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3 hours of sleep = i hate people who laugh
0 ours of sleep = waouw đŒđŒđŒđŒđ
we all need to take better care of our selfs or we might Pass away
how it feels when your favorite fic gets updated and it's genuinely better than everything you've fantasized about
having unwashed hair will have you believing shit like i canât be saved
i love turning off lights. no need for all that
trans women make this place better
not just the website but da world!
Maybe if I just work harder, this empty cup will pour again
Maybe the cup needs a bit of time to rest and refill?
Maybe the cup needs to lock the fuck in???
Remember when joining fandom as a younger person meant lurking for a bit and figuring out the vibe and etiquette instead of coming in on day one and calling people weirdos for liking weirdo shit in the weirdo factory.
Sometimes knowing spoilers for shows is more fun cause u get to spend the show being like how the fuck does that even end up happening ..
Oh great heavens
I love tumblr tags so much. Like okay hereâs the main post and hereâs my little secret thoughts and addendums for the besties
in the everyday things.
summary: You ask Kita to marry you when you're children, because it only makes sense for your childhood friend to stay by your side for the rest of your life. You eventually forget your promise, but Kita always remembers.
notes: 13.3k words, author's notes, childhood friends, fluff, obliviousness, romcom/shoujo vibes, vague haikyuu spoilers, inarizaki volleyball team as side characters
You ask Kita Shinsuke to marry you during the spring when youâre both eight years old, a bundle of roadside daisies clutched in your hands that you proffer like a gold ring.
âPlease!â you say, holding out the flowers straight in front of you, screwing your eyes shut as you bow. âMarry me, Shin-kun!âÂ
Itâs the only step to take in your relationship that makes the most sense, according to your childish logic. Your grandmothers have been friends since they met in high school, inseparable old women with an unchanging weekly appointment to drink tea in your grandmotherâs kitchen.
Even your parents are close; your fathers were childhood friends and grew up splashing by the riverbank and racing alongside empty stretches of open fields. Family holidays are often spent together, so it was an inevitability that you and Kita would end up being friends.
The two of you were born in the same hospital, and as your mother likes to joke, âWhen we put you two down on the same mat to play, you started reachinâ for Shin-kun instead of the toys! Ya even tried to bite him, and he didnât cry a bit, just blinked real slow and let you nibble on his arm.â
And so the two of you are close, too. In cool, misty mornings, Kita waits outside your door so the two of you can walk to school together; he has an umbrella that he shares when it rains and a hat when itâs too sunny, and never misses a day to see you. During summers, youâre both sent up north to his grandmotherâs home in the country, nothing to do but spend lazy days in the rice fields and taking Kitaâs hand in your own as you come up with your own elaborate fantastical games.
A lot of times it feels like your relationship is the same as when you were babies: you drag Kita around and he follows willingly, the voice of reason to every impulsive plot you come up with. If Kita is popular with the neighborhood grannies for his manners and mature demeanor, then youâre popular with the other kids for your cheer and athletic prowess at every neighborhood game.
âWhat do I gotta do to keep Shin-kun with me?â you asked Kaasan once, as she trimmed edamame in the kitchen with a pair of scissors. âWhyâs he gotta go home everyday? I wish he was around forever.â
âWhy donât ya marry him?â she said mischievously, tapping her chin with her free hand. âThat made sure yer Tousan would come home to me every night.â
Her words lit a spark in your brain. You canât imagine a life without Kita; heâs been by your side since you were born. To lose him would be like losing a limb, unimaginable and devastating. And since Kaasan is one of the smartest adults you know, this must be the best way to keep him with you.
This is how you find yourself, on a routine weekend playdate exploring the nearby park, with flushed cheeks and clammy hands, stems wilting from the strength of your grip. Kita is sitting crosslegged in the field, flowers in hand, considering your words with the same gravity he considers everything in life, from the instructions of his teachers to laminated menus at the local diner.
âIâm sorry,â Kita says seriously. His eyes are wide and piercing, and you can see the world reflected in them. âBut we canât get married. You gotta be an adult to get married. And Obaasan always says when you want ta do something, you gotta take yer time with it, especially if itâs something ya care about.â
âOh. But I like ya, Shin-kun,â you add helplessly. But you already know that Kita makes decisions carefully, and once he makes up his mind on something, he rarely changes it.
âAnd I like ya, too,â Kita says.Â
âBut we canât get married?â
âWe canât get married now,â he says. âBecause marriageâs a big decision. Ya canât rush into it.â
âOkay, but do you still want my flowers? Theyâre the best ones I found. The biggest and prettiest,â you add hopefully. The fat white petals of the daisies droop in your hands, as if they, too, are dejected by Kitaâs rejection.
âYeah,â Kita says. He takes your flowers with a solemn reverence.
âLetâs make flower crowns,â you say. âI wanna make one for Kaasan.â
âOkay,â Kita says.Â
The sting of his rejection passes like a summer rainstorm, brief and temporary. Kita is still your friend, the one nearest and dearest to your heart, even if he doesnât want to marry you. There are other things to worry about, anyways, like your homework and what sort of bento Kaasan is going to pack for lunch tomorrow.
(You donât notice the way Kita glances carefully at you through his eyelashes, gaze thoughtful as he considers your question).Â
Kitaâs hands are deft as he weaves your flowers together into a crown, braiding stems together with a careful, slow ease. The flowers are spaced evenly apart, bright heads facing outwards. In contrast, your work is swift but a tad more clumsy, and you rip more than one petal in your haste to complete your work.Â
âThis is for you,â Kita says, placing it gently on your head. He adjusts the band so it no longer rests so lopsidedly.
âThank you, Shin-kun!â you say. âDoes it look good?â
He nods seriously. âReal good.âÂ
âI made ya one, too!â You hold up your flower crown. The flowers are spaced unevenly and your weaving is loose in sections, but Kita regards it as if youâve presented him with a priceless treasure.
âThank you,â Kita says. âWill you put it on me?â
In response, you plop it on his head, where it tilts sideways, one end closer to his ear.
âWeâre matching,â you say, smiling.
You spend another half hour in the fields before you tire of your work, eager to present the fruits of your labor to your parents, as youâve made flower crowns for both of them. Kitaâs crown is still placed on your head when you turn to head inside, waving vigorously at Kita as he waves back before turning and walking down the sidewalk towards his own home. He only lives a few minutes away, but still, you stand in the doorway until you canât see him, not even blinking, eyes burning, trying to preserve the memory of his dear back.
(For the next few days after that, Kita painstakingly presses and preserves the flowers youâve given him. The dried flowers sit on a shelf in his room, and whenever he passes them by, he considers them carefully. Marriage, after all, is a big decision).
â
âShin-kun doesnât want to marry me. I asked,â you tell Kaasan the next day, sitting at the dining table with your reading homework spread around you, your collection of colorful pencils rolling across the surface.Â
âOh, Iâm sorry, sweetheart,â Kaasan says. Sheâs across from you, marking her own documents, laptop and manila files organized in a neat square on the table. âAre you sad about it?â
âI was but, but Iâm not anymore.â
âWhat if Shin-kun marries someone else?â she teases. âWould ya be sad then?â
âWhy would he?â you ask. âIf he doesnât wanna marry me, then he definitely doesnât wanna marry anyone else. Thereâs no one he likes more than me.â
Kaasan bursts into laughter, shoulders shaking as she tries to cover her mouth, documents forgotten. âOh, I see,â she says in-between a gasp.
You make a doodle of a flower on your homework. Really, you canât understand what Kaasan finds so funny, when all you did was tell her the truth.
â
If thereâs one thing you know about your childhood friend, itâs that Kita Shinsuke is a creature of habit. Everything he does, he does with the same precision and meticulous care: his chores, his studies, and even the way he organizes his playdates with the air of an office worker planning meetings.
Itâs one of the things you like about him, how dedicated he is to everything. Even if the same canât be said for yourself, as you love spontaneity too much to deny yourself the pleasure of a sudden impulse, you try your best to respect Kitaâs routine.
