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Hi! Iâm Li! Welcome to my emotionsâŚ
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Ryomen Sukuna study by VL
500 miles â itadori yuuji.
Life had simply kept happening. And you were finding a way to be content. âDo you regret it?â you asked. His head turned sharply. âWhat do you mean?â âBeing with me, staying like this.â you clarified. âKnowing how it ends.â He stared out at the water. The answer came without hesitation. âNever.â
GENRE: alternate universe - canon divergence;
WARNING/S: sfw, post-canon, jjk modulo, angst, fluff, romance, light-hearted, slice of life, marriage, family, long lasting marriage, aging, physical age difference, old people being in love, immortality, mortality, nicknames, hurt, comfort, laughing, teasing, feelings, remiscing, nostalgia, domestic life, children, grandchildren, sparklers, enjoying the sea, illness, mention of illness, upcoming character death (implied), mention of character death, motif about death, motif about life, jjk modulo! yuuji, wife! reader;
WORD COUNT: 6k words
NOTE: this was heavily inspired by all the edits of the song 500 miles which was sung by peter, paul and mary. i just, i really am just emotional about everyone having their feelings about it. i genuinely enjoyed it. whenever i listened to this song, i think about yuuji. and it cannot be helped. so i wrote about him too. i hope you enjoy this a lot!!! anyway, i love you all.
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IT WAS THE FIRST TIME YOU ALL HAVE BEEN BACK WITHIN THE FABRIC OF TOKYO. But considering the danger of the curses that were still lurking about within areas you had known a long time ago, it was only the brave that were willing to go as far as to see the glimpses of what it had been.Â
Yet with how life had panned out, you had to be brave. And people around you had to be brave, for you were not long for this world, the human you were. You were chasing time, in the way your husband and kids were not. It was better to be brave now, when it would be the legacy you leave to them. It would be the happiness of a life lived in bravery than a life lived in seclusion.
The sea in Kamakura was quieter than you expected. You could hear it from the small ryokan balcony. It was not the loud crashing kind from the way one would flash about postcards playfully, but a patient breathing that came from a long life lived and the eagerness now to have peace in your own time.Â
The brash tide came in, and then out again, its sweeping waters slipped across the dark sand, leaving some stranded, only to then be pulled back again, carrying it back with it, almost like it had all the time in the world.Â
You supposed it did.Â
Your beloved husband Itadori Yuuji leaned against the wooden railing beside you, rolling up his shirtâs sleeves to the elbow. You remember being young and how intently you would watch him fold his sleeves, so carefully, so tenderly. And he still does the same thing, as you do the same thing with never ending fondness in your eyes.
The evening light caught his whitish-pink hair and made it almost the blinding echoes of silver melting into copper. He looked exactly like he had when you first met him, decades ago, when you were both kids who didnât know your lives would lead here. Years of loving the same face, the same smile, the same soul.
Exactly that. He was the same. And he always will be. There would be nothing that would change about him. But immortality has always been like that to any one who has to go through it and live it. It was a cruel miracle that kept him untouched for years, and you are devastated, heartbroken even.
Yuuji looks at you.
He smiles.
Heâs more broken than you.
âCold?â he asked gently.
You shook your head. âJust listening.â
He followed your gaze out toward the water. The horizon had begun to blur into evening, the pale blue sky slowly deepening into soft violet. From the small balcony of the ryokan, the sea of Kamakura looked endless, a long sheet of darkening silver stretching to meet the fading light.
Neither of you could find yourselves speaking, ultimately succumbing to sudden silence. Yuuji rested his elbows on the wooden railing, shoulders relaxed, the quiet sound of waves filling the spaces where words might have gone. You had shared silences like this for decades.Â
For the two of you, it was the comfortable kind that came after a lifetime of talking, a lifetime no one would ever understand, a lifetime where you live with the kind of comfort that didnât need explanation.
Behind you, the paper door slid open with a soft shhhk. Suddenly bright, beaming laughter spilled and echoed into the hallway, bright and chaotic, completely shattering the peaceful quiet of the evening.
The two of you turned at the same time.Â
Yuuji was the first to react.
He was the same with the kids too.
His face broke instantly into a grin, as it usually does. A grin that held that same wide boyish warmth, somehow as if the years had never managed to change how such dimples permeate through the beautiful face he holds.Â
It was the exact same smile he had worn when you first met him, when he was still a reckless fifteen year old boy who believed every problem could be solved with optimism and stubbornness that you could not share with him.
Standing in the doorway were three of your young, budding grandchildren, who were all slightly out of breath and glowing with excitement, beaming through it all. âGrandma! Grandpa! Come look!â
Your youngest granddaughter burst forward first, bare feet slapping lightly against the tatami as she ran out onto the raised threshold. She nearly tripped over the wooden step, wobbling dangerously before catching herself.
âCareful!â you called automatically, though you couldnât help smiling.
One of the boys hurried after her, clutching a small crinkled paper bag like it contained treasure. âWe got fireworks from the shop, grandma, grandpa! Like the ones you used to buy for us at the corner store!â
The young excited fella lifted the bag proudly and shook it, the faint clink of thin sticks bumping together inside. Yuujiâs eyes lit up immediately. It was almost unfair how quickly his expression transformed before your eyes.
It was like someone had turned a switch inside him. He hadnât truly looked like that for a while now. Yet you can suppose he needed to put on a show for the younglings. But you know better than that. He was happy to be joyous with them, like he used to be with your kids when they were younger.Â
In an instant with your dearest grandkids, he looked decades younger. Finally matching such tenderness with the same essence of youth in his eternal face. There was endless excitement flashing across his face with the same energy heâd had in his twenties.
âNo way, kiddos!â he said, crouching down in front of them with exaggerated disbelief. âDid you get sparklers?â
âYes!â the kids answered in unison. âUncle Wasuke gave it to us!â
You shook your head, laughing softly. âYou really knew your uncle wouldnât be able to say no to your cute faces, huh?â
âThen we have to do them on the beach.â
You sighed. âToo late to do it now. Everyoneâs going to catch a cold if they go out.â
Yuuji waved you off. âThen weâll figure something out! Weâre gonna go and do this on the beach!â
âYay!â The kids cheered, causing Yuuji to laugh.â
You laugh too. âYou guys are impossible.â
There was no hesitation in your husbandâs voice, no thought about the time or the cold or the sand that would inevitably end up everywhere. Everything in this moment was pure enthusiasm. You watched him kneel on the tatami floor as the children crowded around him, immediately trying to open the bag together.
âHey, hey, slow down, kiddos.â Yuuji laughed heartily. âYouâll break them.â
âBut grandpa, lookââ
âOh! You got the long ones!â
âThey said these sparkle purple!â
âWhoa, purple?â
Soon the small entrance area of the ryokan had become a whirlwind of movement. And you were just happy to be a spectator, to watch it all happen. The paper bag was emptied across the floor instantaneously. Thin fireworks sticks rolled across the tatami. Someone accidentally kicked a sandal across the hallway. One of the younger ones tried to grab two sparklers at once.Â
Yuuji was right in the middle of it, trying his best to help them sort through the fireworks. It was almost like watching your entire life flash before you all over again in that moment, almost like you were back in that small house with the bright garden on a summer night.Â
You could remember how intently your husband Yuuji was with your three children, how intently he used to listen to every excited explanation they had, like he is now with the youngest grandkids. He would do the same, reacting like each of their little discoveries of the world were the most impressive things he had ever seen in his entire life. But perhaps that was what made it good.Â
You leaned against the doorframe quietly, watching. He had raised three children with you, a whole beautiful life together from start to finish. You still remembered the first one. You could only laugh to yourself as you remembered how it all happened then.
Itadori Yuuji was so intent on having a family and most of all with you, a big lively one at that. He started like all husbands, all fathers do. He was so excited and so eager during the entire process, but even with all that in him, he still panicked in the hospital hallway, pacing back and forth like a caged animal who didnât know what to do.Â
Yet when Itadori Chouso was born, all that panic went away. When he saw you holding your first born in your arms, so beautiful in the glow of springtime, he was just stupefied into life. That moment, when he held Chouso, he held him like his son might dissolve if he blinked too hard.Â
He was the same way with every single one of your children. He held Shoko the same way, and then Wasuke. And now that your precious children had children of their own, Yuuji beheld them the same way. With so much love, so much tenderness. Even when the times changed, your husband was always what he was.Â
All the difference is that Itadori Yuuji still looked exactly the same, as did the kids too. And you were certain it would be the same for all the young children that were slowly growing. But just like you, they were mortal in the way your husband would never be.Â
Perhaps thatâs why you keep looking.
Even when you didnât want to anymore.
You mourn for him as much as you love for yourself.
You take a deep breath. You were grateful that the small ryokan continued to feel alive as you lamented to yourself. It distracted you enough to not drown into the endless echo of melancholy. You knew you would not be able to get out of that hole.Â
So you let yourself enjoy it all. How the voices overlapped across the hallway and echoed all throughout. You could hear how somewhere in the ryokan, someone yelled from the back room that they couldnât find their socks. You think thatâs Wasuke, trying to rally some of the other kids to help him find his socks.Â
On the other corner of the ryokan, Chousoâs older daughters, along with Shokoâs eldest daughter were in the other room talking about what yukata they wanted among a huge pile that their mothers were slowly unpacking in time for the festival.
Chousoâs younger daughter said, a big pout on her lips. âI want the blue yukata!â
âNo fair, you had it yesterday!â Her elder sister responded to her.Â
âThatâs because itâs my favorite!â
âNow, now, thereâs plenty of yukata for everyone!â Shokoâs elder daughter tried to play peacemaker.
âNo, I want that exact design!â
The older one put her tongue out. âWell, I donât care!â
Tatami rustled under quick footsteps. The faint scent of the ryokanâs wooden beams mixed with the salt breeze drifting in from the open balcony. Your daughter Shoko appeared in the doorway, leaning her shoulder against the frame.
She watched the scene for a moment. Yuuji kneeling on the floor surrounded by grandchildren, sparklers scattered everywhere, hearing the chaos of the other rooms full of children, full of home. Full of life. She takes a breath, before her eyes shift toward you.
âMomâŚ..â she said softly. âAre you tired?â
The question was gentle, as careful as it could be. You noticed the way she looked at you reminded you so much of how Yuuji used to look at you when there were bad things that came and went in your long marriage. You shook your head.
âNot tonight.â
For a brief moment, her gaze lingered on your face. There was a quiet understanding there. Three weeks ago, she and her husband had been sitting beside you in the hospital when the doctor explained the diagnosis. She had heard every word you heard.Â
She had seen the way Yuuji went completely silent afterward, when he had been told by Chouso and Wasuke, who looked just as devastated as their wives were. They havenât told the kids yet. They think itâs not the right time.
Since then she has been watching you differently. Almost like she was already trying to find all the ways to keep you there. Like she was trying to memorize every part of you that a camera would never capture. But tonight she simply smiled.
