hi! i'm luna, iâm 21 yo. iâm an aries, i believe in soulmates & aliens, as childish as it might sound, and i love the less well-known haikyuu characters more than should probably be healthy.
current mini obsessions; kunimi, taichi, shirabu and futakuchi
i only write fluff and angst here, maybe some slightly suggestive content but nothing explicit.
ç PLATFORM 2; RULES
iâm an adult , i think iâve got no business interacting with minors. this blog is +18. minors donât like, comment, reblog or send asks off anon.
this is a sideblog that iâm much less active on than my main writing blog, so i most likely wonât take requests atm.
i havenât written fluff/ angst in a while so iâm a bit rusty, but i hope itâs still enjoyable!
i support dark content writers. there wonât be any on this blog but still, if you donât like that, youâre free to see yourself out.
ç PLATFORM 3; NAVI
masterlist
#luna;talks >> rambles tag
#talkto;luna >> asks
#ch; >> personal character tags
Curled up on his chest and breathing deeply, buried deep in his shirt and the blankets, youâre his. Matching the way his lungs rise and fall, and completely helpless. He hates that all he can do is be there, exist near you and not for you, that thereâs nothing he can say to make it feel better. He canât carry it for you, and it breaks him a little on the inside, because youâre extra frail right now. Full of little potholes that he wants so desperately to fill, for you, because he loves you. Deeply, and from the very bottom of his heart.
If thereâs anything heâs grateful for, itâs the way he can whisper it, and you whisper it back. Itâs a minimal victory though. The walls still feel shattered, ash still falls from the sky and chokes your breathing. He holds you, afraid that this isnât going to be enough. Not nowâ not tomorrow either. You shake into his hug, sniffling.
âIâm just so tired of it all, I want it to stop. I donât want to try anymore.â Itâs whispered into his shirt and his hand stops rubbing circles into your back for a moment to watch you, really watch you.
As you crawl closer to him, settling with your nose at his throat and exposing him for all heâs worth in these moments, thereâs so much he wants to say. So much that he canât say, because as much as he loves you, it doesnât help. You must know, because you look up with puffy, teary eyes and cling to his shirt, and suddenly heâs tearing up too. And so he kisses you, because thatâs all that he can really do. âI wonât do it. Not while youâre around,â you whisper to his lips.
Those words haunt him.
But theyâre also his saving grace, because at least he can do something. Be there, and stay by you. Watching after you and taking you around, not letting you wallow. And though you donât want to be holding him back, he can tell when you give him another look of exasperation, heâll do it to the best of his ability. It becomes second nature to look for you from the corner of his eye, browsing the isles, walking to team meetings with your hand locked in his. Visiting friends.
Atsumu only keeps his attention for all of two minutes, making him enjoy the end of the season. But when Shugo looks around and doesnât see you, all of that is gone. Instantly. His head feels heavy as he turns around, already starting to tear between the people for your familiar clothing, that little face he loves so much. He pushes through a hall past some of the other players into the spread of the living room, aimlessly wandering and calling your name.
And right as he thinks of making a huge scene, two small arms wrap around his waist, and he sighs so deep it scares you. Turning and taking you in, his eyes clench closed as he drops to his knees and pulls your body to him. Face buried into your chest and large hands keeping you almost too close, right now he doesnât care. âYer fine,â he saysâ asks, deep voice a bit too tight, âI thought somethinâ happened to ya.â
And strangely, youâre the strong one now, as you cradle his head to you and press a kiss to his crown, letting him stay like this for a bit. âIâm good, Shugo, Iâm okay. Iâm sorry for scaring you, I needed the toilet.â Heâll probably have to explain himself to the hosts later, but for right now that doesnât matter.
ââM sorry for scaring ya too.â You two drive home that night in quiet laughter at giving each other a panic attack, and he spends all of his time staring at you from the corner of his eye. These things take time, and theyâre not linear. But he loves you, and you love him; and for right now, thatâs enough.
Six days after you move in he realises he loves you. Less than 200 hours, two grocery store runs and one visit from a pink haired friend a few blocks down is all it takes for the force of his adoration to bang him over the back of the head and leave him struggling not to flush when you get near.
With the hit of your chin on the kitchen counter when he canât help but burst out into violent laughter so full it hurts below his ribs, watching you glare at him through thick, dark lashes. With the shudder of the windows of his old car at the bass, that of a song that seems a fit too perfect to the way your lips mouth along and you drift off into thought on the way back home.
Even so soon after letting you take the spare room in his apartment for the next few months of the excruciating papers you have to write he has to come to the realisation that the guys are right, that thereâs no way this will turn out well. But not like that, not because heâs stupid or reckless. It isnât a balancing act with you, no wobbly rope in between two safeholds to cross.
Loving someone doesnât just creep up on you, it doesnât have the ability to be stealthy if it tried. He knows this, memorised it by heart in his teen years to save himself some heartbreak. But to Iwa, youâve always been it. Youâve always been the one he returned to, and realising that much is a kick of fresh adrenaline.
Itâs in that soft breath that he sees the imaginary rosette of stars dangling above your head like a crown. And Iwaizumi isnât known for his poetics, but looking at you in the dark as he gently runs his fingertips over his guitar and you eye him with such wonder, he feels like the Earth could swallow him whole and heâd remain molten to the core through it.
Balancing your cheek in your palm, eyes sleepy and only one side of your face lit gold and eggshell, you gaze at him and smile, and he swears he can feel some parts of his heart explode. He doesnât play well. You donât care.
You only let your breathing get slower, before getting up and shrugging off your sweater. The sight of it slows his fingers to a halt, but you tilt your head to the side a bit and blink. âKeep going,â you whisper, and he does. Because he couldnât stop if he tried, because youâve taken his soul hostage here at the crack of dawn in some dim, sleepless apartment. And then you close your eyes and sway on your feet for a moment, lips curling at the edges. âThis is nice.â
âYeah,â he croaks back, voice suddenly losing all agency. If you notice it, you donât mention it. His breathing falters at the curve of your throat, your jaw, running over spread lashes. He swallows. âWe should sleep in tomorrow.â It means nothing, but his heart still soars when you agree, when you open your eyes and find his and look straight through his glass casing.
You giggle, breathless, it pulls your nose into a little scrunch. âYou hate sleeping in.â
âBut you love sleeping in,â he mouths back before he can think better, âand Iââ
His fingertips ache from the metal strings. He feels the words crawling up his throat the split second he realises heâd play for you until his fingers bled. These are the years of friendship up in flames, right? The regret?
âAnd you what?â
Heâs never been one for regretting anyway. Heâs not ready, but you look at him like love, and thatâs enough. He stops playing. âAnd I love you.â
You laugh, slapping your hand over your mouth in a second, then stay wide-eyed for several after.