âIâm going to play with Shiori-chan and Jun-kun today, but Iâll come find ya after Iâm done,â you tell him, grip loose on your backpack as you bounce down the road.Â
âOkay,â Kita says. Heâs walking at a steady pace, and youâre careful to match your strides to him, even if you want to run ahead. âHow long are ya gonna take?â
âMaybe a few hours? Not sure yet! But Iâll definitely see you before I go home,â you say earnestly. âBecause being with ya is a part of my routine!â
Thereâs a small smile on Kitaâs face at your words, as faint and lovely as a pattern of frost on a window. âBut ya donât normally have a routine. Does it even count?â
âShin-kun, thatâs mean,â you whine. âI try to see ya every day!â
âWeâre neighbors, and our families are friends,â Kita points out.Â
âStill! The effort counts!â
âWell, being with ya is part of my routine, too,â Kita says. âI like seeing you every day.â
You canât help but skip down the street at that, backpack bouncing on your back at your sudden burst of energy, and Kita watches you, smiling all the while. Not that itâs unusual, though; Kita is always watching like that, everything and everyone.
When you drop Kita off at his doorstep, you give one giant wave at him, promising to stop by as soon as you can, before you turn down the street and head towards the nearby park.Â
(Kita likes to watch you from the window whenever you leave, waiting until youâre nothing more than a dot on the horizon before he turns away. This, too, is a ritual).Â
Shiori and Jun are already waiting by the time you drop your backpack off at home and rush over to the nearby park, a good fifteen minute run from your home. They live farther inside the neighborhood than you, but attend the same school, so you know them fairly well. Not as well as Kita, but you donât know anyone else as well as you know Kita.
After a particular explosive game of tag (Shiori was it at first, and she knabbed you by the tail end of your shirt) and kick the can (youâd like to brag you valiantly defended the can quite well, which was a water bottle donated by Jun, as you hunted down Jun and Shiori), Shiori finally turns to you with cheeks rosy from exertion, her mouth opening into a question.
âKita-kun isnât here with ya today?â Shiori asks. âI feel like you two are always together.â
âHe had ta go home,â you confirm. âAnd thatâs not true! Weâre not together right now, arenât we?â
âWhyâre you always with Kita, though?â Jun asks. Heâs a little quiet, but thereâs something in his tone that you try not to bristle at.
âWhaddya mean? Shin-kun is Shin-kun,â you say. âHeâs the best.â
âBut Kita-kun is kinda⊠quiet. And heâs always in the corner, just doing his work! He doesnât really talk to us unless he has ta,â Shiori says, hesitant.
âKita is boring,â Jun says bluntly. Shiori blushes at his statement, but makes no move to disagree. âHe doesnât seem like a lotta fun. What do ya even talk about with him?â
You pause. Kita, boring? The idea has never occurred to you before. Kita is steady, reliable, responsible, and chides you sometimes like your mom might do, but heâs not boring. Boring is for things like schoolwork, and chores.
âShin-kun isnât boring. If youâre mean to Shin-kun, Iâm not going to play with ya anymore!â you say firmly. âHeâs real fun and super smart. He knows everything, and he can do anything, and he works hard!â
âAw, donât be mad!â Shiori says hastily, elbowing Jun, who grumbles. âWe didnât mean anything like that. I guess heâs just a little hard to talk ta sometimes.âÂ
âIf itâs hard to talk to him, why donât we play together next time?â you suggest. âIâll make sure ya understand how great Shin-kun is.âÂ
âYer bragging about him an awful lot,â Jun says again.
âShin-kun is Shin-kun,â you repeat firmly, as if that answers the question. And it does, in your mind, but Shiori and Jun glance at each other and say nothing more.
The rest of the time passes well enough, though you are perhaps a little too enthusiastic to win in seeing who can swing the highest and then leap off, because even though youâre the clear champion, youâre left with scrapped knees that Jun winces at. You, Jun, and Shiori wave at each other before heading home, the setting sun its own reminder to keep your promise to Kita.
Still, by the time you meet up with Kita, youâre kicking at the ground, smarting from your friendsâ comments you canât get out of your head. You knock on his door, once, twice, and Kita opens it as if heâs been expecting you.Â
Itâs hard to hide the expression on your face, but even if you werenât terrible at concealing your emotions, Kita would probably pick up on it anyways, because he always seems to know how you feel. Not that you could tell him whatâs wrong, because you donât want to repeat those awful comments.
After taking a few seconds to observe you, Kita asks quietly, âDo ya want something sweet? Okaasan brought back some madelines.â
You sniff. âReally?â
âYeah. Come on,â he says, taking your hand, chubby fingers secure around your own. âLetâs get some together.â He then glances at your knees. âAnd ya gotta do something about that.â
A few cakes and bandaids applied to your skinned knees courtesy of Kita, and your troubles are forgotten. Even Kita seems to look a little more relaxed in the presence of your smile again, a sunflower turning towards the sun it canât help but follow.
You really donât get why people are incapable of understanding a simple fact: Kita isnât boring at all. In fact, heâs the most wonderful person in the entire world.
â
Elementary school comes and goes, with a graduation full of classmates that cluster around you, begging for one last photo together. Your bouquet wilts from how tight youâve clutched it as you run from camera to camera, but when Kita sees, he offers you a few pink gerbaras of his own.
(Heâs also the first to take a picture with you, your families cooing as they crowd you close together, but heâs never needed to be told to stick close to your side. Itâs simply whatâs natural, and he frames the photo, keeping it near those dried flowers he still hasnât let go of).
You have a longer commute in middle school, but itâs one you still share with Kita. Itâs a precious period of your day where the two of you walk to school together, side by side. He shows up at the same time at your door like clockwork. Youâre usually scrambling with a last-minute breakfast or putting your uniform together, your blazer slipping down your shoulders while Kita looks impeccable as always, not even a thread out of place.
âYa should have learned to be more careful now,â he chides, even as he reaches out to smooth away the wrinkles with gentle hands, fixing the uneven knot of your tie. ââs not a good habit to be sloppy.â
âAw, but Shin-kun,â you say, âYa always fix it for me!â
âMaybe I should stop.â
âNoooo,â you wail as Kita spins on his heel, collecting both your bag and his in one smooth motion, while you dart after him. âDonât do that, Shin-kun! Then Iâll be even more of a mess!â
One of the great changes in middle school, besides the advanced curriculum and different uniforms and the evolving roster of classmates, are the inclusion of more involved clubs.Â
Of course, you already know what club you want to join, and have known it since the beginning: you want to join the boys volleyball club as a manager. As it is, youâre assistant to the current manager, Yuna, who jumps every time you speak up behind her, taking in your enthusiasm and loud voice with wide eyes.
Youâre quick to brag about it to Jun and Shiori, too, who are in a class down the hall from you, popping in for a brief visit during lunch, pulling up a chair to huddle around Shioriâs desk. You have an armful of snacks from the cafeteria, unable to resist spending a few yen on baked goods.
âAlways felt like ya should be on the team and Kita should be manager,â Shiori says. âDidnât realize itâd be the opposite way âround.â
âWhyâs that?â you ask, curious.
ââCause of⊠um⊠Just, you know, the sorta impression you and Kita-kun give off is a little differentââÂ
âItâs âcause Kita is smart and yer a meathead,â Jun interrupts bluntly.
âJun-kun, ya better be ready to back-up what you just said,â you threaten.
âSee? Only a meathead would say that,â Jun says. âArenât ya faster than Kita, too? And during gym class, ya were always the one ta spike the ball over the most. Just makes sense, right?â
âWell,â you huff, flattered despite yourself at Junâs acknowledgement of your prowess, âBeing on the court is cool, but being a manager is real important too. They do a lot of work behind the scenes to support the players, like helping plan scrimmages and researching opponents. Without âem, the players wouldnât be half as prepared as they are.â
âManagers sound really awesome, then,â Shiori says supportively.
âAnd,â you add, âThey get ta tell people what to do! Shin-kunâs always lecturinâ me about this and that, but if Iâm the manager, heâs gotta listen to me for once!â
âThere it is,â Jun says. âKnew there was another reason.â
âJun-kun,â you begin, but a quick glance at the clock has you straightening up, plucking a few wrapped bread from your arms and dropping them onto Shioriâs desk. âWeâll settle this later, but I gotta get back to class. I said Iâd spend the rest of lunch with Shin-kun. This is for you two, though!â
(Shiori and Jun both sigh as you burst out of the classroom, Jun propping up his cheek with his hand. Itâs obvious from your smile that youâre hoping to see a smile on Kitaâs face or hear, at the very least, a quiet thank you. Youâve always been predictable in that way, chasing after your childhood friend with all the clumsy, floppy grace of a lovesick puppy.