âGoodâŚ.Thatâs good.â she said, almost relieved. Then she glanced down at the chaos unfolding on the tatami floor. âBecause dad promised to embarrass himself by lighting fireworks again.â
From the floor Yuuji immediately looked up, offended. âHey! Donât do your old man like this, Sho-bear. That happened once!â
Your grandson pointed dramatically. âThree times, grandpa!â
Another voice chimed in from the back room. âAnd grandpa screamed!â
âI did not scream!â
âYou totally screamed!â his youngest granddaughter pointed out. âYou said, âyour grandmaâs going to take my butt for this!â and then went wild!â
âThen you panicked and screamed about how the sparkler exploded!â
âIt fizzled!âÂ
âIt popped!â
Yuuji threw his hands up in exaggerated defeat while the kids dissolved into laughter around him. âTraitors, the lot of you.â he muttered dramatically, looking from one giggling grandchild to another like they had all personally betrayed him.
One of them clung to his arm, still laughing. âYou did scream, Grandpa!â
âI did not scream, kiddo!â Yuuji insisted, though the grin tugging at his mouth completely ruined his defense. âGrandpa just overâŚestimated things!â
You couldnât help laughing too. The sound rose quietly from your chest, warm and full, the kind of laugh that felt like it came from years of living rather than a single joke. It slipped into the lively air of the ryokan, blending with the children's high-pitched giggles and Yuujiâs mock protests.
For a few seconds, it was just noise and warmth and movement. Then heavier footsteps approached from the back rooms. Your eldest son appeared first, arms crossed and wearing the patient, slightly exasperated expression he had inherited from you. Chouso.
Behind him came Shoko, one hand guiding two smaller children who had clearly been running wild somewhere deeper in the inn. The youngest had a sock halfway on and the other dragging behind them like a small white tail.
And finally Wasuke followed, carrying a stray sandal and looking entirely too pleased with himself. Chouso sighed the moment he saw the state of the entrance. Suddenly the sparklers scattered everywhere.
Your husband Yuuji remained kneeling on the tatami, the grandchildren gathered in the room and started to do their best to crowd around him like excited sparrows. He rubbed his temple for a moment.
âWhy do I feel like we left you three alone for five minutes and the entire place exploded?â
Shoko snorted under her breath as she finally herded the last two kids toward the group. âTook you two long enough to get your shit together.â
Yuujiâs head snapped up instantly. He pointed at the children around him. âSho-bear, the kidsââ
âDad, please.â Shoko interrupted without missing a beat, âit was a tiny cuss.â
From behind her, Wasuke immediately broke into a grin. âHa!â he laughed. âDad scolds you.â
Yuuji groaned. âYou can shut up now.â
Wasuke only looked more entertained, clearly enjoying every second of the situation. Chouso let out another long sigh, shaking his head slowly. âYou two are such trouble.â
The tone of his voice tried to sound responsible. Unfortunately, it failed completely when one of his own kids immediately tugged on his sleeve asking for the fireworks bag. You laughed again, shaking your head at the whole ridiculous scene.
âYou all are too much more like children than your children.â
That earned you a chorus of reactions. âHey!â Yuuji protested.
âThatâs not true, mom.â Wasuke said, though he was still grinning. âIâm an adult now.â
You hummed. âIt doesnât look like it, son.â
Wasuke laughed at that.
Choso looked mildly offended.
Shoko simply smirked.
Around them, the file of grandchildren continued poking through the fireworks like curious little investigators. One of them, a younger child, waved a sparkler stick in the air, almost too excitedly.
âGrandpa said weâre going to the beach!â
âDid he now?â Chouso muttered, giving Yuuji a look.
Yuuji lifted his chin proudly. âOf course I did. I did it with you kids when you were younger, didnât I?â
Shoko leaned closer to him. âYouâre the one lighting them, by the way.â
âExcuse me?â
âYou screamed last time, though?â Wasuke looked confused.
âI did not scream!â
The kids burst into laughter again, as did the grandchildren. And for a moment, standing there in the doorway with your family filling the small ryokan with noise and warmth and life, the weight of hospital rooms and quiet diagnoses felt very far away.
The sterile smell of antiseptic. The quiet voice of the doctor. The careful pauses in conversation that followed afterward. All of it felt distant to you at that moment. Here, there was only the soft scent of tatami and wood, the bright allure of the salty sea breeze drifting through the open balcony, and the overlapping voices of people who loved each other loudly.
Itadori Yuuji was still kneeling on the floor in the middle of it all, his legs still surrounded by sparklers as much as the kids remained interested about asking him questions by his feet. He was continuing arguing with Shoko while two grandchildren clung to his shoulders, who were laughing like little children.
Before long, that all died down for him as he found himself glancing back at you, even just for a second. His smile softened almost imperceptibly. He could not find it in him to let the same playful grin he wore for the kids, for the grandkids to be the same as his loving smile towards you.Â
Everything with you was more intense, something quieter, something that was far more passionate and warmer. Yuuji knew that he was relieved you were here to see this, still here to be blessed by time.
He was glad you were here enjoying the beautiful messy chaos of your lives with a smile on your face, you were still here to be fond of his noise and laughter and ridiculous arguing. He couldnât ask for anything more.Â
âAre you going to the beach with us, grandma?â one of the younger boys asked you as he pulled at your kimono.Â
You looked at your grandson, blinking. You then offered him a smile. âOf course, grandma wouldnât miss this for the world.â
Itadori Yuuji felt his heart warm at that.
Yet there was some sort of dread.
How long would he survive without that warmth?
Without your smile?
He feared the worst.
âAlright, alright.â Chouso said as he clapped his hands together. âEveryone get your kids together. The walk is only five hundred miles to the shore, it's about six or so minutes.â
Shoko smiled. âHm, alright.â
Wasuke looked at you. âYouâll be okay to go out tonight, mom?â
You looked back at him and then to the rest of your kids. You sighed and locked eyes with Yuuji. You smiled. âOf course.â
YOU FELT YOUR HUSBANDâS WARMTH THROUGH THE JACKET HE PLACED ON YOUR SHOULDER. It wasnât even a few moments out the house before your worrywart husband put his jacket on you as he held you in his arms. You could only shake your head, lips bountiful with laughter as he tells you that heâs not being funny when it comes to you not catching a cold.Â
You shook your head. After all this time, heâs still like this. And it only made you fall in love with him deeper, which one could only think impossible after being together for nearly fifty odd years. Yet it was still that way for you. You will always be falling in love with him, over and over again.
The beach was already far too dark when the moment settled around you, only finding light in the lit lamp canisters your kids and grandkids were carrying among themselves. The waves moved in long, patient breaths against the shore of Kamakura, sliding up the sand and retreating again with a whisper.Â
The tide was low, leaving a wide stretch of cool damp shore where the children and the grandchildren had immediately taken over the moment you arrived. It was almost like they had never seen a beach their entire lives.Â
Some of them had run ahead the instant, removing their shoes and immediately letting their feet touch the sand, laughing among themselves as they played with the water. Shoko reminded people that they didnât bring towels for those who decided to go swimming.
Some of the kids were all in awe at the thin trails of gold flickering through the night as the sparklers burned bright in their hands. Itadori Yuuji stood a few steps away lighting another one, the flame from the lighter briefly illuminating his face before the sparkler caught with a sharp hiss. He handed it carefully to your youngest granddaughter like it was something precious. Her delighted gasp carried across the beach.
âGrandma! Look!â
You sat on the driftwood log he had brushed off for you earlier, hands folded in your lap as you watched them all scatter across the sand. For a moment, the scene looked almost unreal. Little streaks of gold dancing through the dark. Children shouting with joy.
Your grown children trying half-heartedly to maintain order while secretly enjoying the chaos themselves. And Yuuji. He was always in the middle of it, laughing with all his heart, boisterous and so young as ever. It made the night feel impossibly alive.
Five hundred miles. The number had stuck in your mind strangely clearly. Five hundred miles from the hospital room where the doctor had spoken softly, hands folded over the file in front of him. Five hundred miles from the quiet drive home afterward where no one knew quite what to say.
As everyone had their own fun, you couldnât help but notice how your husband Yuuji had become almost despondent in silence as he watched everyone find the time to have fun among themselves. Wasuke had taken over lighting the sparklers for the children.
You walked softly, putting a hand on his shoulder. He didnât look up to find your gaze. Instead, he places his hand carefully on top of your wrinkled one, his eyes staring straight ahead, into the distance. Almost trying to find something in the darkness of the boundless sea.
The night he was told the diagnosis, everyone was over at the house. But everyone seemed to be taxed from the amount of themselves they had put into this emotional rollercoaster and you couldnât blame them. It was past one in the morning when you found him at the kitchen table.
He had his laptop open, his cold already gone cold. He was searching for train routes on the screen. On one of the tabs, there were lists of the top finds in Kamakura. On the other hand, the top ryokans are listed neatly in a websiteâs listing.
He looked up when he noticed you standing there. âLetâs go see the sea again.â
That was all he said. He hadnât asked if you wanted to. He already knew. He already knew that everything was on borrowed time. And there was nothing else but to continue living on, pushing on. Taking advantage of the time that you could have with one another.
Now the ocean stretched out before you again. Everything was dark, everything was endless. Yet it was all so meaningful. It was still the same sea you had visited together when you were young and reckless and convinced that you were simply able to go on for forever.
And now, it was the same ocean where you were all trying to process living with the unimaginable, with the most human of all traits. With the possibility of the grim ripper waiting right behind you for the right time.
âDonât think too much.â Yuuji said it all of a sudden.
Your brows furrowed. âIâm notââ
âYou have that face again, when youâre too deep in thought.â
Before you could reply, you hear something behind you. âHey! Donât wave it like that!â It was Shokoâs voice that cut through the night. âThatâs how you set your sleeve on fire!â
âItâs just a sparkler!â one of the kids protested.
Yuuji laughed. âTheyâre too much, arenât they?â
âBut you love them all the same.â
He seems to smile. âI donât think I can love anything more than them.â
âI can say the same.â you smiled back to him.Â
Before long, the sparks flared bright in the wind. The two of you rejoined everyone else in a few steps. Yuuji found himself crouched to hand it to one of the smaller children, steadying their wrist gently so the sparks didnât scatter too wildly.
You watched him quietly. He looked exactly the same. The same shoulders. The same bright, open smile. The same easy energy in the way he moved. Decades have passed and things have changed in this world. The children are grown, the grandchildren are growing. You are too old, but your beloved Yuuji hasn't changed.
The contrast no longer hurts the way it once had. For years there has been a quiet tension between you. The strange unfairness of time pressing more heavily on one of you than the other. Now it simply felt like part of the story. It was just like the ocean. This ceaseless, endless run towards one direction. Finite in another.
Your son Wasuke suddenly waved from the sand. âMom! Look!â
He spun a sparkler in a wide circle, creating a glowing ring in the air. You raised your hand in greeting, smiling. âI see you!â
Yuuji returned a moment later and lowered himself beside you on the driftwood. The wood creaked softly under his weight. He didnât speak right away, and you soon followed suit. Instead, he just took in the need to have you close to him. The childrenâs laughter carried through the wind as they ran through the dark with their trails of light.