Heâs not even taken aback, if anything thatâs a better reaction than he was hoping for. Even when you crush him under the palm of your dainty hands, you can smile once and make it better. But he waits for a second, because this is not the same tone as the laughter that fills the room at his expense more often than not, itâs small and unbelieving and you look at him like he just made a terrible joke.
And he wonât lose like this. âI mean it,â he admits, and your hands drop from those perfect lips to reveal your cracked pout.
âSay it again.â
You sit down on the opposite couch again, and he takes that as validation enough to break himself open once and for all. âI love you, I love you, I love you.â Nothing but truth, wholeheartedly. âSo letâs sleep in tomorrow, yeah?â
âY-yeah,â you struggle, catching his eyes once more as he puts the guitar aside and casts you a glance. âHajime?â âHmâ he offers back. And you fist your hands into the bottom of your shirt then, switch couches to get into his lap instead and cup his face, while his heartbeat bangs so hard against his chest that it makes him dizzy. âStay with me?â
He leans up, hand coming to the back of your neck to pull you to him. Lips to his and your breathing stuttering. It only took you six days to destroy him entirely, and one well placed breath at 4am on a Wednesday.
Something happens when you tell a person you love them. A chemical reaction, a slight hitch in time and the crashing of two massive rain clouds that makes the entire sky rumble. Itâs sharp and direct, and Keiji thinks that maybe, maybe âI love youâ will never be for him. It might just not be, because that would be a ridiculous leap of faith, and he isnât ready to be that trusting.
But in your arms he could fall. He could fall and land softly, when looking at you through the empty glass of his sake with his cheek pressed to the wooden table and his glasses slid far down his face.
With your hair tied away from your face and your smile so wide it makes you look a bit too genuine, like someoneâs taken a snapshot of your soul, he can believe the sprawling letters of text seen so often in fiction. The sentiment that youâll know once you meet them.
He might not be ready to be open with you in that way yet, but when your hand hangs by your side while walking you home and your hand seems to ghost over the back of his own, he can see it. And he can look at you when you talk, and see the stars shining in your irises like they somehow came down to earth to possess you.
And he looks, he looks, and longs.
And when you pull him over after waving off a colleague and turn to him with that little glint of sparkling joy, he finds himself reaching. For your hand, your eyes widen a moment. But he hangs on, because dear Gods, it feels so nice to have the friction of your skin against his. Like velvet, like fur, like glass. And you just concede, using the other to hand him a copy of a book he hasnât read yet. Your favorite, you admit.
And he squeezes your fingers a bit harder before he lets go, allowing you to break him down on the spot when you admit to it.
And this much, he thinks he can handle.
That when you find the present on the corner of your desk across the room from his, gaze swinging around until it lands on him with a question, youâll know. That when he gives you a copy of that book you both debated over for hours under the loud drumming of the rain and you swore to him it was a horrific masterpiece, heâd never been more exasperated and smitten with a person in his entire life.
And that youâll understand that while he thinks being ridiculous is your greatest feat, the only words that are left on his tongue when it comes to you, are âI love youâ.
urghh i hate that feeling of dread i get when classes are starting soonđ and youâll be ok hopefully, after all you can go at things at your own pace, itâs okay to not do your best all the time. or maybe i just think thereâs a lot more to life than education and work. ahah i hope you wonât be too busy though, itâs always nice to have time for your personal life rather than having to focus on assignments and stuff all the time :// iâm feeling quite upset today bc of all that, and the fact that they allow for little flexibility in my life đbut anyway, donât feel obligated to respond to me if youâre not up to it, sometimes i donât like interacting with others too much either so i would 100% understand. but iâll be here :) - đ¤
Iâm so sorry for answering this so late sweetheart!! It got a bit lost in my inbox ⥠but this is such a lovely message, thank you so so much for the encouragement. Itâs true, assignments and work really do make up a lot of your day which is sad :(( but i hope youâre doing alright and at least able to enjoy your time off. enjoy your weekend
iâm happy to hear that, i hope you have a good week as well!! my week is turning out to be a little stressful but iâve done a good chunk of my work and a bit of my art project today, so hopefully itâll be better. whatâve you been up to love?? - đ¤
ah iâm sorry baby :// please remember ti take care of yourself and drink and eat enough! get some naps if you have to. iâve been working and then trying to clean up my room a little, not been doing much. my classes start again in half a week so iâll be more busy then i think but :< iâll deal. please take care of yourself
aw itâs okay if you donât feel comfy sharing, i completely respect that, hopefully iâll come across your blog one day though đ. iâve read both your works, both are absolutely amazing!! itâs called lace really broke my heart :(( howâs your day/night going?? - đ¤
thank you so much, thatâs very sweet of you to say, i really enjoyed writing itâs called lace!! and my day has been good đ I hope you have a good week!
whatâs your main blogâs @?? iâd love to see more of your writing :)
I donât feel comfortable sharing my main writing blog on this one because I write dark content and smut there, which is why Iâm keeping this one separate. Iâm sorry ( ɾ̼̼ ËĚŤ ɾ̼̼) maybe youâll recognize me on one of those pesky dc blogs hfbsdh but for now I wonât be sharing my main. Iâll try to post more on here though. I know Iâve really been using it as a dump for my fluffy thoughts
sometimes i think of holding hajimeâs hands when heâs not asking for it. just when you feel he might need it, a little push of support by trailing your fingertips along the length of them and playing with his fingers when heâs stressed out or worrying about things; i think he finds so much comfort in your touch. and sometimes heâll press a kiss to your interlaced fingers, before pulling it to his heart where you belong.
iwaizumi hajime
wordc; 1k
cw; fluffy confessions, friends to lovers
where in hajime isnât very good with words or feelings, but heâs willing to try this once
I really fucking like you.
It hangs in the air long after he says it. Thereâs very little that Iwaizumi isnât known for. Heâs known for being powerful, without fault, both in muscle and in mental strength and itâs something heâs always taken a sense of pride in, for better or for worse. Because that left people thinking of him as clenched jaws and a painful grip most times theyâd approach him, like a step in the wrong direction might set him off and make him bare his teeth.
Born with a hunger for anything that can sate him; thatâs what people saw him as from as soon as he was big enough to stand his ground without falling, and they called it strength. But despite what everyone thinks, he has never felt weaker than when heâs around you. When you lean into him for a split second, blouse brushing past his bare arm and setting the cells under it alight, Hajime thinks he might crumble to dust.