âI just donât get it, not them, or Kita-kun,â Shiori says. âDo ya think they really donât know how obvious it is that they like him?â
âYa know how they are. Kita has it rough,â Jun says, and leaves it at that.)
You trundle through middle school, easily collecting friends with your cheer, a parade of people greeting you every morning when you step through the gates. Kita is just behind, by your side as steadily as the way shadow follows light.Â
Kita is liked well-enough, you think, but people always seem to have difficulty approaching him. Maybe itâs his mature demeanor, or his steady gaze they canât meet, as luminous as snowfall on a winter night, quiet and all-consuming. Or maybe itâs the way heâs consistently top of the class, pulling perfect hundreds, and the principled student all the teachers uphold as the model everyone should strive to emulate.Â
âIf only you could be more like Kita ShinsukeâŠâ is a phrase troublemakers hear in their nightmares.
You maintain decent grades, too, but you still badger Kita for his notes, if only because he keeps such meticulous, detailed ones, and his handwriting is prettier than yours with how graceful it looks, like the work of a professional calligrapher. He beats you out easily in class rankings, much to your chagrin.
The real highlight of your day is volleyball practice after school, to the point your friends in class offer to take over clean-up duty from you so you can get to the gym early. Your duties mostly consist of helping keep track of scores during games, managing player statistics, and refilling and passing out water and towels.Â
At times, youâll help Yuna and the coach contact other schools for practice matches. Your role is mostly to observe how Yuna handles being manager, in preparation for when she graduates and you take on the role yourself.
That leaves a lot of time where you can stop to watch Kita. If heâs watching everyone else, whoâs going to watch him? It might as well be you, his childhood friend, and itâs a habit youâve maintained since you were children. Besides, itâs easy for your eyes to follow Kita, and you seek him out in every room before youâre even aware of what youâre doing.
Kita is diligent and steadfast, going through every drill without a word that the other students complain constantly about. He never takes shortcuts, and always does whatâs required of him. He even stays after to help collect the balls and mop the gym with you.
Youâre proud of him. Thereâs no way you wouldnât be, but when two other first-years are selected as regulars for the team, you canât help but feel slighted on his behalf. During games, sometimes youâll end up side-by-side, watching rallies, though Kita always scolds you if you talk too much and end up distracting the benched players.
âDonât ya wanna be on court, Shin-kun?â you ask, hands behind your back. Right now, your team is hosting a scrimmage with a local middle school, and one of your wing spikers pulls a sharp cut shot that leaves everyone cheering.
âEveryone wants ta be on court, but only the players whoâve proven they deserve to be there can stand on it,â Kita says. âI only do what Iâm supposed to, and if I do it well, then thatâs when I deserve ta be on court. Thatâs the proper way to go about it.â
âIf thatâs the case, then yer definitely gonna be a starting member one day,â you say. âBecause I see ya, Shin-kun. Ya work hard, and youâre careful with everything that ya do. You never skip practice, or take shortcuts during laps, and you always do all your drills until ya can do the motions in your sleep! Youâre gonna earn yer place there, I know it!â
Yuna calls your name and you scamper off before he can respond.Â
(Kita breathes in. Breathes out. Like Obaasan told him, so long ago: âThe gods are always watching.â Someone will always notice. Someone will always see him, but she never said that when they did, there would be a miniature sun in his chest, overflowing gold that he canât keep contained).
â
Middle school passes with its own routine, one that you settle into. Kita and you walk to school together in the mornings, rain or shine, eat lunch in his classroom and share parts of your bento with each other (heâs always putting vegetables on your plate), and then you attend volleyball practice, where youâll mop the floors and wipe down the balls with Kitaâs help and then walk home together. Kita will drop you off on your doorstep, and then head off to his own.
Thereâs little deviation to your routine, at least until your second year during lunchtime, when a boy approaches you when youâre halfway through your anpan. Youâve pulled up a chair right across from Kita, your bento and notebooks scattered across his desk. Though youâre in different classes this year, you still make an effort to bother him daily, and eating lunch together is one of your rituals.
âCan I talk with you?â he says. You try to place where youâve seen him before; maybe in the class across from yours?
Youâre still chewing and covering your mouth with your hand, trying frantically to swallow before responding. âYes? Did ya need me for something?â
âThereâs something I want to tell you. In private,â he emphasizes, flicking a glance at Kita.
âSure,â you say. âBut lunch is almost over, so we should hurry. Iâll be back, Shin-kun!â you add over your shoulder.Â
Kita only nods, watching you scamper off without a thought in the world as to what your classmate could want now. Maybe about homework? A shared classmate?
(Kitaâs hands are steady, even as he grips his chopsticks tight enough that his knuckles turn white. A lot of people have been confessing to you lately, but itâs not surprising, not with how well-liked you are. Not that you ever seem to realize whatâs happening, how the easy, careless charm of your smile, the way you always face the person youâre talking to like theyâre the only ones in the world, is dangerous).
The boy guides you down hallways and stairwells until youâre in the courtyard, standing in a little alcove that shields you from views of most of the windows. Including, you think, the gaze of your own classroomâs.
Clouds swirl overhead, grey and heavy, a light breeze stirring the grass. Is it going to rain soon? You glance up, just as the boy in front of you wrings his hands and takes several deep inhales.
âI wanted ta say⊠Iâve noticed ya from the very start of orientation! Yer always so bright and cheerful, and I couldnât stop thinking about you since then. When we pass by in the halls, I always look at ya andâŠ!â his voice raises in a shout. âAnd I wanted to say I like you. Please go out with me!â
Your mouth works before your mind does, but even then, all you can say is a strangled little âOh⊠erm?â You remember his name now, Eiji, but youâre still too startled by his sudden words, all your thoughts scattering like birds. This has happened a few times now, but it still takes you by surprise every time. You? Liked? Itâs strange to think that people think of you in such a way, that they could hold such expectations for you, when youâre just going about your day.
Heâs still staring at you expectantly, and itâd be rude to keep him waiting any longer. Your tongue is still glued to your mouth, but you manage to unstick it to croak out, âIâm sorry. I appreciate your feelings, but I canât return them.â
Eiji hangs his head. âI figured. I wanted to let ya know, anyways, but ya already have Kita-san, right?â
âHuh?â you squeak.
âHuh?â He tilts his head. âYa and Kita-san. Arenât ya dating? Everyone says you are.â
âThatâs notâweâre just childhood friends,â you say hastily. âI mean. Itâs not as if I donât like him, butâwe arenâtâI mean, I thinkâheâs just my friend.â
Huh? Wait a moment. What do you feel about Kita, then? All your feelings for him have always been rolled into one glowing ball that youâve termed âlike,â but people like each other in different ways. Is the way you like Kita different from how you like Jun and Shiori, or your own parents? What does âlikingâ someone even mean, then?
Eiji must see the confusion mar your face because he sighs. ââs all right. Thank ya for yer time. But I hope ya and Kita-san can work out whatever it is you have. You donât want ta be leading him on, or anything.â
Eiji heads in first, ducking his head and running away as you stand in the courtyard for a moment longer, eyebrows furrowed. A drop of something cold splashes on your head. Itâs raining, the clouds sending out a shy drizzle as a warning, and so you hurry inside, distracted for the rest of lunch.
After school, youâre standing by your shoe locker glumly. The rain has transformed into a monstrous downpour, causing squawking students to brave the weather with only their bags over their heads, or hang under dripping eaves as the world is washed clean.
Youâre one of the people who didnât bring an umbrella, and so youâre stuck contemplating your options. You can run out and hope to make it home, or stay behind until the rain clears a little. Either way, youâre most likely going to be soaked, and a trek in soggy loafers is not on your list of enjoyable post-school activities.Â
âDid ya forget your umbrella?â
Itâs Kita, and though heâs a respectful distance away from you, as he always is, you jump as if heâs whispered right into your ear.