âWorth the trip?â he asked finally. His voice was quiet, far too gentle for your liking. It suddenly hurts to feel the tenderness against your ears. âWarm?â
You leaned your head against his shoulder. The fabric of his jacket was warm beneath your cheek. âAlways.â
The wind shifted, carrying the scent of salt and faint smoke from the dying sparklers. Out on the sand, another one fizzled out with a soft hiss. Your granddaughter ran over suddenly and climbed into your lap before anyone could stop her.
âGrandma!â
You laughed in surprise. âWhat is it, dearest?â
She pointed excitedly toward Yuuji. âCan grandpa teach me how to make a heart?â
Your husband Yuuji found himself standing, taking sparklers from her. He grinned big at her. âI donât see any reason why I wouldnât, kiddo!â
âHurray!âÂ
Before long, your husband has lit the sparklers. Soon enough, he was trying to teach her the basics, all the while trying to make sure she was keeping a distance from the sparks. You intently watched and clapped when she did something clever.Â
âOkay, nowâŚ.grandpaâs going to teach you how to make a heart. So pay attention, okay?â
Your granddaughter grinned and cheered. âPlease teach me, grandpa!â
âOkay, okay, have patience.â
But that patience didnât pay off even when one had it. Itadori Yuuji then spent nearly half an hour trying to prove to you, to your granddaughter, that he in fact could make a heart using sparklers. Still, each attempt didnât pan out. Until this one.
âLook, grandma! Grandpa made a heart!â
It looked nothing like a heart.
More like a crooked X glowing in the dark.
You laughed anyway.
A warm laugh that surprised even you. And in that moment, it was almost like all the worries of the world faded away. With the sea breathing slowly in the dark, your family scattered across the sand, and Yuuji glowing in a flickering gold light, it felt like it was normal. Almost like this was something that would never end.
Eventually the last sparkler burned down to its final ember. The golden light faded. The children began to slow down and sit by the concrete benches scattered around the beach. In a matter of minutes, their calm tired yawns replaced all the excited energetic shouting.
Small feet dragged through the sand as the night air grew cooler. One by one they drifted back toward the stone steps leading up from the beach. Someone carried the waste of the wrappers in one bag. Another carried the empty sparkler bag like a prize.
One of the youngest had already fallen asleep against his Wasukeâs shoulder. Another had been leaning on both sides of Chousoâs body. Shoko nodded at her husband as he carried their youngest daughter, who was sleeping soundly in his arms.Â
Soon the beach grew quiet again.
Your daughter approached you slowly and knelt in front of you, brushing sand gently from your sleeve. âMom, weâre gonna head on ahead and bring the kids back to bed.â she said softly to you. âAre you staying?â
You gave her a look. âShoââ
âGreat, dad can help you walk back, okay?â
You knew exactly what she was doing.
Giving you the time you need with Yuuji.
You squeezed her hand. âAlright.â
She hesitated for a moment longer. Her eyes flicked briefly to Yuuji. Then she stood and called the others. âAlright everyone, letâs go.â
Groans followed.Â
âIâm not tired!â one of Chousoâs older kids said.
âYou were literally asleep two minutes ago!â Her cousin, Wasukeâs eldest, rebutted.
Slowly the small group climbed the steps toward the lantern-lit street.Their voices faded gradually into the night. There was lighter laughter and heavier footsteps. The faint murmur of parents guiding sleepy children home.
Until finally the beach was quiet again. Just the tide. And the two of you are sitting side by side beneath the dark Kamakura sky. Yuuji sat beside you in the dark, elbows resting on his knees. The ocean rolled in and out, steady as breathing. For a while neither of you spoke.
You had learned over the decades that silence between you was never empty.
Finally you said, softly, âDo you remember the first time we saw the sea together?â
He snorted a little. âYou mean when I got dragged under by that wave?â
âYou said you knew how to swim.â
âI do know how to swim!â
âYou swallowed half the ocean.â
âThat wave was cheating.â
You laughed again, quieter this time. It had been more than fifty years ago, on a cheap train trip with barely enough money for food. You had shared a single umbrella, a single room, a single future you were making up as you went.Â
Back then you hadnât known he would outlive you. Back then you hadnât known you would reach seventy-five. The wind shifted, bringing the salt smell closer. Yuuji glanced at you for a moment, almost taking in the sight of all the years that had made you the person he loved most.
âYouâre tired.â
âA little.â
âYou want to go back?â
âNot yet.â
He nodded. He always listened like that, like whatever you said mattered enough to wait for. You studied his face in the faint light. The same eyes, once again. The same soft expression he had when he looked at you, the one that had never changed, even after all the years.
âYou never aged.â you said quietly.
He didnât smile this time.
âI know.â
There had been fights about it once. In your forties, when the first gray hairs appeared. In your fifties, when strangers began assuming he was your son. In your sixties, when the grandchildren asked why their grandpa never got wrinkles even when his hair was turning white.
But those fights had passed.
Life had simply kept happening.
And you were finding a way to be content.
âDo you regret it?â you asked.
His head turned sharply. âWhat do you mean?â
âBeing with me, staying like this.â you clarified. âKnowing how it ends.â
He stared out at the water. The answer came without hesitation. âNever.â
The word settled between you, firm and certain. A long wave rolled in and dissolved across the shore. You reached for his hand again. Your fingers were thinner now, skin lined and soft with age. His were still strong, warm, unchanged.Â
But he held yours the same way he always had for these many years of life together. He held your hand like you were everything that made his world. Like you were the most precious person in his life. Like you were the universe itself.Â
âYuuji.â you murmured.
âYeah?â
âWhen it happensâŚâ Your voice faded. He waited. ââŚI can only hope that you donât stay in that house too long.â
He frowned slightly. âThat house is everything to me.â
âI know it is.â you shook your head. âBut youâll not live properly in a place holding so many memories.â
He looked down at your hands. âIâm allowed to remember.â
âYou are.â you confirmed to him gently. âBut youâre not allowed to stop living.â
A faint laugh escaped him. âThatâs a tall order, isnât it?â
âYou married me.â you reminded him. âYouâre used to impossible things.â
The tide crept closer to your feet. He finally nodded. âOkay.â
âPromise?â
ââŚI promise.â
The word felt heavy, but he meant it. You leaned against him again, closing your eyes briefly. The sound of the ocean filled the quiet. After a while he spoke again, softer than before. Softer than he had done his entire life.
âYou know something?â
âWhat?â
âYou always wanted to come back here when we were old.â he whispered to you. âWe came here for our first trip alone together and you said you wanted to come back when weâre older.â
âI did?â
âYeah. You said this place felt peaceful.â
You smiled faintly. Â âThen I picked the right trip.â
Yuuji looked at you for a long time. The wind tugged gently at your hair. Your breathing had slowed. He brushed a strand of silver from your face, finding the woman he loved, and still loved, after all this time. He smiled, almost too sadly that it broke your heart.
âYou knowâŚ.â he said quietly. âHaving seventy-five years of you in this world isnât ever going to be something that is enough.â
Your eyes opened again, warm and knowing. âIt was never going to be. If it was the other way aroundâŚ.I would feel the way you do.â
âIt still feels too short. And so incomplete and I justâŚ..â
You squeezed his hand. âYuuji.â
âYeah?â
âIt wasnât short.â
The ocean breathed in, its waves caving in and crashing. Then receding, only to crash outward again. His eyes widened slightly, before he looked away. For a long moment neither of you said anything. Then you shifted slightly, turning your face toward him, smiling.
âYuu-kun, my dear Yuu-kun.â Your voice was soft, but it carried the same warmth it always had. Your eyes gleamed tenderly at him, a small smile resting on your lips. âCan I ask you a question?â
âWhat is it, my dearest [name]?â he asked quietly.
He took your wrinkled hands into his, just like he had thousands of times before. His fingers traced the lines in your skin with the same careful affection he used when you were young, when your hands had been smooth and restless and always reaching for him.
âDo you still recognize the person you fell in love with?â you asked, smiling gently.
Yuuji blinked, clearly caught off guard. âItâs been so long, and I justâŚ.I know you feel it, and you look at me that way.â you continued softly. âBut I justâŚ.Iâve gotten so old and now that time isââ
âWhat sort of question is that?â He shook his head immediately, the movement sharp, almost panicked. His lips trembled. âOf course I do. I recognize everything about you. All of it.â
âYuujiâŚâ
âYou could be five hundred miles from me.â he said, voice thick with emotion. âYou could be on another planet and Iâd still recognize you. Iâd only love you. Iâd only recognize you and my love for you.â
His grip on your hands tightened slightly, like he was afraid you might disappear if he let go. âYouâre everything to me, [name]. You always will be. You will always be worth everything.â he finished, barely above a whisper. âHow could you not be?â
The wind moved through the quiet beach again.
You watched him carefully. Your husband. He remained to be that boy you will always remember loving. This man who will never age, the man who will spend lifetimes after you. And yet he remains there seated. Tears threaten to form in your eyes but you blinked them away. Your smile deepened.
âIâm glad then.â you murmured. Your voice was quiet, almost carried away by the wind coming off the sea.
Yuuji frowned faintly beside you, turning his head just enough to study your face in the dim light. âWhy?â
You looked out at the water again. The tide rolled in slowly, silver foam stretching thin across the sand before retreating again into the dark. You had never looked more beautiful, and devastatingly so, as you remain there in his arms, under the moonlight.
âBecause that meansâŚâ you said after a moment, your fingers resting loosely in his hand, ââŚYouâll remember me properly.â
The words hung between you, gentle but heavy with meaning. Yuuji could feel his throat tightened. His hand brushes against his white streaks as he takes it all in. The idea of remembering had never frightened him before.Â
Memory has always been something warm, everything about your life together in memories will always be warm. The photographs in the mind, old jokes retold at dinner tables, stories passed between generations. But now it feels different. Now it sounded too close to goodbye.
âI donât want to remember you.â he said hoarsely. âI donât just want to remember you.â The words came out before he could soften them. He looks devastated. âI want you to stay.â
His hand tightened instinctively around yours, as if he could hold you there by sheer will alone. As if refusing the idea might somehow make it untrue. You turned toward him slowly, your age keeping up with your movements.
The move took a little more effort than it once had, but your smile remained soft and patient. It was the same expression he had seen countless times across a lifetime. You lifted one hand and touched his cheek.Â
The warmth of his skin hadnât changed in fifty years. It was still smooth. And it will always be like this. Everything about him is still alive with the quiet energy that time had never managed to touch.
âYou already kept me longer than the world would have promised.â
Yuuji closed his eyes briefly at the touch. His chest rose and fell slowly. When he opened them again, they shone faintly in the darkness. âThat wasnât long enough.â
The words were almost stubborn, as they always have been. Like the boy he had once been, the one who believed problems could be solved simply by refusing to accept them. You smiled at that familiar stubbornness.