He breathes and laughs, pretending not to notice the shine in your eyes when you giggle a little too enthusiastically at something a classmate says. You do that sometimes, laugh like the entire world canât take away your happiness if it tried. Sometimes you tear up and fold in on yourself with the force of it, and in all honesty, he thinks itâs the most powerful thing that heâs ever seen in his life. And when you catch yourself and look at him for the few lingering breaths you let out he thinks he might never get the strength to tell you just how well he knows the curve of your lips.
Heâs known for being gruff and rugged too; an observation thatâs not hard to make. Itâs not that he doesnât have soft sides, but his good intentions just always seem to come out a bit too sharply to set people entirely at ease, and heâs learned to accept that words just arenât his strongest suit. They arenât where he thrives, because sometimes he gets them stuck in his throat.
Sometimes thereâs things that he thinks, sharp, calculated thoughts that have no use, so they rot in the back of his skull where he keeps all the rest of the nonsense. And though people think heâs rough around the edges thereâs no one that can deny that his sharp mind is leading him places, as one of the top students in his class and well on his way to a scholarship. But for you, and just for you, he allows himself to be a bit softer. And he allows himself to make mistakes, little ones, only because they glitter in your eyes as adoration and amusement.
When he accidentally bumps into you a bit too hard and topples you from the sidewalk onto your hands and knees, thereâs never any hatred there. Just an understanding that heâs unfamiliar with how much is too much when it comes to you, as you let him dust off your knees from the gravel with the brightest flush youâve ever seen him have. He softens enough to apologize too, something he knows he struggles with on the daily. But the weight of your hand in his much larger palm stays long after heâs taken it away, and he thinks maybe the softness of your skin is rubbing off on him.
The crunch of his feet in the snow is loud, watching it part for his footsteps under the converse shoes not at all fit for this kind of weather. But after another few beats of silence, he stands his ground. âYou donât have to say anything. I know how it is, and I know you donât feel the same way. Yet. But Iâd ratherâ believe that I still have a chance to turn this around, so you donât have to say anything.â
He stuffs his hands into the pant pockets of his uniform, and blows out another white cloud. âJust give me a chance to prove to you that I mean it.â The snow hits his lashes and makes his nose a tint redder as it pours down around him. His bright gaze lingers for a second at your feet where youâre still standing, before flicking up.
Home. He thinks thatâs the way to describe you now. Snuggled up into your fluffy scarf and hat, eyelashes glistening from the melted snow. He knows your cheeks are scratched up and heated from the chilly wind and he knows that if he could see your lips right now, theyâd be pulled into a tiny, useless pout that somehow always makes his heart a bit heavier. It makes no sense, but even still he cherishes it. âDonât look at me like I grew a second head, please. I might not be too good at this kind of thing but Iâm trying my best.â He smiles a little when your nose is pulled up in amusement, finally regaining some movement. Your hat and scarf are covered in white.
And you walk back to your spot beside him with a contented gleam in your eyes, before you both continue down the street, lacing your arm back in his. âI meant it though. Youâre more beautiful than anything around us.â He snorts when you cling to him a little tighter, fighting the urge to hide his face from your prying eyes. The steps are slower now, he canât quite be bothered to hurry home when youâre beside him like this.
Because Iwaizumi is known as the honest one, the straightforward one, and thatâs one part of him that you will never be able to shake. Not when the truth is so obviously staring him in the face. âIsnât that the stupidest thing Iâve ever said aloud?â
âMaybe,â you hum, staring up at the side of his face like you know something that no one else does. Like you know something about him that he has yet to know. âBut I think you should do it more.â And the fact that he will, for you; thatâs what makes you more powerful than heâll ever be. You snicker when he looks away with a burning pink spreading over the tips of his ears anyway.
âNext time you tell someone you like them though, you should probably leave them a little more time to process before you hurt yourself trying to explain it.â And then, like the gust of wind ruffling his hair, you giggle. âI like you too.â
kunimi akira
wordc; 8k+
cw; 1970s!au, post-war!au, soldier!au, mention of unrelated violence, mature and degrading language, suggestive moments, reader is a sex worker, !shinjō - love deaths!
if you are not familiar with the story, please take the warnings seriously. based on the short story KamÄra shinjĹŤ by Sueko Yoshida.
â
In the dead of night, from somewhere across the river, a clarinet. It fills the silence that is left behind the steps of men in uniform, lately outings solidly cemented in itâs rhythm. With your hands wrung tight in your jacket, vice like, you soak in the cold. The cobbled paths of Osaka are covered in a light layer of powdered white, crackling softly under the feet of a passerby. Your fingers are red, numb, with only your hard bones to peek through the hardened skin, and with these clumsy touches you drop open your jacket to fall around your elbows.
This way your shoulders and chest are almost entirely bare, and though you should be used to it by now, thereâs a part of you, small and evergreen, that probably will never. Another set of soldiers passes under the lowly light of the theater building, trampling the last remains of cherry blossom with little care. The men are warm as they pass you by, stern in the face but with the playful smell of tobacco and whiskey to carry behind them.
You smile, as you look up at one of them, taking his slowed steps as a certain involvement. âGood evening, Sirs. Can I help you tonight?â The blond with a mustache, broadly built and towering above you, looks you up and down once, then twice, his eyes shaped with a hardness that most men have. The jazzy music seems to blend into the distance until is merged with the silence. You try to get rid of the shivers of your body, and give your most charming smile. âOne night is only 20$ for soldiers.â Lies. One night is a fifty for any other girl here, soldier or not. But you donât get to be picky, working so far outside the professional district.
âYou speak English quite well for a foreign whore,â the other smiles, teeth bared with a viciousness resembling a rabid animal, âbut not tonight, little mouse.â His dark brown hair is shiny with pomade, slacks held up by tan suspenders. His words donât sting anymore.
You just pout and blink from under your lashes, hiding your shaky hands between your thighs in hope for a little bit of warmth. The blond soldier stares for a little longer, blatant eyes gliding over your chest and legs, before he slides his hand into his pocket. From out of the black uniform appears an old, red box.
âWould you like a smoke?â he asks, placing a cigarette between his own lips smoothly. His voice is heavy, thick with some kind of European accent, youâre not sure which one. In the last years, many a countries have deployed their soldiers here, though most of them American. They carry stories of cities bigger than life, buildings higher than the sky itself and though you know you wonât, you wish to see them some day. His rough fingers reach over to you, taking your hand in his.
âNo, Sir,â you reply quickly though, tracing the cobbles of the road with the tip of your foot. His grip on your hand tightens slightly, calling for attention. The skin rough on your own.
âYou should head farther up the street, girl. Thatâs where all the lovely ladies hang out. And thatâs where all the soldiers get out of the bars.â He drops your hand to squeeze your shoulder instead, and puffs a cloud of white smoke into the dark night sky. With some more gazes at your thinly veiled body, he takes a step back. You know this, of course, itâs hardly your first time out here. But lately, the men have been getting both more scarce and pickier, forcing you to drop your prices lower and lower.
