?” I asked.
She glanced over. “It’s not every day you have an audience like this.”
She was usually the composed one—the calm in any storm, the person who double-checked everything without making it look like she didn’t trust you. Seeing her even a little unsettled did something strange to me. It caught me off guard. Melted something tight and quiet in my chest.
“Remember, they’re here to witness history, but we’re here to make it,” I said, trying to reassure her with a confidence I wasn’t entirely feeling. “We’ve prepared for this. We’re ready.”
She gave a small nod. Nothing flashy, but it was enough. I told myself the words were for her, but I think I needed to hear them just as much.
Just before we entered the OR, I caught her glance up toward the gallery—and I didn’t have to follow her eyes to know who she was looking at. But I did anyway.
Satoru was there, watching her with this look I’d never seen before. Open. Soft. Proud. Something passed between them I wasn’t meant to witness. I felt it twist in my chest, but I pushed it aside. We had work to do.
The rest... I don’t want to think about too closely anymore. The procedure fell apart—nothing connected the way it should’ve, and all our adjustments failed, one after the other.
Then the seizure started.
She left the room when it happened. I don’t blame her for it. She was still young, still is. Probably too young for all what he dragged her into.
I can still see her face as she backed away. Guilt, shock, something close to grief. I wanted to go after her, but I couldn’t—not until we stabilized the patient. By the time I could leave, she was already gone.
I was worried about her. I knew how much she carried, how seriously she took our work. How much it meant to her—same as it meant to me. And here’s the fucked up part: I stopped being worried the moment I saw Satoru leave the gallery the second she stepped out of the OR.
I knew he’d find her. Knew he’d care for her. That should’ve made me feel better. And it did. That was the worst part.
Because yeah, I wanted to be the one to reach her. To say the right thing. But I was also... relieved. That she wasn’t alone. That he could give her what I didn’t know how to. It’s a strange thing, envy and relief, sitting in the same breath.
Afterwards, I smoked. A bit. A lot.
I ended up on the hospital’s back balcony—the quiet one, where no one bothers you if you look like you don’t want to be found.
Failure wasn’t new to me. Not really. Not in this line of work, where even your best isn’t always enough. I’d read the papers, heard the lectures, told myself all the right things—about resilience, about learning from mistakes, about how medicine is as much loss as it is progress.
But none of that helped.
I hated this feeling.
Not in the abstract, not in the intellectual sense. I hated the actual texture of it—how it crept in behind your ribs, how it clung to your skin long after the day ended. I hated the silence after it was over, the way no one said what they were really thinking. The way people looked at you—too gently, like you might break.
And worse, the way you started to look at yourself.
There’s a particular kind of helplessness that comes when you do everything right, and it still fails. When you know the procedure, follow every step, and the body still betrays you. When you’re left standing in an operating room full of people, heart pounding, hands steady—but nothing works.
You can be brilliant. Focused. Meticulous. And still lose.
And that shit rots something deep inside you.
Every time it happens, it chips away at that quiet voice that says you’re good at this. That you’re meant for this. And eventually, you start to wonder if the voice was ever telling the truth.
I lit cigarette after cigarette because I didn’t know what else to do with the failure sitting in my chest, taking up all the space where certainty used to be.
Smoking’s always been my one visible vice. I know exactly what it’s doing to me. But knowledge doesn’t beat habit. And this one’s been with me since forever.
That was always the difference between Satoru and me. He tore himself apart out loud—painkillers, chaos, pushing boundaries until someone noticed. I hid mine in discipline, in routines, in quiet control. But maybe it came from the same place. Maybe we weren’t so different after all.
I was on—I don’t even know what number cigarette—when I heard the door behind me click open.
Her eyes were red, and I hated that I hadn’t been the one there to wipe her tears. And worse—I hated that it wasn’t really my place to want that in the first place.
I asked if she’d cried. Stupid question, I know. But I asked anyway, hoping maybe she’d say “no, I didn’t cry,” and tell me it was just the cold or lack of sleep, or something other that would make all this feel a little less like failure.
But she didn’t say anything. Just looked down at the cigarette in my hand, then at the pile of crushed butts by my feet. I followed her gaze and realized for the first time how many I’d gone through.
I asked if she wanted one. Another stupid question. Like what I needed right now was to drag someone else into nicotine addiction as well. Still, I would’ve given her one. Might’ve even lit it for her, let my hand brush hers for longer than I should have and stayed that close until everything stopped hurting.
But she told me they weren’t good for me, and I almost laughed. Compared to whatever pharmaceutical Satoru was running on these days, cigarettes felt like fucking herbs.
I lit another one.
Then I asked the real question. The one I hadn’t said yet. If she was going to join him—Satoru, I mean—on his version of the neural interface project. Because I knew he was waiting. Knew he’d never liked my cautious models, never trusted slow progress when reckless innovation could give him a bigger headline. He’d been waiting for a moment like this, and I knew he’d take it.
And I knew she wouldn’t say no to him.
So no, her answer didn’t surprise me. She didn’t say yes—but she didn’t have to. I saw it in her eyes. Eyes say more when you’re trying not to give anything away.
And she wasn’t giving anything away.
Not to me, anyway.
The days after the failed surgery were quiet in the worst way. I threw myself into work—consults, lectures, anything that let me keep moving, my hands busy and my mind elsewhere. Satoru, meanwhile, wasted no time pushing forward with his own version of the neural interface—an aggressive approach I’d argued against for months. But to my surprise, Yaga approved it.
And she joined his team. Not a surprise.
I told myself it made sense. She wanted results. He offered results. I was still stuck on protocols and review cycles and playing things safe.
Weeks went by. I pulled back from research altogether, telling myself I needed the distance. That it was temporary. That I'd get back into it once I'd processed the failure—my failure. But if I was honest, I was just avoiding them.
Avoiding the sight of the two of them hunched over the same terminal, finishing each other’s sentences like it was easy. Avoiding the way she smiled at him without thinking. The way his hand would rest on the back of her chair when he leaned in to explain something.
Avoiding the truth I didn’t want to name, if I’m being honest. She’d chosen his approach over mine, his mentorship over mine. His presence in her life over mine.
And yeah, it stung professionally. Of course it did. But that wasn’t the part that kept me up at night. The part I couldn't shake—the part I couldn't say aloud—was that I was jealous. Not of the data, not of the credit, not even of the results.
Of him.
I’d developed feelings for my student. Lines I knew better than to cross had started blurring in my head long before the surgery fell apart. And when she chose him, it wasn’t just my work she stepped away from. It was me.
And feelings like that don’t disappear just because you know you’re not allowed to have them. They sit with you if you want them or not. And the fucking worst was the irony of it all. Becasue for years, I’d been the one reining Satoru in. The one reminding him where the lines were. Pulling him back from the edge every time he veered too close.
Now, I found myself envying his recklessness. His ability to reach for what he wanted, no matter how messy or stupid. While I stood still, choking on restraint.
That was the thing, wasn’t it?
I'd built my whole identity around control. Around being measured, professional, precise—in the OR, in the lab, in life. I was the one who made things work, who kept the foundation from cracking while Satoru thrived on chaos. He didn’t just ignore lines—he redrew them in real time, and somehow people always followed. Professors, patients, students. Her.
And I’d been okay with that, or at least convinced myself I was. I told myself we needed that balance. But lately, I wasn’t so sure anymore. Because control, as it turns out, doesn’t always get you what you want. It gets you stability. It gets you respect. It gets you responsibility and silence and an inbox full of things no one else wants to deal with. And Satoru?
Satoru got the girl.
And it’s so fucking funny becasue I was the one who reminded him not to cross that line, while I was the one choking on it. Every glance I didn’t hold too long. Every comment I didn’t let slip. Every feeling I folded down into something clinical. I didn’t act on anything. Of course I didn’t.
And yet, he did. Or maybe he didn’t have to. Maybe it was just that he existed so loudly, so brilliantly, she couldn’t help but orbit him.
And I stood still. Careful. Quiet. Watching.
Always watching.
Yet even as I envied him, I worried for her. Because I knew what came next. I’d seen the pattern before and it always ended the same way. And when they left—or when he left them—he acted like it didn’t matter. Like he hadn’t let another person see the soft part of him and then pushed them away before they could hurt him.
And I didn’t want her to be his next casualty. Yet I couldn’t say any of it. Because who was I to say anything at all?
So I kept my distance. Watched from the sidelines as they drew closer, while I drifted quietly further away from both of them. Not all at once, not because of some big thing or betrayal, but in the way erosion happens—slow, silent, unremarkable until one day there’s a canyon where there used to be solid ground.
Satoru and I had made it through worse, or at least I thought we had. But something between us shifted during those weeks. It wasn’t just professional disagreement anymore. It was the lack of unspoken understanding—the confidence we used to have in each other’s decisions, the sense that we were always moving in the same direction, even if we took different paths to get there. And maybe that’s where it began to fall apart—
No.
Stop that.
I’m doing it again, right?