âMaybe not, Yuu-kun.â you agreed softly. Your gaze drifted back toward the ocean. âBut time is the greatest thief.â The tide rolled in again, patient and inevitable. âAnd yet itâs also the most merciful giver.â
The wind moved gently through your silver hair as you spoke. You smiled at him. âIf time had not been so generousâŚwe would not have had the life we had.â
You thought of all the years folded quietly behind you in that moment, coming in flashes that made you long for them with nostalgia in your heart. First apartments with leaky ceilings. Late nights rocking crying babies. Family dinners so loud the neighbors once complained.
The way Yuuji used to fall asleep halfway through movies because he insisted on working too hard during the day. The day your daughter first rode a bicycle without falling. Your sonâs terrible haircut phase in middle school.
The day your kids each announced that they were all getting married. The day they all went off and achieved the things they wanted. The first time each and every grandchild wrapped their tiny fingers around yours.
All the ordinary days.
All the little moments that built a life.
Another wave rolled toward the shore.
Foam spread thin across the sand before dissolving quietly back into the sea. Yuuji followed your gaze. For a long moment, neither of you spoke. Then his fingers tightened gently around your hand again. As if he were trying to memorize the shape of it.
âI love you.â He whispers against you. âFive hundred miles, or to the universe, I love you.â
Tears finally fell from your eyes. âI love you too.â
THE TIES THAT BIND â series masterlist
nanami x reader â arranged marriage au
you didn't choose to marry nanami kento. the marriage was arranged, the love absent, and your heart still clung onto another man who was everything your husband wasnât - wild, untethered, and free. you thought it would be the end of you. instead, itâs where everything begins. â love doesnât happen all at once, but nanami is nothing if not patient.
content: arranged marriage, reader is a sorcerer, enemies to lovers but it's entirely one sided, slow burn, nanami is the epitome of quiet devotion that never asks for anything in return, truly a good man, tw: archaic marriage practices, period-typical sexism, lots of sexual tension, yearning final boss nanami kento, references to reader's past lover, past heartbreak and healing, explicit content, non-explicit mentions of violence and suicidal ideation, past domestic abuse, loss of virginity, hurt/comfort, angst with a happy ending, inexperienced reader, NSFW
a/n: i kind of put half my soul into this, so i hope you'll like it and follow along for the ride <3 this is essentially a love letter written in appreciation of some of nanami's best traits: his steadiness, his devotion, and his enduring dedication (to you).
đâ âš link to ao3 here
đâ âš chapter 1: the end (5.2k)
đâ âš chapter 2: tuesdays (4.7k)
đâ âš chapter 3: animals (3k)
đâ âš chapter 4: yours, nanami kento (3.8k)
đâ âš chapter 5: spring (5.2k)
đâ âš chapter 6: and the gentleness that comes (5k)
đâ âš chapter 7: a choice to make (5.8k)
đâ âš chapter 8: i'll be greedy if you let me (3k)
đâ âš chapter 9: home, is in the warmth of your hand (5.6k)
đâ âš chapter 10: the beginning (EPILOGUE)
comment to be added to the taglist!
if you've already commented and asked to be tagged, i've got you <3 please make sure you have your age in your bio and that you aren't a blank blog.
SOMETHING WORSE THAN HATE â one shot
nanami kento x reader â enemies to lovers au
SYNOPSIS: upset with each other after a mission ends in a near-death encounter, the tension on the drive back to the city finally erupts in a culmination of old arguments and unexpressed feelings. you push nanami too far, and what starts as another fight spirals quickly into backseat heat, fogged windows, and unexpected confessions.
CONTENT: hate fucking, car sex, rough (but tender) sex, porn with plot, enemies to lovers, mutual pining, reader is snarky and a huge brat, brat tamer nanami, both are sorcerers this is important to the plot, tsundere-ish behaviour from nanami, so much sexual tension it fucking explodes, consent checks, fingering, we fuck first and talk later, hurt/comfort, two emotionally repressed fools, happy ending â wc: 8.5k
A/N: there is some semblance of a deeper plot hidden within all this messy hate fucking stuff but iâll let you discover it for yourself! i hope you enjoy the read <3 â ao3 link
Itâs not a secret that you donât exactly get along with Nanami Kento.
They all say Nanami is a gentleman. Heâs the gold-standard of what it takes to be a first-grade sorcerer â razor-sharp judgement paired with flawless execution and the kind of combat experience that makes him near untouchable in the field. Heâs the role model for rookie sorcerers, the example every teacher points to.
And heâs handsome, too, in the unfair kind of way that has old ladies on the street stopping to stare, the kind of handsome that gets him free bread at the bakery and phone numbers scribbled on coffee cups with a little heart next to them.
You know him a little better than that though.
Nanami Kento is a gentleman â to everyone else but you. Heâs not an asshole in the traditional sense of the word, neither has he ever raised his voice or stooped to insults (you canât exactly say youâve adhered to the same principles), but that doesnât mean you get along.
The feud between you has been simmering for two years at this point â and it runs deeper than the clipped cadence of his voice when he speaks to you, or the ridiculous leopard print tie he favours so much, or even the suffocating pragmatism he wields like a second blade.
No, what truly grates is your differences in philosophy, the way they surface in every battle, every mission. To him, youâre reckless. To you, heâs inflexible. Stuck up. Condescending. If someone asked him directly, he might have a few choice words to describe you in return.
Still, the higher-ups thought they were clever, pairing your technique with his. Perfect synergy, as they called it. Too valuable to waste. The younger sorcerer brimming with potential, paired up with the seasoned veteran to temper her recklessness.
Stuck together, as you preferred to call it.
And the thing was â youâd actually managed to make it work. Somehow, despite your fundamental differences, baring a few squabbles and disagreements here and there, you fought well side by side. You covered each otherâs weaknesses, filled in each otherâs gaps.
At least, thatâs how it used to be.
Until the mission in July happened.
Ever since then, Nanami has never treated you the same.
You hear it in his tone, now sharper than usual, the way he wonât meet your eyes and yet his gaze lingers on your back like he doesnât quite trust you to execute a simple assignment without tripping on your shoelaces, and in the way you sometimes catch him staring at the jagged scar running down your left arm â one of the injuries youâd sustained from the mission â his lips pursed and brow creased.
On the surface, things carried on as per usual. You were still being paired together to tackle harder missions better left to more experienced sorcerers. Nothing had really changed about your dynamic, either. You still go out of your way to annoy him, and he still remains largely unimpressed by your attempts to push his buttons.
Most importantly, the implicit trust between two partners on the battlefield was still there, unbroken.
But underneath, you knew that the air between you had permanently shifted, charged with a tension you couldnât quite name. Sharp and lingering, it polluted every interaction, every word too heavy, every sentence too loaded.
Sometimes, you wondered if it was hatred, that maybe after your fuck up in July heâd decided you werenât worth his respect anymore. That the semblance of friendship youâd been slowly progressing towards no longer meant anything.
Or maybe, that the scar on your arm was such a jarring reminder of your failure that he could no longer bring himself to look at you without remembering how badly youâd messed up.
And after tonight, when youâd come so close to messing up again, it feels even worse.
Nanami hasnât said a word for the better part of an hour, weary eyes fixed on the dark ribbon of highway ahead. His jaw is set in that way that means heâs stewing â about you, about the mission, about the split-second decision you made that forced him to step in and save your ass.
Oh, and about the fact that you were supposed to be back in Tokyo by the afternoon, and itâs 9pm.
The next day.
Working overtime. He hates that shit. Possibly even a little more than he hates you.
Nanamiâs sleep deprived â you both are â but the difference is that whilst youâve been able to take little naps in the passenger seat, he looks like his restraint is being held together by the last shreds of sheer willpower and caffeine. Heâs on third, maybe fourth cup of cheap convenience store coffee, and his hands are clutching the steering wheel so tight his knuckles have gone white.
For the record, youâd sincerely offered to take over the wheel, but heâd insisted on driving, claiming he didnât trust you on the road, or with his car.
Youâre stealing glances at him â his typically crisp dress shirt rumpled, tie lost to the backseat (thank god he took that monstrosity off), fatigue carved deep in the lines of the stone statue that is his face.
Heâd graciously let you have the bed last night, when you were stuck in a shitty motel with only one room available, whilst he slept on the floor with a spare pillow and a towel draped over him to act as a makeshift blanket.
So really, you should probably feel a little guilty.
And you do, really, you do. You just canât sit still in the quiet for any longer.
Your lips twitch, and you reach for the console to turn the volume up a notch.
âDonât,â Nanami says, without looking.
Your fingers rest on the display, leaving a little fingerprint across the surface of his otherwise pristine touchscreen â because of course the man keeps his car immaculately tidy and maintained like he just drove it out of the Mercedes dealership the day before.
You hover over the volume button, then, whilst meeting his gaze, you slowly drag your fingertip in a tiny crescent. The bass lifts just a breath â some obnoxious song on the radio youâre only going to pretend to like when he tells you to turn it off â and you hear him audibly exhale.
Nanamiâs jaw flexes. âOff.â
Bingo.
You feign a pout. âYou havenât even heard the song. Itâs my favourite, you know.â
âDoesnât matter,â he replies, voice flat. âMy car is not a club.â
âDisagree,â you say, tapping the dash, where the LED panels extending across the length of it alternates in the colours of the rainbow, pulsing slowly. âYou have the lights. Youâre just lacking the vibes.â
He ignores the last end of your statement. âI told you not to mess with my settings.â
âWhy buy a fancy car if you donât play with it a little, Grandpa?â You grin at him sideways, knowing full well the nickname makes his eye twitch every time.
Nanami isnât one for overtly emotional displays, but itâs the little chips in his composure â so tiny youâd have to squint to see it â that makes pushing his buttons so entertaining. Heâs normally a lot better at denying you the satisfaction of seeing it happen, but now, when sleep-deprived and running low on patience, those cracks show easier.
âI am not your grandfather,â he mutters.
âCouldâve fooled me,â you hum. âYou sure drive like one.â
âI drive safely.â His gaze flicks to you, entirely unimpressed. âIf Iâm being honest, I preferred when you were asleep. It would spare me your commentary.â
Oh, good. Heâs talking again. Talking is good. Anything is better than the silence heâs been submerged in ever since the mission ended.
âDonât be so mean, Kento,â you sing-song, drawing out the âOâ consonant to his name. âI happen to like talking to you.â
Thatâs a half-truth. You like getting on Nanamiâs nerves, mainly because you seem to be able to draw a reaction out of him unlike any other. Not even Gojo comes close, and thatâs saying something. Heâs just a lot more⌠reactive when it comes to you, and youâve always been more than happy to exploit that fact.
And the other half of it? Because any reaction is better than the suffocating quiet that engulfs the car. That, and the sidelong glances of contempt heâs been casting you. You understand Nanami well enough to know that heâs biting his tongue, another sharp lecture waiting on the edge of his teeth.
So why not speed the process up a little?
You reach for the volume button again, dragging it up just a notch. The bass hums louder, grating and insistent, filling the silence he clearer prefers.
âAre you,â he inhales deeply, shooting you a glare, âpurposely trying to rile me up?â
Your grin deepens, teeth flashing. âDid you just figure that out?â
That seems to do it.