âCome on, François. Weâre going to be late if we donât keep going. I wonât have Nakayama show us up on yet another thing,â a swift grimace your way, âdefinitely not for the cheap price of a twenty.â He smacks the blondâs shoulder, and laughs then. âMove out, Sergeant.â The taller man gives a short nod at his friend in reply, waves you a slight goodbye, and turns on his heel.
The two saunter down the street with obnoxious story telling of the brunet ringing behind them. The lights twinkle in the darkness, bright to dim over and over. You huff and roll your eyes when they disappear behind the corner, watching the warm air from your lungs warp into clouds. Your jacket is pulled closed again, shaking like a reed as you look around. The streets are too lonely here, tonight.
Itâs not your night, you feel it already. You glance behind you to peek at the clock in the facade of the building, and take a breath. A quarter past three already. Shit. Deciding swiftly, you wrap your jacket tightly around your body, and start walking the opposite way. Your heels tap on the street, mixing up the music in the background. You run the back of your hand under your eyes swiftly, before crossing the street, as a car speeds by on the next lane.
You pass some civilians and another set of soldiers, drunk and jovial, and come to a halt at the tram stop. The old faces of the houses here have their charm, you think, wishing just a second that you could see them from the eyes of just a visitor. Someday, maybe.
The tram makes a blaring, rattling noise at it comes to a stop. You get on quickly, ignoring the blatant looks of men and women alike. You could probably try in Naha today, hoping thereâs more people there on a cold day like this. You take a seat, settling as the vehicle starts moving again, metal cold against your thigh. You only have a couple thousand yen left. Hopefully youâll make it through tonight, and make at least a little bit of money. Otherwise, itâll seem like a very cold, long winter.
You pass by men in business suits at a swift pace, almost blowing the top hats off their heads, which makes you smile. It might be a sad, lowly night, but at least the blurred streaks of lights in the distance are pretty.
You arrive in the next district quicker than you expected, and jump out to cross the street with a giggle, ignoring the honking of an angry driver. The smell of hot dogs fills the street here, a few people lining up on the sidewalk.Â
 group of a dozen soldiers mingle under the roof of the bar. But your eyes instead glide to the man standing a little bit outside the group instead, taking him in as he chugs the last of his beer, and leaves his bottle on the windowsill of a neighboring house. His black hair is slightly wet from the snow, and his uniform hangs open to reveal a white undershirt.
Youâve always found it easier to approach men when they are alone. The cold wind sends you on your way, heels tapping on the smooth stone, under the gazes from the few other strangers. At least youâre still being noticed. Thatâs a good sign. As you take a deep breath, a memory wraps around your mind like a warm scarf.
It was a night like this one indeed, when you met him. When you get close enough, the strangerâs eyes flick up to you, eyebrows rising slightly. Though you wish to drift away into thought, youâve got more important things to do. So you push any memories to the back of your head, and drop your jacket open as you come to stand next to him. âEveninâ,â the black-haired, young man mumbles, turning his head to look at you better. You smile, and nod at him, before leaning into the wall.
âGood evening indeed.â His mouth twitches with a smile, as you purse your lips. âWant to go somewhere with me, soldier?â He waits for a second, until another late car passes and after heâs glanced at the men further up the street. You wonder if heâs sober enough to understand why you came up to him in particular. Itâs not like heâs that handsome. His hand is stuffed into the pocket of his creased slacks.
âWhere do you want to go?â he asks, dark eyes gliding down your neck to your chest.
You giggle, fighting the urge to roll your eyes. âTo make love.â A few years ago, these words would have made you a blushing, stuttering mess. But sadly, youâre not a few years ago now, and life isnât as easy as you prayed it would be. When you look over your shoulder at him, you can see his slight clumsiness of movements, the slight slowness that alcohol delivers you after three oâclock.
âIâm broke,â the soldier admits, and for one, you believe. It seems everyone is, these days.
You sigh, but lean into him a little, grabbing his arm softly. This is the tricky part, you know this from experience. If youâre too eager, youâll scare him away. But if youâre too slow, he might just slip through your fingers. His muscles are hard, proof of a hard day of work. âTwenty dollars,â you bring out, hoping with every fiber this man realizes what that number even means. Itâs less than half of what most girls on the street are used to asking. A steal, in his eyes. And for you, well, what choice do you have? Youâre broke.
And indeed, the manâs eyes glide up to yours at that, his eyes shining with sudden interest. âTwenty?â he repeats, slightly disbelieving.
With another look at the men to your left, catching the eyes of one of them, who gives you a sleazy grin, you nod. âYes. Letâs go get warm, come on. Wherever you want to go, weâll go.â You pull on his arm a little, feeling relief fill you as he moves from the wall without any more asking. You were already fearing this night would be totally wasted. And you really didnât have the money to waste. âWhatâs your name, soldier?â you prompt, ignoring his cold hand as it travels into your shirt and up your back.
âPeter,â he mumbles, âPeter OâSullivan.â You hum softly, and cross the littered street with him, under the soft music of the bar.
â Ą
Youâre awoken by a soft thump next to the bed. When you open your eyes, the soft light of the sun peeks through the curtains onto your face, ceiling covered with the slight swirling of the incense smoke that burns on the bedside table. You glance to your side, at the slowly moving shape that takes up the rest of your bed. Kunimi is already looking at you, probably has been for a little while judging by his expression.
With a quick swallow, you turn on your other side, and pull the blankets up to your neck. In the light of morning, he can see your every flaw, and youâre not ready to lay that openly in front of him. You probably never will be.
His soft breath fills the silence, as you shut your eyes tightly. Kunimi wants to leave. You know this. You see it in his eyebrows, laced together with frustration that fills him top to bottom, in the fearful look he gives you when he thinks youâre not looking. The sadness in his motions, every second of every day. His eyes, though deep as the night sky, are those of someone with doubt in their heart and soul. You wish you didnât care to pay enough attention to see it.
He wants back to his unit. He has the darkness of a person whoâs suffering under the weight of the world, a man whoâs fading with the time and the pathetically boring reality that is the life of a deserter. And it comes out in his brisk walk, and the sharpness of glass when itâs late. Heâs started to loathe being near you, since you have become the only face of his life. Day in and day out, and you can watch it seep out of his seams when heâs around you. Heâs tired of running, you know this.
The Military Police isnât even looking for him. The patrol and police cars have been sent out in mass numbers just as little, leaving him with the blank reality that people donât care. Thereâs no excitement left in being a fugitive, and so thereâs no excitement left in being with you, either. And pretty soon after this, he came to the conclusion that being a deserter is painfully, sadly unmemorable.