Spiraling into theories won’t change what happened. And this isn’t about rewriting cause and effect like I’m still in the lab trying to model failure from a cleaner angle.
Back then, I didn’t even know what the hell I was feeling. Not really. I shoved it down, put my head down, did the work. Surgeries, lectures, data sets. Keep moving, keep pretending. I told myself that was control. That was maturity.
What a fucking joke.
But it worked. For a while, anyway.
I was fine.
Or close enough to pass.
****
A few weeks later, I was back on my feet like nothing had happened. Same routine, same grind.
The day had started with an emergency craniotomy—unexpected, complicated, and the kind of case that demanded more focus than I had to spare. I got through it. Barely.
No time to breathe afterward, either. I was shuffled straight into a lecture hall full of third-years who couldn’t tell a cerebellum from a cortical shadow. Did my duty. Explained what they should’ve already known. Answered questions that made me question the curriculum, and walked out more drained than I’d been in weeks.
Back in my office, I had a stack of exams to grade. Underwhelming essays, mostly. I’d planned to get through them quickly, head home, maybe eat something that hadn’t come out of a vending machine or been reheated twice.
I was halfway through an agonizing essay in which the student confused the amygdala with the hippocampus when the knock came.
“Come in,” I said, not looking up.
The door opened, and then a voice: “You forgot this.”
I glanced up when Dr. Kimura stepped in, holding my jacket. “You left it behind after your lecture. I figured if I didn’t grab it, one of the students would.”
I blinked, a little disoriented. I hadn’t even realized it was missing.
“Thanks,” I said, rubbing at my face. “Appreciate it.”
Mio Kimura was the new head of pharmacology, sharp in every way that mattered, with a clinical wit and a kind of elegance that didn’t falter under pressure. We’d sat on a few panels together, shared the occasional tired conversation between meetings. Always professional. Always polite.
“Long day?” she asked, as she set the
“Emergency surgery this morning. Then three hours of students asking if dopamine is a hormone.”
She huffed a small laugh. “Ah, the future of medicine. We’re in such good hands.”
“Yeah,” I said, leaning back. “Just hoping I’m not the one they’re operating on when the time comes.”
“Morbid optimism.”
“After three hours of explaining basic neurochemistry to students who should know these things by now, it’s hard not to be a little pessimistic.”
Kimura smiled and shifted her weight, one foot to the other, then, “You know... that thing with the neural interface—no one blames you.”
“I wasn’t asking for absolution.”
“Didn’t say you were,” she replied. “Just... don’t let one failure rewrite everything that came before it.”
I don’t know what hit me wrong about her words. Maybe it was just that strange effect that sometimes well-meaning words have.
Recovery had never been my strong suit. Satoru? He failed fast, laughed louder, moved on like gravity never quite reached him. I didn’t bounce. I absorbed. Dissected every error until it calcified into something permanent. Scar tissue, but in my head.
It made me precise, but never light. And lately, never enough.
I knew she wasn’t trying to cut. She was being kind—the same way a few others had been lately. A few too many glances from colleagues. A few too many “you okay?” between passing small talk. I thought I’d been hiding it well. Apparently, not well enough.
“I know,” I said. “But thank you.”
“I’ve been meaning to ask,” Kimura said after a moment. “Would you like to get dinner sometime? There’s a new place downtown I’ve been wanting to try.”
A simple question. Uncomplicated.
Under different circumstances, I might’ve said yes. She was everything I should’ve wanted—intelligent, respected, and didn’t ask for more than you were willing to give, but offered enough to make you consider giving it anyway. But I hesitated. Maybe if it weren’t for her.
“I’m flattered,” I said carefully. “But I’m not looking for anything serious.” Which was a lie. I just didn’t want anything serious with Kimura.
Her mouth twitched but she covered it quickly with the grace of someone who’d been told no by sharper men than me.
“It doesn’t have to be serious,” she offered. “Just dinner.”
And I did think about it. Longer than I probably should have. Maybe it would help. A reminder that I could still sit across from someone and talk about things that weren’t broken. A chance to remember what normal human interaction felt like. But even as I entertained the thought, I knew I wouldn’t be able to show up fully. Not with everything else going on around me.
“I don’t think I’d be good company right now,” I admitted, and for once, the honesty felt harder than any excuse would have.
“No need to apologize,” she said. “The offer stands if you change your mind.”
She made it to the door, paused, and looked back. “For what it’s worth, Geto—most of us still consider you the best surgeon in this hospital. One bad outcome doesn’t change that.”
With that, she was gone.
And I was left sitting there, staring at the door like it might open again and offer some version of comfort I’d actually know how to accept.
Most of us still consider you the best surgeon in this hospital.
It should have meant something. Probably did. Coming from someone like her, it wasn’t just a kindness. She was not one to bother with empty praise. But I couldn’t believe it. Not really.
Not when all I could see was the seizure. The neural interface spiking red warnings across the monitor. The patient’s body convulsing on the table while I stood there, two seconds too slow. Not when I couldn’t bring myself to meet her eyes after it was over. Not when the patient’s life slipped through my fingers while the gallery watched from above like it was a performance.
Best surgeon in the hospital.
What the hell did that even mean, when it still wasn’t enough?
I rubbed at my temple, trying to silence the noise in my own head, but the thoughts kept circling. What if it wasn’t just one mistake? What if I’d reached my limit and didn’t know it yet? What if all this time, I’d just been good at hiding the cracks?
What if Satoru really was the better one? Not just louder, not just flashier… but braver? Willing to try what I wouldn’t? Willing to ask for what I never let myself want?
I shoved back from my desk, hard enough that a pen rolled off and clattered to the floor. And then, before I could get a breath—
The door burst open again.
Satoru didn’t knock. Of course he didn’t. His shirt clung to him with sweat, hair damp, breathing sharp like like he’d just sprinted across campus. Running clothes, no bag, no effort to clean up before barging in.
He dropped a stack of papers onto my desk without so much as a greeting. “Need your opinion,” he said. “We’re almost ready for the first trial, and Yaga’s on my ass to move faster.”
This was how it had always been. Him crashing through the door like a storm, disrupting whatever I was working on (not that I was working on anything, but that’s beside the point). Once, that energy had been familiar—welcome, even. These days, it felt more like a burden I wasn’t sure I had the energy for.
“You just ran five kilometers to ask me about this?” I said, already reaching for the pages.
“Twenty,” he corrected, pacing across my office like standing still for too long might kill him. “Couldn’t sit still. So? What do you think? Are we ready?”
I scanned the printouts. Protocols, projected success rates, surgical outlines—his typical brilliance, structured just enough to pass inspection, reckless enough that I could already see where the risk lived.
“The approach is strong,” I said slowly, “but there’s still a risk of—”
“Yeah, I know. But we’ve mitigated that with the new algorithm,” he cut in, barely listening. His pacing didn’t stop. “I need to know what you think. Honestly.”
He’d been working out more lately. Not that it was my business but he looked like he hadn’t stopped moving in hours. And he kept flexing his fingers like they couldn’t quite settle, like there was too much electricity in his veins and nowhere for it to go.
“You’ve been working out more,” I said, careful not to make it sound like anything more than an observation.
“Helps clear my head.”
“Clear it of what?”
He froze for a sec. “What do you think? My mind keeps going to her. I try to stop it. I really fucking try. But it doesn’t—” He broke off, shaking his head. “I just can’t.”
That irritated me. Not because I didn’t already know, but because he never said things like that out loud. Not to me. Not to anyone.
“So... cardio,” I offered, dry.
“Yeah. Since the kind of cardio I actually want to do isn’t an option.” He laughed and scrubbed both hands through his damp hair, gripping it at the roots. “And jerking off just makes it worse.”
I winced—the last thing I wanted to think about was him jerking off to the thought of our student. “Jesus, Satoru."
“I know—sorry. But I can’t stop. I don’t even know what the hell she did to me. I don’t get it. I don’t understand it myself.”
For a second, I thought he might actually have a mental breakdown right there in my office. I didn’t want to feel sympathy. But I did. Because the truth was, I understood. More than he probably realized. That feeling of wanting something you’re not allowed to want.
“Satoru—”
“I know what you’re going to say. And don’t worry. I’m not pursuing her. I swear. I just need… distraction. Something to keep me from doing something stupid.”
He said it like a promise. But it didn’t sound like one.
Satoru had never been great at restraint—especially not when it came to the things he wanted. Arguing with him would’ve been pointless. It always was. You push Satoru directly, and he digs in out of sheer spite. The only way to steer him was sideways.
“Let’s get coffee,” I said, already pulling on my jacket. “You can brief me properly once you stop dripping sweat all over my office.”
Five minutes later, we were parked on one of the benches outside the university cafeteria. Same place we’d always gone, years ago, when we were just two overconfident med students who thought the world would rearrange itself around our brilliance.
Satoru had a coffee and some sugary abomination he probably stole off a children’s menu. I had an espresso and a headache.