His head snaps towards you, eyes narrowed. âDo you have any idea how close you came to screwing up that mission?â
âBut I didnât!â you groan in exasperation, your own mood souring instantly. âI didnât, and we got out safely! God, why are you still being such a hardass about it?â
âWe only got out because I had your back,â Nanami retorts, his tone sharper than usual. âIf I hadnât pulled you out at the last second you would have died.â
âOh my god.â You drop your head back against the seat, staring at the ceiling of the car. âThe point is that I didnât die. I didnât die, and now Iâm in your car listening to you lecture me, and itâs starting to make me wish I died instead.â
His grip on the wheel tightens. âDo you hear yourself? That was reckless, and you know it. You got lucky.â He drags out the last word, as if to further emphasise his point.
You roll your eyes, crossing your arms over your chest. âPeople were saved. Thatâs all that matters to me.â
âNot if it costs your life!â His voice comes out low, harsh. âYour life is not an expendable resource you can throw away. We had a plan, and you insisted on veering away from it because you got emotional.â
âIt wasnât emotional,â you grit, dragging a hand down your face in frustration. Maybe death by flinging yourself out of a moving vehicle wouldnât be such a bad idea after all.
âIt was a sacrifice I was willing to make. And I succeeded. With my life intact,â you scowl. Shouldnât you be thanking me instead? What, Mr. First-Grade Sorcerer over here thinks that the only right calls are the ones he makes?â
Nanami lets out a long exhale through his nose, slow and deliberate. âThat is not what this is about.â
âWhat else could it be about?â You throw your hands up in frustration. âDonât act like you donât gamble with your own life every day. This whole job is a gamble. Why is that so hard for you to understand?â
âThe difference is that your life matters!â he snaps, and the crack in his composure comes so suddenly it silences the car for half a beat.
You blink, but recover your snark quickly.
âMatters to who?â you scoff incredulously. âCertainly not to you, given the way youâve been glaring at me this whole time.â
Nanami opens his mouth, seemingly about to retort, before changing his mind and snapping his mouth shut. His jaw ticks, and you swear his eye twitches, but he says nothing. Absolutely nothing. The car goes quiet, with only the hum of tires on asphalt and the low rush of air through the vents filling the void. Â
The silence is heavier than before, and itâs somehow worse than the fighting, worse than the stupid back and forth youâve been doing since the day you met, and although you canât for the life of you figure out why youâre so determined to get a rise out of him â stoic, stone-faced Nanami Kento that everyone respects and looks up to â you reach for the handle, yanking it hard. Just to see what heâll do.
âPull over,â you demand, giving the locked handle another hard tug.
His head whips towards you with a glare so sharp it borders on panic. Itâs not because you want to get out, or because you want to run, but because you want to start a proper fight and you canât exactly do it sitting down.
âNo.â His tone is entirely flat. âAnd stop doing that. Weâre not splitting up on the side of the motorway at night. If I can tolerate you for twenty seven hours,â he checks his watch, eyes narrowing, âno, twenty eight, then you can tolerate me for another sixty more minutes.â
âSo you do care.â You canât help yourself. Pissing him off really is that fun. âSay it, Kento. Say youâd miss me if I got smeared across the road.â
Nanamiâs jaw ticks, but he doesnât answer. His eyes stay fixed on the road ahead, although his knuckles return to white from how hard heâs gripping the steering wheel again.
âYouâd even cry,â you push. âYouâd probably request bereavement leave and take the full week off. Nanami Kento, mourning the brat who drove him insaneââ
He breathes in through his nose, chest rising sharply with every measured inhale. You wonder if heâs in the middle of doing one of those breathing exercises they advise you to do to manage anxiety â or in his case, to manage you.
In any case, he doesnât answer. Doesnât rise to the bait. Instead, he signals, and without so much as sparing you another glance, contemptuous or otherwise, he veers into the next exit, guiding the car down a ramp and into an industrial strip of shuttered shopfronts.
He pulls into a deserted parking lot in front of a closed bakery and parks, pointedly ignoring your increasingly incredulous questions of what the hell are you doing and have you gone completely mad. The engine ticks as it cools, rain threading down the windshield in tired streams and blurring the warm glow of the streetlamps above.
Only then does he turn to you.
The look on his face, somehow made harsher by the dim streetlamps outside is worse than angry.
It is concentrated. Darkened and unyielding, like the electric pulse of the sky before a storm breaks.
âGet out,â he says.
You blink. âExcuse me?â
âYou wanted me to pull over,â his brow lifts just so, the tiniest flicker of a challenge in his otherwise flat expression. âSo, get out.â
You set your jaw. âIf youâre seriously thinking about making me walk home in the middle of nowhereââ
He undoes his seatbelt with a sharp click of the button, and you almost jolt at the way it snaps back into the retractor. âI am not asking you to walk. I am asking you to get out of the car.â
Everything inside you thrums.
You shouldnât move. You should lock your arms and snark until he eventually deflates.
Instead, your fingers reach for the handle, opening the door and stepping out into the drizzle of rain and wet concrete. You wanted an argument, but it feels like this has spiralled headfirst into something else entirely.
You round the hood, fingers curled into tight fists to hide how your hands tremble. How theyâve been trembling ever since the mission ended. He swiftly meets you at the passenger side, door closing behind him with a loud thud that makes something in you brace for impact and roar to life all at once.
Rain stipples his hair, under eyes shadowed with hours and stress he probably blames on you. He looks even taller out here, broad and solid, his eyes hard and unyielding, collar undone.
You hate that you still find him unbearably, breathtakingly handsome.
With a breath held immensely tight in your chest, you watch as Nanami opens the back door. The back seat is immaculate, as is the rest of his car â quilted chestnut leather that still smells faintly new, without any indication of creases or crumbs to suggest anyone had ever sat there before.
âNow get in,â he orders.
Your throat goes dry.
âWhat are you doing?â you ask stupidly, even though you think the heat behind is eyes is an answer in itself.
Nanami steps in closer, and you swear you feel the warmth radiating off him, even through the drizzle of rain. You swear it would burn if you dared to reach for him.
âPolite conversation clearly doesnât work with you. Iâm trying another way.â His voice is a low note, like thunder murmuring in the distance. âSo get in the car.â
You tilt your chin in another act of defiance. âAnd if I donât?â
You expect him to bite back at you, to return tit for tat, but he lowers his gaze, eyes softening unexpectedly.
âThen,â he murmurs, taking a half-step backwards, âyou get back into the front seat, and we go home like this never happened.â
Your pulse is an uneven flutter at the base of your throat. Of course he offers you the choice. Of course he gives you an out. Even now, when the air around you wears thin with tension that threatens to snap, of course he is kind.
And you should take it.
You should stalk back to the passenger seat, shut the door with force and raise the volume loud enough just to spite him. You should ignore how the only decoration in his car is an incredibly out-of-place Pompompurin keychain dangling from the rearview mirror â something you absentmindedly picked out during a gift exchange event. You should pretend youâve never once questioned why he hasnât taken it down, especially if itâs as unsightly as he claims.
You should ignore how you seem to be the only person he lets sit in this immaculate shrine of leather upholstery and polish. Itâs almost as untouched as a showroom piece, and yet he continues to let you eat your lunch in his car when youâre starving and rushing from assignment to assignment. He never says yes, but he never says no either. He just readjusts his glasses with a sigh and attacks the seat with a mini vacuum when you get out.
You should do all of that, then meet him at 9am sharp tomorrow for that briefing with the higher-ups. Poke fun at his perpetual frown and that hideous tie â because what the hell, honestly â and pretend your scars donât itch under the heavy weight of his gaze.
You really, really should.
Instead, your spine liquifies, and you move before you can think better of it, slipping into the backseat, the leather sinking under your weight. He follows after you, and if it was quiet in the car before, it is positively oppressive now, the unbearably small space between you closing further as he leans down, knees bracketing your thighs.
The distinctive smell of his cologne still clings to him, softened now by the rain and a long day on the road, but itâs still enough to make your pulse trip as his gaze drags over your face, tender and hot all at once, almost like a caress across the surface of your skin.
âTell me to stop,â Nanami says, and you donât understand why, for all the restraint he seems to embody, all that iron discipline that defines him â he seems to be begging you, of all people, to hold him back.
Itâs too bad youâve always been a little reckless.
âI wonât.â
His jaw flexes. âYou can.â
âI know.â
Thatâs the last thing you say before you reach out, a hand grabbing at the collar of his shirt, pulling him closer until the space between your faces all but evaporates. Heâs still leaning over you, the breadth of his shoulders caging you in, and you long to find out if heâs just as hard as you imagine â if perhaps the restraint pulling itself taut on every line of his body is fighting back something far more primal underneath.
Your hips shift â just the barest brush against his â and the low growl from the base of his throat tells you enough.
âYou want me,â you taunt, chin jutting out like itâs a dare, because maybe you really are stupid and reckless, and maybe poking the bear helps hide the shakiness to your voice, or the hammering of your heart against your ribs. âMaybe you hate that you want me, but you want mââ
Nanami cuts you off. âI want you,â he replies evenly, âto shut up.â
You grin, wide, all teeth. Youâve always loved watching a storm brew. âThen shut me up.â
And he does exactly that.
He curses once under his breath, soft but not at all sweet, and then his lips crash down upon yours, silencing every single thought with a kiss that is all heat and fervour.
Your hands are mean, or maybe just plain greedy, threading through his damp hair, tugging at the strands, before trailing down the width of his shoulders and down his back with a hunger you donât bother to conceal.
Meanwhile, Nanamiâs hands wander lower, gathering up your skirt in impatient fists and flipping the fabric up around your thighs. The sudden rush of cool air makes you shudder, and you hope to god he canât see how youâve already soaked through the fabric of your cotton panties.
âYou wear this fucking thingââ he rasps, pulling back to let his eyes drag across your body, from your spread thighs to the sharp rise and fall of your chest, ââand wonder why youâre driving me crazy.â
You bite down on another grin, somehow managing a retort despite the dizzy rush of blood in your ears and the furious knocking of your heart against its cage.
âThought it was my mouth that drives you crazy.â
âOh, believe me,â he scoffs, breath ghosting your neck. âThat too.â
And then, as to prove his point, he leans down to kiss you again, harder this time.
There was a conversation to be had, a fight waiting to be fought, but somehow â when his lips press against yours and his hand trails down your thigh â the only battle you want is the one waged by teeth scraping against teeth, in the slick slide of tongues and in gasps withheld and coaxed out of the other.
You shove at his shirt in between messy kisses, fumbling with the buttons in the dark until you lose patience and practically rip it open with force. It leaves his chest bare, and you canât stop the satisfied curl of your lips when you run a palm down his body and over his abs, the barest touch pulling a low groan from his chest.
Itâs easy to get lost in the moment, in the frenzied fight for dominance youâre sure to eventually lose, but you freeze completely when Nanamiâs hands curl at the bottom of your shirt, his intent clear in the way hazel eyes narrow, fixed and focused on your exposed skin.
âD-donâtââ your fingers rush to clamp around his wrist, the slight, frantic tremble in your voice more obvious than youâd hoped.