The boredom is twisting up his insides. It is easy to read it on his face, easy to imagine that any day now, heâll get up and he wonât come back to you by the time evening comes. Any second now, heâll get up and walk all the way to Camp Courtney, with the ugly, chipped, green gate that separates it from the street. âItâs meâ, he will admit, âIâm the fugitive.â And the MP will arrest him and throw him in a cold, lonely jail.
But no matter whatâ youâre sure heâll go. It could be tomorrow, or today, or in a week, that much you canât predict just yet. But one day he will get up and walk all the way to that ugly, green gate with the aluminum roof and thereâs nothing you can do to stop him.
You hear him climb out of the bed, feel the slight movement of the mattress at the lack of his weight, and listen as he opens the windows. With one smooth move, he slides open the curtain further, dousing the room in a light too bright for a cold morning like this. You pull the blanket over your head entirely, turning the other way again so you can look at him through a thin sliver of unobstructed view.
He takes a deep breath, and sits down on the rickety chair on your balcony. The breeze plays with his fluffy hair this way, tossing and turning it in all kinds of fun shapes. You let your eyes travel from his dark hair down, his ears peeking out cutely, following the thin lines of his neck to a broad, muscular back that flexes slightly as he leans forward to watch the cars drive past.
And though the light annoys you, this is Akira at his finest. After getting up, he travels to the kitchen to get a glass of water, stretches out, walks over to the window and watches the world awaken. Always. If youâre lucky, he crawls back into bed with you for a little longer after that, because he can.
Lately heâs been avoiding it, avoiding you and though you want to be mad for it, you donât think you are. The man is tired. Of this apartment. Of you. Of life. You understand that feeling better than most. When a bird chirps from the rain gutter of the house across the street, he takes a deep breath, and turns to look at you. You, a lump under the thick blankets.
You lower the blankets a little to expose your eyes to him, and yawn. âNimi?â Your voice is quite thick, most likely an oncoming cold from any of the nights youâve spent outside lately.
He nods, and brings his eyes to connect with yours, attentive and kind, though the lazy lilt of his head says enough. âHm?â
âPlease close the window and the curtain if youâre done, the light is too bright.â Without saying anything, he does. The windows are shut, the curtains closed, making your home feel dim, and you almost immediately feel bad calling him back. Kunimi puts the old chair back in itâs place, and comes to sit at the edge of the bed, his side.
âCome here,â you breathe, opening the warm blankets for him in the hope that itâs enough to keep him settled for just this little while. He runs his slender, soft fingers through his hair, brushes it out of his way a bit, and slides into the blankets like you ask, his warm hands finding your sides almost immediately.
âYou were out last night,â you note, melting into the bed more as you tilt your head back a bit to look at his visage. Itâs not much of a question, at this point. The young man hums in response, and lets his hand travel to the small of your back, his lips opening and closing over and over as he thinks.
It makes the image of a fish out of water flash in front of your eyes, darting around desperately. You canât help but think it fits the situation perfectly, fits him perfectly. âWhat time did you come back?â
âUhm,â Kunimi frowns a little and looks up to the ceiling as if thinking about an answer, before letting out a sharp breath through his nose. âOne, maybe? It could have been two, Iâm not sure.â You know he came in at five last night, you donât mention it. Instead you bring up your hand, and brush your thumb from his chin to his cheekbone, resting it there with tiny circles.
Heâs young still, for a soldier, you think. And knowing that he already served for a while, means that he was much too young when he started. Heâs also too pretty to be a soldier. Now, you know that the army doesnât make exceptions like that, but he could have been anything he wanted to be, back home.
You never asked, but every reason escapes you when you think of why he could have possibly joined. A gorgeous thing like him, who hates the army more than anything. It seems backwards in many ways, but then again, that tooâ is Akira at his finest.
You decide not to think of it, since it wonât make a difference in the long run. He takes a few breaths with closed eyes, pulling his nose into an adorable little scrunch every few seconds. âYou went to sleep with your pants on?â you ask, feeling the rough fabric on your skin when your legs tangle together.
âYeah,â the brunet sighs, scooting a bit closer so he can lay his head above yours on the pillow, âtoo much work to take it off.â His warmth so close, smell so unmistakably Kunimi that it almost makes you homesick, in a way. Because even when heâs right here, under your fingertips and holding onto you, you know heâs so far away from you and your dull, boring apartment that any tenderness serves no use.
So you donât respond, and press your body as close to his as it can get, nodding your head with the smallest movements you can make. Your lips press to the base of his throat a couple of times, letting your forehead rest against his skin.
âWhere did you go?â you breathe.
With the soft words again, he pulls back a little and gives you a look, staring so openly at your face that you feel yourself getting red. âTo Iwaâs. Iwaizumi Hajime, you know? I told you about him, that friend from the same division I left from. He lives nearby. I went to visit for a while.â
You now hum, listening to the little bird from earlier as it sings through the silence. You drop your hand from his face, and roll to your back, watching the last wisps of smoke floating by the eggshell ceiling, and at the tea pot that stands steaming on the counter. You hate the emptiness you feel when his hands travel over your thighs, brushing over your underwear.
âAs long as you stay in a friendâs house, okay. But if you walk around too much during the day, the MP will find you and lock you up. You should be careful.â You donât understand the army, honestly. Itâs been six months since Kunimi left his unit in a hurry and ran off into the city, yet nothingâ no one seems to be so much as looking for him in the slightest. He doesnât behave like a deserter, and basically runs around day and night without a care in the world.
If you hadnât read it in the paper yourself, youâd never even believed that he was on the run. Kunimi doesnât respond to this, so you look back at him, sitting up on the plush. âTake off your pants,â you mumble, ignoring the coldness when it travels over every inch of your skin. Your entire top half breaks out in goosebumps. With a slight pause, the brunet follows your request, and tosses the piece of fabric on the floor.
He sucks his bottom lip into his mouth when you settle over his body, leaning down to his tummy. Your hands travel down his ribs and waist, squeezing with gentle touches in his soft skin. You press kisses down his navel towards his crotch, as you pull his last layer of clothing down his legs. Kunimi shakes a little when your nails dig into his muscular thighs.
His beautiful hands settle on both sides of your face as you go to work, breath heavier than normal. He cocks his head back in pleasure. You canât drag your eyes away from him for a second. Heâs so pretty, he really is.
His skin warm, like running honey, in stark contrast with his dark head of hair. Dark, calculating eyes that would put the blade of a sword to shame, and the kisses of sun that are littered across his cheeks and nose with a gentleness only heaven can give. God must have worked hard on this one, you think, as you watch the fluttering of his lashes.