I flipped through the research while he watched students pass like he wasn’t seeing any of them. The data was good—annoyingly so. The risks were still there, but minimized. Her handwriting. I knew it. They’d made progress. Real progress. And as much as I wanted to pick it apart, I couldn’t.
“You’re ready,” I said eventually, closing the file. “Your approach is solid. So why the hell are you this nervous? That’s not like you.”
He didn’t answer right away. Just stared into his cup like it might give him the right words. The usual arrogance was gone, or maybe just thinned enough for the truth to bleed through.
“I can’t fuck this up,” he said. “Can’t stand seeing her cry. Not again.”
It wasn’t about the research. It never was. His fingers tightened around the cup.
It was strange seeing him like this.
The man sitting next to me wasn’t the boy who used to light firecrackers in the faculty lot or argue with professors just to prove he was smarter. He wasn’t even the surgeon who once walked out of a failed procedure and still managed to charm the review board into doubling his grant.
But I'd never seen him like this—so completely, utterly in the grip of something he couldn't control. Not even during the worst of his addiction. And that was saying something.
“You’re really gone for her,” I said.
Not a question. He didn’t bother pretending otherwise. Instead, he set his coffee down and turned toward me.
“I never apologized to you.”
“For what?”
“Everything. You’ve always stuck with me, even when I didn’t deserve it. I didn’t mean to steal your research. Or her.” He hesitated, which wasn’t like him either. “I just… I saw a chance to do something right.”
Satoru didn’t apologize. Not with words. His remorse usually came in the form of overcompensation—buying a coffee he’d pretend was for himself, fixing problems he caused without ever acknowledging them aloud. He’d make grand gestures when no one was watching and act like they meant nothing.
But this—this was an apology. Maybe not a clean one. Maybe not even a fair one. But it was as close as he could get. And I didn’t know what to do with it.
“It’s fine,” I said, because that’s what you say when you don’t know what else to say. “Just don’t mess it up.”
We both knew I wasn’t talking about the research.
“It’s not fine. I know you’re still pissed about your research failing. You don’t show it, but I know you. I know the bug boy’s still in there somewhere, taking notes on all the ways this went wrong.”
“I’m not a bug boy anymore, Satoru.”
“Maybe not. But you’re still you. Still carrying failure like if you punish yourself hard enough, it’ll change the outcome.”
I glanced sideways at him. “Sorry I’m not out there running twenty kilometers like a maniac to sweat out my trauma.”
“Ouch.” He let out a low huff, not quite a laugh. “I’m gonna let that slide because you’re a dumbass. And because I deserve it.” Silence, then he added, softer this time, “We really got old, huh?”
“Yeah,” I said. “We did.”
We sat in silence after that. The sun was warm on our faces, the kind of afternoon that softened everything, if only for a minute. And for a second, it felt like nothing had changed. Like we were still just two idiots with too much ambition, dreaming about the future like it wouldn’t one day burn us alive.
Then Dr. Kimura passed by. She gave me a polite nod—nothing more—and kept walking without so much as a glance at Satoru.
“She’s pissed at you, or what?” he asked once she was out of earshot. Satoru had a knack for reading people, even if he didn’t always know what to do with the information.
“She asked me out,” I said. “I turned her down. Wasn’t very subtle about it.”
“You’re always so serious. Would it kill you to let someone like you?”
And I hated how hard his word hit. Let someone like me? As if I had a choice. As if I hadn’t already let someone in, only to watch her fall for someone else. And not just anyone. Him.
Of course it was easy for him to say that. The woman I could barely admit I wanted was already halfway in love with him, and that thought twisted into something ugly. So I shot back without thinking.
“And you don’t take anything seriously,” I snapped. “She’s not just another number in your phone. She’s our student. You don’t get to screw around with that.” And just like that, we weren’t talking about research anymore.
His expression hardened. “I’m not screwing around.”
“You sure? Because it’s not just you who gets burned when it goes bad.”
“You think I don’t know that?”
“I think you’re reckless. Always have been. I’ve seen how this goes with you. You want something and then you’d run it straight into the ground.”
He stood suddenly, coffee cup crushed halfway in his grip, liquid sloshing over the rim. “She’s not a fucking fling, Suguru.”
“Then prove it,” I said, rising to meet his eyes. “Prove it by walking away.”
Voices around us dropped. A few heads turned, and you could feel the odd shift in a room when something private becomes a little too loud.
Satoru stared at me. “You don’t trust me.”
“No,” I said. “I don’t.”
“You think I don’t care? That I haven’t been trying to get this right—”
His hand suddenly spasmed. The coffee cup slipped, hit the ground with a wet slap, and brown liquid spilled across stone. He didn’t move to clean it up. Just stared at his fingers like they’d betrayed him. The tremor hadn’t stopped.
“How long’s that been happening?”
He didn’t answer.
“How are you, Satoru?” I asked. “Really.”
“I’m fine.”
“You’re not. And you can’t lie to me about this. Not again.”
He turned his hand over, watching his own movements strangely detached. “It’s under control.”
“Is it? Because from where I’m standing, it looks like resting tremor. So, you’re either in withdrawal again or you’ve built up a tolerance so high your system’s folding under the ceiling effect.”
We’d done this before. Over and over. Same goddamn script, same stubborn deflection, same brick wall I kept slamming into like an idiot expecting it to give.
“It’s not that,” he said.
“Then what is it? Sleep deprivation? Autonomic dysregulation? Adrenal fatigue? Hyperthyroid crash? Don’t bullshit me, Satoru.”
“You done diagnosing me?”
“No. Not even close,” I snapped, eyes narrowing. “You’re sweating through your shirt, you haven’t blinked in a minute, and your fine motor control’s shot. You’re in fucking freefall.”
He turned away.
“You really think if you pretend hard enough, no one sees it?” I pushed.
“I said I’m fine,” he snapped. “No need to worry.”
“You’re not fine,” I bit out. “You’re showing classic signs of parasympathetic failure and you’re leading a surgical trial with a patient load that could bury you—”
His gaze snapped to mine then. “Shut the fuck up, Suguru.”
The air went still.
But I didn’t flinch. I just exhaled slowly, centering myself.
Because for him to snap like that meant I’d hit something raw. A nerve. A weak point. And weak points don’t form without feeling. He really did care for her. More than he wanted to admit.
“Listen to me,” I said. “If you get close to her—and she finds out about this—it’ll destroy her and I won’t stand by and watch that happen.” I saw the hit land. Didn’t stop. “So keep your fucking distance.”
He bent to gather the papers he’d dropped, hands still trembling slightly. “Thanks for the advice. But I have it under control.” His voice was clipped. Dismissive. Final. “You should get some air,” he added as he turned. “Run some laps. Heard it helps.”
And then he walked away.
I watched him go, and something heavy settled in my chest, smoldering like the end of a cigarette left for dead.
He wouldn’t listen. He never did—not when it came to the things he wanted. And something told me he wanted her more than anything.
In the end, we were both fools. Him, for chasing something he shouldn’t touch. Me, for pretending I wasn’t reaching for the same thing.
I stayed on the bench long after he’d gone, watching the shadows stretch across the courtyard like cracks in something once whole. My coffee had gone cold. Forgotten. My thoughts circled like vultures and beneath it all, a quiet certainty pulsed like a fault line under my ribs—something was going to give.
Satoru, for all his promises, wouldn’t stay away. I knew that. And when the fallout came, because it would, I’d be left to clean up the wreckage. As I always was.
Maybe this was always going to happen. Maybe we’d used up all our luck.
For years, we walked the tightrope without falling—genius and control, chaos and caution, perfectly calibrated just enough to survive each other. But everything has a cost. And maybe this was ours. Maybe she was the price.
I used to believe we were unshakable. Now I think the crack was always there. Maybe this was the moment it started to give. And maybe the tragedy isn’t that we’re breaking now. Maybe it’s that we thought we never would.
I crushed the empty coffee cup in my hand, tossed it into the bin, and walked away. The courtyard was nearly empty now, all the noise and motion drained away with the light.
Whatever came next, one thing was certain: We couldn’t go back to what we were. And I couldn’t keep pretending I hadn’t already stepped past a line I swore I wouldn’t cross.
There was only forward now.
Into whatever storm waited on the other side.
masterlist + playlist + ao3 + support my writing
<- prev chapter | finished <3
author's note — wooaa it's done !! it always feels so good to wrap something up, now i'm back to the familiar dread of having to continue the actual stories oh my haha (and studying for an exam soon, which this was a very convenient excuse to postpone studying for).
i hope you all enjoyed the sidestories of suguru <3 i loved writing them and can't wait to have more air to continue the main stories. as always, thank you so much for engaging with my writing, your messages always make me the happiest. until next time! <3
tags — @buni-bunnydoll @nariminsstuff @panteramarron @starlightanyaaa @myahfig4
@depressedemosantaclaus @nanamis-baker @paolarox01 @shoruio @rosso-seta
@bnha-free-writing @gojoswaterbottle @sadmonke @ihearttoru @sunflxwerhunny
@momoewn @plixy @yokosandesu @nakariabnrb @fairygardenprincesss
@lymsfm @mylovelessnightmare @wiseearthquakebeliever @sujiroses @sunflxwerhunny
@gojossugarcandy @cosmotoic @syubseokie @wiserion @ziggy0stardust
@roseadleyn @nanasukii28 @jeon-blue @justwannasleep @cosmic-har
@grignardsreagent @browrm @rosebluod @bloopsstuff @tofumiao
@chiyokoemilia @bonequinhagojo @mikkmmmii @sunflxwerhunny @moonlightwriter
@yeiena @coeqi @faustina @glenkiller338 @yenmrtnz
© lostfracturess. do not repost, translate, or copy my work.