âYes!â you say, with more force than necessary.
âYa should have checked the weather report,â Kita says plainly. He has a clear plastic umbrella in his right hand.
âI shouldaâŠâ you say morosely. Eijiâs earlier comments are still swirling around your head, and you let out a long sigh. Are you hurting Kita, somehow? At least the rain is as miserable as your mood.
You expect more admonishments or another remark about your lack of preparation, but Kita only unfurls his umbrella and says, âWe can share.â
The umbrella is small enough that your shoulders are pressed side by side, and you can feel, distinctly, the heat from his body. Kita doesnât run hot, and heâs always at a consistent, mild temperature. His hands are always cold, though, and you like to rub his fingers with your own until they warm up. Youâre hyper-aware of his body now, and how much of it you know. Stupid Eiji.
âWhat did that guy want from ya?â Kita asks.
âJust confessinâ,â you grumble. âBut I wasnât interested. I donât know why people are so caught up in romance. Doesnât make any sense. Relationships? Dating? Marriage? âS all ridiculous.â
âI see,â Kita says simply. âDid he say something to ya?âÂ
âJustâŠâ You let out another sigh. âI donât know, Shin-kun. Am I hurting ya? Do ya feel like Iâm leading you on? If Iâm hurtinâ ya, you gotta let me know.â
âYer not hurting me,â he says. âYer my oldest and closest friend, and youâve never done anything wrong. Ya donât gotta listen to people like that; they donât think before they speak, or consider how their words affect others. They just say what they want, so what they say doesnât matter one bit as long as you know what you believe in and whatâs true ta you.â
âAw, Shin-kun!â You fight the urge to fling your arms around his neck, and settle for slapping his back empathetically as Kita lets out a quiet little âoomphâ with each strike. âYer right!â
Eijiâs comments donât matter, you decide. Your relationship with Kita is no oneâs business other than your own, and people can think whatever they want. It doesnât really matter if you arenât sure of the exact nature of your own emotions; you like Kita, no matter what it means, and thatâs all that matters.Â
(Kita has heard what other people whisper in the hallways. Youâve never asked him how he views your relationship, but thatâs all right. You donât need to. What he feels is something he has nurtured for years. Step by step. Day by day. Ritual by ritual).
â
Itâs the last volleyball match of your middle school careers. Kita has never played a game, never been on the starting line-up, but still people flock to him for advice or for his analysis on the other teamâs plays. Heâs often sitting with you on the bench, watching, quietly exchanging notes with you.
Heâs your assistant, you like to joke, though you think you feel more annoyed than Kita over the fact heâs never been chosen. Even though he practices more consistently than anyone else. Even though everyone relies on him. Heâs not flashy, sure, but heâs steady, and thatâs more important than anything in a game where even the best-laid strategy can go awry.
âAre you Kita Shinsuke?âÂ
You spin around, and through the half-open gym doors, you see a man dressed in a track suit, with glasses and a keen smile. Heâs not immediately recognizable as one of the other middle school coaches. But he still speaks with a surety that makes you wrack your brains, regardless, trying to place him. Itâd be awful to have met him and forgotten his name.
Kita looks up from his clipboard, gaze tranquil and steady. âYes.â
âHave you thought about what high school youâd like to attend? What volleyball programs are you interested in?â
(Someone is always watching. Someone will notice).
And thatâs how you and Kita end up at Inarizaki, a bus ride and fifteen minute walk away from your neighborhood.
â
You say goodbye to middle school in a deluge of tearful farewells and congratulatory wishes to classmates whoâre attending different high schools. Youâre encircled by admirers, take so many pictures your mouth starts hurting from how often youâve had to smile. Youâre given flowers, last-minute confessions, invitations to lunch and dinner and dates you have to refuse.Â
Youâre just not interested, you explain. You donât have the time for such things, but you appreciate their feelings regardless.
Jun and Shiori are attending a different high school, so youâre sure to squeeze them extra hard during graduation, handing them flowers from your own bouquets, yellow roses with stems stripped of thorns.
âLetâs still hang out,â you say. âWeâre always going ta be friends! Donât be afraid to say hi!â
âIâll miss ya,â Shiori says sincerely. âIâll stop by when I can, I promise!â
âDonât forget to invite me to yer wedding in the future,â Jun adds.
âWedding? Weâre too young ta get married! Iâm not even thinking about that right now,â you say. âJun-kun yer so weird.â
He only shrugs. Really, what an odd thing to say, though it does give you a disconcerting feeling that youâve forgotten something, some hazy, half-remembered flashback to flower crowns and a distant spring day. But it canât be too important or youâd have remembered, so you tackle Jun and Shiori in another hug instead.
Your favorite picture from graduation, though, is the one you take with Kita, an electric smile on your face, your arm looped around his, your bodies leaning towards each other like flowers sheltering in a storm. When you line it up with your elementary school graduation picture, it feels like a perfect set, a history of your life so far with Kita.
Outside of your new uniform, high school proceeds much the same as middle school did. You and Kita have a routine, the precious rituals youâve built over a lifetime of knowing each other, and those arenât things that collapse so easily.
In the morning, Kita shows up at your door, albeit a little earlier than he did in middle school, smoothing down your rumpled tie without too much complaint. Kita always gives you the seat on the bus, standing in front of you, your knees knocking together when the bus lurches around a corner. He always asks if youâve eaten, and if youâve run out the door without any food, he pulls out packaged bread that you much on.
You share your first year class together, which means you only need to drag your chair to Kitaâs desk and place your bento in your lap to see him. You flick crumpled-up notes at him, but he only reads them, smoothes them out, and places them within his notebook, sending you no reply in return. You chatter about your day at every opportunity, about the difficulties you face in lessons or the petty squabble between new friends that youâve made.Â
In the afternoon, you and Kita head to the gym after school. Youâve applied to be manager of the Inarizaki volleyball team, though it seems plenty of other students in your grade have the same idea. You hear itâs a popular one to apply for but near impossible to get the position, if only because so many people want to join just to get close to the boys on the team. Which is ridiculous, because the boys on the team are just like the boys anywhere else: a little sweaty, a little rude, and wholly ordinary.
Kita might be the exception to that, but thatâs because heâs Kita. Even when he sweats, he smells nice, and heâs always polite, and heâs the most wonderful person ever. Itâd be hard for any other boy to beat that, really.
Suffice to say, you manage to beat out the other candidates and snag the spot. Much like in middle school, Kita is on the bench, not having made the starting lineup again, and youâre lugging around water bottles and tracking scores in practice games.
After school, you and Kita head home together, side by side. You match his slow, steady pace, and sometimes if the weather is nice, youâll take a longer route home, just to see the scenery. Kita walks you to your door, and you wait in the doorway to see him enter his own before you wave goodbye for a final time.Â
The one thing thatâs different about high school, though, is the confessions. Not to you, though you still get your fair share of them and have managed to tune them out as mild irritations in your day, but to Kita.
The first is a girl from the class across from you, clutching at the edges of her skirt during lunch. She went to your middle school, you think, but you were always in different classes and didnât share any friends.Â
âKita-san,â she says shyly, in a tone so full of longing it makes you want to take Kitaâs hand and pull him away in the other direction, âCan I talk to you in private?â
Your classmates snicker around you as Kita calmly stands and says, âOkay.â
You stare out the window, unable to relax, bouncing your leg so nervously that the entire desk shakes. More and more catastrophic scenarios arise in your mindâof Kita accepting her confession, of distancing himself from you, of deciding to move away to another country with this girlâbefore Kita comes back and says, simply, âShe asked me out and I turned her down.âÂ
Then thereâs a second-year, two weeks later, who even brought food with him as if a love confession was a bribe. And then someone from your own class, who Kita shared his notes with, shouting so loud youâre pretty sure the kids from the class next door overheard. The confessions pile up, little by little, irritating and spaced far apart enough that each new one feels like a bucket of ice water thrown at your head, even though youâd hoped it wouldnât happen again.