Itâs fairly dark in the car, but even then you canât bear the thought of him seeing it.
The scars â god, itâs always about the scars â one running down your left arm, crooked and ugly, and the other on your upper chest, evidence of a blade that tore through skin like it was paper, the tissue raised and raw even after all of Shokoâs best efforts.
I canât do much about the cosmetics, sheâd told you with an apologetic wince. Still, youâre very lucky to be alive.
I donât feel very lucky, youâd wanted to say, your legs hanging off her examination table as you shrugged your shirt back on. I know I should. But I donât.
Not when he canât seem to ever look at me the same.
You canât tell if your wide-eyed gaze has indeed betrayed you, or if Nanami simply decides not to cross a boundary you donât want crossed, but his movements halt, fingers slowly unfurling from the edge of your shirt.
âAlright,â he murmurs.
Heâs chooses to be merciful, although you know deep down heâs always been this way and it just kills you to admit that, because he simply doesnât press. Instead, he moves on like nothing happened, pulling your top the full length down, then slipping away from where his hand once hovered and down to your parted thighs.
âYouâre soaked,â he breathes, in half-awe and half-surprise, when he feels the way slick already coats your inner thighs sticky.
âS-shut up,â you bite back weakly, nails digging into his shoulder when his fingers test the wet heat of your core through the thin fabric of your panties. âAre you gonna fuck me or not?â
âImpatient,â Nanami chides with a click of his tongue, but he gives you more anyway, pushing aside the thin cotton barrier and dragging a thumb through your slick, rubbing over your clit as he goes, the pressure enough to make your hips buck up desperately. Â
You bite down hard on your bottom lip, wanting to deny him the satisfaction of hearing the whimper threatening to fall from the tip of your tongue.
âTalk,â he orders, a hand closing on your hips to hold you in place. âYou never stop. Go on.â
âI hate you,â you say, too quickly, because you need ground under your feet. âYouâre a condescendingâ ahâ ohâ fuckâ â
Your protest dissolves into a strangled gasp â more air than sound â when he presses two thick fingers into you without warning, the stretch burning and maddening all at once. Hands fly up to grip his shoulders, every push of air from your throat leaving more broken than the last.
You cry out as he works you open, merciless and unrelenting, darkened eyes watching the way your body trembles and twitches under his control. He is precise, measured even in the way he unravels you, every curl of his fingers and brush against your sensitive clit a deliberate act to unmake you.
âWhat do you want?â Nanami rasps, fingers picking up their pace.
The car is too small, too hot, the wet drag of his fingers and your fractured moans echoing in the cramped space.
âYou,â you say, shameless, gone. Youâll lose the battle if it means winning the war. âI want you.â
âSay it again,â he demands. âTell me you want this.â
âYou,â youâre pawing at him, hungry with want, eyes raking down the length of his bare chest and wishing he would just go ahead and ruin you. The sincerity of your confession â just how deep it truly goes â is lost on you. âW-want youââÂ
Thatâs all it takes for the remnants of his composure to crack like sugared glass, pulling his hand from you to fumble at his belt before yanking it off and pushing his pants down just far enough to tug himself free.
Your gaze flickers down at the low rasp of fabric, the clink of metal hitting against the door, eyes widening despite yourself.
Heâs fucking hung. Well-endowed. Blessed by the gods, clearly, or whatever you call the kind of cock even the average male porn star canât compete with. Your mouth goes a little dry at the sight of it.
âThat wonâtâ wonât fit,â you say breathlessly, eyes transfixed on the way he fists his cock, once, twice, hand sliding tight over his swollen tip.
âWeâll make it fit,â he grunts.
His free hand settles on your thigh, spreading you wider for him. Your hips donât mean to cant up to chase his touch, but your body betrays you anyway, the movement needy and shameless.
Nanami drags the head of his cock against your slick folds and another shaky whimper is torn from your throat when it nudges against your entrance, rubbing up against your wet heat.
âKentoââ You gasp when he presses in just enough to have you stretching around his tip, thighs tensing around him at the weight of it, hands curling into fists.
Youâre forced to hold his gaze in this position, eyes locked on each other even as yours roll back and his threaten to flutter shut just the same. But he keeps them open â stubborn and determined to the last â fixated on the way your face contorts in a convoluted mix of pain and pleasure as he inches deeper.
âIs this what you wanted?â Nanami rasps, a hand on your hip pinning you down to the leather as your body fights against the intrusion. âWhy you keep running your mouth? God,â the laugh he lets out is more dark than it is humorous. âYou drive me crazy.â
âYou alreadyâ hahâ said thatââ
Another inch deeper.
Another groan falls from your bitten lips, increasingly more shattered as your body gradually yields to the stretch. Your nails dig into this shoulders, fingers curling into hardened muscle, the sheer desperation almost overwhelming. Â
âYouâll get yourself killed one day,â he grits through clenched teeth.
âLet it go, already, old man,â you snap back, too breathless to carry any heat, âItâs none of your business how I dieââ
âIs that so?â He seems to grow incensed at that statement, because he pushes all the way to the hilt, hips snapping against you with a decisive thrust. âEven if Iâm the one who has to bury your dead body?â
The force of it makes you choke on a moan, back arching against the seat, hands bracing at your sides for purchase. You swear to god Nanami must truly hate you or he wouldnât be fucking you this good, this ruthlessly, like every thrust is intent to break you into something less frustrating for him to handle.
And then he leans down, breath hot and ragged against your cheek. His face is half-obscured by the darkness, but even then you can see thereâs nothing darker, nothing quite as agitated compared to the look in his eyes.
âIf thereâs even anything left of you next time.â
He spits it out bitterly, eyes narrowing into slits, the next harsh thrust after that almost serving to further punctuate his statement.
Your lips part, but Nanami doesn't give you the chance to retort â and he knows you well enough to know you always have something to throw back â because he picks up his pace, the rhythm he sets enough to shake the car.
But more than frustration, and more than anger itself, thereâs something else buried deep in the way he splits you apart. Something confusing, something desperate behind every devasting thrust.
His hands on your hip stay almost tender, never bruising, and when you guide his hand towards your breasts, above your clothes, he doesnât knead your flesh with any force behind it. Where youâd expected sharpness, his touch stays controlled, gentle, even â as though soothing.
Nanami must know, because of course he does.
He must know about the scarred length of skin that still feels raw to the touch, and if he keeps looking at you like this youâre certain heâll know about the nightmares that keep you up on some nights â where you donât manage to outrun the sharp slice of blade that almost took your life.
He knows everything about you, because heâs worked closely by your side for two straight years, through successes you barely celebrated and losses too deep to speak of, and heâs always right, even when heâs calling you impulsive and reckless.
Even when heâs holding you back by the collar, saving your skin, or giving another sharp lecture with his eyes narrowed and arms crossed â he knows.
And you think thatâs what you hate more than anything.
It isnât the tie (though god, that one is pushing it pretty close), it isnât the clipped tone, and it isnât the petty disagreements on mission strategies or what he deems to be sloppy work on your reports.
No, what you truly hate is the way your mistake in July seems to have cost his respect for you, his trust, and as much as you hated to admit it, you cared more about the broken bond â if anything had existed in the first place â than you cared about the irreversible scars on your chest and arm.
Deep down, what you hated was yourself, for losing something irretrievable.
You silence those thoughts with a desperate reach for him, dragging him down into a kiss that is equal parts messy and all-consuming. Every thrust jolts you against the leather seat, your skin sticky with sweat, nothing but the frantic collision of your bodies echoing in the cramped space.
Youâre greedy for him. You can allow it, just once. And he gives you greed right back, matched and measured, and then not measured at all.
Nanami is methodical even when heâs unravelling; never fully lost to pleasure itself. He brings you to the edge of release first, only letting himself go when youâre already breaking apart under him, trembling and shaking as your orgasm washes over you in waves.
His thrusts finally turn sloppy, losing their rhythm as they morph into urgency, letting himself chase the high heâs been resisting all this while. His forehead presses close to yours, exchanging heated, open-mouthed kisses, as his hips stutter.
âFuckââ he curses, driving into you once, then twice more with a fracturing pace, before spilling into you with a low groan, chest heaving from the exertion.
He stays like that for a moment, a hand braced against the fogged windows to shield you from his weight, the both of you panting heavily from the high. Then, with a sharp but shaky exhale, one hand leaves your hip, reaching up to turn on the overhead light.
The warm amber glow floods the space, and for a moment you squint, shielding your eyes from the brightness above.
âOw,â you bemoan loudly, âdid you have to turn that on right away?â
You hear him rustling in the centre console â because of course that man keeps wet tissues and perhaps even a damn first aid kit in there â but then the movement stops, and his reply doesnât come.
âHello? The light,â you whine, eyes still squeezed shut.
Still no reply.
Itâs only when you slowly pull your hand away from your face that you see what heâs fixated on.
And of course, itâs the scar.
It always fucking is.
Your shirt had gotten shoved up in the chaos, riding high above your stomach and bunching around your sternum. The scar is raised and silvery under the glow of light, one ugly, crooked line that slices across the middle of your chest and extending towards your right breast.
You freeze.
Panic â or maybe even shame â curls hot in your gut.
Shoko had said it wasnât that noticeable, which really, was a blatant lie. You knew it was one of those rare times she was sparing you the sympathy you needed to hear in the moment.
Instinct tells you to pull the fabric down yourself, but you go rigid instead, afraid of what expression you might read on his face when you dare to look closely.
Youâre bracing yourself for whatever he might say, or do, next, but he does what you least expect, leaning down, his mouth crashing hot upon yours all over again.
It starts off with equal fervour as the first kiss you shared, but this one is not messy, not a clash of wills and a battle for control like it was previously.
It is distinctively different this time.
Devastatingly tender, gentle in the way his mouth moves softly against yours, woven with something youâre sure is going unsaid at the moment, a hand moving to cup your breasts.
Your breath hitches when Nanami strokes the raised welt of scar tissue, applying no pressure at all, fingertips tracing across the flesh and then moving to pull down your bra so your nipples harden instantly under the cool air.
âKentoââ you jolt when his hand slips further down, back to your parted thighs and your throbbing heat, still messy with his cum. His thumb presses against your clit, rubbing circles and sending a sharp rush of pleasure that makes your entire body twitch.
âI alreadyâ I alreadyââ
âAgain,â Nanami rasps. âCum again. Without hiding from me.â
Itâs easy â almost too easy â for him to bring you towards the edge of yet another high.
Heâs already got you worked open from his cock, and he only needs to curl his fingers gently, against that sweet spot that makes the pleasure wind tighter and tighter in your stomach, his hands moving against the mess he left inside you.
Nanami doesnât let up, not even when your fingers wrap around his wrist, trying to stop the relentless stimulation and the release that quickly threatens to overtake your senses. Â
âGood girl,â he coaxes. âJust let go.â
You cum on his fingers with a sharp whimper, body tensing and shaking until youâre certain you have nothing left to give.
The tears that were pricking your waterline finally overflow when your eyes screw shut, hot streaks trailing down the sides of your face. He reaches for your cheeks, a thumb about to wipe the trickle of tears away when you grab his hand firmly.