𝐘𝐨𝐮 𝐦𝐚𝐧𝐚𝐠𝐞𝐝 𝐭𝐨 𝐬𝐮𝐫𝐯𝐢𝐯𝐞 𝐝𝐞𝐚𝐭𝐡 𝐨𝐧𝐜𝐞 𝐚𝐥𝐫𝐞𝐚𝐝𝐲 𝐰𝐡𝐢𝐥𝐞 𝐲𝐨𝐮 𝐰𝐞𝐫𝐞 𝐢𝐧 𝐘𝐮𝐣𝐢.
SUGURU'S MEMORIES — PART THREE
featuring — professor geto and professor gojo
summary — before the accolades, before the titles, before the hospital bent around their names—they were just two residents trying to survive. a quiet perfectionist with steady hands, and a white-haired genius unraveling under the weight of brilliance. they were breaking, burning, becoming legends in a system that didn’t care if it killed them first. this is the story of how they rose together—and how the fault lines had started to form.
word count — 8 k
note — this memory flashback is for my ongoing medical AU series. if you've been following "remedies & reasons" and "symptoms & causes," this is a glimpse into the past of our beloved characters from suguru's pov. while it can be read as a standalone, it's best enjoyed as a reader of the main storylines.
warnings — angst, graphic descriptions of injuries, patient death, grief, substance abuse, addiction, relapse, alcohol use, smoking, mental health struggles, references to blood, death and lots of sad things as always.
author's note — eyy this chapter comes unexpectedly fast because the original chapter is over 19k words at the moment and i really don't want to post such a long chapter so i split it up and here comes the first part. so there will be four chapters in total. hope you enjoy as always <3
masterlist + playlist + ao3 + support my writing
<- prev chapter | next chapter ->
I knew it was going to be a shit day the moment I stepped into the hospital and couldn’t feel my toes.
A snowstorm had hit overnight—twelve inches, maybe more—with no signs of stopping. My car hadn’t made it closer than three blocks, so I’d had to trudge the rest on foot. By the time I reached the staff entrance, I was soaked to the knees, freezing, and regretting every life choice that had led me to this point in my life.
“Looking rough, Suguru,” Satoru called from down the hall as I stomped snow off my boots at the entrance to the surgical wing.
Naturally, he looked like he’d just walked off a fucking magazine cover. Not a hair out of place. Not a wrinkle or stray thread in sight on his scrubs. No coffee stains, no sweat, no evidence he even had pores. Just Gojo.
I wanted to punch him.
“Fuck off,” I muttered, running a hand through my damp hair.
They said things would get better after university. That once we were residents, it’d feel like we actually knew what we were doing. Like we’d hit some kind of stride.
Yeah. No.
Turns out, residency just meant screwing up on a bigger stage. Still no sleep, still no answers—just more people calling you doctor while you silently hoped you won’t kill someone by accident.
Satoru, of course, thrived on it. Or at least he made it look that way. Always flashing that damn smile, walking into rooms like he owned them, like nothing could go wrong because he was there to prevent it. Patients loved him for it. I envied it, though I’d never admit it out loud. He’d never let me live it down.
Snow had been falling for three days straight. Everything outside the hospital frozen to a halt, streets swallowed in white, transit shut down, ambulances delayed. And still, the ER was packed. Slips on ice, accidents on barely drivable roads, frostbite, hypothermia. The colder it got, the dumber people seemed to become. And we were the ones patching them back together, one freezing idiot at a time.
It started as another twelve-hour shift. I stayed longer. One hour turned into five, then a full day. I’d stopped counting somewhere past the twenty-eight-hour mark.
Satoru had disappeared into the chaos sometime early on. I hadn’t seen him in what felt like forever, though time stopped making sense hours ago. You stopped thinking in hours and started measuring in caffeine doses and how many times your pager had gone off since the sun came up. Or down. I couldn’t tell anymore.
We were residents. Technically still learning, which was funny, because we were also the ones running trauma intakes, fielding consults, and stitching people back together while barely remembering our own names.
The logic was something like: You’re new. You should probably be supervised. Also, here’s a scalpel. Figure it out.
It was a miracle we didn’t kill someone every shift. Not from incompetence—just from pure, systemic exhaustion. They threw us into the deep end and called it training. Satoru once said if we made it through residency without a god complex or a substance addiction, we were statistical anomalies.
I wasn’t laughing.
Asking for help felt like failure. Making it through a thirty-hour shift without losing a patient felt like a win—until you remembered the next one started in six hours.
I was in my early twenties. Legally an adult, technically a doctor, but I still felt like a kid playing dress-up in scrubs. Too young to rent a car without extra insurance, but apparently old enough to make life-and-death decisions on three hours of sleep and a vending machine diet.
Medicine was supposed to be about care. But all we were learning was how to run on empty, how to compartmentalize, how to keep moving even when you couldn’t remember the last time you’d eaten or gone home or seen sunlight.
And somehow, that was the expectation. Not the exception.
“Dr. Geto, you’re up.”
A chart landed in my hand. I didn’t even see who gave it to me. Another trauma. Sixty-two-year-old male. Slipped on ice outside his apartment. Skull fracture possible. Definitely concussed.
Great.
I nodded, too tired for words, and pushed myself in that direction. My legs felt like someone had poured concrete into my bones, but stopping wasn’t an option. It never was. I couldn’t remember the last time I’d slept—twenty hours ago? Perhaps longer.
“You look like hell.”
Satoru appeared beside me like a creepy hallucination, sipping from a paper cup. His eyes were too bright, that usual lazy smile tugging at his lips, like he hadn’t just worked the same hellshift I had. I hated him a little for that.
“Haven’t seen you in twenty hours,” I said, or maybe it was longer. It was hard to tell. “Didn’t miss you.”
“Sure you didn’t.” He took another sip. I could smell it—burnt and bitter, the vending machine’s finest. I snatched it out of his hand and drank. Lukewarm. Disgusting. Better than nothing.
“You’re welcome,” Satoru said, unfazed. The fact that he didn’t even protest told me everything. He was just as exhausted as I was. He was just better at hiding it.
“Another head trauma?”
“Yeah. Probably the tenth one today.” I shoved the chart under my arm and kept walking. “You’d think people would’ve figured out how ice works by now.”
“You’d think. But if people made smart decisions, we’d be out of a job.”
I snorted. He wasn’t wrong.
“How many surgeries have you done since this shitstorm started?” I asked, even though I already knew the answer would piss me off.
“Lost count after eight,” he said, like it was nothing. “Last one was bad. Multiple fractures. Internal bleeding. Guy tried to make it home from work. Skidded into a telephone pole.”
“Make it?”
“Barely. Touch and go for a while. But you know. I’m just that good.”
He flashed that insufferable grin—but it didn’t last. That was the thing about Satoru. People saw only the arrogance and missed everything underneath. The way he carried every loss like a scar no one else was allowed to see. Like it was his fault for letting them die.
“You’re an ass,” I said and handed him back his coffee.
Before he could come up with a comeback, the trauma bay doors slammed open. Paramedics burst through with a stretcher. The patient—a woman, mid-twenties maybe—was screaming. Blood soaked through the sheets beneath her, pooling dark and fast, trailing behind them as they rushed her in.
“What happened?” I asked, already moving, exhaustion disappearing like it had never been there.
“Multi-car pileup on the highway,” one of the paramedics shouted. “She went through the windshield. Multiple lacerations, probable internal bleeding, definite head trauma.”
Satoru fell into step beside me. “Bay four’s open.”
“Dr. Geto!” Another nurse appeared, her face pale. “The skull fracture in bay three—he’s crashing!”
I caught Satoru’s eye. No words needed. We’d done this a hundred times before.
“I’ve got her,” he said, already steering the stretcher toward the bay. “You take three.”
I nodded once, turned, and sprinted. Behind me, I could hear Satoru’s voice barking orders—calm and authoritative despite the chaos.
The monitors in bay three were screaming. The patient was seizing on the table, blood pressure plummeting.
“He just started seizing!” the nurse yelled. “BP’s dropping fast.”
“Crash cart—now!” I said, grabbing the patient’s shoulders to keep him from sliding off the bed. “Page neurosurgery. Stat.”
After that, it blurred.