Because of course people would like Kita. Heâs wonderful, and kind, and smart, and the best person in the entire world. But no one has ever confessed to him before, or shown much interest in him, romantic interest, until high school.Â
The thought of Kita, your best friend, spending more time with someone else or just liking someone more than you makes you feel sour. Sure, you donât like the idea of him with a partner, but you also canât stand the idea that your relationship will deteriorate because he chooses to prioritize someone else in his life. Heâs always been by your side, and youâve always been by his. Thatâs not a position you ever want to relinquish.
The last straw is a pretty third year who corners Kita after practice and clean-up, leaving you behind to wait near the gym doors, glowering at the rocks near your shoes, as if theyâre the worldâs worst criminals.
âLetâs go home,â Kita says, when he returns. The third year is noticeably absent from his side, and he looks as unruffled as ever.
âWhat did she want?â you say, not moving, twisting your hands together.
âShe wanted to say that she likes me. And wanted ta know if I was free to go to a cafe with her this week.â
âOh. What did ya say?â
âI told her no,â he says plainly. âVolleyball practice takes up most of my time after school.â
âShe was pretty,â you grumble. âAnd real nice. You really said no?â
âIâm not interested in a relationship with her,â he says.Â
âThereâs been a lot of people whoâve been asking after ya these days, Shin-kun,â you press. âYou really arenât annoyed by it?â
âItâs not annoying because itâd be wrong of me to treat those peoplesâ feelings carelessly. It takes courage ta tell someone you like them, and I want to respect that courage and their feelings, even if I donât feel the same.â
Good old Kita, thoughtful as always. But you still feel petty, and small, and wrap your arms around yourself. How is it that he can look favorably upon these others, when all you do is feel rotten? He could stand to be less honorable, let them know that he isnât available becauseâbecause what?
You shake your head, as if to clear yourself of your confusing thoughts. You try to pin a smile on your face, but itâs small, tight. âOkay. I get it. Letâs just go home, then. Before someone else tries to get ya.â
Kita doesnât say anything for a while. He seems to be weighing his words in his mind, watching you with the same intensity he devotes to everything, and you hunch your shoulders, as if doing so will help you escape his scrutiny. Finally, he says, âOkkasan got some madeleines on sale last week. The kind ya like.â
âYa canât bribe me with cakes, Shin-kun! Iâm not a kid anymore.â
â Even if itâs yer favorite flavor?â he says.Â
âThatâs notâŠâ you say, pressing your lips together. âWellâŠâ
âYa can have as much as ya want.â
â... Fine,â you grumble.
âNot too much, though. Itâll spoil yer dinner.â
âShin-kun!â
You swear you see him smile then, a brief flash like the glint of sunlight on water, but his face relaxes, falling back into its usual neutral expression.
(Kitaâs just glad youâre the same as you always are. Heâs had a lot more practice than you, after all, to exercise patience in the face of unwanted confessions directed towards someone he likes, even if you look awfully cute when youâre jealous).
â
Inarizaki High, youâve come to learn, is a real powerhouse for volleyball, a school that regularly makes appearances at nationals, so practices are more intense than in middle school. Inarizaki also has its own marching band that comes to games, and the money to buy all its members, starting lineup or not, the same brand of athletic sneakers. And so thereâs a certain pressure that comes with being manager and having to oversee a gaggle of rowdy teenage boys and wrangle them into practice and drills.Â
Everyone who makes it to the starting line-up, youâve come to learn, is a bit of a personality. Thereâs Aran, whoâs funny and reliable as their ace, and Omi, who reminds you of your grandmother, steady and stern. And, of course, thereâs the upcoming batch of first years.
âAre ya and Kita-san dating?â
The question comes from one of your boldest newcomers, the starting setter, who has bleached blond hair and unrelenting cockiness in his own skills. The team is in the middle of serving drills, but heâs evidently taking a break from his current set, because heâs hounding you as you refill the water bottles, one by one.
âWeâre not,â you say.
Atsumu curses under his breath. In the distance, you can see Osamu raise his eyebrows and Suna snicker. Is this a bet of some kind? But youâre used to these sorts of inquiries from middle school, the assumptions of everyone else.
You know what you and Kita are to each other. Youâre best friends from childhood and⊠well, itâs better not to think about it too much.
âDid ya ever date him?â Atsumu presses. âLike in the past? Even just a little?â
âHm? Not at all,â you say. âShin-kunâs my best friend. Weâve known each other since we were kids.â
âManangerrrr,â Atsumu groans, âYer killing me here. I got my lunch riding on this. Yer really not together? Then whyâre ya always hanging off each other?â
âWe donât hang off of each other,â you protest.
âYa do! And Kita-san always gets this soft look on his face when heâs with ya, likeââ
âAtsumu. Did ya finish your serving drills?â Kita cuts in, hovering somewhere over your shoulder, voice cold and direct. He must have noticed Atsumuâs absence on the court.
Atsumu visibly straightens under the force of Kitaâs stare. As someone whoâs been subjected to that cold stare for a majority of your life, you canât help but pity Atsumu, whoâs not used to it at all. âEr⊠ya see, Kita-san, I was justââ
âIf youâre not finished, then why are you here?â
And with that, Atsumu trudges off back to Suna and Osamu, who both seem to be holding back laughter at Atsumuâs expression.Â
âWas he bothering ya?â Kita asks.Â
âNot really,â you say. âBut I think the first years were bettinâ on whenever weâre together. Isnât it a little silly? I donât know why everyone assumes that.â
Kita gives a soft hum of acknowledgment, tucking a stray curl of hair behind your ear. âThereâs no reason ta mind them. They should be focusinâ on practice, anyways.â
âRight, right,â you say. âOh, Shin-kun. I just refilled the water bottles.â You pluck one off of the bench and hand it to him. âHave some. Youâve been running around so much, and ya gotta make sure yer staying hydrated!â
(There are few team dynamics that Suna and the others are quick to pick up on. For example, youâre popular on the team for your cheer and energy, but Kita is known for his cold perfectionism. No flaws, always diligent, never a single hair out of place.
Sometimes, it makes them all just a little curious to see where he trips up, because surely, someone like Kita must have one weakness, right? Whether itâs a silly habit, a dislike, or another person.
âI really thought they were datinâ,â Atsumu groans.Â
âToo bad,â Osamu says unrepentantly. âYa owe me yer lunch for that. I told you they werenât.â
âMakes no sense! Didja see how he looks at them? And how they always dote on him?â
âThatâs ya get for assuminâ, ya scrub.â
âYer the scrub!â
As the twins dissolve into another spate of bickering, Suna flicks a glance at you and Kita, the way he leans close to you, intent on catching every word, because he never gives you anything less than his full attention, no matter the circumstance.Â
When Kita glares at the three of them, though, the first years all jump and scramble to their feet, guiltily slinking towards the court to practice their next round of serves.Â
Troublesome. Just because Suna can pinpoint his weakness, doesnât mean he can do anything with it).
â
Itâs not until your third year that Kita is made captain, and he steps onto court for the first time, when Inarizaki down six points in a set during an Interhigh game. Heâs subbed in for Aran, who rests on the bench alongside you and the coach, towel around his neck, hands folded in his lap as he intently watches the game resume.
âAre ya feeling okay?â you ask Aran, handing him a water bottle. âThat was an intense rally.â
âI thought my hands were going to fall off,â Aran says, groaning. âBut itâs a nice break. Canât believe Atsumu kept settinâ on first touch.â
âHe just trusts ya to always get the ball,â you say. âAnd he wants to make up for the point gap real bad.â
âMaybe he trusts me too much,â Aran grumbles.
Though youâre fairly friendly to everyone on the team, especially the third years, Aran is one of the people youâre most close to. It helps that heâs also friends with Kita and youâre in his class this year, so you gravitate towards his desk to trade silly jokes and steal pieces of his bento. Even though he groans, he lets you get away with it, and youâre sure to give him something from your own bento in return.
âGo Shin-kun,â you whisper under your breath, pumping your fist as he crouches and digs the ball with one perfect, fluid motion. âYa got this!â
âThought youâd be cheerinâ louder than that,â Aran says.âHavenât ya been wanting him to be on court since our first year here?â
âI donât want to distract him,â you say. âItâs his first time in a real match! Well, not that Shin-kun would get distracted by something like cheering, anyways.â
âFirst time in a match?â
âYeah. Surprised no one told ya yet,â you say, eyes glued to Kitaâs figure. Heâs steady, reliable, and already the other players on court are relaxing their bodies, their focus sharpening. Heâs lecturing them, you imagine, pointing out all the ways in which theyâve been overcompensating or slacking. âNever made it to the court in middle school. I knew he would, eventually. Shin-kunâs good, even if he doesnât think so because heâs not flashy. But being diligent and doing things so consistently every time is real hard, and so thatâs its own skill.â
âYouâre⊠really paying attention to him, huh?â Aran says.