â ˘
As you walk down Gate street, small snowflakes start coming down from the clouds, landing on the tip of your nose and the length of your lashes. You pull your woolen hat down further, and hold your hand up to protect your eyes a bit more. Canât have your make-up running. You pull your empty shopping bag closer to your thigh, and speed up your steps a tad.
It wasnât a day like this, but it was right here, you recall. You were waiting for some soldiers to finish their drink, walking over to them with a little smile. However, they were both far past drunk, so you quickly steered away. It was only midnight, and a figure came out of another bar, clothed in dark clothes but with slightly too long hair peeking from under an ocean blue newsy cap.
âHey,â you call as he passes you by on the sidewalk, trying to catch his eyes in the process. You are just about to give up on him too, when he stops walking. He takes two steps backwards to send you an intrigued look without flinching for a second. You noticed he still looked younger, then too. Unmarked by the crows feet and stubble your other clients are so easily recognized by.
You clear your voice and lift one of your brows at his expression. âTwenty dollars,â you say.
The young man responds without hesitating, dropping his narrowed gaze for a slight twitch of his lips. âTen dollars.â This makes you scoff, shaking your head at the ground in disbelief. Does he really think that he can get a woman for a pathetic two thousand yen? No one in their right mind would sell that body for that price.
Your first instinct is to get mad, at the ridiculous offer that dares cross his lips. But when you look up, possibly to cuss him out, you catch his eyes again. His face still has the certain go-lucky calmness most people have lost through the years, and surprisingly, it calms the fire in your chest almost instantly.
You notice truly how handsome he is as you try to form a response, bright in the night light. Unbelievably so. And youâ youâve always had the bad habit of leaving a soft spot open for good-looking men. He looks lost, you have to admit, like he dropped a piece of himself earlier and is desperately looking for it.
Though his handsome face isnât what eventually makes you agree. Youâve been out in the shadow for almost three hours already, and youâre exhausted. At this point, you just wanted to sit down. Preferably with a warm body pressed to your own on a soft bed, free of charge if you must. Kunimi appears in a moment of emotional weakness of your heart, and stays there for the days to come. Heâs alone, soldiers are hardly ever alone at this hour.
You walk straight past the hotels of B.C. Street and take him to your apartment in Kamara. When you enter the living room, where your bed also stands, you put out your hand and wet your lips. âTen dollars.â He takes a crumpled piece of paper from his pocket and smooths it out in your palm, giving you a small, crooked smile. âDo you really have nothing more?â you ask, fighting the frown on your forehead.
âI swear,â he nods, pursing his lips cutely, as he rocks on his feet, back and forth over and over. âItâs all I have left.â
You close the door with a sigh, and loosen your ponytail to let your hair spill out over your shoulders, sitting down on the bed. âIf thatâs true, how are you going to pay a taxi to get back to the base?â you ask, cocking your head sideways a little. What an interesting person, you think, the blush on his cheeks from the cold painting him in contrast with your dim home.
His black jacket is missing one of itâs gold painted buttons. So itâs true. You raise your arms to take off your sweater, and toss it onto some of your other clothes, as Kunimi averts his eyes to the floor. âWell?â
âIâm not going back,â he admits.
Now, your curiosity is definitely peaked. âWhat do you mean, youâre not going back?â
The brunet takes off his cap, and lifts his shoulders with a lost expression. âI ran away.â You just respond a quiet âohâ, and swing your feet close over the floor for a moment, thinking it over. Though you know that many soldiers leave before their time is done, youâve never actually met one.
After a few seconds, you look up to study the face of the boyâman, really now. His face is clear, with well-sized features and wild hair that rests over his eyebrows and is pulled behind his ears without much care. He frowns, slightly unsure, as he leans against your counter.
âWhereabouts were you?â
He taps his fingers on the wood as he answers, warming up slowly but surely in the confinements of your small home. âCamp Courtney.â
âSo you were a marine?â you fire back. Kunimi nods, looking out the window for a second, until you talk again. âWhat are you going to do next, now youâve run away?â This seems to puzzle him for a second, like he didnât expect your interest in his story. Honestly, neither did you. But youâve never seen a soldier quite like him. He doesnât seem to have the same self-importance most of them have when they walk your streets.
âI hope to find a way to get enough money to cross to Honshu. From there I wanna get to Korea or the Soviet Union if I have to.â
âChrist!â you respond in surprise, lifting your brows in doubt. Youâve never deserted. Is that really what a person must do to escape the army? Kunimi just shrugs again, nonchalant with the words. The slightly wet paper you twirl between your fingers stills for a moment. But well, same here. You donât hand him back the money.
The young soldier, thick blankets pulled up to his chin, stares at you when you walk out the shower and towards the bed. Your gazes cross, and he quickly looks away, which amuses you more than you expect it to. But the longer you look, the colder you feel. You feel a devouring sadness for him, and you donât know why. It drives you without your own will, wanting to wrap him up in your arms and to press a kiss to his forehead, to make him believe itâs going to be okay.
Maybe itâs the warm light of the lamp in the corner of the room, but his face is filled with a certain loveliness. Despite the calmness he seems to spread, his dark eyes are fearful. You donât bother putting on your lace panties before you crawl into bed. You lean forward gently, and press a kiss to his cold lips, before taking his hand and placing it on your body.
Kunimi has nowhere else to go that night, and you let him stay over in your apartment. In the morning he leaves, without knowing where to. The next morning, thereâs a little something in the paper about him. You read it when going to the top apartment to get your hair done, letting your eyes travel the grayed paper.
âMarine from Camp Courtney stabs multiple people and runs.â it says. Itâs a short, little article, but you immediately understand itâs about him.
âOn the 7th, a marine of first class (20), stationed in Camp Courtney, got into an altercation over a trinket with his superior sergeant John W. Anderson, on the exercise field of Camp Hansen. He stabbed the sergeant in the gut with the bayonet he had on hand and ran away from the camp. Sergeant Anderson is heavily wounded, and will need a month of recovery. With the aid from the Japanese police the marine is doing everything in their power to track down the young man.â
That youâd slept with someone who stabbed a person, doesnât scare you. You guess he must have been pretty ruthlessly bullied like all those men in the army are by their superiors. He must have lost his self control at a point. In the last couple of years, youâd seen enough bloody fights between soldiers. Once, youâd even seen a person shot in front of you. A simple stabbing doesnât scare you in this regard.
When you travel back all the way down, back home, Kunimi sits patiently waiting on the stairs to your flat. When he spots you, he sends you a tiny nod, face carrying the distinct marks of exhaustion. âHi,â he breathes. You respond with the same, and come to sit next to him on the stairs, putting down your groceries at your feet. His uniform has the distinct smell of sweat, most likely because heâd have to put the same clothes on when he left.