Seizures were just the beginning. An epidural hematoma, ugly and expanding fast. I stabilized him enough to get him to emergency surgery, handed him off to neuro, and before I could exhale, I was pulled into another bay.
Then another.
Then another.
Outside, Tokyo stayed buried in white. Inside, we drowned in red.
Somewhere around hour thirty-one of what had started as a twelve-hour shift, I found myself in OR 2 with a woman in her early thirties. Mother of two, according to the paramedics. She’d been walking home from the train station when a car lost control on the ice, jumped the curb, and pinned her against a wall.
Her injuries were catastrophic. Crushed pelvis. Ruptured spleen. Punctured lung. Multiple internal bleeds that refused to stop, no matter what I did.
My hands moved on autopilot, my brain locked into survival math. Blood loss rates. Pressure curves. Organ viability. None of it looked good.
“More suction,” I snapped. “I need a better view.”
“BP’s dropping—eighty over forty,” the anesthesiologist called.
“Damn it.” I worked faster. “Get me exposure on the retroperitoneum. I need a vascular tray, now.”
“She’s in V-fib!”
The monitors screamed as her heart began to shudder uselessly.
“Starting compressions,” the intern said, voice tight, barely holding back panic.
“Hold compressions. Charging to 200. Clear.”
Her body jolted. Flatline.
“Again. 300. Clear.”
Nothing.
“Push an amp of epi. Resume compressions.”
We worked her for forty-five minutes. Four shocks. Three rounds of epi. Eight units of blood. Vasopressors cycling through a list I could’ve recited in my sleep. CPR handed off from one trembling set of arms to another.
I felt the shift in the room—the air thinning as everyone began bracing for the moment we’d have to stop.
Across the drape, the anesthesiologist met my eyes. Grim. “Asystole. No cardiac activity.”
Technically, I should’ve waited for an attending to pronounce. But no one was coming. Not tonight. I glanced up at the clock.
“Time of death, 2:17 a.m.”
Silence fell.
I stood there for a moment, staring down at her. Blood spattered my gloves, my gown. Someone—maybe the scrub nurse—placed a hand on my shoulder. I shook it off without thinking and walked out.
In the scrub room, I tore off the gloves and gown and slammed them into the biohazard bin. Washed my hands until the water ran pink. Scrubbed until the blood vanished down the drain and only the sting of soap remained.
I couldn’t face another case. Not another one. I needed a minute. One fucking minute.
I ended up in the east stairwell behind radiology—the one no one used unless they wanted to disappear. It was quiet there. No monitors screaming. No trauma teams shouting orders. Just the distant howl of the storm clawing at the windows and the low hum of the heating system fighting a losing battle against the cold.
I sank down onto the steps, elbows on my knees, head in my hands.
Somewhere out there, two kids were going to wake up without a mother.
Because of me.
Because everything I had to give still wasn’t enough.
Then the door creaked open behind me. I didn’t need to look up to know who it was.
“Go away, Satoru.”
“No.” He dropped onto the step beside me. “Not happening.”
I finally looked up. He’d changed into a clean set of scrubs. Meanwhile, I was still in the same set I’d been wearing for hours—stiff with dried blood. And yet, the exhaustion clung to him just as visibly. The dark circles under his eyes, that tight, hollow look around his mouth. He looked worse than he usually let anyone see.
“I heard about your patient,” he said.
“Which one? The epidural bleed? The teenager with the femur fracture? Or the mother of two who bled out despite everything I tried?”
“The last one.” He didn't offer any bullshit condolences or false comfort. Just reached into his pocket, pulled out a small glass bottle, and handed it to me without a word. “Hospital contraband. Don't tell anyone.”
I took it without hesitation. Alcohol burned its way down, searing a path through the numbness. For the first time in hours, I actually felt something.
“Neurology said the skull fracture kid pulled through,” Satoru added, leaning back, legs stretched out in front of him. “Your call saved his life.”
“Doesn’t make up for the one I lost.”
“It does to him. And to his family.”
I wanted to believe that. I really did. But sitting there, staring at the snow melting against the stairwell window, I wasn’t so sure anymore.
Loss didn’t balance itself out. Wins didn’t erase failures. There’s no ledger, no cosmic math to make it even. Every death stays with you. Every one leaves a hole no amount of success can fill.
Sometimes I wondered if that’s all we were doing—playing the odds against death, pretending like maybe, if we worked hard enough, our occasional victories meant something.
Save a life today, lose three tomorrow. Stop a brain bleed, only to watch them die of cancer five years later. Rebuild a spine, then lose them to a heart attack no one saw coming.
It never added up. It never made sense. And the universe never gave a damn how many nights we stayed awake or how much blood we washed off our hands. Death always won in the end. Always.
Two kids would grow up without a mother now. And nothing I could do—no number of “saves” or successful surgeries—was ever going to make that okay.
Sometimes, I’d think about all the people I’d lost. All the names I couldn’t forget. We told ourselves we were making a difference. But were we? Or were we just slapping tourniquets on severed arteries, pretending we had control over forces we barely understood?
We told ourselves it meant something. That it mattered. But more and more, it just felt like bleeding out in slow motion.
I didn’t say any of that out loud. I didn’t have the energy to explain the kind of tired that crawled deeper than muscle and bone. So I just stared out at the snow. Cold and endless, swallowing everything. Falling and falling, like all the lives we couldn’t save, piling up until you couldn’t tell where one ended and the next began.
Like it would never stop.
I lit a cigarette with hands that still smelled faintly of blood and took a long drag, letting the smoke burn its way through the pain in my chest.
“I haven’t told her family yet. No one’s told them.”
Satoru glanced over, quiet for a beat. “That’s not your job. The attending’s supposed to handle it.”
“He’s still stuck in surgery. God knows when he’ll make it out.”
Another silence stretched between us.
“You don’t have to do it alone, you know,” he said. “I’ll go with you.”
I turned my head. No smirk. No smartass comment. Just Satoru—my best friend since childhood—as exhausted as I was, but offering me something he knew I couldn’t ask for. But before I could say anything, the stairwell door creaked again.
Sukuna stumbled in, looking like death. His surgical cap was pushed sideways, scrubs wrinkled and stained, mask dangling from one ear. He dropped onto the step below us like his knees had given out.
“Figured I’d find you two hiding,” he said, eyeing the bottle beside me. “Please tell me there’s enough left to share.”
I passed it down without a word. He took a long drink, winced like it hurt going down, and handed it back.
“Lost a sixteen-year-old,” Sukuna said flatly. “Snowboarding accident. Massive head trauma. Brain dead before he even hit the OR, but the parents made us try everything anyway.” He scrubbed a hand down his face. “Two hours of surgery just so they could say we didn’t give up.”
“Shit,” I muttered, taking another drag from my cigarette.
“Yeah.” Sukuna leaned back against the steps, eyes fixed on nothing. “I hate winter. I hate snow. I hate teenagers who think they’re immortal.” He let out a hollow laugh. “We should move somewhere warm. Beach town or something.”
“Yeah,” Satoru said dryly. “And get stuck with drowning surfers and shark attacks. Sounds like a dream.”
None of us laughed.
We just sat there, passing the vodka bottle like a lifeline nobody wanted to hold for too long.
“We’ve been at this over twenty hours,” Satoru said eventually, voice low. “And judging by the sirens, it’s not slowing down.”
“Three more multi-car pileups in the last hour,” Sukuna confirmed. “ER’s overflowing. Again.”
I took another sip from the bottle. “I don’t know how much more of this I can take.” I didn’t even bother trying to sound tough about it.
“Remember when we thought residency was going to be the fun part?” Sukuna said, voice faint.
“You’ll finally get to do real medicine,” I said, mimicking one of our professors. “It’s where you learn who you really are.”
“The hard part’s just getting matched,” Satoru added, snorting. “Sure. Real hard part.”
“This first year’s been hell.” I leaned back against the wall, feeling every vertebra protest. “Thirty-hour shifts. Attendings breathing down our necks. Nurses looking at us like we’re walking malpractice suits. Half the time I don’t even know what I’m doing.”
“Don’t forget the notes,” Satoru groaned. “I spend more time writing than I do than actually seeing patients.”
“And the damn quizzes,” Sukuna added. “Yaga grilled me for half an hour yesterday on some obscure nerve branch while I was trying not to pass out.”
“At least in university we could hide in the back,” I said. “Now we’re the ones getting shredded first.”
“We were so damn eager,” Sukuna said. “So ready to be real doctors.”
“Starting to think med school was a scam,” I said. “Should’ve quit while I was ahead. Opened a bar or something.”
“You’d make a terrible bartender,” Satoru replied with a faint smile. “You’d get fired in a week for telling the drunks exactly what you thought of them.”
“Yeah?” I shot back, dry, stamping out my cigarette against the stairs. “You’d drink half the stock before closing.”
No heat behind it. No fight. Just that particular kind of tired that soaked all the way through and stayed there.
Suddenly, Sukuna’s pager went off, shrill against the silence. For a second, it felt like the thread holding us together snapped. Too thin. Too worn. Pulled tight until it gave way under the weight of the next emergency.