âBecause heâs Shin-kun,â you say. âWhy wouldnât I?â
âYouâre up again, Aran,â Coach Kurosu calls. âTake yer number. Weâre gonna put ya back in after this rotation. Think the teamâs back on its feet, and Kitaâs about to rotate to the front row.â
âGood luck, Aran-kun. I want ya to score at least ten points in a row!â you say, holding out your hands as he slaps them in a double high five.
âYer asking for too much,â he groans, picking up the plastic sign with the number four emblazoned on it, raising it as he stands.Â
The whistle blows. Kita returns to you and the coach, covered in a light sheen of sweat, breathing harder than normal. Other than that, he looks calm, cool, as if this isnât the first match in his high school career.
âHow was it, Shin-kun?â you ask, handing him a water bottle. âDid ya have fun on court?â
âWhat I did on court was simply the product of all my practice,â he says. âNo more, no less. ButâŠâ
âBut?â you prod.
âI enjoyed it,â he says simply.
âGood! I told ya you would be out there one day! Next time yer out there, I hope you have even more fun, because weâre gonna go far! Take first place at nationals, even!âÂ
You raise your hands in the same gesture you just did for Aran, both hands splayed out for a high five. Kita observes the movement, sets down his water bottle, and quietly, carefully, slaps your hands in celebration.
â
Your dreams at nationals end after three sets during your first game there. Youâre walking off the court, away from whatever promises youâve made, a stage you can only see for this one final time. The echo of your shoes on the hardwood, the parade of volleyball players chasing the same desire, the dome so high and so impossibly large you have to squint to make out the ceiling.
Inarizaki High stays until the end of the day, when the sea of crowds trickle into a stream of stragglers and most stalls close, the window to buy souvenirs shrinking. You want to stay until the last possible second but then the entire team is packing their bags, and the Miya twins catch you while you check for the location of all the players.Â
âSorry, manager,â Atsumu whispers. He looks deflated, properly chagrined for once, none of the usual arrogance in his stance or words. âWe were supposed ta show you the first place trophy.â
âItâs yer last year,â Osamu says simply.Â
âThen make sure you make it next year,â you say, clapping both of them on the back so hard that they jump. âIâll be watching ya, okay? So donât disappoint me! I wanna see ya take Inarizaki as far as it can go, and then beyond!â
âI promise,â Osamu says. Thereâs none of his usual relaxed, lazy drawl now, just a fervent honesty.
âMake sure ya come watch!â Atsumu says.
The last six years of your life, spent chasing after volleyballs and planning scrimmages, tracking player stats and filling water bottles, is over. Youâll no longer have to dedicate your afternoons to a gymnasium. Youâve managed to find a replacement, a kind first year named Ichika, so the team will be in good hands.
In the lobby, you run into Aran, whoâs watching one of the last games of the day on a television monitor mounted on the wall.
ââS disappointing, but Iâm still gonna do volleyball after this,â Aran says quietly. âIâm thinkinâ about going pro.â
âThen ya better not forget me when yer pro, Aran-kun. I want your autograph. Maybe I can sell it for a lot of money,â you cheer.
âDonât try one of yer get rich quick schemes with me,â he says, but he still slaps your hands when you hold them out in a double high five.
âYou were good on the court,â you say. âSo I know you can make it. It was a good game. A real good game, the most excitinâ one Iâve ever seen so far, and ya had a lot of good spikes.â
âDid ya have to say that now?â Aran says groaning, turning away, and you pretend not to notice as he scrubs at his eyes.
On the bus ride home the next morning, you and Kita sit at the front two seats. The bus ride home is quiet; everyone must be exhausted, because when you look back, all you can see are closed eyes and slumped bodies. Atsumu has an arm flung over Osamu, whose eyebrows are drawn in irritation. Suna huddles in a corner by himself. Ginâs mouth is wide open while Omiâs arms are crossed as he leans back next to him. Akagi is smushed against a window, and Aranâs head jostles with every turn of the bus.
But Kita is wide awake, watching the scenery flash past outside. Your hands rest lightly next to each other on the bus seat, just a centimeter of distance. Itâs a strange thing to be aware of, but all you can think about is how his fingers must be cold, and you have to resist the urge to pick them up and rub them, curling up all your desire to touch him into your clenched fists.
âYer not going to keep up with volleyball, right, Shin-kun?â you whisper. âThis is yer last season.â
âThatâs right,â he says. âBut yer not either, are ya?â
âIt was a good six years. But there are other things I want ta do. Iâm gonna miss this, though.â
âIâm never gonna forget it. I wanted to stay on court a little longer,â he murmurs, voice dropping low as if his words are for your ears alone even though everyone else is asleep, âAnd show off the team, and everyoneâs hard work.â
âI wanted everyone ta place first. Show all of Japan who we are,â you groan. ââCause everyone was good enough to make it! We got out too soon. But the other team was way too good too. Canât believe we never heard of âem before this year.â
âBut even if we canât make it to first place, it wasnât a bad experience. Built a lot of memories, and a lot of muscle,â Kita says. âI know the team always says we donât need memories, but all our past actions make up who we are now. The me in the past that practiced and ate well and studied hard and got the me of today where I am now.â
You turn over his words. Itâs true, after all. Everything youâve built becomes a foundation for who you are now, and everything you want to build in the future.
âThatâs just like ya to say! But ya know, I kinda like our motto. We donât need ta worry about the past and the things we canât change. We can only focus on now, and what weâre gonna do in the future. Because who knows whatâs gonna happen tomorrow. âS exciting,â you say. âAnd Shin-kun?â
âHm?â
âThank you for all yer hard work all these years,â you say sincerely. âIâm glad ya got to stand on court one more time, and that all of Japan could see just how awesome ya are! I wanted to show off and yell, âsee? Isnât my childhood friend the coolest?ââ
Kita blinks, once, twice, and you wonder if youâve caught him off-guard for once because he looks like a startled fox, fur bristling. Thereâs a faint pink tinge to his cheeks, but he only says, âBut we wouldnât get half as far without ya as support. If I looked cool, itâs only because ya and the others worked so hard to get us where we were. âS not just my effort alone. Ya were the one doing research and preparinâ all the supplies, so thank you for all of your hard work as manager.âÂ
âAw, Shin-kun,â you say, and this time, your hand reaches across the divide, forefinger loping around his own. Just this much should be okay, shouldnât it? Kita has always had cool skin, but today, it burns with an intense heat that seeps into your skin. Or are you mistaking your own body heat for his? But isnât it all the same warmth at the end of the day, because youâre always by his side? âI know all that! Ya should take the compliment. Ya donât gotta find a reason for everything all the time.â
Kita laughs softly, a sound as gentle as the swirl of snow across a courtyard. ââS habit. Itâs important ta think through everything, and do it carefully and slowly. Especially for the important things. Ya donât want to rush through those, even if no one notices.â His finger squeezes around yours. âIâm looking forward to seeinâ what tomorrow looks like, after all that hard work.â
âTomorrow will be good,â you say confidently, ââCause we built the foundation for it today. And ya donât need to worry, Shin-kun. Even if yer watching everyone else, Iâll be watching ya, and Iâll see all the effort you put in.â
âI know ya will,â he says, and you can hear the smile in his voice, the fondness, how it colors all of his words, the way it always has.
â
March arrives in a froth of cherry blossoms and pink petals that get caught in your hair, long-winded speeches during the graduation ceremony as you bounce in your seat, your juniors crowding around you with a bouquet of flowers they pooled their allowances together to buy. The flowers are vibrant reds and pinks and yellows, as vivid as the team youâre leaving behind.
âWeâre going to miss you, manager,â Atsumu says. His eyes are rimmed in red.
