Stand by Me
AN: I loved this drama, iykyk
Pairing: Hiromi Higuruma x fem reader
Genre: comfort (lawyer x celebrity reader)
Summary: This is the third meeting. Third in two weeks, where the same suggestion has been laid in front of you like it is a gift. Rescind the case. Accept the settlement. Accept the apology.
He runs through the crowd backstage, tie slightly loosened from where he'd been in a meeting when the call came. He hadn't even stopped to grab his coat. At least the staff has done a good job clearing everyone out.
He slams the door open.
You're sitting on the edge of the vanity chair, arms wrapped around yourself. That's all he needs to see. His arms are around you in the next breath. You're here, safe. With him. His face buries in your hair and he exhales, slow and controlled.
"You're safe," he whispers, even as you shake against him. His hand moves in a steady, unhurried circle at your back.
He does not ask what happened. That came on the way here, when your manager briefed him on the incident.
The fan who had barged in. With photos. So many photos. Not the first time. Not the first time your privacy had been violated like this.
"Let's go home," he murmurs, pulling you gently upright. His hands, one at your back, one briefly cupping your face to look at you properly, thumb brushing the dried tear tracks from your cheek with a quietness that says more than he will. "He's gone. And we are going to sue him down to his last pair of drawers."
You sniffle, something fragile and almost-a-laugh catching in your throat as you look up at him. "Let me change," you whisper, still holding on. "Just stay. I'll be quick. Don't go."
He doesn't answer. He just moves to sit on the small sofa along the wall, and waits. Like he has nowhere else in the world he needs to be.
"No."
Hiromi interrupts the lawyer your company has hired for the case.
This is the third meeting. Third in two weeks, where the same suggestion has been laid in front of you like it is a gift. Rescind the case. Accept the settlement. Accept the apology.
It will be better, they say. The press will move on. You might even come out ahead, the magnanimous celebrity who forgives, who rises above, who does not make things difficult.
You have been doing that for five years.
Five years of gracious statements and quiet settlements and smiling through the anxiety that has carved itself into your core. Five years of being advised, very gently, that this is simply the cost of the life you have chosen.
And you have believed them. You have sat in rooms like this one and nodded and signed and told yourself that this is the price. That for every person who loves you, there will be one who does not understand where the boundary is. That for the adoration and the stages and the career you have built with your own hands, you are supposed to accept this too.
You had been about to nod again. Then Hiromi's hand closes over yours on the table.
He looks at the lawyer across from you. His voice is even, unhurried, "We would like to pursue a civil charge."
"Mr. Higuruma, with respect, the settlement offer is generous and it would spare her from-"
"From what? From having it on record that this happened? From the precedent that might discourage the next person?" He doesn't raise his voice. "She has been advised to accept apologies for five years. I'd like to know what it has cost her."
He turns to look at you, and there is something in his expression that isn't quite anger and isn't quite grief. It is exhaustion from settlements, from fear and worry every time someone looked too long your way, came too close.
You don't have an answer. You're not sure you've ever let yourself add it up before.
His hand is still over yours. "We would like to pursue a civil charge," he says again, quieter this time, just for you.
Not a decision but a path offered to you.
The ride home is quiet.
Not the quiet of the past two weeks. This is different. It is peaceful, liberating ever.
You find his hand somewhere on the back seat and don't let go. Your head finds his shoulder. In another context, in another life, you might want more but there is a driver, and Hiromi is private, so this is what you have.
It's enough. It's more than enough.
The car slows to a stop.
You don't think about it. That's the thing you'll remember later. That there was no decision, no moment of weighing consequences the way you have been weighing everything for five years.
You step out into the afternoon and the sun is warm and ridiculous for a Thursday and Hiromi is straightening his jacket beside you and you simply kiss him.
Arms around him, right there on the pavement. There are cameras somewhere, there are always cameras, and your manager is going to call you seven times before dinner and there will be a headline by evening and you find, standing here with your face tipped up to his.
Hiromi goes still for just a moment. One breath of surprise, and then his hand comes up to the back of your head, and he kisses you back.
Unhurried. In front of everyone. Like he has nowhere else in the world to be.