He checked the screen and muttered something under his breath before shoving himself upright, every movement stiff. And I almost felt sympathy for him.
It wasn’t exactly a secret that I hated Sukuna most days—hated the way he broke rules like they didn’t apply to him, hated the way he gambled with outcomes the rest of us were still trying to keep steady. But even I had to admit it was hard to hate someone who sometimes saved your ass when you were two minutes from collapsing in the middle of an OR.
Like the night Satoru collapsed during rounds—forty-eight hours into a shift. Before anyone could notice, Sukuna dragged him into an empty call room and stitched a cover story so clean the attending never suspected a thing.
Or the time I wrote an order for the wrong dosage—double what the patient could tolerate. I was running on two hours of sleep and didn’t catch it. But Sukuna did. He flagged the pharmacist before it went through, rewrote it under my login, and never said a word.
Loyalty wasn’t the word most people used for him. But it was there. Buried somewhere under all his bullshit and bad calls.
You didn’t get to choose who had your back in a place like this. Sometimes the people you trusted least were the ones still standing beside you when everything else went to hell. And I knew he hadn’t had it easy either. Not that he talked about it. Not that any of us really did. Satoru didn’t. I didn’t. We just kept moving.
And that made it harder. Harder to hate him. Harder to forgive him. Harder to draw clean lines in a place that never stopped bleeding. In the end, we were all just surviving. Some of us more messily than others.
I don’t think I ever thanked Sukuna properly. Funny, the things you don’t realize you should hold onto until they’re already slipping through your hands.
“Not immediately urgent,” Sukuna said, pocketing his pager. “But I gotta head back down. Another skull fracture coming in. Sledding accident this time.” He moved slowly, like every step cost him something. “God, I’m so done with this day.”
“Aren’t we all,” I muttered.
Satoru grabbed Sukuna’s sleeve before he could leave. “Hey. You got anything on you? I’m dead on my feet.”
Sukuna reached into his pocket. “Modafinil.”
Satoru took it without a word. “This isn’t gonna hit fast enough.”
Before I could say anything, he dropped the pill onto the step between us and pulled out his hospital ID card. Quick, practiced motion—he crushed it into fine powder like he’d done it a hundred times.
“Seriously?” I said.
“Don’t judge.” He leaned down and snorted the powder through one nostril. Pulled back fast, blinking hard. “Fuck, that burns.”
“You’re gonna destroy your nasal passages.”
“Better than falling asleep during surgery.” He sniffed hard, wiped his nose. “Hits faster this way.”
“Whatever works,” Sukuna muttered, already turning to leave. “Just don’t let an attending walk in and catch you.”
“You’re a lifesaver,” Satoru said, voice sharper now. Like someone had flipped a switch behind his eyes.
“That’s what they’re training us for, right?” Sukuna tossed the words over his shoulder as he opened the door. “Try not to get reamed before the shift ends.”
“No promises,” Satoru called back.
The stairwell fell quiet again, save for his sniffling as he tried to clear his nose. I watched him for a long moment. His pupils were already starting to dilate.
“You need to get this shit under control.”
“What shit?”
I nodded toward the powder still dusting the step. “This. The pills.”
He waved a hand like I was overreacting. “It’s just to get through shifts. Everyone does it.”
“Not everyone crushes and snorts prescription meds in a stairwell.”
“It’s modafinil, Suguru. It’s not like I’m doing oxy.”
“It’s not oxy this time. But it’s always something, isn’t it?”
Satoru’s eyes narrowed. “What are you, my mother now?”
“I’m your friend, idiot,” I snapped, sharper than I meant to. “And as your friend, I’m telling you—this is getting out of hand. Half the anesthesia department already thinks Sukuna’s skimming from their supply.”
“He’s just trying to survive. Same as the rest of us.” Satoru ran a hand through his hair, exasperated. “This year’s kicking my ass, Suguru. I can’t keep up otherwise.”
“None of us can. That’s the whole point of first year—to break us down and see who’s still standing. But there’s a difference between caffeine pills and snorting goddamn stimulants in a stairwell.”
“I know my limits.”
“Do you?” I asked. “Because from where I’m sitting, you’re pushing them further every week. And I’m not exactly eager to drag you back into rehab again.”
His gaze dropped to the floor. Silence stretched between us.
Finally, he exhaled. “I’ll be more careful.”
Not an apology. Not really a promise. Just a ceasefire. “But right now,” he added, quieter, “we’ve got patients. And I need to be functional.”
I wanted to push. Wanted to grab him by the collar and shake some sense into him. But before I could say anything, his pager went off again.
“Another head trauma,” he muttered, already moving. “Duty calls.”
He stood, movements quick now, clipped. His pupils still wide, his eyes almost unnaturally bright. “Don’t fall asleep in here,” he called over his shoulder. “Stairs’ll kill your back.”
“I’ll survive.”
Satoru hesitated at the door. If only for a second.
“Think about what I said,” I added.
“Yeah,” he replied—so quiet it was barely a sound—and then he was gone.
I leaned back against the cold concrete wall, feeling the last of the adrenaline bleeding out of my system. Left hollow. Left tired in a way sleep wouldn’t fix.
What the hell was I doing with my life? Twenty-five years old, and what did I have to show for it?
A studio apartment I barely stepped foot in. No relationship, no social life to speak of. My only friends were other residents, and half our conversations revolved around patient pathologies or who was getting chewed out by which attending. And now I was watching one of the only people I gave a damn about slip into a pattern I knew would kill him sooner or later.
I pulled out my phone, scrolling mindlessly through notifications I’d been ignoring. Three missed calls from Mom. A handful of texts from Hanami.
[Hanami]: hey dumbass, just checking in. haven’t heard from you in almost two weeks.
[Hanami]: mom’s worried. i told her you're probably just busy saving lives.
[Hanami]: but i’m getting a little worried too. just let me know you're alive?
[Hanami]: i made your favorite mochi this weekend. there's some in the freezer if you ever remember where home is.
The last message was from yesterday. I hadn’t even seen it until now. I stared at the screen for a long moment, thumb hovering over her name. Then I hit call.
I didn’t expect her to answer—it was almost three in the morning—but I let it ring anyway. To my surprise, she picked up on the third ring.
“Suguru?” Her voice was thick with sleep. “Is everything okay?”
“Yeah,” I said, though it didn’t feel true. Suddenly, I felt stupid for calling this late. “Sorry. I just saw your messages.”
“At three in the morning?” A rustle—sheets shifting. “Are you just getting off work?”
“Not exactly.” I hesitated. “It’s been a rough shift. There’s a snowstorm, and we’ve been busy with traumas all night.”
“Oh.” A pause. “Are you okay?”
It was such a simple question. Too simple. And somehow it hit harder than anything else had all night.
Was I okay? I didn’t know anymore.
“I’m just tired,” I said finally. “Really tired.”
“When’s the last time you had a day off?”
I had to think. “Two weeks ago, maybe? Days kind of blur together lately.”
She didn’t answer right away. Then, quietly, “Do you ever regret it? Going into medicine?”
Her words echoed what I hadn’t been able to admit to myself.
“Sometimes,” I said. “On nights like this, yeah.”
Silence.
“How’s Mom?” I asked, because it was easier than sitting in it.
“She misses you. We both do.” No guilt in her voice. No judgment. Just the kind of truth that cut deeper because it didn’t try to. “She keeps your photo on the fridge. From your white coat ceremony. Shows it to anyone who visits.”
I closed my eyes. A tightness rose in my throat. “I’ll try to visit soon.”
“Don’t promise what you can’t give,” Hanami said gently. “Just... take care of yourself, okay? We want you back in one piece.”
“I will,” I said. I wasn’t sure if it was a lie or a wish.
“And Suguru?” Her voice softened. “It’s worth it. What you’re doing. Even if it doesn’t feel like it right now.”
I didn’t know if I believed that anymore. But hearing her say it still mattered. “Thanks, Hanami.”
“Get some sleep if you can.”
“I’ll try.”
“Love you.”
“Love you too.”
I hung up and sat there, phone still in my hand, staring at the dark screen. After a few seconds, the screensaver flickered to life—a photo from graduation. Satoru and me, arms thrown around each other, grins too wide, too sure of the future.
We looked so young. So stupidly certain we were going to change the world. Maybe we had changed something. But sitting alone in a freezing stairwell at three in the morning, I couldn’t remember what it was.
I thought about everything I’d left behind for this life. The birthdays missed. The holidays skipped. The family dinners I was always too busy for. All the versions of myself I’d abandoned along the way—the ones who thought sacrifice automatically meant it would be worth it. And now?
Now I had to stand up. Walk back out there. Find a family waiting for good news that wasn’t coming. Had to look a husband and two kids in the eye and tell them their world had just ended.
And Satoru wasn’t here to do it with me.
I knew it was stupid. Knew it made me sound like a fucking child, but I wished he was. Wished I didn’t have to do it alone. Wished someone else could carry just a piece of it, even for a minute—because I didn’t know how much more weight I could take. But wishing didn’t change anything.