âHe cried thinkinâ about you and the other third years leavinâ,â Osamu says bluntly. âLike a baby.â
âAnd Samu couldnât even sleep âcause today was the last day he could see ya all,â Atsumu responds nastily. âMade him all worried.â
âIâll send you the photos later,â Suna whispers, discreetly aiming his phone at the bickering twins, who look like theyâre one step away from escalating it into a physical altercation.
âThanks, Suna-kun,â you whisper in return, shifting the flowers to rest in the crook of one arm. âTake care of yourself, okay? Donât slack too much.â
Suna hums noncommittally, eyes sliding away from you, but Ginjima pats his chest, standing straight.
âIâll watch out for Suna,â he says, voice already strained with restrained tears. âDonât worry, manager! Iâll work hard, so ya wonât have anything to worry about.â
âThank you, Gin-kun,â you say. âBut watch out for yourself, too!â
With graduation comes a last minute wave of tearful confessions, of promises to stay together, and a request for buttons. You navigate skillfully around an obstacle course of classmates clamboring for your second button or any buttons at all, turn down a wave of confessions, and skirt around anyone who seems like theyâre eying you.
Is Kita getting the same influx of confessions? You really hope not. It takes you a few seconds to spot Kita hanging back from the mingling crowds, at a careful distance. For a moment, all you can do is stare. He looks pretty framed against the trees, like an ephemeral spirit watching over humanity, forever separated. But unlike a spirit, you donât want him to fade away to a place where you canât be with him.
âShin-kun!â you say, running up to him. You flick a quick glance at his jacket; all his buttons are still there. âThere you are!â
Kita reaches a hand to your head, brushing away a shower of petals that must have settled into your hair in your journey to find him. âDid ya talk to the second years? They were lookinâ for ya.â
âJust finished!â you announce, waving your flowers in front of him like a baton. âThey gave me these. Arenât they pretty?â
âThey really like ya,â he says.Â
âWell, they like you a lot too! Are ya gonna give me something, Shin-kun? Since itâs our high school graduation?â you joke.
Kita regards you for a long moment. Then, his nimble fingers reach towards his uniform blazer, tugging out the second button, before he holds it out to you, button lying flat on his palm. âThis is for you.â
âShin-kun?â you say. Kita, who has never looked anything less than perfect, who keeps spare buttons in his bag in case he loses one and has to sew it back on, who never does anything unnecessary, is handing you a button. His second button, the one he ripped out of his jacket.
âItâs customary to do something like this,â he says. âAinât it?â
âIt is, but ya know, giving the button⊠itâs likeâŠâÂ
âYou donât want it?â
You quickly snatch the button from his hands, your fingers grazing against his palm, and it feels like even that momentary touch has burned you, like youâre marked by him in a way no one else can ever do. âI didnât say that! Iâm glad ya didnât give it to anyone else, butâŠâ
âYa didnât give yers to anyone else, either,â he says quietly. âThatâs good.â
âI didnât want ta,â you stammer. Itâs Kita. Kita, your best friend and childhood friend. The one you hold near and dear to your heart, whoâs always gone along with your whims. But right now, it feels like heâs one leading you along.
You like him. Of course you like him. But the shape of his feelings are different from what you expected, or thought they would ever be. And what are your feelings? How do you feel about Kita? Kita, who you adore, who you like, who is the most important person in the world to you?
âSo thereâs no one ya want to give it to?â Kita asks.
You open your mouth, and you donât know what youâre going to say, because Kita looks so serious, and heâs always serious, but today, he has an intensity that he only gets when heâs focused, when he really cares about what heâs doing, and youâve never felt more flustered to be on the receiving end of such a penetrating stareâ
âKita! Manager!â Akagi calls, waving his arms. âThere ya are!â
Startled, you whirl around, waving back to Akagi, whoâs running towards you, and Omi and Aran, who stand a little ways back.Â
âLetâs go, Shin-kun. The others are calling for us!â You scurry off, your entire body fever-hot. For now, at least, youâve been granted another reprieve from having to think about your feelings.
(âI told him not to interrupt âem,â Aran says, groaning, watching as you high five Akagi, Kita trailing just a bit behind. âDid ya see how Kita looked?â
âHe looked fine to me,â Omi replies.Â
âAre ya kidding?â Aran says. Once again, he has to wonder if heâs the only sane one on the team, a thought heâs had many, many times before.
Itâs obvious that Kita cares about you in a different way than he does for the others, a special regard that you yourself seem oblivious to, whether thatâs purposeful or not.
Kita is perfectly polite, kind, and meticulous, the sort of boy that parents absolutely adore. Aran would struggle to come up with a single bad word to say about him, not that he wants to. Theyâre friends. Theyâve spent three years together. But thereâs something about the way he looks at you, something that most people wouldnât pick up on.
Itâs justâŠ
âFoxes mate for life,â he mutters, the fact springing into mind unbidden, from a nature documentary or class, he isnât sure.
âDid ya say something, Aran?â Omi asks.
ââS nothing. Letâs join them.â
Itâs just a little possessive).
â
You squint up at the house in front of you, shading your eyes with your hand. Itâs been a few years since youâve visited Kita Yumieâs home, but it looks just as it did in your childhood: clean, small, well-maintained, curtains pulled back and windows open to let in a breeze, with a porch that you just want to sit on with a pot of tea.
The spring air is warm, inviting, as if winter had never shown its face and itâs always been such pleasant weather. Your suitcase rattles behind you as you pull it along the dirt road and up the house steps, knocking on the door.
Itâs been a year since youâve graduated college, and five years since you left high school. In the time since, youâve landed a job at a wedding planning company, and you havenât had time to rest. Thereâs always a last minute disaster to handle, an argument between the couple, or a mistake in booking. And just when youâre done smoothing out one problem, thereâs always two more to handle, and a new wave of clients at your door.
But youâve always wanted to work in hospitality, to connect with others, and the look of joy on your clientsâ face when the wedding comes together gives you a satisfaction like nothing else. Thereâs something about connecting people, of watching people who want to spend their lives by each otherâs side, that makes you feel as giddy as if youâre the one getting married.
You keep in touch with your classmates and the volleyball team members you once coached, though itâs still hard to wrap your head around the fact you know three professional volleyball players now. Osamu has a habit of giving you free onigiri whenever you stop by his shop, and Shiori and Jun still text you sporadically with updates on their lives.
But itâs Kita who you make an effort to call and text everyday. Even if you donât live next to each other anymore, hearing from him is always a part of your daily ritual. Heâs your best friend, and the two of you have only seen each other in person at family get-togethers during the holidays, or when you try to take a day off to see him on his birthday. Itâs a little lonely to know heâs no longer just a few doors down, that if you looked out the window, you wouldnât see him walking by.
Neither of you talk about high school graduation. You donât bring it up, and neither does Kita, and your relationship is virtually unchanged. Even though you still keep his button, turning it over in your hands when you try to think about what you want. Even though you know both you and Kita are waiting for something. Even though youâre no longer a child and itâs been five years, and youâre just taking advantage of his kindness, because he always, always spoils you.
But thereâs never been a good time to broach the subject, not with classes and now work, and you wonder if itâs too late now. If you imagined the whole thing, if you were wrong, if this is finally the one line youâve crossed.
âYer here,â Kita says, opening the door. âAnd yer early.â
âHi, Shin-kun! Iâm back!â you say, smiling. âThe plane landed at the airport ahead of the scheduled time. Thanks for lettinâ me stay for the weekend.â
Kita is taller now, hair kept a little shorter than he did in high school. Heâs dressed in a plain blue jumpsuit, muddy gloves tucked in his pocket. But he still has the easy, silent grace he always has had, the same intense stare and efficiency and purpose to his actions with no wasted movement. And heâs still Kita, dear Kita, and you know every inch of him, from past to present.
âObaasan likes ya, so itâs no problem,â he says, picking up your suitcase before you can protest. âShe started preppinâ your room as soon as I told her ya were visiting for a while. Sheâs out visitinâ friends now, though.â
âHowâs the farm doing? Want me ta help out?â
âFarmâs doing great, so you should only help if ya want to. I know yer here on break.â
âItâs not a problem!â you say, flexing your arm. âI still keep pretty fit. And Iâd feel bad if I didnât help out at all, ya know!â
When you come downstairs after arranging your luggage in your room (Kita is right. Yumie still has your pair of faded yellow slippers set out, and she fluffed up the futon and set up a vase of pink flowers to brighten up the room), Kita is waiting for you downstairs. He pulls you into his arms for a hug as soon as your feet touch the floor, and you try not to squeak in surprise at the gesture, at the strength hidden in his arms.