âDonât be soft,â you warn bitterly, voice still raw. âDonât.â
Nanami doesnât reply you immediately, but he retracts his hand slowly, an unreadable expression flickering across his face as he studies you. Then, very carefully, like heâs being cautious not to trespass on any more of your space, he pulls your top back down, straightening the fabric. Â
He pulls out wet tissues from the compartment in the centre console and you try not to roll your eyes at how infuriatingly well-prepared he is for any given situation. No further words are exchanged, but he continues to be unbearably soft, gentle hands cleaning up the mess between your legs.
It's only when you both have your clothes back on, fabric hastily tugged back down to cover what shouldnât have been revealed, that he finally speaks again.
You hear the words leaving him quietly, whispered almost begrudgingly.
ââŚI canât seem to help it,â he murmurs.
You scoff lightly. âWhat?â
âI canât seem to help it,â he repeats, slower this time. âBeing⌠soft with you.â
âItâs ugly,â you say, deflecting â partly because you know his mind still lingers on what he just saw, and your shameful reaction to it, and partly because you donât want to linger further on what his words might mean.
âNo, it isnât.â
âI fucked up.â
âMistakes happen.â
You shut your eyes, take a deep breath, and just decide to say it anyway.
âThen why do you hate me so much for it?â
Nanami visibly deflates at that, the soundless sigh he lets out causing his shoulders to droop, almost in surrender. He looks away from you, out of the window and towards the empty parking lots ahead, to where individual stars from the overhead streetlamps illuminate grey concrete floors.
âI donât hate you.â
âLiar.â You make a sound that could pass as laughter. âIâm the only person you treat this way. Youâre polite to everyone else. You open doors. You donât raise your voice. You donât pull them back by the collar,â you opt to stare at the dashboard instead of meeting his eyes, but even then, you canât hide the rawness to your tone. âWhy am I different?â
ââŚI believe I open doors for you.â
You make a frustrated sound. âIs that all you got from my monologue?â
A long pause follows, like heâs measuring out the weight of what he wants to say.
Nanami has the tendency to get quiet like this; every time you demand answers to questions he doesnât quite want to give, or worse â when whatâs about to follow after his momentary silence is something that will hit much harder than what youâre ready for.
For a man that could be so impatient, he sure does take his time to pick his words carefully.
âDo you want to know why I bought a new car?â
ââŚWhat?â You blink, uncomprehending. âWhy? Because you were getting paid too much? Needed somewhere to spend the big bucks?â
âBecauseââ his voice raises above yours, eyes screwing shut, jaw tensing as he swallows. âYour blood was all over the seats. My shirt. My fucking hands. I thought you were about to die on the ride back to the school. Fuck,â he curses, voice cracking. âI thought my backseat was going to be where your heart gave out.â
âKentoâŚâ
âEvery time I looked at those stains it made me sick. And every time I look at that scar on your arm, I⌠I think it should have been me instead.â
Every single pushed out of him sounds pained, punctuated with something haunted and heavy, and guilt curls low in your gut at the sight of it.
âSo yes. I treat you differently because you make me furious.â
Nanami turns to you, but his eyes are not at all hardened, not a single trace of resentment behind hazel irises.
âEvery reckless choice. Every time you joke about your life like itâs a game. Every time you blast your shitty music in my car and mess with my settings.â He rakes a hand through dishevelled hair, looking wearier than ever, the trace of something raw ghosting across his face. âYou make me work harder. Longer. Later. You make me have to sleep on the floor and drive for hours at a timeââ
â âI offered to share the bed!â you interject weakly.
ââBut I do not hate you.â
The overhead light is off now, so his face is mostly shadow; but his voice doesnât need light to be clear.
âI hate how the hard floor felt softer than my own bed because I heard you snoring softy from beside me. Alive. I hate how I canât stand it when youâre not in my sight. When you throw yourself into danger without thinking. Because if Iâm not thereâ if Iâm not fast enoughââ
Nanami cuts himself off with a shake of his head, hanging low, a mirthless laugh escaping him, broken and tired.
Your throat closes up on you. âWhy⌠why are you telling me this now?â
His next words come soft, uttered like a confession it pains him to make.
âBecause the way youâre going makes me think Iâm running out of time to say it.â
âSacrifice is in the nature of our jobs,â you whisper, the same damn lines you recite to yourself every day until the words themselves have hollowed out and lost all meaning. âSurely⌠surely you know that.â
âI know,â Nanami rasps, desperation and stubbornness wreathed in his voice. âYou think I donât know that? Back in July â in Kusatsu â I know I would have made the same choice you did. You made the right call with the information you had.â
You swallow down the lump in your throat, feeling the hot prick of tears behind your eyes. Youâre used to lectures, not pleas, coming out of his mouth.
âDo youâ do you really think I made the right call?â
âYes,â he says, and thereâs no hesitation in his reply. âOf course.â
âI thought⌠I thought you resented me because of what happened,â you will yourself not to cry, even as your vision blurs with tears that push against the precipice, threatening to overflow if you only blinked too heavy. âI thought you looked at me and only saw the mistake. That you hated me for it.â
Silence falls over the car, the steady pitter-patter of rain upon the roof and your combined breathing the only thing to fill the void. It stretches and expands, almost unbearable as you wait for his reply.
âI donât hate you,â Nanami says finally, slower this time, like heâs holding the weight of too many truths between his teeth. âBut I would hate myself if anything ever happened to you. So please,â he looks up and you swear you see the shine of tears in his eyes, though his gaze remains unflinching. âDonât let it be you. Let me try to keep you safe. Please.â
A thousand things fight desperately for precedence in your mouth â alternating rhythms of Iâm sorry and thank you drum in your head, intertwined with other raw, fragile confessions youâve never dared to voice. Things youâve never dreamed of having the luxury of ever voicing to him.
But in the end, nothing comes out. The lump in your throat too thick, your chest too tight. You blink, once, twice, and the tears fall â coursing down your cheeks in hot streams. You donât have to be looking at Nanami to know that, from the deep, shuddering breath he takes, heâs crying too.
âIt wonât be me,â you choke out, voice flimsy. âBut donâtâ donât let it be you, either.â
âIt wonât,â he whispers, even though he canât promise you that. He reaches out â and you let him, this time â a thumb to your cheek in an attempt to wipe away the wet streaks trailing down your face.
âOkay,â you whisper back anyway, because thatâs good enough for you. âThen I wonât let it be me.â
Nothing is ever promised with this job, no two endings ever look the same. But if itâs coming from him â then youâll let yourself believe it.
Nanami allows himself a laugh, an amused huff of breath through the shimmer of tears collecting in his eyes. âThen youâll have to actually start listening to me.â He pauses, thumb still lingering on your cheek, like he canât quite bring himself to pull away from you. ââŚJust sometimes would be enough for me.â
âIâll have to consider it,â you hum, and youâre already breaking out in a wobbly smile to mirror his.
He shakes his head, resigned, though thereâs a trace of something unmistakably fond on his lips. âI suppose thatâs more than youâve ever done before.â
The world seems to tilt on its axis when you lock eyes again. The rain drumming on outside, the tender length of skin under your clothes, even the empty carpark that seems to be holding the weight of this entire moment â all of that fades to grey when he leans in, his hand on your cheek now moving to cradle your jaw.
Your head tips towards him a mere breath after, pulled towards him by something more inevitable than gravity, something almost as steady as the warmth of his touch or the hymns of his pulse thrumming against your skin.
When your lips press against the other, it happens without a fight this time. You meet as partners, savouring the sweetness of his mouth on yours and how his hand fits the curve of your jaw perfectly â like everything was meant to fall into place exactly how it did tonight.
Nanamiâs lips linger on yours, thumb stroking your skin with reverence and longing. He presses one more kiss to your nose â drawing a scrunch from you that is equal parts shy and delighted â and another to your forehead, gentler than anything you have ever known.
No further words are said when his hands fall away, the warmth of his skin still radiating, your hearts still beating in the same tune. Then, as though some unspoken truce has been reached in the simple quiet of the tenebrous night, he starts the engine, the car humming to life once again.
You donât need words, you think.
You just need the certainty of his presence beside you. You need the careful hand against your lower back when he walks alongside you sometimes. The same one you pretend to resist.
You need the way he sighs when you needle him, not because heâs truly exasperated, but because itâs become your rhythm: your push, his pull, the delicate balance that keeps you tethered together even in the ugliest chaos of your work.
The beam of headlights cut through the rain-soaked darkness, and Tokyo waits for you both, just a half hour drive away. Silence envelops the car like a love letter waiting to be sent out â and what was suffocating now melts down into something softer, blanketing you in the most peace youâve felt in months.
âIâm hungry,â you complain loudly after a bit, when the blur of the city finally takes shape across the line of the horizon. âI need food.â
Nanami spares you a side glance and you pout a little harder. âI believe we ate only three hours ago.â
âSex is a full body workout, you know.â
âConvenience store, then.â
A pause. His lips purse, and you watch his throat work before he quietly adds, a little unsteadily, âOr⌠we could go back to my place. I have the seafood cup noodles you like.â
You will your heart to be still. To not flutter at the very notion of an invitation for something more.
âSounds like a plan.â
You turn the radio up one notch, then catch his eye, and turn it back down. He doesnât comment. You think that he too, might be hiding a smile in the dark where you canât see it.
You watch Nanami silently, and then, on impulse, you reach across the console and rest your hand briefly on his forearm. He glances down at your fingers. He doesnât move away.
There are no guarantees with the life you both lead, but there are a few things that are for certain.
Next Monday, heâll still pick you up outside your apartment at 8:30am sharp, ample time before the morning meeting. On your seat will be a teriyaki chicken onigiri and your favourite green tea waiting for you to scarf down, because he says you get more annoying when youâre on an empty stomach.
Youâll still try to push his buttons â even though you refuse to admit that one of the reasons why you do so is because the faint crease of his brow and the pursing of his lips is rather cute. And heâll still sigh, just like he always does, his composure only ever fracturing in your presence. When he does, though, youâll notice a trace of fondness which lingers in the slight curve of his mouth and the softness behind his eyes â little betrayals of the heart he no longer tries to hide from you.
Youâll still fall into his bed many more times after tonight, just like how youâll continue to make him grit his teeth and curse at your recklessness, and how heâll still cause you to roll your eyes and bite back a sharp reply in response.
The label for what started as backseat heat and fogged windows that morphed into nights at his place doing a lot more than just eating cup noodles doesnât come until many months later. It doesnât matter, though â because you already like the way the words âmy partnerâ sound coming from his mouth â more than any other terms of endearment one could ever choose.
The scars wonât ever fade, but Nanami kisses them so much that you start to like the way his lips press against the silvery length of skin. They stop feeling like a reminder of how you faltered, and start feeling like the proof that youâre still here â how you need to keep being here.
For yourself.
For him.
And for everything else that comes after.
For now, you canât help but smile, a small but satisfied curl of lips.
You did indeed win the war â this one, at least.