I pushed myself to my feet, every muscle aching like I was twice my age. Shoved the phone into my pocket. Straightened my scrubs with hands that still weren’t entirely steady.
Because that’s what we did. We kept moving. Even when we were falling apart.
The family was waiting in the consultation room. A husband. And I braced myself for the words I didn’t want to say, for the moment when their world would break.
Then I saw him.
Satoru was already there—standing at the far end of the room, voice low and steady, using those careful, practiced tones they taught us but that never made it any easier. He looked tired. Still too bright eyed. But he was there.
I paused in the doorway.
It shouldn’t have hit me the way it did. But it did. Because even after everything—after the pills, the spirals, the arguments—he still showed up. He still carried the weight I thought I’d be left holding alone.
Same as he always had.
I stayed there a second longer, breathing through the ache in my chest, then crossed the room to stand beside him.
He didn’t look at me. He didn’t need to. We both knew why I was there. Because that’s what we did. We showed up. Even when we were breaking.
Especially then.
****
By second year, the fear had changed.
In the beginning, it was sharp—immediate, paralyzing. Every beep of a monitor could be the one that meant you’d screwed up. Every attending’s question was a trap. Every shift was a battlefield, and you were bleeding confidence from the minute you scrubbed in. Now?
Now the panic was gone. Replaced by something colder. Slower. Like rust creeping into joints that used to move fast.
We weren’t scared of killing someone outright anymore. That kind of mistake was rare. That was the kind of thing they made case studies about. But what kept you up at night were the quiet failures. The ones that slipped through the cracks because you were too tired, too rushed, too human. Missed lab value. Delayed call. A decision made one hour—or one second—too late.
That’s what second year was. You didn’t break so much as wear down. No more panic. Just pressure. Always there. Always waiting.
But we’d survived long enough to earn certain privileges. No more being paged at two in the morning for basic labs. No more sprinting to place IVs in every crashing ER patient. Those joys belonged to the new interns now—wide-eyed, hopeful, and already three energy drinks deep by noon. They looked at us the way we used to look at the ones above us: like we were gods. Or monsters. Or both.
We passed them the shit work like a rite of passage. Pretended it was about tradition, not cruelty. Midnight blood cultures. Death certificates delivered to the basement. Stool samples at dawn. “Character building,” we said, echoing the same lie our mentors had told us.
The exhaustion was different now, too. First year had been chaos. Sprints down hallways, adrenaline surges, sleepless nights that felt like dissecting your own brain. Second year was quieter. Heavier. Like a lung collapsing slowly over time. You learned to function inside the fatigue. Smile on autopilot. Make critical decisions when your brain was soup.
We weren’t good. But we were efficient. And some days, that was enough. Then I’d catch my reflection in a window and wonder when I stopped looking like myself.
It was hell, to be honest, and I wouldn’t go back if you paid me—not to the fear, the blood, the blur of cases that all started to look the same, like we were treating the same dying patient over and over, just with a different name.
But we had moments. Slivers of something almost real. Laughter that snuck in between codes. Shared silence that said more than words. Nights we got out early and pretended we were still twenty and not broken by the system. It wasn’t enough. But it was something.
And today? Today we were chasing one of those moments. Trying to remember what it felt like to be human again.
The sun was spilling into the horizon, smearing gold across the battered asphalt of the university’s outdoor court. Satoru’s pass hit me square in the chest—harder than necessary.
Classic Satoru. Even his passes carried a challenge.
“Wake up, Suguru,” he called. “Or has all those slow ass surgeries finally killed your reflexes?”
We were back at the university for what the administration liked to call “research integration”—their way of pretending we were still students, even while they worked us to death in the hospital.
Every Tuesday afternoon, we dragged ourselves from the hospital’s tomb to the university’s slightly less depressing labs. Most residents used the time for actual research. We used it to remember what sunlight felt like.
The court still had the same cracks I’d memorized years ago, back when burnout was just a lecture topic and the future still felt like something we could shape. Now the cracks looked different. Less like wear. More like scars. Familiar. Earned. Permanent.
I slipped past Satoru, letting muscle memory do what conscious thought was too tired to bother with. The ball arced clean off my fingertips, kissed the backboard, and dropped through the net with a satisfying snap.
No crowd. No scoreboard. Still felt good.
I didn’t say anything. Just pulled the crumpled pack of cigarettes from the pocket of my gym shorts, and lit one. “Three in a row,” I said, flicking ash onto the pavement. “You might want to schedule a cognitive eval. Early decline’s a liability in neurosurgery.”
We’d been at it for maybe twenty minutes. One-on-one. No scoreboard. No stakes. Just two people too stubborn to admit they missed it—the weight of the ball, the scrape of sneakers on asphalt, the brief silence where no one was bleeding or coding or calling your name.
“Bold words from a guy actively killing his own gray matter with cigarettes,” Satoru said, grinning like the last twelve-hour shift hadn’t hollowed him out too. “Weren’t you the one who couldn’t remember what day it was last week?”
It had been three days since I’d seen him take anything.
Not that I was counting.
Not that I ever really stopped.
He seemed better these days. Calmer. But not in the way that worried me—more like a storm finally bleeding out its violence into rain. It was good to see him like this. He’d either cut back on the pills… or gotten better at hiding it. I chose to believe the former. Looking back, perhaps I was just afraid to look too closely. Afraid I’d find cracks where I wanted to believe there were none.
“You two still pretending this counts as exercise?” Sukuna called, walking toward us with his gym bag slung over one shoulder. “Looks more like rehab for geriatrics.”
“You’re late,” Satoru said, tossing me the ball. “Anatomy lab run long?”
Sukuna grinned. “Something like that.”
“You mean pediatrics nurse?” I asked, taking a slow drag as he approached.
“Her name’s Akari,” Sukuna said, dropping his bag by the court. “And she’s a resident. Not a nurse. Try to keep up.”
“Oh, excuse us,” Satoru said. “How’s the esteemed Dr. Akari? Still willing to put up with you?”
“Better than anyone puts up with you,” Sukuna shot back, stretching with a crack of his shoulders. “Speaking of—what’s your turnover rate these days? Still setting hospital records?”
Satoru shrugged. “What can I say? Variety’s important. Right, Suguru?”
They both turned to me with those stupid ass grins.
“I’m just trying to survive Ogawa’s chart audits,” I said, bouncing the ball once between my legs, slow. “You can run your sociological studies without me.”
“Deflection,” Sukuna said. “Means our boy’s in a drought. How long’s it been, Suguru?”
I didn’t bother answering. Just stepped back and shot. Clean arc. No rim.
“When’s the last time you made a three-pointer?”
Sukuna laughed. “Fuck you.”
We played until the floodlights came on. Some med students joined in halfway through, their eager faces still unscarred by the reality of what they’d signed up for.
The sound of sneakers on asphalt. The hollow thud of the ball. The insults tossed across the court like second nature.
It all blurred into something that almost felt normal. Like if we kept moving, kept laughing, we could outrun the fracture lines already spidering beneath our feet.
Looking back, I know what that night was. It was the last time the three of us stood side by side, still pretending there was something left to hold onto.
Two months later, Sukuna took a fellowship in Okayama. Said it was for the career. Everyone nodded along, like any of us believed that was the real reason. He didn’t blame him out loud. Never pointed fingers. Didn’t have to. Distance did the talking for him.
He just packed up and left like the place itself made him sick.
Satoru pretended not to notice. Pretended he could laugh it off, work it off, fuck it off. But guilt has teeth. And it was already chewing through whatever was left of him.
The spiral came fast this time. No buildup. No warning. Like he’d been waiting for an excuse to break.
I think about that night sometimes—the one where he showed up at my apartment at two in the morning, high on God knows what, drenched in sweat and barely coherent. He didn’t knock. Just let himself in with the spare key I’d forgotten I gave him.
Panic attack, I think. Or maybe a bad trip. Maybe both. He kept pacing the length of the room, muttering nonsense, mostly. I don’t think he even knew where he was. Afterward, he crashed on my couch and slept for ten hours straight.
I’d never seen him like that. Not even during the worst of it.
His second stint in rehab didn’t even last a month. Three weeks and two days, to be exact. I kept count, like maybe the number would matter. Like it would mean something.
I never blamed Satoru.
Not really. Not the way I probably should have.
Maybe because we’d been tethered too long, our lives too intertwined together to pull apart without bleeding. Or maybe because I understood, on some level, that addiction makes monsters of us all. It blurred the lines until I couldn’t tell where his mistakes ended and my enabling began. Maybe admitting he’d done something wrong would’ve meant admitting I had too.
Easier to keep the story simple.
When Satoru came back to work after rehab, something in him had changed, and whatever softness he’d carried had been cut out like dead tissue. He would never be helpless again. Never not know exactly what to do. Never hesitate. Never fail.
He didn’t just get better.
He became the best. Fast. Terrifyingly fast.