âI missed ya,â he says. Thereâs a confidence to his movements, an openness that he didnât have before. It would have been unimaginable as children, the idea of Kita hugging you first, as if you belong nowhere else but his arms.
You wrap your arms around him, his body as familiar to you as your own, sinking into his touch. âI missed you, too.â
And then he pulls away, leaving you with only the tingling memory of his warmth all over your body.
âYer not too tired?â he asks. âWas yer flight long? Did ya eat?â
âI slept on the train,â you say, ticking off on your fingers each question that you answer, âThe flight wasnât too long, and I packed lunch that I ate on the way over. If I didnât, ya wouldâve lectured me again, wouldnât you?â
âYer an adult, with a difficult job,â he says simply. âI wantcha to take care of yourself. Ya used to walk out the door in the mornings without making sure ta eat properly.â
âYouâre always like this, Shin-kun. But I promise I wonât give ya a reason to worry anymore. Iâm not a kid, so I know how to be careful now,â you say playfully. âWhy donât ya show me around?â
The rice paddies sprawl for what feels like miles with pools that reflect the blue sky and billowing clouds, as if shards of the sky have fallen to the earth. New, tender green shoots shyly peek their heads out, the start of the growing season. You walk on the outskirts of the fields, the same fields you once visited as a child during vacation.
Even if it feels the same, the plants and the gentle hands working the land are different. Each meter of land and each budding stalk is a testament to Kitaâs diligence, to the dedication and care he puts into each and every single action he takes everyday.
âItâs beautiful,â you say. âA lot nicer to look at than my cubicle, thatâs for sure.â
âDo ya have any weddings coming up?â
âYup! I have a lot of clients whoâve booked me for May next month. Thatâs when the wedding season gets busiest, so I figured I might as well take advantage of our slow months to come see ya. Itâs been ages, Shin-kun.â
âHave ya thought about your own wedding?â
âMe?â you say, startled. âItâs not something thatâs really on my mind. I mean, thereâs so much work that goes into it. And can ya imagine me gettinâ married? Itâs a little silly. Iâm the wedding planner, not the person who throws a wedding.â
âI can,â Kita says quietly. âAnd ya used to want ta, didnât ya? When we were little. Did that change?â
âShin-kun,â you say. The two of you have stopped walking, and a spring breeze stirs your hair. âWhat do you mean? Did I say something like that?â
He takes a step closer to you. And wonderful Kita Shinsuke, your childhood friend, your best friend, the person youâve always loved most in the entire world, pulls out a bundle of daisies from his pocket, green stem tied with a white ribbon, holding them out to you like a wedding ring.
âI want to marry ya,â he says plainly. âIâve been waitinâ my whole life, ever since ya asked me when we were little. We couldnât then, but we can now. I wanted ta make sure my finances were all right, and didnât want to rush ya while you were still in school and settling into your job.â
âButâWhen didâHow!â you say, words a jumbled mess. Your face is hot, hotter the sun, and youâre dizzy from the sheer intensity of Kitaâs open, genuine affection. You take the flowers from him with trembling hands. Theyâre simple flowers, but you remember now, your childish eight-year-old selfâs declaration, Kitaâs response, an ordinary spring day. It was just a silly, impulsive choice, born out of the intensity of your affection for Kita, but Kita remembers, because of course he does. Because heâs always looking at you, as much as youâve been looking at him.
âDid ya forget?â Kita says quietly, bringing your hand to his mouth, his lips ghosting across your fingertips, the promise of a kiss. He lowers your hand, but doesnât let go, your fingers hooked over the edge of his palm. You canât shake him off, you could never even think about it, because itâs Kita, Shin-kun, the most wonderful person in the entire world. âBut I didnât forget all this time, ever since you asked me. Even if you didnât mean it, I did. I wanted to take my time, court you properly, âcause thatâs just the right thing to do.â
âShin-kun, ya said you didnât want to marry me,â you protest, but your voice is weak even to your own ears. âI remembered that you rejected me!â
âI said we canât, not that I didnât want to marry you. I meant that we should wait until we were old enough to. Kids canât get married, but adults can.â
âYou werenât very clear on that! How was I supposed to know what ya met?â
âThatâs why Iâm telling ya now. Marry me,â Kita whispers. âIâve been waiting for you all my life. I can wait as long as you want me to, but Iâm not as strong as ya think. Iâm a greedy man when it comes to you.â
âShin-kun, yer not being fair,â you whisper. âWe havenât even dated.â
âWe donât have ta get married right now. We can date first, get engaged. Take the time to plan everything, do it in the proper way. I love you,â he says. âIâve loved ya ever since we were kids. If ya donât feel the same, then you can tell me right now, and Iâll still be yer best friend. That wonât change. Iâll always love you, even if ya donât love me in the same way.â
Heâs impossible. Heâs impossible, and this isnât real, it canât be. You bring the bundle of flowers to your face, the smooth edge of a waxen petal pressed against your lips.Â
You canât hide it anymore, even if you wanted to. You canât lie to yourself, canât pretend that your feelings are anything other than what they are. You have to stop running, because Kita is waiting for you, right here, right now, and heâs not going to leave.Â
âI love you,â you say, voice choking. âShin-kun, I love you. What are ya saying? You really think I wouldnât feel the same way? Iâve loved ya since before I knew what love even was. Yer the most wonderful person in the world. Iâd choose ya, again and again. I want to marry you, Kita Shinsuke, even if we gotta wait another ten years.â
The flowers fall from your lips as Kita cups your face, cradling you as tenderly as heâs always treated you, because heâs always going along with all your whims while never straying from your side. His lips are on yours, soft, sweet, and he kisses you. Again, and again, and again, an endless shower of kisses that rain on you, as if heâs making up for the years in which he couldnât. And you accept his kisses greedily, parched earth finally watered, because Kita Shinsuke is the most wonderful man in the world, your best friend from childhood, and the person you love more than anyone else.
(âYer really not going ta ask them out? I thought ya liked them. Yer young, Shinsuke. Ya gotta be bold,â Obaasan asks. Sheâs washing vegetables over the kitchen sink, shirt sleeves rolled up, as he chops radish on the cutting board, an efficient system for dinner that theyâve worked out ever since he moved in.
Ever since high school, sheâs been slyly dropping hints about marriage, eyes drifting towards you meaningfully or inquiring about how your relationship has been going. But itâs Obaasan, so Kita dutifully entertains her questions every time even though he can see her ulterior motives, plain as day.
âIâm courtinâ them,â Kita says plainly, âIn the way that works best for us. Datinâ would only make it more complicated, and I donât think they want any of that yet, not with their job. âS no good to rush things. Ya taught me that.â
âDo they know that? What if someone snatches them up? Theyâre so cute, and theyâre young and alone in a big city. Since theyâre visitinâ tomorrow, ya gotta take the chance to say something, ya hear me? I want ta see the two of you at the altar soon.â
He thinks about the daisies heâs grown and picked that are now waiting patiently for your hands, the photographs from your childhood together carefully framed on his dresser, the years heâs spent by your side, nursing his feelings day by day, ritual by ritual.
âIâm not worried,â Kita says. âBecause weâre important ta each other. Even if they didnât love me like I loved them and married someone else, that wouldnât change.â
Obaasan chuckles. âYa know, the two of you really think alike. âS like yer meant to be. When you were babies, they used ta reach for ya on the playmat and chew on ya, but ya wouldnât let go once they did. Clung to them like ya were afraid of them disappearing, like they belonged right by your side.â
âObaasan?â
ââS nothing. As long as the two of you find yer way to each other, it doesnât matter how bumpy the road is. All that matters is that day by day, moment by moment, yer building yer life and relationship together. And as long as the two of you reach each other in the end, youâll be okay.â)
Old art from 2024 in celebration for Dottolone being canon (Delusional... Or am I?)