âWhereâd you go?â you ask, looking over your shoulder at him, and the way his skin glows in the light of the sun. Even in a moment like this, he looks bright. Huh.
âIsabama,â the brunet responds carefully, lacing his hands together between his knees. âThatâs where a friend of mine lives, heâs from the same place Iâm from. I was at his place, but he tossed me out.â You nod, understanding. Harboring a deserter probably isnât appreciated in the marine corps.
âYou were in the paper,â you admit, figuring he hasnât had the chance to check. Akiraâs lips pull into a tight line, so you guess youâre right. âThey say you stabbed a sergeant in the gut.â
âStabbed lightly,â Kunimi immediately claps back, glancing at you with wide eyes, âjust a little, heâs not going to die.â
âHeâs going to need a month of recovery,â you point out, picking at the remnants of your nail polish mindlessly. Baekhyunâs dark eyes catch yours again, as he lets out a breath through his nose, and ruffles his hair to calm his nerves.
âHe deserves it. Iââ You interrupt him though, taking his hand in yours, feeling the cold digits shake in your hold.
âDonât bother, you donât need to give me a reason for your actions. But if you stay out here like this, theyâll catch you in the next hour, though.â
Kunimi nods, and looks at the speckled cement under his feet again, clearing his throat. âThatâs what I wanted to talk to you about.â He flushes a bit pinker, and gives you a look of uncertainty. âCould I please stay in your flat for a little while? Even if itâs just two, three days?â He takes a deep breath, before continuing a little more.
âJust until the money from my mother arrives at my friendâs house.â To your surprise, an image of the night before crosses your mind. His gentle touches, the honest adoration with which he held onto your skin like youâre the only woman heâs ever had. And you hate to admit how much it warms your heart. Maybe youâre really getting emotionally weak here.
Youâve never been so happy to accept so little money. Thatâs the only reason he sits here, on your staircase now. And if you could do your life over three times again, you know for a fact that youâd never get the chance to breathe the same air as a man like Kunimi again. So you sigh, and stand up from the cold stone to look at him, picking up your groceries in the process. âAll right. You canât stay here forever, but for now you can come in.â
The next morning you awake late, which Kunimi by your side. You get up, brush your teeth and walk back to the bed to pick up a darling dress that you put on over your white lace, when an impatient knock comes to your door. When you look through the peephole, thereâs a policeman in front of your apartment.
There it is, already. You rush to his side and shake him awake, helping him leave through the window. You open the door.
âOh, hello,â the officer says, taking off his uniform cap to give you a slight bow. You return it.
âCan I help you, Sir?â With your toothbrush still in hand, you look the young officer up and down.
The officer nods, and takes out a little notebook from his pocket. âProbably, Miss. Do you mind answering a few questions?â he asks, and you hum in response. The man starts his speech immediately at that.
âWell, we are looking for a deserted marine. Do you have any idea where he could be? An employee at Pinocchio Hamburger told us he saw a soldier who matches the descriptions. As you know, many soldiers collect there. This employee says he saw you and the soldier leave in the direction of Kamara. Does this sound familiar, Miss?â
You pout though, and lift your shoulders. âWhen was this, exactly?â
âThree nights ago, Miss.â
You put your hands on your hips, and look at the floor in thought, before giving the officer a lost look. âAnd what did the soldier look like?â
âA young man, quite tall. His hair is dark and longer than is in style. A marine first classâŚâ The man gives you a short description, along with the note that heâs committed a terrible crime, something youâd never expect from someone that age. You nod, feigning understanding.
âWell, I did meet a soldier near Pinocchio that night, but the description is off. The man I met was a foreign soldier, and he was about twenty nine or thirty. Maybe you can ask the man at Pinocchio againâ the employee?â you prompt.
The officer waves his hand in dismissal, and puts his notebook away swiftly. âAh, this will suffice, miss. I know enough. Heâll show up around B.C. Street eventually. Those guys donât have anywhere to run, you see. Weâll definitely catch him.â
With that, he excuses himself again, and leaves the building swiftly after. You watch the officer through the window until he gets into his car and drives off down the narrow street of your home, lights disappearing in the distance. Kunimi comes back when night falls.
After that day, the police donât show themselves again, and for all you know, the MP couldnât care less about him or where he could be hiding. Though he has hope for a few days, the money of his mother never comes, and instead of getting the rest of your pay, youâre the one feeding him and clothing him for the next six months.
After about two months you had fought up the courage to ask him for your money, but Kunimi simply didnât have any to give, and he could hardly look for a job being a fugitive. The situation changed ever so slowly. Because more and more, you started feeling grateful that you even had him in your life.
He was a quiet, soft-handed man, who did enough to help whenever you needed it. You werenât as lonely anymore. And you started to realize that you were sleeping with a man that seemed carved from marble, and the price you paid seemed little for it in comparison. In what world would you be allowed to hold an angel in your arms for only a twenty thousand yen a month? You started feeling heavy of heart, because you really, really didnât want him to leave.
â Ł
When you round the corner at the paint store, you can see the light burning in your apartment. You speed up your walk, stuffing the fifty dollars you made into your jacket pocket and hurrying up the stairs of the apartment. White light beams through the small window next to the door. You turn the doorknob and sigh, kicking off your shoes easily as you enter the heated room.
âNimi,â you call, lifting the bag of French wine in your hand higher in case he looks over at you. Thereâs no answer. âHey,â you call again, looking around the small room with a frown. In the living room, thereâs no Kunimi to be found. His jacket, his shoes are all gone, leaving you nailed to your spot in the middle of the room with a heavy feeling creeping into your belly.
The silence feels thick, surprising you with the weight of it. You put the plastic bag on your counters, and look around once more to be sure, before frowning. Had he really gone back to his unit? Had he given up on trying to cross to Honshu or Kyushu so suddenly, without a word to you? Where could he possibly have gone?
You grab your bag and rush back to the door, jamming your feet into your shoes painfully tight, already slamming the door behind you again. You run the opposite way you came from, looking left and right every few seconds in hope for the familiar face, adrenaline rushing through your exhausted body with a feverish pace.
You rush back towards B.C. Street, past the bar the Caravan, towards the house of Mr. Irihata, a man Kunimi has befriended not too long ago. Maybe heâd gone there. You start walking even faster when you arrive at the beginning of the crowded street, wrapping your scarf around your neck and covering your nose.
You suddenly feel the urge to sob, overwhelmed with the idea of it that you preemptively brush your hands under your eyes. When you get at the house, you walk around the side, and call out towards the window there. âCorporal Irihata?â The window opens almost instantly, revealing the face of the older man with his thick, bushy eyebrows and a stern face.