While the rest of us stumbled through second year, he moved like he’d already seen the future and found the rest of us obsolete. Running surgical teams with Yaga’s special permission. Attempting procedures that made attendings sweat. Correcting anyone who dared make a mistake in his presence.
Not with anger, but with the detached certainty of someone who’d simply overcome the possibility of being wrong. He’d arrive before dawn to review cases, stay late to perfect new techniques, and his hands never shook anymore.
I knew better than to believe it was natural. The pills were still there. Just... organized now. Measured doses. Optimized perfectly to maintain the illusion of invincibility.
No more manic highs. No more crash landings. Just a perfect, steady flatline that looked a hell of a lot like control—if you didn’t know what you were looking at.
He turned that same perfectionism on everyone around him too. Younger residents crumbled under his expectations. Nurses learned to triple-check everything before approaching him. Even some attendings flinched when they saw their names next to his on the OR schedule.
He wasn’t just good.
He was the standard.
And the rest of us? We were noise. Background blur in a story he’d already rewritten without us.
I should’ve been proud. This was my best friend achieving everything we used to dream about. But watching him surgically remove his own humanity felt like witnessing suicide in slow motion. And every award, every breakthrough, every hospital courting him—it all felt like another nail in the coffin of something I hadn’t even realized was dying.
Sukuna fled to the coast after everything fell apart, chasing sunlight and better days. Satoru and I stayed, bound by habit or loyalty or maybe just the inability to imagine ourselves anywhere else.
We still worked under the same roof, but the space between us grew. Not in some dramatic rupture, no shouting or slammed doors—just the quiet drift of two people evolving into different species.
I became good. Very good, even.
But Satoru became something else. Perfect, yes. Brilliant, undoubtedly. But also hollow in a way that terrified me if I let myself think about it too long.
He’d carved out every weakness, every trace of vulnerability, scrubbed away every fingerprint of the boy who once stole books for me and told me his fears.
What remained was a machine—flawless, efficient, running on chemicals and the terror of ever being helpless again.
We stayed friends. Of course we did. How could we not? But our friendship evolved into something I didn’t quite recognize. Him, always three steps ahead. Me, always watching for signs of the next collapse. Both of us pretending this was normal. That this was what success supposed to taste like.
The truth was, I’d lost him long before that Tuesday on the basketball court. Lost him to his own obsessive need to never fail again. And the worst part? I couldn’t even blame him for it. Because if it had been me, I might’ve done the same.
The game ended, as all games do. We gathered our things, made the usual empty promises about next week, and returned to the hospital that owned us.
The next time I played on that court, it was with strangers who didn’t understand why I kept passing to empty spaces where my friends used to be.
****
The years blur together when you're too busy becoming someone important to notice time passing.
Residency didn’t end with a celebration. It ended the way most things did in medicine—quietly, on a late shift. New contracts. Research proposals. Teaching schedules. Another nameplate, another set of responsibilities. The natural order of things, I guess. Survive long enough, and they give you the keys to the kingdom—whether you still want them or not.
Satoru and I became attending physicians the way everything in our lives seemed to happen. Him: spectacular. Me: steady.
He took the youngest neurosurgery attending position in the hospital’s history. I accepted a dual post-doctoral fellowship in surgery and research. Because someone had to build things while he set them on fire.
Different paths, same mountain. One we’d started climbing back in university, long before either of us understood what reaching the summit would cost.
The hospital bent around us without needing to be told. We were good—real good—and everyone knew it. Hierarchies adjusted and unwritten rules wrote themselves faster than the ink dried on our contracts.
Satoru handled the impossible cases that needed instinct. I handled the intricate ones that needed a plan.
The nurses knew who to call at three a.m. Residents memorized our preferences like doctrine. Satoru demanded perfection. I demanded understanding. Different tyrannies. Same results.
And within a few years, we were untouchable.
We’d climbed the mountain they said would take decades. Did it in half the time, and made it look effortless. Committees, conferences, citations, keynote lectures—we were everywhere. Hospitals across the globe started citing our protocols. Labs restructured around our models. Junior doctors walked faster when we were on the floor.
Satoru became the youngest chief of neurosurgery in the country’s history—an unprecedented appointment that made headlines and rewrote the department’s power map overnight. I wasn’t far behind, handed the reins of the research division with a budget that made our competitors foam at the mouth.
And twenty years after collecting insects in pond water, I was sketching neural pathways with the same obsessive focus in my own lab. Full circle, I guess. Life has a dark sense of humor if you’re paying attention.
I think the research soothed something in me. Between surgeries and lectures, I could disappear into data sets and tissue samples, lose entire days without noticing.
It was the opposite of Satoru’s world—if I went a day without seeing him in bloodstained scrubs, it felt like the hospital itself was off balance. He moved from one impossible surgery to the next, dragging people back from the brink with a precision that bordered on violence.
I still loved the OR. Still loved the rush of high stakes. But the lab was different. No one bleeding out. No alarms. Just clean problems waiting to be solved. The cold logic of science I’d always loved even as a kid, I guess, but uncomplicated by grief or panic or human mess.
That’s where I found her work.
Buried in a neuroscience journal. A student paper with no business being that refined. Her methodology was unconventional but flawless. Her conclusions challenged established theories with the kind of precision that only came from someone too young, or too stubborn, to care whose egos she was bruising.
I was at Tohoku University for one of those obligatory lectures they make you give to keep the right letters behind your name. Afterward—no idea what I spoke about. Probably synaptic plasticity or neural circuit mapping. One of those topics you can deliver on autopilot while thinking about lunch—I tracked her down.
Found her bent over a microscope, tucked in the corner of a lab that barely deserved the name. She didn’t hear me come in. Just kept working, completely absorbed in whatever slide she was observing. Sleeves rolled up. Hair barely held by the bun at the nape of her neck.
“Your paper on glioblastoma progression,” I said by way of introduction. “It’s wrong.”
She didn’t startle. Didn’t even look up right away. When she did, her expression held curiosity, not offense. “Which part?”
“The part where a student produces work that makes my postdocs look incompetent.”
A smile flickered across her face. Quick. Almost involuntary. “Perhaps you need better postdocs.”
And something about that casual arrogance of her felt eerily familiar, and for a disorienting moment I was twenty again, listening to Satoru explain to our professors why they were idiots.
“I’m Dr. Suguru Geto,” I said. “I run the neuroscience lab at Tokyo Medical University.”
She blinked up at me with that blank sort of expression, like she wasn’t sure why I was wasting her time.
Yeah. It really felt eerily familiar.
Either way, she came to Tokyo and joined my team. And nothing was ever quite the same after that.
She was perfect. Satoru’s brilliance with my discipline. His chaotic instincts restrained by my structure. And by the time I realized how much I wanted her around, it was already too late to pretend I didn’t. If it hadn’t been for Satoru.
Perhaps I should’ve seen it coming. Should’ve recognized the collision course I set the moment I introduced them. Two supernovas in the same orbit only ever end one way.
They were inevitable—drawn together the way gravity pulls at stars right before they collapse. And I was the one who put them in the same room. Who struck the match. Who stood back and watched the fire catch.
It was the right decision for our research.
And the worst mistake for my own heart.
masterlist + playlist + ao3 + support my writing
<- prev chapter | next chapter ->
author's note — ehmm i don't really have much to say this time, expect i'd love to hear your thoughts as always. next (and last) part will have a lot of satoru x s&c reader content and how suguru views it all. ahhh can't wait to post it but it needs a bit of editiing still and it got so long that i had to cut it. anyway, i have a headache and go take a nap now haha <3
tags — @buni-bunnydoll @nariminsstuff @panteramarron @starlightanyaaa @myahfig4
@depressedemosantaclaus @nanamis-baker @paolarox01 @shoruio @rosso-seta
@bnha-free-writing @gojoswaterbottle @sadmonke @ihearttoru @sunflxwerhunny
@momoewn @plixy @yokosandesu @nakariabnrb @fairygardenprincesss
@lymsfm @mylovelessnightmare @wiseearthquakebeliever @sujiroses @sunflxwerhunny
@gojossugarcandy @cosmotoic @syubseokie @wiserion @ziggy0stardust
@roseadleyn @nanasukii28 @jeon-blue @justwannasleep @cosmic-har
@grignardsreagent @browrm @rosebluod @bloopsstuff @tofumiao
@chiyokoemilia @bonequinhagojo @mikkmmmii @sunflxwerhunny @moonlightwriter
@yeiena @coeqi @faustina @glenkiller338 @yenmrtnz
© lostfracturess. do not repost, translate, or copy my work.
choso is so expressive with his hands
𝐘𝐨𝐮’𝐫𝐞 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐦𝐚𝐧 𝐈 𝐭𝐫𝐮𝐬𝐭 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐦𝐨𝐬𝐭.
𝐓𝐡𝐚𝐭’𝐬 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐨𝐧𝐥𝐲 𝐫𝐞𝐚𝐬𝐨𝐧 𝐈 𝐧𝐞𝐞𝐝.