And youâll make damn sure you stay alive long enough to fight the next one by his side.
a/n: this fic was largely motivated by my need to write a realistic enough scenario where i could imagine nanami hate fucking the reader⌠i totally imagine him being a bit of a hardass about his car so i couldnât resist putting that in (also the jabs about his tie may or may not contain my true sentiments)
i didnât mean to make the plot this emotional and honestly it started off as just a horny thing but i simply could not help myself. i hope you enjoyed the read! i want him so fucking bad lol
iâm also here to plug my other enemies to lovers arranged marriage au with nanami â check it out here <3
comments and reblogs appreciated!! i would really love to hear your thoughts + my inbox is open if you wanna yap at me <3 ty for reading (^_^)
I DONâT WANT SMUT I WANT FLUFF OR SOME GOOD ASS ANGST GOD DAMN IT
stop asking ai for advice and start asking bitches with tarot cards to read your future
How it feels to settle into bed and close my eyes and return to the totally made-up scenario I was last engrossed in
The Duel and The Reconciliation, 1884 by Ămile-Antoine Bayard (French, 1837â1891)Â
When a fic doesnât fit my head canons but itâs well-written
#he wouldn't fucking say that but i'm getting kind of attached to the guy you invented who did say that
Wrong Name
Summary: Reader visits her partner Jack in the ED to drop off his lunch catching the excited attention of all of his colleges much to his chagrin
Pairing: Jack Abbot x Reader
Word Count: 2k
Warnings: None! Just super cute fluff
Authorâs Note: My first Pitt Fic! Basically, a short simple grumpy x sunshine reader cause I had the idea. Everyone in the Pitt loves the reader and Jack pretends to hate that, but everyone knows better. Again my first Pitt fic so any and all feedback appreciated and I hope you enjoy!
Check out part 2 here!
To say Jack was surprised to see you at Danaâs desk was an understatement.
He had just left you a little over an hour ago, a silent kiss to your temple, a murmured I love you into your hair, a cup of coffee left in his wake on the countertop so it was cooled down by the time you got up, the same as every day. You were still asleep when he left could you have woken up with something? Did he miss something last night?
His head was so full of the hypothetical he didnât take the extra second to acknowledge how at ease your body language was as you leaned against the tall desk, a soft smile on your lips as you nodded along to whatever Dana was saying.
Instead, he immediately crossed the ED in a few steps, sliding a hand to the small of your back to grab your attention, cutting of Danaâs story without a second thought.
âHey whatâre you doing here are you okay?â
Your eyes flickered briefly to his, the corners of your mouth pulling up slightly at his appearance as you grabbed his bicep and gave it a small squeeze. âYeah donât worry Iâm fineâ before immediately refocusing on Dana, silently signaling her to continue.
Dana, however, as she normally does, knew better, a look shared between the two women as she stayed silent and instead focused on Jack, the man himself having not moved his gaze from your form for a second.
Pinching your shirt at the waist softly he gave it a small tug, physically pulling your attention back to him as his eyes scanned your face âis it that headache you had the other night? Is it back? I can bump you up the CT lineâ
âHoneyâ you cut him off with that small laugh that always had his chest warming âI promise Iâm fine I texted you like an hour ago to meet me in the parking lot, you just forgot your lunchâ
He could physically feel the relief hit his system at your words, his shoulders dropping as he finally took a deep breath, his next words tumbling off his tongue before he could put any thought to them âyou didnât have to-â
But just as he knew you would, you cut him off with a shrug and the same words you always used when he tried to dodge being taken care off âI know but I wanted toâ
He couldnât have fought the fond smile off his face if he had tried, something he knew he was going to get shit over from Dana and inevitably Robby later. âWhy didnât anyone tell me you were here have you been waiting long?â
âNo Iâve been talking to Danaâ And it was so entirely you the way you stated it like it was obvious. As if this little act of kindness in going out of your way to get him food hadnât hijacked your entire morning. He was nearly overwhelmed by the desire to pull you into him, barely registering the way you pivoted back to Dana at the mention of her name.
âA conversation we absolutely will be finishingâ spoken like a threat that had the charge nurse chuckling, âdrinks later? Location and time TBD?â
âSounds good kidâ
And maybe it was a little selfish of him to want you just to himself in that moment, to pull you out of the Pitt to get even just two minutes of you alone. But Jack had found over the past year that he liked being selfish when it came to you âOh and Langdon was looking for you earlier if you havenât seen him yetâ
âYou spoke to Langdon tooâ heâll admit to only faking part of the exasperation in his tone that had you giggling.
âHeâs got a new puppyâ you protested with a grin âwhat was I supposed to do? Not ask to see photosâ
âYouâre right ridiculous questionâ he conceded easily, ânow arenât you supposed to be at workâ
And Jack relished the way he knew what your exact reaction would be seconds before you made it, the way your eyes widened almost comically before you reached for his arm, pulling his watch specifically into your line of sight, Jack using the momentum to press a quick kiss to your temple before he could think any better of it.
âShit Iâm gonna be lateâ You groaned softly, Jack chuckling at the action.
âI mean it, you didnât have to bring my lunch in todayâ
âPlease we both know you wouldnât eat anything if I hadnâtâ you brushed him off thoughtlessly before brightening and exclaiming âoh before I forgetâ. Suddenly you were pulling back from him, reaching deeply into your bag and rummaging slightly before pulling out a fistful of protein bars âgive these to Dennisâ
âTo Dennisâ he repeated with a raised brow as you pushed them into his chest.
âYeah Dennis, well except for the chocolate onesâ
âYou want me to give these to my med studentâ he repeated with another exasperated sigh.
Again you responded exactly like he hoped you would, a giggle and a teasing push against his chest âyes except for the chocolate ones he doesnât like those he likes the fruit ones. He wonât tell you that though, heâll gladly take them all but heâs just being nice about it because he doesnât want to offend youâ
He couldnât help but appreciate how well you seemed to fit into his life. How youâd forged relationships with each member of the Pittâs team that existed wholly outside of him. It was tough now to believe there existed a time when he had been hesitant to introduce you to the chaos of the Pitt given how you now had seemed to adopt each member of his chosen family on your own.
His train of thought was effectively cut off as he watched your gaze suddenly deviate from him to something behind him, the corner of your mouth ticking up as you took one of the bars back from his grasp and yelled across the room âDennisâ
The poor kid looked terrified for a brief moment as he spun around before breaking out into a relieved grin once his eyes landed on you.
That was all the acknowledgement you needed before you were throwing the bar at him, Whittaker to his credit only looking panicked for a brief moment before he was effortlessly catching the bar, grinning down at his new snack appreciatively once he had it âThank you Mrs. Abbotâ
âNot my nameâ you corrected breezily with a wave âbut bug Jack if you want more Iâm giving him the restâ
âGreat now if youâre done upsetting the natural order of my ED donât you have work to get toâ Jack cut in with fake exasperation.
âNatural order of the Pittâ you scoffed âthatâs an oxymoron if Iâve ever heard oneâ
Your comment had Dana snorting as she didnât even bother to try hiding the fact that she had been eavesdropping on your conversation up to this point.
âYeah yeah now get out of hereâ he rolled his eyes with a fond smile âone of us has to make sure our bills our paid this monthâ
âIâm going Iâm goingâ you groaned with a matching eye roll, pushing up slightly onto your toes and pressing a quick kiss to his cheek, pulling away much too quickly for Jackâs liking with a whispered I love you.
Then you were gone, headed back the way you came leaving nothing but the soft scent of your perfume in the air around him as Jack forced his eyes down to the chart in his hands, pointedly ignoring Danaâs gaze.
Just when he thought he was going to be trapped in the inevitable teasing of his charge nurse Dr. King came running up to the station, Jack more than happy to turn his attention to her and ready to distract himself with whatever case had her moving so fast.
Instead, however, Melâs expression with brimming with barely contained excitement, her gaze searching everywhere around Jack but never properly landing on the man himself âWas that Y/N I heard? Is she here?â
With a disbelieving huff, Jack went back to his chart âyou just missed herâ
âNo sheâs by the door with Robbyâ Dana cut in with a smile, enjoying the way Jacks neck nearly snapped as he whipped his gaze across the ED to where you now stood with Robby, talking animatedly about something while the older man listened with a smile on his face and hands in his pockets, looking much more relaxed than the two of them usually saw him within the department.
Mel peeled off without a second word to either of them, the pair watching the way your expression lit up once more as you recognized her as she approached.
âYou gonna correct thatâ Dana nodded vaguely in your direction, her and Jack leaning onto the counter of the nurseâs station from opposite sides watching you give Mel an enthusiastic high five over whatever story she had rushed over to tell you.
âProbably talk to everyone at some pointâ Jack shrugged in response âthe Pitt canât afford to come to a screeching halt every time she so much as walks in the doorsâ
âNo dumbassâ Dana admonishes with a dramatic groan âitâs good the way everyone brightens up when sheâs here. God knows we could use some positivity around here. I mean Whitakerâs comment about the wrong nameâ
âI mean sheâs already told him to call her by her first name but I could talk to him-â
Dana silenced Jack with a glare, the attending turning his attention back to you from across the room as you eagerly talked to Mel and Robby.
âWas thinking about asking Robby to go ring shopping with me this weekendâ he admitted softly âScale of 1-10 how bad of an idea is thatâ
âNot where I thought this story was going but love is love so I support-â now it was Jackâs turn to silence Dana with a glare, the charge nurse enjoying way too much the way the tips of his ears colored at the admission.
âa sevenâ she mused with a shrug, turning her attention back to you as you finally said goodbye to the two doctors âmaybe a sixâ she let the silence settle around them and watched as Jack eyed her with a skeptical glare from her periphery âinvite me along and I can keep it below a threeâ
Jack studied her for a second, crossing his arms over his chest before nodding softly âdoneâ
Dana fought to keep the grin off her face as Robby finally started to make his way towards the two of them, Jack catching him slipping an awfully familiar looking protein bar into the pocket of his sweatshirt âJesus how many of those does she haveâ
Robby shrugged with a chuckle, eyes casting up to the board above the desk as he did so âshe mentioned something about having extra chocolate onesâ
âI saw her slipping Santos bags of trail mix earlier if youâd prefer thatâ Dana chimed in with a smirk as Jack huffed dramatically.
âdid everyone get to talk to her but me this morning?â
âYou get her every day, stop being so selfishâ Robby clasped his shoulder with a smug grin, giving it a soft shake.
 âSelfishâ Jack repeated under his breath with a shake of his head, eyes going up to the board to pick out his next case as he did so âgod forbid I want to spend time with my future wifeâ
He hadnât even realized he said it out loud until the Pitt around him seemed to go unnaturally quiet. Casting his gaze back down he caught Robby and Dana sharing pointed, amused looks before turning their teasing grins back on him.
All he could get out was a simple ânoâ before he was storming off to the closest room, refusing to acknowledge the way Robby yelled out a threat after him âWe will be talking about this laterâ
Performing holy rites â¨
i think joy âadmit him to med surgâ kwon needs to spend some time with jack âlie about the size of the fetusâ abbot