âOh, itâs you,â he sighs.
âIs Kunimi not here?â Your voice is slightly shaky, eyes wide as you watch his expression change, but just barely.
âOh, that deserter?â he asks, slightly surprised.
âHe came here quite often, didnât he?â
âYeah,â the older man sighs, âbut not today. Is everything okay?â You nod his worries away, too shaky to give into your sadness for now.
âYes, Iâm fine. Heâs probably in a bar here somewhere.â You rush out of the street and past the bars along the street, peering inside quickly. No Kunimi to be found anywhere. You arrive on Goya Boulevard, and rush past that too. One by one, you check the windows for his familiar shape, without success. Where would he possibly have gone? Did he really go back to his unit, after all?
Your legs are shaky, knees weak. Youâve heard that deserters are arrested and brought to Kawasaki right away, and  brought back home to be sent out again. Did he give himself in knowing that heâd be sent back all the way home, even as a criminal? You canât even grasp the idea of that. No, that canât be right. He probably went back to the flat already, he just went out for a walk.
Before you know it, your legs are carrying you back towards Kamara, up the windy, asphalt road to your building. Eyes stinging from the cold breeze and the heaviness in your stomach. When you look up, you notice through the window that the light is on. Youâre pretty sure you turned the lights off when you left, so you rush up even more quickly than before, hands shaky. Your heart feels like itâs dancing, but youâre not sure if itâs a happy or unhappy one.
The door opens without any effort, the room bathing in the bright, white light. Kunimi is not here.
With a deep sigh, you shut the door behind you, and drop backwards onto the bed. You must have ran out with the lights still on then. For a long while, you donât even move. Youâre barely breathing, you think, staring at the imperfections on the ceiling like they are the reason for all your misery. If Kunimi went back to his unit, you wouldnât see him ever again. You stand back up and walk over to the window, pressing your hands against it with a thick, heavy swallow.
He couldnât have just left like that, he wouldnât. But where could he possibly be at a time like this, with no money to his name? Suddenly, as with a hard gust of wind, the door blows open and Akira walks in. His dark hair is messy, tucked under a finely woven hat you bought him. And everything that was suspended so delicately in mid air in your mind crashes to the floor.
Your shoulders drop in relief, tears welling up in your eyes where you canât stop them. âWhere did you go?â you bring out. Your voice is shaky, bottom lip pulled harshly between your lips.
âI went out to Gate street for a while,â Kunimi mumbles, eyes slightly concerned at your tone.
He walks over to you as he unbuttons his jacket, and lays his hands on your shoulders, pulling you closer than youâve been used to the last few weeks. âIf you walk around too much outside, the MP will find you,â you whisper, catching his eyes in the process. The young man presses a kiss on your forehead, and walks past you to drape his jacket across the second chair in the room. He drops back in the bed like you had done not too long ago, and lays there, unmoving.
âDonât think about it anymore,â he calls, closing his eyes against the bright light, âitâs all over anyway.â He doesnât speak after that, and so neither do you. The silence lasts for a while, as you stare at the man youâve grown hopelessly attached to over the past months.
Kunimi sounds so sad, so defeated. Like every bit of energy has been sucked out of him, and you hate that youâre left in limbo trying to help him. When he suddenly speaks again his voice is grated, pretty lips forming a slight pout. âIs there any beer?â
You move from the counter to sit on the rickety, wooden chair. âNo,â you truthfully admit. âWould you like me to go get some? I got paid.â He takes a deep breath before shaking his head, and spreading his limbs out like a starfish. âNever mindâ he mouths. The silence that follows is even longer than the first, and by the time either of you move the sun has lowered behind the horizon so far the sky colors red.
The next time he speaks, you already know what will follow. Itâs a cold feeling, piercing through bones and keeping you in place, though youâd rather run away yourself right now. âYou know I called, right?â he breathes, and you hum in response. Your fingers are still ice cold, your legs still tingly from the back and forth earlier. âI decided to turn myself in tomorrow, at ten oâclock.â
It feels as if someone has hit you over the head with a pipe of lead, echoing around your mind like the bells of a church. And you try to smile, for him, but your face feels so tense that youâre not sure if it comes across. You lay down next to him and sigh deeply, closing your eyes against an onslaught of tears. Kunimiâs cold fingers brush over your thigh, but you feel like slapping them away. Your body seems to sink through the springs of the bed, so ridiculously heavy.
You swallow, and turn into his arms, fisting your hands into his shirt and your nose into the crook of his neck. âRun away with me, Akira. We can go to my hometown, where I was born. No one will look for you there. And thereâs a bunch of abandoned houses,â you say, trying your best to keep yourself from begging, but at this point you know youâre not above it anyway.
âItâs almost fully uninhabited. The houses are old, but they have a garden and a lot of ground. Iâll plant grass in our yard, and cook us something better than eggs for breakfast. And you can fix the floor tiles.â It stays quiet again, you can feel his slow heartbeat against your cheek. But then he shakes his head, and you want to scream until your voice breaks. âIf they arrest you, youâll get sent back home. And you donât want that, right? Thatâs what you told me.â
âIt doesnât matter anymore,â he responds just as quick, swallowing. âIâm tired.â And for one, you believe him. It seems everyone is tired these days.
After your shower, you walk around the room on tiptoes. Kunimi lays in bed, his face peaceful in his sleep, twitching slightly as he dreams. You smile at him for a few seconds, before putting on your favorite lace underwear, and your favorite summer dress. You drink a cup of tea, and a second one, and stare out the window mindlessly for what feels like an hour, but youâve always been bad at keeping track of time.
Your loverâs dark hair stands up straight, in crazy spikes on his head, making him look ever so small. You move to sit in front of your mirror for a while too, putting on your favorite chap-stick. Itâs sweet, like cherry. He once told you he loved the taste of it, and so you loved to kiss him with it in return.
And then you lock the door, and shut the window tight, squeezing the lock until itâs almost impossible to open. You walk to the kitchen, bending to turn open the propane gas. You turn all three gas taps open fully, leaving open the door from the kitchen to the living room and bedroom.
You lie down, and the bed creaks softly under you as well. Like the cry of a child, or the weeping of a loved one missing a lover. You know it well.
Kunimi turns on his other side in his sleep, facing you now. Heâs beautiful, every inch of him, head to to. Eternal, in a way. Itâs easy to believe in someone like that, isnât it?
You close your eyes, and decide to count to a thousand.
One.
Two.
Three.
Four.
Five...
You take the lighter that always lays on your bedside table, the one to light the incense, and turn to lay on your belly. Face down in the pillows.
The clock ticks easily in the quiet of the room. Heavy breaths.
And you reach a thousand.
And you, with full determination, push your thumb against the spark wheel.